Surrey North Delta Leader, November 25, 2014

Page 1

Tuesday November 25 2014

The

Leader

▲ Surrey band Good For Grapes wins Peak Performance Project and $100K 3

WOMAN KILLED IN NEWTON HOME

▶ HUSBAND ARRESTED

IN SUSPECTED DOMESTIC HOMICIDE KEVIN DIAKIW

▶ MELLOW YELLOW Dorado, an 11-month-old golden retriever, yawns as he is petted by students at SFU Surrey last Tuesday morning. Dorado was one of four dogs from Pacific Assistance Dogs Society brought to the university to help the students take a break from studying and relieve stress. EVAN SEAL

A woman is dead and her husband is in police custody in an apparent domestic homicide in east Newton. The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) is investigating the death of a woman who was killed in a home in the 6900-block of 152 Street on Sunday, Nov. 23. The victim was found unresponsive at about 1 p.m. Her husband was arrested at the scene. IHIT spokesperson Jennifer Pound said the woman and her husband – who had not been formally charged as of The Leader’s press deadline Monday – are both in their 60s. Pound said the couple is not known to police. For updates, visit surreyleader. com

BIG CHANGES IN BOOZE BUSINESS ▶ ATTORNEY GENERAL SEEKS ‘LEVEL PLAYING FIELD’ FOR B.C. LIQUOR STORES

TOM FLETCHER

B.C. government liquor stores are losing their wholesale price advantage next spring, but will also have the option of opening Sundays and evenings with chilled offerings to help them compete

WOW!

with private stores. The change to a single wholesale price for every product takes effect April 1, the same date B.C. is permitting private or government liquor sales in separate facilities inside grocery stores. Attorney General Suzanne Anton said the change is to create a “level playing field” for liquor retailing in B.C., after private store operators complained that the existing system gave government stores an unfair price advantage. Currently the Liquor Distribution

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Branch, the government monopoly wholesaler, sells products to government stores at cost and sets a minimum price for all retailers. The wholesale price for private retail stores is 16 per cent less than that retail price, rural agency stores pay 12 per cent less, and stores that sell only B.C. wine get a 30 per cent discount. A new wholesale price structure for the thousands of products sold in liquor stores will be the same for all retailers, set to retain the $1 billion in revenues the province takes in annually from liquor sales. Anton

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said she doesn’t expect substantial changes in retail prices. The B.C. Government Employees Union, representing government liquor store staff, welcomed the Sunday openings and increased hours to help their stores compete. “The move to a single wholesale price will only be in the public interest if it protects and expands over time provincial revenue,” said BCGEU president Stephanie Smith. continued on page 2

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2 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Candlelight Service Join us as we celebrate and remember the lives of those we loved and cherished in this memorial service

Date

Sunday, December 7th

Time

4:00 pm

Place

Valley View Funeral Home 14660 - 72nd Avenue, Surrey

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▶ A HELPING HAND AT CHRISTMAS TIME Christmas Bureau Coordinator KC Gilroy chats with clients on the first day of registration for the annual Surrey Christmas Bureau at the former Liquidation World location in North Surrey last Tuesday morning. Clients began lining up at 5 a.m. In addition to weekday registration, the bureau is open Saturdays (10 a.m. to 2 p.m., all days, at 14885 108 Ave.). Gilroy says the SCB can only register 100 people a day, but expects that in the coming days, the long line-ups will shrink. Registration runs until Dec. 4. EVAN SEAL

For more information call: 604-596-8866

▼ ‘PEOPLE REALLY LIKE THEIR... LIQUOR STORES

www.valleyviewsurrey.ca

from page 1

Valley View Funeral Home & Cemetery by Arbor Memorial

Arbor Memorial Inc.

Premier Christy Clark said the government’s liquor policy review showed “people really like their government liquor stores” because of the wide selection and well-trained staff. Clark agreed with Smith that government

stores are well positioned to compete with private outlets, which are generally not unionized and pay lower wages. The government is also changing its tax system for breweries to eliminate the steep increase that applies when small breweries reach a certain level of production. Anton said that is

designed to encourage growth of craft breweries, which currently employ 2,500 people in B.C. Liquor Distribution Branch officials are also working on a system of higher prices for high-alcohol beverages, a measure long recommended by Provincial Health Officer Perry Kendall to discourage overconsumption.


Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

3

Super city called unlikely and risky ▼ METRO VANCOUVER’S 21 MAYORS AND COUNCILS APPEAR TO BE HERE TO STAY JEFF NAGEL

Taxpayers might save money if Metro Vancouver’s 21 separate municipalities – each with its own mayor, council and bureaucracy – could be merged into a single super city. But observers say even that premise is far from certain in the unlikely event the idea of amalgamation ever gets serious traction in this region. “I believe it could save money,” Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation B.C. director Jordan Bateman said. “But you would have to hold a hard line on labour costs, which won’t be popular with the unions.” He said the risk with amalgamation is that the most expensive tax rates and labour deals across the region prevail rather than the cheapest ones, triggering tax hikes instead of cuts. That’s a key downside of shifting to a mega-city model like Toronto or Montreal. “The big problem is you lose tax competitiveness,” Bateman said. “As bad as our property taxes are, it’s helpful to taxpayers when Port Coquitlam, for example, feels like they’re competing with Port Moody and Coquitlam for residents and businesses.” Bateman said it would be smarter to pursue piecemeal mergers of nearby communities in the region where it makes sense to do so. Langley Township and Langley City should be able to join forces, he argues, and perhaps North Vancouver City and District. SFU political science professor Patrick Smith agrees sub-reJason Bateman gional amalgamation is more viable, with Lions Bay and Bowen Island perhaps joining West Vancouver, or Belcarra and Anmore joining Port Moody or Coquitlam. Mega-city amalgamations have generally failed to deliver on promised savings, he added. And while it might be popular to purge many of the politicians who currently prowl the region for votes – Ontario Premier Mike Harris dubbed his 1996 municipal amalgamation legislation the “Fewer Politicians Act” – Smith said many residents prefer a smaller local government that’s more responsive to their wishes. Delta, with its no-call-too-small-policing, has fiercely opposed any talk of a move to a regional police force, which would be a less dramatic step than full municipal amalgamation. continued on page 4

Surrey band Good for Grapes has won first prize in this year’s PEAK Performance Project, a music competition hosted by radio station 102.7 The Peak. PHOTO SUBMITTED

Surrey’s Good for Grapes wins $100K ▶ BAND TAKES HOME TOP PRIZE IN CONTEST DESIGNED TO KICK-START MUSIC CAREERS SHEILA REYNOLDS

Surrey band Good for Grapes is $102,700 richer after taking home first-prize in this year’s PEAK Performance Project. The music competition, hosted by radio station 102.7 The Peak, held its finale event Thursday night (Nov. 20) at the Commodore Ballroom, with top-three acts Good for Grapes, Tourist Company and Derrival vying for the prestigious title. In the end, folk/alternative group Good For Grapes came out on top, after performing for a sold-out crowd. Congratulations flowed onto the band’s Facebook page almost immediately. “I legit thought people would riot if you did not win tonight,” said Caroline Yeung. “The crowd was going insane for you

guys!!! So happy for you!” “You guys were my favourite this year,” added Erica Granberg. The band is comprised of six members – Daniel McBurnie, Graham Gomez, Alexa Unwin, Robert Hardie, Alex Hauka and Will Watson. Most of the founding members met as students at Fleetwood Park Secondary and officially formed the band about four years ago, after an informal trip to Vancouver Island to do some busking. On the way, they began practising on the outside deck and a crowd so large formed, they felt obligated to keep performing and played almost an entire set. They’ve since gone on to perform regularly and win numerous contests, and last year, released their debut album, Man On The Page. Good For Grapes came fourth in last year’s Peak Performance Project, which Surrey singer Rykka won. Past winners include Dear Rouge, Current Swell, Kyprios and We Are the City. Derrival came second this year, and Tourist Company third, taking home prizes of $75,000 and $50,000, respectively. Good for Grapes will begin a Western Canadian tour in the new year, with the winner of the Alberta Peak Performance Project, which is slated to be announced Nov. 27.

Three arrested after ramming police with stolen truck ▶ RCMP OFFICERS HOSPITALIZED AFTER SUSPECTS TRY TO FLEE SHEILA REYNOLDS

Two Surrey RCMP officers were taken to hospital Friday afternoon after being rammed by a stolen truck. The incident happened in the parking lot of the Cedar Tree

Village apartment complex on Hall Road, just north of Newton Bingo Hall near King George Boulevard and 72 Avenue. Surrey RCMP Insp. Bruce Stuart said at about 12:30 p.m., plain-clothes officers were attempting to arrest the driver and two occupants in a stolen vehicle. “That vehicle tried to back up, to escape, ramming the

police vehicles,” said Stuart. The extent of the officers’ injuries are unknown, but were not believed to be life-threatening. One suspect was also taken to hospital. Stuart said shots were fired by police during the incident but no one was struck. A witness reported seeing several police cars and officers arrive on scene and a man being restrained. Another

woman in the apartment complex reported hearing RCMP officers yelling “shots fired, shots fired.” Two men and one woman were taken into custody. The investigation continues. Anyone with information who has not already spoken to police is asked to contact Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222TIPS or www.solvecrime.ca


4 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Surrey’s Affordable Seniors’ Community INDEPENDENT & ASSISTED LIVING

Two survive fiery crash in Surrey ▶ SEMI TRACTOR TRAILER AND PICK-UP TRUCK COLLIDE AT 176 STREET AND 88 AVENUE

KEVIN DIAKIW

Two people are lucky to be alive after a fiery crash in Guildford this week.

On Wednesday, at about 10:30 p.m., a loaded semi tractor trailer was heading northbound on 176 Street, while a pick-up truck was navigating a left-hand turn from 176 Street onto 88 Avenue. The two vehicles collided at that intersection and the tractor trailer caught fire. Emergency crews arrived and single occupants of each vehicle were taken to hospital by ambu-

lance with non-life threatening injuries. Highway 15 (176 Street) was closed for hours. Mounties are seeking public assistance and asking anyone who may have witnessed the collision to call the Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502 or to remain anonymous, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS).

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“I don’t think there’s any inclination on the part of the participants to go there,” Smith said. And if Metro municipalities don’t volunteer it’s unlikely the provincial government would ever force them together.

Former premier Gordon Campbell entrenched a promise the province would never forcibly amalgamate cities when he created the Community Charter. Other problems would plague a serious push for amalgamation as well – such as deciding where to draw borders. “If the province said

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‘let’s fix the region,’ what’s the region you’re trying to fix?” Smith asked. “Does it include Abbotsford? Does it include Chilliwack? The Gulf Islands?” Then there’s the optics of having one mayor rule an entire region, which was problematic even before Toronto mayor Rob Ford confessed to smoking crack. A green-minded mayor from Vancouver’s Kitsilano neighbourhood might grate in Langley, while a Ford-style suburban conservative would be unpalatable to downtown urbanites. Wards would be have to be created to preserve representation for smaller cities or else the mega-city would be dominated by politicians from populous Vancouver and Surrey. Instead, Smith says the federated model of municipalities working together within the Metro Vancouver regional district to jointly deliver utilities like water and sewage has generally worked well. Regional districts in the Lower Mainland flowed out of the massive flood of 1948 and Smith predicts it would take some similar catastrophe to topple the current structure and move to a mega-city. “You’d need a crisis of

some sort, it could be a flood or an earthquake,” he said. “But we’ve had that kind of crisis in social terms with the missing women and nothing’s happened,” he said, referring to the discarded recommendation of regional policing reform. Greater Victoria, with its similar patchwork of municipalities, seems more fertile ground after voters in several communities there on Saturday approved a non-binding referendum question to explore amalgamation. Community Minister Coralee Oakes said Monday the province will conduct a governance study. “It’s going to be complex, it’s going to be very difficult, but we’re committed to do doing that,” she said. “We should be looking at integrated services. We should be looking at are we being efficient with our taxpayer money.” Oakes said after referendum questions in Victoria, Saanich and other Vancouver Island municipalities showed strong support, communities that didn’t have amalgamation on the ballot have also indicated they are interested in participating in the study.

Easier reforms:

Wishing you and your family a very Merry Christmas and happiness throughout the coming year. Harry Bains, MLA Surrey-Newton

JOIN US ON FRIDAY NOVEMBER 28, 2014 FOR OUR ANNUAL CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE FROM 4:00pm – 7:00pm 102-7380 King George Blvd. (In the Newton Village facing 137th Street) Please consider bringing an unwrapped toy for the Surrey Christmas Bureau or a non-perishable food item for the Surrey Food Bank.

harry.bains.mla@leg.bc.ca

There may be ways to make municipal services more efficient or to improve local democracy without full amalgamation. Here are two ideas: • Jordan Bateman says neighbouring cities could try negotiating agreements to share services, such as fire departments or parks and recreation operations. • Patrick Smith says some of Metro Vancouver’s regional district directors could be directly elected, instead of being the current process where they must first win election as a mayor or councillor and then be chosen by their council to go to the regional board.


Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

5

Hand over the reins to Operation Red Nose ▶ VOLUNTEER DRIVING ORGANIZATION GEARS UP FOR THE 2014 HOLIDAY SEASON

BLACK PRESS

Operation Red Nose’s thousands of volunteers in B.C. are getting revved up as the 19th campaign in the province is getting underway. On most weekend nights, starting Nov. 28 and running up to New Year’s Eve, those volunteers will be offering the popular safe ride home service to motorists who don’t feel fit to drive. With the help of Operation Red Nose’s provincial sponsor, ICBC, the service will be offered in 13 B.C.

communities: Abbotsford‐Mission, Burnaby, Chilliwack, Delta‐ Richmond, Kamloops, Langley‐Surrey, Nanaimo, New Westminster, North Shore, Prince George, Ridge‐ Meadows, Tri Cities and Williams Lake. “We’re proud to support Operation Red Nose because we know that our roads are safer thanks

to this remarkable program and its many dedicated volunteers,” said Jill Blacklock, ICBC road safety manager. “We want everyone to enjoy the holiday season with family and friends. If your festivities involve alcohol, make sure you plan ahead for a safe

ride home.” To reach the safe ride home service, clients can dial 1‐877‐604‐NOSE, or find a local phone

number available at OperationRedNose. com. This year’s campaign theme – This Season, Hand the Reins Over to Us – encourages motorists who have had one too many, who are tired, or who are simply not able to drive their vehicle to call Operation Red Nose. A team of three volunteers will be dispatched and the motorist will be safely driven home in his or her own vehicle. The service is paid for by donations and 100 per cent of the funds turned over to local youth and amateur sports organizations. Each year, Operation Red Nose

Coats for Kids campaign kicks off ▶ WARM CLOTHING CAN BE DROPPED OFF AT HUNDREDS OF LOCATIONS – INCLUDING THE LEADER BLACK PRESS

The Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association’s (GVHBA) annual Coats for Kids campaign has kicked off once again. The coat drive – now in its 19th year – supports the Lower Mainland Christmas Bureau, which aims to help provide a brighter Christmas for families in need. The campaign collects warm clothes – coats, scarves, gloves and blankets – as well as new unwrapped toys and gifts for children, teenagers and adults. Hoodies for “hard-to-buy-for teens” are also

needed, said GVHBA chair Ron Rapp. “We want to make sure we have everyone covered,” he said. In addition to the GVHBA office (Suite 1003 7495 132 St. in Surrey), 45 member companies at 61 locations throughout the Lower Mainland will serve as coat drop-off sites from Nov. 24 to Dec. 4. For a full list of locations, check http://bit.ly/1xd47WQ. The Leader (#200-5450 152 St.) and BC Classifieds (#102-5460 152 St.) are participating.

clients contribute $ 1.5 million to youth initiatives from coast to coast. Operation Red Nose’s service is entirely provided by volunteers – from the

voices who answer the phones, to the teams that drive around the city all night. Anyone interested in volunteering for a guaranteed night

of fun is invited to fill out the Volunteer Application Form available for each community at www. operation rednose.com

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6

INBOX

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tues day November 25 2014

▼ BARINDER RASODE WOULD HAVE BEEN A GREAT MAYOR FOR SURREY

The question conundrum

The community failed Barinder Rasode in Surrey’s municipal election. Rasode is a longtime resident and lived in Surrey for over 25 years. She served as a councillor for three terms with the Surrey First team. As such, Rasode served on 16 active committees, including the Mayor’s Committee on Beautification and Town Centre Development, and was chair of the all-important Community Safety Committee for Surrey. The mood at the candidate celebration camp was gloomy long before the results began to come in. As early as summer, when Rasode launched her campaign with an open house at Highway 10 and 152 Street, the campaign was lacklustre. It was evident then that financial support was lacking, and more so, the choice of campaign manager did not resonate with the community at large. It is regrettable. Surrey deserved the experienced and hard-working councillor Barinder Rasode for mayor.

▼ JUST WHERE ARE THE UNDISCOVERED TAXPAYERS? What gall. Kevin Falcon, a major cause of TransLink’s funding situation, is concerned about the referendum delay (The Leader, Nov. 13). One of the daft promises from the Clark election campaign, along with the mythical “prosperity fund,” was a transit referendum. But nobody can figure out the question, so I will give it a try. The best method is to use the referendum to give the “smart ones” an acceptable direction and let them figure out the details. So my proposed transit ballot would look like this: Should TransLink have anything to do with public transit – yes or no? If you check “no,” close your ballot and deposit it in the ballot box. If you check “yes,” continue:

Orvis Noel Surrey

A letter writer offers his suggestion for crafting the TransLink referendum question(s). FILE PHOTO Preferred funding options, check as many as you wish, yes or no. Should we stick it to: 1). Drivers who try to use their cars less? 2). Transit users? 3). Homeowners? 4). People who drive the far-

thest each year? 5). Business owners? 6). Parking lot owners? Other funding possibilities, yes or no: a). Should we put “Falcon’s Folly” (Golden Ears Bridge) back onto the provincial books, reliev-

ing TransLink of the $5 million per month in payments? b). Should we charge all costs of the Evergreen Line directly to the people responsible, the developers and property owners who caused all that urban sprawl up the mountains of Coquitlam? c). Should a future Broadway subway line be put under the lane between Broadway and 10th Avenue instead of the huge cost of ripping up Broadway? d). Can you think of another set of undiscovered taxpayers that do not already have several government tax siphons stuck into their bodies? If so, write it here: _________________ Some notes – “no” on item one precludes per-vehicle levies. “Yes” on item four allows more tolls and increases in fuel taxes and/or per annual kilometre charges and congestion fees. Robert McCroskey, Surrey

VIEWPOINT

Liquor changes could push up prices BC VIEWS ▼ Tom Fletcher

When the B.C. government announced its latest changes to liquor distribution, the reaction was not what I expected. Private store representatives complained bitterly that the government is allowing further expansion of fridges and “cold rooms” in selected government liquor stores, and longer operating hours that include more Sunday openings. Those hours, along with non-union staff, are the private stores’ big advantages as things stand in B.C.’s hybrid liquor retailing system. The B.C. Government Employees’ Union (BCGEU) didn’t seem at all perturbed that state-run stores’ key advantage was also going to be gone effective April 1. That would be preferential wholesale pricing, in which the government’s monopoly wholesaler sells to them at cost and to private stores at higher rates. How much higher? Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB) officials were carefully vague on that, and it varies depending on which of the 22 wholesale categories you look at. They

released a graph that suggests the average wholesale cost to government stores might be going up 10 to 15 per cent to create a “level playing field” with private stores. That wholesale price difference is the main reason private stores have generally higher retail prices. And the majority of the province’s revenue of nearly $1 billion a year comes from this monopoly wholesale business, where the hidden tax is coyly termed a “mark-up.” When the new, simplified system comes in next spring, a bottle of hard liquor will have a “mark-up” of 124 per cent. That’s right, LDB more than doubles the price with its wholesale liquor tax. And if it’s premium booze, anything valued at more than $21 a litre will get an extra luxury tax on top of that. Coolers and ciders will see a 73 per cent mark-up. Wines are taxed at 89 per cent, with extra luxury tax on premium wines. Beer gets a per-litre tax with ascending rates for small, medium and large breweries. Then of

course there is federal and provincial sales tax applied to all of it. Cheers! Premier Christy Clark acknowledged that the first guiding principle of this overhaul is to keep that government revenue coming. The new BCGEU president, Stephanie Smith, doesn’t sound like your bullhorn-toting socialist of yore. She insists she’s gung-ho to compete head to head with those private interlopers and get back some lost market share, particularly on the high-volume cold beer sales. The union has another ace in the hole. Its current contract stipulates that LDB can’t close stores. In some small towns there are government stores that lose money, particularly since they’ve had more private competition. But at least for the duration of this BCGEU contract, the government retail arm will continue to operate in some places as a perverse social program, subsidizing retail clerk jobs that pay nearly twice what

The

Leader

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ASSISTANT AD MANAGER Shaulene Burkett publisher@surreyleader.com pcarlson@surreyleader.com 604-575-5326 PUBLISHER Jim Mihaly 604-575-5347

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s.burkett@surreyleader.com

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private retail pays. And let’s face it, running a till at a liquor store is not rocket surgery. Private and government store staff have to take the same training, and liquor inspector sting operations have increased vigilance on ID checks in all stores. With higher wholesale prices applied to government stores, this kind of artificial support will cost more. The only way LDB could maintain it without subsidizing it from the wholesale windfall would be to raise retail prices. The LDB says this new simplified system is “not intended to impact consumer pricing.” Note the careful choice of words. Oh, one last thing. There is another new tax in the works. It will be applied to higher-alcohol beverages, in an effort to reduce adverse health effects. 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


ANALYSIS

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

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Referendum is a challenge like no other in TransLink’s tortured history ▶FINANCIAL GRIDLOCK AND PROVINCIAL MEDDLING HAVE KEPT THE TRANSIT AGENCY IN FIRST GEAR JEFF NAGEL

Premier Christy Clark’s promise of a regional transportation referendum hit Metro Vancouver like a drone strike – quiet, unexpected and devastating – in the middle of the 2013 provincial election. Municipal politicians exploded, blasting the premier for creating a new roadblock to the transit expansion they see as critical for the region’s well-being. But now there’s no getting out of the promise that any new tax to improve transit be approved by the region’s voters, even though defeat could block TransLink’s plans for years. Metro Vancouver will find out next year if Clark’s campaign vow was brilliant populist politics but reckless public policy, as many observers fear.

Mayors’ plan After the B.C. Liberals’ decisive re-election last year, Metro cities were given a tight deadline in the spring of 2014 to craft their vision of what the region needs and how to pay for it. Mayors came back with their $7.5-billion plan, which includes light rail lines in Surrey, a Broadway subway line, a dozen new express bus B-Lines, a 25-per-cent overall bus service lift and more frequent SeaBuses. But Transportation Minister Todd Stone refused to share the existing provincial carbon tax and warned the plan may spend too much, too fast for the tastes of the province, and possibly Ottawa, both of which are to contribute large chunks of cash. Mayors have pressed the minister ever since for an answer on what other new funding source might fly – a new regional carbon tax, a vehicle levy or a regional sales tax. A deal and a referendum win could finally deliver sustainable funding for TransLink that has long been elusive.

Off track from the start It seems as if Metro mayors have always battled the province over how to pay for more transit. For nearly all of its 15-year history, TransLink struggled to find extra money to build new transit lines and boost service as the population grew and new neighbourhoods sprang up. The transportation authority was formed in 1999 to empower local politicians to raise taxes and be accountable for those decisions,

▶ Online extra: Check out Jeff Nagel’s interactive timeline that accompanies this story at surreyleader.com

Above: The Canada Line SkyTrain project was rejected twice in 2004 by the TransLink board before Victoria pushed to build it. Below: Premier Christy Clark. FILE PHOTOS climbed: fares, property taxes, pay parking taxes and the gas tax, which cities and the province agreed to raise three times, from 10 to 17 cents a litre.

Projects pushed

replacing the unelected BC Transit board within Metro. A $75 vehicle levy approved by the province was to be charged annually to put the new agency on sustainable footing with an extra $500 million over five years. But that plan quickly went off the rails. Motorists fought the “car tax,” the opposition B.C. Liberals promised in 2000 to kill it and the governing New Democrats reneged and refused to order ICBC to collect the levy in early 2001, just before the Liberals swept to power. Ever since, TransLink has been in a financial hole. New projects were built – notably the Canada Line in 2010 – and bus service did expand but nothing happened fast enough to deliver a real transit alternative that could get many more drivers out of cars, reduce congestion and ensure Lower Mainland livability. Without the vehicle levy, other charges

All the while, mayors complained the province pushed its own priorities ahead of the region’s – construction of the Canada Line ahead of the Evergreen Line to dovetail with the 2010 Olympics; requiring SkyTrain technology instead of cheaper light rail for both those projects; and mandating the costly fare gates/Compass card project to fight fare evasion. That discord peaked in the near-rejection of the Canada Line in 2004 by the mayors and councillors who then served on the TransLink board – it took three votes and provincial arm-twisting before the project was finally approved. Then-transportation minister and Surrey-Cloverdale MLA Kevin Falcon branded the board of local politicians dysfunctional and in 2007 swept them aside and installed an appointed professional board as part of a major remake of TransLink. The mayors’ council was created but relegated to approving or rejecting tax hikes pitched by the appointed board. In the years that followed, the mayors dug in their heels and for the most part resisted raising taxes unless they got sustainable funding for TransLink and regained greater control over its priorities.

And finally, in September 2010, it seemed a breakthrough was at hand. Then-premier Gordon Campbell signed a memorandum of understanding with the mayors committing the province to negotiate new revenue sources for TransLink, possibly even road pricing. Six weeks later, however, Campbell, damaged from the fight over the HST, announced he would resign. Enter Premier Christy Clark.

Bait and switch The next TransLink crisis was whether the Evergreen Line would actually be built and finally give Tri-City residents the rapid transit they had been promised for more than two decades. TransLink needed $40 million a year it didn’t have to cover its share of the costs. Under pressure, the mayors voted in 2011 to approve the third bump in the gas tax to ensure the line proceeded and trusted the province would deliver a new revenue stream worth $30 million a year for promised bus improvements. But no new source was forthcoming. Clark instead piled onto public anger over fare evasion and executive bonuses and ordered a provincial audit of TransLink to find internal savings. TransLink managers carved savings out of the system, axed vice-presidents, “optimized” bus routes and shelved expansion plans. continued on page 8


8 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

‘Bit of a cop-out,’ says Falcon of referendums ▶ FORMER TRANSPORTATION MINISTERS CRITICIZE IDEA OF PUTTING TRANSLINK FUNDING TO A VOTE JEFF NAGEL

Two former B.C. transportation ministers – Kevin Falcon and Blair Lekstrom – expressed reservations about the premier’s transit referendum directive this month in separate interviews with Black Press. Falcon, once a champion of direct democracy in his early years as a political partisan, said he has since come to regard referendums as generally misguided, in light of the damage they’ve done blocking public spending in jurisdictions such as California. Nor had he ever thought of putting TransLink taxes to a referendum when he was in charge. “Never, ever had I considered that,” Falcon said. “I always considered referendums a bit of a cop-out for politicians. It allows us to avoid making hard decisions that should be made and defended.” Falcon said his main concern with the referendum is that

it has delayed needed transit expansion that could already be underway, and brings the “very real risk” of defeat. Time is “very tight” for a coherent referendum that can be well-explained to voters, he said. The mail-in vote is expected to run from March to May. Falcon is now executive vice-president of real estate firm Anthem Capital and first publicly voiced his referendum concerns earlier this month at a business luncheon in Surrey. Blair Lekstrom Lekstrom also argued politicians are elected to make decisions and be judged on the eventual results. “I’m not a huge supporter of governing by referendum,” Lekstrom said. “If you’re going to ask people if they want to pay more in taxes, I could give you the answer right now.” Both ex-ministers predict some further increase in proper-

ty tax will need to be part of any solution. “I think it’s going to be a combination of funding options,” Lekstrom said. “I do believe people recognize the amount of money needed in the years ahead to meet the demands of this system is huge. It’s going to take a lot of people coming to the table.” Neither Falcon nor Lekstrom endorse another idea mayors are eyeing over the longer term – expanded tolling or road pricing. “I’m not a supporter of huge Kevin Falcon tolling operations,” Lekstrom said. “I think we could pay a little more in taxes overall to ensure sound transportation infrastructure throughout the province. It’s the backbone of our economy. “ Read an extended Q&A with Falcon and Lekstrom online at surreyleader.com

▼ ARE HIGHER PROPERTY TAXES INEVITABLE? from page 7

Stop-and-start talks with the province over new revenue sources resumed, with the mayors once again suggesting a vehicle levy as their top choice and then Transportation Minister Mary Polak cautioning the end result must be affordable to residents and that money come from within the region, not elsewhere in B.C. Then came the drone strike – Clark’s 2013 election campaign promise that any new funding source has to survive a referendum. Transit advocates denounced the proposed referendum the instant it was announced, warning the system may be paralyzed for years if the vote fails. In the midst of the election campaign, even Polak said she was concerned about that and suggested the referendum not be about whether new taxes would be imposed, but which ones they will be. Clark threw her under the bus the next day, insisting voters will be able to reject all new taxes – period – not be forced to pick their poison.

Whose tax is it anyway?

Visit Customer Service with a non-perishable food item or unwrapped new toy and help us provide a brighter holiday season to families in need All proceeds go to Surrey Food Bank and Surrey Christmas Bureau

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The government’s real agenda, many Metro mayors suspect, is to box them into what would be the unpopular move of raising property taxes – which also cuts into cities’ spending room – instead of a vehicle levy or extra sales tax, which are more likely to bring voters’ wrath on the province. The province says property taxes still have room to rise because Metro Vancouver residents were absolved of paying hospital capital taxes that are charged in every other region. Those taxes were removed In Metro to make room for higher transit taxes when TransLink was created. (TransLink property taxes, about $250 per average home, are lower than residents in the Okanagan pay in taxes for hospitals and BC Transit, but the overall contribution to TransLink from most car-driving Metro households is hundreds of dollars a year higher because of the 17-cent-a-litre gas tax). The province also argues cities let municipal wages and spending rise too fast and should have been in better position to finance TransLink had they been more disciplined. Mayors counter property taxes will go up – under Falcon’s reform, TransLink gets three per cent more each year whether they agree or not – but they refuse to voluntarily approve more, arguing homeowners are maxed out. Metro residents will know in a few weeks if the two sides can even agree on a tax proposal to put to voters. If the referendum is defeated or if no agreement is reached to hold one, the mayors will be back to their same old choice: raise property taxes significantly or let transit service stagnate in the face of continued growth.


Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

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10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Businesses bracing for Black Friday ▶ BILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN CANADIAN CONSUMER SPENDING HEAD SOUTH DURING ANNUAL U.S. SALES BLACK PRESS

Black Friday is the Friday following the U.S. Thanksgiving Day holiday, but Canadians continue to get in on the action as it is regarded as the unofficial kick-off to the holiday shopping season. A recent study predicts residents north of the border will spend billions of dollars buying goods stateside this coming weekend. Many non-retail employees and schools in the United States have both Thanksgiving and the day after (Friday) off, followed by a weekend, thereby increasing the number of potential shoppers. With retailers offering incentives to increase sales both in-store and online, it has routinely been the busiest shopping day of the year since 2005 south of the border, and has become increasingly popular among Canadians. The annual exodus of patrons and their money means a significant dip in sales for businesses north of the parallel, with this Nov. 28 being no exception. While shopping for sales in Washington and online on Black Friday is attractive to those living in Surrey and surrounding communities, the increasing number of shoppers crossing the border or buying from American retailers online has in impact at home. “Workers take time off or maybe even call in sick in the hopes of landing a great shopping deal, it means lost productivity in the workplace,” said Surrey Board of Trade CEO Anita

Huberman. “The economic impact for local businesses is significant as Surrey is a border city – and like all other border cities across Canada, consumers are taking their spending dollars outside of our economy. “This results in lower sales for local businesses, and lost economic dollars that are translated into infrastructure investment and charity contributions at home.” According to a recent study by one marketing firm (IPG Media Brands), 24 per cent of Canadian Black Friday shoppers will cross the border and spend $1.6 billion buying up stateside deals. And Canadians will spend up to $3.4 billion on U.S. websites on so-called “Cyber Monday.” Acknowledging that lower prices are more effective than appealing to patriotism, local businesses have been battling for years to entice shoppers to buy at home, with some success. “Local businesses, specifically retailers and malls, have been doing a much better job in terms of starting early on Black Friday sales, promotions,” said Huberman. “Guildford (Town Centre) is a good example. Local/Canadian stores and online shopping sites are ready now more than in the past for an influx of traffic targeted towards bargain hunters.” Currently, the loonie is at a five-year low when compared to the U.S. dollar, but Huberman said the thought of lower prices will trump the exchange rate. “Waiting in line at the border may deter some consumers,” she said. “Different spending habits may occur if items are more expensive across the border, but the perception and brand of Black Friday is that the variety of goods and the pricing deals have become a cultural habit for consumers.”

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Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

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12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

November 14 - 30 Black Friday November 28 Jack FM on location from 2-6pm

$100 giveaway every hour! Visit Customer Service with a non-perishable food item or unwrapped new toy and help us provide a brighter holiday season to families in need All proceeds go to Surrey Food Bank and Surrey Christmas Bureau

Receive a gift from Santa Free photo ticket, while quantities last

For details please visit

Central City’s annual Black Friday Sidewalk Sale continues to November 30, 2014. Participating stores will be open at 8am on Black Friday. Don’t miss this fabulous sidewalk sale with deals too good to miss! Save on the U.S. exchange rate and start your holiday shopping right here instead of fighting the long border lineups.

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12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

November 14 - 30 Black Friday November 28 Jack FM on location from 2-6pm

$100 giveaway every hour! Visit Customer Service with a non-perishable food item or unwrapped new toy and help us provide a brighter holiday season to families in need All proceeds go to Surrey Food Bank and Surrey Christmas Bureau

Receive a gift from Santa Free photo ticket, while quantities last

For details please visit

Central City’s annual Black Friday Sidewalk Sale continues to November 30, 2014. Participating stores will be open at 8am on Black Friday. Don’t miss this fabulous sidewalk sale with deals too good to miss! Save on the U.S. exchange rate and start your holiday shopping right here instead of fighting the long border lineups.

Phot s with Santa upper level across from Tim Hortons

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14 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

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Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

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Sat-Sri Akal India! by playwright SAWSKHI SHARMA with opening performance by Billy the Magician Doors 6:30, Show 7:00pm Sat, Nov 29th Newton Cultural Centre 13530 72 Ave, Surrey STUDENTS $5 ADULTS $10 Tickets at door info 604-594-2700

BUSINESS NETWORKING EXPO & LUNCHEON Enjoy a wonderful seasonal lunch, make some new friends. Network and Share what you are passionate about in your personal life and/or your business! Bring your business cards…Includes Lunch! Gift for each attendee! Shop for chances to WIN Prizes!

Eaglequest Golf at Coyote Creek 7778 – 152nd Street, Surrey, BC WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 9:45 AM Doors Open ~ Registration Check-in Begins 10:00 AM to Noon ~ Visit & Shop at Vendor’s Tables 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM ~ Listen in at the Speaker’s Corner 12 Noon Lunch begins, Brief Announcements & Networking 12:45 PM Inspirational Speakers ~ Corinne Ropp & Dale Grove 1:15 PM Door and Vendor Draws 1:30 PM Event Ends. Thank you & Best of the Season! Featured Lunch Speakers: Corinne Ropp, Y.O.U. Seminars ~ Messages from the Angels Angels are all around us. Learn how to hear the loving guidance of the angels. Come and enjoy an Angel Meditation as well as a reading for the group and a surprise for several audience members. How to allow the answers from the angels be very clear so that you can live an amazing life. From the Heart with Dale Grove ~ Your Pink Friend ~ Lessons on the Camino of Gratitude, Faith and Fun! A Meditation Journey of a lifetime! Business Networking Expo includes your Lunch RESERVED by December 4th, 2014 $24 VWN members, $27 non-members & guests or $30 - at the door Questions? Contact: Karen Pedersen: sdvwncoordinator@gmail.com Reserve Your Seat Now by email or Pre-Pay on PayPal at: www.valleywomensnetwork.com sdvwnreservations@gmail.com The To Reserve as Vendor or Attend Event Contact: Sacha Kayriamova: sdvwnreservations@gmail.com

Leader L


16 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

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Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

KPU squads winless at home ▶ BASKETBALL TEAMS FALL TO VANCOUVER ISLAND OPPOSITION RICK KUPCHUK

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

LEADER

Another two losses at home has left Kwantlen Polytechnic University’s (KPU) two basketball teams in the same position one-third of the way through their PACWEST (Pacific Western Athletic Association) season. Both KPU Eagles teams are 1-6 (wonloss) and in seventh place, but still well within range of a top six finish and a playoff position. And with seven weeks until league play resumes in January, there is plenty of time to make some adjustments to challenge for a place in the playoffs. “This break is going to help us,” said women’s team head coach Dan Nayebzadeh, “We need to get healthier and find our focus so that we are able to compete.” The KPU women were swept in a weekend series against the league’s two Vancouver Island teams. On Friday night, Victoria’s Camosun Chargers outgunned the Eagles 87-47. The Vancouver Island University (VIU) Mariners of Nanaimo defeated Kwantlen 57-35 on Saturday afternoon. The Eagles took an early lead over the Chargers Friday, leading 21-19 after one quarter. But they managed just two points in the second, and went into the locker room down 46-23. Shilpa Khanna of Surrey was the top performer for the Eagles with 15 points, followed by Haeley Williams with nine. Samantha McPhail added eight points and seven rebounds. “We were having troubles scoring and defending,” said Nayebzadeh. “We didn’t come out to compete and we need to bring more passion

to our game.” KPU was shut out in the first quarter of Saturday’s game, trailing 13-0 and falling into a hole they couldn’t climb out of. McPhail was the top scorer for the Eagles with 10 points, followed by Brown with six. The men came close to getting a win Friday, before falling 80-77 to Camosun. Slow starts to each half hurt the Eagles, who trailed by nine after one quarter but were down only two at the half. Camosun built the lead to six points at

three-quarter time, then the teams exchanged leads over the final 10 minutes before the Chargers clinched the victory in the final minute. First-year guard Brenden Bailey with 20 points, Obi Udevi of Surrey with 15, and Matt Cooley and Nick Smith with 11 each all scored in double digits for Kwantlen. “I think we outplayed them. But unfortunately, 12 turnovers were bad turnovers,” said Eagles head coach Vladimir Nikic. “Camosun scored 24 fast-break points off of

our turnovers. Other than that, I thought we played great.” The Mariners remained undefeated with an 87-69 win over the Eagles Saturday afternoon, but had to come from behind to do it. KPU led 17-15 after one quarter and 37-32 at the half. Vancouver Island exploded in the third quarter and took a 64- 52 lead into the final 10 minutes. Bailey was again the top scorer with Kwantlen with 21 points, with Jaiten Rana adding 17 and Devan Haynes scoring nine.

17

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South Surrey Athletic Park Improvements Open House Tell us what you think of proposed improvements to the South Surrey Athletic Park.

N OT I C E

NOTICE OF TEMPORARY USE PERMIT At the Monday, December 1, 2014, Public Hearing meeting, commencing at 7:00 p.m. in the Council Chambers, 13450 – 104 Avenue, staff is recommending that Council support the issuance of the following Temporary Use Permit:

Public Open House November 27, 2014

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A new centrally located park amenity area is planned at South Surrey Athletic Park. The improvements aim to enhance the area between the Recreation Centre and Rotary Field House, south of the arena. The project will create an inviting park centre by improving vehicle and pedestrian flow and safety, relocating the waterpark, expanding the playground and providing more parking. If you are unable to attend the Open House, please provide feedback online via our CitySpeaks survey at www.surrey.ca/surveys beginning November 27, 2014. South Surrey Athletic Park is located west of 148 Street, south of 24 Avenue and north of 18 Avenue in South Surrey. For More Information: Visit the project webpage link at www.surrey.ca/culture-recreation/2215.aspx

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Additional information may be obtained from the Planning & Development Department at (604) 591-4441. Copies of the supporting staff reports, the Temporary Use Permit and any other relevant background documentation are available on the City of Surrey website at www.surrey.ca or may be inspected at City Hall during business hours commencing Tuesday, November 4, 2014 until Monday, December 1, 2014. Members of the public are encouraged to submit their comments or concerns to Council, and may be submitted in writing to City Clerk. Comments may be faxed to (604) 501-7578, emailed to clerks@surrey.ca or submitted by mail to the City Clerk at 13450 - 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 1V8, no later than Monday, December 1, 2014 at 4:00 p.m. Jane Sullivan City Clerk

www.surrey.ca


18 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18328

MON DEC 1

2014

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18329

Application: 7914-0178-00

Application: 7912-0208-00

Location: 7053 – 144A Street, 14433 and 14455 – 70A Avenue

Location: 2904 – 160 Street and 2954 – 161A Street

Purpose of Bylaw: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched site

Purpose of Bylaw: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched site from One-Acre Residential and Comprehensive Development to Single Family Residential (9), Single Family Residential (12) and Single Family Residential in order to subdivide into 32 single family lots.

from One-Acre Residential and Single Family Residential (9) Coach House to Single Family Residential (9) Coach House, Single Family Residential (10) and Semi-Detached Residential in order to subdivide into 3 single family small lots and 4 semi-detached single family lots.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18329

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18328

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18338 Application: 7911-0313-00 Location: 8120, 8128, 8138, 8140, 8148, 8158 and 8166 – 128 Street, 12877, 12885 and 12899 – 80 Avenue Purpose of Bylaw and Permits: The applicant is seeking to rezone the property within its current Commercial Development designation to allow a wider range of commercial uses, eliminate restrictions on retail floor area, and update the signage and landscaping requirements to comply with the design guidelines of the Central Newton Cultural Commercial District. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to reduce the minimum parking requirements from 1,674 spaces to 1,077 spaces.

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18330 Application: 7914-0096-00 Location: 13924 – 24 Avenue Purpose of Bylaw and Permit: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched property from One-Acre Residential to Half-Acre Residential in order to subdivide into 2 single family suburban lots. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to reduce the rear yard setback on proposed lot 1 in order to retain the existing dwelling.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18330

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18338

MORE INFO Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18331 Application: 7914-0281-00 Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18327 Application: 7914-0050-00 Location: 13047 – 24 Avenue Purpose of Bylaw and Permit: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched property from One-Acre Residential to Child Care in order to permit a child care centre for a maximum of 25 children.

Location: 15333 – 16 Avenue (15321 – 16 Avenue) Purpose of Bylaw: The applicant is seeking to amend Comprehensive Development Bylaw No. 16410 in order to permit a care facility and eating establishment within a mixed-use commercial and residential senior’s facility.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18331

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18327

BE HEARD

Hall (fax: 604-501-7578)

Continued on next page


Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

IT’S IIT T OUR FIRST A ANNIVERSARY! 15%

Eagles’ losing streak reaches a dozen ▶ JUNIOR A HOCKEY TEAM FALLS TO LANGLEY, ALBERNI VALLEY NICK GREENIZAN

The Surrey Eagles’ slide continued on the weekend, as the beleaguered BC Hockey League squad lost two more games, stretching its losing streak to a dozen. On Friday, Surrey travelled east to the Langley Events Centre to battle the rival Rivermen, but despite getting off to a good start – Chase McMurphy opened the scoring with a power-play goal midway through the first period – the Surrey crew lost 5-2. A day later, back on home ice, Surrey lost 6-2 to the visiting Alberni Valley Bulldogs. “It’s not getting any easier, that’s for sure,” said Eagles head coach Blaine Neufeld. “We’re close (to breaking the losing streak), we really are. But when we do one or two things right, we forget about the rest.” Surrey – which entered the season with a commitment to playing younger, mostly local players – has won just three of 23 contests this season, and sits last in the BCHL’s Mainland Division with just nine points. By contrast, the Chilliwack

Chiefs lead the division with directed his way. 15 wins and 31 points. As was the case Friday, Against Langley Friday, the Eagles lept out to an McMurphy’s opening early lead, this time at the marker was matched eight 1:44 mark when Ben Vickich minutes later by Langley’s notched a power-play goal. Jacob Kearley, and in the The Bulldogs responded at second period, the Rivermen the end of the period, with a jumped out to a 3-1 lead power-play goal of their own when Dante Hahn scored a – off the stick of Kurt Gosspower-play goal, and Justin elin – and then Garrett Halls Szeto extended the lead made it 2-1 for the visitors seven minutes later. less than two minutes later. Eagles’ rookie John Despite the shots on goal Wesley – who also assisted being nearly equal in the on McMurphy’s busy second tally – scored in period – 20 for ▶ “It’s not the period’s final Alberni Valley, minute to make getting any 17 for Surrey it 3-2, but the – the Bulldogs easier...” team couldn’t controlled the BLAINE NEUFELD carry the mogame on the mentum over scoreboard, scorinto the third. ing three unanIn the final swered goals to frame, Szeto and Marcus stretch the lead to four. Vela scored for the home In the third, Scott Clark side. made it 6-1, with Surrey Rookie netminder Daniel not returning fire until the Davidson – still the de facto final two minutes, when number one goalie until Cole Plotnikoff scored on Christian Short returns the power play with 1:45 from injury – stopped 22 of remaining in the game. 27 shots on net. The game got ugly in Davidson got the night the third period, too, with off Saturday, as the Eagles’ Eagles blue-liner Latrell turned goaltending duties Charleson – back in the lineover to junior B call-up Tyler up after missing 10 games with an injury – was ejected Read, a 20-year-old White after receiving a high-stickRock native. ing penalty. At the same Read was peppered with time, Vikich was assessed a shots in his Eagle debut, game misconduct. stopping 41 of 47 pucks

MON DEC 1 2014

THESE

A minute-and-a-half later, Alberni’s Clark was given the boot for a blow-to-thehead.

OFF SERVICES

GENERAL: Examination..................... $20

EN NTTERTOWIN EER R TTO O WIN N ENTER

Captain dealt In an attempt to shake things up, and help the blue-line corps, the Eagles acquired a pair of 19-year-old defencemen, Owen Johnson and Jordan Wiest, from the Calgary Canucks of the Alberta Junior Hockey League. The price, however, was steep – Eagles’ captain Chase McMurphy, a Calgary native, is headed the other way. “It’s a significant piece we’re giving up, obviously,” Neufeld said. “It’s a tough decision, but one we felt we had to make. “We needed to stabilize the back end, and now felt like the right time to make the move. Maybe it gives us a little jolt.” Though he’ll now head home for his final year of junior hockey, McMurphy – who is bound for the NCAA next season – was still upset to leave Surrey, Neufeld said. “He was a little emotional, because he took a lot of pride in trying to turn this thing around,” the coach said. The team will not immediately name a new captain, Neufeld added.

100

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Continued from previous page Surrey Official Community Plan Amendment Bylaw No. 18333

Surrey Official Community Plan Amendment Bylaw No. 18335

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18334

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18336

Application: 7914-0119-00

Application: 7913-0290-00

Location: 15877 – 16 Avenue

Location: 14129 and 14191 – 34 Avenue

Purpose of Bylaws and Permits: The applicant is seeking to redesignate

Purpose of Bylaws and Permit: The applicant is seeking to remove the

the property from Urban to Multiple Residential and rezone from Single Family Residential and Multiple Residential 30 in order to construct an 11 unit townhouse development. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought in order to reduce the front, side yard and rear setbacks in order to accommodate a road dedication along 16 Avenue to achieve a more functional site plan.

hatched site from the Semiahmoo “Suburban Exemption Areas” map and rezone the site from One-Acre Residential and Half-Acre Residential Gross Density in order to subdivide into 5 single family residential lots and 2.4 hectares of parkland dedication, containing the site of the former Elgin landfill. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to reduce the minimum lot width on Lot 3 from 30 metres (100 ft.) to 22.2 metres (73 ft.).

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18333/18334

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18335/18336

Hall (fax: 604-501-7578)

19

121033


20 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014

Your community. Your classifieds. fax 604.575.2073 email ads@bcclassified.com

604.575.5555

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

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

6

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

33

INFORMATION

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57 SOAR is Pacific Coastal Airline’s in-flight magazine. This attractive business & tourism publication is published bi-monthly (6 times/year). Great impact for your BC Business. More than 280,000 passengers fly Pacific Coastal Airlines. Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 or email fish@blackpress.ca

TRAVEL.............................................61-76 CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387 PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587 REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696 RENTALS ......................................703-757 AUTOMOTIVE ..............................804-862 MARINE .......................................903-920

AGREEMENT

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16

CHRISTMAS CORNER

RV Lot Rentals $8.95 a day. 362 days of sunshine, pets, events, classes, entertainment. Reserve by 11/01/2014. Web-site: www.hemetrvresort.com. Call: 1-800-926-5593 CHECK CLASSIFIEDS bcclassified.com 604-575-5555

PRE-SCHOOLS

Harvard Montessori Pre-School 3.5 Hour Classes. 604-999-8162. www.harvardmontessori.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 103

ADMINISTRATION

ORDER ENTRY SPECIALIST

CHRISTMAS Light Special! 10% off supply and install/removal. WCB insured. Free estimate 604-240-9510. We also do re-roofing and repairs. www.kangaroofing.ca

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 33

INFORMATION

THE DISABILITY TAX Credit. $1,500 Yearly Tax Credit. $15,000 Lump Sum Refund (on avg). Covers: Hip/Knee Replacements, Arthritic Joints, COPD. For Help Applying 1-844-453-5372.

PERI is a global leader in formwork, scaffolding & engineering. • Responsibilities: process sales orders; data entry; invoicing; reporting; internal and external customer service; other administrative duties as required. • Must have: 5+ years experience in order management in a logistics environment; invoicing; data entry skills; strong customer service & communication skills; work under pressure & tight deadlines; attention to detail. Please forward resume: hr@peri.ca or fax: 1-905-951-8851 Visit: www.peri.ca PERI is an equal opportunity employer!

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 25 ROOM Imperial Motel for sale in Grand Forks...$789K. Contact andrewsmith1951@shaw.ca (Owner) for more information. 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.

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VACATION SPOTS

98

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

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COPYRIGHT

TRAVEL

76

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.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

115

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS needed! Employers seeking over 200 additional CanScribe graduates. Student loans available. Income-tax receipts issued. Start training today. Work from Home! www.canscribe.com. info@canscr ibe.com. 1.800.466.1535.

114

EDUCATION

IF YOU ARE... S S S S

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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

115

EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

127

APARTMENT/CONDO MANAGER TRAINING • Certified Home Study Course • Jobs Registered Across Canada • Gov. Certified 35 Years of Success! www.RMTI.ca

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

Relax... You’re At Great Clips

We are opening another relaxed Great Clips salon on the Willoughby area Langley in a few weeks. Is this your chance to launch the next phase of your haircutting career? We supply the customers! Could this new salon become your happy place?

We Offer Hourly Wages, Bonuses, Health & Dental Benefits Plus Ongoing Training.

AutoCad Dradting Technician BRIGHTON COLLEGE - Earn $26.79/hr. 604.901.5120

F/T CLASS 1 DRIVERS Pick-Up & Delivery Van Km’s Group of Companies requires FT class 1 drivers for the Surrey area. Applicants must have LTL & P&D driving experience and must be familiar w/the Greater Vancouver region.

$1000 Hiring Bonus & Above Average Rates To join our team of professional drivers please send a resume and current drivers abstract to:

careers@vankam.com or Fax: 604-587-9889 We thank all applicants for your interest!

HAIRCARE PROFESSIONALS

HAIRSTYLISTS

DELIVERY DRIVER. Wholesale auto parts firm is looking for a parts delivery driver. Email: careers@autocamping.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

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.

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.

INTRODUCTIONS

040

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Call Sam 778-898-4120 or send your resume: samb@shaw.ca to set up an interview.

No clientele is required to join us.

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

33

33

INFORMATION

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Van-Kam is committed to employment equity and environmental responsibility.

LONG HAUL TRUCK DRIVERS Accord Transportation Ltd. requires Long Haul Truck Drivers. Class 1 driver’s license with air brake endorsement required. Job duties incl: Operate & drive articulated trucks to transport goods throughout North America. Plan travel schedule/routes Conduct pre-trip inspection. Monitor vehicle’s performance. Maintain log book. Must know English. Min. 1 yr experience req’d. $24/hr + benefits Email, fax or mail resumes to: jobs@accordtransportation.com Fax: 604-575-7510, #801 - 17665 66A Ave, Surrey, BC, V3S 2A7

LONG HAUL TRUCK DRIVERS Harlens Trucking Ltd. req’s Class 1 (with air brake endorsement) Long Haul Truck Drivers for hauling loads throughout North America. Job duties incl: Operate & drive articulated trucks to transport goods. Plan travel schedule & routes. Conduct pre-trip inspection. Monitor vehicle’s performance. Maintain log book. Must know English. Min. 1 yr experience req’d. $23.50/hr for 50 hrs/week Apply by mail or in person at 10716 Scott Rd. Surrey, BC V3V 4G6, Fax: 604-957-5265

TRUCK DRIVERS Safeco Trucklines Ltd. is looking for F/T Long Haul Truck Drivers (20 positions). Salary $24.00/hr. Minimum one year experience. Duties: Drive truck, load / unload goods, pre-inspection / maintenance of vehicle, do emergency repairs, maintain log book. Please email resume to: safecohr@gmail.com or fax 604888-6095. Apply at Unit B8509, 96 Ave, Surrey, BC V4N 3P7.

115

EDUCATION

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!

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Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 21

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

CARRRIERS Earn Extra $ for Christmas

ADULTS NEEDED TO DELIVER the Surrey North Delta Leader Part-time, Small vehicle required. Door to door delivery Tuesdays and Thursdays. Please call 604-575-5342

TRAVEL with bcclassified.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

SUTCO is seeking U.S. qualified Class 1 Drivers for dedicated daily runs. Must be available for shift work. Preferred applicants have log and bulk residual hauling experience. We offer group health benefits, pension, e logs, and auto deposit pay. Apply on line at sutco.ca or fax resume and abstract to (250) 357 -2009

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

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

GENERAL GREENHOUSE WORKERS

SALES ADVISOR DIGITAL PRODUCTS 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.

SP (Delta) LP, a vegetable greenhouse operator looking for steady, hardworking, energetic individuals (60 positions) that are able to do crop work, picking, sorting & packaging product and farm yard maintenance. No experience required but must have the ability to show up for work everyday; to lift 20lbs easily & stand while working for most of the day. Job Location 10250 Hornby Dr. Delta, BC V4K3N3 Wage $10.33/hr plus AD&D benefits. To apply submit resume to: sunjobs2012@gmail.com or by fax to 604-607-7656 Work available immediately.

.

Sales Secretary Clerk Req’d. $22/hr, F/T, Pmt, Educ: High School. Exp: 1+yrs. & 6+mths at telemarketing or similar. Duties: Schedule / confirm sales appointments; order/maintain supplies; update clients through mail/phone regarding design catalogs & follow up with; Greet customers; Maintain customer database & stock maintenance on computer; Handle customer calls, Take payments, Prepare invoices & explain details of invoices & payments; Establish & maintain office procedures; arranging appointment & travel schedule; Call customer, handle complaints & enquiries, get feedback, compile responses to improve service; Call clients from data base & inform about new products/payment offer; Take orders & relay it to the manufacture/sales; Contact current/potential clients & solicit sales; identify new leads from directories & others; Call leads & telemarket; Solicit products/services to end use customers as well as other stores & solicit manufacturing services of the work shop. Lang: English, Hindi asset. Location:155 – 8120 128 St, Surrey, BC V3W 1R1. Contact: Kashyap from BharatJewellers at:bharat.jewellers1 @yahoo.ca

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

.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

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

130

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

NOW HIRING!

Delivery Drivers

With industrial type vehicles only. Vehicle must hold 5000 papers . NO MINI-VANS. • Twice weekly: Tuesday & Thursday • Pick up newspapers from our warehouse • Deliver newspapers to our carriers

Call 604.514.6770 circulation@langleytimes.com

134

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

ETHNIC FOOD COOK

604 575 5555

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Zone Checker The Surrey Leader is looking for energetic and customer friendly individuals for its Circulation Department. The right candidate must have excellent communication and organizational skills. Your attention to detail and ability to work with minimum supervision set you apart from other applicants. Basic knowledge of MS Word, Excel and Outlook Express recommended. Duties include overseeing 100+ youth carriers, recruit and hire new carriers, survey old and new delivery areas, monitor carrier performance and follow-up reader delivery concerns. A reliable vehicle is a must. Vulnerable sector criminal record check is also mandatory. This permanent part-time position is available immediately. Please forward resume to: Circulation Manager Surrey North Delta Leader #200-5450 152nd Street, Surrey BC V3S 5J9 circmanager@surreyleader.com No phone calls please All emailed submissions will receive a reply for confirmation of receipt, however, only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted further.

Mayuri Indian Foods Inc. is looking to hire an Ethnic Food Cook in Surrey, BC. F/T & Perm. $17/hr. Must have at least 2-3 yrs exp. in South Indian cuisine & specialized knowledge in Indian spicing. Duties: prepare & cook meals; supervise kitchen helpers; plan menus; ensure quality and determine food proportions; monitor and order food supplies; set up and oversee buffets; manage kitchen operation. Mail resume or apply by person to: Mayuri Indian Cuisine Unit 102A, 12677 80th Ave., Surrey BC, V3W 3A6 or Fax: 604-572-3281

SUPERVISOR Excellent Wages. Must have exp. Bring resume in person to:

A & W, Cloverdale 17830 #10 Hwy, Sry. or email, cloveraw@gmail.com

TIM HORTONS HIRING FAIR Port Kells/Walnut Grove Friday Nov. 28/14 10am-Noon at 19875-96 Ave Langley Come Join Our Team!

139

MEDICAL/DENTAL

PHARMACY TECHNICIANS Required P/T & F/T for local pharmacy. Must have previous experience. Fluency in Punjabi an asset. Wages commensurate with experience & Benefits. E-mail: faircare@telus.net

156

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

CARPENTERS; West Coast Home & Truss Ltd., 10230 120 St. Surrey, BC, requires 5 Carpenters to start ASAP. F/T, permanent, $25/hr, 40 hours/week. Some high school & several years of experience required. DUTIES: Measure and mark cutting lines on materials; Follow established safety rules & regulations and maintain a safe & clean environment; Shape or cut materials to specified measurements using hand tools, machines etc. Fax resume 604-580-3203

160

Service Clerk / Writer

Interested applicants can fax resume : 604-888-4749 Attn. Annish Singh ars@cullendiesel.com

(Surrey Terminal) Van-Kam Freightways Ltd. requires two (2) full-time Commercial Trailer Journeyman Mechanics to work out of our Surrey Terminal located at 10155 Grace Road. Applicants should have an inspectors ticket, a minimum of 2 years of related experience, a positive attitude and able to work in a team environment. Experience in a freight fleet environment would be preferred as this is a busy facility providing service to a large fleet of Company Owned Trucks and Trailers.

TRADES, TECHNICAL

This is a full-time position at the Surrey location. • Applicant must have service counter experience. • Applicant should also have a good working knowledge of Microsoft Excel and Word. • Excellent communication skills, a pleasant manner, good customer relations and working under pressure are a must.

Commercial Trailer Journeyman Mechanic

Only short listed will be contacted

THE Clusko Group immediately requires Short Log Trucks for operations in the 100 Mile / Canim Lake area for hauls to Canfor, Vavenby. Top rates and safe trip times. Priority will be given to “Safe Oriented” operators. Phone 250-392-2001 or 250-302-1004 Email: cluskogroup@clusko.com

PERSONAL SERVICES 175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

Seize this opportunity to work for one of Western Canada’s largest regional freight carriers. For more information, call Derek, at 604-587-9818 or 604-968-7149 Interested candidates should attach an updated resume and cover letter to: careers@vankam.com or fax: 604-587-9889

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

Van-Kam thanks you for your interest, however only those being considered will be contacted.

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

Van-Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

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

Kristy 604.488.9161

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

SALES Commercial Transport Journeyman Mechanic (Surrey Terminal)

Sales Assistant Van-Kam Freightways has an exciting opportunity for a part time Sales Assistant available at our Surrey head office. This position is perfect for a mom who only wants to work 6 hours a day and still has time to drop off and pick up the kids. The job requires the preparation of different reports for customers, entering customer pickups, data entry, and various other related tasks. The hours for this position are a guarantee of at least 6 hours a day Monday through Friday. Applicants should have strong Microsoft Word and Excel skills, the capability of prioritizing and organizing your work, and the ability to work in a fast paced environment. Interested candidates should attach an updated resume and cover letter to: careers@vankam.com or Fax 604 587-9889

Van-Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

159

TEACHERS

GPRC, FAIRVIEW CAMPUS requires a Heavy Equipment Instructor to teach in our Heavy Equipment Program! Please contact Gavin Winter at 780-835-6695 and/or visit our website at www.gprc.ab.ca/careers for more information.

Van-Kam Freightways Ltd. requires two (2) full-time Commercial Transport Journeyman Mechanics to work out of our Surrey Terminal located at 10155 Grace Road. One (1) position is an afternoon shift starting at 3:30PM and working until midnight and the other position (1) has an 11:30PM start working until 8:00AM. Applicants should have an inspectors ticket, a minimum of 2 years of related experience, a positive attitude and able to work in a team environment. Experience in a freight fleet environment would be preferred as this is a busy facility providing service to a large fleet of Company Owned Trucks and Trailers. Seize this opportunity to work for one of Western Canada’s largest regional freight carriers. For more information, call Derek, at 604-587-9818 or 604-968-7149 Interested candidates should attach an updated resume and cover letter to: careers@vankam.com or fax: 604-587-9889

182

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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. 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. 1-800-351-1783

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

Van-Kam thanks you for your interest, however only those being considered will be contacted.

Van-Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility. Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000. Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046

MECHANIC

Required Full-Time for Dan’s Forklifts, Coquitlam. We are willing to train any qualified mechanic. OUR COMPANY OFFERS: Attractive Wages & Excellent Employee Benefits.

blackpress.ca

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Please e-mail resume: mark@dansforlifts.com

TAX FREE MONEY is available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca


22 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Tuesday November 25 2014 HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 242

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

CONCRETE & PLACING

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

320

MOVING & STORAGE

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 329 PAINTING & DECORATING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 356

RUBBISH REMOVAL

ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-5 ton truck, 2 men fr $45. Seniors Discount. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576

627

www.affordablemoversbc.com

$45/Hr

Bonniecrete Const.

• All Prices • All Situations • • All Conditions • www.webuyhomesbc.com 604-657-9422

641

LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

604-537-4140 ABE MOVING - $35/Hr. Per Person *Reliable Careful Movers. *Rubbish Removal. *24 Hours. 604-999-6020

Ross 604D535D0124

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

Bonniecrete Const Ltd

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

www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

372

SUNDECKS

Running this ad for 10yrs

706

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

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

TONY’’S PAINTING

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

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

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

281

GARDENING Prompt Delivery Available

Meadows Landscape Supply Ltd. ✶ Bark Mulch ✶ Lawn & Garden Soil ✶ Drain Gravel ✶ Lava Rock ✶ River Rock ✶Pea Gravel

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

POLAR BEAR PAINTING Fall Special $299 ~ 3 rooms (walls only 2 coats) 604-866-6706

Member of Better Business Bureau

NORTHSTARS PAINTING www.northstars-painting.com Master Painters at Students Rates. We will BEAT any Qualified Quotes. 778.245.9069

CHAHAL PAINTING Re-paint Specialist. 30% discount. 604-773-9830

281

7 Days / Week

GARDENING

WCB INSURED

Vincent 543-7776

338

PLUMBING

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

374

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

PETS 454

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

Surrey Central

Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets.

Call Surrey Gardens Apts at 604-589-7040 to view our Elite Suites! SURREY BEAUTY BUSINESS HAS OFFICE SPACE 4 RENT

VILLA UMBERTO

Corner of 176 & 64th ave surrey. Suitable for RMT, LASER TEC. or NUTRITIONIST. 3000sq feet new, trendy new salon. $550/mo. Suitable for Hairstylist and chair($500) for rent, Complimentary Beverages for you and your clients, , and much more.Corner of 176 and 64th ave surrey. 604-372-2773, Email.gbassi1@hotmail.com

Lovely 2 bdrm w/2 full baths in quiet adult oriented bldg. In-suite ldry. Senior’s Disc.

Ph: 604-596-5671 Cell: 604-220-8696

SOMERSET GARDENS (S. Sry) Family housing 1851 Southmere Crescent E. 2 bdrm apartments starting from $915/mo-$1027/mo. incl. heat. Pet friendly, near all amenities. Community garden.

Surrey Village 9835 King George Blvd. Renovated Suites Bachelor, 1 & 2 bdrms. F/S, D/W & micro, luxury floors, Gym, tennis court, sauna. Pet friendly. Close to King George Sky Train. Rents start at $799.

604-451-6676

CLOVERDALE:

Kolumbia Garden 17719 58A Ave.

Reno’d Spacious 2 Bdrm Apts Laminate flooring. Near Racetrack, Transit & Shops. Incl heat & HW. Allow small pets. From $875/mo.

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

1-888-746-7036 www.realstar.ca

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

S. SURREY WAREHOUSE; approx 1000 sq.ft., 16’ roll up door, gated, suitable for storage, $700/mo, avail immed. 604-835-6000

Great Location with great people. Come be our new neighbor.

SURREY, 135/65 Ave. Bachelor apt $545/mo, quiet complex, no pets. Call 604-596-1099.

1 & 2 bedroom units available.

SURREY CENTRAL; BACHELOR suite, $575/mo. Available now. N/P. 778-317-5323 or 604-916-2906.

~ 604-597-3758 ~

BLOW OUT SPECIAL on

CEDAR HOGFUEL Sawdust Available Augustine Soil & Mulch Ltd. Pitt Meadows, BC

604-465-5193

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

341

PRESSURE WASHING

All Gutter Cleaning Window & Roof Full house cleaning

Call Victor 604-589-0356

Kennedy Pl: Adults Ridon Apts: Families 604-596-9588 office: Tues-Sat 9-12pm

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

SURREY Lrg 2 bdrm near Sry Ctr & Skytrain, walk dist 2nd flr. Heat & htwtr incl, sorry ns/np 604-589-2103

www.bcclassified.com

FEED & HAY

736

HOMES FOR RENT

CLOVERDALE 5bdr 2 kitch house, 3bath, 7appl,sml pet ok, n/s, $1980. 604-612-1960, 604-576-1465

CARRIERS WANTED

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

477

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

DELTA 7734 117 St. 4 Bdrm, 1.5 bath, dble garage & laundry. N/P. Avail immed. $1500/mo. Call: 778988-6535 or 778-231-0978

WE’RE ON THE WEB

456

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS

PETS

ROUTES AVAILABLE

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 CHAMPIONSHIP AKITA PUPS with papers. $1,800. Call 604-751-0191 CHIHUAHUA, FEMALE, 2 yrs old, very friendly, $400. Call (604)7947347

GUTTER CLEANING SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

MALTESE PUPS, 2F & 1M, ready Dec 8th. Dewormed, vet checked & shots. $525. Call: (604)882-3753

Call Ian 604-724-6373 Gutters - Windows - Tile Roof cleaning - Pressure Cleaning. Please Call Victor 604-589-0356

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

SHEPHERD/LAB/Retriever X puppies, vet checked first shot, $350. (604)794-5953 Chwk

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

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

560

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

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

356 KITCHEN CABINETS

RUBBISH REMOVAL EXTRA CHEAP

JUNK / RUBBISH REMOVAL Almost for free! (778)997-5757

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

MISC SERVICES

✶Dump Site Now Open✶ SBroken Concrete RocksS $24.00 Per Metric Ton SMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS $24.00 Per Metric Ton GrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds

MISC. FOR SALE

STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca. MOVING-MUST SELL Palliser leather sofa and loveseat - oversized, Canadian made, 100% top grain leather, dark brown, hardwood frame, removable cushions. Excellent condition. Sacrifice at $2000. Queen size bedroom suite, mahogany, bed - padded headboard, foot board, side rails, 2 nightstands, tall boy chest of drawers, large dresser & mirror, like new, $1500. Sealy posturepedic firm pillowtop mattress and box spring set ….$750.

Phone - 604-719-7016

$59.00 Per Ton

563

Meadows Landscape Supply

604-465-1311

320

MAYFLOWER CO-OP Spacious, well maintained 2 bdrm units in a clean, quiet, very central highrise. 2 Min walk to Central City Skytrain, mall & SFU. Across from new Surrey City Hall. No Pets. $827/mo - $847. Shared purchase req’d. Call: 604-583-2122 or email: maycoop@shawbiz.ca

604-584-5233 www.cycloneholdings.ca

604-961-3432, 778-708-6336

Reno’s and Repairs

317

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

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

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

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

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

APARTMENT/CONDO

Surrey

CLOVERDALE large 1 bdrm apartment, $790/m incl heat & hot water N/P. 604-576-1465, 604-612-1960

~ Certified Plumber ~

.Jim’s Mowing. 310-JIMS (5467).

706

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

ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

296

EQUESTRIAN

A Gas Fitter ✭ Plumber

meadowslandscapesupply.com

287

TREE SERVICES

✭ 604-312-7674 ✭

(604)465-1311

APARTMENT/CONDO

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

APARTMENT/CONDO Cedar Lodge and Court Apts

FREE ESTIMATES

ELECTRICAL

706

RENTALS

Sec u/ground pkng. Avail now.

RENTALS

3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour

DESIGN

CHARMING 1900 sq.ft. 2 level townhouse in coveted Englesea Place. 2 bed. 3 bath. Nr Semiahmoo Mall. Asking $565,900. Phone 604-536-6105

PAINT SPECIAL

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

TOWNHOUSES

RENTALS

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

D Crack Repair D Eliminate Tripping Hazards D For all your concrete repairs

HOMES WANTED WE BUY HOMES BC

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

Concrete Lifting

ACREAGE

603

DEVELOPMENT Potential in Urban Reserve. Maple Ridge. Approx 7.02 acres & 5 acres. Call 604-760-3792

AFFORDABLE MOVING

Call: Rick (604) 202-5184

260

REAL ESTATE

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

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

MIRACLE MOVING

Ask about our

Licensed - Bonded - Fully Equip. Residential Commercial, 1-3 Men BIG OR SMALL MOVES Start $45/hr ~ All size trucks Free estimate/Senior Discount www.miraclemoving.ca

ROOM SPECIAL

99

$

CALL TODAY! 604-803-5041

604 - 720 - 2009

www.benchmarkpainting.ca

~We accept Visa & Mastercard~ .portkellsnursery

SURREY ROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION

1-03

92

1-14

124

9-06 9-29 11-03 12-15

81 67 110 99

2-16

99

16-20 20-26 21-02

126 116 93

21-10 28-07 28-45 30-20

139 118 101 78

30-21 30-55

129 50

36-05

102

36-13

90

40-08 40-09

114 81

40-10

128

3-03 4-02

97 106

4-04

92

4-10

84

4-18

105

5-05 5-09

57 50

6-07 6-09

114 94

8-08

83

8-16

56

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.

MOVING & STORAGE

DELTA ROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION

Cory Dr - Barkley Dr - Barkley Pl Brewster Dr - 116St Wade Rd - Baker Pl - Baker Rd Sunwood Dr - 120 St - Carriage Pl 72 Ave - 73 Ave - Heath Cres, 113 St - 115 St 77 Ave - 80 Ave , 117 St - 118 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 64 Ave - Bond Blvd, McKenzie Dr Sunshine Dr - Hillside Cres Clark Dr - McKee Dr - Woodhurst Dr Abbey Dr - Fairlight Cres - Caddell Dr Modesto Dr - Wiltshire Pl - Wiltshire Blvd Santa Monica Dr - Santa Monica Pl Wiltshire Blvd 85A Ave - 87 Ave, 117 St - 119 St 82 Ave - 83 Ave, Greenhill Pl 112 St - 114St Dunlop Rd - Delcourt Cres - Delcrest Dr Delwood Dr - Delmonte Cres - Delvista Dr Centre St - Private Rd - Johnson Wynd Iverson Cres, Main St - Karr Pl

77A Ave - 78 Ave, 164 St - 168 St 76 Ave - 78 Ave, 160 St - 161 St 60A Ave - 62 Ave, 184 St - 185B St 54 Ave - Highway 10(56 Ave), 181A St 184 St 81A Ave - 84 Ave, 151 St - 152 St 65 Ave - 68 Ave, 128 St - 128B St Tulsy Cr E - Waterford Pl - Tulsy Pl, 132 St - 133A St - 87 Ave 80 Ave - 81 Ave, 134A St - 135A St 93A Ave - 95 Ave, 156 St - 158 St 86 Ave - 88 Ave, 166 St - 167 St 104 Ave - Beechwood Crt - 105 Ave, Oak Gate - Ashdown Pl - 168 St 102 Ave - 104 Ave, 164 St - 168 St Barnston Dr E - 100A Ave, Lyncean Dr 179 St Hansen Rd - Kalmar Rd - Park Dr Park Pl, 112 Ave - 113A Ave, 138 St - 140 St Berg Rd - Selkirk Dr - Cowan Rd Grosvenor Rd, Brentwood Cr Harper Rd - Park Dr 112B Ave - 114 Ave, 132 St - 133 St 112A Ave - Crestview Dr - 114 Ave, 134 St - Alpen Pl - 135 St 112 Ave - 113 Ave, 133 St - 135 St

CALL 604-575-5342 TO GET YOUR ROUTE TODAY!

The

Leader


Tuesday November 25 2014 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 23 RENTALS 736

HOMES FOR RENT

FRASER HTS 4 Bdrm, brand new 3 level house with 5 baths, den, theatre room, spice kitchen & 2 bdrm ste. Laundry. Avail now. N/P, N/S. 604-729-6260 or 604-600-9450. GUILDFORD 2 Bdrm rancher, 2 baths, all appls, sgle carport. N/P, N/S. $1100. Avl now. 778-322-7507

RENTALS 750

TRANSPORTATION

SUITES, LOWER

838

FLEETWOOD. Clean 2 or 3 bdrm spac. bsmt ste. Cls to amens. Avail now. Ns, n/p. (604)763-3313.

RECREATIONAL/SALE

2004 TRIPLE E COMMANDER Class A Motorhome

36,580/km’s. Mint condition. Always stored inside. Sleeps 6, 2 slide-outs, shower, generator, levelling jacks, storage.

GREEN TIMBERS 14216 91st Ave. Lrg bright 1bd gr/lvl ste, nr park/bus ns/np, incl utils. Dec1 604-583-7615 GREEN TIMBERS 2 Bdrm bsmt suite avail Dec 1st. N/S. N/P. $600 incl hydro/cable. 604-375-9132.

NON-SMOKERS. NO PETS.

Couple Retiring from RVing. Call for more info:

GUILDFORD AREA: 1($600) or 2($700) bd w/ free internet. Contact Liem @ 778-229-7488 N/S N/P

604-556-1895 or 604-856-8788

N.DELTA 1 bdrm grnd level suite, walk to bus, street prk. Avail Dec 1. $725 incl hydro/cable/net. Laundry avail. Call Steve 778-668-4074 or Dennis 604-897-7926. NEWTON 148/68A. 2 Bdrm bsmt $750/mo incl util/lndry/net/cbl. NS/NP. (604) 501-1949, 612-1982. Newton 1 bdrm ste main flr. Nr all ament. avail Dec 1. NP/NS. $600 incl utils, net, cble. 778-855-7456 NEWTON 2bdr bsmt ste, avail now. Small family welcome, incl laundry. Ns/np, no parties. 604-596-0728. NEWTON 2 Bdrm bsmt ste, near Kwantlen College. $650 incl prkg & wifi. No cable or laundry. Avail now. N/S, N/P. (604)502-6806

845

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

NEWTON: 2 BDRM ground level bsmt suite, avail now. Utils incl. For info call after 4pm 604-5722768 or 778-839-5721

Peninsula Prop Management

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

PANORAMA, New 1-bdrm bsmt ste. Avail. Nov. 15. N/s, n/p. $700 incl. utils. (604)572-8019 PORT KELLS 2 bdrm gr flr 1500sf incl alarm/lndry, $950 incl all utils. Avl now (604) 881-2322, 830-6921

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

South Newton, 1 bdrm, 1 bath, includes heat, hydro, cable and wifi, N/P, smokers ok, $550/month, no lease required, available now. call: 778.878.0619 SURREY 15931 95A Ave. 1 Bdrm $525/mo incl hydro & washer. Near schl & bus. NS/NP. Call 604-5802051 or 604-445-2629. SURREY. 1 Bdrm, suitable for 1. NS/NP, Dec 1. $500 incl hydro/cbl. 604-596-7162 or 604-808-4470. SURREY 1 Bdrm suite, full bath & kitchen. Lndry & internet incl. Quiet area, near bus/Skytrain. $550. Avail now. Quiet NS/NP. (604)808-9310 .Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.

N. DELTA 88/116 4 Bdrm house with 3 baths, 2 liv/rms, 2 kitchens & big yard. Avail now. $1500/mo. Call: 604-589-3135 or 778-229-3135 Newton, 6 bdrm renovated house at 134 & 66, 3 bdrm up with 1.5 baths. 3 bdrm sep suite down with 1 bath. Includes: w/d, d/w, f/p & parking for 4 cars. Can rent top or bottom floors separately if desired. Top floor $1400, bottom $900, whole house $2000. 1 year lease required. Available now. Call: 604.614.6180 or 604.312.9804 NEWTON 7042 Malvern Pl. 3 Bdrm rancher, big yrd, near bus/shops & schl. $1200. Avl now. 778-896-4533 SULLIVAN HEIGHTS - 59/147. Large 3 bdrm +den house, 3 baths, double garage, avail immediately. $1950/mo. Call 778-552-2586. SURREY 108/139, 2 Bdrm rancher, fenced, w/d, New carpets. $1100m. Refs. 604-585-4252, 604-375-4146. SURREY 10928 128A St. 3 Bdrm rancher house. Avail now. 2 Baths, laundry. N/P. $1100/mo. Call: 604-930-5840, 604-306-5025

739

MOTELS, HOTELS

SURREY 2 Bdrm grnd lvl suite, priv entry, walking distance to skytrain & shopping Ctr. Incl utils/cable/net. Avail Dec 1st. N/P. 604-341-4974.

SCRAP CAR Removal TOP CA$H PAID on the spot. Local Business. www.a1casper.com 604-378-2029

#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200 The Scrapper

SURREY CENTRAL - 109/128A 1 Bdrm gr/lvl suite, 2 yrs/old, near skytrain. NS/NP. Dec 1st. $550/mo incl utils/laundry. 604-349-2781. SURREY Enver Creek. 2 Bdr suite avail now, ns/np, $750 incl utils/cbl. 778-928-4745 or 778-960-6067. SURREY: Fleetwood. 159/80A Ave. 2 bdrm, $750/mo incl hydro. Avail. now. 604-591-8077 / 604-314-7340 SURREY, Fleetwood 3 bdrm, 1400sf house, $950/mo incl hydro & cable. Avail now. NS/NP. 778-3951912, 778-938-8862

847 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

SURREY reno’d 2 bdrm, Nr skytrain & laundromat. N/S, N/P. Avail now. 778-896-3741, 604-930-9329

751

SUITES, UPPER

BEAR CREEK 145/88A. 4 Bdrm upper, 2 master bdrms, li/rm, f/rm, 3 bath, $1600/mo. N/S. 604-835-2744

TRANSPORTATION 810

AUTO FINANCING

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

2008 SUV Ford Taurus X Ltd, AWD, all options. 125K. Black. $8500/firm Call 604-538-4883

851

TRUCKS & VANS

1991 Plymouth Voyager Van. Seats 6, Air Cared. Driven Daily Gas saver Runs great! $525.

Call (604)503-3151

748 SHARED ACCOMMODATION CEDAR HILLS. Lrg bdrm in quiet clean home. $375 incl utils/cbl, shrd kitch, lndry, bath, prkg. No parties. Walk to SkyTrain. 604-951-0146 South Surrey - Room in country home. Full House Privileges. Bus at front door. No Drugs or Drunks. $400/mo. Jim: 604.575.7271

750

Court Bailiff Sale

West Coast Court Bailiffs Inc. (duly appointed under the Sheriff Act) will offer for sale by sealed bid all the interest of the following judgement debtor, William Crawford in and to the following chattels:

SUITES, LOWER

BEAR CREEK. Spacious 3 bdrm lower. Lots of strg clse to school, transit, $700+util Avail now NP/NS. 604-584-5287 or 778-999-0876. CEDAR HILLS; 2 Bdrm bsmt ste. N/P, N/S. Close to all amens. $800 incl wifi, no lndry/cbl. 778-903-4096 CHIMNEY HEIGHTS. 1 Bdrm, $500 incl utils/cbl/net. NS/NP. Avail now. 778-318-0288 or 778-908-8386

Auto Financing - Dream Catcher, Apply Today! Drive Today!

1.800.910.6402

818

CARS - DOMESTIC

2004 HYUNDAI ELANTRA. $3200 obo. Exc cond. Best time to call between 8am-11am (604)828-9496

CHIMNEY Heights. Newer 1 bdrm. Fncd yard. N/S, N/P. $650/mo incl utils. Avail now. 604-290-4022. CHIMNEY HTS 76/152. 2 bdrm ste New paint & floor. Incl utils/cable. NP/NS. Avail now. 778-829-8658. CHIMNEY HTS, newer 2 bdrm near park/schl, lots of prkg, own w/d, cbl & utils incl. Avail immed. Call: 778881-7081 or 778-883-5347.

FLEETWOOD 152/84. 2-Bdrm ste $650 incl hydro/cbl/sat. Avail. now. N/S. 604-598-0587, 778-862-0587. FLEETWOOD 2 bdrm bsmt suite. Avail now. NS/NP. $625/mo incl utils. Call 604-537-3814. FLEETWOOD, 2 BDRM STE. Avail now. Near school & bus. N/S, N/P. Call 604-307-9034

2011 Buick Regal, mint condition. black on black, auto, sound system, a/c, full pkg, no GPS, $1600 chrome mags, Michelin tires, 22,000K. 5year warr. $17,500obo 604-535-0411, 778-866-2274

- 2007 Ford F-350 Crew Cab Vin #1FTWW31P07EA12037 Terms of Sale: Sold on an “as is where is” basis. Contact the undersigned at 604-529-9328. The highest bid or offer not necessarily accepted. Sale may be subject to cancellation without notice. Bids must be submitted to the Court Bailiff on or before 12:00 noon Thursday, December 4, 2014. Each bid must be accompanied by a bank draft or money order drawn in favor of West Coast Court Bailiffs Inc. for a minimum of 10% of the bid price which is non-refundable if the said offer is accepted and the bidder fails to complete the sale by 4:00pm on Friday, December 5, 2014. D. Fjermestad, Senior Court Bailiff West Coast Court Bailiffs Inc. 101-668 Carnarvon Street New Westminster, BC V3M 5Y6 Tel: 604-529-9328 Fax: 604-529-9102 Email: info@wccb.ca

NO. S097489 VANCOUVER REGISTRY IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA BETWEEN: ROBERT HUNGERFORD LAW CORPORATION carrying on business as HUNGERFORD TOMYN LAWRENSON & NICHOLS SOLICITORS AND: KIMBERLEY STENNER and JUSTYN STENNER CLIENTS ADVERTISEMENT To: Kimberley Stenner and Justyn Stenner TAKE NOTICE THAT on 17 November 2014 an order was made for service on you of an Amended Notice of Application dated 9 October 2014 issued from the Vancouver Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in proceeding number S097489 by way of advertisement. In the proceeding, the Solicitors (the “Judgment Creditors”) claim the following relief against you: 1. An order that the Respondent, Kimberley Stenner (the “Judgment Debtor”), show cause why the interest of the Judgment Debtor in the following lands and premises, legally described as: Parcel Identifier: 018-264-859 Lot 7 Section 17 Township 1 New Westminster District Plan LMP10112 (the “Lands”) or any other lands the said Judgment Debtor may have an interest in British Columbia, in which Judgments held against the Debtor by the Judgment Creditors have been registered, or a competent part of the Lands or interest therein, should not be sold to realize that amount payable under the said Judgments pursuant to section 92 of the Court Order Enforcement Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 78; 2. An order that in default of the Judgment Debtor showing cause to the contrary at the hearing of this application, an order that any interest of the Judgment Debtor in any lands situated in British Columbia be sold to realize, in part, the amount payable under the said Judgments in favour of the Judgment Creditors; and other related relief as set out in the Amended Notice of Application. You must file a responding pleading/response to petition within the period required under the Supreme Court Civil Rules failing which further proceedings, including judgment, may be taken against you without notice to you. You may obtain, from the Vancouver Registry, at the Courthouse at 800 Smithe Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, a copy of the Amended Notice of Application and the order providing for service by this advertisement. This advertisement is placed by Robert Hungerford Law Corporation carrying on business as Hungerford Tomyn Lawrenson & Nichols, whose address for service is Suite 1100, 925 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia V6C 3L2. NO. S146716 Vancouver Registry IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA BETWEEN: 0712199 BC LTD PETITIONER AND: MARK CHANDLER and TREELAND REALTY (1992) LTD. carrying on business as RE/MAX TREELAND REALTY RESPONDENTS ADVERTISEMENT To: Mark Chandler TAKE NOTICE THAT on 17/Nov/2014 an order was made for service on you of a Petition to Court and Affidavit #1 of Eric Manning issued from the Vancouver Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in proceeding number S146716 by way of this advertisement. In the proceeding, the Petitioner claims the following relief against you: (1) An order declaring that the Respondent Mark Chandler’s deposit of $100,000 (the “Deposit”) is absolutely forfeited to the Petitioner; (2) An order that the Respondent Treeland Realty (1992) Ltd. forthwith pay the Deposit, plus any interest accrued thereon, to the Petitioner; (3) Costs; and (4) Interest pursuant to the Court Order Interest Act. You must file a response to petition within the period required under the Supreme Court Civil Rules failing which further proceedings, including judgment, may be taken against you without notice to you. You may obtain, from the Vancouver Registry, at 800 Smithe Street, Vancouver, BC a copy of the Petition and Affidavit #1 of Eric Manning and the order providing for service by this advertisement. This advertisement is placed by the lawyer for the petitioner, Mark G. Underhill of Underhill, Boies Parker whose address for service is Underhill, Boies Parker, 1710 – 401 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, BC V6B 5A1, Fax number for service of the petitioner: 1.888.575.3281.

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Crossword

ACROSS 1. Cat's-paw 5. Article of faith 10. Petty 15. Walk 19. Mogul empire capital 20. Sententia 21. Curved hairs 22. Teatro -- Scala 23. Start of a quip by anonymous: 4 wds. 27. Surfaces 28. Antler prongs 29. Awkward fellow 30. Like gazpacho 31. -- sole 32. Sign on a door 33. Seed of a kind 35. Dwindles 36. Mock serenade 40. Ignominy 41. Shipboard crane 42. Conclusion 43. Internet portal 44. Wished 45. Man in Fredericksburg 46. Truth, archaically 47. Typography unit 48. Jug 49. Some actors 50. -- Domingo 51. Adjust again 52. Incantation 54. Hindu goddess 55. Tchaikovsky's "-Onegin" 56. Depot: Abbr. 59. Part 2 of quip: 4 wds. 63. -- Plaines 64. Prepared a roof 66. Exploit 67. Queen -- lace 69. More uncivil 70. Unblemished 72. Isinglass 73. Serv. branch

77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 95. 96. 99. 103. 104. 105. 106. 107. 108. 109. 110.

An Olympian Trample Drink in cans Lacuna Container for wine Manumits Puccini's "-Lescaut" Chose Reference symbol Harder to get Monarch Homophone for seize Mirthful Teasdale the poet Responds At present Stresses End of the quip: 4 wds. Old Hebrew measure Steamed Marriage Cup handles Nicely sour Ricochet Discrimination Drawing: Abbr.

DOWN 1. Cap 2. Curved molding 3. City in Utah 4. Overdue ones 5. Snarl 6. Proceeded with caution 7. Some votes 8. -- ideal 9. Of ancient Germans 10. Prospects 11. Singles' party 12. "Heidi" setting 13. Rest 14. Suffer neglect 15. Spanish rice dish 16. Plus

17. 18. 24. 25. 26. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 46. 47. 49. 50. 51. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 60. 61.

This week’s theme:

No Escape by James Barrick

Muse of history Bridge position Pressed Massive pin Balm Bette or Jefferson Mug shot Be apparent Vinyl's successor With affection Bank opening Upped the ante Geologic epoch Gladdens A pronoun Bargains Like a dunce cap Kind of bar Dowel Forefront Better protected Subterfuge Ibsen's "-- Gynt" Work dough or clay Lab burner Layers Aldebaran's constellation Impassioned Brainchildren Sartor

62. Of an Andean people 65. -- gestae 68. Superseded 70. Plant with spicy leaves 71. Vichyssoise ingredient 72. Resources 74. Gratify 75. Genus of maples 76. Nourished 78. Geologic period 79. Execute: 2 wds. 80. Spoiled 82. Worries 83. Corday's victim 86. Scoter anagram 87. Convert into cash 88. City in Wisconsin 90. Very, in music 91. Skedaddle 92. Mob gone wild 93. Austen title 94. Mimicking one 95. Ski lift: Hyph. 96. Rara -97. Bangkok denizen 98. Antitoxins 100. Nest egg letters 101. Literary collection 102. Chow mein additive

Answers to Previous Crossword

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