B.C. Views Regulator’s reading on smart meters. p6
Mental health conversation not over. p3
THE NEws
Arts&life Dancers headed to world championships. p19
www.mapleridgenews.com wednesday, september 25, 2013 · serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows · est. 1978 · 604-467-1122 · Delivery: 604-466-6397
CUPE deal to bring more cuts $1 million more over next two years from local budget by Ne i l Cor be tt staff reporter
Colleen Flanagan/thE nEws
Hanging out (From left) Chayse Clancy, her sister Jaida and mother Angela feel the breeze as they stare down at the Fraser River in Pitt Meadows on Monday, a Pro D day.
In April, some trustees were literally in tears as they passed a budget that demanded $5.7 million in cuts. Now they will have to cut approximately $1 million more over the next two years, following the province’s negotiations with CUPE employees in the school district, and a wage increase of 3.5 per cent over two years. The Canadian Union of Public Employees represents teachers aides, custodians, trades people and other workers in school districts across the province. CUPE employees are the second-largest employee group in the district, after teachers. “Definitely, this is going to create a cost pressure for all boards, not just ours,” said secretary treasurer Flavia Coughlan.
see Budget, p9
The ABCs of motivating kids Expert explains why letter grades are destructive by Ne i l Co r b e t t staff reporter
Colleen Flanagan/thE nEws
Alfie Kohn explains to parents intrinsic and extrinsic rewards and the detriment of assigning letter grades to students.
E
lementary students across Maple Ridge may not get letter grades this year, and the district is getting kudos from the man who Time Magazine called “perhaps the country’s most outspoken critic of education’s fixation on grades and test scores.”
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This year in the Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows school district, elementary school teachers will be given the option of not giving letter grades, and can instead choose a student/parent conference model of reporting. Alfie Kohn is the author of 12 books with titles like Feel-Bad Education, The Homework Myth and Punished by Rewards. He is a sought-after lecturer at education conferences and universities, and for two hours on Monday at Thomas Haney secondary he explained to local parents why let-
Index Opinion Letters Community health&wwellness Arts&life sports Classifieds
6 7 12 16 19 23 27
ter grades are a disaster for their children. Kohn is a Boston native, parent and a former teacher who has become a student of the psychology of punishments and rewards. First he debunked the use of punishment – which he says makes children more self-interested, and does not make them more ethical. “Kids become more self-centred, and less concerned with the impact of their actions on other people,” he said. Their thought process is “how
do I escape punishment more effectively next time.” Punishment brings “temporary compliance, but at a terrific cost.” Rewards are not a much better tool to motivate kids, Kohn maintains. “Rewards and punishments are not opposites, they’re two sides of the same coin, and that coin doesn’t buy much.” “You get one thing and only one thing – temporary compliance.” He talked about two different kinds of motivation. see Grades, p14
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 3
Mental health conversation not over Maple Ridge resolution wins support at UBCM, but province won’t reopen Riverview by Moni s ha M ar tin s staff reporter
A
s cars whizz past her, a woman does taichi in the middle of Lougheed Highway.
Seemingly unaware of the world around her, passersby can’t talk her off the street. “We have to respond because she is putting herself in danger,” said Const. Cara Thomson. Police arrive, bundle the woman into a car and take her to Ridge Meadows Hospital. But after a long wait in emergency, the officers have nowhere to take her but the cold, concrete cells at the RCMP detachment. The next morning, she’s sent back on the street. You can hear the frustration in Const. Thomson’s voice as she describes an endless loop. Police are, by default, becoming the informal first responders of the mental health system, and often play such a role without the necessary resources or support to carry it out properly. The hospital doesn’t want to deal with them because of the drugs and the drug treatment places don’t want to deal with them because of mental health issues, said Thomson, a designated RCMP mental health liaison who has been working with the Fraser Health Authority and other community partners for the past four years. “They can bounce back and forth.” Ridge Meadows RCMP deal with around 600 Mental Health Act calls annually and say each file puts a strain on already scarce resources. From January to Aug. 31 this year, RCMP had already logged 534 Mental Health Act files, interacting with 390 different people. Thomson receives between 60 and 80 referrals a month from other officers. “We are talking about significant social issues. This is police time that is spent on these issues,” said Cpl. Alanna Dunlop. When the detachment noticed a steady increase in calls related to mental illness, officers began tracking them in 2008. That tracking led to the creation of Thomson’s position. Thompson’s role now involves identifying individuals with mental health issues and entering informa-
Colleen Flanagan/THE NEWS
Const. Cara Thomson is a designated RCMP mental health liaison who has been working with the Fraser Health Authority and other community partners for the past four years. tion into the police database that helps frontline officers. That includes information on what might trigger the individual to act out, the drugs they use or even something as simple as a phone number of a family member an officer can contact for help. “We’ve had a lot of progress,” said Dunlop. In the past, the mental health unit in Maple Ridge wouldn’t know if a client has had repeated contact with police. Now, officers and trained health care professionals meet regularly to brainstorm how best to help them. Despite the progress, RCMP in Maple Ridge and their counterparts in Vancouver say there is little being done to stem what they see as a “mental health crisis.” In response, the District of Maple Ridge drafted a resolution that called for Riverview Hospital to be reopened as a modern centre of excellence, with patient-centred wraparound care. The resolution won support Friday at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention and has sparked a discussion that police see as a step in
the right direction. “We are going to have to work together, with the common goal of making our society healthier so we are not responding to these calls,” said Dunlop. B.C., however, won’t reopen Riverview Hospital, not even in a modern form. That was Premier Christy Clark’s response to the UBCM resolution. “We’re not considering that,” Clark said Friday, after the convention. “The folks [who] we are all so concerned about, who are living homeless in British Columbia, are not from Riverview. It’s a new set of problems we need to deal with.” Clark said she shared UBCM delegates’ desire to improve mental health care and highlighted provincial investments in affordable housing and treatment. She added an improved economy will help pay for more social programs. “As we grow the economy, we will grow our ability to be able to look after what appeared in the past to be these unsolvable problems.” The premier’s response disappointed Bob Masse, the Maple Ridge
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“The problems we are seeing in our communities and our streets is really the neglect we’ve seen to community-based health care and our social welfare programs,” Morrow added. Morrow does not support reopening Riverview, noting that long-term psychiatric care has been shown to isolate people from their friends and family. It also reinforces stigma and fosters dependency. “I appreciate the concerns of the mayors and frustrations of the police, but the solution is not more hospital beds,” she said. “We have to have a really serious conversation. How is it that people are getting into such a serious crisis that they end up in situations with police?” Morrow also hopes the conversation to solve B.C.’s mental health crisis continues, and that it’s time now to hear from people who provide mental health services and the people who use them. “It would be a shame if that momentum was lost. That kind of sustained conversation could lead to changes, but there has to be political will and support because it will need resources.”
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4 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
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sion about the topic at Monday morning’s council workshop, during which staff and elected officials went over many of the fine points of a revised policy. Requiring more parking spots, charging an annual licensing fee and not allowing basement entry doors in homes where secondary suites are restricted were some of the matters for discussion. Staff reported neighbouring municipalities are allowing secondary suites in neighbourhoods with smaller lots
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than does Maple Ridge, and they recommended the district follow suit, in order to remain competitive to developers. Coun. Al Hogarth, a realtor, estimated that the changes could bring the possibility of 1,000 new legal suites to homes in Maple Ridge. The smallest lots in the district, those in the R3 residential zone, will be prohibited from having doorways into their basements, in order to make it difficult for homeowners to rent out basement suites in this zone. Hogarth noted that when these neighbourhoods were developed, the district allowed narrower streets and smaller lots, generally 3,000 square feet in size, in order to keep the price of single family homes affordable. He characterized the density there as “close or equivalent to a townhouse type of scenario,” and said allowing suites there would make the neighbourhoods too crowded and streets too congested. Every property with a secondary suite must have a minimum of three parking stalls, and there was some discussion of increasing this to four for those with two-bedroom suites, to alleviate on-street parking frustrations, at the suggestion of Coun. Bob Masse. Staff noted that of all the complaints generated by secondary suites, a lack of parking and noise top the list. Although the municipality requires people to have three parking stalls, there is nothing preventing them from parking their RV or boat on the property, and parking their car on the street. “You can require that there be a parking spot, but you can’t make someone park in it,” noted director of planning Christine Carter. Development manager Chuck Goddard noted that from a design perspective, 90 per cent of a 4,000 square foot lot would be covered by pavement or building if more parking space
was required, and that would not be desirable. Masse suggested changing regulations so that people with suites would not be permitted to park a boat or RV on their property. There was little support for that, and Mayor Ernie Daykin suggested that was too heavy-handed. “How much regulation do we impose,” asked the mayor. It was noted that people are able to afford their homes based on income from these mortgage helpers. There is also a lack of affordable housing in the district, aggravated by condominium strata bylaws that discourage renters, and basement suites help alleviate this problem. There was also a lot of discussion about enforcement, and the process is generally complaint-driven, so the bylaws department will only investigate where neighbours take issue with a secondary suite. “We’re doing a fair amount of work in the Albion area,” noted Liz Holitzki, director of licences, permits and bylaws. Staff will be doing more work on the bylaw, and bringing the proposed changes back to council. Staff will also review the fees charged to secondary suites, which are $550, plus a charge equal to two-thirds of the household utility bills. Coun. Corisa Bell noted that the charge adds about $850 per year to the homeowners tax bill. Under the plan, the district will continue with a requirement of owner occupation in a home with secondary suites, either in the principle or secondary unit. The secondary suite review was ordered in July 2012, and staff held focus groups, did online questionnaires and held a public open house. The bylaw is nearing completion. There would be a “period of grace” where those with illegal suites will be allowed to come into compliance with new regulations.
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 5
NDP seeks renewal as leader resigns Bocking will join Dix on the sidelines by Nei l Corbe tt staff reporter
It’s time for some frank self-assessment by the B.C. NDP, say the candidates who ran for the party in local ridings during the last provincial election. “The issue of leadership is not the only issue the NDP must face,” said Mike Bocking, who ran in Maple Ridge-Mission. “There needs to be a solid reappraisal of everything the NDP is about.” His comments come after last week’s announcement by Adrian Dix that he will not continue as party leader. And his words suggest that he feels the party has
lost its way. “A little bit,” Bocking agrees. “We haven’t provided enough of a difference between us and the B.C. Liberals. We didn’t give a distinct enough vision in the last election.” And he said the NDP didn’t emphasize the mistakes and weaknesses of the governing Liberals. Dix’s 20-point lead in the polls led to some complacency, Bocking said. “A lot of people thought the Liberals were going to tumble of their own weight.” The NDP wasn’t tough enough, he said. “It was a little like the Boston Bruins and Vancouver Canucks in the Stanley Cup playoffs,” he said, adding that was probably a trite comparison. “I do not lay it all at the feet of Adrian Dix.
Kamp stays fisheries secretary Member of Parliament Randy Kamp has once again been appointed by the Prime Minister as the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans. “It’s a privilege to be asked by the Prime Minister to continue serving as the Parliamentary Secretary for Fisheries and Oceans,” said Kamp, who represents Pitt Meadows, Maple Ridge and Mission.
the
I think very highly of Adrian Dix,” Bocking said. The “character assassination” that the outgoing leader suffered during the election was “deplorable and bad for democracy.” Bocking lost to Marc Dalton by only 68 votes in 2009, but the 2013 election defeat was his fifth defeat. As a federal NDP candidate, he lost to Conservative MP Randy Kamp in 2004, 2006 and 2008. Bocking said it is highly unlikely he will run again. “I’m a dedicated New Democrat, and I’ll continue to work for the good of the party.” He did not see any obvious choices for a new provincial party leader, and said often it is unexpected candidates who take the job.
Elizabeth Rosenau, who ran for the NDP in Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows, said Dix’s decision was obvious. “It was clear to us that we couldn’t win with Adrian Dix in that position,” she said. “A lot of people will miss Adrian.” She said it was difficult to watch the talented orator give his resignation. “I’ve watched him give speeches for an hour with no notes, but the three-minute speech he gave, he read,” she observed. “He was choosing his words very carefully.” She said the party needs an infusion of youth. “We need a changing of the guard. This is an opportunity for change such as we haven’t had before. “The leadership race will help define what we are.”
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6 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
THE NEWS/opinion News Views
Add another year A number of interesting motions and discussions arose from last week’s annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention, including a proposal for extending terms of office for mayors and city councillors from three years to four Bring it on. Anyone who has regularly watched municipal politicians in action or has served on such a board knows the avalanche of information the newest members must absorb. On top of learning the history of past decisions and choices to create the proper context for making good decisions, rookies must try to memorize the process and learn how best to work within those confines to be most effective. It takes one and two years for an elected official to reasonably understand how to do the job. Therefore, this only leaves about one year of three that they’re sufficiently able to represent the people who put them into office. Extending a term by another year will give residents better bang for their tax buck, reduce election costs and council turnover, and put municipalities in sync with provincial elections. This timing would aid in limiting the costs some municipalities have had to accrue once a current mayor or councillor wins a provincial election, which triggers costly byelections. The proposal passed with a 60 per cent approval rate, with one rural delegate stating the idea came from “professional politicians” in the Lower Mainland, where pay is higher. While that may be true, it doesn’t change the fact that this is an idea for which time may have come and it should be pushed forwarded as soon as possible. And it’s not as though there isn’t precedent for this in Canada. If such a plan is enacted, B.C. would fall in step with every other province except for the Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut. Overall, we would be better served by having longer terms, both in terms of effectiveness of politicians and money saved by having fewer elections. – Black Press
THE NEWS Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978 Jim Coulter, publisher publisher@mapleridgenews.com Michael Hall, editor editor@mapleridgenews.com Lisa Prophet, advertising, creative services manager admanager@mapleridgenews.com Brian Yip, circulation manager circulation@mapleridgenews.com Editorial Reporters: Phil Melnychuk, Monisha Martins, Colleen Flanagan, Neil Corbett Advertising Sales representatives: Karen Derosia, Jaime Kemmis, Brittany Haqq, Maggie Prince Ad control: Mel Onodi Creative services: Kristine Pierlot, Annette WaterBeek, Annie Sarazin, Carly Moir Classified: 604-575-5555 22328 – 119th Avenue, Maple Ridge, B.C., V2X 2Z3 Office: 604-467-1122 Delivery: 604-466-6397 Website: mapleridgenews.com Email: newsroom@mapleridgenews.com The News is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province's newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www. bcpresscouncil.org. CCAB audited circulation: (as of March 2013): Wednesday - 30,529; Friday – 30,529.
Published and printed by Black Press at 22328 – 119th Avenue, Maple Ridge, B.C., V2X 2Z3
Ingrid Rice
Regulator’s reading on smart meters VICTORIA – Despite efforts to keep the smart meter “controversy” alive by repeating imaginary health claims, the end is near. Energy Minister Bill Bennett has made what sounds like a final offer to holdouts. You want B.C. Views to keep your old Tom Fletcher mechanical meter, fill your boots. It’ll cost you an extra $35 a month, starting in December. If you insist on a “radio off ” wireless meter, there will be a setup fee of $100 and a monthly fee of $20 to have someone collect the readings. These charges are to be reviewed by the B.C. Utilities Commission, the independent panel that smart meter opponents want to review B.C. Hydro’s whole smart grid project. As it happens, the BCUC recently did just that for an application by FortisBC to install wireless meters for its Okanagan and Kootenay customers. The meters were approved, and the findings are instructive. The BCUC report notes that it received “many” complaints about smart meter signals being added to existing radio frequency (RF) sources. Some used familiar scare rhetoric about “toxic microwave radiation” that’s promoted by people trying to make money by exploiting fear. One of the experts retained by FortisBC was Dr. Yakov Shkolnikov, an electrical engineer with advanced
degrees from Princeton and Cornell universities. His testimony was not challenged by any of the lineup of opponents. A sample of his findings illustrates the absurdity of this whole discussion. Shkolnikov calculated that a cell phone in use generates radio signals that reach 10 per cent of the international safety code limit. A microwave oven generates 2.3 per cent of the safe limit. A cordless phone: 1.25 per cent. A wi-fi signal: 0.0045 per cent. A bank of smart meters, not separated by a wall, registers 0.0019 per cent. The natural background RF level is 0.013 per cent. Note the decimal place. The level in the middle of a wilderness is more than 10 times that received from a bank of meters. BCUC staff added, for comparison, the radio signal level emitted by a human body. It’s 0.018 per cent. What this means is your spouse snoring beside you is a stronger source of RF than a whole wall of smart meters. Experts put up by opponents didn’t fare so well. One was Jerry Flynn, a retired Canadian Forces officer from Kelowna who travels around taking readings, talking to elderly people about alleged hazards of meters, and making claims to the media about what he has called the single biggest threat to human health today. The BCUC found his military experience not “relevant,” and his evidence frequently “incorrect, exaggerated and/ or unsubstantiated.” Then there was Curtis Bennett, who described himself as “chief science officer” for a company called Thermoguy. He spoke on behalf of West Kootenay
Concerned Citizens. In a 2012 letter to the B.C. energy ministry, Bennett warned of the danger of smart meters triggering “molecular earthquakes.” The BCUC panel wrote: “While Mr. Bennett has an electrician’s knowledge of electrical systems, it is clear that he is unqualified to give expert opinion evidence on the health effects of RF, exposure standards for RF, engineering, physics or geological phenomena such as earthquakes.”
What this means is your spouse snoring beside you is a stronger source of RF than a whole wall of smart meters. Citizens for Safe Technology put up one Dr. Donald Maisch, who claimed to have experience with this issue in Australia. The panel noted that Maisch runs EMFacts Consultancy, and agreed with FortisBC’s argument that “Dr. Maisch’s consulting livelihood depends upon public fears and concerns about RF exposure.” Would you like this circus of quackery to be restaged over B.C. Hydro’s program, at your expense?
This week’s question: Will the NDP be better off without Adrian Dix as leader? @ Online poll: cast your vote at www.mapleridgenews.com, or e-mail your vote and comments to editor@mapleridgenews.com
Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalNews.com (tfletcher@blackpress.ca).
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 7
The News/letters
Metal theft is We are not just cold-blooded killers costing victims more Editor, The News: Re: Metal bylaw is heavy-handed (Letters, Sept. 20). The metal bylaw is not heavy-handed. It is weak, if anything. Almost every day we read about metal theft. I recently had a piece of ground wire stolen for $1 worth of metal that cost me $200 to replace. A friend of mine had a house completely torn apart for copper pipes, costing him thousands. Thefts from grave sites ... and the list goes on. Metal theft is so common, only the dramatic big ones make the news. It is metal recyclers who make this theft possible. If they can not afford the time or cost of monitoring the scrap metal they buy, then they should close down. It may be a loss of some jobs, but the metal theft cost a lot more to their victims. Dan Banov Maple Ridge
More bridge toll disputes Editor, The News: Re: For whom the GE Bridge bill tolls (The News, Sept. 20). I received a bill from TransLink with similar circumstances. My bill was $350-plus. Of that, more than $200 was for interest. I rarely use the bridge. Scam. I was informed by QuickPass that my dispute would be forwarded to TransLink, and who knows when someone would get back to me. I disputed it around June 9. Apparently, many more users have experienced similar circumstances. Simon Stroud Maple Ridge
Not even my car Editor, The News: Re: For whom the GE Bridge bill tolls (The News, Sept. 20). I received a bill for $7,900 on a car that I don’t even own. Then I received a separate bill in my name for my son’s car. Jennifer Zurowski Maple Ridge
online comments • Amanda McKellar · Maple Ridge: Re: More density in Albion pitched (mapleridgenews.com). Anyone else notice that the quality of the houses in these cheap-as-youcan-build-them super small lot developments are getting worse and worse? My concern is that in 15-20 years, all these houses will be falling apart and we will end up with a densely populated ghetto. Since it’s the land that largely holds or increases the value of your house as it ages, having such small lots will not help the problem at all. How much are you going to be able to sell a 557-square-metre lot with a dilapidated quick build on it? Affordable housing, for sure. • Gordie McNeil: I don’t have a problem with metered water. Where I do if it goes the same way as our heat and light. Recall years ago before gas came in the BS they fed us about our natural resource cheap for hundreds of years. Now that most have changed they tell us we have to put up with the increases we have had over the years. Now were hearing the same BS about water. The problem I have is if it lines someone’s pockets with enormous wages, pensions and perks and makes them a millionaire. Especially when [some] companies ... get it for free and sell it back to consumers.
Letters welcome Letters to the editor should be exclusive to The News and address topics of interest to residents of Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows. Include full name and address, as well as daytime phone number for verification. Keep letters to 500 words or less. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. @ E-mail letters to editor@mapleridgenews.com.
Editor, The News: Re: Dike hunters show poor ethics (Letters, Sept. 30). We have quietly been building and placing mallard nesting tunnels, wood duck box nests and doing clean ups around our Pitt Meadows home. Perhaps it is time we hunters step from the shadows to cast the real light on what goes on in these hunting areas. I think readers would be very intrigued to learn how we have been using recycled materials from local major projects and involving the local high school for fabrication. I’m sure we are not the ‘slobs,’ and I agree what the writer saw was slobbish, but does not reflect hunting. Does the teenager who jumps into his dad’s truck and does doughnuts on a local field make all 4x4 enthusiasts bad? No, but negative sensationalism sells. It’s time for the not-so sensational story to be told. I would like to help explain that there is a way to report these people and that, as hunters, we are not just cold-blooded killers. We are fathers, husbands, children, mentors and conservationists. I wonder how many people are unaware that hunters are the federal governments major resource for controlling an exploding waterfowl population? Geese are the reason beaches get closed due to their fecal deposits. I would also like to share some of the
waterfowl sausage we made from last year. But be quick. My kids will be into it as soon as it hits the table. Chris Bradford Pitt Meadows
It’s the law Editor, The News: Re: Dike hunters show poor ethics (Letters, Sept. 30). As a hunter, I read with interest the letter written by Barb Stevens. I have been hunting here for more than 40 years and have always conducted myself in a safe, ethical manner with respect to my quarry, other hunters, and other users of the area. Hunting is legal in Pitt Meadows. It always has been. I agree with Ms. Stevens on one point: hunters have to make an effort to retrieve the birds they have shot. It’s not only an ethical responsibility, it’s the law. If I was at the dike recently and saw a walker discard some litter and another walker with a dog not clean up after their pet, should I paint all users of the area as litterbugs and poor pet owners because of the ones I saw? No. Most pet owners and walkers are responsible and conduct themselves in a courteous and respectful way and I wouldn’t characterize all of them like that because of the few that act like slobs. Hunters like me make every attempt to
recover anything they bring down, add it to their bag limit, and take it home to be consumed. Those who don’t make that effort aren’t part of the majority; they are breaking the law and should be reported.
Anyone who uses the Pitt Meadows area for recreational activities should get the latest edition of the Fraser Valley Special Area map as it will have all the new updated shooting zone boundaries on it. Anyone who uses the Pitt Meadows area for recreational activities should get the latest edition of the Fraser Valley Special Area map as it will have all the new updated shooting zone boundaries on it (there were changes made this year). It’s available online and it should also be available at the government agent office. The map outlines shooting and nonshooting areas in each municipality. Those who don’t wish to be near shooting areas can use this map to avoid them. Dan Otway Pitt Meadows
Albion waterfront plan needs legs, again Editor, The News: I thought it might be time again to pull out our favorite plan that was presented to council in-camera some years ago, when Kathy Morse was mayor. It was received with great enthusiasm, until Jane Pickering doused it with cold water, saying that the priority was the downtown. But that was then. We know the kerfuffle that followed and the misguided process that led to nowhere but utter confusion – the blind leading the blind. Our plan was really quite simple: • Leave the north side of Albion to open space – park area, playing fields – enhance the fairgrounds to
some degree and add some residential in defined areas. • Reinvent the south side of Albion. At this point there are, in my best guess, one and a half jobs per acre, so roughly 300 jobs. There should be 20 jobs per acre, easily. • Add a new West Coast Express station in Albion to anchor the planned Port Kanaka. This area would include a small village located between the station and the waterfront. It would include residential, support services and retail. The basic idea here is that we provide housing for people working in the reinvented and densified industrial area.
This village would only occupy 20 per cent of the area, with the balance split between current industrial use, but augmented by business parks and light industry, possibly some incubator facilities. With roughly 150 acres going to business at an average of 20 jobs per acre, that’s 3,000 jobs, with most of these probably walking to work. • No shopping centre, per se, but locally operated businesses, with limited national brands. Housing would be mostly condos with above ground parking, so that the ‘ground floor’ would be at dike level. • The waterfront end of Main Street coming from
the station would provide a Granville Island-type of environment, with a public square, market, restaurants, becoming a destination for folks from all around. How many active waterfront areas do we have? Not many. We have a great opportunity here. From our understanding, this vision has had a lot of support and would only take some political backbone to make it happen, because it is the right thing to do. It doesn’t have to be exactly the way we saw it, only the principles in essence have to be adopted. Maybe this idea can grow some legs, again. Rod Gruzelier Pitt Meadows
Most drivers do pay attention to traffic lights Editor, The News: Re: Not guilty verdict in fatal Pitt crash (The News, Sept. 20). What an appalling verdict brought down by Justice Miriam Gropper in the case against Kristina Hecimovic for killing two young people in a traffic accident. She attributes the accident to “simple carelessness,” stating that, “Going through a red light is dangerous, but it happens. People misperceive lights”. Well, this may come as a shock to you, judge, but the vast majority of motorists
don’t “misperceive” lights. We pay attention when approaching lights, note if the advanced warning yellow lights are flashing, and act accordingly. Barrie Jones Maple Ridge
Part of the job Editor, The News: Re: Not guilty verdict in fatal Pitt crash (The News, Sept. 20). I don’t know if the woman is guilty or
innocent, but I have been a nurse for 38 years, and if a little bit of vomit on your uniform caused her to burst into tears and lose control of her car, then I suggest that she get out of the industry. Bodily fluids are just part of the job. If this is the reason that the judge did not find her responsible for her highspeed erratic driving, then, again, justice in B.C. has not been represented. My heart goes out to all involved. Lilly Dickson, registered nurse Maple Ridge
8 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
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Hammond residents don’t want treatment centre ‘Area last lost heritage character’ by Ne i l Corbet t staff reporter
The placement of a new drug and alcohol treatment centre in Hammond was a point of contention at a recent District of Maple Ridge public hearing. The hearing was part of a rezoning process, which would allow the residential property to be used as a site of the treatment centre. It would include two lots at 20581 and 20591 Maple Crescent, and the latter land already has an institutional zoning. The Innervisions Recovery Society is partnering with B.C. Housing in the 41-bed project, and partial funding has been supplied by the federal government through the Homelessness Partnering Strategy. The first phase of the project would see construction of a facility with 17 beds. There is already
18 units on the site, in a building known as Maple Crescent Lodge, and a second phase would that building town down and replaced by a 24-bed facility. It would attach to the building constructed in the first phase. There is no timeline for phase two. Innervisions already operates Hannah House at the corner of Laity Street and Dewdney Trunk Road, which is a treatment centre with a 60-day drug and alcohol recovery program. Hammond resident Margaret Ickert said she objects to having the institution in a residential neighbourhood, and emphasized her objection is not “based on people.” “Even if this facility was for Nobel laureates, I would still be standing here,” she said from the podium. “It doesn’t fit.” She said Hammond is a long-neglected neighbourhood. “Residents are fed up.” Ickert also expressed concerns on the basis of limited parking. She asked council to consider
what use the building would have if Innervisions was no longer operating there. Hannah House director Joanna Schofield addressed concerns the building may be abandoned if not successful. She said Innervisions has been running facilities for 22 years. “This is not a fly-bynight organization,” she said, adding the nonprofit “has helped thousands and thousands of people.” She noted that while in treatment, participants are not permitted to have a vehicle or visit family or friends outside the centre, so traffic is generally limited to staff members. She said many people don’t know a women’s centre is also located there, because it causes such little disruption in the neighbourhood. Schofield added that the zoning “institution” probably gives people the wrong impression of what the facility will look like. “It’s not a huge, mam-
moth, grey hospital building.” Sandy Macdougall said he is not opposed to this project, but expressed concerns that Hammond “has lost the heritage character of the area.” He was echoed by Eric Phillips, past president of the Hammond Community Association, who said Hammond residents are upset that heritage buildings are being torn down or falling into disrepair. Maple Crescent Lodge is not included in the inventory of heritage buildings. Hammond resident Dana Greening said Innervisions has not been forthcoming with answers about its future plans. Residents were told the institution would be for 17 beds, only to later learn the final number would be more than 40. District development manager Chuck Goddard noted he asked the builders to incorporate more heritage aspects into their building design, which they did, but
budget limitations meant the changes were “not as much as I would have liked.” Schofield said Innervisions bought the Maple Crescent Lodge in “horrific” condition, and has “turned it into something absolutely beautiful.” “Innervisions has already contributed to that neighbourhood.” Bill Nicholson, a staff member from Innervisions, said neighbours of facilities get staff phone numbers in case there are problems, but there rarely are. Businesses in the area get to know and befriend their clients. “People early in recovery want to do well, and they’re assets to their community,” said Nicholson. “I hope the community gets behind it [the institution], and backs us up,” he said. Several former clients gave testimonials about their life-saving experiences with Innervisions. The rezoning bylaw will be before council at a future public meeting.
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 9
‘Already been challenging year’ Budget from front
The union has negotiated a framework agreement with the B.C. Public Schools Employers’ Association, which represents the province. CUPE members will receive one per cent retroactive July 1, two per cent on Feb. 1, 2014 and 0.5 per cent on May 1, 2014. The agreement expires on June 30, 2014. Under a provincial government policy known as the Cooperative Gains Mandate, schools boards were told they would have to come up with the additional wages within existing budgets, and no new funds will be coming from the province. Trustee Ken Clarkson, the local board’s
representative on the B.C. School Trustees Association, noted that the opposition to the Cooperative Gains Mandate was virtually unanimous. “Practically every board sent a rebuttal,” he said. “It was the most unified I’ve ever seen the BCSTA.” While exact numbers aren’t known yet, Clarkson said the local impact appears to be approximately $1 million. “Obviously, it’s got to come from cuts,” he said, adding that there was no obvious area where the budget could be trimmed. “We’ll have to see. The senior team will come up with a plan. “We’ve got to do it again, and we’ve got to
time equivalents. That caused a drop of $1.17 million in government per-pupil funding. There were 35 staff positions lost, in various capacities, across the district in the $130 million budget for 2013-2014. Class sizes rose, the board spent $1.5 million it had in reserves and there were cuts to custodians, support services and helping teachers. The deadline to complete the CUPE deal through local bargaining is Dec. 20. Bargaining will begin next month. “Definitely, we have already had a challenging year,” said Coughlan.
do it even deeper.” He said the steady loss of students is already causing budget pressures in Maple Ridge, where it appears enrolment is down approximately 163 students this year. “If you’re in a district with declining enrolment, it’s a double whammy,” said Clarkson. The board previously faced a budget shortfall of $5.66 million. That was brought about by several factors, including a projected decline in student enrollment of 197.5 full-
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10 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 11
Pitt proposes medical marijuana bylaw City to restrict pot to industrial zones by M o ni s ha M a r tin s staff reporter
The City of Pitt Meadows plans to restrict medical marijuana to industrial areas in preparation for a change in federal rules, which take effect next year. The federal government is phasing out thousands of personaluse medical marijuana grow licences in favour of fewer, larger operations by April 2014. In a report to council, city planner Dana Parr said the proposed commercial facilities would be better suited to an industrial park than agricultural land. Locating the growop in an industrial area would permit the packing and distribution of marijuana. Industrial areas also provide easier access to sewer, water and waste disposal services.
The buildings would also be easier to inspect and the city would be able to ensure each facility is built to code. Locating the operations on industrial land would also mean higher taxes. “One of the reason I don’t want it on agricultural land is because of policing and fire services,” said Coun. Janis Elkerton, who supports the proposed bylaw. Neighbouring Maple Ridge has a bylaw in the works that would allow commercial sized grow operation on farmland. Earlier this year, the provincial Agricultural Land Commission confirmed that growing marijuana was a “permitted” farm use. “In staff ’s opinion, such a use is better suited to an industrial
area, despite the Agricultural Land Commission’s position on the issue,” Parr said. Pitt Meadows legal counsel has advised the city that prohibiting medical marijuana on agricultural land would open the municipality to future legal challenges that would be difficult to defend against.
Teens request more recycling at parks A group of environmentally conscious teens have prompted the parks department to investigate whether it’s feasible to install recycling containers in every park in Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge. Currently, there are three purpose-built recycling containers, all
located on 224th Street in Maple Ridge. With more than 80 parks sites and more than 400 existing garbage bins, the parks department needs the approval of Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows councils before it proceeds. In a report, director of parks and services David Boag said the project could cost at least $114,400 per year for servicing ( $11 per bin, serviced by weekly). That’s in addition to installing new cans with three compartments for paper, plastic and garbage at the cost of $2,300 each. Parks staff have already come up with novel and inexpensive ways to encourage users to separate garbage by installing pop can baskets to existing garbage bins.
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12 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
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Meadowridge School will be hosting a unique celebration of food as a warm welcome to the school year that is guaranteed to tickle everyone’s taste buds. Feast-ival, a free autumn-themed community event organized by the Meadowridge Parent’s Guild, will feature five popular Vancouverarea food trucks that will make up an area called Eat Street. “The Welcome Back Fair is a long standing tradition at Meadowridge School,” said staff liaison Kalie Whitaker. “Typically we host this family fun event at the beginning of the school year to welcome students back to the school and the parents back to the community,” she said. Food trucks to attend: Tacofino, offering fresh Baja-inspired tacos; Re-Up BBQ, a vendor dedicated to American cuisine and southern barbecue; Holy Perogy, offering gourmet perogies; Blue Smoke BBQ, masters of the art of smoking meat; and Hun-
ger Management, a food truck based out of Maple Ridge, offering creative grilled sandwiches and more for every palette. “Who doesn’t love a food truck? And for those of us who can’t ever get out of Maple Ridge, how great is this,” asked Whitaker. The Haney Farmer’s Market will be also be on hand with vendors selling a variety of goods, including fresh produce, homemade preserves and natural products. Tea and scones will be served for a traditional afternoon tea at the British Invasion Pavilion. The Lordco Refreshment Patio will have homemade apple pies and cool beverages. There will also be an adult patio. Fifty different cakes will be given away during an old-fashioned Cake Walk contest. Like musical chairs, contestants will stand on numbers instead. When the music stops the person standing on the winning number will receive a cake. There will be plenty of activities for children, including carnival games like sack and three-legged races and
an obstacle course, as well as pony rides, a ballhockey tournament, the B.C. Road Safe Family Fun Zone, the Castle Fun Park Putting Contest and a memory-making photo booth. Prizes will be given away every 15 minutes with 50/50 draws and a raffle for five prizes including a beauty basket, a Thanksgiving basket, a weekend away in Vancouver values at $2,000, a wine rack filled with bottles of wine and a barbecue and wine fridge. Tickets for the raffle will be $20 for five tickets. Entertainment will be provided by Jack FM. Money raised from the event will be going back to the parent’s guild and will go to offset the costs of field trips and outdoor education, purchasing new books for the library and physical education equipment and enhancing programs at the school.
Feast-ival Feast-ival takes place Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Meadowridge School, 12224 240th Street.
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 13
Cops ride Const. Duncan McRae (right)of the Ridge Meadows RCMP detachment takes part in the Cops for Cancer tour, which pulled into Maple Ridge on Tuesday. Colleen Flanagan/THE NEWS
Police find guns and drugs A Maple Ridge man is facing criminal charges after police seized guns and a stash of illegal drugs from his home. Ridge Meadows RCMP’s Street Enforcement Unit arrested 50-year-old Byron Howard Mazor Thursday after executing a search warrant at his house just before 7 a.m. The RCMP Lower Mainland District’s Emergency Response
Team assisted Ridge Meadows RCMP with the search. Police seized quantities of illegal drugs, a firearm, a replica firearm, along with other items to support allegations of drug trafficking. Mazor has since been charged with one count of unauthorized possession of a firearm, two counts each of possessing controlled sub-
stances and four counts of breaching bail conditions. “Mr. Mazor was taken into custody without incident during the search, and police seized several items that prompted the criminal charges,” said Cpl. Alanna Dunlop. Mazor was remanded in custody over the weekend, but was scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday for a bail hearing.
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14 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
‘Watch interest in learning evaporate’ A women’s business networking group serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows Everyone welcome! Bring a friend.
15
$
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Door Prize Sponsors: Jane Mackay
Art Glass Design
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Peace Twig Society
*Mutual Funds offered by Sun Life Financial Investment Services (Canada) Inc. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada is a member of the Sun Life Financial group of companies.© Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, 2013.
A WOMAN’S PERSPECTIVE The financial world has recognized that women today have a greater need than ever for planning, whether for savings, income, health or legacy.
Dawn Daughton has been in the investment and insurance business since 1994, starting as a stockbroker on Bay Street and evolving into offering more comprehensive The importance of financial advice. She clarity, relationships and earned her B.A. simplicity have at McMaster created a new University, perspective. Let’s has achieved investigate what a designation they have found in Canadian and how it can Investment benefit you. Management, and is a Fellow of the From a Woman’s GUEST SPEAKER Canadian Securities Perspective will Dawn Daughton* Institute. Financial Advisor cover topics such as: Dawn is an advisor • What is a financial plan? working under the supervision of Sun Life • Challenges Women Face Financial. She takes pride in assessing a client’s • Why is it important for a unique situation and woman to have a plan? building a plan to help them achieve lifetime • Life moments and how financial security with a your plan can help broad range of financial • The good news… products and services.
Thursday, October 10, 2013 • 7:00 am Fraserview Village Hall 22610 – 116th Avenue
Grades from front
Intrinsic motivation is where you like what you do. Extrinsic motivation is doing something to avoid a punishment or get an award. Intrinsic motivation is more powerful and effective because “what drives excellence is interest. “Rewards tend to kill intrinsic motivation,” he said. Twice he appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show, and on the second occasion, the producers conducted an experiment, based on research from the University of Rochester. Posing as toy company executives, they asked children to play with toys, then evaluate them. One group of 10 was paid $5 per toy. The other group was given
no incentive. The kids were watched behind one-way glass as the “executives” left the room. Those children who received no reward went back to playing with the toys. Of the children who were paid to play with the toys, nine out of 10 stopped when they were no longer supervised. Bringing the conversation to the education system, he explained that there are three “robust effects” of letter grades. The first is that children are working for a grade, and so they are less likely to return to a task on their own time. The second effect is that students won’t challenge themselves. “Kids tend to pick the easiest possible task they can, when given a
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Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS
Congratulations Diane Jan Gilchrist of Johnston Meier Pitt Meadows Would like to congratulate Diane Humphries On being the winner of our August Monthly Draw. She won a $100 gift Certificate. Please come in and enter our monthly draw.
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choice,” he said, and they can hardly be blamed. “When kids cut corners, they do so for perfectly rational reasons.” So, they will choose to read the easier book, rather than the tough one, and minimize intellectual risk taking. The third effect is that kids end up not meeting their potential. Students who are graded forget what they are taught faster than those who were not graded. Kids in classrooms or schools that emphasizes letter grades tend to think in more superficial terms, and can be heard to ask things like: “Do we have to know this?” And, “Will this be on the test?” He said a meeting between parent, student and teacher is “far more meaningful and less de-
structive than a report card.” He said parents should make their kids grades a non-event. Rather, ask questions about topics or what they learned, rather than questions about their mark. Kohn said the worst thing a parent can do is give their children money for getting a good report card – that’s giving them a reward for getting a reward. “You can almost watch their interest in the process of learning evaporate before your eyes.” Kohn’s advice to teachers is that even if they must eventually give a student a mark or letter grade, they should never put a number or letter on any individual assignment – even if they are grading it for later marking. “Make grades as invisible as possible, as long as possible.”
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 15
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Offers available at listed locations on September 28 & 29, 2013 and subject to change without notice. 1 Offer available September 28 & 29, 2013 only, based on select 2-year activations of eligible devices. Eligible devices include Samsung Galaxy SIII, Samsung Galaxy S4 and Samsung Galaxy Note II. $50 Bill Credit will be applied against customer's second monthlly invoice. With new activation on any 2-yr. Talk, Text & Internet plan having min. $60 monthly service fee. Device Savings Recovery Fee and/or Service Deactivation Fee (as applicable) apply in accordance with your service agreement. FLEXtab balance corresponds to the sum of Device Savings Recovery Fee and Additional Savings Recovery Fee.©and 2013 Rogers Offers available at the listed locationsDevice on September 28 & 29, 2013 subject toCommunications change without notice. 1 Offer available September 28 & 29, 2013 only, based on select 2-year activations of eligible devices. Eligible devices include Samsung Galaxy SIII, Samsung Galaxy S4 and Samsung Galaxy Note II. $50 Bill Credit will be applied against customer's second monthlly invoice. With new activation on any 2-yr. Talk, Text & Internet plan having min. $60 monthly service fee. Device Savings Recovery Fee and/or Service Deactivation Fee (as applicable) apply in accordance with your service agreement. FLEXtab balance corresponds to the sum of Device Savings Recovery Fee and the Additional Device Savings Recovery Fee.© 2013 Rogers Communications
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16 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
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Health&Wellness Civic leaders make case for better mental health care
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B.C. won’t reopen the closed Riverview Hospital, not even in a modern form. That was Premier Christy Clark’s response Friday to a vote earlier in the day by the Union of B.C. Municipalities to support reviving the old psychiatric institution. “We’re not considering that,” Clark said. “The folks that we are all so concerned about who are living homeless in British Columbia are not from Riverview. It’s a new set of problems we need to deal with.” Clark said she shared UBCM delegates’ desire to improve mental health care and highlighted provincial investments in affordable housing and treatment. She also said an improved economy will help pay for more social programs. “As we grow the economy, we will grow our ability to be able to look after what appeared in the past to be these unsolvable problems.” Municipal leaders endorsed a Maple Ridge resolution calling for the re-establishment of Riverview as a modern centre of excellence, with patient-centred wrap-
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around care. Some delegates stressed it must be a new model, not a return to what Victoria Coun. Lisa Helps called the “checkered history” of primarily warehousing psychiatric patients. Maple Ridge Coun. Bob Masse cited a low number of psychiatric beds per capita in B.C. and longer waits than other provinces. He said the mentally ill are ending up in prisons, alleys, doorways and “in our morgues.” Also passed was a Delta resolution calling for the creation by senior governments of early intervention centres to house mental health or addictions patients who a doctor decides may be a risk to themselves or others. Delta Mayor Lois Jackson says police are spending too much time dealing with calls involving the mentally ill and the current system doesn’t do enough to prevent those individuals from harming themselves or others. She recounted the story of one young Delta man who was taken by police to hospital and was released from care later with some pills and a bus ticket home. He went straight to the Alex Fraser Bridge and jumped to his death. “There is a clear need for facilities where these individuals can be housed,” Jackson said.
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www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 17
Wheelchair fee blocked in Vancouver but not Fraser Health authority defends decision to proceed with charge by Jef f Nage l Black Press
Fraser Health has gone ahead and imposed a controversial $25-a-month wheelchair rental fee at its 16 long-term care homes even though the neighbouring Vancouver Coastal Health Authority has decided to hold off. Seniors have until now had free use of wheelchairs in publicly run residential care homes. Fraser Health was the first B.C. health authority to notify residents in June that if they needed a wheelchair and didn’t own one or rent one from another vendor, they would have to pay starting Sept. 1, unless they applied for and received a hardship waiver. At that time it was expected the policy would be consistent province-wide. Vancouver Coastal spokesman Gavin Wilson said residents there were about to also be notified of the change when a public backlash over the idea prompted the health ministry to embark on a review of all allowable fees. “It raised the issue that there are a lot of inconsistencies not only between health authorities but even within health authorities about how these fees are applied,” Wil-
son said. Fraser Health spokesperson Tasleem Juma said the authority decided to proceed with the fee since more than 1,000 notifications had already been sent to residents in its facilities and some had completed forms or begun applying for hardship waivers. “Rather than create confusion, we decided to say the wheelchair fee remains in place and continue the path of helping those who cannot afford it to go through the waiver process,” she said. Juma said the fee has been “quite well accepted with regard to the residents we’ve had contact with.” Resigning NDP leader Adrian Dix said Fraser officials should reverse the fee, which won’t actually start to be debited from residents’ accounts until the end of September. He noted it’s the only B.C. health authority that will now be charging for wheelchair rentals. “It’s not a good idea, it’s regressive and it requires a lot of energy to collect,” Dix said. “Being ahead of all the other health authorities on an issue like the wheelchair tax is not the right place to be.” The province argued that the fee, aimed to recover maintenance costs for the wheelchairs, was fair because residents who live in their own homes or in many privately run homes don’t get them for free.
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COMING SOON! MAPLE RIDGE PITT MEADOWS
A-LIST TH
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recognizing Maple ridge & Pitt Meadows’ Finest
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The resulTs are in! For the past month, Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows residents have voted for their favourite local businesses, people, hidden gems and more. Join us on Friday, October 18th as we reveal the winners in a special edition of The News.
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18 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
13-287.13_Fall_Campaign_GeneralConservation-P2.indd 1
9/9/2013 12:14:15 PM
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 19
The News/arts&life
section coordinator: Monisha Martins 604-467-1122 ext. 217
newsroom@mapleridgenews.com
Ridge dancers head to the worlds team Canada busy fundraising for a trip to Germany & Poland
Emily Slavin, 16, doesn’t know if her love for tap rubbed off on her sister. For her, tap is a style that’s different and extremely creative. “It’s not a serious style,” says Slavin, who’ll be dancing in the senior/adult category. “It’s also really good to have under your belt.” The siblings have already begun fundraising for their trip. They’ve held a bottle drive and even travelled to Vancouver to busk on Granville Street. Though nervous, Slavin is thrilled she’s going to represent her country in what’s billed as the “dance Olympics.” “I’m over the moon,” she says. Joining Slavin on the senior tap team is Franqui Barber, a student at Samuel Robertson who trains at Peggy Peats School of Dance. Barber, 16, has been dancing since she was three. “Tap has always been my favourite, I have done tap solos since I was eight and it’s my passion,” Barber says. “Going to Germany and representing my country will be the best experience of my life so far, I feel very privileged to have been selected and part of the dance team. I am excited to see tap routines from other parts of the world and meet new people.”
by M o ni s ha M a r tin s staff reporter
I
sabelle Slavin can tap out a tune with her feet, quickly and to a beat. An avid dancer who dabbles in every style from ballet to hiphop, 12-year-old Slavin admits she loves tap the best. “I love making noise with my shoes,” says Slavin, whose prowess in tap has been recognized by Team Canada. The Harry Hooge student and her sister Emily, who train at Coastal Edge Dance in Coquitlam, are busy preparing for their trip to the International Dance Organization’s world championships. Slavin will compete in the intermediate category and has only four opportunities to learn her routine before she performs in Germany with her team of 24 dancers. “I’m really excited,” she says. “But there’s going to be lots of fundraising to do.” Sending two dancers to Germany isn’t cheap. The sisters have to raise $7,000 in a span of three months.
see Team Canada, p20
Colleen Flanagan/the news
Tap dancers Emily Slavin, 16, and her sister Isabelle will represent Team Canada at the International Dance Organization’s world championships in December.
Music of ABBA alive in popular tribute show ABRA Cadabra features Jonas Falle from Maple Ridge
Contributed
Jonas Falle from Maple Ridge plays Bjorn in the ABBA tribute band ABRA Cadabra.
ABRA Cadabra has been touring the world for the past decade, helping audiences of all ages to relive and celebrate the timeless and uplifting music of ABBA. This high-energy and captivating stage show keeps the music of ABBA alive in a fresh, classy and respectful way, with powerful vocals, dancers, costumes, and a spectacular Live band. Starring Maple Ridge Jonas Falle as Bjorn, Kylee Epp as Agnetha, Jeanette O’Keeffe as Anna Frida and Ryan Langevin as Benny, ABRA Cadabra has had the honour of traveling to many corners of the world performing shows for the Prime Minister of Malaysia, the Malaysian royal family, Tatler Magazine and International Shoe Designer Jimmy Choo. Falle grew up on Mark Road in Maple Ridge in the early 70s. He was exposed to music at an early age while frequenting the Alouette Arts Folk Club that was hosted by Pat and Jill O’Rourke, long-time residents of Maple Ridge. His parents were also musicians and played in the ‘Dewdney Trunk Road band’ for many years along with the
Contributed
ABRA Cadabra plays the ACT in Maple Ridge Friday at 7:30 p.m. O’Rourkes. In 1998, he accepted the lead guitar posiHe says the time spent at the Alouette tion for the internationally known tribute Arts Folk Club greatly impacted him and act, “Nearly Neil”, and later starred as Scot set him on his career path towards music. Evil in the P3 Production of The Shagadelic By age 16, Falle was already touring Swingers. throughout Canada with notorious heavy Since that time Falle has been busy perMetal Band Aragathor and later with the forming, producing writing and creating. band Assault, who were popular in western In 2003, he co-founded Moon Coin ProEurope. Falle went on to form, front and ductions with Jeanette O’Keeffe. He coproduce his own original metal group Ran- produces several live stage shows such as, dom Damage. ABRA Cadabra, The Moon Coin Hippie In 1990 Random Damage signed a two Revival, The Retro Diva’s, The SHANIA album record deal with Mascot Records,, Experience and Kindness Rocks, which based out of Rotterdam in the Netherlands. promotes world kindness and self empowTheir albums were released in 16 coun- erment to kids. tries, and they continued to build a strong • ABRA Cadabra plays the ACT in Maple following throughout the 1990s. Ridge Friday, Sept. 27 at 7:30 p.m.
OCTOBER CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Mall Interior Renovations Begin .................................................October 1
1st Haney Scouts – Apple Days Fundraiser ........................................................................... October 5 Alouette District Pathfinders – Girl Guide Cookie Sale........................................................... October 5 Thanksgiving – Mall Hours Noon to 5:00 pm........................................................................ October 14 Family Resource Fair – Community Information & Displays ................................................ October 19 CLUB16 Trevor Linden Fitness & She’s Fit! - Registration................................................October 1-31
224 & Lougheed
•
604-467-1554
•
haneyplacemall.com
•
Runners & Booties Shop & Stroll Exercise Program Thursdays 9:30 -10:30 am Contact Lara 778-285-6265 Tri Hard Walking Club Mon, Wed & Fri 8:30 am Contact Beverly Hernandez 604-467-9407
Stores are open during renovations
ows since 1978
20 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
Modern Square Dance Learn to dance in teams of eight in 10 weeks
tickets
Fun For All Ages! Exercise Your Brain!
11944 Haney Place, Maple Ridge, BC
Maple Ridge Art Gallery Celebrate Craft! On now until November 9 Celebrating the Craft Council of BC’s 40th Anniversary with the works of 13 BC artists.
7:00 - 8:30 pm
For more information or to register Please Call: Gloria 604-467-0951
GEMS Movie Series: Rust and Bone September 30 – 7:30 p.m. A struggling single father helps a whale trainer recover her will to live after a terrible accident that leaves her confined to a wheelchair. Rated R.
Casual Attire Singles Also Welcome
TOWN n’ Country
SWINGERS
1 2 3
The Financial Benefits of a Fully Inclusive Workplace October 2 – 6:00 p.m. Learn how making your workplace more inclusive can help you lower costs for your business, with keynote speaker Mark Wafer.
Now featuring preschool arts programs in French! Visit www. theactmapleridge.org/ programs for full schedule. Register at www.recreg4u. ca or call 604-465-2470 Lobby Nights Holy Wow Poets Oct 1 – 7:00 p.m.
*
#PostToWIN
=
Shangri-La Chinese Acrobats October 5 – 8:00 p.m. A jaw-dropping spectacle of acrobatics, balancing and martial arts displays. Register today for Fall Arts Programs! With over 30 new programs this fall there’s sure to be something for everyone.
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Select your house hold items to sell
1 2 3 WIN!** Contest closes September 30, 2013 *See Official Rules & Regulations at UsedEverywhere.com for details. **Winners will be notified via email
Homelessness you DON’T see
.
TICKET CENTRE HOURS Mon, Tues, Fri, Sat 10 am to 5 pm Wed, Thurs, 10am - 9pm Open 2 hours before performances any day of the week.
Quan: Living in a one room apartment with eight other people.
Call or visit the ACT Ticket Centre to purchase tickets. (604) 476-ARTS (2787) Ticket prices include taxes & fees
www.theactmapleridge.org
sponsored by the:
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS Volunteer at the ACT. Call Landrie 604 476 2786
Homelessness you DON'T see
80
Currently living %the church in OF basement.
HOMELESS PEOPLE DON’ T LIVE ON THE STREET.*
IN CANADA
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HOMELESS PEOPLE DON’ T LIVE ON THE STREET.*
WE CAN FIX THIS.
We can permanently WE CANcost-effectively FIX THIS. and We can permanently solve homelessness. and cost-effectively
solve homelessness. Find out how at stophomelessness.ca Find out how at stophomelessness.ca #startwithhome #startwithhome Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS * HOMELESS HUB. 2013. HOMELESSNESS: SOCIAL EXCLUSION. RETRIEVED FROM: HTTP://WWW.HOMELESSHUB.CA/TOPICS/SOCIALEXCLUSION208.ASPX * HOMELESS HUB. (2013). HOMELESSNESS: SOCIAL EXCLUSION. RETRIEVED FROM: HTTP://WWW.HOMELESSHUB.CA/TOPICS/SOCIAL-EXCLUSION-208.ASPX
“Even though it requires a lot of training and hard work, I enjoy every minute of it.” Sall too has been dancing since she was three and dancing for Team Canada is an opportunity of a life time. Nasiv Sall “I have been very fortunate to work with excellent choreographers and teachers who have encouraged and motivated me along the way. I do not take this opportunity lightly and will work hard to make them and my country proud.” • Mail donations to Team Canada Dance Central, Box 157, 605 Mercy Street, Selkirk, Manitoba, R1A 2B2. For more information on fundraisers being held by Maple Ridge dancers, visit mapleridgenews.com.
20th Annual
Ridge Meadows Rivers Day! Events include: • Live Entertainment • Learn to fish with “Pathways to Fishing” by the BC Drift Fishers • Children’s Activities • Barbeque • Environmental Displays Allco Fish Hatchery • And much more... Sunday, Sept. 29, 2013
Sponsored by:
Joan: IN CANADA
80%
Auditions for the Canadian National Dance Team brought some of the best dancers from across Canada together, with over 300 participants competing for a position on the team to represent Canada at Franqui Barber the world level. Team Canada dancers train up to seven days per week - they are as flexible as any gymnast, as graceful as figure skaters and as dedicated as any other Olympic athlete. Nasiv Sall can’t imagine her life without dance. “Dance is an outlet for me to express myself and I enjoy developing the artistic and creative side of myself,” says Sall, 14, who will compete in a range of categories including junior ballet, junior jazz and junior modern.
Celebrate B.C.’s spectacular river heritage at a FREE family event.
Friday Night Dance With Robyn Picard Oct 4 – 7:00 p.m. $13 lesson & dance, $10 dance only
Check us out on Facebook & Twitter for up-to-date news on events at The ACT!
Dancers trains like athletes Team Canada from p19
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
ABRA Cadabra September 27 – 7:00 p.m. Back by popular demand! Celebrate the timeless and uplifting music of ABBA. Canada CULTURE Day September 28 – 1:00 p.m. Celebrate Canada’s cultures with lots of free performances and activities at The ACT!
Keep Fit!
Arts&Life
11:00 am — 3:00 pm 24959 Alouette Rd, Allco Park, Maple Ridge Tel: 604-467-6401
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 21
Arts&Life
Celebrate Culture Day at the ACT in Maple Ridge Annual celebration Sept. 28 Get a big dose of arts and culture during Culture Days at the ACT on the weekend. The celebration opens with a Traditional Hoop and Jingle Dance by Jane Wylie and a performance from the Vancouver Inter-Cultural Orchestra. The public is invited to learn about the cultures that contribute to our community through an examination of different expressions of art. Everyone is invited to drop and visit the diverse community groups at their information booths as well as participate in workshops and demonstrations. • Culture Day takes place Saturday Sept. 28 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Schedule: • 1-1:15 p.m.: Opening welcome and Traditional Hoop and Jingle Dance in the ACT lobby by Jane Wylie;
• 1:15–2 p.m.: Vancouver Inter-Cultural Orchestra Small Ensemble (Studio Theatre); • 2–2:45 p.m.: Belly Dance performance in the ACT lobby followed by a belly dance workshop in the studio theatre. People are encouraged to bring hip scarves. • 2-4 p.m.: Tea and Culture at the Maple Ridge Art Gallery. As you enjoy this refreshment, you’ll learn more about how tea can be important means of celebrating culture. Join the Barbara Duncan and Navneet Nagra for a live demo on how to dye with indigo on the ACT steps. See Bisque & Brush with Nicole Smith (3D Studio). Create an artist trading cards with Maple Ridge Artist in Residence Kjaer Pedersen in the Galleria. Paint a pre-made ceramic piece with acrylic paint and take your special piece home with you. • 3-4 p.m.: Mandala Workshop with Sand-
eep Johal (Studio Theatre). • 3:15-3:35 p.m.: Polynesian Dance Performance from the Spirit
of the Pacific Cultural Society (Lobby) • 3:45-3:55 p.m.: Traditional Chinese singing with Olivia Chun
Jing Zhang. • 4-5 p.m.: Drum from around the world workshop with Boris Sichon (lobby).
Performing ABBA’s Biggest Hits!
Committed Cops. Inspirational Kids. Caring Communities. Please help us improve the lives of children with cancer.
iloveabba.com
FRIDAY - SEPT. 27 THE ACT THEATRE
Tour de Valley 2013 September 26 – October 4 To find out more or donate visit: copsforcancerbc.ca PRINTSPONSOR SPONSOR PRINT
11944 Haney Place – Maple Ridge
NEWS OUTLET LOGO
Tickets on sale at Act Theatre Box Office.
theactmapleridge.org 604.476.2787
Boeing-Boeing | Arts Club on tour By Marc Camoletti | Translated by Beverley Cross and Francis Evans
A MILE-HIGH COMEDY. Bernard (Jonathon Young), a successful architect in swinging sixties Paris, is even more successful with the ladies. In fact, he juggles the hearts of three air hostesses who jet in and out of his groovy bachelor pad: Gloria, Gabriella, and Gretchen—aka “America,” “Italy,” and “Germany.” But when Boeing introduces a faster jet, Bernard’s precise romantic timetable goes hysterically off course and turbulence looms. Saturday October 12, 2013 8pm | Main Theatre
“I left with a sore face from laughing so hard.”
tickets: Adults $42 Seniors $37 Students $15
kimberley davison, vancouver vantage
www.theactmapleridge.org
11944 Haney Place Maple Ridge, BC V2X 6G1 tel 604.476.2787
media sponsor
22 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 23
The News/sports
Section coordinator: Neil Corbett 604-467-1122 ext. 216
sports@mapleridgenews.com
Knights shut out Giants contributed
The Gold Knights used a stiffling defence led by the trio of Declan Schrader, Dante Clarke, and Kesler Johnson to shut out the Chilliwack Red Giants 28-0 in a decisive road win in atom football play. Offensively, the Gold Knights were led by runningback Devon Crenshaw, with the help of lineman Jordan Canavan, James Launder and Mitchell Alcinay. The Blue Knights dropped their second straight game to the Chilliwack Blue Giants, 30-8. The loss comes after the Blue Knights were shut out at home 24-0. Carter Smith of the Blue Knights had the team’s only touchdown, scampering for a 65 yards.
Pee wee
Colleen Flanagan/the newS
Lean on me Matthew Blackwell (left) of the Ridge Meadows 3 Burrards runs past Noah Wickett of the Delta 2 Footmen during a U-10 game at Thomas Haney secondary Sunday. The Burrards dropped the game 10-5. Chase Miller scored two for the Burrards, with singles going to Dylan Tory, Joel McCormick and Brayden Wandler.
Flames offense goes cold over the weekend by T i m Fitzg e r ald contributor
The Ridge Meadow Flames opened the first week of the season on a high note. They closed out the second week
of way off key, dropping three straight games, scoring just three goals while giving up 16. The Flames were drubbed 7-1 Saturday night in Abbotsford, giving up 49 shots in the process.
Flames coach and general manager Jamie Fiset said his club simply ran out gas after playing its fifth game in eight days. He’s now hoping his team can use the early season struggles as a way to learn
what it takes to win on a consistent basis. “Nobody’s hanging their head down and feeling sorry for themselves,” said Fiset. “There’s a different attitude in the dressing room this year. No one is pleased with los-
ing, but we know we can turn this around. We’re a young team and sometimes things like this happen. Hopefully they’ll come to the rink and put in the hard work and we can get back on track.”
See Search, p25
The Gold Knights took a late 7-6 road lead against the Abbotsford Falcons, only to see two late touchdowns end any hopes of victory. Knights’ quarterbacks, Riley Celino and James Ross teamed up with runningbacks Ethan Kitsch and Tyson Phare to help control the clock, but ultimately fell 21-7.
Junior bantam The Knights dropped an agonizing 22-19 decision to the Abbotsford White Falcons in the second half of a home-and-home tilt. The Knights dropped the rematch in Abbotsford after losing 24-6 at SRT. The Knights had a long TD run called back with under two minutes left and stopped on the Falcons five-yard-line as time expired.
Abbotsford oct. 4-6 tRADEX,
BUY YOUR TICKETS ONLINE AND SAVE
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24 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
Sports
GREAT SAVINGS Watch For Our Flyer In This Week’s Maple Ridge News
*Delivered To Select Areas
See In Store For Our Sales & New Arrivals.
Local Shops Support Local Events & Teams
22722 Lougheed Hwy., Maple Ridge 604-463-7277
Smart Clothes. Everyday Living.
Custom Embroidery Centre on Premises • Locally Owned and Operated
Monday - Friday 9 am - 9 pm • Saturday 9 am - 6 pm • Sunday 10 am - 5 pm
Speed skating club hosts free tryouts Saturday contributed
The Ridge Meadows Racers Speed Skating Club is hosting an open house at Planet Ice in Maple Ridge Saturday, Sept. 28 with registration opening at 9 a.m. Anyone interested in the sport can come a try a free session on the ice, starting at 10:30 a.m. Trish MacKay of the Racers said the event is geared for returning skaters as well as anyone who is new to the sport. She said the club will provide skates for the event. The association’s former Olympians and coaches Eden DonatelliGreen and Julian Green will attend. DonatelliGreen won a gold at the 1987 world championships in Montreal, as well as silver and bronze at the 1998 Calgary Olympics, while short track speed skating was a demonstration sport. • For more info call 604-466-8355, or visit www.ridgemeadowsracers.org.
PRESENTED BY
ROUND 2 Fraser River Pile & Dredge is pleased to present the Ridge Meadows Hospital Foundation’s 25th Anniversary Fundraising Gala on Saturday, October 19, 2013 at Meadow Gardens Golf Course. The annual fundraising gala is a dazzling evening with all the proceeds being used to purchase life saving equipment for Ridge Meadows Hospital and health care in our community.
Tickets are $175 each, tables seat 8 guests
GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY STARTING AT ONLY
THE NEWS/files
The Ridge Meadows Racers season is just getting underway and runs until March.
The evening will feature a champagne reception, gourmet dinner, live and silent auctions, raffles, From the Heart fundraiser, and entertainment. To order tickets, please email Laura.Butler@fraserhealth.ca or call 604.466.6958
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 25 BEST BUY – Correction Notice
Sports
Please note in the September 20 flyer, page 17, the Acer AMD Quad-Core A8-5557M APU Laptop (V5-552P-8646) (WebCode: 10254571) may not be in stock. This model is only available while quantities last as it is end of life. Please see a Product Specialist for assistance. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.
Mason battles for a second-place finish
Flames in search for answers Flames from p23
Junior Hockey
ACTION
NEXT HOME GAME period, the Flames fell behind early in the second,as Holden Wilkerson scored on the powerplay 58 seconds into the frame. Flames captain Travis Oddy and Marco Ballarin scored two goals 1:11 apart with just under five minutes left in the period to take the lead. However, Wilkerson scored his second of the period with 2:39 seconds remaining to draw the Outlaws even. Mission’s Nolan Dyck
scored the game winner at the 7:56 mark of the third. Fiset said his team has played well in spurts, but needs to bring a more consistent approach if it hopes to win. He points to the team’s 6-0 loss to Aldergrove Wednesday as an example. He said they were able to skate with the division’s top team for a period-and-a-half before a couple of quick goals took the wind out of their sails.
“We were playing a great game except for a 12-minute lapse. You can’t give a great team like that any room. But at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter how well you play defensively if you’re not scoring any goals.” • The Flames next home game is against the North Vancouver Wolf Pack Friday, Sept. 27 at 7:30 p.m. at Planet Ice.
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Meadowridge Collision Hard Hat Award
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Friday, September 27th
Ken Mason photo
Keanna Mason fired a 76 at the Redwoods Golf Course in Langley in a one-day event.
no
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or join our group at The Maple RidgePitt Meadows News
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The loss in Abbotsford Saturday came on the heels of dropping a 3-2 decision to the Mission City Outlaws the night before on home ice. After a scoreless first
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Keanna Mason fired a 76 and took home a second-place finish at the Maple Leaf Junior Golf Tour’s MJT Lindsay Kenney One-Day Fall Classic at Redwoods Golf Course in Langley. Mason, a 17-year-old Maple Ridge resident and member at Pitt Meadows Golf Club, finished one shot back of Sophie Liu, 15, of Surrey. It was the first MJT Girls division title for Lui. Mason, who won the 2010 B.C. Golf Bantam Girls championship, is considering scholarship opportunities for the fall of 2013.
th
7:30 pm vs.
North Van Wolf Pack Tickets Available at the door: Adults $8 • Students/Seniors $5 • Children $4 or in advance.
Home Games at Maple Ridge Planet Ice Arena For more info call 604-809-GOAL(4625) or www.flameshockey.com
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS
RIDGE MEADOWS
SPCA
FLAMES
ADOPT A PET 463-9511
Kurt Klimek 5’7”, 155 lbs. #1 Goal
WIN A RIDGE MEADOWS FLAMES PRIZ E PACK
Hometown: Langley
Proudly sponsored by
Maple Ridge Hyundai
RIDGE MEADOWS
FLAMES www.flameshockey.com
DEXTER
Meet Dexter he is an adorable 7 month old Beagle looking for a experienced dog owner. This charming little fella will need a active patient owner to give him a new start on life. To learn more about Dexter please contact the shelter.
HOCKEY PHOTO CONTEST
Where can you find me?
Pitt Meadows Secondary School
STEVE NASH YOUTH BASKETBALL LEAGUE For Grade 2-7 Boys and Girls Sundays 1-3pm Sept. 27 to February 23
At the Maple Ridge SPCA. You can contact me by Email mapleridge@spca.bc.ca
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS
Phone 604-463-9511 10235 Jackson Rd., Albion Sponsored by Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS We’re Committed To Our Customers! By purchasing any Royal Canin cat or dog food you enter to win this Trek Shift1 Cruiser! Value $500.
Open tO all bOys and girls in sd #42
For further information, benefits, costs and schedules read the league information at: pmssmarauders.wordpress.com/stevenash-league/ or contact Mitch McNicol: pmnashball@plus.ca
is!
th You could win
Come see us today to enter.
22745 Dewdney Trk Rd., Maple Ridge
604-463-3855
Contest brought to you by
Submit your favourite hockey photos NOW until October 6th for your chance to win a Flames Prize Pack! For more information visit: MAPLERIDGENEWS.COM/CONTESTS
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
THE NEWS
26 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com EVERY SAT & SUN 10AM-8PM
ALL CHECKOUT LANES
OPEN GUARANTEED† unless we are unable due to unforseen technical difficulties
†
Spend $250 and receive a
FREE
u
◆
31
Pampers club size plus diapers size N-6, 104-210’s 481862 3700081890
06
AFTER LIMIT
44.99
PC lasagna
579226 3600036484
Spend $250 or more before applicable taxes at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive a free PC® butter basted turkey up to 7 kg. Excludes purchase of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated. The retail value of up to $28.80 will be deducted from the total amount of your purchase before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from Friday, September 20th until closing Thursday, September 26th, 2013. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item. 104797
ea
®
size N-6, 100-216’s
up to 7 kg, $28.80 value
LIMIT 4
7
CLUB PACK Huggies club size plus diapers
PC® butter basted turkey
29
65
selected varieties, frozen, 2.27 kg
ea
482494 6038310932
98
1
selected varieties, frozen, 201-340 g
ea
LIMIT 6
AFTER LIMIT
308656 5500055155
12.99
2
no name club pack® hams
Stouffer’s or Lean Cuisine entrées
99
selected varieties
ea
LIMIT 8
AFTER LIMIT
2.99
210910 1956353
98
/lb
6.57 /kg
1
Ziggy’s® roast beef, corned beef, pastrami or Montreal smoked meat freshly sliced, available in stores with a service case 256849 / 87199
77
/100 g
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
44.99
baked fresh
in-store LIMIT 6
AFTER LIMIT
.97 1.99
Colgate Total 85 mL or Aquafresh 90 mL toothpaste 111456 / 685731 5800030939 / 6081503551
PC® cotton swabs 500’s 276857 6038302848
3
3/
OR
3.29 EACH
4
Bakeshop fresh bread
PC® soft drinks
product of Western provinces, Canada fancy grade
white or 100% whole wheat, sliced or unsliced, 450 g
selected varieties, 24 X 355 mL
701870 62021
ea
00
.76
Orchard Run Royal Gala apples
1
/lb
203448 46038382948
1.68 /kg
128511 6563307472
67
selected varieties, 432-461 g
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
296400 6563346585
2.87
Fuel up at our
4/
1
OR
1.47 EACH
Betty Crocker cake mixes
Nature Valley granola bars selected varieties, 175-230 g
00
7
gas bar and earn
¢ per
litre**
00
136298 2037401001
3
Maxwell House instant coffee ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
1.25
in Superbucks® value when you pay with your
selected varieties, 150/200 g 571749 6618813660
†
97
2
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
selected varieties, 12 X 355 mL 263110 6700010483
5.97
97
aloe, 340 mL 505928 5800000820
1
00
33
3
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
5.97
no name® foam plates 9 inch, 100 pack
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
6.47
670620 6038399971
57
ea
LIMIT 3
AFTER LIMIT
4.69
in Superbucks value using Or, get 3.5¢per litre** any other purchase method ®
®
**Redeem your earned Superbucks® value towards the purchase of Merchandise at participating stores (excluding tobacco, alcohol, lottery tickets, gas and prescriptions). With each fuel purchase when you use your President’s Choice Financial® MasterCard® or President’s Choice Financial® debit card as payment, you will receive 7 cents per litre in Superbucks® value. When you use any other method of payment, you will receive 3.5 cents per litre in Superbucks® value. Superbucks® value expires 60 days after date of issue. Superbucks® value are not redeemable at third party businesses within participating stores, the gas bar, or on the purchase of tobacco, alcohol, lottery tickets and prescriptions. Superbucks® value has no cash value and no cash will be returned for any unused portion. Identification may be required at the time of redemption. See Superbucks® receipt for more details. ® Trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. ©2013. † MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. President’s Choice Bank a licensee of the mark. President’s Choice Financial MasterCard is provided by President’s Choice Bank. President’s Choice Financial personal banking products are provided by the direct banking division of CIBC.
Soft Soap liquid hand soap
3
Coca Cola soft drinks
Redeem Superbucks towards purchases made in-store.**
Prices are in effect until Thursday, September 26, 2013 or while stock lasts. ea
Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2013 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.
superstore.ca
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- A27
Your community. Your classifieds.
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
I=: C:LH
604.575.5555 fax 604.575.2073 email ads@bcclassified.com
INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...............1-8
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 4
FUNERAL HOMES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21
COMING EVENTS
GROW MARIJUANA COMMERCIALLY. Canadian Commercial Production Licensing Convention October 26th & 27th. Toronto Airport, Marriott Hotel. www.greenlineacademy.com. Tickets 1-855860-8611 or 250-870-1882.
TRAVEL.............................................61-76 CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387
42
PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587
LOST AND FOUND
Social Work Text Books taken from Front Patio in Maple Ridge. Sept.18@1pm Email w/ any info bearmeldrum@telus.net
REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696 .Garden Hill Cremation & Funeral Services. 11765 224th St., Maple Ridge 604-463-8161 www.GardenHill.ca
RENTALS ......................................703-757 AUTOMOTIVE ..............................804-862 MARINE .......................................903-920
TRAVEL
AGREEMENT
It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes for typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.
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CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248
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Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.
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Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse by law.
_____________ Advertise across the Lower Mainland in the 18 best-read community newspapers and 2 dailies. ON THE WEB:
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98
PRE-SCHOOLS MONTESSORI
HEADSTART PRESCHOOL 21882 124th Ave. www.montessoriheadstart.com ~ 2 1/2 to 5 Years ~ Would you like your child to develop good reading, pre-reading & number skills; high self esteem, great socialization skills, a LOVE of LEARNING? Small groups NURTURE your child’s UNIQUE needs
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES **ATTENTION: JOB SEEKERS!** MAKE MONEY! Mailing Postcards! www.PostcardsToWealth.com NOW ACCEPTING! ZNZ Referral Agents! $20-$60/Hour! www.FreeJobPosition.com HOME WORKERS! Make Money Using Your PC! www.SuperCashDaily.com Earn Big Paychecks Paid Every Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com
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*Professional Staff *Affordable *AM Spaces Available
REGISTER NOW Call BETTY (604)467-3204
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 102
ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 124
Resident Caretaker/Maintenance required for multi site complex in the City of Langley. Competitive wages with an excellent benefit package.
127
HAIRSTYLISTS Check Out the GREAT OPPORTUNITIES at our newest Great Clips location for Full-Time & Part-Time positions.
Please fax resume to: (604) 682-6183 Attention to: Ben Horowitz
WE OFFER:
• GREAT MONEY • GREAT BENEFITS • GREAT TEAMWORK • A GREAT CAREER
Golden Eagle Group is a blueberry and cranberry farm located in Pitt Meadows, B.C., Canada.
“We provide customers for Hairstylists that loves to cut hair!”
FAX resume to 604 530-7104
Call Sam at 778-898-4120 or send your resume at samba@shaw.ca
✓
OBITUARIES INTERMEDIATE ACCOUNTING STUDENT
* Multi - Age * Fully licensed Qualified E.C.E. * Programs included * Math, Science, Dramatic play, Art, Music & Sports Spaces Now Available 604-368-5527
PUDDLE D (Duck) Children’s Ctr
BC Cancer Foundation Legacies accepted. 604.851.4736 or visit: bccancerfoundation.com
MACINTOSH, Charles (Murray) On Monday, September 16th, 2013 Murray passed away at Ridge Meadows Hospital, Maple Ridge at the age of 75 years. He is survived by his children Micheline (Marcel), Marjorie (Matt), Jody (Rob) and Ross (Lenanne). He is also survived by his seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. A private family service was held. In honour of Murray’s memory, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society would be greatly appreciated. Condolences may be sent to mapleridgefuneral.ca
Preschool Daycare 21/2 to 5 years Before &/or After school care K ~ 12 years Davie Jones Edith McDermott Highland Park Pitt Meadows Programs included: Arts, Science, Music, Math, Dramatic Play & Sports Fully licensed, Qualified E.C.E. Caregivers & Teachers Close to major route
Public practice firm with three locations is seeking an intermediate (2nd level or equivalent) accounting student for our office in Maple Ridge. The position will require the preparation of working papers for Notice to Reader and Review files, as well as T1 and T2 preparation. Candidates should have min 6/mo of Canadian public practice exp., with proficiency using Caseware, Caseview, Profile, Simply Accounting and QuickBooks. Strong Bookkeeping, GST / HST / PST skills a definite asset.
EDUCATION
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
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Please reply with resume by email (with job application in the subject line) to: vspindor@eprcga.com or by fax to 604-467-1219 to the attention of Verle Spindor. No phone calls please.
DRIVERS / CLEAN UP PERSON
Thank you to all applicants, however only those being interviewed will be contacted.
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
The Abbotsford Press Centre has an opening for a Pressman on our spare board. Web Offset experience a must. Must be available for shift work. References required.
CLASS 1 DRIVER W/ AIR To conduct deliveries for international lubricants co. in Vancouver area, Seattle-Tacoma, Prince George, Okanagan & Edmonton. Pay $20/hour, mileage, bonus, profit-sharing & full benefits. Apply with resume by emailing custservpacific@fuchs.com or faxing to 604-888-1145
CHECK CLASSIFIEDS bcclassified.com 604-575-5555
Pressman
DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING
Candidates must possess exceptional written and verbal communication skills with the ability to deal with clients in a professional manner. We are a well-established firm and offer a great working environment.
Interested applicants should direct their resume to: Foreman, Abbotsford Press Centre 34375 Gladys Avenue Abbotsford, B.C. V2S 2H5 Fax: 604-853-2195. No phone calls please e-mail: gbuller@abbynews.com
F/T position. Apply in person: with drivers abstract & resume:
We thank all those who are interested in this position; however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
A-Z RENTALS 20850 Lougheed Hwy, Maple Ridge. No phone calls please.
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ALL CASH Drink/Snack Vending Business Route. Complete Training. Small Investment Required. 1888-979-VEND (8363). www.healthydrinkvending.co
604.465.9822 115
HAIRCARE PROFESSIONALS
Farm Workers Golden Eagle Group is looking for farm workers to commence work on January 01, 2014. Duties include weeding, berry harvesting, pipe and drainage repair, and other related duties. Work is outdoors, in all weather conditions and is physically demanding. Pay is $10.25/hour at 40 hours per week.
CARETAKERS/ RESIDENTIAL MANAGERS CARETAKER
FARM WORKERS
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
CHILDREN 7
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TIMESHARE
CHILDREN
115
EDUCATION
115
EDUCATION
TRAIN TO BE AN Apartment / Condominium Manager ONLINE! Graduates get access to all jobs posted with us. 33 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-665-8339, 604-681-5456.
www.blackpress.ca
115
EDUCATION
115
EDUCATION
COMMUNITY SUPPORT WORKER/ SOCIAL SERVICES NIKKEL, Annette Clara April 2, 1935 September 18, 2013 Predeceased by parents Eugene and Claira, sister Therese, brother James and husband Gordon. Survived by sons Kelvin, Darrel, Randall, daughter Katrina and their spouses, 4 grandchildren, sisters Marie, Laurette, Cecile, Agnes, brothers Raymond and Walter and many other family and friends. Annette will be remembered for her outgoing nature, her zest for life and mostly her love of family. She will be dearly missed. Memorial Mass October 4, 2013 at Saint Lukes Catholic Church at 11:00am, 20285 Dewdney Trunk Road, Maple Ridge. Celebration of life to follow at same address.
As a Community Support Worker, you will be able to provide rehabilitation, support, and other forms of assistance to children, youth, and families while supporting social workers and health care professionals. Train in this rewarding career. Career Opportunities: Child and Youth Care Worker O Women’s Shelter Worker Family Place Worker O Settlement/Newcomers Service Worker Teen Pregnancy and Parenting Support Worker
110 -
CALL MAPLE RIDGE: 604.466.3600 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM
A28 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
FLAG PERSONS & LANE TECH PERSONNEL NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
WE WILL TRAIN!
INSIDE SALES ASSOCIATE/ ADMINISTRATIVE PERSON
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
Must Have Valid TCP Certificate, Reliable Insured Vehicle And Provide A Clean Drivers Abstract!
Please E-mail Resume: grasdald@telus.net
FOOD & APPLIANCE PRODUCT SAMPLERS Need To Get Out Of The House, Talk To People & Create Extra Income?
Send resume: wstewart@fabcoplastics.com An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators, Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)7235051Edson,Alta
Try part-time work as a Food Demonstrator 6-10 days a month in local grocery, drug & department stores. Job Description: You must be a go-getter able to work on your own who enjoys talking to people & doing basic cooking. Great for men & women, seniors, retirees & mature adults. Availability: contracts would consist of 2-3 days on Fri. Sat. and/or Sun. (must be able to work all 3 days) from 11-5 or 6. Requirements: • Fully fluent in English • Own a car to carry supplies • Be well groomed & bondable • Able to carry medium weight equipment into stores.
HELP WANTED
160
GUARANTEED Job Placement: General Laborers and Tradesmen For Oil & Gas Industry. Call 24hr Free Recorded Message For Information 1-800-972-0209
TRADES, TECHNICAL
Trailer Mechanic
Mega Cranes Ltd. an industry leader is seeking an energetic, aggressive self starter for a full time position.
Of Spices & Herbs - repetitive filling and sealing of spices and herbs, light lifting may be req’d. Suitable for someone who enjoys working with their hands and has attention to details. $10.25/hr. Fax resume to: 604-465-4372 www.natureschoice.ca
172 ASTROLOGY/PSYCHICS
Psychic Healer
Discover the power of Energy Readings by Angela
Required Immediately.
BENEFIT PACKAGE!
40 Yrs Exp.. She’ll tell you Past, Present & Future
Please contact Mike e-mail: mike@megacranes.com or Fax: 604.599.5250
Reunites Loved Ones One visit will amaze you! CALL TODAY FOR A BETTER TOMORROW.
Must have experience in supervision & janitorial services. Good pay with benefits.
604-653-5928
Apply in person or email: 201-1420 Adanac St., Vancouver
173
info@utcs.com
182
FINANCIAL SERVICES
DROWNING IN DEBT? Cut debts more than 50% & DEBT FREE in half the time! AVOID Bankruptcy! Free Consultation. BBB Rated A+ www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1-877-556-3500
PERSONAL SERVICES 188
MIND BODY SPIRIT
“Massage Confidential”
LEGAL SERVICES
CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 236
CLEANING SERVICES
CUSTOMIZED CLEANING
Specializing in *Palm, *Tarot Cards, *Crystal Ball Readings. SPECIAL $20 ALL READINGS
Supervisors
PERSONAL SERVICES
DON’T LET TIME & DISTANCE STAND IN YOUR WAY.
SOLVE ALL PROBLEMS OF LIFE.
for Ultra Tech Cleaning Systems in downtown & Burnaby areas.
131
PERSONAL SERVICES
SPIRITUAL
P/T Packager
COMPETITIVE RATES
Req. for Fabco Plastics, Surrey. A well ESTABLISHED national co. engaged in resale supply of process components and piping. Job requires processing of telephone order sales, may involve some physical warehouse duty. Technical knowledge or aptitude of fluid systems / components is an asset. Willing to train the right candidate! Potential for eventual advancement to outside sales.
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
Fridays Now Open for your weekend relaxing pleasure!
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
WE ALSO DO MOVE-OUTS
Call 604-467-1118
If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161.
*Private Studio *European
HOME CARE/SUPPORT
From $35. By appt: 604.230.4444
PERSONAL SERVICES 171
ALTERNATIVE HEALTH . housecleaning 604-551-3255
173E
Become a PLEA
HEALTH PRODUCTS
Local lady has immed. openings. Hardworking, reliable, efficient. Refs. avail. (778)231-0709
Family Caregiver.
PLEA provides ongoing training and support. A young person is waiting for an open door... make it yours.
# 101-1125 Nicola Avenue Port Coq. (behind COSTCO)
130
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
604-468-8889 candymassage.blogspot.com/
604.708.2628 caregiving@plea.bc.ca www.plea.ca
Pay starts at $10.50/hr. Training provided in North Burnaby. Call JMP Marketing at 604.294.3424, local #30 JMP Marketing Services BC’s largest demo company since 1979
FLAGGERS NEEDED. No Certification? Get Certified, 604-575-3944
Opportunity for an outstanding
604 575 5555
115
115
EDUCATION
EDUCATION
Classes Start SOON in Maple Ridge
Three powerful certificates in one exciting diploma. • Personal Support • Education Assistant • Community Mental Health
Where Your Success Matters! 96% Employment Rate* *2012
Scan here to learn more
TRADES, TECHNICAL
Mega Cranes Ltd. an industry leader is seeking an energetic, aggressive self starter for a full time position. Required immediately. Must have inspectors ticket and Red seal. Will have hydraulic experience and must be able to read electrical and hydraulic schematics.
COMMUNITY SUPPORT WORKER
- Hands-on professional training. - Small class sizes. - Three specialized practicum placements. - Earn your professional diploma in only 54 weeks.
160
Heavy Duty Diesel Mechanic
Become a
BENEFIT PACKAGE! Please contact Mike e-mail: mike@megacranes.com or fax 604.599.5250
Evening and weekend classes starting in September
CALL NOW! Limited seats available!
604-463-1174
www.INVERTRAC.COM 1-800-667-7795
TRAVEL with bcclassified.com
PIPE LAYERS BACKHOE & EXCAV. OPERATORS, FOREMANS & SUPERINTENDANTS TYBO CONTRACTING is quickly becoming an industry leader in the excavating & civil contracting business. Tybo is currently retained by some of the largest developers in B.C. We are currently offering top wage & benefit pkgs as well as opportunities for advancement. Email resumes to:
. 4 U SPA
130
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
Earn Extra Cash! Maple Ridge Pitt Meadows NEWS
Available routes in Maple Ridge 40000001 - 118 Ave, Dewdney Trunk Rd, Hawthorne St. 40000010 - 117B Ave, Dewdney Trunk Rd, Glenhurst St. 40310311 - 11895 Laity St, 21079-21171 Lougheed Hwy. (Trailer Park) 40310314 - 117 Ave, 207 St, Camwood Ave, Graves St, Owen St, Thorne Ave. 40320377 - 124 Ave, 125 Ave, 202A St, 202B St, 203 St, Powell Ave. 40320378 - 204 St, 205 St, Brooks Ave, Powell Ave. 40320382 - 120B Ave, 204B St, 205 St, 205A St, Dewdney Trunk Rd. 40330338 - 20625-20680 118 Ave (Townhouse Complexes), 207 St. 40330344 - 116B Ave, Ashley Cres, Stanton Ave. 40400433 - 13009-13359 239B St, 13421-13511 240 St. 40400439 - 130A Ave, 240 St, Shoesmith Cres.
Available routes in Pitt Meadows 41011011 - 114B Ave., 115A Ave., 116A Ave., 196A St., 196B St., 197A St., 197B St., 198 St., 116B Ave. 41011032 - Alouette Blvd., Blaney Dr., Blaney Way, Bonson Rd., Tully Cres.
Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows since 1978
Your Career Starts Here
www.discoverycommunitycollege.com
We’re here for you. The answer to your problem can be as easy as picking up your paper. To place an ad call 604-575-5555
bcclassified.com
The Abbotsford News, one of Canada’s leading community newspapers, has an opening for an Advertising Sales Consultant. This is a challenging career opportunity for a results-driven individual. Candidates will possess the ability to increase sales to existing clients while successfully prospecting new business in one of the Fraser Valley’s fastest growing markets. The ideal candidate has a positive attitude, a proven track record in sales, is highly motivated with strong organizational and communication skills. Our work environment sets industry standards for professionalism and innovation. The News combines a salary/benefits package designed to attract and retain outstanding staff. Please send your application in confidence to:
Andrew Franklin, Publisher 34375 Gladys Avenue Abbotsford, B.C. V2S 2H5 e-mail: publisher@abbynews.com
Closing Date: Monday, Sept. 30, 2013
tbrebner@tybo.ca workwithus@tybo.ca
WHEN YOU NEED HELP IN A HURRY...
Advertising Sales Consultant
I=: C:LH
The interest of all applicants is appreciated, however, only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.
Circulation
604.476.2740
brian@mapleridgenews.com
www.blackpress.ca
www.abbynews.com
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- A29
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 236
CLEANING SERVICES
Intex Janitorial & Maintenance Services Janitorial, Office Cleaning Int. Ext. Windows, Pressure Washing, Gutter Cleaning Free Estimates
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
CONCRETE & PLACING
300
283A
HANDYPERSONS
Maintenance S Repair S Renovation
www.proficientrenovation.com 604-323-4111 for more details.
287
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.
all soils are tested for Optimum growing requirements.
Find the
.
16897 Windsor Road Pitt Meadows
604-465-9812 1-800-663-5847 317
332
✶Dump Site Now Open✶ Home Renovations and New Construction
263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE
1 DAY INSTALL COMPLETE BATHROOM REMODELING Free Estimates
604-576-6750 or Cell: 604.341.7374
(604)465-1311
meadowslandscapesupply.com
100% Heating & Plumbing 24/7
604-537-4140
• Hot water tanks • Furnaces • Broilers • Plugged Drains 778-862-0560
341
GET THE BEST FOR YOUR MOVING
PRESSURE WASHING POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING
Experienced Mover w/affordable rates, STARTING AT $40/HR 24/7 - Licensed & Insured. ** Seniors Discounts ** fortiermoving.ca
289 HOUSEHOLD SERVICES
WEBSITES, free hosting with a design package, Gmail, Google Integration, Consulting, Computers and Devices. millersystems.ca
Tar & Gravel DAsphalt D Interlocking shingles DTorch-on Membrane D Laminated shingles
ONLINE SERVICES
All types of Roofing Repairs Free Estimates
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
604-467-6065 Eastcan Roofing & Siding Liability Insurance/BBB/10% off with ad
604.562.0957 or 604.961.0324
*Rototilling *Levelling *Gardens *Loader Work *Brush Cutter *Plowing TONY’’S PAINTING
604-941-2263 / 604-725-7246
Professional Installation 5” Gutter, Down Pipe, Soffit *CLEANING *REPAIRS 28 YEARS EXPERIENCE
~ FULLY INSURED ~
Call Tim 604-612-5388
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
FOR SALE BY OWNER
DUTCH TOUCH Green Services Ltd
Landscape Construction Renovations W Maintenance
604-463-3644 604-861-1490 JAGUAR LANDSCAPING Lawn & Garden Service. Design, Pruning, Lawns, Cleanups, Comm/ Res. (604)466-1369
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
PATTAR ROOFING LTD. All types of Roofing. Over 35 years in business. 604.588.0833
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
10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofing & Siding. CB. Re-roofing, New Roof Gutters.
Pay-Less Pro Painting Summer EXT/INT SPECIAL LOOK for our YARD SIGNS
604-812-9721
D Free estimates D Insured Licensed D References Residential D Pressure Washing
Serving Tri City 33 Yrs. Call 24 Hrs/7 Days www.paylesspropainting.com
CALL
604-595-4970 Rated best painting & moulding company (2010 & 2012) by consumers.
www.benchmarkpainting.homestars.com
Scott 604-891-9967 A-1 EXTERIOR/ INTERIOR. Quality job, senior rates, free est, residential, commercial. Refs. 15 yrs exp. No job too small.Call 778-980-0717 2 HUNGRY PAINTERS. Int/Ext, In the area 35 yrs. Power wash. Refs. WCB. Free Est. 604-467-2532 .
Updated 2bdrm,1bath, cul-de-sac downtown MapleRidge $314,800 gardenstreethouse@gmail.com
627
HOMES WANTED
WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-657-9422
PRIME LAKEVIEW LOTS FROM $140,000 Also; Spectacular 3 Acre Parcel at $390,000 1-250-558-7888 www.orlandoprojects.com ~ FINANCING AVAILABLE ~
GARAGE SALES 633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS
Your junk. A neighbors treasure. “DOLLAR DEALS”
Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
374
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
Ed’s ROTOTILLING & LANDSCAPING
M.T. GUTTERS
551
14+ Family Garage Sale Fundraiser, 12138 Edge Street Sat. Sept 28, 9am-1pm. Proceeds go towards Eric Langton Elem class trip to Quebec.
make it easy to sell your miscellaneous items. Call for details 604-575-5555
TREE SERVICES
Call Ian 604-724-6373
•New Roofs •Re-Roofs •Repairs
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
SUNDECKS
BURIAL PLOTS
CEMETERY PLOT in Maple Ridge Cemetery for sale, $2200 firm. Ph 403-335-4384, or email: dsherris@telus.net
SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE
LANDSCAPING
~ Free Estimates ~
372
560
EAGLE ROOFING 323
TOPSOIL
SCREENED TOPSOIL MUSHROOM MANURE BARK MULCH 604-467-3003
www.jonesbroscartageltd.com
Call: 778-773-3737
604-618-6401 Marcel Repairs, Maintenance, Renovation Guaranteed work, Free Estimate
300
• • •
CRESCENT Plumbing & Heating Licensed Residential 24hr. Service
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.
HOME REPAIRS
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 520
BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7 Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com
LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE
Ph 604-319-1993
DOG Walking Service in Pitt Meadows Insured bondable reliable. Email doggiesonthemove@gmail.com or call 778-837-3809
Journeyman Call 604-345-0899
$45/Hr
Licensed in Maple Ridge Fully Insured / WCB.
288
RELIABLE & AFFORDABLE
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
*Res *Comm *Apts *Warehouse SENIORS 10% Off
359 SAND, GRAVEL & TOPSOIL
Certified, Insured & Bonded
www.affordablemovers.bc.com
604-477-4777 www.bathtime.ca
PAINTING, PRESSURE WASHING & GUTTER CLEANING.
MOVING & STORAGE
AFFORDABLE MOVING
Ask us about $20K Gov’t Grant or visit: www.bchousing.org/HAFI - 1 Piece Seamless Acrylic Walls - Custom Showers, Tubs, Glass Doors - Wheelchair Accessible Showers
Meadows Landscape Supply Ltd. ✶ Bark Mulch ✶ Lawn & Garden Soil ✶ Drain Gravel ✶ Lava Rock ✶ River Rock ✶Pea Gravel
604-465-1311
Dean 604-834-3076
“Accept Visa, Mastercard, Discovery & Debit”
mikes hauling 604-516-9237
PLUMBING
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
Meadows Landscape Supply
320
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
FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATING H/W Tanks, Reno’s, Boilers, Furn’s. Drain Cleaning. Ins. (778)908-2501
$59.00 Per Ton
Kitchens, Bathrooms, Flooring, Drywall, Garages, Decks & more * 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE* INSURED ~ WCB
•Drainage •Back-Filling •Landscaping & Excavating. •Landclearing & Bulldozing Hourly or Contract 38 Years exp.
7 Days / Week
338
MUNCHKINS KITTENS, born Sept 11, ready Nov 14. 2 Fem, 1 Male. $400 - $700, shots, dewormed & vet chkd. (604)543-1828
PAVING/SEAL COATING
ASPHALT PAVING • Brick Driveways • Retaining Walls • Foundation Repairs • Sealcoating 604-618-2304
MISC SERVICES
SBroken Concrete RocksS $23.00 Per Metric Ton SMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS $23.00 Per Metric Ton GrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds
LAGOTTO ROMAGNOLO PUPS, perfect family dogs, non-shedding, stable, intelligent & loving, $1900. www.lagottinokennels.com
2 OLD GUYS WITH PAINT BRUSHES Quality Painting & Handyman Serv. 604-928-7765 ~ 604-710-0070
(Turn right 1st road East of Pitt River Bridge from Vancouver)
DC ELECTRIC (#37544). Bonded. We specialize in jobs too small for the big guys! *24 HOUR SERVICE* 30Yrs exp. Free est. 604-460-8867.
Prompt Delivery Available
625
P/B blue males Ready to go. 1st shots & tails/dew claws done. ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIAN $800. 604-308-5665
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
GARDENING
REAL ESTATE
604.587.5865
. Expert Power Washing. Gutters cleaned & repaired. www.expertpowerwashing. Mike, 604-961-1280 MIKE 604-961-1280
281
ITALIAN MASTIFF (Cane Corso)
STEEL BUILDING - SIZZLING SUMMER SAVINGS EVENT! 20X22 $4,188. 25X24 $4,598. 30X36 $6,876. 32X44$8,700. 40X52 $12,990. 47X70 $17,100. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca
www.recycleitcanada.ca
ELECTRICAL
Ceramic Tiles, Hardwood Laminate Guaranteed work, Free Estimate.
• Furniture • Appliances • Electronics • Junk/Rubbish • Construction Debris • Drywall • Yard Waste • Concrete • Everything Else! **Estate Clean-Up Specialists**
HOME of Your Dreams!
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
MISC. FOR SALE
HOT TUBS NO PROB!
CASCADE DRYWALL. Res / Comm Drywall, taping, text. ceilings, t-bar. steel stud. Call Rob 604-218-2396 or 604-820-9601
604-618-6401 Marcel
JUNK REMOVAL
Instant Grassifacation!
DRYWALL
FLOOR REFINISHING/ INSTALLATIONS
604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca
560
DISCONNECTED PHONE? National Teleconnect Home Phone Service. No One Refused! Low Monthly Rate! Calling Features and Unlimited Long Distance Available. Call National Teleconnect Today! 1-866-443-4408. www.nationalteleconnect.com.
AAA PRECISION PAINTING. Quality work. 778-881-6096.
NO JOB TOO SMALL Serving Lower Mainland 25 Years! *Prepare *Form *Place *Finish *Granite & Interlocking Block Walls *Stairs *Driveways *Exposed Aggregate *Stamped Concrete. *Interlocking Bricks *Sod Placement EXCELLENT REF’S -WCB Insured
275
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
Real Estate Section - Class 600’s
604-465-3189
PETS
Starting from $199.00
bcclassified.com
PICK-UP ...... or .... DELIVERY
477
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
DISPOSAL BINS By Recycle-it
By RECYCLE-IT!
17607 Ford Road Pitt Meadows
PETS
BRITISH Bulldog Puppies. Pure breed, CKC and home trained. $700. M/F, 2 months old, current shots. 778-800-1369. Email: statohe@gmail.com
Delivery & Pick-Up Included Residential & Commercial Service • Green Waste • Construction Debris • Renovations • House Clean Outs
3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour
NO Wood byproducts used
RUBBISH REMOVAL
6 - 50 Yard Bins
PAINT SPECIAL
When QUALITY Matters
HERFORT CONCRETE
Excavator & Bobcat Services
356
Running this ad for 8yrs
D Garden Blend Soil D Lawn Blend Soil D Custom Blends avail. D Composted Mushroom Manure
778-231-9675, 778-231-9147 FREE ESTIMATES
260
329 PAINTING & DECORATING www.paintspecial.com
F All types of concrete work F F Re & Re F Forming F Site prep FDriveways FExposed FStamped F Bobcat Work F WCB Insured
257
LANDSCAPING
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley
UNIQUE CONCRETE DESIGN
Leo: 604-657-2375 / 604-462-8620
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
ALWAYS! GUTTER Cleaning & Roof Blowing, Moss Control,30 yrs exp., Reliable! Simon 604-230-0627
(604)465-1302 / 604-786-3466
242
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
MISC. FOR SALE
STEEL BUILDINGS / METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca ABC TREE MEN Pruning, Shaping, Tree Removal & Stump Grinding. 604-521-7594 604-817-8899
New custom built manufactured home w/360 degree river view in Ruskin. Pet/fam ok. $99,800 with $570 pad rent. 604-830-1960.
New SRI *1404 sq/ft Double wide $89,888. *New SRI 14’ wide $62,888. Repossessed mobile homes, manufactured homes & modulars. Chuck 604-830-1960.
A30 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
REAL ESTATE 639 REAL ESTATE SERVICES • DIFFICULTY SELLING? •
DifďŹ culty Making Payments? No Equity? Penalty? Expired Listing? We Buy Homes! No Fees! No Risk! www.GVCPS.ca / 604-786-4663
RENTALS 706
APARTMENT/CONDO
MAPLE RIDGE Central, avail now. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, 5 appls, $900-$1000. Gas f/p’s, u/g prkg. Call 604-467-4450 or 604-355-1356 Maple Ridge Central
RENTALS 706
APARTMENT/CONDO
Crime free clean quiet well managed mature adult bldg. No smokers No pets gas f/p. $525 + utils.
Your Choice for Property Management (Since 1990)
Professional Property Management Services
COQ. “Montreux� Parkway Blvd 2bd 2ba, 838s/f, new carpet/paint pool, gym. Ns/Np. Oct1. $1350. P.Meadows - Solaris Towers BRAND NEW UNITS AVAIL *1Bd+den. *2Bd +den. *3Bdrm.
Call 604-464-7548 Visit our website for other rentals: www.proďŹ le-properties.com
GARIBALDI Court (604) 463-9522 Central Maple Ridge
2 Bdrm units avail Great location for seniors! Clean, quiet & affordable! Incls heat, h/w, cable. Senior Move-In Allowance. Refs & Credit check req.
Sorry No Pets For more info: google us.
MAPLE INN 11695 -224th St Maple Ridge 1 Bdrm $550/mo 2 Bdrm $625/mo. Incl’s hot water CertiďŹ ed Crime Free Building Mature adult oriented. Close to uptown 604-463-4131 for appointment (9am-5pm) MAPLE RIDGE
1 & 2 Bdrms $790/$875 GREAT LOCATION
Queen Anne Apts.
(604) 467- 5271 MAPLE RIDGE Central Spacious 1 bdrm apt. Deck, lndry facil, prkg. NS/NP $620. Oct 1. 604-937-3534 Maple Ridge
Glenwood Manor Apartments 1 & 2 Bdrms from $655 & $880 & renovated suite with dishwasher $45. extra. Clean, Spacious Includes heat, hot water & parking Seniors discount 21387 Dewdney Trunk Rd
(604)466-5799 Maple Ridge Swan Court Apartments Large 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Hardwood floors, adult oriented, heat, h/w & cable incl’d, f/p, Approved pets only. Criminal Record check may be req. Resident Manager Onsite Now with SENIORS DISCOUNT
604.466.8404 (Erik) PORT COQUITLAM
RENOVATED SUITES 1 Bdrm suite $775 2 Bdrm corner suite $925 S Incl heat/ht water, wndw cvrngs S Close to bus stop S Walk to shoping/medical/WCE S Across from park w/Mtn views S Gated parking and Elevator S Adult oriented building S References required CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
* Renovated Suites *
604-464-3550
Clean, very quiet, large,
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
INCLUDES: HEAT, HOT WATER & HYDRO Near Shopping & Amenities. SENIOR’S DISCOUNT
604-463-2236 604-463-7450
11895 Laitty St, Maple Ridge
Fully renovated 1 & 2 bdrm suites Full time on-site caretaker. Available Immediately CALL ANYTIME TO VIEW
1-604-358-8722
12186-224 St, Maple Ridge CertiďŹ ed Crime Free Buildings
MAPLE RIDGE
AVAILABLE NOW 1 & 2 BDRM SUITES
709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL MISSION. SPACIOUS 1000 sf shop with 1250 loft w/deck Formerly wood & metal fab shop. $1500/mo. Chad 778-861-2423
Heat, hot water & parking. Close to stores & schools.
MAPLE COURT I 22437 121st Ave 604-467-0715 &
MAPLE COURT II 22423 121st Ave 604-467-4894
MAPLE RIDGE
AVAILABLE NOW 1 Bdrm apts $750 2 Bdrm apts $800 Incl heat, hot water & parking. Close to stores and Schools.
SUNRISE 22292 122nd Avenue (604)349-5982 SORRENTO 12260 122nd Avenue (604)319-9341
PORT COQUITLAM, 1500 - 3000 sq ft. Ground floor commercial area. Facing onto city park. 1 blk from Lougheed/ Shaughnessy intersection. Call 604-464-3550.
736
RENTALS 741
OFFICE/RETAIL
Maple Ridge OfďŹ ce & Retail Space
Unbelievable Rates, Starting at $495/month. Various sizes 320sf. - 2000sf. Various downtown locations. Updated and well maintained.
Rick Medhurst Royal LePage Realty
604-463-3000
745
ROOM & BOARD
MAPLE RIDGE Attn: STUDENTS: 2 ROOMS AVAIL - Room & Board Exc location walk to WCE, shopping, Continuing Education & all amens - across fr Staples. NS/NP. $750 inclusive. Call 604-465-7356
746
ROOMS FOR RENT
RENTALS 750
$75 OFF 1ST MONTH
Haney Motor Hotel 22222 Lougheed Hwy., Maple Ridge Inquire in person between 9am - 3pm or
Call 604-467-3944 749
SUITES, LOWER
2 bedroom @ $810.00 / month 1205 Johnston (at Guildford) Coquitlam Close to all amenities (Transit, shopping schools and parks)
Saturday, Sept. 2 • 11am – 3pm & Sunday, Sept. 2 • o QN Contact Sandy @ (604) 945-5864 Email Sandy@terramanagement.ca
845
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
851
TRUCKS & VANS
The Scrapper
2002 OLDS SILHOUETTE, every option, DVD, perfect cond, 150K, private. $3800 obo. 778-565-4230
MAPLE RIDGE Kanaka newer lrge bright 1 bdr above grnd ste. Incl full bath, alarm, laund (optional). Near bus. $725 incl utils/net/TV. Refs req N/S, N/P. Avail now. 604-868-7288.
P.T.O. AUTO RECYCLERS
MAPLE RIDGE Prefer quiet single couple, refs req. 2 bdrm g/level patio, shed, NS/NP $900m. Avail Sept 15/Oct1 604-808-1787 or text
We PAY CA$H for all unwanted
M.RIDGE-Bright lrg 1bdrm, priv ent lam flrs, shrd w/d, no pets. no smoking $795 inc util 604-460-9166
• Cars • Trucks • Vans Serving The Lower Mainland
604-217-2074
TOWNHOUSES
MAPLE RIDGE. Brookside Garden. Reno’d attractive 3 bdrm. N/S. Oct. 1st. Call 778-835-0748 PITT MEADOWS: 2 - 3 bdrm co-op T/H $1097/mo - $1199/mo. Shares req’d. Close to WCE, schools & shopping. No subsidy available. 19225 119th Ave. For more info & to book an appt. call 604-465-1938
• Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022
PITT MEADOWS, Ford & Harris, 3 Bdrm T/H in quiet family complex, rent geared to income. N/P. Call: 604-465-4851
STORAGE
#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200
TRANSPORTATION 810
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Johannes Ouwehand also known as John Ouwehand, formerly of 18635 Dewdney Trunk Road, Pitt Meadows, BC, Deceased, who died on the 2nd day of August, 2013, are hereby required to send the particulars thereof to the undersigned Executor, c/o Robert L. Harris, Esq., McEachern Harris & Watkins, Barristers & Solicitors, 22334 McIntosh Avenue, Maple Ridge, BC, V2X 3C1 on or before the 25th day of October, 2013, after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to the claims that have been received. Lance Ouwehand,
AUTO FINANCING LANGLEYAUTOLOANS.COM 1-877-810-8649
Pitt Meadows Marina
845
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AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673
14179 Reichenback Rd
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
Year or semi-annual Rental Moorage
Parking + Onsite Manager
604.465.7713 750
SUITES, LOWER
Coquitlam Harbour Chimes 1 bdrm brand new, incl heat alarm granite counters NP $950 604-788-1275 MAPLE RIDGE; 1 Bdrm ste. Gas F/P. $850/mo incl hydro/cable/net. N/P, no smoking inside. Avail now. 604-466-5289 or 604-307-3685
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OPEN HOUSE CO-OP LIVING
AUTO FINANCING
TRANSPORTATION
MAPLE RIDGE - Kanaka Creek. Clean bright 1 bdrm suite. N/S, N/P. $800/mo incl utils. 604-380-3639.
HOMES FOR RENT
APARTMENT/CONDO
TRANSPORTATION
MAPLE RIDGE - 203 Stanton Ave. 1 bdrm bsmt, $650/mo incl heat/ht water/cable. N/P. 604-457-1100
MAPLE RIDGE 3 bdrm house on huge lot with large livrm & kitchen, avail mid Oct. $1300. 604-438-5095
706
810
MAPLE RIDGE 1 new bdrm Albion nr SRT, walk-out bsmt, Avail now, ns/np, $695 incl utils. 604-928-5012
752 Rooms from $445/mo. Fully Furn, weekly maid service, cable TV, private bath, on bus route, 5/min walk to commuter rail.
TRANSPORTATION
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In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT: On February 14, 2013, at 232nd Street and Fern Crescent, Maple Ridge, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Ridge Meadows RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $1,080 CAD, on or about 19:30 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been obtained by the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (Possession for purpose of trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2013-1688, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute
is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www. pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT: On May 9, 2013, in the area of 210th Street and Wicklund Avenue, Maple Ridge, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Ridge Meadows RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $1,710 CAD, on or about 15:11 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been obtained by the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (Possession for purpose of trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2013-1689, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute
is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www. pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT: On May 29, 2012, at Meadows Gardens Way on Lougheed Highway, Pitt Meadows, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Ridge Meadows RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $670 CAD, on or about 02:30 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been obtained by the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (Possession for purpose of trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2013-1711, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute
is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www. pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
0 96 %
FOR UP TO
FINANCING
CLEAROUT
ACCENT 5 DR L
, 500 4
$
†
OR GET UP TO
IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS Ω
MONTHS
AMOUNT SHOWN ON THE 2013 SONATA HYBRID
ON SELECT MODELS
HURRY IN AND GET AN AMAZING DEAL TODAY
2013
HWY: 5.3L/100 KM CITY: 7.1L/100 KM▼
$
73
BI-WEEKLY
Inventory is limited. Dealer order may be required.
ELANTRA L
2013
$
+
ACCENT 5 DR L 6-SPEED ΩMANUAL. $200 PRICE ADJUSTMENT , DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.
IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS
Ω
FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS
15,099
NO MONEY DOWN
1.6L GDI ENGINE • FRONT ACTIVE HEADRESTS • FRONT, SIDE & CURTAIN AIRBAGS • POWER DOOR LOCKS • AM/FM/CD/MP3/USB/IPOD® AUDIO SYSTEM
HWY: 5.2L/100 KM CITY: 7.1L/100 KM▼
$
82
INCLUDES
0
WITH
OWN IT FOR
%†
$
+ Ω
NO MONEY DOWN
6 AIRBAGS • IPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS • POWER WINDOWS & DOOR LOCKS • ABS WITH TRACTION CONTROL SYSTEM • DUAL HEATED POWER EXTERIOR MIRRORS
HWY: 6.7L/100 KM CITY: 10.1L/100 KM▼
$
139 0.99 WITH
OWN IT FOR
BI-WEEKLY
%†
FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS
INCLUDES
$
+ IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS
Ω
NO MONEY DOWN
27,759 SELLING PRICE:
Limited model shown
ELANTRA GT
AIR CONDITIONING • 7 AIRBAGS • SIRIUS XM™ RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM • VEHICLE STABILITY MANAGEMENT W/ESC & TRACTION CONTROL SYSTEM • HEATED FRONT SEATS
HWY: 5.3L/100 KM CITY: 7.6L/100 KM▼
GET UP TO
+ Ω IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS
Inventory is limited. Dealer order may be required.
0
FINANCING FOR 24 MONTHS
SIRIUS XM™ RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM • PANORAMIC SUNROOF • 17″ ALLOY WHEELS • 7″ TOUCHSCREEN NAVIGATION SYSTEM W/HIDDEN REARVIEW CAMERA • HEATED FRONT SEATS
5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty†† 5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty
SANTA FE SPORT 2.0T 2013 CANADIAN UTILITY VEHICLE OF THE YEAR
%†
AVAILABLE FEATURES: SE with Tech. shown
♦
AUTO. SANTA FE SPORT 2.4L FWD Ω $500 PRICE ADJUSTMENT , DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.
STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE:
2013
♦
AL. ELANTRA L 6-SPEED MANU Ω $500 PRICE ADJUSTMENT , DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.
IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS
FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS
16,999 SELLING PRICE:
STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE:
Limited model shown
SANTA FE SPORT 2.4L FWD
Inventory is limited. Dealer order may be required.
♦
STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE:
BI-WEEKLY
Inventory is limited. Dealer order may be required.
0
%†
SELLING PRICE:
ELANTRA GT 2013 BEST NEW SMALL CAR (OVER $21K)
HyundaiCanada.com
TM
2013
GLS model shown
INCLUDES
WITH
OWN IT FOR
The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 Accent 5 Door L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD Auto/Elantra GT SE 6-Speed Auto with an annual finance rate of 0%/0%/0.99%/0% for 96/96/96/24 months. Bi-weekly payments are $73/$82/$139/$453. No down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $0/$0/$1,126/$0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination of $1,550/$1,550/$1,760/$1,550. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual for $16,999 (includes $500 in price adjustments) at 0% per annum equals $82 bi-weekly for 96 months for a total obligation of $16,999. Cash price is $16,999. Cost of Borrowing is $0. Example price includes Delivery and Destination of $1,550. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Fuel consumption for 2013 Accent 5 Door L 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.1L/100KM)/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.2L/100KM; City 7.1L/100KM)/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD Auto (HWY 6.7L/100KM, City 10.1L/100KM)/Elantra GT SE 6-Speed Auto (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.6L/100KM) are based on Energuide. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. Price of models shown: 2013 Accent 5 Door GLS 6-Speed Manual/Elantra Limited/Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited AWD/Elantra GT SE Tech 6-Speed Auto are $19,249/$24,849/$40,259/$27,899. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,550/$1,550/$1,760/$1,550. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ΩPrice adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of up to $200/$500/$500/$2,350 available on 2013 Accent 5 Door L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD Auto/Elantra GT SE 6-Speed Auto. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. †ΩOffers available for a limited time, and subject to change or cancellation without notice. See dealer for complete details. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
www.mapleridgenews.com - THE NEWS -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- 31
The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 Accent 5 Door L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD Auto/Elantra GT SE 6-Speed Auto with an annual finance rate of 0%/0%/0.99%/0% for 96/96/96/24 months. Bi-weekly payments are $73/$82/$139/$453. No down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $0/$0/$1,126/$0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination of $1,550/$1,550/$1,760/$1,550. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual for $16,999 (includes $500 in price adjustments) at 0% per annum equals $82 bi-weekly for 96 months for a total obligation of $16,999. Cash price is $16,999. Cost of Borrowing is $0. Example price includes Delivery and Destination of $1,550. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ▼Fuel consumption for 2013 Accent 5 Door L 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.1L/100KM)/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.2L/100KM; City 7.1L/100KM)/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD Auto (HWY 6.7L/100KM, City 10.1L/100KM)/Elantra GT SE 6-Speed Auto (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.6L/100KM) are based on Energuide. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. ♦Price of models shown: 2013 Accent 5 Door GLS 6-Speed Manual/Elantra Limited/Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited AWD/Elantra GT SE Tech 6-Speed Auto are $19,249/$24,849/$40,259/$27,899. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,550/$1,550/$1,760/$1,550. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ΩPrice adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of up to $200/$500/$500/$2,350 available on 2013 Accent 5 Door L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD Auto/ Elantra SE 6-Speed Auto. adjustments applied before taxes.Brent Offer cannot be combined or Kinney used in conjunction any other available Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. DaveGTWyant SeanPrice Elmont Mike Jankowiak Miscisco Brett Bob with Murdoch Peteroffers. Bender Sean Ferguson Corey Baryer No vehicle trade-in required. †Ω♦Offers available for a limited time, and subject to change or cancellation without notice. See dealer for complete details. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
TM
Matt Wood
www.mapleridgehyundai.com
PAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HERE
604 467 3401 23213 Lougheed Highway DL#7356
Super Dave’s
32 -- Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -- THE NEWS - www.mapleridgenews.com
PRICE
GUARANTEE PRICE
+ GUARANTEE
OUR PRICES ARE UNBEATABLE!
+
OUR PRICES ARE UNBEATABLE!
Loveseat now at
449
Model 13301- 35 • Model 13301- 38
PRICE
+ GUARANTEE
Chair & 1/2
749 $ 1099 $
PRICE
OUR PRICES ARE Superb versatility UNBEATABLE!
Sofa
+
GUARANTEE
meets refined style! Chair, ottoman and sectional available.
$
Contemporary design with clean lines and plush comfort. Power reclining loveseat available.
100 $ 1799 $1099
Model 1576
All leather power reclining sofa now at
Model 1435 • Model 1430
PRICE
$
ea
All leather power recliner now at
999
$
SAVE
200
$
Now at
799
$
Model 70200-16 • Model 70200-17
PRICEGUARANTEE+ @
BRANDSOURCE
Contemporary look with lumbar support and pillow top arms for total relaxation. Matching chair available. Model 2393
All Leather Sofa
OUR PRICES ARE UNBEATABLE!
2 PIECE CONTEMPORARY SECTIONAL
OUR PRICES ARE UNBEATABLE!
+
GUARANTEE
+
GUARANTEE
SAVE
$
ea
PRICE
OUR PRICES ARE UNBEATABLE!
Sofa now at
499
200
$
Combines plush comfortable seating with the style of metro modern design. Chair and ottoman available.
SAVE
All Leather Loveseat
949
$
we’ll give you 120% of the difference if you find the same product at a cheaper price elsewhere.*
*See in-store for details
Proud to serve the community for the past 89 years
HOME FURNISHINGS • MATTRESSES • APPLIANCES Monday - Thursday 9am - 5:30pm • Friday 9am - 9pm Saturday 9am - 5:30pm • Sunday Open 12 - 5
fullerwatsonbrandsource.ca
22390 - Lougheed Hwy, Maple Ridge
NOW OPEN SUNDAYS
604-463-4168