Surrey North Delta Leader, June 19, 2015

Page 1

Friday June 19 2015

▼ LEGO travels back to the future 29

▼ Mills named Official of the Year 28

The

Leader HEPNER’S HEALTH CARE IDEA IS ALREADY IN PLAY ▶ B.C. MINISTRY OF HEALTH HAS COLLECTED $28.2 MILLION FROM PEOPLE CRIMINALLY RESPONSIBLE FOR INJURING PEOPLE

▶ Under the Health Care Cost Recovery Act, $28.2 million has been recovered from criminals who ring up hefty health care costs. B.C. MINISTRY OF HEALTH

BIKE OWNER FINED $13,500 KEVIN DIAKIW

The owner of a motorcycle that raced through a Surrey mall has now been fined more than $13,000. While police were unable to identify the owner as being on the motorcycle at the time of the infractions, they are fining him as the registered owner of the bike. It was Feb. 20 when the bike was seen tearing down 104 Avenue near 152 Street with police helicopter and police squad cars in pursuit.

KEVIN DIAKIW

Recovering health care costs from criminals who put others in hospital is already happening, The Leader has learned. On Monday, Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner said that she wanted to see the province’s civil forfeiture legislation changed to allow B.C. to recover health care costs from people who’ve been shot. Hepner is frustrated with the lack of cooperation, and sometimes outright mocking of police, by victims injured in the recent rash of shootings in Surrey and North Delta. Since March, more than 30 incidents of gun violence have occurred in the streets, with many tied to an ongoing drug turf battle over dial-adope operations. And those being hurt are not cooperating with police. One shooting victim told police

▼ OWNER OF MOTORCYCLE THAT TORE THROUGH WAL-MART IN GUILDFORD HAS BEEN SLAPPED WITH 58 INFRACTIONS

continued on page 5

Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner suggested earlier this week that health care costs be recovered from uncooperative victims of crime. FILE PHOTO

“the bullets fell from the sky,” while another said “I will take care of it myself.” Hepner wants to recover health care costs from uncooperative victims. Suzanne Anton, B.C.’s attorney general and minister of justice, said she understands Hepner’s frustration. But Anton also said in the scenario described by Hepner, the Civil Forfeiture Act would not apply. Civil forfeiture involves taking action against property, not people, when that property has been determined to be a proceed of crime.

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However, Hepner’s plan has some legs at the B.C. Ministry of Health, where officials say it would be possible under the Health Care Cost Recovery Act (HCCRA). Since 2009, when the HCCRA was enacted, the government has collected $28.2 million from criminals who ring up hefty health care costs. Last year alone, the ministry opened more than 3,000 files. For the cost recovery to take place, the person who committed the crime must be identified and criminally convicted. The health ministry typically charges the perpetrators who put

a person in hospital, but it could conceivably be argued someone’s risky lifestyle choices contributed to their injuries. The ministry indicated that in order for the cost recovery to work, the defendant needs to have assets, or more often, private insurance, which can sometimes prove challenging. Civil action is also a possibility, but it can prove costly, and there’s no guarantee the money will be returned to the ministry. continued on page 5

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

No new Mounties here yet, despite feds’ pledge

3

Are tougher fines needed for drivers who text? The province is asking B.C. residents for feedback on how far to go. FILE PHOTO

▼ FEDERAL MINISTER SAID 20 NEW RCMP OFFICERS FOR SURREY ARE READY AND ‘BOOTS ARE ALREADY ON THE GROUND’ KEVIN DIAKIW

Despite Ottawa’s claim that Surrey has 20 new RCMP officers here, none have shown up yet, The Leader has learned. Last week, the federal government minister in charge of the RCMP said Surrey had 20 new “boots are already on the ground.” That’s not so, it turns out. For weeks, NDP MPs have been hammering the Conservatives in the House of Commons over the Tory promise to deliver 100 police officers to the city this year. Jasbir Sandhu, NDP MP for Surrey-North, called the pledge an empty campaign promise in the House on June 4. “Immediate action is needed, but the Conservatives Jasbir Sandhu are stalling and refusing to commit to a timeline for the arrival of new RCMP in Surrey,” Sandhu said to Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Steven Blaney at the time. “Will the minister please provide a clear timeline today for the deployment of new RCMP our community?” A week later, Blaney announced the 20 officers were in Surrey. on page 7

B.C. eyes stiffer penalties for distracted drivers ▼ WIDESPREAD VIOLATIONS MAKE IMPOUNDMENT DIFFICULT: POLICE JEFF NAGEL

The province is considering stiffer fines and possibly vehicle impoundments or prohibitions to get distracted drivers to put down their cellphones and devices. Motorists caught using a hand-held device face $167 fines and – since last fall – three driver penalty points. “We took a first step and increased the penalties last fall and now we’re looking at possible changes to the legislation, including more severe penalties,” Justice Minister Suzanne Anton said. A four-week online consultation period is open until July 16 to gather public opinion on whether tougher measures are needed. Comments are being collected at engage.gov.bc.ca/ distracteddriving. Besides potential vehicle impoundments or driver prohibitions, the site asks if texting drivers should be punished more severely, and possibly new drivers and repeat offenders as well. Five years after distracted driving fines were introduced in B.C., many drivers continue to ignore the law. Police issued 55,100 tickets last year to drivers caught using an electronic device behind the wheel – an increase

from 53,000 in 2013. ICBC estimates 9,500 drivers in B.C. are using a hand-held device at any given time and 40 per cent are texting or emailing as they drive. The B.C. Association of Chiefs of Police supports escalating fines or sanctions, particularly for multiple repeat offenders, said Transit Police Chief Neil Dubord who chairs the chiefs’ traffic committee. But he said the widespread disregard for the cellphone law makes it difficult to see how officers could impound vehicles – at least on a first offence – without being accused of selective, unfair enforcement. “The impoundment of vehicles is difficult because of the large numbers,” said Dubord, who is taking over as chief of Delta Police later this month. “When people are speeding at double the speed limit a threshold is broken which can then lead to the impounding of the vehicle.” He said he believes prohi▶ “...we’re bitions should be considered, looking at but only for the worst repeat offenders. possible changes The chiefs’ association doesn’t have a formal position on to the legislation, prohibitions, nor has it adopted including more the stance that texting is worse than hand-held phone calls. severe penalties.” continued on page 8

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The expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline will mean more than $93 million in extra costs for taxpayers in Surrey, Langley, Coquitlam, Abbotsford and Burnaby, according to a report filed with the National Energy Board (NEB) late last month. The study by Associated Engineering, now posted on the NEB website, was funded by the five municipalities. Projected over 50 years, the report concludes the added cost of building municipal infrastructure around the new pipeline “exceeds $93,000,000.” Coquitlam would bear the biggest expense at $28.5 million, followed by Burnaby with $17.6 million, Surrey with $17.1 million, Abbotsford at $17 million and the Township of Langley would have the smallest added expense at $12.8 million. That reflects the extra cost of installing new and replacement “buried utilities” like water pipes, sanitary and storm sewers as well as roads, ditches and creeks in areas where the pipeline is located. NEB regulations for working around petroleum pipelines require the communities through which the pipeline passes to follow strict rules when they carry

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Workers install a length of pipeline along the route of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline, between Edmonton and Burnaby. The National Energy Board is still looking at plans to complete twinning of the route. FILE PHOTO out day-to-day maintenance tasks and construction projects. That often means “altering methods of design and construction to accommodate the pipeline,” a memo in the report states. “The communities affected by the existing pipeline have been responsible for the additional costs associated with these activities since original construction, and are concerned with the additional financial strain that may be included with the addition of a second pipeline,” the memo adds. The report says while Trans Mountain pipeline owner Kinder Morgan has acknowledged there will be disruption during construction of the new pipeline, “there has not yet been acknowledgement of additional costs incurred by each municipality to operate, maintain and construct municipal infrastructure [after the line is built].”

Langley Township Mayor Jack Froese said the report was raised with Peter Watson, chairman of the NEB, during a meeting involving Froese, Watson and senior municipal staff. “We’re concerned about the costs down the road,” Froese said, adding the hour-long meeting was at the request of Watson. The mayor said he was pleased to hear Watson say the federal government is preparing a law that would make pipeline operators “absolutely liable” for up to $1 billion in clean-up costs if there is a spill, more if the company is found negligent. “I think that’s a good thing,” Froese said. Watson said there will be more face-to-face consultation with representatives of local communities along the pipeline route in the future.

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

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▼ VEHICLE OWNERS ARE RESPONSIBLE from page 1

At some points, the driving became so dangerous, police cars broke off the chase. Then the biker headed down the escalator of Guildford Town Centre into Wal-Mart, weaved through shoppers, and raced out another door. The bike then tore down 104 Avenue eastbound, crossing a pedestrian overpass and evading police. The motorcycle was found dumped in North Surrey by the Port Mann Bridge. On June 6, police served the registered owner with $13,500 in traffic fines. The violations included 58 traffic infractions, including failing to stop for police, excessive speed, disobey red light and no insurance. The motorcycle has been seized pending the outcome of a civil forfeiture hearing. “We’re thankful no one was seriously injured due to the motorcyclist’s reckless driving,” said Scotty Schumann Surrey RCMP Cpl. Scotty Schumann. “While we were unable to positively identify the driver of the motorcycle, we are still able to hold the registered owner to account in this instance, in accordance with the British Columbia Motor Vehicle Act.” In B.C., the registered owner of a motor vehicle is responsible for it at all times.

▶ WON’T FIX ALL WOES from page 1

Hepner said Wednesday her plan would only be used if the victims had gone through the court system and were found guilty of a crime that landed them in the hospital. The rationale behind the idea, she said, is to prod parents of uncooperative patients who are minors to name suspected shooters in order to avoid medical bills. She acknowledged the plan won’t fix all woes in the war against drug dealers with weapons, but it may just prompt some parents into convincing youth to assist police. Hepner wasn’t aware of the HCCRA, but said it sounds like it may just need some tweaking to be effective in Surrey’s case. She said she will be approaching the ministry of health shortly to recommend possible changes.

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VIEWPOINT

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION: Do you think recovering health care costs from the perpetrators of crime is a good idea? To answer, go to the home page of our website at surreyleader.com

Last week we asked: Have you ever chosen to pay for private health care treatment, instead of waiting for the provincial system? Here’s how you responded:

Yes 40% No 60%

INBOX

Senate spending rules lax During its long history, the Senate of Canada has only had two senators who lived in Surrey. Both were federal politicians who were initially elected as MPs and were then appointed to the Senate by the respective prime minister of the day. Senator Tom Reid is now mostly forgotten, but in his day he was a powerful political force. He served as reeve (mayor) of Surrey from 1924 to 1930 before being elected as Liberal MP for New Westminster (which included Surrey). He was first elected when the Conservatives won a majority government under R. B. Bennett. He served for almost two decades in the House of Commons before being appointed to the Senate in 1948. As both an MP and senator, he did a lot of work with the International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission, which is a joint Canada-U.S. body charged with dealing with the Pacific salmon runs, which are no respecter of boundaries. He lived for many years in south Newton, in a neighbourhood at one time known as Reidville. Today, one of the few places he is still remembered in Surrey is at an elementary school named after him – Senator Reid Elementary. Reid died in 1968 at the age of 82. Surrey’s other senator is Gerry St. Germain. First elected as a

Conservative MP in the riding of Mission-Port Moody in a 1983 by-election, his political career had strong overlaps with Brian Mulroney. He and Mulroney were both elected to the House of Commons on the same day, and St. Germain was a strong supporter of Mulroney’s leadership of the Progressive Conservative party. He was re-elected in 1984 when Mulroney became prime minister by winning 211 seats in the House of Commons, which stands as an all-time high for one party. Mulroney later named St. Germain to his cabinet and as political minister for B.C. However, he lost his seat in the 1988 election to the NDP’s Joy Langan, The election was hard-fought over the issue of free trade. In one of his last acts as prime minister in 1993, Mulroney later named St. Germain to the Senate, and he remained there (as a PC, then Canadian Alliance senator, before going back to the Conservative label) until he retired at the age of 75 in 2012. St. Germain lived for many years on a large ranch on 8 Avenue in South Surrey. He hosted many political gatherings there – including several for Prime Minister Stephen Harper. He also worked closely with the B.C. Liberals and hosted

several events for them as well. St. Germain is now under fire for some of his expenses, which have been highlighted by Auditor-General Michael Ferguson in his report into spending by senators. He is one of nine singled out in the report and was referred for further investigation. In a response to the audit, St. Germain stated he believes he has done nothing wrong. Nonetheless, it is obvious that the rules surrounding spending by senators were and are notoriously lax. St. Germain was singled out for having the Senate pay to bring a number of people to his 50th wedding anniversary at Hazelmere Golf and Tennis Club in 2011. Among those on hand for that event was the PM. Canadians, fed up with government waste at all levels, have been particularly unhappy about the way senators spend tax dollars. It is likely that few Surrey residents would object if the Senate disappeared entirely. That will take some doing, as it requires agreement by every single provincial government, but it may happen yet if the Senate’s indifference towards taxpayers continues.

QUITE FRANKLY ▼ Frank Bucholtz

Frank Bucholtz is the editor of The Langley Times. He writes weekly for The Leader.

Surrey greater than the sum of its parts ▼ GOOD PEOPLE RISE ABOVE THE VIOLENCE IN THE STREETS Warning: This letter isn’t exactly polite. Because it’s a rant. Dear criminals of Surrey: Screw you and your drive-by shootings. For those who decided to litter our streets with casings of bullets blocks from where our school held its spirit night only hours earlier, screw you for even coming close to my babies. And I don’t mean just the two I gave birth to. I mean my kids, their friends, their friends’ friends and even the children I see when I walk my kids to school. They are my neighbours. And so they are my children too. We have lost enough children. We have decorated lawns,

trees and schools, and held candle-lit vigils to remember our lost children. We have baked cookies, cooked dinners and littered our streets with flowers to help mend broken hearts. We have rallied for our sick mothers, our widowed mothers, and our mothers who have just been having a bad day. So screw you for turning the story of these streets that have witnessed so much compassion into a violent story. I don’t judge you because I don’t know what you’ve been through that would lead you to the awful choice of raising a gun to another soul. I am truly sorry that your concerns as a young man are not what job to apply for or if you should ask the cute girl in your chemistry class out on a date. But your choice to bring violence to our homes is inexcusable. Surrey may be known for individuals irreverent of the con-

cept of community – such as the men in the stolen vehicle that rammed my husband and his vehicle off the road in a school zone two weeks ago. But this city will be known as the sum that is greater than its parts. All because of people like my people: the man who walks his dog with a plastic bag to clean up garbage along his way; the witnesses who chased and caught the driver who hit my husband; the many who have called/texted/emailed/dropped by asking those few precious words, “how can I help?” My neighbours are the most compassionate people I have ever known. Give us a few days. We will rewrite your violent story.

The

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

EDITOR Paula Carlson 604-575-5337

s.burkett@surreyleader.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER Sherri Hemery 604-575-5312 sherri@surreyleader.com

Trina Pacey Sullivan

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


Fr iday June 12 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

An unknown number of police officers have been identified to come to Surrey, but they’re not here yet. FILE PHOTO

▶ SURREY RCMP: 703 OFFFICERS from page 3

“Today, I am pleased to announce that the deployment of the first 20 members committed to Surrey is underway and that boots are already on the ground,” Blaney said in a news release on June 11. However, The Leader has learned the local RCMP head count hasn’t changed. The current complement of officers is 703, exactly what it was on April 1, long before

Blaney’s announcement. Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner confirmed what sources had said, that new police officers have not yet arrived. One source, who refused to be named, said the issue was “far too political” to wade into. However, Hepner checked with Surrey RCMP Officer-in-Charge Bill Fordy and he confirmed the complement is still at 703. He did note that an unknown number

of officers have been identified to come to Surrey, but the number of boots on the ground has not changed. Calls to the federal ministry of justice were not returned by The Leader’s press deadline Wednesday. Sandhu said the Conservatives are simply playing pre-election politics with Surrey. “I think the Conservatives are playing games with the safety of people in Surrey,” Sandhu said. “That’s shameless.”

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▶ SPEED, DISTRACTION NOW THE TOP TWO FACTORS IN CRASH DEATHS from page 3

According to research cited by the province, texting or using a smartphone while driving is more distracting than talking on one, resulting in up to 23 times higher crash risk for drivers who text. Speed and distraction are now the top two factors contributing

to crash deaths, ahead of thirdranked alcohol. B.C.’s distracted driving fines are the second lowest in Canada. Nova Scotia has the highest, climbing from $234 to $579 on the third offence, and Ontario is about to double its maximum fine from $500 to $1,000. Saskatchewan impounds the vehicle for seven days if the driver has had two or more

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distracted driving tickets within the last year. Dubord said police are also concerned about the increasing use of in-dash video screens that allow the passenger, and often also the driver, to watch movies. He said officers are also wary of other new and distracting technology, from Google Glass to the Apple Watch.


Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader FOOTPRINTS CELL SHADES

B.C. adding to aboriginal education ▶ PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND POST-SECONDARY INSTITUTIONS WILL BE INTRODUCING MORE HISTORY OF FIRST NATIONS IN THE COMING YEAR TOM FLETCHER

When the city of Prince George was being established a century ago, the aboriginal people on the site of the present downtown area were relocated to a new reserve and their homes were burned. That’s a part of B.C. history that many people in Prince George and around the province don’t know, and an example of why changes are coming to B.C. school curriculum, says Aboriginal Relations Minister John Rustad. More changes will be announced soon for post-secondary education, based on the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. The B.C. government is providing $4.3 million to establish an emergency financial assistance for aboriginal students and $12 million for a scholarship program. “There have been attempts over the years to include more information around First Nations and our aboriginal history, but this is going quite a bit further and trying to tell a more complete history of us as Canadians, all Canadians,” Rustad said. National Aboriginal Day is Sunday, June 21. Rustad will be in Prince George at a ceremony to rename Fort George Park to recognize the original inhabitants, the Lheidli T’enneh First Nation. A Lheidli T’enneh flag will be raised at city hall where it will be permanently flown. National Aboriginal Day events are planned around the province, including a three-day cultural festival at the Royal B.C. Museum in Victoria

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Proposal to Discharge a Land Use Contract Land Use Contract Discharge Bylaw No. 7444 for 11112 81A Avenue (File: LU007469) PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that at the Regular MeeƟng of Council to be held on Monday, JUNE 22, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. at the Municipal Hall, 4500 Clarence Taylor Crescent, Delta, B.C., the Municipal Council of The CorporaƟon of Delta will consider third reading and Įnal consideraƟon and adopƟon of “Delta (Sall – LU007469) Land Use Contract Discharge Bylaw No. 7444, 2015” which relates to the property at 11112 81A Avenue as shown outlined in bold and marked “Subject Property” on the map below. The purpose of this bylaw is to authorize Council to discharge Land Use Contract S.A. No 2954 from the subject property to reveal the underlying RS1 Single Family ResidenƟal Zone, in order to permit construcƟon of a new single family house with an in-ground basement and secondary suite on the subject property. Pursuant to SecƟon 890(4) of the Local Government Act and Council’s resoluƟon on June 1, 2015, there will not be a Public Hearing for this bylaw. Website: www.delta.ca June 1, 2015 Regular Council MeeƟng Agenda Item E.01. AND TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that the bylaw, detailed maps and other relevant informaƟon and regulaƟon may be inspected at the oĸce of the Community Planning and Development Department, 4500 Clarence Taylor Crescent, Delta, B.C., (604-946-3380) Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, between 8:30 a.m. and 4:45 p.m., and Thursday between 8:30 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. from June 12, 2015 to June 22, 2015 exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays and statutory holidays.

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A month after confirming the team will retain its status as a varsity sport, the University of British Columbia (UBC) has announced its women’s softball team will play home games in Surrey next season. The UBC Thunderbirds will play games at Softball City, site of the annual Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship and the 2016 Women’s World Championships. The announcement, made Wednesday afternoon at Surrey City Hall, comes a week after the Cascade Collegiate

Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner is presented with a UBC women’s softball team jersey at Surrey City Hall Wednesday afternoon. Beginning this fall, the UBC women’s team will call Softball City in South Surrey their home park. From left: Quinn Dhalilwal, Hepner, UBC President and Vice-Chancellor Arvind Gupta, Lindsey Ogilvie and UBC coach Gord Collings. EVAN SEAL Conference approved an associate membership application from the

UBC team. The Thunderbirds previously competed as a member of the

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Association of Independent Institutions. “One of the benefits of moving to the new conference is we will have the opportunity to play more home games,”said UBC head coach Gord Collings. “At Softball City, our team will have access to one of the best facilities in North America, if not the world.” The Cascade Collegiate Conference has teams in Oregon, Montana and Idaho. Last season, it played a 28-game conference schedule. “We are so excited to become a part of the Cascade Collegiate Conference (CCC) and given the opportunity to compete against some of the best teams in the NAIA”, added Collings. In addition to playing 14 CCC league games each season in Surrey, starting in March of next year, UBC players and coaches will be out in the community providing instructional clinics for local female softball players. The Thunderbirds team had a huge local contingent on the roster last season, including Quinn Dhaliwal, Kelly Rumley, Zoe Gillis, Frances Ramsay, Emma Tuson and Margarita Sison of the White Rock Renegades, and Sarah Hillsdon and Lindsey Ogilvie of the Surrey Storm. Collings was involved in the Delta Heat rep program for many years before taking on the role of head coach at UBC. His daughter Paige Collings is an assistant coach, as is former Renegade Cassandra Dypchey.


Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Blind Surrey student finds her way to the top of the class â–ś BORN WITH A RARE EYE DISEASE, ANGELL LU-LEBEL ACES HER STUDIES AT SFU BLACK PRESS

Fluent in three languages – English, French and Mandarin – Surrey science student Angell Lu-Lebel earned an invitation to the Golden Key International Honours Society after finishing in the top 15 per cent of her class at SFU. It’s a significant achievement for any university student (Golden Key is the largest collegiate honour society), but perhaps even more impressive for Lu-Lebel, who has been blind since birth. Born with congenital amaurosis, a rare inherited eye disease, Lu-Lebel has seldom let anything hold her back from learning. Navigating her classes and the SFU campus was challenging, but

Angell Lu-Lebel and her guide dog Koby. DALE NORTHEY

with assistance from her guide dog Koby, a golden retriever/ Labrador-cross who has been piloting her around campus for the past seven years, and from several of her professors, she excelled. One of Lu-Lebel’s biggest challenges was learning calculus, a subject that’s designed around visual learning.

To help her overcome this issue, her professor, Natalia Kouzniak, and teaching assistant Poojay Pandey, integrated flexible, wax-coated strings called Bendaroos into their teaching. Kouzniak used the strings to lay out graphs, while Lu-Lebel used them to plot curves and understand the geometrical set-up

of problems. In addition to her success in academics, Lu-Lebel is also an accomplished athlete. She is a six-time Canadian National Championship medallist in goalball—a sport for the visually impaired in which two teams of three take turns throwing a ball with bells attached into each other’s net. Lu-Lebel credits her achievements to the guidance she received from mentors as she grew up. Now a mentor at Blind Beginnings, she is paying it forward. “I mentor visually impaired children and their parents because a lot of the time parents are just finding out that their children are blind,� she says. “It can be a stressful experience. Parents don’t know what to do and they panic a bit.� Lu-Lebel now plans to get her teaching certificate, with the hope of working with students with special needs.

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btaining a driver’s license (DL) is a significant milestone for young people, for new immigrants, indeed for all who want or need the status and skill set thereby confirmed. Maintaining a valid DL by renewing it—in BC every five years, by keeping all identification and contact information updated, and by driving safely according to all the rules of the road is an important responsibility of citizenship and mature participation in modern society. Some go so far as to characterize holding a DL as a right and not just a government-issued privilege. They point to the fact that a valid DL is often required for identification purposes and to qualify for many types of employment, even beyond those opportunities in which driving is the main activity. In most North American jurisdictions, drivers who accumulate too many driving record penalty points by being ticketed or charged criminally for violating the driving rules will have their DL suspended for a set period of time. Re-obtaining it usually involves enrolling in and successfully mastering a driver retraining course and paying reinstatement fees and higher car insurance premiums. Criminal offenders—drunk drivers and dangerous drivers risk being permanently un-licensable. This direct link between substandard and hence illegal driving behaviour and DL validity is generally accepted to be just. A trend has developed, however, in many jurisdictions, to suspend DLs for misbehaviour not linked in any way to driving.

Failing to pay child or spousal support, failing to appear in court, and failing to pay fines for other non-driving offences are now common types of misbehaviours punishable by DL suspension. In British Columbia, Translink, Metro Vancouver’s transportation authority now has the power to suspend DLs for transit by-law infractions like not paying a fine for fare non-payment. This trend is understandable: relatively simple to administer, relatively effective and hence, unlike incarceration, remunerative to the public purse. And people made to pay a debt by this method do not garner much public sympathy. But a recent Globe & Mail newspaper article by Peter Shawn Taylor, discusses the dangers of this mismatch, especially for low-income earners already struggling. In the United States, where many states now collect unpaid fines of all types through DL suspensions, examples of the unintended consequences of this approach have so proliferated that it has even been suggested as a factor in the perpetuating poverty said to be associated with the recent riots in Ferguson, Mo. A typical anecdote: a bus driver who forgot to inform the licence bureau of her address change, overlooked the associated fine, lost her DL and, hence, her job. Interest and add-ons to the unpaid, original $25 fine have ballooned it to $2,900 which, in her current state of unemployment she has no possibility of paying. Mr. Taylor likens DL suspension for non-driving offences to a “Dickensian debtor’s prison, consigning unfortunates to a lifetime of unemployment and poverty,â€? and he unequivocally rejects it as a bad policy—to be avoided “at all costs.â€? Certainly, suspending a debtor’s DL with the result that the debtor loses employment that requires the DL, has to be an unintended and necessarily reviewable consequence – basically, all involved will lose. ‌by Cedric Hughes, Barrister & Solicitor with regular weekly contributions from Leslie McGuffin, LL.B

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A ring of thieves is thought to have preyed on patients in as many as six Lower Mainland hospitals, including Surrey Memorial and Royal Columbian. One suspect was recently arrested and two others are under investigation after staff at Vancouver General Hospital spotted them June 2 and alerted security. A description had previously been circulated after the trio was seen at other sites, including B.C. Cancer Agency facilities, wearing hospital scrubs and stolen ID to blend in with staff. That tactic isn’t entirely unusual, according to John Acorn, director of operations for the Lower Mainland health authorities’ Integrated Protection Services. “I’ve seen individuals trying to blend in,” he said. “What makes this one a little bit more unique is we were able to confirm multiple people working in concert. “Rarely have we seen this kind of organized or targeted theft in our environment.” Typically, Acorn said, thefts from hospital are relatively uncommon and, when they happen, tend to be crimes of opportunity involving small, easily concealed items, such as wallets, small electronics and jewelry. He credited staff for spotting the intruders and reminded patients and visitors not to bring valuables to the hospital and to report any suspicious behaviour. The main suspect had 52 outstanding offences, including a Canada-wide warrant, while the other two are known to police.

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Landfill harnesses methane for power ▶ CACHE CREEK DUMP CAPTURES 85 PER CENT OF LANDFILL GAS JEFF NAGEL

The Cache Creek landfill has begun generating electricity from the methane emitted by the millions of tonnes of Metro Vancouver garbage dumped there over the past 26 years. Three reciprocating engines installed by operator Wastech Services now turn captured landfill gas into 4.8 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 2,500 homes. The province had made

beneficial use of landfill gas a future condition of the landfill’s new operating permit and it was also under a province-wide requirement to capture at least 75 per cent of the gas emitted by 2016. Cache Creek’s system hit that target years ahead of schedule and is now capturing 85 per cent of the landfill gas that would otherwise escape into the atmosphere and contribute to climate change, said Janet Tecklenborg, environmental services director for Wastech, which is an arm of Belkorp Environmental. The electricity produced is sold to BC Hydro.

Methane from garbage is an intense greenhouse gas and last year the landfill captured and flared 22.5 tonnes per day of carbon dioxide equivalent. The Vancouver Landfill in Delta also captures large amounts of methane, some of which is used to heat nearby greenhouses. The exhaust from burning methane there is currently released but Village Farms is studying the potential to process and pump the resulting carbon dioxide back into its greenhouses to boost crop yields and reduce emissions that contribute to smog.

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Public Hearing – June 23, 2015 The Municipal Council of The CorporaƟon of Delta will hold a Public Hearing, in accordance with the Local Government Act, to consider the following proposed project and related applicaƟon. Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 Time: 7:00 p.m. Place: Council Chamber, Delta Municipal Hall 4500 Clarence Taylor Crescent, Delta, BC V4K 3E2 A Council meeƟng is scheduled to immediately follow this Public Hearing in the event Council wishes to give further consideraƟon to the project at that Ɵme. Any persons who believe that their interest in property will be aīected by the proposed project shall be given an opportunity to be heard at the Public Hearing on maƩers contained in the bylaw and/or proposed by the applicaƟon. Should you have any concerns or comments you wish to communicate to Council in advance of the Public Hearing, you can write to: Mayor and Council, The CorporaƟon of Delta 4500 Clarence Taylor Crescent, Delta, BC V4K 3E2 Fax: 604-946-3390 Email: mayor-council@delta.ca Correspondence addressed to Mayor and Council will form part of the public record for this Public Hearing. To be considered, correspondence must be received by the Oĸce of the Municipal Clerk no later than 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Project No. 1: ApplicaƟon for Rezoning and Heritage AlteraƟon Permit (File No. LU007277) LocaƟon: 4840 48 Avenue as shown outlined in bold on MAP NO. 1 Applicant: T.E. Andres Home Building Ltd. Telephone: 604-946-8876 Proposal: ApplicaƟon for Rezoning and Heritage AlteraƟon Permit in order to permit subdivision of the subject property into Įve bare land strata lots with the exisƟng Niemetz Residence being relocated, restored and protected on proposed Lot 2, and new single family dwellings to be constructed on proposed Lots 1, 3, 4 and 5. “Delta Zoning Bylaw No. 2750, 1977” Amendment Bylaw No. 7431 To amend “Delta Zoning Bylaw No. 2750, 1977” by rezoning the subject property from RM1 MulƟple Family (Duplex) ResidenƟal to MAP NO. 1 Comprehensive Development Zone No. 452, to FILE NO. LU007277 permit the subdivision and development of Įve bare land strata lots. Heritage AlteraƟon Permit LU007277 To regulate the relocaƟon, preservaƟon and restoraƟon of the Niemetz Residence to proposed Lot 2 and the construcƟon of the new buildings on proposed Lots 1, 3, 4 and 5. Staī Contact: Stephanie Johnson – 604-946-3269 Web LocaƟon: June 1, 2015 Regular Council MeeƟng Agenda Item E.02 AddiƟonal InformaƟon AddiƟonal informaƟon, copies of the bylaws, supporƟng staī reports, and any relevant documentaƟon may be inspected unƟl Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Municipal Hall: Community Planning and Development Department Hours: 8:30 am to 4:45 pm Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday (except statutory holidays) 8:30 am to 8:00 pm Thursday Website: www.delta.ca Email: com-pln-dev@delta.ca Phone: 604-946-3380 Please note that Council may not receive further submissions from the public or interested persons concerning any project aŌer the Public Hearing has concluded. The Corporation of Delta 4500 Clarence Taylor Crescent Delta BC V4K 3E2 (604) 946-4141 www.delta.ca

More ALR reforms announced ▶ PROVINCE HOPES RELAXED RULES TEMPT FARMERS TO BRANCH OUT

into the beer, spirits or Letnick said. mead must be grown on “I firmly that believe the farm. we’ve come up with Agriculture Minister the right balance that Norm Letnick promotes JEFF NAGEL of reforms announced noted hops agriculture by the province MonBreweries, distilleries farming is on and safeguards day that aim to make it and meaderies will be an upswing in agriculture but easier for farmers to set allowed to open up on areas such as also provide up agricultural processfarmland in the Agrifor more ing plants and otherwise Chilliwack and cultural Land Reserve Kamloops, and opportunities earn more money from (ALR) provided they predicts the for farmers to their land. meet the same rules set rule change earn income on As with wineries in out for wineries. their land.” the ALR, at least half the will create an That’s one of a series Winery farm ingredients that go incentive for more farmers restaurants in Norm Letnick to take a risk the ALR will and get into now be allowed beverage proto serve alcohol duction. they didn’t produce, “If that means you such as beer. can enjoy some mead Some reforms apply or some beer on a piece only on farmland of farmland and that’s outside the Lower what it takes to get that Mainland, Letnick said, farmland back into probecause he said farmers duction, I’m okay with face a tougher struggle that,” Letnick said in to earn a living in areas an interview at an herb such as the Interior, farm in Surrey. North and Kootenays. ALR land can also now A second home can be leased for farming now be built on large without applying to the parcels of at least 50 Agricultural Land Comhectares in the ALR’s mission (ALC) – a move rural Zone 2 provided the province hopes gets residential uses make up more unused land into less than 43,000 square production. feet. Another rule change Letnick said that could will make value-added allow farmers to build processing easier by another house for famletting farms band ily, lodging for workers, together as co-ops and or a rental to earn extra count all their members’ money to support the crops toward meeting farm. the same 50 per cent Similarly, retiring 8oz Sirloin Steak & Eggs local content rule. farmers in Zone 2 will That’s expected to allow be allowed to sell the Benny $14.95 clusters of farms to feed farm but lease back their from 8am to 1pm into a plant in the ALR farmhouse from the new Daddy-O Burger with that makes something farm owner, who can like juice or jam without build another home on fries $10.99 seeking ALC approval. the property. Metro Vancouver It’s hoped that will Buddy Holly Burger previously registered help those retiring concern that looser rules farmers sell their farms for non-farm uses may but encourage them to result in less land being stay there and perhaps farmed and a further mentor a new, younger climb in farmland prices farmer, Letnick said, and BLAST N2 THE PAST! beyond what new farmmeet the challenge of • Burgers • Sandwiches• Breakfast • Shakes & Floats ers can afford. the coming “generation“Some people wanted al change” in agriculture. Open 8am to 8pm Daily. Closed Mondays. F O R M E R LY J I M HA R L E Y ’ S D I N E R us to do more, some Second dwellings are 11951 95A Avenue, Delta BC • 604.581.5250 • Email for take-out: blastn2thepast@gmail.com wanted us to do less,” still on the same parcel of land, which can’t be subdivided without CHOOSE FROM OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF REGUL AR PRICED CARHART T WORK, CASUAL AND OUTDOOR GE AR! asking the ALC. More proposed BUY ONE reforms relating to AT REGULAR PRICE agri-tourism are still GET ONE OFF being considered and are to be put to local governments for feedback in MEN’S TWILL RUGGED the fall. DOUBLE WORK CARGO Asked if he intends PANTS FRONT PANTS to increase the ALC’s DUNGAREES budget so it can hire STYLE BO1 STYLE B290 STYLE 100272 BUY ONE $5999 BUY ONE $6499 BUY ONE $3999 more compliance and % % % GET ONE 25 OFF GET ONE 25 OFF GET ONE 25 OFF enforcement officers – just three officers pa$ 99 $ 74 $ 99 each each each Sale Sale Sale trol the entire province TALLS/OVER SIZES EX TR A TALLS/OVER SIZES EX TR A TALLS/OVER SIZES EX TR A for violations like illegal MEN’S 8" BOOT MEN'S 6" BOOT fill dumping – Letnick STYLE 3508 STYLE 3507 said that’s under considAZTEC 2.O SUPERSOLE AZTEC 2.O SUPERSOLE eration. PRICE PRICE MEN'S the ALC’s budSHORTS $ 99 $ 99 getHeissaid now $3.4 million, each each STYLE B357 up from $2 million, HOURS: LANGLEY $ and potential increases e BUY ONE 4999 Mon-Wed: 9-7 m o 19685 Willowbrook Dr. C Thurs - Fri: 9-8 GET ONE 25% OFF (Old Dulux Paint Building) will be discussed with See Our Saturday: 9-6 W 604.539.1456 Sunday: 10-5 $ 49 OCNAETION! new ALC chair Frank L www.redwingshoes.ca w each Sale Leonard.

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

PRIME NOW SELLING 200 UNITS SOLD ON OPENING WEEKEND MICRO-LOFTS FROM $149,900 CORNER 2 BEDROOMS FROM $344,900

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15


16 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

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

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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.

17


18 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

We’re Move In Ready.

GST INCLUDED • 5% DOWN PAYMENT • HOMES FROM 240’S* We’re ready for you to move in today! South Point Walk is located in the heart of South Surrey within walking distance to everything you will ever need or want. Quick access to South Point Exchange Mall, groceries, restaurants, big brand stores, conveniences, boutique shops, transit, parks, paths, and green spaces. Spacious 1, 2, and 2 plus den homes are elegantly appointed with quality finishings including gas ranges, stainless steel appliance packages, Shaker style cabinetry, and thick quartz island countertops. Make a move home to South Point Walk now!

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

19


20 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

GRAND OPENING June 20 • 1 - 5 PM

Apex Custom Homes proudly introduces you and your family to the Ideal Living Experience at The Brooks at Langley. 3 and 4 Bedroom Townhomes ideally situated and outfitted for all your families needs. You’ll love the heated floors, continuous hot water, cooking with Gas in Chef Inspire Kitchens and the entertainment sized covered decks.

Show Homes Open Daily from 1-5pm (closed Fridays) 19913 70th Ave. Langley • www.thebrooksatlangley.ca Call Sally Scott at 604-619-4902

FLEXIBILITY FOR YOUR INDIVIDUAL WANTS & NEEDS. BREATH TAKING VIEWS. DOORSTEP HIKING TRAILS. AMAZING PRICE. INCREDIBLE VALUE.

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader HOMELIFE TOP 5% SALES REPRESENTATIVE IN CANADA 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013 & 2014 • GROSS SALES

HomeLife Glenayre Realty Chilliwack Ltd.

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CALL TODAY FOR A FREE MARKET ANALYSIS, MAXIMUM EXPOSURE AND QUICK SALE! RAINSCREENED! The scaffolding is now down and the rainscreening is finished. Great layout in this 2 bedroom plus den unit with large room sizes. Buy now and watch prices rebound!

SULLIVAN STATION

46066 FIRST AVE., CHILLIWACK ~ $549,900

A magnificent, grand 5 bedroom, 3900 plus sq ft Edwardian family home, set within a beautiful, private and generous lot surrounded by lush landscaping and within easy walking distance to coffee shops, restaurants, shopping, leisure centre, library... This well proportioned residence offers elegant accommodation, ideal for family living and entertaining. A spacious entry with a grand oak staircase gives access to a stunning living room with double entry doors, oversized windows, and an elegant fireplace, a bright formal dining room, charming study with cozy fireplace, and a large kitchen breakfast room designed to be the centre of daily life with all updated appliances and new custom kitchen cabinetry. The spacious breakfast room has a wall of windows that flood the space with light, there is also the convenience of a butler’s pantry with floor to ceiling cabinetry. The 2nd floor comprises of 4 generous bedrooms, an office, family bathroom and a laundry room. The top floor has the wonderful light filled 5th bedroom with 2 skylights and stunning views of Chilliwack and surrounding mountains. Major upgrades of roofing and hot-water boiler have been completed. The owner has received multiple expressions of interest in this magnificent home in the past and is now offering the home for sale. Do not let this rare opportunity pass you by. 6/15 HL19

$338,900

3 LEVEL TOWNHOME 1954 Square foot 3 bedroom townhome with a double wide garage, rec room,  and 4 bathrooms. Needs a little work but still great value. Call to view.

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22 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

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Starting today (Friday), Surrey’s LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Questioning) community will have an exhibit on display at city hall. The display recounts the history of the gay community in Surrey. It’s the second year the exhibit has been shown and and it helps kick off pride celebrations. The 16th-annual Surrey Pride Festival will be held at Holland Park from 12-5 p.m. on Saturday, June 28. More information can be found at http://www. surreypride.ca/

Were you a French student?

Canadian Parents for French is searching for graduates of French programs in Surrey and Delta. The parent-led non-profit organization would like to follow up with them to see what path their lives have taken. The group is looking to contact anyone who took French immersion, Core French or Frenchas-a-first-language programs. Visit wherearetheynow.ca to complete a questionnaire or email communications@ cpf.bc.ca

Groups ready for gay pride events Check out some of the reasons why Nissan is

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Equivalent lease payments of $34/$36 on the 2015 Versa Note/2015 Sentra must be made on a monthly basis and cannot be made weekly. Weekly lease payments are for informational purposes only. Offers available from June 2, 2015 to June 30, 2015. 1My Choice Bonus Cash is applicable to customers who purchase, lease or finance a model year 2015 Micra® (excluding S trim)/Versa Note/Sentra/Altima Sedan/Juke®/Rogue/Pathfinder. The $500/$700/$1,000/$1,000/$750/$1,000/$1,500 My Choice Bonus Cash consists of $350/$500/$750/$750/$500/$700/$1,200 NCI cash and $150/$200/$250/$250/$250/$300/$300 dealer participation which will be deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. 2“2 monthly Payments on Us” is available to customers who lease or finance any new model year 2015 Micra® (excluding S trim)/Versa Note/Sentra/Altima Sedan/Juke®/Rogue/Pathfinder through Nissan Canada Inc. and Nissan Canada Financial Services Inc. (collectively, “NCF”) and refers to the first two (2) monthly lease payments or first two (2) monthly finance payments. A customer’s first two monthly payments (inclusive all taxes) will be waived, up to a maximum of $225/$250/$375/$400/$375/$400/$600 per month tax inclusive. After two months, the customer will be required to make all remaining regularly scheduled payments over the remaining term of the contract. Customers must be approved to lease or finance through NCF. Cash purchase buyers or buyers who finance outside of Nissan Finance are also not eligible for this choice. 3No charge extended warranty is valid for up to 60 months or 100,000 km (whichever occurs first) from the warranty start date and zero (0) kilometers. Some conditions/limitations apply. The no charge extended warranty is the Nissan Added Security Plan (“ASP”) and is administered by Nissan Canada Extended Services Inc. (“NCESI”). In all provinces NCESI is the obligor. This offer includes the Gold level of coverage. Retail value of ASP is based on MSRP $1,200/$1,400/$1,500/$1,500/$1,700/$1,700/$2,000 for a new 2015 Micra®(excluding S trim)/Versa Note/Sentra/Altima Sedan/Juke®/Rogue/Pathfinder. Dealers are free to set individual prices. ≠Representative monthly lease offer based on any new 2015 Versa Note 1.6 S M5 (B5RG55 AA00)/2015 Sentra 1.8 S M6 (C4LG55 AA00). 0%/0% lease APR for a 60/60 month term equals monthly payments of $148/$158 with $0 down payment, and $0 security deposit. First monthly payment, down payment and $0 security deposit are due at lease inception. Prices and payments include freight and fees. Lease based on a maximum of 20,000 km/year with excess charged at $0.10/km. Total lease obligation is $8,887/$9,322. $700/$1,000 My Choice Bonus Cash included in advertised offer. Conditions apply. †Representative finance offer based on any new 2015 Micra SR MT (S5SG55 AA10)/ 2015 Altima 3.5 SL CVT (T4SG15 NV00). Selling price is $17,025/$34,963 financed at 0%/0% apr equals 72/72 monthly payments of $236/$486 monthly for a 72/72 month term. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $17,025/$34,963. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer. $500/$1,000 my choice bonus cash is included in advertised offers. Conditions apply. X $9,998/$19,998 MSRP price for a new 2015 Nissan Micra® 1.6 S, MT (S5LG55 AA10)/2015 Altima 2.5 (T4LG15 AA00). MSRP price for the 2015 Altima 2.5 (T4LG15 AA00) includes $1,000 My Choice Bonus Cash, $4,380 NCI non-stackable cash and $235 dealer participation. Conditions apply. VModels shown $18,435/$21,235/$26,085/$35,963 Selling price for a new 2015 Micra® 1.6 SR 4 AT (S5SG75 AE00)/2015 Versa Note 1.6 SL CVT (B5TG15 AE00)/2015 Sentra 1.8 SL (C4TG15 AA00)/2015 Altima 3.5 SL CVT (T4SG15 NV00). *X±≠VFreight and PDE charges ($1,567/$1,695/$1,567/$1,695) air-conditioning levy ($100) where applicable, applicable fees (all which may vary by region), manufacturer’s rebate and dealer participation where applicable are included. License, registration, insurance and applicable taxes are extra. Lease offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers except stackable trading dollars. Retailers are free to set individual prices. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Vehicles and accessories are for illustration purposes only. Offers, prices and features subject to change without notice. ††The Nissan Loyalty Offer (“Offer”) is available only to eligible customers who (as of Feb, 1, 2015) lease/leased, finance/financed or own/owned a 2009 or newer Nissan brand vehicle (an “Existing Vehicle”). Eligibility for the Offer will be determined by Nissan Canada Inc. (“NCI”) in its sole discretion. Proof of current or previous ownership/lease/finance contract will be required. Offer is not transferrable or assignable, except to a co-owner/co-leasee of the Existing Vehicle who resides within the same household as the intended recipient of the Offer. If the eligible customer elects to lease or finance a new and previously unregistered Nissan brand vehicle (excluding NV, Fleet and daily rentals) (an “Eligible New Vehicle”) through NCI and Nissan Canada Financial Services Inc. (collectively “NCF”), then he/she will receive a specified amount of stackable loyalty dollars (“Loyalty Dollars”), as follows: (i) Micra/Versa/Sentra ($500); (ii) Juke/Altima/Rogue ($600); (iii) Frontier/ Xterra/Leaf/Murano/Pathfinder ($800); and (iv) Maxima/Z/Titan, Armada/GT-R ($1000). Loyalty Dollars will be applied before taxes which means they are inclusive of all applicable taxes. Alternatively, if the eligible customer elects to purchase or lease/finance an Eligible New Vehicle (excluding GT-R and Leaf) other than through NCF, then he/she will receive a three-year/48,000 kilometers (whichever comes first) Oil Change and Tire Rotation Plan which consists of a maximum of 6 service visits, each consisting of 1 oil change (using conventional 5W30 motor oil) and 1 tire rotation. For complete details on the Oil Change and Tire Rotation Plan, ask your dealer. Offer has no cash redemption value and can be combined with other offers. Offer valid on Eligible New Vehicles purchased/leased/financed and delivered between June 2 – June 30, 2015. ∞Global Automakers of Canada (GAC) Entry Level Segmentation, June 2015. For more information see IIHS.org. ALG is the industry benchmark for residual values and depreciation data, www.alg.com. Offers subject to change, continuation or cancellation without notice. Offers have no cash alternative value. See your participating Nissan retailer for complete details. ©2015 Nissan Canada Inc. Nissan Financial Services Inc. is a division of Nissan Canada Inc.

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24 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

MON

JUN 29

2015

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18465 Application: 7915-0122-00 Location: 14885 – 60 Avenue (14877 – 60 Avenue) Purpose of Bylaw: The applicant is seeking to amend Comprehensive Development Bylaw No. 16776 to allow recreational facilities as a permitted accessory use on a portion of the site. A yoga studio is proposed for a vacant commercial space in this existing mixed-use building. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18465

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18471 Application: 7913-0228-00 Location: 12658 – 100 Avenue, Portion of unopened road allowance Purpose of Bylaw and Permit: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched site from Single Family Residential to Assembly Hall 1. The applicant is proposing to develop a religious assembly building on the site. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to permit off-street (underground) parking within the front yard setback, reduce the front and east side yard setbacks and reduce the landscaping requirement along the west property line. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18471

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18470 Application: 7914-0200-00 Location: 5846 King George Boulevard Purpose of Bylaw: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched property from One-Acre Residential to Single Family Residential (12). The applicant is proposing to subdivide the property into 2 single family lots. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18470

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18464 Application: 7915-0082-00 Location: 10209 – 152A Street Purpose of Bylaw and Permit: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched property from Single Family Residential to Community Commercial. The applicant is proposing to consolidate two lots (10209 and 10215 – 152A Street) in order to develop a child care centre in an existing commercial building. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18464

MORE INFO

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18466 Application: 7914-0311-00 Location: Portion of 19343 – 64 Avenue Purpose of Bylaw and Permits: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched portion of the property from One-Acre Residential to Multiple Residential 30. The applicant is proposing to develop 31 townhouse units. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to reduce the minimum rear yard and west side yard setback in order to accommodate road dedication and improve the layout of the proposed townhouse development. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18466

BE HEARD

Hall (fax: 604-501-7578) Continued on next page...


Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Blue Jays split with Royals after loss to North Shore ▶ NORTH DELTA IN FIFTH PLACE IN PREMIER LEAGUE STANDINGS RICK KUPCHUK

The North Delta Blue Jays lost more ground in the B.C. Premier Baseball League playoff race, losing two of three games last week. After winning 11 of their first 13 games, North Delta has slipped into fifth place with losses in seven of their last nine. The Jays lost in North Vancouver for the second time in three days last Thursday (June 11), falling 1-0 to the first-place North Shore Twins. Max Kondratowski took the loss for North Delta. The 16 year-old took his second loss in three decisions after pitching six innings and allowing one earned run on just seven singles and two walks. The Jays managed

just three hits, all singles. North Delta snapped their five-game losing streak at home Saturday at Mackie Park, topping the Parksville Royals 6-4 in the first of two games. Mackenzie Marquis was the offensive leader for the Jays, going two-for-three with an RBI (run batted in) and a run scored. North Delta managed just six hits, including a double from Braeden Miller, but took advantage of nine walks issued by Parksville pitchers. Alex Davis was the winning pitcher, throwing all seven innings and allowing four unearned runs on five hits and three walks while collecting four strikeouts. The Jays were unable to complete a sweep of the last-place Royals, losing the second game 6-3. With the game tied 2-2 after five innings, Parksville took advantage of three North Delta

errors to score four unearned runs in the sixth inning. Marquis with a double and a triple, Logan Newman and Gota Kinoshita each had a pair of hits for the Blue Jays. Two teams from Vancouver Island will

be at Mackie Park next weekend. The 2310 Victoria Eagles are the visitors Saturday for games at 1 and 3:30 p.m. The 18-11 Nanaimo Pirates are the opposition Sunday, with start times set for 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.

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...Continued from previous page

MON JUN 29 2015

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18467 Application: 7914-0307-00 Location: 16671 – 78 Avenue Purpose of Bylaw and Permit: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched site from One-Acre Residential to Single Family Residential and Half-Acre Residential. The applicant is proposing to subdivide with an adjoining lot (7863 – 167 Street), into 5 single family lots, 1 remnant lot (for future rezoning and subdivision potential), 1 lot for riparian protection and a small portion for parkland. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to reduce the minimum east side yard setback on proposed Lot 6 in order to retain the existing house.

Surrey Official Community Plan Amendment Bylaw No. 18468 Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18469 Application: 7914-0011-00 Location: 8009, 8027, 8055 and a portion of 7929 – 152 Street, Portion of 80 Avenue Purpose of Bylaws and Permits: The applicant is seeking to redesignate a portion of the hatched site from Suburban to Urban and rezone from General Agriculture and Golf Course to Multiple Residential 15 and General Agriculture. The applicant is proposing to permit the development of approximately 59 townhouse units and 2 “hooked” parcels to be dedicated for riparian protection. In addition, a development variance permit is being sought to reduce the minimum front, rear, east and west side yard setbacks in order to allow dedication for riparian protection.

DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18467 DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP BYLAW NO. 18468/18469

Hall (fax: 604-501-7578)

25

121033


26 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

▶ SPORTS BRIEFS

Hargrove wins in Toronto

N OT I C E O F P U B L I C M E E T I N G

Public Information Meeting East Fraser Heights Land Use Concept Plan The public is invited to attend an Open House on Thursday, June 25th, 2015 regarding the East Fraser Heights area of Surrey. This Open House will provide residents, owners, and other interested parties with an opportunity to comment on the development of a land use concept plan in the East Fraser Heights neighbourhood. The purpose of this first meeting is to: • provide background on why there is a plan being done in the area; • introduce the City’s planning team, and discuss how the planning process will take place; • provide initial results of an environmental study recently conducted in the area; and • allow comments and suggestions about a future Land Use Concept Plan. Members of City staff and consultants will be on hand to answer questions during the evening. City Staff will give a brief presentation at approximately 6:00 pm. Feedback from the Open House will be considered and documented before returning to the public for comment on a draft land use concept plan in the Fall of 2015.

September 14, 2015 Northview Golf & Country Club

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Scott Hargrove returned to Ultra 94 Porsche GT3 Cup racing with a dominate performance in Toronto. Racing in the third race of the series Saturday during the Molson Indy weekend, the Surrey driver led from start to finish for the win. “I’m thrilled with the result,” Hargrove said. “The OpenRoad Racing Porsche was phenomenal. I’m just super-excited to be back here racing Porsches again.” Hargrove won six of 10 races to win the Platinum Cup as series champion a year ago, but missed the first two races of this season. The fourth race of the series was Sunday, also in Toronto, and Hargrove placed second to rookie Daniel Morad. The runner-up finish lifted Hargrove into sixth place in the series standings.

Sign-up for football in Cloverdale Cloverdale Community Football is accepting registration Saturday, June 20 at its clubhouse at Cloverdale Athletic Park from 10 a.m. to noon. For more information, call the registrar at 604-590-2774 or 604-593-0466.

Local athlete to join UBC T-Birds swim team Surrey’s Darian Fry is joining the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds swim team. Fry is a backstroke and butterfly swimmer from the Pacific Sea Wolves Club. “I am excited about the upcoming year and swimming with such a talented group of competitors,” said Fry. “I’m ready to work hard and hope to take my swimming to the next level.” Fry spent four years (2009-2012) with Team B.C.

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Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Chiefs are improving RICK KUPCHUK

With three wins in four starts, the Whalley Chiefs have again evened their record while tightening their grip on a B.C. Premier Baseball League playoff position. The Chiefs took three of four games with the Abbotsford Cardinals, then edged the White Rock Tritons 8-7 Tuesday night at Whalley Stadium. Now at 17-17 (won-lost), Whalley is four-and-a-half games ahead of the ninth-place Victoria Mariners. Eight teams qualify for the playoffs. Whalley almost let a win against the Tritons slip away. The Chiefs blew a 7-2 lead when White Rock scored five runs in the top of the sixth inning to tie the score. Whalley scored the winning run in the eighth inning

when Lichel Hirakawa-Kao scored on a wild pitch. Max Williams, Colin Kellington and Ryan Kaplanis all had a pair of hits and two RBIs for the Chiefs. Matt Legg also had a pair of hits. The Chiefs began their three-game stretch against the Cardinals with a 3-1 victory last Tuesday in Whalley. Kaplanis, Braeden Massignani and Zach Chaba each had a pair of hits, with Massignani collecting a pair of RBIs (runs batted in). Lucas Soper was the winning pitcher, lasting four and one-third innings and allowing an earned run on five hits and a pair of walks. He had four strikeouts. The Chiefs won the first of two games Sunday in Abbotsford, rapping out 13 hits in an 8-3 victory. Legg had three hits, with Kaplanis, Thomas Espig, Brendan Gerbert and Ken Dubois adding two each. Isaac Greer threw five innings and was

the winning pitcher. The Cardinals managed four hits and drew three walks off Greer, scoring one run while striking out six times. The Cardinals escaped with a 5-4 win in the second game. The Chiefs outhit the home team 7-5 but left 10 players on base. Legg and Williams led the offense with two hits each. The Chiefs don’t play again until next Thursday, when they host the North Delta Blue Jays at 7 p.m.

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28 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

Mills named BC Hockey’s Official of the Year ▶ SURREY OFFICIAL WORKED TWO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS RICK KUPCHUK

Following a season in which he received two huge international assignments, Bevan Mills has been named BC Hockey’s Official of the Year. The Surrey native

worked as a linesman at both the World Junior Hockey Championships in Montreal and Toronto last January, as well as the World Championships in May in the Czech Republic.

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Bevan Mills makes a call at the 2014 RBC Cup tournament in Vernon. HOCKEY CANADA PHOTO

“The 2015 season may have been Bevan’s most impressive season to date,” announced BC Hockey during its awards banquet at its annual general meeting in Sun Peaks last weekend. “It’s nearly unprecedented for a Canadian official to receive those two assignments in the same season.” A linesmen in the BC Hockey League and the

Western Hockey League, he has previously worked in the 2013 Memorial Cup in Saskatoon and the 2014 RBC Cup in Vernon. Mills, 27, credits his RBC Cup experience for moving his career forward. At that tournament in Vernon, he was selected to work the gold medal game between the Yorkton Terriers and Carleton Place Canadians, won 4-3 in overtime

by Yorkton. “At the start of every year, you set a goal to work as long into the season as you can,” Mills told Hockey Canada. “Being selected to work the championship game makes all the hard work and the time spent on the road away from home worth it.” At the World Junior tournament last winter, he performed well enough to earn the as-

signment for the bronze medal game, a 4-2 win by Slovakia over Sweden in Toronto. Following his season working two junior leagues, he was in Europe for the World Championships. He called the lines in six round robin games, a quarterfinal game, and the semifinal game between Alex Ovechkin’s Russian national team and the United States. He was the lone Canadian at the tournament, which serves as another step towards his ultimate goal of landing a job with the National Hockey League (NHL). “I have always dreamed of being in the NHL,” he said. “When I realized I wasn’t going to get there as a player, I shifted my focus to serving the game as an official. I hope to one day get the call from the NHL to have the opportunity to be on the ice as an official with the best players in the world.”

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ARTS & LIFE

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

29

LEGO exhibit travels back to the future

▶ SURREY MUSEUM DISPLAY INCLUDES DETAILED SCENES OF THE FRASER VALLEY’S PREHISTORIC PAST, BUSTLING PRESENT AND POSSIBLE FUTURE

JENNIFER LANG

Members of the Vancouver Lego Club used one million plastic bricks to portray 20 millennia of Fraser Valley history in their latest imagination-filled extravaganza at the Surrey Museum. Six minutely detailed dioramas form Lego: A Fraser Valley Odyssey, which opened June 2 and is on display to Sept. 19, telling the story of the Fraser Valley’s prehistoric past, bustling present and post-dystopic future. The club was able to exercise plenty of creative licence in bringing Surrey’s natural history to life, which is why woolly mammoths and penguins roam receding ice fields in Cloverdale, and a now-shuttered Clova Cinema (which dimmed the lights in 2014) is showing the latest Lego movie. “It’s not all historically accurate,” admits Greg Yellenik, curator of exhibitions at the Surrey Museum. “There’s a lot of imagination. The creative juices were flowing.”

There’s serious stuff, too. Ripe red cranberry fields surround 1858 Fort Langley, and pre-contact shelters used by First Nations along the Fraser River are as historically accurate as the building medium will allow. The exhibit has been two years in the making. Consider the stats for the diorama depicting Sept. 3, 2083: eight builders worked 2,000 hours using 75,000 Lego pieces. All told, the exhibit consists of about one million pieces. “They think it’s more than that,” Yellenik says. “It’s thousands of hours. But a lot of it isn’t specifically done for this exhibit.” Thirty members of the Vancouver Lego Club played a part in building the exhibit, sometimes re-purposing already existing structures. A member who specializes in building accurate models of real buildings, for instance, built a Lego version of the Surrey Museum – complete with a mini-fig Mountie on guard – along with The Clova, and Surrey Memorial Hospital, which are part of the contemporary Surrey

Lego: A Fraser Valley Odyssey is an exhibit on display at the Surrey Museum until Sept. 19. It tells colourful tales of the past, present and future one brick at a time. BOAZ JOSEPH PHOTOS

diorama. The exhibit required flights of fancy, too. Fifty years into the future, oceans rise over suburban rooftops, thanks to global warming. Denizens grow veggies on what’s left of the Port Mann bridge, Waterworld-style, even as Expo ‘86’s infamous McBarge floats sedately nearby. The genius is in the details. Be sure to look for the time travellers (or their wheels) hidden among the action: Mad Max’s Interceptor (“The last of the V-8s”), TV Time Lord Dr. Who’s blue telephone box, and the DeLorean Marty McFly borrowed from Doc Brown in Back to the Future. There’s a time traveller in every scene, says Yellenik. The Surrey Museum is located at 17710 56A Ave. It’s open Tuesdays to Fridays from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Saturdays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is sponsored by the Friends of the Surrey Museum Society. For more information, call 604-5926956 or visit www.surrey.ca/AH


30 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015

ETCETERA N OT I C E O F C O U N C I L M E E T I N G

2014 Annual Municipal Report Pursuant to Section 98 of the Community Charter, S.B.C. 2003, c. 26, the Council of the City of Surrey seeks public input and will receive delegations in the Council Chamber at City Hall, 13450 – 104 Avenue, Surrey, B.C., on Monday, June 29, 2015, commencing at 7:00 p.m., to provide the public an opportunity to comment on or ask questions concerning the 2014 Annual Municipal Report. Copies of the 2014 Annual Municipal Report are available for public inspection at the City Clerk’s Office, Legislative Services Counter, City Hall, Monday through Friday (except statutory holidays) between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. or may be viewed on the City of Surrey’s website at www.surrey.ca. Should you have any concerns, comments or questions you wish to convey to Council concerning the Statements or Report, please submit via fax at 604-501-7578, email clerks@surrey.ca or submit them in writing to the City Clerk prior to 4:30 p.m., Friday, June 26, 2015. •

Be a part of our growing community, we invite your input. • www.surrey.ca

P U B L I C N OT I C E

COMMUNITY CHARTER, S.B.C. 2003, CHAPTER 26 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO DISPOSE OF CITY PROPERTY SECTIONS 26 AND 94 Pursuant to Sections 26 and 94 of the Community Charter, S.B.C. 2003, Chapter 26, as amended, the City of Surrey hereby gives notice of the intention to dispose of the following CD zoned, single family building lot: Civic Address:

7572 – 146 Street, Surrey, BC

Legal Description:

PID No.: 023-621-290; Lot 102, Section 22 Township 2 New Westminster District Plan LMP31031;

Property Description:

The property is a 372 m² (4,001 ft.²) CD Zone, residential building lot located in Chimney Heights, East Newton, Surrey. It has service connections to municipal sanitary, storm, and water mains. Minimum basement elevation analysis for the lot indicates a basement home is deemed feasible only by relocating the existing sanitary and storm service connections.

▶ ARTS

for further information.

Arts Council of Surrey’s annual juried art exhibition ARTS 2015 is on display at the Surrey Art Gallery June 27 to Aug. 22. An opening reception will be held June 26, 7 p.m., which will include an awards presentation. The gallery is located at 13750 88 Ave. For more information, call 604-501-5566. A show featuring the work of a dozen artists belonging to the Dimasalang III International Artist Group, whose art focuses on the the concept of kalayaan (freedom), is on at the Surrey Art Gallery until July 4. The exhibition also celebrates Philippine independence, heritage and culture. The Surrey Art Gallery is located at 13750 88 Ave. Phone 604-501-5566 or check www.surrey.ca/artgallery

▶ BUSINESS Sutton Premier Realty is hosting a “Business After Hours Business Networking Mixer” on June 24 starting at 5 p.m. at The Taphouse, 15330 102A Ave. Business owners, entrepreneurs and professionals are invited to meet and build business relationships. The event is a fundraiser for The Surrey Food Bank. Donations of food or money are welcome. The Taphouse will have specials on the menu for the event. To RSVP or for more information, call 604-581-8400 or email info@suttonpremier.com

▶ EVENTS Surrey Museum (17710 56A Ave.) is hosting Ice Cream Afternoon on June

All offers should be submitted in the Offer to Purchase form of document enclosed within the Information Package referenced below. Asking Price:

Three Hundred and Sixty-Five Thousand Dollars ($365,000).

Further Information:

An Information Package can be accessed from the City’s website www.surrey.ca/realtyservices

The inaugural United Nations International Yoga Day will be held all day stating at at 10 a.m. on June 21 at the Guildford Recreation Centre. Organizers are expecting more than 1,500 people to be involved in the traditional yoga program, as well as laughter, dancing, music and sattvic (yogic) vegetarian meals. For more information, call 778-8925007 or email archieharit@ gmail.com

H I S T O R I C S T E W A R T FA R M

Stewart Farm Day Camps Farmhand Fever Do old-fashioned chores, taste farm-fresh food, and play on the Farm like pioneer kids. Tues, Jul 7 - Fri, Jul 10 6-9 yrs 6-9 yrs Tues, Aug 4 - Fri, Aug 7 6-12 yrs Tues, Aug 18 - Fri, Aug 21 Pioneer Discovery Get in training for the Ultimate Pioneer Challenge as you become a mapmaker and explore the Farm. 6-12 yrs Tues, Jul 14 - Fri, Jul 17 Tues, Aug 11 - Fri, Aug 14 6-12 yrs

Invitation to Offers to Purchase: The City invites offers to purchase this building lot. Interested persons or parties should submit their offer to purchase to the City of Surrey, Realty Services Division, Engineering Department, 13450 - 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 1V8 before 3 p.m. on Thursday, June 25, 2015. Offers received after this closing date and time will not be accepted or considered. Delays caused by any delivery, courier, or mail service(s) will not be grounds for an extension of the closing date.

20 from 1-4 p.m. Visitors will only have to travel to the Mr. Cool ice cream truck in the Museum’s parking lot to experience a worldwide ice cream adventure. Try diverse and exotic flavours such as Canadian Maple, Guatamalan Chocolate, Mexican Mango, Chinese Black Sesame, Indian Kulfi, and Italian Tiramisu. For more information, call 604-592-6956 or visit www.surrey.ca/heritage

Backwoods Builders Set up camp in your own fort, chisel a wood figure, and create a vintage toy. 6-12 yrs Tues, Jul 21 - Fri, Jul 24 Anchors Aweigh Learn the ropes with nautical knots, go on a pirate treasure hunt, and more! 9-12 yrs Tues, Jul 28 - Fri, Jul 31

13723 Crescent Rd., Surrey @StewartFarm1

For further information please contact Avril Wright, Property Negotiator; Phone 604 598 5718; Fax: 604-598-5701.

www.surrey.ca

ARTS ART S & HEERIT RITAGE A IN SU AGE URRE RREY Y

www.surrey.ca/heritage

▶ MUSIC The 180-member Utah Valley Children’s Choir will perform July 12 at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints’ Surrey Stake Centre (6270 126 St.) The concert is free and open to the public.

▶ FUND RAISING Ukrainian Soul Food – perogies, cabbage rolls and borscht – will be available on Friday, June 26 at a fundraiser from 4:30-7:30 p.m. at the Ukrainian Cultural Centre, 13512 108 Ave. Eat-in, take away, or ready for your freezer. For more information, call 604-531-1923 or 604581-0313.

▶ THEATRE Beach House Theatre Society is holding a fundraising dance for the season June 20, 7:30 p.m. at the Royal Canadian Legion Crescent Branch 240 (2643 128 St.), featuring The Diggers and Joani Bye. For more information on other events, visit beachhousetheatre.org Surrey Little Theatre is holding auditions for its fall comedy Calendar Girls by Tim Firth and directed by Simon Challenger, on June 21 and 22 at 7 p.m. at 7027 184 St. There are four male roles and nine female roles with ages ranging from the 20s to 70s. For more information visit www. surreylittletheatre.com or contact Simon at schallenger@shaw.ca

Must Pre-register at 604-592-6956

The City of Surrey reserves the right to accept or reject the highest or any offer and may reject any or all offers without giving reasons therefore. The proposed sale and the terms and conditions thereof will be subject to final approval by Surrey City Council.

Whalley’s Corner Community Festival takes place June 27 on Grosvenor Road at the intersection of 108 Avenue and King George Boulevard. Family entertainment includes music skateboard demonstrations, dancing, bouncy castle, face painting and more. The festival takes place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Centre Stage at Surrey City Hall (13450–104 Ave.) presents Tucked and Plucked, a Zee Zee Theatre production, on July 3 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $28. For advance tickets call Surrey Civic Theatres Box Office at 604-501-5566 or visit https://tickets.surrey. ca. Tickets will also be available at the door.


Fr iday June 19 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

▶ A BLUEPRINT FOR SUCCESS Guildford Park Secondary Grade 12 carpentry students Kennedy Hertzog (left) and Jessie Galang put the finishing touches on one of four small buildings built by students. Sixteen teens from the high school’s Carpentry Apprenticeship program began construction on the deluxe backyard structures, which included this saloon-style shed, in February. A trio of drafting students from Guildford Park created the blue prints late last year, while 15 plumbing students from Panorama Ridge Secondary plumbed two of the buildings in April and 16 electrical students from Princess Margaret Secondary spent two days on wiring. EVAN SEAL

Tea and a tour ▶ MAD HATTER’S STRAWBERRY TEA JUNE 25

I am the hopeful for the future type. What type are you?

jdrf.ca/walk

THANK YOU!

BLACK PRESS

Strawberry shortcake for mad hatters? Surrey Art Gallery Association (SAGA) welcomes the summer with a chance to wear a fun hat, and enjoy fresh art and local strawberries at the Mad Hatter’s Strawberry Tea and Tour on June 25 at 7 p.m. Get a sneak preview of the gallery’s summer exhibition ARTS 2015 at an informal tour led by the gallery’s assistant curator, Brian Foreman. Following the 30-minute tour is a strawberry shortcake and tea reception. In keeping with the Mad Hatter’s theme, guests are encouraged to wear their craziest hat. The event is free for SAGA members and $5 per person for non-members. The Surrey Art Gallery is located at 13750 88 Ave. Phone 604501-5566.

Thank you for joining us this past Sunday at Mill Lake Park and Stanley Park. Together our support and contribution made a meaningful impact in the lives of those impacted by T1D. We look forward to seeing you next year (June 12th 2016) for the 2016 TELUS Walk to Cure Diabetes.

Skimboarding Summer Camps for kids ages 7-14 Join us for summertime fun at White Rock beach

Learn skimboarding basics and progress to tricks! ◼ Four Day Camps $115 ◼ Five Day Camps $135 ◼ Board Rentals and Private Lessons Available ◼ Includes Souvenir Skimboarding T-Shirt

We are still accepting donations until Dec 1st, 2015. National Title Sponsor

National Sponsor

To see our camp times and sign up today visit: National Supplier

Let’s turn type one into

JDRF Canada | 1.877.287.3533 charitable business number: 11897 6604 RR0001

whiterockskimboarding.com

Call 778-990-5137

31


32 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Friday June 19 2015

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

604.575.5555

bcclassified.com FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

6

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

7

OBITUARIES

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

33

INFORMATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57 TRAVEL.............................................61-76

CAREER FAIR

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

CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387 PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587

BC Cancer Foundation

REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696 RENTALS ......................................703-757 AUTOMOTIVE ..............................804-862

bcclassified.com

10

CARDS OF THANKS

604-588-3371 championsforcare.com

Your Community, Your Classifieds. www.bcclassified.com 10

CARDS OF THANKS

École Secondaire Burnsview Burnsview Secondary School 7658 112 St. V4C 4V8 604-594-0491 604-594-6352F

Delview Secondary School 9111 116 St. V4C 5W8 604-594-5491 604-597-4374F

North Delta Secondary School 11447 82 Ave. V4C 5J6 604-596-7471 604-596-6192F

Sands Secondary School 10840 82 Ave. V4C 2B3 604-594-3474 604-594-1145F

A Special Thank You from the 2015 Delta North End Dry Grad Committee to the following members of our community for their generous support of this year’s Dry Grad Event: Diamond Sponsors: Silver Sponsors: BC Liquor Distribution Branch Corporation of Delta Maduke Bulat Orthodontists North Delta Youth Soccer Club Bent Air Balloons

National Tire Wholesale

Platinum Sponsors:

Barb Inglis

North Delta Softball Association SurDel Girls Soccer Envision Financial Sport Clips WestCor Group Realty – Randy Mann AAA Easypark Driving Academy North Delta Minor Hockey Assoc. Ron McMaster

S S S S

604.930.4078 bccancerfoundation.com

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

To Place An Ad Call 604-575-5555

IF YOU ARE...

13750 96th Avenue Surrey, BC V3V 1Z2

Linda Strobl Sungod Physio Sketch Projects – Leah Davis FYI Doctors Capilano Suspension Bridge Steve Nash Fitness European Creations Delta Teachers Association Gold Room

Work for an established software development company without the downtown commute

WEDNESDAY JUNE 24 FROM 4:30PM – 8:00PM 20486-64TH AVENUE, SUITE 200, LANGLEY

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

“Our people truly are the essence of TMW Systems” With over 800 employees around the world, TMW Systems, 35 years in business, is very «À Õ` v Ì i V Ì Õ ÕÃ }À ÜÌ > ` i « Þii ÀiÌi Ì Ì >Ì ÀiyiVÌÃ > V «> Þ doing so many things right!

1-844-299-2466 We have Gifts & Information

www.welcomewagon.ca

Supporting the BC Cancer Agency

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

42

LOST AND FOUND

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

LOST: COCKATIEL, Surrey/Delta 120th St / 92nd Ave. Reward. Please call 604-580-1399

21

LOST - RING: Ladies ring with great sentimental value. Custom made to represent 4 special people (intertwining circles). Can show pics Lost in prkg lot @ Save On 188 St & Fraser Hwy, June 12th @ 4:30pm Please call if found - reward offered (604)838-9073

COMING EVENTS

WE are looking for vendors and non-profit organizations for the TD Vancouver Chinatown Festival on Saturday, August 8th from 12pm to 9pm and Sunday, August 9th of 2015 from 12pm to 5pm. If you are interested please contact us by emailing daymarket@vancouverchinatown.com or call us at 604632-3808 and we can get you started. We look forward to hearing from you!

33

INFORMATION

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

21

COMING EVENTS

CURRENT OPENINGS:

FROM DAY 1 OF EMPLOYMENT AT TMW SYSTEMS WE OFFER:

Business Analyst Client Operations Support Analyst Database Administrator/Developer QA Analysts Software Developers Crystal Reports Developers Implementation/Training Specialist

FULL-TIME CAREER OPPORTUNITIES, PLEASE VISIT AND APPLY AT: www.tmwsystems.com

LOST: Wallet. Small, blue. Sunday June 7 at Superstore on 104th Ave. If found please call (778)554-0651.

U ÝÌi `i` i> Ì V>Ài Li iwÌà U ÃÕÀ> Vi E ->Û }à * > à U Óä `>Þà *> ` / i "vv Q*/"R ³ £ä «> ` `>Þà «iÀ V> i `>À Þi>À U ÃV Õ Ìi` « Þii /À L i -Ì V *ÕÀV >Ãi * > U iÜ vwVi ë>Vi Ü Ì }Ài>Ì > i Ì ià U >L À>Ì Ûi VÕ ÌÕÀi U > i } } «À iVÌà U i> Ì E 7i iÃà *À }À> U Ì Þ >ÃÃ>}i U > Þ V>ÃÕ> `ÀiÃÃ

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES CONTRACT Office Cleaning Routes available in the Lower Mainland., Investment required Min. $2500. 604-274-0477 or fred@arodal.ca

21

COMING EVENTS

115

EDUCATION

115

EDUCATION

115

Become a

MEDICAL/DENTAL OFFICE ASSISTANT Medical Dental Office Administration Medical Dental Office Management Diploma Upgrade your Business Certificate with a Medical Dental Office Administration Specialty Certificate Small class sizes, hands-on approach to learning Many students get jobs from their practicum placements

96

% GRADUATE EMPLOYMENT

Funding may be available.

.25 RATE (2014)

Vancouver Canadians Baseball Skin Concepts

EDUCATION

Your Career Starts Here

Peter F Pook Insurance

Just laid off? WE HAVE RETRAINING OPTIONS. You will qualify for a $1500 bursary .

Oxygen Yoga Ocean Park Driving School

Gold Sponsors:

Edward Jones Insurance

CUPE Local 1091 Re/Max Realty – Tom Edwards Sports Unlimited Delta Scottsdale Lions Club Trotman Auto Group Delta Thistle Curling Club Photography – Greg Wilson

Dr. Heather Dowling Delta Orthodontic Group Big Kahuna Sports Co. Ambit Arena Laser Tag The Tireman Scott Road Massage Therapy Guildford Mall

DCC Campus located inside Retirement Concepts Call now to receive a free information package

604-930-9908 www.discoverycommunitycollege.com


Friday June 19 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 33 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

CLASS 1 HIGHWAY LINE HAUL COMPANY DRIVERS

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 121

ESTHETICIANS

NEED Estheticians with Threading Experience for Busy salon. Able to work weekends & speak English. Excellent hourly pay, tips. Please Call 604-441-7679.

126

FRANCHISE

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

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

Jim’s Mowing Business for Sale Call 310-JIMS (5467)

130

HELP WANTED

ADULT SUBSTITUTE CARRIERS WANTED for Surrey North Delta Leader Part-time, small vehicle req’d. Door to door delivery Wednesdays and Fridays.

Please call 604-575-5342

HIGHWAY OWNER OPERATORS $3500 SIGNING BONUS

CONSTRUCTION SITE In your NEIGHBOURHOOD

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

New West 604.522.4900 EXPERIENCED Lane Closure Tech’s and Traffic Control people req’d. immediately. 604-996-2551 or email Traffic_King@shaw.ca

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

Tiwana family requires permanent F/T (40 hrs/week) Live in or Live out Caregiver (Nanny) for their newborn baby and 2 yrs old son at their home located at 153 St. and 20 Ave, Surrey, BC. Duties include: supervise and take care of children, preparing formulas, feeding, changing diapers, bathing, dressing, taking care of emotional comfort and ensuring healthy and safe environment for children. Speaking English is mandatory. Min 6 months training or 1 yrs experience in a similar role and high school or equivalent education. Optional accommodation avail. (own secured room with private bathroom and full use of household amenities for the duration of employment available) at no charge on a live-in basis. Please note: This is not a condition of employment. Salary $ 10.50/hr. Email resume at: jessicakang1984@gmail.com

Insurance Customer Service Agent Excellent wage, commission and benefit package. Will train, no experience necessary.

Please send resumes to:

136A JANITORIAL SERVICES

HOUSE CLEANERS/ JANITORS

Full-Time & Part-Time Calvin’s Farm Market

REQUIRED NOW PAY $12-15 PER HOUR

Apply in person: 6477-120 St. N. Delta

Apply Weekdays Between 9AM to 2PM at: 118-713 Columbia St

New West 604.522.4900

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

131

HOME CARE/SUPPORT

Home Support Worker F/T, $10.25/h, for position details,go to www.ebuysave.com Wendy Zhao,778-707-7137

134

HIRING FAIR Wednesday June 24th, 1:00pm - 3:00pm

LABOURERS

SKILLED LABOURERS needed to start asap working in the Langley & Surrey area. Must have experience in back framing & concrete repairs. Also a DEFICIENCIES position for interior final detailing. F/T Mon-Sat. Wages dependant on exp. Call: On Site Contracting (604)808-8542

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

New Country Appliances (13533 78 Avenue, Surrey) Requires Full Time permanent office administrator. Oversee admin. procedures. Ordering office inventory, preparing e-mails, databases/spreadsheets, Maintaining payrolls, greet / assist clients. High school required , college degree and 1 year experience preferred . Salary $14.00-$22.00/hour

SALES

Sales Representative

138

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Office Administrator

Well est. manufacturer/distributor of industrial containment and control products is now recruiting for the position of Sales Rep. for the lower mainland & Vancouver Island territory. The successful candidate will be a competitive and energetic self-starter with 3-5 years of industrial sales exp. and 2 year college diploma or better.

Driver / Warehouse Worker “We Are Growing Again” We are an industry leader of building products, located in Surrey, and we are growing. Top notch warehouse worker / driver with a positive attitude with willingness to learn and ability to do heavy lifting is required for immediate start Monday-Friday. The team is hard working, the work environment is fast-paced with good people, and the benefits are excellent. If you have class 5 DL, are dedicated, have leadership ability and are looking for good solid employment send your resume & abstract: Fax: 604-513-1194 Email: jobs@westcoastmoulding.com

Competitive Salary, Commission & Car Allowance w/ Extended Health, Pension & Other Benefits. Please send resume to salesad2012@gmail.com

TRAVEL with bcclassified.com

604 575 5555

142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS 142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS

Customer Service Representative

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.

Tim Hortons

SALARY TO BE NEGOTIATED

22525 Fraser Hwy Langley, BC

Please contact Diane Moses dmoses@overlandwest.ca

FT & PT hours available. Hiring for Early AM (5 or 6 am start)

142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS

156

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

COOK required Full-Time for breakfast, lunch & dinner. Min. 3 yrs experience. Kalmar Restaurant Surrey. Please apply with resume btwn. 1:00p.m. & 2:30p.m. 8076 King George Blvd.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

To Apply Please Email: appliancesnewcountry@ gmail.com

WAREHOUSE WORKER

info@keyins.com Landscaping Sales & Service Opportunities Up To $400 CASH Daily

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

STOCK PERSON

MOLLY MAID

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

HELP WANTED

GREENHOUSE LABOURER SP (Delta) Limited Partnership operation 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 10250 Hornby Dr. Delta, BC V4K3N3 Wage $10.49/hr plus AD&D benefits. Positions available immediately. English language not required. To apply submit resume to: sunjobs2012@gmail.com or by fax to 604-607-7656

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

Only those of interest will be contacted.

115

130

In Home Caregiver (Nanny)

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

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

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130

HELP WANTED

142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS

Part-Time Receptionist

Southridge School is a university preparatory day school located in south Surrey with 670 students from kindergarten to grade 12. If you appreciate being around children who strive to make a difference in the world we are currently seeking applicants for a part-time receptionist commencing mid-August, 2015. For further information on this opportunity please visit our website at www.southridge.bc.ca. We thank all applicants for their interest, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

Is looking for bondable, hardworking, detail oriented house cleaners. Drivers Lic an asset. Good English Required.

EDUCATION

Call Mon - Fri 9am - 3pm

Call 604-599-9962 surdelwr@mollymaid.ca .Flagpersons & Lane Closure Techs required. Must have reliable vehicle. Must be certified & experienced. Union wages & benefits. Fax resume 604-513-3661 email: darlene.hibbs@shawbiz.ca

Newspaper Promoters Required. Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal location. Early morning shifts. Monday - Saturday. Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca

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

FORKLIFT DRIVER & YARD CLEANER required in Surrey F/T & P/T Fax resume to: 604-930-5066 or email to:

Please call Marilou at 604.542.7411 or email: marilou@blackpress.ca RENTALS: These listings cover all types of rentals from apartments, condos, office space, houseboats and vacation homes. So if you’re in the market to rent, or looking for a roommate, start here. bcclassified.com

130

HELP WANTED

Advertising Sales Representative

horizonwork@yahoo.ca WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

NOW HIRING! Delivery Drivers Must have your own reliable CARGO VAN (minimum ¾ ton) and clean driver abstract.

Free Employment Services Servicces for job-seekers and employers emplooyers Visit our centre today orr check uus out online at aviaemployment.ca Newton Storefront 260-7525 King George Blvd. Surrey, BC V3W 5A8 T: 778.578.4272

Newton Satellite ϮϬϭͲϳϯϯϳ ϭϯϳƚŚ ^ƚƌĞĞƚ Surrey, BC V3W 1A4 T: 778.728.0175

NO CARS, SUVS, MINI-VANS OR PICKUP TRUCKS. • Tuesday Evenings & Thursday Evenings • Pick up newspapers from our warehouse • Deliver newspapers to our carriers’ homes in Langley City, Walnut Grove and Aldergrove

Call 604.514.6770 circulation@langleytimes.com

The Surrey Leader has an opening for an Advertising Sales Representative. By joining an award winning 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 to be a strong communicator, well organized, self motivated and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. The Ability to multitask and meet deadlines are a must. Competitive Base Salary, Commission, Cell and Car Allowance. A car and a valid drivers 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 30th, 2015. Shaulene Burkett admanager@surreyleader.com The Surrey Leader #200-5450 152nd Street, Surrey, BC V3S 5J9

avianewton@aviaemployment.ca

The

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Leader


34 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Friday June 19 2015 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 203

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 281

ACCOUNTING / TAX /BOOKKEEPING

GARDENING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 287

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 320

MOVING & STORAGE

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

MOBILE BOOKKEEPING & Payroll services. GST, PST, ROE filing. Reasonable rates. (778)230-9057

Commercial Trailer/ Transport Mechanics

242

CONCRETE & PLACING

Applicants should have an inspectors ticket, a minimum of 2 years of related experience, a positive attitude and able to work in a team environment. Experience in a freight fleet environment would be preferred as this is a busy facility providing service to a large fleet of Company Owned Trucks and Trailers. Seize this opportunity to work for one of Western Canada’s largest regional freight carriers. For more information, call Derek, at 604-587-9818 or 604-968-7149 Interested candidates should attach an updated resume and cover letter to: careers@vankam.com or fax: 604-587-9889

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.

PERSONAL SERVICES 171

ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

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

Kristy 604.488.9161

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

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

Call 778-881-0961

UNIQUE CONCRETE

Excavators, Backhoes, Bobcats & Dump Trucks for hire

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

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

TOPSOIL & GRAVEL

FREE ESTIMATES

DRYWALL

604-531-5935

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

260

ELECTRICAL

FINISH CARPENTER Finish Carpentry - Mouldings, sundecks, stairs, siding, painting, drywall. Refs. Rainer cel 604-613-1018

263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE

288

FENCING

6’ CEDAR FENCING. Free ests. Red Rose Landscaping. Harbiee 604-722-2531 6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE. $13/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work. Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.

281

GARDENING SHINE LANDSCAPING

$500 loans and more No credit checks

- Hedge Trimming -Pruning - Clean-up - Lawn Cutting - Power Raking - Aeration - Spring Clean-up

1-877-776-1660

Tom 778-895-9030 or 604-582-1875

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

MUSHROOM MANURE Delivery or pick up Surrey location Covered Storage.

.aaa lawn 604-542-1349

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

CURB APPEAL Landscaping, Mowing, Pruning & Clean-up. Small Delivery of Soil, Mulch, Rock. Sell your home faster. Dale 604 - 785 - 5982

ALL BEST LANDSCAPING All Lawn Care ~ Free Est.

Bill, 604-306-5540 or 604-589-5909

RAJ GARDENING *Yard Clean-up *Power Raking *Lawn Cut *Hedge Trimming *Pruning *Fertilizing. Res/Comm. 604-724-8272 or 604-671-2215

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

284 HEAT, AIR, REFRIGERATION Natural Airflow Heating Ltd.

~ Furnaces 60 M ~ $3450 + tax Less FORTIS rebate, $800 AC’s- Starting at $3500 & Hot Water Tanks

604-461-0999

7 Days / Week

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

(604)465-1311

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

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 EXTRA INCOME Classified ads are a direct line to extra income. Somewhere there is a buyer for the things you no longer want or need. Call bcclassified.com 604-575-5555

778-227-2431

287

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing, reroofing. Dhillon 604-782-1936. EXP. CARPENTER / HANDYMAN All types of work! No job too small! Over 20 yrs exp! Ed 778-888-8603

BL CONTRACTING RENOVATIONS SPECIALIST

SUNDECKS:

WALT’S YARD WORKS & POWER WASHING

*Cedar *Treated *Vinyl *Trex

Lawn Mowing Yard Clean up

*Aluminum *Glass *Wood

RAILINGS:

(604)240-1920 Doing a Renovation or Drywall Repair?

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

Call 604-531-5935

PETER ROOFING Ltd. Roofing Specialists NORTH STARS PAINTING www.northstars-painting.com AMAZING WORK, AMAZING VALUE! 778.245.9069

HOME REPAIRS

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 Reno’s: Bsmt Stes, Kitch/Bath Hardwood/Lam Floors, Tiles, Mouldings - 778-549-9119

ETERNAL TOGETHERNESS 5 BURIAL PLOTS SIDExSIDE , 2 openings/closings, 2- 24 x 12” bronze memorials Valley View Memorial “ Garden of Christus” TOTAL VALUE $41,425. INDIVIDUAL OR PACKAGE OFFERS CONSIDERED

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

BBB, WCB & LIABILITY Cell 604-837-6699

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

KITCHEN CABINETS

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

~ FRESH LOCAL ~

BLUEBERRIES 14176 Colebrook Rd.

356

RUBBISH REMOVAL

Vincent 543-7776

EXTRA CHEAP

PAINTING 1/2 PRICE

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

Interior Special. Top Quality. Free Estimates! 604-498-3050

RICK’S RUBBISH REMOVAL - Residential - Commercial - Construction - Yard Waste

604-599-3516, 778-878-4650 Local Raspberries $9.99/flat/U-Pick. Local Blueberries $9.99/flat Surrey Farms 5180-152 St. 604-574-1390

551

HUGE SALE !!! Furniture, couches, office desk, home decor, kids items, tent canopy, household & lots more

TONY’’S PAINTING

604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley Running this ad for 10yrs

604-773-1349

PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299

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 317

MISC SERVICES

✶Dump Site Now Open✶ SBroken Concrete RocksS $25.00 Per Metric Ton SMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS $25.00 Per Metric Ton GrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds

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

338

Best Rates in Town. Local and Long Distance

PLUMBING

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

#1 IN RATES & SERVICE. Lic’d/Ins. Local Plumber. Drains, gas, renos etc. Bonded. Chad 1-877-861-2423

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

~ Certified Plumber ~ Reno’s and Repairs ~ 604-597-3758 ~

A Gas Fitter ✭ Plumber RENOS & REPAIRS Excellent price on Hot Water Tanks Furnace, Boilers, Plumbing Jobs & Drain Cleaning

MIRACLE MOVING

341

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

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

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

MOVING SALE: Like New: 9-Piece Diningroom Set and other Furniture. Call Tony at 604-538-1788

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

372

SUNDECKS

563

MISC. WANTED

✭ 604-312-7674 ✭

FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATING H/W Tanks, Reno’s, Boilers, Furn’s. Drain Cleaning. Ins. (604)596-2841

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING

MISC. FOR SALE

MOVING - MUST SELL ENTIRE CONTENTS OF APARTMENT. Furniture, small appliances, etc. All like new - only 6 months old. Call 604-230-3166.

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

Call 778-928-5995

604 - 720 - 2009

560

ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

Fully Licensed/Insured/Bonded

~We accept Visa & Mastercard~

GARAGE SALE Sat June 20, 9am 3pm. 13756 63B Ave. Surrey. Furniture, wheelchair, walker & misc.

A LICENSED/HONEST PLUMBER & GAS FITTER / Furnace man with 35 yrs exp, ref’s, insured, reas rates Free est. 24hrs. Don 604-220-4956

604-465-1311

TLL MOVING & Storage

Sat. June 20th 9am - 1pm 16080-82nd Ave. No Early Birds

2 coats any colour

$59.00 Per Ton

MOVING & STORAGE

Fleetwood Ponderosa Estates Annual Garage Sale

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

Meadows Landscape Supply

320

** Guildford Garbage Removal ** Junk Removal & Yard Waste Res / Comm........... 778-918-4322

www.paintspecial.com

Call Brian for a free estimate

Rocky Mountain Landscaping

Saturday, June 20, 9am - 3pm 9361 164 A Street

Call Rick 604-329-2783

Complete Landscape Service

GARAGE SALES

Fleetwood

IN BUSINESS OVER 20 YEARS ~ FREE ESTIMATES ~

*30 Yrs Exp. *Fully Insured

FRUIT & VEGETABLES

Open Daily Rai’s Colebrook Farming

LANDSCAPING

Specializing in landscape renos Bobcat - Excavator - Decks Retaining Walls - Paving Stones New Lawns-Irrigation-Drainage Hedging and more

BURIAL PLOTS

604-542-7747 OR donnap@bkslaw.com

Ticketed Painter. N/S. 25 years exp. A+ Rating

Member of Better Business Bureau

300

Harjit Pattar 604-589-4603 604-857-3325

520

AJM PAINTING

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

296

• New Roof Re-Roofing • Repairs • Cedar Shakes • Shingles Duroids • Torch-on

AAA PRECISION PAINTING. Quality work. 778-881-6096.

Lawn Cut, Ride-on mower, Pwr Rake, Aerating, Weeding. Hedge Trim, Pruning, Reseed, Edging, Moss Killer, Bark Mulch, Pressure Wash., Gutter Clean. Roof Clean. Res/Comm. Reas. Rates, Fully insured. WCB.

604-644-1878 Prompt Delivery Available

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE Accountable Roofing - Re-Roof Specialists. Cedar Conversion, Asphalt, Torch-on (604)760-7937

HANDYMAN Home Repair Services - 45 Yrs Exp Call or Text Henry 604-868-5441

*Grass Cutting *Hedge Trimming *Yard Clean *Pruning *Pressure Wash

HEDGE TRIM, Tree Pruning, Garden Cleanup, Lawn care, Bark Mulch & Aeration. 778-383-7220

CHIHUAHUAS tiny tea cups pups, ready to go now. $800. call (604)794-7347

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

VECTOR RENO’S

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

All Green Lawn Care

Apply at moneyprovider.com

BEAUTIFUL BATHROOM Plumbing + Drywall + Elect. + Tubs & Showers & Sinks + Toilets & Tile + Fan + Countertop + Painting = = BEAUTIFUL BATHROOM!! Sen disc. Work Guar.17 yrs exp. Call Nick 604-230-5783, 604-581-2859 Specializing in all interior & exterior home renovations & additions Call 604-690-3327

269

PETS

MANX (Bobtail) Kittens, born March 25, 2 males , charcoal grey with stripes, $75, Mission, 604-820-4827

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

New Construction & Renovations Patios ✦ Sundecks ✦ Fencing Bathrooms Concrete Sidewalks Basement Suites Remodels FREE ESTIMATES GORD REID 778-241-4668

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

ASPHALT GRINDINGS WHOLESALE GRAVEL

778-878-2617 (BBB) or 604-781-2094

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

477

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

.super soil

DESIGN

257

Specializing in Re-Roofing New Roofing & Repairs. All kinds of roofing. Free Est.

604-537-4140 HANDYMAN CONNECTION HANDYMAN CONNECTION Handyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations Repairs - 604.878.5232

PETS

A1 TOP CANADIAN ROOFING LTD.

LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

AKAL CONCRETE.

Call 778-688-3724

FINANCIAL SERVICES

$25 Off with this Ad

Jerry, 604-500-2163

604 - 259 - 2482 www.arbutusroofing.com

$45/Hr

shinelandscaping@hotmail.com

182

Tree Removal/Topping/Spiral Thinning/Hedge Trimming/Stump Grinding. Free Estimates. WCB/Fully Insured

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

All types of reno’s. •Driveways •Sidewalks •Floors •Stairs •Forming •Retaining walls. •Breaking & Removal Concrete

Call 604-897-5850

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

We specialize in: F Shingle Roofing F Flat Roofing F Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs

www.affordablemoversbc.com

Danny 604 - 307-7722

7 DAY DELIVERY

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

TREE BROTHERS SPECIALIST

AFFORDABLE MOVING

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

TREE SERVICES

ARBUTUS ROOFING & DRAINS Ltd

.Brothers Moving 604-720-0931

STAMPED CONCRETE

175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

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

374

Residential / Strata

(Surrey Terminal) Van-Kam Freightways Ltd. 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.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

Have Unwanted Firearms?

PRESSURE WASHING

POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

Call Ian 604-724-6373 POWER WASHING since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627

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

374

TREE SERVICES

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

Have unwanted or inherited firearms in your possession? Don’t know how to dispose of them safely and legally? Contact Wanstalls and we will come and pick them up and pay you fair value for them. Wanstalls has been proudly serving the Lower Mainland firearms community since 1973. We are a government licensed firearms business with fully certified verifiers, armorers and appraisers.

Call today to set up an appointment 604-467-9232

Wanstalls Tactical & Sporting Arms


Friday June 19 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 35 REAL ESTATE 609

APARTMENT/CONDOS

RENTALS 706

APARTMENT/CONDO

WHITE ROCK / S. SURREY

SUNCREEK ESTATES

2 Bdrm updated condo, 55+ building, pets welcome, quite & bright, balcony overlooks park. 1740 Southmere. $174,800. Must see. Agents welcome.

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

Call: (604)377-5414

625

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Minutes from university, downtown and fairgrounds.

739

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

&ODVVL¿HGV 604-575-5555 750

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

172nd/ 0 Ave 1/2 acre development property with house. For more info call 604-767-7099 no agents pls

Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets. .Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.

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

RENTALS

MOTELS, HOTELS

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

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

Call: (604)575-9199

SUITES, LOWER

BIRDLAND 14077 108 Ave. 2 Bdrm avail now/July. 1250 sq.ft., 5 appls, hardwood floors, fenced backyard, no pets, 40% hydro, $840/mo. Call: 604-583-6844 or 604-809-7796 CEDAR HILLS, 88/128. 2 Bdrm ste. $700 inc utils. NP/NS. Avail now. (604) 507-6614 or 307-7508.

RENTALS 750

SUITES, LOWER

RENTALS 752

TOWNHOUSES

CLOVERDALE 2 bdr in quiet CDS. Incl gas f/p, utils,lndry. NS/NP. Avail Aug 1st. $995/mo. 778-808-5100

SURREY 139/68 Ave. 2 Bedroom townhouse, $915/mo, in quiet family complex,no pets.Call 604-599-0931

ENVER CREEK, 1 bdrm suite, $500/mo incl hydro. Avail now. N/S, N/P. 604-595-3349, 778-855-3093

SURREY 64/King George 3 Bdrm T/H, $1140/mo, unfinished bsmt, washer/dryer hook ups, quiet family complex,no pets.Call 604-596-1099

PANORAMA 133/58. Large 1 bdrm grnd lvl ste. Avail immed. N/S, N/P. $600/mo incl utils. 604-649-0406.

SURREY SUTTON PLACE

SURREY. 3 Bdrm bsmt suite, very spacious. Avail July 1st. N/S, N/P. $1050 incl utils/ldry (604)728-5563

751

SUITES, UPPER

N.DELTA 3 bdrm, good cond. 1.5 baths, NS/NP $1250 + sh utils. Cls to schls, shops, bus. Also a 2 bdrm suite available. Call (604)999-3493

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

TRANSPORTATION 845

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

The Scrapper

13834 102 Avenue. Family housing near amenities, transit, and schools. Crime-free multi-housing. Onsite laundry. 3 Bedroom townhome $1005/mo. Avail June 1/15. Subsidies Avail.

Call 604-451-6676

CHECK CLASSIFIEDS bcclassified.com 604-575-5555

TRANSPORTATION 821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS 2001 Toyota Corolla CE 4 dr sedan auto a/c 166K regularly maintained by senior. Good brakes & tires, new battery, awesome gas mileage $3150. 604-507-9945

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS

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

HOMES FOR RENT

RENTALS

Surrey

$750,000

APARTMENT/CONDO

736

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

1/4 Acre (70x161) View Lot Super, Super Cloverdale Location! 18085 58 Ave.

706

RENTALS

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

736

In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:

HOMES FOR RENT

604-584-5233 www.cycloneholdings.ca CLOVERDALE 1bdrm $810m, 2 bdrm apt $970m inc heat, hot water N/P. 604-576-1465, 604-612-1960

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

.Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.

N. DELTA 7013 West Brewster Dr. 3 Bdrm 2 storey house, 2 full baths, close to schools. Avail July 1st, $1800/mo. N/P, N/S (604)889-1738

SURREY 100 /K.G. Blvd. 1 Bdrm, 19th flr, beaut view, balc, inste lndry & all appls. N/S, N/P. $1100/mo. 604-575-2975 or 604-202-5678.

SURREY 4220 168th Street. House on farmland: 3 Bdrm suite with 1.5 baths up and 2 bdrm suite with full bath down. Call 604-825-8879. Homelife Pen. Property 604-536-0220

Surrey 185/60th 3 bdrm clean rancher 4 appls, dble garage, avail now. N/S pet neg. 604-785-0548

SURREY; Strawberry Hills. 4 Bdrm spacious upper lvl, 2 baths & lndry. $1500/mo + 1/2 utils. Avail July 1st. N/S, N/P. Call: 778-385-9848

On January 29, 2014, at 88th Avenue and King George Boulevard, Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: a 1997 green Toyota Corolla, BCLP: 577TTR, VIN: 2T1BA03E4VC208005, on or about 11:13 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been used in the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (possession for purpose of trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2015-2840, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil

Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www. pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.

In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT: On March 11, 2015, at the 19000 block of 94th Avenue, Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the RCMP FSOC seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $33,140 CAD, on or about 14:36 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been obtained by the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (possession for purpose of trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2015-2854, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of

dispute is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www. pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.

Find them here! In the classifieds. Class 203-387 Business Services


36 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 19 2015


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