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J a n u a r y
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Members of the 1st Willoughby Scouts group Alana Travers, 16, Ashton Williamson, 9, and Joey Rizzuto, 9, helped out with a tree chipping and bottle drive fundraiser at Willoughby Elementary on Saturday. The three are part of a brand new scouts group in Willoughby, which is still looking for members. They will be holding more tree chipping fundraisers on Jan. 5 and Jan. 12 at Walnut Grove Secondary School from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For those on the east side of town, the Township of Langley firefighters will hold their annual tree chipping event at the Otter Co-op, 3650 248 St., on Jan. 5 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Miranda GATHERCOLE/ Langley Times
Charges laid in New Year’s Eve murder Suspect and victim in Langley homicide believed to have been friends, says IHIT representative Dan Ferguson Times Reporter
Sgt. Jennifer Pound
A man found dead in a Langley Township house on Monday morning and the man charged with his murder were friends, a police spokesperson said Wednesday.
The victim has been identified as 40-year-old Cloverdale resident Cole Adam Manning. The suspect, 24-year-old Jason Terrence Brewer, has been charged with second degree murder and was scheduled to appear before a Surrey Provincial Court
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judge Wednesday afternoon. Brewer is said to be known to police. “The victim and suspect are believed to be friends,” said Sgt. Jennifer Pound, speaking for the regional Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT). The motive for the mur-
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der is still under investigation, Pound added, but police have ruled out gang involvement. Langley RCMP were called about a body in a basement of a house in the 19800 block of 69 Avenue around 7:30 a.m. on Dec. 31. Police said a suspect was
quickly identified and an alert was issued. A man was arrested on 264 Street near 48 Avenue in Aldergrove less than two hours later by police from Abbotsford and RCMP from Langley. continued, PAGE 3
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The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 3 The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 3
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Compost Langley New Year’s baby first in region plant public meeting date set Paternal grandmother was the first New Year’s baby in Surrey 44 years ago
Dan Ferguson Times Reporter
The first Lower Mainland baby born this year was Langley’s Shane Greenwood, who arrived at Langley Memorial Hospital at 12:26 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 1. He weighed in at a healthy 9 lbs. 5 oz. and he was actually a little bit late, mother Alyssa Burkhardt said. “He was due Dec. 27,” Burkhardt told The Times. Mom and son are back home
with father Justin Greenwood and big brother Shawn. Shane shares his birthday with his paternal grandmother, who was Surrey’s first baby of the year 44 years ago. It was a busy night at Langley Memorial with a total of five New Year’s babies being born — three boys and two girls. The first New Year’s baby in B.C. arrived in Kamloops at 12:02 a.m. David James Jr. was a bit early. His mother’s due date was Wednesday, Jan. 9.
photo courtesy CBC News
Shane Greenwood of Langley became the first baby of the New Year in the Lower Mainland early Tuesday morning.
Three-hour event will take place Wednesday, Jan. 16 at Fort Langley Golf Course Dan Ferguson Times Reporter
A three-hour public information meeting will be held on a proposed composting facility east of Fort Langley. The company that wants to build the plant, Glenval Organics Ltd., has booked the event for Wednesday, Jan. 16 from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the Thompson Room at the Fort Langley Golf Course at 9782 McKinnon Cres. The meeting is not a formal public hearing, only an information session, according to Ray Robb, the Metro air quality district director who has the authority to issue an air quality permit for the plant. The Glenval Organics Ltd. application to locate the plant on a 12.32 hectare property 25330 88 Ave. has drawn complaints from area residents and at least one member of Langley Township council, who say there hasn’t been enough public consultation. Langley Township Councillor Charlie Fox said the proposal will make Langley the “dumping site” for all the green waste from all the other municipalities in Metro Vancouver. Fox said the whole area is a flood plain and sensitive peat bog. Fox was not satisfied with the operator’s promise to restrict the type of waste to limit odours, saying that could change down the road. Glenval promises the facility will not smell bad because it will only use yard waste but nearby residents like Katherine Kinman, who is renovating a nearby farm house, are not reassured. She is concerned the plant will drive down property values and says she and her neighbours are “outraged” and intend to fight the planned development. Glenval Organics spokesperson Scott Temreck describes the site as a “former fill and gravel pit” that is properly zoned for composting. Temreck said the company intends to become the first yard waste compost facility in the Metro Vancouver region to receive an air quality permit and promised the plant will “meet or exceed all environmental regulations that apply to the composting industry.” He predicted traffic will be “minimally increased” along 88 Avenue, adding a maximum of 16 trucks a day to the 2,500 to 5,000 vehicles that travel the route every day.
Dan FERGUSON/Langley Times
Police blocked off 264 Street for several hours Monday morning after a 20-minute car chase ended with a deliberate collision when a cruiser forced a murder suspect’s vehicle off the road.
Survey helicopter helped police track suspect vehicle along Aldergrove road A number of local pilots were on standby to answer RCMP call for assistance from PAGE 1
Insp. Amrik Virk
There was what IHIT Insp. Amrik Virk called a “short” pursuit that ended with police vehicles forcing the suspect’s vehicle off the road. At least one cruiser, an RCMP vehicle, was damaged, Virk said. Virk said police would like to thank members of the general public who offered to use their
personal airplanes to assist with locating the suspect. “We called the Langley airport and we asked for any aircraft or helicopters that were in the air that could assist us,” Virk told reporters. “We had a number of calls from owners of private aircraft ready to take off and ready to assist us and we had a helicopter that was doing some surveying work very close to the area
that assisted, that did spot the incident unfolding.” “(We had) people waiting actually at the airport with their own fuel, their own aircraft saying ‘we’re ready to take off, what do you want us to do?’” The house where the body was discovered is located in a newer neighbourhood of recently-built homes. At least one neighbour said it was a shared house.
4 4
• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
yearinreview
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Miranda GATHERCOLE/Langley Times file photo
In September, the annual Langley Good Times Cruise In once again drew more than 100,000 classic car enthusiasts to downtown Langley.
September: Classic cars, drug busts and provincial politics September On Sept. 4 the new Lynn Fripps Elementary opened in Willoughby. Construction of a nearby middle school and elementary school in southeast Yorkson are underway to help alleviate overcrowding of schools in the area. ••• Several Lower Mainland men, including a 38-year-old Langley man, faced drug trafficking charges in connection with an international plot to import large amounts of cocaine and ship ecstasy to the U.S. The
investigation spanned B.C., California, Mexico and Peru. ••• The annual Langley Good Times Cruise-In drew more than 100,000 people to the City on Sept. 8, with more than 1,700 classic cars on display. Other highlights of the day-long event, included the chance to chow down on a famous In-N-Out burger. The charity event raised thousands of dollars for Valley Therapeutic Equestrian Association, Langley Heart and Stoke Recovery and the Langley Hos-
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The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 5 The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 5
yearinreview
October: Trucking business burns DESTINATIONHEARING we’ll get you there.
from PAGE 4
Robert David Bradshaw, 28, was on trial for first degree murder of the March 2009 killings of Laura Lynn Lamoureux and Marc Bontkes. Michelle Motola, 21, was sentenced to six years in a federal prison for her part in the killing of Bontkes. Roy Thielen, 33, pleaded guilty to second degree murder in the Bontkes case, as well as in the related killing of Lamoureux. He is serving a life sentence with no chance of parole for 20 years. Bontkes was found shot to death in a parking lot of HiKnoll Park on the Surrey-Langley border on March 19, 2009. His murder, as well as that of Lamoureux, which took place five days earlier, were related to the street-level drug trade. Bradshaw was found guilty on both counts of first degree murder in October, and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. ••• Langley MLA Mary Polak was named transportation minister in a cabinet shuffle after numerous BC Liberals stated they were not running again. Included in the shuffle was Aldergrove-Fort Langley MLA Rich Coleman, who was named deputy premier. ••• Hundreds of trout and stick-
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An explosion at a Port Kells trucking company sent black smoke billowing into the air and injured one employee in early October. leback died after a sewage spill at Gloucester Industrial Park on Oct. 27. The sewage went into nearby West Creek, a significant fish-bearing stream.
OctOber An explosion and a series of smaller blasts engulfed a Langley trucking business in an inferno that sent workers scurrying from neighbouring businesses on Oct. 2. The fire sent a massive cloud of dense black smoke into the air where it could be seen miles away. One man, who was one of five in the Ken Johnson Trucking company’s shop at 9807 196A st., suffered burns to his back.
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He had been working on an empty tank trailer. It was a miracle no one was killed, said Township assistant fire chief, Bruce Ferguson. ••• A 30-year-old Langley man who legally changed his name to Nikki Sixx Serafino was sentenced to six years in jail for shooting and killing Surrey resident Damon Michael Martin in 2009. Originally, Serafino was charged with second degree murder, but on the first day of what was set to be his trial in May, he pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of manslaughter.
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• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
yearinreview
October: Museum of flight gets a new set of wings from PAGE 5
So nice to come home to. Our beautiful Assisted Living residence for seniors is located within easy walking distance to shopping, library and doctors offices. Enjoy an independent lifestyle, new friends and relaxing in your bright, spacious suite.
Hockey bags with $1.5 million worth of cocaine inside were dumped out of a van and into a ditch in rural Aldergrove on Oct. 4. Police could not locate anyone associated with the bags. ••• Thor Shay, 59, of Mission was sentenced to a $1,500 fine and a one-year driving ban after hitting and kill-
ing Aldergrove flagger Don Cain in July, 2010. The 49-year-old flagger was working on Lougheed Highway just west of Oliver Street when he was struck by Shay. ••• Well known community member Eric Bysouth passed away on Oct. 12 after several months in hospital. He was 89. He was an active member of the Langley community for more than 40
years, and was a recipient of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee medal while he was in hospital. He was involved with the Langley Rotary Club, Valley Transportation Advisory Council, Langley Reunification Association and the Arboretum and Botanical Society of Langley. ••• Pilots Bill Findlay and Ray Horton performed one last
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water drop demonstration before permanently parking the Firecat air tanker aircraft at the Canadian Museum of Flight on Oct. 5. The retired air tanker, which originally served as a CS2F Tracker on the HMCS Bonaventure aircraft carrier, was donated to the museum by Conair Aviation. It is the greatest acquisition the centre has ever made, said Bruce Friesen, vice president of the museum.
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Occupants of a house were evacuated following a mudslide that closed 264 Street between 72 and 84 Avenues. Mud plugged the road for about 100 metres in the 7700 block after a relentless two-day rainfall. ••• Langley artist Reet Herder had one of her stolen oil paintings returned to her by an 11-year-old picker. continued, PAGE 7
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November: Council gives Coulter Berry Building the green light from PAGE 6
Matthew Hanna found Herder’s seascape oil painting at Big Valley Auction in July, bought it, and returned it to her. The painting was one of 16 stolen from the Fort Langley caboose in 2005. ••• Two years after Michael and Elizabeth Pratt approached the Township with an idea for an Afghanistan war memorial, the sibling’s vision was finally completed on Nov. 11. In an emotional ceremony, the last of the 158 trees were planted along the Walk to Remember at the Derek Doubleday Arboretum and a new cenotaph was unveiled to pay homage to soldiers and civilians killed in Afghanistan. This project is the largest Afghanistan memorial of its kind in Canada. ••• A large RCMP funeral for Surrey RCMP Const. Adrian Oliver was held on Nov. 20 at the Langley Events Centre. Oliver, 28, was killed on Nov. 13, when he was involved in a crash with a semi-truck trailer at 148 Street and 64 Avenue in Surrey. He was at the end of his night shift and was driving in an unmarked police car back to the detachment. Thousands of uniformed Mounties and other emergency responders turned out to pay their respects. ••• After two full evenings of heated debate for and against the Coulter Berry Building in Fort Langley, Township council gave the project the green light with a 7-1 vote in favour. The three storey building, which is 14.5 feet over the height limit set out in the Fort Langley Community Plan, will be constructed on the corner of Mavis Avenue and Glover Road. It will include retail shops, office space and residential apartments. ••• Langley Township council approved a new formula that will calculate pay raises based on the salaries of police, provincial judges, federal and provincial politicians and Langley school principals, an approach that would raise their pay 3.3 per cent and pay them a travel allowance for the first time. The raise will be phased in over the next four years, and the travel allowance that will boost their overall compensation by almost 10 per cent will take effect right away.
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opinion The
Published Tuesday and Thursday at 20258 Fraser Highway, Langley, B.C., V3A 4E6 by Black Press Ltd.
Langley Times
Sales agreement No. 3298280. Contents copyright of Black Press
we say
they say
Your pocket picked
Let’s keep up the generosity of holidays
I
t’s a new year, and that means that all levels of government have their hands in your pockets a little more deeply than in 2012. The Canadian Taxpayers Federation sent out a press release last week outlining just how much additional pocket picking is coming our way in 2013. The list is substantial. The most substantial, and perhaps the most unfair, is the boost in Medical Services Plan premiums. These premiums will go up by $60 per family this year, and have now risen 24 per cent ($300 per family) in three years — far more than the rate of inflation. This boost in MSP fees was first brought in by the provincial government to help deal with its deficit, and it has since discovered that it’s a tax boost that causes minimal political trouble. It appears this premium will keep rising until enough members of the public start to pay full attention to just how much it is costing them. The federal government doesn’t get off scot-free. As of Jan. 1, premiums for Employment Insurance are rising, and so are contributions to the Canada Pension Plan. While contributors will get their CPP contributions back eventually if they retire and collect CPP, the same cannot be said for EI. A small portion of the population actually collects it, but all working people and their employers pay dearly for the program. Municipal governments, who are in the midst of giving their employees raises, will boost property taxes by two to five per cent this year. Exact rates in Langley Township and Langley City haven’t been set yet. TransLink property taxes are also rising. And TransLink will also take more from people who actually use the transit system, as fares rose on Jan. 1. The province is facing a massive deficit and claims it will bring in a balanced budget, so that adds up to all kinds of tax increases that we have yet to see. But in the meantime, BC Hydro, controlled by the province, is raising rates by almost four per cent on April 1. Taxpayers may get a small break if the PST, due to come back on April 1, isn’t levied on some services, as happened under the HST. We will wait and see what happens on that front. One thing is certain — governments have an insatiable appetite for our money. While much of the money they take goes to useful services, there is plenty of room for better management and for minimal tax increases.
T
Many great coffee experiences
F
or Christmas, I received a ute. That’s a pretty bold statement. Platinum B70 Keurig Brewer, Out in my shop, up on a shelf complete with a pack of 60 is a box of camping equipment. In selections of K-Cup portion packs. McGregor there is a battered old coffee pot Says That’s a pretty impressive way of with a glass bulb in the lid. The saying I got a new coffee maker jim Mcgregor once-shiny sides are now blackand some coffee. ened from the soot of many campBut with features like a 72 oz. refillable fires. Many mornings the hot tar that poured reservoir and a removal drip tray, combined from that pot was like an elixir that got the with a fully programmable LED screen, it just body going at those chilly campsites. I still have about makes the cup of coffee itself. Contrary fingertip scars earned by forgetting how hot to the chiding of my skeptical friends and that handle got on the grate. relatives, it is set up, brewing coffee and the In the evening, the stories that poured out clock is not flashing 12 o’clock, 12 o’clock. of that spout, along with the coffee, had been I have even purchased a convenient brewing and blending for years. With each cup chrome- finished carousel to display and came another memory of another trip and the store my portion packs for ease of selection. fish got bigger with each telling. That’s why you Whether I choose the Breakfast Blend in the never wash out a camping coffee pot. You risk morning or perhaps an Italian Roast as an losing some of the history. after-dinner coffee, they are right there at my There are many fine coffee experiences fingertips. that come to mind. I recall one morning An unexpected feature is the sensuous pale at 5 a.m., after we had fought a stubborn blue light the programmable screen casts garage fire for about two hours. As we over the kitchen when the lights are out. It stood there assessing the damage, the lady provides a very pleasing night light and of, of the house came out with a tray holding course a bit of a safety feature as well when a coffee pot, cups, cream and sugar and you come out for that late night snack or poured a cup for all the firefighters. Yes, drink of water. there were some cookies too. With its sleek space age design, it is worthy It wasn’t the delicious, hot and welcome of a spot on the bridge of the Starship Entercoffee that made it a memorable coffee expeprise. I can envision Capt. Kirk, bathed in the rience as much as it was the respect, the cool blue glow, snapping a rich cosmic porthoughtfulness and the thank you that surtion pack into the machine when Dr. McCoy rounded that tray. comes in and says, “For God’s sake Jim, that’s I could go on. The coffee in the paper cup your third cup today, your blood pressure is on Crescent Beach as the sun is setting, or off the charts.” the coffee you enjoy when the big job is comBut then on the last page of the instructions, pleted are great coffee experiences. it says, “Sit back and enjoy the finest coffee Yes sir, my Platinum B70 has a lot to live experience you’ve ever had.” Now wait a minup to. At least that’s what McGregor says.
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he new year is a time for second chances and new beginnings. A time to reset and refocus, and plot a new course. While the holidays remind of the importance of family, the dawn of 2013 offers us a chance for introspection. With that in mind, what will you do to make Delta a better place this year? How will you improve the lives and lot of your neighbours, strangers, friends, family and loved ones? Volunteerism and public service is the most noble use of one’s spare time, and benefits the entire community. But helping out doesn’t have to be an ordeal or a chore. It could be as simple as taking an elderly neighbor’s dog for a walk, holding a door open, or helping someone with their groceries to their car. For the more ambitious, there are dozens of service groups and nonprofit charities based here in South Delta who would greatly appreciate your support. Don’t let the generosity of the Christmas season end as the new year dawns. Let it continue, and grow. —South Delta Leader (Black Press)
The Langley Times 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 within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www. bcpresscouncil.org
The The Langley Langley Times Times •• Thursday, Thursday, January January 3, 3, 2013 2013 •• 9
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Langley Times
City garbage plan has holes in it Editor: I have a few issues with the new garbage collection program that began in Langley City on Jan. 2. It is only for single-family residential homes. Does this council not realize that there are more and more apartment buildings and condos going up in the City these days? Why shouldn’t these property owners also be responsible for recycling and having limits put on how much they can put out each week? The condos and apartment buildings contain far more people per square foot than those of single-family dwellings. If they were included in the recycling plans, think of the huge reduction in the amount of garbage that hits our landfill. When Langley City first began its recycling program, I decided I really did not want to continue carting boxes and boxes of old newspapers to the curb every week, nor did I want to recycle household bills or other items that contain my personal information. Thus, I cancelled all newspaper delivery to my home and contacted all my creditors and informed them to bill me via email each month, thus reducing the amount of paper coming into my home. Now with the new Green Can program that is being implemented, I am to discard the recyclable eco-friendly clear plastic bags that I have purchased specifically for my yard waste, as they are no longer acceptable. I am to use my non-existent newspapers to wrap kitchen scraps and place them into a separate bin purchased
especially for this purpose. Don’t forget to also come down to city hall and pick up a brand-new sticker to place on said Green Can and ensure it is facing outwards to the street, because we can’t ask a garbage man to have to make any effort to actually look at the cans to see which are for which program. Because of this Green Can program, single-family residences have now had their regular garbage collection limits cut in half. According to Mayor Peter Fassbender’s letter our “kitchen food scraps and yard green waste make up from 30 to 40 per cent of our household garbage.” That does not add up. But anyone requiring extra garbage pick-up can purchase stickers to use for the extra bags that they may have, on a regular and ongoing basis. How magnanimous of you. Increasing the single-family residences’ costs, while reducing the services you provide. Good job. A single-family home resident pays far higher property taxes than a condo owner does, yet a condo owner has clear access to a great big bin for any and all their garbage and recyclables and kitchen waste, without limitations. Per square foot, condo owners produce far more waste than a single-family residence. If one City lot contains the footprint for four condos and the building is four storeys high, that would make 16 families living in a space that normally houses one single-family residence. Given averages, and the usual smaller size of a condo-occu-
pying family, let’s be generous. This same condo footprint is producing just 10 times the amount of garbage that a single-family residence is producing. In addition, they don’t have any restrictions on the amount or types of garbage they can throw out. Maybe they even have a private company picking up their refuse, rather than the City-hired company. It matters not. They are still contributing to the final tally allowable for this City, and the single-family residences are suffering restrictions because the condo owners have none at all. Not only has the amount of garbage allowable been cut in half, but we are now only getting it picked up half the time. Garbage stinks and it attracts vermin and other wildlife, thus this new program is going to increase these issues for single-family residences. We are going to have higher numbers of rats, raccoons and wild cats getting into our stinking rotten garbage in our yards. and you can’t tell me that just because kitchen refuse is going into a different can which is picked up every week, this problem won’t occur. Items such as tinfoil from a barbecue, containers with remnants of food still in them that are not recyclable, pet refuse, and the like are going to be sitting around in our yards for twice as long. I have to wonder if this is worth all that effort. Or should homeowners just say forget it and go live in a condo. Rae-Lynne Dicks, Langley City
Editor: Frequently I look out the window and curse if it’s raining. I must go out to walk the dogs, however. I was thinking of this the other morning when my mind drifted back to wartime Holland. The spring of ’45 was wet, cold and miserable. But the coldest night of all was in ’47. We of the Princess Pats were on Exercise Sweet Briar. We had been tearing over miles of Alberta in pursuit of the enemy, who were some of our own fellows slated for that role. We were in support company and rode in Jeeps with our Vickers machine guns. That evening we parked our Jeeps, waded through a frigid slough and dug slit trenches with our weapons at the ready. Our battle dress uniforms froze stiff in the below-zero air. About 4 a.m., we were ordered out of the trenches and back into our vehicles. We crept through the darkness without lights
following our platoon commander. Finally we received the command to halt and set up our weapons in an easterly direction where our lieutenant thought our final objective, the enemy’s position, lay. He turned command over to the sergeant as he was going to reconnoitre to ensure we were in the right place. As ordered, we cocked our machine guns and waited. At approximately 0555 hours, (five minutes to six), as the sky to the east lightened, we saw dancing headlights bouncing across the prairie toward us. This was unprecedented, as everything had been done in utter darkness up to this point. Then we heard our officer’s voice screaming to get those bloody guns, the Jeeps and ourselves the hell out of there. Without hesitation, we followed orders throwing our still-primed weapons into the vehicles and roaring off in a westerly
direction. Less than 60 seconds later, all hell broke loose: shells from the artillery shrieked though the air and exploded in the place our Vickers had been placed. Rifle and Bren gun fire swept the area and would have decimated us if we’d still been there. Our platoon leader was ashen-faced as he brought us to a halt and ordered us to set up the guns and fire at the position we’d just abandoned. Whether his colour was the thought of what would have happened had we stayed or, perhaps, the knowledge that he would be facing our angry colonel regarding his misplacement of our position due to incorrect map reading I don’t know. However we all survived, and the last time I saw Mervin he was a retired major living in Langley. Mike Harvey, Langley
Wages in Georgia Editor: I have been reading the Atlanta Journal Constitution newspaper, which published the salaries of its mayor and council members. Please read these numbers and consider if our elected officials are overpaid. The Atlanta mayor makes $147,000, while council members make $39,473. The population of the city is 427,432, with the last pay raise in 2006. Consider Marietta, Georgia’s city council. The population is 57,357. The mayor is part-time and makes $18,000. Part-time council members make $13,000 The last pay raise was in 2005. Langley City’s population is about 30,000, while Langley Township is just over 100,000. I will leave the question of overpayment up to the reader. Don Woode, Langley City
Let me keep my money Editor: Okay, so now that we are all clear — Langley Township Councillor Steve Ferguson plans to give his extra expense money to charity, Councillor Grant Ward believes in entitlement, and Councillor Bev Dornan thinks it’s OK to have her travel expenses paid for by the taxpayer, because she already gives part of her salary to charity. I’d like to know what these people are smoking? Use the taxpayers’ money and donate it to a charity of his choice, take it because someone said he should, and it’s OK because I already donate to charity. Excuse me, folks. That is my money, and money belonging to other taxpayers. You think you can justify it with these excuses. When the next election comes around, none of you will be on my ‘yes’ list. Debbie Atkinson, Langley
Remembering the coldest night of all
The
Times reserves the right to reject unsigned letters. Letters are edited for brevity, legality and taste. Contact Editor Frank Bucholtz, 604-533-4157
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• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
Township Page For the week of January 3, 2013
langley events centre Coming Events Langley Rivermen Junior A Hockey Sun Jan 6 2:00pm vs. Cowichan Capitals Sat Jan 12 7:15pm vs. Penticton Vees Sun Jan 13 2:00pm vs. Surrey Eagles
Skate with the Rivermen following every Sunday game
TWU Spartans University Sports Volleyball
Thu Jan 10 vs. Brandon University 6pm women’s 8pm men’s Sat Jan 12 vs. Brandon University 12:30pm women’s 2:30pm men’s
Basketball Fri
Jan 11 vs. University of Alberta 6pm women’s 8pm men’s Sat Jan 12 vs. University of Saskatchewan 6pm women’s 8pm men’s
Men’s Hockey Fri
Jan 11 7pm vs. Thompson Rivers
The Langley Events Centre is located at 7888 - 200 Street For ticket information, contact Langley Events Centre 604.882.8800 • langleyeventscentre.com
public notice Low Flow Toilet Rebate Program Ending After March 29, 2013, toilet rebates for Township residents on private wells or the municipal water system will no longer be available. Toilet Rebate application forms with eligible receipts dated on or before March 29, 2013 will be considered for rebate, subject to the verification and approval process. All applications must be received within 90 days of purchase date. Applications received after June 28, 2013 will not be processed. Toilet recycling is available until March 29, 2013, Monday to Friday, 9am – 4pm, at the Township Operations Centre, 4700 - 224 Street. After March 29, applicants are responsible for proper disposal of old toilets to the Langley Transfer Station, 1070 - 272 Street. Engineering Division 604.532.7300
Christmas Tree Chipping Events
Brookswood/Fernridge Community Plan
Recycle your Christmas tree at the following events.
44 AVE
Trees must be bare, with no decorations or tinsel.
10th Langley Scouting Group (Fundraiser) by donation
40 AVE
Dates: Saturday, January 5 and Sunday, January 6 Time: 10am to 4pm Location: SE corner of Safeway parking lot, corner of Fraser Hwy. and Langley Bypass
2nd Aldergrove Scouts (Fundraiser) by donation Dates: Saturday, January 5 Time: 9:30am to 3:00pm Location: Aldergrove Legion, 26607 Fraser Hwy.
216 ST
Township of Langley Civic Facility 20338 - 65 Avenue, Langley V2Y 3J1 604.534.3211 | tol.ca
public open houses
public programs and events
210 ST
Monday, January 14 | 7 - 11pm Regular Council Meeting Civic Facility Fraser River Presentation Theatre
20338 - 65 Avenue, Langley V2Y 3J1 | 604.534.3211
208 ST
dates to note
www.tol.ca
2nd Brookswood Scouts (Fundraiser) by donation Dates: Saturday, January 5 Time: 9am to 4pm Location: Brookswood Secondary School, 20902 - 37A Avenue
Langley Meadows Scouts (Fundraiser) by donation
196 ST
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Dates: Saturday, January 5 Time: 9am to 3pm Location: Langley Meadows Elementary, 2244 Willoughby Way
Township of Langley Firefighters Local 4550 by donation
20 AVE
Dates: Saturday, January 5 Time: 9am to 3pm Location: Otter Co-op, 3650 - 248 Street
16 AVE
Fields Tree Services by donation
(100% of proceeds to BC Cancer Foundation) Dates: Saturday, January 5 and Sunday, January 6 Time: 9am to 3pm Location: Willowbrook Shopping Centre (Northwest corner of parking lot)
1st Walnut Grove Scout Group (Fundraiser) by donation Dates: Saturday, January 5 and 12 Time: 9:30am to 4:30pm Location: Walnut Grove Secondary School Parking Lot, 8919 Walnut Grove Drive Also offers tree pickup service for Walnut Grove residents $10 minimum donation treepickup@1stwalnutgrovescouts.ca or call 778.858.5331 Engineering Division 604.532.7300
public meeting
The Township of Langley is holding two open houses to present information gathered from the Brookswood/Fernridge Community Plan Public Consultation Workshops held in October. Property owners, business owners, and residents of the community are encouraged to attend one of the open houses (each will cover the same material) and provide input. They are being held in conjunction with open houses for the Anderson Creek Integrated Stormwater Management Plan. Date: Time: Place: Address:
Tuesday, January 15 3:30pm – 8:00pm Brookswood Secondary School (small gymnasium) 20902 – 37A Avenue
Date: Time: Place: Address:
Saturday, January 19 10:00am – 2:00pm Brookswood Secondary School (small gymnasium) 20902 – 37A Avenue
Information about the updating of the Brookswood/Fernridge Community Plan is available at tol.ca/brooks-fernplan.
Town Hall Meeting: Propane Cannons
Community Development Division 604.533.6034 bfplan@tol.ca
In September 2012, Council’s Agricultural Advisory Committee created a Task Force to address the use of bird scare devices (propane cannons) in the Township of Langley. Stakeholder consultation is a key component of the work. The Propane Cannon Task Force will be hosting a Town Hall Meeting to collect comments from stakeholders in the community. Members of the public, particularly those who live and work in the Township of Langley, are encouraged to provide comments on the use of propane cannons. Date: Thursday, January 17 Time: 7 - 9 pm Location: Township of Langley Civic Facility Fraser River Presentation Theatre Address: 20338 – 65 Avenue A speakers list is being established to help manage the event. Speakers will present on a first come, first served basis. The speakers list is open for registration until the end of the entire Town Hall Meeting. Please call the phone number below to register. Each speaker will have a maximum of five minutes to provide comments and will have only one chance to present. PowerPoint presentations are permitted as long as they are provided at least four hours prior to the Town Hall Meeting. A comment sheet is available for those who prefer to provide written comments and those who wish to provide comments beyond the five-minute speaking limit. The Propane Cannon Task Force will not ask any questions or provide answers to speakers at the Town Hall Meeting. Any necessary followup would be done at a later date. A second meeting has been tentatively scheduled for January 24, 2013 to accommodate additional speakers, if necessary. Community Development Division 604.533.6154
Anderson Creek Integrated Stormwater Management Plan The Township of Langley is developing an Integrated Stormwater Management Plan for the Anderson Creek watershed. It will guide municipal decision making in the watershed as it outlines how to integrate land use, stormwater runoff, and environmental values. The Township is holding two open houses to present information and receive input for the study. For a detailed map of the catchment area, please visit tol.ca/Anderson. Property owners, business owners, and residents of the community are encouraged to attend one of the open houses (each will cover the same material) and provide input. They are being held in conjunction with open houses for the Brookswood/Fernridge Community Plan. Date: Time: Place: Address:
Tuesday, January 15 3:30pm – 8:00pm Brookswood Secondary School (small gymnasium) 20902 – 37A Avenue
Date: Time: Place: Address:
Saturday, January 19 10:00am – 2:00pm Brookswood Secondary School (small gymnasium) 20902 – 37A Avenue
Information about the Anderson Creek Integrated Stormwater Management Plan can be found at tol.ca/ Anderson. Engineering Division 604.532.7300
After-Hours Emergency Contact 604.543.6700
The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 11 The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 11
yearinreview
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December: Stars on ice at LEC Healthy Savings skating dazzled on the ice at the Langley Events Centre on Dec. 1. The 90-minute Holiday Festival on Ice show featured 2010 Olympic bronze-madalist Joannie Rochette, as well as Elvis Stojko and Kurt Browning. ••• On Dec. 9 Fort Langley welcomed it’s grocery store back as Lee’s Market (the former Fort IGA) held its grand opening. The new store, set back from its original footprint on Glover Road to Mavis Avenue, is Fort Langley’s main grocery store and a gathering spot for locals. The Lees have owned the grocery store since 1975 and
from PAGE 7
December
Gary AHUJA/Langley Times file photo
Canadian figure skating icon Elvis Stojko was among the performers at LEC on Dec. 1.
It was smooth sailing for Highway 1 commuters between Surrey and Coquitlam the first week of December after the new Port Mann Bridge officially opened on Dec. 1. The bridge is the widest in the world and an introductory toll of $1.50 per crossing was implemented on Dec. 8. The toll will increase to $3 by the end of 2013. ••• Thousands of fans watched in awe as some of the top names in figure
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a fire burned down the old structure on Jan. 4, 2011. ••• The new Jays Care Community Clubhouse for the Boys and Girls Club was unveiled at Douglas Park. It will allow even more young kids the opportunity to access resources that otherwise might not be available to them. The project was made possible thanks to a $250,000 Field of Dreams grant from the Jays Care Foundation, the charitable arm of Toronto’s Major League Baseball team. The Rotary Club of Langley Central also provided $80,000 towards the project.
Watch for your Natural Factors flyer in today’s Langley Times
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12 •• The The Langley Langley Times Times •• Thursday, Thursday, January January 3, 3, 2013 2013 12
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The The Langley Langley Times Times •• Thursday, Thursday, January January 3, 3, 2013 2013 •• 13 13
opinion
Dix seeks balance with business
. . . RY
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review, as they platform? have in Site C AD: Absolutely. [dam proposed TF: You picked for Peace River], up some serious as they did BC Views money from with Kemess the business Tom fletcher North [rejected community at mine expansion a fundraiser in proposal] and other cases. October. Is that some kind of a TF: You don’t want record for the NDP? duplicated review processes AD: [Laughs.] It might be a here, you just want a record, I don’t know. I think provincial cabinet say in the the business fundraiser we did decision? at the Hotel Vancouver netted AD: That’s right. $350,000. TF: On your relationship I think what it reflects is, with the B.C. Federation this year I’ve had about 230 of Labour, your caucus is meetings with the business considering a proposal that community. The purpose of it B.C. should once again do has been principally to build away with secret ballots for understanding, particularly on union certification. issues of skills training. With AD: The B.C. Fed makes the priority I give to skills a case to the government training, I think I’m much on a series of issues on more attuned to their concerns employment standards every than the government has been. year. Labour law, every year. TF: I suppose that kind of WorkSafeBC, every year. success in fundraising might Trades and training, every make it more difficult to follow year. through with your pledge to With respect to [accepting ban corporate and union signed union cards for donations. certification], it is a AD: I don’t think so. The democratic process that the B.C. Liberal Party has a Newfoundland Conservative very high level of corporate government just put into place donations as a percentage of a few months ago. So it’s a its total. We’re overwhelmingly proposal from the labour dependent on individual movement and we’re looking donations. We get support at it. from unions, but it’s not even For most of B.C.’s modern close to what people would history, since World War think. II, we’ve had that cardTF: So you’ll campaign for check system in place. The that, as you have before? question would be whether AD: Yes. [returning to that system] is a priority for this term in Tom Fletcher is legislative government. reporter and columnist for TF: So those kinds of things Black Press and BCLocalnews. will be made clear in your com. tfletcher@blackpress.ca
SURREY LANGLEY
N
DP leader Adrian Dix has completed yearend interviews with members of the legislative press gallery. Here are highlights from my discussion with him. TF: On the Kinder Morgan oil pipeline expansion proposal, federal NDP leader Tom Mulcair says the federal environmental process would have to be strengthened before a project like that could get a thorough enough hearing. Do you agree? AD: The B.C. Liberal government has signed an equivalency agreement that says that the federal decision is the provincial decision on these projects. If it applies to Enbridge Northern Gateway, presumably the B.C. Liberals would apply it to Kinder Morgan. They could have done a joint process, where [the final decision] would have gone to both cabinets. They chose instead to give up jurisdiction. They were so afraid of making any decision on Northern Gateway that they sent it over to the federal government. So what we’ve said is within a week of coming to office, we would end that equivalency agreement, and British Columbia would make decisions about both Enbridge Northern Gateway, which applied in May 2010, and any other pipeline, including the Kinder Morgan proposal, for which no application has been made. Obviously it would have been desirable for everyone had they chosen a true joint
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• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
Loving the life in the Lower Mainland By Kerry Vital
Metro Vancouver is widely known as one of the best places in the world to live in. Leisure and recreation is right on our doorstep, our economy is thriving, we have a lively arts and cultural scene, and new residents move here in droves. But what exactly makes the Lower Mainland such a wonderful place to live? “I think people love living in the Lower Mainland because of the excellent work-life balance,” says Bob de Wit, CEO of the Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association. “There aren’t many places where someone can ski and golf in the same day in the same city!” Michael Hungerford, a partner at Hungerford Properties, agrees, saying that Metro Vancouver has it all. “There’s a tremendous quality of life here,” he says, adding “People recognize the stability that the Lower Mainland has. It’s a great city to work in and have fun.” Hungerford himself lived outside of the Lower Mainland for 10 years, but kept coming back to Vancouver. “There are studies that speak to the Lower Mainland as one of the best places to live in the world,” he says. “People want to raise their kids here. They recognize the stability that the Lower Mainland has.” Indeed, Vancouver was rated as the fifth best city in the world on the Mercer Quality of Living survey, the results of which were released in early December. A similar study by the
Martin Knowles photo above, submitted photo below Economic Intelligence Unit rated Vancouver as third in the world. A temperate climate and some pretty amazing scenery are just two of the reasons that The citizens of of Metro Vancouver are an people love living in the Lower Mainland. A thriving economy and a great quality of life intelligent bunch, according to a study by draw new residents every year. Smartcities Hub. The study rated Vancouver as the fourth smartest city in the world. Our relatively temperate climate is also a draw for people considering where to live. With warm summer days and cool fall nights, it’s rare for citizens of Metro Vancouver to experience major weather-related problems, unless of course you’re yearning for the white Christmas that doesn’t happen very often. “I think people are drawn first to Canada – because of our relatively greater political and economic freedoms – and then once they’re here, to the Lower Mainland, probably due to our having the best climate in the country,” says de Wit. Another wonderful thing about the Lower Mainland is the options for business owners here. “You can really create your own opportunities,” Hungerford says. It’s no wonder Metro Vancouver’s population grows every year, when there are so many great reasons to live here.
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Mail or drop off submissions to 20258 Fraser Hwy.; e-mail datebook@langleytimes.com Or go online at www.langleytimes.com to post your event. Click on calendar and ‘add event.’ Datebook is a free community service for non-profit organizations published twice a week.
Saturday • Multicultural Gala Langley’s International Festival Society dinner and awards 6 p.m. Feb. 2, at the Fort Langley Golf and Country Club at 9782 McKinnon Cres. Reserve online at www.langleysinternationalfestival.com or email gala@internationalfestival.ca or call 604-514-2294. • Tree Chipping fundraiser by the 1st Walnut Grove Scouts Jan. 5 and Jan. 12 at the Walnut Grove Secondary School (8919 Walnut Grove Drive) 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. By donation. The scouts will also pick up trees in Walnut Grove for a minimum $10 donation per tree. Please e-mail treepickup@1stwalnutgrovescouts.ca or call 778-858-5331. • Bottle drive by the 1st Walnut Grove Scouts at the Walnut Grove Secondary School (8919 Walnut Grove Drive) Jan. 5, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Canadian Tire money accepted. • Tree Chipping Fundraiser hosted by Langley Gymnastics Foundation on Jan. 5 and Jan. 6, the Saturday and Sunday. Times are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days. The three sites are James Kennedy Elementary, Alice Brown Elementary and the Langley Events Centre. Donations are welcomed. • Heritage Holiday at Fort Langley National Historic Site. Until Jan. 6, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Start with a guided introduction of the site where British Columbia was born at 11 a.m., then at 1 p.m. warm up with some heritage hot chocolate and decorate a cookie. At 3 p.m., roast chestnuts on an open fire while swapping stories with our costumed guides. Regular admission applies; free for annual pass holders.
Monday • Langley Concert Band meets Monday nights 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the band room at R.E. Mountain Secondary School, 7755 202A St. Always accepting new members with at least one year’s experience. For more info, email langleyconcertband@gmail.com. • Chess Club meets Mondays at 7 p.m. at the Brookswood Seniors Centre. For more info call Hugh at 604-530-4693.
tueSday • Langley Toastmasters 2743 meets every Tuesday at 6:45 p.m. in the CFK Conference room at Langley City Hall, second floor, 20399 Douglas Cres. Learn to speak in public in this friendly and supportive environment. For more info, call Derek at 604-329-6408 or visit langley.toastmastersclubs.org. • Langley Newcomers and Friends is open to women of all ages and meets at the W.C. Blair Recreation centre on the first Tuesday of every month at 7:15 p.m. Contact Cyndy Smith at 604-530-3924 or Donna Stark at 604-5303844 or langleynewcomers@hotmail.com. • Langley Elks, meet second and fourth Tuesdays at 8 p.m., excluding January and February at #6- 4044 200B St. Contact: Steve 604-510-4742. • Langley Lions Bingo, every Tuesday night at the Evergreen Lodge, in the hall, at 5464 203 St. Doors open at 4 p.m., Bonanza pre-call at 5:30 p.m., cards sold at 6 p.m., start time 7 p.m., light concession opens 5 p.m. • Scottish Country Dancing in Fort Langley. No partner necessary. Beginners welcome. Every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Fort Langley Hall, 9167 Glover Rd. First session free. For more information phone Rebecca at 604-530-0500 or email: lonotera@ shaw.ca.
WedneSday • Housing Workshop on the property tax assessment Process - Wednesday, Jan. 16
1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Langley Seniors Resource and Recreation Centre, 20605 - 51B Ave. Preregister by calling 604-530-3020. Drop-ins welcome. Open to the public and free of charge. • Classics Book Club meets on the first Wednesday of every month at 7 p.m. at Murrayville Library. Please phone the library for more information or to register for this free program 604-533-0339. • Fort Langley Library Knitting Circle meets 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Drop-in. Bring your knitting to the library and enjoy the companionship of working with others on your project. Beginners welcome. • Langley Quilters Guild meets the fourth Wednesday of every month at George Preston Recreation Centre, 20699 42 Ave. Day meeting is noon to 3 p.m.; evening meeting is 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Contact Nancy Walker at 604-534-1013 or www.langleyquiltersguild.com for more information.
The Langley Langley Times Times •• Thursday, Thursday, January January 3, 3, 2013 2013 •• 17 The
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ongoing • Men’s Langley League Cribbage urgently needs players. Evenings, 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Phone Rob 604-533-9363 or Tim 604-530-2364. • Fraser Health Crisis Line is recruiting volunteers. Extensive training and ongoing support is provided. Visit www.options. bc.ca and follow the link for the Crisis Line. • Small Animal Rescue Society (SARS) urgently need volunteers to help at their rabbit shelter in Aldergrove. Phone Muriel 604-530-3297 or cell 604-306-5775. • Langley Meals on Wheels Service Society is always seeking volunteers. It’s a four-hour commitment, twice a month. Those interested please call: 604-533-1679 or email info@ langleymealsonwheels.com. • Penny Pincher Thrift Store needs volunteer cashiers to work a four-hour shift minimum of once a week, Monday to Saturday. Apply at the store, 20211 56 Ave. Proceeds go to LMH. • Langley Lawn Bowling Club is for all ages and operates all year-round, with carpet bowls and cards from October through April and outdoor bowling May through September. Lots of social activities. Reasonable membership fees. Call Nell at 604-534-7465.
Go to www.langleytimes.com to post your event. Click on calendar and ‘add event.’
re El se?
ails.
Always wear your smile.
thurSday • Family caregiver series offers practical coping strategies for people caring for a person with dementia. Thursdays, Jan. 10, 17 and 24, 10 a.m. to noon at the Alzheimer Resource Centre, 200 20644 Eastleigh Cres. Cost: by donation. Registration is required as space is limited. Please call 604-533-5277 or email rpuszka@alzeimerbc.org. • eBooks at the Library Learn how to select and download free eBooks from the library to your computer or eReader. Bring your eReader (if you have one) and your questions to the Walnut Grove Library Jan. 10, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. To register, please visit or call your local library. • Career assistance from Kwantlen Polytechnic University Jan. 10, 10:30 a.m. in Room 2075 at the Langley campus of Kwantlen University. Research a meaningful career, work and lifestyle. This tuition-free (administrative costs apply) daytime program is held on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. from Feb. 7 to May 24. RSVP to Elly Morgan 604-599-3431 or email elly.morgan@kwantlen.ca. • Ala-teen is a support program for teens who have been or are being negatively affected by another person’s drinking. Open to ages 10 and up. Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. in the Township of Langley Civic Building at 20330 65 Ave. For more information, call 604-688-1716.
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18
• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
sports The
gary ahuja 604-514-6754
Langley Times
sports@langleytimes.com
Taliah Leigh Photography
submitted photo
Jeffrey Hansen-Carlson changed his diet to drop more than 100 pounds, going from 295 pounds (left) to his current weight of 180. A big factor in losing all the weight was when he could barely fit into his tuxedo for August 2008 wedding to his wife Alison (above). The change in Hansen-Carlson’s lifestyle has also helped him rediscover his passion for cycling.
Lifestyle change helps rediscover passion Dietary changes helped Jeffrey Hansen-Carlson drop 120 pounds and get back on the bike Gary ahuja Times Sports
N
ew Year’s is a time many people make resolutions in an effort to better their lives. But for Jeffrey HansenCarlson, it wasn’t a New Years resolution which turned his life around. Like most kids growing up, Hansen-Carlson loved riding his bike. The son of an RCMP officer, he says his mom
used to have to call the local detachment because he would be gone all day long. Like most people, HansenCarlson grew through his teenage years and in his 20s. A few years back, he hadn’t ridden a bike in years but decided to purchase one and went for a spin. Unfortunately, he did not find the experience as enjoyable as he used to. “It was the worse experience of my life; it was so uncomfortable,” he described. “I was so out of shape. “I hated every pedal stroke. “I went on that one bike ride and then sold the bike.” “I knew I was a fat guy but I never really had the desire to change,” he added. He described the next six months as a dark time, and he turned to fast food to cope with
his frustrations. was his diet. “I just ate and ate and ate,” Hansen-Carlson spent the he said. next 12 months “For six trying to make months, I lost the necessary control. changes in his “I realized I life, but was had let myself unsuccessful. go for way too So one year many years. I later, HansenJeffrey Hansen-Carlson Carlson went didn’t know cycling enthusiast to see a what to do. “As far as self nutritionist. esteem goes, For the next this was an all-time low for me.” 18 months, he ate only what he He resigned himself to be was supposed to. obese. “I was entirely committed A few months later (August to learning the nuances of a 2008) on his wedding day, perfect diet,” he explained. Hansen-Carlson struggled “I didn’t sway, I didn’t have a getting into his tuxedo. mint, I didn’t have anything that “I was embarrassed,” he wasn’t explicitly allowed.” admitted. This change in diet allowed But he realized something: Hansen-Carlson to drop 120 the problem was not exercise, it pounds.
“I just ate and ate and ate. For six months, I lost control.”
The 30-year-old now weighs 180 pounds, a weight he hasn’t been at since he was in his late teens. And as part of his new lifestyle, Hansen-Carlson decided to get back on the bike. With the help of Bicycle Sports Pacific and its store manager Kevin Billingsley, Hansen-Carlson found a road bike and was introduced to a bike club and all the caveats of the sports. “Without Kevin’s excitement for the sport, I would not have rediscovered how important the simple pleasure of riding a bike was to me,” Hansen-Carlson said. Riding became a staple of Hansen-Carlson’s life. In 2011 alone, he rode more than continued, PAGE 19
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The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 19 The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 19
sports
Founder ‘excited’ when people ride from PAGE 18
20,000 km. Not even being hit by a car on two separate occasions could slow him down. “Every time I ride a bike now, I get off that bike — whether it is freezing cold, soaking wet, whether I have a kink in my back or whatever the case is — and I am grateful for it,” Hansen-Carlson said. “Just because I know what it is like to not be able to enjoy it.” His passion also prompted
Hansen-Carlson to give back to the sport. Hansen-Carlson founded the Canadian Velo Event Management Society — he also serves as its president — and the Society founded and manages the Prospera Valley GranFondo. The ride was created with his network of cycling friends as “a feather in the cap for the Lower Mainland,” he said. “I am so genuinely passionate about cycling that it was very easy to inspire others to ride. Starting the Canadian Velo
Event Management Society and working to encourage everyone in the community to ride a bike is nothing more than the natural evolution of my story.” “It really excites me when people ride bikes; it is that simple.” The GranFondo will be held for a second straight year beginning and ending at the Fort Langley Historic Site on July 21. The inaugural event saw 1,200 cyclists participate and the $20,000 raised went to Special Olympics BC.
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• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
sports
Rivermen rock Express twice, Gary ahuja Times Sports
A home-andhome sweep of the Coquitlam Express has the Langley Rivermen back in the hunt for a playoff spot. The Rivermen filled the net with 13 goals — winning 6-1 at Coquitlam’s Poirier Sports Complex on Dec. 28 and 7-1 the next night at the Langley Events Centre — to pull within a point of the Express for the fourth and
final playoff spot in the BCHL’s Mainland Division. Langley also has two games in hand. Ben Butcher and Derek Sutliffe scored 19 seconds apart in the opening period in the first game before Coquitlam’s Philip Zielonka cut the lead in half prior to intermission. But that would be the only puck to elude James Barr, the game’s first star, who made 46 saves. James Robinson
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scored for the visitors, but with 29 seconds to go in the period, Logan Smith made it 4-2. John Siemer had the lone goal in the second to make it 4-3 but Azurdia and Reichert gave the Rivermen a three-goal cushion. Siemer and Sutliffe traded goals to end the game. Evan Anderson picked up three helpers and Barr made another 40 saves to pick up the victory. The victories wrap up the team’s most successful stretch of the season as they closed December with four victories, a tie and an overtime loss in their past eight games.
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made it 3-1 in the second before Mario Puskarich, Mitch McLain and Evan Campbell tallied in the third. Puskarich also added a pair of assists while Jakob Reichert set up three goals. The rematch got off to a fast start as the teams combined for six goals in the opening 20 minutes, four of which came from the Rivermen. Austin Azurdia, Butcher and Puskarich chased Coquitlam goalie Cole Huggins from the game with goals in the first 13 minutes. That sparked the Express as Zachary Pryzbek and Zielonka
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th Street, Langley, BC • 604 510 2588 • www.rootsandwingsbc.com 15250—54A Avenue, info@rootsandwingsbc.com 982—200 Street, Langley, BC 510• 2588 2588www.rootsandwingsbc.com • www.rootsandwingsbc.com 982982—200 - 200th Street, Langley, BC•Surrey, • 604 604 BC510
15250—54A Surrey, BC• •info@rootsandwingsbc.com info@rootsandwingsbc.com 15250—54A Avenue, Surrey, BC 15250Avenue, - 54A Avenue, Surrey, BC • info@rootsandwings.com
The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 21 The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 21
sports
climb back into playoff race They have climbed back into the playoff race thanks to a highpowered offence which leads the entire junior A league in goals for with an average of 3.45 goals per game. Leading the way is Puskarich who had five points in the two games and sits atop the BCHL scoring race with with 24 goals and 49 points. Langley returns to action on Jan. 5 when they visit the Mainland Division-leading Chilliwack Chiefs. The Rivermen also host the Cowichan Valley Capitals on Jan. 6 at the LEC for a 2 p.m. game. ••••• The Rivermen have added some local talent to the line-up, picking up defenceman Austen Bietenbeck from the Surrey Eagles in exchange for future considerations. “We have been interested in him right from the get-go,” said Langley coach and general manager Bobby Henderson. “We are excited; he has a ton of upside.”
Order Photos On-line
24/7
Miranda GATHERCOLE/Langley Times
Langley Rivermen’s James Robinson (#7) and Mario Puskarich (right) celebrate with Logan Smith, who scored his first goal of the season in the team’s 7-4 victory on Saturday at the Langley Events Centre. Smith is also the team’s new captain. The 6-foot-3, 197pound Langley native had one assist in 20 games for Surrey. “He is a big body on the blue-line and has all the tools to become
a great player in this league” said associate head coach Jordan Emmerson. The trade was one of two moves made by the Rivermen as
they shipped another defenceman, captain Thomas Nitsche to Penticton for future considerations. Logan Smith will serve as captain.
Grand Opening
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• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
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The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013 • 23
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• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
JANUARY PRE-OWNED PERFORMANCE EVENT! Over 40 Cars to Choose From
2005 ACURA MCX
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2009 JAGUAR XF
2009 PORSCHE CAYENNE GTS SPORT UTILITY
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$37,500
1P0593A
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46,989 km, Manual 6-Cyl 3.0 Liter, 10 Speaker Audio, Traction Control, Sport Pkg, Upgraded 18 in Rims
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24
Thursday, January 3, 2013 A25
langleytimes.com
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
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
7
OBITUARIES
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Advertise across Advertise across the the Advertise across the Lower Mainland Lower Mainland in in lower mainland in the 18 18 best-read the best-read thecommunity 17 best-read community communityand newspapers newspapers and newspapers. dailies. 53 dailies. ON THE WEB: ON THE WEB:
OBITUARIES
7
OBITUARIES
Mrs. Jean Doucet late of Chilliwack, BC passed away on December 25, 2012 at the age of 66 at Chilliwack General Hospital. She is survived by her loving husband, Paul; 3 sons, Richard, Roger (Leonie), Denis; 2 brothers, and 1 sister; and numerous nieces and nephews. Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Friday, January 4, 2013 at 10:00 am at Saints Joachim & Ann Catholic Church, 2827 273 Street, Aldergrove, BC, with Father William Ashley Celebrant. Interment will follow at St. Mary’s Cemetery, Promontory Road, Chilliwack, BC. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Canadian Heart & Stoke Foundation or to the Mission Poor Clare Sisters. Tributes and condolences may be left at:
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 16
33
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'LADYSĂĽ-ARGARET "ELOVEDĂĽ WIFEĂĽ OFĂĽ $R ĂĽ +ENTĂĽ !LANĂĽĂĽ 5TENDALEĂĽ PASSEDĂĽ AWAYĂĽ $ECEM ĂĽ BERĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ATĂĽ THEĂĽ AGEĂĽ OFĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 'LADYSĂĽ ISĂĽ SURVIVEDĂĽ ANDĂĽ LOVINGLYĂĽĂĽ REMEMBEREDĂĽ BYĂĽ HERĂĽ HUSBANDĂĽĂĽ +ENT ĂĽ SONĂĽ 7ILLIAM ĂĽ DAUGHTERĂĽĂĽ 2UHAMAH ĂĽ GRANDSONĂĽ +EEGAN ĂĽĂĽ ASĂĽ WELLĂĽ ASĂĽ MANYĂĽ RELATIVESĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ FRIENDS ĂĽ !ĂĽ FUNERALĂĽ SERVICEĂĽ WILLĂĽĂĽ BEĂĽ HELDĂĽ ATĂĽ (ENDERSONSĂĽ &UNER ĂĽ ALĂĽ HOMEĂĽ INĂĽ ,ANGLEYĂĽ ONĂĽ *ANUARYĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 4HEREĂĽ WILLĂĽ BEĂĽ AĂĽ VIEW ĂĽ INGĂĽ FROMĂĽ PM ĂĽ PMĂĽ FOL ĂĽ LOWEDĂĽ BYĂĽ THEĂĽ SERVICEĂĽ ATĂĽ PM ĂĽ )NĂĽ LIEUĂĽ OFĂĽ mOWERSĂĽ DONATIONSĂĽĂĽ MAYĂĽ BEĂĽ MADEĂĽ TOĂĽ THEĂĽ #ANADIANĂĽĂĽ 7ILDLIFEĂĽ&EDERATION
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND - KEYS with Campion float whistle & 3 keys, in the Brookswood area, call: (604)514-0288
CHILDREN 83
Henderson’s Funeral Home 604-854-5534
INFORMATION ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC The 2013-2015 BC Freshwater Fishing Regulations Synopsis
www.hendersonsabbotsfordfunerals.com
CAVALIER, Janet (Jan) Fay aged 69 passed away peacefully on December 24, 2012. She is survived by her husband Richard, Daughters Tracy Holborn and Samantha Nickel and Son Jaime along with Brother Tom Symington and Sister Teresa Erickson. She had a very giving heart and loved to help others. Jan will be missed greatly by her family and friends. Jan fostered children, rescued street kids, cared for orphans in India, shared her gift of hospitality, and loved everyone she met unconditionally. A celebration of her life will be held at the “Clubhouse� in Sharon Village 5721 213A Street, Langley, BC on January 20th at 2pm. The family would like to thank the staff and care givers of Brookside Lodge in Surrey for the tremendous support. In lieu of flowers please make a donation to the BC Alzheimer’s Assoc.
CHRISTMAS CORNER
7 foot artiďŹ cial Christmas tree. 51’’ diameter at base. GET READY FOR NEXT YEAR. Great condition. $40. Downsizing. North Delta Call (604)591-9740
Jean
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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
DOUCET
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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 106
AUTOMOTIVE
0936886 BC LTD. dba JIFFY LUBE in Surrey is hiring 1 F/T Automotive SERVICE TECHNICIAN. 4 Years exp. is required. Duties include review work orders, test automotive systems and components using computerized diagnostic and other testing devices, test and adjust repaired systems to manufacturer’s performance specifications etc. Salary would be $26/hr with 40 hrs week. Email resume to: lubejiffy@hotmail.com Looking for a “SUPER� employee? Advertise in the best-read community newspapers 604-575.5555
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES NEW TO CANADA. Join us in the multi-billion dollar industry, and the most amazing health product. For an appt call (604)316-9859
124
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator 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 780-723-5051.
CASHIER & STOCK PERSON with exp, for our Langley produce store, P/T, F/T. Call 604-533-8828.
FARM, Fishing, Hunting, Property Manager: Year round. To manage and maintain a 685 acre working farm with pheasants, cattle, dogs, hay and tourism accomodations. Semi retired welcome. Hands on management. mk@skeenameadows.com
FARM WORKERS
12 FARM LABOURERS required, for MYERS ORGANIC FARMS Inc. 5212-252 St. Aldergrove. $10.25/hr. Full Time Seasonal from March to Nov. To pick, plant, weed, load & unload. Fast paced, physically demanding. Rain or Shine. All outside work. 604-856-6310. No walk-ins. email: myersorg@telus.net No exp. req. Sun. - Fri. 5am start.
125
FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE
CHILDCARE AVAILABLE
SUNNYSIDE BROOKSWOOD DAYCARE F/T space available. Ages 3-5 yrs, structured program includes lunch, 2 snacks, and preschool program
www.ďŹ onasdaycare.com
604-533-5132
86
CHILDCARE WANTED
NANNYSITTER req’d Mon-Fri, 2:30-5:30pm in our home, must have vehicle to pick up from school, & ref’s. Start Jan 7. 604-857-1967 Classified advertising an effective way to build business.
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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.
NOW HIRING! Up to $800/wk
Entry level promoters needed.
Room for travel and rapid advancement. Must be outgoing and avail immediately
Make it yours. Call 604-708-2628 caregiving@plea.bc.ca www.plea.bc.ca
Brandi, 604-777-2195
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
4OĂĽLEAVEĂĽCONDOLENCESĂĽAND VIEWĂĽMOREĂĽOFĂĽ'LADYS ĂĽLIFEĂĽSTORY ĂĽ PLEASEĂĽVISIT WWW HENDERSONSLANGLEYFUNERALS COM
Independent Store Operators
Have you got what it takes to run your own business? Let Mac’s give you the chance to prove yourself! We are currently recruiting for Independent Store Operators in the Mission B.C. area Macs’s provides an opportunity for people with retail and management experience to operate their own convenience store with a leading name in the business. We are looking for goal-oriented individuals who want to grow with an innovative industry leader. Successful candidates will have strong management and interpersonal skills, a flair for dealing with customers, and most importantly the drive to succeed. To learn more about how to join the Mac’s team, please visit out website at www.macs.ca Fax resumes to 604-590-3569 Or e-mail to macsbcoffice@macs.ca Mac’s – redefining retail excellence
A26 Thursday, January 3, 2013
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
langleytimes.com
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 131
HOME CARE/SUPPORT RESPITE Caregivers
LOOKING TO HIRE? Reach Out To QualiďŹ ed Candidates Today! Advertise your job postings with ease and reliability. We can help you source candidates locally or province wide with our proven advertising methods in over 96 community publications. Contact us today for customized packages and pricing!
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PAPER DELIVERY Pay your Christmas bills or even your car payment!
Deliver the Vancouver Sun in Langley. Must have reliable car. For more info Contact Dennis at:
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:
www.bcclassified.com 604-575-5555 toll-free 1-866-575-5777 115
EDUCATION
163
PERSONAL SERVICES
VOLUNTEERS
173
BECOME A VOLUNTEER LITERACY TUTOR and help a child who is struggling to read and write! You must have excellent English skills, love to read and enjoy working with children. Tutoring locations in both Surrey & Langley. Extensive training provided. Surrey Information session will be held on Tues, Jan 8th, 7pm. at the Learning Disabilities Assn office, #201 13766 - 72 Ave. Langley Information session will be held on Thurs, Jan 10th, 7pm at Douglas Park School, 5409-206 St. Pre-register at 604-591-5156. Info: www.ldafs.org
AQUA SPA
LABOURERS
MORGAN Creek Tropicals email danielle@mctropicals.com $10.25/h greenhouse, planting, labour
151
PROFESSIONALS/ MANAGEMENT
F/T Office Manager for White Rock Tour Co. Advanced MS Office & customer service skills required. Manage high-volume client itineraries & booking overnight/day tours. Email resume to jillian@mandatetours.com NO phone calls/drop ins please.
115
EDUCATION
BECOME AN OPTICIAN IN ONLY 6 MONTHS Optical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Train for a “Career With Vision�. START YOUR OWN BUSINESS!!
604.510.6689 20437 Douglas Crescent Langley
263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
~ Excavation, Clearing ~ ~ Drainage, Final Grading ~ Free Estimates, 20 years exp. Fully Insured/WCB
Borrow against your car! •Money Today! •Instant Approvals •No Credit Checks •Privacy Assured
www.topdogloans.com 604.503.BARK (2275)
287
Need CA$H Today?
Chinese Massage Specializing in Private Events! We Come To You! Doing It All, From Set-Up - Clean-Up.
778-278-2298 20521 Douglas Crescent GREAT HANDS Genuine Full Body Massage AWESOME! 604-507-7043
• Home Dinner Parties • Meetings • Funerals • Weddings • B-B-Ques • Birthdays • Anniversaries
172 ASTROLOGY/PSYCHICS
Unique Taste, Unique Menus... Gourmet, Customized Menus Tailored To Your Function...
PSYCHIC READER and advisor. 10 min free by phone for the New Year. Find out about your love, money and future. Not a 900 line. 21+. Call 1888-559-5207.
130
Kristy 604.488.9161
threescocatering@shaw.ca or Visit us at: www. threescompanycatering.ca
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
BC B.C.COLLEGE COLLEGEOF OFOPTICS OPTICS
The Burnaby NewsLeader & New Westminster NewsLeader are divisions of Black Press Ltd., Canada’s largest independent newspaper company, with more than 180 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii. This is a fantastic opportunity to develop a rewarding career in advertising and marketing. We are seeking a highly creative individual with an ability to multi-task in a fast paced team environment plus have good interpersonal and sales skills. The successful applicant will have a university or college education or two years of sales experience, preferably in the advertising or retail industry. The ability to build relationships with clients and offer superior customer service is a must. The winning candidate will be a team player and will also be called upon to grow the account list with an aggressive new business growth mandate. There is plenty of advancement opportunities within the company and much room for growth. We offer a great working environment with a competitive base salary plus commissions coupled with a strong benefit package. Vehicle is required. To apply, please forward your resume with a cover letter to: Jean Hincks, Publisher 7438 Fraser Park Drive Burnaby, BC V5J 5B9
203
Running this ad for 8yrs
PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.
CGA: Tax, Audit, Tel:6045935447; ga@gmail.com
224
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR,
ACCOUNTING/TAX/ BOOKKEEPING
European Quality Workmanship
Accounting: pnnjen-
CONTRACT OR HOURLY FREE ESTIMATES 24 YEARS IN BUSINESS
Per Molsen 604-575-1240
CARPET CLEANING
YUKYUK’S: JAN 3-5 Allyson Smith; Jan 10-12 Paul Myrehaug; Jan 17-19 David Merry; Jan 24-26. TOM GREEN - yukyuks.com or 604-696-9857
CLEANING SERVICES
ENGLISH LADY. Home Cleaning Honest, reliable, hard working. Refs Pets OK Reas rates 604-533-1711
SAMCON BUILDING. Complete renos, decks, kitchens & baths, from start to finish. All trades available. Over 25 years experience. Call Derek (604)720-5955 www.samconbuilding.com
300
LANDSCAPING
DREAMING of a new career? Look in bcclassified.com’s
Class 109 Career Opportunities! Why not make your dream a reality?
338
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
HOGFUEL
Gas Fitter ✠Plumber Furnace Boilers, Hot Water Tanks Hot Water Heat, Plumbing Jobs. Furnace cleaning with truck mounted machine
Please call for pricing 604-465-5193 or 604-465-5197
CONCRETE & PLACING
PLUMBING
Hemlock, Fir & Cedar
SAWDUST
FILIPINO team- hardworking, looking for office & residential cleaning. Great Rates. Please call 604-613-4380
242
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
Repairs & Reno’s, Sundecks & Additions, New Homes
www.augustinesoilandmulch.com
320
604-507-4606 or 604-312-7674
MOVING & STORAGE
PLACING & Finishing * Forming * Site Prep, old concrete removal * Excavation & Reinforcing * Re-Re Specialists 34 Years Exp. Free Estimates.
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.
Call: Rick (604) 202-5184
AFFORDABLE MOVING Local & Long Distance
SEMI-RETIRED contractor will do small concrete jobs. Patio’s, sidewalks, driveway’s. Re & re old or
$45/Hr
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
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
604-537-4140 GET the best for your moving 24/7 From $40/hr Licensed & Insured Senior Discount 778-773-3737
DRYWALL
2 GUYS-A-MUDDIN, We board & l tape it. Over 20 yrs exp. David 778-317-3065 2guysamuddin.com
FULL PLUMBING SERVICES • Hvac Gas Fitting • Electrical *Free Est. *Licensed *Insured 24hr. Emergency Service
SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
C & C Electrical Mechanical
604-475-7077
341
WALTER’S DRYWALL Taping - Texture - Repairs Over 40 yrs exp. 604-308-7943 MERCHANDISE: From antiques & collectibles, to sporting goods & electronics, to parakeets & pet supplies, if it is considered merchandise for sale, you can find it here. Call bcclassified.com 604-575-5555 fax 604-575-2073
260
PRESSURE WASHING HANDYMAN - 604-518-4778 WCB & Liability Insured. www.lwrestoration.com
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS Canuck Roofing All Roof Repairs Any job big or small. Free Est. *WCB *Insured *BBB 778-772-1969
ELECTRICAL
ALL JOBS Big or Small. Panels, lighting, plugs, fans, hot tubs etc. Guaranteed work. 604-539-0708 Cell 604-537-1773 (Lic. 26110)
GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, Asphalt Shingles, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters. $80. 604-240-5362
C & C Electrical Mechanical • ELECTRICAL • FULL PLUMBING SERVICES • HVAC GAS FITTING *Free Est. *Licensed *Insured 24hr. Emergency Service
356
604-475-7077 YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
RUBBISH REMOVAL
BUDDY WITH A TRUCK
.Hayden Painting 778-229-0236 Family Owned & Operated
www.blackpress.ca
www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley
Additions, Home Improvements Restorations, Renovations, & New Construction. Specializing in Concrete, Forming, Framing & Siding. 604-218-3064
Email: publisher@burnabynewsleader.com publisher@newwestnewsleader.com Deadline for applications is: January 11, 2013
Paul Schenderling 604-530-7885 / 604-328-3221
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
236
Advertising Representative
CEILINGS OUR SPECIALTY
A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing, reroofing. Dhillon 604-782-1936.
www.PitStopLoans.com 604-777-5046
Deep Tissue, Relaxation Massage Christmas & New Year Discount!
Over 2000 colours to choose from Exterior 2012 Specials!
TIME FOR A NEW CAR?
Cash same day, local office.
ALTERNATIVE HEALTH
Rooms from $99 inc. paint
See bcclassified.com’s Automotive Section in 800’s
No Credit Checks!
171
SINCE 1977
(604)533-9108
Own A Vehicle?
Burnaby NewsLeader New Westminster NewsLeader
604.581.0101
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
Borrow Up To $25,000
startsFeb. Feb.20th, 11th, 2013 $ starts 2012 $ $ Hurry #208 - 10070 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC www.bccollegeofoptics.ca
FINANCIAL SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GRAHAM’S EXCAVATING
MASSAGE & SKIN CARE
PERSONAL SERVICES
www.plea.bc.ca
138
182
175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS
caregiving@plea.bc.ca
CLEAN OUT YOUR CLOSETS WITH DOLLAR DEALS 604-575-5555
MIND BODY SPIRIT
PERSONAL SERVICES
Grand Opening
604-708-2628
doorstep@shaw.ca
WE’RE ON THE WEB
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
POLAR BEAR PAINTING $299 ~ 3 rooms (walls only 2 coats) 604-866-6706
Junk Removal. Yard & Construction Clean-up. We Haul It All.....
604-763-8867
langleytimes.com HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 356
RUBBISH REMOVAL
RECYCLE-IT! JUNK REMOVAL Recycled Earth Friendly • Estate Services • Electronics • Appliances • Old Furniture • Construction • Yard Waste • Concrete • Drywall • Junk • Rubbish • Mattresses & More!
On Time, As Promised, Service Guaranteed!
604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca
373B
TILING
A-1 Ceramics, Marble, Glass blocks etc. Install/Repair. Res./Comm. Free Est. 20 years exp. Peter’s Tile (604)209-0173
PETS 454
EQUESTRIAN
CEDAR HOGFUEL Special Fall prices Sawdust also available
PETS 477
REAL ESTATE
PETS
603
CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977 KUVASZ-MAREMMA X puppies. 11 wks old. Vet-checked, 1st shots, dewormed. $600. Photos www.facebook.com/RiverstoneQH ; email rstranch@gmail.com. PITBULL puppies. 9 males, 6 females. 6 wks old. White & brown. $350. each obo. 604-300-0807 PRESA CANARIO P/B UKC, fawn Both parents approx. 120 to 150 lbs. Call 604-302-2357 TOY POODLE. 6 weeks old, black, male. $700. Call 604-820-4230, 604-302-7602 Wolf X Shepherd pups, $450. blk w/markings, view parents. chrisjo@telus.net (604)869-2772
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 503
548
604-465-5193
456
FURNITURE
627
633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS
477
PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 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
No qr code reader? Text info: 778.786.8271
827 Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402
LANGLEY CITY 1-bdrm apt. Clean, crime free bldg. Incl. heat, n/p, refs. req’d. $710. 604-530-6384.
639 REAL ESTATE SERVICES
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
CALL FOR AVAILABILITY LANGLEY CITY
CHESTNUT PLACE
Apartments 20727 Fraser Highway
1 & 2 Bedrooms avail incl heat/hot water/cable Criminal record check may be req’d.
Ph: 604-533-4061 Langley
CLAYMORE APTS * RENTAL INCENTIVES *
All new tenancies will be entered into a draw for 1 mth of free rent. 1 & 2 bdms avail. now & Jan. 1st. Close to shopping, schools & transit. Some pets ok.
5374 - 203rd St, Langley Call 604-533-9780
in the 17 best-read
LANGLEY
The Village at Thunderbird Centre
RENTALS
MISC. FOR SALE
X COUNTRY SKIIS & BINDINGS FOR SALE. Kneissl & Rossignal Men’s size 10 & Woman’s size 7. Shoes and Poles as well. 3 pin (old style). North Delta. 604-591-9740
845 The Scrapper
Betsy - 604-533-6945 New SRI *1152 sq/ft Double wide $77,900. *14x70 Full gyproc single wide - loaded $66,900. Repossessed mobile, manufactured & modulars. Chuck 604-830-1960. Glenbrookhomes.net
lower mainland
SPORTING GOODS
.DJ AUTOMARKET 604-538-2422
Michael - 604-533-7578
advertise across the
578
VEHICLES WANTED
Rainbow & Majorca
REACH ALL
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?
CARS - DOMESTIC
LOOKING FOR A DEAL ON A NEW VEHICLE? Save up to 40% OFF your next new vehicle... No games or gimmicks, deal direct with local dealerships. www.newcarselloff.com
Villa Fontana & Stardust
*NEW QUEEN MATTRESS SET* Pillow Top in Plastic. Mfr. Warranty Must Sell $200 ~ 604-484-0379
560
818
AUTO FINANCING
FREE: heat, h/w, cable TV, laundry & parking. No Pets BACHELOR, 1 & 2 BDRMS. SENIORS, ADULT ORIENTED
PET SERVICES
NEW DOG WALKING service! 3 FREE January adventure walks for all new customers. www.canineadventures.ca or email: matt@canineadventures.ca
810
LANGLEY CITY APARTMENTS ON 201A
community papers!
474
HOMES FOR RENT
TRANSPORTATION
HOMES WANTED
• Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331
MIXED SPECIES HOG FUEL 1” minus mixed berry mulch, Red Cedar coarse hog fuel Phone R.J. Caplette 604-856-6500
736
WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-626-9647
MATTRESSES starting at $99
FEED & HAY
APARTMENT/CONDO
TRANSPORTATION
There will be no pressure and no obligation, but let’s discuss possibilities.
AUCTIONS
CENTRAL AUCTION #313 - 20560 - Langley By Pass (#10 Hwy) 604-534-8322 www.centralauction.com
706
RENTALS
If you would consider selling your property of 3 Acres or more and want maximum value, send the details to: randyd@portraithomes.ca
STEAMER CHEST, very old. curved top. needs some work. $70. North Delta. 604-591-9740
509
RENTALS
DEVELOPMENT LAND WANTED
ANTIQUES & VINTAGE
ANTIQUE & ESTATE AUCTION. Monday Jan. 7th, 7:00pm. View: Sunday 1pm-5pm Consignments Welcome
Augustine Soil & Mulch Ltd. Pitt Meadows, BC
ACREAGE
Thursday, January 3, 2013 A27
706
APARTMENT/CONDO 1/2 Month Free LANGLEY CITY Spacious, Clean Bachelor, 1,2 & 3 Bedroom Heat, Hot Water,
604-530-0030 www.cycloneholdings.ca
Deluxe 2 bdrm suites available. Large balconies, fireplace, in-suite laundry. No Pets. Live, shop, work & play all in one location. Next to Colossus Theater (200th & #1 Hwy).
Call 604-881-7111
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673
LANGLEY/ALDERGROVE. Bright & spacious 1 bdrm cottage on acreage, w/d, d/w, carport, avail Jan 1st, ns/np, refs req. $900/mo incl hydro. Call 604-857-1967.
750
SUITES, LOWER
ALDERGROVE: 2 Bdrm grnd level bsmt ste. Close to both schls, bus & shops. Immed. N/P. 604-628-2200 ALDERGROVE 2 bdrm. suite, Jan 1. 4 appl. f/p, N/S N/P. $800 incl utils 604-607-0647, 604-856-5106
DreamTeam Auto Financing “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals
1-800-961-7022
www.iDreamAuto.com DL# 7557
LANGLEY, Campbell Valley; large 1 bdrm & den bsmt ste on quiet view acreage. W/D, utils incl. N/S, small pet ok. $950. (604)737-2526 LANGLEY nr Willowbrook Mall. Newly renov 1 bdrm bsmt. walk-in closet, Optik TV, PVR, internet, all utils. 1 Blk to public trans. NS/NP $700/mo. Jan 15th. 604-532-4388
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Notice is Hereby Given that creditors and others, having claims against the Estate of Terence David Mitchell, formerly of 110, 20145 55a Ave, Langley BC, deceased are hereby required to send the particulars thereof to the undersigned Executor: C/O Vern Harrison, Box 6481 Drayton Valley Ab. T7A1R9 on or before January 21, 2013, after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to the claims that have been received.Vern Harrison, Executor.
WHITE Rock 2 bedrm apt. Close to pier & beach. Quiet bldg suitable for 55+. Small pet OK. Underground pkng for 1 car. Newly updated. 6 appliances. Available immed. $1200. 604-910-4383
thunderbirdvillage@bentallkennedy.com
www.bentallkennedyresidential.com www.ThunderbirdVillage.ca
751
SUITES, UPPER
Bentall Kennedy (Canada) LP
LIMERICK MANOR Near Langley City Hall & shops Bachelor suite - $635 1 bdrm - $720 - $750/month Inc. heat/storage/parking Adult oriented Sorry - no pets
Brookswood 1300sf, 3 bdrm, enste own lndry, cvrd deck, lots of prkg. $1400 + utils. Feb 1. 604-506-5212 MURRAYVILLE- Upper 1 bdrm, f/s, d/w, w/d, f/p. N/P, N/S. Avail. Feb 1. $800/mo. (604)534-1215
TRANSPORTATION
By appt - call 604 - 514 - 1480
Northland Apartments
810
809
AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS
809
AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS
AUTO FINANCING
19777 Willowbrook Dr., Langley 1 & 2 BDRM APTS AVAILABLE NOW! Newer building, secure entry, 5 appl’s including insuite washer and dryer, a/c, electric f/p, u/g prkg & balconies. No pets CLOSE TO SHOPPING, Superstore & Willowbrook mall.
CALL 604-533-7710
TOWN & COUNTRY APARTMENTS 5555 208th Street, Langley Studio - 1 & 2 bdrms. Indoor swimming pool and rec facility. Includes heat & 1 parking stall. No pets
Phone 604-530-1912 WALNUT GROVE 2 br + den exec condo, 2bth, ns $1300. 6app. fp, prkg, sm pet. Feb 1. 604-319-7416
709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL BROOKSWOOD COMMERCIAL LEASE spaces available at 208th Street and 40th Ave. Sizes 7002100 s.f. $1500 - $4500. Call Frank @ Noort Investments 604-835-6300 or Nick @ 604-526-3604.
715
SELF-SERVE DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS OVER A THOUSAND VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM
WEEKLY SPECIALS JAN. 5 - 11, 2013
Hoods .......................................... $44.95 Car Doors.................................... $39.95 Trk/Van/SUV Doors ................... $49.95 Fenders ....................................... $25.95 Door Glasses ............................. $14.95 Cylinder Heads - Alum ............. $34.95 All Bucket Seats - Manual ..... $19.95 All Bench Seats ........................ $24.95 Now That’s a Deal!
DUPLEXES/4PLEXES
LANGLEY, central. Clean 3 bdrm. insuite lndry, close to parks, shops & schools, fenced yard. Avail now. N/P. $950 + util. 604-754-0704 LANGLEY CITY CTR, lower 1/2, pri entr, 1 bdrm, bright, 800 sf, Carport, storage. Now. $850. (604)807-5848
Hours: 8:30 am–5:00 pm 7 days a week www.pickapart.ca
CLOSED TUES, JAN. 1 792-1221 01/13H_PP3
43645 Industrial Way, Chilliwack
28
• The Langley Times • Thursday, January 3, 2013
12 MONTHS FREE FINANCING OAC*
BOXING WEEK SALE SAVE UP TO 50% OFF
LAST WEEK TO SAVE!
ON BEAUTIFULLY SELECTED ITEMS!
3PC. RICHMOND KING BED & TWO NIGHTSTANDS Regular $3694 Boxing Day Price $2698 No HST Limited Quantities LIMITED QUANTITIES Hampton Fabric Recliners Boxing Day Special
2 for 1 Boxing Day Price
$
998
5pc. Solid Wood Dining Set, Table & 4 Leather Chairs Limited Quantities Regular: $3290.00
Boxing Day Price
Leah Leather Condo Size Sofa Regular 2598 Boxing Day Price $1598 No HST $
1798 No HST
$
Lane All Leather Sofa & Loveseat Regular $4298
Boxing Day Price
2998
$
No HST
Limited Quantities Although every precaution is taken, errors in prices and/or specifications may occur in print. We reserve the right to correct any such errors. May not be used with any other promotion. Some special items may not be on display but are available via our special order program. *See store for details.
1455 United Blvd., Coquitlam, BC www.lanestore.ca
604.522.5144
Store Hours: Monday - Thursday 9:30am - 6:00pm Friday 9:30am - 9:00 pm Saturday 9:30am - 6:00 pm Sunday 11:00am - 5:00pm
Proud Sponsor of the PNE Lottery Home