Surrey North Delta Leader, July 29, 2014

Page 1

Tuesday July 29 2014

The

Leader

WEATHERING

THE STORM ▶ A SURREY WOMAN WHO LOST 10 FAMILY MEMBERS TO TYPHOON HAIYAN FOCUSES ON THE FUTURE 3

▶ SURREY CONFERENCE HEARS GOOD NEWS ABOUT GANG ACTIVITY 2

Nenita Yap lost 10 members of her family during Typhoon Haiyan last November in The Philippines. In June, the Surrey nanny won a $10,000 scholarship from Sprott Shaw College and hopes to bring her 13-year-old daughter to Canada soon. BOAZ JOSEPH

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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

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The battle against gangs in B.C. has made big advances but now is not the time to relax, a top B.C. Mountie told a conference on youth gang prevention Thursday. RCMP Chief Supt. Dan Malo said he believes redoubled community efforts and new policing tactics can further dent organized crime and prevent a resurgence of the gangland bloodbath of five years ago. “We’re down in the statistics,” Malo told delegates in Surrey at the Acting Together gang prevention conference organized by Kwantlen Polytechnic University. “A number of [gangsters] are in jail, a number of them are dead, a number of them have changed their behaviour and others we have forced to change their behaviour.” There have been just three gang-linked murders in B.C. so far this year, way down from 2007 to 2009, when the annual death toll ran as high as 36. Malo said it’s becoming clear a police strategy of pressuring prolific gangsters to make life uncomfortable and rob them of their power and influence is helping. He said it’s also clear earlier enforcement in B.C. failed because gang members “weren’t being touched” while they spent lavishly and developed the attitude they were “superstars” who could kill at will. “In the ‘90s and the 2000s we let people like [gangster] Bindy Johal run crazy. We let the United Nations Gang and the Inde-

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RCMP Chief Supt. Dan Malo JEFF NAGEL

pendent Soldiers run around with hoodies on that said they were all that.” Youth in B.C. cities were recruited and sucked into the vortex of violence. “Many of these young kids went from street-level bullying to drug trafficking to extortion to contract killing in a matter of a few years, when traditional organized crime takes decades to do that.” Past policing success was measured too much by the number of bad guys jailed or kilograms of cocaine seized, Malo said, and focused on taking out top crime kingpins. Today, he said, more effort aims to change attitudes and behaviours. “It needs to become part of the fabric of British Columbia that this kind of behaviour is not tolerated. We take our young kids, we turn them into superstars in our communities – not gangsters.” The new endganglife.ca campaign of B.C.’s

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anti-gang police unit plays on emotions of gangsters with imagery of loved ones left behind after they’re dead. Malo said it worked on one ex-Lower Mainland gangster, who recently agreed to exit the life rather imagine his child having to bury him. The biggest challenge was answering the man’s question of what he would do now to keep earning $6,000 a day. Malo said officers arranged for the ex-gangster to enter a training program for a job that will pay well. “If they choose to exit that lifestyle, we’re going to help them do that,” he told delegates. “We’re going to support them because they’re going to change their behaviour.” He said community groups can play a huge role in helping build strong character in youth and “give them role models that are not Jamie Bacon.” Malo also wants to put pressure on others who profit from gang activity. “We know car rental places that make all their money from renting cars to gangsters. We need to work with them maybe tell them that’s not the right side of the community they need to be in.” While there have been signs of success – Malo also counts the doubling in the price of cocaine in the past couple of years to $60,000 a kilogram, indicating a crimp in supply – there are also trouble spots. Heroin overdoses have spiked in the last six months, he said. And too many B.C. criminals remain influential players in the international drug trade. “Now is not the time to take our foot off the gas.” See related story on page 4

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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

3

‘I can’t see how you can hit a guy like that... and no charges whatsoever...’ ▶ MAN’S FAMILY ANGRY THAT CONTRACTOR FOR RCMP WILL NOT BE CHARGED IN FATAL HIT-AND-RUN KEVIN DIAKIW

A family is angered that no charges will be laid against a contractor for the RCMP who left the scene after killing Andrew Leduc last year. A civilian consultant working with Mounties on a traffic accident investigation was involved in a fatal hit-and-run accident on Aug. 7, 2013 in the 19500-block of Langley Bypass. The driver of the semi-truck was travelling eastbound in the curb lane at 3 a.m. when he struck and killed Leduc, 37, of Langley. The driver did not stop to render assistance, but kept driving. Leduc died at the scene. The consultant driving the semi-truck involved in the fatal hit-and-run had been working that day on a re-creation of an accident involving a semi-truck

Fighting to move forward ▼ SURREY NANNY NENITA YAP HAS WON A $10,000 EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIP BOAZ JOSEPH

Last November, Nenita Yap prayed for two days straight. The Surrey nanny was praying not only for the safety of her family, but for news – any news – out of the Philippines. The first trickle of information from the news blackout came on Facebook, but the short blip of “we’re okay” from one local source meant little in those early days. There were 15 people crammed into her family’s home when the devastating Typhoon Haiyan hit Tanauan, a small town where “everybody knows everybody” on the east coast of the island province of Leyte. Haiyan, a Category 5 typhoon, was one of the strongest tropical storms ever recorded. It slammed into Southeast Asia on Nov. 8, 2013, causing mass devastation – especially in the Philippines. It killed more than 5,000 people. The day before the storm hit, Yap was reassured by her family over the phone that they had extra supplies and the concrete house was ready for what was coming. “We thought it was strong enough to withstand the typhoon,” Yap told The Leader during an interview in Guildford. Indeed, the concrete house withstood the storm itself, but there was worse to come. Days later, Yap, on the phone and on the ground among the wreckage, would hear the

Andrew Leduc, 37, was killed in a hit-and-run collision last August. He left behind three children. PHOTO COURTESY CBC NEWS

same two words over and over: Storm surge. “(Before the typhoon), we didn’t know what it meant.” The rush of water that Haiyan unleashed plucked, one after another, 10 members of Yap’s family from the rafters of the house, including her mother Arnesia and second-oldest sister Editha. “It was like a tidal wave,” she said, wiping away tears as she recalled the catastrophe. “When I talk about them, I still get emotional,” she said. “It’s been exactly eight months.” Yap’s brother Rolly was trapped in another – and ultimately spared – house in the town, and later helped with rescues and the recovery, while her brother José (Joe) remained at home, holding on to whichever relatives he could as the storm surge swept through the lower floors, finally collapsing the walls. He helped Yap’s 13-year-old daughter Samantha survive with numerous scrapes and bruises, but José stills feels terrible guilt for being unable to save their 78-yearold mother, Yap said. José, in a twist of fate, had arrived home

that killed Surrey RCMP Const. Adrian Oliver in November 2012, at the intersection of 64 Avenue and 148 Street On Thursday, RCMP said there will be no criminal charges against the driver. Leduc’s brother Adam told CBC News he was extremely upset to receive the news. “I was pretty shocked I was pretty angry,” he told CBC. “I can’t see how you can hit a guy like that, leave him lying in the street to die and continue on and no charges whatsoever, not even a traffic ticket.” Surrey RCMP Major Crimes Section concluded its investigation after eight months, but Mounties called in the Office of the Police Complaints Commissioner (OPCC) to ensure the integrity of the investigation. This month, the OPCC ruled the RCMP finding was correct – that there was no criminality to the incident. At the time of the accident, the RCMP called the Independent Investigations Office (IIO), but as the driver was not a police officer, the incident did not fall under the purview of the independent investigators. A final report of the OPCC is expected in the coming weeks. ~with files from CBC News

just two weeks earlier after being employed paperwork allowing her and her daughter in Saudi Arabia. Two weeks later, his chilpermanent residency. dren died in the storm as he watched. In the meantime, she recently received a Yap arrived in the devastated area a bit of good news. week after the storm. The landscape had On June 30, she won a scholarship changed and much of her family was gone. through Sprott Shaw College at the Philip“Everything was flat. All pine Consulate in Vancouver the landmarks were gone.” for an essay she wrote about ▶ “When I talk While she was there, the the typhoon. bodies of several members The scholarship is worth about them, I still of her family were recovered; about $10,000 and will fully get emotional. It’s others were to be found and pay for Yap’s seven-month buried weeks later. been exactly eight Health Care Assistant diploAs Yap tries not to dwell ma program at Sprott Shaw, months.” on the heartbreaking story, as well as her books and she has the support of student fees. NENITA YAP Surrey’s Filipino communiThe course begins in ty and her church, and has August and will allow her to hope for a brighter future. continue to work while she “I keep myself busy. I concentrate on the studies. family I have left.” “This scholarship will help me a lot,” Samantha, who is currently living in said Yap, who also wants her 16-year-old Manila, is expected to move to Canada this orphan niece to join her in Canada. “It will summer or in the fall. make me much more employable.” Yap, who has been in Canada under the At present, money from her caregiver job Live-in Caregiver program for the past continues to flow back to her family in the 34 months, hopes to hear soon about Philippines.

Nenita Yap created a photo collage in memory of her lost family members. PHOTOS SUBMITTED


4

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

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booklet released by B.C.’s anti-gang police unit. The guide, titled Understanding Youth and Gangs: A Parent Resource, aims to help parents recognize and ward off the start of gang involvement. It focuses on dial-adope drug deliveries because that’s the main entry point for many youth who enter gangs or organized crime activity, said Sgt. Lindsey Houghton of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit (CFSEU-BC). The entry-level trade is not lucrative like gang recruiters make it out to be, the guide says, arguing most could make more money working fast-food restaurants but instead expose themselves to great risk. Dial-a-dopers are often under extreme pressure, it says, because they often rack up debts and will be held responsible by gangs for any product that’s stolen or fronted without payment. The guide, developed in partnership with the Acting Together (AT-CURA) Project and the South Asian Community Coalition Against Youth Violence, is to be translated into other languages, including Punjabi, Chinese and Vietnamese. Police and community partners will distribute the new booklet province-wide. It’s also online at endganglife.ca


Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Killer driver who attacked victim’s son granted full parole ▶ MOTORIST FATALLY STRUCK FATHER DELIVERING NEWSPAPERS IN SURREY TRACY HOLMES

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tion of alcohol; to follow a substance-abuse treatment plan; not to consume, purchase or possess drugs other than prescribed medications; and not to associate with anyone he knows or has reason to believe is involved in criminal activity or substance abuse.

himself with positive associates and continues A driver who struck to take responsibility for and killed a father as he his actions. delivered newspapers in “The board acknowlSurrey with his teenage edges that your index son four years ago has offence took a life and been granted full parole your actions with nearly with the a year surviving left in his victim were sentence. abhorrent,” Accordthe decision ing to the states, referParole Your Locksmith in Surrey, BC for Over 35 Years! ring to the Board of fact Wood Canada, pushed, the decipunched Call now 604 584 1511 sion to reand swore 10596 King George Blvd. lease Allan at Connor 24 Hour Emergency Mobile Service! Simpson McCron Wood was following the made June Victim: Bryan collision. 26 and BEST BUY - Correction Notice McCron “The board sent to In the July 25 flyer, page 6, the Asus AMD A8-6500 APU finds that media last with AMD Radeon HD Graphics (WebCode: 10298737) you have week. was advertised with an incorrect processor logo. made positive progress Please be advised that this CPU features an AMD A8 Wood’s two-year in observable and meaprocessor NOT an AMD A10, as previously advertised. sentence for causing the surable ways… You are Also, on page 16, the Nikon P53016.1 Megapixel Digital death of Bryan McCron not considered to have Camera, Camera Case and Mini Tripod (WebCode: ends June 2, 2015. entrenched criminal be10288513/ 10061488/ 10043870) were advertised Last summer, Wood, with an incorrect savings claim. Please be advised haviour… You reported41, pleaded guilty to that this camera package has $60 savings NOT $620, ly have insight into your assault and dangerous as previously advertised. We sincerely apologize for risk factors and into the driving causing death any inconvenience this may have caused our valued plight you have caused customers. in connection with the July 19, 2010 incident that killed McCron and injured his teenage son, Connor. (Charges of Your GoodLife Club is impaired driving causing death and failure to provide a breath sample were stayed). The court heard that Wood’s Chevy Silverado struck McCron’s Toyota Tercel as the McCrons were delivering newspapers in the 15300-block NO MONEY DOWN! NO ENROLMENT! of Colebrook Road. (On a 2 year membership) Limited Time Offer The Silverado was not insured; Wood did not have a valid driver’s licence; and, at the time of impact, Wood’s vehicle was travelling more than double the speed limit. He was granted day parole in January, a decision in which the parole board cited Wood’s limited criminal record, assessed low risk to reoffend, acceptance of responsibility and “reasonable level of insight.” After that decision, McCron’s sister, Vicki Macri, said the day parole was “a slap in the face of the victims NT® CLUB E M E G B D U U L J C O ED again.” YOUR N lcome Here ay) WTON COBODY We SURREY-NAEvenue (76 Ave. & Anvil W “Six months is about ry e v E 12992 - 76 all the justice system 4 m -59n@0g-oo1dlif6e6 feels a life is worth,” she fitness.co 778 to said. surreynew In making the latest decision, the board con*Based on the purchase of a 2 year membership. Bi-weekly payments sidered Wood’s respectwill commence based on your start date after club has opened. $9 weekly ful interactions with payments valid at Surrey-Newton Co-Ed Club. Applicable tax applies. No additional fees are required above the regular membership fee. Membership staff and residents at his fees vary based on club and selected membership option chosen. Limited community residential time only. Please check goodlifefitness.com or with club for hours of operation. Other conditions apply, see club for details. Proudly Canadian facility, that he secured a full-time job, surrounds

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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

Helping teenagers shift into drive It shouldn’t come as any great surprise that a recent ICBC survey found many parents are passing along poor driving habits to their teenagers. What is less expected is only about one-third of them seem to be aware of the impact their bad behaviour is having. Whether it’s speeding, failing to come to a complete stop or not properly concentrating on the task at hand, for some, the rules of the road tend to grow a little hazy over the years. And the more comfortable we get behind the wheel, the more corners we cut. Thanks to experience, most of the time, it works out. But for young drivers, who in all likelihood still occasionally flip on the wipers when they mean to signal a turn, there is an overwhelming

amount of information coming at them fast. Add heavy traffic, aggressive drivers and a seemingly endless succession of construction projects to create stress and confusion, and new drivers have enough to deal with. “Driving is particularly risky for new drivers because they lack experience. Not only are they more prone to crash but on average, 18 per cent of crashes involving young drivers result in an injury or fatality,” ICBC points out. Allowing teens to start out with bad habits passed down – however inadvertently – is like setting them up to fail. Along with the caveat, ICBC offers a few tips for parents as they prepare their teens for one of the (simultaneously)

RAESIDE

greatest freedoms and responsibilities they will ever know. When possible, they suggest, provide your teen with a vehicle that is a manageable size and has good visibility and an automatic transmission. Write and sign a family contract, laying out in no uncertain terms what is expected and the consequences of violating the agreement. Ensure they have a firm grasp of the rules and regulations. Most important, they say, parents should remove themselves from an emotionally charged situation and allow an expert to provide instruction. Whatever the cost, it’s worth it to know you’re giving them their best shot at success. And, of course, it never hurts to set a good example.

In defence of younger drivers BC VIEWS ▼ Tom Fletcher

A recent column on the B.C. government’s decision to raise speed limits on portions of rural highways excited numerous comments from readers. Some questioned my suggestion that today’s new drivers are worse because they spend their formative years staring at screens in the back seat instead of looking out the window and grasping the grim physics of the real world. There is no doubt that B.C.’s graduated licensing system for new drivers is more difficult than what my generation faced. Those vehicle stickers with the “L” (for learner, or as teens prefer “loser”) and “N” (for novice, or in teenspeak “nerd”) have been around since 1998. The two steps make getting a full driver’s licence a longer, more difficult and expensive process. Statistics provided by ICBC show what new drivers are up against. First there is the written “knowledge test” to obtain a learner’s permit. From 2004 to 2008, more than half of applicants failed in their first attempt. Things improved in subsequent years,

with a 46-per-cent failure rate in 2009 declining to 42 per cent by 2013. The first road test is required to go from “L” to “N” and it seems sufficiently harsh. The failure rate has been consistently around 47 per cent in the past six years. More practice and another $35 are required to try again. Students fare better on the second road test, where the failure rate has consistently been 21-22 per cent for the past decade. ICBC reports that in the first three years of the graduated licence program, the new driver crash rate dropped by 16 per cent. In 2003, the required learner and novice period were extended, and restrictions on the novice stage were increased. New driver crashes fell by another 28 per cent. Those restrictions include the number of passengers and a “zero tolerance” for alcohol. Impaired crash and injury statistics aren’t available for drivers in the graduated licence program, only fatalities. They grew as more new drivers were

enrolled in the new system, to a high of 24 in 2007, but that declined to 14 by 2012. There will always be young people who drive impaired, speed or make other fatal errors. But it’s difficult to argue that today’s system in B.C. is lenient. A couple of readers were concerned about the effect of higher rural speed limits on older drivers. One suggested that higher limits on rural highways are a poor mix with vacationing seniors hauling around oversized motorhomes, trailers and boats. Another cited the coming wave of retired baby boomers and added a likely increase in marijuana-impaired drivers, all emboldened by the invitation to drive faster. B.C.’s medical health officers issued a letter denouncing the decision by Transportation Minister Todd Stone to raise speed limits. Provincial Health Officer Dr. Perry Kendall

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said the research is clear that higher speeds increase the risk and severity of incidents. Then there is the government’s own position, articulated in a road safety strategy released last year by Attorney General Suzanne Anton. “Research is conclusive that at higher speeds, more people are killed and injured in the traffic system,” it states. “At lower speeds, fewer are killed and injured as a direct result of the safety buffer that lowered speeds create.” The strategy notes that new technologies such as adaptive cruise control are becoming available. B.C. is also testing electronic highway speed limit signs that change with weather and traffic conditions. Next comes self-driving vehicle systems, so drivers will be able to check their phones again. Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press.

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


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Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

▼ PUBLIC EDUCATION NEEDS TO BE STRONGLY DEFENDED

Parents organizing a rally supporting teachers’ concerns at the legislature in Victoria recently correctly stated that current contract negotiations are not about teacher greed, as government suggests. At issue is the sustainability of an inclusive, accessible and academically rigorous public education system. If we truly value such a system, we must be vocal to ensure it is funded. Currently, the Canadian public school system is internationally recognized as world class. In Canada, the majority of Canadian families enrol their children in public schools. I was surprised, therefore, when a school trustee attending this rally indicated not all trustees support or understand the vital role of public education. As citizens, we need to ask if our children’s interests are being well represented by our officials. By all appearances, the public system is increasingly incorporating elements of a privatized system (i.e. academies which require “tuition fees” from parents) – except it is funded less and less adequately. We need to ask hard questions to ensure our officials fulfill their mandate: Are you willing to support public education at the expense of private education? Conceivably, the answers from current and potential trustees may help us better understand where tax dollars are being spent. In the meantime, let your voice be heard strongly defending public education. Gillian Bateman, Delta

The people’s pipeline? ▼ BRITISH COLUMBIANS SHOULD HAVE A SAY ON NORTHERN GATEWAY I don’t think that it is okay that Ottawa has given approval for the Enbridge Northern Gateway oil pipeline to proceed. I believe that the people of the province should have the say whether or not the pipeline goes through. I know that we vote the government in, but I did not vote for the Conservatives. There should be a provincial referendum so that we, the people of the province, have a say on what is to be done. Yes, it will create jobs, but when it is finished what happens to all the people that helped build it? I must write this so that others can see what one Canadian has to say about the pipeline. Maybe others might think the same and if there are enough of us, things might change and a referendum might be held so that people of B.C. will at least think they have a say in what happens.

A letter writer wonders why Canadians aren’t paid royalties for the oil that is exported for refining, and then sold back at a high price. FILE PHOTO The price of fuel is outrageous in this province, which is ridiculous. We have our own resources in this country, yet we farm our oil out to countries to refine, and then they sell it back to us and we end up paying more for it than the refining nation.

Has any one thought of paying the people of this country royalties on the oil that is exported? They give the people of Dubai royalties, why not do the same in this province?

▼ SURREY TREE PRESERVATION GETS ‘PATHETIC LIP SERVICE’ FROM CURRENT COUNCIL My congratulations on a fine “Viewpoint” in the July 17 issue “Kudos for tree huggers,” by Frank Bucholtz. As a director/treasurer of the Green Timbers Heritage Society (GTHS) and a 28-year volunteer for Surrey heritage, I have seen Surrey go from a rural to a paved community. Thank you so much for a well-thought-out and clear criticism, pros and cons, of the pitiful lip service the current Surrey council has done for tree preservation. The greatest weakness in its tree bylaw is that Surrey-owned land is exempt. The long effort by GTHS to protect/promote the preservation of the “urban forest” is again in jeopardy as once again parcels are cut off for pavement and facilities. We hope that your Viewpoint will be a catalyst to reawaken the Surrey public to these threats and loopholes, especially in the threats against already set-aside green space.

Richard Griffin Surrey

S O U T H S U R R EY R E C R E AT I O N & A RT S C E NT R E

Fall Program Registration Registration for our Fall Programs begins on Monday, July 28! The South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre offers fitness and activity programs for people of all ages. Visit our newly expanded facility at 14601 – 20th Avenue and check out our expansion features: • 8,000 sq. ft. weight room • Spin Studio • Fitness Studio • Café (opening soon) • Multipurpose Arts Room • Visual Arts and Pottery Studios • Child-minding Room • Expanded Lobby • New Exterior Plaza Stop by the South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre to pick up your Fall Recreation Guide, or visit www.surrey.ca/register.

www.surrey.ca

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Jim Foulkes


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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

Forget something?

Surrey canine daycare business in 35% the doghouse with the city, SPCA *

OFF ALL

busy bee cleaners

8900 152nd Street, Surrey 604.581.3662

*Some Conditions Apply. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Coupon expires August 31, 2014.

OPEN: Mon - Fri: 7:30am - 6pm • Sat: 7:30am - 5pm

FUTURE SHOP – Correction Notice We would like to clarify the "SAVE up to $20 on select Case-Mate cases" promotion (WebID: 10290673/ 10290671/ 10262247/ 10290674/ 10262244) advertised in the July 25, page 11. The promotion should be "Save up to 20% on select Case-Mate cases" NOT "Save up to $20", as previously advertised. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

▶ OWNER ALLEGEDLY TAPED DOGS’ SNOUTS SHUT KEVIN DIAKIW

A North Surrey doggie daycare has been shut down by the city amid reports that the owner

was allegedly taping dogs’ snouts shut. But the owner has kept operating, despite the fact the city continues to issue fines

for operating without proper permits. Noise complaints about the daycare at a home in the 10900-block of Partridge Crescent came about six months ago, according to Surrey’s Manager of Bylaw Enforcement Jas Rehal. Then came accusations of abuse – that the dogs’ mouths were being taped shut. Rehal said bylaw officers witnessed that, and alerted the Society

for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The SPCA is currently investigating the complaints. At the end of June, Surrey pulled the daycare’s business licence. Rehal said a woman is continuing to operate the daycare, despite the fact she’s been issued three to four fines of $500 apiece. The city is now examining its legal options on how to close the business down.

Rehal said the city wants the fastest resolution to the problem. There are a total of 31 doggie daycares in Surrey, Rehal said, and no such complaints have been received about any of the others. “No, I checked that yesterday, and this is the only one,” Rehal said. Periodically, there are complaints elsewhere of dogs barking, but nothing that can’t be resolved.

63-year-old fatally stabbed BLACK PRESS

A senior was stabbed to death near the Front Room Drop In Centre in Whalley early Friday, sparking a manhunt for his killer. At about 6:30 a.m., Donald Williams Deweyn, 63, was fatally stabbed outside the building in the 10600-block of 135A Street, colloquially known as Whalley’s notorious strip. Deweyn had no criminal record, police say. The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) has taken custody of the investigation.

A motive for the killing has not been determined as of yet, but police say witnesses heard an argument between Deweyn and another man. It is Surrey’s tenth murder of the year. Surrey has typically seen about 13 murders a year over the last decade, except for last year when it hit an all-time record of 25. IHIT is asking anyone with information to contact the IHIT tipline at 1-877-551-4448 or to remain anonymous, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS).

Marjorie Andersen Joins BFL CANADA Bradley Potter, Managing Vice President and Gareth McDonnell, Vice President of Real Estate are pleased to announce Marjorie Andersen has joined the BFL Real Estate team as Client Executive. Marjorie has spent her 24 year career helping stratas manage their insurance needs. Her experience includes spending time with council members and property managers, answering questions on insurance, advising on industry trends and helping with claims. Now, as part of Western Canada’s largest team of strata/condo specialists, Marjorie is able to provide BFL’s exclusive Strata Protect insurance program. Strata Protect’s insurance policies have been specifically designed to protect strata owners, council members and property managers from unforeseen risks. Marjorie shares our commitment and passion for protecting Strata Corporations and owners and we welcome her knowledge, enthusiasm and kind manner to our Real Estate team. Marjorie can be reached at Mandersen@bflcanada.ca or 604-637-4591

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Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Woman faces charges in theft from veteran BLACK PRESS

A suspect arrested last month in connection with the theft of a war vet’s memorabilia is now facing additional charges. Jaylene Hawkins, a 23-year-old Surrey resident, is facing a total of 10 charges, including break and enter, identity theft, possession and/or trafficking in credit card data, uttering a forged document and possession of stolen property. She had earlier been charged with theft of mail, mischief, unauthorized use of credit card data, possession of stolen property and breach of a condition. The charges came after police found a stolen van that led them to a suspect in the May 30 break-in of a Second World War veteran’s home.

19th Annual Prospera Golf Classic raised $40,000 for The Centre for Child Development You did it for the kids and we thank you! Net proceeds from this event enable The Centre to continue helping children with special needs reach their potential.

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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Cult classic, ABBA and amazing race usher out the Clova Saturday, Aug. 2 in the historic town centre, starting at noon at the Clova. Later on, the Clova presents ABRA Cadabra, an ABBA tribute band (tickets are $30 for adults, $20 for children). The weekend wraps up with The Great Clova Auction on Sunday, Aug. 3 at 1:30 p.m., when fans can purchase a piece of Clova history. The Clova opened in 1947. A digital projector would have ushered in a new era for the Clova, but operator Craig Burghardt wasn’t able to secure a long-term lease with the building’s owner. The cinema had organized an inventive fundraising campaign in hopes of securing enough cash to modernize the projection system. But in March, the building was sold to a church. The family-owned single screen cinema – one of the last of its kind in operation in the Lower Mainland – is located at 5732 176 St. Visit www.theclova.com

▶ FAMILY OWNED SINGLE SCREEN CINEMA DRAWS THE CURTAINS AFTER THE B.C. LONG WEEKEND JENNIFER LANG

With less than a week to go until it closes forever, the Clova Cinema is adding events to its final weekend, starting with a screening of the Rocky Horror Picture Show on Friday, Aug. 1. Tickets are on sale ($10 in advance, $15 at the door) for the cult film, showing at 9:30 p.m. Costumes are encouraged, and prop bags ($5) will be available. The Clova is also hosting the second-annual Amazing Race Cloverdale. Teams of four to six members can register for the fun-filled challenge, slated for

Operator of the Clova Cinema, Craig Burghardt, is preparing for the theatre’s final showings. FILE PHOTO

Join the 2013 International Harmony Classic Division AA Champions! real women. real harmony. real fun We are a chorus of approximately 60 diverse women who sing with passion and perform with imagination. Each rehearsal is devoted to developing vocal skills while learning a variety of challenging repertoire ranging from traditional barbershop style to contemporary arrangements. T H E H I G H N OT E I N M U S I C L E A R N I N G!

Music Lessons

Register now for September SATURDAY & EVENING LESSONS AVAILABLE myc.com/teacher/LSteger

LaVonnie Steger 8077 158A Street

604-572-6927

One hour lesson includes piano, chording, ear training, composing and theory. Fun, colourful dynamic teaching techniques ensure your child enjoys their lesson – learning music should be fun!

Quality music education since 1980

Guess who’s coming to town!

an original script by Adrian Duncan, Jeff and Hannah Christensen and Mike Balser

November 26 - December 7, 2014 Surrey Arts Centre Theatre Tickets go on sale August 15th

HANDEL SOCIETY OF MUSIC CHOIR FIRST REHEARSAL FALL CONCERT SCHEDULE

If you love to sing, come and sing with us

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sun | 11:30AM - 7:30PM Jamaican Canadian Cultural Festival Free, all ages Holland Park, 13428 Old Yale Rd Annual Cultural Festival has activities and events for the whole family. jccabc.ca

sun | EVENING

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Watch the Sunset and see the Full Moon

Moonrise at 8:18pm • Sunset at 8:35pm Free, all ages • Crescent Beach Excellent photo op: today is the closest to earth that the moon gets all year. The sun will be up for 14 hours and 37 minutes; the moon will be visible for 9 hours and 43 minutes. High tide is at 4:40am and 6:50pm. The only low tide of the day is 11:40am.

sun | 11AM - 4PM

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Watershed Gallery & Gift Shop carries quality hand-crafted, local artisan wares. You will find pottery, paintings, photography, jewelry, fabric arts, woodwork, glassware, garden art, clothing, cards and much more. Every month the Gallery features a new p y 'Artist of the Month' display.

11425 84th Avenue, Delta For hours of operation, check our facebook page or website;

604-596-1029

Free, all ages Wander around the Historic Heart of Surrey. Named for the abundance of clover in the area the town center got its early start from the railroad which skirted along Clover Valley Rd. Historic facades, heritage homes, charming shops and country hospitality characterize the community. cloverdalebia.com

mon | ANYTIME Bike Ride

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Free, all ages Explore while getting exercise and reducing your carbon footprint with the new Surrey 2014 Route Map! Bike maps review biking rules and show existing bike routes including bike lanes, shared traffic lanes, local roads, and multi-use pathways. surrey.ca

mon | ANYTIME

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Admission by donation • 1395 - 176 St Meet over 300 animals and 110 different species. Come learn why tarantulas have hair, what snake skin feels like, what are the longest living creatures on the planet. Drop-in tours available. urbansafari.ca

Free download Launched by the Surrey Art Gallery, this app links you to videos, photos and maps answering your questions about public art in Surrey’s City Centre neighbourhood. surrey.ca/publicart

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By donation, all ages 13723 Crescent Road Located in Elgin Heritage Park in South Surrey, this picturesque site interprets the time period 1890 - 1920. Guides in Victorian costume provide tours of the restored farmhouse, original pole barn, boathouse, threshing shed, root cellar, heritage gardens, orchard and much more! surrey.ca

For more information call Rita 604-536-6818 handelsociety.ca | “Handel Society of Music” on facebook

BC Day - Visit Cloverdale

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Artwalk App

Historic Stewart Farms

WE ARE A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION SITUATED IN SURREY

mon | ANYTIME

Urban Safari Rescue Society

sun | 12 - 4PM

Director Johan Louwersheimer Handel’s Messiah – December 20 Vivaldi’s Gloria and Handel’s Dixit Dominus – November 8

www.watershedartworks.ca

▶ UNION DEMANDS SPEEDY CRACKDOWN ON LOW RATES JEFF NAGEL

Unionized container truckers say the province and Port Metro Vancouver haven’t done enough to crack down on rate undercutting within their industry since a deal ended a 28-day strike this spring. New minimum rates were supposed to be enforced – complaints would be investigated by the province and then the port could suspend or even ban offending companies from access to the container terminals. Unifor spokesman Gavin McGarrigle said the province promised to enact legislation in the fall to do its part, but the union’s members feel that may not come

Experience Surrey’s Cultural Crawl featuring festivals, public art, exhibitions, drop-in entertainment and more – often for free! For more information, visit www.bcculturalcrawl.com

PREMIER MUSIC PROGRAM for young beginners ages 3-12

Tuesday, September 2, 7pm Northwood United Church 88th Avenue and 156th Street

Port truckers dispute could erupt again

August2014 We sing every Wednesday: 7:15pm – 10:15pm 6:45pm registration for new guests Parkland Fellowship 9574 - 160 St. Surrey Corner of 96th Ave. and 160 St. info@westcoastsings.com

sun | 10AM - 4PM Learn about Bees

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$5 drop-in Honeybee Centre, 7480 - 176 St The Bees & Bugs Lab offers guided presentations every hour. Each presentation runs for approximately 25 min and includes a game or activity. Stay to explore exhibits in the Bees & Pollinators room for as long as you like, and take in more presentations. Family rate available. honeybeecentre.com

mon | DAWN TO DUSK Nature Trail

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Free, all ages Blackie Spit, 3136 McBride Ave 5km nature trail. Blackie Spit is one of the best bird watching areas in Canada with almost 200 species of birds recorded in a calendar year. The park is managed as a wildlife conservation area and habitat enhancement activities are ongoing throughout the park. surrey.ca

tues | 8:30AM - 4:30PM Go Fishing

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Free, all ages Green Timbers Lake, 14225 Green Timbers Way The lake is stocked with rainbow trout, offering a chance for anglers to experience fishing in the heart of the city. Check out the free Fishing Rod Loan Program at the Surrey Nature Centre. With the program, you can borrow a fishing rod and tackle box for up to a week. surrey.ca

tues | 8AM - 9PM Seen From Here: Recent Acquisitions

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Free, all ages Surrey Art Gallery, 13750 - 88 Ave Until Aug 30th, this exhibit features recently acquired works by artists who have called the South of the Fraser region home. Organized into groupings about people, places, and abstraction this exhibition is an eclectic mix of paintings, photographs, prints, and sculptures. surrey.ca/artgallery

tues | ANYTIME Geocaching

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Free, all ages • World wide Try geocaching and get addicted to a new hobby. Geocaching is the realworld treasure hunt that’s happening right now, all around you. There are 2,428,084 active geocaches and over 6 million geocachers worldwide. geocaching.com

tues | 6 - 8PM Teen Movie Night

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Free, ages 12 - 18 Fleetwood Library, 15996 - 84 Ave Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince. Register in library or 604-598-7347. surreylibraries.ca

movies

Under the ✶ stars

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wed | 12 - 5PM

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thurs | DAWN TO DUSK

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Surrey Urban Farmers Market

Wildlife Area

Free, all ages • City Hall Plaza, 13450 – 104 Ave Every Wed, this market will feature a wide variety of food trucks as well as vendors selling produce, meat, prepared foods, baked goods, crafts and more. Come meet local food producers and farmers, benefit from buying fresh, local, nutritious food, and discover local artistic talent. surreymarket.org

Free, all ages • Serpentine Fen, King George Blvd & 44 Ave Explore the 3.5km nature trail. 150 hectares managed by Ducks Unlimited is home to more than 130 species of birds. The Serpentine Wildlife Area lies in a triangle between Highway 99, King George Blvd (99A), and the Serpentine River. surrey.ca

wed | 10AM - 3:30PM

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Amal Wasfi: Nature Inspired & Chloe Kim: Artist Journey Free, all ages Newton Cultural Centre, 13530 - 72 Ave Drop by this unique gallery space in a converted firehall to see this and other monthly rotating exhibits! artscouncilofsurrey.ca

thurs | 11AM

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fast enough. “It could erupt very quickly into another dispute,” McGarrigle said of the simmering tensions. Unionized drivers’ jobs are at risk because their companies are losing work to cut-rate non-union trucking firms that don’t abide by the minimum rates, he said. “If we have a company with 50 trucks and all of a sudden 20 of us aren’t going to be working because someone isn’t playing by the terms of the action plan, are we supposed to just sit and wait at home while the province has its summer vacation?” He said minimum rates agreed in the strike settlement were to have been in effect within 30 days of the return to work in late March. “Here we are 100-plus days out and they haven’t taken the necessary measures to

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fri | 4 - 7PM Date Night!

$10 per couple Bear Creek Park, 13750 - 88 Ave Bear Creek Park Mini Golf offers couple specials every Fri during Jul & Aug. Reserve your tee-time on this 18 hole, natural and lush tree-lined 30-45 minute course. Check website for other summer deals! bctrains.com

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fri | 6 - 11PM Surrey Night Market

$2 admission, kids free Agriplex, Cloverdale Fairgrounds New open air summer market is an inclusive and multicultural family friendly event. Sample a variety of local foods, services and goods, while enjoying local performers on stage. Runs Fri and Sat until Aug 30. surreynightmarket.com

fri | 8AM - 9PM

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The Three Munschketeers

Grassroots Yoga Festival

$12.50, ages 4 - 94 Blackie Spit, Crescent Beach Are you looking for a good morning of fast paced entertainment for your young family? Enjoy live outdoor theatre at Crescent Beach, based on stories by Robert Munsch. Runs Aug 11 – 15. beachhousetheatre.org

Free, all ages Camp Alexandria, 2916 McBride Ave Community event with a focus on sustainable living. Offering yoga and meditation, as well as workshops with a focus on gardening, permaculture, knitting, and other self-sustainable activities. Aug 15 - 17. grassrootsyogafestival.com

sat | 1 - 3:15PM Teen Writer’s Open Mic

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Free, pre-reg Ocean Park Library, 12854 - 17 Ave Share what you’ve been working on for the Young Adult Writing Contest or any other original work at this inclusive event! All genres welcome, bring your music, poetry, monologue, or short story to read aloud. 604-502-6449 or lagawthrop@surrey.ca surreylibraries.ca

sat | 5PM, MOVIE AT DUSK Movies Under the Stars

L BEL

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Free, all ages Holland Park, 13428 Old Yale Rd Giant inflatable outdoor screen is guaranteed to bring you a unique movie watching experience. Bring your own blankets, lawn chairs and umbrellas and watch Rio 2. Refreshments will be available at the North Surrey Lions Club barbecue but feel free to bring your own picnic. downtownsurreybia.com

sat Cloverdale Blueberry Festival Free, all ages

backstop the action plan to progress on completing the ▶ “Here we are make it binding,” McGarrigle Joint Action Plan that ended said. the strike. 100-plus days Port Metro Vancouver Completed measures out and they spokesman John Parker-Jerinclude the opening of vis said the port has set up terminals at night to reduce haven’t taken a whistleblower line where congestion and installation container truckers can lodge of GPS units in all trucks to the necessary complaints on matters from improve efficiency and so measures to rate undercutting to excesdrivers can be compensated sive waits at port terminals. for unreasonable waits. backstop the The line has been in place A statement from Transaction plan to four weeks and has received portation Minister Todd more than 100 complaints Stone emailed by his staff make it binding..” so far. said the province is working GAVIN McGARRIGLE Parker-Jervis said there through the summer to comhaven’t been any licence susplete the remaining compensions yet but a number mitments from the strike of investigations are ongoing. settlement and thanked truckers “for their He said the port has made substantial patience and restraint.”

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Jarnail Arts

Cloverdale Town Centre, 5748 – 176 St Blueberry Arts Festival, Show N Shine, amusement rides, live entertainment, charity blueberry pancakes and BBQ’s, farmers’ market, pie eating contests, shuttle bus rides and lots of exhibitors at the Surrey Museum Plaza and Clover Square Village. cloverdalebia.com

We give you something to treasure!

PAINTINGS • PORTRAITS • MURALS PAINTING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN & ADULTS

wed | 4PM - DARK Lend a Hand for Charity

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Volunteer, all ages • 16582 - 40 Ave Young or old, all are welcome to help with farm tasks on this 70 acre project which now includes 5 farms. This year’s goal is 500 000lbs of produce to donate to charity. Find out where your food comes from and get your hands dirty with your neighbours! Wear work boots and bring a smile. godslittleacrefarm.com

wed | 6 - 7:30PM Crafters’ Club

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Free, adult Port Kells Library, 18885 - 88 Ave Drop-in Crafters Club, beginners welcome. Knit, crochet, quilt etc. Bring a craft project that you are working on. Coffee and tea provided. surreylibraries.ca

A great event for all ages! Bring a blanket and enjoy a movie outdoors! 5PM, movie at dusk ✶ Holland Park downtownsurreybia.com

thurs | 9:30AM - 5:30PM 21 fri | 9 - 9:45AM, 10 - 10:45AM 22 sat | 9AM - 12:30PM Story Time in the Park

Kids Swap Meet

Free, all ages Surrey Archives, 17671 - 56 Ave Many people access the collections of the Surrey Archives, including local and family historians, students, lawyers, real estate agents, City Staff, heritage and environmental consultants and general browsers. All researchers are welcome! surrey.ca

Free, ages 2 - 5 Redwood Park, 176 St & 20 Ave The tree house is located inside the forest, on the main walkway past the playground. Create fun-filled memories with your child this summer and uncover the magic with a new book and themed craft each week. Redwood Park is situated on a steeply sloping wooded hill. Must pre-register: partnersinparks@surrey.ca, 604-501-5100. surrey.ca

$5 before 10am, $4 after 10am Cloverdale Fairgrounds, 60 Ave & 176 St New and used toys, clothing, accessories and more; search for the best hidden treasures for children. cloverdale.bc.ca/events.php

thurs Go for a Swim

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8 Outdoor Pools • Free, all ages Surrey is home to 200 parks, and eight of them have free outdoor pools to enjoy! They are: Bear Creek, 13820 – 88 Ave; Greenaway, 17901 – 60 Ave; Sunnyside, 15455 – 26 Ave; Hjorth Rd, 10277 – 148 St; Holly, 10662 – 148 St; Kwantlen, 13035 – 104 Ave; Port Kells, 19340 – 88 Ave; and Unwin, 6845 – 133 St. surrey.ca

Aug 2: Aug 9: Aug 16: Aug 23:

fri | 11AM - 3PM

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Guildford Harvest Festival & Neighbourhood

Free, all ages • Holly Park, 10706 - 148 St Come out to Holly Park Community Garden’s Harvest Festival to meet your neighbours, take part in an artsy beautification workshop, and talk about local topics. Hosted by the Holly Park Community Garden; this event coincides with the Park Play 2014 wrap up event. surrey.ca

Despicable Me 2 Rio 2 The Lego Movie Frozen

sat | 10AM - 3PM

Jarnail Singh | Baljit Kaur

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Explore History

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Crescent Beach Concours d’Elegance

Free, all ages Blackie Spit Park, 3136 McBride Ave Continuing in the spirit of the former Steamworks Concours, the 2014 event marks the 12th year bringing together a gathering of Collector Automobiles and Motorcycles. crescentbeachconcours.com

Cell: 604-825-4659 Tel: 604-595-5885 E-mail: jarnailarts@hotmail.com 106 - 12882 - 85 Avenue, Surrey BC V3W 0K8

Jazz,Ballet,Tap, ap, al Hip Hop, Musical Theatre, Boyss only classes VOTED BEST STUDIO 3 YEARS

604.596.4161

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Acro/Dance camp August 18-21 10-3pm

danceCraft 604.594.2700

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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Cult classic, ABBA and amazing race usher out the Clova Saturday, Aug. 2 in the historic town centre, starting at noon at the Clova. Later on, the Clova presents ABRA Cadabra, an ABBA tribute band (tickets are $30 for adults, $20 for children). The weekend wraps up with The Great Clova Auction on Sunday, Aug. 3 at 1:30 p.m., when fans can purchase a piece of Clova history. The Clova opened in 1947. A digital projector would have ushered in a new era for the Clova, but operator Craig Burghardt wasn’t able to secure a long-term lease with the building’s owner. The cinema had organized an inventive fundraising campaign in hopes of securing enough cash to modernize the projection system. But in March, the building was sold to a church. The family-owned single screen cinema – one of the last of its kind in operation in the Lower Mainland – is located at 5732 176 St. Visit www.theclova.com

▶ FAMILY OWNED SINGLE SCREEN CINEMA DRAWS THE CURTAINS AFTER THE B.C. LONG WEEKEND JENNIFER LANG

With less than a week to go until it closes forever, the Clova Cinema is adding events to its final weekend, starting with a screening of the Rocky Horror Picture Show on Friday, Aug. 1. Tickets are on sale ($10 in advance, $15 at the door) for the cult film, showing at 9:30 p.m. Costumes are encouraged, and prop bags ($5) will be available. The Clova is also hosting the second-annual Amazing Race Cloverdale. Teams of four to six members can register for the fun-filled challenge, slated for

Operator of the Clova Cinema, Craig Burghardt, is preparing for the theatre’s final showings. FILE PHOTO

Join the 2013 International Harmony Classic Division AA Champions! real women. real harmony. real fun We are a chorus of approximately 60 diverse women who sing with passion and perform with imagination. Each rehearsal is devoted to developing vocal skills while learning a variety of challenging repertoire ranging from traditional barbershop style to contemporary arrangements. T H E H I G H N OT E I N M U S I C L E A R N I N G!

Music Lessons

Register now for September SATURDAY & EVENING LESSONS AVAILABLE myc.com/teacher/LSteger

LaVonnie Steger 8077 158A Street

604-572-6927

One hour lesson includes piano, chording, ear training, composing and theory. Fun, colourful dynamic teaching techniques ensure your child enjoys their lesson – learning music should be fun!

Quality music education since 1980

Guess who’s coming to town!

an original script by Adrian Duncan, Jeff and Hannah Christensen and Mike Balser

November 26 - December 7, 2014 Surrey Arts Centre Theatre Tickets go on sale August 15th

HANDEL SOCIETY OF MUSIC CHOIR FIRST REHEARSAL FALL CONCERT SCHEDULE

If you love to sing, come and sing with us

3

sun | 11:30AM - 7:30PM Jamaican Canadian Cultural Festival Free, all ages Holland Park, 13428 Old Yale Rd Annual Cultural Festival has activities and events for the whole family. jccabc.ca

sun | EVENING

10

Watch the Sunset and see the Full Moon

Moonrise at 8:18pm • Sunset at 8:35pm Free, all ages • Crescent Beach Excellent photo op: today is the closest to earth that the moon gets all year. The sun will be up for 14 hours and 37 minutes; the moon will be visible for 9 hours and 43 minutes. High tide is at 4:40am and 6:50pm. The only low tide of the day is 11:40am.

sun | 11AM - 4PM

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Watershed Gallery & Gift Shop carries quality hand-crafted, local artisan wares. You will find pottery, paintings, photography, jewelry, fabric arts, woodwork, glassware, garden art, clothing, cards and much more. Every month the Gallery features a new p y 'Artist of the Month' display.

11425 84th Avenue, Delta For hours of operation, check our facebook page or website;

604-596-1029

Free, all ages Wander around the Historic Heart of Surrey. Named for the abundance of clover in the area the town center got its early start from the railroad which skirted along Clover Valley Rd. Historic facades, heritage homes, charming shops and country hospitality characterize the community. cloverdalebia.com

mon | ANYTIME Bike Ride

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Free, all ages Explore while getting exercise and reducing your carbon footprint with the new Surrey 2014 Route Map! Bike maps review biking rules and show existing bike routes including bike lanes, shared traffic lanes, local roads, and multi-use pathways. surrey.ca

mon | ANYTIME

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Admission by donation • 1395 - 176 St Meet over 300 animals and 110 different species. Come learn why tarantulas have hair, what snake skin feels like, what are the longest living creatures on the planet. Drop-in tours available. urbansafari.ca

Free download Launched by the Surrey Art Gallery, this app links you to videos, photos and maps answering your questions about public art in Surrey’s City Centre neighbourhood. surrey.ca/publicart

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By donation, all ages 13723 Crescent Road Located in Elgin Heritage Park in South Surrey, this picturesque site interprets the time period 1890 - 1920. Guides in Victorian costume provide tours of the restored farmhouse, original pole barn, boathouse, threshing shed, root cellar, heritage gardens, orchard and much more! surrey.ca

For more information call Rita 604-536-6818 handelsociety.ca | “Handel Society of Music” on facebook

BC Day - Visit Cloverdale

4

Artwalk App

Historic Stewart Farms

WE ARE A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION SITUATED IN SURREY

mon | ANYTIME

Urban Safari Rescue Society

sun | 12 - 4PM

Director Johan Louwersheimer Handel’s Messiah – December 20 Vivaldi’s Gloria and Handel’s Dixit Dominus – November 8

www.watershedartworks.ca

▶ UNION DEMANDS SPEEDY CRACKDOWN ON LOW RATES JEFF NAGEL

Unionized container truckers say the province and Port Metro Vancouver haven’t done enough to crack down on rate undercutting within their industry since a deal ended a 28-day strike this spring. New minimum rates were supposed to be enforced – complaints would be investigated by the province and then the port could suspend or even ban offending companies from access to the container terminals. Unifor spokesman Gavin McGarrigle said the province promised to enact legislation in the fall to do its part, but the union’s members feel that may not come

Experience Surrey’s Cultural Crawl featuring festivals, public art, exhibitions, drop-in entertainment and more – often for free! For more information, visit www.bcculturalcrawl.com

PREMIER MUSIC PROGRAM for young beginners ages 3-12

Tuesday, September 2, 7pm Northwood United Church 88th Avenue and 156th Street

Port truckers dispute could erupt again

August2014 We sing every Wednesday: 7:15pm – 10:15pm 6:45pm registration for new guests Parkland Fellowship 9574 - 160 St. Surrey Corner of 96th Ave. and 160 St. info@westcoastsings.com

sun | 10AM - 4PM Learn about Bees

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$5 drop-in Honeybee Centre, 7480 - 176 St The Bees & Bugs Lab offers guided presentations every hour. Each presentation runs for approximately 25 min and includes a game or activity. Stay to explore exhibits in the Bees & Pollinators room for as long as you like, and take in more presentations. Family rate available. honeybeecentre.com

mon | DAWN TO DUSK Nature Trail

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Free, all ages Blackie Spit, 3136 McBride Ave 5km nature trail. Blackie Spit is one of the best bird watching areas in Canada with almost 200 species of birds recorded in a calendar year. The park is managed as a wildlife conservation area and habitat enhancement activities are ongoing throughout the park. surrey.ca

tues | 8:30AM - 4:30PM Go Fishing

5

Free, all ages Green Timbers Lake, 14225 Green Timbers Way The lake is stocked with rainbow trout, offering a chance for anglers to experience fishing in the heart of the city. Check out the free Fishing Rod Loan Program at the Surrey Nature Centre. With the program, you can borrow a fishing rod and tackle box for up to a week. surrey.ca

tues | 8AM - 9PM Seen From Here: Recent Acquisitions

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Free, all ages Surrey Art Gallery, 13750 - 88 Ave Until Aug 30th, this exhibit features recently acquired works by artists who have called the South of the Fraser region home. Organized into groupings about people, places, and abstraction this exhibition is an eclectic mix of paintings, photographs, prints, and sculptures. surrey.ca/artgallery

tues | ANYTIME Geocaching

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Free, all ages • World wide Try geocaching and get addicted to a new hobby. Geocaching is the realworld treasure hunt that’s happening right now, all around you. There are 2,428,084 active geocaches and over 6 million geocachers worldwide. geocaching.com

tues | 6 - 8PM Teen Movie Night

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Free, ages 12 - 18 Fleetwood Library, 15996 - 84 Ave Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince. Register in library or 604-598-7347. surreylibraries.ca

movies

Under the ✶ stars

11

wed | 12 - 5PM

6

thurs | DAWN TO DUSK

7

Surrey Urban Farmers Market

Wildlife Area

Free, all ages • City Hall Plaza, 13450 – 104 Ave Every Wed, this market will feature a wide variety of food trucks as well as vendors selling produce, meat, prepared foods, baked goods, crafts and more. Come meet local food producers and farmers, benefit from buying fresh, local, nutritious food, and discover local artistic talent. surreymarket.org

Free, all ages • Serpentine Fen, King George Blvd & 44 Ave Explore the 3.5km nature trail. 150 hectares managed by Ducks Unlimited is home to more than 130 species of birds. The Serpentine Wildlife Area lies in a triangle between Highway 99, King George Blvd (99A), and the Serpentine River. surrey.ca

wed | 10AM - 3:30PM

13

Amal Wasfi: Nature Inspired & Chloe Kim: Artist Journey Free, all ages Newton Cultural Centre, 13530 - 72 Ave Drop by this unique gallery space in a converted firehall to see this and other monthly rotating exhibits! artscouncilofsurrey.ca

thurs | 11AM

14

fast enough. “It could erupt very quickly into another dispute,” McGarrigle said of the simmering tensions. Unionized drivers’ jobs are at risk because their companies are losing work to cut-rate non-union trucking firms that don’t abide by the minimum rates, he said. “If we have a company with 50 trucks and all of a sudden 20 of us aren’t going to be working because someone isn’t playing by the terms of the action plan, are we supposed to just sit and wait at home while the province has its summer vacation?” He said minimum rates agreed in the strike settlement were to have been in effect within 30 days of the return to work in late March. “Here we are 100-plus days out and they haven’t taken the necessary measures to

1

fri | 4 - 7PM Date Night!

$10 per couple Bear Creek Park, 13750 - 88 Ave Bear Creek Park Mini Golf offers couple specials every Fri during Jul & Aug. Reserve your tee-time on this 18 hole, natural and lush tree-lined 30-45 minute course. Check website for other summer deals! bctrains.com

8

fri | 6 - 11PM Surrey Night Market

$2 admission, kids free Agriplex, Cloverdale Fairgrounds New open air summer market is an inclusive and multicultural family friendly event. Sample a variety of local foods, services and goods, while enjoying local performers on stage. Runs Fri and Sat until Aug 30. surreynightmarket.com

fri | 8AM - 9PM

15

The Three Munschketeers

Grassroots Yoga Festival

$12.50, ages 4 - 94 Blackie Spit, Crescent Beach Are you looking for a good morning of fast paced entertainment for your young family? Enjoy live outdoor theatre at Crescent Beach, based on stories by Robert Munsch. Runs Aug 11 – 15. beachhousetheatre.org

Free, all ages Camp Alexandria, 2916 McBride Ave Community event with a focus on sustainable living. Offering yoga and meditation, as well as workshops with a focus on gardening, permaculture, knitting, and other self-sustainable activities. Aug 15 - 17. grassrootsyogafestival.com

sat | 1 - 3:15PM Teen Writer’s Open Mic

2

Free, pre-reg Ocean Park Library, 12854 - 17 Ave Share what you’ve been working on for the Young Adult Writing Contest or any other original work at this inclusive event! All genres welcome, bring your music, poetry, monologue, or short story to read aloud. 604-502-6449 or lagawthrop@surrey.ca surreylibraries.ca

sat | 5PM, MOVIE AT DUSK Movies Under the Stars

L BEL

9

Free, all ages Holland Park, 13428 Old Yale Rd Giant inflatable outdoor screen is guaranteed to bring you a unique movie watching experience. Bring your own blankets, lawn chairs and umbrellas and watch Rio 2. Refreshments will be available at the North Surrey Lions Club barbecue but feel free to bring your own picnic. downtownsurreybia.com

sat Cloverdale Blueberry Festival Free, all ages

backstop the action plan to progress on completing the ▶ “Here we are make it binding,” McGarrigle Joint Action Plan that ended said. the strike. 100-plus days Port Metro Vancouver Completed measures out and they spokesman John Parker-Jerinclude the opening of vis said the port has set up terminals at night to reduce haven’t taken a whistleblower line where congestion and installation container truckers can lodge of GPS units in all trucks to the necessary complaints on matters from improve efficiency and so measures to rate undercutting to excesdrivers can be compensated sive waits at port terminals. for unreasonable waits. backstop the The line has been in place A statement from Transaction plan to four weeks and has received portation Minister Todd more than 100 complaints Stone emailed by his staff make it binding..” so far. said the province is working GAVIN McGARRIGLE Parker-Jervis said there through the summer to comhaven’t been any licence susplete the remaining compensions yet but a number mitments from the strike of investigations are ongoing. settlement and thanked truckers “for their He said the port has made substantial patience and restraint.”

16

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Jarnail Arts

Cloverdale Town Centre, 5748 – 176 St Blueberry Arts Festival, Show N Shine, amusement rides, live entertainment, charity blueberry pancakes and BBQ’s, farmers’ market, pie eating contests, shuttle bus rides and lots of exhibitors at the Surrey Museum Plaza and Clover Square Village. cloverdalebia.com

We give you something to treasure!

PAINTINGS • PORTRAITS • MURALS PAINTING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN & ADULTS

wed | 4PM - DARK Lend a Hand for Charity

20

Volunteer, all ages • 16582 - 40 Ave Young or old, all are welcome to help with farm tasks on this 70 acre project which now includes 5 farms. This year’s goal is 500 000lbs of produce to donate to charity. Find out where your food comes from and get your hands dirty with your neighbours! Wear work boots and bring a smile. godslittleacrefarm.com

wed | 6 - 7:30PM Crafters’ Club

27

Free, adult Port Kells Library, 18885 - 88 Ave Drop-in Crafters Club, beginners welcome. Knit, crochet, quilt etc. Bring a craft project that you are working on. Coffee and tea provided. surreylibraries.ca

A great event for all ages! Bring a blanket and enjoy a movie outdoors! 5PM, movie at dusk ✶ Holland Park downtownsurreybia.com

thurs | 9:30AM - 5:30PM 21 fri | 9 - 9:45AM, 10 - 10:45AM 22 sat | 9AM - 12:30PM Story Time in the Park

Kids Swap Meet

Free, all ages Surrey Archives, 17671 - 56 Ave Many people access the collections of the Surrey Archives, including local and family historians, students, lawyers, real estate agents, City Staff, heritage and environmental consultants and general browsers. All researchers are welcome! surrey.ca

Free, ages 2 - 5 Redwood Park, 176 St & 20 Ave The tree house is located inside the forest, on the main walkway past the playground. Create fun-filled memories with your child this summer and uncover the magic with a new book and themed craft each week. Redwood Park is situated on a steeply sloping wooded hill. Must pre-register: partnersinparks@surrey.ca, 604-501-5100. surrey.ca

$5 before 10am, $4 after 10am Cloverdale Fairgrounds, 60 Ave & 176 St New and used toys, clothing, accessories and more; search for the best hidden treasures for children. cloverdale.bc.ca/events.php

thurs Go for a Swim

28

8 Outdoor Pools • Free, all ages Surrey is home to 200 parks, and eight of them have free outdoor pools to enjoy! They are: Bear Creek, 13820 – 88 Ave; Greenaway, 17901 – 60 Ave; Sunnyside, 15455 – 26 Ave; Hjorth Rd, 10277 – 148 St; Holly, 10662 – 148 St; Kwantlen, 13035 – 104 Ave; Port Kells, 19340 – 88 Ave; and Unwin, 6845 – 133 St. surrey.ca

Aug 2: Aug 9: Aug 16: Aug 23:

fri | 11AM - 3PM

29

Guildford Harvest Festival & Neighbourhood

Free, all ages • Holly Park, 10706 - 148 St Come out to Holly Park Community Garden’s Harvest Festival to meet your neighbours, take part in an artsy beautification workshop, and talk about local topics. Hosted by the Holly Park Community Garden; this event coincides with the Park Play 2014 wrap up event. surrey.ca

Despicable Me 2 Rio 2 The Lego Movie Frozen

sat | 10AM - 3PM

Jarnail Singh | Baljit Kaur

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Explore History

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Crescent Beach Concours d’Elegance

Free, all ages Blackie Spit Park, 3136 McBride Ave Continuing in the spirit of the former Steamworks Concours, the 2014 event marks the 12th year bringing together a gathering of Collector Automobiles and Motorcycles. crescentbeachconcours.com

Cell: 604-825-4659 Tel: 604-595-5885 E-mail: jarnailarts@hotmail.com 106 - 12882 - 85 Avenue, Surrey BC V3W 0K8

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The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

13

A second attempt at a medal ▼ SURREY LIFTER EYES THE PODIUM AT COMMONWEALTH GAMES IN GLASGOW RICK KUPCHUK

Parm Phangura is in Glasgow, Scotland for his second Commonwealth Games. But as far as the 35-year-old Surrey weightlifter is concerned, it might as well be his first time as an actual competitor. A three-time national champion, Phangura qualified for the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, India. But after flight delays and longer-than-expected layovers resulted in a 40-hour trek to get to Delhi, he contracted an illness soon after arriving and was in no shape to be at his best during competition. “I got sick and lost 15 pounds in three days,” he recalled. “Those Games started bad for me. I competed, but I bombed out. I missed all three lifts. “But it’s just part of sports. So after that, the goal was to get back to the Commonwealth Games.” Phangura had planned to retire a couple of years ago, but wondering how he might have fared had be been healthy in 2010 prompted him to postpone retirement and continue lifting. He reached qualifying standards at the Western Canadian championships in Winnipeg last March, but had to wait until early June to be notified he was selected for the Canadian team heading to Glasgow. He declared a medal was the goal for Delhi, but four years later he is happy just to be there, do his best, and see how it compares to other lifters. “I have other responsibilities now, like my daughter, who is six,” he said. “So I am more of a part-time athlete now, going up against some full-time competitors. “I am ranked in the top five among the lifters who will be there, and the top three are well ahead of the rest of us. But you never know what happens in competition.” Phangura will compete on PARM Wednesday (July 30) in the PHANGURA 105 kg. class. And no matter what happens, this will be his last competition. “Oh yeah, this is the last kick at it,” he said. “I have my own company, teaching weight training to athletes in many different sports. It’s nice to meld into that now that my (competitive) lifting is winding down.” Three other Surrey athletes will be be competing at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, which run July 23 to Aug. 4. Christabel Nettey, 23, will contest the long jump in the track and field competition Sunday (July 27). A graduate of Johnston Heights Secondary, Nettey won a bronze medal at the 2013 Francophone Games with a leap of 6.63m, and her personal best is 6.75m. Alice Falaiye of Canada won the gold medal at continued on page 13

Lucas Soper of the Whalley Chiefs slides into second base during a PBL game against the Vancouver Canadians at Whalley Stadium earlier this season. The two teams are among five seeking the PBL championship next weekend in Whalley at a fourday tournament hosed by the Chiefs. BOAZ JOSEPH

CHIEFS HOST PBL’S BEST AT WHALLEY

FIVE TEAMS PLAY FOR BC PREMIER BASEBALL LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNAMENT AT WHALLEY STADIUM ▶

RICK KUPCHUK

It took a 48-game regular season and a best-of-three playoff round, but the field is set for the B.C. Premier Baseball League (PBL) championship tournament next weekend at Whalley Stadium. The five-team tournament will run Friday through Monday, and the host Whalley Chiefs will be competing against the Langley Blaze, North Shore Twins, Victoria Mariners and Vancouver Cannons for the championship of the elite 18-and-under league. The five teams will play a round robin Friday through Sunday, with the top three teams playing off Monday. The Blaze, North Shore and the Mariners were the top three teams in the PBL over the past four months by a wide

on the road. After a fifth-place finish (26-22), they travelled to Kelowna and upset the fourthplace Athletics (28-20) in three games. Chiefs general manager Paul Hargreaves isn’t surprised by margin. Langley finished atop the four teams which have the standings with a 35-12 qualifi ed for the championship (won-lost) record, but needtournament, correctly predicted three games to eliminate ing the PBL’s top squads back the eighth-place Nanaimo in early April. Pirates in their playoff series “North Shore, Langley last weekend in (Blaze), VancouLangley. ver (Cannons) ▶ “We’re The North Shore and probably the Twins were in sechere to have Victoria Mariners ond place at 32-12, are the odds-on some fun and and also needed favorites to reach three games to see if we can the final four,” advance in the said Hargreaves playoffs, knocking upset a few prior to the first out the Victoria teams.” pitch of the 48Eagles in North game PBL regular PAUL HARGREAVES Vancouver. season. Victoria placed While the third in the final Twins, Langley, league standings at Vancouver and Mariners have 34-14, and hosted the White been at or near the top of the Rock Tritons, winning the PBL, the Chiefs struggled in series in two games. 20-14. The Cannons were the lone A bright spot was designated team to win their playoff series

hitter Jacob Robazza finishing the season as the PBL’s batting champion, hitting .438 with 25 runs batted in (RBI) and a league-best four triples. The Fraser Heights Secondary student was the only player in the league to hit better than .400. Offensively, the Chiefs rank with the best in the PBL, with a team average of .275 that trailed only the Twins (.291) and Mariners (.277). The Blaze were right behind Whalley at .273 while Vancouver hit .258. It was pitching where the Chiefs struggled, their 4.17 ERA (earned run average) behind all opponents except the Parksville Royals (4.88). Victoria led the league with a 1.93 ERA, followed by the Blaze at 1.95 and the North Shore at 2.10. “Some days our pitchers are world beaters,” said Hargreaves. “But it depends how they start. If they get through the first two innings unscathed, they only get better. continued on page 13


14

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

▶ BLAZE THE FIRST OPPONENT from page 13

“But sometimes they take two or three innings to get focused, but by then we’re down 3-1 or 4-1.” During the regular

season, the Chiefs played four times against each opponent. They split the four games against the Cannons, won once against the North Shore and were winless against Langley and the

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Mariners. Whalley will play their first game at the championship tournament against the Blaze Friday (Aug. 1) evening at 7:30 p.m., then play the Mariners Saturday at 2 p.m. They are on the field twice Sunday, at 1 p.m. against Vancouver and at 3:30 p.m. with the Twins. “We’re here to have some fun and see if we can upset a few teams,” said Hargreaves. “We’re not going to roll over.” The top three teams advance to a playoff Sunday, with a semifinal game at 10:30 a.m. followed by the final at 1 p.m. All games will be televised live via VBN Sports at http://client. stretchinternet.com/ client/vbn.portal, a first for the PBL playoffs. All games will also be available for viewing for 90 days following the tournament. Admission is $10 for the tournament or $5 per day. Children’s admission is $1 per day. Tournament passes will include coupons for the concession, t-shirts and other offers.

▶ DEVELOPMENT CAMP ON ICE A dozen participants participated in a Women’s Sledge Hockey of Canada development camp July 1820 at the Surrey Sports and Leisure Centre. The weekend concluded with a game against the Eagles men’s team July 20. Four current members of the Canadian national women’s team were present at the event. BOAZ JOSEPH

www.surreyleader.com

2014

Surrey Business Excellence Awards

NOMINATIONS OPEN! Presented By:

▶ PANESAR SCORES FOR CANADA

SURREY BOARD of TRADE

from page 13

This is your chance to nominate your company or a deserving person for Surrey’s top business awards. Business Excellence Award (1-10 employees) Business Excellence Award (11-40 employees) Business Excellence Award (41+ employees) Not-for-Profit / Association Business Person of the Year New Business of the Year

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Student Entrepreneur of the Year Nomination Deadline: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 Nomination forms at: www.businessinsurrey.com For more information Call: 604.634.0347 | Email: brianne@businessinsurrey.com ASSOCIATE SPONSOR

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The

HOTEL

To confirm your interest in completing a full nomination form, fax (604-588-7549) or email (brianne@businessinsurrey.com) this form to the Surrey Board of Trade. Company or Nominee Name: ________________________________ Nominated By: ______________________________________________ Phone: _______________ Email: ________________________________ Category: __________________________________________________

the 2010 Games with a jump of 6.50m. Arjun Gill, 23, will wrestle in the 97 kg. class Wednesday. The current national champion after winning a silver medal at the nationals in 2013, Gill is a graduate of North Surrey Secondary. Sukhpal Panesar, 21, is a member of Canada’s men’s field hockey team which is currently competing. A member of United Brothers FHC, Panesar also competed at the 2013 Junior World Cup. In Canada’s first game of the Commonwealth Games, Panesar scored in a 3-1 loss Thursday to New Zealand. Canada has also lost 2-0 to Malaysia and defeated Trinidad and Tobago 3-1. Canada concludes round robin play with a game against England on Tuesday.


Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Whalley Little Leaguers advance to World Series tournament ▶ ALL-STAR TEAM WINS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP IN CALGARY, WILL PLAY AT INTERNATIONAL EVENT IN CALIFORNIA RICK KUPCHUK

LEADER BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Whalley Little League’s Intermediate all-star team is in Livermore, California today for the first game of the Intermediate World Series. They will play their first game today (Tuesday), just four days after they claimed the Canadian championship with an 8-2 win over Ontario at the six-team national tournament in Calgary. Whalley dominated the opposition in Calgary, winning all seven games played while outscoring their opponents by an average of 18-3. After scoring 95 runs in five round robin games, B.C. defeated Quebec 13-3 in a semifinal game to qualify for Friday’s final against Ontario. In the championship game, Whalley led 1-0 after one inning and 4-0 after two. Winning pitcher Winston Wong held Ontario to just three hits, and two runs which were scored in the bottom the the seventh inning. Wong struck out 10 Ontario batters. Sean Sasaki led the Chiefs offensively with a pair of hits. He, Adam Inouye and Evan Alexander had two RBIs each. In the semifinal game against Quebec, Whalley scored six times in the bottom of the first inning. After Quebec cut the difference in half at 6-3, Whalley put up another five runs in the bottom of the third frame to put the game well out of reach. Inouye had three hits against Quebec, while Sasaki drove in four RBIs. Sasaki finished with a tournament-best .684 batting average in the five round robin games, leading all batters with 13 RBIs. Andy Kliewer was second among all batters with a .588 average. Other members of the Whalley team are Marcus Garcia, Christian Raytek, Bailey Chiasson, Rey John Fortaleza, Sherman Lin, Braden Scott, Matthew Slater and Jacob Mahon. The World Series is comprised of two dou-

ble-knockout tournaments, one for the six teams from the U.S.A. and another for the five international teams. The U.S.A. winner will play the international champion for the World Series banner on Monday (Aug. 4). Q Whalley will send a second all-star team to a Little League national championship next weekend in Valleyfield, Quebec. Whalley’s Senior Little League team won their provincial championship, and will be the B.C. representative at the national tournament that begins Friday. On their way to a B.C. championship, Whalley defeated North Vancouver Central 9-0 in the quarterfinal round, topped Mt. Seymour 5-2 in the semifinals, then topped Coquitlam 6-2 in the final. The national champion will advance to the Senior League World Series in Bangor, Maine.

CARRIERS NEEDED IN SURREY

Please Call

604-575-5342

PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION

11-16 11-17 12-15 17-06 21-02

149 124 99 58 93

16-20 25-17 26-10

126 110 109

26-18

131

29-13 30-02 30-38 30-55 36-13

142 68 118 50 91

37-12 39-01

81 77

MARINE DRIVE, WHITE ROCK East Beach – West Beach – White Rock Pier

AUGUST 1, 2 & 3 • FEATURING…

• Main Stage Entertainment (continuous) • Fireworks • Torchlight Parade • Kids Zone • Market Place • Vancouver Aquarium Aqua Van • Sandcastle by Craig Mutch • Salmon Barbeque by Semiahmoo First Nation • AND SO MUCH MORE!

+ + MAIN STAGE + + Headline Entertainment

Saturday August 2

58 Ave - 60 Ave, 184 St - 186A St Highway 10(56 Ave) - 58 Ave, 184A St - 186 St 54 Ave - Highway 10(56 Ave), 181A St - 184 St Bear Creek Dr - 82 Ave, 140 St - 141A St Tulsy Cr E - Waterford Pl - Tulsy Pl, 132 St - 133A St - 87 Ave 81A Ave - 84 Ave, 151 St - 152 St 88 Ave - 89 Ave - Drummond Pl, 126 St - Arran Pl - 128 St 91A Ave - 92 Ave, Stuart Pl - Huntley Ave, 130 St - Stuart Cr - 132 St 88 Ave - 89 Ave , Queen Mary Blvd - Lanark Pl 131 St - Inverness Pl - Edinburgh Dr - 132 St 88 Ave - Fraser Hwy, 150 St - 152 St 112 Ave - 113 Ave, 153 St - 154A St 108A Ave - 110A Ave, 154 St - 155 St Barnston Dr E - 98 Ave - 100A Ave, Lyncean Dr - 179 St Berg Rd - Selkirk Dr, Bentley Rd - Harper Rd - Brentwood Dr - Hansen Rd, Park Dr - Grosvenor Rd - Cowan Rd 105A Ave - 106 Ave, 144 St - 145 St 111 Ave - 112A Ave, 128A St - 132 St

The

FURNITURE

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GUARANTEED BEST PRICE ON

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from our family to your family since 1974

EYECARE

COMPUTERS

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Call now to book your full Eye exam

Well trained computers @ a great price Custom Computers and Repairs

604-501-1533

#113, 8940 - 152nd Street, Surrey 604.588.5227

NO CHARGE for children, First Nations & income assistance 510 7488 King George Blvd. Surrey, BC V3W 0H9 BOOKS

• Astrology • Cinema • Cooking

8:00 pm

MEDIA SPONSORS SEMIAHMOO LEVEL

Leader

PLUMBING

• Sikhism, Hinduism and Islam

• Novels in Punjabi, Hindi & Other • Dance & Music Languages • Learning • Bi-lingual Languages Books for & Dictionaries (Punjabi, Hindi, Urdu, Children • Yoga & Health

Wide selection of books in many languages!

65thrsary! Annive

UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTES ROUTE#

15

Bengali, Gujarati, etc.)

# 117B 12888 - 80th Ave. 604.593.5967 • 604.595.2923 York Business Centre info@indiabookworld.ca Surrey, BC V3W 3A8 www.indiabookworld.ca

COMMUNITY SPONSORS MAIN STAGE FRIENDS OF THE FESTIVAL

Dale & Wendy Mumford

Brian & Alicia Hagerman

For more info visit us at www.whiterockseafestival.ca or contact us at email@whiterockseafestival.ca


16 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

Your community Your classifieds.

604.575.5555 fax 604.575.2073 email ads@bcclassified.com

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

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 6

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 33

INFORMATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 102

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57 TRAVEL.............................................61-76 CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387

A Great Janitorial Franchise Opportunity

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587

IF YOU ARE...

REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696

S S S S

RENTALS ......................................703-757 AUTOMOTIVE ..............................804-862 MARINE .......................................903-920

604-588-3371 smhfoundation.com

It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes for typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.

ACCOUNTANT/ ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN

ANNUAL STARTING REVENUE $24,000 - $120,000

A well established firm of C.A.’s located in Surrey is seeking a staff accountant / accounting technician with full working knowledge of Caseware, Caseview, Taxprep, Excel, Sage and Quickbooks with the opportunity to work flexible hours. Acctg designation not required. Competitive Compensation & Benefits!! Please forward your resume: Heming, Wyborn & Grewal, #200 - 17618 -58 Avenue, Surrey, BC, V3S 1L3 or Fax: 604-576-2890 or email:

• 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

56

ON THE WEB:

bcclassified.com

INFORMATION

PERSONALS

041

SPORTS & RECREATION

SUNRISE GOLF COURSE 5640 - 188TH St Surrey

9 Holes Golf Course Open 7 days/wk fr 8am-7pm Weekday Rates: Seniors $10, Regular $12 Weedend Rates: Seniors $14, Regular $16

GET FREE VENDING MACHINES. Can Earn $100,000.00 + Per Year. All Cash-Retire in Just 3 Years. Protected Territories. Full Details CALL NOW 1-866-668-6629. Website WWW.TCVEND.COM.

33

INFORMATION

OF Great FE

Get the guidance you need now.

TRAVEL 74

TIMESHARE

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

75

CARRIERS NEEDED IN DELTA

Please Call

604-575-5342

UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTES ROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION

2-09 67 2-10 71 4-02 106 4-04 92 4-08 93 4-10 84 4-18 105 5-10 5-11 6-08 8-08

68 64 135 83

6-09 94 8-12 93 8-16 56

Scarborough Dr - Carnaby Pl - Bridlington Dr - 112 St Barnston Pl - Minster Dr - Auburn Pl - Filey Dr - Malton Dr - 112 St Huff Blvd - Paterson Rd - Stewart Rd - Stewart Pl - Lyon Rd - Kingswood Crt - Newport Pl, Sussex Cres - Ryall Cres Cherry Ln - Lyon Rd - Faber Cres - Hamlin Dr - Kent Cres - Stoney Cres 64A Ave - Lincoln Dr - Bond Blvd - 66 Ave, Stoney Cres - Carncross Cres - Mckenzie Dr 64 Ave - Bond Blvd, McKenzie Dr - Sunshine Dr - Hillside Cres Clark Dr - McKee Dr - Woodhurst Dr - Abbey Dr - Fairlight Cres - Caddell Dr Westside Dr - Modesto Dr, Wiltshire Blvd Sheaves Rd - Nechako Dr - Fraser Pl - Skagit Dr 84 Ave - 84A Ave, 116A St - 119 St Dunlop Rd - Delcourt Cres - Delcrest Dr - Delwood Dr - Delmonte Cres - Delvista Dr 82 Ave - 83 Ave - Greenhill Pl, 112 St - 114 St 84 Ave - Harrogate Dr - Dunlop Rd Centre St - Private Rd - Johnson Wynd - Iverson Cres, Main St - Karr Pl

The

Leader

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES CHEVALLIER GEO-CON Ltd. of Rocky Mountain House, Alberta requires experienced Cat and Hoe Operators, Class 1 Lowbed Driver, Heavy Duty Mechanic & Mechanic’s Helper. Safety tickets required. Please email resume to info@geocon.ca or fax to 403-844-2735. EMPLOYERS SEEKING CANSCRIBE MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION GRADUATES. We can’t meet the demand! Medical Transcription is a great work-from-home career! Contact us today at www.canscribe.com. .800.466.1535 info@canscribe.com MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION is an in-demand career in Canada! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get the online training you need from an employertrusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-888-528-0809 to start training for your work-at-home career today

114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

EXPERIENCED Class 1 Drivers, earn $70,000.00 plus per year with Sutco, plus many benefits. Drivers needed for our Flat Deck division apply on line at sutco.ca or call 1-888357-2612 ext 230

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

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.

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

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

Carlton Cards Limited has a sales opportunity in the social expression industry. We currently seek:

FREE from Valley View!

TRAVEL

Fountain of Youth Spa and RV Resort Offers more vacation for less money, hot mineral springs, events, activities, fitness, entertainment. www.foyspa.com or 888-800-0772.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

R!

604-576-0340 / 604-761-1419

Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

Advertise across the Lower Mainland in the 15 best-read community newspapers.

www.welcomewagon.ca

Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION

_____________

1-866-627-6074 We have Gifts & Information

33

bcclassified.com reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

COPYRIGHT

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

Looking for witness of accident on June 14, 2014 at 3pm. Incident occurred on Nordel off ramp southbound of Alex Fraser Bridge between Black four door Mercedes with tinted windows and Grey Nissan Skyline. Please contact 604 354 1420

bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse by law.

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

Make a gift that honours the memory of a loved one.

PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483

AGREEMENT

ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Similar products sold in n stores for $39.95 Prepared by reputable legal professionals Laid out in an easy-to-follow format

Not available by maill

PLUS ! The Family Registry E Estate Pl Planner™ l ™ ‘A complete guide to recording final wishes’ Free and Without Obligation. Call now! 604 596-7196 VALLEY VIEW MEMORIAL GARDENS & FUNERAL HOME CEMETERY, FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION CENTRE 14644-72nd Avenue, Surrey • A division of Arbor Memorial Services Immediate need: 604 596-8866 • www.valleyviewsurrey.ca

AREA SUPERVISOR SURREY/DELTA Responsibilities include selling and maintaining our products in established independent and chain retailers, implementing Head Office directives, and managing a staff of merchandisers, including hiring, training, coaching and measuring performance. The ideal candidate will be a strong communicator who is detail oriented with good computer skills, and 1-3 years of outside sales or retail experience. Post-secondary in business or equivalent is required. We offer a career opportunity plus: •Guaranteed Base Salary •Competitive Bonus Opportunity •Company car •Protected Territory •Paid Expenses •Formal Training •Comprehensive Benefits Package •Career Advancement Potential •Must have a valid driver’s license •Out of town and overnight travel required To explore this opportunity, please forward your resume, no later than August 15, 2014, via e-mail: humanresources@carltoncards.ca Visit our web site at: www.carltoncards.ca. We encourage applications from all designated groups. No agencies or phone calls, please. While we appreciate all responses, we must advise only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.


Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 17

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

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.

Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

115

EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 121

ESTHETICIANS

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

130

HELP WANTED

NAIL TECHNICIAN

Required Full-Time, Perm. for Loan Thanh Thi Vo dba Queens Nails. 7135 138 St. #147 Surrey, BC V3W 7T9. Salary: $18/Hourly. Must be fluent in English. Start immediately. Must have GED. Will be required to Manicurist and pedicurist clean, shape and polish fingernails and toenails and provide related treatments. Contact Ravinder Randhawa Fax: 604-598-9950 or Email: loan.thanh.thi.vo2014@gmail.com

130

PRODUCTION WORKERS

LAB TECHNICIAN

Temporary Lab Technician for Fuchs Lubricants wanted until end of August. To perform Quality Control testing and sampling, data entry, filing, maintenance of equipment, calibrations, & customer service work. Perfect for science student enrolled in university in fall. Lab exp. mandatory. Located in Langley, BC. $17.00-$18.00/hr. depending on experience.

HELP WANTED

An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators, meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-(780)7235051.

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 with Resume: hr@sfyl.com

Email resume: jbperez@fuchs.com or Fax: 604-888-1145 .Flagpersons & Lane Closure Techs required. Must have reliable vehicle. Must be certified & experienced. Union wages & benefits. Fax resume 604-513-3661 email: darlene.hibbs@shawbiz.ca

Gas Station Attendants

ORDER PICKER

2 required, full-time contract for Triple Nine Group Holdings Ltd. of 101 - 7999 King George Highway, Surrey, BC, V3W 5B3 Duties: fuelling vehicles, checking fluid levels, minor service and maintenance, like washing windshields, replacing tires, receiving payment from customers, some maintenance jobs such as changing price tags, sweeping floors, maintaining the lot area & greeting customers. Evenings & weekends, shift work. Wage: $12.00/hr. Apply with resume: toor.daljit2014@gmail.com or fax: 604.598.9950

Growing cleaning company req`s a part - time maintenance support person for day work. Various Lower Mainland locations. Long term, flexible scheduling, newer commercial bldgs, some travel. Equipment provided. Standards training program. Cleaning or handyman experience beneficial.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED WANTED

PB Distribution We are currently seeking people for our afternoon/night shift pickers in our cold storage warehouse. Requirements: F Picking & packing of customer orders F Operating RF scan guns F Stable work history F Ability to work as a team or independently F Ability to lift up to 50lbs F Repetitive / frequent lifting, standing and walking F Asset in knowledge of stand-up reach trucks/dock stockers F No experience necessary but is an asset If you are interested in this position and meet the above requirements, plse send your resume to:

ADULT SUBSTITUTE CARRIERS for Surrey North Delta Leader Part-time, Small vehicle required. Door to door delivery Tuesdays and Thursdays. Please call 604-575-5342

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. 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:

jobs.vantage way@gmail.com

Surinder.dhaliwal@ pbdistribution.com

MAINTENANCE SUPPORT Retired but want to work?

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

134

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

TIM HORTONS HIRING F/T & P/T Early Morning & Afternoon Shift - includes 1 day on weekend Apply in person to: Store 1468

19875 96 Ave Langley Or online:

www.timhortons.com - follow instructions to “Join Our Team”

139

MEDICAL/DENTAL

PHARMACY ASSISTANT required immediately for local Langley Pharmacy. No Sundays or Evenings. Experience in Blister Packing an asset. Please reply by email to:

valphar@hotmail.com

SEEKING MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS TO WORK FROM HOME! We are currently recruiting experienced MTs to work from home. CanScribe graduates preferred. Positions available immediately. Email: mt.recruiter@yahoo.ca

Email Gerry: gcc@shaw.ca Ph: 604-908-7455 (leave msg) Advanced Building Care Systems Inc.

Sales Advisor - Digital Products

Primary Focus: • Contact prospective business clients via phone and email • Develop trustworthy and informative relationships • Maintain a strong volume of calls with the assistance of our CRM system Qualifications: • Strong telephone skills • Marketing and/or creative mindset • Ability to thrive in a fast-paced environment • Basic computer skills • Strong command of english, both verbal and written It is also an asset if you have a good knowledge of BC communities. This is a full time position based in Surrey, BC. Black Press offers competitive compensation, a team environment, benefits and opportunity for career advancement. Please forward your resume with a brief note on why you are a great candidate to: Kristy O’Connor, Digital Sales Manager koconnor@bpdigital.ca Competition closes August 13, 2014

blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com

Carriers Needed! e l b a l i a v a s e Rout away in right ose to Delta, clome. your h CALL

604-575-5342 TODAY!

Leave your name and phone number.

PICK YOUR ROUTE

Are you confident enough to develop business conversations? Black Press publishes the Surrey Leader, Langley Times and Peace Arch News along with 150 other publications. We will develop individuals with an ambition to succeed whether they have deep post-secondary credentials or not. This is an exceptional opportunity if you are adept at making successful calls and highly rewarding to those that maintain the required pace. We have an immediate opening for a Sales Consultant on our Digital team representing our highly successful online recruitment platform LocalWorkBC.ca.

Earn Money!

130

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

SURREY LEADER

Now Hiring

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

If interested please call 604.575.5345


18 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 156

SALES

INSIDE SALES PROFESSIONAL

M.A. STEWART & SONS LTD. an International valve and fitting company headquartered in Surrey, B.C., has an immediate opening for a qualified Inside Sales Professional to join our growing team full-time.

To apply visit our website www.mastewart.com and click on careers.

LOOKING FOR WORK?

Check out bcclassified.com Help Wanted - Class 130

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

MASTER CRAFTSMEN WANTED

PERSONAL SERVICES 182

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

FINANCIAL SERVICES

269

DROWNING IN DEBT? Cut debts more than 60% & DEBT FREE in half the time! AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free Consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+

FENCING

6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE. $12/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work. Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.

Are You $10K Or More In Debt? DebtGo can help reduce a significant portion of your debt load. Call now and see if you qualify. 1-800351-1783

275

FLOOR REFINISHING/ INSTALLATIONS

BOLD and Bald Laminate Services Premium Floor Installation starting @ $1.00/sq.ft.! Call 778-895-9291

.Jim’s Mowing. 310-JIMS (5467).

175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

188

7 Days / Week

Meadows Landscape Supply Ltd.

LEGAL SERVICES

✶ Bark Mulch ✶ Lawn & Garden Soil ✶ Drain Gravel ✶ Lava Rock ✶ River Rock ✶Pea Gravel

(604)465-1311

meadowslandscapesupply.com SHINE LANDSCAPING *Grass Cutting *Hedge Trimming *Yard Clean *Pruning *Powerrake shinelandscaping@hotmail.com

Kristy 604.488.9161

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

356

ABOVE THE REST “ Interior & Exterior Unbeatable Prices & Professional Crew. • Free Est. • Written Guarantee • No Hassle • Quick Work • Insured • WCB

778-997-9582

RUBBISH REMOVAL

518

Running this ad for 10yrs

PAINT SPECIAL

SPECIALIZING IN

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

Valley View Memorial Gardens - Surrey In close proximity to chapel. Double depth plot. Current value is $10,500. Please present your negotiable offer.

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

(1)604-392-3656 gdpetersen@shaw.ca JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT! 604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca

CHEAP HOME REPAIRS

338

RUBBISH REMOVAL Almost for free!

PLUMBING

(778)997-5757

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

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 296

Reno’s and Repairs

KITCHEN CABINETS

317

SBroken Concrete RocksS $24.00 Per Metric Ton SMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS $24.00 Per Metric Ton GrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds

604-465-1311

CLEANING SERVICES #1 CLEANING SERVICE Saving U Time! Supply Includes. 12 yrs. Exc. Refs. Bondable. 778.386.5476

320

MOVING & STORAGE

NKI Moving & Delivery Family O/O Since 1991 *Residential Movers *Business Relocation *Deliveries *Rubbish Removal Ask about our Eco-Friendly Moving Boxes

Brads Junk Removal.com. Same Day Service. Affordable Rates! 604.220.JUNK (5865)

372

RENOS & REPAIRS Excellent price on Hot Water Tanks Furnace, Boilers, Plumbing Jobs & Drain Cleaning

374

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

www.affordablemoversbc.com

ELECTRICAL

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

NEIGHBOURS ELECTRIC Licensed, Warrantied, Affordable. Renos & small jobs. Res & comm. 7 Days. Free est. 604-710-5758.

Low Cost. Same Day. Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos Panel changes ~ 604-374-0062

386

.Port Kells Nursery

RAJ GARDENING *Yard Clean-up *Power Raking *Lawn Cut *Hedge Trimming *Pruning *Fertilizing. Res/Comm. 604-724-8272 or 778-960-3334

~ PRO PAINTERS ~ INTERIOR / EXTERIOR Quality Work, Free Estimates Member of Better Business Bureau

WCB INSURED

Vincent 543-7776

WINDOW CLEANING

“ The best you can Get” 604-690-4644 / 604-358-0230

PETS

604-537-4140

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

POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

Call Ian 604-724-6373

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

REAL ESTATE 625

FOR SALE BY OWNER

SULLIVAN MEWS

LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

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

TREE SERVICES

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

Gutter & Window Cleaning

$45/Hr

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

DRYWALL

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

Call Victor 604-589-0356

AFFORDABLE MOVING

PSB DRYWALL ★ All Boarding, Taping, Framing & Texture. Insured work. Dump Removal Service. 604-762-4657/604-764-6416

260

PRESSURE WASHING

All Gutter Cleaning Window & Roof Full house cleaning

MISC. WANTED

FIREARMS. All types wanted, estates, collections, single items, military. We handle all paperwork and transportation. Licensed Dealer. 1.866.960.0045 www.dollars4guns.com.

BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7 Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com

LowerMainlandMoving.com

DESIGN

563

✭ 604-312-7674 ✭

341

KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs - Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available online only @ Ace Hardware & The Home Depot

VALLEY View Memorial Gardens, 2 side by side burial plots in Garden of Nativity. $8000 for both. Price includes title transfer. 604-309-4344

A Gas Fitter ✭ Plumber

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING

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

SUNDECKS

Plumbing Services - Hvac Gas Fitting & Electrical. C & C Electrical Mechanical 604-475-7077

778-317-5049

UNIQUE CONCRETE

MISC. FOR SALE

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com

✶Dump Site Now Open✶

$59.00 Per Ton

FRUIT & VEGETABLES

Bill & Judy’s Blueberries, U-Pick, $1.35 pound. Call 604-530-7401. 24452-32nd Ave. Langley

13’ RECREATIONAL KYAK Incl paddles & safety equipment. In exc cond! $950. 604-635-7376.

~ 604-597-3758 ~

MISC SERVICES

Meadows Landscape Supply

542

560

Furnace, Boilers, Hot Water Heat Plumbing Jobs ~ Reas rates

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

CONCRETE & PLACING

UNDER $400

LOCAL Blueberries & Raspberries Raspberries 4 flats for $29.99 U-Pick Blueberries. Surrey Farms. 5180 152 St. ~ 604-574-1390

~ Certified Plumber ~ ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

242

526

4 Stow Master 235/80R 16 trailer tires, less then 3000 miles use, 1 Hankook LT235/85R 16, 10 ply truck tire, less than 300 miles. All tires mounted on rims. $350 for all. 604-594-5463

TONY’’S PAINTING

A1 BATH RENO’S. Bsmt suites, drywall, patios, plumbing, siding, fencing, roofing, landscaping, etc. Joe 604-961-9937.

236

BURIAL PLOTS

PRESTIGIOUS SERMON ON THE MOUNT

EXTRA

Accounting & Tax Services

BUILDING SUPPLIES

STEEL BUILDINGS...”STEEL OVERSTOCK SALE!” 20X20 $4,055. 25X24 $4,650. 30X32 $6,586. 32X34 $7,677. 40X48 $12,851. 47X70 $17,899. One End wall Included. Pioneer Steel 1-800668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca

520

3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour

GARDEN & LAWN MAINT. Prune, hedge trim, garden clean-up. Reasonable. Call Tom at 604-764-0015

Bookkeeping for individuals and small business corporations, Clean up historical books, Full Payroll, GST, PST and WCB Returns. Tax Returns for Individuals and businesses. Management and systems help. Raju Nanduri CGA 778-688-2999 rajunanduri@yahoo.com

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

STEEL BUILDINGS / METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

www.paintspecial.com

• Basement Suites • Kitchens • Baths • Remodels • Additions • Flooring • Painting • Drywall • Much More Since 1972 Dan 778-837-0771

Purebred CAIRN TERRIER Pups Shots, dewormed. $650. House pets. 778-588-1051,604-859-1724

Hauling Garbage & Rubbish 20 Yard Bins Available Contact Mario 604-828-2806

604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

TOTAL RENOVATIONS

288

203

COCKER SPANIELS, family raised, shots, vet chkd & de-wormed. $750. GOING FAST. 1-250-218-0681

KMM JUNK REMOVAL

Email: mario_kmm@yahoo.ca

Repair, Replace, Remodel...

EB GARDENING. All your Landscaping & Gardening needs. Pressure wash. 604-543-1634, 604-318-5636

257

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

Roofing Experts. 778-230-5717 Repairs/Re-Roof/New Roofs. All work Gtd. Free Est. Call Frank.

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

ACCOUNTING / TAX /BOOKKEEPING

CHIHUAHUA, small, female, 3 yrs old, very sweet, $400. Call (604)794-7347

PITTBULL Puppies Born March 7th. Purebred. Great bloodlines. All papers, dewormed. 604-765-0453.

Call 778-688-3724

FREE ESTIMATES

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

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

FULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1-800-573-2928

PETS

GOLDEN RETRIEVER, Bernese Mtn pups. 1st shots, deworm, 8 wks, asking $800. (604)793-1271

BEST LAWN & Garden Service. We don’t just maintain, we improve. 25 yrs exp. Call Mike 604-868-3554

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

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

EXCEL ROOFING LTD. All kinds of roofing work. Reroof, New, Repairs. Free est. (778)878-2617

RICHGOLD Contr. Ltd. Bsmt suites, framing, drywall, paint, decking, flooring, crown moulding & all kinds of reno’s. Sam 604-992-8474.

WORK WANTED

PERSONAL SERVICES

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

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

Best Prices & Service! Boarding, Taping, Texture paint, Stain removal and Much More! We complete Basements! Carpet & Laminate Flooring Small Jobs Welcome! 25 yrs of exp Free est. & quote! Call Kam @ (604) 551-8047

Prompt Delivery Available

PET SERVICES

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

Doing a Renovation or Drywall Repair?

Unfiled Tax Returns? Unreported Income? Avoid Prosecution and Penalties. Call a Tax Attorney First! 855-668-8089 (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET)

474

477

Furnace & Air Conditioning

287

PETS

CAN’T AFFORD to spay or neuter? Help for Newton cat owners. 604-538-3404

BEAUT BATHROOM & KITCHEN Plumbing + Drywall + Elect. + Tubs & Showers & Sinks + Toilets & Tile + floors + countertop + painting. Sen disc. Work Guar. 21 yrs exp. Call Nick 604-230-5783, 604-581-2859

WAREHOUSE

Writer: creative, innovative, poetic, yearning to fulfill my creativity! Do you need someone to write: short stories for film/tv, marketing, advertising, slogans, or to come up with a brilliant idea for business? Please contact: berliner10@shaw.ca

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

GARDENING

If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161.

Contact: Daljit coverstarinc@gmail.com

165

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

604-461-0999 281

Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000. Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046

EXPERIENCED CHEMICAL WAREHOUSE OPERATOR. Do you enjoy a challenging, fastpaced, “never-a-dull moment” environment? Are you mechanically inclined? Are you self-reliant? Quadra Chemicals Ltd. is looking for an experienced, chemical warehouse professional for our Delta BC facility. This is not just an “order picker” job. Our warehouse team works closely with many other departments to ensure our customers receive the right product at the right time. We are looking for someone who is able to multi-task, can take direction but is still able to work without supervision. Someone committed to improving work processes; is comfortable around tools and equipment; and is able to see a problem and take the initiative to fix it. The ideal candidate: - will be a high school graduate - have 1 to 3 years’ experience in a shipping/receiving department, preferably in a chemical or related environment (warehousing, bulk filling, tank farm) - have experience on forklifts - be able to lift 50 pounds WHMIS & TDG training and good computer skills are definite assets. Must be willing to work overtime on occasion. Quadra offers an excellent compensation package which includes a competitive salary, an incentive plan, pension plan, health benefits, employee assistance program, and more. To learn more about our company, please visit our web site at www.quadra.ca If you are interested in meeting with us and have the qualifications we are looking for, please forward your resume via email to: resume@quadra.ca

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

~ Hot water tanks ~ Gasfitting/Sheet metal

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

Apply On-line: www. handymanconnection.com /handyman-job-careersopportunities.aspx

164

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

284 HEAT, AIR, REFRIGERATION

Must have min. 10 years exp. Serving Metro Vancouver & surrounding area. F/T, P/T, Flexible hours & great compensation!

Req. for Cover Star Structures Ltd. Business address & location of work: 7811 Vantage Way Delta BC, V4G 1A6. Welder, F/T, $26/hr. MIG / TIG weld sheet metal parts, including mild steel & aluminum. Fabricate welded assemblies. Trade diploma or min. 2 yrs. relevant exp. required. Machinist, F/T, $28/hr. Operate and maintain a variety of machine tools and machining operations such as boring, planning, drilling, sawing etc. Trade diploma or min. 2 yrs. of relevant exp. req’d.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

Gutters - Windows - Tile Roof cleaning - Pressure Cleaning. Please Call Victor 604-589-0356

• Plumbers • Painters • Electricians • Finish Carpenters • Tilers • Dry Wallers • Handymen / Jack Of All Trades

• WELDER • MACHINIST

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

FEED & HAY

FEEDER HAY $180 per ton in 3 x 4 square bales. Delivery avail. Sawdust & Shavings. 1- (250)838-6630

55 + Co-Op. 2 bdrm, 2 bath upper unit. 1200 sf. Recently reno’d. $210,000: 1502066A Ave. Unit 6.

Call for details: 604-598-3121 or 360-296-9658

SURREY. 2303 Cranley Dr. Sunnyside Estate. 1248 sqft. Manufactured w/land. Strata fee $80. $299,900. 604-495-1909

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

Ask about our

99

$

ROOM SPECIAL

CALL TODAY! 604-803-5041 www.benchmarkpainting.ca


Tuesday July 29 2014 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 19 REAL ESTATE 625

RENTALS

FOR SALE BY OWNER

706

APARTMENT/CONDO

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

W.Maple Ridge: 2Bd+den, 75x139 lot, 19x15 wrkshp 220V + carport, RV prkg. $415K. 604-944-8100.

Office: 7121 - 133B St. Surrey 604-596-0916

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

627

HOMES WANTED

SURREY 126/72 AVE. 2 Bdrm handicapped unit, $930/mo. Quiet family complex, no pets, call 604543-7271.

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

SURREY 75/120A St. 2 Bdrm apt $920/mo. Quiet family complex, no pets. 604-501-0505. Surrey

Beautifully Upscale 1 Bdrm Suites - perfect for the discerning renter!

PRIME LAKEVIEW LOTS

Starting at $810. Located close to bus routes & skytrain, 20 min walk to Surrey City Centre.

FROM $140,000 Also; Spectacular 3 Acre Parcel at $390,000

Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets.

Call Surrey Gardens Apts at 604-589-7040 to view our Elite Suites!

1-250-558-7888 www.orlandoprojects.com ~ FINANCING AVAILABLE ~

715

RENTALS 706

DUPLEXES/4PLEXES

GUILDFORD bright clean 2bd bsmt wd, fencd yrd,nr transit/schls/amens Ns/np. $800 +utils. 604-283-9055.

APARTMENT/CONDO

RENTALS 739

MOTELS, HOTELS

750

CHIMNEY HILLS 145/72. 1 Bdrm suite avail now, nr all amens. $550 incl hydro. Ns/np. (778)242-0790.

HOMES FOR RENT

$1800 / 2br - S. Surrey Home This two bdrm hse is on a large lot has been completely renovated from top to bottom. Aug 1. Refs are a must. For more info 604-880-4919

A place where you feel you belong. Where your neighbours care and children share. Well you’ve found us and we are in N.Delta.

Ridon Apts: Families Kennedy Pl: Adults 604-596-9588

CROSSROADS We got a great thing going on.

FLEETWOOD Area; $2300 4 bdrm - 2900 ft. Beautiful and spacious 4 bedrooms and the den home on oversize lot, w/ large backyard, there is a jaccuzzi in the master bedroom, 3 and 1/2 bathrooms, 3 family rooms, laundry room, large kitchen, 2 car garage, utilities not included. Available to move in. tel # (604)877-7787 or (604)417-2888

BEAUTIFUL 3BR Condo for rent, parking for 2 , weight room, close to bus and shopping. Surrey/Delta border. Available immediately furnished $2200 or unfurnished $1950. Contact Fazal 604-6447773, Fuzzbee@aol.com, no smokers or pets

CHIMNEY HTS bright 1 bdrm suite avail Aug1. Ns/np, no laundry. $650 incl utils, cable, wifi. 604-807-6268.

604-584-5233 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. $1,100/mo + utilities. Call Craig @ 778-388-4932

FLEETWOOD brand new 2 bdrm suite w/priv lndry, Avail now. ns/np $900 incl utils/cable. 778-237-8204

CLOVERDALE large 1 bdrm 3rd flr $790 incl heat & hot water. N/P. 604-576-1465, 604-612-1960 Linwood Place Apts: 604-530-6555 1 & 2 bdrm apts, $650-$900/mo. Ask about our Move-In BONUS.

736

HOMES FOR RENT

RENOVATED house in Surrey Central for rent - $1300. 2 L bedrm, 1 bath, garage. Call: 778-558-1690 SURREY 140th & 71A. 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, lrg yrd, nr all amens Avail now. N/S, N/P. $1700/mo. 604-507-8112 or 604-710-7113 SURREY Strawberry Hill 7572 122A St, 2 bdrm Suites. New renov., minutes 2 elem school & all amenities. $900 inc utilities. 604596-1695. merle_ugalde@hotmail.com

Rentinfo.ca www.rentinfo.ca Peninsula Property Management #304 - 1959 152nd Street, White Rock, B.C. V4A 9E3

URGENTLY NEEDED! Rental Homes for Qualified Tenants. PHONE:

604.536.0220 RESIDENTIAL RENTALS IN B.C.

by James Barrick

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

818

CARS - DOMESTIC

FRASER Hts: 2bdrm walkout bsmt ste, NP/NS. No ldry. $825 inc cable, utils. Avail. now. 604-585-7777

NEWTON. **BRAND NEW** Large 2 bdrm suite - Includes utils, cable, & coin laundry. NS/NP. Avail now. 604-507-4455 or 604-781-3554. SURREY 10793 142A St. Avail now or August 1. 2 Bdrm suite main floor 5 appl, no pets, 1200 sq.ft. $860/mo 778-863-3450 or 604-809-7796

.1993 Mercury Topaz. 360-510-6827 jeanj226@gmail.com

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS 1989 Mercedes Benz 300SE

SURREY CENTRAL 1 bdrm ste, nr Gateway skytrain. Ns/np. $600/mo 604-760-8877 or 778-549-5301

Blue with black leather interior.

SURREY Clayton, 3 bdrm suite, 2 baths, inste w/d, d/w. Sept1, Ns/Np. $1250 +20% utils. 604-576-9330.

$2700. Call 778-385-6028

751

SUITES, UPPER

216K. AirCared

in Excellent Condition!

845

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

SURREY Scott/100 Ave. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath. Modern/clean. View, lndry, f/p & lots of prkg. $1375. 604-951-7992

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

TOWNHOUSES

SURREY 139/68 Ave, 2 bdrm townhouse, $900, quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-599-0931.

N.SURREY newly reno’d 3 bdrm bungalow, 2 full baths, sep theatre room. Ns/np. Avail now. $1550 + utils. 604-649-9304, 604-498-5488.

In Deep Water

FLEETWOOD 156/81A Ave. 3Bdrm Avail now. Near schl/amens, NS/NP $1000 incl util/lndry. 604-501-4900

752

HOUSE near Surrey centre One bedroom share kitchen bathroom laundry no pets 778-887-0818

This week’s theme:

CLOVERDALE. Newly reno’d 2 bdr walk-out suite on acreage, priv laund, pkng, ns/np, nr all amens, schools. Aug 15th, $800 + shared utils (not incl cable). 778-869-3021.

Peninsula Prop Management

www.cycloneholdings.ca

CHANGE OF NAME I, Dayalo Kaur Gill, daughter of Bachan Singh, holder of Indian Passport No: F8009855 issued at Vancouver, BC on 05/18/2007, permanent resident of V.P.O Akalgarh Kalan, Distt. Ludhiana, Teh Jagraon, Punjab India and presently residing at 7477 - 116 Street, Delta BC V4C 5T1 do hereby change my name from Dayalo Kaur Gill to Dialo Kaur Gill, with immediate effect.

CHIMNEY HTS. Newer 2 bdr suite. Fenced yrd. $700 incl utils & cable. NS/NP. Avail Now. 604-290-4022.

3 Bedroom Townhouse $981.00 SUTTON PLACE 13834 - 102 Av. Certified with City of Surrey Crimefree Multi housing Program. Pets ok (some restrictions apply). Close to schools, skytrain, shopping. Call (604) 436-6717

Quiet community living next to Guildford Mall. Clean 1 & 2 bdrm (some w/ensuites), Cable, Heat & Hot Water included. Onsite Mgr.

Crossword

Auto Financing Dream Team - www.iDreamAuto.com or call 1.800.961.7022

SURREY Sturt Place. 3 Bdrm upper suite, 1.5 baths, w/d, avail Aug 1st. $1300/mo. Call 604-446-9925.

Cedar Lodge and Court Apts

TRUCKS & VANS

Call (604)503-3151

CHIMNEY HTS - 14635 76 Ave. Spacious gr/lvl suites: 2 Bdrm $675 & 3 bdrm with 2 baths, $1025/mo. NS/NP. Avail now. 604-729-2134.

N.DELTA 80/115 Spacious newly reno’d bright quiet 2 bdrm suite, new kitch, floor & paint, f/p, lndry, pkng. $850 +utils. 778-574-4180.

736

851

1998 FORD WINDSTAR 6/Pass Van. AirCared. All Power. Air Cond works! Even has TV! A1 Cond In/Out! $700.

CHIMNEY HEIGHTS. 2 Bdrm suite ns/np. Avail now. $650 incl utils/cbl & net. 778-565-1879, 778-318-0288

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS

Are you looking for a Safe Home to stay a spell.

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

BEAR CREEK Quiet 1 large Bdrm + den. $575 incl hydro. No lndry/cbl. Suit 1. N/S. N/P. 604-572-4001.

55 and older, 1 bedroom suites. No pets

604-538-8308

845

SUITES, LOWER

GUILDFORD 1 bdrm grnd lvl suite, semi-furn’d. Near all amens, mall & bus. Aug 1st. $650 incl utils/cable. 778-840-6069 or 778-882-6647

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

AUTO FINANCING

TRANSPORTATION

BEAR CREEK AREA - 2 bdrm, cls to transit, school, bus, shopping centre. n/s, n/p. $700/m. Aug. 1st. (604)597-5010 or 604-616-5010

Scott Rd/100 Ave 3bd up 3bd down 1/2 duplex 3ba ldry lots of prkg f/p cls to ament $2800 604-951-7992

S. Surrey, 2603 151 St.

810

TRANSPORTATION

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

Affordable Housing for Seniors

Call Mon-Fri btwn 9am-noon.

TRANSPORTATION

SURREY 174/57 Ave. 2 Bdrm T/H. $910/mo and 3 Bdrm T/H $1065. Quiet family complex, no pets. Call: 604-576-9969 SURREY 64/K.George 2 Bdrm T/H bsmt, $995/mo, washer/dryer hook ups, quiet complex, no pets. Call 604-501-2533. SURREY 65/135 St. 3 Bdrm T/H. $985, quite family complex, no pets, washer/dryer, call 604-596-1099

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

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673 #1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200

ACROSS 1. Party leader 5. Covers with flour 10. Folio 14. Lacunae 18. Imprint clearly 19. Not moving 20. Bel -21. Place in Czechoslovakia 22. Fashion name 23. Step 24. Liquid measure 25. Getz or Kenton 26. Start of a quip by Demetri Martin: 4 wds. 30. Spread 31. Range of knowledge 32. Upon: Prefix 33. Of the wrist 36. Fanatic 38. More brittle 43. Whey-faced 44. Burgomaster 45. Lamina 46. CXII + CMXXXIX 47. Part 2 of quip: 3 wds. 51. Relatives 52. Floral bunch 53. Breakneck 54. Do a kitchen job 55. Staffs for British royals 58. Troubles 59. Some messages 60. A pronoun 61. Tribal emblem 63. -- avises 65. Tickle 68. Ancestry 69. Fighter in a ring 73. Glut 74. Neutral shade 76. Nest for a bird 78. Spy gp. 79. Part 3 of quip: 7 wds.

84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 105. 106. 107. 108. 110. 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. 116. 117.

"To -- is human ..." Actress Sophia -Redacts Be found to be Fix-it man Group of lions Alarms Japanese drama Managed care gp. Privateer End of the quip: 7 wds. Home to billions Pound Coat of mail Bettor's concern Discarded portion Depend -- noir Slavic name Invites Flowerless plant Releases Budget item

DOWN 1. Bunk 2. Cornelia -- Skinner 3. Canal vessel 4. Forrest Gump's boat 5. Gloomy 6. Up to 7. Form of "John" 8. Math branch 9. Event in baseball 10. Secular 11. Within: Prefix 12. Solar disk god 13. Lost 14. Tabloid "news" 15. -- Spumante 16. Layout 17. -- of Solomon 20. Jangle 27. Was tantamount to 28. Burns superficially 29. Disconcert 33. Containers

34. Savory jelly 35. Wine region in France 36. Confronts 37. "Saving Private --" 38. Hoofbeats 39. Branches 40. Blend 41. Chosen 42. Starts a new day 44. Cultural ideas 45. Lamps anagram 48. Roseanne the comedian 49. Toledo's waters 50. Standard of perfection 56. Presented 57. Cal. abbr. 58. Goddess of mischief 59. Start for cycle 61. Big cat hybrid 62. Nonpareil 63. Discovery at a dig 64. On in years 65. Heretofore: 2 wds. 66. Indigenous New Zealander 67. Reversal: Hyph. 68. Certain inmate 69. Chatter 70. Blood of the gods

71. Kitchen item 72. Weedy plants 74. Recurring life process 75. Raison d'-76. Defunct recording 77. -- Diana Elizabeth Rigg 80. Margarines 81. Noted nuclear physicist 82. Abbr. in citations 83. Kind of spider: Hyph. 89. Massages 90. Ending for techno 91. Vacation wear 94. Honker 95. "United States of --" 96. Opera by Lully 97. Musteline animal 98. McKinley's birthplace 99. Vases 100. Follows 101. Reduce 102. Hotel chain 103. Doing nothing 104. Unspoiled place 109. Mil. rank

Answers to Previous Crossword


20

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday July 29 2014

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MSRP $31,558

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y.

88th Ave.

0% available on select models see dealer forPlease complete details.forAllcomplete MSRP prices on the ad dohave not include tax, license, insurance or documentation fee.include 2015 Micra, $112 biweekly are based on2015 the Micra, selling selling price ofprice $16,966 96 month termof@borrowing 4.95% interest includes $1800 ICBC the first year and $2400 gas 21900 for the10000 first Cash year.back The cost 0% financing up to 84 months available on -select models. see dealer detailsshown on which vehicles 0% financing. All MSRP prices shown on the ad do not tax, license, incurancepayments or documentation fee. 26900 over 15000aCash Back Cost is 4378which apr 4.49 term payment 173 Bifor weekly 96/60. 2015 Micra Saleforprice Cost of borrowing Borrowing for thePayment Micra is126.00 $4051.95. 2015apr Micra the only on the ad Back that includes Gas 4.49 for 1APR year.Cost 2014 Versa Note,5078 $92179.00 biweekly payment is based on selling price $16,705 @0% interest over an is844269 month term. 2014 Sentra, biweekly based on the price of $18,665 @0% interest anof84$18,665 month@0% term.interest 2014 Altima, biweekly is based on the 3585 Bi Weekly 4.49is96/60 2014 vehicle Versa Note15000 and SaleICBC priceand is 31250 of Borrowing Bi Weekly 10000 Back and Sale price is of 26250 4.4G APR Cost of Borrowing 150.00 Bi weekly 96/60 on$103 all these are bipayments weekly 2014 Sentra, $103selling biweekly payments based on the sellingover price over an $156 84 month term. payment 2014 Rogue, $171 biweekly selling price of $18,665 @0%a interest a 84 2014isRogue, biweekly interest over 84selling monthprice term,ofthe cost @0% of borrowing is $3352. 2014 term. Pathfinder $215 biweekly paymentpayment @2.9% @2.9% interestinterest over aover 84 month term term the cost of borrowing is $4208. AllAll payments to OAC. The payments in this areJuly valid31,until 2014 only. oil payment @2.9% interest over 84 monthover term, themonth cost ofterm. borrowing $3352. $171 2014 Altima, $156payment biweekly@2.9% payment is based onathe $18,665 interest over a 84 month 2014 Pathfinder $215 biweekly a 84 month the cost of borrowing is $4208. paymentsare aresubject OAC. The payments in this ad are validaduntil 2014July only.31, See dealer forLifetime completefree details. changes are good for 3 oil changes per year if all regular service work is performed at Applewood Nissan and is valid for the life of the manufacturer’s warranty. Gift giveaways are at the dealers discretion with vehicles sold this weekend and cannot be combined with other offers. See dealer for complete details. Vehicles illustrated may not be exactly as shown. Lifetime free oil changes are only valid for the length of the manufactures warranty.

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