Langley Times, July 03, 2014

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Hall up for HOF PAGE 23

THURSDAY July 3, 2014 • www.langleytimes.com

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NEWS Dogs in Cars a Hot Topic

BUSINESS A China Connection

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SPORTS Athletes Ready to Shine

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D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s

Two visitors in colourful hats watch the acts on the main stage during Canada Day-International Festival celebrations held at Willoughby Community Park on Tuesday, July 1. An estimated 50,000 people took in the festivities over a two-day period. For more photos, see page 3.

‘International’ Canada Day draws 50,000 BR EN D A AND E R SO N Tim e s Re po r t e r

The weather may have been a bit on the warm side, but organizers of the first joint Canada Day-International Festival celebration, held on June 30 and July 1, aren’t complaining. “It was hot … but it went very well,” said Sarwan Randhawa.

Randhawa said the organizing committee estimated the number of people who attended this year’s celebration at Willoughby Community Park at about 50,000. Over the course of the two-day event, visitors were treated to live entertainment by 30 different acts on the mainstage. The wide range of children’s attractions offered were popular as well, said Randhawa.

“People definitely enjoyed the dog show and the pony rides. The marketplace was really busy, too,” he said. “The food vendors were extra busy.” The annual celebration concluded Tuesday night with a fireworks display. “In the evening, it was just packed. It was the best I think I’ve ever seen — the most people in one place in Langley,” said Rand-

hawa. “We wanted to make (the celebration) the biggest and best we’ve ever had, and we succeeded — definitely.” Fort Langley also held its annual Canada Day celebration, with events throughout the village — including demonstrations at the historic fort site, and a presentation of this year’s Bard in the Valley production of Julius Caesar.

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D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s pho to s

Top left: Marty and Nikki Robbins, who brought Brayden to Willoughby to take in the sights and sample some of the food, were among the estimated 50,000 who people attended Canada Day-International Festival celebrations at Willoughy Community Park on June 30 and July 1; above: the event was a hit with visitors of all ages, including twoand-a-half year-old Lisa Dobkin-Wong; below: Michael Savage Jr. of Langley grabs some air at the Flip City trampoline.

DAN FER GUSON L an gley Tim es pho to s

Above: During Canada Day celebrations at Fort Langley, Frank and Dagmar Parr from Aldergrove chat with Tim Watkins. Watkins is dressed as a sapper (private) in the 1859 British Royal Engineers; left: Chetan Singh Bhangu, 9, appeared on the Willoughby mainstage with traditional dancers from the Shan-e-Punjab Arts Club of Surrey.


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Kwantlen Polytechnic University has announced its own review of executive compensation after a provincial government review declared the university broke the rules by making two pre-employment payments of $50,000 each to president Alan Davis and former vice president Anne Lavack. The announcement was made by Davis, who said “the recipients, including myself, were unaware that these contracts might be non-compliant in some way with BC public sector regulations.” Davis said it was clear that before he became president “there was an established pattern of issuing pre-employment

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consulting contracts to people being hired to senior positions” and other such contracts were issued before the two that attracted government attention. “I am therefore conducting my own review of these issues, using independent external resources as required,” Davis said in a written statement released by the university. Davis said the results and recommendations of his review “will be shared with the KPU Board and, to the extent allowed by legal and privacy regulations, with the broader KPU community and the public later this summer.” A report by assistant deputy minister Rob Mingay found “failures by Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) to disclose

as required” and to make a detailed disclosure. Advanced Education Minister Amrik Virk, a former Langley RCMP inspector until he was elected to the legislature last May, was on the university’s board when the payments were made. The report did not suggest penalties for Virk or the university but called for rewritten compensation reporting guidelines “emphasize that transparency is the overarching intent of the guidelines.” The opposition New Democrats complained the payments were not included in the reported salaries of the two executives, but were recorded instead as payments to suppliers of goods and services.

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This bumper sticker is being distributed, with photos of the six dogs who died of heat stroke in May. It is hoped that more people will pay attention to the issue during the hot weather months.

‘Hot dog’ fine in City, not Township MO N I Q U E TA M M I N G A Ti me s Re po r t e r

On June 25, Surrey approved a bylaw that would see people fined $500 for leaving a dog in a hot car. In the Township, no bylaws exist to protect dogs stuck in poorly-ventilated vehicles. And it isn’t known whether Langley will look at fining dog owners, said Sean Baker, animal shelter manager. “I have not been in discussions with the Township about such a bylaw,” said Baker. Senior Township bylaw officer Bill Storie was away so was unable to comment. Baker pointed out that Lang-

ley City has had a similar bylaw to Surrey on the books since 2006. There, a person can be fined $100 if the dog is to be found in a poorly ventilated vehicle on a hot day. So far, this year, police and/ or LAPS have been called seven times about dogs left in hot cars. Four calls came in June and three in May, clustered around the hot days. In 2013, there were 21 calls in total. “For a population of over 100,000, that isn’t a lot of calls,” Baker said. “What that tells me is most people get it, that you don’t leave a dog in a vehicle on a hot day.”

But in light of the recent tragedy where six dogs died of heat exhaustion after being left for at least an hour in the back of a dog walker’s truck on a hot day in May, many people are calling for tougher penalties around leaving dogs in hot cars. When someone finds a dog appearing in distress in a hot vehicle, they should call LAPS or the RCMP. “If we get the call first, we go out and assess the situation. If the dog needs to be removed, we call the RCMP. I can assure you that the RCMP are there quickly and very attentive to this issue,” Baker said.

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Liberals fare well

we

Published Tuesday and Thursday at 20258 Fraser Highway, Langley, B.C., V3A 4E6 by Black Press Ltd. Sales agreement No. 3298280. Contents copyright of Black Press.

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Dwayne Weidendorf PUBLISHER

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NEWS newsroom@langleytimes.com 604-514-6751 ADVERTISING admanager@langleytimes.com 604-514-6762 CLASSIFIED 604-575-5555 DELIVERY circulation@langleytimes.com 604-514-6770 Roxane Tizard Circulation Manager

The Langley Times is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C., V9G 1A9. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org

Getting at the root of a fast-growing problem I had some uninvited guests visit the task of peeling it off and, on a my back yard last summer. Some couple of trees, it came off intact, small patches of green ivy popped a huge 50 foot ecosystem. I could up in the ground cover under the almost hear the trees take a deep trees. At first I thought they were breath as the foliage fell to the fitting in well with the other resiground. It was a lot of work but if I dents, filling in some bare spots hadn’t let it go so long, it wouldn’t and cuddling up to the ferns and MCGREGOR have been such a big task. hostas. So I just let them stay. But that’s human nature, isn’t It was mostly green back there it? We tend to leave things alone and I had once thought about in- Jim McGregor until the situation becomes critfusing some colour between the ical. We let depression start yucca plants but then I decided, around our feet and ignore it until with fronds like that, who needs anemo- it has covered our entire body, blocking nes? Nature always seemed to know just out the sunshine. what my little jungle needed. We wait until the vines are squeezing our By fall, when everything else was dying chests. Then we decide to do something to off or going dormant for the winter, I no- free up our hearts and lungs. We wait until ticed my guests were still growing strong our abuses or addictions have choked out and they had even started to work their and smothered the healthy life around way up the fir trees. It actually looked pret- us and then suddenly, we find ourselves ty, giving my forest an English garden look, starving for light. and soon my back yard looked more like The secret I found to rid these vines was Oxford or Cambridge than Brookswood. to do some digging, and find the root of But it showed no signs of stopping and by the problem. Once I had the root firmly in spring it was crowding, choking and cover- my grasp, if I was careful I could pull it all ing everything and it was now well up into away in one piece. In some cases it wasn’t the trees. After some investigation, I found that easy. The invader had to removed bit that when this visitor had first appeared by bit, in small pieces. But the secret was to I should have said, “Sorry, you’re not wel- not give in to it. come here. Move along.” Getting to the root of the problem is It seems this particular strain will devel- where you have to start. It may take getop a root system that robs nutrients from ting down on your knees, it may take askthe tree roots, it attaches to the tree in ing for help, it may mean getting dirty and such a way that it kills the bark and if it you might not like what you find down gets to the canopy, it blocks the photosyn- there, but it’s a good place to begin. thetic process and the weight of the vine Summer is a good time to clean up your can bring the dead tree down. garden, your body and your mind. Take a I followed guidelines and donned a dusk close look at what you’re letting grow in mask, goggles and long sleeves and began there. At least that’s what McGregor says.

says

?

Question langeytimes.com

The prime minister chose an odd day for four federal byelections — Monday, June 30. Voting day came in the midst of what was, for many people, a four-day long weekend. It also occurred on the eve of Canada Day. Two of the byelections were in the Toronto area, and two were in Alberta. Turnout in all four was very low, much lower than in a federal election. One race in Alberta attracted just a 15 percent turnout — lower than in Langley municipal elections. The highest turnout, about 33 per cent, was in downtown Toronto’s Trinity-Spadina byelection, where Liberal Adam Vaughan handily won the seat that had been held by Olivia Chow of the NDP, widow of the late Jack Layton. Chow is running for mayor of Toronto. A better turnbout there isn’t surprising. The seat was competitive and is considered a bellwether for the Liberals in urban Ontario. Justin Trudeau’s leadership of the federal Liberals clearly resonates with the downtown Toronto mood. One should not read too much into the byelection results, considering the low voter turnout. However, the Liberals fared very well, winning the two Toronto seats comfortably and placing second in the two Alberta races behind the Conservatives. Trudeau’s leadership has clearly helped keep Liberal supporters within the fold, and the party should do well in Ontario in the next federal election. That province may in fact be its strongest area of support, given that the provincial Liberals, who are much more closely allied to their federal namesakes in Ontario than in B.C., recently won a majority government there. The Liberals will name their candidate in the new federal riding of Cloverdale-Langley City this week, and given that they will be the first on the ground with a nominated candidate, that should help them here as well. It will be a tough row to how though, given the strong traditional support in both Langley and Cloverdale for the federal Conservatives. That party has not yet set a nomination meeting date, but there are five candidates seeking the nomination, so it will be a closely-watched event. The Conservatives have a good chance to retain government in the October, 2015 federal election — if the Liberal and NDP vote remains split. The NDP should do well in Quebec, but their ability to retain status as the official opposition may be in question, given that the Liberals seem to be building a significant amount of momentum.

of the week

Do you celebrate Canada Day, or is it just another day off work?

Answer online at www.langleytimes.com

No need to be silent they

With final investment decision timelines of several liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects already being extended and a continuing swirl of activity around the world in the race to supply the product to waiting customers, the provincial government has been correctly prudent in not forecasting any tax dollars from the industry in future budget planning. It’s also been fairly prudent and low key in working with northwestern local governments to prepare for what might happen, should the regional population increase. But where the province has been too low key and where being prudent has risks is its so-far muted explanation of the ins and outs of how the industry works, right from how the gas is extracted to when it sails off overseas in its supercooled form. The general consensus, so far, is that natural gas is relatively benign but any industry has its environmental as well as social risks. And to date, the province has been strangely silent in tackling either issue in any substantive form. A bit of a push back is starting to appear around LNG as more questions emerge. And, perhaps in response and in the need to get out in front of the topic, LNG companies have now formed a coalition to explain themselves. And so they should. But that does not mean the province should be silent in its role as the guardian of the public trust when it comes to resource development. — Terrace Standard

say

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Blame the province Editor: I have been reading all of the rhetoric, and letters to the local newspapers about the teachers’ strike, with great interest. Now it’s my turn. Let’s first of all place the blame for the entire mess exactly where it deserves to be — directly at the feet of the provincial government. The BC Liberals, since the dawning of the Gordon Campbell era, have been a right-wing, confrontational party. In my opinion, the government has no interest whatsoever in negotiating fairly with any of their employees. Look at what happened a number of years ago with the Hospital Employees Union — some of the lowest- paid people around. The government legislated them back for three years, with a 15 per cent pay cut. Nurses, doctors, ferry workers, the list goes on and on. All the government cares about is keeping their wealthy friends wealthier. I, for one, support the teachers completely. I ask them to hang in there and not cave in to a very bad, right-wing government, which hopefully will finally be a thing of the past in another three long years. We can always hope. JACK MCEWEN, LANGLEY

Correcting the spin Editor: The “listening” is lacking. I am writing to respond to a news item recently appearing in The Times (June 24) regarding council’s “listening” to the community. As it is apparent that the fall election campaign rhetoric has started, I would like to counter some comments from Mayor Jack Froese regarding his intentions to seek re-election. To quote from the article “Froese said council has shown it listens when people have concerns, citing the Glen Valley land sale which initially caused a furor, but ended with a portion of municipal land being declared a park, and another portion sold to Trinity Western University, and set aside as a conservation area.” As a supporter and admirer of the Watchers of Langley Forest (WOLF), I find it extremely ironic and frankly distasteful to read that a new and more positive political “spin” has been given to the Township’s decision to remove all of the Glen Valley lands from the chopping block. From my perspective, council only chose to “listen to the people” when WOLF and their many community supporters brought the sale to the attention of the local, national and international media. This media assault finally forced the Township to seek a “compromise” which was still in play when the generous offer of the Blaauw family to purchase the Gray pit properties finally resolved the matter. At that time, I strongly suspect that WOLF’s intention was to re-focus their efforts on the westerly properties that had been taken off the market. The McLellan Park designation was more or less a capitulation, in light of the threat of more embarassing lobbying by WOLF. In closing, I hope that this letter helps to set the record straight. I would strongly encourage voters to check the facts before November in order to decide who should be elected to steer the Township for the next four years. DAVID DENYER, LANGLEY

How to deal with cannon noise Editor: Well, it’s that time of year make sure to include the correct again — warm weather, clear skies address of the farm you are comand the explosions from propane plaining about. My experience has cannons amongst the bluebershown that violators often take ry fields of rural Langley. Every advantage of the weekends and year the residents of this normalstatutory holidays (when bylaws ly peaceful region along with our officers are not working) to run neighbours throughout the Fraser cannons day and night. Valley, Surrey and Delta are victimFor more details on the bylaw, go ized by the ear-splitting blasts from to the Township of Langley website, these archaic devices. www.tol.ca and search for Bylaw Some have described it as a war 5005 – Audible Bird Scare Devices. zone, livestock bolt and riders’ Page 4 describes the conditions risk being thrown from their horsthat must be adhered to. es. It is all supposedly to protect If you feel the conditions are bethat precious crop, the B.C. blueing violated outside normal Townberry. This year, the Township ship business hours, you have the should begin its enforcement, inright to call the RCMP non-emercluding issuance of fines of a bygency at 604-532-3200. You must law passed in 2013 to regulate the have the farmer’s address or the use of cannons and other noise RCMP will not attend. making devices. Before you call, please try and Langley Time s file pho to Bylaw 5005 calls for operating find out if the farmer has a sign permits, signage, notification to Kevin Mitchell ran in the 2013 provincial posted or not. If there is no sign nearby horse farms and speci- election as an independent. One of the posted, let the RCMP know that fied hours of use. Like many other issues he was concerned about was the sections 4(a) (“must have a perbylaws in the Township, this is a use of propane cannons by farmers in ru- mit”) and 5(g) (“must post a sign “complaint-driven” bylaw. In oth- ral areas of Langley Township. showing you have a permit”) are er words, only those who submit being violated, in addition to your signed complaints to the approprimain complaint. Advise the RCMP ate department may get results. that bylaw 5005 assigns a $150 fine on a first offence. Also, complainants need to be aware that Langley If you make their job easy, they will attend and help Township policy is to not update you regarding your you get some peace and quiet. complaint. They need to call in to get updates. The For more information on cannons and alternatives, go phone number to call is 604-532-7551. to www.banthecannons.com. The good news is you can (if you wish) submit comKEVIN MITCHELL, plaints daily and on various sections of the bylaw, but LANGLEY

Teachers could forego raise and bonus, with funds used to hire more teachers Editor: After reading Brandon Southern’s letter which was published in The Times on June 17, I thought it took a lot of courage for him to write it, as he could be ostracized by some teachers for doing so. I hope that will not be the case. However, after reading the response to his letter by Alexia Anastasiou (The Times, June 26), I feel compelled to write. First, I feel very sorry for teachers with the present classroom conditions. The remedy seems logical. Obviously, smaller class sizes are needed along with additional trained teachers for special needs students. So why don’t the teachers forego some of the expensive benefits they are requesting, such as an enormous

pay increase and $5,000 signing bonus? Instead, the money could be used to hire more teachers. Brandon Southern made a comment to this effect in his letter, and I am sure there are many others who would agree. Somehow, the teachers don’t get it — but it would lighten their load in the classroom and, as a result, be beneficial to students. Teachers keep saying they are on strike for students, not monetary gain. So this seems like a win-win situation to me. JOY STADNYK, LANGLEY

The Langley Times reserves the right to reject unsigned letters. Letters are edited for brevity, legality and taste. CONTACT EDITOR FRANK BUCHOLTZ 604.533.4157 DROP OFF or EMAIL LETTERS TO newsroom@langleytimes.com

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 9

10-year-old hopes to knock cancer ‘out of the park’

M O N I Q U E TA M M I N G A Tim e s Re po r t e r

A Langley girl’s softball family is determined to do everything they can to help the talented 10-year-old knock cancer right out of the park. North Langley Softball Devils 10-year-olds went into provincials with heavy hearts, missing one of their key players. Katelynn Bartlett, 10, loves playing softball, alongside her twin sister Allyson. Currently, the Shortreed Elementary student is in a fight for her life battling stage four cancer at B.C. Children’s Hospital. In early April, Katelynn complained of back pain. Since she plays competitive softball and is very active, her parents Carrie and Matt thought it may be a pulled muscle. But the pain became worse, sending her to the ER two weeks later. By the May long weekend, Katelynn was in Children’s and her parents were given the devastating news that their daughter had stage four Rhabdomyosaaroma, a rare childhood cancer. That was six weeks ago, and the Bartlett family’s world was turned upside down. “We were told she would require extreme chemo treatment for at least a year and may require a bone marrow transplant,” said her dad Matt. Her ball family, North Langley

Softball were deter“It blew my mind mined to help and how many people did just that on Facame together to ther’s Day. support Katelynn. “I was hoping to It was really emoraise about $1,000 tional. The park for the family but was packed,” said we ended up makStefanyk. ing close to $12,000,” Matt was able to said NL Royals coach be at his daughSteve Stefanyk, who ter Allyson’s game put together the against the Royals fundraising day. on the Monday. SteGirls softball fanyk was able to teams ages 9 to 13 present the cheque K ATELY N N showed up with to him there. BA RTLETT their families, “Honestly, it is the friends and coachleast we could do. es to support Katelynn at the I have an 11-year-old daughter all-day tournament that saw myself and really, this fundmixed-ages play 45-minute raiser was what any person games at Dorothy Peacock. would do when they find out a There were coaches from Ab- 10-year-old girl has cancer.” botsford and Aldergrove, LangMatt said Katelynn’s oncolley Xtreme players and mem- ogist is very optimistic, saying bers of Katelynn’s sister’s team, she is already showing signs of Surrey Storm. major improvement. But she’s Krysten, Katelynn’s 14-year- been in terrible pain of late. The old sister, was there and visibly extreme chemo they put her on moved by the show of support caused pancreatitis. for her sister, said Anita van “The road ahead will be long Weerden, who also helped or- and hard with plenty of ups ganize the event. and downs,” said Matt. “But we Surrey Storm, a rep team, ran will be here alongside Katelynn the 50/50 for the day, which helping her win this fight.” raised $800. Matt and Carrie will not go Other older players ran a lol- back to work for some time, due lipop stand with ‘cancer sucks’ to the need to stay with her. A posted on the suckers. trust account has been set up in Local businesses donated gift Matt Bartlett’s name at TD Canabags and there was an auction. da Trust, account #9193-6102301.

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10 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Will B.C. devolve into a variety of regions?

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The Supreme Court er David Vickers, who of Canada’s landmark rejected B.C.’s position decision on aboriginal that the economic valtitle held by the Tsilue of the timber to the hqot’in Nation leaves province overrode the many questions to be then-vaguely defined answered. aboriginal title. Perhaps the biggest is Here’s McLachlin’s BC this: Will British Columdefinition: bia exist as we know “The nature of aborigiit today by the end of nal title is that it confers Tom Fletcher this century? Or will on the group that holds it devolve into dozens it the exclusive right to of semi-autonomous regions, decide how land is used and the through treaties or similar court right to benefit from those uses, actions, as the only Canadian subject to the restriction that province that never completed the uses must be consistent historic treaties? with the group nature of the inThe Tsilhqot’in decision ap- terest and the enjoyment of the pears to uphold the key find- land by future generations.” ing of the 2007 trial, that 1,700 That’s not land ownership square kilometres of the Nemi- in the fee-simple sense of the ah Valley west of Williams Lake term. It locks in communal are essentially owned by the ownership, which I and many people who occupied it hun- others have argued is at the root dreds if not thousands of years of the poverty seen in many abago. original communities. It’s not quite ownership. FedAnother big question: Is there eral and provincial jurisdiction any future for B.C.’s 20-year-old still applies, and their authority treaty process, or will this precvaries with the strength of the edent-setting case send more aboriginal title claim. First Nations to court, or to the Chief Justice Beverley Mc- barricades as the Tsilhqot’in Lachlin ruled that the province did on a logging road in 1983? overstepped its authority by One of the unique advantagissuing logging permits in the es that have emerged from the valley in 1983. McLachlin noted handful of modern treaties in that lawyers for B.C. first argued B.C. is that aboriginal commuthat the logging was to control nities have more options in land mountain pine beetle, then ownership. By voluntary agreedropped that argument in its ment, they can convert land to first appeal. She also upheld the fee-simple ownership, making decision of the trial judge, one- it available for mortgage or sale. time NDP leadership contend- Modern treaty holders also get

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out from under the federal Indian Act, which remains in force despite this latest decision. One of the big questions asked in the days after the Tsilhqot’in decision was this: Is the Northern Gateway pipeline project dead? None of the aboriginal communities along the pipeline route has this kind of declared aboriginal title. Few if any would have a similar strength of claim as the Tsilhqot’in, who fought a small war to defend their territory from a wave of gold seekers in the 1860s. One that does is the Haida Nation, whose occupation of a beautiful group of islands was long defended militarily, and never challenged by any other aboriginal group. Among others, the Haida Nation was represented in the Tsilhqot’in case as interveners. Council of the Haida Nation president Peter Lantin said after the decision that his team is preparing its own aboriginal title case for trial. Few doubt that this assertion of title will be successful, either by negotiation or court ruling. But there is a unique aspect to the Haida claim that would set another precedent. They claim title to the ocean around Haida Gwaii, a challenge to anyone wishing to sail tankers through. Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. tfletcher@blackpress.ca

A Supreme Court judge has ruled against a Langley man who wanted to withdraw his guilty plea for owning an illegal and loaded gun. On May 29 in New Westminster, Justice Kenneth Ball ruled that Tyler Jay O’Neill could not withdraw his guilty plea, which carries a mandatory minimum jail sentence. O’Neill’s lawyer argued that he wasn’t given proper legal advice prior to entering the plea

and wasn’t provided proper disclosure of all documents. In June 2010, Langley RCMP executed search warrants on four properties in Langley and Surrey, including O’Neill’s on 44 Avenue in Brookswood. He lived there with his wife, and their one-year-old and eight-week old children. RCMP found a grow operation of 392 plants in the basement. During the search, they seized a safe. Inside the locked safe

was a fully-loaded revolver. O’Neill said it was a gift from his father when he turned 16. O’Neill pleaded guilty in September 2013 to possession of an illegal firearm and the Crown dropped the charges in relation to the grow operation. Ball rejected O’Neill’s request, deciding that he was represented by experienced counsel and there is no reason given for the courts to allow him to withdraw his plea.

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 11

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12 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

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Erikson’s Daylily Gardens 13th Annual Open House July 12 and 13, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Over 3,200 daylilies, lilies, hosta, unusual perennials and specimen trees. VanDusen Master Gardeners will be on hand to answer gardening questions. Admission by donation, supporting B.C. Children’s Hospital. www.eriksonsdaylilygardens.com or 604-856-5758. Note: not wheelchair, walker or stroller accessible. Fibromyalgia Well Spring Foundation Fourth Annual Western Hoedown Aug. 16, 1 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at 25039 8 Ave. Admission $10 for adults. $5 for kids. Under 5 free. Call 778-278-3697 for tickets.

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Langley Community Farmers Market every Wednesday until October 8, 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the Kwantlen Polytechnic University campus courtyard, 20901 Langley Bypass. Fresh, local and organic with over 40 vendors and 30 minutes free parking. www. lcfm.ca.

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Langley Blind And Visually Impaired Group meets the last Thursday of every month at 1:30 p.m. at Evergreen Timbers, 5464 203 St. For more info,

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LMHA Penny Pincher thrift store needs volunteers for markers, sorters, cashiers and security. Applications available at store, 20211 56 Ave. Singles Social and Walking Club seeks new members age 45 and up. For details, call Christina at 604-3757732 or Dorothy at 604-594-1260 or email singsocwc@gmail.com. Learn to meditate Free heart-centered practice for those seeking real change from the inside out. Call 604510-9787 or email: divinetraveller@ gmail.com. Drop-in Tennis, Mixed Doubles Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5:30 p.m. through October, weather permitting at Brookswood Secondary, 208 St. 37A Ave. Horse Protection Society of BC in South Langley needs volunteers. Also looking for someone who lives close by to work in their on-site thrift barn, taking pictures and selling items online. Please contact Gena Sandli at 250-295-0775. The Senior Men’s golf club at Poppy Estate Golf Course is looking for new members 55 years or older. Information on the club can be found on club website www.poppyseniormensgolf. com or phone 604-530-4501. FOOD AND FRIENDS a division of Langley Meals on Wheels. Seniors (55 or better) are invited to enjoy a social luncheon that includes guest speakers, great food, and good company. Cost: $5. Time: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at various locations and days of the week. For more info, phone 604533-1679 or email: Ashley@langleymealsonwheels.com. Post your event. Click on calendar & ‘add event.’

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 13

Appealing to the younger buyer at PortLiving’s Midtown In Metro Vancouver’s thriving housing market, the younger buyer is an important piece of the puzzle, and PortLiving’s Midtown development in Mount Pleasant is a project that is hitting all the right notes for that demographic. “Some neighbourhoods are more appealing to a younger buyer,” says Tobi Reyes, founder of PortLiving. “Mount Pleasant is one of those.” Midtown is a low-rise mixed-used condominium development that is focusing on being both sustainable and

connected. “There’s a lot of heritage in this area,” Reyes says. “We wanted to add to this existing community, not change it. It’s all about getting the vibe of the neighbourhood.” PortLiving conducted the Midtown Experiment earlier this year, allowing businesses to open a pop-up shop for a week to gauge how popular they would be for local residents. Among the requests they had was a coffee shop and a microbrewery. “The sense of identity in the context of a neighbourhood

NEW HOME DEVELOPMENT

is important to people,” Reyes says. “This area is a bit underserved and a bit overlooked. We wanted to create a sense of community.” The homes themselves are also appealing to a younger buyer, whether they are first-time homeowners or those looking to upgrade from their current place. Among the features are larger covered patios and a shared communal courtyard to encourage mingling with your neighbours. Homeowners will also have access to bazinga!, a social network that connects you with your neighbours, property manager and the developer, as well as a place to keep documents such as warranties and appliance manuals organized. Eco-conscious living is top of mind at Midtown, and homeowners can be part of that with the One Earth Eco Strata Guide, which will offer sustainable living tips for buyers. Reyes is also the director and co-founder of One Earth, so sustainability is extremely important to him. “The buyer support and community support has been really encouraging,” he says. For more information about PortLiving’s Midtown, visit www.livingmidtown.com or call out 604-563-3330.

Submitted photos

The homes at Misson Group Homes’ Secret Ridge are spacious and elegant, with plenty of natural light, custom wood shaker cabinetry in the kitchen, above, luxurious bathrooms, top right, and tons of space for entertaining or relaxing.

A hidden gem is found at Secret Ridge By Kerry Vital

Secret Ridge, built by Mission Group Homes on Coquitlam’s Burke Mountain, is no longer a secret due to its amazing location, stunning homes and large floorplans. “You won’t find this anywhere else in Metro Vancouver,” says sales manager Barbara Hughes. “They feel like single-family homes, without the maintenance and upkeep.” The duplex homes, which Mission Group calls “paired homes” and which are more than double the size of a usual townhome, have already garnered an extremely positive response. The project is over 75 per cent sold, and Hughes notes that the location is one of the biggest draws. “It’s a beautiful setting,” she says. “There’s no one near you, so it feels incredibly private.” Secret Ridge is situated within the Foothills at Burke Mountain community, and bordered by East and West Smiling Creek, making your new home feel like it’s a part of nature. “This a really unique product offering in a beautiful, growing community,” says JoAnne Adamson, director of sales at Mission Group. “It’s an ideal location; there’s no one else offering this kind of opportunity.”

Craftsman-style architecture lends itself to great curb appeal, along with spacious southfacing covered decks and patios, double-wide attached garages and painted wooden fences surrounding each yard. Inside, rich wood laminate flooring throughout the main living areas and soaring vaulted ceilings (with many up to 17 feet) on the main floor welcome you home. The gourmet kitchen includes custom wood shaker cabinetry, complemented by double thick polished granite countertops with a full-height mosaic tiled backsplash, an expansive kitchen island and undercabinet lighting for extra illumination while you cook. Homeowners can choose Kitchen Aid stainless-steel appliances as an optional upgrade. Luxurious bathrooms are another feature of Secret Ridge. All of them include custom wood shaker cabinetry, with the master ensuite going above and beyond with their own double thick granite countertops and large format polished porcelain tile flooring. The main bathroom and secondary ensuite (depending on floor plan) have square-edge laminate countertops, a full-width vanity mirror and a soaker tub and/or full height shower with a gorgeous tile surround. The master-on-main floorplans have been appealing to downsizers and young families alike, Hughes says. One of the floorplans actually has two master suites; one on the main floor and one on the upper floor. “It works well for people who have family living with them,” Hughes says. “It’s very

appealing that way.” Because the homes are paired with another one, all of them are prime corner homes, and have been built wider than any other home in the area. “I can’t stress enough how large these homes feel,” Hughes says. “ Homeowners at Secret Ridge are within easy driving distance to everything the Tri Cities have to offer, including dining,

shopping, leisure opportunities and excellent schools. Burke Mountain itself is steadily growing, with its own restaurants, retail opportunities, trails and schools. Remaining homes at Secret Ridge start at $669,900. For more information, visit www. secretridge.ca, call 604-916-8805 or stop by the display home at #105-3458 Burke Village Promenade, open Saturday to Wednesday between noon and 5 p.m.


14 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

A L S O I N C LU D E S

105 AVE

100 AVE

- VISIT US TODAY -

SELLING W O N 9235 McBride Street

Open Daily (except Fridays) 12 –5pm

mcbridestation.com

M

- 52 -

master on the main & traditional townhomes

M AVIS

ES

T

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OV

AV

ID

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96

BR

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MC

AV

cBride Station is a collection of 52 authentic character homes modelled on local historical buildings and filled with contemporary features and finishes. Here, you’ll be part of a vibrant community that’s carrying on good traditions and building a bright future.

9235 McBride Street Fort Langley, BC 604.888.7172

This is currently not an offering for sale. Any such offering can only be made with a disclosure statement. E.&.O.E.

Developed by:

Marketed by:

156 ST

154 ST

Guildford Town Centre

152 ST

104 AVE


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 15

5Y FI E A NA R , NC 2 .9 IN 5 % G*

Bright&Open Mason&Green by Polygon is the start of something new. With input from homeowners and people like you, we designed a new generation of two and three bedroom townhomes from the side-by-side parking garage on up. The result is open floorplans with more light, more living space, more storage, a main-floor powder room, and a way of life that feels just right. The result is Mason&Green.

Priced from $ 314,900 HIG

HW AY 1

7848 – 209th Street, Langley Open Noon to 6pm daily (except Friday)

N

209TH ST

72ND AVE

208TH ST

200TH ST

80TH AVE

Telephone: 604.882.5382 Email: masonandgreen@polyhomes.com *Special financing promotion available for a limited time. Consult sales staff for details.


16 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

LOWEST PRICE, BEST QUALITY, AND CENTRAL LOCATION 2 NEW IN-BUILDING DISPLAY SUITES

WALKING DISTANCE TO ALL YOUR AMENITIES

2 BEDROOM + 2 BATHROOM $229,800 TO $300,900 LIMITED TIME SAVINGS UP TO $15,000 In-building Presentation Centre 20068 Fraser Hwy Langley Open 12-5pm daily (closed Fridays) and by appointment

604.539.2200 LIVE a tVA RSIT Y.COM *Developer reserves the right to change the information herein. Renderings and images are approximate only. E. & O.E.


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 17

FREE EVALUATION

TAKEN OUT OF COUNTRY LIVING MAGAZINE

Gorgeous 4800 sq.ft. two storey with full, finished bsmt plus a 800 sq.ft. detached triple garage on spectacular 4.6 acres just minutes to Thunderbird Equestrian Estates. Grand kitchen, beautiful wood floors, river rock fireplace in the famrm. Master bdrm with the 3rd f/place, barreled ceilings, large games room upstairs. Front and back covered porch. Incredible landscaping with backyard firepit, soothing water feature, iron gates at the entry. Drive by 7519 254 Street. Please see the stunning virtual tour to truly appreciate everything this home has to offer. $2,188,000.

CAMBRIDGE COURT

1204 sq.ft 2 bedroom condo in the heart of Langley. Immaculate TOP FLOOR, END unit. Excellent location…close to bus and shopping. Large deck and spacious kitchen. Building is very well managed. #402-5646 200 Street. $209,900.

1.17 ACRES – DETACHED SHOP

Custom built 5665 sq.ft. two storey plus basement on a beautiful, private 1.17 acre. Outdoor f/place, covered deck, soothing water feature. Wine cellar, irrigation, in home theatre, 2 bay detached heated shop. RV parking. Stunning kitchen, 2 heat pumps, walk out basement, legal suite. So many details and features to mention. Drive by 22890 76A Ave. $1,699,000

HIGH POINT ESTATES

No expense spared on this gorgeous 2719 sq.ft rancher on a .72 acre landscaped and private lot. Beautiful great room concept, grand kitchen with every detail in place. Spa like ensuite off the master bedroom. Hardwood floors, unique ceiling architecture, French doors, lavish lighting and beautiful finishing detail throughout. Separate garage. Very desirable Langley location. Drive by 19816 1st Avenue. $1,599,000

PROVINCETON

FORT LANGLEY

5 ACRE RETREAT

The Ridge at Provinceton featuring this beautiful two storey plus bsmt that waits for your finishing. Backing on park and greenbelt. Beautiful colonial style home on 4037 sq.ft. private lot. Hardy plank siding, open floor plan, 9’ ceilings, French doors, vaulted ceilings. 18208 70 Avenue. $619,900.

Walk to the village, swimming pool and schools from this spacious 5683 sq.ft two storey plus finished basement home. Over 10,000 sq.ft landscaped lot with large patio. 7 pce ensuite, hand scraped floors, 19’ river rock fireplace, waffled ceilings, large kitchen with steam oven, w/in pantry and granite island. Full wine cellar. Plus legal basement Suite. So many features to mention. 8906 Trattle St. $1,349,000

Beautiful Sunshine Bay Resort, 2000 sq.ft lodge on .62 of an acre. Can easily sleep up to twenty. Extensive renovations, granite, cozy fireplace, 150’ of dock space and large outdoor deck. Absolutely a spectacular piece of paradise. Call Danny for details. $699,000

DANNY EVANS • 604-649-1067 www.dannyevans.ca

WE BOUGHT AT MARQUee Serena, MIA & Nabil Proud, new Marquee HomeOwners

reason to buy: TRUe affordability

We live in a condo right now, and didn’t think we would ever be able to afford such a nice place! The prices at Marquee are ]LY` YLHZVUHISL MVY ^OH[ `V\ NL[ 0[ OHZ ]LY` ÄUL KL[HPS ^VYR HUK THRLZ V\Y ÄYZ[ OVTL ]LY` JVTM` HUK OVTL` LZWLJPHSS` for our daughter. Marquee is really the best bang for your buck! Come check them out...you won’t want to leave...just like us!

SALES CENTRE & DISPLAYS

19752 55A AVE, LANGLEY open daily: noon – 5pm

MOVE-IN READY!

HOMES START FROM

289,900

$

VISIT MARQUEELIVING.COM OR CALL 604.427.3550

*

INCLUDING NET GST!

*Price net of incentives. Prices, discounts and incentives are subject to change without notice. Visit our Marquee Sales Team today for full details. E. & O. E.


18 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Full walk-in master closet

$2 0, 00

0* SU M M ER

Spacious master bedroom

O N

Spa inspired ensuite with 5 foot walkin shower, separate soaker tub, his & her sinks, under vanity motion light, exquisite tiling detail.

Gorgeous Island kitchen with tall pantry. Featuring quartz or granite countertops, sparkling porcelain back splash, under cabinet task lighting, above cabinet highlighting, and stylish island pendants.

SA LE

SIZE & QUALITY MATTER! MOVE-IN SOON!

N O W !

ONE, TWO & TWO + DEN HOMES FROM THE $150’s - $350’s

Den perfect for home office or hobby room such as sewing or crafting.

Exquisite tile details, sleek one piece toilets and cool under cabinet motion light for those middle of the night bathroom trips. Sure to impress all your guests.

Even the second bedroom is spacious!

Open and Spacious Living and Dining. Seat up to 8 for dinner or book the chef kitchen and dining lounge in the Trilogy Club for large gatherings.

Larger than average decks to enjoy the green belt

1230 SQ FT 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom & Den Open Concept - PLAN P3

SIMPLY LANGLEY’S MOST CONVENIENT MASTER PLANNED COMMUNITY. ONE BED UP TO TWO BED & DEN HOMES FROM THE $140’s - $370’s ELEMENTS IN LANGLEY SITUATED AT 20211 66TH AVENUE LANGLEY BC. OPEN DAILY NOON - 5PM (CLOSED FRIDAYS)

ELEMENTSINLANGLEY.COM 604.533.7718 *Prices quoted exclude taxes and are subject to change without prior notice. $20,000 pre- completion Summer sale is available on phase 3 homes only, ready to enjoy this winter. $150’s to $350’s quoted price already has the $20,000 promotion deducted. E.&O.E. Sales and marketing by Fifth Avenue Real Estate Marketing Ltd. fifthave.ca


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 19

ALDERGROVE • BROOKSWOOD • FORT LANGLEY • MURRAYVILLE • WALNUT GROVE • WILLOUGHBY

LANGLEY

YOU SNOOZE YOU LOSE OVER 70% SOLD!

20 HOMES REMAINING UNDER $229,900 8 HOMES REMAINING UNDER $200,000 DON’T MISS YOUR BEST OPPORTUNITY TO BUY IN 2014. MOVE IN TODAY.

604.534.6000 cornerstoneliving.ca Sales Centre and three fully-furnished Display Homes 56th & 210A St, Langley | Open daily (closed Friday) from 12 to 5 pm. Marcon Homes (Cornerstone) Ltd.

Limited time offer. Prices subject to change without notice. Please see our sales representative for further details and exact terms of this offer. E. & O.E.


20 Thursday, July 3, 2014

Tom Devlin

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Lynn Brice-Polegato

Anne Chow

Sam Otter

Miriam Testini

Nancy Smith

Nicol Dvornicka

46766 Woodspring Place, Chilliwack

Ann Lapierre

Susan Marquis

Stunning views of the valley, this well appointed home has a unique floor plan. Hosting 3 bdrms, 1 on the main (20x18) with French doors leading to a park-like extremely private backyard. A gardeners delight, this greenspace features Lefferson Creek Trail. Come sit in the various quaint areas where you hear the gentle sound of Lefferson Creek. Formal living & dining room, with a den in front of home. Warm & bright, large open kitchen, with eating area, cozy family room, all of which overlook a serene spectacular outdoor living space. Entertainers dream!!! Upper floor has spacious master bdrm with spa like ensuite, walk-in closet, private balcony, overlooking a “one of a kind� backyard. Come see, you won’t want to leave.

Gabe Kadoranian

$

460,500

Lynn Brice-Polegato 604.209.5545

$

604.889.8600 devlingroup.ca

744,900

#26-20038 70 Ave, Langley Great location, this 3 bed, 2.5 bath unit looks out to a beautiful greenspace/forest. Functional layout with great sized rooms. A wonderful living/entertainment area with a large deck. Very bright kitchen that offers s/s appliances, granite countertops and not only a great eating area but a dining area, also the main also has the coveted 2pc bath that offers a great convenience. Close to shops and RC Garnett Elementary, Mountain High school. This will not last.

604.889.8600 devlingroup.ca

Bill Harrison

reduced to

$

299,000

Wonderful all on one level home in the heart of Cloverdale. This home would be great for first time buyers or those downsizing. This 3 bedroom rancher on a wonderful south facing lot with a great detached garage/shop with lane access. This home has a spacious layout with a wonderful quiet street. Close to shops, schools and public transit. Watch the kids on the play structure while you relax on the covered deck.

$

Sam Otter 604.533.3939

557,500

Neal Ewers

Tom Devlin

$

604.889.8600 devlingroup.ca

26946 27B Avenue, Aldergrove Beautiful bright home in a wonderful neighbourhood easy walk to all levels of schools, community centre, library and skating rink. Well laid out open plan with 10’ trayed ceilings, classic oak kitchen, beautiful hardwood flooring - radiant heat tiled entry & kitchen, tiled and covered back deck to enjoy even the rainy evenings. This home sits on a large fully fenced lot with plenty of privacy and a two car garage with double doors. Great place to raise your kids! Close to schools & shopping. Call now for your private viewing - this one won’t last!

489,000

16856 57B Avenue, Cloverdale RICHARDSON RIDGE BEAUTY! This one of a kind custom built 6 bedroom, 6 bathroom home on a cul-de-sac will fill the needs of any family. 7 zone hotwater heat, the whole main floor has 2 zone radiant infloor heat as does the heated garage. The master suite is 450 sqft on its own. This home has insulated interior walls and floors. A large kitchen and a great eating area. Entertaining in this home is a must, multiple auto awnings on the windows and decks, 2 beautiful fountains with lights and timers. The handy person of the home will enjoy the workshop with its own bathroom. The basement has the quality as the rest of the house with its own electric panel and laundry area. RV/BOAT parking in the rear. The home has too much to list, Come and see.

$

517,500

Anny Kosovic 604-837-2905

Ata Miri

Tom Devlin

$

604.889.8600 devlingroup.ca

728,888 Bronsson Harder

Colleen Allen

NEW LISTING: 7246 202 Street, Langley SOUGHT AFTER JERICHCO RIDGE!! Spectacular 3,725 SF home has TILED ROOF AND RADIANT HEAT with Traditional Plan, Den on the main and open Concept KIT and F/Room and a FULL Bath on the main. Gorgeous Finishing throughout include Granite Entry, Maple and Granite Kit w/SS App (Gas stove), Crown mouldings. 4 Bedrooms up with 3 ensuite Baths and 2 walk in closets! Bsmt has 2 bedroom suite plus REC/MEDIA Room for upstairs use. Brand new paint job outside and freshly landscaped. Beautifully maintained and MOVE IN READY!!!

NEW LISTING: 20193 74 Avenue, Langley BEST LOCATION IN JERICHO RIDGE! Backing onto treed Green Space, on a quiet Street, this 3,321 SF “GEM� is spotless and meticulously maintained. The Traditional Plan offers both LVG & DIN Room W/Rich Brazilian Hardwood. Den w/Attractive millwork detail, 2 F/P (1 W/Rock detail) and open Kitchen & FAM Room ++ Extra Large Laundry Rm. Beautiful Maple cabinetry in Kitchen (W/Under mounted lighting) & Granite counters & Island, Travertine Tile and Pantry++ Lots of Crowns and Pots. Covered Deck off the kitchen leads to additional deck and No Maintenance Yard! 4 Bedrooms up W/Large Master (5 piece ensuite & WI closet). New 1 or 2 Bedroom Suite in BSMT (Never been used) w/laundry + Rec/Media Rm for upstairs use. Pride of Ownership!

Ann LaPierre or Susan Marquis

$

604.889.1517 or 604.220.1879

659,900

Ann LaPierre or Susan Marquis

ONE DAY! IN D L O S Ann LaPierre or Susan Marquis $

Martin Steward

664,900

21024 84 Avenue, Langley

RARE OPPORTUNITY! CUSTOM BUILT & Meticulously Designed with WEST COAST Flair & tucked into a Cul-de-sac on a Fabulous, private 9,000 SF lot in the Heart of Willoughby! No detail was spared in this exceptional home. ICF Concrete Foundation &InFloor Zoned Radiant Heat. Soaring Ceiling with Chalet Style windows highlight spacious Great Room Plan w/Hand Scraped Maple Hardwood, Custom Cherry Cabinets, Solid Granite, HIGH-E ND S/S appls, Walk-in Pantry & Den on main. 3 oversized Bdrm’s up include Huge Master & To Die For Ensuite (CUSTOM CONTROLLED SHOWER, RAIN HEAD & BODY JETS)! High-end igh-end 1 Bdrm Suite & Media/Bdrm. Professionally Landscaped, B/I Rock BBQ, Water Feature & Mature Trees for complete privacy. Truly a UNIQUE and Speciall Home!

604.889.1517 or 604.220.1879

$

604.889.1517 or 604.220.1879

19698 71 Avenue, Langley

879,000 879 000

HUGE FAMILY FRIENDLY HOME in PRIME YORKSON Location on a 5,386 sq ft lot. This Beauty checks off all the “MUST HAVE’s�. 4,348 sq ft, 4 Bdrm’s and 3 Bath’s up, Den on main W/Full Bath, Open Plan, Split Staircase & High Ceilings, Win Seats, 3 Big sundecks and Walk-in Hall closet!! Kit has rich maple cabinets, thick Granite, Samsung & Jenn-Air Appl (5 Burner gas Range), Walk in Pantry (Great storage everywhere). Extra large bdrms up (all with ensuites). Master retreat w/covered sundeck)! BIG back-yard w/Gazebo and sit up bar! BSMT has HUGE REC/MEDIA Rm, Craft room AND a 2 BDRM suite. All this and a GREAT PRICE!!

Ann LaPierre or Susan Marquis 604.889.1517 or 604.220.1879

Y! SOLD IN ONE DA S) (MULTIPL$E OFFER

#156 - 19653 Willowbrook Drive, Langley

604-533-3939 toll free 1-888-551-3939 suttonwestcoast.com

Stan Sturwold

Fra

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wy .

Marla Lynch

k Dr.

WestCoast Realty™ You’ve found a home

George Porter

Heather isaac

689,900

wbroo

Darren Martin

Carolyn Carson

Willlo

Darren Giesbrecht

Ray Lewis

17408 59 Avenue, Cloverdale

19479 66A Street, Clayton Heights, Surrey

Janet Lee

Hollie De Boer

Tom Devlin

Tom Devlin Stunning 4 bed, 4 bath and two den family home located in Clayton Village. What a gem this home is; boasting an amazing open floor plan complimented by neutral coloured paint and laminate flooring. The huge backyard is a true standout in the neighbourhood. The kitchen features stainless appliances, granite counters, slate backsplash and a large island. The fully finished basement has great suite potential with separate entrance.

Lisa Rassak

6599 186A Street, Cloverdale Beautiful 3 level home on a very appealing cul-de-sac. You will be very impressed with the open concept main floor and Chefs Dream kitchen with double wall ovens and gas cooktop perfect for entertaining or even a cooking class or two. Upstairs offers 4 large bedrooms with large closets, 2 masters with their own ensuites. The basement offers 2 more bedrooms, large rec room and wet bar. The wonderfully cared for garden and yard awaits family, friends or your wonderful neighbors on those summer night. This home offers a wonderful lifestyle.

Mary Young

Cheryl Kraut

Janet Fisher

Kathy Peltz

Willowbrook Mall

Suzanne Carswell Managing Broker

Parm Rai

Larissa Van Dam

Ken Heppner

Anny Kosovic

Gary Sidhu

Mike McAuley

Inderjit Shokar

Rob Hoffman

Robert Kowalewski


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 21

Stan Sturwold

CGA

604.855.2122 604.533.3939 Office

OPEN HOUSE Sunday, July 6 | 1 - 3 pm 14 - 26970 32 Ave, Aldergrove

Family Townhome, 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, 1360 Sq Ft. Fa Over $35,000 spent in upgrades. NEWER everything. High End Kitchen, Stainless Steel appliances, Doors, Lighting, Engineered Laminate, carpets, elegant mouldings thru out, vinyl windows. Brand new paint , Full Tile Backsplash ,under cabinet lighting, Iron stair railings. Strong Strata as well . Large Fenced Backyard facing east offering privacy and concrete maintenance free patio. Enjoy your morning coffee in the sunshine . Walk to school and parks across the street . Pet friendly. Vacant - Immediate possession possible.

$1,749,000

$249,900 livingwestcoast.ca | stansturwold@shaw.ca

The Residences at Village Square This unit offers a great lifestyle for all seasons. Ideal 2BR corner unit with nice updates, freshly painted, and immaculately cared for. High ceilings, shaker wood cabinets and tile backsplash, cozy fireplace, living room nicely laid out for easy living, plus a large patio for enjoying the afternoon sun. 55+ complex is a complete lifestyle of choice with planned social activities, morning coffee in lounge area, etc. Other amenities include a media room, fitness center, fireplace lounge, rooftop patio, BBQ, courtyard and a putting green. Walking distance to almost everything you need; grocery, pharmacy, coffee shops, walk-in clinics, restaurants, salon, movie theatre, transit. Vacant, Easy to show! Quick completion possible!

00

,9 225

$

Rob Uveges 604-374-6747

• New coach house 1 bedroom suite. Rents for 850/mo

PRUDENTIAL Power Play Realty

Upcoming Event Tea & Tour with Bette Come in and cool off with an ice tea and book your personal visit of Chartwell Renaissance. We have large one bedroom and one bedroom + den available. Ask about our Monarch Club. Please call to book your tour.

• 5 acre lot • RU3 in ALR • Build your dream home

6676 - 203rd St., Langley, BC Call 778-726-0842 Chartwell offers residents a secure and rewarding lifestyle that they can be happy to call home. • Court date July 10


22 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

GA RY AHUJ A @LangleyTSpo rts 604.514.6754 • b us i nes s @l angl ey ti m es .com

Delegation meets with or separation? businesses and councils

Going through a

divorce

DAN FER GUSON Tim es Reporter

Free help with doing your own separation agreement … and more

familylaw.lss.bc.ca/go/sa

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A Taiwanese trade delegation told representatives of local businesses and both Langley councils that Canadian businesses seeking access to mainland China should consider using Taiwan as a bridge to that market. The morning meeting last week (June 26) at the local campus of Kwantlen Polytechnic University drew about 30 participants. It was hosted by the Greater Langley Chamber of Commerce. In his opening remarks, Langley MP Mark Warawa called Taiwan the “gateway” to Asian markets for local business, saying the island nation is the “highest of high-tech” economies. Dr. Chi-Kung Liu, diplomatic head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (TECO) in Canada, said westerners tend to “overlook” Taiwan when they are planning to enter the Asian markets. Some even confuse it with Thailand, he said. Liu said Taiwanese businesses can play a “bridging role” for B.C. businesses by sharing their in-depth knowledge of mainland China with Canadians. Liu referred to himself as an “ambassador” when he spoke at the Langley meeting, but that is not technically correct. Mainland China does not recognize Taiwan as an independent country and has refused to trade with countries that do not agree to its “One China” policy. When Canada formally opened diplomatic relations with mainland China in 1970, the written agreement said

D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s

A trade delegation from Taiwan told representatives of local businesses and both Langley councils that Canadian businesses seeking access to mainland China should consider Taiwan as a “bridge” to China. Dr. Chi-Kung Liu (left to right), diplomatic head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (TECO) in Canada, Langley MP Mark Warawa and William Wu, Liu’s executive assistant, were among more than two dozen who participated in the meeting at Kwantlen Polytechnic University. the Canadian government acknowledges the People’s Republic of China is the “sole legal government of China” and “takes note” of China’s position that Taiwan is an “inalienable part of the [mainland] territory.” However, Canada maintains a trade office in Taiwan that functions as an embassy in everything but name, while Taiwan does the same with its trade office in Ottawa. Government of Canada figures show trade with Taiwan totaled $5.3 billion in 2010, consisting of $1.3 billion in Canadian exports to Taiwan and $4 billion in imports from Taiwan. B.C. made up the largest portion of Canadian exports to Taiwan, with $505.3 million in goods or about 40 per cent of

all Canadian shipments. Currently, Taiwan imports raw materials from Canada, mostly coal, metals and lumber, while Canada imports manufactured goods from Taiwan, mostly electronic circuits and parts for smart phones. “Taiwan is too big to ignore,” said William Wu, executive assistant, who spoke at the Langley meeting. Taiwan is Canada’s fourth largest trading partner in the Pacific Rim, Wu noted. “We have a lot of potential to grow [that trade]” Wu told the meeting, pointing to one successful Canadian venture in Taiwan, the 86 joint Roots-Second Cup stores. “Taiwanese are quite friendly to Canadian goods and Canadian services as long as it’s good [quality],” Wu said.

A DIVISION OF CANACCORD GENUITY CORP., MEMBER – CANADIAN INVESTOR PROTECTION FUND

Investment portfolios are not guaranteed, their values can change frequently and past performance may not be repeated.

STREET SCAPE SHOPPING, OUTDOOR PATIOS, CHILDREN’S PLAYGROUND, VIP MOVIE THEATRE. 20 ACRES OF EXTRAORDINARY. THE VALLEY’S NEW PREMIERE SHOPPING DESTINATION

Highway 1 and Mt. Lehman Road, Abbotsford highstreetfv.com


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 23

GA RY AHUJ A @LangleyTSpo rts 604.514.6754 • s p orts @l angl ey ti m es .com

No secret to success GARY AH U J A Ti m e s Spo r ts

Before the season began, new coach Shaun Springett made a pair of big moves and while they may not have translated into more victories on the floor, they have proved to have been the right call. The first move was switching James Rahe from defence to offence and the second was giving Rahe the captain’s ‘C’ to wear on his jersey for the Langley Junior Thunder. And while the Thunder’s season will end tomorrow (Friday) with the team not qualifying for the post-season, Rahe has been nothing short of spectacular. In 18 games, Rahe sits tied for second in the B.C. Junior A Lacrosse League with 40 goals and 41 assists for 81 points. Last season, he had 21 goals and 44 points in 18 games. The 20-year-old Rahe — who still has a season of junior eligibility remaining‚ has also played four games for the senior A Langley Thunder. In his first game, he scored a hat trick and now has six points in his short time playing with the men’s squad. Springett contends that despite his junior team’s struggles, Rahe should get consideration for the league’s MVP award. And should Rahe win the award, it would be the third straight year Springett has had the privilege of coaching the league’s award winner. Heading into their final regular season game, Langley sits at 5-141. “Without James, there is no way

we would be near where we are,” the coach said. The scoring title will be won by New Westminster’s Connor Robinson, who has 40 goals and 99 points. The rest of the top five is separated by nine points, but what the stats don’t show is that Rahe has scored or assisted on nearly 51 per cent of his team’s goals. By comparison, none of the other top scorers are above 35 per cent. There is no secret to what makes Rahe special. “He is just a big, strong kid and sees the floor well,” Springett said. “He understands the game, finds the holes (and) he is not afraid to shoot.” No player has attempted more than Rahe, who has fired 175 shots, scoring on 22.3 per cent of his attempts. Rahe was more of a defensive specialist in 2013 for Langley, mainly because the team had other quality offensive weapons with six players surpassing the 20-goal mark. “I wasn’t too surprised (with the move), I have always been an offensive-minded player,” he said. “And that is where I feel more comfortable, that is what I play at school.” Rahe is also a third-year mechanical engineering student at Pittsburgh’s Robert Morris University and plays on the Colonials’ field lacrosse team. Rahe, who is six-foot-four and 230 pounds, is used to facing double teams, but he is strong enough to beat them when he can and smart enough to know

when to use his teammates. He is also quick to give credit to his teammates and coaches. “It is not me at all, it is the team,” Rahe said. “We run a good offence … and it all has to do with the guys on the floor.” Last year saw Athan Iannucci serve as the team’s assistant, and this year, Alex Turner is serving the role. The pair are teammates on the Langley senior A Thunder. Turner is second in league scoring (44 points in 11 games) and Iannucci is third (39 points in 11 games), so they definitely know what they are doing with a stick in their hands. “Being able to mess around with them at practice and talk to them about what has made them a successful has played a big role,” Rahe said. Having familiarity with the two helped Rahe when he got called up to play for the senior squad, but he admitted to being surprised to score three times in his senior debut. “I honestly think it had a lot to do with the guys out there,” he said. “I would be open for a split second and the ball would be on my stick, which isn’t normally how it is. In senior, the guys make you look really good.” Springett is not surprised with Rahe’s instant success at the senior level, despite playing against men, some of whom are 15 years his senior. “James, with his size, that doesn’t really intimidate him,” he said. “And he has the IQ of a senior player.”

GA RY A HUJ A Langley Time s

Langley Junior Thunder captain James Rahe has had an outstanding season, figuring in on nearly 51 per cent of his team’s goals. The next highest in that stat in the B.C. Junior A Lacrosse League is at 35 per cent. Springett anticipates another solid year of junior in 2015 for Rahe, followed by a lengthy and productive senior career. Rahe, who grew up in Aldergrove and played through the ranks of the Langley Minor La-

crosse Association, would love nothing more than playing both senior lacrosse in the WLA and pro lacrosses in the National Lacrosse League with the Thunder and Vancouver Stealth, respectively.

Stealth’s Hall up for National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame Chris Hall is one of five nominees on the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame Class of 2014 ballot. The nominees were announced on June 27. Hall, who stepped down as head coach of the Vancouver Stealth at the beginning of June because of health concerns, has coached for

a dozen years in the league. He is staying on as a senior adviser to the team. The Victoria native spent six seasons with the Calgary Roughnecks from 2002 to 2007 and then took the helm of the Stealth in 2009. His 85 regular season wins ranks third all-time in league history and his 11 playoff wins are

fourth. He is also one of just two coaches in league history to win the Champion’s Cup with two different teams, capturing the league championship with Calgary in 2004 and the Stealth in 2010. Hall was also co-recipient of the NLL coach of the year award in 2010. Also nominated for the hall of

fame are Jake Bergey, who played 10 seasons for the Philadelphia Wings; Pat Coyle, who played a dozen years in the league for the Toronto Rock and Colorado Mammoth; Pat McCready, who played 17 seasons, primarily with the Buffalo Bandits and Rochester Knighthawks; and Kaleb Toth, who played 13 seasons with To-

ronto and Calgary. To be inducted into the Hall, the nominees must be selected on a minimum of 75 per cent of the ballots cast. Voters may select up to three nominees on their ballot. Candidates who do not achieve the 75 per cent minimum, remain on the ballot for a second year.

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24 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Athletes ready to shine at Special Olympics Games Langley will be well represented at the Special Olympics Canada Summer Games. The community is sending 31 athletes to the Games, the most of any city or town in B.C. The Games will be held July 8 to July 12, primarily at the UBC campus in Vancouver. Other venues include Vancouver’s University Golf Club and Richmond’s The Zone Bowling Centre. Leading the way for Langley are the basketball and softball teams, which have 10 players

each on the roster. Alastair Singh, Carson Buzdegan, Chris Lawrie, Chris Shaxon, Kailyn Potomak, Karl Beugh, Kyle Litfin, Matt Williams, Sean Annan and Trevor Martel make up the basketball team. And Chris Beugh, Christian Burton, Jade Deakin, Jaykob Low, Jenifer Burton, Jeremy Wright, Kathy Foss, Krista Sanders, Matthew Sanches and Stuart Stevenson make up the softball team. Ashleigh King, Jas Nagra, Jennifer King and Tyler Page will represent B.C. in five-pin bowling,

while Josh Low, Karina DuPaul and Trisha Boyle are part of the aquatics team. And Andrea Zonneveld, David Cairns and Dustin Beard will go for gold in athletics. Langley’s Brendon Schmidt, Kurc Buzdegan, Peter Potomak and Rob Martel are coaching the basketball team while Keith Foss, Monique Deakin and Robin Foss are on the softball coaching staff. Cari Henri is serving as team manager and Patty Wheeldon is on Team’s BC’s mission staff.

Thunder beat Salmonbellies 8-6 A four-goal second period helped the Langley Thunder defeat the New Westminster Salmonbellies 8-6. The two senior A Western Lacrosse Association rivals squared off June 25 at the Langley Events Centre. The Thunder trailed 4-2 early in the second period before scoring six of the final eight goals. The win improves

Langley to 6-5 and leaves them tied for third place in the WLA. The team holds a four-point cushion for a playoff spot with seven games to play. The team chasing them, however, has a pair of games in hand. Against New Westminster, Alex Turner (two goals, four assists) and Athan Iannucci (two goals, two assists) led the offence while Brodie

MacDonald stopped 35 of the 41 shots he faced. MacDonald was named the league’s first star of the week for the week ending June 22. He earned the honour after stopping 74 of the 82 shots he faced in a pair of games, a 5-4 loss to the Burnaby Lakers and a 5-3 win over the Coquitlam Adanacs. MacDonald is second in save

After spotting the opposition a 2-0 lead, the Langley Blaze scored the game’s final seven runs to beat the Whalley Chiefs 7-2. The win was the fourth straight for the U18 baseball team and they lead the B.C. Premier Baseball League with a 28-7 record heading into the stretch drive of the regular season. Langley leads the North Shore Twins (22-6) by 2.5 games. The game was played on Thursday (June 26) at Whalley Athletic Park. Liam Wyatt and Andre Pelletier

Blaze leading heading into final month

percentage (.828) and fourth on the season in goals against average (8.00). He is also second in minutes played, having played 600:10 out of a possible 660 minutes. Langley hits the road this weekend in Victoria on Friday (July 4) against the first-place Shamrocks (8-1-2) and then on Saturay (July 5) in Nanaimo against the Timbermen (2-8-1).

drove in a pair of runs apiece, while Connor Chorpita and Kristjan Storrie had one RBI each. Jonathan Keltie pitched a complete game, striking out seven. The Blaze are at Vancouver’s Queens Park for a doubleheader on July 5 against the Cannons (19-19). ••• A seventh-inning error allowed Quintin Nakamura to score from second base and snap a 6-6 tie as the Langley Junior Blaze won their seventh straight game, 7-6.

A LY S S A O’ D E LL Langley Time s

Seven-year-old Asaminew Humeniuk works on his volleyball skills on the outdoor beach courts at Willoughby Community Park on Saturday. Willoughby Community Park and the Langley Events Centre hosted Tourism Langley’s Canada Day Sports Fest over the weekend. The Blaze were playing the White Rock Junior Tritons at South Surrey Athletic Park on June 25 and the victory improved Langley to a B.C. Junior Premier Baseball League-leading record of 24-2. The Tritons did advance the tying run to second base in their half of the inning, but Matthew Poirier nailed down the final out. Markus Gregson led the team offensively, going 4-for-4 with a double and three RBIs. The Blaze host a pair of doublehead-

ers this weekend at McLeod Park. On Saturday, they face the Nanaimo Junior Pirates (11-19) and on Sunday, it is the Victoria Junior Mariners (2411). ••• The Langley Senior Blaze went 2-2 at the Grand Forks Invitational tournament last week. The Blaze won their first two games, 9-1 over the Lacey Saints and 3-0 over the Parkland White Sox. But they lost 5-3 and 6-3 to the Northwest Honkers and Everett Merchants, respectively.

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

DrivewayCanada.ca |

Thursday, July 3, 2014 25

Welcome to the driver’s seat

Visit the Jeep Cherokee gallery at DrivewayCanada.ca

Radically new Cherokee returns after 20 years Jeep has been one of the that the Dodge Dart strongest brands for the uses, the styling is edgy Chrysler Group, thanks and modern. to the fantastic Grand The sharp nose and Cherokee mid-sized SUV small headlamps, along and the always-popular with the curved Jeep Wrangler. grille make a statement. Building off that success Some Jeep aficionados is the introduction of an might not be intrigued The 2014 all-new Cherokee. It has by this new design but been almost twenty years Cherokee is a newcomers to the brand since we had a Cherokee thoroughly modern might. The starting price in the market and this is $23,495, which is less SUV with goone is radically different than it’s major comfrom anything one might anywhere capability petitors. For this price, remember. Since the you get standard air and around town Chrysler group didn’t have refinement that needs conditioning, Bluetooth a small SUV in its portfolio connectivity, two USB to be experienced. to take on established ports, a 5-inch Uconnect players like the Toyota screen and power winZack Spencer RAV4, Honda CR-V and dows/doors. The AWD Ford Escape, this 2014 Cherokee has a model starts at $25,695, which is also lot riding on its success the lowest price model in this class. The closest competitor, on price, image and Looks capability might be the Subaru Forester Unlike the last 1990s Cherokee, this for $25,995. radically different Jeep is based on a car platform instead of a rugged truck Inside chassis. This approach is lighter, to The interior of the all-new Cherokee is save fuel, and rewards the driver with more upscale than most of the competgood on-road manners. Built off the itors. The doors, armrest and dash are same Alfa Romeo-derived platform covered in soft touch materials. The front

‘‘

’’

seats are supportive and comfortable. The rear seats too are comfy and slide for and aft for more cargo storage. When placed in the normal position, the legroom isn’t ample but on par with others in this class. Connecting to the Cherokee is a snap with the optional 8.4-inch Uconnect system that pairs with smartphone in seconds, is very quick between commands, and has nice looking graphics. The base screen is five inches but has many of the same functionality. Behind the steering wheel, inside the instrument cluster, is another programmable screen for all the information the driver needs frequently. Drive The base 2.4L 4-cylinder with 184hp is the base engine on all trim levels. For just $1,300 any Cherokee can be equipped with the optional 3.2L V6 engine – making the walk up to this 271hp engine within reach for many buyers. In addition, this is the very first application of a 9-speed automatic anywhere in the auto industry, providing improved fuel economy and drivability. Having a chance to drive both the 4-cylinder and V6 models with the all-new 9-speed automatic, I’m torn. The V6 is the engine of choice for towing, steep mountain

A good off-roader, comfortable and an easy street performer, the Cherokee does both equally well.

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runs and longer distance driving. The flip side is that the 4-cylinder is a very good in-city commuter and the lighter engine helps this Cherokee to corner, brake and manouevre better. The 9-speed automatic shifts quickly and smoothly, in fact I forgot it had so many cogs but it does improve fuel economy with a highway rating of 6.4L/100km with the 4-cylinder and 7.0L with the V6. Most Canadians will opt for the AWD versions thanks to our winter conditions, but here too there are more choices. Jeep has included three AWD systems. The first is a called Active Drive 1 with a selectable drive mode called Select-Terrain, for automatic, snow, mud and sand settings. The second is called Active Drive 2 and offers a two-speed mode for low speed crawling. The most aggressive system is Active Drive Lock, which comes in the off-road purpose-built Cherokee called Trailhawk. The Trailhawk is a ‘real’ Jeep; this is thanks to a locking rear differential and a host of electronic aids. The most impressive feature is the low speed crawling mode for both up and down hill tasks. Therefore, Jeep purists, yes there is a Cherokee for you. Verdict This new Cherokee is off to a fantastic start. Sales are strong and the sharp design is bringing in buyers, not shoving them away. The 2014 Cherokee could not be further away from the last model; this is a thoroughly modern SUV with go-anywhere capability and aroundtown refinement that needs to be experienced. The Lowdown Power: 184hp 2.4L 4-cylinder, and 271hp 3.2L V6. Fill-up: 9.9L/7.0L/100km (city/highway AWD) Sticker price: $23,695-$32,195

Question of the Week There is talk in Greater Vancouver of introducing a regional carbon tax to fund transit and highway initiatives. Should such a tax be extended B.C.-wide to help fund much needed transport infrastructure throughout the rest of the province? Go to DrivewayCanada.ca to submit your answer. QUESTION

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26 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Thursday, July 3, 2014 27

ADESA Chrysler 200 similar but better than its predecessor RICHMOND PUBLIC AUTO ADESA driveway

Consumer Reports rates the 200 The Chrysler 200 was introduced for as “below average” for predictthe 2011 model year and replaced ed reliability, “above average” the outgoing Sebring. for owner satisfaction and “avIt’s available as a mid-sized sedan, erage” for owner costs. Used with coupe-like styling and a roomy prices are reasonable, from a interior, as a hard or soft top convertbuyer perspective, and there ible with two doors and four seats. appears to be a good supply of The 200 is based on the same chasUsed prices are sedans, but not too many consis as the outgoing Sebring but came vertibles, out there for sale. with revised suspension geometry, reasonable, from a The Limited trim level (see stiffer body mounts, a raised roll cen- buyer perspective, check chart) visually adds tre, new sway bars and a wider rear and there appears to price 18-inch polished aluminum track to improve both its ride and wheels, dual exhaust tailpipes handling. There were also extensive be a good supply of and inside upgrades include upgrades to reduce cabin noise and sedans, but not too leather-faced seats. Like most these included acoustic lamination many convertibles, Chrysler products the 200 offers of the front door windows and windout there for sale. high content and value, and it’s shield. a good looking car. The 2011 edition of 200 came in Bob McHugh Safety Recalls: 2011 & 2012 base LX, Touring, Limited and topChrysler 200: line S trim levels. The base engine is 2011: A pivot rivet on the steera 173-horsepower, 2.4-litre, 16-valve four-cylinder. A carry-over engine from Sebring, it ing column may be missing or incorrectly installed provides good low-end torque, decent fuel econo- and this increases the risk of driver injury in a my and is mated with a reliable four-speed auto- crash. Dealers will inspect for steering column matic. City/highway fuel economy is 9.9/6.7 L/100km. Even the LX edition of the 200 comes with a very good equipment package that includes a tilt and telescoping steering wheel, four-wheel disc brakes with an anti-lock system, remote keyless entry with a security alarm, power windows, locks and mirrors (heated) and air conditioning. The optional and newer 3.6-litre (Pentastar) V6 was a powertrain offering that came with a six-speed automatic. A quieter and smoother performer than the four-cylinder, this V6 can effortlessly produce 283 horsepower. Highway fuel economy (6.8 L/100km) is also impressive and almost the same as the base four-cylinder. Its city rating, however, is 11.0 L/100km. The Chrysler 200 Convertible was available with the choice of two automatic-latching power tops. There’s a light-weight fabric-top with a glass back window or a (body colour) fully-retractable steel hard-top. Both types of folding top can also be lowered or raised remotely via the owner’s key fob, which is a neat feature. In addition to being less expensive, the fabric-top is more compact when folded and allows more cargo space in the trunk. The hard-top, on the other hand, can provide a quieter cabin for occupants while driving and it’s more secure when parked. Active safety improved with the addition of both electronic stability control and traction control systems as standard equipment in all editions for the 2012 model year. Otherwise, the 200 was unchanged. Some new paint choices were added for the 2013 model year, but other than that the 200 was again unchanged. The 200 comes with an up-to-date complete passive safety package and its crash safety test ratings have been top-notch, both for the sedan and the convertible. In fact, the sedan achieved “Top Safety Pick” status with the IIHS (Insurance Institute for Highway Safety).

’’

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rivet presence and alignment, and repair as required. 2011/2012/2013: The airbag warning lamp may illuminate due to an electrical fault within the Occupant Restraint Control (ORC) module and the Active Head Restraints may not deploy during a rear impact collision. Dealers will reprogram the Totally Integrated Power Module or replace the ORC module, as required. 2012: The 3.6 litre V6 engine may have debris in the cylinder block from the manufacturing process and this could cause connecting rod bearing and crankshaft bearing damage. Dealers will replace the engine assembly. 2013: Certain vehicles may experience fuel leakage or engine stall due to a broken control valve in the fuel tank assembly. Dealers will inspect and if the control valve is damaged, the fuel tank assembly and vapour canister will be replaced. 2013: Some vehicles equipped with the 2.4 litre engine may experience a loss of oil pressure and subsequent engine failure. Dealers will replace the balance shaft module. bob.mchugh@drivewaybc.ca

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28 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Gold Key Langley Volkswagen makes history. TIM ANDERSON

JORDON DENG

PETER KOOISTRA

JOHN NIELSEN

PETER SAIEVA

CHRISTOPHER LAU

BRANDON SIEBEN

BILL SIE

TRACY BEST

MARK ELLENS

ALAN LODGE

MICHAEL OJINMA

JAMIE SHEPPARD

KYLE MARTIN

DEREK SLOBODIAN

JOHN TRICKETT

CHERYL

ANITA ELLIOTT

SARAH MAHAFFEY

GARRY PENNER

JORDON ABERNNATHY

JACKIE NEUMANN

SHAUN SOUSA

GORDON VADNAIS

NICOLE CAHAREL

PRISCILLA FULLER

JACK MAHSERJIAN

VICTOR PETERS

DENIS VEZINA

LYNDA NOEL

GARRY STICKLE

LARRY VILLENEUVE

JORDON CHARTIER

JOHN FULLER

DAVOR MARIC

NIN PINAG

JENNIFER FAUHT

AARON REDEKOPP

ANDREW STUMFORD

BRANDON VIRAG

TONY CHEN

MICHAEL JOHANSEN

JEANNIE MCCRAKEN

MIGUEL PIRIR

JESSE FRYER

JEFFERY REID

NEIL SUDRA

BRENDA WEIR

MATHEW CHWAKLINSKI

MICHAEL KANG

STUART MCDONALD

KEVIN QUINN

DOUG GIBBONS

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RICHARD SYKES

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When a Volkswagen dealership makes it into the prestigious Wolfsburg Crest Club, it’s because they’ve met the highest Volkswagen standards in service and sales. Those of you who have driven one of our vehicles know what kind of standards we’re talking about. Such an accomplishment doesn’t just happen by chance. Every day, the team at Gold Key Langley Volkswagen makes every effort to provide nothing but the best for their customers. Membership in the Wolfsburg Crest Club is fitting recognition of their remarkable work. And you’ll no doubt agree if you come in for a visit. Because they meet more than the highest Volkswagen standards – they meet yours.

LANGLEY 19545 No. 10 Hwy. Surrey, BC V3S 6K1

Township For the week of July 3, 2014

dates to note Monday, July 14 | 7 - 11pm Public Hearing Meeting Civic Facility Fraser River Presentation Theatre

604-534-7431

Page

public programs and events The Langley Demonstration Garden has a busy summer planned!

Japanese Knotweed is an invasive species whose root system has the potential to ruin home foundations, roads, parking lots, sewerage, and water main infrastructure.

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This summer, a number of fun and informative events, activities, and programs will be held and the public is encouraged to take part.

Summer Pruning - Monday, July 14, 7 - 9pm: Control the

Sun Jul 6

5:00pm vs. Richmond Roadrunners

Langley Thunder WLA Lacrosse Wed Jul 9 7:45pm vs. Burnaby Lakers Wed Jul 16 7:00pm vs. Victoria Shamrocks The Langley Events Centre is located at 7888 - 200 Street For ticket information, contact Langley Events Centre 604.882.8800 • LangleyEventsCentre.com

public notices Japanese Knotweed Roadside Control Strategy

Township of Langley Civic Facility 20338 - 65 Avenue, Langley V2Y 3J1 604.534.3211 | tol.ca

Langley Intermediate Thunder BCILL Lacrosse

20338 - 65 Avenue, Langley V2Y 3J1 | 604.534.3211

Langley Demonstration Garden Summer Programs An educational facility operated by the Langley Environmental Partners Society in partnership with the Township of Langley, the Demonstration Garden is located in the Derek Doubleday Arboretum in the 21200 block of Fraser Highway. It is open year-round to demonstrate sustainable gardening techniques and staffed weekdays from May to August.

Coming Events

www.tol.ca

growth of your apple and pear trees to produce bigger crops and train your trees into various forms. Please RSVP at least one week in advance.

All-Season Vegetables - Saturday, July 19, 10 - 11:30am: Learn what you can plant in the summer and fall for harvest even until winter and early spring. Please RSVP at least one week in advance.

Langley Eats Local - Sunday, August 10, 11am - 2pm: This 6th annual event returns to the garden to celebrate local farmers, processors, and artisans. Sample and purchase items, from vegetables and berries to baked goods and wines.

Blackberry Bake-Off and Open House - Wednesday, August 20, 11am - 2pm: The annual tradition continues. Enter a blackberry creation (see contact below) for the chance to win local fame, or enjoy a locally-sourced barbecue lunch for just $5. Crafts for kids, and live local music for all.

The Township of Langley is working to eliminate the threat of this invasive plant. You may see markers along various roads identifying where Japanese Knotweed is located. Do not remove the plants or mow these areas. Improper removal of the plant could result in the plant reproducing rapidly or spreading further. The Roads Department is spraying a mild herbicide to control the Japanese Knotweed. The removal process will take several treatments and inspections throughout the year. After the roots are killed, the plant stock will be removed and discarded safely. For more information on the roadside control program, contact: Engineering Division 604.533.6006 tol.ca/invasive

Recreation, Culture, and Parks Master Plan Public Input Township of Langley residents are being surveyed as part of the process to create a new Recreation, Culture, and Parks Master Plan.

Last chance to register for Eco Explorer kids’ day camps!

An online resident survey is available on the Township of Langley’s website at tol.ca until July 18. Please consider taking a few moments to help guide our future service provision.

For more information and to register, contact:

For more information about the Master Plan process, please contact:

Langley Environmental Partners Society garden@leps.bc.ca 604.546.0344

David Leavers Director, Recreation, Culture, and Parks 604.533.6158

After-Hours Emergency Contact 604.543.6700


Thursday, July 3, 2014 29

www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7

OBITUARIES

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMING EVENTS

42

LOST AND FOUND

LOST black short haired female CAT, 7 year old. Vicinity 197 St / 49 Ave. Plse call 604-534-9986 LOST: CAT, female, black long haired, missing since Friday, June 20th. Answers to Mow Mow. Area of 202/Grade Cresc. (604)5147632. bcclassified.com 604-575-5555

INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...............1-8

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 6

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

OPEN HOUSE

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57

July 12th & 13th

TRAVEL.............................................61-76

481 216 Street, Langley, B.C. 11:00 am - 4:00 pm Admission: Adults $2.00 Children FREE

CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387 PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587 REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696 RENTALS ......................................703-757 AUTOMOTIVE ..............................804-862

_____________

MARINE .......................................903-920

Advertise across the Lower Mainland in the 15 best-read community newspapers. ON THE WEB:

bcclassified.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Critter Care Wildlife Society 16th Annual

GAUTHIER, Maurice Maurice “Moe” Gauthier passed away with his loving wife and daughter by his side on Thursday June 26th, 2014. Survived by his wife Janis, his children Christopher (Kate), Michael (Shelby), Jenna and his grandchildren Sophia and Noah. Also survived by his parents Terry and Paul and his sisters Marcella (Gary), Lucille (Wes) his brothers Lawrence (Joylynn), Aime (Kelly) and numerous nieces & nephews. Maurice was much loved and respected by those who knew him. His smile and kind heart will forever be remembered. Maurice’s celebration of life will be at Newland’s on Friday July 4th at 2:00pm. “Rest in peace my angel you handled what God gave you with such strength and determination. You never complained and continued to remind us to enjoy life, to smile, and to appreciate even the smallest things in life. We are forever thankful for the time we had with you”

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

Come and spend the day in the country & sign up for a guided tour to see all the baby animals.

ANNUAL STARTING REVENUE $24,000 - $120,000 • Minimum investment as low as $6,050 required • Guaranteed Cleaning Contracts • Professional Training Provided • Financing Available • Ongoing Support A Respected Worldwide Leader in Franchised Office Cleaning. Coverall of BC 604.434.7744 info@coverallbc.com www.coverallbc.com

Enjoy family entertainment, our concession stand and check out our Critter souvenirs.

604-530-2054 www.crittercarewildlife.org

RECYCLING business looking for candidates wanting to start-up their own in Langley. Call Aeron Jensan to find out more 604-783-1221 THIS simple but powerful Home Business is exploding, watch the video, FREE tour! www.b-f-h.info

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

ATLAS POWER SWEEP DRIVERS Power sweeping,power scrubbing and pressure washing. Must be hard working with a good attitude. Burnaby based. Must be available to work nights and weekends. Good driving record & abstract required. Experience and Air Ticket beneficial. Email: jobs@atlasg.net or Fax: 604-294-5988

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

A Great Janitorial Franchise Opportunity

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

CLASS 1 HIGHWAY LINE HAUL COMPANY DRIVERS Van Kam’s Group of Companies requires Class 1 Drivers for the SURREY area. Applicants must have a min 2 yrs industry driving experience.

HIGHWAY OWNER OPERATORS $3500 SIGNING BONUS Van Kam’s group of companies req. Highway linehaul owner operators based in our Surrey terminal for runs throughout BC and Alberta. Applicants must have winter and mountain driving experience/training. We offer above average rates and an excellent employee benefits package. To join our team of professional drivers, email a detailed resume, current driver’s abstract and details of your truck to: careers@vankam.com or Call 604-968-5488 or Fax: 604-587-9889 Only those of interest will be contacted.

We Offer Above Average Rates! To join our team of professional drivers please send off a resume and current drivers abstract to: careers@vankam.com For more info about Line Haul, call Bev, 604-968-5488

Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

115

EDUCATION

We thank all applicants for your interest! Van-Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

JOBS Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca

127

Love you always and forever Janis

BCCLASSIFIED.COM

HAIRCARE PROFESSIONALS

QUALIFIED HAIRDRESSER for vacation relief July to November 2-4 days/wk (Mon-Fri) at seniors care homes. Langley/Surrey. Own vehicle required. Commission. Call: 604-420-9339

.TCP

Experience world class cycling in the largest fully supported ride in the Fraser Valley!

Bea Carlson Photography - Paintwithlight.net

The ride: start and finish in Historic Fort Langley The challenge: 160KM GranFondo | 88KM MedioFondo | 55KM PrestoFondo Your part: ride, volunteer, learn about winning the Ultimate Opus Bike Package. In support of

RIDE. VOLUNTEER. VALLEYGRANFONDO.COM


30 Thursday, July 3, 2014 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators, meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-(780)7235051. CAN-CELL Industries has an immediate need for full-time & part-time WAREHOUSE HELP in our Langley Distribution Warehouse. Some experience and/or Fork lift certification an asset. Email resume to hr@can-cell.com or fax 780-7325853

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Retired? Laid off from long term employment? Are you looking for P/T or even F/T work to keep you busy? If you have excellent computer skills, previous experience in a sales/service environment and are looking for variety – we have the job for you! Moderate physical work is also involved in this position. Please apply: hr@sfyl.com or Call: 604-513-8144 Farm Supervisor. $15/hr. F/T, pmt, No Education. Exp: 2+yrs. Duties: Supervise, schedule & evaluate farm workers. Oversee growing & crop-related operations (tomatoes, cucumbers, poinsettias, mums & spring flowers). Est. procedures. Ensure safety & quality control. Maintain records. May perform general farm duties. Lang: English. Spanish an asset. Please Contact: Matt from Darvonda Nurseries at 6690 216th Street, Langley, BC. By e-mail: darvonda@yahoo.ca or fax: 604-530-6884

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

Landscaping Sales & Service Opportunities Up To $400 CASH Daily F/T & P/T Outdoors. Spring / Summer Work. Seeking Honest, Hard Working Staff. www.PropertyStarsJobs.com Light Metal Fabrication Plant requires PRODUCTION WORKER / SHOP HELPER No experience req’d, involves heavy lifting. $13.41/hr to start, $14.90/hr after 30 days worked.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

PERSONAL SERVICES 171

157

PRODUCTION WORKERS Canada’s Largest Independently owned newspaper group, is currently looking for Part-Time Production Workers to work at our Delta - Vantage Way 24/7 production facility.

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

This is an entry level, general labour position that involves the physical handling of newspaper & related advertising supplements. REQUIREMENTS: • Prior bindery and/or machine operator experience is preferred • Motivated self-starter willing to work in a fast-paced enviro. performing repetitive tasks • Must be able to lift 35lbs. & stand for long periods of time • Ability to work co-operatively in a diverse, team-based enviro. • Must be reliable & dependable • Excellent communication skills & detail oriented • Completion of high school • Must have own transportation This P/T position has a variety of afternoon & graveyard shifts (Mon - Fri). The incumbent must be able to work on a weekly schedule with short notice.

Starting Wage $12.20 + Shift Premiums! If you are interested in this position, please e-mail your resume, including “Production Worker” in the subject line to:

bpcampbellheights @gmail.com Want your event or services to be a success? Advertise across the lower mainland in the 17 best-read community newspapers.

FLAGGERS NEEDED. No Certification? Get Certified, 604-575-3944

Specialist

Bus over 35 years ~ BBB since ‘84

Danny 604 - 307 - 7722

UNIQUE CONCRETE

287

182

FREE ESTIMATES

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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 ** MONEY AVAILABLE ** 1st, 2nd & 3rd Mortgages Use the EQUITY in your HOME for Consolidation, Renovation or Any Reason. Call Donna at BBK Investments Ltd. 604.341.2806

Placing & Finishing * Forming * Site Prep, old concrete removal * Excavation & Reinforcing * Re-Re Specialists 34 Years Exp. Free Estimates. coastalconcrete.ca

SAMCON BUILDING. Complete reno’s & additions. Over 25 yrs exp. Call Derek (604)720-5955 www.samconbuilding.com

~CHOICE CARPET CLEANING~ 604-897-6025 (24 hr) Free Est. Steam Carpet Cleaning.

236

257

DRYWALL

WALTER’S DRYWALL Taping - Texture - Repairs. Sm jobs pref’d. 40+ yrs exp. 604-308-7943

Complete Landscape Service

163

Specializing in landscape renos Bobcat - Excavator - Decks Retaining Walls - Paving Stones New Lawns-Irrigation-Drainage Hedging and more *30 Yrs Exp. *Fully Insured Call Brian for a free estimate

START TO FINISH CONTRACTING

604-773-1349

320

ELECTRICAL

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

www.affordablemoversbc.com

$45/Hr

From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos

LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

604-537-4140

Call Blake or Brian (604)816-1653

263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.

Licensed, Insured, WCB

www.starttofin.ca

Structural - Organic - Concrete We Deliver 604-218-6554

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

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

Bulldozer & Excavator Services

COMPUTER SERVICES

MOVING & STORAGE

AFFORDABLE MOVING

D interior & exterior renovation D rot repair & restoration D Decks D Fences & much more free estimates.

FREE FILL 24/7

CLEANING SERVICES

English Lady - Cleaning. Reliable. Honest. Exc Worker Pets ok Refs Reasonable Rates 604-533-1711

239

(Turn right 1st road East of Pitt River Bridge from Vancouver) 604-465-9812

1-800-663-5847

A+, BBB member-Low rates, Expert trouble shooter. All types of Electrical work 24/7 604-617-1774

CARPET CLEANING

16897 Windsor Road Pitt Meadows

SUNDECKS

Call: Rick (604) 202-5184

260

224

Free Turf

Dave: 604-862-9379

Blake and his Dad make a positive difference in your life by providing quality workmanship delivered with integrity.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

We Sell Weed...

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Complete Home Renos ✔ Bathrooms & Kitchens ✔ Plumbing & Electrical ✔ Finishing Work & Mouldings ✔ Small Additions/Bsmt Suites ✔ General Contracting for renos FREE ESTIMATES hudolinrenos@gmail.com www.hudolinsrenos.com

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

threescocatering@shaw.ca or Visit us at: www. threescompanycatering.ca

MACHINIST WANTED Vancouver Island Company requires a machinist immediately. Must be proficient in the operation of boring mills and lathes. Union position with comparable wages and excellent benefit package. Submit resumes via fax to: 250-656-1262 or email to: rmwltd@ramsaygroup.com

LANDSCAPING

HUDOLIN’S ON HOMES

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

JOURNEYMAN MACHINIST

Please send your resume: gtasker@acgroup-ca.com

300

Fireplace Doctor

604-596-6790

TRADES, TECHNICAL

Health, Dental, Vision & more. We also have a company paid RRSP plan. Must be willing to join the union (UNIFOR).

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Homes, Driveways, Sidewalks, Fireplace & Chimney Repairs

Van Kam is an Equal Opportunity Employer Committed to Environmental Responsibility.

ACR Group located in south Richmond seeks a F/T worker to perform machining on rubber, urethane & some metal. Candidates should have experience in operating various lathes and be able to read various measuring devises. A forklift ticket or exp. driving a forklift is also preferred. 7:30 AM - 3:30 PM Mon. - Fri. some overtime. Wage depending on qualifications.

287

Pressure Washing & Odd Jobs Crack Repair & Sealing

STAMPED CONCRETE

Kristy 604.488.9161

careers@vankam.com or Fax 604 587-9889 www.vankam.com

160

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

SPRING RENOVATIONS

DESIGN

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

Inside Sales

The successful applicant must be a mature, stable individual with above average organizational, computer and customer service skills. In addition you should be self-disciplined, goal oriented and driven with passion to be a part of a positive, growth mode team. Sales background and knowledge of the transportation industry is an asset. Send a detailed resume to:

HANDYPERSONS

283A

FPatios FPool Decks FSidewalks FDriveways FForming FFinishing FRe & Re 30yrs exp. Quality workmanship Fully Insured crossroadsstampedconcrete.com

SALES - INSIDE TELEMARKETING

Van-Kam Freightways has an opening for a Inside Sales Specialist working out of our Surrey Office. You will work with our business development team located throughout BC to identify new business opportunities and ensure potential new business and service existing clients.

CONCRETE & PLACING

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

175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

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

All positions are full time and include benefit package after 90 days worked.

umlhrdept@gmail.com

242

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

damaged concrete. Ken 604-307-4923

POWDER COATER Minimum of 1 year experience required. $16.09/hr to start, $17.88 after 30 days worked.

Submit resume to:

ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

RELAXATION BODY CARE 604-859-2998 #4 - 2132 Clearbrook Road, Abby

Production Worker Speciality Western Red Cedar remanufacturer located in Burnaby is looking for a skilled production worker. Experience required in lumber grading, trimsaw operation, and lumber tallying. Rate of pay is $26.13/hour. Send resume to: Fax: 604-437-7222 or email: rsandve@haidaforest.com

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

Land Clearing - Excavating •D6 Bulldozer •CAT320 EXCA • D4 Wide Pad Bulldozer “Accept Visa/Mastercard”

604-576-6750 or Cell: 604.341.7374

281

GARDENING 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

ELECT SERVICES

VOLUNTEERS

Tree Pruning, Topping & Removal

.HILTON CONSTRUCTION HiltonConstruction@shaw.ca Call 778-552-7051

Hedge Trimming ~ Disposal

Full Landscape & Maintenance Services

Computer Problems? Call Blue Sky Tech 604.512.7082 John Jespersen

Insured ~ WCB Over 25 yrs Exp.

*Free Estimate *Seniors Discount

Call 778-245-5006

VOLUNTEER AT THE SCOTIABANK CANADIAN OPEN FASTPITCH!

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

Free Employment Services Servicees for job-seekers and employers employyers Visit our centre today or check us out online at aviaemployment.ca Langley 101-20316 56th Ave Langley, BC V3A 3Y9 T:778.726.0288

Aldergrove 104-26956 Fraser Highway Aldergrove, BC V4W 3L6 T:778.726.9355

avialangley@aviaemployment.ca ǀŝĂ ŵƉůŽLJŵĞŶƚ ^ĞƌǀŝĐĞƐ ŝƐ Ă ĚŝǀŝƐŝŽŶ ŽĨ ĂĐŬ ŝŶ DŽƟŽŶ ZĞŚĂď /ŶĐ͘

Every volunteer will receive free admission to all playing venues, one complimentary item of event apparel, and one complimentary meal per volunteer shift worked! In exchange, we only ask that each volunteer work a minimum of 20 hours during the event, which takes place from July 11 21, 2014 in Surrey, BC. We are looking for reliable, conscientious, hard working individuals to join our Security, Gate Attendants, and Parking Committee! Call our office or visit our website to register NOW as a volunteer: 604-536-9287 or www.canadianopenfastpitch.com

736

HOMES FOR RENT

INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Repairs & Reno’s, Sundecks & Additions, New Homes

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

European Quality Workmanship

Gutter & Roof Cleaning since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627

CONTRACT OR HOURLY FREE ESTIMATES 25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

736

HOMES FOR RENT

752

3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour

TOWNHOUSES

752

TOWNHOUSES

We have 2 Playgrounds for your kids! And are “Pet-Friendly”

#304 - 1959 152nd Street, White Rock, B.C. V4A 9E3

NEWLY RENOVATED $990 per month + utilities 3 BDRM - 1.5 Baths - 2 Levels

URGENTLY NEEDED! Rental Homes for Qualified Tenants.

1,100 sq ft and fenced back yard For more info call Mike at 604-792-8317 or 1-877-515-6696 or Email: wb@raamco.ca

PHONE:

RESIDENTIAL RENTALS IN B.C.

Running this ad for 10yrs

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

Property Management

604.536.0220

www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

Per Molsen 604-575-1240

Rentinfo.ca www.rentinfo.ca Peninsula

TONY’’S PAINTING

WOODBINE TOWNHOUSES 9252 Hazel St. Chilliwack BC - Move in Incentive! Our Gated 5 acre Complex is Quiet and Family Oriented

6295005 6353866


Thursday, July 3, 2014 31

www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 329 PAINTING & DECORATING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 356

REAL ESTATE

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

RUBBISH REMOVAL

RENTALS

633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

RENTALS 736

TRANSPORTATION

HOMES FOR RENT

810

AUTO FINANCING

838

RECREATIONAL/SALE

LANGLEY CITY

CHESTNUT PLACE

Painters SINCE 1977

Apartments

Rooms from $99.00 incls. paint

100-20436 Fraser Hwy., Langley

20727 Fraser Highway

TOWNHOUSE 240/Fraser Hwy

1 & 2 Bedrooms avail incl heat/hot water/cable

Over 2000 COLOURS provided by General Paint & Deluxe Premium Products.

2001 Security Park Model, 1 bdrm, kitchen nook. Must be moved. $34,000 obo. 604-465-5508

CEILINGS OUR SPECIALTY Paul Schenderling

604-530-7885 / 604-328-3221

- Two Storey Townhomes – Newly Updated – Clean and Bright – All appl. Sm pet neg./No Smoking. $950/mo Sandy @ 604.534.7974.115 and Brenda @ 604.657.3321 Visit us on the web at: www.goddardrentals.ca

Criminal record check may be req’d.

Ph: 604-533-4061 Langley

The Parkview Terrace 551

ALDERGROVE

JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT! 604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca

GARAGE SALE

EXTRA

CHEAP

Sat, July 5 8am - 5 p.m. 26254 64th Ave

RUBBISH REMOVAL Almost for free!

Workshop, antiques, kitchen wares, crystal, silver, office items, records, paintings, lumber. Too much to list. No reasonable offer refused.

(778)997-5757

.CAN-PRO Paint and Drywall. Over 25 yrs of quality service. 3 ROOMS, $250. Insured. 604-771-7052

FREE! Scrap Metal Removal...FREE!!! *Appliances *BBQs *Exercise Equip *Cars/Trucks/Trailers *Hotwater Tanks *Furnaces * Restaurant Equipment All FREE pickup!

604-572-3733 www.tkhaulaway.com

372

SUNDECKS

.Hayden Painting 778-229-0236 Family Owned & Operated Ryan 778.229.0236

SPECIAL Paint 2 bdrms & get 1 room free. Free est. 2 yr warr.

525

560

MISC. FOR SALE

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?

Asphalt Grindings Available Material/Machine Leveling avail

7 days/wk. 604-897-5850. ASPHALT PAVING • Brick Driveways • Retaining Walls • Foundation Repairs • Sealcoating 604-618-2304

338

TILING

New SRI 14x70. 2 Bedroom on 55+ pad in Abby. $96,188. Chuck 604-830-1960

ACREAGE

TILES, REPAIR, RENOVATION visit www.mastercraftceramics.com or call 604-319-1049 for more details

Royal LePage Northstar Realty web: www.homeandacreage.ca

Home and Acreage Realtor (604)838-2331 email: info@homeandacreage.ca

Attention Sellers, have buyer for horse property.

625

CLAYTON - 960 sq.ft. like new, top floor, 1 bedroom & den apartment in newer building available now. Modern kitchen with granite counter tops & stainless steel appliances. In-suite front load washer & dryer. Two secured, underground parking spots & separate storage locker. No Pets. No Smoking. $1,200/mo + utilities. Call Craig @ 778-388-4932

LANGLEY CITY APARTMENTS ON 201A FREE: heat, h/w, cable TV, laundry & parking. No Pets BACHELOR, 1 & 2 BDRMS. SENIORS, ADULT ORIENTED

Villa Fontana & Stardust

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Rainbow & Majorca

LANGLEY Newly reno’d quiet clean spac 2 bdrm near amens & transit. Incl 4appls, hotwtr & prkg. NS/NP Res Mgr. Calll 604-534-1114.

PayFair Heating

Linwood Place Apts: 604-530-6555 Maple Manor Apts: 604-534-0108 1 & 2 bdrm apts, $650-$900/mo. Ask about our Move-In BONUS.

*Water Heaters *Furnaces *Gas Fitting *Air Condition *Heat Pumps SUPPLY / INSTALL / REPAIR Prompt Service - Licensed & Bonded

809 ABBOTSFORD ~ Stunning Brownstone. 3-bdrm, 2.5 baths. H/wood throughout, granite. $425,000. Call for details (604)807-0016

Call 604-728-4478 10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005

5555 208th Street, Langley Studio - 1 & 2 bdrms. Indoor swimming pool and rec facility. Includes heat & 1 parking stall. No pets

Phone 604-530-1912

~ Fir Apartments ~ 1455 Fir St WHITE ROCK 1 & 3 Bdrm units avail now Heat & hot wtr incl. Swimming pool & rec room On site mgr

Call 604-536-0379

1988 TRAVELAIR Class C motorhome 460 Ford w/gas saver adaptor, gets really good mileage. New sealed roof, new toilet, flat screen TV, DVD player, microwave. 110,000 kms. Exc. cond. $7,400. obo. 604-859-7904

Peninsula Prop Management

LANGLEY - 3 acre. private house, 3 levels, 4 bdrms, 3 bathrms. $2300/m. Avail. now. 604-719-2998

748 SHARED ACCOMMODATION 845

BROOKSWOOD. Looking for Roommate. NS/NP. No drinking. No drugs. Furnished. $500 incl utils. Call 604-340-7036.

750

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

SUITES, LOWER

ALDERGROVE 1 bdrm bsmt suite, $650/mo incl utils/internet, no lndry, NS, NP, suits single tenant, refs & credit check. (604)626-4940

• Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022

CLEARBROOK. 1 bdrm, spacious, 3 appl. Avl now. N/s. $650 incl util & net 604-217-7461; 778-242-1917. The Scrapper

TRANSPORTATION 809

AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS

CLEAN OUT YOUR CLOSETS WITH DOLLAR DEALS 604-575-5555

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

CALL FOR AVAILABILITY

PETS

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

TOWN & COUNTRY APARTMENTS

APARTMENT/CONDO

Betsy - 604-312-1437

477

604-530-0932

RENTALS

Michael - 604-533-7578

PETS

Clean Bach, 1 & 2 Bdrm suites Heat & Hot Water included

www.cycloneholdings.ca

2BR Southmere Villa Lrg. Patio. pr. Yard O/d pool. ug prk. Avail July 31. 604-307-7402

Buying or Selling Call John Wojnarowski

BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7 Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com FLUID SOLUTIONS INC. Gas, plumbing, heating, reno’s, repairs. 20 years exp., reliable & courteous. Lic’d. Bonded. Jack 778-835-4416

CALL FOR NEW SPECIALS

\’SAMICK’MODERN Upright Piano, Black. Beautiful condition, like New. $750.00 or O.B.O Ft. Langley Area. 604 513 0321

A-1 Ceramics, Marble, Glass blocks etc. Install/Repair. Res./Comm. Free Est. 20 years exp. Peter’s Tile (604)209-0173

PLUMBING

Park Terrace Apts

SUSSEX PLACE APTS

706

603

CLOVERDALE Farm area. 5 bdrm 2 kitchens, newly reno’d, fncd yrd $1650 + util. Sm pet. 604-576-2457

604-530-0030 www.cycloneholdings.ca

566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

REAL ESTATE

Aldergrove 3 bdrm house on 1/2 acre fenced Suit cple. NS/NP. No partiers. avail Aug 1. 604-856-7010

CALL FOR NEW SPECIALS Spacious Bachelor, 1, 2, 3 Bdrm Suites. Heat & Hot Water incl. On Site Manager

UNDER $300

. Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688

373B

New SRI *1296 sq/ft Double wide $94,888. *New SRI 14’ wide $69,988. Repossessed mobile homes, manufactured homes & modulars. Chuck 604-830-1960.

TABLET - only 5 months old. MICROSOFT SURFACE TABLET Includes Book for Dummies. $300/obo. Call 604-530-6344.

(604)762-5436

PAVING/SEAL COATING

Call: 604-220-6905

Langley City. Multi Houses: Sat July 5th, 8-? 196-200th, 47A up to 50th. Pick up maps 19646-49th Ave

Member of BBB

332

5400 ~ 204 St. 1 bdrm ($775/m) & 2 bdrm ($900/m) Heat, H/W, cable incl, in a adult-oriented building. N/S,N/P.

GARAGE SALES

AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS

1760sf Street Exposure Industrial Ave, Langley 604.603.9584 BROOKSWOOD COMMERCIAL LEASE spaces available at 208th Street and 40th Ave. Sizes 7002100 s.f. $1500 - $4500. Call Frank @ Noort Investments 604-835-6300 or Nick @ 604-526-3604.

809

AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS

TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026

810

AUTO FINANCING

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

851

TRUCKS & VANS

CLOVERDALE / LANGLEY

341

Clayton Heights

PRESSURE WASHING

604 - 861 - 6060 We do tile roofs, gutters, windows, siding drvwy. WCB insured. Our #1 goal is to satisfy our customers.

2 Left. PITTBULL PUPPIES 1 Tan Female, 1 Grey/tan bridle Male. Excellent temperament, Both parents avail to view. 1st shots, dewormed/ flead $1000 obo. Call 604-376-0920

3400 sq/ft - 6 bdrm house with 3 baths, 3 decks with view. $659,000.

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866

More info: 604-908-1840

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

626

627

PRESSURE WASHING - Prices Starting at $99.00. Quality, Integrity Manintenance. 778-997-5163

POWER WASHING since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627

HOUSES FOR SALE

1100SF reno’d 3 bed rancher in Abby Bateman. Large lot. RV pkg & wchr. $345,500 Dave 604-557-3347

HOMES WANTED WE BUY HOMES BC • All Prices • All Situations • • All Conditions • www.webuyhomesbc.com 604-657-9422

POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

Call Ian 604-724-6373

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

CHI/POM puppies, very small. 3 Females. Ready to go. $700. 604-702-1908 or 604-316-2136

COMPLETE ROOFING + Repairs & gutters. All Roofs - Cedar, Shingles, Torch-On, Flat. WCB, BBB, Reas guaranteed. Sr Disc. 604-725-0106

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

10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofing & Siding. WCB Re-roofing, New Roof Gutters & Replace Fascia 604-812-9721

Pure bread CAIRN TERRIER Pups Shots, dewormed. $800. Home raised.604-807-5204,604-854-1978

.A East West Roofing & Siding Co. Repairs, new roofs, torching, gutter services. 10% off. 604-783-6437

PRIME LAKEVIEW LOTS FROM $140,000 Also; Spectacular 3 Acre Parcel at $390,000 1-250-558-7888 www.orlandoprojects.com

2005 Toyota Tacoma 4x4, X-cab 5/spd, new front brakes & battery, Exc cond. $9500. 604-828-7911

SELF-SERVE DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS

OVER A THOUSAND VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM

WEEKLY SPECIALS JULY 5 - JULY 11, 2014 DOOR GLASSES....................................$14.95 BACK GLASS - CAR .............................$24.95 HATCH ASSYS ......................................$65.95 PWR MIRRORS .....................................$19.95 HOODS ...................................................$40.95 FENDERS ...............................................$20.95 CAR DOORS...........................................$34.95 TRK VAN SUV DOORS .........................$44.95 ALL BUCKET SEATS - MANUAL ........$19.95 ALL BENCH SEATS...............................$24.95 ANY PLAIN STEEL WHEEL ...................$7.95 Now That’s a Deal!

~ FINANCING AVAILABLE ~

633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS Specializing in reasonably priced SMALL BREED puppies. 604300-1450. trugoalpuppies.com

www.pickapart.ca

NEW 2014 Single Wide in 55+ park. Pet OK. $89,900. Pad $500/mo. Call Chuck 604-830-1960

Hours: 8:30 am–5:00 pm 7 days a week 792-1221

07/14F_PP4

43645 Industrial Way, Chilliwack

Auto Loans Guaranteed or We Pay You! 1-888-375-8451 or apply at: www. greatcanadianautocredit.com

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 August 12, 2012, at 20090 91A Avenue, Langley, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Langley RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $2,250 CAD, on or about 21:51 Hours; a BlackBerry, a white iPhone, a black iPhone and a Motorola flip phone, all on or about 22:05 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been used in/ 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 (CDSA) and was therefore offencerelated property pursuant to section 11 (Search, seizure and detention) of the CDSA. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2014-2190, 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.


32 Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Victoria Outdoor Set 5HJ NOW

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While Supplies Last

Outdoor furniture price reduction

Chios Outdoor Set 5HJ

NOW

$1298

While Supplies Last

Sombra Patio Furniture

Square Table

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Side Chair

$149

$198

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Visit Us Online at scandesigns.com LANGLEY 20429 Langley By-Pass 604.530.8248

COQUITLAM 1400 United Blvd 604.524.3444

RICHMOND %ULGJHSRUW 5G 604.273.2971

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