Our Team
Jeremy Shepherd
Managing Editor
A chiropractor and a folk singer, after having one great kid, decided to push their luck and have one more, a boy they named Jeremy Shepherd.
Shepherd grew up around Blue Mountain Park in Coquitlam, following a basketball around and trying his best to get to the NBA (it didn’t work out, at least not yet).
With no career plans after graduating Porter Elementary school, Jeremy Shepherd pursued higher education at Como Lake Middle School and eventually, Centennial High School.
Approximately 1,000 movies and several beers later in life, Shepherd made a change.
Having done nothing worth writing, he decided to see if he could write something worth reading.
Since graduating journalism school at Langara College, Shepherd has been a reporter, editor and, reluctantly, a content provider for community newspapers around Metro Vancouver for more than 10 years.
He worked with dogged reporters, eloquently indignant curmudgeons and creative photographers, all of whom shared a little of what they knew.
Now, as he goes about the business of raising two fascinating humans alongside a wonderful partner, Shepherd is delighted to report news and tell stories in the Tri-Cities.
He runs, reads, and is intrigued by art, science, smart cities and new ideas. He is pleased to meet you.
Patrick Penner, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
Reporter
Having spent the first 20 years of his life in Port Moody, Patrick Penner has finally returned as a hometown reporter.
His youth was spent wiping out on snowboards, getting hit in the face with hockey pucks, and frolicking on boats in the Port Moody Arm.
After graduating Heritage Woods Secondary School, Penner wandered around aimlessly for a year before being given an ultimatum by loving, but concerned, parents: “rent or college.”
With that, he was off to the University of Victoria to wander slightly less aimlessly from book, to classroom, to beer, and back.
Penner achieved his undergraduate degree in 2017, majoring in political science and minoring in history.
To absolutely no one’s surprise, translating this newfound education into career opportunities proved somewhat challenging.
After working for a short time as a lowly grunt in various labour jobs, Penner’s fruitless drifting came to an end.
He decided it was time to hit the books again. This time, with focus.
Nine months later, Penner had received a certificate of journalism from Langara College and was awarded the Jeani Read-Michael Mercer Fellowship upon graduation.
When that scholarship led to a front page story in the Vancouver Sun, he knew he had found his calling.
Penner moved to Abbotsford to spend the next three years learning from grizzled reporters and editors at Black Press Media.
Assigned to the Mission Record as the city’s sole reporter, he developed a taste for investigative and civic reporting, eventually being nominated for the 2023 John Collison Investigative Journalism Award.
Unfortunately, dwindling resources and cutbacks in the community media sphere convinced Penner to seek out alternative ways to deliver the news.
When a position opened up at the Tri-Cities Dispatch, he knew it was time to jump ship and sail back home to beautiful Port Moody.

