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Western News: June 25, 2019

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WESTERN NEWS Latest Christchurch news at www.star.kiwi<br />

Tuesday <strong>June</strong> <strong>25</strong> <strong>2019</strong> 3<br />

<strong>News</strong><br />

Another challenge for former head boy<br />

JAKE BAILEY has been bitten<br />

by the Kathmandu Coast to<br />

Coast bug and will line up in the<br />

race for a second time next year.<br />

He will compete as an<br />

individual in 2020 after being<br />

part of a three-person relay this<br />

year.<br />

It’s a remarkable turnaround<br />

for the former Christchurch<br />

Boys’ High School head boy,<br />

who fought off Burkitt’s non-<br />

Hodgkin’s lymphoma, only to<br />

struggle to walk unassisted after<br />

chemotherapy damaged the<br />

nerves in his legs.<br />

But true to form, and his<br />

incredible resilience, in February<br />

– three years after his initial<br />

diagnosis – the 21-year-old took<br />

on the three-part 140km bike<br />

ride to cross the finish line in<br />

New Brighton alongside two<br />

of his ex-school mates, James<br />

Dunbar and Dalton Ewing.<br />

“The feeling of<br />

accomplishment was incredible.<br />

I was so humbled to have been<br />

able to be a part of an event with<br />

so much history and meaning<br />

to the Canterbury community<br />

– and also fairly grateful that I<br />

made it,” Bailey said.<br />

Almost as quickly as he<br />

crossed the finish line, like many<br />

who start their Coast to Coast<br />

journey as part of a team, Bailey<br />

has already set his sights on the<br />

RESILIENT: Former CBHS head boy Jake Bailey, who fought<br />

off cancer only to find the nerves in his legs were damaged by<br />

the chemotherapy, will take on the Kathmandu Coast to Coast<br />

again next year.<br />

challenge of completing the<br />

243km course in the two-day<br />

individual event.<br />

“Even the day before at the<br />

registration you start to feel<br />

how special the event is and<br />

how much it will mean to you to<br />

achieve the Kathmandu Coast<br />

to Coast, and then when you do<br />

cross that finish line, you just<br />

want to do it again,” he said.<br />

“It’s a tough race, there’s no<br />

doubt about it, but having grown<br />

up in Christchurch and seen<br />

family members and friends do<br />

it for years, I just want to be able<br />

to say I did that too, the whole<br />

thing on my own. I went from<br />

one side of the South Island to<br />

the other and it was all me.”<br />

Having recently completed the<br />

Tour de Cure, a 1400km bike<br />

race in Australia, Bailey says<br />

he is comfortable with the bike<br />

and run legs of the event, but<br />

mastering the kayak, including<br />

earning his grade two certificate,<br />

will be a challenge.<br />

“It’s probably my biggest<br />

challenge to learn the kayak,<br />

but I’ve got more than 200 days<br />

to get myself sorted, so I’m<br />

confident I’ve got enough time<br />

to get myself organised. And<br />

there are some fantastic people<br />

around that I’m sure will help<br />

me out along the way.”<br />

Now in remission for the<br />

third year, Bailey is also looking<br />

forward to continuing to<br />

demonstrate there is life after an<br />

illness like cancer.<br />

“I’d like to show survivors that<br />

they can go on to better things.<br />

That cancer doesn’t define them.<br />

I often meet parents whose<br />

kids are going through cancer<br />

and they’re incredibly worried<br />

about how their kids might<br />

come out the other side from a<br />

physical standpoint, and I guess<br />

I’m walking proof that life can<br />

be good, it can be great, and it<br />

shouldn’t hold you back.”<br />

Local<br />

<strong>News</strong><br />

Now<br />

In Brief<br />

Fire rages, homes at risk<br />

CHANEYS TRAFFIC LIGHTS<br />

Two-way traffic on Main North<br />

Rd, near the closed Chaneys<br />

on-ramp, will be managed with<br />

temporary traffic lights until early<br />

October. The lights are on a timer<br />

and are vehicle-activated. The<br />

work being done is part of the<br />

Christchurch Northern Corridor<br />

upgrades, and will include a<br />

stormwater culvert, IT cables and<br />

the reconstruction of Main North<br />

Rd.<br />

PHOTO COMPETITION<br />

Think Papanui is running its<br />

Papanui in Pictures photo<br />

competition. A $50 gift voucher<br />

provided by Mitre 10 Mega<br />

Papanui is up for grabs. To enter<br />

visit thinkpapanui.nz before the<br />

competition closes on July 21.<br />

YOUTH GRANTS<br />

The Fendalton-Waimairi-<br />

Harewood Community Board<br />

has granted $500 to Fendalton’s<br />

Cassandra Hetherington to<br />

compete at the International Junior<br />

Canoe world champs in Romania<br />

in August. A $500 grant has gone to<br />

Bishopdale’s Talesha Ellen Cooper<br />

Brook’s for the International<br />

Korfball Federation World Cup<br />

in South Africa in August, while<br />

Strowan’s Madeline Morrow<br />

received $<strong>25</strong>0 to attend the under-17<br />

national basketball tournament in<br />

Auckland next month.<br />

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HAVE YOUR SAY<br />

Change the speed limit<br />

to 60km/h?<br />

We want to make Christchurch roads safer. We’re reviewing<br />

speed limits across our roading network.<br />

We are proposing to change 80 km/h and 70 km/h speed limits to<br />

60 km/h in the Marshland, Spencerville and Kainga area:<br />

• Marshland / Main North Roads<br />

• Spencerville / Kainga Roads<br />

• Local road network west of Marshland Road.<br />

Consultation is open until 2 July.<br />

Let us know what you think<br />

ccc.govt.nz/haveyoursay<br />

Leaflets available<br />

on request.<br />

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