Langley Times, June 05, 2015

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Blaze doused in tourney final PAGE 29

FRIDAY June 5, 2015 • www.langleytimes.com NEWS Community garden opens

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BUSINESS Otter Co-op keeps growing

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SPORTS Hockey academies announced

‘An innocent and gentle person came to a terrible end’ WELL-KNOWN HOMELESS MAN WELLS ‘MILES’ GALLAGHER IDENTIFIED AS MURDER VICTIM MO N I Q U E TA M M I N G A Ti me s Re po r t e r

Condolences and a memorial are growing for Wells ‘Miles’ Gallagher, the homeless man stabbed to death outside Baselines Pub on Monday evening (June 1). Known to many in downtown Langley as ‘Miles’, the 37-year-old had been a fixture in the City for years, seen outside the 7-Eleven, or sitting outside the Starbucks or Save-On Foods on Fraser Highway. A memorial of flowers, candles and cards is growing at the crime scene. His sister Danielle Hagen said her family, especially her mom, is devastated by the news of Wells’ murder. “He was gentle and sweet and suffered from severe schizophrenia,” said Hagen. “We have tried for years to get him help and we’re never able to get him off the street and on his medications. Our system is broken. He truly was a tender and sweet individual. “He would never hurt another living being, even though he himself suffered every day. “An innocent and gentle person came to a terrible end.” David Christopher Van Den Brink, of no fixed address, has been charged with second degree murder in Gallagher’s death.

Van Den Brink, 21, is known to police and remains in custody. Numerous people have been severely traumatized by witnessing the brutal attack on Gallagher, said police. It was around 7 p.m., Langley RCMP started getting frantic calls from citizens witnessing the suspect actively stabbing the victim. Officers arrived and chased the suspect. He was apprehended a few blocks away behind The Langley Times office. Blood covered his clothing. A very large amount of blood was visible on the sidewalk outside the Langley Hotel and Baselines Pub, in the 20300 block of Fraser Highway. CPR was initiated on Gallagher, and he was transported to hospital in grave condition. He later died. Many people who live and/ or work in the downtown have seen or gotten to know Gallagher through the years. Many commented he was a kind, quiet man who has never hurt anyone. Others said they have offered a coffee, sandwich, pocket change or just a hello to him over the years. One woman commented that she was sorry the system had failed Miles. Bouquets of flowers, balloons, notes, candles and a pack of cigarettes have been left beside a bike at the crime scene outside Base-

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D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s

A sidewalk memorial for Wells ‘Miles’ Gallagher is growing at the scene of Monday night’s murder in Langley City. The 37-year-old was fatally stabbed and a 21-year-old has been charged with second degree murder. Gallagher (pictured below) grew up in Langley and his family is devastated by his death.

Su bmitte d Pho to s

lines Pub. Many in the community are saddened and shocked at this random attack on ‘Miles.’ Hagen recently went to check in on her brother at the 7-Eleven. While there, a stranger gave Wells a sandwich and juice. “Many in the community were

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concerned for Wells, making sure he was eating,” she said. “That’s Langley for you. This was his community and even though maybe he didn’t always communicate, many have shared that he had a great sense of humour and was very sweet.” Gallagher had no criminal back-

ground. Hagen said her mother is a foster parent who took in Wells at the age of four. He became part of the family and lived with them until he was 19, when he wanted to move out on his own.

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2 0 2 5 8 FR ASE R HIGHWAY 604.533.4157 • www.l angl ey ti m es .com

Pharmacy concerns caught up in Charter B REN D A AND E R SO N Ti me s Re po r t e r

An attempt to stem the influx of pharmacies in the City of Langley’s downtown core got off to a rocky start on May 25, when council discovered that the City’s present bylaw governing methadone dispensing is, in fact, invalid. Currently, there is a law on the City’s books that prohibits methadone dispensation without supervision by the Fraser Health Authority. This is a violation of Canada’s Charter of Rights, and is therefore not enforceable, council was told. The point arose as council began discussing a proposed new bylaw that would preclude any new pharmacies from opening in the City within 400 metres of an existing one. That conversation was cut short by a motion from Councillor Dave Hall to delay second reading of the proposed new bylaw until council is able to “correct the wrong that exists.” Hall’s amendment passed in a 4-3 vote, supported by Councillors Jack Arnold, Paul Albrecht and Val van den Broek. The proposal for a pharmacy proximity bylaw came in response to a June 26, 2014 letter the City received from the Downtown Langley Business Association. In it, association chair Sonya Perkins wrote that while the BIA recognizes the need for methadone dispensary, the concentration of pharmacies in the City’s core has become a cause for concern. There are currently 12 pharmacies in the City with a 13th set to open soon in the Langley Mall. Of the 12, 10 currently dispense methadone. Among the issues the BIA has with the proliferation of pharmacies is that downtown business owners feel the City is becoming a hub for treating people from other communities. They say it is leading to an increase in incidents of loitering and illegal drug activity as well as an increase in the number of homeless people in the City. Hall objected to the idea that simply implementing tighter restrictions is the answer. The bylaw, as it was presented, would be punitive to clientele who are receiving a legitimate medical

treatment that is endorsed by a doctor, he said. It would take an expert, Hall added, to look at the situation and definitively link the methadone distribution to an increase in the homelessness and drug use in the community. “I don’t think we should be casting aspersions on hearsay,” Hall said. Arnold said the proposed bylaw is discriminatory, noting the City has no such rules for grocery stores or coffee shops. “I’m not sure why we would have one for pharmacies and only pharmacies.” “We need to exercise community values,” said Councillor Rudy Storteboom. “This is the City of Langley, not the Downtown Eastside.” Councillor Gayle Martin supported the intent of the proposed bylaw, but expressed concern that it might be “too little, too late.” She noted there are 109 methadone patients in Langley City. “I’m not against the serving of methadone, but that’s an average of 10 customers per pharmacy.” Martin said that while she has heard rumours about people being bused in from other communities to receive methadone in the City, she has never seen it herself. “You just wonder how these pharmacies can stay in business,” she said, adding that she expects the number will eventually decrease through attrition. Hall said the City needs to fix the original bylaw, before looking at ways to address the BIA’s concerns. “This is out of step with what should happen.” A subsequent lengthy discussion about the proper procedure for correcting the City’s invalid bylaw and proceeding with any zoning changes revealed that two separate public hearings (one will technically be a public input session) will be required. The process could now spread out over the next three council meetings with the introduction of a business regulation amendment and a zoning amendment to deal with problems in the existing bylaw. On June 29, a public hearing and a public input session into the two issues will take place.

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D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s

A Langley City fire truck is parked outside the CKF plastics plant on Thursday, May 28. Fire broke out inside stacks of compressed egg cartons and apple containers, and it took fire crews a full 17 hours to finally be sure the fire was completely extinguished. No machinery was damaged in the fire, but two firefighters suffered minor injuries.

Plant fire proves to be challenge MONIQUE TAMMINGA Tim es Reporter

It took 17 hours to finally extinguish the ‘challenging’ egg carton fire at the CKF factory on Thursday, May 28. But in the end, minimal damage was done to the premises of one of Langley City’s largest companies, and everything was back up and running in three days. Firefighters were called to the factory on 200 Street and 57 Avenue around 11:30 a.m. to respond to a fire that had started in compressed egg cartons and

apple holding containers. According to City fire chief Rory Thompson, the sprinklers were activated and kept the fire from getting out of control. But the white smoke caused zero visibility for firefighters going into the factory. One City firefighter fell and injured his shoulder and a Township firefighter hurt his knee battling the blaze. Both were taken to hospital. The pallets of egg cartons were five metres high and many more metres deep into the

building, so once water got onto them, it became a soggy mess to slog through, said Thompson. Fire crews worked on pulling it all apart to make sure there were no hot spots. They were on the scene until 4 a.m. the next day. City fire crews said employees did a great job of evacuating calmly and sprinklers kept the fire from spreading to the plant’s machinery. With two restoration companies working diligently, that portion of CKF was up and running three days after the fire.

Man accused of running over wife MONIQUE TAMMINGA Tim es Reporter

A 31-year-old Langley man faces numerous charges after allegedly running over his wife with a car while his three-yearold child was strapped into the car seat. The toddler was located safe in the back seat of his car in Vancouver, following a police

pursuit that started in Langley on May 15. William Marten is now charged with assault with a weapon (the vehicle), failing to stop during an accident involving bodily harm, flight from police and dangerous driving. Police were called about 2 p.m. May 15, after a man reportedly had driven off with a toddler

in the back seat after hitting a woman, believed to be his wife, in a neighbourhood near 200 Street and 64 Avenue. The mother’s injuries were said to be non-life threatening. Police vehicles and a helicopter chased the fleeing vehicle into Vancouver. Marten is due back in court on June 16.

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System is broken, says devastated sister From Page 1

His parents set him up in the apartments above the then-Horse and Rider Pub in Brookswood (the building has since been torn down), but he didn’t stay too long. “He had serious schizophrenia. My parents did everything they could. They took him to the hospital and tried to get him help but there are no supports out there. He would be admitted into a mental health facility and get back on medication, start to feel good and check himself out.” This happened many times, she said. “I don’t have all the answers but I know the system as it is now is broken when we let people go out on their own when they are so incapacitated — they end up becoming victims themselves or victimize someone else which has happened here with my brother and the man arrested. “The only thing I can hope is he has a measure of peace now.” Mandy Hamel, on behalf of #LangleyMoms wrote, “I, for one, would hand him change or purchase a coffee or some food for him. Others would reach out to him in other ways, but in all, we felt helpless and did what we could. He was quiet and kind. Someone who would not have hurt a soul. His schizophrenia was apparent and as time went on, many noticed changes in him. I will miss the man outside of Starbucks who would sit quietly, rocking and whispering to himself.” Hagen said they are hoping to bury him in the Fort Langley cemetery where they have family plots. She is organizing a memorial service for people who want to say goodbye. “Multiple witnesses came forward to provide information to police. This community support, coupled with the partnership between IHIT and Langley RCMP, is responsible for investigators obtaining charge approval quickly,” said IHIT Sgt. Stephanie Ashton. On May 29, two days before the murder, Van

Den Brink was arrested by Langley RCMP for breaching five of his probation orders. He was released that same day. He hadn’t been out of jail long. In March, he had been sentenced to 44 days in jail and one year probation for assault with a weapon for a crime in Langley in December 2014. On April 20, he was charged with assault, uttering threats, theft and breaching probation. A trial is set for September for those charges. Van Den Brink makes his next court appearance on June 17. Anyone with information regarding this investigation can call the IHIT tipline by calling 1-877-551-IHIT (4448) or email at ihittipline@rcmp-grc.gc.ca.

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A police officer at the scene of the Gallagher homicide in Langley City.

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A pair of new projects should help foster a sense of community. Those were the words of Langley City Mayor Ted Schaffer last Friday afternoon (May 29) at Linwood Park as he officially opened a new community garden, as well as a new off-leash dog park. “We see both of these projects as really great community building opportunities,” Schaffer said. “Places where residents can meet to do the things they love, enjoy the open spaces and connect with their neigbhours.” The project has been two years in the making. The community garden is the second one in the City and the 13th in the two Langleys. There is a wait list for community gardens in the area, said Sarah Atherton, the interim executive director of the Langley Environmental Partners Society (LEPS). “That shows how much of a need there is for a community garden,” she said.

GA RY A HUJ A Langley Time s

Langley City now has its second community gardens, at Linwood Park. The official opening of the gardens and off-leash dog park took place last Friday, May 29. Some of the garden plots will be wheelchair-accessible, so that more people can enjoy gardening.

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Friday, June 5, 2015 7

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The CN railway station at Fort Langley is shown after the railway stopped using the building. It was facing demolition, but an active community campaign was responsible for moving it closer to Glover Road and restoring it. The station will be 100 years old this year, and an anniversary celebration is planned for June 20.

Station’s 100th birthday marked

The 100th anniversary of the Fort Langley railway station will be marked with a special event on Saturday, June 20. The station was originally built by Canadian Northern Railway as one of its third-class stations in 1915, as it completed its line from Edmonton to Vancouver. It was originally located about two blocks west of its current location. In 1918, Canadian Northern became part of what is now Canadian National Railway. The station remained an important part of the town into the 1970s, when passen-

ger service was cut back. CN closed the building in the early 1980s and planned to demolish it. However, a concerted community effort resulted in it being moved closer to Glover Road and restored in 1983 and 1984 by the Langley Heritage Society. It now sits adjacent to a caboose and passenger car and is a central historic attraction in the town. LHS continues to maintain and preserve the station, and the living quarters in it are occupied to ensure that there are watchful eyes on it at all times. The beautiful gardens

that were once a feature of many railway stations have been brought back and are well-maintained. The event on Saturday, June 20 will begin with RazzMaJazz jazz band performing at 12 p.m., with remarks and a cake cutting at 1 p.m. “History does not have to be something you learn in school,” say organizers of the event. The building will be open to the public and there will be displays of historic railway photos from Langley Camera Club on both Saturday and Sunday, June 20 and 21, from 12 to 4 p.m.

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BBQ marks hospital tower’s 50th On Friday, June 12, a barbecue will be held at Langley Memorial Hospital grounds to celebrate the 50th anniversary of tha tower building. The event runs from 3 to 7 p.m. in the

parking lot, and will feature a live band, displays of hospital memorabilia and free parking. Tents will be provided in case of inclement weather, but it is not expected to snow that day.

On a snowy February day in 1965, a large crowd of Langley citizens gathered to welcome their new hospital building which had been years in the planning.

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The final report from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which has been gathering information and evidence from aboriginal people all across Canada for the past six years, was released on Tuesday. Its contents make for disturbing reading. The commission comes to the conclusion that the government of Canada, and Great Britain before it, practised “cultural genocide” on First Nations people all across the country, through a wide variety of means. The most notable was residential schools, which had a mandate from the government to “take the Indian out of the child” by refusing to allow children to speak their native language, by removing them from home at young ages, by banning First Nations cultural ceremonies and replacing them with religious ceremonies, and ultimately by breaking up the family unit. The damage this has done is evident all around us. While the Lower Mainland has a significant number of First Nations people living on the street, the numbers here pale when compared to cities like Regina and Winnipeg. First Nations children continue to be taken from their families due to concerns about neglect and abuse. Far too many of the children referred to in B.C. Children’s Commmissioner Mary-Ellen Turpel-Lafond’s reports are of native background. The languages once spoken by First Nations people (there were dozens of distinct languages in B.C. alone) have almost completely disappeared, although small groups are trying mightily to preserve them by teaching them to young children. The challenge is that few adults know the languages any more. All of these things can be directly traced to government policy and a determination to ensure that there would be little distinction between the aboriginal people who have lived in this land for countless generations, and the immigrants from other parts of the world. The commission makes a multitude of recommendations to try and bring about genuine reconciliation. These need careful study, but the first step must be for all Canadians to recognize the wrongs of the past and learn from them. Next Wednesday’s Times will look at some possible forward steps.

‘New’ hospital turns 50 You know you have lived in a were made to sit with firefighters town for a long time when an orgawaiting for treatment from trauma nization is having a 50-year annireceived on the fire scene. versary and you remember being at I have sat with my kids as they the original ribbon-cutting. received stitches for dog bites and Next week, on Friday, June 12, needles for bee stings and I have from 3 to 7 p.m., Langley Memorileft there in a sling for a separatal Hospital will be hosting an event MCGREGOR ed shoulder, or an ankle wrapped called the South Tower anniversary for a torn ligament. I have been celebration to commemorate the hooked up to machines and poked opening of the South Tower, which and prodded and invaded. I have Jim McGregor replaced the original cottage hospigiven blood and received blood tal. and I’ve been scanned and x-rayed The event will be held in the parking lot and ultra-sounded. at LMH with a barbecue, live music, and I have sat with friends and held their displays of memorabilia. It is open to the hands in encouragement or prayed with public and parking is free. This is a great them to find some peace and comfort in opportunity to catch up on some valuable troubled times. Langley history. Each of my visits has been a positive exTaking some time to reflect on my in- perience and so I am surprised when I hear teraction with the local hospital over the the odd complaint. My visits have always years brings back a flood of memories, been tempered with three things: please, some happy, some sad, but how fortunate thank you and patience. The hospital is that my family and I had such professional always a busy place and I have the conficare so close to home. Many in our prov- dence in the professionalism of the staff ince don’t have that luxury. that they are treating the sickest people I was born on top of the hill in the lit- first. Sometimes that means I have to wait. tle hospital, with Murrayville on my birth I do not take our local hospital for grantcertificate. Two of my children and both of ed. Many people throughout the world my grandchildren were born at LMH so we have no chance of ever seeing a doctor, have a three-generation connection to the much less lying in a clean hospital bed. facility. Back in the early 1950s, the expansion I have walked through the front doors committee recognized that a growing comsmiling with flowers or balloons to cele- munity would need a new facility to mainbrate happy occasions and I have arrived tain that service at a high level. in an ambulance in pain and full of fear. I On March 4, 1965, all patients were transhave held my new babies as they entered ferred from the cottage hospital to the new the world and I have held the hands of my facility, a dream come true for many proDad, aunt and uncle, as they left us behind fessionals and volunteers. for a world much better than ours. You have all thought about thanking the Many trips were made to pick up fire- folks at LMH after a stay but just never got fighters who had ridden up in the ambu- around to it. Friday, June 12 is your chance. lance to assist with CPR and some trips At least that’s what McGregor says.

says

?

Question

of the week

Should killer Allan Schoenborn be allowed escorted absences from the psychiatric hospital he’s confined to?

Answer online at www.langleytimes.com

Pay close attention they

Every month the RCMP report on the incidents they respond to. Just recently there was a significant drug bust in Sooke. While this isn’t unusual in any town, big or small, it doesn’t happen too often in Sooke. Sooke is not what it used to be. At one time everyone knew each other and the ne’er-do-goods were not encouraged to stay. What is troubling is the increase in methamphetamine use which, according to the RCMP, is leading to more property crime. More thieves at work. Properties are broken into and stores are being ripped off, all to fuel a bad drug habit. People are migrating here from the city and bringing their big city habits with them. So, what is the solution? Well, for one thing, people should be locking up their vehicles. It’s not the Sooke it once was where one could leave their doors unlocked. Robbery is mostly a crime of opportunity and if you give them one, they will take it. We have Citizens on Patrol but their numbers are limited. We have Park Watch but their numbers are limited as well. What we need is for people to pay attention to what is going on in their own neighbourhoods. That doesn’t mean reporting each and every bit of suspicious activity, what it means is looking out after our neighbourhood. It means paying attention. Check on a neighbour’s home while they are away and if something looks amiss, then investigate further. But never put your own safety at risk. That’s the way small towns used to be and it is the way it can still be. It’s about being a community. Sooke is a good community. There are people from all over the world who would love to live here. We often dismiss our town core, but it is what it is and we who live here are probably more critical and apologetic. We have something special here, even if we can’t always see it. Let’s not lose sight of what we do have — a caring community. — Sooke News Mirror

say

Last Week we asked you:

Are single-family houses in Langley still affordable for home buyers? YES 34% NO 66%


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 9

Farmers need to protect crops and animals Editor: It’s a sad day when one can log into social media and see that individuals fear more for the life of wild animals than they do for the lives of their children, and their providers. In the past couple of days there has been a confirmed kill by a cougar locally. Now this isn’t to say that there haven’t been others, but this one in particular hits close to home. I would like it to be known that crop protection and livestock protection is a legal and regulated process, and if there is wildlife threatening these things, then we should be grateful that we live in a society that has the resources to protect our providers. Packaged meats and dairy products, as well as fruits and veggies, come from local farmers —so why not support them in protecting their

livelihood that helps feed our families and make it a possibility to have diverse meals daily. For those who believe that these farmers have encroached on wildlife land, fine, but those townhouses and urban areas do so as well, and they are not providing sustenance for the community. I think there is an important lesson to be learned from this. Perhaps we should realize that we too are animals, and we protect our own, just as wildlife does. If we want to eat and feed our animals, then we might want to rethink our views on trapping or destroying large animals that pose a threat not only to livestock, but children and pets too. SARAH EMILIE BRAATEN, LANGLEY

Why kill our resident cougar? Editor: As a resident of South Langley, I do feel a slight concern for safety which has been placed upon us in light of our newly-discovered resident cougar. That being said, I find it more concerning that the cougar will be “destroyed” once trapped and caught. There have been many cases in the Lower Mainland where equally dangerous animals, like bears, have been tranquilized and relocated away

from human beings. Why is this not an option for the cougar? I’m sure he would thrive just fine if placed in a safer environment for all those involved. I hope that cougar runs and hides, as it makes me sad to know his days are numbered.

RCMP’s sensitivity praised Editor: A few weeks ago, a member of our family passed away unexpectedly in Langley. Although he was a resident of another community in B.C., the circumstances of his passing fell to the RCMP detachment in Langley to investigate. His death was further complicated by the fact that we, as next of kin, are Americans living in Washington State. We want to take this opportunity to thank the members of the Langley RCMP who dealt with this situation. Through many telephone calls and a trip to Langley, we interacted with personnel who were uniformly supportive, patient, sensitive, and professional in their interactions with us.

In an era in which the activities of the police in North America are sensationalized and under constant scrutiny, one often loses sight of the vast majority of outstanding public law enforcement servants who work daily on our behalf. Their positive handling of the details of our situation deserves recognition, and should serve as a model of all of the good that the RCMP does in our lives. Langley is very fortunate to have such a fine group and, as citizens, you should feel fortunate. We thank them immensely for their support and service in a time of need. DAPHNE AND BRYAN JOHNSON, BLAINE, WA.

Inconsiderate driver outed Editor: I am very frustrated regarding an inconsiderate driver. I was on my way to the vet hospital, as my Newfoundland dog just had major surgery two weeks ago. It was around 11:10 a.m. Monday. I was headed west on 56 Avenue from 240 Street. I was in the roundabout at 232 Street, following a truck and flat deck trailer. The driver of a vehicle coming south on 232 thought it would be a good idea to drive straight through the roundabout in the

space between my vehicle and the trailer. I had to slam on my brakes and honk my horn. I found it very frustrating that the girl in the dark-coloured Sidekick or Tracker thought it was pretty funny to almost cause a crash. ICBC would have blamed me or 50/50 between me and her. When vehicles are in the roundabout, the vehicle entering the roundabout has to make sure it’s clear. J. PURCELL, LANGLEY

K. MOONIE, LANGLEY

Wikime dia pho to

A cougar attack on a heifer in South Langley on Sunday has caused readers who live in the area to share a number of their concerns.

Township not maintaining Editor: The Township of Langley is showing negligence in maintaining its own property. I live in Aldergrove and my house backs onto a green space, which the Township refuses to maintain. I have had a tree fall on my house, despite my warnings to the Township to do something about the trees in the green space. The Township would not pay any damages. I have had pieces of trees fall onto my fence and damage it, and again the Township refuses to take responsibility. Now I am in a dispute with them over blackberry bushes that are on Township property and invading my backyard. A year ago, when the tree fell on my house, the Township had no choice but to come and cut the remainder of the tree down, and while crews were doing that they decided to take away the blackberry bushes that were growing along part of my fence line.

Since then they have grown back in a monstrous way and are probably going to push my fence over. I have sent pictures to the Township and requested that they remove the blackberry bushes or cut them back away from my fence. They have denied my request, but told me they will allow me to cut them back one metre from my fence line into their greenspace. This would be a monumental task for me to do, and yet a simple job for the Township with their crews and machinery. I explained this to the Township, however, my request was denied again. I find it rather annoying that I pay property taxes and when I need the assistance of the Township to deal with their own mess, they tell me to do it myself. I can provide further information, including the pictures and email responses from the Township. J. HEAD, ALDERGROVE

Headline was disrespectful Editor: I cannot believe the headline you gave to the closing of the kitchen at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church (The Times, May 29). It read “Joe’s serves its last bowl of soup.”

How disrespectful can you really get? I think you should apologize to the church. AL LAWSON, LANGLEY

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

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Clothing sale at Langley Lodge New2U boutique June 13 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 5451 204 St. Clean, gently-used good quality ladies clothing and accessories. Proceeds from all sales are used to enhance quality of life for our residents. Fibromyalgia Well Spring Foundation 5th Annual Western Hoedown fundraiser, Aug. 15, 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Tamara’s Farm, 25039 8 Ave. 50/50, Toonie toss, silent auction, live music, petting zoo. Tickets: $10 Adults, Children six to 15 $5, under six free which includes food. Purchase at the Fibromyalgia Well Spring Foundation thrift shop at 109 20631 Fraser Hwy.

Hot Rod Sunday at Willowbrook Shopping Centre July 19, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Up to 200 hot rods, vintage, classic, and custom cars and trucks showcased. Proceeds go to the Valley Therapeutic Equestrian Association for children and adults.

The Canadian Festival of Chili and BBQ JUNE 20 & 21 CASCADES CASINO, LANGLEY

Osteoporosis Canada Langley Monthly Support Group Meeting, June 8, 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Langley Seniors’ Centre, 20605 51B Ave. Guest speaker on “How to Maximize Dietary Calcium Absorption.”

Saturday June 20 Open to the public at 10:30 am The BC Chili Championships • Kids Q Competition

Sunday, June 21

Municipal pensioners meeting June 22, 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. at Douglas Recreation Centre, 20550 Douglas Crescent. Monthly meeting and membership update followed by presentation on how to discuss primary health care issues with your doctor, Guests welcome. Coffee and cookies will be served.

Open to the public at 10:30 am The BC BBQ Championships Pork Shoulder, Beef Brisket, Chicken & Ribs Is there a Junior Pitmaster at your house? Youth under 16 are invited to compete in two categories: Saturday, June 20 2:30 pm Hills Foods Chicken Wings • 3:30 pm Johnston’s BC Pork Tenderloin FREE Entry Sponsored Meat Supplied $100 1st Place • $50 2nd Place

Fibromyalgia and Disability Forum June 9 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Township of Langley Civic Facility 20338 - 65 Ave (Fraser River Presentation Theatre on fourth floor) Admission is free. Register at 778-278-3697.

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Langley Quilters’ Guild meets fourth Wednesday, except for Dec. Day meeting 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., night meeting 7:15 p.m. to 9 p.m at George Preston Rec. Centre, 20699 42 Ave and 208 St. Contact Nancy Walker, 604-534-1013, for more info. or visit www.langleyquiltersguild.com.

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LMHA Penny Pincher Thrift Shop needs volunteer sorters and cashiers. Applications available in store at 20550 Fraser Highway. Langley Newcomers and Friends is a non-profit, community minded club for women of all ages. Meets the first Tuesday of every month at the WC Blair Rec Centre at 7:15 p.m. For info phone Diane Campbell at 604-626-9678 or email us at langleynewcomers@hotmail.com. Langley Meals on Wheels needs volunteers to help out with Food & Friends social luncheon program. Requires a commitment of twice a month from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. (days of week and locations vary). Phone: 604-533–1679 or send email to ashley@lmow.ca. Volunteers needed at Langley Lodge Sign up at www.langleylodge.org and go to the Volunteer Page. Or call Judith McBride, 604-532-4209 or email jmcbride@langleylodge.org. TOPS Take Off Pounds Sensibly is a non profit weight loss support group. For a daytime chapter near you phone Linda at 604462-9326, for night time phone Jacquie at 604-556-0535. Singles Social and Walking Club seeks new members age 45 and up. For details, call Christina at 604-375-7732 or Dorothy at 604-594-1260 or singsocwc@gmail.com. The Senior Men’s golf club at Poppy Estate Golf Course is looking for new members 55 years or older. Information on the club can be found on club website www.poppyseniormensgolf.com or phone 604-530-4501. Outreach Services at the Langley Seniors Centre include: information and referral, transportation and shopping assistance. We will come to your home or building and provide information. Call 604 5303020 Ext. 302, 305, or 306. The Langley Lawn Bowling Club is for all ages and operates all year-round, with carpet bowls and cards from October through April and outdoor bowling, May through September. Reasonable membership fees required. South end of Douglas Park. Call Nell at 604-534-7465 for information.

Céilidh (Kay-lee) last of the season June 11, 7 p.m. to 9:45 p.m. at St. Andrew’s United Church Hall, 9025 Glover Rd. Great Men’s Langley League Cribbage urgentmusic, food & fun. Tickets $5 at the door ly needs players. Evenings, 8 p.m. to 9:30 includes traditional Maritime lunch of tea p.m. Phone Rob 604-533-9363 or Tim 604biscuits and jam. Next Ceilidh on Sept. 24. 530-2364. New performers contact: Jack Williamson, Langley Elks Lodge #259 membership 604-888-7925 or jackwilliamson@telus.net. drive call Ron (membership chair) at 604534-3126 for further information.

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Langle Red Hats Society is a group for senior women created to connect like-minded women, to make new friends and enrich life through the power of fun and friendship. Go to lunch, dinner, see movies, theatre. The Rockin Red Hats are now accepting new memberships. Call Dorothy (our Queen) at 604-546-3306.

Langley Memorial Hospital South Tower 50th anniversary celebration June 12, 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. in hospital parking lot.

E-mail your event information to datebook@langleytimes.com

Singles Social and Walking Club seeks new members age 45 and up. For details, call Christina at 604-375-7732 or Dorothy at 604-594-1260 or email singsocwc@ gmail.com.

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 11

Crime rates holding steady in Langleys, says superintendent PROPERTY CRIME CONTINUES TO CONCERN POLICE, TOP COP TELLS LANGLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE FRAN K B U C H O LT Z Ti me s Re po r t e r

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He is unaware of any serial crimes taking place in Langley now, and said police are vigilant in trying to identify such activity. There were some predatory assaults recently, but police made arrests in those cases. Learning from the Robert Pickton experience, police try to be on top of such crimes. There is no gang activity underway in Langley at present, he said. Calls involving mental health issues have increased rapidly, he said, up about 60 per cent in four years. These occupy a lot of police time and are a growing problem. He encouraged business people to be partners with police. One way is by installing surveillance cameras. Those available today are low-cost and very effective, he said, and often provide excellent means of identifying criminals. “We don’t want solutions to crime that put a financial burden on businesses,” he said. Power praised Langley RCMP D Watch for its heroic efforts in notifying residents of the Murray Green and Autumn Ridge townhouse complexes about a major fire in an adjacent building early on May 17 in Murrayville. He said police went through the halls, notifying residents who were asleep, and in the end bashed in close to 60 doors. At the time, they were very concerned that the fire could spread to either of the nearby buildings. “I am very proud of the Langley detachment members and other first responders for the job they did,” he said. He also mentioned Langley City’s homelessness task force, which has started to meet. He urged residents to remember that homeless people are human beings. He also said that the homeless issue is a “manageable” problem now, but will become unmanageable if left alone.

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 13

Is B.C. a Third World backwater? Father’s Day We might call ourselves Super, Natural or even The Best Place on Earth, but how is B.C. viewed around the world? Ever since U.S. billionaires and their environmental clients decided more than a decade ago to supervise our society, the impression that British Columbia is a primitive colonial backwater in need of “saving” has only been reinforced. In late April, the province and coastal aboriginal leaders announced completion of marine planning areas for Haida Gwaii and the North and Central Coast. U.S. activists knew about the announcement weeks before the legislature press gallery did, and a documentary crew was sent up to advance the narrative of the saving of the “Great Bear Rainforest.” Within minutes of the announcement, the World Wildlife Fund website trumpeted the creation of the “Great Bear Sea,” continuing the penchant of outsiders for renaming large parts of B.C. to fit their marketing strategies. Unlike the “Great Bear Rainforest” land use deal of 2007, the Sierra Club, ForestEthics and Greenpeace were not represented. Instead, Tides Canada CEO Ross McMillan sat beaming in the audience. McMillan’s role in directing U.S. foundation money to B.C. has prompted him to declare himself “a principal architect of the Great Bear Rainforest project,” although in the early years he

and his staff (currently al marketing purposes, 24 people) stayed behind covering pioneer-cleared the scenes while Sierra, farms of our colonial Greenpeace et al took backwater with forest the credit. for 100 years so they can At the event, two abadvertise their soaps original leaders gave a and cold pills as carbon nod to the real funder neutral. Another 10,000 BC of the ongoing effort to hectares of B.C. “saved” “save” the B.C. coast, the from destruction by beGordon and Betty Moore nevolent foreign interTom Fletcher Foundation. Gordon ests! Moore is a co-founder Back to reality. B.C.’s of Intel Corp., maker of most of Auditor General issued a report the world’s computer processor last week calling on the province chips, now spending his vast for- to do more to prevent the “cumutune on the Amazon basin, B.C. lative effects” of industrial develand other “threatened” places. opment. A familiar example of Other Silicon Valley and Seat- this is the struggle to maintain tle billionaires helped finance caribou herds in northern B.C. the original effort, and a strategy The B.C. government mustered document surfaced in 2008 de- a response from the multiple scribing their plan to de-market ministries that have worked on the Alberta oilsands by creating this since 2010. a blockade against energy exAmong other things, they ports on our Pacific coast. That noted that 90 per cent of B.C.’s campaign has featured a fake vast area is now covered by recancer study and grossly exag- gional land use plans created to gerated greenhouse gas claims manage cumulative impacts. A compared to U.S. coal and oil whopping 37 per cent of B.C. is production. designated as parks and protectThe effort has since expanded ed areas for environmental and to natural gas, with false horror cultural values. stories about “fracking” finding a Maybe that’s still not good receptive global audience. enough, but it’s better than anyLast week I wrote about the thing I can find in Europe or the plan by British manufacturing U.S. That’s particularly true of conglomerate Reckitt Benckiser California, home of Hollywood, to buy up farms in the B.C. Inte- Silicon Valley, a pipeline spill, rior and replant them with trees. heavy oil refining and gridlocked Contrary to my description, “RB freeways. Trees for Change” isn’t particTom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reipating in the dodgy European porter and columnist for Black Press carbon credit market. newspapers. Email: tfletcher@blackThey’re just doing it for glob- press.ca

Mary, formerly of The House of Miss Rose & Prism Hair Designs, invites present, past and future clients to visit her at her new location. Irina’s Hair & Skin Care 5570 204 Street in downtown Langley. Specializing in colour and perms. cell: 604-803-7627 shop: 604 604-533-3319 533 3

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14 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Page

For the week of June 4, 2015

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 15

www.tol.ca

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For the week of June 4, 2015

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20338 - 65 Avenue, Langley V2Y 3J1 | 604.534.3211

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Notice of Road Closure, Highway Dedication Removal, and Disposal

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Coming Events Langley Thunder WLA Lacrosse Wed Jun 10 7:00pm vs. Victoria Shamrocks Wed Jun 17 7:45pm vs. Burnaby Lakers

Langley Junior Thunder BCJALL Lacrosse Sun Jun 7 5:00pm vs. Nanaimo Timbermen Thu Jun 11 8:00pm vs. New West Salmonbellies

Langley Intermediate Thunder BCILL Lacrosse Tue Jun 16 7:30pm vs. Port Coquitlam Saints Vancouver Stealth 2016 Season Tickets on sale 20% discount – Visit StealthLAX.com The Langley Events Centre is located at 7888 - 200 Street For ticket information, contact Langley Events Centre 604.882.8800 • LangleyEventsCentre.com

Engineering Division 604.532.7300 opsinfo@tol.ca

public programs and events Give Laundry a Fresh Start with Clothes Washer Rebate Program Is your clothes washer an energy waster and a water guzzler? Are you in the market for a new washing machine? For a limited time only, Township of Langley residents can receive a $100 to $200 rebate on select Energy Star® qualified clothes washers. Rebates are courtesy of BC Hydro Power Smart and the Township’s energy and water programs.

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Motorists are advised to plan alternate routes and allow extra time to reach their destination. The work is weather dependent and the construction schedule is subject to change. Visit tol.ca/roads for the latest traffic information. We appreciate your patience. To receive email notifications on upcoming traffic impacts, sign up for eAlerts by visiting tol.ca/ealert.

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langley events centre

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Single lane alternating traffic

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

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Wednesday, June 17 | 7 - 9pm Community and Transportation Safety Advisory Committee Civic Facility Salmon River Committee Room

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Monday, June 15 | 7 - 11pm Regular Council Meeting and Public Hearing Meeting Civic Facility Fraser River Presentation Theatre

Road Paving: 96 Avenue Between Wright Street and Glover Road

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Tuesday, June 9 | 7 - 9pm Seniors Advisory Committee Civic Facility Salmon River Committee Room

public notices

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The intent of the Bylaw is to close and remove the dedication of highway of a 0.161 hectare of unimproved road allowance situated between Church and Queen Streets at approximately the 9000 block in Fort Langley. The lands will then be offered for sale on the open market. The road being closed is shown outlined on the plan. Comments will be received by the Township Clerk prior to 12pm on Monday, June 8, 2015. Written comments should be directed to: Deputy Township Clerk 20338 – 65 Avenue Langley BC V2Y 3J1 Fax: 604.533.6054 Copies of the Bylaw may be inspected at the Township of Langley Civic Facility. Contact Scott Thompson for information regarding the process by which the land may be acquired. Scott Thompson Manager, Property Services Department 604.533.6138

Rain Garden – Did you know?

Visit powersmart.ca/appliances to check a Product Eligibility Search Tool for qualifying models and to apply.

Having a rain garden is an attractive and natural way to manage rainwater run-off in developed neighbourhoods. Rain water treated by topsoil is cool, clean, and has nutrients that benefit wildlife.

Rebates are available for purchases made from May 1 - June 30, 2015 or when funding is exhausted. You must be a Township resident in order to qualify for the maximum rebate.

If you have a rain garden, or are thinking about making one, visit tol.ca/raingarden for helpful information on what to plant and how to maintain your garden. Engineering Division 604.532.7300 opsinfo@tol.ca

Engineering Division 604.532.7300 opsinfo@tol.ca

public notice Be Wild Animal Aware The Township of Langley is full of wildlife habitat, and residents share the area with animals including bears, cougars, and coyotes. While residents throughout Langley do not need to be continually on alert, there are a number of actions that can be taken to deter wild animals if they are spotted in your area. Parents are encouraged to educate their children on what to do if they encounter any of these animals, especially if they play by themselves in areas that wildlife frequent or have been seen in the past.

WARNING Langley has a large deer population

To help people coexist with creatures that are simply trying to survive but can be dangerous if provoked, the following information is offered:

Bears: are looking for food - don’t let them learn it can easily be obtained from humans. If you encounter a bear, do not run. Act big and loud, and back away slowly to a safe place.

Cougars: can have kittens throughout the year, and family groups can be seen at any time. Cougars survive on natural food sources found in the wild, primarily deer.

Cougar attacks on humans are highly unlikely. However, if you encounter a cougar, do not run. Pick children up immediately and talk to the cougar in a confident voice. Act big by waving sticks and branches, and back away slowly while still facing the cougar. If it attacks, fight back.

USE CAUTION ON ROADS

Coyotes: have the largest population of potentially dangerous wildlife in the area and can be seen year round, even in residential areas. Coyotes are bold and easily lose their natural fear of people. Never feed a coyote. If you encounter a

In Agricultural Areas:

coyote, scare it off by making loud noise or throwing something at it to make it afraid. Never ignore a coyote. If it continues to approach, do not run. Maintain eye contact, pick up small pets or children, and slowly move to an area of increased activity.

In Residential Areas: Reduce the smell of food by keeping barbecues clean. Keep pet food inside. Garbage is the biggest attraction for bears so keep it secure and inaccessible to wildlife. Do not leave garbage cans out overnight: keep them in the house, a locked garage, or secured outbuilding that cannot be broken into by large, smart bears. Put them out only on the morning of collection. If you are worried about odour, keep garbage in the freezer until collection day. Do not use bird feeders, as they attract bears and the birds do not need seeds when other natural food sources are available. This is the time of year to be extra vigilant with small pets, especially cats, in areas where coyotes are around.

Protect your investment by keeping fences secure and free of damage that predators can use for access. Coyotes burrow, so ensure surrounding netting goes deep into the ground. Use electric fencing to deter bears from blueberries and beehives, and pick berries and fruit as they ripen. Be vigilant with livestock and keep them secure. Farm animals are usually killed at night, so bring them inside in the evening. It is an offence to attract wildlife into a residential neighbourhood. Those who do not take steps to deter bears and other wild creatures can face a fine of up to $575. To report poachers or polluters or if you have a problem with wildlife call: Report All Poachers and Polluters (RAPP) 1.877.952.7277

After-Hours Emergency Contact 604.543.6700


16 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Gold, three silver for local students Family Fun Day FOUR FIND PODIUM AT FRENCH PUBLIC SPEAKING COMPETITION

Students from several different schools in Langley swept a provincial French public speaking competition held last month. Some 10,000 students from across B.C. competed, 240 made the provincial finals, and four students from Langley took home top

awards in this year’s pan-provincial French public speaking competition, Concours d’art oratoire. “In addition to the cultural and language benefits, Concours d’art oratoire helps students develop their creative and public speaking abilities, as well as self-confidence,”

said Patti Holm, President of Canadian Parents for French BC & Yukon. “It’s an incredible feat to make it to the provincial finals — taking home a medal is a real achievement. “We congratulate everyone who participated; they are all winners. Félicitations!” added Concours d’art oratoire chief judge, Dr. Renée Hamilton-Clark. The provincial finals were hosted Saturday, May 2 at the

Surrey SFU campus. R.E. Mountain Grade 8 immersion student Jasmine Lee took first place in her category, April St. Pierre, a Grade 9 Walnut Grove Secondary immersion student took second in her category, École Brookswood Secondary Grade 10 core French student Roxanne Kondos took second in her category and Michael Pratt, Grade 12 Early Immersion at Brookswood took second in his category.

The second annual Family Fun Day is set for this weekend at Willowbrook Shopping Centre. The event runs from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday (June 7). Dress up your dog in super hero costumes or come for the free barbecue, contests, prizes and games, there is plenty of fun to be had. There will also be a balloon artist, face painting, photo booth and activities for the kids. Across the street, for the car buffs, Preston GM is hosting a Corvette show all day at 200 Street and Langley Bypass.

“Did you know our proposed expansion follows the existing route for most of the way?” - Carey Johannesson, Project Lead, Land & Right-of-Way, Trans Mountain Expansion Project.

The proposed Trans Mountain Expansion follows the existing

%

73

route or other linear infrastructure for 90% of the way.

OF THE ROUTE IS ON THE EXISTING RIGHT-OF-WAY.

That means less than 100 kms needs to be moved to undisturbed lands. These reroutes will be made to improve safety and address environmental considerations, and will accommodate changes

%

10

(or 98km) WILL REQUIRE NEW ROUTING.

in land usage since the pipeline was originally built in 1953. We’ve been talking with the public, stakeholders, landowners and Aboriginal communities along the proposed corridor to hear their concerns. We expect you will ask questions. We’ve made

17%

WILL FOLLOW OTHER LINEAR INFRASTRUCTURES, SUCH AS HYDRO, TELUS, RAILWAYS AND HIGHWAYS.

adjustments in many places to address the concerns we’ve heard. Our intention in all of our planning is to minimize the impact on residents, communities and the environment, while ensuring that safe construction and operations are possible.

For more information, go to TransMountain.com/planning-the-route Email: info@transmountain.com · Phone: 1-866-514-6700 Committed to safety since 1953.


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 17

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

LANGLEY

2 BEDS 2 BATHS 2 PARKING $20,000 OFF EVERY. SINGLE. HOME. FINAL COUNTDOWN! SALES CENTRE CLOSING JUNE 21ST. But hurry, this offer ends soon. Move in today!

2 BEDROOMS FROM $229,900 604.534.6000 cornerstoneliving.ca Sales Centre | 56th & 210A St, Langley | Open daily (closed Friday) from 12 to 5 pm. Marcon Homes (Cornerstone) Limited time Ltd. offer.

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

Marcon Homes (Cornerstone) Ltd.


18 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

FINAL PHASE NOW SELLING!

OLD L ANDMARK. NEW LIFE. CLOVERDALE’S FASTEST SELLING COMMUNIT Y. A collection of bold new country residences on an old Surrey

BEST VIEWS. BEST SELECTION. BEST FOR LAST. 17 AVAILABLE TO MOVE-IN THIS WINTER!

landmark: the historic Bose Family Farm. This is your only opportunity to live in a gold winning heritage community. Overlooking the heritage courtyard or sunset ALR view. Our most spacious floor plans yet in this latest offering up to 3 bedroom and den layouts.

2015 GEORGIE AWARDS GOLD WINNER

PHASE 1 & 2 SOLD OUT!

Prices quoted exclude taxes, are subject to availability at time of visit and/or to change without prior notice and include available homes in all phases. E.&O.E.

se a h P ast! l a Fin ling F Sel

STAR TING FROM

$389,900

HomeLife Glenayre Realty Chilliwack Ltd.

6-15 DC5


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 19

LEORONSE CAN’T PLAY GOLF!

Open Saturday 2-4

S. SURREY • $788,800 15482 Semiahmoo Avenue

LANGLEY • $249,900 19 5664 208 Street

MURRAYVILLE • $411,900 16 21965 49 Avenue

WILLOUGHBY • $691,800 7079 208A Street

BROOKSWOOD • $724,900 3670 204A Street

Nicely updated, top floor corner unit in the Meadows. 2 Bedrooms + den - 2 Baths - Spacious Floor Plan with white kitchen and large Living Room. Bathrooms, hardware, flooring, kitchen backsplash, lighting, mouldings, paint, etc. all redone in the last few years. Central location with shopping, transit, schools and recreation close by. This is a well maintained 1250 square foot unit. Pets and children welcome.

2080 sq.ft. Townhome on Murrayville Hilltop! Rarely does a home come available in this unique, responsibly self managed complex. This 4 bedroom home offers numerous updates and large spaces for family living. A perfect opportunity for thos e moving up AND for those moving down in size. Private South facing backyard. Stunning Mountain views from the Master Bedroom and each floor has its’ own outdoor living space. A great Family complex that won’t disappoint any Purchaser. Close to pool, parks, shopping, transit, library etc. Bring your pets. This feels and lives like a house.

This well maintained 3351 sqft, 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 year old home is located in the GEORGIE AWARD WINNING desirable area of MILNER HEIGHTS. It features beautiful bamboo flooring, crown moldings, vaulted ceilings on the main floor and master be droom. This home also boasts a professionally landscaped 4271 sqft lot. The backyard has a beautiful ‘waterless stream’ almost the full width of the property. And while backing onto extremely quiet townhouses it is surrounded by 55+ emerald cedars for privacy. Both front and backyards have a premium grade of artificial turf..... No Mowing! A 1125 sqft UNFINISHED basement just waiting for your design ideas. Priced to sell quickly! DEFINITELY A MUST SEE!!

Huge Brookswood 17,115 sqft lot! This 2,398 sq.ft. split entry home has been extensively updated and modernized. 3 bdrms - 2 baths on the main & a fully finished basement with additional bdrm, Rec Room, bath & Wet Bar. Large, private lot offers a huge entertainment sized deck, Detached 20x30 shop & tons of additional parking. Excellent street appeal and walking distance to both levels of Schools and Noel Booth park.

BROOKSWOOD • $999,000 21135 45A Crescent

MURRAYVILLE • $1,049,000 4661 217B Street

CLAYTON • $1,149,900 19530 80 Avenue

Over $300,000 in updates on this spectacular Cedar Ridge 2storey with basement home. Very high quality materials & craftsmanship from top to bottom. 5bdrm, 4bath and 3,522sqft. Top of the line kitchen w/ quartz counters, high end proff. ap pliances; Liebherr fridge, 36” dual fuel range & miele d/w. Brushed oak hardwood throughout main, all tile floors heated. Master suite has spa like ensuite & custom built in walkin closet. Quartz counters throughout, wine room, custom window treatments, high end lighting, etc. Re-plumbed (no polyb), tankless h/w, new high eff. furnace/heat pump, irrigation, spray foamed basement, 16x25 composite deck, & oversized front and back doors. Private backyard.

Brand new 2 storey + unfinished bsmnt in Murrayville. 3,991 sq.ft. home on an 7027 sq.ft. cul-de-sac lot w/West facing backyard is being built by Wallmark Homes. This well designed great room plan exudes quality from inside/out. Huge ente rtaining sized kitch w/shaker cabinetry, quartz countertops & lrg eating area. Great Room offers extensive use of mouldings & hardwood throughout the main. Upstairs features 3 oversized bdrms + a loft/mezz area that could easily be converted to a 4th bdrm. Master has lrg walk in closet & deluxe ensuite. Bsmnt is unfinished & could be a legal suite or dream entertainment area w/ media room & wet bar. A rare opportunity to work w/design team & add your personal touches to the Exec. Murrayville Home

Raise your family in this large country home on 1.7 acres, with complete privacy and future development potential! 4902 sqft 2 storey w/unfinished basement. Home is bright and spacious with oversized bedrooms, an open plan kitchen/family ro om and a big basement awaiting your ideas. Panhandle lot allows for long driveway to your quiet lot set well back from the road. Bright South facing backyard has inground pool and expansive wooden deck. Feel like you are in the middle of nowhere, yet minutes to all amenities. Out of ALR, no creeks, in future development area.

BROOKSWOOD • $924,900 4012 212 Street .91 of an Acre in Brookswood - Flat useable land with 2700+ sq.ft. home. 4 bdrms OR 3 bdrms + a Games up. Lovely Country home in desirable neighbourhood. Only a 2 minute walk to LFM School & 5 minutes to Brookswood. Home is well cared for and offers various updates. Beautiful grounds offer gardens with fruit trees & various perennials. House is strategically placed to one side and offers lots of room for a shop or future rezoning potential.

LANGLEY • $949,900 5934 243 Street Fantastic Rancher completely updated on manicured private acre. This home is complimented with beautiful fruit trees and backs onto farmland. This is a 2,314 square foot 4 Bdrm home with part Basement. Huge Family sized kitchen with Granite Counters and SS appliances. Hardwood floors throughout. The Best Home in this price point.

Building Lot in center of White Rock. Close to all amenities and only moments from White Rock Beach. Build your dream home. This 5,825 sq.ft. lot accommodates a Basement. Vendor financing is available with qualifications.

LANGLEY • 1,414,900 21132 41 Avenue

LANGLEY • 1,725,000 2911 204 Street

LANGLEY • 1,799,000 24230 26 Avenue

LANGLEY • 2,238,800 20163 2nd Avenue

Custom built & custom designed 2 storey + bsmnt w/1 bdrm legal suite. This large and spacious home is built for the large family that loves to entertain. Huge open living w/ great room plan. Shaker cabinetry, granite & harvest sized eating area. Stunning hardwood throughout. Master on main boasts 6 pce ensuite & walk-in closet. 3 large bdrms up (or 2 & a games) + 2 full washrooms. Covered patio overlooking private back yard. This home is strategically placed on 1.08 acres & offers potential for future removal of 1/4 acre lots. Just 2 minute walk to Langley Fundamental School.

Highly sought after Brookswood/Fernridge acreage. This Beautifully updated 2,833 square foot rancher offers Large Sprawling Living space with an Open Kitchen to Family Room, 3 generous sized Bedrooms, 3 Baths and shows incredibly well throughout. The grounds offer the best of everything: Space for Entertaining, Privacy AND a 5 Bay Detached Garage/Workshop. Toys and Cars, bring them both to this Stunning Gated Gem. Part of the Griffith Plan for future development potential.

High Point 3/4acre lot with Mountain Views. This 6,500sqft 2storey w/ fully finished basement has a LEGAL inlaw suite or nanny quarters above garage. Beautiful custom finishing from top to bottom. Master bdrm on main has deluxe ensuite w / 2 person walkin shower. Great room plan w/ vaulted ceilings and spacious entertainment sized kitchen that opens onto covered patio for entertaining. Basement has gym, recrm, movie theatre, wine nook, office, and guest bdrm. Partial walkout to stone grotto hottub area. Large backyard is fully hedged with deluxe kids playhouse, sweeping lawns and backing onto horse trails and green belt. Triple car garage plus RV parking. Built by Mill Creek Homes.

High Point 3/4acre lot with Mountain Views. This 6,500sqft 2storey w/ fully finished basement has a LEGAL inlaw suite or nanny quarters above garage. Beautiful custom finishing from top to bottom. Master bdrm on main has deluxe ensuite w / 2 person walkin shower. Great room plan w/ vaulted ceilings and spacious entertainment sized kitchen that opens onto covered patio for entertaining. Basement has gym, recrm, movie theatre, wine nook, office, and guest bdrm. Partial walkout to stone grotto hottub area. Large backyard is fully hedged with deluxe kids playhouse, sweeping lawns and backing onto horse trails and green belt. Triple car garage plus RV parking. Built by Mill Creek Homes.

LEORONSE.COM • 604.790.0231

WILLOUGHBY • $874,900 7627 210 Street Looking for the best of the best? This European Craftsman built 2storey w/ basement is better than a show home. 6bdrm, 5bathrm. Main floor features a gourmet open plan kitchen w/ prof. series stainless steel appliances, quartz countertops & a large island. Upstairs has a loft area & 3 spacious bedrooms including a large master retreat, deluxe en-suite bathroom with fireplace & over sized tub. The basement has a 2 bedroom legal suite w/ it’s own laundry plus an additional bedroom/play room & full bathroom for upstairs use. Upgraded finishing throughout home w/ high end finishing, fixtures, & hardwood floors. Backing a protected wildlife greenbelt w/ walking trails, & has nicely landscaped, private backyard w/ custom storage shed.

OTTER • $1,199,000 24212 32 Avenue 5.34 Acres on Quiet Dead End Street. Great frontage, South facing back yard. Basement home updated on main floor with Basement partially complete and an easy conversion to legal suite. 2 BDRM mobile with own driveway. 60 X 40 Shop with office space and Bathroom. 3 Septics. Small horse barn. Property is fenced and an ideal Hobby Farm. Easy to view and offers lots to see with great value.

LANGLEY • 2,395,000 22954 Old Yale Road Quite unique! Enjoy Country living with all conveniences of Murrayville & Langley City within minutes of this private, 11.65 Acre property! Through the automated gate, at the end of a long driveway, stands the stunning 3 level home, designed and situated to optimize the pastoral views & natural light from nearly every room! Featured within, is a Great Room with vaulted ceiling, large kitchen with SS appliances, island & surprise cabinets. Fireplace & Master bedroom on the main all open up to a huge, wraparound, South facing sundeck with natural gas BBQ connection & mood lighting. Natural Stone & Hickory floors with radiant heating. 2 laundry rooms, Media Room, Wine Cellar in walk out Bsmnt. Be sure to view soon!


20 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com Managing Broker

Mobile Mortgage Specialist 604-613-1855 TD Canada Trust

Balli Dhanda

Cindy Trudgian

Nancy Smith

Mike Bowie

Bernadine Jensen

SUTTON GROUP WEST COAST REALTY WELCOMES...

Janet Fisher

Stan Sturwold

We would like to welcome Emily, Jay, Noi, and Namita to the Sutton West Coast Team. They will be working out of the Langley Office and are now available to help you with all of your real estate needs.

Lisa Rassak

Emily Merrin

Karen Grunlund

Jay Lee

Emily Merrin

Namita Dhami

Noi Soudarack

Bill Harrison

Lynn Brice-Polegato

107-3031 200 ST. LANGLEY

Anne Chow

#34 2305 200 Street, Langley

• Cedar Creek Estates Mobile Home Park • Age 55+ • 2 bdrm double wide pad $560 • Covered patio & sundeck • Fruit trees • Parking for 2nd car

924 sq. ft. mobile home with two bedrooms, has a hot tub spa on deck. Lots of updates. Small pets allowed. Pad rent $570. Age 40 plus. $

58,000

Mike McAuley 604-308-5715

#205 5499 203rd Street, Langley Ann Lapierre

Pioneer Place features great sized one bedroom units, this one is 850 sqft with two balconies, new carpet in the master bedroom, freshly painted bedroom, bath, kitchen & feature wall in living room. Laminate floors in all rooms except bedroom. Building had new roof in 2013, freshly painted hallways, new carpet and building security cameras all done this year. Walking distance to transit, shopping, banking and restaurants. Don’t miss out on this one. Quick possession possible. Call today for view.

$

156,000

Janet Fisher 604-613-2480 Susan Marquis

# 30 7088 191ST ST, Surrey THIS END UNIT in the well known Montana Complex is waiting for you! This bright unit features 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bath, powder on the main. Good sized deck off the kitchen for those sunny evening bbqs, large kitchen, laminate flooring throughout main, all good sized bdrms. Close to schools, shops, transit and parks. Call today to view.

ST WEEK SOLD IN FIR

Eileen Wang

Mike McAuley 604-308-5715

$

61,500

21980 100th Avenue, Fort Langley LOVE COUNTRY LIVING, THIS HOME IS FOR YOU! 8000 sf home on 4.2 acres. Home features 5 bdrms and 5 baths, of which 4 of each on the main and 1 down. Beautiful master bedroom with large updated ensuite. Kitchen has lots of oak cupboards, granite counter tops and large pantry. Nice sunken living room with floor to ceiling windows to look onto the property. Main floor has just been freshly painted. 930 sf loft looking onto the sunken livingroom. Basement features, theatre room with 100” projection screen, acoustic sound panels and surround sound system. Nice sized bar area and wood burning stove, plus a large open area for indoor sports or whatever you choose. New septic system done in 2013.

Cheryl Kraut

$

336,000

Janet Fisher 604-613-2480

Janet Fisher 604-613-2480

A rare opportunity to own an amazing 48.18 acre parcel of land. Located in the beautiful Salmon River Uplands area of Langley, the irregularly shaped property is surrounded by a mix of residential acreages, hobby farms, small agricultural farms and residential subdivisions. The property enjoys green views of surrounding trees and the quietness and convenience of a location close to many amenities. With a 3 bedroom modular home, a cinder block shop, a Quonset, a Greenhouse and many ancillary site improvements, this is the perfect location!!

Don Munro 604-817-7338

$

2,500,000

DEVELOPER AND INVESTOR ALERT!! A RARE 5 ACRE PROPERTY IN PRIME WILLOUGHBY AREA. Willoughby is currently the fastest growing neighbourhood in the Township of Langley (TOL). A great investment property, it is free of any structures, is 660’ deep with 330’of frontage on 208th Street and is centrally located in the Smith Neighbourhood Plan. The acreage, currently zoned Suburban Residential (SR-2), is lightly treed with a south eastern exposure offering an excellent potential Mount Baker view in an area already planning for major expansion within the rapidly growing Willoughby Community. This is an exceptional opportunity to own a large 5 acre parcel, a perfect short-term holding property and well-situated .

Don Munro 604-817-7338

#SEC 5 Popkum Rd, Rosedale Popkum Leanna Nash

Darren Giesbrecht

Looking for a quintessential property with subdivision potential? Well look no further, you have found it! Backing onto Lake Cheam is this 32.45 acre dually zoned parcel. Approximately 14 acres are the potential to be sub-divided into lots, providing lakefront property to build the perfect homes & to enjoy the charms of lakefront living. The remainder of the property is perfectly suited for blueberries or other agricultural purposes. Situated across the highway from the Trans Canada Waterslides & scenic Bridal Veil Falls Provincial Park & only minutes to Trans Canada Exits 135 & 138, make this a major tourism destination location. This is truly an exceptional opportunity for investors!

$

Ata Miri

$

1,490,000

Jamie Pfannmuller

$

3,990,000

7306 264 St, Langley

1,200,000

Don Munro 604-817-7338

Mary Young

7468 208 Street, Langley

24576 64TH Avenue, Langley

Kristy Dusdal

Ray Lewis

Spanning 138.14 Acres with two road frontages, this extraordinary parcel of land is located within minutes of the TransCanada Highway and provides an opportunity not usually offered in the beautiful Glen Valley area of Langley. This property features 7 acres of cleared “One of a Kind” Building Site and over 131 acres covered in second growth forest. This private estate site is now fully entitled with approved plans for an approximately 15,000 sq.ft. shop and a 7,400 sq.ft. modern rancher. This rare opportunity allows you to experience nature on one of the largest estate properties at an extremely private and serene location. Build your dream home here, back-dropped by breathtaking views! Call today for all the details!

Don Munro 604-817-7338

Bronsson Harder

$

9,900,000

Marla Lynch

WestCoast Realty™ You’ve found a home Darren Martin

Martin Steward

George Porter

Parm Rai

Desmond Jensen

LANGLEY

ABBOTSFORD

156 – 19653 Willowbrook Drive 604-533-3939 • Toll Free: 1-888-551-3939 www.suttonwestcoast.com

5 - 33324 South Fraser Way 1-604-859-6800 www.sutton.com

Ajia Glover

Robert Kowalewski

Ken Heppner

Anny Kosovic

Gary Sidhu

Mike McAuley

Namita Dhami

Sarah Shinn


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 21


22 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

LANGLEY’S HIDDEN GEM REVEALED NO.1

HOMES FROM 1.2 MILLION.

604 636 7082 hydecanyon.com

Marketed by:

Developed by:

62

A

61 AVE

240 ST

REGISTER TODAY

HW Y

64 AVE

232 ST

Hyde Canyon is an exclusive and carefully planned community encompassing 64 estate homes woven into a magnificent natural setting. Impressive views of the north shore mountains and acres of protected greenspace connected by a scenic 3 km walking trail enhance the quality of life that thrives here. Two accomplished Langley builders offering a complementary range of house styles and finishing materials allow you to find a home as unique as you are.

N


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Best value in apartment living! Totally remodelled interior right in the heart of Walnut Grove. Awesome, quiet North/East corner unit overlooking greenspace. All new flooring, bright open plan, lots of windows, balcony deck off living room, large rooms & spacious entry. Walk to schools, parks, track, library, swimming, shopping & transportation. #203 8976 208 ST, Walnut Grove $239,500

Popular ‘Clayton Heights 3100 sqft. 2 storey & basement home, 4 bdrms up and 2 bdrms down. Beautiful hardwood and tile floors throughout the main level, formal dining, open Great room with B/I mantel, gas f/p and shelves. Spacious kitchen with eating nook, espresso cabinets, granite countertops and S/S appliances. basement is fully finished with wine room and more. Double garage, situtated on a corner lot close to transportation, shopping, schools and parks. * PREC - Personal Real Estate Corporation

7030 194B ST, Clayton, Cloverdale $654,800

Bridlewoods WALNUT GROVE! 1364 sqft 2 storey, 2 bed/3 bath in beautiful Bridlewoods! If you’re looking for change, what better place to find it. Nearby all necessary amenities in a great neighborhood with an atmosphere you won’t get tired of. This 2 storey townhome has much to offer with 1364 sqft! 2 beds, 3 bathrooms and a LARGE kitchen. Very clean property, new laminate floors, new paint, blinds throughout, single garage w/additional parking outside property. Call today to book your personal showing! # 44 9045 Walnut Grove Dr., Langley $289,900

Friday, June 5, 2015 23

Beautiful Hunter’s Glen

Leisure at it’s Best

Showstopper

1,450sq/ft+2bed/2bath CORNER unit. This unit offers an open floor plan allowing you to enjoy the space provided! 3 balconies, garage w/ additional parking +visitor parking spot! Gas fireplace. Dining rm & family rm w/ balcony, MSTR w/ ensuite +balcony. Near parks, shops, rec centre & library. Easily accessible trail! # 25 9036 208th Street, Walnut Grove $289,900

The Residences - 510 SQFT, 1 Bed/1 Bath -Featuring FULLTIME Concierge services. Location is everything, within walking distance to many desirable amenities in beautiful Walnut Grove, Langley! This quaint property is perfect for the buyer who wants the benefits of leisure with minimal upkeep required. # 319 8880 202nd Street, Walnut Grove $165,900

7000 sq.ft., triple garage, outstanding views, wrap around deck, hot tub, dog kennel, putting green, gourmet kitchen, b/i. espresso, paneled fridge, island fridges, warming drawer, wall ovens & luxurious master retreat on main w/2 way f/p, hardwood, tile marble extraordinary wet bar, gym, billiards rm, wine cellar, guest rooms & theatre ever! Wow factor beyond compare but warm and inviting. 45353 MAGDALENA PL, Cultus Lake $1,250,000

Gorgeous Clayton Rise

Charlton Park Located in North Surrey, GUILDFORD this LIKE NEW ground unit apartment boasts 1095 Sqft, 2 Bedrooms/2 Baths & den. North facing, 2 slider doors to large covered patio. Large living room to entertain your guests, Master w/ensuite. Kitchen w/granite countertop & stainless steel appliances. Spacious 9ft ceiling space throughout w/hardwood flooring! Close to all nearby amenities! Access included for 3500 sqft clubhouse with pool, gym & guest suite. Call Dean to book your private showing today and become a resident in the heart of Guildford!

115 10180 153RD Street, Surrey $278,500

1,5944 sq/ft 3BED/3 BATH. This Townhouse / Duplex able plex has a very spacious floor plan ab ccommodate any layout! Gated with to accommodate cozyy front yard & back yard patio allowin allowing you adequate privacy and comfort to oy. Offers LARGE family room, LARGE enjoy. bl garage. 5 P bdrms andd 2 WIDE ddouble Pc EEnsuite w/master bedroom. Access to pool, exercise center & rec center included! 6869 195A Street, Cloverdale $409,800

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Check heck out this spacious end unit, 1518 sqft, bedrooms, qft, 2 storey with basement, 3 bedroo 3 baths, large patio and balcony. Very desirable esirable location with so much to offer, shoppings, fer, walking distance to all shopping recreation High creation centre and Walnut Grove H school. Quiet location and backing onto greenspace in popular “Highland Ridge”. #35- 8890 Walnut Grove Dr, Langley $339,800

Located ed in the heart of Walnut Grove! 2,506 Sq/ Ft 3bd/3bath 3bath 2 Storey! Beautifully maintained w/ upgrades countes to the KITCHEN & BATHS. W/granite count ers/pulll out pantry and more. Oak floors, vaulted ceilingss in lvngroom w/gas f/p. Sunken fam room w/corner er gas f/p 3pc powder w/shower, new tile, counter and sink. LARGE den on main, double garage & laundry w/outside door. Large Games room, Large rear yard w/shed & garbage shed. 20691 91B AV, Langley

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24 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

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26 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

HAVE BUYERS, NEED LISTINGS

Call Verne Stel 604-857-1100 INVESTORS TAKE NOTE... MORE UNITS MAY BE AVAILABLE

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D L O S

7200 sq. ft. HOME 35X40 SHOP 5 ACRES Custom built 2 level with full basement on a treed private property. A grand entrance with a curved staircase to the second level greets you as you step into the expansive foyer. Most of the main level living area and stairway is hardwood flooring with heavy slate in the Dream Kitchen. Up the stairs are 3 bedrooms including the Dream Master with jetted tub for 2, massive separate shower, see through fireplace, a walk-in closet that could have been another bedroom. There is a 1 bedroom suite above the triple attached garage for long term guests or? The fantastic shop is just that. To find out the rest of the story --- CALL Garth Olson 604-533-3491 geolson46@gmail.com

Come check out this 2-storey with a basement with tons of room and open for your ideas. This beautiful home includes newer hardwood floors, 5 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, a huge rec room and media room or “man cave� In sought after Murrayville. Near shopping, schools, parks and golf. Call Verne today for your viewing.

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TREELAND REALTY Just as the title says, this Langley townhome is ideally located in the heart of the city near shopping and transit, and lots of walking trails in a self-managed complex with NO Strata fees. All kinds of upgrades including, windows, roof, hot-water tank, furnace, and flooring. Plus a private south facing back yard with bonus workshop and parking for two. Great Value here just waiting for your offer. Call Verne today for your viewing.

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Nothing but pride of ownership shows here. This is the first time offered for sale for this beauty. Lot of space for your whole family plus room for your rv and other toys. This home has been beautifully cared for and updated‌.needs nothing. Almost 2800sq ft with gleaming hardwood floors, beautiful kitchen and updated ensuite all for you to enjoy. Call Verne for your showing today.

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www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 27

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

Hydro says no to underground utility boxes TRANSFORMER AND CABLE BOXES IN FORT LANGLEY WI LL GET DECORATIVE WRAPS D AN F ERGUSO N Ti me s Re po r t e r

B.C. Hydro has agreed to allow decorative wraps on the new Above-ground utility boxes can’t ground-level utility boxes in Fort be avoided in Fort Langley when Langley, provided the Township the new underground utility lines pays for installation and maintego in, but the boxes will get deco- nance. The wraps will be designed with rative wraps and could be moved input from the away from busy Langley Herpedestrian aritage Society, eas if alternaLangley Centive locations tennial Musecan be found. um and other An unsigned groups to come internal memo up with a look from the Townthat “considship engineerers the unique ing division to aspects of Fort council said the Langley,” the idea of burying memo said. the new boxes Shaw Cable was raised by has advised municipal staff the municipalwith B.C. Hydro, INTERNAL MEMO ity that it “has which rejected no objections” the notion. “B.C. Hydro advised that they will to decorative wraps on its new not allow the undergrounding of above-ground utility boxes. The proposed Telus undertheir transformer infrastructure,” ground system will not require the April 23 memo said. Staff are discussing alternative above-ground boxes. Some critics of the undergroundlocations for some of the boxes with Hydro and “certain private ing project have complained the property owners” the memo add- boxes will obstruct sidewalks and discourage pedestrian traffic. ed.

B.C. Hydro advised that they will not allow the undergrounding of their transformer infrastructure.

D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s

As part of undergrounding power lines in Fort Langley, the Township is planning to cover new ground-level utility boxes with decorative wraps, similar to this example on Fraser Highway in Langley City.

Companies partnering up to make recycling easier for people Spring cleaning has always been a messy job that can produce lots of garbage, whether it be plastic air freshener cartridges and the blister packs they come in, trigger heads on spray bottles, screw caps from cleaners, used packages of disposable cleaning wipes and more.

And while these items are technically recyclable, the high cost of separating mixed plastics means the infrastructure to recycle them isn’t available across the country. But it will now be easier thanks to a partnership between London Drugs, Febreze and TerraCycle.

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28 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

R.E. Mountain And Yorkson Creek Middle Are Proud To Present

Rivermen Hockey Academy For The 2015/2016 School Year

This is a skills - based academy, focusing on individual development, which means players will receive cutting edge training as coaches use superior training techniques geared at advancing players to the next level. Students (males/females) will receive 2 – 3 on-ice training sessions per week from September to March at the Langley Events Centre. Both schools will incorporate the program into their timetable so that academics remain a focus and priority.

For more information we are hosting an information meeting on

Wednesday June 10th at 7:00 pm at RE Mountain cafeteria To RSVP please visit: www.remountainhockeyacademy.com and click on the RSVP link to confirm your attendance.

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Otter Co-op shows continued growth K URT LANGMANN Black Press

Mayer told the members that while there were problems, such as cross-border shopping, construction delays and the oil price debacle, it was still a successful year. “I believe it’s a feather in the cap of our management team that they handled these problems and still accomplished a record year of sales,” said Mayer. “This makes five years in a row of record sales.” Year-end sales were $183,866,549 and 4,648 new members were added. This past year Otter Co-op re-branded two service stations in Abbotsford, opened a bulk plant in Chilliwack and began construction of a service station in Penticton that is part of the co-op’s expansion plans for the Interior of B.C. Coming up this year is a planned $2.5 million re-fit of the retail store on 248 Street, as well as a $2 million rebuild of the pellet mill at their feed operation on 248 Street. Mayer also noted that

Otter Co-op reported continuing growth in retail sales last year at the annual general meeting held May 28. Despite challenges in the market, the co-op’s sales are closing in on $200 million, membership is up at 53,000, and $4.45 million is earmarked for patronage refunds to members. Members also approved proposals by the board to expand voting opportunities for members across the province. The board is exploring options such as advance polls at the co-op’s outlets so that members do not have to travel to the AGM at D.W. Poppy Secondary school to elect board members. The membership added one new face to the board at this year’s elections, Brian Thomasson, a retired educator and past board member of Aldergrove Credit Union. Susan Dodd and Larry Jantzen were re-elected to the board. Co-op board president Dick

$145,000 was provided in donations to charitable causes in the community. “Because of this Otter Co-op was voted the Business of the Year — and also received the Community Impact Award — by the Langley Chamber of Commerce,” said Mayer. In addition, Otter Co-op awarded 10 scholarships of $1,000 each to local students for their studies. General manager Jack Nicholson reported that sales were up in every division, except for feed. However, profits were up at the feed division despite lower sales volumes due to decisions to exit manufacture of less profitable lines of production. “Otter Co-op is stable and growing,” said Nicholson, noting that $4.45 million will be returned to members in cash repayments for their patronage. “We are committed to doing what is essential, affordable and which provides a return to our members.”

Warm weather means early strawberries, blueberries JEFF NAGEL Black Press

The BC interior town of Cache Creek declared a state of local emergency Sunday after a flash flood raged through the town. This campaign will help pay for recovery efforts. Please help us put our town back together! Even the smallest donation will make a difference. Officially endorsed by Mayor & Council, Village of Cache Creek

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B.C. strawberry growers are enjoying a very early crop and blueberry farmers are about to join them. A very mild winter and a warm, dry spring has been ideal for growing quality blueberries much sooner than usual, says Jason Smith, an Abbotsford blueberry farmer and chair of the B.C. Blueberry Council. “I’ve heard that some growers may start around the 15th of June in the eastern part of the Valley,” Smith said. He expects many blueberry farms will

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Smith said there’s some risk the season could end earlier than normal as well if the weather stays mostly dry.

“If I could control the weather I would love to see a good strong inch of rain now, a good strong inch of rain in one week and then good, warm, dry weather around 25 to 27 degrees.” Some strawberry farms began selling around May 18. Richmond strawberry farmer Bill Zylmans said he can’t remember his family ever harvesting this early since they started growing in 1952. “We didn’t have a winter, so the plants didn’t go dormant,” he said. – with files from Matt Hoekstra

Open: Mon. 9-6, Tues. 9-6, Wed. 9-5, Thur 9-6, Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-5:30

604.514.6770

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Friday, June 5, 2015 29

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

District OK’s hockey at REM, Yorkson

Langley Blaze’s Hayden Jaco is tagged out at home plate by White Rock Tritons’ catcher Thomas Vincent during the Blaze Invitational baseball tournament last week at McLeod Park. The Blaze won this game 7-0 behind a two-hit shutout from Cooper Misic and were undefeated heading into the tournament final on Sunday before finally losing 6-3 to the North Shore Twins. Langley resumes B.C. Premier Baseball League action this weekend with a pair of doubleheaders at McLeod Park against the top two teams in the league — Saturday vs. the Twins (14-3) and Sunday against the North Delta Blue Jays (12-3). The Blaze are fourth at 16-7.

GARY AH U J A Ti me s Spo r t s

Five years after first trying, a hockey academy is finally coming to Willoughby. “We tried before, but couldn’t pull it off,” said Darrin Ponak, a teacher at R.E. Mountain who will serve as the hockey director. “We have a good leadership team up at the (school) board office that is really helping promote it as well. “What they are after is an academy that will sustain itself, similar to what LSS has with the Blaze.” Both Mountain and Yorkson Creek Middle School will have hockey academies after getting approval at last week’s Langley School Board meeting. A hockey academy is also being offered at Langley Secondary next year (see side story) but while that one is teacher-driven, this one will see an affiliation with an outside organization, similar to LSS and their baseball academy, which is run with the Langley Blaze. The Mountain and Yorkson academies will be tied in with the junior A Langley Rivermen as well as the Fraser Valley Thunderbirds of the B.C. Major Midget Hockey League. The academies will be skill-based, meaning the students do not play on a school team. The coaching will be done by Rivermen associate head coach Jon Calvano and Thunderbirds coach Bill Grieve. Continued Page 31

GA RY A HUJ A Langley Time s

Hockey academy returns to LSS

GA RY A HUJ A Times S p or ts

High school students will be able to trade their notebooks and pens for sticks and skates as Langley Secondary is re-opening their hockey academy. The academy had closed three years ago but is poised to start up again in the fall. It will be a Hockey Canada Skills Academy, focused on helping students improve their on-ice skills. The school will not have a team — both the Delta and Yale (Abbotsford) hockey academies play in the Canadian Sport School Hockey League — and the players will instead suit up for their minor hockey association team. “We decided to restart the academy because there has been an increased demand to do so,” said Jamie Fiset, the program’s teacher/co-ordinator. Fiset, LSS vice-principal Sean Wicker and Paul Whintors will serve as the coaches. All three have extensive hockey

backgrounds. Fiset is the head coach and general manager of the junior Ridge Meadows Flames, as well as being involved with B.C. Hockey for more than 10 years. He was named an assistant coach for Team B.C.’s U16 squad at the 2015 Western Branch Challenge Cup. Wicker is a district evaluator for B.C. Hockey’s High Performance program as well as a scout for the junior A Chilliwack Chiefs. And Whintors is currently an assistant coach with the junior B Langley Knights. He also owns the Complex Hockey Training. Fiset also said they have lined up a diverse group of guest coaches and speakers from junior A, junior B, the Western Hockey League, the NHL, as well as from the B.C. High Performance program. The program will accommodate 22 to 24 students total in Grades 9 to 12 and they would have one block of hockey inside their timetable.

The students receive a PE credit for completing the course. The program will focus on technical, physical and cognitive skills. That hockey block would take place either at the Langley Twin Rinks, in the gym or the classroom. “The goal of the program is to give the student-athletes a high performance experience,” Fiset said. “Although there is always a variation in terms of talent, the focus on high performance remains the same; we focus on developing a complete player in terms of building technical skills, improving physical performance and understanding strategic concepts.” The LSS hockey academy is one of two proposed for the district (see side story) as R.E. Mountain Secondary and Yorkson Creek Middle School will also be running a skills academy out of the Langley Events Centre. This will be the second sports academy offered by LSS as they are just wrapping up a successful first year

for their baseball academy, which is run in conjunction with the Langley Blaze. “Being able to have a 30-second walk to McLeod Park where I spend every weekend doing doubleheaders, it instills pride,” said academy student James Hardy, who plays for the Blaze program. Hardy was speaking at the Langley School Board meeting on May 26 about the baseball academy. Part of their curriculum is filming their swing in the batting cage and then playing it back to see where they can make improvements. They also learn about the physics of baseball, as well as doing yoga and working out in the weight room. Cost of the hockey program, which runs September to June, is $1,500. For more information, either call Fiset at 604-534-4171, email him at jfiset@sd35.bc.ca or visit www.langleysecondary.com/hockeyacademy. — with files from Monique Tamminga

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Junior Blaze win streak ends at 13

All good things must come to an end and that’s what happened to the Langley Junior Blaze. The U16 baseball team went 3-1 over the weekend, with the loss snapping a 13-game winning streak to start the B.C. Junior Premier Baseball League season. Langley split a doubleheader on Saturday, winning 5-2 and losing 5-1 to the White Rock Junior Tritons at South Surrey Athletic Park. But they quickly put that loss behind them, sweeping the second-place North Shore Junior Twins 9-5 and 8-3 on Sunday at Parkgate Park. The results improved Langley to 15-1, 1.5 games ahead of the Twins. The weekend began with James Hardy throwing a two-hitter, allowing just a pair of unearned runs while striking out seven. Jayden Knight had two triples and a pair of RBIs to lead the offence while Michael Stovman, Nate Kolb and Brockton Wickins had an RBI apiece. Langley’s lengthy win streak finally came to an end after White Rock scored five runs in the bottom of the sixth to win 5-1. Stovman had the lone RBI while Colby Ring was tagged with the loss. Langley rebounded with a 9-5 win the next day as Rhys Cratty led the way with three hits — finishing just a triple shy of hitting for the cycle — and four RBIs. Stovman also went deep with a three-run home run as well as picking up the win with six solid innings of pitching. Adam Reston had the other Blaze RBI. And the Blaze made it a sweep thanks to a pair of four-run innings in the 8-3 game two victory. Wesley Moore allowed just one earned run over seven innings for the win while Jaron Jeske, Cratty and Quintin Nakamura had an RBI apiece. Langley next plays June 10 when they host the North Delta Junior Blue Jays at McLeod Park.

D A N FE R GUS ON Langley Time s

North Langley’s Parker Gehring delivers the pitch during mosquito (9/10) baseball action against the Newton Blue Jays at Walnut Grove Community Park on May 24.

Thunder rally to win Barnburner title The Langley Thunder needed overtime — but not much of it — to capture the gold medal at the Penticton Barnburner bantam B lacrosse tournament. After Jaxon Pearson and Mitch Ray combined for three goals in the final 2:32 to force overtime, the Thunder wasted no time in claiming the gold medal.

Fourteen seconds into the sudden-death period, Brodie Tarling took a pass from Pearson, cut to a better shooting position and sent a bounceshot past the Abbotsford Warriors goalie for the 7-6 win. The tournament was held May 22 to May 24 at Penticton’s Memorial Arena. Goaltender Nick Dewsbury stood tall all tournament, es-

pecially in the finals, coming up with several big saves to keep his team in the game. Langley had gone 2-1 in the round robin, defeating the Surrey Rebels 4-3 and the West Kootenay Wolfpack 13-2. Their lone loss was a 4-2 defeat at the hands of the Penticton Heat but Langley avenged that loss with a 6-1 victory over Penticton in the semifinals.

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Friday, June 5, 2015 31

Another tourney, another gold

D AN F E RGUSON L an gley Tim es

Marina Zimmerman and Amber burst out of the gate during a doughnut race at the Langley Riders Society on May 24. The event requires contestants to race to a barrel, dismount, munch a doughnut, then whistle before getting back on their horse. It was one of several whimsical events at the Games Day. The Society is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year and its next big event is the Little Britches Rodeo June 19 to 21.

Academy a partnership with Rivermen, T-Birds Assistant superintendent Gord Stewart said it makes perfect sense to utilize the nearby facilities of the LEC. With such a population boom in the Willoughby area, Stewart said the middle school hockey academy will only be available to students in the Yorkson catchment area. There may be room at the Mountain academy for out-of-catchment students, but first priority will be given to students in the area, he said. Cost of the academy will be $2,000. For more information, visit www. remountainhockeyacademy.com or call 604-807-8598. There is also an open house set for June 10 at 7 p.m. at R.E. Mountain Secondary (7755 202A St.).

From Page 29

Calvano has experience with a hockey academy as he ran one in Coquitlam when he was head coach of the Coquitlam Express. Prior to joining the BCHL, he coached in the B.C. Major Midget Hockey League. Grieve has coached for more than 10 years in minor hockey before joining the Thunderbirds. The students — who will receive a PE credit for completing the course — will spend their hockey block on the ice at the Langley Events Centre. And when the ice comes out in the spring, the students will work with Langley’s Impact Hockey Development, who run a strength and conditioning off-ice program.

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Another weekend, another gold medal for the Langley Xtreme 2001. For the third time this spring, the girls rep B softball team captured a tournament title, this time at the Kelowna Spring Sizzle U14 Fastpitch tournament, which ran May 29 to 31. Langley needed extra innings to secure the win as they were tied at seven with the Maple Ridge Rage 01 following the seventh inning. And with the teams playing international rules — a runner starts on second base — the Xtreme went to a small ball strategy with five consecutive base runners either bunting or reaching on an error to score five runs. The Langley defence held firm in their half of the inning for the 12-7 victory. Altogether, Langley went 4-0 in round robin play and beat the Coquitlam Classics 6-2 in the semifinals behind a combined three-hitter from Piper French and Ashley Preston. Taryn Jenkins led the way in game one with a triple and a home run in a 13-5 win over the PoCo Ravens 02. Rebecca Courneyea scored three runs and Jayna Hagen drove in three runs. Game two saw Langley thump the South Surrey White Rock Thunder 01 12-2. Kaitlyn Cowie had a triple — which she tried to stretch into a home run — and Jordan Quechcuk was 1-for-3 with an RBI. Kayla Michael held Prince George hitless over two innings while Sierra Miller chipped in with an RBI in a 12-1 win over the Prince George Thunderbirds And in their final pool game, Langley beat the Langley Xtreme 01/02 squad 8-2 with Sam Cox and Jackie Hudson delivering an RBI apiece.

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Thomas leads medal charge

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Dylan Thomas captured four gold and one silver medal to lead the Langley Olympians Swim Club at the West Coast Open swim meet over the weekend in Richmond. The meet featured more than 500 swimmers from 17 clubs and Langley won five gold, five silver and six bronze medals. Thomas, 11, was tops in the 200 and 400IM and the 200 and 400 free events as well as taking second in the 100 breast. Alanna Picotte, 11, won gold in the 400 free, silver in the 200 free and a pair of bronze in the 200IM and 200 back. She also achieved her AAA qualifying times in the 50 fly, 400 free, 200IM and 200 back for this July’s provincial championships. Daniella de la Gorgendiere, 15, won silver in the 400 free. Robyn Nakano, 16, won silver in the 50 fly. John Park, 11, won silver in the 200 breast. Reese Blunden, 12, won bronze in the 200 back and Luke Stewart-Beinder, 10, won three bronze medals in the 50 fly, 100 fly and 50 free. And a team of six Olympians swimmers were at the Mel Zajac Junior International Swim Meet at the UBC Aquatic Centre last week. Thirteen-year-old Josie Field achieved her age group national qualifying time in the 50 fly which earns her a place at the Canadian age group national championships. And 17-year-old Hilary Metcalfe achieved her senior national qualifying time in the 200IM and has now made times for four separate events. For more results from this meet, visit www.langleytimes.com.

Sisters qualify for Summer Games A pair of paddling sisters from the Fort Langley Canoe Club have qualified to represent Team BC at the Western Canada Summer Games this August. The Games will be held in Wood Buffalo, Alta. Lauryn Cheung and Meghan Cheung finished first and third,

A’s drop Thunder

respectively, in both the K-1 (kayak single) 200m and K-1 500m events. They were competing at the BC Cup #1 regatta at Burnaby Lake on May 24. Also earning medals for the club were Natasha Spring and Mika Asano in the K-2 U14/U15

A second straight hat trick from rookie Anthony Malcom was not enough as the Langley Thunder saw their two-

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Poppy Redhawks’ Savannah Sunquist battles for the ball with a Queen Elizabeth player during the Grade 8/9 girls Fraser Valley soccer championships last month. Poppy won this game 4-1 and placed fourth overall at the Valley championships after losing the bronze medal game 1-0 to Pitt Meadows.

200m while Elissa Elmadani and Erika Gow took second in that same event. Spring also won gold in the U14 K-1 200m while Elmadani was third. For a list of top 10 finishers from the club, visit www.langleytimes. com.

game win streak come to an end with an 8-7 loss to the Coquitlam Adanacs on Wednesday night at the Langley Events Centre in Western Lacrosse Association senior A action. Langley is 0-2 at home but 2-0 on the road. Langley also defeated the Burnaby Lakers 15-8

on Tuesday night. The Thunder visit Maple Ridge on Tuesday before hosting Victoria at the LEC on Wednesday. The Langley junior A Thunder were also in action on Wednesday, losing 13-4 to the Coquitlam Junior Adanacs. See more at www. langleytimes.com.

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DrivewayCanada.ca |

Friday, June 5, 2015 33

Welcome to the driver’s seat

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Question of the Week

A Fitting moniker for this Honda Then there’s how it drives. All Fits are What’s in a name? Quite a lot in the auto powered by a 1.5L, 4-cylinder, i-VTEC industry. engine producing 130 horsepower and If a vehicle is “improperly” titled, 114 lb-ft of torque. the remnants of those poorly made It’s small but mighty and can be paired boardroom decisions will likely survive with either a six-speed manual or a the ages. It’ll not only find ridicule on Continuously Variable Transmission enthusiast sites, like “Top 10 Worst Car (CVT). While I’d normally sing praises Names,” but it can serve as a case study The Fit is a joy about the manual – I still will because on what NOT to call a vehicle. to drive and has it is easy to work with and gear throws Then there are the cases where you get are well balanced – the CVT is very it spot on. Some cars don’t even need a flair in the looks good. For the days when you happen to formal introduction. Meaning, you don’t department. be in traffic, the CVT is even better! have to say the automaker beforehand The tailoring of the Fit is also another like: Mustang, Integra, Gallardo, Gremlin. Alexandra Straub one of its high points. It has grown up, Think of it as the automotive equivalent and embodies sleek lines that were ofto Cher, Beyoncé, or Madonna. ten reserved for higher-end cars. The interior and I have To add to the list hits, there’s the Fit. The 2015 Honda a love/hate relationship. I am definitely not a fan of the Fit. Probably one of the most appropriately named cars touchscreen in the EX-L Navi trim. That’s because you on the planet. It’s ripe with play-on-word puns and have to control pretty much everything from it, except scenarios. the climate. Heck, I could spend the better part of the review focusI will give it style points because the centre stack is ing on just that but don’t worry, I won’t. streamlined and easy on the eyes. But I like a combiIt truly is a car that can fit into your everyday repernation of buttons and gauges when it comes toire and with a fitting starting price of $14,495 (plus to controlling the audio, navigation, a $1,995 destination charge). system settings and more. It’s a It does so many things well. Sure, it’s a small vehicle, personal preference so but there is room for five inside and an amazing amount of storage space. There’s 470L with the rear seats up and 1,492L with the seats folded down. And those rear seats fold flat. Flat as in flat as a pancake. An added bonus is that the bumper/trunk isn’t particularly high off the ground. So if you have trouble lifting larger or heavier items up, this will be a welcome perk. Though my road bicycle isn’t particularly heavy, it is awkward. But when placing it inside the Fit, its wide trunk opening, low seats and fold flat features got a 10/10 in my books.

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I’m not saying there is anything fundamentally wrong with this setup. It’s just not my first choice. That said, it’s not a deal breaker. Bluetooth comes standard on all models; so do power windows. And of course, the aforementioned Magic Seats, which allow you to configure the cabin in ways that will astonish you. On the road, the Fit also shines. A roomy cabin, combined with enhanced NVH properties so road noises are kept at bay make for a serene environment. Its electric power-assisted rack and pinion steering (EPS) move the Fit in and out of tight spots with ease and little effort. Though at highway speeds, you still feel connected to the car. Its charm extends much further than its practical characteristics. The Fit is a joy to drive and has flair in the looks department. Overall, the Fit fits well with me and I’m very happy about that. Write to alexandra.straub@drivewaybc.ca

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Friday, June 5, 2015 35

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Ford is opening its portfolio of electrified vehicle technology patents to competitive automakers to accelerate industry-wide research and development of electrified vehicles. In 2014, Ford filed for 400plus electrified vehicle patents – more than 20 percent of the total patents the company applied for last year “Innovation is our goal,” said Kevin Layden, director, Ford Electrification Programs. “The way to provide the best technology is through constant development and progress. By sharing our research with other companies, we will accelerate the growth of electrified vehicle technology and deliver even better products to customers.” Ford Motor Company currently offers six hybrid or fully electrified vehicles including Ford Focus Electric, Ford Fusion Hybrid, Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid, Ford C-MAX Hybrid, Ford C-MAX Energi plug-in hybrid and Lincoln MKZ Hybrid. In total, Ford has more than 650 electrified vehicle patents and approximately 1,000 pending patent

applications on electrified vehicle technologies. Ford believes sharing its patented technologies will promote faster development of future inventions as all automakers look toward greater opportunities. “As an industry, we need to collaborate while we continue to challenge each other,” said Layden. “By sharing ideas, companies can solve bigger challenges and help improve the industry.” As part of Ford’s increased focus on new and innovative technologies, the automaker is set to hire an additional 200 electrified vehicle engineers this year as the team moves into a newly dedicated facility – Ford Engineering Laboratories – home to Henry Ford’s first labs in Dearborn. keith.morgan@drivewaybc.ca

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Offer(s) available on select new 2015/2016 models through participating dealers to qualified customers who take delivery by June 30, 2015. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. Offers are subject to change without notice. See dealer for complete details. Vehicle images shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All offers exclude licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and down payment (if applicable). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and financing options also available. 0% purchase financing is available on select 2015 Kia models on approved credit (OAC). Term varies by model and trim. Financing and lease rates vary by vehicle and are valid on approved credit (OAC) only. Delivery and destination fees up to $1,715, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and A/C charge ($100, where applicable) are included. License, insurance, applicable taxes, variable dealer administration fees, and registration fees are extra. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. Offer ends June 30, 2015.Cash purchase credit and Loan credit available on select models and varies by model and trim. Credits are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease and finance offers. Cash purchase price includes cash credit, delivery and destination fees and other government taxes. Other taxes, registration, insurance and licensing fees are excluded. Available at participating dealers. Other lease and finance options are also available. Dealers may sell for less. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Prices are subject to change without notice. Certain restrictions may apply. Offers may change, may be extended without notice, and are for examples only. Retailer order/trade may be necessary. See your Kia retailer for full offer/program details. All offers are subject to availability. Dealer participation maybe required. June 30, 2015. FBonus Cash amounts are offered on select 2015 models and are deducted from the negotiated purchase/lease price before taxes. Certain conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. ?Don’t pay for 90 days (90-day payment deferral) applies to purchase financing offers on 2015 Sportage and 2015 Forte models only on approved credit. No interest will accrue during the first 60 days of the finance contract. After this period, interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay the principal interest monthly over the term of the contract. Offer ends June 30, 2015. ??LOAN SAVINGS (loan credit) varies by model and trim and are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. **LEASE CREDIT varies by model and trim and are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. ??CASH CREDIT varies by model and trim and are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease and finance offers. 8ECO-CREDIT for 2014/ 2015 Optima Hybrid is $1,000 and is applicable to the purchase or lease of a new 2014/2015 Optima Hybrid and is deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. Available at participating dealers. ?Cash bonus amounts are offered on select 2015/ 2016 models and are deducted from the negotiated purchase/lease price before taxes. Certain conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. 0% FINANCING IS AVAILABLE ON SELECT 2015 &2016 MODELS, ALL PAYMENTS ARE CALCULATED OVER 96 MONTHS AT 4.24% O.A.C (STK#SR6470 COB$6206, STK#SD5156 COB $5494, STK#RO5X10 COB$2795, STK#CA5127 COB$6441, STK#K95105 COB$10,446 OAC, See dealer for more info.


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

ONSITEING FINANC

Friday, June 5, 2015 37

WWW.ORIGINALAPPLEWOOD.COM

Renovation

DOOR CRASHER

2011 VW JETT TDI

$

STK#32982

59

SALE $15,850

WEEKLY

DOOR CRASHER

STK# 32206

SALE $12,850

2009 NISSAN QUEST SE STK#32760

SALE $11,888

$

57 WEEKLY

$

52 WEEKLY

2007 FORD RANGER

DOOR CRASHER

$

STK# P15-213B

68 WEEKLY

SALE $12,850

$

$ 42 37 35 EVERYTHING MUST GO MAKE US AN OFFER

2006 PT CRUISER 2008 HYUNDAI TUCSON

DOOR CRASHER

DOOR CRASHER

STK# 32994

2011 SMART FOR TWO PASSION STK# 33439

WEEKLY

SALE $5,998

June 5

$

STK# 33426

WEEKLY

SALE $9,888

June 6

2008 SMART FOR TWO

June 7

WEEKLY

SALE $7,888

June 8

June 9

2013 DODGE RAM $ 1500 STK# 32914

92 WEEKLY

SALE $27,888

$

2010 HYUNDAI SANTA FE STK# 32218

81 WEEKLY

SALE $18,850

Truck and Camper Summer Package 2010 KIA BOREGO STK# 32821

SALE $21,888

$

$

$

84

96 WEEKLY

108

WEEKLY

2015 HONDA CRV STK# 33431

SALE $27,850

2010 KIA SOUL STK#32373

SALE $13,888

2007 KIA AMANTI FWD STK#30917

SALE $8,850

2008 DODGE AVENGER STK#32263

SALE $11,900

2009 VW PASSAT STK# 33003

SALE $16,888

$

82

2008 Adventure Camper STK# 32030

SALE $15,850

61

2013 Ford Focus SE STK# 32500

39

2007 DODGE RAM 1500 STK# 33434

63

2005 FORD FIVE HUNDRED SEL STK#32510

74

2006 CHEVROLET COBALT LS

$

WEEKLY

STK#32542

$

SALE $16,888

WEEKLY

$

SALE $6,888

SALE $6,888

52 WEEKLY

SALE $15,850

WEEKLY

$

$

2011 2012 Dodge Ram 2500 STK# 30467

$

STK# 32993

2008 NISSAN ALTIMA

WEEKLY

STK#33454

48

2010 KIA FORTE 2.0L LX

WEEKLY

STK#32029

48

2010 HYUNDAI ACCENT GLS STK#30640

SALE $10,850

SALE $9,850

SALE $11,888

49 WEEKLY

SALE $14,888

75

WEEKLY

$

2014 KIA Forte LX

$

48

SALE $28,888

2015 CHEV MALIBU 1LT STK# 33305

2012 MAZDA 3 STK# 33459

43

2013 KIA RIO LX STK#32446

52

2013 KIA RIO LX

WEEKLY

STK#30864

$

SALE $15,888

WEEKLY

$

$

SALE $18,888

WEEKLY

$

104 WEEKLY

SALE $27,888

2010 LEXUS IS F STK#30810

WEEKLY

$

STK# 33320

$

WEEKLY

WEEKLY

$

2012 NISSAN NV 2500

$

SALE $12,850

SALE $12,850

56

2014 KIA Rio LX

WEEKLY

STK#33307

59

2013 TOYOTA COROLLA

WEEKLY

STK# 33452

42

2012 KIA Forte

WEEKLY

$

42 WEEKLY

STK# 32505

$

WEEKLY

SALE $13,850

$

SALE $15,888

$

SALE $12,850

2012 KIA Forte LX STK# 30653

41

SALE $11,850

STK# 33420

STK#32806

48

2013 FORD FOCUS

WEEKLY

52 WEEKLY

SALE $13,850

WEEKLY

44

WEEKLY

$

2012 HONDA CIVIC

2012 KIA RIO FWD SEDAN

$

145

SALE $38,888

52

WEEKLY

$

$

44 WEEKLY

STK#32712

SALE $11,850

$

49 WEEKLY

SALE $14,858

$

2009 PONTIAC G5 STK#32365

SALE $8,850

39 WEEKLY

SS

19820 Fraser Highw Highway, LANGLEY 604-637-8259

LEY

L

G AN

PA BY-

APPLEWOOD APPLEW APP LEWOOD LEW OOD Original Applewood KIA

DL#30871

HOURS MON-THUR 9-8; FRI-SAT 9-6; SUN 11-5 DL#30871

WILLOWBROOK SER HIG MALL HW AY

200 STREET

FRA

ON THE CORNER BESIDE MCDONALDS 2015 Kia Rio stk#RO5X10 $24,995 $65.00 weekly payments over 96 months term at 4.24% interest, the cost of borrowing is $6,027 plus taxes and fees OAC includes $10,000 cash back, 2009 Nissan Quest SE Stk # 32760 Sale price $11,888 payments over 60 mths $52 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $1985.11 and Total obligation $16,268.20 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2011 Rio 5 LX/SX Hatchback stk # 32353 Sale price $11,288 payments over 72 mths $42 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $2,284.44 and Total obligation $15,908.88 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2011 Kia Forte 5 SX stk # 31094 Sale price $15,288 payments over 72 mths $57 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $3,039.88 and Total obligation $21,172.32 finance rate of 5.24% OAC, 2006 Chevy Cobalt stk # 32542 Sale price $6,888 payments over 36 mths $48 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $819.05 and Total obligation $9,475.44 finance rate of 5.96% OAC, 2010 Kia Forte LX Stk #32029 Sale price $11,888 payments over 60 mths $52 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $1985.11 and Total obligation $16,268.20 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2013 Kia Rio LX stk # 32446 Sale price $13,888 payments over 72 mths $52 weekly + taxes / fee’s Cost of borrowing $2,773.24 and Total obligation $19,309.68 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2013 Kia Rio LX stk # 30864 Sale price $13,888 payments over 72 mths $52 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $2,773.24 and Total obligation $19,309.68 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2011 Kia Forte stk# # 30694 Sale price $11,888 payments over 60 mths $52 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $1985.11 and Total obligation $16,268.20 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2013 Kia Forte EX Stk # 30956 Sale price $15288 payments over 72 mths $57 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $3,039.88 and Total obligation $21,172.32 finance rate 5.24 OAC, 2010 Kia Forte LX Stk # 32554 Sale price $11,888 payments over 60 mths $52 weekly + taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $1985.11 and Total obligation $16,268.20 finance rate 5.24% OAC, 2006 Hyundai Sonata stk # 32694 sale price $8888 payments over 48 mths $48 weekly +taxes/fee’s Cost of borrowing $1384.18 and Total obligation $12,321.92 finance rate 5.96% OAC 2012 Kia Rio Sedan stk# # 32806 Sale price $12,888 payments over 72 mths $48 weekly + taxes / fee’s Cost of borrowing $2,585.96 and Total obligation $18,002.40 finance rate 5.24% OAC, Stk # 32353 2011 Kia Rio5 is now $10,850 and $40 weekly over 72mths @ 5.24% COB $2204.04 OAC, Stk # 32029 2010 Kia forte is now $9850 and $43 weekly over 60 mths @ 5.24% COB $1667.67 OAC, Stk # 32446 2013 Kia Rio is now $12,850 and $42 weekly over 84 mths @ 5.24% COB $3027.53 OAC, Stk # 30864 2013 Kia Rio LX is now $12,850 and is $42 weekly over 84 mths @ 5.24% COB $3027.53 OAC, Stk # 30694 2011 Kia Forte LX is now $10,850 and is $40 weekly over 72 mths @ 5.24% COB $2204.04 OAC, S2012 Kia Rio is now $11,850 and is $44 weekly over 72 mths @ 5.24% COB $2391.32 Stk # 32030 2008 Adventure Camper Trailer is $15,850 and can only be financed for 48mths @ 5.24% and is $84 weekly COB is $2069.94 OAC. Stock # 32998 Chrysler 200 LX 2012 selling @ $13,850 $45 weekly over 84mths @ 5.24% (COB $3250.69) (TOB $19,757.92) OAC, Stock #32994 2006 Chrysler PT Cruiser selling @ $,5998 $42 weekly over 36mths @ 5.24% (COB $634.93) OAC, Stock #P32263 2008 Dodge Avenger selling @ $11,900 $63 weekly over 48 mths @ 5.24% (COB $3964.16) (TOB $15864.16) OAC, Stock #32045 2008 Grand Prix selling @ $7,888 $42 weekly over 48 mths @ 5.24% (COB $1084.50) (TOB $10,874.24) OAC, Stock #33003 2009 VW Passat selling @ $16,888 $74 weekly over 60 mths @ 5.24% (COB $2762.91) (TOB $22676.00) OAC, Stock #30050 2009 Sportage LX @ $10318.93 $52 weekly over 60 mths @ 5.24% (COB $2762.91) (TOB $16,268.20) OAC, Stock # 32982 is a 2011 VW Jett TDI selling @ $15,850 and $59 weekly over 72 mths @ 5.24% (COB $3140.44) (TOB $21,874.32) Stock # 32993 2014 Kia Forte LX selling @ $14,888 and $49 weekly over 84 mths @ 5.24% COB $3478.61 Total OB $21,148.4 Stock # 33307 2014 Kia Rio LX selling @ $13,850 and $41 weekly over 96 mths @ 5.24 % ( Cob $3739.21) ( TOB $20,255.04) Stock # 33032 2013 Kia Rio LX selling @ $12,850 and $42 weekly over 84 mths @ 5.24% (COB $3027.53) (TOB $18,414.76) Stock # 32712 2013 Ford Focus selling @ $14,850 and $49 weekly over 84mths @ 5.24% (COB $3250.69) (TOB $19,757.92 OAC stk # 30917 2007 Kia Amanti retails $8850 over 60 mths at 5.96% a pymt of $39 weekly and Cost of Borrowing $1729.47 and total obligation is $12,610 stk #32206 which is a 2008 Hyundai retails $12,850 over 60 mths at 5.96% & $57 weekly with COB $2441.67 and TOB $17,802.20 stk # 33426 which is a 2008 Smart For Two retails $7888 over 60 mths @ 5.96% & $35 weekly with COB $1558.91 and TOB $11,362 OAC, stk # 30467 which is a 2012 Dodge Ram2500 retails $28,888 over 72 mths @ 5.24% & $108 weekly with COB $5588.68 and TOB $38,925.12 stk # 32914 which is a 2013 Dodge Ram 1500 retails $27,888 over 84 mths @ 5.24% & $92 weekly with COB $6343.29 and TOB $38,573.08 OAC, stk # 33439 2011 Smart for two Passion retails $9888 over 72 mths @ 5.24 & $37 weekly with COB $2021 and TOB $14,077.44 OAC, stk # 32821 2010 Kia Borego retails $21,888 over 60 mths @ 5.24% & $96 weekly with COB $3540.71 and TOB $29,023.80 OAC,stock # 33431 which is a 2015 Honda CRV retails $27,850 over 96 mths @ 5.24% & $82 weekly with COB $7298.25 and TOB $39,536.64 replaces stock # 32353 2011 Kia Rio5 stk # 32218 which is a 2010 Hyundai Santa Fe retails $18,850 over 60 mths @ 5.24% & $81 weekly with COB $3014.07 and TOB $ 24,702.60 OAC, stk # 33320 2012 Nissan NV 2500 retails $27,888 over 72 mths @ 5.24% & $104 weekly with COB $5401.40 and TOB $37,612.84 stk # 30810 which is a 2010 Lexus IS F retails $38,888 over 72 mths @ 5.24% & $145 weekly with COB $7464.60 and TOB $ 52,001.04 stk # 33420 2012 Honda Civic retails $13,850 over 72 mths @ 5.24% & $52 weekly with COB $2765.88 and TOB $19,259.76 stk # 33305 which is a 2015 Chev Malibu 1LT retails $18,888 over 96 mths @ 5.24% & $56 weekly with COB $5018.89 and TOB $27,177.28 OAC, stk # 33452 which is a 2013 Toyota Corolla retails $15,888 over 84 mths @ 5.24% & $52 weekly with COB $3698.13 and TOB $ 22,487.9 stk # 33459 which is a 2012 Mazda 3 retails $15,888 over 72 mths @ 5.24% & $59 weekly with COB $3147.80 and TOB $21,924.24 stk # 33454 2008 Nissan Altima retails $10,850 over 60mths @ 5.96% & $48 weekly with COB $2084.27 and TOB $15,204.80 OAC, stk # 33434 2007 Dodge Ram 1500 retails $16,888 over 60mths @ 5.96% & $75 weekly with COB $3160.71 and TOB $23,043.80. All prices do not include taxes and fees and are based OAC. See dealer for more info. Store promotion ends June 9, 2015.


38 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Lease a new Honda from

39

$ GET A

750

$

CIVIC BONUS† UNTIL JUNE 30TH

weekly and

2015 CIVIC LEASE FOR

39

$

*

#

Weekly on a 60 month term with 260 payments. MSRP $17,245** includes freight and PDI. Model shown: FB2E2FEX

Fraser Valley Grape Escape

June 6 & 7, 2015

Register now! msbike.ca

Features available on select models include:

Honda

• LaneWatch™ blind spot display • Multi-angle rearview camera • 7” Display Audio System with HondaLink™ Next Generation

0 down do own

2015 FIT

LEASE FOR

0.99 APR $0 down %

$

*

40

$

2015 ACCORD

*

LEASE FOR

62

$

*

2.99 APR $0 down

0.99 APR $0 down

Standard features include:

Features available on select models include:

%

#

Weekly on a 60 month term with 260 payments. MSRP $16,070** includes freight and PDI. Model shown: GK5G3FE

• Earth Dreams™ technology powertrain • Multi-angle rearview camera • 60/40 Split 2nd Row Magic Seat®

%

#

Weekly on a 60 month term with 260 payments. MSRP $25,745** includes freight and PDI. Model shown: CR2E3FE

• LaneWatch™ blind spot display • Lane Departure Warning and Forward Collision Warning • Rearview camera (standard)

†$750 Civic Bonus is comprised of $500 Consumer Incentive Dollars on any transaction for all 2015 Civic models and $250 Lease Dollars available on lease transactions from Honda Finance Services (“HFS”), on approved credit only, on qualifying 2015 Civic models (not available on Civic Hybrid FB4F2FG). All bonuses are deducted from the negotiated selling price after taxes. *Limited time weekly lease offer and all other offers are from Honda Canada Finance Inc., on approved credit. #The weekly lease offer applies to a new 2015 Fit DX model GK5G3FE/ Civic DX model FB2E2FEX/Accord LX model CR2E3FE (“Specified Models”) for a 60-month period, for a total of 260 payments of $39.96/$38.94/$61.93 leased at 2.99%/0.99%/0.99% APR based on applying $1,175/$1,100/$550 “lease dollars” (which are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes). ‡In order to achieve $0 down payment, dealer will cover the cost of tire/battery tax, air conditioning tax (where applicable), environmental fees and levies on the 2015 Fit DX, Civic DX, and Accord LX only on customer’s behalf. Down payment of $0.00, first weekly payment and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $10,389.60/$10,124.40/$16,101.80. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometres. **MSRP is $16,070/$17,245/$25,745 including freight and PDI of $1,495/$1,495/$1,695 based on new 2015 Specified Models described above. License, insurance, registration and taxes are extra and may be required at the time of purchase. */#/**Prices and/or payments shown do not include a PPSA lien registration feeof$30.31andlienregisteringagent’sfeeof$5.25,whicharebothdueattimeofdeliveryandcoveredbythedealeronbehalfofthecustomeronSpecifiedModelsonly.OffersvalidfromJune2ndthrough30th,2015atparticipatingHondaretailers. Dealermaysell/leaseforless. Dealer trade may be necessary on certain vehicles. Offers valid only for British Columbia residents at BC Honda Dealers locations. Offers subject to change or cancellation without notice. Terms and conditions apply. Visit www.bchonda.com or see your Honda retailer for full details.

1-800-268-7582 or 604-602-3221 Title Sponsor

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604-534-7431


www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

Friday, June 5, 2015 39

No Extra Fees! Fixed Commissions Sales

604-575-0275 10YEAR

WOLFE MITSUBISHI

160,000 KM

6959797

19360 LANGLEY BYPASS SURREY/LANGLEY

DL#30306

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SHOP 24 HOURS A DAY! | WWW.LANGLEYMITSUBISHI.COM WOLFEMITSUBISHI.CA

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*0% for 84 months applies to 2014 Lancer, 2014 Outlander and 2014 RVR base models only. Mitsubishi First Auto Program applies to Lancer, Sportback and Mirage vehicles and is applicable to all approved Scotiabank first time automotive finance purchasers and can be combined with Scotiabank Subvented Finance Rates. Rebate amount will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. Some conditions apply Please see Dealer for details.

Lease payment based on $1,995 down over a 48 month term @5.95% interest.

° Up to $5,000/$2,500 in no-charge extra features applies to 2015 RVR SE Limited Edition 2.0L/2015 Lancer SE Limited Edition vehicles purchased from May 1, 2015 to June 1, 2015. See your dealer for details. $800/$800 consumer cash applicable on 2015 RVR SE Limited Edition 2.0L/2015 Lancer SE Limited Edition vehicles. Some conditions apply. ∞ $2,500 consumer cash applicable on 2015 Mirage ES 5MT models purchased between May 1, 2015 and May 31, 2015. Some conditions apply. ¤ $9,998 starting price applies to 2015 Mirage ES (5MT), includes consumer cash of $2,500 and excludes freight and other fees. 2015 Mirage ES (5MT) MSRP is $12,498. Factory order may be required. • Based on MSRPs and applicable incentives of Mirage ES and competitive models, plus included features such as Mitsubishi’s 10-year warranty and class-leading fuel economy. § AWC standard on RVR SE AWC, Limited Edition and GT/Lancer SE AWC, Limited Edition SE AWC and GT AWC. S-AWC standard on Outlander GT. † Estimated combined city and highway ratings for non-hybrid sub-compacts based on Natural Resources Canada new testing methodology: Mirage highway 5.3 L/100 km (53 mpg), combined city/highway 5.9 L/100 km (48 mpg) and 6.4 L/100 km (44 mpg) in the city for CVT-equipped models. Ac y will vary with options, driving and vehicle conditions. ** Whichever c. Regular maintenance not included. See dealer or mitsubishi-motors.ca for warranty terms, restrictions and details. Some conditions apply.

0

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*$500 Conquest Bonus is available on retail cash purchase/finance/lease of select new, in-stock 2014/2015 Mazda models. Bonus amounts vary by model. Maximum $1,000 Conquest Bonus only available on 2015 CX-9. Conquest Bonus does not apply to 2016 CX-3, CX5 or Mazda6. Maximum bonus will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. All cash purchases include cash credits. All cash/lease.finance examples include conquest bonus. Bonus is available to customers who trade-in or currently own a competitive vehicle. Offer only applies to the owner/lessor of the competitive model and is not transferable. Offer cannot be combined with Loyalty offer. 0% financing is available on all new 2015 Mazda 3 & 3 Sport for 48 months, 2015 MX5 for 84 months, & 2016 CX5 for 36 months. Finance example of $10,000, the cost of borrowing for a 24/36/84-month terms is $0, monthly payment is $416.66/277.77/119.05, total finance obligation is $10,000. Lease examples apply to 2015 Mazda3 GX (D4XK65AA00)/2016 CX-5 GX (NVXK66AA00)/2015 Mazda 3 Sport (D5XK65AA00)/2016 CX-3 GX (HVXK86AA00) with a lease APR of 2.49%/2.99%2.49%/4.49% and bi-weekly payments of $91/$147/$97/$134 for 60 months, including down payment of $0/$0/$0/$0. Offers valid June 1 – June 30, 2015, while supplies last. Prices & payments are plus taxes. $0 down Sign & Drive applies to finance purchases. All finance & lease offers to qualified buyers.

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40 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

We invite you to join us in our 28th annual golf tournament fundraiser EVENT SPONSORSHIP - 3 levels available y Corporate y Friend y Patron

AUGUST 13, 2015 11am: tailgate party 1pm: shotgun newlands golf & country club 21025 48 Avenue, langley

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*LIW SDFNDJH IRU HDFK UHJLVWUDQW

$250 per golfer includes golfing, cart & gourmet dinner no extra charge for all on-course hole activities

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all event proceeds will go towards agency mentoring programs for the children of Langley Golf with us to help a child reach their full potential

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Friday, June 5, 2015 41

www.langleytimes.com The Langley Times

phone 604.575.5555 fax 604.575.2073 email ads@bcclassified.com

Your community. Your classifieds. FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7

OBITUARIES

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 42

LOST AND FOUND

FOUND: WATCH near Biomedical Clinic on Willowbrook Drive on May 29th. Call to identify 604-856-6271.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 115

EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

ATLAS POWER SWEEPING DRIVERS / LABOURERS

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

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our dear mother, grandmother, sister-in-law and friend on May 24, 2015 in Langley. Her life journey came to a peaceful end when she passed suddenly at the age of 84, surrounded by family. Lesley will be missed by everyone who knew her and remembered for her generosity and dedication to her family. Lesley was born in Smoky Lake, Alberta. She was predeceased by her parents, William Patterson & Florence Smith (Emes), and her brother, Alan Patterson. She is survived by her two loving sons, David (Elaine), and Andrew, and four grandchildren, Ryan, Dylan, Lauren and Madeline, sister-in-law Patty, and nephews. Thank you to Rosemary for her friendship and for going above and beyond to help support Lesley over the past year. Special thanks to all the doctors, nurses and caregivers at Langley Memorial Hospital who took care of her with love and compassion. In lieu of flowers, donations to Langley Memorial Hospital Foundation, in Lesley’s memory, would be appreciated. A Celebration of Lesley’s Life will be held on Sunday, June 14, 2015 at the Sharon Village Club House, 5721 213A St, Langley, 2 to 4 pm. “Those we love don’t go away, they walk beside us every day.”

SCRIVENS, Anna 1933-2015 It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of Anna. Welcomed in heaven by her husband Cyril and her son Michael. She will be watching over her daughter Cyanna (Earl) Mufford and her daughter in law Debbie, seven grandchildren, and three great grandchildren. She lived happily in Langley since 1970. A tea will be held to celebrate her life on the Mufford Farm, Saturday June 6th from 2pm4pm. Momma is the love that brought us here.

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21

COMING EVENTS FLOWER BULB & PERENNIAL PLANT SALE

OVER 50% OFF

TOP QUALITY, HUGE SELECTION Saturday June 6th 9am-2pm

3858 - 205B St. Langley CASH ONLY

New West 604.522.4900

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. SignUp online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853

130

130

Deliver the Vancouver Sun in Aldergrove & Langley Must have reliable car. For more info Contact Dennis at:

Ph: 604-690-4091 or doorstep@shaw.ca

Preston Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac has an immediate opening for the following position:

DETAIL SUPERVISOR We are looking for someone who

takes pride in their work, has a great hard working attitude, willing to learn and be a team player. Must have valid class 5 drivers license.

Apply with resume by fax: 604.532.4589 or e-mail: Dina dholzken@prestongm.com

An industry leading grocery distribution facility is

The largest RTA cabinet manufacturer in Western Canada is NOW HIRING!

• Showroom Installation Coordinator • Experienced Machine Operators • Purchasing Assistant • Customer Service Representative • Warehouse Production Workers •Must be physically fit with good communication skills. •Must be accurate and have excellent attention to detail. •Must be able to work well in a team environment. •Must be able to multi-task and meet deadlines. Those experienced with 20/20 Design, Machine Operators, Cabinet Manufacturing and with Warehouse experience will be given preference.

WE OFFER BENEFITS & COMPETITIVE WAGES!!

Please forward resume to: hr@eurorite.com Attention: Louise Meissner or apply in person at: 212 - 19100 Airport Way Pitt Meadows, BC

WAREHOUSE WORKER

Entry-level warehouse order selector positions are available at our Perishable Facility and Dry Goods Facility.

EV Logistics offers an attractive incentive program and regular progressive increases every 5001000 hours worked. An excellent training program is provided. REQUIREMENTS:

Ability to do repetitive physical work that requires lifting 20-80lb cases of grocery products. Weekend work, flexible daytime & afternoon availability. English communication skills essential. No access to public transit. Please bring your resume and 2 pieces of ID (1 piece must have government issued photo ID) for the interview. Check out our website to learn more:

www.evlogistics.com

CEMENT MASON

Experienced Cement Mason required for city curb & gutter and sidewalk work. We offer excellent Union Wages & Benefits!

160

The General Office Clerk must have a strong familiarity with computers and software. Other requirements will include a high rate of typing (50 words per minute or faster), use of databases and the ability to work in a fast-paced, team environment.

GREENHOUSE LABOURER

SunSelect Produce Limited Partnership operation is looking for steady, hardworking, energetic individuals that are able to do plant care, harvesting, sorting grading & packaging and general cleanup and workday preparations. The positions advertised are full time permanent positions for all seasons. Job Location: 349 - 264th St Aldergrove BC V4W 2K1 Wage $10.49/hr plus AD&D benefits. Positions available immediately. English language not required. To apply submit resume: sunselectproducejobs @gmail.com or by fax to 604-607-7656

We are a busy LTL/TL transportation company, located in Surrey and we are looking for you. Top notch warehouse worker with a positive attitude with willingness to learn and ability to do heavy lifting is required for immediate start Monday - Friday, afternoons 2:00a.m. - 10:00p.m. The team is hard working, the work environment is fast-paced with good people, and benefits package, wage commensurate w/ experience. If you are dedicated, have leadership ability and are looking for good solid employment send your resume: Fax: 604.888.6469 Email: Sean sweber@overlandwest.ca

Required for Western Star & Sterling Trucks of Vancouver Inc. 2nd/3rd year level position available in Abbotsford. Engine experience considered an asset. Factory training provided.

Union Shop - Full Benefits

Fax Resume: 604-888-4749 E-mail: ars@cullendiesel.com

MECHANICS

Commercial Transport & Diesel Engine

Please e-mail resume to: jyoung@bpdigital.ca

160

With late model diesel engine experience req. for Cullen Diesel Power Ltd. Positions available in Surrey. Detroit Diesel & MTU engine exp. considered an asset. Factory training provided.

TRADES, TECHNICAL

Carpenter Helper/ Framer Wanted

Union Shop - Full Benefits

Fax Resume: 604-888-4749 E-mail: ars@cullendiesel.com

Must have own vehicle, tool pouch, hand tools

Phone 604-856-0889

PERSONAL SERVICES 171

Email resume to: gblltd@telus.net or Fax: 604.294.3745

Please call Marilou at 604.542.7411 or email: marilou@blackpress.ca

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

SENIOR ESTIMATOR n. Wallace & Company Ltd., a Construction Manager and General Constructor is seeking an experienced Senior Estimator with high integrity and with 7 plus years experience in commercial and light industrial construction. Our projects typically range from $2 to $15 million and are located throughout the lower mainland. Remuneration will be based on the candidate’s experience plus benefits, car allowance and profit sharing. Please submit your resume to employment@nwallace.ca along with full references and salary expectations.

HOUSE CLEANERS/ JANITORS REQUIRED NOW PAY $12-15 PER HOUR Apply Weekdays Between 9AM to 2PM at: 118-713 Columbia St New West 604.522.4900

142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS

Overland West is currently seeking a full-time, day-shift Customer Service Rep. Quick data entry skills and ability to handle a busy call center required. Will train the right candidate for this position.

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

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

Circulation Clerk The Peace Arch News has an opening for a circulation clerk. This position is 37.5 hrs per week Monday - Friday. The successful applicant will enjoy working in a fast-paced customer service oriented environment. In addition, this person must possess strong computer skills; have an accounting background, good communication skills and a pleasant telephone manner.

SALARY TO BE NEGOTIATED

F/T & P/T Outdoors. Spring / Summer Work. Seeking Honest, Hard Working Staff. www.PropertyStarsJobs.com

Newspaper Promoters Required. Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal location. Early morning shifts. Monday - Saturday.

ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

136A JANITORIAL SERVICES

Customer Service Representative

Landscaping Sales & Service Opportunities Up To $400 CASH Daily

TRADES, TECHNICAL

Commercial Transport Apprentice

• Data entry into database • Check records for duplication • Clerical tasks as assigned • Fast and accurate key boarding skills (50+ WPM) • Knowledge of Word, Excel, and some previous experience with databases. • Experience related to general administrative duties. • Ability to adhere to confidentiality when working with sensitive information • Ability to work with strong attention to detail and time lines.

130

Saturday, June 13th 9:00am - 12:00pm 5111 - 272 Street, Langley, BC

per week. Starting wage is $13.80/hr

142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Visit us at: www.eurorite.com

Hosting a Job Fair

Stable, part-time union positions with hours ranging 16-40 hours

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

General Office Clerk

Compensation commensurate with experience. Extensive company benefits package.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Pay your bills or even your car payment!

Req: Carpenters, Helpers Labourers, CSO’s/OFA’s TCP’s, Cleaners $11-28/hr Work Today, Daily or Weekly Pay Apply 9AM to 2PM at: 118 – 713 Columbia Street

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

PAPER DELIVERY

CONSTRUCTION SITE In your NEIGHBOURHOOD

JOCK, Lesley Jean October 24, 1930 May 24, 2015

bcclassified.com

Please contact Diane Moses dmoses@overlandwest.ca

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

Free Employment Services Servicces emplooyers for job-seekers and employers Visit our centre today orr check us u out online at aviaemployment.ca Langley ϭϬϭͲϮϬϯϭϲ ϱϲtŚ ve Langley, BC V3A 3Y9 T:778.726.0288

Aldergrove ϭ0ϰͲ269ϱ6 &ƌaƐeƌ ,igŚǁay Aldergrove, BC, V4W 3L6 T:778.726.9355

This is an exciting opportunity for an enthusiastic self-starter with proven organizational expertise. Previous circulation experience would be an asset. Please forward your resume and handwritten cover letter to: The Peace Arch News 200-2411 160 St, Surrey, B.C. V3S 0C8 Email: marilou@blackpress.ca Deadline for submissions is Monday June 16th, 2015. No phone calls please.

avialangley@aviaemployment.ca via mployment ^eƌviceƐ iƐ a ĚiviƐion oĨ acŬ in DoƟon ZeŚaď /nc.

blackpress.ca


42 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

PERSONAL SERVICES 171

ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

WRITING for Healing & Growth Groups have openings for September 2015. If you are interested in exploring personal healing and potential through writing, come join a writing group this fall! Groups meet one evening per month in White Rock and practice effective discovery, discernment, and healing through private personal writing. For further information and schedule, please contact: ammdm@icloud.com.

PERSONAL SERVICES 175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

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

PERSONAL SERVICES 182

FINANCIAL SERVICES

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 257

260

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

HELP WANTED

Immediate Openings:

RAMP SERVICES AGENT

Vancouver International Airport (YVR)

About Us: Swissport International Ltd. is the leading Ground Services Provider to the aviation industry. Job Responsibilities: Ĺ˜ Load and unload passenger luggage and cargo Ĺ˜ 'rive and or operate ground support eTuipPent Ĺ˜ 2ther duties as assigned 4ualiĹľcations and Competencies: Ĺ˜ +old and Paintain a valid %.&. drivers license and aEility to oEtain and Paintain a <95 ' $ license Ĺ˜ 0ust Ee aEle to worN in inclePent weather Ĺ˜ )le[iEle to worN on various shiIts days evening nights weeNends and holidays

Ĺ˜ LiIt heavy oEMects that could reach pounds NilograPs

Ĺ˜ 0eet 7ransport &anada reTuirePents stipulated in the $irport 5estricted $rea $ccess &learance PrograP Please send resume: yvrhr@swissport.com or Fax: 604.207.9941 or apply online: www.swissport.com

ALL LAWN CARE Free Estimates

Lawn Cuts, Aerating, Weeding Hedge Trimming, Pruning, Moss Control, Bark Mulch

ELECTRICAL

The Surrey Leader has an opening for an experienced Advertising Sales Representative. By joining the number one community newspaper serving Surrey/North Delta, you can realize your full potential while contributing to one of the fastest growing communities in Canada. The team environment at The Leader will inspire you to the highest level of customer partnership and reward your motivated approach to excellence. The ideal candidate will have experience, be a strong communicator, well organized, self motivated and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. A car and a valid driver’s license is required. The Leader is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 100 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii. Send your resume with cover letter by June 12, 2015 Shaulene Burkett admanager@surreyleader.com The Surrey Leader #200-5450 152nd Street, Surrey, BC V3S 5J9

The

Leader

FLEA MARKET Abbotsford Exhibition Park

GARDENING

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

287

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

HUDOLIN’S ON HOMES

TURF BOYS

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

Call 604-309-8798 or 604-888-0743

Dave: 604-862-9379

INTERIOR/EXTERIOR

Repairs & Reno’s, Sundecks & Additions, New Homes

604-531-5935

European Quality Workmanship CONTRACT OR HOURLY FREE ESTIMATES 26 YEARS IN BUSINESS

DESIGN

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

FREE ESTIMATES

TOPSOIL

Per Molsen 604-575-1240

Turf & Lawn Blend, Planting & Garden Blend, Composted Mulch, Sand & Gravel

Doing a Renovation or Drywall Repair?

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

Call 604-531-5935

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

VECTOR RENO’S

Specializing in all interior & exterior home renovations & additions Call 604-690-3327

Commercial Trailer/Transport Mechanics (Surrey Terminal)

A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing, reroofing. Dhillon 604-782-1936.

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. We thank you for your interest, however only those of interest to us will be contacted.

Langley - MURRAYVILLE

Moving/Garage Sale

Friday / Saturday / Sunday

June 5, 6 & 7 - 9am-3pm

4530 - 217th Street

Furniture, Household Items, Tools, China and very good collectible ornaments, etc.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 287

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 300

LANDSCAPING

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

Complete Landscape Service

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

Want to Get That Home Renovation Project Finished, That Hasn’t Even Started? Amazing Secret Discovered by Langley Housewives... Gets the Project Done, On Time, Under Budget and Eliminates the Need for You to Hassle Your Husband Over and Over!

604-773-1349

320

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING

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

For all of your fence, deck, shed, crown molding, baseboard, ceramic floor tile, bathroom or kitchen renovations‌call Steve at AHI CONTRACTING LTD!

AFFORDABLE MOVING www.affordablemoversbc.com

$45/Hr

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

Steve is a proud Langley resident and Craftsman who offers FREE Estimates, Quality Workmanship and does the job Right.

To see some of his amazing craftsmanship and read some amazing testimonials of many of his satisfied customers, check him out online at:

MOVING & STORAGE

LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

604-537-4140

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

CONCRETE FORMING, FRAMING & SIDING. 604.218.3064

300

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.

For more information, call Derek, at 604-587-9818 or 604-968-7149

Furniture, Tools, Collectibles, Garden Centre stuff, Perennials & Shabby Chic at Yard Sale Prices.

Langley - MOVING SALE: Saturday June 6th, 8am-1pm. 21131 42nd Ave. Furniture & lots more!!

www.ahicontracting.ca Or call him @ 778-808-4450

Van-Kam Freightways requires two full-time Commercial Trailer Journeyman Mechanics and a full-time Commercial Transport Journeyman Mechanic to work out of our Surrey terminal located at 10155 Grace Road. The Transport Mechanic position would work the 11:30 pm to 8:00 am shift.

Seize this opportunity to work for one of Western Canada’s largest regional freight carriers.

Yard Sale 317-208th St. Langley Sat. & Sun. June 6 & 7 9am - 3pm

SPECIALIZING IN

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

Something For Everyone Rain or Shine!

Repair, Replace, Remodel...

Excavators, Backhoes, Bobcats & Dump Trucks for hire CONCRETE & PLACING

Many Units Participating! Electronics, Computers, Appliances, Kids Stuff, House Hld. & Much More!

LANGLEY CITY Neighbourhood sale. Saturday, June 6, 9am-1pm. 4700-197th Street.

Lawn Maintenance. Weekly cuts, Aeration, Power rake, Lime, Fertilize and Hedge trim.

242

Surrey Scottsdale Village Annual Garage Sale 7955 122nd Street, Surrey Saturday, June 6th 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

LANGLEY CITY Downsizing, Saturday & Sunday June 6th & 7th, 9am2pm. 4830 - 201 Street.

PRESSURE WASHING, Gutter & window cleaning, yard cleanup, WCB. 20 yrs exp. 778-384-4912

COMPUTER SERVICES

21138 88th Ave

Organized by Jamie P Sutton West Coast Realty

GUTTER & ROOF Cleaning/Power Washing since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Simon, 604-230-0627

CLEANING SERVICES

HKS ENT. LTD. Commercial Cleaning Call 604-854-2340 harpreetsandhu05@hotmail.com

239

Sat June 6th, 9am-1pm

FENCING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 236

BLOCK SALE

DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION. Complete Fencing. Bob 604-8301322 www.deadlevel.ca BBB Accredited Member

281

18 HOUSEHOLD GARAGE SALES Gates don’t open until 9am.

204B - 205A on 67B Ave.

269

Langley - WALNUT GROVE

Phone 604-859-7540

HUGE MULTI FAMILY

Call 604-897-5850

GARAGE SALES

Sat, June 6th, 9am-1pm Spencer Green 55+ Complex

Garage Sale: 20138 - 52nd Ave. Langley, Sat. June 6 8:30am - 6pm. Everything must go! Rain or shine.

7 DAY DELIVERY

551

TRETHEWEY @ MACLURE AVE

~ SUNDAYS ONLY ~ 6 am to 4 pm

ASPHALT GRINDINGS WHOLESALE GRAVEL 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

GARAGE SALES

ABBOTSFORD

Call Paul (778)316-3054

TOPSOIL & GRAVEL

Advertising Sales Representative

551

263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE

Kristy 604.488.9161

130

GARDENING

A RAM GARDENING

DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION LTD. Complete Drywall Work. Bob 604-830-1322 www.deadlevel.ca BBB Accredited Member

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

HELP WANTED

281

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

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

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

130

DRYWALL

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

LANDSCAPING

LAND ESCAPES CONTRACTING LTD.

HANDYMAN CONNECTION HANDYMAN CONNECTION Handyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations -

DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION LTD. Complete Home Renovations WE DO IT ALL! Call Bob 604-8301322 www.deadlevel.ca BBB Accredited Member

SUNDECKS

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

New Construction & Renovations Patios ) Sundecks ) Fencing Bathrooms Concrete Sidewalks Basement Suites Remodels FREE ESTIMATES GORD REID ¸ 778-241-4668 tjbconstructionltd@gmail.com

Excavating, Sand / Gravel Delivery Site Services, Riding Rings, Driveways, Drainage, Demolition, Foundations, Stump Removal, Brush Clearing, Dump Truck

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

604-317-7748 Rocky Mountain Landscaping

Residential & Commercial

• Lawn Mowing & Maintenance • Yard Clean-Up • Manure • Hedge Trimming • New Turf • Power Raking Seeding • Tree & Stump Removal • Drainage • Paving Stones • Retaining Walls • Fencing • Pressure Washing

Chung 778.552.5838

SAM PAINTING NO PAYMENT UNTIL JOB COMPLETELY 100% FINISHED.

2 Year Warranty - Free Estimate

Call 604-762-5436 STEFANO PAINTING

Exterior Summer Special 10% Off FREE Estimates (604)720-1390


Friday, June 5, 2015 43

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

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 372

SUNDECKS

REAL ESTATE 633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS

VACANT MANUFACTURED HOME PADS AVAILABLE

RENTALS 736

HOMES FOR RENT

www.paintspecial.com Running this ad for 10yrs

PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299 2 coats any colour

(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint.

NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring.

NORTHSTARS PAINTING www.northstars-painting.com Master Painters at Students Rates. Best Value In Town, Book Now For Super Savings. 778.245.9069

373B

TILING

TILES, TILES, HARDWOOD small or big jobs call 604-880-6438 or visit www.futuristictiles.com A-1 Ceramics, Marble, Glass blocks etc. Install/Repair. Res./Comm. Free Est. 20 years exp. Peter’s Tile (604)209-0173

RENTALS 706

RECREATIONAL/SALE

838

APARTMENT/CONDO

845

LANGLEY

845

851

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

20727 Fraser Highway

Quiet 1 & 2 Bdrm Incl cable/heat/hot water Laundry each floor Walk to shopping / amenities

604-533-4061

MARINE 912

BOATS

ALUMINUM BOAT WANTED 10’, 12’ or 14’ with or without motor or trailer. Will pay cash 778-868-9342

CHESTNUT PLACE

• Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal

www.chestnutplaceapartments.net

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

The Scrapper

1996 White Dodge Ram 2500 V8 5.9L ext cab short box seats 6, & 1998 23ft Slumber Queen 5th wheel. rear kitchen, slps 6, 2 way fridge, microwave, 3 pce bath, a/c, tandem whls, 15ft canopy, bike rack. $9800 both. 604576-0350 Cloverdale

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

DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION LTD. Deck Construction. Vinyl decking - 10 yr warranty. Call BOB 604-830-1322 www.deadlevel.ca BBB Accredited Member.

TRANSPORTATION

BROOKSWOOD 4 bdrm home lge yard pets neg. Avail Sept 1. $2100/mo incl utils. 604-836-5360

45+ Abbotsford, Ruskin 55+ Abby, Ruskin, Mission, Hope Chuck 604-830-1960

604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

TRANSPORTATION

TRUCKS & VANS

2008 DODGE NITRO 4 x 4 SE.Only 145K Quick Sale, Moving. Excellent Condition. No Accidents. All Service Records. Leather Interior, a/c, c/d, auto Pwr. Options. $9,000 OBO 604-488-9161

FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022

LANGLEY CITY 1-bdrm apt. Clean, bright, crime free. Incl. heat. Refs. req’d. $720. 604-530-6384.

LANGLEY CITY APARTMENTS ON 201A

PETS 477

PETS

BLUENOSE BULLIES CROSS LAB PUPPIES. Ready to go $300 firm Call btwn 12noon-6pm 778-551-0769 CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866

CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at:

fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977

338

PLUMBING

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

341

PRESSURE WASHING

A SOFT TOUCH - HOME SOFTWASH. Done By Hand. No Pressure Washing. Siding, Gutters, Windows Special $99. 604-537-6180

POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING

CHIHUAHUAS tiny tea cups pups, ready to go now. $800. call (604)794-7347 JACK RUSSELL; Adopt a beautiful 8 yr old Jack Russell, she is petite, standing 11’’ at the shoulder, and weighs 11lbs. All white with brown markings around both eyes & ears, with her right ear being 1/2 white. (604)846-8212 MULTIPOMS. Under 8 lbs. 5 weeks old. Beautiful & fluffy. Velcro dogs. Can email pics. Vet checked, 1st shots. Guar’d. $800. 604-746-8074

SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

Call Ian 604-724-6373

NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com

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

Purebred CAIRN TERRIER Pups Shots, dewormed. $800. House pets. 604-854-1978, 604-807-5204

SPECIAL SUPER SALE Gutter windows skylights siding for $360. (under 2500sf) We use soap WCB Insured.............604-861-6060

WANTED pure black LAB PUP female 6-8 wks. Give full details & telephone # to Box #001, 20258Fraser Hwy Langley V3A4R6

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

Yellow Lab, female, 4 yrs old, spayed, vet checked, shots. $700 obo. No sunday call, 604-795-4681

ARBUTUS ROOFING & DRAINS Ltd We specialize in: F Shingle Roofing F Flat Roofing F Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs Residential / Strata

604 - 259 - 2482

www.arbutusroofing.com

356

.LANGLEY JUNK REMOVAL Lowest Rates Guaranteed! Call 604-723-6174

JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT! 604.587.5865

RUBBISH REMOVAL

RUBBISH REMOVAL

Household / Construction ~ FREE ESTIMATES ~

SENIORS DISCOUNT

Call Mitch 604-813-9104

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 523

UNDER $100

4 DRAWER BDRM CHEST $25. TV cabinet, exc cond $40. 6 Drawer bdrm dresser - Free. Armchair in good cond - Free. 778-240-2222.

563

MISC. WANTED

Have Unwanted Firearms?

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Wanstalls Tactical & Sporting Arms

REAL ESTATE 633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS

FREE: heat, h/w, cable TV, laundry & parking. No Pets BACHELOR, 1 & 2 BDRMS. SENIORS, ADULT ORIENTED

No. S-1410023 VANCOUVER REGISTRY IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

Villa Fontana & Stardust Michael - 604-533-7578

BETWEEN

Rainbow & Majorca

THE OWNERS OF THE RESIDENTIAL SECTION OF STRATA PLAN VR. 963 and each of the individuals set out in Appendix “A” to this Petition

Betsy - 604-312-1437

CALL FOR AVAILABILITY

PETITIONERS

LANGLEY quiet, clean, spacious 2 bdrm, walk to Safeway & on transit line. Incl 4 appls, hotwater & prkg. Avail July 1st. N/S, N/P. Res Mgr. 604-534-1114 on wknds 778-8088749. oakdaleapartments.ca LANGLEY

The Village at Thunderbird Centre DELUXE 2 & 3 BEDROOM SUITES in Walnut Grove. Includes large balcony, fireplace, in-suite laundry. No Pets. Live, shop, work & play all in one location. Next to Colossus Theater (200/ #1 Hwy).

AND RANDALL KEITH COLOMBI and each of the individuals set out in Appendix “B” to this Petition RESPONDENTS MURRAYVILLE 50/214 St. 3 Bdrm rancher on 1 acre, Aug 1st. $1800. N/S, pets neg. (604)430-5596

SOUTH SURREY EXECUTIVE

Fully Furnished & Equipped or Unfurnished Based on Your Needs.

Short Term or Long term! Hotel Living

Call 604.449.4940 thunderbirdvillage@bentallkennedy.com

www.bentallkennedyresidential.com www.ThunderbirdVillage.ca

Bentall Kennedy (Canada) LP

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

MAYFLOWER CO-OP Surrey Central

Spacious, well maintained 1 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. $755/mo. Shared purchase req’d. Call: 604-583-2122 or email: maycoop@shawbiz.ca

Like New Townhouse. Only 3 years old. Immaculate Deluxe, 2 bdrm. + Rec. Room/Office + 2 Full Bath T/House. Flr. to ceiling storage + storage rm. in garage. 6 s/s appli. d/w, w/d, Garburator. Crown Mouldings, 9ft. ceilings, H/W laminate flooring and slate tile. Gas F/P & Alarm. 1 car garage parking. Covered patio lower & outdoor patio upper. Amenities room incls. full gym, outdoor hot tub & pool. Walk to Morgan Heights shopping. NO Smoking inside & NO Pets! $2050/mo. or negotiable Available July 1!

NEW & USED Call Chuck at 604-830-1960 ~ your local SRI dealer ~

TAKE NOTICE THAT on 29/May/2015 an order was made for service on you of a Petition to the Court and supporting Affidavits issued from the Vancouver Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in proceeding number S-1410023 by way of this advertisement. In the proceeding, the Petitioners claim the following relief against you: The Petitioners apply for an order and declaration that: 1.The following property be sold: Parcel Identifier: 006-259-863 STRATA LOT 7 DISTRICT LOT 1902 STRATA PLAN VR. 963, TOGETHER WITH AN INTEREST IN THE COMMON PROPERTY IN PROPORTION TO THE UNIT ENTITLEMENT OF THE STRATA LOT AS SHOWN ON FORM 1 (the “Strata Lot”) on the following terms: (a)

The order for sale is for the sale of the Strata Lot in its entirety on the open market for a period of up to one year from the date of entry of this order;

(b)

The Owners of the Residential Section of Strata Plan Vr. 963 (the “Association”) have exclusive conduct of the sale during the open market period and shall forthwith list the Strata Lot for sale by general, exclusive or multiple listing through a licensed real estate agent, agents or firms and may agree to pay to any real estate agent or firm who may arrange a sale of the Strata Lot a commission in an amount consistent with the industry standard, as approved by this Honourable Court, of the gross selling price plus applicable tax, such commission to be paid from the proceeds of sale upon completion; and

(c)

If the Strata Lot is not sold on the open market within the said period of one year, the order for sale shall be as provided by order of this Honourable Court.

604.488.9161

Park Terrace Apts

Langley City, family friendly, walk to senior & rec ctr, schls, shops, Incl heat & hotwater & prkg. Live In Manager

604-530-0030 www.cycloneholdings.ca

SUSSEX PLACE APTS CALL FOR NEW SPECIALS Bachelor starting @ $680, 1 bdrm starting @ $725 2 Bdrm starting @ $830 Heat, Hotwater, Parking Included Live In Manager

604-530-0932

www.cycloneholdings.ca

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

752

TOWNHOUSES

ARBORETUM CO-OP

15350 105 Ave. Spacious 2 bdrm T/H. $1008/mo. Shrd purchase req’d. D/W, F/P, W/D hkup. Walking distance to Guildford Mall, library & rec centre. Easy access to bridge. No Pets. Ph btwn 10am-9pm (604)582-9520

NEWLY RENOVATED 3 bdrm with 1.5 bth on 2 levels Our gated 5 acre complex is quiet and family oriented we have 2 playgrounds available for your kids and are “Pet- Friendly”

Woodbine Townhouses 9252 Hazel St, Chilliwack $1050 per month utilities not included.

BROOKSWOOD COMMERCIAL LEASE spaces avail. at 208th St & 40th Ave. 1000 to 1500 s.f. $1500-$4500. HEY! 1.5 ACRES, fenced & secure lot now available on 208th near 40th. Has small trailer with washroom facilities & approximately 3000 sf. of warehouse / storage / service building. Ph: Frank @ Noort Investments

604-835-6300 or Nick @ 604-526-3604

2. The proceeds of sale, after payment of all necessary costs of sale and discharge of encumbrances, including legal fees and/or expenses associated with the Petition to be reimbursed to the Association pursuant to paragraph 3 herein, shall be divided among the owners pursuant to the schedule of percentages set forth in Appendix “C” attached hereto; 3. The Association shall be reimbursed any amounts advanced by it for legal fees and/or expenses associated with the Petition herein from the proceeds of sale before any distribution of proceeds to the owners and further, to the extent that any individual owner is in arrears on maintenance fees or any other obligation owed to the Association pursuant to a sublease of the Strata Lot granted by the Association to such owner, that the Association be paid such defaulted amount owed out of said owner’s share of the proceeds of sale prior to distribution of the balance to said owner, and further, any Respondent owner who refuses to accept service of the Petition by email shall have the cost of personal service deducted from his or her share of the proceeds of sale prior to distribution of the balance to said owner; 4. All necessary accounts, directions and inquiries be taken; 5. The Association shall be appointed as trustee to distribute the proceeds of sale as the Court directs; 6. A certificate of pending litigation;

Call Mike to set up a day & time to view (604)-792-8317 or email raamco.ca

7. The parties are at liberty to apply for such further order and other directions as may be necessary to carry out the purpose and intent of this order; and

TRANSPORTATION

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.

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

MANUFACTURED HOMES. MOBILE HOMES. MODULAR HOMES.

TO: The Respondent, Jean Anderson

Bachelor starting @ $680 1 bdrm starting @ $725 2 bdrm starting @ $830 RETRO RENT RATES. Act Now

Phone 604-530-1912

New SRI *1296 sq/ft Double wide $99,988. *New SRI 14’ wide $74,900. Repossessed mobile homes from $1900. www.glenbrookhomes.net

ADVERTISEMENT

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

2002 HONDA CIVIC

4-Door Automatic. Highway driven, nice & clean Runs very well! 234/km’s.

Asking $2800. 604-572-0890 / 778-908-3401

8. Such other relief as this Court may deem appropriate.

You may obtain, from the Vancouver Registry, at 800 Smithe Street, Vancouver British Columbia, a copy of the Petition and supporting Affidavits and the order providing for service by this advertisement. This advertisement is placed by the Petitioners whose address for service is Miller Thomson LLP, Barristers and Solicitors (Attention: Chantelle M. Rajotte), 1000 840 Howe Street, Vancouver, BC, V6Z 2M1.


44 Friday, June 5, 2015

The Langley Times www.langleytimes.com

Queen Bed

$1198

O I T C E L L CO

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King Bed

$1398

T S E O H T G H N I C G INTRODU VICTORIA 661 McCallum Rd Millstream Village 250.475.2233

NANAIMO 1711 Bowen Rd 250.753.6361

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KELOWNA 6SULQJÂżHOG 5G 250.860.7603

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RICHMOND 12551 Bridgeport Rd 604.273.2971

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LANGLEY 20429 Langley By-Pass 604.530.8248

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COQUITLAM 1400 United Blvd 604.524.3444

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