Surrey North Delta Leader, July 03, 2012

Page 1

Cities move to save sharks page 3

International play ty begins at Softball City page 13

Tuesday July 3, 2012 Serving Surrey and North h Delta www.surreyleader.com w w. w. w.surrey y leader.com le

Region kicks off search for waste-toenergy sites Metro ‘crazy’ to name locations ahead of technology, says Marvin Hunt by Jeff Nagel

A new kind of

METRO VANCOUVER is launching

an informal 90-day process to identify potential sites and operators of a new waste-to-energy (WTE) plant to consume more of the region’s garbage. But some directors fear it’s a recipe for panic in their cities if prospective sites are named this fall because Metro won’t yet know what technology – incineration or some alternate method – will be used. There’s been past talk among either proponents or host cities of building a new plant at sites in Surrey, New Westminster, Burnaby, or the Tsawwassen First Nation lands. There are also proposals for out-ofregion sites, including Gold River on the west coast of Vancouver Island, which would add to garbage transport costs but ease concerns in the Fraser Valley, where residents fear an incinerator will worsen air pollution. Surrey Coun. Marvin Hunt Marvin Hunt said it’s “crazy” for Metro to identify locations without being able to tell fearful neighbours what might actually be built there, adding some WTE systems may be much less contentious than others. “That is the best possible way to stir up a community in ignorance and fear and they have every right to that,” Hunt told the Metro board Friday. See METRO / Page 3

horsepower BOAZ JOSEPH / THE LEADER

Jonathan Pichette, 17, hugs horse Rio at the end of a six-week therapeutic horse program at a Langley farm. The program is part of Surrey Memorial Hospital’s Adolescent Day Treatment Program for youth aged 13-18 who are coping with psychiatric challenges.

Teens struggling with mental health issues benefit from equine healing by Monique Tamminga

F

or teens living with mental illness, the world can feel out of control at times. At other times, it can be frustrating and isolating. But a new program that pairs teens with rescue horses gives youth with mental health issues a new sense of empowerment – and a bond with some special “gentle giants.” Last month, Rachelle Sall, 15, and Jonathan Pichette, 17, graduated from a sixweek program at Langley’s Healing Heart Sanctuary, where the two teens learned to lead horses. “I’ve learned a lot about myself. I really learned how to control my emotions,” said Pichette. “When I had to pick up a horse’s hoof

I was really anxious about it, but I had to control my fear. I told the horse that I was anxious but I will do this.” He explained that the “more you accept your emotions, the more willing the horse is to work with you.” Later, he showed how he calmed Rio by putting his hand where the horse’s heart is and putting a hand on his own heart at the same time. Breathing deep breaths through the belly, a horse will sync up his breathing with the human and soon Rio’s head lowered, his eyelids drooped, and his ears came forward. Pichette had relaxed the horse. The Surrey teen has found the program so rewarding that he began volunteering at the Aldergrove horse ranch. Linda-Ann Bowling, Healing Heart

Editorial 6 Letters 7 Sports 13 Classifieds 20

Sanctuary owner and facilitator of the therapeutic horse program she calls “Youth with a Purpose … a New Kind of Horsepower,” said horses are highly intuitive and react to the energy people give off. “Horses are sensitive animals and respond to people’s emotions, moods, and non-verbal language,” said Bowling. “Through their work with the horses, youth learn healthy boundaries, responsibility, assertiveness and a variety of ways of interacting more positively with others.” The youth don’t actually ride the rescue horses, but form a leadership role with the large animals, bonding with them by grooming them and taking them through obstacle courses. See BONDING / Page 5

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2 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 3

Shark fin ban has teeth Surrey on the radar as activist advocates for end to Chinese tradition

by Jeff Nagel

From page 1

A CAMPAIGN to stamp out the

use of shark fins by Chinese restaurants is quickly gaining steam across Metro Vancouver. Activists have already persuaded Coquitlam, Port Moody and the City of North Vancouver to ban the possession and use of the fins and Burnaby is expected to follow suit. Now Vancouver Animal Defence League spokesman Anthony Marr is preparing to go after Surrey, Vancouver, Richmond – cities home to many of the Metro restaurants that serve shark fin soup. “They’re going down like dominoes,” Marr said of the cities signing on. “It’s going pretty strong.” Seven cities in Ontario, including Toronto, have agreed to bans, but B.C. is the big prize. By getting smaller communities on board first, Marr hopes to convince councils of the bigger Metro cities to simultaneously sign on to a ban and defuse concerns that affected restaurateurs will flee Vancouver for Richmond or viceversa. Marr himself ate shark fin soup as a kid in Hong Kong, but gave it up when he saw how poachers carve the fins off live sharks, which are then dumped back in the ocean to die. It’s not just a tragedy for the slowto-reproduce sharks. “If you wipe out the sharks, the medium-sized fish they prey on will proliferate and overfeed on the smaller fish,” Marr said. “They will

“If you cater to the Chinese culture and let them carry on... you’re not really doing the Chinese reputation any favours.” Anthony Marr

Metro: Testing the market

Coquitlam, Port Moody and the City of North Vancouver are banning the possession and use of shark fins and Burnaby is expected to follow suit. Shark fin soup is seen by many restaurant customers as a prestigious delicacy. proliferate and the fisheries will most likely collapse. So sharks are very important.” Marr claims plenty of allies in the Chinese community who agree it’s time to end a barbaric practice, responsible for the slaughter of about 50 million sharks annually. But he doesn’t try to convert restaurateurs, or their rich clientele who see shark fin as a prestigious delicacy. He figures sharks will be extinct by the time they come around or are replaced by younger, more enlightened generations of Chinese heritage. Nor does he apologize for what some fellow Chinese see as an attack on their culture.

“If you cater to the Chinese culture and let them carry on with it, you’re not really doing the Chinese reputation any favours,” he counters. Some civic politicians have questioned their authority to enforce a ban. Marr is working with others, including NDP MP Fin Donnelly, for a Canada-wide ban, as well as a provincial one. But he contends shark fins should be illegal to possess already, since Canada is signatory to an international convention banning trade in endangered species and many shark species are endangered. It’s difficult to prove what species of shark a fin came from or whether

it was removed from a live or dead shark, he noted. Some of the local bylaws being imposed simply refuse business licences to businesses that trade or use shark fins, or impose fines for violations. Marr has been a force in B.C.’s animal rights movement for years. In the mid-1990s he helped wage a campaign in Vancouver’s Chinatown to end imports of endangered species products like tiger balm, rhino horn and bear bile. And he spearheaded a provincial initiative to block bear hunting, a campaign that failed but led to a short-lived provincial moratorium on grizzly hunting in 2001. jnagel@surreyleader.com

“This process is doomed to failure.” Richmond Coun. Harold Steves also objected, saying the process should be geared from the outset to make low carbon emissions a top priority. Despite the concerns, Metro is proceeding with the “market sounding” process, which aims to test the waters this summer to assess the readiness and intent of prospective proponents ahead of a more formal procurement. Based on the results, Metro would later call for bidders to step forward, who would then be short-listed and then bid through a Request For Proposals (RFP) after the region makes key project decisions and sets bid evaluation criteria. Metro Solid Waste Manager Paul Henderson said the province’s approval of the region’s solid waste plan and its directives from the environment minister require that sites – both in region and out of region – as well as technologies be all considered in parallel, not in a particular order, through a competitive process. Officials hope to drum up as many proponents and viable sites as possible to maximize competition and get the best deal. Henderson said between 10 and 20 WTE project proponents have had some level of contact with Metro so far. Harold Steves The region’s waste strategy calls for it to stop sending garbage to the Cache Creek Regional Landfill, which takes 500,000 tonnes of waste per year. A new WTE plant was to be built to take at least that much garbage, but Metro downsized the plan this spring, estimating it now needs extra disposal capacity of 250,000 to 400,000 tonnes per year.

“This process is doomed to failure.”

Carbon tax hike unlikely to bring record pump pain 1.1-cent-per-litre increase July 1 by Jeff Nagel THE 1.1-CENT-PER-LITRE increase in B.C.’s carbon tax as of Canada Day

Gas prices have trended lower this spring as crude oil prices dropped.

isn’t expected to push Metro Vancouver gasoline prices into record territory. Gas prices in the region averaged $1.39 per litre as of Thursday, before the final lift in the carbon tax to 6.67 cents a litre. Gasbuddy.com founder Jason Toews said the bump could take average prices here back over $1.40, but not likely above the 2008 record of nearly $1.50 or this year’s late May peak of $1.489. “I think that’s going to be the peak for the year unless we see some major refinery issues,” he said. Prices have trended lower this spring as crude oil prices dropped on a sagging world economy and, more importantly, as three west coast refineries came back on line after previous shutdowns constricted supply. Higher demand from the summer driving season has kept gas prices from falling too far yet, Toews said, but he expects significantly lower

pump prices by the fall if all else stays equal. “We should see gas prices get much cheaper,” he said. “I think we could see the return of $1.20-something gas.” The last scheduled increase in the carbon tax comes as the provincial government asks for public input on the future of the tax ahead of 2013 budget deliberations. Up for debate is whether the tax should be reduced or rise further, whether any further increases should continue to go to tax relief or be redirected to fund carbon reduction initiatives such as transit. The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling for the carbon tax to be eliminated entirely, adding many of the offsetting tax cuts are geared to business and don’t benefit ordinary consumers. CTF spokesman Jordan Bateman listed tax breaks for industrial property owners, interactive digital media ventures, scientific research and the film industry. “The quickest way to save taxpayers money is for B.C. to scrap the carbon tax,” he said. The carbon tax also applies to other carbon-releasing fossil fuels, including diesel, natural gas, coal and propane. jnagel@surreyleader.com


4 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 5

Bonding: Learning from ‘gentle giants’

The youth participating in the horsepower program come from the Adolescent Day Treatment Centre in Surrey, which supports teens aged 13 to 18 who are experiencing severe psychiatric difficulties such as psychotic, mood and anxiety disorders. They are also struggling with their academics, family relationships, and social functioning. Teens taking part come from Langley, Delta, Surrey and White Rock and attend the program four days a week for six months. While there’s a saying, “you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink,” the teens led to this program are lapping up the time with the “gentle giants,” said Sall. Out of the six horses she worked with in the program, she bonded with the only female horse, Genevieve. Sall, who is shy herself, bonded with the most confident and difficult horse in the group. “If you aren’t the clear leader, she won’t go with you,” said Bowling. “She is more than happy to give you horse hugs, but won’t move an inch if she sense any skepticism.” Sall said Genevieve has given her a confidence she didn’t have before. The huge, beautiful mare has forced her to be a leader and the reward is the trust the animal has placed in the Surrey teen. Sall has been able to walk Genevieve through an obstacle course and over a bridge, something many horses are reluctant to do. The centre’s youth care worker Kristine Bateman has already seen the benefits of the program. “It’s nice for them to step outside of themselves for a while. The skills they are learning here are inthe-moment decision making. They are problem solving on the spot and learning that it’s okay to ask for help,” said Bateman. “By the time these teens get to us (at the centre), they have been struggling for a while. “They’ve spent a lot of time avoiding things

“We think it has gone amazing. What we saw was kids problemsolving in the moment.” Linda-Ann Bowling like school. This is giving them life lessons about perseverance.” Leading a horse is no easy task. As Bowling explained, horses are constantly testing your leadership. Giving up would be an easy out for anyone and a defense mechanism for these kids, said Bateman. But she’s heard the kids say: “ ‘If I can get a horse to move and walk over a bridge, then I can finish this math question,’ or whatever task they found difficult before.” Bowling has been inspired by the teens’ willingness to learn.

“We think it has gone amazing,” she said. “What we saw was kids problem solving in the moment.” When the teens join the program, the horses don’t see them as youth, she explains. “We form a collective herd. We aren’t kids, staff and horses.” The program is work for the horses, too. Just like humans, they have “off ” days and they are “challenged by choice” not by force, just like the youth in this program. If they aren’t feeling up to it that day, they don’t have to participate. A total of $15,000 in funding from three donors to the Surrey Memorial Hospital Foundation has allowed the centre’s teens to take part in the Horse Power program. It’s the first time Fraser Health has partnered with Healing Heart Sanctuary. Thanks to the funding, there will be a summer and fall session as well. And the demand is certainly there, because one in five children will experience a mental health challenge, according to Dr. Karen Tee, manager of Fraser Health’s youth and young adult mental health services. To learn more about Healing Hearts Sanctuary, go to unbridling yourbrillance.com

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OPINION

6 Surrey/North Delta Leader

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Published and printed by Black Press Ltd. at 5450 152 St., Surrey, B.C.

RCMP MESS HALL

Cheers to cop bar

RAESIDE

L

ast Monday, Surrey council did not offer support for a liquor application by RCMP E-Division for its new B.C. headquarters being built in Green Timbers Urban Forest. The Mounties want to carry on a long-standing tradition of having a licensed mess hall available for members. (A bar exists at the current B.C. RCMP headquarters in Vancouver, which is moving to Green Timbers). Whether this issue moves forward given the public’s reaction (mostly negative) remains to be seen; the RCMP is under the jurisdiction of the federal government, so it has the power to put in a pub whether or not the City of Surrey or province agree. But there’s the optics. At a time when the national police force is in the spotlight and under the microscope for several serious missteps – sexual harassment, sexual misconduct, assault and impaired driving among them – ramming a bar through the red tape might not sit well with stakeholders. However, outside the context of recent Mountie wrongdoing, would the idea of a licensed mess hall have been that big a deal? Police perform a dangerous, stressful, often gruesome job that entails long hours, little sleep and sparse thanks. After a shift, being able to decompress with comrades who understand the challenges unique to the profession can not only lighten the load, it can be life-saving. Back in the day, hashing it out over a cold one with a partner was all that passed for critical incident debriefing. Although more formal intervention policies are now in place, that doesn’t erase the need for connecting with co-workers – something that in the case of police officers and the sensitive nature of their work can’t always be done in community spaces. Besides, not all cops consume alcohol. A licensed mess haul would provide a safe, central gathering place for both imbibing and teetotaling Mounties and their guests. As long as members and visitors are held to a zero-tolerance rule of no drinking and driving, bring on the bar.

TRANSPORTAION

Rough seas ahead for BC Ferries

B

The

Leader

The Surrey/North Delta Leader is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2.

ries, and ignores the other factors. Just cut last week how the sale went. He didn’t have final figures yet, but he allowed that the boost the fares and increase the taxpayer subsidy, say the NDP and their local echo chambers. in traffic was “marginal.” Of course, taxpayers are already pitching It’s the second year that the spring sale has been offered over weekends, when people are in an extra $80 million this year, bringing the subsidy to the ferries more likely to travel. But instead close to $200 million. That’s of generating additional trips, how B.C. Transportation Corrigan said the main effect has Minister Blair Lekstrom been to shift traffic from midweek sweetened the pot as he to weekends. unveiled new powers for B.C. One of the primary reasons for Ferry Commissioner Gord this spring’s poor performance Macatee to set service levels is the lousy weather that kept as well as regulate fares. people at home. Gasoline at $1.40 Macatee’s task now is to a litre is another big one. Hotels travel the coast and endure and other tourism services tell the demands of island dwellsame story. Tom Fletcher the ers who want the rest of us to Here’s another problem: subsidize their splendid isolastudent traffic on the ferries was down by a third this spring, because teachers tion. The proposition for them will boil down to this: You can pay more or you can cancelled field trips as part of their lengthy have fewer sailings. And where the boat is work-to-rule campaign. a third full, you will have fewer sailings. The simplistic political debate about ferry This consultation period is an opporservice starts and ends with rising fares, with occasional fits of temper over executive salatunity to ask some hard questions. For

CONTACT US Newsroom email: newsroom@ surreyleader.com Phone: 604-575-2744 604-575-2544 fax

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C Ferries has begun its summer schedule, ramping up sailings for the vacation season that is crucial to the fleet’s bottom line. It’s been rough sailing for BC Ferries so far this year. The corporation released its financial results in June, reporting a net loss of $16.5 million, compared to net earnings of $3.8 million the previous year. Last year’s earnings were boosted by the sale of the former corporate headquarters for $9.3 million, preventing a loss there as well. In the fiscal year that ended March 31, vehicle traffic was down 3.5 per cent and walk-on passengers were down 2.8 per cent. As a result, BC Ferries is forecasting a “small loss” for this year as well. The spring “Coast Saver” sale has just ended. That’s a 37-per-cent discount offered Fridays through Mondays, May 25 to June 25 on the major runs from the mainland to Victoria and Nanaimo. The discounts allowed a foot passenger to cross for $9.95 and a car and driver for $39.95. I asked BC Ferries CEO Mike Corrigan

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instance, does Saltspring Island really need three ferry terminals? And why is there no passenger-only service? Macatee’s term as commissioner started with a detailed review last year that pointed to some other ways to save serious money. But CEO Corrigan says there are no quick fixes. FortisBC has offered an $11 million incentive for conversion of marine vessels to natural gas, which would give the fleet significant relief from spiraling fuel costs. But a ferry conversion would take six months or more, and another vessel would be needed in the meantime. Another promising suggestion is overhauling the ferry reservation service, making reservations free and charging extra for those who just show up. Corrigan says a computer reservation overhaul is underway, but it will take three years.

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012

COMMENTS

Surrey/North Delta Leader 7

Editor’s note: Two stories in The Leader last week prompted a deluge of comments – on our website at surreyleader.com, on facebook at http://www.facebook. com/surreyleader, and in our email inbox at newsroom@surreyleader.com. The RCMP applying for a liquor licence for its new B.C. headquarters in Green Timbers Urban Forest and a group of Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary teens who streaked through the school as part of a graduation prank sparked intense debate among our readers. Here is a selection of those opinions. Spelling, grammar and punctuation have been left as received.

To serve or protect: Do Mounties need a bar?

A MOUNTIE can have personal bar, then a free cab ride home. Disabled community is currently fighting with Translink to keep the Taxisaver program!! What is wrong with this picture? Shame on this government. Jane Burkart

I CAN’T believe they allow

those that “Serve & Protect” our city to have their own personal bar...tax payers dollars at work...WRONG!! Patricia Brennan

with your community... Leila Shakti Rai

I DON’T see anything wrong

with this. They can go in there have a few and get a safe ride home. Or there can come to a pub like mine get drunk and get into their own car or take the better option of taking a cab. Sadly most people always drive themselves home. I think its a great idea. Cops work under a lot of pressure and they too need down time. Laura Parker

else outside of work after a hard day of work what’s wrong with having some drinks with your co-workers? As long as people are responsible and don’t drink and drive and being cops I’m sure they won’t. Erik Vanderhoek

THEY ARE not responsible and do drink and drive at rates higher than the general public. Policing attracts adrenaline junkies and social outcasts. Blake Rickard

LOOKS LIKE they got the

“serving”part down....drinks that is........protection?...... mmm not so much W Matt Brennan

I LOVE a few beers but thats

madness!! John Garvey

WHAT WILL stop them from

POLICE AGENCIES across

leaving from there, drunk and in their own car? I think every construction site should have its own “Pop Up Pub” so that the over worked, under paid and highly stressed guys and girls can

North America have drinking establishments funded by their members. In the USA, the Fraternal Order of Police is prominent, as well as many others. Not a day goes by that we read about the RCMP in the headlines because it is salacious news that sells dying newspapers and gets civilians riled up. This facility has existed in a similar fashion without incident for many years in Vancouver. Surrey is meant to replace the old E Division HQ, so why not allow this use to move as well? In a large organization like the RCMP, scandals and sensational stories can be found each and every day. They are now in the cross hairs of media and people lap it up. Why not investigate the inner workings of some of the big newspaper groups around town? Well, their records are not open to FOI requests and public scrutiny, so it will never happen. The Mounties are great targets it seems and for many years have taken it on the chin. Why not continue to berate them? Do any of the public rocket scientists have an alternative to the police to maintain public order? If you do, speak up. Better yet, put your name on the list and get out to Depot to straighten them all out. The public should look at the many fine men and women that provide excellent police services every day. But, this is not sexy or smug, so never mind.

THIS COULD be the root of

many of their problems...they are sending the message to their officers that yes, drinking in and around the job is ok...we support it...what the heck?? These good old boys need to give their head a shake... Sibli Sidhu-Gill

I AGREE with Jane....this is not something that is needed....I don’t see the Paramedics or Firemen having a pub in their facility! This is wrong...no excuse will suffice! Patricia Brennan

I WAS involved with Emergency Services for over 40 years and \i can remember alcohol being available, but that was stopped and became old school. To suggest this is “tradition” shows the RCMP’s need to get up to date. Alcohol within a workplace/mess is not acceptable in a highly public occupation. David Enfield

I agree - too much temptation before going home. Beth Logan Williams

COPS...NEED other ways to

destress...a recreation facility perhaps. What if school districts had bars for their teachers? There’d be an outcry. This just smells of more of a “military state” type set up whereby the oppressors are allowed to behave in ways that are questionable to public interest and where they are out of touch with communities...go to the local bar if you want a drink...mix

“Most days (the mess hall) will be simply used for other things, meetings, charitable events, veterans’ functions...” Cpl. Bernie Conroy drink their pain away. And on top of that, out tax dollars will help pay for the cheap beer they will drink. You really think they will be paying full prices to drink there? I highly doubt it. Oh, the taxis they take home, they will be paid by us as well. Micheal McPherson

Joe Zaccaria

SHOULD NOT have

built this HQ on Green Timbers land in the first place. Steve Willis

PERSONALLY I see nothing

wrong with this. Cops are no different from anyone

WHEN WILL the RCMP get

the message. There never seems to be a day go by that we don’t hear another disturbing story about our local police. Where is their pride? David Chesney

FILE PHOTO / THE LEADER

Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary grads (from left) Jason Singh, Griffin Steele, Imraj Randhawa and Dwight Lilly are four of seven boys who were suspended from school and barred from grad ceremonies for streaking at the school.

Bum rap for high school streaking grad prank? THEY SHOULD be able to go..Good for them,

Good Luck in the future.. Kirsten Hoffmann-Innbjor

WAS THERE a rule that said “thou shalt not

streak upon punishment of missing Grad?” I think not. Lighten up school people. Dal Lockwood

OUR GRADS threw water ballons into the

Cafe...dont think they were punished! LTS needs to lighten up! Cecilia Thompson

I THINK what should be printed in the paper

is what else was done other than the streaking. The article is commented only by one of the Mothers, let’s be told what else was involved, I am certain there was more. Real facts first please.... Ian Stirling

streaked that their action was against the school code of conduct? Yes they did, as they were told pranks would not be tolerated, and one had an older brother who had been suspended for the same thing. They knew there would be repercussions for their actions, but freely of their own will, did it anyhow. Now they want to complain about their punishment...too frickin’ bad !! If you can’t do the time , don’t do the crime ! It’s even worse that their parents are basically teaching them that it’s OK to break the law or rules, it’s the school that’s wrong. Might as well teach them that it’s alright to rob a bank, as long as you use a little gun , and don’t take much....get a grip, and stop your whining. Do I personally think the punishment is too much...yes I do .But They made the choice, so live by it.

Skip Angus

AGREE. There are rules. Follow them. Derek Dunlop

OPINION ABOVE is dumb. In my opinion. Colin Ross

DISAGREE!!!!

Seriously, banned from their own graduation ceremony for a petty grad prank?! Lighten up dude! Is the human body really that offensive? A suspension, for sure.. but no grad? Definitely being taken WAY too far. Rosie George

THE FACT is, because of administrators

the likes of “Mr Buggie” I have absolutely no faith in the public school system, and consequently will not be sending my child to public school. Rod Jr Mclean

THESE KIDS where also suspended and

banned from coming on school property to have their yearbooks signed....I think that was punishment enough. Missy Hamilton

DID THE streakers know before they

MY UNDERSTANDING is that the Grade 12 class as part of their Grad Transitions signed a form that stated that Grad pranks would not be tolerated and that a resulting consequence would be not attending the Grad dinner/dance and or Valedictory. The boys knew they were going against school policy. Now they don’t like the consequences. Tough. I agree with Skip Angus (earlier post). The older the baby the louder the whine; parents and students alike. Betty Bop

THE CRIME is indecent exposure and any-

one caught would be arrested and could possibly serve jail time so I think they got off pretty damn easy.. Wonder what their employers think of this crime. I totally agree with Skip Angus!! Michelle Kats

See MORE COMMENTS / Page 8


8 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

MORE COMMENTS From page 7

DISGRACE... if it is a

criminal crime charge them ... unfair and unjust... people stand up and shout!!! This is not right don’t punish the parents...grad cap and gown is for parents... not the kids truly ??? Tammy McMillan

I’M A parent at Lord

Tweedsmuir...the code of conduct and consequences are clearly laid out in September. These boys choose to ignore it. I applaud the prin-

cipal for his actions. I highly doubt this is an isolated incident for these boys. Any parent that voluntarily misses their child’s graduation in solidarity with this group is flat out stupid. Julie Diels Neufeld

I CAN’T believe the

mom who said her eldest did it and now her youngest too! Shame on you for teaching your kids it is O.K. What would the consequnce be if you or I streaked in public, hmmm? Wayto go principal Buggie!

Franz Weisinger MR. BUGGIE was my

homeroom teacher at West Whalley, about 25 years ago... He has a pretty good sense for what is good fun and what is malfeasance. I don’t know where comparable punishments lie in today’s school system. 3 days suspension for a rather dramatic action seems reaonsable. Barring kids to go to grad seems somewhat more extreme, but perhaps called for in this case. In any event - Mr. B. did a good job with

P U B L I C N OT I C E

COMMUNITY CHARTER S.B.C. 2003 CHAPTER 26 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SELL CITY LANDS Pursuant to Sections 26 and 94 of the Community Charter S.B.C. 2003, Chapter 26, as amended, the City of Surrey hereby gives notice of the intention to dispose of the following City lands: Legal Description: PID: 028-852-613 That Part of Section 26 Township 1 New Westminster District Shown on Plan BCP50863 Civic Address: A 272.4 m² portion of road at 39A Avenue and 159 Street. Property Description: The property is a portion of redundant road. It is designated Suburban in the Official Community Plan. It is currently CD (Comprehensive Development). The City is selling this 272.4 m² portion of the road for consolidation with the adjacent properties located at 15955 through 15989 – 39A Avenue and 3833 – 160 Street. Purchasers: Morgan Creek Holdings Inc. Nature of Disposition: Fee Simple Selling Price: Forty Three Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($43,500.00)

me, I would trust his judgment in this case. Oke Millett

THEY WERE fully

aware there would be a consequence to their actions but chose to do it anyway. Now they need to suck it up and take it. Loretta VanderWerf Trotter

I FULLY support the

school stance on this. I was a graduate of LTS in 2004, and I don’t recall streaking being a tradition then. In fact I don’t recall it happening in 2004 so it’s funny to hear it being said it’s tradition. Also the original punishment of a 3 day suspension is more likely viewed as a mini-vacation since it’s so close to the end of the school year. Hardly a deterrent for further pranks so good on principal Buggie for dealing out a stiff punishment that will count. These students are new adults, and as adults need to take responsibility for their actions like adults. Steaking anywhere else is an act of Indecent exposure which is a crime and carries large fines as punishment. These students should be lucky that the RCMP was not called to the school to enforce this law. Prank or not. Angelo Bifolchi

THRILLED TO bits that

these ‘almost adults’ are being punished. Total support to Mr. Buggie...in fact, they should have been charged criminally. Since when is it ok for a man to strip naked in front of your child? Pretty sure you’d be on the phone to 911 if it happened on the street. I totally fail to see the difference. Full support to the school. The parents who are supporting them should be ashamed of themselves for supporting the offenders. Wendy Insley SaintOnge

I TOTALLY support

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the school’s stance. These men exposed themselves to minors. They’re lucky they are not charged. Grow up kids and the parents who support them. Sara Newham

WOW, YES too harsh, these kids did a stupid thing, though I don’t know any of them at all, I can say that I am

sure that they did not mean to do any harm, back in the day in my home town there was a guy that streaked though a pub, the police werent’ called, and regarding a 13 young girl seeing a guy streaking our kids are taught sex ed in elementary school, I feel sorry for these kids, they have been at school all this time and now they can’t have their grad ceremony, I can see further things happening to the school and those involved in banning these kids. Ramona PichurskiLough

BIG DEAL so they

streaked and got shaving foam around and got in a car! In the big picture of life...does it really matter? They have made it through school and are graduating....isn’t that the important thing here? I’m a grandmother and I’ve seen lots of kids celebrating this occasion with similar activities and so what....they went on to live their lives without problems! Makes me wonder about the actions of Allan Buggie ~ I certainly wouldn’t want any of my family in his school. I hope the grads and families all stage some sort of protest against this stupid ruling! Good Luck Kids ~ and Congratulations on finishing grade 12! Judi Henderson

I HOPE that all the parents, teachers, and students, streak the grad ceremonies or moon the principal. Korky Day

THEY SHOULD be able to attend their grad! After all it tock 13 years to achieve. Yes they made a studied decision, but shouldn’t have to miss this event Tammy ThunstromJacobs

THEY KNEW the con-

sequences before they did it . They choose to take that risk so now they have to accept their punishment. If patents do not like the ruling then they need To take steps to change it . These student called the principals bluff and lost ! it may be the best lesson they have learned all senior year . Hate the law not the lawyer !!!! Francine Newton

FACE THE conse-

quences for your actions- as the actions are against the law & no criminal gets to choose their punishment. If the ceremony was so important to them, they should have considered the pranks they chose to participate in. Janelle Patterson

CONGRATULATIONS

to Principal Buggie. Attendance at graduation is a privilege, not a right, and the young “pranksters” have forfeited that privilege. Mr. Buggie had the courage to apply discipline, something that their parents are apparently not doing. You can bet there won’t be any streakers in the halls of Lord Tweedsmuir next June. Kent Dykstra

I FIND the penalty given by the principal far too severe I would prefer the principal had given them a three day suspension, and rather than excluding them from Commencement. Make them write a letter of apology to the student body and teaching staff to be read by them at an assembly. Claudette Louise Gamble

IT SEEMS the kids act crazy and mothers defend them rather than telling them to grow up and face up to their own acts. I think, any school has right to draw the line somewhere and give students consequences.It is a sorry day when all consequences are removed from our society. That school has sorry history with all kinds of troubled kids and all kinds of stuff happening there.It is about time,someone takes a stand and says; enough. Good for the Principal ! He has right to offer the students some consequences and yes... the parents might need to grow up,too ! Mari Kiwi

I AM so glad that the principal at Lord Tweedmuir is not only suspending the boys that streaked the halls but also taking their grad commencement away. Since the Lilly family already knew that there would be consequences and you didn’t learn the first time, obviously the repercussions need to be harder. I think it

is absolutely horrific to have these “grown” people that are heading into the “real” world thinking that this is appropriate behavior. Grow up... I have had one child already graduated and one in the school system right now and have made it very clear that you DO NOT act innapropriately, especially with the younger students. I think running around naked is very inappropriate, and they better be praying that one of those parents of those female students don’t press charges for their indecent exposer. If I had a daughter that had been there at the time, I sure would.... it is a crime and they are lucky that this is the only punishment they are receiving. Maybe next years grads will think of a funny “prank” instead of a crime. M. Lea

SO WHERE does one draw the line for not following rules? first it is streaking... and then speeding... then? a rule is a rule...this explains society these days though... people know the rules, but just don’t follow them. Stefani Dueck

I AM expressing my support for Mr. Allan Buggie, of Lord Tweedmuir, in the action he took with the “streaking grads.” The parents of (the boys) would also be well advised to instruct their children in appropriate behaviour and see that they apologize and make some significant restitution for their silly behaviour. I am sure Mr. Buggie and Surrey School District staff can help them with this resolution. It is especially sad to hear that one of these students was the recipient of a scholarship or bursary. In my experience, students who qualify for such recognition are kind, thoughtful, intelligent and respectful young people. Donna Bond

FINALLY A punishment

that fits the “crime”. I’m sick and tired of the whole “boys will be boys” theme. If my son ever did something so stupid I would be first to instill punishmentand it would make the principals punishment seem like a walk in the park!


Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 9

Coffee with Dave

REGIONAL BRIEFS

Got something on your mind?

Metro rents up, vacancy rate slides METRO VANCOUVER

rental vacancy rates edged down to 2.6 per cent in April, from 2.8 per cent a year earlier, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). Rents rose an average of 2.4 per cent over the same one-year period, with renters paying on average $854 for Metro Vancouver bachelor units and $1,210 for two bedrooms. A CMHC report said downward pressure on vacancy rates in the region came from a combination of more jobs, a growing population from in-migration, and a “persistent gap between the cost of home ownership and the cost of renting.” It costs $773 more per month to own a Vancouver condo than to rent one, the report estimated. Most new jobs in B.C. have been created in Metro Vancouver, which gained 35,300 jobs since the start of 2011.

More bus routes ‘optimized’ TRANSLINK HAS

stepped up bus service on 21 high-demand routes across Metro Vancouver and reduced frequency on 18 others where ridership was deemed too low to justify current service levels. The changes, effective June 25, are the next stage in the transportation authority’s ongoing service optimization initiative. The aim is to serve more riders with the same number of transit service hours, while bringing in more fare revenue. TransLink says bus productivity has climbed three per cent since 2010 as a result of previously implemented changes. Routes that gained frequency in the newest round include the #97 and #99 B-Lines and the #345 from White Rock to Bridgeport Station. Much of the increased service is at middays and weekends, reflecting

a rise in riders taking transit outside the traditional morning and afternoon rushes. Routes where buses will run less often include the #402, #403 and #404 runs in Richmond, as well as early morning, weekend and holiday service on some other routes. Schedule change details are at www. translink.ca.

that the cancellation of the program will erode air quality gains in the Lower Mainland, as motorists are no longer compelled to rein in emissions. Around 12 per cent of tested cars fail AirCare each year, but most vehicles are exempt from testing because they’re relatively new. Lake has said the

End of AirCare opposed THE METRO Vancouver

board is objecting to the province’s decision to phase out AirCare testing for regular vehicles by the end of 2014. The regional district voted June 15 to write to Environment Minister Terry Lake expressing its concerns

July Celebration! 2 for 1 es i h t o o Sm Y SIZE!

province could convert the program to one targeting diesel emissions from large trucks.

Dave will buy your first cup of coffee!

Sat, Aug 4th 3:15-4:30pm The Pantry Restaurant in Guildford Mall

152 St & 104 Ave near London Drugs

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Sundays - Buy 1 Get 1 1/2 Price! on Sundays - 12pm to 6pm at the Central City Shopping Centre location only. *Management *Mana agem ementt re rese reserves servves ser ve all rig rights.

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Come celebrate at our new Newton Insurance Services location. Join us for our Grand Opening. Saturday, July 7, 2012 11 am - 2 pm (ribbon cutting at 12 pm) 114 - 7322 King George Blvd. Chance to win 1 of 4 grand prizes including 3 iPads being drawn at 12 pm, 1 pm, and 2 pm. And a $1,000 shopping spree to Guildford Town Centre. Enjoy some refreshments while you meet our team. envisionfinancial.ca


10 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Princess Margaret Secondary would like to

CONGRATULATE the following scholarship and award winners from the Grad Class of 2012:

Gary Ahluwalia Seye Akinsanmi Sunny Ali Zarlish Aneela Hussein Assad Roma Atwal Amandeep Badyal Colin Barber Baneet Bhangu Rohaan Bhatti Kathleen Castillo Harsheen Chawla Solomon Chernishov Jessica Cho Zaeema Choudhri Nedene De Guzman

Japneet Deol Kirandeep Dhesi Jaspreet Dhillon Manpreet Dhillon Amandeep Dhothar Adrian Encarnacion Henry Flowers Paramveer Ghai Gursimran Gill Harleen Grewal Randeep Grewal Thom Hargreaves Elaine Herrera Gurleen Jagpal Gunisha Kalra Nidah Khan

Haris Khattak Sandeep Kullar Akash Kurrha Khush Lamba Marielle Macaraeg Adam Magdurulan Gurtaj Mahil Chanpreet Mand Parmvir Matharu Jessica Munday Fatehjeet Nagra Dilsahib Nahal Shivani Nambiar Payashvi Nathoo Amarpret Nijjar Sharanjit Nijjar

Daman Pabla Jaspreet Padam Sajjal Pirzada Mahira Qadri Kristel Ramirez Margaret Royena Sargun Saran Sindi Sharma Anoop Shergill Jagdeep Shoker Kenny Sidhu Arpana Singh Manpreet Takhi Vincent Tang

Princess Margaret Secondary would also like to congratulate the following students who have been invited to compete in the International Space Settlement Design Competition in Houston, Texas: Haroon Chaudhary Alice Ho Harinderpal Khakh Khush Lamba Zoubhair Moosuddee

Gurvansh Sharma Sindi Sharma Hassaan Sheikh Ishmeet Singh Vincent Tang

This is the second year in a row that our school will be competing in the finals of this competition! It is also the second time in the 19 year history of the competition that a Canadian team has qualified. Good luck! PRINCESS MARGARET

Congratulations to all of our graduates for being such a wonderful group! Once a Lion, Always a Lion. SECO ARY ND

Charges laid in juice bar robberies 29-year-old Surrey man facing eight counts by Dan Ferguson A 29-YEAR-OLD Surrey man has been charged

with eight counts of robbery in connection with a series of holdups, including those at three Booster Juice stores in South Surrey and Langley. The charges also relate to incidents at three Subway outlets and one Quizno’s in Surrey, as well as a Langley tanning salon. The robberies took place between June 2 and June 14, Surrey Provincial Court records show. Clayton Norris is due back in court today (July 3). More charges are possible, police said. Security footage from the holdup at the Langley Booster Juice showed a Caucasian man in his 20s, wearing a hoodie and a glove on one hand, who threatened a store cashier with a knife. The suspect was wearing sunglasses and a baseball hat with “Police” embroidered on the front. The incident was one of three robberies at the chain of juice bars in less than two weeks: On June 3, the Booster Juice outlet at 15161 Hwy. 10 in Surrey was robbed at 7:30 p.m. by a man with a knife; on June 7, another South Surrey Booster Juice store, at 15355 24 Ave., was robbed around 2:30 p.m.; and on June 11, the Langley Booster Juice at 20159 88 Ave. was robbed around 5:15 p.m. In each case, the robber fled on foot with an undisclosed amount of cash. Langley RCMP said the suspect was arrested

as a result of a conversation between a Langley store owner who had just been robbed and a passerby. “We’d like to convey our appreciation and thanks to the two civilians who provided key information to police, which assisted us in making an arrest,” Sgt. Ravinder Pawar said Thursday. “We just needed the last piece of the puzzle from the public in order to gather evidence to support robbery charges.” The tip came in June 19. On June 21, Surrey RCMP’s Strike Force Target Team in collaboration with Langley RCMP arrested Norris. “Since the start of this investigation both detachments have been working together sharing information and resources,” Surrey RCMP Sgt. Drew Grainger said. “Investigators would like to point out that high-quality video images were helpful in quickly identifying a suspect. They would also like to thank some keen-eyed members of the public for their observations which helped assist them in making this arrest.” Anyone who has not spoken to police who may have further information on these robberies is asked to contact Surrey RCMP at 604-5990502 or Langley RCMP at 604-532-3200. Or, to remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.

dferfuson@peacearchnews.com

S U R R EY M U S E U M

NEW EXHIBITION

LEGO: Myths & Muses

The Lost City of Atlantis has been found at the Surrey Museum! From the famed lighthouse at Alexandria to the Greek underworld, explore fascinating histories and mythologies of the Mediterranean as told with LEGO®. The Vancouver LEGO® Club presents a world of gods and goddesses, heroes and monsters from ancient times. On display June 30-September 15, 2012.

Programs Must pre-register at 604-592-6956 Mythic Fridays

DROP IN

Armchair Travellers: Greek Myths and Muses

Discover the exciting history and captivating mythology of the Mediterranean as you create ancient Greek, Roman and Egyptian gods and artifacts, with different “mythic” crafts each week. Fridays, July & August 10:30am-12noon All ages, by donation

Historical fiction and travel writer W. Ruth Kozak takes you on a journey from sacred Delphi to the vineyards of the lyric poet Sappho in search of the heroes of Greek history. 1 session $6 (16+yrs) Sat, July 21 1:00pm-2:00pm

LEGO® Behind the Scenes

Author Harry Mouratides travelled to ten Greek “longevity villages” filled with healthy and active nonagenarians. He shares some secrets at a special reading and discussion of his book. 1 session $7 (16+yrs) Sat, July 21 3:00pm-4:00pm

DROP IN

®

Join the Vancouver LEGO Club for a bbehind the scenes peek as these master builders create an Ancient Egyptian hieroglyph in celebration of this summer’s Myths & Muses exhibit. Saturday, July 21 10:00am-4:00pm All ages, by donation

Long Live the Greeks

We have a summer filled with Mediterranean and LEGO® themed programs for kids of all ages! Call 604-592-6956 or go to www.surrey.ca/heritage and click on Heritage Facilities & Services/Surrey Museum.

17710-56A Avenue 604-592-6956 Hours: Tue-Fri, 9:30am-5:30pm; Sat, 10am-5pm 2012 admission sponsored by Museum Friends Society

www.surrey.ca/heritage


Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 11

Tug sinks near Pattullo Two men rescued; no serious injuries by Grant Granger A TUGBOAT capsized and sunk near the

Pattullo Bridge on Thursday just before 9 a.m., and the high speed of the rising river likely played a factor, says a Coast Guard spokesman. Canadian Coast Guard maritime coordinator Jeff Olsson said two tugs were working with a barge when one of the boats overturned and sank. The tug’s captain was thrown into the Fraser River, but the other tug managed to come to his rescue. He was taken ashore and then whisked off to Royal Columbian Hospital with undisclosed injuries. Another worker was on the barge, which bumped into the 1904 CN Rail train bridge just upriver from the Pattullo. Olsson said the structure was not damaged. The worker remained on the barge as the second tug guided it to safety. The worker was then taken off the barge by Coast Guard hovercraft, which happened to be working just down river at Annacis Island and responded to the mayday call along with many other marine vessels.

Olsson said the tugboat was not a big vessel, about eight metres long. He said there will be an environmental investigation into the incident. Several agencies, including the federal Transportation Safety Board, marine officials, and possibly WorkSafeBC “will have an interest in what happened.” The Fraser is currently high because a large level of snowpack is melting in northern British Columbia. The high volume of water likely played a role in the capsizing, said Olsson. “It’s pretty safe to say the rate of current, estimated five knots – and that’s fairly fast – it’s pretty hard to say it wasn’t a factor. It definitely didn’t help.” The strong currents narrow the path vessels have to navigate through the rail bridge, Pattullo and SkyTrain bridge pylons, said Paul Johansen, who runs tours on the Edgewater Fortune from a dock just down river from the Pattullo. “It’s like whitewater rafting,” said Johansen. “The back eddies, it’s just whirly-twirly.” New Westminster police responded to the incident along with Surrey RCMP, Air 1 helicopter and numerous private vessels.

CARRIERS NEEDED in Surrey, North Delta & Cloverdale

Please call

604-575-5342 for more information.

FUTURE SHOP - CORRECTION NOTICE

BEST BUY - CORRECTION NOTICE

On page 14 of the June 29 flyer, the Gateway PC with 3rd Generation Intel® Core™ i5-3450 Processor (DX4860 EF16P) (WebCode: 10207076) was advertised with an incorrect feature. Please be advised that this PC does NOT have a Blu-ray disc player, as previously advertised. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

Please be advised that on page 6 of the June 29 flyer, the HP H8-1227 (WebCode: 10208233) was advertised with incorrect specifications. The CORRECT specs for the H8-1227 include a 3rd generation Intel® Core ™ i5-3450 processor, 8GB Memory, 1TB Hard Drive and a Radeon 7450 Graphics Card. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

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CARRIERS NEEDED 604-575-5342 in Surrey, North Delta & Cloverdale for more information.

12th Annual

BUY ANY 10

Here’s how it works. If you come in and buy less than 10 of any of our selected annuals in 4” pots, our cashier is going to charge you the regular price (1.99 to 2.99). And she is going to smile (and maybe hum) while she does it. That’s because most of our cashiers have a bit of a mean streak. However, if you are clever and buy 10 or more (mix and match all you want) she will charge you $10 for every 10 you buy. That's a buck apiece for the mathematically challenged.) Save $10 to $20 on each group of 10.

Dahlias

It’s not often we get a deal like this. We normally sell our

It’s time for you

to go!

SA SAVE $$20

4’ Emerald Cedars

for 24.99, but we were offered a one-time deal we couldn’t say no to, and neither will you. While stocks last take up to 50 of these for only 9.88 each. If you want more than 50 we are going to ever-so-politely ask you to go rob somebody else.

We bought the entire inventory of from a major greenhouse grower. Well... I don’t exactly mean “bought” because we haven’t paid for them yet.That’s where you come in. Plant now and enjoy blooms for months. Gorgeous colours. Big 6” pots. Reg. 5.99

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12 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

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How To Build a Good Relationship Are you happy? Many people believe that if you’re in a relationship you will be happy and everything will work. This is not necessarily true. Your relationship can not give you what you need to give yourself. Francesca Tomas, a Surrey-based Registered Professional Counsellor, teaches people about what makes relationships work. She stresses that respect and communication are keys to a healthy relationship. “You need to really like the person you’re with.”

enter a relationship, Francesca adds. “It’s important to take responsibility for yourself and your needs. It’s also important to pay attention to what your partner needs from you, even if it’s just a caring word or a sign of affection. It is not a weakness to have needs, but a quality of being human.” Ultimately, relationships can be hard because they require commitment and work – and that takes two people.

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 13

International teams take to the field Canada versus the world at Softball City by Nick Greenizan THE SCOTIABANK Canadian Open

Fastpitch International Championship has been underway since Saturday, but tomorrow the event’s flagship tournament hits the field. The Women’s International Division – which includes a handful of

teams headed to ISF Women’s World Championships – begins play tomorrow (Wednesday) with a 12:30 p.m. game between defending champion Japan and New Zealand. Fan favourite Team Canada will also play New Zealand in its first game, which is scheduled for

See WHITEHORSE / Page 14

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Michelle Cox from Australia crashes into USA infielder Lauren Gibson at second base during play last year at the Scotiabank Canadian Open Fastpitch Internationanal Championship at Softball City. Both teams have again entered the International Division, which begins play tomorrow (July 4).

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The Family Law Act, which replaces the Family Relations Act, is scheduled to take full effect in March 2013. The definition of “spouse” under the new Act makes no distinction between married couples, common law spouses, and same-sex couples. Couples entering spousal relationships or considering separation or divorce should pay particular attention to the effect the new Act will have on their property rights. The Family Law Act redefines “family property” to include all real and personal property acquired by either spouse from the date the spousal relationship began until the date of separation. Property that is excluded from division are specifically listed under the Act: gifts, inheritance, damages for bodily injury or payments from an insurance policy (not including wage loss), to name just a few. Under the new rules, all assets and debts acquired during the spousal relationship are subject to division upon separation or divorce unless the property falls within the exceptions. The burden is on the spouse claiming the exclusion to demonstrate that the property should not be divided between the spouses. Couples should use caution when co-mingling “family assets” with previously owned or excluded property. Wages earned, assets acquired, and debts incurred during a spousal relationship are likely to fall under the umbrella of “family assets.” So, for example, a spouse who uses wages earned during the spousal relationship to pay for renovations to a condominium owned prior to the relationship may be entitling his spouse to an interest in the increased market value resulting from those renovations. The determination of how family assets and debts are ultimately divided depends on the specific circumstances of each case. Although the Family Law Act provides greater clarity for classification of property, its broad application can be problematic for individuals who may unintentionally fall under the new definition of a “spouse”. Individuals who wish to preserve certain assets should seek legal advice and consider a written agreement respecting division of property and debt.

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14 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Whitehorse: Preparing for the Worlds From page 13

Softball City at 7:30 p.m. Whereas the international squads have, in the past, began play on the first day of the event, this year’s tournament – which has long been the main draw of the Canadian Open and its predecessor, the Canada Cup – had a delayed start in order to accommodate teams comings from the World Cup of Softball in Oklahoma. The World Cup began last Friday and wrapped up Monday, giving teams a travel day before hitting the field in South Surrey. They’ll play until July 9, and which team the world championshipbound countries – a list which includes Canada – will head north to Whitehorse to vie for a world title, from July 13-22. The worlds are held every four years. “We did it this way because between Oklahoma and world championships, there was a bit of a dead spot for teams, so this gives them a (warm-up) tournament, and it’s on the way (to Whitehorse),” said Canadian Open tournament director Greg Timm. The ability to capitalize

on the world championship schedule – and convenient location – means an uptick in Canadian Open participation. Seven teams are slated to take part this year; last year, the women’s international division included just five teams. In addition to the Canadian national team – which includes Surrey’s Melanie Matthews, and North Delta’s Jennifer Yee and Jocelyn Cater – other countries represented include the powerhouse United States, which has won the last seven world championships dating back to 1986, Australia and Japan, which won last year’s Canadian Open women’s international tournament after a 7-0 win over the U.S. A pair of stalwarts on the Canadian roster – former White Rock Renegades pitcher Danielle Lawrie and Port Coquitlam shortstop Jen Salling – won’t be in Canada’s Canadian Open lineup due to commitments with their pro team, the USSA’s Florida Pride. However, Softball Canada announced June 22 that the pair would be made available for the national side at world championships.

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We need volunteers to assist in the operation of our Thrift Store. If you would like to join a team of people dedicated to helping their community in a fun and robust working environment – we want you! A unique partnership with the Surrey Hospice Society ensures all net income of the store is used to benefit the people of Surrey. Donations of items in good condition can be dropped off at the store or placed in a collection bin located at most fire halls in Surrey. Drop by and visit us Monday thru Saturday 9:00 am - 4:00 pm. We are located at the corner of 72 Avenue and King George Highway beside the Newton Wave Pool.

The Surrey Fire Fighters thank the following Major Sponsors of our Inaugural Charity Golf Tournament: RBC, Aspen Developments, Surrey Leader, Blue Pine Enterprises, Gold Room Jewellers, PH&N Investment, Westland Insurance, FDM Software, Inno-Tex, Rocky Mountain Phoenix, Pro-line fittings, B&B Contracting

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Fines target alcohol servers, bootleggers Booze for under-age customers targeted by Tom Fletcher NEW B.C. LIQUOR regulations

include a $575 fine for adults who buy alcohol for under-aged drinkers, or serve them in restaurants and pubs. The fines apply to serving staff who fail to check identification, in addition to penalties already in place for licensed establishments that serve under-aged drinkers. Those penalties range from fines of $7,500 to $10,000 or a licence suspension of 10 to 15 days. Parents and guardians who provide booze to their under-19 children are exempt from the tickets. “These changes give police and liquor inspectors another tool to make it harder for minors to get alcohol,” said Rich Coleman, minister responsible for liquor

and gambling policy. The new tickets are part of an effort by the B.C. government to streamline the court system, after imposing new administrative penalties for impaired driving. For supplying alcohol to minors, police previously handed out court appearance notices. The new tickets can still be disputed in court, but the onus is on the person ticketed to dispute or pay it. B.C. Restaurant and Foodservices Association president Ian Tostenson said the organization supports the new penalties.

Beer carts don’t need ICBC THE B.C. government has

changed regulations that required golf course beverage

carts to be covered by an ICBC insurance policy. “Carrying double coverage for liability wasn’t enhancing safety for golf course members and guests,” said Douglas Ferne of the National Golf Course Owners Association. “In fact, it was just creating more work and cost for golf courses, with no real benefits.” The change also relieves miniature cars such as those used in parades, as well as industrial utility vehicles that are only driven briefly to cross roads or get to a worksite. The new regulations require owners to have private third-party liability insurance. In 2011 the B.C. government created similar exemptions for golf carts and mobile equipment such as personal lifts and powered wheelbarrows. tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 15

Recycle Your Small Electrical Appliances, Power Tools & More As of July 1st, you can recycle more than 300 different household electrical products such as small appliances, power tools, exercise equipment and sewing machines at one of over 120 ElectroRecycle drop-off locations across B.C. For a complete list of accepted products or to find a drop-off location near you, visit electrorecycle.ca or call the Recycling Council of BC’s hotline at 1-800-667-4321 or 604-732-9253 in the Lower Mainland.

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COMMUNITY CHARTER S.B.C. 2003 CHAPTER 26 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SELL CITY LANDS Pursuant to Sections 26 and 94 of the Community Charter S.B.C. 2003, Chapter 26, as amended, the City of Surrey hereby gives notice of the intention to dispose of the following City land: Legal Description: That Part of Block 141 New Westminster District Shown on Plan BCP50857 as Parcel 1 That Part of Block 141 New Westminster District Shown on Plan BCP50857 as Parcel 2 That Part of Block 141 New Westminster District Shown on Plan BCP50857 as Parcel 3 Civic Address: A 79.9 m² portion of lane located adjacent to the eastern boundary of 13995 Hansen Road; a 49.1 m2 portion of lane adjacent to the westerly boundary of 14017 – 110 Avenue; and a 30.8 m2 portion of lane adjacent to the westerly boundary of 11023 – 140A Street. Property Description: The properties are portions of redundant lane. They are currently zoned RF (Single Family Residential) and designated as Urban in the Official Community Plan. The properties are being sold to adjoining owners for consolidation into the adjoining owners’ lots. Purchasers: OSZYWA MIROSLAW and FIESTA VERA AMANDA DEVRIES Nature of Disposition: Fee Simple Selling Price: THIRTY THOUSAND AND FIFTY DOLLARS ($30,050.00)

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16 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

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with the limitations of a pipeline that has been “oversubscribed.” Hobenshield explained that 25 to 30 per cent of the existing 1,150-kilometre pipeline is already twinned, so the company will be applying to the National Energy Board (NEB) to twin the remaining 900 kms. Kinder Morgan will file its expansion application with the NEB in late 2013, which will include a “potential corridor.” If the NEB gives the go-ahead to the project, then the company would come up with a detailed specific route which would go through its own NEB approval process. As for the map of the current pipeline route recently commissioned by Burnaby-Douglas NDP MP Kennedy Stewart, Hobenshield said it includes other pipelines owned by the company, such as the jet fuel line, or owned by others. She stressed that only the mainline system would be affected by the expansion project. Stewart has also been raising awareness of the potential for property along the route to be expropriated for the project if it goes ahead. “The Lower Mainland is a very good example of an area where we will need to look at alternatives [to the existing corridor],” she said. “Final decisions on routing will be done both through our consultation process and through routing studies.” The 60-year-old pipeline has long had easement agreements with landowners along the route. “With our proposed expansion process, our goal is to negotiate mutually agreeable arrangements with individual landowners if they are impacted by our expansion plans.” See PIPELINE / Page 17


Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 17

ICBC union issues strike notice Overtime ban ďŹ rst stage of slow escalation by Jeff Nagel THE UNION representing workers at ICBC has issued 72-hour strike notice. But job action will start slowly, with a ban on overtime starting July 6, according to COPE 378 vice-president Jeff Gillies. He said the union will give at least 48 hours warning of any further escalation in the job action. Unionized ICBC workers previously voted 87 per cent to provide the strike mandate to

back contract demands. COPE initially wanted fiveper-cent pay raises for each of 2012 and 2013 but has since trimmed that request. It now wants a four-year deal providing cost-of-living adjustments in each year, plus an extra two per cent in each of the final two years. ICBC has proposed a fiveyear contract with no pay hikes. The union argues the provincial government has used ICBC as an ATM – siphoning $1.2 billion in surpluses out of the public auto insurer

over five years – and therefore money is available to fund higher wages. The Labour Relations Board issued an interim order requiring some of ICBC’s 4,600 workers to continue to work in areas of claims, driver licensing, insurance and information to maintain essential services. ICBC officials have said they have no mandate from the province to bargain on monetary issues pending a provincial review of ICBC’s operations. More than 900 ICBC employees work in Surrey and close to 600 live in the city.

Pipeline: Too early to know proposed route Saturday, September 8, 2012

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It’s too early to know what the proposed routing is and what properties might be impacted, she said, noting factors to be considered include urban development, geography such as rivers and steep mountains, and locations between highways and railroads. “In lots of areas it’s not going to be practical to route within the existing right of way,� she said, adding one possibility the company may look at is running the sections of new pipeline within other transportation or utility corridors. Its NEB application late next year will provide a general idea of where the pipeline may run, she said, noting it will be applying for a 150-metre (492-foot) wide corridor. That would be wide enough to fit the length of a CFL football field, including end zones. It would be another year, around late 2014, before the specifics of the route are determined. In addition to modifications to its pump stations and Westridge Terminal, capacity at its Burnaby tank farm would also need to be doubled. No rezoning would be required, Hobenshield said, as it would take place within the existing site either by Kennedy Stewart building on undeveloped areas or replacing smaller tanks with larger ones. “We will work with the city to provide them with the information that they want or need through their permit application process, but as a strictly speaking federally-regulated entity we don’t [need their approval].� In the next couple of weeks, the company will make a commercial tolling application, seeking NEB approval of its fee, or tolling, structure for the post-expansion pipeline, essentially asking it to approve the fees on the agreements it signed in the fixed contracts. If it receives all the required approvals, Kinder Morgan will spend $4 billion and two years building the expansion, which would then go into service in late 2017. The company will provide updates along the way at www.transmountain.com and answer questions from the public at info@transmountain.com and 866-514-6700.


18 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

N OT I C E O F P U B L I C H E A R I N G - M O N DAY, J U LY 9 , 2 012 The Council of the City of Surrey will hold a Public Hearing pursuant to the provisions of the Local Government Act, in the Council Chamber at City Hall, 14245 - 56 Avenue, Surrey, BC, on Monday, July 9, 2012, commencing at 7:00 p.m. Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17697 Application: 7911-0229-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 18175 Claytonhill Drive APPLICANT: Oasis Development Ltd. c/o Citiwest Consulting Ltd. (Roger Jawanda) #101, 9030 King George Boulevard, Surrey, BC V3V 7Y3 PROPOSAL: To rezone the property from “Half Acre Residential Zone (RH)” to “Single Family Residential Zone (RF)”. The purpose of the rezoning is to permit subdivision into 2 single family lots.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17697

Surrey Official Community Plan By-law, 1996, No. 12900, No. 325 Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17698 Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17699 Application: 7911-0113-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 7264 - 194 Street APPLICANT: 09211879 B.C. Ltd. c/o Hub Engineering Inc. (Mike Kompter) #101, 7485 - 130 Street, Surrey, BC V3W 1H8 PROPOSAL: By-law 17698 To redesignate the property from Suburban (SUB) to Urban (URB). By-law 17699 To rezone the property from “One Acre Residential Zone (RA)” to “Single Family Residential (9) Zone (RF-9)”. DEVELOPMENT VARIANCE PERMIT To vary “Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000”, as amended, Part 5 and 17C, Section K, as follows: (a) To reduce the minimum lot width for a Type III Corner Lot from 13.8 metres (45 ft.) to 9.0 metres (29 ft.) for proposed Lot 22; (b) To reduce the minimum lot width for an uncovered Parking Space from 2.75 metres (9 ft.) to 2.6 metres (8.5 ft.) for proposed Lot 8 and to 2.25 metres (7.35 ft.) for proposed Lot 9. The purpose of redesignation, rezoning and development variance permit is to permit subdivision into approximately 22 small single family lots.

Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17692 Application: 7911-0327-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 3122, 3142 Croydon Drive and 15311 - 31 Avenue APPLICANT: City of Surrey and Croydon Corporate Centre Inc. c/o Site Lines Architecture Inc. (Gordon J. Klassen) #200, 9188 Glover Road, Langley, BC V1M 2R6 PROPOSAL: To rezone the site from “One Acre Residential Zone (RA)” and “Business Park Zone (IB)” to “Comprehensive Development Zone (CD)”. The purpose of the rezoning is to permit the development of two business park buildings. B. Permitted Uses for By-law 17692 The Lands and structures shall be used for the following uses only, or for a combination of such uses: 1. Office uses excluding social escort services and methadone clinics. 2. Light impact industry. 3. General service uses excluding drive-through banks. 4. Warehouse uses. 5. Distribution centres. 6. Accessory uses including the following: (a) Personal service uses limited to the following: i. Barbershops; ii. Beauty parlours; iii. Cleaning and repair of clothing; and iv. Shoe repair shops; (b) Recreational facilities, excluding go-kart operations, drag racing and rifle ranges; (c) Eating establishments, excluding drive-through restaurants, provided that i. The eating establishment does not exceed a total floor area of 185 square metres [2,000 sq.ft.]; and ii. The eating establishment is located only on the ground floor of the building; (d) Community services; (e) Assembly halls limited to churches, provided that: i. The church does not exceed a total floor area of 700 square metres [7,500 sq. ft.]; ii. The church accommodates a maximum of 300 seats; and iii. There is not more than one church on a lot, and where a lot has been subdivided by a strata plan, then there shall be only one church within the strata plan. (f) Child care centre; and (g) Dwelling unit(s) provided that the dwelling unit(s) is (are) i. Contained within a principal building; ii. Occupied by the owner or a caretaker, for the protection of the businesses permitted; iii. Restricted to a maximum of 2 dwelling units on the Lands; iv. Restricted to a maximum floor area of: a. 140 square metres [1,500 sq. ft.] for one (first) dwelling unit; and b. 90 square metres [970 sq. ft.] for the second dwelling unit;.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17692

To rezone a portion of 2456 - 188 Street from “Business Park 1 Zone (IB-1)” and a portion of 18917 - 24 Avenue from “Intensive Agriculture Zone (A 2)” to the existing “Comprehensive Development Zone (CD)” (17038). By-law 17694 Block B To rezone a portion of 2456 - 188 Street from “Business Park 1 Zone (IB-1)” and a portion of 18917 - 24 Avenue from “Intensive Agriculture Zone (A 2)” to “Comprehensive Development Zone (CD)”. The purpose of the rezoning is to enable the expansion of the Loblaws site and permit the development of four new lots along 24 Avenue. B. Permitted Uses for By-law 17694 The Lands and structures shall be used for the following uses only, or for a combination of such uses: 1. Light impact industry including wholesale and retail sales of products produced within the business premises or as part of the wholesale operations provided that the total floor area used or intended to be used for retail sales and display to the public shall not exceed 20% of the gross floor area for each individual business or establishment, or 460 square metres [5,000 sq.ft.], whichever is less. 2. Warehouse uses. 3. Distribution centres. 4. Office uses excluding: (a) social escort services; (b) Methadone clinics; (c) offices of professionals including without limitation, accountants, lawyers, doctors, dentists, chiropractors, physiotherapists, massage therapists and related health care practitioners and notary publics, and the offices of real estate, advertising and insurance. 5. Accessory uses limited to the following: (a) General service uses excluding drive-through banks; (b) Eating establishments limited to a maximum of 200 seats and excluding drive-through restaurants; (c) Community services; (d) Child care centre; and (e) Dwelling unit(s) provided that the dwelling unit(s) is (are): i. Contained within a principal building; ii. Occupied by the owner or a caretaker, for the protection of the businesses permitted; iii. Restricted to a maximum number of a. One dwelling unit in each principal building less than 2,800 square metres [30,000 sq.ft.] in floor area; b. Two dwelling units in each principal building of 2,800 square metres [30,000 sq.ft.] or greater in floor area; c. Notwithstanding Sub-sections B.5(e)iii.a and iii.b, the maximum number shall be two dwelling units for lots less than 4.0 hectares [10 acres] in area, three dwelling units for lots equal to or greater than 4.0 hectares [10 acres] in area, and where a lot has been subdivided by a strata plan then there shall only be one 140-square metre [1,500 sq.ft.] dwelling unit within the strata plan. iv. Restricted to a maximum floor area of a. 140 square metres [1,500 sq.ft.] for one (first) dwelling unit on a lot; b. 90 square metres [970 sq.ft.] for each additional dwelling unit; and c. Notwithstanding Sub-sections B.5.(e)iv.a. and iv.b., the maximum floor area shall not exceed 33% of the total floor area of the principal building within which the dwelling unit is contained.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17693/17694

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17698/17699

Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2009, No. 17038 Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17693 Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17694 Application: 7910-0308-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 2456 - 188 Street and 18917 - 24 Avenue APPLICANT: 661903 British Columbia Ltd. c/o Pacific Land Resource Group Inc. #101, 7485 - 130 Street, Surrey, BC V3W 1H8 PROPOSAL: By-law 17693 Block A

www.surrey.ca

Continued on next page


Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 19

N OT I C E O F P U B L I C H E A R I N G - M O N DAY, J U LY 9 , 2 012 City of Surrey Heritage Revitalization Agreement By-law, 2012, No. 17700 Application: 7911-0253-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 16017 - 8 Avenue APPLICANT: B. A. N. Holdings Ltd. c/o Ankenman and Associates Architects Inc. (Mark Lesack) #200, 12321 Beecher Road, Surrey, BC V4A 3A7 PROPOSAL: To enter into a Heritage Revitalization Agreement to permit upgrading of the Seventh Day Adventist Church building and add additional uses to the site. The following uses are added in addition to the uses already permitted in the “Assembly Hall 1 Zone (PA 1)” Zone: • meeting hall; • community resource centre; • community theatre; • adult daycare; • office uses; • antique store; • craft store; and • art gallery (art retail permitted).

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17700

Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17701 Application: 7912-0005-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 16977 - 0 Avenue APPLICANT: Herbert and Sybill Koehl c/o Citiwest Consulting Ltd. (Donni Chanyungco) #101, 9030 King George Boulevard, Surrey, BC V3V 7Y3 PROPOSAL: To rezone the property from “One Acre Residential Zone (RA)” to “Single Family Residential Zone (RF)”. DEVELOPMENT VARIANCE PERMIT To vary “Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000”, as amended, Part 16, Section F, as follows: (a) To reduce the minimum front yard setback from 7.5 metres (25 ft.) to 6 metres (20 ft.) for an attached garage or carport, and the minimum front yard setback from 7.5 metres (25 ft.) to 4 metres (13 ft.) for the remainder of the principal building. The purpose of the rezoning and development variance permit is to to permit subdivision into 3 single family lots.

Surrey Land Use Contract No. 294, Authorization By-law, 1977, No. 5191, Discharge By-law, 2012, No. 17695 Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17696 Application: 7911-0172-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 13769 - 104 Avenue APPLICANT: Highten Properties (104) Ltd. c/o PJ Lovick Architect Ltd. (Andrea Scott) 3707 First Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5C 3V6 PROPOSAL: By-law 17695 To discharge Land Use Contract No. 294 from the property to allow the underlying “Self Service Gasoline Station Zone (CG-1)” to regulate the site. By-law 17696 To rezone the site from “Self Service Gasoline Station Zone (CG-1)” to “Town Centre Commercial Zone (C-15)”. DEVELOPMENT VARIANCE PERMIT To vary “Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000”, as amended, Part 1 and Part 37, Section F, as follows: (a) To allow a canopy that exceeds a total of 2.4 metres (8 ft.) in horizontal length along an exterior wall to encroach into the required front yard (south) setback to a maximum of 1.6 metres (5.2 ft.); and (b) To reduce the minimum front yard (south) setback from 2.0 metres (7.0 ft.) to 1.8 metres (5.9 ft.) to the building face; and (c) To reduce the minimum required number of on-site parking spaces from 23 to 22. The purpose of the Land Use Contract discharge, rezoning and development variance permit is to permit the development of a three-storey commercial/office building in City Centre. B. Permitted Uses for Town Centre Commercial Zone Land and structures shall be used for the following uses only, or for a combination of such uses: 1. Retail stores excluding the following: (a) adult entertainment stores; and (b) secondhand stores and pawnshops. 2. Personal service uses excluding body rub parlours. 3. General service uses excluding drive-through banks. 4. Eating establishments excluding drive-through restaurants. 5. Neighbourhood pubs. 6. Liquor Store, permitted only in conjunction with a “liquor-primary” licensed establishment, with a valid license issued under the regulations to the Liquor Control and Licensing Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, chapter 267, s. 84, as amended. 7. Office uses excluding: i. social escort services ii. methadone clinics 8. Tourist accommodation. 9. Indoor recreational facilities. 10. Parking facilities. 11. Entertainment uses excluding arcades and adult entertainment stores. 12. Assembly halls. 13. Community services. 14. Child care centres. 15. Multiple unit residential building may be provided subject to such use forming an integral part of the commercial uses on the lot.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17695/17696

Surrey Zoning By-law, 1993, No. 12000, Amendment By-law, 2012, No. 17702 Application: 7911-0334-00 CIVIC ADDRESS: 13450 - 104 Avenue (also shown as 10350 University Drive) APPLICANT: City of Surrey c/o Surrey City Development Corporation (Jim Cox) #1870, 13450 - 102 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 5X3 PROPOSAL: To rezone the site from “Single Family Residential Zone (RF)”, “Community Commercial Zone (C-8)”, “Town Centre Commercial Zone (C-15)” and “Comprehensive Development Zone (CD)” (By-law No. 13882) to “Comprehensive Development Zone (CD)”. The purpose of the rezoning is to permit the development of a 45-storey commercial and residential mixed-use building. B. Permitted Uses for By-law 17702 The Lands and structures shall be used for the following uses only, or for a combination of such uses: 1. Office uses excluding social escort services and methadone clinics. 2. Retail stores excluding adult entertainment stores. 3. Personal service uses excluding body rub parlours. 4. General service uses excluding funeral parlours and drive-through banks. 5. Eating establishments excluding drive-through restaurants. 6. Neighbourhood pubs. 7. Liquor store. 8. Indoor recreational facilities. 9. Entertainment uses excluding arcades and adult entertainment stores. 10. Tourist accommodation. 11. Child care centres. 12. Universities designated as such under the Universities Act, R.S.B.C., 1996, c.468, as amended. 13. Colleges and institutes designated as such under the College and Institute Act, R.S.B.C., 1996, c.52, as amended. 14. Multiple unit residential buildings.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17702

Additional information may be obtained from the Planning & Development Department at (604) 591-4441. Copies of the by-law(s), development variance permit(s), supporting staff reports and any relevant background documentation may be viewed in the “Notices” section of the City of Surrey website at www.surrey.ca or inspected at the City Hall, Monday through Friday (except statutory holidays) between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. from Tuesday, June 26, 2012 to Monday, July 9, 2012.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP 17701

All persons who believe their interest in property will be affected by the proposed by-law(s)/development variance permit(s) shall be afforded an opportunity to be heard at the Public Hearing on matters contained in the by law(s)/development variance permit(s). Should you have any concerns or comments you wish to convey to Council, please fax to 604-591-8731, email clerks@surrey.ca, or submit in writing to the City Clerk at 14245-56 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3X 3A2, no later than Monday, July 9, 2012 at 4:00 p.m. Please note that Council may not receive further submissions from the public or interested persons concerning these applications after the Public Hearing has concluded. Jane Sullivan City Clerk

www.surrey.ca


20 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Your community Your classifieds.

604.575.5555 fax 604.575.2073 email ads@bcclassified.com COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . . . . . . 1-8 COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . 9-57 TRAVEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61-76 CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80-98 EMPLOYMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . 203-387 PETS & LIVESTOCK . . . . . . . . . . . 453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE . . . . . . 503-587 REAL ESTATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603-696 RENTALS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703-757 AUTOMOTIVE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 804-862 MARINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 903-920

ON THE WEB: ON THE WEB:

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

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LOST AND FOUND

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

FOUND: KITTEN, white, blue eyes. Approx. 7 weeks old. Large hernia. Call 604-596-4928. LOST - CELL; LG touchscreen slide cell phone, lost in the Cloverdale area on June 21st. Please call: (778)298-5567. LOST: OLDER Bichon went missing from yard on Sat Jun. 16 around 9 am. She had no collar, she was mid haircut and bath. If found please call 604-809-5510, Reward for return.

We Are Growing & You’re Invited:

TRAVEL

TO SUPER SAVE’S OPEN HOUSE & RECRUITMENT FAIR!

74

CARETAKER - LANGLEY ROD & GUN CLUB Full-time caretaker required (live-in or live-out). Front office administration and facilities maintenance. Basic computer skills, handyman skills, must possess or willing to apply for firearms license, bondable. Visit our website at www.lrgc.com. Apply at lrgc.jobs@gmail.com.

Mon. - Fri. 6a.m. - 6p.m. Saturday 8a.m. - 2p.m.

TIMESHARE

We’re offering Exciting careers for

CLASS 1 & 3 DRIVERS

CHILDREN

OBITUARIES

Stop in to find out what makes SUPER SAVE the Right Choice for YOU... WE OFFER: · Excellent Equipment · Dedicated Dispatch Team · Safe Driving Reward Program · Referral Bonus Program · Great Benefits and more! · Pension Plans

LITTLE STARS DAYCARE. Neat and clean. Fully licensed, first-aid. ECE staff. Call 604-592-2526.

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

BRONCO TRANSPORTATION bcclassified.com

19395 Langley Bypass Langley BC V3S-6K2

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248

w/ Clean Drivers Abstract

7

114

Please e-mail resumes: dispatch@supersave.ca or call: 604.533.4423 Super Save is committed to Employment Equity and Diversity.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

COMPANY DRIVERS & OWNER OPERATORS

Required for BC, Washington Oregon and Alberta runs. Must have previous flat deck experience. Please fax resume & abstract 604.888.2956 or e-mail: jerry@ broncotransportaion.com CLASS 1 DRIVERS WANTED! Sign bonus $2000 for Owner/op ph: 604-598-3498/fax: 604-598-3497 DRIVER. Class 1 Drivers wanted. Offering top pay. Close to home. Home most weekends. Family comes first! 1 year flat deck exp. & border crossing a must. Fax resume & driver abstract to 604-853-4179.

114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

DRIVERS West Valley Trucking Ltd. is hiring for Long Haul Truck Drivers ($23/hr, 40hrs/wk). Mail 7880 128 Street, Surrey, BC. V3W 4E8. Fax – (604) 593-5485. DRIVER WITH CLASS 1 + AIR WANTED To conduct deliveries for international lubricants co. in Vancouver area, Seattle-Tacoma, Prince George, Okanagan & Edmonton. Pay $20/hour, mileage, bonus, profit-sharing & full benefits.

115

EDUCATION

125

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION RATED #2 FOR AT-HOME JOBS. Start training today. Graduates are in demand! Enroll now. Take advantage of low monthly payments. 1-800466-1535 www.canscribe.com admissions@canscribe.com TRAIN TO BE AN Apartment/Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of graduates working. 31 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-6658339, 604-681-5456.

Apply with resume by emailing custservpacific@fuchs.com or faxing to 604-888-1145

Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home for a few months. Are you looking for the opportunity to do meaningful, fulfilling work? PLEA Community Services is looking for qualified applicants who can provide care for youth in their home on a full-time basis or on weekends for respite. Training, support and remuneration are provided. Funding is available for modifications to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting for an open door.

Make it yours. Call 604-708-2628 www.plea.bc.ca

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

115

FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. Apply online! IHEschool.com 1-866-399-3853

130

EDUCATION

HELP WANTED

NAVI GARAGE DOORS needs garage door installers. Min. 1 yr exp. Call (604)825-1353

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783

115

EDUCATION

DRIVERS WANTED - must have class 1 or 3 driver license. Please E-mail resume & abstract to amanda@supersave.ca MATCO. Class 1 Household Goods Drivers 2 years experience required. $5000 sign-on bonus. *Terms and conditions apply*. Competitive Wages. Contact: Dana Watson dana.watson@matco.ca, Fax 780-484-8800

BC CANCER

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21

COMING EVENTS

CALLING ALL JOKERS! Former teachers & students. John Oliver Secondary’s 100th Anniversary September 21 & 22, 2012. Pre-registration required. www.jo100.ca joanniversary@gmail.com Early Bird ends July 15th

33

INFORMATION

A PARDON/WAIVER FOR WORK AND/OR TRAVEL? Guaranteed Fast, Affordable, Criminal Record Removal. Call for FREE Consultation. Qualify Today & Save $250.00 (limited time offer). 1-800736-1209, www.pardonsandwaivers.ca BBB Accredited CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

$294.00 DAILY MAILING POSTCARDS! Guaranteed Legit Work. Register Online! www.ThePostcardGuru.com Internet Referral Agents Needed! $20-$95/Hr www.FreeJobPosition.com $1497 Checks Stuffed In Your Mailbox! www.DankMoney.com Big Paychecks Paid Every Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com

$30,000-$400,000yr. P/t or F/t Magazine Publishing Business For Fun Energetic Entrepreneurs! Exclusive Protected License. We Teach You Step By Step!

Toll Free 1-855-406-1253 Help Wanted!!! Make up to $1000 a week Mailing brochures from home! FREE Supplies! Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.theworkinghub.com OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING!

Own your own home inspection franchise *ALL TRAINING INCLUDED* Join this BC Gov’t Licensed industry! Limited franchises available in Surrey.

Call Dave today to book your Franchise Presentation.

778-996-0369 www.bc.abuyerschoice.com

IF YOU ARE...

S Moving, Expecting A Baby S Planning A Wedding S Anticipating Retirement S Employment Opportunities

This is creating MILLIONAIRES! Earn $30,000 to $50,000+ weekly with ABSOLUTE proof. This is real! Call 1-800-887-1897 (24 hrs.) This is a serious life changer!

1-866-627-6074

We have Gifts & Information www.welcomewagon.ca

041

PERSONALS

Curious About Men? Talk Discreetly with men like you! Try FREE! Call 1-888-559-1255 Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888-744-3699

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 5 Wk Job Search Class with possible

job placement. Info Session July 3rd @1:00 pm. 604 - 598 - 8545 #303 7337 137- St, Sry

e

Classified Sales Representative Full Time Position Classified Business Centre Black Press is one of Canada’s largest independent media companies. We publish over 100 award–winning newspapers, host over 75 websites and create value for communities across British Columbia. We have a passion for growth and are courageous innovators. Black Press Classified Business Centre has a full time Classified Outbound Sales Representative position available immediately. Are you interested in: • 5 day work week ( Mon-Fri) • No weekends or holidays • Great earning potential • Opportunity for advancement You will work as an integral part of the dynamic classified sales team to achieve both departmental & personal goals. Your main focus will be to develop new classified business as well as building on an existing client base. You will have a professional manner, a passion for serving people and the desire to “WOW” customers. You will understand the basic elements of classified advertising and have a proven track record in sales. To apply, please send a covering letter with your resume to Lisa Farquharson, Classified Manager, lisa@blackpress.com or mail your resume with covering letter to Black Press Classified Business Centre, #100, 5460 152nd Street, Surrey, B.C. V3S 5J9. Closing date is August 1, 2012.

www.blackpress.ca

SUMMER GRANT GIVEAWAY! Start any Sprott-Shaw Community College program between July 1, 2012 - Aug. 20, 2012 and earn up to $1,000* towards tuition. *conditions apply

Practical Nursing ● Healthcare Assistant ● Medical Office Assistant ● Pharmacy Assistant ● Community Support Worker ● Early Childhood Education ● Legal Secretary ● Business Management ●

*Not all programs available at all campuses

Call Our Surrey Campus:

604-583-1004

Join us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/sprottshaw

www.sprottshaw.com


Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 21 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

$100-$400 CASH DAILY for Landscaping Work! Competitive, Energetic, Honesty a MUST!

PropertyStarsJobs.Com

All Unemployed Start Now! F/T employment on our promotions team. Great hours, great pay, great atmosphere. We want 6 new people by next week! Call today start tomorrow.

Call Erica 604 777 2195 An Alberta Construction Company is hiring dozer, excavator and labour/rock truck operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfield road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-7235051. Australia/New Zealand dairy, beef, sheep, crop enterprises have opportunities for trainees ages 18-30 to live & work Down Under. Apply now! Ph:1-888-598-4415 www.agriventure.com CLEANER for commercial bldgs, perm F/T. Split shift, early morning and eve’s. Starting at $14 to $15/hr, can work your way up to $20/hr. Car req’d. No exp. necessary, will train. Fax resume to 778-298-8985, email: and1ball@shaw.ca

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 134

F/T JANITOR SERVICES Full Time Janitor services required at busy RV Dealership in Langley. Daytime shifts with a few evenings. Experience required and must be knowledgeable in the care of linoleum floor tiles. Please email resume to accounting@travelandrv.ca. No phone calls or drop ins please.

Coast Tsawwassen Inn is currently seeking a part-time Guest Services Agent flexible to do Front Desk, Bellmen or Night Auditor shifts. Successful Candidate :

HOTEL SUPERVISORS ~ HOUSEKEEPING ATTENDANTS ~ FRONT DESK OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR

688953 BC LTD dba Comfort Inn & Suites Surrey is hiring for Hotel Managing Supervisors ($17/hr); Housekeeping Room Attendants ($14/hr); Front Desk Clerks ($13/hr); Office Administrator ($20/hr). All positions 40hrs /week + ben. Apply Fax: 604-576-8884.

JUNK REMOVAL STAFF Recycle-It! Earth Friendly Junk Removal is looking for clean cut, hard working, energetic people to join our expanding recycling team. If you have a valid class 5 D.L. and are not afraid to work hard in a challenging but, exciting atmosphere please e-mail your resume to jason@recycleitcanada.ca

DRYALL INSTALLERS ~ PAINTER

IRONWORKER ~ PLASTERER CEMENT MASON Nijjar Drywall Construction Ltd. is hiring for Material Handlers ($16.05/hr), Construction Helpers ($18.69/hr), Drywall Installers ($25/hr), Ironworker ($28/hr), Painter ($19/hr), Plasterer ($25/hr), Cement Mason ($25/hr). All 40 hours/wk. Mail – 16375 30B Ave., Surrey, BC V3S 0E3. Fax – (866) 694-2742.

Students 12 & up. Cash paid daily. Provincial youth program $100-$300/wk. 604-854-1044

TEAM MEMBERS NEEDED RESIDENTIAL CLEANING Now accepting applications for: F/T, day positions Mon. - Fri. ✖ Paid Hourly, not percentage ✖ Vehicles & Equip. provided ✖ Must be fluent in English ✖ Drivers license required ✖ No experience necessary, top training provided Apply in person only Mon. - Fri., 9:00a.m. - 3:00p.m. 6834 King George Hwy. Surrey

131

NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED

WE WILL TRAIN! COMPETITIVE RATES Must Have Valid TCP Certificate, Reliable Insured Vehicle And Provide A Clean Drivers Abstract!

HOME CARE/SUPPORT

Must speak, read and write fluent English. Must have valid drivers. licence with a clean abstract. Must be outgoing, friendly and caring. Must be available to work. Exceptional Guest Services attitude.

• • • •

Please submit your resume and cover letter to yipp@tsawwasseninn.com or fax them to 604-943-8299

Coast Tsawwassen Inn is currently seeking a casual part-time Room Attendant for our Housekeeping Department.

Cook Req’d for Greek food, F/T, Pmt, Exp: 1-2 yr. Sal: 14.50/hr. Duties; Prepare all kind of Greek food include authentic Greek food, souvlakia, barbeque, teriyaki and seafood special etc. Collect all ingredient to make all Greek food include barbeque, teriyaki, seafood etc. Manage kitchen staff, supervise kitchen helpers, maintain inventory and supplies. Lang: Basic English required. Greece with Punjabi an asset. Contact Jim from Jim the Greek Taverna at Delta, BC. Fax: resume 604-589-0828 or e-mail your resume: jim_greek@ymail.com

COOKS ~ SERVERS & SWEET MAKERS DGS Enterprises Ltd. dba Yellow Chilli Restaurant & Bar is hiring for Tandoori Cooks, Sweet Makers & East Indian Cooks (All $17/hr, 40hrs/wk) and Food & Beverage Servers - $11.50/hr. Mail – 12818 72 Avenue, Suite #6, Surrey, BC V3W 2M9. Fax – (778) 218 0447. SUBWAY 108/148th St. F/T late night food counter attendent position. English required. $11/hr. Will train. Fax resume to: 778-395-0305.

WESTERN BAY dba Tim Horton’s Food Counter Attendants F/T / Shift Work / Nights / Overnights / Early Mornings / Weekends

$10.25/hour + benefits! Apply in person to one of the following locations or fax: • 9591 Ladner Trunk Rd. Delta. • 2360 KG. Blvd, Sry. or • Unit # 1 - 1767 152nd St. Sry. or fax: 604-278-6726

604-708-2628 www.plea.bc.ca

or Email to:

horizonwork@yahoo.ca F/T SHOP HELPER / INSTALLER for sanding & pressure washing railings. No exp. - no problem - will train. Fax resume to: 778-578-7606.

BDC Appointment Coordinator Jonker Auto Group are looking for an energetic, enthusiastic individual to join our team. Duties include scheduling service appointments and maintaining customer relationships. During this full time permanent day shift, you will be required to talk on the phone while working on the computer system. High school education is required and automotive experience is an asset. Please send your resume to christal@jonker.com

SALES

156

s

Unalloy-IWRC (div. Samuel, Sons) a diverse metals distributor looking for a key individual to join our sales team. Experience in wire rope and rigging products considered a definite asset. Knowledge of perforated metals an asset also. The successful individual will have a proven track record in industrial sales. Currently sales area is lower mainland. We offer a competitive salary and excellent benefit program. Please respond with resume to “themanager@unalloy-iwrc.com Only applications going to personal interviews will be contacted. All applications treated confidential

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

ALLISON TRANSMISSION MECHANICS Req. for ABC Transmissions Ltd. Positions available in the Surrey location. Applicants with previous manual transmission & gear exp. will be considered. Forward Resume to Steve Palm: Fax: 604-888-4749 E-mail: sep@cullendiesel.com

Required Monday - Friday for a Fraser Valley logging company sort yard. No experience necessary. We will train. Summer position, potentially could turn into long term.

Competitive Wages! Please fax resume: (1)604-796-0318 or e-mail: mikayla.tamihilog@shaw.ca CABLE PLOW and Drill Operator. Well-established company provides underground telecommunication installations throughout Alberta. Experience required. Accommodation and meal per diem provided. Email resume; catearmstrong@ grahamsbackhoe.com

COMMERCIAL TRANSPORT & DIESEL ENGINE MECHANICS Required for Cullen Diesel Power Ltd. and Western Star & Sterling Trucks of Vancouver Inc. Positions avail. in Surrey & Kamloops. Also, Elk Valley as resident men. Detroit Diesel / MTU experience an asset.

Union Shop ~ Full Benefits.

MECHANIC ~ Ancor Transport Ltd. is hiring for Truck and Transport Mechanic ($26/hr, 40 hours/week) Mail to 13926 89A Avenue, Surrey, BC V3V 6K9 TRUCK & TRANSPORT MECHANIC

Bestlink Transport Services Inc. is hiring for Truck and Transport Mechanic - $26/hr, 40 hrs/week. Mail: 13101 78A Ave., Surrey, BC V3W 9B6.

CALLIDALE SPA Specialists in • Acupressure • Reflexology

236

CLEANING SERVICES

ALL GREEN CLEANING If you want your home or office to sparkle call Susan 778-899-0941. Weekly, Bi-Weekly, or Monthly Rates. Free Estimates.

EXP’D FILIPINA cleaning lady avail. to clean your home or office. Affordable rates. 604-587-5454

778-708-7733

#40-20631 Fraser Hwy. Langley

GRAND OPENING! Green Island Relaxation Body Care 604-598-8733

242

CONCRETE & PLACING

8673A Scott Road

Concrete Lifting Specialist

175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

Bonniecrete Const Ltd

Ross 604D535D0124

www.driveproducts.com We currently have the following opening within our Vancouver Branch:

Specializing in Private Events! We Come To You! Doing It All, From Set-Up - Clean-Up.

JOURNEYMAN FABRICATOR / WELDER

• Home Dinner Parties • Meetings • Funerals • Weddings • B-B-Ques • Birthdays • Anniversaries

Min 5 years experience in a steel manufacturing environment. Min C level welder qualifications. Proficient in multi-process all position steel welding with the ability to read blueprints and work independently. Mechanical ability an asset. We offer competitive wages, comprehensive benefit plans and the opportunity to advance within the company. Must be able to multi-task in a fast paced environment.

Please fax your resume to:

604-888-2029 or email: dscott@driveproducts.com

164

WAREHOUSE

Material Handling Assistant/Driver Due to growth, FLSmidth Knelson is looking for a talented Material Handling Assistant/Driver to add fulltime to our material management team. You must have experience driving small forklifts and light trucks. A Class 5 license, a clean driver record (driver’s abstract), and good knowledge of the Lower Mainland area streets are required. A current forklift license and previous TDG certification are assets. Please sent resume to: FLSmidth Knelson at knelsoncareers@flsmidth.com or fax 604-888-4013

Unique Taste, Unique Menus... Gourmet, Customized Menus Tailored To Your Function...

Kristy 604.488.9161 threescocatering@shaw.ca

182

FINANCIAL SERVICES

DROWNING IN DEBTS? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877987-1420. www.pioneerwest.com If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161. MONEYPROVIDER.COM. $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877776-1660.

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LEGAL SERVICES

CRIMINAL RECORD? Guaranteed Record Removal since 1989. Confidential, Fast, & Affordable. Our A+BBB Rating assures EMPLOYMENT & TRAVEL FREEDOM. Call for FREE INFO. BOOKLET

1-8-NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366) RemoveYourRecord.com

Please list the position you are applying for in the subject line

PERSONAL SERVICES

SEMI-RETIRED contractor will do small concrete jobs. Patio’s, sidewalks, driveway’s. Re & re old or damaged concrete. Ken 604-532-0662

UNIQUE CONCRETE DESIGN F All types of concrete work F F Re & Re F Forming F Site prep FDriveways FExposed FStamped F Bobcat Work F WCB Insured

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147 FREE ESTIMATES

257

ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

HEALTH MASSAGE

11969 88 Ave Scott Rd. 10:00a.m. - 10:00p.m. 778-593-9788 ✶ Spa Grand Opening ✶

“HOT” Special ! Sensation Skin Care Tel: 604-583-6603

191

DRYWALL

A Call to Vern. Free Est. Drywall,

Reno & Texture Specialist, Painting.

“No job too small”. 604-825-8469

PSB DRYWALL ★ All Boarding, Taping, Framing & Texture. Insured work. Call Parm (604) 762-4657 THREE STAR DRYWALL LTD Boarding, Taping, & texture. Small jobs welcome! Kam 604-551-8047

260

ELECTRICAL

#1113 LOW COST ELECTRIC Panel upgrade, trouble shooting Lic & Bonded. Alfred 604-522-3435 #22047 WE LOVE SMALL JOBS All work guaranteed. High Outlet Electric. 604-220-8347

LICENSED. Local. Low cost. Home theater, Big/small jobs. Renov. & panel change expert. 604-374-0062

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899

269

FENCING

1-A1 BRAR CEDAR FENCING, chain link & landscaping. Block retaining wall. Reasonable rates. Harry 604-719-1212, 604-306-1714 6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE. $11/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work. Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.

6 FT FENCING, Retaining Walls, Blacktop/Concrete driveway’s, Reno’s, Roofing, Bobcat Service. Snow Removal. Gaary Landscaping Call (604)889-8957.

281 171

Grand Opening th

Westview Dr - Huff Bvld,Westview Pl - Southridge Rd Brewster Dr E - Brewster Dr W, Cory Dr - 71A Ave Bridlington Dr - 112 St, Sutton Pl - Monroe Dr Boynton Pl - 112 St, Scarborough Dr - Bridlington Dr Malton Dr - 112 St, 74A Ave - 75 Ave Cherry Ln - Stoney Cres, Hamlin Dr - Lyon Rd McKenzie Dr - Hillside Cres, Bond Blvd - 64 Ave Mackie Crt - 111B Ave, 80 Ave - 81A Ave Wiltshire Blvd - Westside Dr, Santa Monica Dr Westside Dr - Modesto Dr,Wiltshire Bvld Dawson Pl - 114 St, Dawson Cres - 95A Ave 114 St - 116 St, 94 Ave - 96 Ave 116 St - 118 St, 94 Ave - 96 Ave 112 St - 115 St, 88 Ave - 90 Ave River Rd - 112 St, 90 Ave - 92A Ave Harrogate Dr - Dunlop Rd, 84 Ave Dunlop Rd - Byron Rd, Doncaster Cres

MIND BODY SPIRIT

COME JOIN OUR TEAM!

FULL TIME Buncher/Processor Operators needed in the Williams Lake area. Great wage and benefits package. Email resume to smallpinelogging@yahoo.ca or call 250398-8216.

ROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION

173

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

D Crack Repairs D Driveways D Patios, etc. D Provide Proper Drainage

BEST HAND IN TOWN. New Location. Hot Oil. 10am - 10pm. Call: 604-719-5628

604-575-5342

PERSONAL SERVICES

Free Est & Warranties

Forward Resume to Annish Singh: Fax: 604-888-4749 E-mail:ars@cullendiesel.com

UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTES 112 76 85 71 74 94 89 105 50 71 100 71 82 130 90 95 69

TRADES, TECHNICAL

BUNDLER

IN DELTA

1-05 1-16 2-08 2-09 2-10 4-04 4-10 5-07 5-09 5-10 7-02 7-03 7-07 7-16 8-01 8-12 8-18

160

Union Shop ~ Full Benefits

CARRIERS NEEDED Please Call

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Outside Sales

Please submit your resume and cover letter to yipp@tsawwasseninn.com or fax them to 604-943-8299

Respite Caregivers

FORKLIFT DRIVER & Yard Cleaner required in Surrey - F/T & P/T. Fax resume to: 604-930-5066

RETAIL

SALES ASSOCIATES req P/T for Fashion Addition 14+ location at Morgan Crossing, South Surrey. Apply in person or email:

The successful candidate should be fluent in English and have great communication skills. Some lifting and pushing is required.

PLEA Community Services Society is looking for individuals and families who can provide respite care in their homes for youth aged 12 to 18, who are attending a recovery program for alcohol and/or drug addiction. Qualified applicants must be available on weekends and have a home that can accommodate one to two youth and meet all safety requirements. Training and support is provided. If interested, please call a member of our Family Recruiting Team at:

Please E-mail Resume: grasdald@telus.net

154

sharvey@fashionaddition14plus.com

MATERIAL HANDLERS ~ CONSTRUCTION HELPERS ~

FLAG PERSONS & LANE TECH PERSONNEL

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

GARDENING

NUTRITION/DIET

SLIM DOWN FOR SUMMER! Lose up to 20 lbs in just 8 weeks. Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-8545176

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 206

APPLIANCE REPAIRS

Dawn Appliance Service. (Sry) Fast in-home repairs, all makes & models Certif’d tech. 1 Yr parts & labour warr. 7 days/24 hrs. 604-512-5936

224

CARPET CLEANING

Action Carpet & Furn. Cleaning Special pkg $79. Call 604-945-5801

SURREY LEADER

Now Hiring

Delivery Drivers • Surrey-North Delta • Must own 3/4 to 1 ton cargo van - no minivans or SUV’s • Pick up newspapers from our warehouse and deliver to carrier’s homes.

If interested please call 604.575.5345


22 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012 HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 281

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

GARDENING

281

GARDENING

320

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

MOVING & STORAGE

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

Lawn Mowing Trimming & Edging Yard Improvements Planting -Gardening/Weeding Yard Clean-up / Care Rubbish Removal

A-OK PAINTING

Andrew 604-618-8585 $ Best Rates $

PRESTINE PAINTING. Call us for a FREE ESTIMATE. Competitive Prices. Call Roy (604)576-2692

RENTALS: These listings cover all types of rentals from apartments, condos, office space, houseboats and vacation homes. So if you’re in the market to rent, or looking for a roommate, start here. bcclassified.com

Northstar Painting Ltd.- The Residential Specialists. BIG jobs, Small jobs - We do it all! Interior and Exterior Projects. Master Painters at Students Rates. WCB Safe, Reliable, Efficient & Quality Paint. 778.245.9069

356

RUBBISH REMOVAL

RECYCLE YOUR JUNK! Rubbish Removal, Caring for the Earth. Professional Quality Service at Great Rates. 604-787-8782

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

DANGEROUS TREE REMOVAL * Pruning * Retopping * Falling Service Surrey 25 years

FULLY INSURED **EMERGENCY CALL OUT** Certified Arborist Reports

Morris 604-597-2286 Marcus 604-818-2327

DISPOSAL BINS ~ PRO PAINTERS ~ INTERIOR / EXTERIOR Quality Work, Free Estimates

Gutters -Windows -Tile Roof- Pressure Cleaning, Please Call Victor between 4 & 9pm. 604-589-0356

HANDYPERSONS

Residential & Commercial Services

Member of Better Business Bureau

WCB INSURED

HOME maintenance and repair. Drywall, painting, flooring & more. Over ten years experience. Great rates on small or big jobs. Friendly, fast and reliable. Call Richard at 778-835-1823

Tree removal done RIGHT! • Tree & Stump Removal • Certified Arborists • 20 yrs exp. • 60’ Bucket Truck • Crown Reduction • Spiral Pruning • Land Clearing • Selective Logging ~ Fully Insured • Best Rates ~

604-787-5915, 604-291-7778

Vincent 543-7776

www.treeworksonline.ca treeworkes@yahoo.ca 10% OFF with this AD

PETS

SENIOR’S HANDYMAN SERVICE Semi-Retired businessman. Honest - Reliable - Insured. Call Brad for free estimate. 604-837-5941

• Portable Toilets • Fencing • Containers • Waste Management • Storage

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

20% DISCOUNT NOW ON - Decking, Masonary, Flooring and Painting. Wholesale samples upon request. Refs avail. Don’t miss out, schedule today. Aron 604-542-9934

AWD Interior/Ext Painting. Drywall/Ceiling Repairs. Call Will for a Free Estimate. (778)709-1081

We Recycle! GO GREEN!

A-TECH Services 604-230-3539

www.EconPro.com 604-882-2733

Running this ad for 8yrs

PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour

FLEETWOOD WASTE Bin Rentals 10-30 Yards. Call Ken at 604-294-1393

(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services. www.paintspecial.com

BEAUT BATHROOM & KITCHEN Plumbing + Drywall + Elect. + Tubs & Showers & Sinks + Toilets & Tile + floors + countertop + painting. Sen disc. Work Guar. 21 yrs exp. Call Nick 778-881-6177 / 604-581-2859

bradsjunkremoval.com

Haul Anything... But Dead Bodies!!

JACK’S HOME IMPROVEMENT. Prof painting & complete renos. Reasonable rates & quality work. Jack 604-716-3653, 778-995-5049

COMPLETE RENOVATIONS, 30 yrs in Const. Very reliable. Denicon Const. Call Dennis 604-809-0702. OF Home (604)501-9290

Morris The Arborist

Honest Man Rubbish removal. Fast on his service,best rates, clean-up, handyman Services. 604-782-3044

GUTTER Cleaning Service, Repairs Free Est, 20 yrs exp, Rain or shine. 7 days/week. Simon 604-230-0627

MLG ENTERPRISES All Aspects Landscaping & Garden Solutions

TREE SERVICES A1-TRI-CRAFT Tree Serv. Dangerous tree removal, spiral pruning hedge trimming, stump grinding, topping. Insured, WCB Free Est Arborist Reports

Forget the Rest Call The Best! Harry 604-617-0864

~ Reasonable Rates ~

287

374

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

Call 778-227-2431

283A

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

BEST WEST MOVING. FAST 24/7 short notice moves. Great mid mo. rates! Free Est. Tim (604)319-1010

WALT’S YARDWORKS & POWERWASHING -

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

604.

220.JUNK(5865)

Serving The Lower Mainland Since 1988

RECYCLE-IT!

JUNK REMOVAL Recycled Earth Friendly

Improvements,

ABOVE THE REST “ Int. & Ext., Unbeatable Prices, Professional Crew. Free Est. Written Guarantee. No Hassle, Quick Work, Insured, WCB. Call (778)997-9582

• Estate Services • Electronics • Appliances • Old Furniture • Construction • Yard Waste • Concrete • Drywall • Junk • Rubbish • Mattresses & More!

477

PETS

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 German Shepherd pups, ckc reg, 1st shots, deworm, parents gd temp. $900. 604-796-3026 no sun calls NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com SMOOTH MINI Dachshunds. Born May 11/12 Family raised. 1st shots, dewormed. $750. 604-855-6176

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 506

APPLIANCES

Fridge $195; Stove $175 Washer $175; Dryer $175 Stackers & Dishwasher Warranty, delivery, low prices 604-534-4402 ----------------------------------------APPLIANCES WANTED * Free pick-up* 604-339-0744

509

AUCTIONS

REAL ESTATE 603

ACREAGE

20 Acres - Only $99/mo. $0 Down, Owner Financing, NO CREDIT CHECKS! Near El Paso, Texas, Beautiful Mountain Views! Money Back Guarantee! Free Color Brochure. 800-755-8953 www.sunsetranches.com

612 BUSINESSES FOR SALE LIVE THE DREAM. Harbours End Marine, 27 year history on beautiful Salt Spring Island, BC “the best place on earth!” Owner retiring, well-established business only $129,000 email: bjg_cormorant@shaw.ca

615 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY STEEL BUILDING - HUGE CLEARANCE SALE! 20X24 $4,658. 25X28 $5,295. 30X40 $7,790. 32X54 $10,600. 40X58 $14,895. 47X78 $19,838. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca.

625

FOR SALE BY OWNER

PANORAMA RIDGE 1/2 acre lot, great view, o/d pool, older well built 5 bdrm, 2 level home. $1,350,000. Call 604-518-8100

627

HOMES WANTED

WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-657-9422

633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS NEW SRI Single & Double Wides in Langley& Surrey parks fr $114,900. Preowned in Surrey 55+ adult park $29,900. Chuck 604-830-1960.

641

TOWNHOUSES

TOWNHOME $245,000 Hawthorne Park. 3 bed, 2 bath in a popular family oriented complex. Large storage room, large rooms, & lower strata fees. Sam Otter, Sutton Group - West Coast 604-533-3939.

660 LANGLEY/ALDERGROVE HOMES FOR SALE-SUPER BUYS

www.dannyevans.ca

RENTALS 706

APARTMENT/CONDO

GUILDFORD GARDENS 1 Bdrm. $700-$735 2 Bdrm. $850-$875 • Professional on-site staff

• SMALL PET OKAY • Minutes walk to Elementary School and Guildford Mall

Heat & Hot Water Included ACROSS FROM GUILDFORD RECREATION CENTER

To Arrange a Viewing Call Grace at 604-319-7514 CEDAR COURT & CEDAR LODGE Call for seniors special CLEAN 1 & 2 BDRM SUITES (some w/ensuites) in Park-like setting. Cable, heat, & hot water incl. Laundry rest area on each floor.

604-588-8850 604-584-5233 www.cycloneholdings.ca

CLOVERDALE. 1 bdrm - $765 incl. heat /ht.water / prkg. N/P. $200 move-in allowance. 604-576-1465 or 604-612-1960.

CLOVERDALE, Senior / 50+ bldg Quiet. Heat, h/w, storage included 50% OFF 1st month, onsite ldry 1br $740-780. No dogs. 604-574-2078 jessica.benberg@gmail.com

Cloverdale. Sherwood Apt. 5875 - 177B St. (2) - 1 bdrm - $775, (1) - 2 bdrm -$1,000 (1) - Studio - $650 Laundry facility. NP/NS. LEASE. Member of Surrey Crime free Multi-Housing Program. Call Lloyd at : 604-575-1608. ascentpm.com GUILDFORD

FAMILY FRIENDLY COMPLEX Rental Incentives... 1 & 2 Bdrms available. Close to shopping, bus, school, park. Small pets welcome.

Homelife Benchmark Realty Corp. Langley

Call: 604-585-1966.

RENTALS

SOMERSET GARDENS (S. Sry) Family housing, 1851 Southmere Cres. E. 2bdrm appt. starting at $875/m. Avail Apr 15th. & May 1st. Pet friendly, nr all amen, heat, Community garden. 604-451-6676

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

SURREY 75/120A St. 3 Bdrm apt $1005. W/D hkup, quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-501-0505

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

Big Valley Auction

On Time, As Promised, Service Guaranteed!

604-857-0800

604.587.5865

SPECIALTY AUCTION

www.bigvalleyauction

A-1 PAINTING CO. 604.723.8434 Top Quality Painting. Floors & Finishing. Insured, WCB, Written Guarantee. Free Est. 20 Years Exp.

www.recycleitcanada.ca

EXTRA

CHEAP MILANO PAINTING & RENOS. Int./Ext. Prof. Painters. Free Est. Bonded & Insured. 604-551-6510

Moon Construction Building Services. Your Specialists in; • Concrete Forming • Framing • Siding 604.218.3064 RenoMan. Laminate floor & Tile SPECIALIST. Deck & Stairs repair Kitch & Bath, Roofing. All Jobs Welcome! Res. & Comm. Many yrs of exp. QF Renos 604-728-3849

338

~ Certified Plumber ~ ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

312 MAINTENANCE SERVICES

Reno’s and Repairs Furnace, Boilers, Hot Water Heat Plumbing Jobs ~ Reas rates

SUNDECK’S & PATIO’S

Vinyl or wood. Stairs, Railings, etc. 40 Yrs exp call Don (604)596-0652

Increase your chances in getting the right candidate. Our friendly Classified Sales Representatives will assist you. 3 STEPS: 1) Call us. 2) Discuss what you’re looking for - we’re here to listen. 3) Start hiring. Yes, it’s that easy. Phone: 604-575-5555 bcclassified.com

HOME REPAIRS

IRRIGATION/SPRINKLER

ABE MOVING - $35/Hr. Per Person *Reliable Careful Movers. *Rubbish Removal. *24 Hours. 604-999-6020

AFFORDABLE MOVING Local & Long Distance

$45/Hr

KITCHEN CABINETS

QUICKWAY Kitchen Cabinets Ltd. ****Mention this ad for 10% Off **** Call Raman @ 604-561-4041.

372

SUNDECKS

From 1, 3, 5, 7,10 Ton Trucks Licenced ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free estimate/Seniors discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos

604-537-4140

526

PRESSURE WASHING

542

POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING

FRUIT & VEGETABLES

Call Ian 604-724-6373 Tile Roof, Window, gutter cleaning. Pressure Wash. Please Call Victor between 4 & 9pm. 604-589-0356

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS A EAST WEST ROOFING & SIDING CO. Roofs & re-roofs. BBB & WCB. 10% Discount, Insured. Call 604-812-9721, 604-783-6437 A to Z Roofing Ltd. Spec in re-roofing, asphalt, cedar, flat roof. Guar Wrk. WCB, BBB. 778-996-6479. EXCEL ROOFING LTD. All kinds of roofing work. New roof, reroof, repairs. Free est. (778)878-2617.

Now Open!! Take 264 St exit off Hwy #1 & follow yellow signs

DECKS

(6030 248 Street) OPEN Mon. Sat. 8am - 7pm Sun. 8am - 6pm

WCB Covered, BBB A+ rating Licensed & Insured, Free Estimates.

Call Lyall at: 604-625-4655

373B

TILING

AN EXPERIENCED TILE SETTER Interior / Exterior Call BRUCE @ 604-583-4090 We always advertise with “THE LEADER”

374

TREE SERVICES

PRO TREE SERVICES Quality pruning/shaping/hedge trimming/ removals & stump grinding. John, 604-588-8733/604-318-9270

GARAGE SALES

UNDER $400

Aluminum patio cover, NO HST Summer Sale. 604-782-9108 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com

New, Repaired, Replaced

551

MULTI-UNIT GARAGE SALE Saturday June 30 from 9am - 1pm 12738 66th Ave, Surrey BC @Starwood Townhouse Complex

JUKE upholstery heavy industrial sewing machine, walking foot type, good shape, $400. (604)583-2442

STRAWBERRIES Greenvale Farms

SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE 1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.

296

359 SAND, GRAVEL & TOPSOIL Always! deliver Top soil, bark mulch, sand & gravel. 7days/wk. Simon 604-230-0627 will spread

10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005

341 MOVING & STORAGE

CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME Unit # 4 - 26157 FRASER HWY., accredited appraisals available

FRESH LOCAL STRAWBERRIES $9.99 flat - 3 flats $27. U-Pick avail. 5180 - 152nd Street Surrey Farms. 604-574-1390

#1 IN RATES AND SERVICE. Licensed. Insured. Clogged Drains. No job too small. 778-888-9184.

320

Preview 9:00am *Bikes *Sports Memorabilia, *Camping *Tools *Commercial Woodworking Shop Tools & Cabinets *Retail Sports Store Inventory Reduction.

AIR CONDITIONING INSTALL, SERVICE, HEATING, GAS , REFRIGERATION, FIRE DAMPER UPGRADES. RED SEAL 604 355 2118.

FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATING H/W Tanks, Reno’s, Boilers, Furn’s. Drain Cleaning. Ins. (604)596-2841

Top Notch Associates Bathrooms, Electrical, Tile, Reno’s, finishing & handyman services. We feature CLEAN, and responsible work >> always. We do it right and water tight. Sm jobs ok. Mike 604-594-4791

294

(778)997-5757, (604)587-5991

~ 604-597-3758 ~

LOOKING FOR A SPECIFIC CANDIDATE FOR AN EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY WITHIN YOUR COMPANY?

288

PLUMBING

RUBBISH REMOVAL Almost for free!

July 4th @ 5:00pm

604-856-3626 / 604-855-9351

548

Why bother with the time & hassle of a garage sale?

donate and be free.

FURNITURE

MATTRESSES starting at $99 • Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331

We -ay lo al ,o,-ro9ts e3ery time you donate.

USED BDRM. SUITE, mattress, (6 pce. bdrm. suite) $990 obo (604)488-4755

SHOP from HOME! Check out bcclassified.com

560

MISC. FOR SALE

DEMOLITION SALE; newly reno’d home in Surrey. Flooring, roofing, windows, etc, til end of August, $3000 takes all. (604)760-3792

10642 King George Hwy, Surrey · (604) 588-5225 6925 King George Hwy, Surrey · (604) 635-1341 Mon. - Sat. 9am - 9pm, Sun. 10am - 6pm


Tuesday, July 3, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 23 RENTALS 706

RENTALS

APARTMENT/CONDO

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

S. SURREY small clean reasonably priced apartments for seniors 55 & older. Call Mon-Fri btwn 9am-noon 604-538-8308.

SUNCREEK ESTATES * Large 2 & 3 Bdrm Apartments * Insuite w/d, stove, fridge, d/w * 3 floor levels inside suite * Wood burning fireplace * Private roof top patio * Walk to shops. Near park, pool, playground * Elementary school on block * Clubhouse, tennis court * On site security. Sorry no pets

Office: 7121 - 133B St. Surrey 604-596-0916 SURREY - 13820 72nd Ave 2 Bdrm 780 sq/ft. $755/mo. Shares $2,500. No Subsidy, U/G Parking, 2 Appls, NO pets. Avail immed.

RENTALS 736

RENTALS

HOMES FOR RENT

750

$1600 + Utilities (NEWTON 71 Ave & 131 St). 2000sqft Whole House for Rent. 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. STRICTLY No Smoking & No Pets. Preference Given to Families. Within Walking Distance To All Levels of Schools. References & Employment check will be completed Available August 1, 2012 CALL: 778-838-1031 CLOVERDALE. Full house. 5 bdrms, 2.5 bath. 7 appls. $1900/mo + utils. N/S. N/P. 604-612-1960. ENVER CREEK: 6 bdrm, lndry, DW, sunrm, 2 kitchens, deck. Rec rm, 2 bths. Lots of storage. Lrg lot, very priv. Avail. July 15/Aug. 1 $1800: n/s, n/p. 778-320-2493 FLEETWOOD house $1600 + utilities @ 82Ave & 156St. 2300sqft. 4 Bdrs, 3.5 Baths (handicap access.) N/S N/P, REFERENCES AND CREDIT CHECK REQUIRED. Avail. July 1, 2012. CALL: 604-5621518 GUILDFORD 10497 156 St. Nice 2 bdrm. rancher, close to all amens. $1200 mo. + utils. (778)866-6034

www.hawthornehousing.org

Crime Free Multi-Housing Certified Ask About Incentives! Spacious Suites, very competitive prices. Extra large 1 & 2 BDRM ste’s, lots of storage. Heat/hot water incl. Access to Vancouver via freeway, 1 bus to Skytrain. No pets.

Call Cumberland Park your home. 1 and 2 bdrm immediate. Reno’d suites. Walk to Guilford mall and all it’s amenities. On site mgr., prof. landscaped. Will consider a cat. Call Al 604-589-1167

Enjoy a brand new home in a oppeaceful atmosphere with absolutely great neighbours and friendly staff. Let us all care for you. Available July 1. 604-596-9588 CROSSROADS Always a Good Thing Goin On

GUILDFORD. 3 bdrm grnd lvl ste $800+utils, covered patio, NS/NP no lndry. July 1. (604)589-7766 NEWTON 7536 140th St. Nice clean 2 bdrm. Ns/np, no laundry, $675 incl heat/light 604-290-2449

SURREY: 148/72. 3 bdrm bsmt ste, 1200sf, very open, Jul. 1st. $1000 + 1/4 utils. Call Sunny 604-805-6748

SURREY CENTRAL. 1 Bdrm apt. $650. Also Bachelor suite, $575. Available now. N/P. Call: 778-3175323 or 604-916-2906.

SURREY, 194/67A 1 bdrm bsmt suite. Nr amenits. Now. N/S. N/P. $700/mo. incl utils. 604-314-6008. SURREY,195A/70A, BRAND NEW, 2 bdrm, 900 sf, F/S, W/D,$1100 incl utils, cbl, net. NS/NP. 604-782-3451

SURREY

SURREY. 2 bdrm g/l ste. $750 incl utils/cable. No ldry July 15. NP/NS. Call 604-585-3289 or 778-828-7722

SOMERSET HOUSE LG. CLEAN 2 BDRM. Available for June, W/ BALCONY, D/W, U/G PKG. / QUIET BLDG.

SURREY, 61/132A. 2 bdrm grd lvl bsmt. July 1. N/S. N/P. No laundry. $700 incl utils. 778-908-8355.

Please call Manager Dave

BRIGHTON APARTMENTS

SURREY 8835 164 St. Lrg 2 bdrm, sep kitch & fam/rm, N/S N/P, July 1. 604-584-9293 or 778-232-1633.

Large 1 Bdrm. Apts $200 Move-In Allowance Please call for details. On-site manager. Suites include fridge, stove, drapes & carpeted throughout. Hot water & parking included. Close to shopping & schools, on bus route. Seasonal swimming pool & tennis court. Some pets welcome.

Call 604-533-0209 SURREY

Regency Park Gardens Large 1 & 2 bedroom units Rent from $725.00/mo.

Phone: 604-581-8332 & 604-585-0063

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

SURREY, CHIMNEY HTS. 2 bdrms H/w floors, spacious. NS/NP. Avail immed. $625 incl util. 778-218-1478

SURREY Unit #5 - 7743 128th St. Warehouse in busy location,approx 1600 sq/ft, with washroom & office. Avail immed. $1750. 604-290-2449

SURREY: Close to skytrain. 2 bdrm., no cats, no dogs, N/S. $750/mo all incl. No cbl, no lndry. Avail. now. Phone (604)715-1698.

715

DUPLEXES/4PLEXES

S. SURREY 160 St. 2 Bdrm upper ste.,1000 sq.ft. N/S, N/P. Shrd w/d. $1175 incl utils. Suits quiet person or couple. Ref’s. 778-246-0184.

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS NEWTON MOBILE HOME PARK. 2 Large RV Pads available for mobile home. Call 604-597-4787.

736

HOMES FOR RENT

ALDERGROVE. 4 bdrm bsmt home Dble. garage. 4 appls. Avail Aug. 1. $1700/mo. N/P. 604-312-5666.

CARRIERS NEEDED IN SURREY

604-575-5342

UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTES ROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION

177B St - 180 St, 56A Ave - 58 Ave 179 St - 180 St, 58 Ave - 60 Ave 141A St - 144 St, 70 Ave - 72 Ave 148A St - 152 St, 84 Ave - 86 Ave 150 St - 152 St, 86 Ave - 88 Ave 124 St - 125 St, 78 Ave - 80 Ave 121 St - 123 St, 96 Ave - 97 Ave 123A St - 125 St, 102 Ave - 104 Ave 126 St - 128 St, 102 Ave - 104 Ave 158 St - 160 St, 82 Ave - Townhomes Eagle Pl - Kew Dr, Jay Cres - Robin Cr 138 St - 140 St, Kalmar Rd - 114 Ave 146 St - Wellington Dr, 111A Ave - Wellington Cr 143A St - Caledonia Dr, 110 Ave - Currie Dr Hanson Rd - Kindersley Dr, Coventry Rd - 140 St 140 St - Cowen Rd, 108 Ave - Hanson Rd 144 St - 146 St, 108 Ave - 110 Ave 133 St - 134 St, 102 Ave - 104 Ave 134 St - 132 St, 96 Ave - 97 Ave 134 St - 132 St, 96 Ave - 97 Ave

NEWTON: 135/67 Ave: 3/bdrms main flr, 2 bthrms, alarm, sundeck, lrg fenced b/yrd. lrg workshop/garage. Lndry & D/W. n/s n/p. Aug. 1st. $1200/mo. (778)320-2493 PANORAMA RIDGE; full 5 bdrm house with o/d pool & big view lot, July 15 or earlier. $3000/mo. Call: 604-518-8100 SURREY 128 St/106 Ave. 3 Bdrm, 1.5 bath. 2 Bdrm ste will full bath & lndry down. Now/Jul1, ns/np. $1900 +utils. 604-841-9987 10am-7pm SURREY 128 St. nice 4 bdrm. bsmnt. Huge fenced yard, new appl. (w&d). New paint & carpets. $1490 mo. N/S N/P. Avail. now. C.21 Prudential 604-889-2470

739

MOTELS, HOTELS

LINDA VISTA Motel Luxury Rooms w/cable, a/c & kitchens. 6498 King George Hwy. Mthly, Wkly & Daily Specials. 604-591-1171. Canadian Inn 6528 K.G.Hwy. 604-594-0010

748 SHARED ACCOMMODATION SURREY, family home w/pool. Prefer female. Avail. now. $375 + utils. 1 blk. to bus. (604)786-7977.

750

SUITES, LOWER

BOLIVER HEIGHTS 2 bdrms, $750 incl utils, shr. W/D. NP/NS. Aug 1. 778-229-7488 / 604-580-0119 CHIMNEY HILLS 74/146. 2 Bdrm suite, near schls & shops. Avail July 15th/Aug 1st. Ns/np, n/laund. $700 incl utils/net/cbl. Call 604-760-6063 CHIMNEY HTS. Extra spac. 1 bdrm suite, sep kitchen. ns/np. $600 incl utils. Avail now. 604-614-1234 CLOVERDALE 189/55. 2Bdr suite laundry neg. Avail immed. NS/NP $800 incl utils/cbl/net 778-574-8283 ENVER CREEK. 145/83A. 2 bdrm ste. N/S, N/P, n/lndry. Avail now. 604-782-0048 or 604-592-9047.

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

818

RIVERSIDE GARDENS FAMILY COMPLEX

TRANSPORTATION

CARS - DOMESTIC

845

2 & 3 Bdrm T/Homes Ask for Move-In Allowance!!

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

Fridge, stove, dishwasher (in most), drapes. Outdoor pool. Some pets welcome. Resident Manager. Close to bus, shopping, schools and parks. #36 - 5210 - 203 Street, Langley

1981 VOLKSWAGON Rabbit conv, has motor, but needs to be installed $1000 obo. (604)583-2442

Call 604-532-2036 NEWTON, 7345 - 140 St. Large 3 bdrm T/H. 1½ baths, 5 appls. 2 prkg. Avail. July 1. N/S. N/P. $1150/mo. + utils. 604-780-4959. OWN a 2 or 3 bedroom townhome w/$3300 down. Several UPDATED T/H in good areas w/fenced yds and 2 PETS OK. $1260/MO. + $250 mnt oac $58,509 combined income + 680 credit. Higher down PMT ($14,800 down), lower mtg ($981/MO), 600 credit to quality and $48,050 combined income. QUICK DATES ok and several HOUSES also available. Call Jodi Steeves, ReMax Treeland for details 604833-5634.

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

2002 CHRYSLER NEON, auto, 149K, spoiler, pb., pl., ps., a/c, c/d, alarm, keyless, chrome wheels. $3150. 604-502-9912.

2003 Saturn Ion 2 quad coupe 2dr 4cyl 2.2L 5sp 96,000kms full load good on gas $5295. 604-539-0557 2004 MERCEDES E500, 4-matic, 4 dr, fully loaded, auto, black, 145K. good cond, no accid, $10,200 obo. 778-881-1216. 2005 Kia Spectra LX 4sp auto p/s, p/b, p/w, p/dl, cruise, new paint. good on gas $5295. 604-539-0557 2009 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GL 47,000 K, asking $10,900 firm. Phone 604-542-2251.

We pay $100 to $1200 Cash for all scrap Cars, Trucks & Machinery. Free Pick-up.

No Wheels - No Problem! Call Gerry:

604-612-7182

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673

Metal Recycling Ltd. • Cars & Trucks • Scrap Metals • Batteries • Machinery • Lead

Scotty 604-313-1887 #1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200

2011 VW JETTA TDI - diesel, 4 dr sedan, 35,000 km. Like new. $22,000/obo. Ralph (778)988-2055

828 COMMERCIAL VEHICLES

FREE Scrap Vehicle Removal Up To $500 CA$H Today Fast Service. JJ 604-728-1965

SURREY SUTTON PLACE 3 bdrm 13834 102 Ave. Family housing nr amens, transit, schools, Crime-free multi-housing. $925/month. On site laundry. Call NOW 604-451-6676

SURREY TOWNHOUSES

“SIMRAN VILLAS” 2 & 3 bedrooms

$1100 - $1200/m

1990 Dodge Diesel Tow Truck. 5sp Runs exc, needs work, some whl lift parts missing lows km’s Pic’s avail $1900 or sell/parts 604 - 996 - 8734

Quiet, Clean & Spacious 2.5 bath, patio, storage, d/w, w/d, f/p, N/S, N/P, 2-car garage, next to high school. Avail. Now!!

604-592-5663 12730 - 66 Avenue

757

WANTED TO RENT

NEED Acreage w/ 4+ Bdr & Den in Langley! Ideal tenant needs family friendly,clean home on acreage for 3 kids, 2 dogs. Prefer fenced, green space for veg gardens, room for 24ft RV. Homeowner for 20 yrs, relocating to BC for work. Exc. references and genuine respect for your home and land. 1-2 year lease poss. Please email leah.chevallier@gmail.com.

830

MOTORCYCLES

2002 TRIUMPH TROPHY. Low k’s, new battery, runs good. $4,700. Call 604-217-3479; 778-880-0233.

838

RECREATIONAL/SALE

16½’ RV travel trailer, Jay Suther Sport by Jayco, purchased new in Sept. 2010. Asking $10,900. (604)536-9108

851

810

TRUCKS & VANS

2003 CHEV SUBURBAN Z71, black, rebuilt trans. w/warranty, used eng., new B.J. & brakes. Inspected. $8900 obo (604)826-0519 2007 Nissan Frontier SE 4x4 V6 king cab. Great cond. Wht w/tan int. 135 hwy km. 5” lift kit w/new tires. A/C, Pwr wnd/lcks, cd/aux/USB, cold air intake, box liner. 1 owner. $19K OBO. 778-242-0515

MARINE

TRANSPORTATION 903

AUTO FINANCING

BOAT ACCESSORIES

2012, 9.9 Merc 4 stroke, new, never used, 3yr warranty. $400 off listed price. $2600 firm. 604-788-0718 1983 Dodge ext van, raised roof, camperized runs gd, needs lots of sm work New tires Lots of upgrades Pics avail $1500 604 - 996 - 8734

912

BOATS

TITAN - inflatable boat - 10 ft, hard bottom. Lunging wheels. Rod holders & more. $1100: (604)531-6634

SURREY/Hunter Park. High end suite in upscale neighborhood: 2 bdrm, 1 bath, grnd lvl, 9’ ceilings, wood flrs, country chic kitchen, priv entry. Must have refs. $1199/mo incl utils. N/P, N/S. 604-617-5224 SURREY, nr. Gateway stn. 3 bdrm. g/l suite. $950/mo + 40% utils. N/s, n/p. Avail. July. 604-889-5075 SURREY, very good loc, in brand new home, corner lot, 1 bdrm suite, nr schools, transit & beautiful park NP/NS 8144 145 St. (778)552-0502

751

1989 Chev Getaway van raised roof, partially camperized. New tires, no rust. P/W, alarm, runs good. Pic’s avail. $1550. 604 - 996 - 8734

SUITES, UPPER

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION To: NAVDEEP SINGH MANN

ENVER CREEK: 3 bdrm, main flr, very lrg kitch. Deck, lrg lot, lots of prkg. Lndry, n/p, n/s. July 15th/Aug. 1. $1200: 778-320-2493

TAKE NOTICE THAT on June 19th, 2012 an order was made for service on you of a notice of family claim Issued from the New Westminster Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in family law case number E 41268 by way of this advertisement. In the family law case the claimant claims the following relief against you: divorce. You must file a response to family claim within 30 days after the date of the publication of this notice (OR, if the court orders a different period, within 35 days after the date of the publication of this notice) failing which further proceedings may be taken against you without notice to you. You may obtain a copy of the notice of family claim and the order for service by advertisement from the and the order for service by advertisement from the Registry, at 651 Carnarvon Street, New Westminster, BC V2M 1C9

Surrey: 123/78. 4 bdrm upper flr. 3 bthrms, l/rm, f/rm. $1550 + 60% utils. n/s. n/p. (604)507-7126 SURREY 148/114 Ave. Newer 1 bdrm upper. $600 incl util/cbl/int. N/S. N/P. Avail now. 778-823-0106. SURREY 3 bdrm., 2 liv. rms., 2 baths, nr. last skytrain station, SMH, Surrey Place Mall, elem. & high school. $1300 mo. + 1/2 utils. July 1. (604)727-2525

752

TOWNHOUSES

GUILDFORD GLEN 14860 101 A Ave. 3bdrm T/H. Family housing. Avail NOW. $985 Near all amen’s, bus stop, clean. 604-451-6676. GUILDTOWN HOUSING CO-OP, 10125 156 St. is accepting applications for 3 & 4 bdrm units. No subsidy. Close to schools & shopping. Participation req. Shares $2000. Call 604-581-4687 or pick up application at office.

TRAVEL with bcclassified.com

604 575 5555

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

Refreshingly Clean Meticulously Maintained

Surrey Gardens Apartments for your new one bedroom home www.GreatApartments.ca From From It’s time to$670.00 discover $690.00

TRANSPORTATION

TOWNHOUSES

LANGLEY

SURREY 7666 147 St. 2 Bd grnd lvl new home, incl cbl/utils, July 15, ns/np 604-502-8213, 778-242-8213

604-580-0520

81 56 128 127 111 131 74 70 80 93 125 98 121 93 99 76 96 97 90 90

FLEETWOOD: 2 bdrm, 1 lrg bath. g/l bsmt ste, w/d, v.cln, nr schools. n/p. $975/utils. inc. (604)572-5763

SURREY 141A/90th 2 bdrm, no lndrym, July 1. $700 incl hydro. N/Pet. 604-588-1948 604-782-1948

LANGLEY

12-08 12-09 15-05 16-07 16-08 19-11 23-16 24-03 24-05 28-53 33-03 36-05 36-07 36-10 36-14 36-18 36-21 38-05 38-15 38-15

FLEETWOOD: 1bdrm ste, avl. now. Nr Fleetwood Park. N/S. N/P. $550 inc. util. Quiet area. Looking for mature resp. tenant 604-597-8790

752

Surrey: 157/67A. Brand new 2 bdrm bsmt ste. n/s, n/p. $795 utils inc. new appl. Avl. now. (604)507-7126

Kennedy Place Apts. (Delta) Only 14 suites remain out of 44.

Please Call

FLEETWOOD 163/80Ave. 1 bdrm grd lvl suite. Sep entry. Own laundry. Incl hydro. NS/NP. $550. Avail now. Quiet person. 778-320-1415

SULLIVAN HEIGHTS Brand new bright 1 bdrm suite, h/wood & tile floors. NS/NP, avail now. $600/mo incl utils/cable/laund. 778-218-1478

Phone 604-582-0465

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

FLEETWOOD, 158/80A. Brand new, g/l 1 bdrm. Cbl/utils/internet incl. Absolutely NS/NP, will suit quiet person. $650. 604-354-8534

PANORAMA Hts 58/148 St. 1 Bdr suite, full bath, livrm, spacious kitch. Refs req’d. NS/NP. Avail now. $550 incl utils/cable. 604-502-7187.

SURREY

EVERGREEN APARTMENTS

ENVER CREEK, 83/145A. Lrg 1 bdrm, nr schl/bus, ns/np. Incl utils, cable,wifi. $550. Call 604-572-7390

NEWTON bright 2bdrm suite in new house, nr schools. Ns/np, Avl. now. $750 incl utils/cable. 604-671-4358.

Email Application or Phone 604-543-3043 Guildford Mall / Public Library

SUITES, LOWER

ENVER CREEK - 4 bdrms, grnd lvl ste, sunrm, new kitch, d/w. lrg lot, lots prkg. Lndy, n/p, n/s. $800/mo. n/s, n/p. Aug. 1st. 778-320-2493

RENTALS

Owner Managed Sorry, No Pets

Call for details! 604-589-7040

1MONTH FREE*

2007 30ft Trail Bay Tow Trailer full load generator awning 2 TV’s 13ft slide $16,900. 604-556-3731

DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

845

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

GUARANTEED

Auto Loans or We Will Pay You $1000

Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal

1-888-229-0744 or apply at:

FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022

All Makes, All Models. New & Used Inventory.

www.greatcanadianautocredit.com

TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES!

Must be employed w/ $1800/mo. income w/ drivers license. DL #30526

WANT A VEHICLE BUT STRESSED ABOUT YOUR CREDIT? Christmas in July, $500 cash back. We fund your future not your past. All credit situations accepted. www.creditdrivers.ca 1-888-5936095.

818

CARS - DOMESTIC

1987 CAMARO 2.8, just AirCared, looks excellent and runs excellent, $1495. Call: (604)866-6168. 1998 CHEVY MALIBU, 1 owner, only 80,000 miles. $5,000 obo. Phone 778-237-0828.

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

The Scrapper

Name of party: Jaspreet Kaur, 7075 150A Street Surrey, BC V3S 2E2 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026


24 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, July 3, 2012

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Fraser Valley Distance Education School


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