A few months after the 2017 Terry Fox run in 91原创 City, the volunteers who work on the annual event began preparing for the next one.
Janice Busby says usually, the work starts out slow, then the pace picks up as the date draws near.
It can get hectic.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just like a whirlwind,鈥 said Busby.
鈥淚t鈥檚 crazy, but it鈥檚 a good crazy. We have a wonderful group.鈥
Busby will be managing the concession at Douglas Park (20550 Douglas Cres.) on the morning of Sunday, September 16, when the takes place.
She has been working on the run since it was revived in 91原创 City nine years ago.
鈥淭hey were looking to bring the run back and they were looking for people,鈥 Busby said.
Not that she required much convincing.
鈥淭erry Fox is my hero,鈥 she said.
鈥淚ts a wonderful thing (that) we鈥檙e still carrying on his dream. I鈥檝e lost my dad, I鈥檝e lost friends to cancer. I, too, would like to see a cure.鈥
She said among the positives of volunteering is the experience of seeing people come back to the run year after year, either for a themselves or for a family member.
鈥淲hy do I do it? Because of the people I end up working with and volunteering with,鈥 she said.
鈥(It鈥檚) keeping Terry鈥檚 dream alive.鈥
Last year, there were 228 participants in the 91原创 City run, who raised a total of $13,801 by walking or running routes of varying lengths.
Achieving that total required 50 volunteers, who began setting up for the 10 a.m. start at 7 a.m.
The 91原创 City Terry Fox Run has raised over $136,000 for cancer research since it started, while the Walnut Grove run in 91原创 Township has collected $140,000 to date and the Aldergrove run has raised $79,000.
Those amounts don鈥檛 include funds raised by local schools and other groups.
Since Terry Fox set out on his Marathon of Hope, over $750 million has been raised by hundreds of thousands of participants across Canada.
Donna White, British Columbia and Yukon Provincial Director of the Terry Fox run, said the volunteers are 鈥渁 human chain linked by a common purpose 鈥 to make a positive difference in the fight against cancer.鈥
People interested in volunteering can learn more at or contact the regional office at 604-464-2666, or email email donna.white@terryfoxrun.org.
After he lost a leg to cancer, Terry Fox began the Marathon of Hope in 1980 to raise money for cancer research, saying if each Canadian could contribute just a dollar, millions could be raised to fight cancer.
After 143 days and 5,373 kilometres Fox was forced to end his run near Thunder Bay, Ontario after his cancer spread to his lungs.
Terry Fox Runs have taken place every year on the second Sunday following Labour Day since September of 1981.
They are volunteer-led, all-inclusive, non-competitive events with no corporate sponsorship, incentives or fundraising minimums according to the expressed wishes of Terry Fox.
dan.ferguson@langleytimes.com
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