Surrey North Delta Leader, July 10, 2015

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Friday July 10 2015

▼ Truck parking plans unveiled 8

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CHRISTMAS IN JULY RETURNS ▶ SURREY FOOD BANK LAUNCHES ONLINE CAMPAIGN 2

The Surrey Food Bank’s Executive Director Marilyn Herrmann (left), along with Feezah Jaffer and Katrina Albert, has resurrected the former Christmas in July campaign and taken it online to help buy healthy groceries – such as fresh veggies – for the food bank’s 14,000 clients. BOAZ JOSEPH

REGION’S WATER AT RECORD LOW LEVELS

▶ ‘WE’RE INTO UNCHARTED TERRITORY HERE,’ METRO SAYS JEFF NAGEL

New readings show Metro Vancouver’s water reservoirs have dropped well into record low levels for this time of year. Hot, dry weather throughout May and June sharply increased water demand

in the region. The regional district now has 75 per cent of its total drinking water capacity available, as of July 5. “We’re into uncharted territory here,” said Darrell Mussatto, chair of Metro’s utilities committee. “We are using our water more than we did obviously last year and more than we have in the past. We’re at early August levels in early July.” Metro already moved to stage two water restrictions effective last Friday – that reduces lawn sprinkling from three days to just once a week. Sprinkling is permitted Mondays from 4-9 a.m. for even-numbered

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addresses and Thursdays from 4-9 a.m. for odd-numbered addresses. Watering of school yards, sports fields, park lawns, cemeteries, boulevards and golf course fairways are also limited to minimal levels, in most cases once a week. Stage two restrictions also mean a ban on the use of pressure washers and other hosing off of outdoor surfaces, with limited exceptions, such as health and safety or preparing a driveway for painting or sealing. continued on page 5

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Banking on an early Christmas ▶ SURREY FOOD BANK IS SEEKING ONLINE DONATIONS TO FILL THE SHELVES DURING THE SLOW SUMMER MONTHS BOAZ JOSEPH

FREE

O come, all ye faithful, and help the Surrey Food Bank (SFB) this summer. The non-profit society has resurrected its Christmas in July program and taken it online as it expands purchases of healthier foods to meet the changing needs of its clients. There are 14,000 people served each month – 40 per cent of them children – and the need continues in the hot weather months when donations tend to dwindle. While food donations are always welcome, the SFB is seeking more money to buy baby formula, protein, mealsin-a-tin, soups, milk, eggs and rice – the latter undergoing a worldwide shortage and price increases. Through bulk-buying arrangements with grocery chains, each dollar donated to the food bank can buy $3 worth of food. “We buy $10,000 worth of formula every six weeks to feed

9 TH ANNUAL

200 babies a week,” says SFB Director of External Relations Feezah Jaffer. That number is growing, as the SFB has 87 babies waiting to be born among its clients. For the first time, the SFB is also buying bulk carrots and potatoes on a regular basis. “We’re adamant that our clients receive good food that’s as healthy as possible,” says Executive Director Marilyn Herrmann, who adds the food bank disposes of – at some cost – a lot of expired food that is donated. “We had a can here a couple of weeks ago from 1999,” recalls Jaffer. “That’s the record-holder right now.” She notes that despite the good intention of donors, clients deserve respect and should not be expected to eat expired food any more than the donor’s family would. “If you allow us to do the purchasing, we can do it in a much more thoughtful and effective way,” says Herrmann of cash donations. Unlike the previous Christmas in July program, which ran annually until several years ago, the SFB is asking for online donations only – handled in-house by development manager and social media guru Katrina Albert.

Following a renovation last year, the Surrey Food Bank’s 14,000 clients are now served indoors, rather than having to line up outside. The food bank is still seeking donations of cash to buy more fresh and healthy food. BOAZ JOSEPH

This time around, SFB volunteers won’t be standing outside grocery stores asking for donations. Instead, donating is a few clicks away. Herrmann says the old system wasn’t effective over time, and was unpopular with some store owners and customers. It’s also unrealistic to expect people to carry change or small

bills these days, she adds. The money raised in Christmas in July will go directly to food purchases. Regular and corporate donations of money will continue towards other operating costs. The SFB has an annual operating budget of between $1.3 and $1.4 million, well up from $1 million just two years ago.

The food bank makes many of its bulk purchases at Fresh St. Market (owned by H.Y. Louie) in Fleetwood, and has a continuing relationship with the Overwaitea Food Group and Safeway and other stores. The SFB continues through its programs to assist more vulnerable members of the population, including babies, people with mobility issues, new Canadians and seniors. Following renovations last year, the food bank now stores a part of its not-perishable goods offsite. With the increase in space available, food bank clients are served inside, and are offered more – and healthier and fresher – choices in the foods they can take home. “It’s almost like a grocery store,” says Jaffer. The summer, she adds, is a good time to focus on online donations, since people can be out of town and still donate. “Hunger has no season,” says Jaffer. “If you’re hungry, you’re hungry.” The Surrey Food Bank is located at 10732 City Parkway. For more information about the Christmas in July program, contact Katrina Albert at events@surreyfoodbank.org or 604-581-5443 or visit http:// bit.ly/1JHsHuw

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Fr iday July 10 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

Surrey teacher who belittled students guilty of misconduct

The B.C. government is asking the public whether penalties for distracted driving should be tougher. The online consultation website (www. gov.bc.ca/ distracted driving) is collecting feedback until July 16.

▼ EDUCATOR ARGUED THE HIGH LEVEL OF STUDENT NEED IN HER CLASSROOM AND LACK OF SUPPORT WERE PARTLY TO BLAME A Surrey teacher has been found guilty of professional misconduct by the B.C. Teacher Regulation Branch (BCTRB) for yelling so loudly at her kindergarten students it could be heard outside the classroom, and for criticizing kids’ work, sometimes crumpling it and throwing it away. Cheryl Ann Gosse was a teacher at Hjorth Road Elementary during the 2011-2012 school year – the period during which it was alleged she engaged in professional misconduct and/or conduct unbecoming a teacher on several occasions. Though many of the allegations were unsubstantiated, a three-person BCTRB panel found after a hearing last fall that Gosse also inappropriately reprimanded a child for urinating in the playground and made belittling and disrespectful comments to children. The decision was issued in late May but was just posted on the teacher regulation website last week. Gosse denied she ever made belittling or disrespectful comments to her students, and though her principal and some colleagues testified they heard her yell, she called the allegations “generalized and impressionistic.” She admitted she was a strict teacher with high expectations, but, according to the BCTRB decision, “expressed adamantly” that she would never crumple and throw a student’s work in the trash. She recalled disciplining the child about urinating on the playground, but didn’t recall whether other students overheard and denied the student cried.

BOAZ JOSEPH

Public demands higher distracted driving fines

continued on page 9

▼ BRITISH COLUMBIANS APPEAR TO WANT TOUGHER PENALTIES; PUBLIC CAN WEIGH IN UNTIL JULY 16 TOM FLETCHER

Three-quarters of the way through a consultation on distracted driving policy, the vast majority of B.C. residents who have responded want fines increased. Justice Minister Suzanne Anton says thousands of people have participated on the B.C. government’s consultation website, and more than 90 per cent want stronger action to stop people talking or texting on their phones while they’re behind the wheel. The issue now is how high the fines should go. “British Columbians are also telling us they want to see tougher escalating penalties for repeat offenders, because right now some people see the $167 ticket as the cost of doing business,” Anton said Tuesday. “We need to stop that.” B.C.’s fine is the second lowest in Canada, and a threepoint insurance penalty was added last fall. Anton said she doesn’t intend to follow Ontario’s lead and put the fine

up to $1,000 for repeat offenders, but an increase will be coming within a year. Comments on the website www.gov.bc.ca/distracted driving continue to debate the merits of seizing cellphones from drivers, but Anton reiterated that option is not being considered. Suspending licences or impounding vehicles of repeat offenders is on the table, however. Saskatchewan impounds the vehicle for a week if the driver gets two distracted driving tickets less than a year apart. The consultation continues until July 16. Participants are asked to reply to nine questions. The crowd-sourcing exercise has its weaknesses. Only five ▶ “... some per cent of respondents have come from the B.C. Interipeople see the or, and Anton said younger $167 ticket as people are also under-represented. the cost of doing The province attributes 88 business. We deaths to distracted driving last year, second to speedneed to stop that.” ing and ahead of impaired SUZANNE ANTON driving.

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4 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday July 10 2015

A fusion of culture at upcoming festival SHEILA REYNOLDS

Get a taste of Surrey’s diversity when the seventh-annual Fusion Festival takes over Holland Park next weekend. The two-day event features back-toback entertainment on five stages, plus dozens of cultural pavilions highlighting the food, traditions, arts and colourful attire of numerous countries. Headlining Saturday on the Concorde Pacific World Music Stage is bhangra star Jazzy B featuring Miss Kaur, while world-renowned Latin musician Jose Feliciano will headline on the same stage Sunday evening. Everything from pipers, to Chinese dancers, to a Santana cover band, to fiddling will provide non-stop entertainment on three other stages from morning to night. There will also be a celebrity cooking stage where

special guests, including MasterChef Canada winner David Jorge, will give demonstrations. Get a glimpse of the world at the nearly 50 cultural pavilions on site. New this year are representatives of Afghanistan, England, Iran, Scotland, Thailand and Vietnam. Admission to the festival and entertainment is free. Tickets to buy food at the pavilions are for sale on site. The 2015 Surrey Fusion Festival takes place July 18 and 19, from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. both days. Holland Park is located at King George Boulevard and Old Yale Road. For more information, including the full line-up of performers and demonstrations, a list of cultural pavilions and other things to do at the festival, check www. surrey.ca/fusionfestival

▶ SURREY

FUSION FESTIVAL ON JULY 18 AND 19

Bhangra star Jazzy B (above) performs on Saturday at 8:30 p.m. at the Concorde Pacific World Music Stage, while Latin guitarist Jose Feliciano plays on Sunday at 8:45 p.m.

Please Join Us We are hosting a Public Open House for our Fleetwood West and East proposals. Anthem Properties has submitted applications to rezone 16434 and 16518 Fraser Highway to permit two separate townhouse developments. For more information, please contact the Applicant, Brent Carlson, Development Manager, Anthem Properties at BCarlson@anthemproperties.com or 604-235-3167. Open House Event Details Date: Tuesday, July 14, 2015 Time: 6:00pm - 8:30pm (drop-in) Sheila Reynolds

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Only water play parks with user-activated switches are now allowed to operate under Metro Vancouver’s Water Shortage Response Plan. BOAZ JOSEPH Est. 1942

▶ METRO TAKING WAIT-AND-SEE HOT TUB TRADE-INt APPROACH TO MORE RESTRICTIONS even from page 1

Only water play parks with user-activated switches are now allowed to operate. Decorative water fountains will also be shut down, but hand-operated drinking water fountains won’t be affected. Hand watering of flowers, vegetable gardens and trees is still allowed. Stage two restrictions are expected to remain in place until Sept. 30. Mussatto said it’s too early to say if Metro will order even tougher water restrictions. He said more time is needed to see if the stage two restrictions do enough to reduce

water consumption. “If everyone responds well that will allow us to get into the fall.” Further steps in Metro’s Water Shortage Response Plan would ban all lawn sprinkling at stage three, and hot tubs and pools couldn’t be refilled. At stage four, all watering of plants with treated drinking water would be banned, all car washes, water parks and public outdoor pools shut down, and many other water uses would be allowed only if ordered for health and safety reasons. The last time Metro went to stage three restrictions was in 2003, the year of the Kelowna wildfires, and more restric-

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VIEWPOINT

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday July 10 2015

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION: Are you pleased with the result of the transit referendum? To answer, go to the home page of our website at surreyleader.com

Last week we asked: Are you making an effort to conserve water? Here’s how you responded:

Yes 71% No 29%

Bus riders left stranded Last week, word came down that the proposal to add 0.5 per cent to the provincial sales tax to pay for an ambitious program of transportation expansion was handily defeated. Surrey voters voted 66 per cent against the plan. Delta voters were against it by a 68-32 per cent margin, while 59 per cent of White Rock voters said “no.” What does this mean for the projects which most benefit Surrey? The Pattullo Bridge replacement project will still go ahead. Even supporters of the added tax acknowledged this during the campaign. TransLink’s portion of the cost of the new bridge will be funded by tolls, so the sales tax revenue plan really didn’t affect it. The bigger question on the Pattullo should be this - why spend more than $100 million to patch up the bridge to keep it open for a few more years? TransLink announced just before the final day of handing in plebiscite ballots that the bridge would be closed to all but light vehicle traffic for close to two years to get the patchwork done and would be closed every evening and weekend. It would be far better to use the money earmarked for that project as a down payment on the new bridge, and get to work on it right away. Most drivers who now use the bridge would likely put up with a permanent

closure if it meant a new bridge would be available to them sooner. The LRT lines in Surrey will also likely be built, according to Mayor Linda Hepner. She said private-sector partners are ready and willing to invest in the projects. She made that statement the day the plebiscite results were announced. Hepner said partners could build, maintain and operate the line. This is what happened with the Canada Line, so it is not without precedent. Federal and provincial money is available for the LRT lines, so the partner(s) would have to come up with one-third of the capital costs. The first line would run from Newton to Guildford via King George Boulevard and 104 Avenue. Hepner promised in the November election that it would be ready by 2018. The more ambitious line along Fraser Highway, which is controversial as it would mean hundreds of trees in the Green Timbers urban forest would be cut down, is the second phase of the LRT project. It was set for completion in about 10 years, according to the mayors’ plan. Whether this project would go ahead in its current proposed form is debatable. For one thing, it would offer an absolute minimum of travel time savings over rapid buses. Given the distance

involved, it seems that it would be better to invest in buses for the foreseeable future on that busy corridor. Green Timbers may also prove a more formidable object than Surrey council thinks. The forest was protected by a referendum vote by citizens in 1988, and any planned encroachments on it could lead to legal challenges. While Surrey officials claim that only trees which are not protected within the urban forest would be chopped down, that claim seems a bit too convenient. The LRT line from King George Station to Langley City would also be very expensive, and in some rural areas, there would be no passenger traffic. From a private sector perspective, it may not be viable east of 168 Street. The one part of the mayors’ transit plan which is least likely to go ahead now is expansion of the bus fleet. Additional buses and more routes had been promised if the sales tax plan was approved, but it will be hard for TransLink to set up new routes or offer more service given its current financial constraints. Once again, those who depend on the bus system have been left out in the cold.

QUITE FRANKLY ▼ Frank Bucholtz

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

frank.bucholtz@gmail.com

Cool reception for a brilliant idea GUEST VIEW ▼

Nick Greenizan

When it comes to camping, I like to think of myself as something of an innovator. A few years ago, in advance of a camping trip with some friends, I decided that rather than spend another hot Okanagan night in a tent, I would design a far-too-elaborate wooden bed and storage structure that I could slide into the back of my SUV once the seats were folded down. I bought some cheap patio-furniture cushions to put on top of the wooden platform and – voila! – I had myself a motorhome. Never mind the problems – the bug screens I bought to cover the open windows that routinely slid off, or the fact that, even with open windows, it was like sleeping in a sauna. It was an ingenious, well-executed plan. Of course, most of my friends dis-

agreed with me. I received a few sideways glances, and a few people wondered why I was too lazy to just take 10 minutes to set up a tent. The truck-to-motorhome conversion lasted just that one summer. The next time out, I brought my tent with me. And I’ll have it with me again this weekend, when I be venture out with some friends on a four-day trip. Only this time, I’ve made a few improvements. This year, faced with the prospect of temperatures in the 30s and with seeing many of my camping mates pull up with air-conditioned trailers, I decided to add air-conditioning to my tent, too. It was easy, really. An old air-conditioner, some cardboard, more than a little duct tape, a bit of old-fashioned ingenuity and about 100 feet of extension cords. Air-cooled paradise.

And just like two yeas ago, I was again met with skepticism. “Good lord,” texted one friend, when I sent her a picture of my handiwork. “You can’t be serious,” said another. “Why don’t you just rent a trailer?” It’s criticism I imagine some of the world’s greatest visionaries also received through the ages – just imagine the text-messages Sir Isaac Newton received from his friends when he tried to tell them about gravity. Truth be told, it should never have come to this. Until a week ago, I was set to borrow a tent trailer from a friend. At the last minute, however, due to circumstances neither of us could control, it became unavailable.

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My understanding wife – who camps only because she knows I love it, and because I’d promised her finer accommodations this time – was understandably crushed at the prospect of spending another scorching hot weekend sans trailer. But necessity is the mother of invention – and I didn’t want to disappoint my wife more than I normally do – so I came up with my plan, naysayers be damned. So, we’ll see how it goes. It could work beautifully, making me the envy of all my friends. Or it could blow up in my face, and I’ll be forced get a trailer in time for next summer. Either that, or I’ll have to come up with another brilliant idea. Pass the duct tape. Nick Greenizan is the sports reporter at the Peace Arch News, a sister paper to The Leader.

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


Fr iday July 10 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

INBOX ▶ newsroom@surreyleader.com

‘I want my Canada back’ ▼ MP NO-SHOW AT COAL FORUM A DISAPPOINTMENT

My husband and I attended an all-candidates forum in North Delta on June 26 hosted by Communities and Coal, a community group from South Surrey. This was an opportunity to acquaint ourselves with federal candidates on a local issue. The group’s guest speaker, Nick Mullins, was a former coal miner turned climate change activist who spoke to his experiences and discoveries about coal and its environmental effects on our health and planet. We learned a lot. It was very disappointing to find our Conservative MP, Kerry-Lynne Findlay, was absent and did not provide a requested statement to answer the five questions pre-arranged for all candidates. The first question was to ask for each candidate’s position on Fraser Surrey Docks’ coal project and U.S. thermal coal in general. It was a very straightforward question. A response from our MP would have shown concern and engagement with an issue in Delta and important for Delta voters to hear and communicate with their representative.

A letter writer wonders why a local MP did not provide a statement for an all-cadidates’ meeting that explored the topics of U.S. thermal coal and the poropsed Fraser Surrey Docks’ port expansion project. FILE PHOTO Canada is in the process of allowing up to four million metric tonnes of thermal coal to be transported through White Rock, Surrey and Delta on its way to Asia. What is very disturbing is that all the U.S. west coast ports from California to Washington have declined or delayed having this coal transported through their states yet Canada said yes. Why? What are the risks and benefits for Delta? Since our MP was a no show, I can only imagine that this is just

another example of control by the Harper government. Perhaps the message is still with the Ottawa committee that approves responses or maybe she was told to ignore this issue. I’m fed up with this style of government. I for one will be looking to vote for someone to represent Delta to Ottawa, not Ottawa to Delta. The government is not Harper’s, it is ours and I want my Canada back. Peggy Richardson, Delta

Delighted with transit vote I am delighted with the transit referendum result – the “no” vote was larger than I expected. It is apparent that the general pubic is more intelligent than the city politicians

and the board of TransLink. What needs to happen now, and of course it will not, is that the TransLink board should be fired and the politicians told to stick to politics.

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Truck parkades coming ▶ FIRST SITE IN DELTA, WITH MORE PLANNED FOR SURREY AND ABBOTSFORD JEFF NAGEL

New truck parking lots being opened by the province could in some cases be located on agricultural land, Transportation Minister Todd Stone said after unveiling the first site in North Delta. The first overnight parking area for 40 trucks at Highway 91

and Nordel Way will be open by late 2016 and other potential sites are being identified from Surrey to Abbotsford. They’re supposed to reduce the problem of big rigs congesting residential streets or being parked illegally on farmland. But Stone did not rule out using agricultural land for some of the sites. “It could potentially,” he told Transportation Minister Todd Black Press, adding that would require Stone unveils a site in North approval of the Delta for a new truck parking Agricultural Land lot. JEFF NAGEL Commission. “There will be no short circuiting of the ALC process what- neighbourhoods, he noted. soever for any of the “This is going to reduce potential sites that we’re congestion and benefit looking at.” Stone said six or seven communities and the repotential sites are under lated lands,” Stone said. The new location consideration in Surrey, in Delta is unpaved at least one is expected provincial land curin Abbotsford to serve long-haul truckers using rently used as a Mainroad Contracting road Highway 1, and another maintenance yard, and would be placed near will offer washrooms, a Deltaport for container sani-dump, lighting and truckers. garbage bins. The project Sites can’t be right cost is expected to be a next to residential couple million dollars.

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The development of dedicated lots to address the serious shortage of truck parking was one plank of Stone’s provincial transportation plan, which includes other measures aimed at making trucking more efficient. A review of pilot car requirements for heavy trucks is also underway. B.C. Trucking Association president and CEO Louise Yako welcomed the initiative, saying parking trucks is a major challenge in urban areas. She said it will be safer and more convenient for truckers and the general public will benefit “because truck drivers will be more rested and able to do their jobs well.” The City of Surrey has previously estimated about half of the more than 12,000 heavy trucks registered within Surrey have no legal place to park, and that dozens of acres of new land are needed every year to accommodate growth in trucking.

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Delta police officer dismissed over deceit and neglect of duty ▶ POLICE COMPLAINT COMMISSIONER REVIEW UPHOLDS DPD RECOMMENDATION SHEILA REYNOLDS

A Delta Police officer will be dismissed from the force after a review by the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner (OPCC). Const. Felipe Gomes admitted to four counts of deceit and one count of neglect of duty under the Police Act and in early January thenDPD chief Jim Cessford recommended Gomes, 33, be dismissed from

the force. The recommendation followed a 26-month investigation over concerns he kept inadequate notes on police files for many years and made false claims to professional standards investigators. The DPD was notified by the OPCC of the decision on Monday (June 29). Adjudicator Alan Filmer, a retired judge, found Gomes was no longer able to fill the role

of police officer. “The allegations against him, which have been proven, are very serious and lasting in their impact,” he said, noting the only appropriate discipline is dismissal. The decision emphasized the importance of an officer’s notebook, saying the notes can add to the credibility of an officer and reinforce testimony in court. Failure to provide accurate notes “could have significant consequences,” wrote Filmer, calling Gomes’ admission he didn’t keep adequate

notes from April 2005 to January 2013 “very troubling.” DPD Chief Const. Neil Dubord said he respected the adjudicator’s decision. “It is of utmost importance to the Delta Police Department that we all adhere to our core values of honour, integrity, courage, and trust; when the personal values of one do not align with the core values upheld by the men and women of the Delta Police Department, appropriate action must be taken.” Whenever a dismissal

Man killed in collision with truck

MELISSA SMALLEY

A South Surrey resident is dead after a serious two-vehicle collision on 32 Avenue Saturday afternoon (July 4). Surrey RCMP said the 57-year-old man, whose name has not been released, was killed after the red Jeep SUV he was driving westbound in the 17000-block of 32 Avenue collided with a dump truck

travelling eastbound around 4:30 p.m. The man was pronounced dead at the scene. Surrey RCMP Cpl. Scotty Schumann said the SUV struck one of the axles of the trailer. Charges will not be laid in connection with the collision, he said. “At first blush, it appears the Jeep came over the centre line,” Schumann said. The driver of the dump truck did not suffer any injuries.

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During the hearing, Gosse said she regretted some of her conduct during the 2011-2012 year, but argued the panel should have considered the challenging composition of her class that year. She said 11 of the 18-20 kids in her class were English language learners, while two were designated special needs and one or two were undesignated but she suspected had special needs. “A teacher struggling to contain frustration in a classroom in an inner-city school in an under-supported class with students with severe learning and/or behavioural disabilities is signifi-

cantly less blameworthy than the same behaviour of a teacher in a 10-student kindergarten class on the Westside of Vancouver with no students with special needs and adequate support,” Gosse said. The BCTRB commissioner said to accept that argument would be to accept that children in challenging classrooms are not entitled to the protection of professional conduct standards. The regulation branch decision noted teaching conditions can vary dramatically due to a host of factors, including class size and composition, students’ age, teacher experience and learning resources available to the teacher

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10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday July 10 2015

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Fr iday July 10 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

11

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday July 10 2015

11

▶ SHORTSTOP IN TEAM CANADA’S LINEUP AFTER A THREE-YEAR ABSENCE

Salling’s return ‘a positive’ NICK GREENIZAN

world championships here in Surrey next year – so being able to get a chance to play in those events was really important to me,” she said. “But (playing pro) was a great experience – there is so much talent there, it’s a great league. I think that anyone who ever gets the chance to do it, should definitely try.” The left-handed hitting Salling, known as something of a defensive whiz in the field, played for the national team from 2006-12, and is one of just four current team members with Olympic experience – second baseman Jen Yee, third baseman Megan Timpf and catcher Kaleigh Rafter are the others who played at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, the last time softball was on the Olympic docket. Her experience is a welcome addition to the team, head coach Mark Smith said, though for her part, Salling said she eased back into a leadership role after her three-year absence. “It was important for me to realize that I haven’t been here for three years, and there were a lot of new players who I didn’t know, and

A group of diehard softball fans in the outfield bleachers at Softball City’s main diamond have a little something extra to cheer about at this year’s Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship – the return of Jenn Salling. The 28-year-old shortstop from Port Coquitlam – whose “clan” of family and friends, she says, are fixtures in the left-field bleachers each year – has returned to the Canadian national team this summer after spending the last three years playing in the National Pro Fastpitch League in the U.S. Though leaving the pro ranks was difficult – Salling spent three seasons with the USSSA Florida Pride in Kissimmee, Fla. before being traded to the Pennsylvania Rebellion – there were plenty of reasons to return to Canada, not the least of which was being able to play in front of her family again. “I was just kind of ready to move on from the pro league, and obviously we have two big events here in Canada – the Pan-Am Games this summer (in Toronto) and then the

Jenn Salling of Port Coquitlam is once again playing shortstop to Team Canada.

who didn’t know me,” she said. “It’s not just about jumping in and saying, ‘OK, here, this is what we’re gonna do.’ That’s not my personality. “But it’s really good to be back.” While Smith knows his younger players have learned under Salling – “and are better for it,” he said – he’s also noticed that even the team’s vet-

NICK GREENIZAN

eran infielders, like Yee and Timpf, are playing with a newfound confidence and assertiveness. “There’s a difference in someone like (Yee), because she knows she has Jenn to her right again. She’s used to that, it’s familiar. And the same goes for Megan and the others. “It’s been a positive return, all the way around.”

Team Canada, Japan share first place ▶ HOST TEAM, DEFENDING CHAMPIONS EACH WIN FIRST TWO GAMES RICK KUPCHUK

It took only one day for Canada and Japan to climb to the top of the Women’s International standings at the Canadian Open Fastptich International. The two national teams won twice each on their first day of play at the nine-team tournament. Canada began with a 5-0 victory over the NJCAA All-stars Tuesday afternoon at Softball City, and followed up with an 11-0 romp past Dominican Republic in the

evening. Japan, the defending champions, took care of Puerto Rico 12-0 in the afternoon before edging Cuba 3-2 five hours later. While acknowledging a win at the Canadian Open would be nice, Team Canada head coach Mark Smith said his group is concentrating on the Pan-American Games tournament that follows in Toronto. “Our goal this week is to use this as preparation for the Pan-American Games, so that’s what we’re trying to do. We’re trying to prepare ourselves, and we’re fine-tuning as we need to, and looking after getting people the at-bats they need to get, while at the same time being mindful that we’re going to be playing a lot of ball in a short period of

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time,” he said. “As much as we’d like to win the Canadian Open, we also want to win the gold medal at Pan-Ams in two weeks, so we need to leave here healthy and ready to go.” After playing four scoreless innings against the NJCAA (National Junior College Athletic Association) All-Stars, Canada scored all five of their runs in the fifth inning. Erika Polidori had the big hit, a two-run double. Joey Lye, Megan Timpf and Megan Gurski also drove in runs in the inning. Jenn Caira was the winning pitcher, striking out six batters while allowing just three hits without a walk. Team Canada needed just three innings to stop the Dominican Republic. They sent 12

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batters to the plate while scoring eight times in the second inning. Jenn Salling with a single, triple and three RBIs led the offense. Lye added another two RBIs. Smith has been pleased with Team Canada’s play during the recent World Cup of Softball in California, and the start of the Canadian Open. But he is still hoping for improvement prior to playing in Toronto. “We just have to up our level, generally speaking. We need to be consistent – and we have been – and I don’t think there’s any one part of our game that’s wanting. “But can we get two, three, four, five per cent better? We can – and we need to. Right across the board.” - with files from Nick Greenizan

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N OT I C E

NOTICE OF TEMPORARY USE PERMIT At the Monday, July 13, 2015, Public Hearing meeting, commencing at 7:00 p.m. in the Council Chambers, 13450 – 104 Avenue, staff is recommending that Council approve the issuance of the following Temporary Use Permit: Permit No. 7915-0116-00 Location: 12175 – 104 Avenue Purpose of Permit: The applicant is seeking to renew an expired TUP for a temporary truck parking facility to continue to operate for an additional three years from the original expiry date of October 1, 2014. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP

Additional information may be obtained from the Planning & Development Department at (604) 591-4441. Copies of the supporting staff reports, the Temporary Use Permit and any other relevant background documentation are available on the City of Surrey website at www.surrey.ca or may be inspected at City Hall during business hours commencing Tuesday, June 30, 2015 until Monday, July 13, 2015. Members of the public are encouraged to submit their comments or concerns to Council, and may be submitted in writing to City Clerk. Comments may be faxed to (604) 501-7578, emailed to clerks@surrey.ca or submitted by mail to the City Clerk at 13450 - 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 1V8, no later than Monday, July 13, 2015 at 4:00 p.m. Jane Sullivan City Clerk

Poor sportsmanship from thief at softball tournament ▶ WASHINGTON TEAM’S HEAD COACH HAS TRUCK – AND – GEAR STOLEN IN SURREY RICK KUPCHUK

Before they played their first game at the Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship, the Edmonds Starz of Washington suffered a huge loss. Just 12 hours after checking into their hotel, and four hours before their first game, the truck of head coach Adrian Manuel was stolen from the hotel parking lot. And in the truck was all the team gear. “We arrived Sunday night at 11 p.m., it got stolen Monday morning at 11:15 a.m.,” said Manuel. “Right in front of the Surrey Ramada. I watched it drive away. As I was walking in the lobby, I saw it turning onto Highway 10.” The Starz were missing their equipment for Monday’s exhibition game

against the Lloydminster Rebels at Cloverdale Athletic Park. “I’m the head coach, so I carry all the gear. I’m talking six buckets of softballs and nets which we hit into,” said Manuel. “And even a barbecue, because I cook for the team when

▶ “We arrived Sunday night at 11 p.m., it got stolen Monday morning at 11:15 a.m.” ADRIAN MANUEL

we’re at tournaments like this.” The situation improved over the next 48 hours. Manuel used his contacts to borrow some equipment for games on Tuesday and Wednesday. Tournament organizers also stepped forward, as did a fan at Softball City. “I also coach at Edmonds

Community College, and we sometimes play up here against Douglas College. So I called their coach and asked if they could help out,” Manuel said. “Before our game Tuesday, (Douglas College coach Michelle Peterson) showed up with some gear to help us out. “The tournament committee loaned us a dozen softballs, and one guy (Don Thompson) gave us a set of catcher’s gear for the team. He told us to keep it.” Things got even better Wednesday morning. An RCMP officer showed up and said the truck had been found – and it appeared all the equipment was still inside. “He came, got my key, and said he was going directly to the truck,” said Manuel. “But I’m not going to say yes I have it until I put my hands on it. “I’ve travelled up and down the I-5 corridor to to play in California and through Oregon, and into Colorado. This has never happened to me.”

www.surrey.ca

MON JUL 13 2015

Surrey Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 18477 Application: 7913-0210-00 Location: 12424 – 80 Avenue Purpose of Bylaw: The applicant is seeking to rezone the hatched site from Single Family Residential to Single Family Residential (12). The applicant is proposing to subdivide into 4 small single family lots.

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P U B L I C N OT I C E

COMMUNITY CHARTER, S.B.C. 2003, CHAPTER 26 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SELL CITY LANDS Pursuant to Sections 26 and 94 of the Community Charter S.B.C. 2003, Chapter 26, as amended, the City of Surrey hereby gives notice of the intention to dispose of the following City lands: Civic Address: 18954 – 54 Avenue; and a 37.4 m² (403 ft.²) Portion of 18949 – 52 Avenue. Parcel Identifier: 029-191-963; and 012-369-080 Legal Description: Lot A Section 4 Township 8 NWD Plan EPP31539, Except Plan EPP31540; and Southerly Half of Lot 3 Section 4 Township 8 NWD Plan 1461 Except: Plan EPP31538. Property Description: 18954 – 54 Avenue is a 73.3 m² (789 ft.²) remainder lot created from the dedication of road from the parent parcel. 18949 – 52 Avenue is a hooked lot comprised of two areas of land severed by the newly constructed 189A Street. The 37.4 m² (403 ft.²) disposition area has minimal utility to the City due to size, shape and location. 18954 – 54 Avenue and the 37.4 m² (403 ft.²) portion of 18949 – 52 Avenue are intended to be consolidated with the adjacent private land located at 18998 – 54 Avenue. This disposition and consolidation will result in a neat and straight property line boundary. Purchaser: Kerr Properties Ltd. Nature of Disposition: Fee Simple. Consideration: Twenty Six Thousand, Eight Hundred Dollar ($26,800).

▶ Y-M-C-A SPELLS ‘PRIDE’ Vancouver Pride Society secretary Rick Leonovich, Melanie Dolly Normand and Cathy Erickson took part in the YMCA song warmup at the Surrey Pride Festival at Holland Park on June 28. The annual event was organized by the Surrey Pride Society. BOAZ JOSEPH

ETCETERA Further information can be obtained from the City of Surrey, Realty Services Division, Engineering Deptartment, 13450 – 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 1V8. Phone (604) 598-5718.

▶ EVENTS Wellbrook Winery (4226 88 St.) is hosting the third-annual Deja Vu Vintage Market on July 11 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. More than 45 vintage vendors, wine tasting, a vintage photo booth, vintage trailers and food trucks. Admission is $5. For more information, visit www.dejavuvintagemarket.com The third-annual Fleetwood Multicultural Fair and Market takes place July 12 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Francis Park, just south of the Fleetwood Recreation Centre, 15996 84 Ave. The event includes live music, dance demos, kids activities and drums. A Latin-flavoured multicultural fair and market takes place July 12

from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Chuck Bailey Recreation Centre, 13458 107A Ave. The Phoenix Society and the Downtown Surrey Business Improvement Association are teaming up for a third year at the Eat, Play, Live Well Street Fair on July 12 from 11 a.m. to 4 pm at Phoenix Centre, 13686 94A Ave. The event promotes health and wellness – physical, emotional, spiritual, intellectual, interpersonal/ social and environmental.

▶ MUSIC 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.

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P U B L I C N OT I C E

COMMUNITY CHARTER S.B.C. 2003 CHAPTER 26 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SELL CITY LANDS Pursuant to Sections 26 and 94 of the Community Charter S.B.C. 2003, Chapter 26, as amended, the City of Surrey hereby gives notice of the intention to dispose of the following City lands: Civic Address: Legal Description:

Parcel Identifier: Civic Address: Legal Description:

Parcel Identifier: Civic Address: Legal Description:

Parcel Identifier: Civic Address: Legal Description:

Parcel Identifier:

11348 – 128 Street Lot 66 Except Part in Plan LMP34688 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan 59625 005-792-118 12851 Bridgeview Drive That ±2,230 m² portion of: Lot 1 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan LMP52739 025-257-331 12881 – 113B Avenue Lot “G” (BE12942) Block6 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan 480 017-258-553 12848 – 114 Avenue Lot “H” (BE12940) Block 6 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan 480 017-263-433

Civic Address: Legal Description:

Parcel Identifier: Civic Address: Legal Description: Parcel Identifier: Civic Address: Legal Description:

Parcel Identifier:

12851 – 114 Avenue Lot “K” (BE12934) Block 5 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan 480 017-241-235 12861 – 114 Avenue Lot 33 Block 5 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan 480 011-587-661 12869 – 114 Avenue Lot “L” (BE12937) Block 5 Section 9 Block 5 North Range 2 West New Westminster District Plan 480 017-253-276

Property Description: Seven (7) vacant lots containing ±3.63 acres. Nature of Disposition: Fee Simple

Invitation for Offers To Purchase: The City invites offers to purchase the Subject Properties. Offers must be submitted on or before 3 PM on Thursday, July 23, 2015 in sealed envelopes marked “Bridgeview Lots Offer” and must be addressed to the following: City of Surrey, Realty Services Division, 13450 – 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 1V8, Attention: Paula Kucharczyk, Property Associate Offers received after this closing date will not be accepted or considered. All Offers must be submitted using the Offer to Purchase document enclosed as Appendix II in the Information Package referenced below. Note: Industrial land uses will not be considered. Further Information: An Information Package is available on the City of Surrey’s website at www.surrey.ca/realtyservices For further information please contact Paula Kucharczyk at (604) 591-4459; Fax: 604-598-5701. The City of Surrey reserves the right to accept or reject the highest or any offer and may reject any or all offers without giving reasons therefore. The proposed sale and the terms and conditions thereof will be subject to final approval by Surrey City Council.

Cities target illegal fill dumping on farmland ▶ TOO FEW CONTROLS TO PREVENT LUCRATIVE ACTS JEFF NAGEL

Metro Vancouver cities are vowing to take coordinated action to stop the dumping of illegal fill on farmland, which degrades it and may contaminate it with demolition debris or invasive species like fire ants. Some cities in the region have controls on soil excavated and deposited within their boundaries, but there’s no good system to track movements of fill that cross civic boundaries. Compacted soil excavated from urban construction sites gets trucked – sometimes

surreptitiously – out to agricultural areas where farmland owners are paid handsomely to accept fill loads. Politicians fear that, if left unchecked, the practice will render vast swaths of farmland unproductive because of the temptation of short-term gain. Degraded farmland may become truck parking lots and poor soil can ultimately be an argument to allow development. “We need a unified stand,” Richmond Coun. Harold Steves told the Metro Vancouver board last month. “Lots of land owners are quite happy to take [money] from truckers who want to get rid of the soil and do it in the dark of night or weekends.” Land owners get

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NOTICE OF TEMPORARY USE PERMIT At the Monday, July 13, 2015, Public Hearing meeting, commencing at 7:00 p.m. in the Council Chambers, 13450 – 104 Avenue, staff is recommending that Council support the issuance of the following Temporary Use Permit: Permit No. 7915-0188-00 Location: 6611 – 152A Street Purpose of Permit: The applicant is seeking to allow a temporary parking lot to service a proposed banquet hall on a neighbouring property for a period not to exceed three years. DEVELOPMENT LOCATION MAP

Cedric Hughes

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N

ow that cars have become computers on wheels, computer ‘issues’ have also become car issues. Bluetooth connectivity, for example, brings with it concerns about deleting personal data from computer equipment that you are no longer using. Synching your smartphone to a rental car via Bluetooth provides lots of advantages: handsfree calling, center console dialing, and your own music streaming. But it also means that when you return the car, unless you take the steps necessary to delete your smartphone data, it remains stored and accessible to the car rental agency and subsequent renters of the vehicle. People with good technical skills will likely know how to access their smartphone on the list of paired Bluetooth gadgets in the car’s settings and will look for options to delete their phone or clear all the user data or do a complete factory reset. For the rest of us, it seems like we are well advised to seek help from the rental agency with this easy-to-overlook clean-up step. Likewise, if you used the car’s navigation system, it may be best to clear your location history. Similarly, when you sell your car equipped with this technology, deleting your data is well advised.

Additional information may be obtained from the Planning & Development Department at (604) 591-4441. Copies of the supporting staff reports, the Temporary Use Permit and any other relevant background documentation are available on the City of Surrey website at www.surrey.ca or may be inspected at City Hall during business hours commencing Tuesday, June 30, 2015 until Monday, July 13, 2015. Members of the public are encouraged to submit their comments or concerns to Council, and may be submitted in writing to City Clerk. Comments may be faxed to (604) 501-7578, emailed to clerks@surrey.ca or submitted by mail to the City Clerk at 13450 - 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3T 1V8, no later than Monday, July 13, 2015 at 4:00 p.m. Jane Sullivan City Clerk www.surrey.ca

paid $100 to $200 per truckload, which can add up to hundreds of thousands of dollars – much more than the maximum fines if caught, according to a Metro report. For truckers, $200 a load is a lot cheaper than $3,240 in tipping fees at the Vancouver Landfill for a 30-tonne truck. And the report says there are no measures in place to control the quality of fill being dumped. The six Metro cities with 95 per cent of the region’s farmland – Langley Township, Delta, Surrey, Richmond, Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge – require soil deposition permits for placing fill on farmland and have stepped up enforcement, but it’s difficult for them to

We are hearing that some people, when renting a car on a short-term basis, will choose to avoid connecting their smartphone altogether. They don’t want their smartphone data stored in the car and they know that in-car systems are also vulnerable to hackers, which, in turn, can put their smartphone data at risk.

To listen to music, security conscious people may use an auxiliary cable to connect the headphone port on their phone directly to the audio system. For charging, instead of the in-car USB port, they use a cigarette lighter adapter, and for hands-free calling they use a third-party Bluetooth audio kit. Soon, when systems like Android Auto and Apple CarPlay become the new standard for car infotainment systems, connecting your smartphone will not involve storing the data in order to display it. Another feature of your ‘computer on wheels’ is the way in which your driving behaviour is being indelibly recorded and archived in the Event Data Recorder. EDRs, colloquially known as ‘black boxes’ are not all alike and not ubiquitous even though they date back to 1994 when General Motors added them to certain models for help with crashworthiness research. This is about to change however. In 2013, reportedly 96% of new cars sold in the United States came with a black box, and as of September 1, 2014, every new vehicle will have one installed. And while the first-generation EDRs did little more than track whether or not the car’s airbags deployed, new regulations require tracking of 15 variables including speed, throttle position, airbag deployment times, whether the brakes were applied, if seatbelts were worn, steering angles and more. Manufacturers may also include up to 30 additional data points, which, they say, do not include GPS location, video or audio. What the black box in your car is recording, who can obtain this information and how you can keep control of it are new important issues for car owners to learn about. Given current trends, it looks like sometime soon our vehicles will through GPS history and video, be able to provide us – and others - with a very substantial personal biography. …by Cedric Hughes, Barrister & Solicitor with regular weekly contributions from Leslie McGuffin, LL.B

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police against excessive dumping or undeclared loads coming from elsewhere in the region. Meanwhile, most other municipalities either have no regulations on what developers can do with soil from demolition or excavation sites, or else only regulate fill dumped locally. They’re expected to add new provisions forcing developers to declare where soil is coming from and where it’s going as part of construction and demolition permitting. Metro Vancouver is to launch a web-based registry as a two-year trial to pull together the information across civic boundaries and help track where the fill goes from specified construction sites. Metro expects the problem of illegal fill dumping to worsen as the region’s population grows and more older homes are demolished to make way for new developments. The estimated cost of the Metro pilot project is $80,000. Some mayors, including Burnaby’s Derek Corrigan and North Vancouver City’s Darrell Mussatto, say the province should address the problem because it has underfunded the Agricultural Land Commission. The agency theoretically charged with preventing illegal dumping on ALR farmland has just three enforcement officers for the entire province. Mussatto and Corrigan say it amounts to cost downloading if cities or the region shoulder more costs of farmland protection. “I don’t think we should kid ourselves in thinking the province is going to step in and do the job for us,” Steves responded. Langley Township Coun. Charlie Fox said municipalities need to avoid downloading but agreed the ALC is incapable of policing the problem. “I live right in the middle of fill central down in south Langley,” Fox said. “On weekends and late at night the dump trucks run through 16th Avenue 24 hours a day.”


Fr iday July 10 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

17

Metro fears garburators will clog pipes â–ś FOOD WASTE GRINDING ON RISE; RESTAURANT BAN CONSIDERED JEFF NAGEL

As Metro Vancouver prepares to impose fines to stop the dumping of organic food waste in the garbage, officials at the regional district now worry too many residents and businesses will instead use garburators to send the problem down the drain. As a result, Metro planners are now considering a ban on the installation of new food waste grinders by restaurants and other businesses, and they’re

mulling how to keep households from using garburators that are already widespread in newer homes. Using in-sink disposals to grind up food and flush it down the drain is convenient for people and businesses who don’t have organic waste pickup service or don’t want to use it. But Fred Nenninger, Metro director of liquid waste policy planning and analysis, said all those food particles increase the load on the region’s sewage treatment plants. More food waste in the sewage fosters more microbe activity and could potentially deplete oxygen in the effluent discharged to the Salish Sea.

Metro estimates 45 per cent of homes in the region now have garburators and there’s no food scrap pick-up yet at 63 per cent of apartments and condos across the region. A continued trend towards more food grinding, coupled with expected population increases, could put Metro in violation of its sewage discharge permits from the Iona and Lions Gate plants that are still on primary-only treatment, Nenninger said. Metro isn’t proposing a residential ban on new garburators. But Nenninger wants residents to know

they’re problematic and diversion of organics – either to backyard compost or to green bins – is a much better use of the material as a resource. It’s cheaper, too. According to a staff report, the cost of processing food waste through the sewage system is $1,800 per tonne, compared to the $70 per tonne tipping fee for separated organic waste. Food grinders are so far relatively uncommon as a disposal method in restaurants and supermarkets. But the report warns increased use of them could cause big

problems for the Metro treatment plants, as well as municipalities. One anticipated problem is that a restaurant food grinder that mushes food bits up with fat and oil will make required grease traps much less effective, causing more oil and grease buildup in sewer lines. Area cities already spend $2 million a year removing builtup grease from sewer pipes to keep them from backing up. “If you’re trying to grind ahead of grease traps you’re going to have a real serious problem,� Nenninger said.

Organic waste disposal fines begin

or paper will now add a 50 per cent surcharge to the tipping fee of loads containing more than 25 per cent food material. That threshold is expected to drive disposal costs up for mainly just the larger generators of food waste, such as supermarkets, restaurants and hotels that don’t have an effective food scraps recycling system. Metro expects to gradually reduce the tolerance threshold in future years so the surcharge hits more loads and spurs greater diversion of organics to green bins.

Haulers who arrive at Metro transfer stations with too much food waste in their garbage loads will be dinged with a surcharge. A ban on organic waste disposal has been in place since the start of the year but actual enforcement through fines is now taking effect after a six-month education period. Inspectors who already watch for loads with other banned recyclables such as electronic waste, cardboard

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(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)/2015 Versa Note 1.6 S M5 (B5RG55 AA00). 0.99%/0.%/0% lease APR for a 60/60/60 month term equals monthly payments of $255/$158/$146 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 $15,280/$9,454/$8,767. $1,000/$1,000/$700 My Choice Bonus Cash included in advertised offer. Conditions apply. †Representative finance offer based on any new 2015 Micra SR MT (S5SG55 AA10). Selling price is $16,905 financed at 0% apr equals 84 monthly payments of $201 monthly for a 84 month term. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $16,905. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer. $500 My Choice bonus cash is included in advertised offers. Conditions apply. X $11,565 selling price which includes MSRP and freight & fess for a new 2015 Nissan Micra® 1.6 S, MT (S5LG55 AA10). Conditions apply. VModels shown $36,598/25,965/$21,115/18,405 Selling price for a new 2015 Rogue SL AWD Premium (Y6DG15 BK00)/ 2015 Sentra 1.8 SL (C4TG15 AA00)/2015 Versa Note 1.6 SL CVT (B5TG15 AE00)/2015 Micra® 1.6 SR 4 AT (S5SG75 AE00). *X±≠VFreight and PDE charges ($1,750/$1,567/$1,695/$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. The Nissan Sentra received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among compact cars in the proprietary J.D. Power 2015 Initial Quality StudySM. Study based on responses from 84,367 new-vehicle owners, measuring 244 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of owners surveyed in February-May 2015. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ALG is the industry benchmark for residual values and depreciation data, www.alg.com. ∞Global Automakers of Canada (GAC) Entry Level Segmentation, June 2015. 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.

JEFF NAGEL

X

18 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday July 10 2015

Region gets recycling advice from Denmark Metro’s zero waste committee. “I do not see any positive environmental impacts from going down that road.” Metro has been under pressure from

Belkorp Environmental to authorize a proposed material recovery plant in Coquitlam. Metro officials have been skeptical that it would work, and other critics fear that, taken to the extreme, mechanized sorting of recyclables from garbage would encourage residents to throw everything into one garbage bin and stop separating recyclables. “The way to go about it is to have source separation if you want to move towards a zero waste society,” Simonsen said. In Denmark, 56 per cent of residential waste is recycled, while 41 per cent goes to waste-to-energy plants, and three per cent is landfilled. Danish waste incinerators are often located in densely populated areas and tied into district heating systems. Simonsen said there’s been increasing success in extracting more metals from the bottom ash of incinerated garbage as technology improves. “We can actually sort out all sorts of metals, down to grain size that’s less than 0.5 millimetres,” he said. Denmark is building new waste-to-energy plants to replace older ones and is counting on district heating as a key part of its strategy of generating energy with minimal carbon emissions. He acknowledged the case for waste-to-energy plants may be stronger in Denmark, where energy recovered from waste replaces the carbon-intensive burning of coal, compared to B.C., where electricity is generated renewably from hydroelectricity. Belkorp Vice-President Russ Black dismissed Simonsen’s views on material recovery facilities as “fear-mongering” by the incineration industry. “These things work and they continue to be built,” he said, pointing to new MRFs coming on stream in the U.S. that he said are more advanced than previous European efforts. He said MRFs aren’t generally compatible with waste-to-energy plants because they remove the paper and plastics from garbage that generate the most energy when burned.


Fr iday July 10 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader

19

Politicians urge review of Site C dam ▶ FOOD SECURITY A CONCERN IF PEACE FARMLAND IS FLOODED JEFF NAGEL

Metro Vancouver politicians are urging the province to pause its plan to build the Site C dam on the Peace River pending a

review by the B.C. Utilities Commission and the Agricultural Land Commission. The Metro board passed the resolution las Friday after hearing delegations that warned the $8.8-billion hydroelectric project would flood scarce B.C. farmland as well as aboriginal burial grounds and hunting territories.

“There’s only about five per cent of the entire land that’s capable of growing anything,” Delta Mayor Lois Jackson said. “Certainly we need hydro. But do we need hydro more or food more? I’ll take the food.” Richmond Coun. Harold Steves argued it would be a mistake to lose the estimated 3,800 hectares of

prime agricultural farmland in the Peace in light of projections that climate change will result in dryer summers and more parched farmland in southern B.C.

Others cited B.C.’s excessive reliance on produce from California. Presenters argued the province has failed to adequately consider alternative energy options such as

geothermal, wind and solar that could deliver much more electricity without the impacts of a major dam. But Langley Township Coun. Charlie Fox questioned how the is-

sue was one for Metro to weigh in on at all. Vancouver Coun. George Affleck called the debate “absolute political posturing. Construction on the Site C dam starts soon.

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20 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Friday July 10 2015

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

604.575.5555

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

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

6

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57

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

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

604-588-3371

AGREEMENT

It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes for typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION

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

COPYRIGHT

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

_____________ Advertise across the Lower Mainland in the 15 best-read community newspapers. ON THE WEB:

bcclassified.com

championsforcare.com

7

OBITUARIES

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

7

OBITUARIES

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

21

33

COMING EVENTS

Lotte passed away peacefully surrounded by her family on July 5th 2015. Predeceased by her husband Walter on July 7th, 2004. Lotte “OMA” is survived by her loving sons Jurgen (Gaye), Bill (Karen), and Raymond (Joanne), 6 grandchildren and 3 greatgrandchildren. Our family would like to thank the staff at Surrey Memorial Hospital (neurological) for their kind support caring for our mother. A memorial service will be held at 2pm on August 22nd, 2015, at Valley View Funeral Home, 14660 72 Ave. Surrey, BC. For online condolences please visit valleyviewsurrey.ca

Required for the Curtain Call Custom Interiors: We create environments that people want to come home to. Spaces that suit their tastes and supports their lifestyle. If delivering positive customer experiences with a flare for design and quality workmanship is what drives you,you are a perfect fit for The Curtain Call.

Critter Care Wildlife Society 17th Annual

July 11th & 12th 481 216 Street, Langley, B.C. 11:00 am - 4:00 pm Admission: Adults $2.00 Children FREE Come and spend the day in the country & sign up for a guided tour to see all the baby animals. Enjoy family entertainment, our concession stand and check out our Critter souvenirs.

604-530-2054 www.crittercarewildlife.org

INFORMATION

13750 96th Avenue Surrey, BC V3V 1Z2

IF YOU ARE... S S S S

LINKE, Patricia (Trish) (nee Griffin)

world about HHT. This cruel disorder affects 1 in 5000 people. It does not discriminate by age,

gender or ethnic background. Trish was a preschool teacher in Surrey and Delta for many years, and many of those children came to her house to visit and chatted with her when they saw her in the grocery store. She was a Sci-Fi enthusiast and

a memorabilla collector (Star Trek, Star Wars, Stargate, Indiana Jones, LOTR) and was looking forward to seeing the new Star Wars movie. In the summer she looked forward to firing up her 3 muscle cars, a 1967, a 1973 & a 2013 Camaro and driving them while listening to her favourite music. Memorial Service will be held at Colebrook Church, 5441 125A Street, Surrey, BC, V3X 1W4, at 2:30 pm. on July 25th, 2015. Please RSVP to: klinkbet@hotmail.com In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to Cure HHT. The website is www.curehht.org. You will also find a tribute page about Trish here and on Facebook at Cure HHT.

42

LOST AND FOUND

LOST - RING; A man’s gold, half Sovereign ring, lost at Meridian Golf Course on Sunday June 28th. Has great sentimental value, small reward offered. Call: (604)535-3621.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

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

604.930.4078 bccancerfoundation.com

her mother Edith Mary Griffin became ill. For 24 years, Trish has been an advocate for HHT International giving 24 hours a day of her time to inform the

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! Indemand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-7683362 to start training for your workat-home career today!

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

BC Cancer Foundation

She was unaware of her genetic disorder until she was 51 when

Please E-Mail Resume: joan@thecurtaincall.com

OPEN HOUSE

33

Supporting the BC Cancer Agency

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

Established Coffee Shop for sale in busy S.Surrey Mall. EXCELLENT LOCATION PERFECT OPPORTUNITY FOR DEDICATED OWNER.

Owner must sell due to health issues. $79,000. Will Train.

1-844-299-2466

Call 604-569-3358 778-868-9712

We have Gifts & Information

ROBOTHAM, Irene Our mother Irene Robotham (nee Rushton) was received into the arms of her Lord and Savior Jesus Christ on July 4, 2015. Mum was born December 16, 1925 in Manchester, England. In her younger years, mum was proud to be a part of building the Lancaster Bombers in WW II. She moved to Canada in 1944 as a war bride. Mum loved all her family and truly missed her home country of England. She loved to share about Jesus Christ and read the Bible. Irene is survived by her children Donna, Richard (Nancy), Julie (Fred), Danny (Cindy), Eleven grandchildren, Twenty two great grandchildren, One great great grandson and Two nieces and Five nephews. Mum was predeceased by her parents James and Gertrude , her sisters Rita, May, Katherine, and Marjorie, her granddaughter Laura and great grandson Adrien. We sincerely appreciate the love and care given to our mother in the last years of her life by the staff at Gateway Assisted Living in Surrey B.C. Our Mother’s Life Celebration will be a graveside service held on July 16, 2015 at 2:00pm Valley View Memorial Gardens 14644 72nd Avenue Surrey BC at the Garden Of Atonement.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114

Interior Design Office/ Project Manager

PEHLKE, Liselotte Frieda “OMA” 1922 - 2015

Valley View Funeral Centre 604-596-8866

Born July 23, 1941 of Surrey, BC, passed away June 4, 2015 due to complications of Osler-Weber-Rendu Syndrome, HHT Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia. She is survived by husband Frank E. Linke Jr., daughter Kathy (husband Tony Bettanin), son Matthew, granddaughter Courtney. and many nieces, nephews, colleagues and friends.

INFORMATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

www.welcomewagon.ca

or email: len@mokahouse.com GREAT CANADIAN Dollar Store franchise opportunities are available in your area. Explore your future with a dollar store leader. Call today 1-877-388-0123 ext. 229; www.dollarstores.com.

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS are in huge demand! Train with Canada’s top Medical Transcription school. Learn from home & work fr home. Call today! 1.800.466.1535 www.canscribe.com info@canscribe.com

BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Container Services Van-Kam Freightways Ltd has envisioned and strived for transportation excellence since 1947. Our successful and long standing relationship with our customers and our status as a major transporter enables us to continue expansion and to provide an infrastructure that ensures a punctual and dependable service capability. This position will be focused on container drayage and off-dock container services: Building our port business both for inbound and outbound overseas clients as well as our domestic clients for this service. Our diverse network within Western Canada allows the successful individual many pools to draw from to be able to successfully present our “Value Proposition”. This individual will project a confident and professional image for Van-Kam. Applicants should have previous sales experience which demonstrates an ability to ‘grow the business’ and to seek creative solutions to transportation issues. The successful individual will develop and implement new business strategies that capture revenue, aiding in the growth and profitability of the drayage market. We are seeking an individual with knowledge and experience in the transportation industry, in particular, the overseas container business these individuals will be given preference. The successful applicant must be self-motivated and have above average organizational, customer service and negotiation skills. In addition, you will have an excellent command of the English language (oral and written), be a self-disciplined team player, the ability to travel within the region, be goal oriented and have at least intermediate excel skills. Please submit your application package to:

careers@vankam.com Only those of interest will be contacted.

HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in Walking/Dressing? Disability Tax Credit $2,000 Tax Credit $20,000 Refund. Apply Today For Assistance: 1-844-453-5372.

110

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH

110

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

CAREER SERVICES/ JOB SEARCH 115

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

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

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

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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

BECOME AN OPTICIAN

...in only 6 months! Optical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Or, even start your own business!!

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BC COLLEGE OF OPTICS

#208 - 10070 King George Blvd. Surrey BC

604.581.0101

www.bccollegeofoptics.ca


Friday July 10 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 21

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 115

EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

EXPERIENCED Lane Closure Tech’s and Traffic Control people req’d. immediately. 604-746-4613 or email Traffic_King@shaw.ca

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

HOUSE PARENTS for Children’s Residence. Looking to contract a couple to support children in a livein home setting. Go to www.inclusionpr.ca - careers for more information or 604.485.6411. In Home Caregiver (Nanny)

126

Jessica Tiwana requires permanent, F/T (40 hrs/week) Caregiver (Nanny) for their newborn baby and 2 yrs old son at their home located at 153 St. and 20 Ave, Surrey, BC. Position Start Date: 16, Dec 2015. Duties include: supervise and take care of children, preparing formulas, feeding, changing diapers, bathing, dressing, taking care of emotional comfort and ensuring healthy and safe environment for children. Speaking English is mandatory. Min 6 months training or 1 yrs experience in a similar role and high school or equivalent education. Optional accommodation avail. (own secured room with private bathroom and full use of household amenities for the duration of employment available) at no charge on a live-in basis. Please note: This is not a condition of employment. Salary $ 10.50/hr. Email resume at: jessicakang1984@gmail.com

FRANCHISE

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

Landscaping Sales & Service Opportunities Up To $400 CASH Daily

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

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

FLAG PPL & LANE TECH NEEDED. Must be cert & have car. Med/Dental $15 - $24/hr. bcroadsafe.com email resume to trshaw@bcroadsafe.com

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

horizonwork@yahoo.ca

F/T & P/T Outdoors. Spring / Summer Work. Seeking Honest, Hard Working Staff. www.PropertyStarsJobs.com LOCAL, reputable, craft manufacturing company looking for reliable, motivated pieceworkers. Training provided at no cost to you. We are VERY busy! Unlimited earning potential. Please leave your name and number ONLY at 604-826-4651 or at our email craftmanufacturing@gmail.com. We respond to ALL calls and messages in the order they are received.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

Newspaper Promoters Required. Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal location. Early morning shifts. Monday - Saturday. Please call Marilou at 604.542.7411 or email: marilou@blackpress.ca

SHOP from HOME!

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

Poultry Farm Worker

W. Friesen Farms at 1509 - 176 Street Surrey BC, V3S-9S7 are hiring for their poultry division, Full time poultry farm workers. Duties: Caching and moving poultry, cleaning of caged and barns and sterilizing of poultry bird houses. Heavy lifting and fast pace work. Must be willing to work night shifts and week-ends. Wages at a hourly rate of $11.00. Experience 1-2 years in farming an asset. English reading and wiring a must. Please submit a resume attn., Bill Friesen Fax: 604-541-1729

Check out bcclassified.com

NOW HIRING! Delivery Drivers

Work Today, Daily or Weekly Pay Apply 9AM to 2PM at: 118 – 713 Columbia Street

New West 604.522.4900

Multi-Media Journalist The Abbotsford News, a twice-weekly publication serving more than 45,000 homes, has an opening for a full-time, permanent, multi-media journalist.

DRIVER / LABOURER Growing Surrey Co. requires. Driver / Labourer with Class 5 driver’s license. Must be willing to work occasional Saturday’s. Applicant must have leadership ability, positive attitude,dedication & willingness to learn.

Please e-mail your resume info@recycleitcanada.ca

Candidates will have outstanding and diverse writing abilities, including a flair for narrative. The successful applicant for this entry-level position will be a key contributor to the print product, while bringing creative content to our web-based branding. Advanced photography and video skills will be key attributes, along with a strong grasp of social media best practices. You will have a diploma/degree in journalism, and/or related experience. Knowledge of basic Photoshop, iMovie and InDesign is a must. You’re a self-starter and a critical thinker, with keen attention to detail, and the ability to work well under deadline pressures. The Abbotsford News is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private, independent newspaper company, with more than 150 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii. Those interested should submit a resume, writing and photography samples, and a cover letter to aholota@blackpress.ca Deadline for applications is July 24. Only short-listed candidates will be contacted for interviews.

blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com

130

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

Vantage Way 7979 Vantage Way, Delta, V4G 1A6

Bindery Workers Black Press has opportunities for Bindery Workers at our Delta location to assist with the mechanical insertion of advertising flyers into our Lower Mainland newspapers. Applicants must be available to work a variety of scheduled day, evening and night shifts. Additionally, successful applicants will need to be available on a call-in basis. Excellent remuneration. Experience an asset, but not a requirement. Reliable transportation is a prerequisite.

Must have your own reliable CARGO VAN (minimum ¾ ton) and clean driver abstract.

Interested applicants should email their resume to Derrill Imrie at: binderyjobs@vantageway.ca

NO CARS, SUVS, MINI-VANS OR PICKUP TRUCKS.

We thank all those who are interested in this position, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

• 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

CONSTRUCTION SITE In your NEIGHBOURHOOD

Req: Carpenters, Helpers Labourers, CSO’s/OFA’s TCP’s, Cleaners $11-28/hr

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

Marketing Consultant The Mission Record, one of Canada’s leading community newspapers, has an opening for a Marketing Consultant. This is a career opportunity for a results-driven individual. Candidates will possess the ability to increase sales to existing clients while successfully prospecting new business in one of the Fraser Valley’s growing markets. The ideal candidate has a positive attitude, a persuasive manner (previous sales experience preferred), is highly motivated with strong organizational and communication skills. Training is provided. Our work environment sets industry standards for professionalism and innovation. The Record combines a salary/benefits package designed to attract and retain outstanding staff. Please send your application in confidence to: Andrew Franklin Publisher 34375 Gladys Avenue Abbotsford, B.C. V2S 2H5 e-mail: publisher@missioncityrecord.com Closing Date: Friday, July 17, 2015

Competition closes: July 31, 2015

blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com

Circulation Clerk The Surrey Distribution Centre has an opening for a part-time circulation clerk. This position is 30 hrs per week. The successful applicant will enjoy working in a fast-paced customer service oriented environment. In addition, this person must possess strong computer skills; have an accounting background, good communication skills and a pleasant telephone manner. This is an exciting opportunity for an enthusiastic self-starter with proven organizational expertise. Previous circulation experience would be an asset. Please forward your resume and handwritten cover letter to: Surrey Distriburtion Centre #200-5450 152nd St, Surrey, BC V3S 5J9 Email: circmanager@surreyleader.com Deadline for submissions is Wednesday July 22nd, 2015. No phone calls please.

We thank all those who are interested in this position; however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com

blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com


22 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Friday July 10 2015 EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

The Delta Hospice Society hiring casual RN’s & LPN’S For more information, position descriptions & application expectations visit www.deltahospice.org and click on ‘Join our Team. Send resumes to: chrise@deltahospice.org

Experience in palliative care required for RN and LPN positions. Only those candidates selected for interviews will be contacted.

131

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 134

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

ETHNIC FOOD COOK Lahori Sweets & Rest. Ltd. is looking to hire an Ethnic Food Cook in Surrey BC. Permanent F/T position. $22/hr. Must have at least 2-3 years experience in Pakistani and East Indian Dishes. Completetion of Secondary School. Duties; prepare and cook meals; prepare and cook individual dishes and foods; ensure quality of food and determine size of food proportions, estimate food requirements and costs; maintain inventory and records of food. Mail resumes or apply by person to: Lahori Sweets & Rest. Ltd. 109 12877 80th Avenue, Surrey, BC. V3W 0E6 Fax: 604-593-6722

HOME CARE/SUPPORT

TIM HORTONS

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 151

PROFESSIONALS/ MANAGEMENT

AS A FRONT-LINE PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR, you’ll lead 30+ employees in production processes, streamlining workflow and logistics to meet schedules and quality standards. You’ll have proven exp supervising manufacturing and supply chain along with an ability to read drawings & design docs. The company, based in Delta is a industry leader in sign manufacturing with a reputation for delivering high quality products. Email: maryann@gorecruitment.com

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

CHAIN LINK FENCE INSTALLERS/HELPERS

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

FT & PT - 4AM start Baking & Storefront duties

Needed for WESTERN FENCE & GATE in Surrey. Must have a valid drivers license. F/T dayshift.

Live-In Caregiver req for 2 adults, f/t, flex. schedule, Surrey area. Email, josefinabaciles@yahoo.com

We offer benefits after 3/mo’s and incentives for reliablility & dedicated team work.

Fax: 604-543-7660, or Ph: 604-543-7665 ext 310

Apply In Person Unit 130, 8380 - 112 St, Delta, BC

136A JANITORIAL SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

Truck-Trailer Mechanics 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

164

PERSONAL SERVICES 182

FINANCIAL SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 281

134

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

Servers & Tandoori Cook

REQUIRED NOW PAY $12-15 PER HOUR Apply Weekdays Between 9AM to 2PM at: 118-713 Columbia St

New West 604.522.4900

required for

Mirage Banquet Hall

&ODVVL¿HGV 604-575-5555

on 64th Ave in Surrey Fax resume: 604-575-0354 Ph: 604-575-0304 or 604-355-4646

130

HELP WANTED

130

HELP WANTED

Senior Payroll Administrator Black Press is home to some of the oldest, most trusted community newspapers in North America. Market by market these are the leading newspapers in their communities with history dating back to the 1800s. As the largest independently owned newspaper company in Canada, with more than 150 titles in print and online, Black Press has operations in BC, Alberta, Yukon and four US states. Reporting to the Payroll Manager, you will provide support for processing the Canadian payroll for 1700 employees accurately, on-time and in compliance with legislation, company policies and 10 different collective agreements. You will be required to assist in the interpretation and application of company policies and collective agreements with respect to compensation, benefits, vacation and other leaves. You will possess strong communication skills and are able to support our payroll administrators and department managers. You have a sound knowledge of payroll costing and liability reconciliations. You have the ability to identify and implement process improvements, and help advance the department. You are experienced in extracting and reporting information with advanced Excel skills. You are an analytical problem solver with the ability to manage multiple priorities with accuracy and attention to detail. You have your PCP certification and several years’ experience with large payrolls. This is a new full-time, permanent position located in our Fraser Valley office and has opportunity for career advancement. If you want to be part of a great company, with terrific benefits and a commitment to staff excellence, please send your resume to: Black Press Group Ltd. Attention: Robert Gale 34375 Gladys Avenue Abbotsford, BC V2S 2H5 or e-mail: robgale@blackpress.ca Competition closes: July 10, 2015 We thank all those who are interested in this position; however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com

296

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

TOPSOIL

300

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

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

Call 604-531-5935

Chung 778.552.5838

WAREHOUSE WORKER / DRIVER NEEDED! Looking for a warehouse worker and delivery driver with Class 5 license. Require a full time worker. Punjabi/Hindi speaking is an asset. Please contact 604-5629853 for more information and applications.

Complete Landscape Service Specializing in landscape renos Bobcat - Excavator - Decks Retaining Walls - Paving Stones New Lawns-Irrigation-Drainage Hedging and more *30 Yrs Exp. *Fully Insured

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

Call Brian for a free estimate

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

604-773-1349 .aaa lawn 604-542-1349

171

ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

242

SHINE LANDSCAPING

CONCRETE & PLACING

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

COMPLETE CONCRETE WORK & LANDSCAPING. Breaking, Bobcat work, Removal, City Driveways, Residential. 5 mil. liab, WCB. Free Est. 604-722-8733

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. 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

7 Days / Week

Meadows Landscape Supply Ltd.

Call 778-881-0961 JOE’S CONCRETE - 37yrs exp. All types of renovations, driveways, sidewalks, placing, etc. Small jobs welcome. 604-723-5778

(604)465-1311

meadowslandscapesupply.com

Male Enhancement Pills - Ultimate Results, Satisfaction Guaranteed. 1-800-563-8616

175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

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

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

287

EXCLUSIVE Glass Wholesale Inc. Automotive Glazier/Technician. Must be experienced - no exceptions 778.227.7658

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

Kristy 604.488.9161

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

182

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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

778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

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

257

DRYWALL

PSB DRYWALL LTD.★ All Boarding, Taping, Framing & Texture. Insured work. Dump Removal Service. 604-762-4657 / 778-240-4657

260

TYBO CONTRACTING is quickly becoming an industry leader in the excavating & civil contracting business. Tybo is currently retained by some of the largest developers in B.C. We are currently offering top wage & benefit pkgs as well as opportunities for advancement. Email resumes to:

tbrebner@tybo.ca workwithus@tybo.ca

TRAVEL with bcclassified.com

604 575 5555

130

HELP WANTED

$500 loans and more No credit checks

1-877-776-1660 Apply at moneyprovider.com 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

130

HELP WANTED

CORPORATE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Quadra Chemicals Ltd., Canada’s market leader of chemical and ingredient distribution seeks an EXPERIENCED CUSTOMER SERVICE REP for our Delta Branch office to handle all day to day customer requirements. Quadra offers a competitive salary and benefits package which includes health and dental benefits, employee assistance program, incentive and pension plans, etc. QUALIFICATIONS: 5 years relevant experience | Experience in an advanced computer environment (JD Edwards/SAP) | Proven computer; excellent organizational; and follow-up skills | Ability to support and build strong partnerships and relationships with the commercial team. Please visit our website at www.quadra.ca for additional details and to learn more about our Company. If you have a long-term interest in this position and meet the qualifications, please submit your resume along with a letter of intent to Human Resources at: Quadra Chemicals Ltd. | Subject: Customer Service (Delta) | Email: resume@quadra.ca No phone calls please.

281

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

*Cedar *Treated *Vinyl *Trex

RAILINGS: *Aluminum *Glass *Wood

(604)240-1920 VECTOR RENO’S Specializing in all interior & exterior home renovations & additions Call 604-690-3327 A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing, reroofing. Dhillon 604-782-1936.

FENCING

GARDENING

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

SUNDECKS:

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

6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE. $13/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work. Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.

604 - 720 - 2009 ~We accept Visa & Mastercard~

BL CONTRACTING

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

269

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

RENOVATIONS SPECIALIST

ELECTRICAL

MOVING & STORAGE

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

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

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

Pipe Foreman Traffic Control Persons

320

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

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

FREE ESTIMATES

604-465-1311

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL Forming, Framing & Finishing. Reno’s/Additions, Decks. Hrly. or Contract. Free est. 604-341-3806

DESIGN

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

$59.00 Per Ton

Meadows Landscape Supply

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

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

SBroken Concrete RocksS $25.00 Per Metric Ton SMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS $25.00 Per Metric Ton GrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds

Prompt Delivery Available

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

MISC SERVICES

✶Dump Site Now Open✶

Call 778-688-3724

AKAL CONCRETE.

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

317

shinelandscaping@hotmail.com

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

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.

GPRC, Fairview Campus requires a Heavy Equipment Technician Instructor to commence August 15, 2015. Caterpillar experience will be an asset. Visit our website at: https://www.gprc.ab.ca/careers.

LANDSCAPING

WAREHOUSE

PERSONAL SERVICES Commercial Trailer/ Transport Mechanics

KITCHEN CABINETS

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

(Surrey Terminal)

HOUSE CLEANERS/ JANITORS

GARDENING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

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

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

.Brothers Moving 604-720-0931

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

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

VDK Contracting Top Quality/Affordable Prices Exterior/Interior Years of Experience WCB Covered

778-862-1515 FREE ESTIMATES

Excavators, Backhoes, Bobcats & Dump Trucks for hire

www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

TOPSOIL & GRAVEL

Running this ad for 10yrs

604-531-5935

PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299 2 coats any colour

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

MUSHROOM MANURE

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

Delivery or pick up Surrey location Covered Storage. HANDYMAN CONNECTION HANDYMAN CONNECTION Handyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations Repairs - 604.878.5232

604-644-1878 All Green Lawn Care - Hedge Trimming -Pruning - Clean-up - Lawn Cutting - Power Raking - Aeration - Spring Clean-up

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

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

EXP. CARPENTER / HANDYMAN All types of work! No job too small! Over 20 yrs exp! Ed 778-888-8603

288

HOME REPAIRS

A1 BATH RENO’S. Bsmt suites, drywall, patios, plumbing, siding, fencing, roofing, landscaping, etc. Joe 604-961-9937. HANDYMAN Home Repair Services - 45 Yrs Exp Call or Text Henry 604-868-5441

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

NORTH STARS PAINTING www.northstars-painting.com AMAZING WORK, AMAZING VALUE! 778.245.9069

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

WCB INSURED

Vincent 543-7776

To Place An Ad Call 604-575-5555


Friday July 10 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 23 REAL ESTATE 625

FOR SALE BY OWNER

RENTALS

RENTALS

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS

752

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

551

GARAGE SALES

AUCTION

551

GARAGE SALES

HIGH-END, Multi Family Garage Sale July 11 8am-12pm 5155 160th St, Surrey BC

July 25 546 Fort St Hope BC

SURREY MOVING SALE. Furniture, tools etc. Sun. July 12, 10:00 am-4:00 pm. 9060 160A St.

watch next week for list

SURREY: Sat. & Sun. July 11 & 12th, 9-4pm. 18341-72 Ave. Tools, house items, furniture, car manuals

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

551

GARAGE SALES MOVING SALE 15184 Pheasant Drive Surrey, Sat. & Sun. July 11 & 12, 9am - 4pm

Garden & Mechanics tools, saws, lawnmowers, weed eaters, axes & many household goods & items. Call for information (604)584-7023

477

ARBUTUS ROOFING & DRAINS Ltd Associated Painters Inc.

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

Residential/Commercial Interior/Exterior

FREE ESTIMATES

Residential / Strata

Over 30 yrs exp. Call Dan,

604 - 259 - 2482

604-542-4331

www.arbutusroofing.com

www.assocatedpainters.ca

PETER ROOFING Ltd. Roofing Specialists • New Roof Re-Roofing • Repairs • Cedar Shakes • Shingles Duroids • Torch-on Harjit Pattar 604-589-4603 604-857-3325

356

A-1 Painting Company - Interior / Exterior 20 years exp. Summer Special 10% off (604)723-8434

RUBBISH REMOVAL

RICK’S RUBBISH REMOVAL - Residential - Commercial - Construction - Yard Waste IN BUSINESS OVER 20 YEARS ~ FREE ESTIMATES ~

TONY’’S PAINTING

338

Call Rick 604-329-2783

PLUMBING

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

~ Certified Plumber ~

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 P/B CANE CORSO PUPPIES, 1st shots, de-wormed, parents on site, ready to go! $1500. 604-802-8480.

~ 604-597-3758 ~

SCOTTY / SCHNAUZER pups. 3 F, 1 M. Black/brown. 9/wks, Non-shed $600. 778-933-9026 (Chilliwack)

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

542

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

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

BURIAL PLOTS

FRUIT & VEGETABLES

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

~ FRESH LOCAL ~

BLUEBERRIES

$9.99/box Open Daily Rai’s Colebrook Farming

14176 Colebrook Rd.

PRESSURE WASHING

604-599-3516, 778-878-4650

All Gutter Cleaning. Window & Roof FULL HOUSE CLEANING Call Victor 604-589-0356

Fresh local Raspberries, Blueberries & Black Berries. $10/flat/U-Pick. Local Blueberries 3 Flats for $27: Surrey Farms 5180-152 St. 604-574-1390

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

POWER WASHING GUTTER CLEANING SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

548 372

SUNDECKS

Call Ian 604-724-6373

Solid oak computer table, tall bookcase, oak table + 4 chairs. All in Excellent condition. (604)503-2494

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

REAL ESTATE 625

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS ROOF Trouble? Let us hop up and take a look! KANGA ROOFING Call or Email for your no-obligation free quote dan@kangaroofing.ca 604240-9510

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

FURNITURE

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

FOR SALE BY OWNER

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

PETS

$735,000

Call: (604)575-9199

477

PETS

CKC Reg Sheltie Puppies sable CH bred-N.B. contract. $1500. Riverwind Shelties-Laura. 604-793-6768.

4 BDRM in Sunshine Hills, N.Delta. Huge corner lot, lots of potential, completely remodelled home with lots of beautiful gardens, $899,000. Call: (778)237-7925

CARS - DOMESTIC

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

Luxury V6, Super on Gas! Spotless IN/OUT. MUST GO. $500/obo.

Call (604)503-3151 821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS 1977 VOLVO - 244DL - all service records avail. Runs well. New radiator & tires. $1300: (604)584-7573

Homelife Pen. Property 604-536-0220

U-Haul Moving Center Surrey Claims a Landlord’s Contractual Lien against the following person’s goods in storage at:

13425 King George Hwy. Blvd Surrey, BC 604-585-4511 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

684

Auction is subject to cancellation at anytime without notice. 1994 Toyota Camry, beige 4dr V6, auto, fully loaded, 240K great cond. $2300 obo. 604-716-6149

SURREY

120 Ryan Andrew Ring Bdlg 1 100-7434 Kingsway, Burnaby, BC 129 Verna Robb 801 - 2128 West 43rd Ave., Vancouver,BC 132 Meg Curle #97 - 15275 105 Ave., Surrey, BC

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

1995 HONDA CIVIC, green, 4 dr auto, a/c, P/L, 240K, great cond. $1200/obo. 604-716-6149 .Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.

WHALLEY - Central City area. 3 Bdrm suite up $1350/mo. 2 Bdrm suite down $850/mo or rent Whole house: $1950/mo. 778-552-4418

739 RENTALS 706

APARTMENT/CONDO Cedar Lodge and Court Apts

Quiet community living next to Guildford Mall. Clean 1 bdrm starting at $760 & 2 bdrm starting at $860, Corner units starting at $950. (some w/ensuites), Cable, Heat, Hot Water incl. Onsite Mgr.

604-584-5233 CLOVERDALE 1 bdrm-$820m, 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

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

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

746

750

2005 SILVERWING SCOOTER 600 cc, auto, highway / city. Recent service. $3500: 604-349-4181

2009 SAGA Dual Sport dirt/street motorcycle. Mint cond, never off road. 675 orig kms. Super commuter. $2500 firm. 604-349-4181.

N.DELTA - 112/78A Ave. 2 Bdrm suite in brand new corner lot house with insuite laundry, near shopping, transit, all levels school, across from Sun God Rec Ctr. Avail July 15th. Ns/Np. Call 778-552-0502. N. DELTA 2 Bdrm grnd lvl. $750 inc utils. Avl now. Suit single. Quiet, reliable, N/S, N/P. (604)396-8774

238 Sierra Williams #205 - 13939 104th Ave., Surrey, BC 247 Shawn Cudmore 13425 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC 330 Tamara N. C. Nelson 14498 68 Ave., Surrey, BC 346 Michael R. Foran 9847 Manchester Dr., New Westminster,BC 347 Dylan Row 8370 Gilnet Pl., Vancouver, BC

FRASER HEIGHTS 2 Bdrm suite with shared laund, nr elem school, Hwy 1 & bus. NS/NP. Avail Now. $850 incl utils/cble. 604-589-6433.

845

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

349 Christine Young 7055 152 St., Surrey, BC AA1953E Elena Elliott #108 - 929 Esquimalt Rd., Victoria,BC A sale will take place at the storage location on Friday July 24th, 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.

The Scrapper

N. DELTA; 2 bdrm newly renovated suite, New cabinets & floors. Avail now. $800/m. 778-858-1423 N. DELTA. New 4 bdrm above grnd suite, $2000/mo incl all utils/cable. 604-957-7861 or 778-991-7865 SURREY/Guildford newer 2 bdrm gl Patio, alarm, $750 incl utils & lndry. NS/NP. Avail now. 604-377-9037

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:

751

SUITES, UPPER

752

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

MOTORCYCLES

CLOVERDALE 2 bdr in quiet CDS. Incl gas f/p, utils,lndry. NS/NP. Aug 1st. $995. 778-808-5100 after 6pm

SURREY, 126/72 Ave. 2 & 3 Bdrm apt, $945 & $1020/mo. Quiet family complex, no pets, 604-543-7271.

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

830

SUITES, LOWER

BEAR CREEK 145/88A. 4 Bdrm upper suite, 2 master bdrms, liv/rm, fam/rm, 3 bath, new paint, new appli’s. $1400/mo. N/S. 604-835-2744

SURREY 75/120A St. 3 Bdrm apt, $1060/mo, quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-501-0505

2000 TOYOTA SOLARA 163/km’s, fully loaded, clean, mint cond! Well maintained, new tires. $5000. Call 604-502-8152

ROOMS FOR RENT

CHIMNEY HTS ROOM FOR RENT. $425/mo. Available immediately. Phone 778-552-4418.

151 Bartley H. Jr. Scruggs B 9353 156 A St., Surrey, BC 152 Kristopher Vrolyk 13425 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC

MOTELS, HOTELS

SURREY 100 /K.G. Blvd. 1 Bdrm, 19th flr, beaut view, balc, inste lndry & all appls. N/S, N/P. $1000/mo. 604-575-2975 or 604-202-5678.

Surrey

Minutes from university, downtown and fairgrounds.

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

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

1992 BUICK LESABRE WELL MAINTAINED

TOWNHOUSES

BUILDING SUPPLIES

EXTRA CHEAP

✭ 604-312-7674 ✭

341

641

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

SxS BURIAL PLOT with & concrete vault for 2 + plaque w/bronze vase in Valley View Memorial Gardens. Save $1000’s & $1000’s of dollars. Call for info 1-(250)596-7786

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

818

MINI DACHSHUND puppies - born June 6, males & females, smooth coat, red. Raised by 13 yr old girl, well socialized. 1st shots & dewormed, $850 (will go toward education fund) 604-820-4827 Mission.

520

Reno’s and Repairs

TRANSPORTATION

HOMES WANTED

www.cycloneholdings.ca

ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

A Gas Fitter ✭ Plumber

LAB GERMAN Shepherd Rottie cross pups, 4 females @ $545.00 ea, 4 males @ $495.00 ea, 3 black, 3 tan with black & 2 rottie colour, vet checked, de-wormed. 8 weeks old. Phone 604-864-1004

STEEL BUILDINGS... “OUR BIG 35th ANNIVERSARY SALE” 20x20 $4500. 25x24 $5198. 30x30 $7449. 32x36 $8427. 40x46 $12,140. One end Wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca

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

627

845

Call 604-451-6676

Imacculate, clean 3 bdrm, 2 bath Rancher near 68/Fraser, many upgrades, 50x150’, close to schools & amenities. $599,000. Call: (604)575-2534

PETS

COLLIE DOODLE (collie x poodle) puppies, born June 12, specially created, ideal family dogs, intelligent, easy to train, good natured, gentle, good with animals & kids, low/no shed for hypoallergenic, will be med. size about 50lbs 23-24in tall, 1st shots, dewormed, male & female, black and rare blue merle, home raised with kids. $950. Mission, 604-820-4827

518

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

CLOVERDALE. 4 bdrm clean, Rancher. Cls to school, bus, shopping. Avail. now. (604)724-5384 or 604-724-7892

female, 6mo, spayed, 5lbs, tattooed, microchipped, vaccinated, r a b i e s , house-train. 604-745-3352

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

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.

HOMES FOR RENT

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

Biewer Yorkie.

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

SURREY SUTTON PLACE

WE BUY HOMES BC

PETS

A1 TOP CANADIAN ROOFING LTD.

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

736

TOWNHOUSES

TRANSPORTATION

TOWNHOUSES

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

Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets.

SURREY 174/57 Ave. 2 Bdrm T/H. $920/mo. Quiet family complex, shopping mall across street, no pets. Call 604-576-9969

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

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

On June 20, 2014, at 142nd Street and Hyland Drive, Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $4,216.85 CAD, $60 USD, and three cell phones, on or about 18:00 Hours. The subject property was seized because there was evidence that the subject property had been used in and/or obtained by the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 354(1) (possession of property obtained by crime) of the Criminal Code of Canada. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2015-2898, 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.


24 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Fr iday July 10 2015


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