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▶ WITH SCORCHING TEMPERATURES ON THE HORIZON, CITY AND HEALTH OFFICIALS WARN PEOPLE TO KEEP THEMSELVES AND THEIR PETS COOL KEVIN DIAKIW
If you have a dog, leave it at home in a cool spot during the coming heat wave, Surrey’s animal control officials are advising. Weather Canada and Fraser Health have not issued warnings yet, but it’s believed one might be sent out today (Friday), as scorching weather is expected by the weekend – pushing temperatures well above 30 degrees Celsius in Surrey and the Fraser Valley. Even the best-intentioned owners can put their pets in danger when the mercury rises, said Kim Marosevich, the City of Surrey’s bylaw business operations manager. “Just don’t travel with your pets,” Marosevich said, adding even if the air seems cooler, the ground can be a huge problem. “(Dogs) can burn the pads of their feet; they can dehydrate.” Even if there’s plenty of water, that, too, can present potential problems. “If dogs ingest too much water, they can actually deplete the sodium in their blood, and suffer from something called water toxicity.” Mostly seen in dogs that like to play in lakes and other bodies of water, or in those that over-hydrate when hot, water toxicity can cause seizures, coma and death. And Marosevich said people still aren’t getting the message about the perils of leaving dogs in vehicles. Surrey’s bylaw department has been answering a number of “hot dog in car” calls, including one about an out-of-towner who brought her dog to the Bell Performing Arts Centre last week. She explained to the officer that she was running out to the parking lot every few minutes to make sure her pet’s water bowl was full. The officer told her that wasn’t good enough and that she would have to remain with the animal, so the woman missed the show. Temperatures can rise to 52 C within 20 minutes in an enclosed vehicle when the outside temperature is 34 C. Leaving the car windows slightly open or “cracked” will not keep the inside of the vehicle at a safe temperature. As for the masters of the house, extreme temperatures can cause heat-related illnesses as well, said Fraser Health. Symptoms to watch for include thirst, dizziness, confusion, weakness, fainting and collapsing. Heat-related illnesses can also lead to death, the health authority added. People considered most at risk are seniors and infants, and those with heart, lung and kidney conditions. People living alone and unable to leave the house are considered more at risk, and Fraser Health reminds everyone to check on elderly friends and family members regularly. Some tips to stay cool include staying hydrated by drinking water before thirst sets in, and spending several hours a day in air-conditioned facilities ▶ “Just don’t such as shopping centres, libraries, or community centres. Fraser Health sugtravel with your gests using public pools, water parks and pets. Dogs can beaches, or taking a cool shower. Also, spend the hottest hours (between burn the pads of 11 a.m. and 2 pm.) out of the sun and in their feet; they can a cool location. The hot weather is expected to contindehydrate.” ue into next week. KIM MAROSEVICH Check Environment Canada for further updates: http://bit.ly/1QQObJx
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▶ VISION GOES ALONG WITH CITY PROPOSAL TO RELOCATE TWO SHEETS OF ICE FROM THE NORTH SURREY RECREATION CENTRE KEVIN DIAKIW
Surrey is looking for a firm to build a 5,000plus spectator arena in North Surrey. It comes as the city plans to move two ice rinks from the North Surrey Recreation Centre to Bridgeview near 130 Street and 110 Avenue. In mid-June, Surrey sent out expressions of interest for a company to build a spectator arena at the Bridgeview site as well. It has not yet been determined what type of sport would be played there, as the private sector hasn’t yet decided which would be the most viable.
The city says both sheets of ice and the spectator arena can fit on the 5.7-hectare (14-acre) parcel of property. Laurie Cavan, Surrey’s general manager of parks, recreation and culture, says the two sheets of ice at the existing North Surrey Recreation Centre will remain operational until the new sheets can be used. She also noted there are no plans to move the existing pool or gymnasium from the North Surrey Recreation Centre at 135 Street and 102 Avenue. Surrey has budgeted $45 million for 2015-16 to construct the two sheets of ice at the new location. It’s unknown what the expected cost sof the spectator arena will be. That will be known when the expressions of interest are submitted.
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Fr Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
Surrey pair among nation's Top 25 immigrants
3
One of Dan Thomas’s favourite things to do is to go on cruises. In the past four years, Thomas has been on a dozen cruises, visiting places such as Mexico, California, the Panama Canal, Alaska and Hawaii.
▼ AMRIK SINGH AULAKH AND MARIA NIEVES SANTOS-GREAVES HONOURED AT ANNUAL EVENT
SUBMITTED
SHIELA REYNOLDS
Two Surrey residents are among 25 people named among the year’s Top 25 Canadian Immigrants for their outstanding contributions. Amrik Singh Aulakh is a is a Surrey RCMP Auxiliary Constable and tireless community contributor. He has volunteered more than 2,500 hours to the Surrey Crime Prevention Society, doing patrols, traffic safety and speed watch programs and working with the RCMP at CounterAttack roadside checks. He has also volunteered with the Canadian Red Cross, Canadian Blood Services and Canada Revenue Agency. “No one wants to live in a trouAulakh bled neighbourhood. I want my city to be a safe and better place to work and live in,” he says. “I am helping seniors, newcomers who have issues and who need to talk to law enforcement. I feel like a great asset to the RCMP and my community. By volunteering I am giving something back to my community.” Born in India, Aulakh has Santospreviously won the Governor Greaves General’s Caring Canadian Award, the Queen’s Golden and Diamond Jubilee Awards and a Surrey Leader 2013 Community Leader Award for his commitment to volunteerism. “I frequently feel like what I’m doing helps people. Whether it’s navigating a difficult system, or providing blood, or filing taxes, it’s helping my community as a whole,” Aulakh says. “When I think about how things were back home, I see the need for people to step up and help people out.” continued on page 7
Newton resident rolls over life’s obstacles ▼ PARALYZED IN AN ACCIDENT AT AGE 45, DAN THOMAS IS FUNDRAISING FOR SPINAL CORD INJURY B.C. NICK GREENIZAN
It wasn’t that long ago that Dan Thomas thought he had it all. After years of hard work – he bought his first dump truck at 18, and had worked in the truck and excavating industry for nearly 30 years – the Newton resident, then 45, had a wife, a business, and a house he’d paid off. Then, in 2002 while driving home along 32 Avenue late one winter night, Thomas hit a patch of black ice and rolled his truck into a tree. His injuries – which he says included crushed lungs and two vertebrae in his back “basically disintegrating” – left him paralyzed from the waist down. And he lost more than just his mobility. Without being able to work, he was forced to close his business, and eventually, he split up with his wife. Even a few longtime friends, he says, eventually deserted him. But still, Thomas, now 58, has managed to look on the bright
side – though he admits such an outlook has sometimes been difficult. “I worked hard my whole life, and when I was younger I always said I wanted to retire by the time I was 45, so I guess I did,” he laughed. “It just wasn’t quite the way I’d planned it. But that’s life, man.” There were, and still are, very tough days – he deals with chronic pain he deems “manageable” but also has unexpected bouts of intense nerve pain in his leg that was once so intense it caused him to break two teeth because he was clenching them so hard. “Unbelievable torture,” he called it. But while he was rehabbing his injuries, Thomas also discovered an organization, Spinal Cord Injury BC (SCI BC), which he credits with helping him get his life back ▶ “It just wasn’t in order. The organization provides quite the way I’d support for those with spiplanned it. But nal-cord injuries, bringing people together for social that’s life, man.” outings and other events. DAN THOMAS
continued on page 4
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▶ FUNDRAISER TAKES PLACE ON SUNDAY from page 3
On Sunday, Thomas will take part in the Scotiabank Charity Challenge, a 5K event which is part of the Vancouver Half Marathon and is raising money on behalf of SCI BC. To date, he’s raised just over $1,000. He will be part of a team of nearly 60 people who will be participating in support of the same organization. “They’re a great organization, and the thing I like about them is that the money they raise goes directly to people with spinal-cord injuries,” Thomas explained. “Sometimes, you donate to different research groups, and you never really know where the money goes, but this directly helps people.” Thomas credits the group for helping him understand that being disabled doesn’t mean he can’t stay active, whether it means playing basketball or tennis, sledge hockey, taking in the Abbotsford Air Show or going on a cruise. “I have pain issues, but over the years I’ve found the only thing that’s really helped has been to have a distraction – to get out and do things,” he said. One of his favourite things to do is to go on cruises. In the past four years, Thomas has been on a dozen cruises, visiting places such as Mexico, California, the Panama Canal, Alaska and Hawaii. “Dealing with this, it can be tough. You don’t prepare for it, you don’t think you’ll ever be paralyzed, but then it happens and you have a lot of years left where life isn’t what you thought it would be,” he said. “But you have to get out there. You can’t sit around and dwell on your situation.” To donate to Thomas’s Charity Challenge fundraiser, visit http://bit.ly/1FBiwj7
Can You Help? Your donations support exceptional care at Surrey Memorial Hospital and the Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre
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Fr iday June 26 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
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ADVERTISING FEATURE
Compassion, Awareness, OutReach and Empowerment.
S
even local Surrey students created a new youth group called Youth for CARE (YCARE) in March 2015 to raise awareness and funds for the Surrey Hospital & Outpatient Centre Foundation. These students have already raised more than $1,500 and added 24 new members. At their inaugural event last month, these Surrey students held their first fundraiser involving bake sales in support of Mental Health Week, May 4-10, and raised triple their expected amount: $322.
campaigns for the hospital. YCARE members will be able to join in and gain more knowledge of the Surrey Memorial Hospital (SMH) by joining hospital orientation tours and being invited to attend talks by some of the doctors.
• Total Pediatric ER visits April 2014-March 2015: 26,682 • Total Mental Health visits: 8,511 • There are over 72,000 students in k-12 in the Surrey School district • SMH has the only pediatric emergency department outside of Vancouver
The YCARE members involved come from many different Surrey schools, such as Enver Creek Secondary, Holy Cross Regional High School and Fraser Heights Secondary. All students across the school district are welcome to join. YCARE provides three main activities: fundraising, youth awareness programs and community outreach. These activities encourage students to give back to their community. These Youth for CARE awareness campaigns will let students participate in local school and community events that support the Surrey Hospital & Outpatient Centre Foundation’s
• Over 47,000 young people in Fraser Health currently experience mild to severe mental health concerns
“I am a huge believer in giving back to the community, especially the hospital, which has provided us with so many services over the years. Being part of the original Youth for SMH team three years ago, I saw great potential to create a formal organizational structure for the youth of Surrey that would have significant impact in the community.” Hebah Hussaina, Youth For Care Founder and President
For more information or to attend an upcoming information session, visit youthforcare.com, like them on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ youthforcare, and follow them on Twitter @ youthforcare.
“We are thrilled to partner with Youth for CARE. Young people should have a big say in the future of healthcare. I am glad to see so many youths getting actively involved in supporting a future they believe in.” Jane Adams – President, Surrey Hospital and Outpatient Centre Surrey Memorial Hospital Foundation
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6
VIEWPOINT
The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 26 2015
THIS WEEK’S QUESTION: Do you enjoy really hot weather? To answer, go to the home page of our website at surreyleader.com
Last week we asked: Do you think recovering health care costs from the perpetrators of crime is a good idea? Here’s how you responded:
Yes 46% No 54%
Three-tiered realty Speakers at a housing forum in Surrey last week, sponsored by the Urban Development Institute, brought a measure of common sense to the often-overheated rhetoric about housing prices in Metro Vancouver. They brought detailed data to show the real estate markets in Vancouver, Richmond and the North Shore are very different from those in Surrey, Delta and Langley. In addition, they pointed out that in Surrey, there are actually three different markets. Neighbourhoods are important in real estate sales, and in the case of South Surrey and White Rock, the speakers suggested that, real estate-wise, the peninsula has more in common with the Vancouver and Richmond markets than it does with the rest of Surrey. “South Surrey really behaves to me more like the west side of Vancouver than it does the Fraser Valley,” said Scott Brown, president of Fifth Avenue Real Estate Marketing. Meanwhile, throughout the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board area, which includes Surrey, North Delta, Langley, Abbotsford and Mission, the price of townhouses and condominium apartments has actually fallen since 2008. Only the price of detached homes is rising. That’s perhaps the most significant point. In Surrey and North Delta, there is one market
for detached homes, no matter what size the lot, and another for multi-family units. The gap between the two has risen from $200,000 in 2009 to between $300,000 and $400,000 today. It continues to widen. When considering the differences between the South Surrey marketplace and other areas of Surrey, there are three different markets for buyers and sellers. Some areas of North Surrey don’t command the same prices as in other parts of the city. While the size and age of the home are important, so is the street, the proximity to schools, transit and other public services, and the general reputation of the neighbourhood. For example, with the negative publicity about Newton, it is likely prices there have not risen to the same degree as they have in some other communities. As far as multi-family units go, Surrey has seen a huge number of townhouses and apartments built in the past decade. This type of unit appeals to first-time buyers and is increasingly becoming popular with families. The added density serves another purpose, from the city’s perspective. Surrey needs to bulk up on density in order to get improved transit service, a significant deficit. The growing price gap between
multi-family and detached housing units should not be that surprising. Ever since the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) was created in 1972, there have been significant limits on land available for urban development in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. Up until recent years, there has been enough supply available, with the biggest supply of those available lands in Surrey. That has changed. Much of Surrey has now been developed and the city is either preparing or contemplating development plans for much of the rest of the area outside the ALR. There are some other areas, such as Langley Township, Maple Ridge and Mission, where there is still a significant amount of developable land. However in many cases, services are non-existent. Sprawl into the middle of the Fraser Valley will have a negative effect on transportation and sustainability. As long as people keep moving to this area and the local economy is able to supply enough jobs for them, a two- or three-tier market is likely to continue. Owning a detached home in the future will be available mostly for the well-to-do.
QUITE FRANKLY ▼ Frank Bucholtz
Frank Bucholtz is the editor of The Langley Times. He writes weekly for The Leader.
INBOX
Rethink Massey Bridge ▼ DESIGN SHOULDN’T BE BASED ON CONVENIENCE FOR THE LNG INDUSTRY There is a proposal to make a mountain out of a mole hill. Again. Just like the Alex Fraser Bridge, Port Metro Vancouver is recommending an air draft around 60 to 65 metres for the new Massey Bridge to allow huge LNG tankers to visit a
proposed LNG terminal on the Fraser River. How convenient for the LNG industry – but extremely inconvenient and costly, not just for the rest of us, but to the environment as well. It isn’t rocket science to realize carbon emissions/pollution from traffic increase dramatically when having to climb a steeper grade. Will the public have to suffer another steep bridge like the Alex Fraser nightmare riddled with stalls and ac-
cidents (among the Lower Mainland’s top 10 worst crash sites in 2013)? The Alex Fraser has an air draft of 57 metres. Why so high when, so far this year, the tallest ship to pass under it was only 35 metres? If we have to build the Massey bridge, then please, let’s make it a mole hill and let it inconvenience industry. Jason Lewko Delta
▼ WHY WAS THE NEW CULTURE AND RECREATION TAX KEPT UNDER WRAPS DURING THE ELECTION? Since it is time to pay our property taxes, it is a good opportunity for Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner to explain why she never once mentioned during her pre-election promises that she was imposing a new annual $100 tax for culture and recreation. The mayor kept saying several times during her speeches that property taxes would be raised by 2.9 per cent, but kept the $100 tax to herself until after the election. Now is the for Hepner to tell us why she deceived us.
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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 Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
from page 1
Maria Nieves Santos-Greaves, who came to Canada from the Philippines, is president of Surrey Hearing Care Inc., but provides a healthy dose of humanity along with her entrepreneurship, often providing home visits or rides to clients. Santos-Greaves also regularly provides free hearing testing via the company’s mobile clinic van. “With science we blend humanity, imparting warmth as we genuinely care for others and their hearing needs,” she says, noting when you’re doing what you love, owning a business doesn’t feel like work. “But I am also a single mom to a 14-year-old boy and balancing lifestyle and business is not easy. That is why I believe it is critical we as immigrants help and support each other so that we will not be afraid to take risks and succeed in doing what we were trained for, attaining our dreams for ourselves and our children.” The pair are recipients of the seventh-annual RBC Top 25 Canadian Immigrant Awards, presented by Canadian Immigrant magazine. The 25 winners were chosen from more than 650 nominees and were honoured at a celebration in Vancouver on Thursday (June 25). “There is no limit to what an immigrant can achieve in Canada, and these 25 winners are a testament to that,” says Margaret Jetelina, editor of Canadian Immigrant magazine. The winners received a commemorative plaque and a $500 donation will be made towards a registered Canadian charity of their choice.
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Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 8 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr
Hearing set for former Sikh temple president ▶ BALDEV SINGH KALSI CHARGED WITH SECOND-DEGREE MURDER IN DEATH OF HIS WIFE
after police found his wife in severe medical distress at a home in the 19400-block of 32 Avenue. She was airlifted to hospital and placed on life support. Police at the time described the incident as “domestic-related and not a random
BLACK PRESS
A preliminary inquiry has been set in the second-degree murder case of a former high-ranking member of Surrey’s Sikh community. The proceedings against Baldev Singh Kalsi – to determine if there is enough evidence to warrant a criminal trial – are scheduled to take place over three days starting June 13, 2016 in Surrey Provincial Court. Kalsi – former president of the Gurdwara Sahib Brookside temple – was arrested in South Surrey last July 14,
Baldev Kalsi
attack.” Initially charged with aggravated assault, then attempted murder, the charge against Kalsi was upgraded to second-degree murder less than a week later, after Narinder Kaur Kalsi was taken off of life support and pronounced dead.
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Fr Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
Surrey man found guilty in fatal 2010 hit-and-run
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▶ SHAMUS TRAVIS WILLIAM MACKAY WAS STRUCK AND KILLED ON FRASER HIGHWAY
Highway, stopping shortly after the collision to switch seats. Basra, court documents reveal, had a suspended licence at the time, but was not speeding or impaired. The couple continued driving before stopping again, first calling a relative and then an emergency windshield repair service. They SHEILA REYNOLDS arranged to meet a repairman in the morning and went to Basra’s home for the night. A man has been convicted in a hit-and-run Basra testified that in the morning, he that killed another man in Surrey more than awoke to news on his clock radio that a pedesfour years ago. trian had been killed near Fraser Highway and Jagjit Singh Basra was charged with failing 168 Street. He met the repairman to stop his vehicle or offer assisand at some point, called a lawyer, tance in a crash that resulted in the ▶ “I find that who contacted police to report the death of Shamus Travis William MacKay. Mr. Basra was collision on Basra’s behalf. Crown prosecutors alleged Basra According to a May 29 Supreme well-awar of was “wilfully blind” to the fact the Court judgment posted online this vehicle he drove was in an accident week, the possibility with MacKay. Basra and his girlfriend Parveen that the In his decision, Justice Frits VerBains had been on a date on Sept. hoeven said he didn’t buy Basra’s 4, 2010 and were driving home accident had testimony that he had no idea what through Surrey when they heard a involved a he had hit. loud thud and saw a large hole in “I find that Mr. Basra was wellthe windshield. collision with aware of the possibility that the Basra was driving and it was a person...” accident had involved a collision Bains’ car. They both testified at with a person, but chose not to trial that they did not see what hit JUSTICE FRITS investigate or inquire, in order to the car, but speculated someone VERHOEVEN avoid finding out what he did not had thrown a rock. want to find out,” Verhoeven said, In actuality, MacKay had been adding the circumstances required hit while walking and his body had Basra to “at least” determine what been thrown into a ditch. He was he had hit. spotted by a passenger in a passing vehicle, “He did not do so because he did not want to who pulled MacKay’s body out of the ditch learn the truth.” and called 911. He died of blunt force trauma Basra has yet to be sentenced. His next court to the head. date is Sept. 11. Basra and Bains kept driving down Fraser
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Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr
▶ POLICE BRIEFS
Cyclist killed in crash Johnston Heights Secondary School – Dry Grad 2015 Would like to thank all of our proud Sponsors for their generous donations and support. Thank you for contributing to providing a safe and fun event for our 2015 Graduates! ABC RestaurantFleetwood AKA Pets Bard on the Beach BC Lions Blasted Church Vineyards Boston Pizza Burnaby Lake Greenhouses Butler Did It Catering Canadian Tire-Whalley Capilano Suspension Bridge Castle Fun Park Champer’s Hair City of Surrey Costco Dairy Queen – Guildford Town Centre David Hunter Garden Centre Dr. Ali Kanani-Guildford Orthodontic Centre Dr. Daniel De Jesus Inc. Dr. Daphne J. Visarra Inc. Dream Orthodontics
Envision Financial Fleetwood Dairy Queen Ford Motor Company – Hallmark Ford Four Seasons Hotel Fresh Street Market Friendly Frog Coffee Gillander’s Wine Cellar Gold Room Great Clips HairFleetwood Guildford Town Centre Hollywood Nails Icon Nails Lana’s Hair Design Landmark Cinemas M & N Mattress ShopParksville McDonald’s McQuarrie Hunter LLP Ming and Sing– Fleetwood Mylyne & Associates No Frills-Surrey Old Dutch Pacific National Exhibition Price Smart FoodsFleetwood
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KEVIN DIAKIW
A cyclist is dead after being hit by a car in Fleetwood. On Monday at about 10 p.m., a cyclist was crossing 152 Street at 86 Avenue when he was hit by a southbound 2009 Honda Civic. The cyclist was
thrown from his bike and died at the scene. Visibility was a problem, police say, adding the cyclist, a male in his 20s, was not wearing bright clothing, nor was he using a marked crossing. The driver of the Honda, an 18-year-old resident of Surrey,
and his passenger were taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries, treated and released. Surrey RCMP is asking anyone who may have witnessed the collision to call the Surrey RCMP at 604599-0502 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800222-8477.
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Man found dead in North Surrey A 60-year-old man has been found deceased inside a North Surrey home. Early Tuesday morning, a body was discovered in a house near 141A Street and 110 Avenue. Police are still trying to determine the cause of the man’s death. The B.C. Coroner’s Service has also been called in to investigate. Police have not identified the deceased pending notification fo the next of kin. A neighbour told The Leader Tuesday police arrived at his home and said there had been an incident at the house. The officer was looking for anyone who might have witnessed anything, he said. Anyone with more information is asked to contact the Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers, if they wish to remain anonymous, at 1-800222-TIPS or www. solvecrime.ca
ARTS CLUB THEATRE COMPANY ON TOUR at the Surrey Arts Centre Vancouver’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Musical By Dean Regan October 14 to 24, 2015
In A Blue Moon Finding Home in Unexpected Places By Lucia Frangione
An Arts Club Theatre Company production. Produced in Association with Western Canada Theatre Company (Kamloops), and Thousand Island Playhouse (Gananoque, ON)
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Fr iday June 26 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
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Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2015 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.
Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr
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B.C.’s TransLink reps may come after vote ▶ MINISTER ‘RESPECTING’ PLEBISCITE PROCESS IN DELAYING APPOINTMENTS JEFF NAGEL
Transportation Minister Todd Stone still hasn’t appointed two directors to represent the province on the TransLink board.
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Preventable Accidents are Still a Commonplace
THE ROAD RULES www.roadrules.ca
Cedric Hughes
Barrister & Solicitor
A
list of the car crashes reported in the media in the last four weeks in and around the lower mainland brings to mind the famous epigram by Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr (1808 –1890) the French critic, journalist, and novelist: — “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose” usually translated as “the more things change, the more they stay the same.” Of the many possible interpretations, with respect to motor vehicle crashes this paradox seems apt for distinguishing between trends and the individual case. While a combination of factors has produced improvements over time in almost every aspect of road safety measurable, the crashes that continue to occur invariably consist of excruciatingly predictable sequences of events. Recorded below are six categorizable incidents, one in particular involving a serial impaired driver under license suspension killing his passenger and two cyclists. To so categorize is not to overlook the suffering of the relatives of those who died, nor the potentially life-altering experience of the injured, nor the misery of any of the persons at fault. It is, however, important to note that these incidents were not unusual and hence likely preventable. And the all-too-familiar particulars bear repeating as a reminder for staying safe: Tuesday May 26, 2015 – Pitt Meadows: Before 9 pm, an 18-year-old woman driving with a 17-year-old female passenger, lost control causing the vehicle to flip into a water-filled
ditch. The passenger released her seatbelt but the driver, unconscious, could not and later died in hospital. Sunday May 31, 2015 – Pemberton: At noon, on the Duffy Lake Road section of Highway 99, a car driven by a 43-year old Lillooet man with a suspended licence and history of impaired driving convictions crossed the centre line and hit head-on two cyclists riding down the winding, steep hill. Both cyclists and the car passenger died. The driver sustained serious injuries. Monday June 8, 2015 – Downtown Vancouver: A delivery truck hit a power pole at noon causing a two hour power outage affecting 800 customers in the surrounding Gastown area. Wednesday June 10, 2015 – East Vancouver: At the intersection of Victoria Drive and East 43rd Avenue, around 1 am, a 41-yearold motorcyclist and his 29-year-old female passenger sustained non-life-threatening injuries when they were hit by a white SUV. The SUV driver fled the crash site. Tuesday June 16, 2015 – Downtown Vancouver: Around 3 pm, a truck driver making a legal right turn onto Hornby from West Georgia hooked a baby-stroller with its right rear tires, pushing over and dragging it a short distance. The adult person pushing the stroller appeared either to have ignored or not seen the light change or the turning truck. The baby was in stable condition in hospital and the adult suffered minor injuries. Friday June 19, 2015 – Abbotsford: At Dahlstrom Place and George Ferguson Way, around 3 am, three pedestrians, all in their 40s sustained non-life-threatening injuries when they were struck by a white van that crossed the centre line. The driver fled the crash site.
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But a ministry spokesperson indicated it is still his intention to do so – after the referendum on a 0.5-percent sales tax increase for transit and transportation is finished. “The minister is respecting the plebiscite process and awaiting the results of the plebiscite before any decisions respecting the two provincial appointees are made,” Sonia Lowe said in an email. “It is up to the minister to decide on timing, and also who he would like to appoint.” Some Metro mayors have doubted the province would follow through on a pledge to appoint its own representatives to join the two mayors on the board – Mayors’ Council Chair Gregor Robertson of Vancouver and Vice-Chair Linda Hepner of Surrey. The skepticism is rooted in history. TransLink was formed with three designated seats for the province that first the
governing NDP and later the BC Liberals never filled, finding it more convenient to let municipal politicians take the blame for whatever went wrong at Metro Vancouver’s transportation authority instead if sharing responsibility. A reform of TransLink’s structure made the additional appointees possible and it was hoped mayors and government representatives sitting together at the same table, along with seven professional appointees, could find more common ground in managing and financing TransLink than in the past. Provincial directors had been expected on the board by early 2015. By sitting out the first months of the year, the province avoided at least one controversial board vote: the replacement of former CEO Ian Jarvis that allowed “no” vote campaigners to criticize having “two CEOs” on the payroll. Also delayed – past the May 29 voting
deadline in the referendum – has been a decision now expected at June 25 board meeting on a new executive compensation plan for TransLink that would either endorse the current pay packages or propose reforms. Sitting out that board meeting might also be more convenient for the province given past finger pointing on the issue. Stone has repeatedly insisted the new reforms give the mayors’ council control over TransLink executive pay, while mayors say they only have a rubber stamp with no real power. Instead of releasing the 2014 financial results in May, as TransLink normally does, those, too, have been delayed until the June 25 board meeting. All board meetings continue to take place behind closed doors despite past commitments to open them up. North Vancouver District Mayor Richard Walton, the previous
Mayors’ Council chair when the last governance changes were enacted, said mayors trusted the province to name its directors when they decided last year to take two seats on the board. “When we put our two members on we certainly expected that the minister would in short order put his two members on,” Walton said. He said the province may have some justification for waiting to choose directors – possibly different ones – depending on how the outcome of the referendum. It’s also likely to steer the board’s decision in picking the next permanent CEO. “If the referendum passes, you’re looking at an organization that’s funded for the future and in a position to make a lot of capital decisions with a lot of energy,” Walton said. “If the referendum doesn’t pass, you’re squeezing every nickel you can. That may not be as appealing a job for a new CEO.”
Fr Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
New clean-up agency on the way for oil spills ▶ INDUSTRY WILL HAVE TO PAY TO DEAL WITH HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES RELEASED ON LAND JEFF NAGEL
The province will require industry to pay for a new organization to quickly deploy trained and equipped responders to deal with a spill of oil or any other hazardous substance on land. New legislation will come next spring and the new Preparedness and Response Organization (PRO) is to be in place by 2017 to counter a variety of land-based spills, including train derailments, tanker truck crashes and pipeline failures that release petroleum or other chemicals. Environment Minister Mary Polak predicted it will significantly improve B.C.’s readiness to coordinate and, if necessary, lead the response to a spill on land without delays to determine who is responsible. Companies will have to join the new response organization if the risk they pose – based on the volume and toxicity of the cargo they ship – exceeds a certain risk threshold that is yet to be determined. The spiller will remain responsible for response and clean-up costs, but if its efforts are failing the province would be able to call the PRO in to take over. Polak likened the new agency’s role to that of the Western Canada Marine Response Corp., the non-profit indus-
try-funded group that responds to marine spills. “That’s the kind of idea that we are looking at so you have one body that can be contacted, can be immediately put into place, taking action even before we’ve identified who’s responsible for a spill,” she said. Polak said the aim is to fill gaps in readiness, not to duplicate existing industry efforts. While the federal government has jurisdiction over problems along a pipeline right-of-way, Polak said a spill could cause environmental damage over a wider area. “If one imagines the damage that a pipeline spill could potentially do, much of that would then be potentially our responsibility outside of that pipeline right of way.” First Nations and other local communities are expected to play significant roles in the new system. The B.C. SPCA is also involved in the planning work to ensure international best practices in caring for oiled animals, said chief scientific officer Dr. Sara Dubois. The federal government has jurisdiction over spills at sea. But the province says the new landbased spill response system will also be ready to pitch in on a marine spill by helping coordinate the response and quickly minimizing shoreline impacts, if necessary. World-leading spill response capabilities on land and at sea are among the province’s preconditions for agreeing to new heavy oil pipelines.
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SUMMER
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Register today for one of our great fitness programs at the South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre! Stay fit and active this summer with yoga, dance and more! Call 604-510-5100 or visit the South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre for more information. Bhangra Dance 5 Sessions $25.25 4423005 M Jul 6 6:20pm – 7:20pm Sunnyside Hall Zumba 8 Sessions $48.50 4408230 M Jul 6 7:30pm – 8:30pm Sunnyside Hall 9 Sessions $54.75 4408229 W Jul 8 7:30pm – 8:30pm Kwomais Point Park Meditation 8 Sessions $48.50 4407053 M Jul 6 7:15pm – 8:15pm Kwomais Point Park
Prenatal Yoga 8 Sessions $48.50 4407672 M Jul 6 6:00pm – 7:00pm 9 Sessions $54.75 4407671 W Jul 8 6:15pm – 7:15pm Kwomais Point Park 9 Sessions $54.75 4407670 F Jul 10 6:00pm – 7:00pm South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre Yoga for Beginners 8 Sessions $48.50 4408563 M Jul 6 12:15pm – 1:15pm 9 Sessions $54.50 4408562 Tu Jul 7 6:00pm – 7:00pm 4408564 Th Jul 9 6:15pm – 7:15pm Kwomais Point Park Yoga 9 Sessions $54.75 4408538 Th Jul 9 7:30pm – 8:30pm 4408539 F Jul 10 10:30am – 11:30am 7 Sessions $53.25 4407838 Su Jul 12 10:30am – 11:45am Kwomais Point Park
Yoga Level 2 9 Sessions $54.75 4408567 W Jul 8 7:30pm – 8:30pm 9 Sessions $68.25 4408566 Th Jul 9 6:00pm – 7:15pm Kwomais Point Park
Semi-Private Pilates Training 8 Sessions $229.50 4407478 Tu Jul 7 9:00am – 10:00am 4407480 W Jul 8 8:00am – 9:00am South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre
Restorative Yoga 9 Sessions $68.25 4407837 W Jul 8 9:30am – 10:45am 7 Sessions $53.25 4407838 Su Jul 12 9:00am – 10:15am Kwomais Point Park
Spin & Pilates 9 Sessions $100.75 4407886 Th Jul 9 6:45am – 7:45am 7 Sessions $78.50 4407884 Sa Jul 11 11:00am – 12noon South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre
TRX Suspension Training 8 Sessions $48.50 4407875 M Jul 6 5:15pm – 6:15pm 9 Sessions $54.75 4407874 Tu Jul 7 6:00pm – 7:00pm South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre
Spin for Beginners 8 Sessions $36.50 4407919 M Jul 6 7:30pm – 8:15pm 9 Sessions $41 4407920 W Jul 8 7:30pm – 8:15pm South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre
South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre 14601 20 Ave. • 604-592-6970 www.surrey.ca/southsurrey
Fr Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 The The Surrey-Nor Surrey-Nor th th Delta Delta Leader Leader
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Cities celebrate Canada’s 148th birthday July 1 ▶ LIVE PERFORMANCES AND FIREWORKS PLANNED AT EVENTS IN SURREY, DELTA AND WHITE ROCK NEXT WEEK ALEX BROWNE
It’s Canada’s 148th birthday on Wednesday, July 1 and the cities of Surrey and White Rock are all set to party with two major celebrations offering entertainment and activities for all ages – Surrey’s Canada Day Celebration in Cloverdale (with headliners Blue Rodeo) and Canada Day by the Bay (with headliner Daniel Wesley) In Cloverdale, Surrey’s Canada Day celebrations focus on the area around the Bill Reid Millennium Amphitheatre, at 176 Street and 64 Avenue. Featured events will include a Sports Zone, highlighting new and unusual sports activities; Storyville, a storytelling tent offered by Surrey Library; Kids World, offereing a variety of children’s activities, a CTV live on-location broadcast; Shooting Stars amusement rides; a seniors-oriented Strawberry Tea featuring live music and dance; and a digital photo booth operated by Kwantlen Polytechnic University. The amphitheatre’s mainstage schedule starts at 11 a.m. with health and happiness lessons for children with Rockin’ Robin and the Magical Tree, followed by family-oriented recording artist Jessie Farrell (11:45 a.m.) and the versatile Langley Ukelele Ensemble (12:30 p.m.). An ‘Embrace China’ salute to ‘Colourful Guizhou’ (1 p.m.) will be followed at 1:30 p.m. by opening ceremonies with Mayor Linda Hepner and councillors and the community-based Cedar Hills Caledonian Pipe Band. Afternoon shows will feature four-piece alternative band Little India (2:30 p.m.), young
Three girls proudly display their Canadian spirit during the 2014 Canada Day festivities in Surrey. FILE PHOTO country singer-songwriter Madeline Merlo (3:30 p.m.), rising country band Me and Mae (4:30 p.m.) and The Hip Show (a tribute to the Tragically Hip) at 5:30 p.m. At 6:30 p.m. the evening entertainment begins with symphonic alt-pop-rock duo Zerbin, followed at 7:30 p.m. by experimental pop band The Zolas. At 8:55 p.m. tenor Mark Donnelly’s singing of O Canada will precede the headliners, legendary Canadian band Blue Rodeo (9 p.m.), followed at 10:15 by the city’s fireworks display. In Delta, Canada Day celebrations take place in several locations – from North Delta to Ladner. Delta Museum (4858 Delta St.) will host a pancake breakfast, live music, street perform-
ers and family activities from 9 am. to 12 p.m. Nearby, from 12-4 p.m., Kirkland House will be the site of an array of activities, including antique tractors and vehicles, spinners and weavers, live music, food, games and rides. The Tsawwassen Boundary Bay Lions will host a family event at Diefenbaker Park (5579 1 Ave.) starting at 10 a.m., with cake-cutting at 1 p.m. In North Delta, Chalmers Park will once again be the site of evening celebrations, including crafts, games and barbecue food vendors beginning from 5:30-10:45 p.m. An official ceremony will take place at 6 p.m., following by live performances by Will Stroet & the Backyard Band and the March Hare Band, topped off with a fireworks display. Meanwhile, White Rock’s event will be fo-
cused on the area between the pier and White Rock Museum and Archives on Marine Drive, where the RE/MAX Mainstage will feature live entertainment from 10 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. hosted by MC Wendy Bollard. Events for the day will actually begin at 8 a.m. with Try Events’ Canada Day Rock 10K Run, followed at 10 a.m. by the Rock Kids Run. East Beach will also be part of the action, with a Kids’ Zone featuring face painting, balloon twisting, bouncy castles, sandcastle competition, Cory’s Caricatures and a barbecue, sponsored by South Surrey Smiles. Celebrate Canada at the Museum, at White Rock Museum and Archives, will offer face painting, toy car crafts Canada flag crafts, oldtime games, raffles, old-fashioned root beer floats and popcorn and free admission to the museum’s latest exhibit, Child’s Play: Toys of the Last 100 Years; while West Beach promenade will feature artisan vendors’ handmade arts and crafts. Mainstage entertainment will feature musical performers Curtis Heimburger (10:15 a.m.); Token Rhyme (11 a.m.); Ava Carich (11:45 a.m.); and The Rhythm Well (12:30 p.m.). At 1 p.m. opening ceremonies will feature a re-affirmation of Canadian citizenship ceremony and a Canada Day cake-cutting. Musical entertainment will resume with the Dominik Heins Trio (2 p.m.); The Kailyarders (3 p.m.); Fionn (4 p.m.); and Payton Rector (4:45 p.m.). Next up will be the Halifax Wharf Rats (6:15 p.m.); Deborah Jean Creelman (7 p.m.); The River and the Road (8 p.m.), culminating in the appearance of White Rock-born indie pop singer/songwriter Daniel Wesley, scheduled for 9 p.m. Rounding out the day’s events will be the annual fireworks display, at 10:15 p.m.
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▶ ENVIRONMENT The Royal BC Museum’s travelling exhibition Species at Risk will be at the Surrey Nature Centre on June 30, 12-4 p.m., featuring a display of some of B.C.’s species under threat of extinction.
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On display June 2 to September 19 20,000 years of Fraser Valley history. One million LEGO® bricks. Combine these with the masterminds of the Vancouver LEGO® Club and the result is the Surrey Museum’s new exhibit, all built with the coloured bricks beloved of kids and adults alike. 17710-56A Avenue Hours: Tue-Fri, 9:30am-5:30pm; Sat, 10am-5pm Info 604-592-6956 Admission sponsored by Museum Friends Society
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.
▶ FUND RAISING Ukrainian Soul Food – perogies, cabbage rolls and borsch – 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 604-581-0313. Soireé en Blanc, a fundraiser for Surrey Libraries, takes place July 11 from 5:30-7 p.m. at City Centre plaza (10350 University Dr.), with music by Denzal Sinclaire, as well as Brandenburg Strings, Agent C and Top Secret. Tickets are $150, available by calling 604-5015566 or online at www.surreysoiree.ca/
▶ MUSIC The James Danderfer trio and friends will close out the Vespers in the Valley season at Northwood United Church (8855 156 St.) this Sunday. The June 28 concert will include Miles Black, Joe Poole, Karin Plato and Adrian Smith. The concert, with admission by donation, starts at 4 p.m. The 180-member Utah Valley Children’s Choir will perform July 12, 7 p.m. 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.
▶ SUPPORT
ARTS & HERITAGE IN SURREY
www.surrey.ca/AH
A Mental Health Family Support and Respite Program provides support to families/ caregivers who have a family member that has been diagnosed with a severe mental illness (schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and bipolar disorder). The group meets on Mondays from 7-8:30 p.m. in North Delta. For more information or individual support, call Hardeep at 604-574-1976.
PEOPLE
Fr iday June 26 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
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▼ STUDENT EARNS SCHOLARSHIP AFTER SUPPORTING SURREY FOOD BANK Surrey’s Pavneet Kalsi has been named recipient of Envision Financial’s The Full Cupboard Volunteer Education Award for 2015. The Full Cupboard Volunteer Education Award consists of two $2,500 awards which are eligible to secondary and post-secondary students who demonstrate outstanding community volunteerism with their local food banks. Kalsi is one of this year’s two winners. Kalsi will attend the University of British Columbia and pursue a degree in science and pharmacy. Notably, she dedicated more than 100 volunteer hours at the Surrey Food Bank, including planning and implementing her own community outreach event, which raised $300 and 10 palettes of food for the food bank. “Pavneet is certainly a worthy recipient of The Full Cupboard Volunteer Education Award,” says Susan Byrom, senior manager of community investment at First West Credit Union. “She’s a great example of what it means to be an active community leader and has demonstrated tremendous dedication to giving back to her community. We’re thrilled to recognize her efforts with our Full Cupboard Volunteer Education Award and we hope it will help her in her chosen education and career path.” The Full Cupboard is a community program launched in 2013 by First West Credit Union’s Envision Financial division. It aims to raise food, funds and awareness for food banks in the communities where Envision Financial operates. The Full Cupboard Volunteer Education Award, established in 2013, has awarded $15,000 in education award funding to help six students from across B.C. finance their education.
▼ $200K RAISED FOR DELTA HOSPITAL On June 18, Delta Hospital Foundation – alongside Century Group – hosted its annual golf tournament at Beach Grove Golf Club. When the final tally was in, the event broken all previous records, raising more than $201,000, bringing the overall 16-year fundraising total to $1.7 million. One hundred and forty-nine participants turned up to golf in support of Delta Hospital’s Cardiac Care Clinic. The 38 volunteers from the community, including 25 volunteers from Century Group, helped to create a memorable day. Funds raised will go towards supporting heart health at Delta Hospital with the purchase of two new electrocardiogram carts.
From left: Kier Christer-Junos, Polytechnic Ink Publising Society’s coordinating editor; Stephanie Peters, PIPS board chair; Scott Boux, PIPS operations manager; Lisa Robinson, KPU advancement officer; Steve Lewarne, CEO KPU Foundation and executive director of advancement; and Diane Purvey, KPU Dean of Arts. SUBMITTED
Kwantlen students give $100K for peers ▼ NON-FOR-PROFIT POLYTECHNIC INK PUBLISHING SOCIETY IS FUNDING MULTIPLE SCHOLARSHIPS
▶ KITCHEN CASH Surrey-Cloverdale MLA and Minister for Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux (second from right) presents a $30,000 grant for renovations to the kitchen at Evergreen Transition House, a shelter for women and children operated by Options Community Services. Pictured are Tammy Dyer, deputy executive director, Deara Dirk, senior manager, and Sukh Mattu, program coordinator. PHOTO SUBMITTED
executive officer of the KPU Foundation and executive director of the university’s office of advancement. “Knowing that our current students are building capacity for future students through this level of philanthropy is something that we take a great deal of pride in. PIPS’ donation will be endowed to support five annual awards in perpetuity that support students BLACK PRESS enrolled in KPU journalism and creative writing proKwantlen Polytechnic University’s (KPU) student-led grams, as well as those who have contributed significantly to KPU student publications. Starting in 2016, publications are giving back to journalism and writing $5,000 in scholarships will be awarded each year.” students in a big way. PIPS board chair Stephanie Peters said: “As stuPolytechnic Ink Publishing Society (PIPS), the dents, we know that university can be a student-owned not-for-profit that challenge, and not just a financial one. oversees The Runner and other ▶ “PIPS’ donation will It’s really life-changing to get a vote of student publications, has generously confidence, and we wanted to recognize be endowed to support donated $100,000 to fund multiple the great things our peers do that may scholarships for those with a passion five annual awards in not be otherwise taken into account in for publication. award criteria.” perpetuity that support “When it boils down, it’s the stuThe KPU Foundation builds comdents’ money in the first place and students...” munity and corporate partnerships it should go back to them. If it were that benefit students, support faculty STEVE LAWARNE to go outside of KPU, it would just and enhance education. Each year, feel wrong,” said PIPS Operations hundreds of thousands of dollars in Manager Scott Boux. scholarships and awards are given to “KPU is extremely grateful to Polytechnic Ink Pubstudents across disciplines. lishing Society for their generosity and leadership More on the KPU Foundation is available at kpu.ca/ in establishing endowments that will support KPU foundation. students for years to come,” said Steve Lewarne, chief
Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 22 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr Peach Cobblah (Dave Deveau) and Isolde N. Barron (Cameron Mackenzie) are the hosts in Tucked and Plucked, coming to Centre Stage at Surrey City Hall on July 3. SUBMITTED
The ‘herstory’ Vehicle of drag comes Detail to Surrey stage
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▶ ZEE ZEE THEATRE BRINGS ITS TALK SHOW-STYLE SHOW TO TOWN BLACK PRESS
Ever wondered about the ‘herstory’ of drag? Zee Zee Theatre remounts Tucked and Plucked in Surrey, inviting audience to be part of the studio audience at a glamourous, often funny and thought-provoking talk
B R I D G E V I E W F E S T I VA L
H I S T O R I C S T E W A R T FA R M
Pioneer Fair Experience an old-time country fair at the farm
Bridgeview
Bring your family and a picnic to enjoy on the picturesque grounds. • Kick up your heels to live music and test your skills at Victorian carnival games. • Rub elbows with ‘The Re-enactors’ as they recreate Surrey’s true stories. • Sample lemonade, popcorn and hand-churned ice cream. • Cap off your day with a tour of the 1894 farmhouse led by a costumed guide. Saturday, July 4 11:00am-3:00pm All ages, by donation
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show-style performance. The show comes to town – this time with a Surrey focus – following runs at the rEvolver Festival and the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. The on-stage talk show is co-hosted by Isolde N. Barron (Cameron Mackenzie) and Peach Cobblah (Dave Deveau). The real-life drag husbands will be joined onstage by the Queen Bee of Surrey, Mz. Adrien, the current drag Empress of Surrey, Amanda Luv, and by Mona Regina Lee. The sometimes-outrageous evening is billed as Ellen DeGeneres meets Jerry Springer. Barron is host of Apocalypstick: East Vancouver’s Drag Show at the Cobalt and has performing at events across Vancouver. As Cameron Mackenzie, he is the Managing Artistic Director of Zee Zee Theatre for whom he has directed Lowest Common Denominator, My Funny Valentine, Nelly Boy, Tiny Replicas and Whale Riding Weather. Cobblah hosts Shame Spiral at 1181 and has also hosted HUSTLA and SHINDIG at The Cobalt. As Dave Deveau, he is Playwright in Residence with Zee Zee Theatre, where he has written Lowest Common Denominator, My Funny Valentine, Nelly Boy, and Tiny Replicas. Tucked and Plucked takes place at Centre Stage at Surrey City Hall (13450 104 Ave.) on July 3 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $28, available by calling 604-501-5566 or online at tickets.surrey. ca. Tickets will also be available at the door.
Fr Fr iday iday June June 26 26 2015 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
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A showcase of new, local art ▶ ARTS 2015 JURIED EXHIBITION FEATURES AN ARRAY OF WORK BY VISUAL ARTISTS BLACK PRESS
Adam Gibbs’ photograph Fairy Mist is among dozens of pieces of art chosen for the juried ARTS 2015 exhibition at the Surrey Art Gallery, as is Christopher Siemens’ drawing We Are Leaving Our Shadows Behind Us (top, right) and an untitled 3-D work (bottom, right) by Deborah Morriss.
A diverse range of artwork is always to be expected at the Arts Council of Surrey’s annual juried show at the Surrey Art Gallery. But this year, ARTS 2015 also provides plenty of invention, surprise and humour amongst the 51 chosen pieces of art, which include drawings, paintings, fabric works, sculpture, photography and glasswork. The show launches this evening (June 26) with an opening reception from 7-9 p.m. at the Surrey Art Gallery (13750 88 Ave.) Awards will also be presented in five separate categories. The exhibition runs through Aug. 22. Phone 604-501-5566 for further information.
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Water your boulevard tree twice a week Water twice a week for 15 minutes with a steady stream of water (that’s about 20 litres of water).
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24 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 26 2015
DrivewayCanada.ca |
Welcome to the driver’s seat
Visit the Nissan Murano gallery at DrivewayCanada.ca
Murano crossover offers more for your money Nissan led the crossover charge with the introduction of the Murano almost 12 years ago but its imitators soon roared past it on the sales battleground. First drives of each of this third-generation’s trims clearly indicate that this 2015 version is designed to rectify that state of Keith Morgan affairs, even though this segment is far more competitive than it was a decade or so ago. Simply put, this car-based crossover vehicle scores on looks, performance, fuel economy and value for money. The bulbous-rear of the first iteration of the Murano is long gone. The new vehicle is sleek with a low and sloping roofline. A huge V-shaped grille defines the front. Dare we say, sporty? Inside, five passengers will find comfort and room aplenty for human and inanimate cargo. Fold flat seats make add to its versatility. The external good looks are matched inside but it’s the usability of the controls that make it a real beauty. The touch screen is almost as intuitive as your smart phone of choice. The Murano S starts at just short of $30,000, which includes Bluetooth with streaming audio, keyless entry, dual-zone climate
control and 18-inch wheels. That’s a lot of extras for what passes as standard fare in the in the Murano. The top-of-the-line AWD Platinum version adds another 15 grand and includes a fabulous oversized sunroof, adaptive cruise control and a predictive forward-collision warning and braking system. There are less pricey options between the base and top models. For instance, The $40,848 Murano SL AWD offers navigation, a Bose audio system, moonroof, 360-degree parking camera, heated steering wheel, heated leather front seats plus blind spot detection and rear cross traffic alert safety systems. While the likes of its key rivals, the Ford Edge and Toyota Venza, offer a choice of four and six-cylinder engines, Nissan is sticking with its trusty 3.5-litre, 260hp, V6 coupled with a continuously variable transmission with a manual shift option. It’s hard to fault the dogged determination to stick with the V6 because it performs well and the continuous tweaking has resulted in improved fuel economy. If you were to attend any of the major manufacturer media launches, you would hear journo after journo complain about the audacity of carmakers who use CVT. In the old days, CVT deserved its poor reputation with power lags, high revving, uneven gearing and unedifying and unexpected lurches forward! The technology has evolved. And, the fact is the average consumer has no problem
with it, liking the smoother transitions. My first test route was in the Whistler area and showed off its hill climbing skills and the smoothness of the ‘dreaded’ CVT. It’s no gazelle but it is sure-footed and the CVT did not fail even when the driver behaved like a lead foot! I found the ride to be smooth and highway passing no challenge. Cornering at sensible speeds keeps the vehicle firmly planted. It’s darn quiet too. Then I spent a week tooling around the city putting it through its shopping paces. Parking on the street was a little challenging but I’ll put that down to impatient drivers behind, not prepared for the Murano’s wide swing needed to get into that tricky spot. On the supermarket lot, it glided into spaces forwards or backwards with ease. It’s a fine long-distance vehicle but would serve well as a commuter where longer distances are the norm. I can see it being used in the suburbs but it’s a bit large for the centre of the city. The Murano is not too thirsty for its size – 11.2/8.3 L/100 kms. That’s about two litres per 100 klicks better than its main rivals. Prices: Murano S FWD, $29,998; Murano SV FWD, $33,698; Murano SV AWD,$35,698; Murano SL AWD, $39,098; Murano Platinum AWD, $43,498. keith.morgan@drivewaybc.ca
Question of the Week Were you taught to drive by a parent or did you take formal driving lessons? Go to DrivewayCanada.ca for the question of the week
Safety Tip: Summer can be a great time to teach teenagers to drive now that school is out and road conditions are good. If your teen will be driving your vehicle, check that you have the right insurance coverage, particularly if your vehicle is rated in an experienced rate class.
/Driveway @DrivewayCanada
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2014 RAM 1500 OUTDOORSMAN 1969 FORD F100
14,990
RESTORED 2015 JEEP WRANGLER SAHARA 2014 DODGE CHARGER SXT PLUS 1955 CHEV BELAIR COMPLETELY
STK#PC1858b
32,990
22,990
2006 CHEV 2500 CARGO STK# PP2012
33,990
STK# PC1974
STK#PC2020
2012 RAM 1500 SPORT W/NAV 2013 GMC SIERRA 1500
STK#PC2040
13,990
STK# PC2007
32,990
STK#PP2094
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2011 RAM 1500 LARAMIE 2008 FORD RANGER SPORT 2013 DODGE JOURNEY RT
23,990
604-265-5466 or 1-855-974-4466
16065 Fraser Hwy, Surrey British Columbia V4N 0G2
pinnacle-csl.com
Fr iday June 26 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
Advertising Feature
25
Surrey Dealer Sends Shockwaves Through Local Community
Cars to sell for $69 TODAY ONLY!! On Saturday, June 27, Mainland Ford will slash down used car prices by $3500 - $7500, some to just $69!*
" /"BC] q LBullock, Õ V ]Gener i SURREY, – BOB iÀ> > >}iÀof v Mainland ÀÌ ÃÌ>À Ford, ÞÕ `> ] Ì `>Þ al Manager today an> Õ Vi` « > Ãforv Àa >one-day i `>Þ sales Ã> ià iÛi Ì nounced plans event Ì >Ì will Ü feature vi>ÌÕÀi cars V>Àà selling Ãi } v À that for >à as Ü low >à as ÕÃÌ $69. fÈ ° This / à incredible VÀi` L i iÛi Ì just event à is V> i` called Ì i the - >à "7 Event Ûi Ì for v À the Ì i à « i SlashDOWN simple v>VÌ fact Ì >Ì that Ì i « ÃÌi` the posted «À Vià prices oniÛiÀÞ every«Ài Ü i` pre-ownedÛi veV i Ü Li be à >à i` LÞ fÎxää Ì fÇxää] Ü Ì hicle will slashed by $3500 to $7500, à isome Ãi } v À >Ãfor Üas>Ãlow ÕÃÌ as fÈ t with selling just`ôÃŗà $69! Ɛùĉĉ Ãwill EƎÃŗ ƎÃôù¥ĉÃŝ ŝÃĉĉùĘè selling ÚĠŗ ŻĘµÃŗ There beŷƟ Over 20 vehicles for
Ġ ŻĉĉĠ¥ć² )ÃĘÃŗ~ĉ ?~Ę~èÃŗ ÚĠŗ AĠŗūôŝū~ŗ +ƔŻĘµ~ù Mainland Ford
½įƟ²ƟƟƟÖ / i i `>Þ Ã> ià iÛi Ì ÃV i` under $10,000! The one-day sales Ãevent is Õ i` Ì Ì> i ->ÌÕÀ`>Þ] Ü Ì with Ài} ÃÌÀ> scheduled to « >Vi take place Saturday, regÌ ÃÌ>ÀÌ } >Ì n\ää ° 7 i When >à i` asked Ü >Ì istration starting at 8:00AM. «À «Ìi` Ì i the `i>] what prompted idea, Õ V Bullock iÝ« > i`] explained, º Õi Ì «Ài Ü i` Ûi “Due to > an ÛiÀÃÌ V overstock v of pre-owned inÌ ÀÞ ÀiÃÕ Ì } vÀ from > ÃÕÀ}i v ÀiVi Ì >Ìi ventory resulting a surge of recent `i ÌÀ>`i Ã] ÕÀ Ûi Ì ÀÞ iÛi à levels >Ài >Ì late-model trade-ins, our inventory > > Ì i } ° À`iÀ i` >Ìi Þ are at an all-time high. In Ì order to immeÀi`ÕVi reduce VÕÀÀi Ì current Ûi Ì ÀÞ iÛi à Üi Ü we Li diately inventory levels à >à } « ÃÌi`posted «À ViÃprices LÞ Ì ÕÃ> `à v À will be slashing by thousands " ONE `>Þday Þ° " On->ÌÕÀ`>Þ] for only. Saturday, «À June ÎäÌ 27th
>ÕÌ shoppers à ««iÀà can V> expect iÝ«iVÌ Ûi V ià auto vehicles >À i` marked >Ì$25,000 fÓx]ääätoÌ beLi à >à i` Li Ü f£{]äää] at slashed below $14,000, veÛi V ià >À i` >Ì f£Ó Li à >à i` hicles marked at $12K to beÌ slashed down ` Ü Li Ü fn vehicles > ` Ûi V ià >À i` >Ì below $8K and marked at $9K f Li à >à i` ` Ü Li Ü q to be Ì slashed down below $5000 fxäää – and of > ` v aV ÕÀÃi > viÜvehicles fxäää Ûi V iÃ Ü Li course few $5000 will be slashed à >à i`to` Ü Ì Ì i VÀi` L i «À Vi ÕÃÌ down the incredible price of just v$69.
« à Ìi of v an > auction, >ÕVÌ ] where Ü iÀi bidding L `` } `À Ûià posite drives «À Vià up. Õ«° Posted * ÃÌi` prices «À Vià will Ü be Li >À i` prices marked ` Ü ONE " time Ì i to Ì a> Rock , V ÌÌ down Bottom «À Vi price Ì >Ì will Ü delight `i } Ì auto >ÕÌ buyers LÕÞiÀà and > ` i >Ìi that eliminate > Þneed ii` to Ì haggle! >}} it In short, à ÀÌ] this Ì Ã event iÛi Ì Ü any will «À Û `i buyers LÕÞiÀà the Ì i perfect «iÀviVÌ opportunity «« ÀÌÕ ÌÞ Ì provide to «ÕÀV >Ãi a> quality µÕ> ÌÞ used ÕÃi` car V>À at >Ì the Ì i ÜiÃÌ purchase lowest
Ì i°is7 iÛiÀ à à ÌÌ } Li `ofÌ i ever sitting behind the wheel theÜ ii vehi v Ì i Ûi V i Ü i isÌ i «À Vi Ãwill à >à i` Ü cle when the price slashed be given Li } Ûi Ì i wÀÃÌ «« ÀÌÕ ÌÞ Ì the «ÕÀV >Ãi the Àrst opportunity to purchase vehiÌ i at Ûi V i >Ì Ì >ÌThe «À Vi° / i «iÀà cle that price. person sitting à ÌÌ } in the Ì i «>ÃÃi }iÀ Ãi>Ì Ì i ÃiV ` «« À passenger seat has the >Ãsecond opportunity ÌÕ ÌÞ Ì «ÕÀV >Ãi Ì i Ûi V i >Ì Ì i à >à i` to purchase the vehicle at the slashed price,
Î: oâ oÔ «« ¦ or «Ô buying… Ríþ ¦  sick Ø \ of «}what ü Aâyou’re þ«íÑÔodriving… fÔ û ¦  “Whetherþ«íÑÔo you’re íØâ just looking ¦oof A R oÔ ûo \ o â Ôof «} RÔoA ¦ f«ü¦Â «« ¦ }«Ô A «ûof «¦o need a bigger vehicle… tired of breaking down… looking for a loved one… üA¦â â«to «üoÔ íØâ ready ÔoAfþfor }«ÔaAchange, \ A¦ ocYOU <$4 what lowerþ«íÔ your¼Aþ¡o¦â payment -«Ô or þ«íÑÔo you’re just :$"Ñ2 2$TO ! 00 WON’T: "2 WANT MISSâ Ø thisí¦ Éío uniqueJ&oý\ â ¦ excitingoûo¦â event0AâíÔfAþc Saturday, ¼Ô June äĄâ 27th fÈ ° 7i½Ài V w`i Ì Ì >Ì iÛiÀÞ i We’re conÀdent that everyone will getÜ an }iÌ > VÀi` L i > ` fun >ÛiinvÕ Ì i incredible deal… `i> °°° and have the pro«À ViÃÃt» cess!” V Õ ` ½Ì be Li easier i>à iÀ to Ì «>ÀÌ V «>Ìi\ It Ì couldn’t participate: - « Þ Simply Û Ã Ì Mainland ÀÌ ÃÌ>À ÞÕ `> Ì Ài} ÃÌiÀ > ` visit Ford to register and get}iÌa > à i> «ÀiÛ iÜ v Ì i Ûi Ì ÀÞ] Ü V sneak-preview of the inventory, which will Ü vi>ÌÕÀi Óää Ûi V ià v differ > Þ feature almost> ÃÌ 200 vehicles of many ` vviÀi Ì > ` `i ð º À Ì Ãi ent makes > ià and models. “For those shoppers à ««iÀÃexclusively } iÝV Õà Ûi Þ v Àcars, Ì i fÈ looking for the $69 you V>ÀÃ] Þ Õ LiÌÌiÀ V i > this vviÀ i better come early, as ani>À Þ] offer>à like rarely Ì Ã À>Ài Þsays >««i Ã]» Ã>ÞÃ Õ V ° happens,” Bullock.
i>À Þ this Ì Ãis Ãno ordinary À` >ÀÞ Ã> i] Clearly carV>À sale, and> ` eviÛiÀÞÌ } >L ÕÌthis Ì Ãevent iÛi Ìis à designed `ià } i` v À erything about for VÕÃÌ iÀÃtoÌ have >Ûi a> great }Ài>Ì time Ì i and > ` }iÌ customer get >a }Ài>Ì deal. `i> ° On " Saturday ->ÌÕÀ`>Þ ÀivÀià i Ìà great refreshments Ü will Li made >`i available >Û> >L i for v À > ° be all. Õ V Bullock >ÃÃiÀÌÃ] asserts, º ÛiÀÞ i will Ü have >Ûi a> great }Ài>Ì Ì i “Everyone time > ` and LÕÞ buyiÀÃshould Ã Õ `drive `À Ûioff vv Ü Ì > smile L } à i ers with a big on their Ì i À having v>Vi] >Û } Ì ÕÃ> `Ãt» face, savedÃ>Ûi` thousands!” / à SlashDOWN - >à "7 event iÛi Ì is Ã Ì i This the iÝ>VÌ exact « op-
« Ãà L iprice. «À Vi° possible `ôùŝ event ÃƎÃĘū will Ɛùĉĉ feature ÚÃ~ūŻŗà around ~ŗĠŻĘµ 100 įƟƟ ĻŗÃø This preĠƐĘõcars, ¥~ŗŝ²trucks, ūŗŻ¥ćŝ² vans Ǝ~Ęŝ and ~ʵ sport ŝĻĠŗū ŻūùĉùūƔ owned utility ƎÃôù¥ĉÃŝ² assuring ~ŝŝŻŗùĘè shoppers ŝôĠĻĻÃŗŝ an ~Ę Ãƒ¥ÃĉĉÃĘū vehicles, excellent ŝÃĉÃ¥ūùĠĘ of ĠÚ many đ~ĘƔ different µùÚÚÃŗÃĘū makes đ~ćÃŝ ~ʵ selection and đĠµÃĉŝłCustomers ŻŝūĠđÃŗŝ will Ɛùĉĉ be à able ~ ĉà to ūĠ ¥ôĠĠŝà models. choose ÚŗĠđa~ wide ƐùµÃ selection ŝÃĉÃ¥ūùĠĘ of ĠÚ makes đ~ćÃŝ and ~ʵ đĠµø from modÃĉŝ on ĠĘ hand, ô~ʵ² including ùĘ¥ĉŻµùĘè Chrysler, ôŗƔŝĉÃŗ² 7ÃÃĻ² els Jeep, Ġµèò Ford, 'Ġŗµ² Chevrolet, ôÃƎŗĠĉÃū² Toyota, `ĠƔĠū~² Aùŝŝ~Ę Dodge, Nissan ~ʵ more. đĠŗÃł All ĉĉ vehicles ƎÃôù¥ĉÃŝ will Ɛùĉĉ be à ĠĘ and on µùŝĻĉ~Ɣ display ~ū Mainland AĠŗūôŝū~ŗ Ford +ƔŻĘµ~ù ŗÃèùŝūŗ~ūùĠĘ at withƐùūô registration be ÃèùĘĘùĘè 'ŗùµ~Ɣ² Ļŗùĉ ŷƟįįł ginning Friday, June 26, ŷĚ² 2015. " Friday, À `>Þ] June «À 26Ó registration Ài} ÃÌÀ>Ì Li} à On begins at >Ì n\ää ° Ì >««À Ý >Ìi Þ ££\ää 8:00AM. At approximately 11:00AM Sat->ÌÕÀ`>Þ > ` «À ëiVÌ Ûi urday gates}>Ìià will Ü open, «i ] and prospective buyLÕÞiÀà > «iÀà > âi` ers will Ü have >Ûi beenLii given} Ûi a personalized pass «>Ãà > Ü } Ì Ã«iVÌ Ì i Ûi V ià allowing them Ì i to inspect the vehicles that Ì >Ì ÌiÀiÃÌ Ì ££\Îä ] à >à interest them.Ì i ° At 11:30AM, theÌ i slashing } ÃÌ>ÀÌÃt - >à i` Li starts! Slashing down` Ü prices«À Vià will beÜ posted « ÃÌi` i>V one Ûi V i] i >Ì > on each vehicle, vehicle at aÛi V i time. Who-
AĠŗūôŝū~ŗ +ƔŻĘµ~ù Mainland Ford
v Ì i VÕÃÌ iÀ Ì i seat `À ÛiÀ½Ã Ãi>Ì if«À Vi] the customer in the driver’s passes. «>ÃÃiðwishing to beat the rush should get Those / Ãi Ü Ã } Li>Ì Ì i atÀÕÃ Ã Õ ` registered early Ì Thursday Mainland }iÌ Ài} ÃÌiÀi` / ÕÀÃ`>Þ >Ì ÀÌ ÃÌ>À Ford, located ati>À Þ 14530 104th Avenue, Sur ÞÕ `> ] V>Ìi` £ÎÈÎ{ -Ì° LiÀÌ /À> °a rey. Customers are>Ì encouraged to bring
ÕÃÌ iÀà >Ài personal i V ÕÀ>}i` Ì LÀ } >Ü lawn chair for comfort and> dress V > À v À «iÀà > V v ÀÌ > ` `ÀiÃà >««À appropriately for weather conditions. «À >Ìi Þ v À Üi>Ì iÀ For further info on V ` Ì Ã° Mainland Ford’s $69 À vÕÀÌ iÀ v please ÀÌ ÃÌ>À SlashDOWN Event, call ÞÕ `> ½Ã 604-588fÈ - >à ` Ü Ûi Ì] « i>Ãi V> or / Àii 9921. The event will be held rain shine. £ nÈÈ Îäx ÈÈÈ{° V> V> iÀà « i>Ãi ` > * There will be at least 3 cars selling for $69 Çnä {Çn ÇÈÈ ° / i iÛi Ì Ü Li i ` À> June 27, 2015. First come, Àrst served. Àonà i° Sale price does not Îinclude taxes, I/ iÀi Ü Li >Ì i>ÃÌ V>Àà Ãi } v ÀadminfÈ istration fee. Buyers mustwÀÃÌ be ÃiÀÛi`° at least-> i 18 «À Îä] Ó䣣° ÀÃÌ V i] «À Vi ` ià ÌLimit V Õ`i Ì>ÝiÃ] vii° years old. one $69>` ÃÌÀ>Ì per family. See ÕÞiÀà Li >Ì i>ÃÌ £n Þi>Àà `° Ì i dealer ÕÃÌ for details. fÈ «iÀ v> Þ° -ii `i> iÀ v À `iÌ> ð
2 0 0 24/ < $" <{{{ 2015 F-150 SUPERCAB XLT 4x4 Stk. 5F12219
MSRP $50,164
payments were $175/wk
SLASHED to ????/wk 104 Ave
z
CALL (604) 588-9921
➊
152 St
148 St
140 St
HWY
wy
84 months
96 Ave
Guildford Town Centre
er H
Rates as low as 0 % up to
#!Ð1
100 Ave
Fras
King George Blvd
Mainland
// 1zz es
8 .;#! Ð/ ! .3,1 ; r 8#. r . 1 r ,,.#8
*Payments based on 60 month term amortized for 84 months at a low rate. Doesn’t include taxes, OAC. May require money down on bank request.
REGISTER BY e-mail
at calvin@mainlandford.com
DL#40139
All-new Infiniti Q30 compact entry debuts this fall Premium brand Infiniti will unveil its first-ever compact car at the International Motor Show in Frankfurt in September this year (September 17 to 27). Two years after the Infiniti Q30 Concept debuted at the 2013 Frankfurt show, the production version of this segment-spanning compact car will be revealed at the show this year.
Check out some of the reasons why Nissan is
THE FASTEST GROWING AUTOMOTIVE on full-line brands, on 12 month, year over year rolling unit sales BRAND IN CANADA Based
- IT’S BACK THE NISSAN
SL AWD Premium model shown
Platinum model shown
1.8 SL model shown
SR AT model shown
V
JONKER NISSAN 19505 LANGLEY BY-PASS, SURREY TEL: (604) 534-7957 †
APR FOR UP TO
%
PLUS PICK FROM OUR
GREATEST CHOICES EVER
0 84
$
SAFETY COMES STANDARD:
• Nissan Advanced Airbag System (6 airbags) • Vehicle Dynamic Control (VDC) • Traction Control System (TCS)
FINANCE AS LOW AS
1,500 2 OR
AVAILABLE FEATURES INCLUDE:
• Intuitive All-Wheel Drive • Nissan Safety Shield with Forward Collision Warning
AVAILABLE FEATURES INCLUDE:
• Highest Standard Towing Capacity In Its Class (5,000 Lbs.) • Seating For 7 with Best-In-Class Passenger Room**
AVAILABLE FEATURES INCLUDE:
• 17-inch Aluminum Alloy Wheels • Standard Bluetooth Handsfree Phone System
STARTING FROM MONTHLY
PAYMENTS ON US 2
V
V
KING GEORGE NISSAN 14948 32 ND AVENUE DIVERSION, SURREY TEL: (604) 536-3644 OR
MY CHOICE BONUS CASH1
MONTHS ON SELECT MODELS
ON SELECT MODELS
GET UP TO
NO CHARGE
EXTENDED WARRANTY PLAN 3 UP TO A $2,000 VALUE
2015 NISSAN ROGUE
ON ROGUE S FWD
MONTHLY LEASE≠ FROM $253 WITH $0 DOWN AT 0.99% APR FOR 60 MONTHS X $ THAT’S LIKE PAYING ONLY WEEKLY
58
ON PATHFINDER S 4X2
MONTHLY LEASE FROM $362 WITH $0 DOWN AT 0.99% APR FOR 60 MONTHS X $ THAT’S LIKE PAYING ONLY WEEKLY
83
ON SENTRA 1.8 S M6
MONTHLY LEASE≠ FROM $158 WITH $0 DOWN AT 0% APR FOR 60 MONTHS X $ THAT’S LIKE PAYING ONLY WEEKLY
36
$
®
9,998
®
ON MICRA SR MT
OR FINANCE† FROM 0% APR FOR 72 MONTHS
ON MICRA 1.6 S MT
$
1,000
$
$
$ INCLUDES
MY CHOICE BONUS CASH
2015 NISSAN PATHFINDER
≠
1,500 INCLUDES
MY CHOICE BONUS CASH
V
2015 NISSAN SENTRA
1,000 INCLUDES
MY CHOICE BONUS CASH
2015 NISSAN MICRA®
X
500
PLUS
MY CHOICE BONUS CASH
CURRENT NISSAN OWNERS THAT QUALIFY ARE ELIGIBLE FOR UP TO AN ADDITIONAL $1,000 LOYALTY CASH ON SELECT MODELS
VISIT CHOOSENISSAN.CA OR YOUR LOCAL RETAILER • ENDS JUNE 3O TH
††
APPLEWOOD NISSAN 15257 FRASER HWY, SURREY TEL: (604) 589-8999
X Equivalent lease payments of $58/$36/$83 on the 2015 Rogue/Sentra/Pathfinder 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 Rogue S FWD CVT (Y6RG15 AA00)/ 2015 Sentra 1.8 S M6 (C4LG55 AA00)/Pathfinder S V6 4x2 (5XRG15 AA00) CVT transmission. 0.99%/0%/0.99% lease APR for a 60/60/60 month term equals 60/60/60 monthly payments of $253/$158/$362 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 $15,208/$9,302/$21,707. $1,000/$1,000/$1,500 My Choice Bonus Cash included in advertised offer. Conditions apply. †Representative finance offer based on any new 2015 Micra SR MT (S5SG55 AA10)/ 2015 Sentra 1.8 S M6 (C4LG55 AA00). Selling price is $16,905/$16,165 financed at 0%/0% APR equals 72/84 monthly payments of $235/$225 monthly for a 72/84 month term. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $16,905/$16,165. 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 MSRP price for a new 2015 Nissan Micra® 1.6 S, MT (S5LG55 AA10). Conditions apply. VModels shown $36,598/$48,668/$25,965/$18,405 Selling price for a new 2015 Rogue SL AWD Premium (Y6DG15 BK00)/ 2015 Pathfinder Platinum (5XEG15 AA00)/ 2015 Sentra 1.8 SL (C4TG15 AA00)/2015 Micra® 1.6 SR 4 AT (S5SG75 AE00).m*X±≠VFreight and PDE charges ($1,750/$1,720/$1,567/$1,567) 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. For more information see IIHS.org. ALG is the industry benchmark for residual values and depreciation data, www.alg.com. **Ward’s Large Cross/Utility Market Segmentation. MY15 Pathfinder vs. 2015 and 2014 Large Cross/Utility Class. ^Ward’s Large Cross/Utility Market Segmentation. MY15 Pathfinder and Pathfinder Hybrid vs. 2014 competitors. 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.
26 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 26 2015
drivewayBC.ca
Infiniti is in the final stages of preparing the launch. Dynamic testing and ultimate validation is currently taking place across the UK and throughout mainland Europe where development of the vehicle has been completed at the company’s Engineering Centre in Cranfield, in northeast England, since 2014. The Q30 will go on sale in Europe towards the end of
Its design and engineering development has the fingerprints of four-times F1 Champion Sebastian Vettel all over it.
‘‘
Keith Morgan
’’
2015 with other markets to follow subsequently. More news on the Infiniti Q30 active compact will be released closer to the Frankfurt show in September. The road to production for this much-anticipated car has been rocky though not for what might be expected reasons. Its design and engineering development has the fingerprints of four-times F1 Champion Sebastian Vettel all over it. When his ‘hands-on’ association with the car was revealed, it was not merely a stroke of marketing genius but the racer’s renowned smarts meant his input would be extremely valuable. Then Infiniti President Johan de Nysschen announced the car alongside Vettel, who was wearing his Infiniti-Red Bull F1 team shirt for the occasion. Since then the president has headed over to GM to run Cadillac and Vettel has joined the Ferrari F1 team. After chatting to Vettel, there’s no doubt in the mind of yours truly that he will want to get a turn at the wheel of a Q30 production car to see just how much of his advice was accepted. Sadly, for Infiniti they won’t be able to trumpet his participation in Frankfurt this fall. keith.morgan@drivewaybc. ca
Fr iday June 26 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader
27
28 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 26 2015
SOUTH SURREY SUMMER FITNESS
Stay fit and active this summer with the South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre! Register your child or youth in one of our great fitness programs! Contact 604-510-5100 or surrey.ca/register for more information. Weight Training Youth 5 Sessions $38.50 13-18yrs 4409247 Th Jul 2 4:00pm – 5:00pm South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre
Family Yoga 8 Sessions $61.50 6yrs+ 4409280 M Jul 6 6:30pm – 7:30pm 7 Sessions $54 6yrs+ 4409281 Su Jul 12 11:00am – 12noon South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre
Family Zumba 9 Sessions $69.25 6yrs+ 4409285 W Jul 8 6:15pm – 7:15pm Kwomais Point Park
Children’s Yoga 9 Sessions $83.25 6-12yrs 4409267 F Jul 10 3:30pm – 4:30pm South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre ntre re
Children’s Bhangra 5 Sessions $33.50 5-10yrs 4423197 M Jul 6 5:15pm – 6:15pm Sunnyside Hall
Youth Yoga 9 Sessions $69.25 13-18yrs 4409287 F Jul 10;45pm – 5:45pm South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre ntrre Parent & Tot Yoga 7 Sessions $54 2-5yrs 4409286 Su Jul 12 10:15am - 11:00am am South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre ntrre
South Surrey Recreation & Arts Centre 14601 20 Ave. • 604-592-6970 www.surrey.ca/southsurrey EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 102
ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CLEANING BUSINESS FOR SALE
Includes all equipment, supplies & cleaning staff.
Accounts Receivable Clerk/Reception The Langley Concrete Group Wants You!
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 6
IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7
OBITUARIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 33
INFORMATION
Make a gift that honours the memory of a loved one. BC Cancer Foundation 13750 96th Avenue Surrey, BC V3V 1Z2
S S S S
604.930.4078 bccancerfoundation.com
Moving, Expecting A Baby Planning A Wedding Anticipating Retirement Employment Opportunities
1-844-299-2466
We have Gifts & Information
604-588-3371 championsforcare.com
IF YOU ARE...
Supporting the BC Cancer Agency
www.welcomewagon.ca
WE BUY HOMES BC • All Prices • All Situations • • All Conditions • www.webuyhomesbc.com 604-657-9422
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21
COMING EVENTS
LOST AND FOUND
LOST - DOG - Male Pomeranian, 8 yrs old. Weighs 6 lbs. Lost on June 15th in Cloverdale. (604)790-4066
Established Coffee Shop for sale in busy S.Surrey Mall. EXCELLENT LOCATION PERFECT OPPORTUNITY FOR DEDICATED OWNER.
This position is part of the core ofŅce team in our Langley ofŅce and is a challenging admin. position requiring many different skill sets to deal with all aspects and components of the position. This position acts as a liaison between the Accounting dept. and the Sales/Shipping dept. with respect to the invoicing and inventory. Responsible for compliance with The Langley Concrete Group’s policies and procedures, timely and accurate invoicing, inputting of deposits, as well as inputting & monitoring of all documents, transactions and records impacting the Accounts Receivable system. The Accounts Receivable Clerk is expected to perform, in a timely and accurate manner, all tasks listed below while maintaining professionalism and conŅdentially in the performance of this important role in our Langley ofŅce environment. QualiŅcations and Position Requirements: • Preference will be given to candidates with Two plus years exp. in accounts receivable / collections and reception in a computerized accounting enviro. • Consistent, reliable attendance is req. in order to successfully perform & complete the essential job functions and duties of this position • Good knowledge of accounting principles is required Please send updated resume and cover letter indicating salary expectations to hr@ langleyconcretegroup.com
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 42
Excellent Client List. Only $20,000 1 (604)808-0212
CONTRACT OfŅce Cleaning Routes available in the Lower Mainland., Investment required Min. $2500. 604-274-0477 or fred@arodal.ca
Owner must sell due to health issues. $79,000. Will Train.
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 115
EDUCATION
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. SignUp online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853
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
130
HELP WANTED
COMMON EXCHANGE PAWN & JEWELRY Has an immediate opening for a full-time Pawn Associate in our Central Surrey location. Position requires experience in sales, cash handling, customer service and computer skills. Pawnbroker training provided. Competitive wages and beneŅt plan. Please send resume to: Personnel Manager, Common Exchange Ltd., 10595 King George Blvd., Surrey BC V3T2X5 Email: hiring@commonexchange.com
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
Call 604-569-3358 778-868-9712
New West 604.522.4900
or email: len@mokahouse.com
114
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING
LONG HAUL TRUCK DRIVERS
Harlens Trucking Ltd. req’s Class 1 (with air brake endorsement) Long Haul Truck Drivers for hauling loads throughout North America. Job duties include: Operate and drive articulated trucks to transport goods. Plan travel schedule and routes. Conduct pre-trip inspection. Monitor vehicle’s performance. Maintain log book. Must know English. Job is permanent full time, 50 hours/week. $24.00/hour. Apply by mail or in person at 10716 Scott Rd. Surrey BC V3V 4G6 or Fax: 604-957-5265
115
EDUCATION
Jim’s Mowing Business for Sale
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
Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca
BLUEBERRY PICKERS Now required for a fraser valley
FORKLIFT DRIVER
42 cents a pound.
Fax resume to: 604-930-5066 or email to:
farm. Transportation is provided from Surrey. Experience a must. Very good blueberries
To apply please call 604-951-8677 or 778-908-0893
& YARD CLEANER required in Surrey F/T & P/T
horizonwork@yahoo.ca
Friday June 26 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 29 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
GARDENERS HELPER required for large White Rock property, full-time during Summer. STUDENT WELCOME! Call 604-531-7624.
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
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
Landscaping Sales & Service Opportunities Up To $400 CASH Daily
F/T & P/T Outdoors. Spring / Summer Work. Seeking Honest, Hard Working Staff. www.PropertyStarsJobs.com
MOLLY MAID
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
PRODUCTION STAFF K-Bro Linen Systems
* Full time: 4 days @ 10 hrs or 5 days @ 8hrs * Part-time 4-5 hrs starting at 6pm * Starting pay rate: $11.03 $13.02 plus Extended Health Insurance Ability to work weekends is req.
Is looking for bondable, hardworking, detail oriented house cleaners. Drivers Lic an asset. Good English Required.
K-Bro Linen operates a large modern commercial laundry facility located within a short walk from Lake City Skytrain in Bby.
Call Mon - Fri 9am - 3pm
8035 Enterprise St., Burnaby July 3, 2015 between 9:30 am – 4:30 pm
Call 604-599-9962 surdelwr@mollymaid.ca Newspaper Promoters Required. Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal location. Early morning shifts. Monday - Saturday. Please call Marilou at 604.542.7411 or email: marilou@blackpress.ca
WAREHOUSE WORKER
Overland West is looking for an experienced safety oriented, reliable professional forklift operator, to work in a fast paced warehouse. We have many long term employees and are looking to add to our team.
We Offer A Competitive Wage & BC Medical As Well As Extended Benefits. Fax: 604.888.6469 Email: Mike meverest@overlandwest.ca
131
HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES
Servers & Tandoori Cook
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
required for
(Temporary position)
136A JANITORIAL SERVICES
Mirage Banquet Hall
Apply Weekdays Between 9AM to 2PM at: 118-713 Columbia St
New West 604.522.4900
130
NOW HIRING! Delivery Drivers
OFFICE HELP
Suit mature person, willing to work flexible P/T hours, wage based on exp, Surrey area, fax 604-593-1988 email: info.15always@gmail.com
• 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
Fax resume: 604-575-0354 Ph: 604-575-0304 or 604-355-4646
New Country Appliances (13533 78 Avenue, Surrey)
Requires Full Time permanent office administrator. Oversee admin. procedures. Ordering office inventory, preparing emails, databases/spreadsheets, Maintaining payrolls, greet / assist clients. High school required , college degree and 1 year experience preferred . Salary $14.00-$22.00/hour
To Apply Please Email: appliancesnewcountry@ gmail.com
160
TRADES, TECHNICAL
Need to overhaul your job?? We require 2 Mechanics to complete our team. You’ll find we have a clean, organized, friendly shop with a great variety of Trucks, Trailers & Equipment to work on. Duties Include: welding, body repair, hydraulics, brakes, air, electrical, oil changes, and more. We offer Leading Wages in the Valley, Excellent Benefits and a Great Company Culture! Fax: 1.604.856.8399 or email: employment@klinetrailers.com
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.
130
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
Zone Checker The Surrey Distribution Centre is looking for energetic and customer friendly individuals for its Circulation Department. The right candidate must have excellent communication and organizational skills. Your attention to detail and ability to work with minimum supervision set you apart from other applicants. Basic knowledge of MS Word, Excel and Outlook Express recommended.
We are: • GIS (Flyer coordination) – the key agents for supporting the sales in the company • A key participant in the sales process, gathering required demographic or readership information and creating targeting maps by GIS system; • Provide geodemographics analysis and distribution recommendation through GIS analysis • Responsible for GIS mapping and coordinate flyer distribution • Responsible for distribution database updating • Familiar with Canada Census and Postal boundaries system
Advertising Sales Representative
Skills / Experience needed:
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 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 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
Duties include overseeing 100+ youth carriers, recruit and hire new carriers, survey old and new delivery areas, monitor carrier performance and follow-up reader delivery concerns. A reliable vehicle is a must. A vulnerable sector criminal record check is also mandatory. This permanent part-time position is available immediately. Please forward resume to: Circulation Manager Surrey Distribution Centre Serving: • Surrey Leader • Surrey Now • Cloverdale Reporter #200-5450 152nd Street, Surrey, B.C., V3S 5J9 circmanager@surreyleader.com No phone calls please. Only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.
The
blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com
Office Administrator
142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS
NO CARS, SUVS, MINI-VANS OR PICKUP TRUCKS.
• A Capable, well spoken, intelligent, self-motivated and highly organized individual • Knowledgeable and proficient on the GIS applications and systems which you use and have a desire to learn new applications and systems • Ability to learn and understand information technology concepts as they apply to our flyer distribution operations • Someone who is looking for challenge and willing to work under pressure
Closing date July 3, 2015
142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS
Must have your own reliable CARGO VAN (minimum ¾ ton) and clean driver abstract.
You are:
Please forward your resume to: Janet Fitzgerald, Client Services Representative, National Sales janet@blackpress.ca
142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS
Truck-Trailer Mechanics
The National Sales office of Black Press is looking for a successful candidate to assist its GIS department. The suitable candidate will possess an excellent understanding of GIS related technologies/database systems and be able to work in a fast paced environment. The candidate will assist the GIS Analyst in the provision of demographic data, maintain and update distribution database, and thematic maps to sales staff and clients for the purpose of target marketing.
• A background in or working knowledge of GIS • Excellent logic, analytical and problem solving skills • Strong organizational, time management and communication skills • Ability to work independently with minimal supervision • Post-secondary education in GIS • Working knowledge and experience in ArcMap 10.x and up • Experienced in different ArcGIS Desktop and Extensions • Proficient in Excel
MEDICAL/DENTAL
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
HELP WANTED
on 64th Ave in Surrey
130
139
Bayshore Home Health currently has a vacancy for a Registered Nurse in the South Delta / Ladner area. This position is to provide services to a child who has complex medical needs and requires an experienced nurse to attend Kindergarten with the child in the Fall. If you are an exp. RN and love working with children, have excellent leadership and communication skills, we would like to hear from you. ICU or ER, and Pediatric experience is an asset; however, Trach & Vent training will be provided as well as client specific orientation. Interested individuals are encouraged to fax their resume to: 604-739-7435 or email: pedsvancouver@bayshore.ca
REQUIRED NOW PAY $12-15 PER HOUR
HELP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
REGISTERED NURSE
HOUSE CLEANERS/ JANITORS
HOME CARE/SUPPORT
Home Support Worker F/T, $10.25/h, for position details,go to www.ebuysave.com Wendy Zhao,778-707-7137
GIS Business Support National Sales
136A JANITORIAL SERVICES
130
134
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
Apply in Person
In Home Caregiver (Nanny) Jessica Tiwana 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 livein basis. Please note: This is not a condition of employment. Salary $ 10.50/hr. Email resume at: jessicakang1984@gmail.com
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com
Leader
blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com
30 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Friday June 26 2015 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160
TRADES, TECHNICAL
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160
TRADES, TECHNICAL
PERSONAL SERVICES 175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 260
ELECTRICAL
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 281
GARDENING
NEIGHBOURS ELECTRIC Licensed, Warrantied, Affordable. Renos & small jobs. Res & comm. 7 Days. Free est. 604-710-5758.
Commercial Trailer/ Transport Mechanics (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. 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.
• Carpenters • Labourers Carpenters Required F/T for CWL
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
Contracting, Abby. Please e-mail:
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
156
SALES
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
Specializing in Private Events! We Come To You! Doing It All, From Set-Up - Clean-Up.
• Home Dinner Parties • Meetings • Funerals • Weddings • B-B-Ques • Birthdays • Anniversaries
263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE
300
1-877-776-1660 Apply at moneyprovider.com
ASPHALT GRINDINGS WHOLESALE GRAVEL
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 LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars 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
PIANO LESSON 25 yrs exp. B. Ed. (Mus)., ARCT. Spec. in beginners. S.Surrey. Suzanne (604)807-6329
SALES
By joining an award winning community newspaper serving Langley and Aldergrove, you can realize your full potential while contributing to one of the fastest growing communities in Canada. The team environment at The Langley Times 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, determined and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. Your customer service will be second to none. You will be experienced in cold call selling, creative marketing planning and experienced with online and social media marketing You will also be proficient in Mac, Excel and Word programs. The Ability to multi-task and meet deadlines is a must. Competitive Base Salary, Commission, Cell and Car Allowance. A car and a valid drivers license is required. The Langley Times is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii. Send your resume with cover letter by June 30th, 2015. If you are up to the challenge, please send your resume to: Kelly Myers Advertising Manager The Langley Times 20258 Fraser Highway, Langley, B.C. V3A 4E6
WALT’S YARD WORKS & POWER WASHING
Lawn Mowing Yard Clean up 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
TOPSOIL Turf & Lawn Blend, Planting & Garden Blend, Composted Mulch, Sand & Gravel
AC’s- Starting at $3500 & Hot Water Tanks
604-461-0999
Call 604-531-5935
604-644-1878 Excavators, Backhoes, Bobcats & Dump Trucks for hire
The Langley Times has an opening for a Multi Media Sales position.
778-227-2431
RAJ GARDENING
Covered Storage.
156
*30 Yrs Exp. *Fully Insured
GARDENING
Delivery or pick up Surrey location
287
203
ACCOUNTING / TAX /BOOKKEEPING
MOBILE BOOKKEEPING & Payroll services. GST, PST, ROE filing. Reasonable rates. (778)230-9057
You'll find something for the kid in you in the Classifieds! 604-575-5555
242
CONCRETE & PLACING
COMPLETE CONCRETE WORK & LANDSCAPING. Breaking, Bobcat work, Removal, City Driveways, Residential. 5 mil. liab, WCB. Free Est. 604-722-8733
Placing & Finishing * Forming * Site Prep, old concrete removal * Excavation & Reinforcing * Re-Re Specialists 34 Years Exp. Free Estimates. coastalconcrete.ca
Call: Rick (604) 202-5184 JOE’S CONCRETE - 37yrs exp. All types of renovations, driveways, sidewalks, placing, etc. Small jobs welcome. 604-723-5778
AKAL CONCRETE.
All types of reno’s. •Driveways •Sidewalks •Floors •Stairs •Forming •Retaining walls. •Breaking & Removal Concrete
Call 778-881-0961
UNIQUE CONCRETE
DESIGN
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
FREE ESTIMATES
Posting closes on Tuesday June 30th, 2015 257
DRYWALL
PSB DRYWALL LTD.+ All Boarding, Taping, Framing & Texture. Insured work. Dump Removal Service. 604-762-4657 / 778-240-4657 A Call to Vern. Free Est. Drywall, Reno & Texture Specialist, Painting.
“No job too small”. 604-825-8469
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
FINISH CARPENTER Finish Carpentry - Mouldings, sundecks, stairs, siding, painting, drywall. Refs. Rainer cel 604-613-1018 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
TOPSOIL & GRAVEL
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
LANDSCAPING
Specializing in landscape renos Bobcat - Excavator - Decks Retaining Walls - Paving Stones New Lawns-Irrigation-Drainage Hedging and more
6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE. $13/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work. Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.
MUSHROOM MANURE
Over 30 yrs exp.
KITCHEN CABINETS
Complete Landscape Service
FENCING
HEDGE TRIM, Tree Pruning, Garden Cleanup, Lawn care, Bark Mulch & Aeration. 778-383-7220
Residential/Commercial Interior/Exterior Call Dan,
604-542-4331
www.assocatedpainters.ca
www.paintspecial.com Running this ad for 10yrs
6’ CEDAR FENCING. Free ests. Red Rose Landscaping. Harbiee 604-722-2531
*Yard Clean-up *Power Raking *Lawn Cut *Hedge Trimming *Pruning *Fertilizing. Res/Comm. 604-724-8272 or 604-671-2215
Associated Painters Inc.
PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299
7 DAY DELIVERY
281
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley
Call 604-897-5850
Multi Media Sales
blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com
QUICKWAY Kitchen Cabinets Ltd. ****Mention this ad for 10% Off **** Call Raman @ 604-561-4041.
269
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
FREE ESTIMATES
All Electrical. Low Cost. Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos Panel changes ~ 604-374-0062
Kristy 604.488.9161
$500 loans and more No credit checks
HOME REPAIRS
296
threescocatering@shaw.ca or Visit us at: www. threescompanycatering.ca
FINANCIAL SERVICES
288
A1 BATH RENO’S. Bsmt suites, drywall, patios, plumbing, siding, fencing, roofing, landscaping, etc. Joe 604-961-9937.
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
Unique Taste, Unique Menus... Gourmet, Customized Menus Tailored To Your Function...
182
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
New Construction & Renovations Patios ) Sundecks ) Fencing Bathrooms Concrete Sidewalks Basement Suites Remodels FREE ESTIMATES GORD REID ¸ 778-241-4668 tjbconstructionltd@gmail.com
604-531-5935 SHINE LANDSCAPING
*Grass Cutting *Hedge Trimming *Yard Clean *Pruning *Pressure Wash shinelandscaping@hotmail.com
BL CONTRACTING
Call 778-688-3724
All Green Lawn Care
RENOVATIONS SPECIALIST
- Hedge Trimming -Pruning - Clean-up - Lawn Cutting - Power Raking - Aeration - Spring Clean-up
*Cedar *Treated *Vinyl *Trex
Tom 778-895-9030 or 604-582-1875
*Aluminum *Glass *Wood
SUNDECKS:
RAILINGS:
Call Brian for a free estimate
604-773-1349
Rocky Mountain Landscaping
Residential & Commercial
• Lawn Mowing & Maintenance • Yard Clean-Up • Manure • Hedge Trimming • New Turf • Power Raking Seeding • Tree & Stump Removal • Drainage • Paving Stones • Retaining Walls • Fencing • Pressure Washing
317
MISC SERVICES
9Dump Site Now Open9 SBroken Concrete RocksS $25.00 Per Metric Ton SMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS $25.00 Per Metric Ton GrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds $59.00 Per Ton
Meadows Landscape Supply
604-465-1311
320
MOVING & STORAGE
AJM PAINTING Ticketed Painter. N/S. 25 years exp. A+ Rating
BBB, WCB & LIABILITY Cell 604-837-6699 NORTH STARS PAINTING www.northstars-painting.com AMAZING WORK, AMAZING VALUE! 778.245.9069
338
ABE MOVING - $35/Hr. Per Person *Reliable Careful Movers. *Rubbish Removal. *24 Hours. 604-999-6020
PLUMBING
FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATING H/W Tanks, Reno’s, Boilers, Furn’s. Drain Cleaning. Ins. (604)596-2841
A Gas Fitter 0 Plumber RENOS & REPAIRS Excellent price on Hot Water Tanks Furnace, Boilers, Plumbing Jobs & Drain Cleaning
0 604-312-7674 0
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Call Aman: 778-895-2005
~ Certified Plumber ~
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING
Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.
ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY
Reno’s and Repairs
Furnace, Boilers, Hot Water Heat Plumbing Jobs ~ Reas rates
~ 604-597-3758 ~
ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-5 ton truck, 2men fr $45. SENIOR DISCOUNT.Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576
MIRACLE MOVING 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
604 - 720 - 2009
~We accept Visa & Mastercard~
AFFORDABLE MOVING www.affordablemoversbc.com
$45/Hr
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE
604-537-4140
VECTOR RENO’S
7 Days / Week
Specializing in all interior & exterior home renovations & additions Call 604-690-3327
Meadows Landscape Supply Ltd.
NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring.
Chung 778.552.5838
(604)240-1920
Prompt Delivery Available
2 coats any colour
(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint.
341
PRESSURE WASHING
POWER WASHING since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627
----- PRESSURE WASHING ----- LICENSED & INSURED -- HOUSES START AT $150 -- CALL ANTHONY 778*228*6302 (qualityonly.ca)
POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING
SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE
Call Ian 604-724-6373
9 Bark Mulch 9 Lawn & Garden Soil 9 Drain Gravel 9 Lava Rock 9 River Rock 9Pea Gravel
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
(604)465-1311
~ PRO PAINTERS ~ INTERIOR / EXTERIOR Quality Work, Free Estimates
meadowslandscapesupply.com
ALL BEST LANDSCAPING All Lawn Care ~ Free Est.
Member of Better Business Bureau
WCB INSURED
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.
Vincent 543-7776
SPECIAL SUPER SALE Gutter windows skylights siding for $360. (under 2500sf) We use soap WCB Insured.............604-861-6060
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
PETER ROOFING Ltd. Roofing Specialists • New Roof Re-Roofing • Repairs • Cedar Shakes • Shingles Duroids • Torch-on Harjit Pattar 604-589-4603 604-857-3325
Bill, 604-306-5540 or 604-589-5909
ARBUTUS ROOFING & DRAINS Ltd
HANDYMAN CONNECTION HANDYMAN CONNECTION Handyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations -
Reno’s: Bsmt Stes, Kitch/Bath Hardwood/Lam Floors, Tiles, Mouldings - 778-549-9119
We specialize in: F Shingle Roofing F Flat Roofing F Re-Roofing & Roof Repairs
A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing, reroofing. Dhillon 604-782-1936.
Residential / Strata
RICHGOLD Contr. Ltd. Bsmt suites, framing, drywall, paint, decking, flooring, crown moulding & all kinds of reno’s. Sam 604-992-8474.
604 - 259 - 2482
www.arbutusroofing.com
FULL BATHROOM RENO’s, basement & deck development, painting. Call Les 778-688-5739 or 604-930-4956
288
HOME REPAIRS
HANDYMAN Home Repair Services - 45 Yrs Exp Call or Text Henry 604-868-5441
PAINTING 1/2 PRICE Interior Special. Top Quality. Free Estimates! 604-498-3050
Roofing Experts. 778-230-5717 Repairs/Re-Roof/New Roofs. All work Gtd. Free Est. Call Frank.
Friday June 26 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 31 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 560
551
GARAGE SALES
CLOVERDALE Sat. June 27-9am3pm. 18488-54 Ave. New Napoleon Port. BBQ, new 30” Range, etc, etc. COMPLEX GARAGE SALE 12725 - 63 AVE. SURREY Sat & Sun June 27&28 ~ 9am-3pm Everything available even a Kitchen Sink!! Rain or Shine
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.
551
GARAGE SALES REAL ESTATE
NEWTON
MULTI FAMILY GARAGE SALE
Sat, June 27th, 9am-5pm
6364 130th Street
Lots of Everything - incl: an Older Upright Piano by Schomacker & Co.
Fraser Heights GARAGE SALE Sat, Jun 27, 9am-3pm. 10477 169th Street. Hsehld, Jewelry, Lots More!
609
APARTMENT/CONDOS
ABBOTSFORD
ANCORA HOUSING SOCIETY Non-Profit Seniors Housing (55+)
2 bdrm. 850 sq. ft. Apt.
MULTI Neighbour Sale: 15260 62 Ave Surrey, Sat June 27, 9am- 2pm Some furniture, lots of good stuff!
Refund. Membership fee $55,000
Max. 2 people - No pets Low monthly maintenance fee includes hydro. Close to hospital & all amenities.
NEWTON
COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE
604-870-8831 / 604-854-5408 ancorahousing@gmail.com
Westwood Estates/ Westwood Gate
Sat. June 27, 10am-2pm.
625
FOR SALE BY OWNER
8224 / 8234 / 8254 134th St.
706
RENTALS
APARTMENT/CONDO
752
ARBORETUM CO-OP
SUNCREEK ESTATES * Large 2 & 3 Bdrm Apartments * Insuite w/d, stove, fridge, d/w * 3 floor levels inside suite * Wood burning fireplace * Private roof top patio * Walk to shops. Near park, pool, playground * Elementary school on block * On site security/on site Mgmt * Reasonable Rent * On transit route * Sorry no pets
Office: 7121 - 133B St. Surrey 604-596-0916 SURREY 75/120A St. 3 Bdrm apt, $1060/mo, quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-501-0505
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 356
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 S. SURREY. 1 YR/OLD 3 bdrm + den T/H nr Semiahmoo Trail. Open flr concept, lrg kitch, w/i closet, almost 2000 sf, 2 car garage, beaut backyrd on greenspace, walk to all amens. Ns/np, $2300m $2200 for longer term tenant. 604-542-0034. 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
SURREY SUTTON PLACE
Surrey
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.
Beautifully Upscale 1 Bdrm Suites - perfect for the discerning renter!
Starting at $810. Located close to bus routes & skytrain, 20 min walk to Surrey City Centre.
Call 604-451-6676
Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets.
Specializing in Re-Roofing New Roofing & Repairs. All kinds of roofing. Free Est.
733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS NEWTON MOBILE HOME PARK. 2 Large RV Pads available for mobile home. Call 604-597-4787.
RUBBISH REMOVAL
RICK’S RUBBISH REMOVAL - Residential - Commercial - Construction - Yard Waste
A1 TOP CANADIAN ROOFING LTD.
3 Bdrm Rancher near 68/Fraser Beautiful ‘Garden of Eden’ landscaping, 50x150’, many upgrades $597,000. Call: (604)575-2534
736
HOMES FOR RENT
IN BUSINESS OVER 20 YEARS ~ FREE ESTIMATES ~
778-878-2617 (BBB) or 604-781-2094
Call Rick 604-329-2783
TRANSPORTATION
** Guildford Garbage Removal ** Junk Removal & Yard Waste Res / Comm........... 778-918-4322
372
356
TOWNHOUSES
Call Surrey Gardens Apts at 604-589-7040 to view our Elite Suites!
Units taking part will be designated for easy access.
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
RENTALS
SUNDECKS
818
1992 BUICK LESABRE
5 Bdrm custom built home across from French Immersion, on c/d/s. Newly reno’d. Call Rani to view by appt only 604-941-3977. Open house 10am-3pm. Sat & Sun, June 27th & 28th, 1691 Renton Ave Port Coquitlam. $950,000
4 Door, automatic, all power options, A/C, plush interior, new tires, good on gas, driven daily. $550/obo. Call (604)503-3151
CEDAR HILLS - Deluxe 2 bdrm Condo, 1026 sf, $208,000: Don’t miss this deal! (604)786-7977
RUBBISH REMOVAL
641
CARS - DOMESTIC
In the Matter of Mechanics’ Lien Act Blackwell Distributors of 10894 120th Street, Surrey, BC claims a Mechanics’ Lien Act against the following person for work done and materials supplied in the repair of a 2008 black Mazda Hatchback, VIN # JM1BK34L681790032. If not paid in full on or before the date stated the vehicle will be sold by private sale. STEVEN SHELDON CAMPBELL Date of Sale After July 20, 2015 AMOUNT OWING - $1262.20
NO. 163144 New Westminster Registry In the Supreme Court of British Columbia Between: Francis Sonon, Plaintiff and Ashley Alicia Meilleur, Defendant No. 163145 New Westminster Registry In the Supreme Court of British Columbia Between: Corazon Sonon, Plaintiff and Ashley Alicia Meilleur, Defendant No. 163146 New Westminster Registry In the Supreme Court of British Columbia Between: Abbegaile Sonon, Plaintiff and Ashley Alicia Meilleur, Defendant ADVERTISEMENT TO: ASHLEY ALICIA MEILLEUR TAKE NOTICE THAT on May 28, 2015, an Order was made for service on you of Notices of Civil Claim issued from the New Westminster Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in proceeding numbers 163144, 163145 and 163146 by way of this advertisement. In the proceedings, the Plaintiffs claim the following relief against you: general damages; special damages; damages for past, present and future loss of earning capacity; damages for future care costs and loss of housekeeping capacity; interest pursuant to the provisions of the Court Order Interest Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.79; costs of this action; and such further and other relief as to this Honourable Court may deem meet. You must file responding pleadings within the period required under the Supreme Court Civil Rules failing which further proceedings, including judgment, may be taken against you without notice to you. You may obtain, from the New Westminster Registry, at the Law Courts, Begbie Square, 651 Carnarvon Street, New Westminster, British Columbia, a copy of the Notices of Civil Claim and the Orders providing for service by this advertisement. This advertisement is placed by the Plaintiffs whose address for service is CAMPBELL REDMOND, Barristers and Solicitors, 200, 10388 Whalley Boulevard, Surrey, BC, V3T 4H4, Attention: Oliver Hui Fax: 604-581-2017 E-mail: crlaw@uniserve.com.
U-Haul Storage Center Port Kells Claims a Landlord’s Contractual Lien against the following person’s goods in storage at:
18590 96th Avenue, Surrey, BC 604-888-0133
Auction is subject to cancellation at anytime without notice. A5-2 Amanda Menard 2955 Diamond St., Abbotsford, BC F6-1 Michele Montanaro 9168 175 St., Surrey, BC L15-30 Michael Ferrie #126 - 18777 68A Ave., Surrey, BC P12-4 Christopher Lentsch 8997 217 St., Langley, BC P7-6 Krystal Chesser 10030 156 St., Surrey, BC Q10-9 Peter Brown 7853 Suncrest Dr., Surrey, BC R14-3 Richard Ollerith 10556 127 Ave., Surrey, BC T10 Charlie Black 8156 164 St., Surrey, BC A sale will take place at the storage location on Friday July 10th, 2015. Viewing from 10:00AM - 12:00PM. Sealed bids will be opened at 12:30PM. Room contents are personal / household goods unless noted otherwise. Bids will be for entire contents of each unit.
TOWNHOUSES
. Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688
374
TREE SERVICES
PRO TREE SERVICES Quality pruning/shaping/hedge trimming/ removals & stump grinding. John, 604-588-8733/604-318-9270
2010 GM PONTIAC WAVE auto, sedan, only 20,000 kms. Beige. All options. $6000/firm. 604-538-9257
TREE BROTHERS SPECIALIST Tree Removal/Topping/Spiral Thinning/Hedge Trimming/Stump Grinding. Free Estimates. WCB/Fully Insured
JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT! 604.587.5865
$25 Off with this Ad
EXTRA CHEAP
Jerry, 604-500-2163
JUNK / RUBBISH REMOVAL Almost for free! (778)997-5757
PETS 477
684
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
Investment Property FOR SALE
2.17 Acre in Port Kells Annidale 3 Bdrm + 2.5 Baths. NCP Phase 1 approved 10-15 units/acre. Tejinder Singh 604-725-8484
Sunrise Westcoast
RENTALS 706 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 523
UNDER $100
DANBY FREEZER - small. $100. Perfect condition. No scratches. (604)599-0258
542
FRUIT & VEGETABLES
~ FRESH LOCAL ~
BLUEBERRIES
$9.99/box Open Daily Rai’s Colebrook Farming
14176 Colebrook Rd.
604-599-3516, 778-878-4650 Fresh Local Raspberries, Blueberries & Black Berries $10/flat/U-Pick. Local Blueberries 3 flats for $27: Surrey Farms 5180-152 St. 604-574-1390
830
MOTORCYCLES
N. DELTA 7013 West Brewster Dr. 3 Bdrm 2 storey house, 2 full baths, close to schools. July 1, $1650/mo + utils. N/P, N/S (604)889-1738
BELGIUM MALINOI dogs from very strong working line a 6/mo old & a 4/year old. Imported from Holland. $1500/each. Call 604-710-3884.
MANX (Bobtail) Kittens, born March 25, 2 males , charcoal grey with stripes, $75, Mission, 604-820-4827
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
SURREY
PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS
New! END UNIT 3 Bd townhome Bright & Spacious, quiet location, near YMCA & Schools. #8 - 14905 ~ 60th Ave The Grove at Cambridge. Don Fults @ Royal LePage 604-715-4945
APARTMENT/CONDO Cedar Lodge and Court Apts
Quiet community living next to Guildford Mall. Clean 1 bdrm starting $760 & 2 bdrm starting at $860, Corner units starting at $950. (some w/ensuites), Cable, Heat, Hot Water incl. Onsite Mgr.
604-584-5233
www.cycloneholdings.ca CLOVERDALE 1 bdrm-$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
Surrey - 10139 Helen Drive 2 bdrm. + den rancher, 1 bath. 2 car garage, 7,200 sq. ft. yard. Avail. July 1 604.597.3399 or 604.505.3564
2009 SAGA Dual Sport dirt/street motorcycle. Mint cond, never off road. 675 orig kms. Super commuter. $2500 firm. 604-349-4181.
Surrey 185/60th 3 bdrm clean rancher 4 appls, dble garage, avail now. N/S pet neg. 604-785-0548
739
MOTELS, HOTELS
845
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
The Scrapper
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
750
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:
SUITES, LOWER
CLOVERDALE 2 bdr in quiet CDS. Incl gas f/p, utils,lndry. NS/NP. Aug 1st. $995. 778-808-5100 after 6pm CLOVERDALE bright 2 bdrm suite in brand new house, full bath, nr all amens, school, bus. Avail July 15th ns/np. $900 incl utils. 604-307-2952 SURREY, 2 bdrm ste. Hydro, heat & cable incl. Prkg for 2 cars. Close to all schls & transit. N/P. $800/mo. Call: (604)357-3732 SURREY - Cedar Hills: 2 bdrm bsmt suite in newer house. Very spacious. Ground level. New carpets, super clean. Close to all amen. $900/m. Utils inc. n/s, n/p. July 1st or 15th. (604)584-8242
751
• Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal
FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022 #1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200
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
851
TRUCKS & VANS
2007 GMC Denali black Truck, asking $21,900. Low kms. Fully loaded. 604-315-2525
On August 7, 2013, at 14945 Marine Drive, White Rock, B.C., and the 7000 block of 130th Street, Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $466.60 CAD, an iPhone, and a Blackberry (Marine Drive), on or about 17:50 Hours, and $235 CAD (130th Street), on or about 20:00 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was a warrant authorized by the court pursuant to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada (CDSA) to seize evidence in respect of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (possession for purpose of trafficking) of the CDSA and/or because there was evidence that the property was obtained pursuant to offences under that section. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2015-2844, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will
be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www. pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
32 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday June 26 2015
surreycollege.ca
ADULT EDUCATION SITES Queen Elizabeth 9467 King George Blvd 604.581.1413
Invergarry 12772 88 Avenue 604.595.8218
Academic Courses - Ministry funded academic courses for anyone who has not graduated from high school and high school grads who are still 18 years old on July 1, 2015.
Information Literacy Foundations courses - Ministry funded Sessions courses available for BC residents. Call for details.
Register in person at the following locations: July 8 - 31 10 am to 2 pm Princess Margaret Secondary Summer Programs Office 12870 72 Avenue, Surrey 604.594.5458 Queen Elizabeth Secondary Summer Programs Office 9457 King George Boulevard, Surrey 604.581.1413
Academic Courses Offered: • Accounting 11 & 12
• English 11 & 12
Surrey Community College • Math 11 & 12 • Chemistry 11 & 12 - 140th • Physics 11 &Surrey, 12 9260 St, BC • Biology 12
• Communications 11 & 12
• Planning 12
604.583.4040 • Data Management 12 • Social Studies 11 scollege@surreyschools.ca
surreycollege.ca g
Register today for September CLASSES
ph. 604.583.4040 surreycollege.ca