Vancouver Sun

Land developer pitches in to help Langley students

Secondary school breakfast program benefits from company donation

- GERRY BELLET gbellett@gmail.com Vansunkids­fund.ca

The story was hardly in the paper when Rick Johal was sending out an email offering to adopt Langley Secondary school’s troubled breakfast program.

About 120 students a day arrive at the school hungry and in need of food, but a lack of funding had placed the program in jeopardy.

“I always read The Vancouver Sun and I was shocked to see that Langley Secondary needed help. I was not aware there was a problem there,” said Johal, president of Zenterra Developmen­ts Ltd., a land developmen­t and constructi­on company that works extensivel­y in Surrey and Langley.

“When I saw the story I thought, oh my God, we have to help them.”

Johal is one of the major donors who have responded to The Vancouver Sun’s Adopt-A-School (AAS) campaign, which this year has received almost $1 million in requests from schools desperate to feed hungry students.

Johal’s company supports a multitude of charities — its website is a who’s who of good causes helped — and he has put more than $170,000 into feeding needy Surrey children through the school district’s Surrey Meals Program. Surrey’s school district is asking AAS for more than $300,000 this year to feed, clothe and care for hundreds of impoverish­ed children and families including refugees.

Other companies, individual­s and foundation­s have offered help this year, as well as private donors.

Vancouver Sun editor-in-chief Harold Munro said the number of applicatio­ns has far exceeded anything seen before.

“We are being asked for double what we normally see in requests. It’s daunting, but we hope our readers will respond,” said Munro.

The requests have come from many parts of the mainland and schools on Vancouver Island.

Vancouver-based property developers PCI Developmen­ts have come forward to help one of the schools, Britannia Secondary, as did CIBC Wood Gundy, who have been supporting emergency breakfast programs in Vancouver schools for years.

“The reason for us helping was that it caught our attention,” said PCI Developmen­ts president Andrew Grant.

“We want to support young people and we have donated to Adopt-A-School before,” he said. “It’s important for us to give children a good start to the day and we want to support that.”

Among those also helping is The David Sidoo family, which has helped AAS from the beginning, likewise Vancouver lawyer Irwin Nathanson’s family and a number of foundation­s, such as the McGrane-Pearson Endowment Fund, Peter Young ’s Hearts of Gold Foundation, the Lohn Foundation and a number of foundation­s that have asked to remain anonymous.

Telus has helped the campaign from the beginning.

There are other organizati­ons that help AAS as well such as Metro Theatre, which donates a pantomime performanc­e to students attending Downtown Eastside elementary schools.

This year children and families will be welcomed by the cast of King Arthur’s Court, on Dec. 13 at 7:30 p.m.

Writer and producer Catherine Morrison said the pantomime, which runs from Dec. 14 to Jan. 5, is a combinatio­n of Camelot and Monty Python and the Holy Grail with all the usual onstage antics.

“We just love being able to do this for Adopt-A- School and these children,” she said.

 ?? PNG MERLIN ARCHIVE ?? Sparky MacDonald, left, Catherine Morrison and Colton Fyfe are part of Metro Theatre’s show King Arthur’s Court, and are donating a performanc­e on Dec. 13 to Downtown Eastside families.
PNG MERLIN ARCHIVE Sparky MacDonald, left, Catherine Morrison and Colton Fyfe are part of Metro Theatre’s show King Arthur’s Court, and are donating a performanc­e on Dec. 13 to Downtown Eastside families.

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