Archive for December, 2007

Shelved projects signal building boom is bust as costs dampen demand

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

Sun

Economics is really a simple subject made complicated by

S-curves and diffusion indexes. Take the price elasticity of demand, for example. What this jargon boils down to is the common sense notion that the price of something will greatly influence the decision to buy it.

That basic principle is beginning to take a toll on the provincial economy. Construction is becoming too expensive and buyers are backing away.

Last week, NovaGold and Teck Cominco announced plans to suspend a major mining project in northwest British Columbia because it has become too costly. The companies announced a partnership just six months ago to build the Galore Creek copper-gold mine based on a 2006 feasibility study that estimated its cost at $2 billion. Rapidly escalating construction and materials costs, however, helped push the projected capital cost to $5 billion, and that was too rich even accounting for high commodity prices.

Galore Creek would have created 1,000 construction jobs over a four-year building phase and 500 full-time mining jobs over a mine life expectancy of at least 20 years. Development of the mine was also to be the catalyst for a new $400-million electricity transmission, which has now been put on hold. It would have linked the northwest, where diesel generators supply electricity, to the provincial power grid. Shelving the transmission line will likely discourage other projects and depress further exploration activity in the region.

Reverberations are being felt by communities in the region, first nations bands and stock market investors, the last having have seen NovaGold lose half its share value since the announcement.

Meanwhile, Barrick Gold Corp. says the cost of its Donlin Creek mine in Alaska may climb to about $4 billion, 60 per cent more than an initial estimate last year.

The impacts of escalating construction costs are being felt closer to home too. Inflation in the cost of non-residential construction in Metro Vancouver reportedly reached a record of 13.6 per cent in the third quarter of 2007 over a year earlier, although some dispute the number.

And it’s not just mines and warehouses being hit with construction cost inflation. The cost of building infrastructure — roads, bridges, schools, community centres, skating rinks and swimming pools — has put pressure on public sector budgets, which normally use the Consumer Price Index as their inflation factor.

Nor is residential construction immune from cost inflation. The Eden Group recently cancelled two city condominium projects, saying construction costs would have caused huge losses if they had gone ahead. Several other residential developments have been curtailed, including the Riverbend project in Coquitlam.

The cost of apartment building construction in Metro Vancouver rose 13.8 per cent in the third quarter from the same period last year, far ahead of the national rate of 8.5 per cent.

The good news, or bad news depending on your perspective, is that our model of price elasticity assumes that prices will bring demand and supply back into equilibrium.

In other words, by cancelling projects, scaling back others and putting more on hold, market players will create the conditions that will bring construction costs down.

If developers refuse to build at current prices, suppliers of labour, construction materials and the ancillary goods and services that support the construction sector will have little choice but to lower them.

So this could be the beginning of the end of the construction boom, and prices will begin to drop to a level at which investors and developers feel comfortable that their projects will be profitable.

Of course, one of the problems with economics is it assumes a perfect or contestable market, without the distortions of government interference. In this poker game, politics is the wild card.

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

 

Health tests find dirty pools in hotels, condos

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

66 swimming pools, hot tubs hit with ‘high’ hazard ratings

Larry Pynn
Sun

The Best Western Hotel on the Lougheed Highway in Maple Ridge, one of three of the Phoenix, Ariz.,-based chain’s hotels to be given a high hazard rating by water inspectors, was cited by Fraser Health Authority for hygiene problems with its hot tub. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay/Vancouver Sun

The Ramada Inn, on the Lougheed Highway in Coquitlam, was among a number of hotels that received a high hazard rating for its swimming pool. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay/Vancouver Sun

Burnaby’s Holiday Inn Metrotown was given a high hazard rating for its swimming pool by the Fraser Health Authority. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay/Vancouver Sun

You’ve had a long hard day, and now it’s time — ahhhh — for a soothing soak in the hot tub or a refreshing swim in the pool of your hotel or condo development.

But even as the stress slips away, there is a nagging question in the back of your mind: is this water safe?

Turns out the answer too often is no, and that the same hotel that may caringly vacuum the carpets and ensures clean towels are on the rack might be failing to meet health standards poolside.

An extensive survey by The Vancouver Sun of Fraser Health Region inspection reports has found 66 pools and hot tubs — mainly in hotel and condo developments — that received a “high” hazard rating for failing to meet provincial health regulations so far this year.

Pool and hot tub violations typically involve a lack of disinfectant, improper pH balance, poor water clarity, improper water temperature and levels, failure to keep daily records, and maintain change rooms, handrails, and poor equipment such as flow meters and skimmers.

“If they’re not maintaining it properly, we’re in there, inspecting them, and letting them know,” said Surjeet Gill, health protection manager for the Fraser Health Region.

The authority provides the following definition for a high-hazard rating: “Significant problems were noted related to sanitation and/or infection-control procedures.

“The facility’s current operation significantly increases the risk of infection to clients and the operator must take immediate corrective action. The facility is approaching the highest level of risk considered acceptable for its continued operation. The facility may be closed if conditions worsen or the operator fails to eliminate the hazards.”

Don’t think the problem applies merely to flea-bag operations. The hotels cited by health inspectors are among North America‘s largest and most familiar chains.

Best Western had three hotels with high-hazard ratings: Maple Ridge (hot tub), Langley (pool) and Aldergrove (pool and hot tub). The Sun sought comment from the Best Western International Inc. corporate headquarters in Phoenix, Ariz., but no one called back.

Other hotels to violate health regulations included Ramada Inn in Surrey (pool) and Coquitlam (pool); Holiday Inn Metrotown in Burnaby (pool) and Holiday Inn Express in Langley (hot tub); and Hilton (hot tub) in Metrotown Burnaby.

The Travelodge Chilliwack achieved one of the worst records of compliance of any facility.

The hotel’s hot tub had a total of five high-hazard ratings during separate inspections between January and October for issues such as water temperature, disinfection, flow meter and re-circulation systems out of compliance. The hot tub also had high ratings twice in November 2006.

The pool, meanwhile, received high ratings in November 2006, and twice in June 2007.

Both the pool and hot tub are now at a low-hazard level. The hotel refused to comment.

Gill said that it is important to properly balance pH levels and maintain disinfectants such as chlorine or bromine to protect against the spread of skin diseases and irritation of the skin and eyes.

He said it’s especially important to properly maintain hot tubs because of the greater chance of spreading bacteria in a relative low volume of water; the higher temperature also allows chlorine to dissipate faster.

“The degree of risk is high in recreational water facilities,” Gill said. “There are so many variables — temperature, chlorine levels, pH, and the constant maintenance of these. Naturally, you’ll find more high-hazard facilities.”

He added that it’s important to keep the hot tub no hotter than 104 Celsius to avoid potential heart attacks.

Pool decks must also be disinfected to ward against transmission of ailments such as athlete’s foot.

Standards are set out under the Health Act’s Swimming Pool, Spray Pool, and Wading Pool Regulations.

Condo developments that feature common-use pools and hot tubs can just as easily fall afoul of the regulations.

Some of the condos given high-hazard ratings included Central Park Place (pool and hot tub) and Parkside Manor (hot tub) in Burnaby; Carnarvon Place (hot tub) and Promenade (hot tub) in New Westminster; Odyssey Towers and the Southmere Villa in Surrey; and the Embassy (hot tub) and Monterey (hot tub) in White Rock.

And while condos may contract out maintenance of pools and hot tubs, it is the strata that is ultimately responsible for ensuring health regulations are being met.

One of the more surprising facilities to make the list is the hot tub/therapeutic pool at the B.C. Lions training facility in Surrey.

The hot tub received high-hazard ratings for failing to maintain the pH balance and maintain water clarify, with similar past ratings dating back to 2003.

One can image a team of big sweaty players cramming the tub, then driving home with red rashes.

But the football team’s head trainer Bill Reichelt insists that’s not the case. “Not a big deal at all, actually.”

He said “every one of those times pretty well” the problem resulted from the hot tub’s lack of maintenance when the team is away on a road trip.

When players return home, they do not go into the water until the water condition has been made compliant, he insisted. “It’s not like a normal facility, where it’s used every day.”

The Fitness 2000 hot tub on Erickson Drive in Burnaby scored high-hazard ratings in January and February, for issues such as adequate pH controls, incomplete or lack of posted safety rules, and operating permit not posted in a conspicuous location.

One public facility to make the list is the Ladner Outdoor Swimming Pool, which received a high-hazard rating in August for “drinking water available not in compliance” and violations related to flow balance and pool water levels out of compliance. A follow-up inspection one week later reduce the hazard rating to low.

To view health inspection results for pools and hot tubs in the Fraser Health Region, visit www.healthspace.com/Clients/FHA/FHA_Website.nsf/Env-Frameset. Click on “recreational water” then “facilities and inspections” under quick links. There is a list of municipalities on the left.

Note that pools and hot tubs in private homes are exempt from the health regulations, as are those in bed-and-breakfast operations based out of single-family dwellings.

The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority — which covers Richmond, Vancouver, North Shore, Sea to Sky and Sunshine Coast — lists restaurant inspections, but not pool and hot tub inspections on its website.

Nick Losito, Vancouver Coastal’s regional director of health protection, said the authority is “probably six months to a year out from adding these to our public portal.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

British Columbia New Home Devlopment

Friday, December 7th, 2007

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Subprime plan could help 1.2 million

Friday, December 7th, 2007

Noelle Knox and Sue Kirchhoff
USA Today

Foreclosure signs such as this one in Herndon, Va., are becoming all too common in some places.

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced on Thursday details of a plan to freeze interest rates on hundreds of thousands of subprime mortgages, hours after new data showed a record number of homeowners went into foreclosure in the third quarter. None of them will be eligible for financial relief under the proposal.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced on Thursday details of a plan to freeze interest rates on hundreds of thousands of subprime mortgages, hours after new data showed a record number of homeowners went into foreclosure in the third quarter. None of them will be eligible for financial relief under the proposal.

Nearly one in five homeowners with subprime adjustable-rate loans — around 600,000 borrowers — were in default in the July-September quarter. But the rescue deal forged by regulators and the mortgage industry is designed to help 1.2 million who have subprime ARMs that would reset to higher rates starting next year through mid-2010.

The plan won’t help borrowers with prime ARM loans, either. Those loans accounted for nearly 19% of foreclosures begun in the third quarter — another record high. That figure is expected to surge even further in the next two years as more of those loans reset to higher rates. The pain will be particularly severe in California and Florida, which accounted for 42% of the new prime ARM foreclosures last quarter.

The administration’s plan “will make a difference,” Paulson said. “It will reduce the number of avoidable foreclosures.

“This is not a silver bullet,” he acknowledged.

The mortgage industry estimates that half of those eligible will have their rates frozen; the other half should have the financial strength to refinance into a fixed-rate loan.

But Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com, estimates that only about one-third of the eligible borrowers will be saved, because the plan faces legal and logistical hurdles. Resistance from investors and the plan’s tough qualifications could limit its success.

The alarming pace of foreclosures is threatening to send the real estate market deeper into recession and drag the economy down with it. After one of the most spectacular booms in history, fueled by flagrantly imprudent lending, the real estate market is suffering the biggest correction since the Great Depression, Zandi says. Home prices this year will post their first average annual drop since World War II, and will drop again next year, the Mortgage Bankers Association projects.

“We expect the housing market, broadly defined, to bottom out in late 2008, no earlier than the third quarter, because of the substantial inventories” of homes for sale, said Doug Duncan, the MBA’s chief economist.

A national 24-hour hotline exists for borrowers in financial trouble: 888-995-HOPE. But some credit counselors, already overwhelmed with calls, complain that loan-servicing companies lack the staff to handle the crushing caseload.

Linda Ingram, a credit counselor at Beyond Housing in St. Louis, is trying to get Saxon Mortgage to postpone a Jan. 8 foreclosure on a family with three children.

The loan officer “told me about many files he had stacked up on his desk,” she recalls. “I’m sure he has files to the ceiling with work, but my point to him is no one should lose their homes because you or I can’t get the volume of work done — let’s postpone it. But the process is continuing.”

A call to Saxon Mortgage was not returned.

Strict qualifications

Even as the average interest rate on a 30-year fixed-rate loan fell last week to 5.96%, the lowest point since September 2005, many subprime ARM borrowers will have trouble refinancing under the Bush administration’s plan. That’s largely because the qualifications are strict. Borrowers must live in the home and cannot have missed more than one payment in the past 12 months.

More than half the borrowers who got subprime ARMs last year, for example, provided little or no documentation of their income. These loans are nicknamed “liar loans” in the industry. It’s unclear how many borrowers who got this type of loan will be able to qualify for a new loan.

In September, the Federal Housing Administration launched a loan insurance program called FHASecure, designed to help borrowers refinance out of their subprime ARM loans. In the first three months, the FHA received 111,000 applications for the FHASecure loan but has funded fewer than one-third.

“It’s a nice attempt, but I’ve submitted two (applications), and both were denied,” said Pava Leyrer, a mortgage broker and president of Heritage National Mortgage in Grand Rapids, Mich. “There are lots of lenders saying they offer the program, but I’m not finding anyone who will do the loan,” she said. “I don’t think lenders are comfortable with it.”

In Michigan, one in four borrowers with a subprime ARM is in default. Last month, the Wayne County treasurer’s office ran a 121-page foreclosures notice in the Detroit Free Press. Community housing advisers say they’ve never seen so many people come through their doors looking for help paying their mortgages.

President Bush’s promise to freeze mortgage rates is a welcome first step, says Deborah Jones, president of the Detroit Alliance for Fair Banking, but more needs to be done.

“These foreclosures are like some sort of evil that has come to steal, kill and destroy the American dream,” Jones says. “We have to have corporate leaders and the government say, ‘This is massive — thousands of people are being affected. What can we do to provide a win-win solution for everyone?’ “

Michigan‘s high unemployment rate and massive job losses in the auto industry are partly to blame. The state is seeing its longest stretch of job losses since the Great Depression, say economists at the University of Michigan. From 2000 to 2006, the state lost 336,000 jobs and is predicted to lose an additional 33,000 by the end of 2008.

Across Detroit, homes are being boarded up and vandalized, and the shred of a downtown revival the city has seen in recent years is threatened if residents in the rest of the city can’t hang on to their homes.

Elmira Smith-Vincent, founder of Mission of Peace Community Development Corp. in Flint, Mich., says the number of people coming to her agency looking for help paying their home bills has skyrocketed in the past year. What’s most worrisome, she says, is that it’s no longer isolated to just low-income homeowners. Even traditionally middle-class homeowners are now seeking help.

Bush said Thursday: “We should not bail out lenders, real estate speculators or those who made the reckless decision to buy a home they knew they could never afford. Yet there are some responsible homeowners who could avoid foreclosure with some assistance.”

But his plan became an instant political flashpoint. The presidential candidates and key lawmakers issued statements to support or strike at the proposal.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, a member of the committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, said the plan was mainly too little, too late:

“Families across Ohio have known for a long time that we are in a housing crisis, but this administration told us that it was ‘largely contained.’ So long as it was largely contained to the Midwest, it didn’t require any response. But once Wall Street started to feel the pain, this administration jumped into action.”

Investor resistance likely

The most serious challenge to the plan is likely to come from investors, who are spread around the globe and could sue to protect the terms of the loans, which were pooled together and sold as bonds.

The bailout plan in itself is “more form than substance,” says Mark Morgan, analyst at Rochdale Securities. But the plan’s intent is to add confidence to the mortgage debt market and get it to start functioning again. And if it’s successful, Morgan says, investment banks and investors holding bonds backed by the lowest-rated subprime loans could benefit.

Standard & Poor’s isn’t so sure. The rating agency said, “Since security holders considered the original loan terms and rate resets when making their initial investment decisions, the loss of potential payments or returns may discourage continued participation in the U.S. subprime” mortgage market.

Stock investors, however, celebrated the bailout.

The S&P 500 Homebuilding index gained 13%, the biggest one-day percentage gain by the index since it was created in 1989, says Howard Silverblatt of S&P. Still, the index is down almost 60% over the past 12 months, he says.

Even Toll Bros., which on Thursday posted an $82 million quarterly loss, saw its stock rise 13%, despite CEO Robert Toll’s dismal synopsis: “By many measures, fiscal 2007 was the most challenging of the 40 years that Toll Bros. has been in business.”

Tim Backshall, chief credit derivatives strategist at Credit Derivatives Research, said, “The housing recession is still the worst in U.S. history and is likely to get worse, regardless of this relief plan. We don’t expect this to help in the short term. A hard landing for the economy is unavoidable, regardless of any debt relief plan.”

Proposals in Congress might provide additional relief. One bill would change the bankruptcy law to let judges change the terms of a loan. And the administration also wants Congress to temporarily change the tax law to relieve the burden on homeowners who sell their homes for less than they owe the bank.

And to stop history from repeating itself, the Federal Reserve will issue new rules this month, targeting liar loans, prepayment penalties and the borrower’s ability to repay the debt.

“While (the new plan) is not a permanent solution, it is a critical step forward for buying time for families,” said Michael Heid, co-president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage (WFC). “It also buys time for the housing market to hopefully stabilize so that refinancing options again become available for all of these consumers.”

 

Residential building sets record in B.C.

Friday, December 7th, 2007

Permits for October post the biggest one-month percentage gain

Sun

British Columbia recorded a whopping 38-per-cent increase in the value of residential building permits issued in October, the largest one-month percentage gain in Canada, Statistics Canada said Thursday.

Across Canada, building permits rose more sharply than expected in October as the value of permits issued by municipalities rose 6.8 per cent to $6.7 billion, the agency said.

In B.C., the value of housing permits rose to $848 million. Most of that came from a 70-per-cent increase in multiple residential units approved.

The federal government’s data-gatherer noted that totals in previous months were smaller, partly because of a municipal worker strike in the city of Vancouver.

That’s borne out by the numbers for Metro Vancouver, where the value of all permits, both residential and non-residential, increased by 81.6 per cent, the largest percentage increase among Canada‘s major census metropolitan areas (CMAs), to more than $664 million.

The value of non-residential permits in B.C. rose 35.7 per cent from September, to more than $848 million.

“The strong rebound in building permits shows that dips earlier this year were likely due to the civic strike,” says Keith Sashaw, president of the Vancouver Regional Construction Association. “We’re pleased to see the figures rebound, and the medium-term outlook continues to be strong.”

The Abbotsford CMA reported even stronger results than Metro Vancouver, with gains of 100.6 per cent in the value of all permits, both residential and non-residential.

Nationally, forecasts had estimated an 0.8-per-cent increase.

Intentions in the residential sector remained stable at $4 billion, while in the non-residential sector intentions rose 19.3 per cent to $2.6 billion.

Overall, building permits remained above $6-billion mark for the sixth month in a row in October, Statistics Canada said.

The value of permits for multi-family dwellings gained 21.8 per cent in October to $1.6 billion, the second-highest level since December 2005.

The value of single-family permits fell 10.6 per cent to $2.4 billion.

“On a year-to-date basis, municipalities issued $62.1 billion worth of permits from January to October, up 14.2 per cent from the same period in 2006. This was only $4.2 billion short of the record for an entire year, set in 2006,” Statistics Canada said.

The value of non-residential permits surged in October, thanks to the strong demand for commercial space in the Calgary census metropolitan area, which gained by 42.1 per cent.

A large part of the overall gain in the non-residential sector came from commercial construction intentions. The value of commercial permits totalled $1.6 billion, up 23.1 per cent from September.

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

 

TiVo, ‘VCR on steroids,’ selling ‘extremely well’

Friday, December 7th, 2007

TV recording device available in U.S. for years is welcomed with open wallets in B.C. stores

Marke Andrews
Sun

VANCOUVER — Like many marketing managers, Lee Scherbinsky can talk a blue streak about a new product. But in the case of TiVo, the television recording device, which arrived in British Columbia stores…

TIVo requires a permanent internet cable connection or a wireless adapter. It can pause live television and skip ads.

Like many marketing managers, Lee Scherbinsky can talk a blue streak about a new product.

But in the case of TiVo, the television recording device, which arrived in British Columbia stores just days ago, Scherbinsky has a personal interest because he got one for himself.

TiVo is like a VCR on steroids,” said Scherbinsky, home theatre merchandise manager for Future Shop, from the company’s head office in Burnaby.

“The user experience is so remarkable,” said Scherbinsky, who’s had his TiVo for 10 days.

TiVo, which has been available in the U.S. for almost a decade but only reached Canada within the last two weeks, is known as a “smart recorder” of television programming.

The box device, which requires a permanent Internet cable connection or a wireless adapter, will record shows with very little searching. If, say, you like Clint Eastwood westerns but don’t like his cop movies, you can punch in “Clint Eastwood western” and the TiVo will record every Eastwood cowboy movie that comes up in your service area for as long as you like.

It can record two shows at once, or pause live television in case you have to leave the room.

Like a VCR, it can skip past commercials, a plus for viewers who don’t want to sit through a two- or three-minute delay when viewing shows and movies.

The TiVo box, which has an 80-gigabyte hard drive, sells for $200. A wireless adapter retails for $59.

Customers who purchase TiVo must also pay for a monthly or annual subscription charge for the service, which is $12.95 a month or $129 a year.

Future Shop only got TiVo in all its stores on Tuesday, but accepted pre-orders from customers, who got a free wireless adapter with the order.

Susan Kirk, communications manager at Future Shop, said pre-orders were heavy, and she anticipates TiVo will be a big seller during the Christmas shopping period.

TiVo may have a relatively short shelf life, however, because it does not work with high definition (HD) television programming in Canada.

You can get an HD TiVo box in the U.S., but not in Chilliwack or Vancouver. Because of that, Scherbinsky believes that sales “are going to be tempered, to some degree,” because most televisions bought now are HDTVs, although that doesn’t necessarily mean that the HDTV buyer is receiving HD programming.

“Less than 10 per cent of people who buy an HDTV buy HD programming,” said Scherbinsky, adding that those who want a similar device for HD programming will likely get the Shaw box.

Colin Cottrell, merchandise manager for electronics and audio-video systems at London Drugs, said customer reaction to the TiVo has been very strong.

“The sell-through has been incredible considering we haven’t done any advertising,” said Cottrell, who added that the first ad for TiVo appeared in a Tuesday flyer, more than a week after the stores had the device.

“A lot of customers have known about the product for several years, and don’t need really need much explanation,” said Cottrell.

“Others have heard about TiVo, and are coming in and asking lots of questions, and a good percentage of them are buying.

“It’s been selling extremely well,” said Cottrell, who wonders if he should have ordered more TiVos on his initial order.

Best Buy and The Brick stores also sell the TiVo.

INCREASING COMMERCIAL BREAKS ADD TO TIVO’S APPEAL

Just like VCRs and digital video recorders, the new-to-Canada TiVo can fast-forward through commercials when you play back your favourite shows or movies recorded off television.

Sometimes those commercial breaks seem interminable, running for two, three, four minutes at a time. But, then, who’s counting?

The CRTC, that’s who.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission has explicit rules as to how much advertising television stations in Canada can carry.

On Sept. 1, that limit rose from 12 minutes to 14 minutes per hour in the prime-time period of 7 p.m. to 11 p.m., and 12 minutes per hour for the rest of the broadcast day.

Half-hour prime-time shows are limited to seven minutes of ads. A two-hour show can package the ads any way it wants (and the tendency is to place more ads as the show reaches its climax), provided the prime-time total does not exceed 28 minutes.

Specialty services — cable and satellite outlets with paid subscribers — can carry 12 minutes of ads per hour of their broadcast day.

The exceptions are community channels, which cannot carry commercial advertising other than sponsorship ads (although community-based stations and digital services with fewer than 2,000 subscribers can carry 12 minutes of local advertising), and pay-TV services, which carry no ads.

Next September, the CRTC limit rises to 15 minutes per hour per broadcast day. But it’s 2009 when items like TiVo will be in demand, because that’s when the CRTC lifts all time limits on commercials.

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

 

Realtors attribute dip in detached-home prices to seasonal slump

Friday, December 7th, 2007

Derrick Penner
Sun

The latest housing market statistics show the average Fraser Valley house price has declined for the second month in a row, reaching $511,176 in November.

That price is the lowest for detached homes since March, reported the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board.

Realtors look at the shift as nothing more than a seasonal slump, and economists are uncomfortable calling it a price trend other than to say it follows evidence of the market slipping into equilibrium.

“You never want to read too much into any one month,” said Tsur Somerville, director of urban economics and real estate at the University of B.C.‘s Sauder School of Business.

“[But] clearly there is a pattern here that suggests things in the Fraser Valley have started to slow down, just because of lower price increases, declining sales and rising listings.”

The average house price appears to have peaked in September, when it reached $535,572, after rising from $494,177 in January.

Somerville added he’s wary of making bold statements about trends from looking only at average prices, because the quality of homes sold from month to month can vary widely in a region as large as the Fraser Valley.

“They have a large geography, and have areas like Crescent Beach that are very different from Whalley,” he said.

The Fraser Valley Real Estate Board is made up of the communities south of the Fraser River from North Delta and Surrey to Mission.

An average Fraser Valley house at $511,176 in November was still 4.9 per cent higher than the $487,392 average price a year earlier, but Somerville added the year-over-year price growth has slowed considerably.

Richard Sam, a market analyst with Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., said that while the overall Fraser Valley price slipped, pockets saw rising prices.

“Traditionally, sales do tend to slow in the fall and winter,” Sam said, “and because of that, too, you see a bit of price slippage, as well.”

Sam said that looking at his statistics, he counted a similar month to month decline in average house prices between September and November of 2006, as well.

Sam added there seems to be growing competition between municipalities, with sales of single-detached homes in Langley holding up better than those in Mission, Abbotsford, or Surrey.

The preferences of buyers look like they’re shifting, as well, Sam added, with more multi-family developments being built in Surrey.

“I think people are changing their expectations,” Sam said, with people realizing that if they want to get into the market they’ll have to buy a townhouse or condominium.

Overall, Sam said the region’s economy is strong, although job growth in the Fraser Valley might be slowing somewhat as the high Canadian dollar continues to hurt manufacturing exports and retail trade.

Jim McCaughan, president of the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board, said he believes the price decline represents nothing more than a seasonal slowdown.

He added average prices have risen and dropped from month to month a few times in 2007.

And while White Rock experienced the biggest month-to-month drop in November, falling 16.3 per cent to $726,774, North Delta’s average house price rose four per cent to hit its highest price ever at $508,433.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. doesn’t do a market forecast for the entire Fraser Valley, McCaughan added, but it does compile one for the Abbotsford census area, which calls for 10-per-cent price growth in 2008.

“That means that while the market is going to fluctuate, at the end of the year you’re going to have increases,” he said. “The fact that we have an up and down [price] graph to get there has gone on forever.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

Thinking of switching to a Mac? Here’s why you might

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Edward C. Baig
USA Today

Customers browse iMacs at an Apple Store in Salt Lake City. Macs are generally more expensive than Windows PCs, but Mac lovers say they’re worth it.

Most consumers seeking a new computer this holiday season will buy a Windows PC. And yet judging by the questions I get, many would-be buyers are considering a Macintosh for the first time, possibly because they’re smitten with the iPod, or because of Apple’s clever Mac guy/PC guy TV ads.

I’m a Mac guy, too, though not one who believes bashing Windows is a prerequisite. So consider this column a primer on switching to the Mac. I’ll come back next week with advice for folks who plan on sticking with Windows.

Answers to some key questions:

Why are Macs special?

It’s like explaining the difference between a Buick and a BMW. Both get you from here to there, only the ride is generally smoother and more fun. Put another way, Windows users tolerate their computers to get stuff done. The Mac crowd enjoys its machines, whether managing music in iTunes or pictures in iPhoto.

Mac hardware is beautifully designed; the strikingly thin all-in-one iMac desktop, for example, has an anodized aluminum frame and glossy glass cover. The underlying software is polished, robust and secure, with see-through menus and fanciful icons that spring to life when you click on them. Indeed, Apple’s computers to date have been immune from the scourge of viruses and malware that have long plagued Windows.

Macs aren’t completely trouble-free; programs on my own iMac sometimes freeze up. But the machines are exceedingly reliable, much more so in my experience than their Windows rivals.

Is there a learning curve?

Sure, but it’s not as steep as you might think. Apple’s operating system is known as OS X (pronounced “Oh S Ten”). The latest version carries the nickname Leopard; previous iterations were called Tiger, Jaguar and Panther.

Microsoft’s latest operating system, Windows Vista, adds features that have been part of OS X for a while, including universal desktop search. You’ll have to pick up a new vocabulary, of course. Example: Windows users dispose of files in the “recycle bin.” Mac users dump them in the “trash.”

For $99, you can buy a year’s worth of weekly personalized training sessions at Apple retail stores.

Are there things I can’t do on a Mac?

Occasionally. You may work for a company or take a class whose software requires Windows. But Microsoft has long produced an Office suite for the Mac — a new version is coming — with Word, Excel, PowerPoint and an Outlook-like program called Entourage. So you can read and edit Word files, say, on a PC that were created on a Mac and vice versa.

Mac and Windows PCs can be on the same wired or wireless network, and share printers, common file types, cameras, keyboards and other peripherals. You can even connect a Mac to a PC to move files from one machine to the other.

Printers and other peripherals often work with a Mac out of the box, without you having to load or update software.

Not all programs are superior on a Mac, however. I’ve traditionally preferred the Windows version of Intuit’s Quicken finance software to the Mac version.

Gamers should note that OS X has far fewer titles than Windows does.

You may also run across a website that doesn’t work with Mac’s Safari browser. But the overwhelming majority of sites work just fine with Safari or other Mac-friendly browsers. Microsoft no longer produces or supports Internet Explorer for the Mac.

Aren’t Macs pricier?

Well, you won’t find sub-$400 bargains. The cheapest Mac, the 6.5-inch-square Mac Mini starts at $599 — without monitor, keyboard or mouse.

Among consumer desktops, the iMac line starts at $1,199 (and goes way up from there). It’s sold with a 20- or 24-inch screen.

Apple sells a more expensive Pro line of desktops, but they’re beyond the scope of the typical home user.

Among notebooks, entry-level MacBooks have 13.3-inch displays and cost $1,099 on up; they’re terrific consumer or student notebooks. The MacBook Pro comes in 15- and 17-inch versions and starts at $1,999. It has superior graphics, among other enhancements.

You get a lot of bang for the buck across all the machines, though in some cases you’ll want to splurge for a more generous hard drive and extra memory. New models come with iLife ’08, a slick multimedia software suite for handling pictures (iPhoto), video editing (iMovie), making music (GarageBand) and websites (iWeb).

Leopard has standout features of its own, including Time Machine (dirt-simple backup) and iChat (way cool video chat).

How do I run Windows on a Mac?

Macs with Intel chips — Apple converted all its models over to Intel in 2006 — can run a program called Boot Camp, which comes with Leopard. It lets you boot up into Windows or OS X, but not both simultaneously. And you’ll have to buy your own copy of Windows XP or Vista.

Through so-called virtualization software, available from third-party companies such as Parallels or VMware, you can run the two operating systems at the same time.

Apple owners heap lavish praise on Macs for good reason. These are solid and elegant computers that are well worth your consideration.

‘Showcase lounge’ for coffee in Kits

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

49th Parallel offers 13 roasts and the best in pastry and chocolate treats to nibble on

Mia Stainsby
Sun

Conrad Brown (left) and Colter Jones at 49th Parallel Coffee Bar on Fourth Avenue. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay, Vancouver Sun

When coffee worship migrated north from Seattle, java-philes launched into this dark brew with the intensity of ardent oenophiles. Our version of Starbucks is Vince Piccolo, former owner of Caffe Artigiano and now, coffee wholesaler.

His company, 49th Parallel, buys, blends, roasts, packages and then sells coffee to discerning retailers around North America. His 49th Parallel coffee bar in Kitsilano is the “showcase lounge” for the dark, rich brew.

The room is like a cup of coffee itself, in signature dark browns and “Tiffany blue” — colours that also conjure a Birks‘ blue box, wrapped in its brown ribbon. See? Colour psychology at work!

But it’s not all about packaging. To go with the excellent coffees, he brings in coffee-friendly edibles from Thomas Haas, the prince of pastries and chocolates — brioche, pain au chocolat, croissants, almond croissant and quark cheese danish zapped with lemon zest and raisins. Other edibles include chocolate sour cherry torte, biscotti, carrot cake and brownies.

As for coffee, there are 13 roasts, including single-origin beans from Australia called Australian Mountain Top. It’s served in their espresso-based drinks on Fridays. For drip coffee, they use a Clover coffee system which brews up fresh coffee by the cup in one minute. And regulars, take note.

Every so often, Piccolo or one of his staff will be conducting cuppings, which, in coffee-speak, means tastings.

“Our goal is to be the world’s best coffee roaster. We only see the best coffees and are meticulous in buyng green, the way it’s shipped, sample-roasted, the way it’s cupped, roasted, packaged and produced,” says Piccolo.

In the end, coffee isn’t about words. Go and check it out yourself. I think you’ll like it. It’s open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Saturday and 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday.

– – –

49TH PARALLEL

2152 West Fourth Ave., 604-420-4901, www.49thparallelcoffeeroasters.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

Classic French bistro fare, pure and simple

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Pied-a-Terre’s Andrey Durbach isn’t into inventing, just cooking French favourites with skill and top-notch ingredients

Mia Stainsby
Sun

Pied-a-Terre’s atmosphere is cosy and friendly with an intimate glow. Photograph by : Ian Smith, Vancouver Sun

Since Pied-a-Terre is Number 3 in a growing family of restaurants run by Andrey Durbach and Chris Stewart, it was possible to imagine what was coming: delicious, uncomplicated food.

Durbach shows his global positioning on food with his snub of molecular gastronomy, that trend to make scientific experiments of food.

“I don’t put pop rocks in my tuna or white chocolate foam replicating chantilly [flavoured whipped cream],” he says. “The way forward is to make a perfect beurre blanc, a beautifully silky chocolate mousse. I like the big, bold classic flavours and textures in food. I like that more than I like mucking around with molecular gastronomy and super-fancy plate presentations.”

Word-of-mouth on the bistro’s opening had spread quickly. Even with Cambie Street in a dishevelled mess, it was hard to book a table for the hour we wanted.

Pied-a-Terre rounds out the trio of restaurants perfectly. Parkside is impassioned West Coast; La Buca is a well-dressed Italian trattoria; and this latest is a classic French bistro. Durbach’s strength is simple food with a culinary laying on of hands, producing dishes with impact, with layers of flavour and nice transitions.

The other down-home French bistro, Jules, in Gastown, immediately springs to mind in comparison. Pied-a-Terre has better food (and that’s saying a lot because I’m nuts about Jules’ food) but Jules has more atmosphere in the charming space in the heritage Dominion Hotel.

That’s not to say Pied-a-Terre lacks atmosphere. It’s warm and neighbourhoody with an intimate glow about it. On the menu, you’ve got your steak frites (four kinds of steaks, four choices of sauces), your beef bourguignon, your steak tartare, coq au vin and duck a l’orange.

He’s not inventing anything here. He’s just making those classics in the best way he can with top-notch ingredients and a lot of know-how. He manages to keep the prices reasonable ($16.50 to $27 for dinner mains).

“It’s a carte of French bourgeois classics,” he says. “This is personally right in my wheel-house.

The build-up to his Alsatian onion pie involves onions that have been sweated “forever and ever and ever” until it’s condensed to a rich caramelized mass. He mixes in sage, rosemary, egg yolks, cream, gruyere cheese and it turns out to be the best I’ve had. Baked mussels were small but came with an incredible sauce. Entrecote (New York steak) with frites, creamed spinach and baked tomato was delicious. Fillet of trout amandine was a satisfyingly large portion cooked properly and set atop tiny, turned vegetables.

I don’t think you can beat the huge escargots you get in Burgundy but here, you get better than average. Yummy! Steak tartare, if not done well, turns my stomach. Here, I loved it with the lively seasoning and very fresh beef. Duck a l’orange had a glossy sauce and good flavour. My only disappointment was the lamb “a sept heures” (cooked, I guess, for seven hours); it was fall-apart tender, but strangely, not moist or delicious.

For dessert, the rustic tarte tatin is a burst of apple and the lemon tart comes with a brulee topping. Drinks, assembled by Stewart, feature affordable French whites and reds (“I challenge anyone, pound for pound, to punch out that rich, spicy taste,” Durbach says, of a $35 bottle of Fabas Minervois from Languedoc) as well as a classic French bistro selection of apertifs.

It’s no wonder that a carved-up Cambie Street had little impact on this restaurant but the 20 parking spots behind the restaurant is definitely a plus.

PIED-A-TERRE

Overall: 4

Food: 4

Ambience: 4

Service: 3 1/2

Price $$

3369 Cambie St., 604-873-3131

Open for lunch and dinner, Monday to Friday; dinner only Saturday and Sunday, www.pied-a-terre-bistro.ca

Restaurant visits are conducted anonymously and interviews are done by phone. Restaurants are rated out of five stars.

© The Vancouver Sun 2007