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Delivery 604-942-3081 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Siblings at the helm of this city company PAGE 13
Taking history into the future
PAGE 3
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SEXUAL EXPLOITATION
City helps task force for youth Jennifer Moreau staff reporter
Burnaby councillors approved $6,000 in funding Monday for a city-led task force that aims to combat child prostitution and the sexual exploitation of youth through pornography, stripping and phone sex. The task force is a city-led initiative but includes representatives from a number of agencies, such as local school districts, the Fraser Health Authority, the Ministry if Children and Family Development and nonprofit groups. The task force’s plan is to use the money for a variety of upcoming projects, mainly to figure out what services are missing for sexually exploited youth and advocate for those services. The group has also had a hard time getting reliable statistics and information on sexually exploited youth, so the task force wants to develop a guide for social service agencies to identify sexually exploited youth (or those at risk) in Burnaby and New Westminster and start a pilot project to keep track of them. The task force also plans to participate in “Stop the Sexual Exploitation of Children and Youth” awareness week in March and hold a walk to raise community awareness about the problem. The task force will also launch a new resource website for youth and sponsor presentations in high schools to raise “awareness of the dangers of high-risk behaviour.” The task force has been around since 1998. In 2000, Burnaby social service agencies tracked 35 local youth at-risk of being sexually exploited through the sex trade if they weren’t already. The task force states that each year, kids as young as 13 are recruited into the sex trade, “lured by promises of glamour and excitement, because they can sell their Youth Page 4
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Top of the world: Graeme Sarte scales new heights during playtime at the celebrations marking Cameron Recreation Complex’s 30th anniversary on Saturday.
Top cop backs long-gun registry Political foes of registry back off as police and supporters make their arguments Alfie Lau
staff reporter
It looks like the long-gun registry will live for another day. The big debate about the gun registry comes as Parliament reconvened in Ottawa on Monday and one of the first things to deal with was Conservative MP Candice Hoeppner’s private member’s bill
to kill the gun registry. important tool for the police officers who The vote, scheduled for today use it daily, and I think once you get past (Wednesday), looks set to fail after at the great criticism of the cost of setting up the registry, people will least five NDP MPs have flip see that the registry has many flopped back to supporting the OUR VIEW benefits.” long-gun registry. Opinion: It’s a mat“We’re the only party offerThree local NDP MPs have ter of public safety, and ing solutions on how to fix strongly come out in favour of politics should take a the registry and make it betkeeping the controversial probackseat on this issue. ter,” said New Westminstergram alive. See page 6 Coquitlam MP Fin Donnelly. “I’ve always supported “I believe we have the votes the long-gun registry, and it’s looking more like the attempt to get rid of necessary to save the registry.” it is going to fail,” said Burnaby-Douglas MP Bill Siksay. “It’s been shown to be an Gun registry Page 8
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A02 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A03
5 MLA off ‘hit list’
9 Wrongful deaths
13 Family biz thriving
A CLOSER LOOK: BURNABY’S CITY ARCHIVES STORE HISTORY AND CHART CHANGE
What the future holds for the city’s past Janaya Fuller-Evans staff reporter
Burnaby’s city archives has shaken off the image of archives as dusty, dark rooms filled with microfiche with its Charting Change online atlas project. Charting Change: An Interactive Atlas of Burnaby’s Heritage tied with a Smithsonian Institute project last month for ArchivesNext’s award for best repurposing of digitized data. “We’re so excited,” city archivist Arilea Sill says, adding it is great to be acknowledged, as the Burnaby Archives is a comparatively small organization. She adds it is also great that “We can make something equal to, and as good as, the service provided by the Smithsonian.” The project started 10 years ago, she says, with a poster of four historical maps of Burnaby, and one current map. The online project, which allows visitors to Heritage Burnaby’s website to click on and learn about historic locations on each of the maps, launched last February. The city’s gaming funds, and a Department of Canadian Heritage grant, funded the project. Charting Change is not the only modern initiative the archives has taken on. HeritageBurnaby.ca – a collaboration between Burnaby’s community heritage commission, the heritage planning program, the archives, the Burnaby Village Museum and the Burnaby Library – launched last February, as well. The site contains online exhibits, links to history websites, historic photographs, information on artifact and text collections, heritage landmarks, and library collections. Technology is also being used to preserve documents, Sill says. “It’s opening a lot of new windows to us,” she says, adding the archives can kill two birds with one stone by digitally scanning photos to preserve them, and provid-
Jason Lang/burnaby now
Back to the future: City archivist Arilea Sill is helping to bring Burnaby’s past into the digital age. ing access to the public by uploading the photos online. The archives are also exploring crowdsourcing, primarily with a comment feature on the historical photos on the site, so people can discuss photos or provide additional information. “We’re gathering a great deal of information,” Sill says. One woman who saw
her family in photos on the site was able to provide historical background back to England. “It’s everybody’s history, and personal stories add to it,” Sill says. “The resources of the public can be so vast.” Sill is also hoping to add a feature that would allow viewers to upload their own photos.
While 2,000 of the city’s historic photos are now online, the city’s textual and audiovisual material is still only accessible by visiting the archives, located at the McGill Library at 4595 Albert St. The city bylaws are all available online, however. The hardcopy materials are held in cold,
Archives Page 4
Archives jam-packed, but shelves may help Janaya Fuller-Evans staff reporter
The Burnaby Archives are requesting a space-saving measure that could prevent the need for a larger location for the time being. City council passed a report from the community heritage commission, asking for $174,000 for high density shelving for the archives, on to the city’s finance and civic development committee.
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Sports
Currently, the archives is at 90 per cent capacity and is expected to be at 100 per cent by the end of 2011, according to the report. The shelving could increase the archives’ capacity by 75 per cent. “It is an effective solution at this point,” said Arilea Sill, the city archivist. The additional shelving could provide enough space for the next five to seven years, she said, adding that is a conservative estimate and she hopes it would last
longer than that. The archives moved into its current location at the McGill library branch in 2001, and at the time received large amounts of records from the city. The archives also received the Burnaby Historical Society’s archival material in 2007. “In the first few years, we were receiving transfers of 300 to 400 boxes at a time,” Sill said, adding transfers come in much smaller quantities now. If funding is approved, it would take
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a few months to install the shelving, as a vendor needs to be found, she said. The installation would use the current shelves but compact them, while adding additional shelving units. The archives’ material would have to be moved for about a month during the installation, Sill said. The funding request included $2,000 for storage. Eventually, however, a larger space or
Last week’s question Do you agree with the decision to hold a referendum on the HST? YES 69% NO 31% This week’s question Do you support keeping the longgun registry? Vote at: www.burnabynow.com
Shelving Page 4
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A04 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
CITY HALL
City concerned about cost of regional sewer plans Burnaby city staff agree with the principles behind Metro Vancouver’s liquid waste plan, but they’re concerned about the financial implications to the municipality. The environment committee presented a report on the issue to city council this week. Metro Vancouver’s board adopted the Integrated Liquid Waste and Resource Management Plan in May. The plan includes goals and strategies originally in the 2002 plan, to manage and provide
wastewater services. These services include collection and treatment, source control programs, rainwater management and support of environmental monitoring programs. The new goals and strategies for 2010 include protection of public health and the environment, use of liquid waste as a resource, and effective, affordable and collaborative management. While the city supports these goals, the financial burden is worrisome, the staff report stated.
“The detailed financial implications and affordability of the regional and municipal commitments remain uncertain at this time, especially with respect to the level of cost sharing that will be available from senior levels of government for the upgrading of the wastewater treatment plants at Lion’s Gate and Iona,” the report said. Burnaby wants Metro Vancouver to secure cost sharing, and determine levels, from the provincial and federal governments.
House demolition set
A home on city property is beyond repair and should be torn down, according to a report from the engineering department, presented to council this week. The house at 7624 Newcombe St. was bought by the city in 1973 for road right-of-way for future road construction. There is currently a singlefamily home on the property, with tenants. The dwelling is in need of extensive repairs to bring it to rental standards, the report
stated. The finance department confirmed that, because of the age of the building and the significant improvements required in the next few years, it is not economically feasible to upgrade the dwelling for rental purposes. Staff said there is no heritage value to the building. City council approved the plan to remove and/or demolish the structures and outbuildings on the property. The tenant is being notified. – Janaya Fuller-Evans
Archives: Past meets future online continued from page 3
dry storage facilities on the premises. The archivists’ primary job is to collect records from the community, and preserve and index the material, says Sill, who has been the city’s full-time archivist since 2002. The archives also provides research services for the public and city staff. While Burnaby’s archival online presence is primarily through the city website, New Westminster’s Archives launched a Facebook page, New Westminster Museum and Archives, earlier this week. Neither of the archives have a Twitter account as of yet. It is a balancing act to make sure material is collected, preserved and protected as well as promoting the archives to the public, Barry Dykes, New West’s archivist, says. The Royal City archives still uses traditional methods of preservation, such as microfiche, but has also been digitally scanning photos since the mid-’90s, like many archives, he says. New West is planning to launch a new website for the museum and archives by the end of the year. While the website will be simple in structure, it will contain online exhibits, as well as the archives’ online public access database, which is also set to be completed by the end of the year.
Dykes hopes the projects are completed around the same time, so the two can be launched together. However, he points out that New Westminster Archives is a smaller organization – he is the sole archivist and works four days a week, whereas Burnaby has two on staff – and must keep preserving and indexing material as its priority. “We have a duty to preserve the records we do have,” he says, adding the archives is also trying to take advantage of available technology, to preserve material and show people what’s available. Vancouver Archives, which has more financial and staff resources than the smaller cities’ archives, has had a strong online presence for years. Vancouver has a Twitter account, VanArchives, and has had a YouTube channel for its digitalized videos since 2008. The city even has its own digital archivist, Sue Bigelow. The archivists continually update the online database, and are proponents of open data access, and also use open source software to preserve records and material. But Vancouver archives manager Heather Gordon agrees it is impossible to digitize everything and put it online, even with the Vancouver Archives’ resources. “For heavy-duty research, they pretty much have to come in,” she says.
Shelving: Archives needs expansion continued from page 3
expansion of the current space will be needed. “We’ll have to look at all the options,” Sill said. “There will have to be some long-term planning.” The commission also submitted a request for funding for the archives’ oral history digitization program. The archives has been digitally preserving text
documents and photos for some time, but is looking at preserving audio recordings as well. The archives has about 100 hours of oral history recordings of Burnaby’s pioneers, done in the ‘70s and ‘80s. The commission has requested $75,000 to digitize the recordings. Thus far, the archives
has made an inventory of the analog tapes, Sill said. Eventually, she hopes to upload the digital tracks to the Heritage Burnaby website, and make them keyword and subject searchable, so people can find interviews or portions of interviews relevant to their searches. “It is in the planning stages now,” she said.
Youth: Group tackles exploitation continued from page 1
bodies for the security of a place to stay or food to eat, or because they have a drug habit or alcohol problem they must feed.” Annabel Webb is a spokesperson with Justice for Girls, a non-profit group that works with young girls in the crimi-
nal justice system. She said her group has worked with sexually exploited youth from Burnaby and New Westminster, and that often they are criminalized to keep them out of the trade. Webb said it’s difficult to say if Burnaby and New Westminster are any better or worse than other munici-
palities when it comes to child prostitution, but the task force’s effort to get statistics and reliable information was a good idea. Webb said the best way to solve child prostitution was to address root causes like violence against women in the home and poverty.
Authority is given for an annual tax sale by the Local Government Act Sec. 403 (1) which states “At 10 a.m. on the last Monday in September, at the council chambers, the collector must conduct the annual tax sale by offering for sale by public auction each parcel of real property on which taxes are delinquent.” Take notice that the following properties shall, on the 27th day of September, 2010, in the Council Chamber of the City Hall, 4949 Canada Way, Burnaby BC at the hour of 10:00am be offered for sale at the public auction, unless delinquent taxes, with interest, are sooner paid. Purchasers of tax sale property are subject to tax under the Property Purchase Tax Act. This tax will be calculated on the market value of the property at the time the title is transferred to the purchaser at the Land Title Office. At the end of the redemption period, the City will notify the Registrar of Titles to transfer the title to the purchaser and will also notify the Administrator of the Property Tax Act who will bill the purchaser for the tax. Prospective bidders are advised that it is their responsibility to search the title in advance to determine if there are any charges against the property. For further information call the Tax Office at 604-294-7350. TERMS OF SALE – CASH OR EQUIVALENT. IE: BANK DRAFT OR CERTIFIED CHEQUE PAYABLE IMMEDIATELY UPON ACCEPTED BID LT 33 DL 127, PL NWS246, 31148/1000000 PID 001-224-433, 302-5450 EMPIRE DR LT 19 BLK 10, DL 186, PL 1124, PID: 011-997-117, 3807 TRIUMPH ST LT 13 DL 116, PL BCS2090, PID 026-874-822, 109-3811 HASTINGS ST LT 24 BLK 5, DL 121, PL 1054, PID 011-936-711, 4449 HASTINGS ST LT 29 BLK 15, DL 121, PL 1054, PID 002-903-857, 4245 FRANCES ST LT 15 BLK 23, DL 121, PL 1054, PID 002-894-220, 4262 GEORGIA ST LT 5W1/2 BLK 15, DL 116, PL 2223, PID 003-168-352, 3848 VENABLES ST LT 30 BLK 25, DL 121, PL 1054, PID 002-656-469, 4129 VENABLES ST LT 2 BLK 34, DL 122, PL 1543, PID 012-225-631, 4608 PARKER ST LT 2 BLK 7, DL 120, PL 9106, PID 011-380-306, 4214 NAPIER ST LT 26 DL 119, PL BCS1339 PID 026-304-511, 406-4132 HALIFAX ST LT 176 DL 142, PL 63855 PID 003-207-439, 7865 MEADOWOOD CLOSE LT 66 DL 143, PL NWS963, PID 001-461-478, 8214 ROSSWOOD PL LT 181 DL 15, PL NWS962, & DL 56, 148 PID: 001-603-434,302-9126 CAPELLA DR LT 34 PL NWS962, DL 15/56/148, 4012/1000000 PID001-601-661,1039150 SATURNA DR LT 137 DL 6, PL NWS58, 10/1940 PID 001-079-824, 8956 ORION PL LT 41 DL 43, PL 21986, PID: 003-292-347, 7471 KRAFT CRES LT 373 DL 80, PL 58797, PID 002-893-819, 4842 CANADA WAY LT 3 DL 85, PL 6317, PID: 003-010-376,5132 CANADA WAY LT A DL 85, PL 5049, PID: 002-764-377, 5180 CANADA WAY LT 95, DL 90, PL 30016, PID: 002-410-702, 7132 CANADA WAY LT B DL 28, PL 14865, PID 003-405-443, 7414 CANADA WAY LT 228 DL 58, PL 34353, PID 005-559-863, 8064 WESTLAKE ST LT A DL 42, PL BCP13607, PID 026-085-593 7709 GOVERNMENT RD LT 41 DL 2, PL NWS1721, 851/82907 PID 001-922-424, 408-9890 MANCHESTER DR LT 194 DL 40, PL 48688, 1600-8115. PID 002-636-000, 8120 BURNLAKE DR LT 32 DL 39, PL 64591, PID 003-211-436, 3893 FIR ST LT 19 DL 81, PL NWS194, 10/720 PID 000-507-229, 4770 FERNGLEN DR LT L DL 35, PL 16710, PID 010-222-260, 3776 MOSCROP ST LT 1, DL 34, PL NWS930, 50/100 PID: 001-568-256, 4010 PRICE ST LT 416 DL 87, PL 60153, PID: 002-369-656, 7878 BURRIS ST LT 335 DL 87, PL 47229, 1770-6428. PID 003-306-852, 7847 WELSLEY DR LT 83, DL 94, PL 40640, PID: 005-375-487, 5312 GRIMMER ST LT 22, DL 151, PL NWS554, 1366/100000 PID 000-563-552, 503-4105 IMPERIAL ST LT 7, DL 91, PL 651, EXC FIRSTLY PORTION ON PLAN WITH BYLAW A32277 SECONDLY: PARCEL “A” (REFERENCE PLAN 35561) PID 002-642-531 7650 IMPERIAL ST LT 98 DL 90, PL 31678, PID 002-576-015, 7760 ROSEWOOD ST LT 13 DL 99, PL 2058, PID 002-440-547, 4541 WATLING ST LT 18 DL 156, PL 27832, 5665-7620. PID 012-748-731, 4312 RUMBLE ST LT 60 BLK A, DL 157, PL 1679, 5735-7658. PID 012-294-250, 4505 NEVILLE ST
DL 158 PL 2384, Lot 14 E1/2, PID 012-700-746, 5293 PORTLAND ST LT 2 BLK 8, DL 173, PL 9015, PID 011-353-813, 6308 MARINE DR LT 6 DL 165, PL NWS3123, 164/2126 PID 015-304-361, 106-4833 BYRNE RD LT 27 DL 95, PL BCS1213 PID 026-233-819, 211-7000 21ST AVE LT 1 DL 30, PL NWS3451, PID 017-171-768, 1-7398 EDMONDS ST LT 210 DL 95, PL BCS2498, PID 027-187-446, 3107-7088 18TH AVE LT 3 DL 30, PL 11232, PID 001-958-691, 7675 16TH AVE LT 7 BLK 3, DL 173, PL 1034, PID: 003-240-291, 6088 12TH AVE LT 3 DL 53, PL 11062, PID 002-837-358, 7213 10TH AVE LT 38 DL 28, PL 2105, PID 012-519-626, 7805 10TH AVE LT A DL 13, PL 15838, PID 002-075-059, 9239 10TH AVE LT 3 BLK 1, DL 150, PL 2041, PID: 009-525-823, 7130 BOUNDARY RD LT 2 DL 68, PL BCS2773, PID 027-397-416, 3592 KALYK AVE LT 7 DL 38, PL 16460, PID 010-195-556, 4355 BARKER AVE LT 2 DL 151, PL NWS2497, PID 005-702-674, 102-6282 KATHLEEN AVE LT 19 BLK 11, DL 187, PL 1282, 0560-4391. PID: 002-666-472, 75 ROSSER AVE LT 5 DL 149, PL 13032, PID: 003-061-388, 7092 MCKAY AVE LT 20 BLK 16, DL 122, PL 1308, 0740-4577. PID 002-929-155, 585 ALPHA AVE LT 81 DL 73, PL 47403, PID 002-534-177, 3743 GARDEN GROVE DR LT 269 DL 32, PL NWS2489, PID 010-715-525, 1903-6055 NELSON AVE LT 127 DL 157, PL 44541, PID 002-840-928, 8393 HOLLIS PL LT 17 DL 32, PL LMS334, PID 017-759-196, 305-6388 MARLBOROUGH AVE LT 5 DL 98 PL NWS3099 3350-5231 3300-5224 PID 015-075-117,105-7368 ROYAL OAK AVE LT 48 DL 125, PL NWS419, 1353/132353 PID 001-329-634, 901-2020 BELLWOOD AVE LT 149, DL 125, PL BCS2622, PID 027-308-651, 2401-2225 HOLDOM AVE LT 1 DL 93, PL 7299, Except Plan EP15298(PCL A) PID 003-173-879 6507 WALTHAM AVE LT A DL 218, PL LMP4492, PID 017-775-370, 8 FELL AVE LT 7 BLK 11, DL 97, PL 2802, PID 002-570-904, 7061 RANDOLPH AVE LT 195 DL 136, PL 40919, PID: 002-966-115, 1980 CLIFF AVE LT 43 PL LMS248, DL 53 & 95, 4430-7115 PID 017-625-149, 43-7520 18TH ST LT 74 DL 207, PL 27610, PID 002-706-024, 7151 MAUREEN CRES LT 32 DL 95, PL LMS1432 PID 018-778-445, 32-7433 16TH ST LT 17 DL 30,PL NWS178,8016/299966 3284-7355 PID 001-156-101, 206-7180 LINDEN AVE LT 40 BLK 14, DL 29, PL 3035, PID: 001-596-128, 7730 HILDA ST LT 418 DL 87, PL 60153, PID 002-369-699, 5939 6TH ST LT 248 DL 87, PL 42855, PID 002-461-731, 6260 FIELD PL LT 27 DL 102, PL BCS1737, & DL 211 PID 026-609-746, 115-9229 UNIVERSITY CRES LT 150DL 31, PL BCS1893, & DL 102, 211 PID 026-699-818, 801-9232 UNIVERSITY CRES LT 164, DL 102, PL BCS1046, PID 026-112-451, 904-9288 UNIVERSITY CRES LT 55 DL 13, PL 12193, PID: 009-666-559, 7737 ELFORD ST LT 31 DL 4 PL NWS92 921222619409295 8315-3940 PID 001-107-810, 111-3921 CARRIGAN CRT
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A05
POLITICS
Burnaby MLA off HST ‘hit list’ But Fight HST organizer says Richard Lee isn’t necessarily safe Jennifer Moreau staff reporter
The Fight HST campaign announced a new revised list of Liberal politicians targeted for recall campaigns on Monday, and Burnaby North MLA Richard Lee is no longer on it. However, Fight HST organizer Bill Tieleman says Lee is not safe from the recall campaign. “He still could get on there. What we’ve done is got expressions of interest from the ridings,” Tieleman said, explaining the Fight HST campaign collected public input to see which ridings were best prepared for the recall campaign. Each riding is going to try and sign up canvassers to get signatures to recall MLAs, and the ridings that have the most support will get launched first in the recall campaign, he added. “The folks in Richard Lee’s riding weren’t quite ready to meet to circumstances.” Tieleman said Lee is still a target but he’s just not on the top list of 18
MLAs. dum on the issue before the end of “Richard Lee should not think that this year. he’s not on anyone’s list. Let’s be Recall campaigns could start as clear,” Tieleman said. early as Nov. 15. Organizers are calling the camMLAs can be removed between paign “MLA Survivor Recall, Vote elections, provided enough signathem off the Island,” after the real- tures are collected, under the Recall ity TV show Survivor, something Lee and Initiative Act, the same legislatook issue with. tion the anti-HST initiative petition “It’s not a game,” Lee was organized under. said. “It’s about MLAs, they The 18 targeted MLAs make their decision based are Donna Barnett (Caribooon what’s good for our econChilcotin), Ida Chong (Oak omy.” Bay-Gordon Head), Terry Lee said he felt for the Lake (Kamloops-North MLAs on the list. Thompson), John Slater “I worry that it will put (Boundary-Similkameen), them under stress and will Marc Dalton (Maple Ridgeaffect their service to the Mission), Colin Hansen community,” he said. (Vancouver-Quilchena), Bill Lee was voted in on a thin Richard Lee Bennett (Kootenay East) margin in the last provincial Burnaby MLA John Les (Chilliwack), Bill election, and his office was Barisoff (Penticton), Steve targeted for regular rallies through- Thompson (Kelowna-Mission), out the anti-HST campaign while vol- John Rustad (Nechako Lakes), Ron unteers collected signatures for the Cantelon (Parksville-Qualicum) initiative petition. Eric Foster (Vernon-Monashee), The new recall list was released at Don McRae (Comox Valley), Norm a Fight HST press conference Monday Letnick (Kelowna-Lake Country) Jane morning in Vancouver. Thornthwaite (North VancouverFight HST leader Bill Vander Seymour) Joan McIntyre (West Zalm said the campaign was mov- Vancouver-Sea to Sky) and Ben ing to recall because Premier Gordon Stewart (Westside-Kelowna). Campbell was not holding a referenjmoreau@burnabynow.com
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A06 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
The Burnaby NOW is a Canadian-owned community newspaper published and distributed in the city of Burnaby every Wednesday and Saturday by the Burnaby Now, 201A – 3430 Brighton Avenue, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5A 3H4, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.
Brad Alden den Publisherr
Listen to the cops: Keep the long-gun registry about losing the “rural” gun vote. But It’s good enough for us. If the people who have to actually deal with the people shouldn’t public safety and the ability of carrying long guns want a long-gun regis- the police to protect us and themselves trump gun owners’ self-interest or a bortry, then we’re all for it. rowed-from-the-U.S. right to arms ideolB.C.’s top cops came out last week ogy? saying they want the long-gun Burnaby’s top cop, Chief registry retained. For the last Burnaby NOW Supt. Rick Taylor, told the couple of years, there’s been Burnaby NOW that, in 2009, his a lot of lobbying to have it officers accessed the registry 52,207 times. scrapped – and those efforts have proVancouver Police Chief Jim Chu has duced more political flip-flopping than a said that officers across Canada check landed flounder. with the registry about 14,000 times a day. Some politicos are clearly worried
OUR VIEW
He said police often deal with suicidal people, and knowing if those people have a firearm saves lives. As Chief Const. Peter Lepine of the West Vancouver Police Department summed it up: “Why do you think this information is so important? We do it when a student on a Facebook page says they are tired of being bullied and don’t want to take it any more. … We do it when people call to report a relative with mental health problems or a landlord calls to say a couple is fighting and he
doesn’t know if they have any firearms.” Yes, a farmer in a peaceful Saskatchewan town who uses his .22 for killing prairie dogs is probably not too pleased about having to register his gun. But guns can be moved from one place to another – and, unfortunately, domestic violence and mental illness also occur in idyllic prairie towns. It’s time to get politics out of this issue and listen to the police. The goal – and the only goal here – should be to ensure fewer people die.
Liberals in for a tough HST fight W
Association and Cameron henever he’s asked Muir of the B.C. Real Estate these days about next Association – have also slightly year’s referendum changed their tune on the matter on the HST, Premier Gordon Campbell keeps insisting the vote in recent weeks. Nevertheless, even if more “is not about me.” than 50 per cent of the electorate Well, unfortunately for his eventually accepts the government, it is HST (or at least don’t likely that for a good view it as some kind of chunk of the public, Keith Baldrey heinous attack on their the referendum will pocketbook), it still doesn’t solve indeed be as much about his one of the B.C. Liberal governleadership as it is about a harmoment’s biggest problems: motinized sales tax. vating enough people to actually And therein lies the biggest leave their homes, troop down challenge of all when it comes to to a polling station, and vote in Campbell and the B.C. Liberals favour of a tax. taking something positive out of Campbell’s game-changing the referendum results. move to accept a 50-per-centIn fact, convincing a majority plus-one result in the referenof British Columbians that the dum as binding (instead of 50HST is not as bad for them as it per-cent-plus-one of the entire has been portrayed may be the electorate) makes turnout from easiest part of the selling job for the government. Already, there is both sides crucial. And it would appear that those whose opposisome evidence attitudes towards the HST have softened somewhat tion to the HST remains firm by next year will be more likely to – not to the point of the tax being turn out to vote than those who popular or anything like that, are ambivalent or even have a but perhaps to the point where favourable attitude towards the the somewhat hysterical negative tax. reaction to it has calmed a bit. Consider these numbers. An Ipsos-Reid online poll last week pegged the number of those There are about three million who would vote to scrap the HST voters. In the last election, a little at 65 per cent, a decline from sev- more than 1.6 million people voted, and more than 700,000 eral months ago when more than people signed the anti-HST peti80 per cent wanted it gone. tion (although more than 140,000 And two key industry spokessignatures were ruled invalid). people who were highly critical If the turnout for the referenof the HST before it was introduced – Ian Tostenson of the B.C. dum is roughly the same as the Restaurant and Food Services Referendum Page 7
IN MY OPINION
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Electoral system isn’t working Dear Editor:
Burnaby NOW has recently published an interview with former city councillor Lee Rankin (Does Burnaby city council need opposition?, Burnaby NOW, Sept. 8), an Editor’s Letter (Is opposition always better?, Burnaby NOW, Sept. 11) and a letter from G. Bruce Friesen (Opposition crucial to democracy, Letters to the editor, Burnaby NOW, Sept. 15). These have all pointed out the lack of any opposition in the present Burnaby city council and its consequences. They all miss two important points: that we all deserve representation, and how to get it. In his 1940 book, George Hallett wrote: “In a democratic government, the right of decision belongs to the majority, but the right of representation belongs to all.”
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Our present system fails badly on both counts. The Burnaby city election in 2005 resulted in the party that received the largest number of votes losing the election to a party with a smaller number of votes. Crazy? Yes, but that is what happens with our voting system. And it is routine with this system that about half of the voters do not get a representative of their points of view on council. At the 2008 election, 51 per cent of the votes were for candidates from the Burnaby Citizens’ Association, and those votes elected all eight councillors. The other 49 per cent of the votes elected no one. Why can’t we have everyone represented on council? The culprit is the block voting system in use; it may be simple, but it is a failure. It routinely produces an unrepresentative council, and
System Page 7
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A07
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR System is failing voters continued from page 6
occasionally a “wrong winner.” A simple improvement could be made by the city council – that is, instead of giving everyone eight votes, give everyone a smaller number, say six, votes. This is called limited block voting. It is not perfect but would result in a better representation of what people vote for. Better still is a voting system in which voters indicate their preferences, ranking candidates 1, 2, 3 etc., and the ballots are counted using the single transferable vote. This system matches voters’ and candidates’ interests and would result in each candidate being elected by about the same number of votes. Limited block voting is something that candidates at the next election should be promising to institute if they are in a position to do so. If they do not, I do not want to hear them complaining about how unrepresentative council is. Looking further ahead, we really should do our best to get each councillor representing a set of voters with similar interests. My reading of the Local Government Act is that we could do this now; the present council disagrees. The act does not specify any particular voting system. What it does specify is that the “candidates who received the highest number of valid votes” are elected. This is true for nearly all voting systems. I find it very disappointing that the parties that did not get anyone elected at the last election did not make any representation to the Local Government Elections Task Force earlier this year; this was their
Until Sept.30 Hurry soon!
opportunity to try to get the act changed to give us fair elections. The City of Vancouver and several groups made submissions but were ignored by the task force. Perhaps those who have connections to the B.C. Liberal Party could use their influence to get the minister to get this underway. David Huntley, Burnaby
Voters spoke at the polls
We’re all about Bikes
Dear Editor:
Re: Opposition crucial to democracy, Letters to the editor, Burnaby NOW, Sept. 15. Mr. G. Bruce Friesen‘s attempt to include our city council with the dictatorial B.C. Liberal Party is simply attempting to kill two birds with one stone. Regarding our city council makeup, it was an autonomous voters’ choice. Their democratic decision resulted in the opposition being humiliated and the BCA flabbergasted. It was no Machiavellian ploy by the BCA. Burnaby voters democratically eliminated those they knew to be ineligible for our city governance, therefore those contesting local politicians who complain about BCA dominance on city council, or school board, have only themselves to blame. Our so-called “free press” is built on the same model employed by countries such as China and Russia. The only difference is theirs is state-controlled, ours is controlled by an individual or a corporation with vested interests. With the control of newspapers falling into fewer and fewer hands, we now have an enormous amount of private influence being controlled by those hands.
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Referendum: Liberals in tough continued from page 6
one in the last election, more than 800,000 people would have to leave their homes en masse on one Saturday next fall and vote to keep the HST. That strikes me as an awfully high bar for the government to get over. It’s not completely out of the question for enough people to vote in favour of the HST to keep it, but the odds seem awfully long. And compounding the problem from the government’s point of view is the inevitability of many, many people seeing the referendum as the perfect vehicle to register their displeasure and frustration of the government – and particularly the premier – over any number of issues. I’ve long thought the
anti-HST petition was signed by a lot of people who viewed it as more of an anti-B.C. Liberal petition than an anti-tax effort. I visited a lot of canvassing locations and witnessed many people asking, “Is that the anti-Campbell petition” or “Is that the antigovernment petition?” Will Campbell’s popularity recover in time for next year’s referendum? According to various polls, he’s got a heck of a lot of ground to make up to even get to the point where half the electorate supports him. One wild card in all this speculation could be the fact that more than $2 billion in extra revenue over the next three years has suddenly materialized, thus creating the real possibility that next spring’s
budget could contain significant tax cuts or some kind of financial rebate scheme (to go with the various ones already in place). But I’m not sure Campbell and the B.C. Liberals can buy their way back into the good graces of enough people to save the HST at this point. After nine years in power, a government – and especially a leader – can accumulate so much bad baggage that they inevitably sink. He may insist the HST referendum is not about his leadership, but Gordon Campbell may discover that for so many people, it is exactly about that – unless, of course, he resigns before the vote. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global B.C.
The Burnaby NOW welcomes letters to the editor. We do, however, edit for taste, legality and length. Priority is given to letters written by residents of Burnaby and/or issues concerning Burnaby. Please include a phone number where you can be reached during the day. Send letters to: The Editor, #201A-3430 Brighton Ave., Burnaby, B.C., V5A 3H4, fax them to 604-444-3460 or e-mail: editorial@burnabynow.com
•NO ATTACHMENTS PLEASE• Letters to the editor and opinion columns may be reproduced on the Burnaby NOW website, burnabynow.com The Burnaby Now 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. 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. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.
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A08 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Gun registry: Police chiefs unite in support continued from page 1
Service Deputy Chief Const. “I have asked people in Dave Jones. the community what they “It’s a tool we use every want me to do and I think day and that ensures the it’s running 10 to one in safety of police and citizens favour of keeping the reg- at large.” istry,” said Burnaby-New Jones said that his offiWestminster MP Peter cers use the registry prior to Julian. “That’s why I’ll be going to any call. voting for the registry.” “It’s a great tool to help Local police chiefs also find out what we might be led the charge to urge the heading into,” said Jones. province’s members of Jones’ comments come Parliament to vote to save on the heels of a press conthe registry. ference held last week by Burnaby’s top cop, Chief Vancouver Police Chief Jim Supt. Rick Taylor, said the Chu to present the united long-gun registry thoughts of local is a vital tool his police chiefs. officers and civil“The registry ian staff use daily. helps us protect “In 2009, we the public, it does accessed the reghelp us save lives, istry 52,207 times, keep people safer, and this year, it helps front-line in the first nine officers do their months, we’ve jobs in a more accessed it 41,267 safe environment, times,” said Taylor. Rick Taylor it helps us inves“That’s almost chief superintendent tigate crimes after 100,000 times in they occurred,” the last two years, and it’s a said Chu, who is also the tool that allows our people B.C. director of the Canadian to have the information to Association of Chiefs of prepare themselves for fol- Police. lowup action.” West Vancouver Chief Taylor said that while Const. Peter Lepine said he recognizes the merit his officers use the registry of some of the arguments an average of 18 times per against the long-gun reg- day. istry – that criminals don’t Back on the political register guns, that illegal front, the change of heart guns are available to crim- by the five NDP members inals and illegal guns are led to a compromise sugused in criminal acts – he gestion by NDP leader still strongly believes in the Jack Layton, who called registry. on Prime Minister Stephen “From a public safety Harper to admit defeat in point of view, I believe the his campaign to dispose of registry does contribute to the registry and to sign on public safety,” he said. to a compromise plan to Taylor’s thoughts are make the database more echoed by his counterparts palatable to gun owners. in New Westminster. Harper “no longer has the “We support the long- votes he needs to ram this gun registry, it’s a safety bill through the House,” measure that works,” said Layton told a news conferNew Westminster Police ence.
Meanwhile, the Liberals, under Michael Ignatieff, have said all their MPs will vote against the bill next week, even the dozen members who previously supported the measure. Conservative House Leader John Baird said that if the bill is killed in
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Wednesday’s vote, the Harper government will remain committed to scrapping the long-gun registry. The five NDP MPs who have changed their votes are Carol Hughes, Malcolm Allen, Claude Gravelle, Charlie Angus and Glenn Thibeault.
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A09
Families seek changes to wrongful death laws Alfie Lau
staff reporter
Beatrice Pereira admits she’s always a mess on June 19 each year. That’s because that date is the anniversary of when Pereira lost her mother, Theresa, in 2006. What makes Beatrice so sad is that her mother died in a case she believes is a case of medical negligence. “My mom went in to a hospital for an eye infection, and she ended up dying,” said Beatrice. “It’s been more than four years now, and I still don’t have any answers.” Theresa Pereira’s story goes back to May 10, 2006, when the 71-year-old went in for cataract laser surgery. The surgery seemed to go well, but less than two weeks later, on May 21, her eye became sore and swollen and she had a headache. Her son Gordon took her to Vancouver General Hospital, and the first doctor there told her the eye was infected. Theresa was told to go to an eye clinic down the street because they had more specialized equipment. At that clinic, Theresa was told by the resident doctor there that she needed immediate treatment and a freezing solution, Lidocaine, would be injected. The resident doctor also told Theresa that she needed some antibiotics, which would take an hour to arrive, so the doctor suggested that Theresa and Gordon go for lunch. After Theresa returned, the resident doctor administered the Lidocaine and left
to page a retinal specialist. While alone, Theresa suffered a reaction to the medication. When the resident doctor and her son found her, she was unconscious and not breathing. Gordon was told that his mother had thrown up and had possibly inhaled some of the vomit when a breathing tube was put down her throat. The initial diagnosis was that the Lidocaine had entered Theresa’s cerebral fluid and frozen her brain. Theresa’s brain was deprived of oxygen for more than three minutes. Admitted to the intensive care unit, Theresa also suffered burns when an intravenous needle was incorrectly inserted into her arm and caused the medication to burn the outer layers of her skin. By June 13, 2006, Theresa’s condition had worsened, as a blood clot led to her needing medication to maintain a regular heartbeat. Six days later, Theresa was diagnosed with internal bleeding. When doctors were preparing her for surgery, they discovered that blood was barely flowing to her extremities. Within hours, the family had to make the decision on whether to take Theresa off the machines that were keeping her alive. “Less than a month after my mother went in to get treatment on her eye, she was dead,” said Beatrice. “I know that I definitely have to let go of the past, but it’s been hard.” Instead of wallowing in pity and sorrow, Beatrice wanted to make a difference. She became involved in a local group, the Law Page 10
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A10 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Law: Families seek reform continued from page 9
Wrongful Death Law Reform Group, that was started five years ago. The group offers support to families, like the Pereiras, who believe they lost their loved ones as a result of wrongful death. Bentley Doyle, communications director for the Trial Lawyers Association of B.C., said wrongful death cases generally involve deaths caused through medical negligence or car accidents where the death was caused by someone else’s recklessness and negligence, though not of a criminal nature. “As it stands, non-wageearners, generally children, seniors and the disabled, are worthless in the eyes of the law,” said Doyle. “If their family didn’t count on them for income, their loss of companionship, care, guidance, protection and so forth are ignored by the system, as is the pain and suffering experienced by the direct victim prior to death and the secondary victims, the loved ones left behind.” Doyle cites the recent case of a Vancouver lawyer receiving a multimillion-dollar settlement for loss of wages after being injured in a bar incident as an example of how the law places differing values on what a life is worth. “There have been far too many victims of wrongful death in this province, and far too many families have been left helpless by the
lack of proper law,” said Beatrice. “The families are outraged by the state of the law in B.C. The greater public will be shocked and outraged as well, especially once citizens are made aware that – as it stands in British Columbia – children, seniors and the disabled are all worthless in the eyes of the law.” The group celebrated its fifth anniversary on Sept. 11 during a meeting at the Bonsor Recreation Complex that was attended by more than 50 people. “It was a great turnout,” said Doyle, who also had local lawyer Don Renaud speak at the gathering. “New, fair and effective legislation is needed to provide legal remedies to suffering families,” Renaud said. “As it exists, the law is only concerned with wageearners and the economic loss of wrongful death. It totally fails to recognize pain, suffering and other forms of loss, such as loss of guidance, companionship, protection and care.” Doyle said the organization has more than 100 different supporters and their goal is to have a provincial Wrongful Death Act to be established. In June 2007, the attorney general’s ministry undertook a consultation on this topic, specifically looking at reform of the existing Family Compensation Act. The consultation concluded in September 2007, but so far there hasn’t been any change to the existing law.
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A12 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
City pitches in to help Horizons with fire repairs
“The enlarged window openings and new canopy will result in a building profile staff reporter that is more modern and more appealing,” A Burnaby landmark got a monetary the report stated, adding double-glazed boost from the city to aid in repairs follow- windows and increased insulation would make the building more energy efficient. ing a major fire this spring. The renovation is also an opportunity City council voted to put $286,000 towards repairing the popular Horizons to update the restaurant’s in-house water treatment plant and the park’s Restaurant. The city owns the public washrooms located in building and the land. the basement of the restaurant, Horizons was extensively while the restaurant is closed. damaged by a fire that started The tenant and insurer are on an outside deck on April 15. story first appeared on fully funding all fire-related The tenant, Toseki This www.burnabynow.com repairs and code upgrades, but Entertainment, and its insurer the city will be covering the have committed to returning the restaurant to its original condition cost of enlarging the west and north facing while also updating the building, accord- window openings, using double-glazed ing to a report from the city’s finance window panes, and the additional rooftop insulation. department. The city’s five year capital plan identiThe restaurant is scheduled to reopen fied a number of capital works initiatives on Nov. 24. In addition to repairing all the damage for Horizons Restaurant, including the caused by the fire, the restoration also roof and building envelope, deck, stairs includes the replacement of the front entry and wheelchair ramp. The repairs made canopy; larger, double-glazed windows; necessary by the fire will allow the city to an additional two inches of insulation set aside some of the planned initiatives, on the roof deck; a new handicap access according to the report. This work has been included in the ramp; upgrades to the outside deck; a new exterior paint job; and repairs to the build- 2010 component of the 2010-2014 capital program. ing near the rear exit stairs.
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A13
15 Lively City
17 Taste
21 Healthwise
SECTION COORDINATOR Janaya Fuller-Evans, 604-444-3024 jfuller-evans@burnabynow.com
MOVERS & SHAKERS Janaya Fuller-Evans
Casino pitches in for the kids
T
he Grand Villa made a donation to the Burnaby Christmas Bureau this month and plans to participate in the Angel Project at Christmas. The donation was made because the Bureau seemed like a natural fit as a charitable giving partner, according to Matt Ballesty, executive general manager of the casino. “The Burnaby Christmas Bureau provides a great service to the community, especially during the holiday season,” Ballesty said in an e-mail. On Sept. 1, Ballesty presented a cheque for $3,552.25 to Stephen D’Souza, executive director, and Claudine Souza from the bureau. The money is slated to provide gift certificates for food for lowincome families over the holidays. Grand Villa staff and customers will also participate in the Bureau’s Angel Project this Christmas, providing gifts for children of Burnaby families that are living in poverty, Ballesty added. The casino also provides support to the Burnaby Hospital Foundation, KidSport B.C. through the Ritchie Brothers’ corporate kids challenge, the Burnaby Blues and Roots Festival, the Rotary Club of Burnaby Metrotown, the B.C. Cancer Foundation, the Burnaby Fire Fighters Association’s nutritional snack program, B.C. Children’s Hospital, the Royal Columbian Hospital, the Make a Wish Foundation, and Giro di Burnaby. “We are very passionate about the community that we belong to,” Ballesty said. The casino is introducing two new restaurants this fall; one serving Japanese food, and a modern Cantonese eatery. Both restaurants will be located on Dominion Street and will be owned and managed by the Tropika Restaurant Group, according to Ballesty’s e-mail.
Burnaby chartered accountant elected to ICABC council
John D. Crawford, a Burnaby chartered accountant, is now an ICABC council member. The senior vice-president of
Movers Page 14
Photos by Larry Wright/burnaby now
All in the family: Flavia Boffo Punzo and brother Daniel Boffo at a new Boffo company development, Townewalk, on Chaffey Avenue in Burnaby. The sibling team runs the family business that was formed by their father, Tarcisio Boffo, in 1963.
Siblings share company helm Boffo family continues father’s work after nearly five decades in the Lower Mainland
Home, sweet home:
A look inside one of the units at the new Boffo development, Townewalk, on Chaffey Avenue.
Janaya Fuller-Evans staff reporter
It can be difficult to work with family. Defining professional and personal relationships, and the tensions that can arise from that, isn’t easy. But one Burnaby family has managed to build a small but successful business together over nearly five decades. Daniel Boffo and sister Flavia Boffo Punzo currently run the Boffo family of companies, which was formed in 1963 by their father, Tarcisio – or Terry – Boffo. The construction and management company’s success lies in the values of its founder, according to Daniel and Flavia. “We’re planning to keep the reputation he’s built up, and build on it,” Daniel says, adding that Terry taught his children not to focus only on the bottom line, but to assess how a new building is and will be received by the community. His barometer of success: “In 10 or 15 years, will you still be proud of it,” Daniel says. Boffo is a small company, and Flavia and Daniel still rely on their father’s advice, going over project plans with him. “We’ve been fortunate to have his expertise across a wide range of properties,” Daniel says.
Terry emigrated from Ca’Rainati, Italy when he was 18, starting in the construction industry as a landscaper. He still chooses the landscaping for each project. Terry and his brother, Mario, formed Boffo Brothers Landscape and Construction in 1963. Terry then created his own group of companies, including Boffo Homes Inc., Boffo Living Inc. and Boffo Building Inc. Daniel, Flavia and Terry all live within minutes of each other in North Burnaby. As for the difficulties of working with family, Daniel jokingly says, “No comment!”
But he says it takes patience and communication, and it is important to be open and honest with each other. “You need to be able to leave business at the front door,” Flavia adds. Her husband, Steve Punzo, is also part of a family business, and both strive to keep the two aspects of their lives separate. “We really try to make a conscientious effort,” she says. Flavia has been with the company for more than 20 years, since graduating from the B.C. Institute of Technology. Boffo Page 14
A14 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Movers: Accountants add up continued from page 13
financial services at Pacific Blue Cross was elected to serve on the Institute of Chartered Accountants of British Columbia council for the 2010 to 2011 term. It is his third term on the council. “John is a leader within our profession and the expertise he brings to council is second to none,” said Peter Norwood, president of the ICABC, in a press release. “We look forward to working with him over the coming year.” Crawford was actively involved with the institute’s professional conduct inquiry committee and the professional development committee. He has also worked with the B.C. Children’s Miracle Network Telethon since 1988. The other councillors are Olin Anton with Deloitte & Touche LLP in Vancouver; John (Jack) Arnold with MacKay LLP in Surrey; Lenard Boggio with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP in Vancouver; Linda Lee Brougham with LL Brougham Inc. in Victoria; Kyman Chan
with Hayes Stewart Little & Co. in Victoria; Karen Christiansen with Meyers Norris Penny LLP in Kelowna; Andrew (Sandy) Hilton with UBC Okanagan in Kelowna; Gordon Holloway with KPMG LLP in Abbotsford; Michael Macdonell with the office of the auditor general in Victoria; Sheila Nelson with Chan Foucher LeFebvre LLP in Prince George; Peter Norwood with Langara College in Vancouver; John M. Sims with Manning Elliott LLP in Vancouver; Praveen Vohora with Vohora & Company in Surrey and Prince Rupert; and Eric Watt of KPMG LLP in Vancouver. The council also includes three public representatives who are appointed by the provincial government. This year, these public representatives are David Hughes and Kenneth Tung. A third representative will be appointed, according to the press release.
Women in business meeting
Meet other Burnaby businesswomen through
One to One, a local nonprofit, on Thursday, Sept. 30. The networking group meets monthly to connect, relax and socialize. The evenings include dinner, and guest speakers on a variety of topics. The meetings generally occur on the last Thursday of the month, except in July, August and December. Those attending are also invited to bring brochures, pamphlets and business cards for the networking table, as well as something to donate as a door prize. The evening starts at 6 p.m. with registration and socializing, dinner is from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m., and the night’s speaker comes on at 7:30 p.m. Meetings end at 8:30 p.m. The event takes place in the meeting room at ABC Country Restaurant, at 6500 East Hastings St. Tickets are $21 for members and $24 for guests. Annual dues are $40. Reservations must be made in advance, but those attending can pay at the door. To RSVP contact Sharon at 604-434-7221 or sharon@ donndean.
Today: Casual Fridays. Someday: Casual Everydays.
Let’s figure it out.
Boffo: Brother and sister team continued from page 13
She started out working with bark mulch when she was little, as her father thought she could do the least damage there, she jokes. Daniel has worked for the company since he was a kid, like his sister, but has only co-run the company with her for the past two years. He first got his economics degree from the University of British Columbia, and his architectural and building engineering technology diploma from BCIT, and worked with another construction company, as well. The company is currently selling units in its TowneWalk town home developmentnearPatterson SkyTrain station. Boffo is holding an open house for the new project on Sept. 23. It is a mixture of 13 twolevel units and 13 one-level units. The exterior is an interpretation of traditional Arts and Crafts design, Daniel says, and each home has its own front door. While the outside has a traditional appearance, the interior has a more contemporary, European look, he adds. And there is elevator access from the parkade, as well. One of the primary
perks to the location is that it has a high walkability score, Daniel says, which means it is close to shopping, transit, Central Park and other neighbourhood amenities. Another relatively new undertaking for the company is the official Boffo Foundation. While Terry gave back to his community in a variety of ways – helping other families; founding the Gruppo Folcloristico
Trevigiano-Veneto di Vancouver; and commissioning a monument for the Italian Gardens from his home town of Italy – corporate giving was not formalized in the past, Flavia says. A lot of the foundation’s focus will still be on Gruppo, which is a folk dancing and performing group that performs in seniors’ homes and hospitals, she says. jfuller-evans@burnabynow.com
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A15
Teen musical’s run extended LIVELY CITY
I
Julie MacLellan
f you didn’t get a chance to see 13: The Musical, don’t worry. The musical has been recognized as a Pick of the Fringe for the 2010 Vancouver International Fringe Festival – which means it gets extra shows.
The musical was featured in the Sept. 11 Burnaby NOW. For those who missed it, it’s an all-teen production that features two young Burnaby talents, Julia Di Spirito and Brittany Gee-Moore. They’re part of the cast that tells what’s described as the “wickedly funny” story of Evan, a boy plucked from his New York existence and plunked down in the middle of nowhere, Indiana, just weeks before he turns
13 – and just when he’s ready to throw the best bar mitzvah bash ever. The coming-of-age story is unique for the Fringe, with a cast aged 12 to 18. The musical runs in two casts – a junior cast (ages 12 to 17) and a more experienced senior cast (ages 15 to 18). Julia and Brittany are both part of the junior cast and can be seen on stage on Saturday, Sept. 25 at 3:30 p.m. The senior cast performs again on Friday, Sept. 24 at 7 p.m.
Both shows are at the Waterfront Theatre, 280 East Cordova St. Tickets are $18 and on sale at www.vancouver fringe.com or by calling 604-637-6380. And there’s more good news for 13: The Musical – it’s also going to play at the Norman Rothstein Theatre over Thanksgiving weekend, Oct. 7 through 11. Check out www. awkwardstageproductions. com for details. Lively City Page 16
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A16 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Lively City: Guild looks for painters continued from page 15
Artists’ guild seeks painters
Are you interested in painting? The Burnaby Artist Guild is welcoming new members, both beginners and established painters. The group meets Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, and a variety of demonstrations and workshops are scheduled throughout the year. For information, call Judy Smith at 604-6826720.
Books, books and more books
Books, you say? Anybody that sends in an announcement with the words “10,000 new books” automatically has my attention. So I’ll share this good news with my fellow local bookworms. St. Michael’s Parish in Burnaby is holding a huge book sale featuring nearly 10,000 brand-new books, all for $3 or less.
The sale runs Saturday, Oct. 2 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 3 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the St. Michael’s School gym, 9387 Holmes St. in Burnaby. You can buy at the unbeatable prices of one for $3, two for $5 or five for $10, and the books range from fiction to biographies to business, cooking, travel, education and more. A concession will also be operating all day.
Explore new gallery exhibit
Lovers of art, don’t forget that this weekend is your chance to take part in some community events in connection with the Burnaby Art Gallery’s current exhibition. The Intertidal Zone: Prints by Doug Guildford is on at the gallery until Nov. 21. This Friday evening (Sept. 24) from 7 to 9 p.m., you can join in a Culture Days event at the gallery – a crochet social with Guildford.
NATUROPATHIC PHYSICIAN
Dr. Ardis Krueger has returned from maternity leave and is currently accepting new patients. Dr. Krueger focuses her practice on fertility, pregnancy-related concerns, new moms, infants and children.
On Saturday, Sept. 25, from 3 to 5 p.m., it’s a reception and artist talk. Both events will give people a chance to explore Guildford’s exhibition, which reflects his roots in drawing and printmaking. Check out www. burnabyartgallery.ca for more about the exhibition and gallery events. Do you have an item for Lively City? Send arts and entertainment ideas to Julie, jmaclellan@burnabynow. com. Visit her In the Spotlight blog online at www.burnaby now.com – click on the Opinion tab and follow the link under Blogs.
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A17
Good Friends Good Sushi
TASTE It’s time to make friends with garlic ON COOKING
B
Chef Dez
eing a chef, I am certain that you will think my opinion is biased when I tell you that garlic is my friend. However, I have reasons to support my love for this little bulb. I honestly believe that most people who say they hate the taste of garlic must have been exposed to an overpowered caesar
dressing or Greek tzatziki sauce at some point in their lives. Garlic, when cooked, does not have that overly pungent flavour reminiscent of these raw form recipes. Alternatively, it has a sweeter and smoother temperament and adds a depth of flavour to your dish that cannot be mimicked. A perfect example of this would be roasted garlic. Whole heads of garlic roasted in the oven can be puréed and mixed into an endless variety of recipes such as bread dough, dips, spreads, stuffings, etc, and it’s one of the easiest things to prepare:
*Cannot be combined with any other special or promotion. Expires Oct. 15, 2010
Preheat your oven to 450 degrees. Keep the garlic heads whole and cut off the tops of the garlic heads, just enough to expose the tops of the garlic cloves. Place the garlic heads in an ovenproof casserole dish equipped with a lid. Drizzle one teaspoon of olive oil over each of the exposed garlic heads, and season lightly with salt and fresh cracked pepper. Cover and bake for 45 minutes. Remove from the oven and let stand at room temperature (with the lid on) until cool enough to touch. Serve whole for presentation, or squeeze out Garlic Page 20
FINE DINING
BAR & GRILL
Eagle Creek Bar, Grill & Banquet Facilities
$$
At Burnaby Mountain Golf Course. Pub & Grill menu. Fabulous food – fabulous setting. 7600 Halifax St., Burnaby (at Burnaby Mountain Golf Course)
BURNABY’S RESTAURANT GUIDE
ALL REGULAR MENU ITEMS
Tivoli’s at the Executive Hotel
West Coast cuisine. Friendly atmosphere, great service and generous portions. 4201 Lougheed Hwy. 604.297.2118
$$$$
JAPANESE/FUSION/ SUSHI
IHOP Kingsway
$$
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner. A wide variety of tasty food choices. Come Hungry, Leave Happy. 5137 Kingsway, Burnaby 604.451.5557
CHINESE
$$
Wah Lun Chinese Restaurant
EAT-IN/TAKE-OUT
Hart House
$$
$$
A wide variety of innovative rolls, not the usual. Renowned for "The Black Sun," a tasty combo of chopped scallops, tuna and salmon, black tobiko, and a raw quail egg. 6285 Nelson Ave., Burnaby 604.437.-8839
Amorosa Pasta House is an Italian eatery in Burnaby that offers a plethora of choices for their patrons. The menu allows for mix & match pasta dishes, choose your own sauce, pasta and fixings. 7874 Edmonds St., Burnaby 604.525.3343
PUB
Admiral Pub & Grill
$$$$
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To feature your Restaurant in our weekly guide, please contact 604.444.3451 or display@burnabynow.com
Legend
Bargain Fair ($5-8) Inexpensive ($9-12) Moderate ($13-15) Fine Dining ($15-25+)
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Offer valid until Oct. 6, 2010. Valid with coupon only. Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit. Applicable taxes extra. Void if copied. Coupon has no cash value. See store for more details.
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Portuguese flame-broiled chicken, marinated in your choice of peri-peri sauces ranging from mild spice to extra hot. Delicious. 4334 Kingsway, Burnaby 604.434.6220
FINE DINING
(at Kingsway across from Metropolis)
ITALIAN
Dim Sum daily 4524 Hastings St., Burnaby 604.294.8059
Nando’s Kingsway
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A18 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
ELEVENTH ANNUAL
BURNABY BUSINESS EXCELLENCE AWARDS Come celebrate the best of the Burnaby business community! Join us as we recognize Global BC for their years of business success and service to the Burnaby community at the Burnaby Hall of Fame & Nominees’ Luncheon. Thursday, October 7, 2010 | 11:30am to 2:00pm Hilton Vancouver Metrotown 6083 McKay Avenue, Burnaby This event will also announce the finalists in the eight award categories of the 11th Annual Burnaby Business Excellence Awards. For ticket information please call the Burnaby Board of Trade office at 604.412.0100, or visit us online at www.bbot.ca.
Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A19
Sawmill Creek Chard or Merlot 750 ml BONUS alet Triplep ETW Chcha se whi With pur ies last. ities quantit
6
$ 99
Budweiser 15 pack p cans
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Smirnoff ff 750 ml and Bacardi White Rum
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Jackson Triggs Unity Merlot or Unity Sauvignon Blanc
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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. ALL ITEMS WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. BONUS ITEMS MAY NOT BE EXACTLY AS SHOWN AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AND AVAILABILITY.
SALE STARTS TUESDAY - September 21st — September 25th SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
TUE 21
WED 22
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A21
Getting the right diagnosis isn’t always easy HEALTHWISE
Dr. Davidicus Wong
H
ave you ever left the doctor’s office, feeling rushed, uneasy and worried that you don’t have the right diagnosis? Have you ever felt that the doctor wasn’t listening? Do you sometimes feel like doctors are thinking of you as a disease or a problem rather than a real person? In medical school, we learn to recognize patterns of disease, and while we listen to a patient talk about their condition, in our heads, we run through a list of possible explanations – the differential diagnosis. We are taught to listen first and not interrupt the patient too quickly. We also start with open-ended questions before funnelling down to more precise questions. You can tell if the doctor has made up his mind about your problem if he starts asking a series of short close-ended questions that just require a one word answer, such as yes or no. If the doctor believes she already knows what you have, the physical examination will be very focused and brief. Once the doctor gives you a working diagnosis, you may be sent for some lab tests to confirm it, and of course, the treatment prescribed will be based on that diagnosis. Doctors tend to get frustrated if a patient’s presentation of symptoms don’t fit a typical pattern. A few rise to the challenge, maintain a broad differential of possible diagnoses and won’t rest until they arrive at the solution. But if a doctor is in a rush or doesn’t have much invested in your professional relationship, he may narrow the differential too quickly and make a diagnosis – usually the most common condition to explain your symptoms even if they don’t quite fit. An experienced doctor’s intuition is like one’s conscience. If after a patient encounter, I have a sense of unease – that I missed something or that the presentation doesn’t quite fit the diagnosis – I’ll go back to my notes and think things through again. Sometimes, making the
right diagnosis requires calling up the patient to ask a few more questions or considering different investigations. Patients can inadvertently force a doctor to make premature diagnoses by presenting a barrage
of problems that he or she could not possibly work through systematically in a single office visit. We usually want to see all the patient’s concerns up front – at least a summary list, so that we can realistically give each the attention
they require. What can you do if the doctor arrives at a diagnosis that you’re uneasy with? Most people wouldn’t come straight out and ask, “Are you sure?” An alternative approach would be to ask two reasonable and
simple questions. What else could it be? What’s the worst thing it could be? I have a golden rule in practice: to treat each patient with the same degree of care I would want for a member of my family.
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If you want your doctor to do the same for you, ask her, “What would you recommend to your mother or father if they had my condition?” Dr. Davidicus Wong is a physician at PrimeCare Medical.
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A22 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Recognition carved in stone Exceptional Burnaby residents, companies and organizations were recognized for their work in the community at a special ceremony last Saturday. The commemorative paving stone dedication took place at city hall. Burnaby’s Citizen of the Year for 2009, Chris Hildred, was honoured with a paving stone, as was Burnaby
Popowich were recogBusiness Hall of Fame 2009 nized for their work in inductee Glentel Inc. sports. Sports Hall of Fame 2009 Wrestling coach Gianni inductees were also honBuono also received the oured, including baskethonour, as did the Burnaby ball player Jay Triano and Visit www.burnabynow.com for a photo gallery Girls Optimists from 1995 lacrosse and soccer athlete – under-15 national socGary Stevens. In the builders category, Stu cer champions – including coach Don Ballantyne, Ken Lind and Bill Gray and manager Al McKay.
Web
EXTRA
Photos by Jason Lang/burnaby now
Optimistic: From left, Yvonne Nichols, Kim Gray,
Al McKay and Bre-Anne Graham with Mayor Derek Corrigan. They were all recognized as part of the Burnaby Girls Optimists Soccer team of 1995, which is in the Burnaby Sports Hall of Fame.
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Courting fame: A paving stone recognizes basketball player Jay Triano, inducted into the Burnaby Sports Hall of Fame.
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PUBLIC ADVISORY The Burnaby RCMP is looking for the Ultimate Volunteer The Burnaby RCMP Auxiliary Program offers individuals an opportunity to serve their community and help make the city of Burnaby a safer place to live, work and play. If you are interested in volunteering in a variety of community policing programs that focus on public safety and crime prevention, come out to one of the information seminars to learn more about joining the Burnaby RCMP Auxiliary Program.
When: Saturday, September 25th • 1-3 p.m. Monday, September 27th • 7-9 p.m. Where: The Burnaby RCMP Detachment 6355 Deer Lake Avenue
For more information about the Burnaby RCMP Auxiliary Program visit the Community Services & programs section at www.burnaby.rcmp.ca or contact the Auxiliary Program coordinator at 604-294-7983.
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A23
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National Brand Appliances See in-store for selection
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Pricing are in effect until closing Friday, March 5, 2010 or while stock lasts. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Some items may have ‘plus deposit and/or environmental charge’ where applicable. *PRICE MATCH. We determine a major competitor based on our assessment of a number of relevant factors that may vary by region. “Items you buy most” refers to our top selling products. We check competitor pricing on the majority of items you buy most on a weekly basis; and in all cases, no less than quarterly. We may not match a competitor’s short term promotional pricing activities(ie. one day sales or ‘door crashers’) or other promotional pricing activities such as ‘2 for 1’ or ‘buy 1 get 1 free’. We do not Price Match all items at all times; where we have Price Matched an item, it will be identified in-store. This is not a price match guarantee where we match any competitor price you find. PRICE CUT. Longer term price reductions on items identified in-store. “Items that matter most to you” refers to our top selling products. WEEKLY SPECIAL. Typically in effect from Friday to Thursday of each week on items identified in-store and/or in flyer.
A24 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
Art group seeks members Burnaby artists invited to check out the Heritage Life Drawing Society
Artists of all levels are invited to practise their skills in figurative drawing with the Heritage Life Drawing Society. The non-profit group meets weekly at the Dance With Me Studio in downtown New Westminster, and Burnaby artists are being invited to join them. A core group of artists has been meeting for close to five years, but the artists are actively looking for new members to bolster their ranks. The artists gather on Sunday evenings from 6 to 9 p.m. at the studio.
Tables are available, but artists should bring their own supplies. The fee is $12 per session, covering the costs of a professional model and the rent for the studio. “As in other disciplines, it is important to practise your skills,” group member Gillian Wright noted in an e-mail to the Burnaby NOW. “We would like to encourage all artists of all levels to consider the value in figurative drawing.” The group also gives its members a chance to take part in a variety of local events, and members have had a showing at the Arts Council of New Westminster gallery in Queen’s Park. E-mail heritageartists01@gmail.com or call Gillian Wright at 604-524-0638. jmaclellan@burnabynow.com
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R5 DUPLEX LOT Pending 4th reading (already passed 1st, 2nd, & 3rd reading), 66.67' x 124' lot, currently has older 6 bedroom character home on it. 3804-3810 Napier, Bby $799,900
Wow! Marvel at views to North Shore Mtns & SFU from updated corner unit townhome in “Deerfield” a popular family oriented complex. 1795 sf townhome features 5 bdrms (3 up, 1 on main & 1 down), bright open kitchen w/eating area opening on sunny & spacious balcony, Whistler-inspired living room w/ wide plank fir floors & river rock F/P, 3 spacious bdrms up, main bath w/updated tub surround & skylight, full size laundry room, bdrm/rec room down & 3 pce bath, built in vac system & double garage. Located in prime location within the complex & has small fenced front yard for gardening or for your pets to lounge in. Great complex w/lots of visitors parking, outdoor pool & exercise room.
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A25
Professor wins award for controversy SFU professor Mark Jaccard is the recipient of the 2010 Nora and Ted Sterling Prize in Support of Controversy. Jaccard is an environmental economist whose work on sustainable energy and climate policy has garnered national and international acclaim and protest. The prize will be presented on Oct. 5, at SFU’s Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue in Vancouver, preceding his Sterling Prize lecture titled Climate Controversies: The Saga Continues. For nearly two decades, Jaccard has argued that our energy options should not be seen as a choice between good (renewable energy, energy efficiency, for example) and evil (such as fossil fuels or nuclear power). He says greenhouse gas emissions will not decline unless climate policies are dominated by strong emissions pricing and regulations. “Most governments have been unwilling to implement strong climate policies,
although they talk a good line about ambitious targets and faking-it policies,” says Jaccard in a media release. “I am proud, as a British Columbian, to say that here, our government has established policies that are a model for the world, but it has not been easy getting to this situation and there is much work ahead.” Jaccard has provided evidence that subsidies are usually an ineffective policy and that energy efficiency is much more difficult to achieve than claimed by its advocates. Jaccard teaches in SFU’s School of Resource and Environmental Management and served as chair and CEO of the B.C. Utilities Commission from 1992 to ‘97. He is a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change team that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. His lecture is free and open to the public, but seating is limited. For reservations, go to www.sfu.ca/ reserve.
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RIDE THE TRAIN for Change! Come on Burnaby – All Aboard! During the month of September the Metropolis Express train at Metropolis at Metrotown will be chugging along to support people in our community living with mental illness and/or dealing with homelessness. All donations made to ride the train will benefit the Progressive Housing Society. Better yet................. The Society has the chance to earn an additional $10,000 by driving train usage (and donations) on Saturday, September 25th from noon to 8:00 PM Bring your spare change (minimum $1) and a donation of new socks to help fill the Metropolis Express caboose with one of our most-needed items to support Burnaby’s most vulnerable population during the cold and wet winter months. When: Saturday, September 25 between noon and 8 PM Where: Metropolis at Metrotown - pick-up station in the Bay Atrium near HMV What: Help support people in our community living with mental illness and/or dealing with homelessness by riding the Metropolis Express For more information, call us at (604) 522-9669 ext. 317
A26 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A27
MOTORING
How not to fix brakes CLICK & CLACK TALK CARS Ray & Tom Magliozzi
research, cleaned the speed sensors on both sides and checked to see if the reluctor wheels were the same as the ones on the old rotors I’d removed. They are. Not sure where to go from here. How can I figure out what I screwed up? Thank you. –Peter RAY: Just out of curiosity, we did a survey of 527 normal people and asked them at what point they would have given up on this job. Even the outliers walked away after five hours, Peter. And you should have, too! TOM: Clearly, you’re a person who needs to be watched carefully. But you
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Dear Tom and Ray: In my infinite wisdom, I woke up early one Saturday morning and decided I would do something productive with my weekend. Even though I’ve never attempted any sort of car repair in my life, I decided to change the front brake rotors on my 2006 Ford Ranger. I bought all the tools necessary for the job, cranked up the
radio and got the front passenger brake rotor replaced in just under 16 hours. NNNNNice! I took the car for a test drive, and the brakes did just fine, no issues. Then I moved on to the driver’s-side brake rotor, which took just about four hours, given all the experience I’d gained on the other side. But then I had a problem: I went for a test drive, and my ABS system started to activate when I slowed down to under two mph or so. I can feel the pumping in the pedal and hear a bit of a humming noise. Well, that was about five months ago, and unfortunately, the problem hasn’t worked itself out yet. I did some
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A28 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
cleaned my brother, and it hasn’t made him function any better. Sometimes things just need to be replaced. TOM: What you need to do is try replacing the ABS sensor on the driver’s side. It’s an easy job, Peter. Twenty-five hours, max. ◆ If it ain’t broke, you won’t have to fix it! Order Tom and Ray’s pamphlet, Ten Ways You May Be Ruining Your Car Without Even Knowing It! Send US $4.75 (cheque or money order) to Ruin, PO Box 536475, Orlando, Florida, U.S.A., 32853-6475. Get more Click and Clack in their new book, Ask Click and Clack: Answers from Car Talk. Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack. E-mail them by visiting the Car Talk website at www.cartalk.com.
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g to be rs, we are goin lued Shoppe a , V y r n o o t i n t e n v e great, n t At amount of i unts are so o s c s s a i m d e e h h t T o Due t RANCE SAoLloEu.r in this week’s ad. A E L C a g n i v a h d c -2pm th le to affor PT 26 12 noon we are unab SPECIAL SUN SE th
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FURNITURE)
Personal shopping only. All merchandise sold “as is” and all sales are final. No exchanges, returns or adjustments on previously purchased merchandise; savings offers cannot be combined. No dealers; we reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices do not include home delivery. Although we strive for accuracy, unintentional errors may occur. We reserve the right to correct an error. ‘Reg’, ‘Was’ and ‘Sears selling price’ refers to the Sears Catalogue or Retail store price current at the time of merchandise receipt. Advertised items are available at Burnaby Outlet. Merchandise selection varies by store. Sears® is a registered Trademark of Sears, licensed for use in Canada. MasterCard® is a registered Trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. Offers exclude 195xxx items. IN-STORE SEARS CATALOGUE LOCATION TO SERVE YOU! Sale priced merchandise may not be as illustrated.
Sears Vancouver Outlet 9850 AUSTIN ROAD, BURNABY
NEW STORE HOURS: Mon. - Tues.: 9:30 am - 7:00 pm Wed. to Fri.: 9:30 am - 9:00 pm Saturday: 8:00 am - 6:00 pm Sunday: 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
7
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Austin Ave.
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continued from page 27
probably knew that already. RAY: There are two things you may have screwed up on your brakes. One is that you may have damaged the reluctor, or “chopper wheel.” TOM: The reluctor is a disc that spins along with the wheel. It has a series of notches on it, and the ABS wheel sensor uses those notches to determine how fast the wheel is turning. If you cracked the reluctor while replacing the rotors, for instance, it could be causing the wheel sensor to read the wheel speed incorrectly. RAY: But a more likely possibility is that you damaged an ABS sensor (there’s one on each wheel). You say you cleaned the sensors, but we’ve
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A29
31 More on Mann Cup
31 Knights this weekend
SECTION COORDINATOR Tom Berridge, 604-444-3022 • tberridge@burnabynow.com
Knights lose to Van’s Fighting Irish Opening kickoff score set tone for Burnaby’s defeat Alfie Lau reporter
The St. Thomas More Knights were the perfect homecoming guest for the Vancouver College Fighting Irish. The Irish scored on the opening kickoff, 16 seconds into the game, and never looked back as they beat the Knights 29-7 at O’Hagan Field in Vancouver. Sean Mayzes returned the opening kickoff 94 yards and then hauled in an 85-yard TD pass from quarterback Jeff Tichelman with 23 seconds left in the first quarter to give the Irish a lead they would never relinquish. The Irish also got 15 points from their multipurpose receiver and kicker Reiner Theil, who hauled in a 42-yard TD pass in the second quarter, made all three conversions, and added 21 and 26-yard field goals. Irish defensive tackle Christian Covington – son of former CFL allstar Grover Covington – added the other Irish scoring, sacking Knights quarterback Mikey Carney
’Bellies third time unlucky Alfie Lau reporter
Jason Lang/burnaby now
Knights: St. Thomas More running back Kyle Madden breaks a Vancouver College Fighting Irish tackle at Saturday’s game, a 29-7 Knights loss. Madden scored the Knights only touchdown with a one-yard run.
in the second quarter for a safety. The Knights managed to avoid the goose egg by scoring in the final two minutes of the game, with running back Kyle Madden punching in a one-yard score that was set up by a 30-yard reception by Ross Hilliam.
“The start definitely hurt us,” said Knights head coach Bernie Kully. “We thought we were well prepared but little mistakes snowballed on us and led to big plays for them.” Kully said he wasn’t surprised that College head coach Todd Bernett relied on Tichelman’s arm
to lead the Irish. “We knew they’d probably do a lot of things in the air,” said Kully. “You’ve got to remember that Todd was an old quarterback himself.” “I’m very happy with our intensity level,” said Bernett. “We got a great start and we just kept on
building on that start.” Bernett said Theil gives him a lot of offensive options. “As a receiver, he’s a big target,” said Bernett. “And as a kicker, we’re comfortable having him try a 40-yard field goal. … As a coach, that’s a Knights Page 31
Lacrosse fans celebrate brotherhood of Mann Alfie Lau reporter
The River’s Reach pub in New Westminster was packed as if it were a Vancouver Canucks playoff game. But it wasn’t Canada’s national winter sport that had everybody jumping for joy or biting their fingernails, it was Game 6 of the Mann Cup, Canada’s national summer sport. The hometown ‘Bellies were fighting for their lives, ultimately losing 15-9 and the best-of-seven series 4-2 to the Peterborough Lakers. But for the packed tables of lacrosse fans, it was a chance to celebrate the brotherhood that is Royal City lacrosse. Jack Fulton just returned from Peterborough, where he watched his team play the first five games of the series. “I had to be back because I’m organizing the (Salmonbellies) alumni golf tournament,” said Fulton. “They were all good
games, but our guys fell just a bit short.” Fulton has four Mann Cup rings to his credit: 1958, 1959, 1962 and 1965. Fulton said the task of winning out east for a western team is hard to do justice to. “I think you have to be 25 per cent better and at this level, nobody’s 25 per cent better,” he said. “They’ve got guys like John Grant, Tracy Kelusky and John Tavares and those guys are pretty good.” The mere mention of the Tavares name brings a smile to the face of Steve Goodwin. Goodwin remembers the 42year-old superstar well. “John actually came and played with us in Vancouver in 1990 when we went to the Mann Cup,” said the local real estate agent. “He was 22 back then and we lost four straight to Brooklin.” But that’s not the only memory Goodwin has of Tavares. “One of those games, John did a doubleheader. He was playing
university football, I think for McGill, and he played an afternoon game at safety and played for us that night,” said Goodwin. “That’s how good an athlete John is.” Goodwin was an assistant to current coach Bob Salt, but with three kids, Goodwin left just as the ‘Bellies began their ascent back into the upper lacrosse echelons. While Goodwin doesn’t have any Mann Cup rings to show off, his friend John Wilson won the coveted cup twice, but has only one ring to show for it. “I won as a junior call-up by New West in 1989 and I also won in 2001 when I was with Coquitlam,” said Wilson. “I don’t have the 1989 ring because my place got broken into and that ring was stolen.” Wilson doesn’t let that incident get him down, as he takes pleasure in ribbing Goodwin when the Realtor starts giving him the gears. “I can’t hear you because my rings are clogging up my ears,”
said Wilson as he referenced a famous hockey put-down by goalie Patrick Roy to opposing centreman Jeremy Roenick. Wilson said he should have had a third ring too, as he was an 18-year-old in 1986 when Casey Cook called and asked if he wanted to play in the playoffs for the senior Bellies. “I had tickets to a Lions game at Empire Stadium,” said Wilson. “So I told Casey that he should call up Brian Nikula. ... Nik gets called up and that’s the year they went out east and won the Mann Cup, the last time a western team has gone out and taken the Cup out east.” Cook remembers that championship well, as that was the second of the four Cook would win. “We beat Brooklin in six games and it was extremely difficult,” said the current New Westminster school trustee. “It was our fourth time going out east and that’s how long it took us to bring the Cup Mann Cup Page 31
Lucky number 13 for the Peterborough Lakers came at the expense of the unlucky New Westminster Salmonbellies. The Lakers capped off their 13th Mann Cup victory on Friday with a 15-9 win in Game 6 over the Royal City squad that has now lost three straight Mann Cup finals. “It’s harder each time you lose,” Salmonbellies general manager Dan Richardson said on Saturday afternoon. “The expectations are higher each time so it’s harder when you don’t meet those expectations.” The ‘Bellies flew out of the starting gate, scoring the first two goals by 4:10 of the first, on markers from Jamie Floris and Pete McFetridge. But the Lakers scrambled back to a 4-4 tie after the first period on the strength of a hat trick from Scott Evans and a goal and two assists from John Tavares. “We felt very good after the first period,” said Richardson. “We got the start we were looking for.” After the teams played a tight second period, marked by Evans’ fourth goal, the game turned in the final five seconds of the period when ‘Bellie Kyle Ross punched an unsuspecting Evans in the back of the head and received a five-minute roughing major. The Lakers were holding an 8-6 lead at the time but opened the third period with two powerplay markers, with Evans’ younger brother Shawn scoring at 2:22 of the third, followed by Scott at 4:06. “The Ross punch was something we didn’t need to do,” admitted Richardson. “Our PK (penalty killing) was doing a good job until that point but those Evans boys, they were dialled in.” Scott Evans would finish with six goals and two assists on the night while ‘Bellies Page 31
Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A31
‘Bellies: Youth on their side, despite loss Mann Cup: Hydration a Knights: bounce at the right time, said. “I firmly believe that Hosts third Shawn walked away with just big problem in the past not getting breaks.” when we win our first The ‘Bellies were led Mann Cup, we will win the MVP after a one goal, six assist effort. Shawn fin- offensively by Alex Gajic, many more after that and game Friday ished the six-game Mann who finished with a goal we’ll soon forget about the continued from page 29
continued from page 29
continued from page 29
blessing because I don’t feel obligated to have to go for it all the time.” Kully did take some positives out of the game that went to running time – high school rules are that the clock is only stopped for timeouts and injuries once a team gets ahead by 29 points or more – for the entire second half. “Positives, we started a lot of Grade 11s and they got a chance to learn that you have to keep getting better all the time,” said Kully. “Our best players were our leaders, Kyle, who just kept trying all game, Ross, who made some nice catches, and Mikey, who gave it everything he had.” The Knights, 1-1, host Mission in their third exhibition game this Friday at 2 p.m. at Burnaby Lake West. The Irish, 1-2, go to New Westminster for a conference tilt against the Hyacks, Friday at 7 p.m. Follow Alfie Lau at twit ter.com/AlfieLau
Cup series with 32 assists, breaking Josh Sanderson’s 2002 mark of 26 helpers in seven games. The Lakers also got an eight-point effort from John Grant, who finished with a hat trick and five assists. Richardson, fully aware that a Western team hasn’t gone to Ontario and won a Mann Cup since 1986, said his squad played well, but didn’t get any help from Lady Luck. “We didn’t get too many bounces,” he said. “I’m talking about not getting breaks on faceoffs, not getting the right
and three assists, Floris and Cliff Smith with two goals and an assist each, and Jordan McBride, who had a goal and two assists. Wade Dewolff and Jordan Hall also scored for the ‘Bellies. The ‘Bellies were buoyed by the first appearance of rookie Corbyn Tao, who missed the first five games because of school conflicts. As for looking ahead to the future, Richardson said youth is on their side. “Their average age is 28 and ours was 25, so we’re a young team,” he
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three we lost.” As for what changes the squad will need to make in 2011, Richardson said it’s too early for that talk to begin. “We will get together and we’ll talk to our players and see what we need to do,” said Richardson. “We’re not afraid to make changes but today (Saturday) is too soon to think about that. We fly back home Sunday, and we’ll start thinking about next year after that.”
back home.” Cook, with championship rings in 1981, 1989 and 1991 as well, said the biggest problem back then was hydration. “Our guys were losing 10 to 12 pounds a game, the place was so humid,” said Cook. “Our guys were getting stomach cramps and we had to make sure everybody was always hydrated.” As the new Salmonbellies went down to defeat, the old ‘Bellies could only offer encouragement. “Their time will come,” said Fulton. “They’ve got such a great young team, and they’ve got a good team leading them.” “We went to 11 Mann Cup finals in 16 years and we won four,” said Cook. “Just getting there is tough but winning is even tougher.” alau@burnabynow.com
A32 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
INDEX
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There are days when it feels like only moments have passed since I heard your voice and felt your touch.
SPACE There are days when it feelsBOOKING like an eternity.
LABORATORY ASSISTANT
For: NORTH SHORE NEWS I remember you every day Mary. Rep: TAgrios Ad#: 1267887 Love always Chris
1085 1010
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ADVERTISE YOUR NEWS! Post a classified in a few easy clicks. Choose your province or all across Canada. Best value. Pay a fraction of the cost compared to booking individual areas. www.communityclassifieds.ca ATTENTION RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL SURVIVORS! If you received the CEP (Common Experience Payment), you may be eligible for further cash compensation. To see if you qualify, phone toll free 1-877-988-1145 now. Free service! CRIMINAL RECORD? Canadian pardon seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation? All CANADIAN / AMERICAN Work & Travel Visa’s. 604-282-6668 or 1-800-347-2540
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All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss or damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections or changes will be made in the next available issue. The Burnaby Now & The New Westminster Record will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration. For best results please
check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!
Acme Analytical Laboratories (Vancouver), a premier BC mining laboratory, is looking to fill various Laboratory Assistant positions in Vancouver. Must be able to handle up to 40 lbs as some heavy manual labor may be required. Experience in a lab environment an asset but training will be provided. Starting wage of approximately $12 (combination of base hourly rate and daily production bonus). Detailed descriptions of the various positions are available on Acme’s website:
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Interested parties should submit resume and cover letter by email as instructed on the website.
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required ( locating debtors in the USA). Must be good on the telephone & internet . Our Tracers earn $ 13.70 hr to start + bonus + benefits, Earn 35-50K/yr. No exp. Necessary. Will train suitable candidates. Email resume and cover letter to its.careers@skiptrace.com or call 604-484-6900 Detailed job info at www.skiptrace.com
1240
General Employment
M&P MERCURY SALES seeking a F/T Yacht Detailing Supervisor. $18/hr. 2 yrs experience and secondary school completion required. Apply: jaye-lynn@mpmercury.com Personal Trainer Certification Earn up to $70/hr as a Personal Trainer. Government Financial Aid may be avail. 604-930-8377 See our ad in todays paper under Education. RESIDENT MANAGER needed for 42 unit bldg in Metrotown. Live on site position. Please send resume to jobs@pacificwesgroup.net quote BBY42 SEEKING DANCE INSTRUCTOR with several years of exp in latin dances. Due to clienteleSpanish lang. is mandatory. $26.50 hr/ 37.5 hr wk. e-resume: info@dancevancouver.ca LOOKING FOR A CHANGE? A Family company that cares about their people. Our company was built on trust, understanding & hope for a future. Do you enjoy Camping, Boating, Hunting. We offer full-time employment in an atmosphere that promotes better lifestyle, family & opportunities for growth. Currently seeking fulltime positions for certified/apprentice Picker operators, Winch tractor, Bed truck & Dispatchers with rig move experience. We offer above average remuneration, excellent benefit package, solid future earnings, incentives & a change in attitude towards the employee! Fax resume 780-623-4051. Email: hr@Calnashtrucking.com.
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FLAGPERSONS & LANE CLOSURE TECHS
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is seeking a F/T Thrift Store Coordinator at 37.5 hrs/wk with weekends and some evenings. Minimum of 2-3 years previous retail / customer service. Experience working with volunteers preferred. Must have exceptional interpersonal and organizational skills. Computer proficiency is required. Please send your resume to: dli.bhospice@telus.net, fax: 604-520-5089 or 6855 Kingsway, Burnaby, BC V5E 1E4 by Sep 30, 2010. No phone calls please.
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Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home for a few months. If you’ve been looking for a home-based opportunity to do meaningful, fulfilling work. Qualified applicants receive training, support and monthly remuneration. Funding is available for modifications to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting for an open door. Make it yours. Call 604-708-2628 www.plea.ca
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Hotel Restaurant
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Trades/Technical
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Apply in person with resume & references to: Advance Chemicals, 2023 Kingsway Avenue, Port Coq
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WANTED JOURNEYMAN Flat roofer - Calgary PVC, EPDM, T&G, & other flat roof systems. Must have Journeyman Ticket and valid Drivers License. Wages $30+ Foreman & Supervisory positions available. Call 403-261-6822. THE KDL GROUP is seeking an experienced LOG TRUCK DRIVER for work in the Fort St. James area. Full time winter work is currently available. Successful applicants will be offered competitive wages and an attractive benefit package. Please forward your resume with references via fax to: (250) 996-8742.
Flynn Canada Ltd. is hiring F/T ROOFERS & FOREMAN
Must have 3+ years experience with single or multi-ply roofing. $18 - $33 per hour based on experience, benefits available. Email: htavasoli@flynn.ca or Fax to: 604-531-4399
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Call Ron at 1-866-857-1375 Visit our website @ www.canamwest.com
Classifieds Continue on next Page 36 Find your dream Job.
Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A33
EDUCATION 2010
Advertising Feature
Trades Enjoy New Popularity Among Job Seekers
Find your dream Job.
A career in
With the number of apprentices expected to double in the next year, Kent Orrock believes we’re seeing the first steps of a renewed respect for the trades. He now entertains several phone calls a day regarding applications to apprenticeship programs and inquiries about how to get involved in this steadily growing industry. Mr. Orrick, the human resources co-ordinator for the British Columbia Road Builders and Heavy Construction Association welcomes the interest. “It can only help recruitment efforts when it becomes a point of pride for parents to have a son or daughter who is a ‘dozer operator, pulling down as much as $42 an hour.” After decades of fighting negative perceptions about the boom-and-bust nature of employment and the hard work in construction and other heavyindustry sectors, there has been a steady increase of interest in a career in the trades. “They’re getting in at a time when they will definitely be able to [work until they] retire in this industry,” says Orrock. The federal government has recently proposed tax incentives for employers who take on apprentices, and grants for individuals who sign on for skilled trades training. Sighting a serious shortage of trades people, the federal government is now attempting to make the lucrative trade industry even more enticing to prospective employees. “The difficulty Canadian employers are having finding skilled tradespeople is becoming an impediment to economic growth,” the government said in its budget documents. “Meanwhile, many young Canadians find themselves in low-paying work, and are either not encouraged to consider the trades or are unable to do so because of financial barriers.”With measures to give employers tax credits of up to $2,000 a year for the first two years that they employ and train eligible apprentices, and as well as cash grants of $1,000 a year to eligible apprentices in the first two years of their training, the federal government is stepping up the push for
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A34 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A35
EDUCATION 2010
Advertising Feature
Take Your Career in a New Direction Continued from previous page
NEW HORIZONS Now that you’ve identified why it is time to move on, follow some key strategies for making a smooth transition into a new career. 1. Make a list of likes and dislikes: Did you get into your current career because you needed money right away or you had no other options at the time? Don’t feel bad; many people assume careers out of necessity rather than a genuine interest in that field. Now’s your time to jot down what you really like to do. What are your hobbies? How do you like to spend your time? It’s easy to focus on what you don’t like to do, but assessing what you enjoy can put you on the path to a career that may be better suited. There are even career assessment tests and services that can help you if you truly are unsure. 2. Explore what’s out there: Try and match up careers to your interests. For example, if you love animals you may consider becoming the owner of a pet shop or study to be a veterinarian. How much research you do will depend on just how drastic the change will be. For example, switching from salesperson to a marketing executive might not be as big of a change
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FOODSAFE 1 DAY COURSES Guaranteed best value! Six Metro Vancouver Locations: Vancouver • Burnaby • Surrey • Richmond • Coquitlam • Maple Ridge All our Instructors are also working local Health Inspectors! Classes held each week & weekend! Course materials available in 6 languages. Same-day Certification. Visit our website at www.foodsafe-courses.com or call 604-272-7213 ADVANCE Hospitality Education – B.C.’s #1 Choice for Foodsafe & WorldHost Training.
1405
Driving Lessons
AFFORDABLE DRIVING LESSONS!!! Class 5 & 7 Spec. Promo: $25 each for first 2 lessons! ( 1 hour) Door to door service! Gov’t Lic. Instructor. Metropolis Driving School 604 518 7949 or visit: www. metropolisdriving.com
AND MORE…
1415
Music/Theatre/ Dance
PIANO LESSONS RMT Teacher. Space avail starting Sept. All levels & all ages. 604-760-7442
1420
Tutoring Services
Call our New Westminster Campus
520-3900 www.sprottshaw.com
(604)
In-Home Tutoring for All Ages and Subjects. Experienced & Qualified. 778.552.5262 jmeyer@tutordoctor.com www.tutordoctorca.com/tricities
Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A37
PETS & LIVESTOCK
3503
3508
Birds
Dogs
Cats
GOLDEN DOODLES, Avail Sep 24th, $1250. 778-737-0146. www.foxycharliepuppies.com
4051
4060 POMERANIAN X-CHIHUAHUA. And: Tiny Pomeranian. Females. $1,000/each. Call 604-607-7433
Metaphysical
FREE TO TRY. LOVE * MONEY * LIFE. #1 Psychics! 1-877-478-4410 $3.19 min. 18+ 1-900-783-3800
CATS for ADOPTION Royal City Humane Society. 604-524-6447 www.rchs.bc.ca
★CATS & KITTENS★ FOR ADOPTION !
Registered Massage Services
TRAINED MASSEUSE $55/hr, Call Kathy 778-885-5254 www.massagebykathy.info
LAB PUPPIES ready to go vet ✔ dewormed & vac. yellow & Choc males/ females $475. 604-701-1587 5 KITTENS for sale. 2 orange tabby,1b/grey tabby,1orange mix tabby,b/w tabby,ready to pick up Sept.25 $100 call 604-872-6025
Health Products & Services
A SAFE, Proven “Restless Leg Syndrome” and “Leg Cramps” Cure That Always Gives You Instant Relief. www.allcalm.com 1-800-765-8660.
YELLOW/GREEN CANARIES, $35/each or white, zebra finches, $15/each. Call 604-939-5666
3507
4020
LOVE! MONEY! LIFE! #1 Psychics! 1-877-478-4410 CreditCards/Deposit $3.19/min 18+ 1-900-783-3800 www.mysticalconnections.ca
POODLE/SCHNAUZER X, 8 mos wks, shots, deworm, declawed, doc’d tails. 3F/2M. 604-951-6890
604-724-7652
3508
Dogs
REG CKC ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIELS, 2 males/2 fem, 1st shots, eyes tested, 604-521-2855
ALL SMALL breed pups local & non shedding $350+. 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com
TNT SHARPEI Rescue urgently requires foster/adoptive homes, visit www.tntsharpeirescue.com or call Lauren @ 1.604.847-0204
5017
CHEAP TELEPHONE RECONNECT! Paying too much? Switch, save money, and keep your number! First month only $24.95 + connection fee. Phone Factory Reconnect 1-877-336-2274 www.phonefactory.ca CRIMINAL RECORD? Only PARDON SERVICES CANADA has 20 years experience GUARANTEEING RECORD REMOVAL. Call 1-8-NOWPARDON (1-866-972-7366). www.RemoveYourRecord.com.
5035 BEAUTIFUL BLUENOSE pitbull puppies. 5 males 4 females $1500. Ph 604-316-1457 or 604-751-3114
CHOCOLATE LAB pups, PB both mother /father come from a bird dog lineage father ckc reg 1st shots vet checked,dewormed. 5 left. $600 604-768-7130
DOBERMAN PUPS. Female/ Male. Tails/dew claws done. Blk/ tan. $1000-$1500. 604-607-7433 FILA/MASTIFF GUARD DOGS owners best friend. Intruders worst nightmare. all shots, $2000 each. ready now! 604-817-5957
Puppy Paradise
1266720_0914
LOCATED IN
SURREY
9613 192 Street
ND VET)%-+#$#%' CERTIFIED•VACCINATED•DEWORMED (%+ * (,))#/,+%' * '%&.-!%'
BREED BREED
LHASALIER LHASALIER MORKIE MORKIE HAVANESE/PUG HAVANESE Registered
M M
$695 $595 $795 $695 $695 $795 SHIHTZU/PUGS $495 GOLDEN RETRIEVERS (PEKEPOO ,") Registered, 1 left!) $695 WESTIE HAVENESE Registered $495 $795 SHELTIE Registered PEKAPOM $695 BICHAPOO $695 MIN PINRegistered $595 YORKIE MINI PUGGLE $595 ENG TOY/BICHON $695 SHIHTZU/PUGS $695 BEAGLE $795 PAPILLON $695 PUGGLE Registered $695 PEKEPOO $695 CHIHUAHUA $695+ WESTIE $795 DASCHUND $795 SHELTIE Registered $795 CHI-WEENIE $695 BICHAPOO $695 ITALIAN GREYHOUND $795 YORKIE Registered $795 SHELTIE-MO COCKALIER $695 SHIBA-MO $895 POM $795 SILKY(8WEEKS,REG) TERRIER $995 ENG TOY/BICHON $695 $695 SHIHTZU-POODLE BEAGLE $795 ESKI-POO $795
FF
$895 $795 $795 $895
$695
$895
$895 $795
$695
$695 $795
$795
-
$895 $895 $895 $795 -
$895 $795 $795 $995 $895 $795 $795 $895
SPECIALS *** ******SPECIALS ***
Shihtzu-Poodle XX $495 Shihtzu-Poodle Yorkie-Poo Maltese-Pekingese X $495 Shihtzu $495 Pomeranian Registered, M/F Yorkie-Poo
$275 $275 $395 $395
778-552-5366 or 778-298-5758 778-552-5366 or 778-298-5758 Mon-Sat 11:30-6:30/Sun 12-6 Mon-Sat 11-7/Sun - Free Delivery - 12-6
puppyparadise.ca
Pet Services
LUXURY PET HOTEL @ YVR airport because your pet deserves a vacation too! 604-238-Pets (7387)
Cares! The Burnaby Now and New West Record have partnered with the BC SPCA to encourage responsible pet guardianship and the humane treatment of animals. Before purchasing a new puppy, ensure the seller has provided excellent care and treatment of the animal and the breeding parents. For a complete guide to finding a reputable breeder and other considerations when acquiring a new pet, visit spca.bc.ca.
A FREE TELEPHONE SERVICE - Get Your First Month Free. Bad Credit, Don’t Sweat It. No Deposits. No Credit Checks. Call Freedom Phone Lines Today Toll-Free 1-866-884-7464. AGE / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161. DEBT STRESS? Debts got you worried? End those phone calls. Avoid bankruptcy. Contact us for a no-cost consultation. Online: www.mydebtsolution.com or tollfree 1-877-556-3500. **HOME PHONE RECONNECT** Call 1-866-287-1348. Prepaid Long Distance Specials! Feature Package Specials! Referral Program! Don’t be without a home phone! Call to Connect! 1-866-287-1348. IF YOU own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS will lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161.
Cut Your Debt by up to 70% DEBT Forgiveness Program Avoid Bankruptcy, Stops Creditor Calls. Much lower Payments at 0% Interest. We work for You, not Your Creditors.
Call 1-866-690-3328 www.4pillars.ca
5040
Business Opps/ Franchises
#1 JANITORIAL FRANCHISE Customers, (Office Cleaning), Training and support. Financing. www.coverall.com 604-434-7744 info@coverallbc.com
@
view ads online@ http://classified.van.net
BE YOUR OWN BOSS with Great Canadian Dollar Store. New franchise opportunities in your area. Call 1-877-388-0123 ext. 229 or visit our website: www.dollarstores.com today. NEED EXTRA income? Everyday Style is looking for new Consultants in your area for our FallChristmas season! Visit www.everydaystyle.com or call 1-866-378-4331 for information.
5075
Real Estate Services
6005
★ RENT TO OWN! ★ If you have a small down payment, I have a nice home for you! Less then perfect credit OK. Call Kim 604-628-6598
6007
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
Computerized Embroidery & promo product business for sale. Established 14 years. www. home-embroidery-business.com
6008
Condos/ Townhouses
6008-08
Coquitlam
COQ/BBY, CORA Tower. Brand new, 1000+sf, 2 BR, 2bth, appls, Gym, Media, 2 sec prkg. Near SFU/skytrn. Dave 604-787-1413
6008-30
Surrey
Sry, 6960-120 St, Harleen Gardn New 900sf, 1 BR garden patio ste, ALL appls, f/p, sec’d parking, +. $200k incls HST! 604-690-4979
6020
Houses - Sale
6020-01
Real Estate
Financial Services
$500$ LOAN SERVICE, by phone, no credit refused, quick and easy, payable over 6 or 12 installments. Toll Free: 1-877-776-1660 www.moneyprovider.com.
YORKIE OR Yorkie X Maltese Toy size, local, 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com
3540
Business Services
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Mortgages
STOP FORCLOSURES 1st and 2nd Mortgages 604-629-8628 www.Mazuma.ca
uSELLaHOME.com
$99 can sell your home 574-5243 Agassiz spotless 924sf 2br mobile home 55+ park $69,900 604-823-4710 id5221 Harrison Hot Springs immaculate 1650sf 3br, 2ba rancher $389K 604-796-3531 id5222 Maple Ridge drastically reduced 4.9ac serviced vu acreage $440Kobo 722-3996 id4694 Mission, Owner Retiring, profitable framing store & gallery $47,000 826-7993 id5176 Sry E Newton 1 acre lot with 2600sf 6br 2.5ba bungalow $479,900 778-549-2056 id5198 Sry Fleetwood huge 4542sf 8br 6ba on 6965sf lot with 2 suites $799K 507-0099 id5219
6020
Houses - Sale
6020-04
Burnaby
2420 NORCREST CT, Sat, 2-4pm, Beautifully Reno’d 5 BR, 3 baths, mortgage helper, Must Sell. Mala, Sutton, 604-710-9030 OPEN HSE Sun, Sept 26, 2-4pm, Highgate, 6855 Noelani Pl, $529K, 2182sf, 1/2 dplx, 5 BR incls 2 BR ste, nr amens, Kerry 604-763-4638, www.sandrin.com Royal LePage Coronation West
6030
Lots & Acreage
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING LOT, New Westminster. $75,000 in services paid! 33’ x 130’. No HST! $324,888. Call 604-726-0677.
6035
Mobile Homes
#86 - 7850 King George Blvd, Sry. 2 BR. 55+ years old. 1 pet ok! $37,900. Lorraine Cauley, Royal Lepage North Star, 604-889-4874
6050
Out Of Town Property
ARIZONA BUILDING LOTS! Full acres & more! Guaranteed Financing! NO CREDIT CHECK! $0 Down, $0 Interest. Starting @ just $89/month USD! Close to Tucson Int’l Airport. FREE Recording at 1-800-631-8164 code 4040 or www.SunsitesLandRush.com
MOVING?
6508
Apt/Condos
BACH & 1 BR, nicely done, cls to shop & transit, secured, incls heat, h/w, prkg, Start @ $675. 604-325-1385 www.remirealty.ca SALISBURY APARTMENT 7111 Salisbury Ave Bby Highgate 1 BR rent incl heat & hot water. NS/NP. Call 604-526-5584 N. WEST 1 - 2 BR apt, nr Douglas Col, skytrain, balcony, n/p, n/s, n/d, $700 & up. 604-839-8156.
COQ. 1 BR, 2nd flr. U/grd prkg. $790/mo incl heat & h/w. N/s. Consider sm. dog. 604-723-6907
COQ. 1 BR, $750. 2 BR, $850, 3 BR, $1050. Now/Oct 1, Incl d/w, ht, 778-990-7079, 604-521-8249
BBY, Brentwood. Big 1 BR top flr. $780 incl ht & h/w. Adult-oriented bldg. ns/np. 604-841-6984 BBY METROTOWN 1 & 2 BR avail Immed, Clean, quiet bldng. Inc heat/hot water. 778-788-1867 BBY METROTOWN 1 BR avail Immed, Clean, quiet bldng. $700 Inc heat/hot water. 778-994-2334 BBY METROTOWN 1 BR avail Immed, Clean, quiet bldng. Inc heat/hot water. 778-323-0237 BBY METROTOWN 1 BR avail Immed, Clean, quiet bldng. Inc heat/hot water. 778-848-1790
BBY, NORTH. 2 BR, 20th floor. 2 full baths, 6 applis, 2 balc, u/grd prkg, gym & pool. Near Skytrain. $1500/mo. Oct 1st. 604-420-9228 BBY NORTH Luxury 1 BR & Den Condo, nr Brentwood mall, $1350 (unfurn) $1550 (furn), n/s, n/p, Avail Oct 15. 604-568-0570 BBY S. 1 & 2 BRs. $710 & $795 - $835., ug prkg, hw, WiFi, cat ok, Metrotown, 604-818-1129 BBY SIMON FRASER APTS, 7175 Pandora St, close to SFU, shops & transit, 1 Br $875, 2 Br $1000 incl heat/hw, hardwood, new paint, 1 yr lease, np, Call Lorne Dorset Realty 604-299-0803
COQ, 2925 Glen Drive. Quiet bldg. 2 BR + solarium, 2 f/baths, gas f/p, in-suite w/d, d/w, garb., balc., u/grd prkg. Near W.C.E. $1,000/mo. Nov 1. 604-298-6667 COQ BRAND New 1 BR & Den apt, top flr, nr schl & shops, $1200. Avail Now. 604-939-3122 COQ WW Plateau, 2 BR, 2 bath, $1325/mo, Quay Pacific Property Mgnt Ltd. Call 604-570-2786
COQ/BBY, CORA Towers. NEW, 1000+sf, 2 BR, 2bth, appls, Gym, Media, 2 sec prkg. Close to SFU/skytrain. $1600(rent) +$400 (credits) /mo. Dave 604-787-1413 COQ AUSTIN & BLUE MTN. 1 BR, $720, Avail Oct 1, incl h/w, Bldg w/d. 778-865-6696
CARM-ELLE APARTMENTS
815 - 5th Ave, New West 1 BR apartments. Includes heat, h/w & cable. U/grnd prkg avail. No pets. Call 604-521-2866 or 604-619-5323
COTTONWOOD PLAZA 555 Cottonwood Ave, Coq
Large units some with 2nd bathroom or den. On bus routes, close to S.F.U. & Lougheed Mall.
office: 604 936-1225 AMBER ROCHESTOR Close to Lougheed Mall, S.F.U. & Transportation.
● DIFFICULTY SELLING? ●
office: 604 936-3907
Expired Listing, No Equity, High Pymts?
We Will Take Over Your Payment
Until Your Property Is Sold. No Fees. Call Kristen today (604) 786-4663
www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
401 Westview St, Coq
(604) 435-5555 OR (604) 786-4663
Large Units. Near Lougheed Mall. Transportation & S.F.U.
Any Price, Any Condition Any Location. No Fees! No Risk ! www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
Call 604-998-0218 604-444-3000 to place your ad ad
LEGALS Legal/Public Notices
By virtue of the Warehouseman’s Lien Act, Mundies Towing, Storage & Service (1976) Ltd. will dispose of: 1) 1990 BMW M5 SN: 2BG51123X0BK02150 RO: RADOSLAV HEIDRICH. 1) 2010 MERCEDES SN: WDCGG8HB0AF501705 RO: ZHANG JIA LE 1) 2006 AUDI A 4 SN: WAUAF78E56A295687 RO: DANNY LI 1) 1969 VW BEETLE SN: 119085242 RO: DERRICK MICHAEL LOEWEN 1) 2002 ACURA RSX SN: JH4DC54612C801492 RO: LEO JEREMIAH STROWBRIDGE 1) 2002 MERCEDES CLK32 SN: WDBLJ65G62T120646 RO: ANDRE MARK AQUI Units may be viewed and bids to be submitted on Monday September 27, 2010 at 5917 Thorne Ave., Burnaby, B.C. between 10:00am to 3:00 pm. All written bids to Mundies Towing, 5917 Thorne Ave, Burnaby, B.C. V3N 2T8.
1300 King Albert, Coq
ARBOUR GREENE 552 Dansey Ave, Coq
Extra Large 2 Bedrooms. Close to Lougheed Mall & S.F.U.
office: 604 939-4903 cell: 778-229-1358
CALYPSO COURT 1030 - 5th Ave, New West Near Transportation & Douglas College. Well Managed Building.
office: 604 524-8174 cell: 604 813-8789
6508
415 Westview St, Coq
Close to Lougheed Mall, all Transportation Connections, Schools & S.F.U.
KING ALBERT COURT
office: 604 939-2136 cell: 604 805-9490
★ WE BUY HOUSES ★ Foreclosure Help! Debt Relief! No Equity! Don’t Delay! Call us First! 604-657-9422
JUNIPER COURT
office: 604 939-8905 cell: 604 916-0261
AMBER (W)
❏ WE BUY HOMES ❏
5505
Apt/Condos
COQ 1 BR & Den apt, 18th flr, great view, ss appls, $1195 + utils, Now, ns/np. 604-649-6500
545 Rochester Ave, Coq
* WE BUY HOUSES * Older House! Damaged House! Pretty House! Divorcing! Moving! Mortgage too high! Too much debt! Quick Cash! Convenient! Private! ( 604 ) 626-9647 www.webuyhomesbc.com
6508
Close to Transportation, Schools & S.F.U.
office: 604 937-7343 cell: 778 848-5993
Family Living WHITGIFT GARDENS 1 BR, (80% adult bldg), $750. 2 BR fr $925. 3 BR fr $1100. ● Spacious apartments ● Heat, h/w, prkg, indoor pool ● Ball court, daycare avail. ● Near Skytrain, shopping & kids park. Sorry no pets.
604 939-0944
Rentals
Continues on next page Apt/Condos
Refreshingly Clean Meticulously Maintained
Surrey Gardens Apartments for your new one bedroom home www.GreatApartments.ca It’sFrom time to$690.00 discover
Owner Managed Sorry, No Pets
Call for details! 604-589-7040
1MON TH FREE*
A38 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
RENTALS
6508
Apt/Condos
NEW WEST. Reno’d 1 BR New Appl’s etc. No Pets, From $775 inc. HT/HW 604-724-8353 N. WEST, Lrg 1 BR $895 & 2 BR $1095, hdwd flrs, heat hot/water & cable. Cat OK. Nr transit, quiet bldg. Av now. Jim 604-728-2086
GARDEN VILLA 1010 6th Ave, New West
1 BR & 2 BR Available. Beautiful atrium with fountain. By shops, college & transit. Pets negotiable. Ref required.
6508
Apt/Condos
ROYAL CRESCENT ESTATES
22588 Royal Crescent Ave, Maple Ridge Large units. Close to Golden Ears Bridge. Great view of River
office: 604 463-0857 cell: 604 375-1768
6515
Duplexes - Rent
CALL 604 715-7764
BBY, TRINITY St. 2 BR ste lower in 4plex, newly painted, incls cable & laundry, prkg. $825. Avail Oct1. N/S, Cat OK. 778-227-4431
VILLA MARGARETA
COQ, MUNDY Park. Lrg 3 BR, 5 appls, nr schl & bus, np/ns, Refs, $1300 incls utils, 604-291-2090
BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
320-9th St, New West
Bach & 1 BR Available. All Suites Have Balconies. Undergrd Parking Available. Refs Required. Small Pet Ok.
CALL 604 715-7764 BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
EL PRESIDENTE
220 7th St, New West 1 BR $700. 2 BR $850. Rent incls heat & hot water, reno’d suites with big patios. By shops, banks, skytrain & college. U/grd prkg available. Call 604 519-1382 Managed by Colliers International
NEW WEST
St Andrews Street 1, 2 or 3 BR Apt, Large balcony, updated, nr transit & amens. Avail Oct 1, small pet ok with pet deposit.
Call 604-540-9300
6540
Houses - Rent
2 BDRM, 1 bath, Central Maple Ridge, near Elementary & Secondary Schools, big landscaped yard. large lot, $1300. Oct 1st, 604-897-0512 or 604-729-4907 2 BR rancher, N.W., new reno, h/wood, storage, nr amen, $1100. Oct 1, np ns 604-521-7773 BBY N, 3 BR, great hse, gd loc, lrg lot, h/w heating, N/s, $2200, Denis 604-838-4661 after 5pm BBY NORTH; VIEW, UPPER , 2 BR & Den, 2 bath, sh’d W/D. $1350+ utls. Lower 2 BR, $850 + utls OR Whole house $2050. N/P. 121 Nth Warwick. 604-299-0403
COQ 2 BR lower suite with large fam room. $800/mth. Close to Coquitlam Centre and bus stop. 778-899-8823.
ROTARY TOWER 25 Clute St, New West
Age 55 or over. Beautiful view. Bach high rise apt. Close to trans & shopping. Rent incl all utils. Refs req. Contact Ana Cell: 778-859-0798 Bayside Property Services Ltd.
COQ, Blue Mtn / Como Lake. 3 BR upper floor, 1.5 baths, 6 appl., big sundeck. $1,550/mo + 2⁄3 utils. Ns/np. Avail Oct 1. 604-939-6077 COQ. HOME 3bdrms up & 1 dwn, 21/2 bath, lrg rec rm & yard, N/P N/S Rent $1800 1yr lease, Avail. Oct.1 604-937-3010 COQ, MAILLARDVILLE, 3 BR, 2 lev, all appls, carport, new reno’d. Oct/Nov. $1500. 604-913-7785
MONTECITO TOWERS 99-7360 Halifax St, Bby Bach, 1 BR & 2 BR
604 420-5636 www.montecitotowers.com
BONSOR APTS Renovated high rise, concrete building. Penthouse, 1 BR & 2 BR available. Very close to Metrotown, Skytrain & Bonsor swimming pool. Rent includes heat, hot water. Reference required.
Contact Natalie 778-230-9037 or Bayside Property Services Office: 604-432-7774
SKYLINE TOWERS 102-120 Agnes St, N.West
Hi-Rise Apartment with River View & Indoor Pool. 1 BR & 2 BR Available. Rent includes heat & hot water. Remodelled Building and Common area. Gated undergrd parking available. References required.
CALL 604 525-2122 BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
6510
Co-ops
COQ, WEST. Charming character home, 2 BR & den, main flr. Big private yard & patio. Jacuzzi tub. Near Skytrain. $1,250/mo + 2 ⁄3 util. Avail now. 604-931-4051
6540
Houses - Rent
SRY, NEWTON. 4 BR, 2 lvls, $2,200/mo + util. No pets. Immed. Also: Two 40 x 40’ steel barns, 2 storeys. Concrete flooring. Parking. Good for fabrication, storage or hobby cars. $2,800/mo for both barns. Call 604-626-7441 STOP RENTING-RENT TO OWN No Qualification - Low Down CHILLIWACK - 9557 Williams, 3 bdrm, 1 bath, cozy HOUSE on 49x171’ lot, excellent investment property in heart of town..... $888/M VANCOUVER - 558 Taylor St, 1 bdrm + den, 2 level TOWNHOME, nr GM Place & Costco…$1,288/M CLOVERDALE - 6965-192nd St, 6 bdrms, 5 baths, NEW HOUSE, 3 suites equal BIG income, new appliances, gas f/p. ......$2,688/M
Call (604)435-5555 or (604)786-4663
www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
6450
Miscellaneous Rentals
GATED PARKING AVAILABLE New Westminster BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
6565
Office/Retail Rent
BBY CONVENIENCE STORE FOR LEASE, Newly Reno’d 1700 sqft, high traffic location, over 40 yrs in operation. 604-808-3457 BBY METROTOWN $7.70 sqft for 850 sqft Office, $550/month, incls com cost, utils, secured u/g prkg, Call Natalie 778-230-9037
6595
Shared Accommodation North Burnaby
6595-10
BRENTWOOD MALL, Clean, quiet, Share bsmt, priv rm, $400 incls utils & net. 604-723-1837
qacoop@gmail.com
2 BDRM+DEN, $1300.. washer dryer, cable wifi (internet), 1 bath (no tub), small pets ok, info call 604-808-1263 2 BR, M.Ridge, g/l ste, COZY, NS NP, own w/d, cable/utils incl, nr bus, Oct 1, $800. 778-227-1503
2BR BBY N spac g/lvl, newly painted, w/d, nr amen, sky/tr, ns/ np. $975+1/2 utils. 604-420-6339 2BR MAIN floor, bright and clean. $1175 Includes util, cable, internet and laundry. Avail Oct 1st. 604 727 2382 BBY 11THAVE/CUMBERLAND. NEW 2 BR ste avail Oct 1. $800 incls utls. NS/NP. 604-540-4554 BBY CARIBOO HEIGHTS, 2 BR bsmt ste, n/s, n/p, no w/d, $800 + utils, Avail Now, 604-528-6036 BBY, Deer Lake. 2 BR, sh’d w/d, carport. Suits 1 or 2. $995/mo incl hydro. Ns/np. Now. 604-521-6120 BBY, E. 13th Ave/4th St. 2 BR g/l. 1,200 sf. Sh’d w/d, f/yrd. Ns/np. $875 + util. Nov 1. 604-290-2181
BBY, Edmonds/Canada Way. 1 BR. $750/mo incl hydro. Ns/np. Laundry. Suits mature person. Immed. Refs req’d. 604-522-9380 BBY METROTOWN, 2 BR bsmt, w/d, nr Dufferin/Kingsway, $820 + 40% ht, sep hydro meter, nr Royal Oak Skytrain, 604-315-2009 BBY N., nr Sperling skytrain, 3 BR g/l, N/s, N/p, avail immed, $1300/mo + 50 utils. Emily 604-433-9738 or 778-869-0103
BBY NORTH, Lrg 2 BR g/lvl, 5 appls, priv prkg, $1200 incl utils, cble & net, Oct 1. 604-570-0556 BBY ROYAL Oak/Rumble, Brand New Main flr 3 BR ste, 2 bath, Nr bus/school. NS/NP. Avail Now $1200 + util. Also 2 BR ste avail, $900 + utils. 604-375-4261
South Burnaby
6595-15
6602
Suites/Partial Houses
NEW WEST Queens Park, 2 BR bsmt ste, sh’d W/D, newly renod. Avail now. $900 incls ults. NS/NP. 604-520-5772 or 604-589-6231 POCO LINCOLN PARK 1 BR mn flr ste, lrg liv rm, f/p, $750 incls hydro/cbl. Oct 1. 604-464-9485 POCO: Reno 2 BR, main flr, $775 + utls, share w/d. By shops & schools. NS/NP. 778 895-3607 PORT MOODY 2 BR g/lvl ste, carport, big yd, utils incls, $900. n/p, no w/d, Oct 1. 604-936-6533
PT COQ. 2 BR, f/ba, f/p, priv w/d. Great view! Ns/np. $975/mo incl hydro/cbl. Oct 1st. 604-944-1479 SRY. Brand new, big 2 BR. H/wd flr. Nr SFU & S/train. $980/mo incl util. ns/np. Oct 1. 778-227-6028
6605
Townhouses Rent
3BDRM, ONLY 3 yrs old, 3 bath.1400 sqft. Near Lougheed Mall and skytrain, 604-671-9949
BBY, SOUTH Slope. 2 BR bsmt. $800/mo incl hydro/cbl/internet. Ns/np, no laundry. 778-867-9715
New Westminster
BURNABY S. Nr New West, 2 BR bsmnt ste g/l, close to school, bus, park, w/d, $950/mo + 1/3 utils, N/p N/s. Call 604-970-8232
6595-40
N. WEST. Furn’d, Small rm $330 incls sh’d kitch & bath & utils. 604-767-3863 or 778-397-2102
Time to Get Your Own Place? Find your answer in the Classifieds – in print and online!
FOR RENT
1-BEDROOM AP T. Move in tomorrow. Affo rdable monthly rent.
Go to http://classified.van.net or call 604-444-3000.
BBY, EDMONDS. 2 BR, 1.5 baths, 6 appl, patio, fenced yard, u/grd prkg. Ns/np. $1,180/mo incl hydro. Oct 1st. Near Skytrain. 604-522-8350 or 1-250-865-7251 COQ WW Plateau, 3 BR T/H, 3 bath $2195/mo. Quay Pacific Ppty Mgmt Ltd, call 604-570-2786 WESTWOOD PLATEAU, 2030 Sq Ft T/H, 3 BR, 2 1/2 bath, double Garage, Hardwood floor, w/d, $1850, Big rec room in bsmt, Family neighborhood, Close to greenbelt, Golf club. N/Pets. 1 yr lease min. credit check & refs req’d. Call 604-464-4409
BAINBRIDGE PLACE
3 BR, 1½ baths, fridge/stove, laundry hook-up. $1,250/mo + utilities. Near Skytrain, schools and Lougheed Hwy in North Burnaby. Family-oriented complex. Immed. N/s, no dogs. ★ Cats are welcome! ★
Call 604-420-0763
1 BR in 3 BR hse, nr Highgate Mall, Metrotown & skytrain, n/s, n/p, $550, Immed, 604-767-0503
136 10th St, New West
Email for application
Suites/Partial Houses
CALL 604 723-8215
Queens Avenue 3 BR Townhouse, $1218 includes heat & hot water, w/d hookup & common laundry & u/grd prkg. $1200 share purchase.
6602
COQ. BRIGHT, clean, 1 bdrm, 1 bath bsmt suite in River Heights. Prime quiet location close to Coq Ctre & schools. In-suite laundry, gas fireplace, new floors, own entrance and private yard, parking spot, no pets, n/s. Available Oct 1, $825 including utils. Call 604-722-2294.
WOODLAND PARK
TOWNHOMES Professionally managed family townhome complex on 28 acres located in beautiful Port Moody. Spacious 2 BR & 3 BR units, 5 appls, inste w/d, walk out bsmt, 1 parking. Cat friendly.
Contact 604 939-0221 woodland@rentmidwest.com
6620
Warehouse/ Commercial
AUTO DETAILING SHOP at Kingsway/Gilley, fully fncd, COQ CTR. Lrg 1 BR clean, quiet. Sh’d W/D. Ns/np. $800/mo incl util/’net. Oct 1st. 604-464-1085 COQ. LRG 1 BR ste, Executive home, sep laundry & entry, f/p. Nice view. Suits quiet mat person. $850. NS/NP. 778-882-3959 COQ, Mariner Way. 2 BR. 1 bath h/wd flrs, priv w/d. $825/mo + 1⁄3 util. Ns/np. Immed. 604-521-5642
604-767-0503, canadianauto@shaw.ca
HOME SERVICES
8010
ALARM 604-463-7919 Systems Ltd.
8030
Carpentry
HOME IMPROVEMENTS Renos to Handyman’s Service Call Ray 604-418-4208 * RENOS * Bsmt refinish * Drywall * Bath Tiles * Windows * Doors * Stairs. Call Norm 604-437-1470
8055
Cleaning
#1 QUALITY Cleaning Service Homes & Business. Senior Disc. Low Rates. 604 724-8998
Exp. Reliable European Cleaning, Move In or Out, Res/ Comm★ Call 604 760-7702 ★
8060
Concrete
All Concrete/Asphalt Removal Disposal incls Quality Guaranteed, Free Estimates. Comm/ Res. 604-540-6567
PT MOODY Moray/St. Johns, 2400 sf shop plus mezzanine Suit auto/warehouse, wholesale, boatshop, etc. 604-525-8839
N. WEST 1 BR 19th St/Dublin, sh’d w/d, ns, np, $800 incl util., Oct. 1, walk to skytrain, 604-219-9376 N. WEST Queensborough. 2 BR, sh’d W/D. $1000 incls utls. Quiet. NS/NP. Avail now. 604-729-1435 NEW 2 bdrm bsmt suite, sep entry, laundry, large fenced yard, n/p, n/s, close to all amenities (school/bus/shopping) $800 + util avail Oct 1 604-725-8874 or 604-725-9030
8073
NEW WEST. Large 1 BR. Ns/np. $650/mo incl hydro. Avail Oct 1st. 604-240-9067 or 604-521-1575
7010
Personals
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 service call. Insured. Lic # 89402. Fast same day service guaranteed. We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
8087
Excavating
# 1 BACKHOE, EXCAVATOR & BOBCAT
one mini, drainage, landscaping, stump / rock / cement / oil tank removal. Water / sewer line, 24 hours Call 341-4446 or 254-6865
8090
Fencing/Gates
DIRECT FROM THE MILL 6x8 Fence Panels from $27, Siding, Decking, Roofing, Shed, Split Rail, etc... We Install Chain Link & Cedar Fencing. Free Est. 7753 Edmonds St, Burnaby Call 604-520-7792 Timberlandforestproducts.com
West Coast Cedar Installations Custom fencing, decking & more 604-244-8824, Cell: 604-788-6458
8105
Flooring/ Refinishing
Refinish, sanding, install, dustless 604-219-6944 We cover the HST
8125
Gutters
DRAIN TILES & WATER LINES Without Digging a Trench 604-294-5300 DRAINAGE, SEWER & WATER Call Tobias 604 782-4322 Mia Casa − Drain Tile/Sewer Line Water Line Repairs / Replacement & Cleaning. Vince 604-941-6060, Al 604-783-3142
8075
Drywall
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
J.A. CONSTRUCTION
Specializing in drywall & textured ceiling repairs, drywall finishing, stucco repairs, painting. Fully insured.
604-916-7729 JEFF
Full Seamless Gutter Installation/Repairs Soffits All jobs Guaranteed. Fully insured/WCB covered Will beat any competitors price
604-439-9417 Grant’s Home Maintenance Complete Gutter Cleaning & Repairs: We also do pressure washing & window cleaning .
ARCO DRYWALL. Board, tape, texture, frame. New & renos. 16 years exp. Mike, 604-825-1500
Residential & Strata Prompt Service. WCB Insured
*Drywall * Taping * Texture * Stucco*Painting * Steel stud framing Quality Home 604-725-8925
grantshomemaintenance@shaw.ca
Electrical
#1113 Low Cost Electric 522-3435 Comm/Res/Panel change Heating/Appl Repair. Lic & Bonded.
604 936-2808
RAIN CENTRE LTD.
(since 1968) 4", 5" & 6 " continuous gutters Vinyl & aluminium siding soffits Install repairs and cleaning. Free Estimates! 604-874-8158 Check us out with the BBB
A1 Steve’s Gutter Cleaning & Repair from $98. Gutters vacuumed/hand clean. 604-524-0667
Lic Electrican, Res/Comm. Reno’s & panel changes, low cost, 604 374-0062, lic # 06951 LIC. ELECTRICIAN #37309 Commercial & residential renos & small jobs. 778-322-0934.
DATING SERVICE. Long-Term/ Short-Term Relationships, FREE CALLS. 1-877-297-9883. Exchange voice messages, voice mailboxes. 1-888-534-6984. Live adult casual conversations-1on1, 1-866-311-9640, Meet on chatlines. Local Single Ladies. 1-877-804-5381. (18+).
Electrical
Artistry of Hardwood Floors
Drainage
#1167 LIC Bonded. BBB, lrg & sm jobs, expert trouble shooter, WCB, low rates, 24/7. 617-1774. MAPLE RIDGE, 223rd St. New 2 BR, 2 full baths, balc, f/p, 7 appl, granite counters, h/wd flrs, u/grd prkg. $1,150/mo + utils. Ns/np. Avail Oct 1st. Call 604-365-6733
8080
A.S.B.A ENTERPRISE Comm/ Res, Free Est, $20/hr incls supplies, Insured, 604-723-0162
8080 BBY 6994 Greenwood St, Brand New approx 1800sf W/H with finished office, clean, large O/H door, 3 phase power, avail Now. Call 604 929-9493 www.westrockproperty.com
Alarm/Security
LOW COST maintenance free gutters, best price in town. 604-600-2554 PRESSURE WASHING, Gutter Cleaning and Repairs Call George, 778-859-7793
Home Services
Continues on next page
Need a Handyman?
Find one in the Home Services section.
Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • A39
CALL THE EXPERTS HOME SERVICES 8220
Plumbing
RESIDENTIA I OTNI A LT . IVISION LTD. RLE D S II V DIES N L DD
Tried & True Since 1902 Since 1902 Tried & True
• BBB • RCABC • GAF/ELK • BBB •Master RCABCElite• Contractor GAF/ELK Master Elite •Contractor Residential Roofing • Residential Roofing • Liability Coverage•and WCB •Coverage Designatedand Project Liability WCBManagers • Designated Project&Managers • Homes Strata • Homes & Strata • Third Party Inspection • Third Party Inspection • Installations & Repairs • Installations & Repairs Call 604-327-3086 for a free estimate free Hr Emergency Call2010604-327-3086 estimate Service Quote code for a 5% discount for a• 24
Quote code 2010 for a 5% discount
10% Off with this Ad! Aman’s Plumbing Service, Lic. Gas Fitter, Reas. Rates. 778-895-2005
• 24 Hr Emergency Service
www.crownresidentialroofing.com
HOME SERVICES Landscaping
★ AMAZING TOUCH LAND’G ★ Paving, retaining walls, turfing, planting. Call 604-889-4083 COMPLETE YARD Redevelopment. Jackhammer. Hedge Install, Removal and Trim. Returfing and Drainage. Call Tobias 604 782-4322 ★ OPERA LANDSCAPING ★ Retaining walls, irrigation, paving, patios, fences, etc. 778-688-2444
8160
Lawn & Garden
Fall Services
SAME DAY SERVICE “More than just mowing!”
Yard Clean-ups • Hedges Pruning • Gutters • Aeration Lawn Mowing Christmas Lights Rubbish Removal
8180
Home Services
LUCKY METAL WORKS Fence & Gates Stainless Steel Door Window & Door Replacement Patio Covers & Sunrooms Andy: 604-719-8689 #158-11782 River Rd., RMD
8185
Moving & Storage
MOVERS & STORAGE South American Van Lines Ltd.
• Local • Long Distance • International • Overseas
310-JIMS (5467) www.jimsmowing.ca Book a job at: www.jimsmowing.ca
• Residential and Commercial Lawn Maintenance •Aeration • Yard Cleanup • Lawn Repairs • Gardening • Hedge Trimming • Tree Pruning
Free Est 604-779-6978
WILDWOOD LANDSCAPING Hedge Trimmimg & Tree Pruning & Hedge Removal Fall Clean Up Chaffer Control & Lawn Restoration. Comm/Strata/Res Aerating & Power Raking. Free Estimates. 604-893-5745 LANDSCAPE INSTALLATION, tree services, hedge trimming, autumn lawncare. 778-885-6488
A Gardener & A Gentleman Lawn, garden, tree svcs. Pruning, yard clean-up, rubbish. 319-5302
FREE Boxes • FREE Storage
Insured & Bonded Toll Free
Lawn/Garden/Hedge trim, cleanup, install, quality, low$, 778-241-9706, cedar on sale !
Fully Insured 20 years experience Call 604Free Estimates
7291234
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR SPECIALS
No Hassle Quick Work Insured /WCB
45
We accept Visa, Mastercard & Interac Licenced & Insured Local & Long Distance
Seniors 15% Disc • 27 Yrs Exp. • BBB Member WCB • 5 Year Guarantee • Free Est. Refs.
MILANO Painting 604-551-6510 Int/Ext. Good Prices. Free Est. Written Guar. Prof & Insured. Pacific Pro Painting Restoration •Int / Ext •Res / Comm •Reno’s Strata’s. Free Est. 604-488-4000
FREE ESTIMATES Seniors Discount
www.affordablemoversbc.com
Experienced Movers ~ 2 Men $50 ~ • Includes all Taxes • Licenced & Insured • Professional Piano Movers
604-708-8850
$30 P/HR. Abe Moving & Delivery & Rubbish Removal. ★ Available 24 hours. Abe at: 604-999-6020 A MOVING EXPERIENCE WITH L & D ENTERPRISES !!! Fast & Dependable Special Rates Seniors Disc. Call 604-464-5872
ABBA MOVERS bsmt clean 1-4 ton Lic, ins’d from $35/hr, 2 men $45 day honest 26 yrs est 506-7576. AMI MOVING ★ 3-5 ton cube. Starting at $39/hour. Local & long distances. 24/7 ★ 604-617-8620
ALL RENOS Bathrooms starting @ $2495 Call Rick • 604-617-9208
*Additions*Quality Work *Ref’s 604-720-1564 matco@telus.net
* Save Your Dollars * Bath, Kitchen, Suite’s & More www. renorite.com 778-737-0800
8250
Have Your Roof Done Between Now & Sept 30
POPEYE’S MOVING 604-783-6454 Vancouver 604-377-2503
www.popeyesmovingbc.com
Paving/Seal Coating
ALLEN Asphalt, concrete, brick, drains, foundations, walls, membranes 604-618-2304/ 820-2187
8220
Plumbing
BBM
PLUMBING, HEATING & DRAINAGE
Renovations Big or Small. Water Lines without Digging Broken Water Mains & Sewer Mains. Hot Water Tanks, Plugged Drains, Toilets, Tubs, Leaky Faucets & Broken Pipes, Irrigation Sprinkler Systems. 24 / 7 Emergency Service Fully Licenced & WCB.
8175
Masonry
CONSTRUCTIVE Landscaping paving stone, masonry, rock walls decks cedar fence 604-250-7824 constructivelandscaping.com NORTHLAND MASONRY. Rock, slate, brick, granite, pavers. 20 yrs exp on the N. Shore. No job to small.. Will 604-805-1582
8195
Painting/ Wallpaper
RED SEAL
Drainage & Plumbing Inc.
Plumbing, Drainage, Repairs & Installation
Main sewer lines, water lines, camera inspections, plugged drains, hot water tanks and drain tiles. 24/7 Emergency available Sat/Sun/Holidays Licensed, Insured, Bonded
D&M PAINTING
Interior/Exterior Specialist Many Years Experience Fully Insured Top Quality, Quick Work Free Estimate
604-724-3832
$0 DOWN & we make your 1st payment at auto credit fast. Need a vehicle? Good or Bad credit call Stephanie 1-877-792-0599. www.autocreditfast.ca. DLN 30309
9110
Collectibles & Classics
604-588-0833
SALES@ PATTARGROUP.COM WWW.PATTARGROUP.COM Quality work by Qualified Professionals. Free Estimates 24 Hour Repairs Skylights Gutters Cedar - Duriod - Torch-On Systems All work Guaranteed! Family owned & operated since 1989
(604) 299-8131
1986 ROLLS-ROYCE, 1-owner, only 56,000 km, as new. $30,000. 604-987-3876. D24627
9125
Domestic
A BETTER
PLUMBER
Better Quality, Better Service
8Plumbing 8Drain Cleaning 8Hot Water Tank Specials 8Seniors Discounts
436-1005
1999 OLDS Intrigue a/cared, winterized, well cared for grt family car. $3500. 604-946-6533
8315
Tree Services
$ BEST RATES $
99 DODGE Intrepid 210K, good shape, needs brakes, $1200 obo. Sold as is. 604-463-3254
9145
Scrap Car Removal
Removal FREEScrap/Car
HOUR 2Service From Call
Family Owned & Operated
(604) 209-2026
Topside Roofing 604-290-1650 Quality Workmanship. Prompt, Prof Service. Insured. Call Phillip
Treeworks 15 yrs exp. Tree/ Stump Removal, Prun’in & Trim’in & View Work 291-7778, 787-5915 www.treeworksonline.ca Wildwood Tree Services, Exp Hedge Trimming and Removal & Tree Pruning. Free Est. 604-893-5745
8335
Window Cleaning
BOB’S WINDOW Gets that Clean, Clear Shine No Drops, No Drips, No Streaks Right into the corners! Serving you for over 20 yrs. Also do Gutters 604 588-6938
Jerry 604-618-8585 Andrew 604-618-8585
9145
Scrap Car Removal
9160
Sports & Imports
Pays $150 minimum for Full-Size Complete Vehicles. Free Removal! 2-Hr. Service in Most Areas
Call 778-316-3217
CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES
2004 HYUNDAI Sonata, immac, loaded, luxury version. only 69K, 6 mos warr. remaining, dark grey w/tinted rear, black leather int, 4 snows, 1 owner, paid $35,000, now $11,000 obo. 604-926-1206 2005 HYUNDAI Accent GREAT cond. Red,auto,2drs,hatchback. 1 owner/all papers.No accidents. 60,000kms $7000 778-628-0059
604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H
9155
E
Sport Utilities/ 4x4’s/Trucks
1990 F250 4x4, canopy, well kept mechanically, good tires, great for work, $2500, 604-940-1580
2006 HONDA Civic DX Coupe $12,500. Auto, dark blue, PWR Locks/Windows, heated mirrors, digital dash, 4 new tires, new brakes. Honda Serviced. NO Accidents. 100k. Great on gas, +extras. Coq. ★ 604-868-3128
9173
Vans
1992 TOYOTA Landcruiser, 4x4, right hand drive, 196K km, seats 7, diesel / biodiesel, new tires & shocks, great shape, North Vancouver. $9,500 nego. 778-838-1637 1999 FORD Windstar 162 k, auto, a/care 2012, 5 dr, 7 seat,grt cond $3600 no accid 778-839-0409 2003 DODGE Grand Caravan Sport. loaded, dvd, lthr, exc cond, 131K km, $6500 604-924-0812 2005 NISSAN Xterra SE 4wd, 1 owner 122 k, no accid, winter tires, $19,950. 604-880-0542
9160
Sports & Imports
1982 MERCEDES 300SD, turbo, power pak, ac loaded, alarm new battery. $3200, 778-279-8856 1999 TOYOTA Tercel 4-door sedan, automatic, 150,000 km, deep green, reliable, $2,750 neg. Tel. (604) 649-3083
2008 GRAND Caravan, red, stow & go, 39K, auto, 7 seats, $18,500, 604-922-7367..778-867-7367
9522
RV’s/Trailers
BIGFOOT SIGHTINGS! New 2011 BIGFOOT Campers have arrived only at Mike Rosman RV! 1-800-667-0024. www.rosmanrv.com
32’ Fifth Wheel
FREE
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL No Wheels, No Problem CASH FOR SOME COMPLETE CARS OPEN 24 HRS. INCLUDING HOLIDAYS
MIKE:
604-872-0109
2000 HYUNDAI Elantra wagon, 5 spd, 80,000 kms. Fun, economical, air care, new tires, $4250.00 Call 604-988-6666
#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle Removal Ask about $500 Credit!!! $$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200 Roofing Experts 778-230-5717 Repairs/Re-Roof/New Roofs. All work Gtd. Free Est. Call Frank
Tree Services
A-1 TRI CRAFT TREE SERVICES (EST. 1986)
2003 CHEV Malibu, 84K, auto, ac, dark green, 2 owners, $6500 obo, no accidents, 604-929-8834
10% off ALIN Maintenance •Roof •Chimney •Skylight Repairs •All Leak Problems! 604-319-2229
Alive & still roofing after 50 years!! RCABC Certified Roofers. BILL the Roofer • 604-522-8516
A to Z CERAMIC TILES Installation, Repairs, Fair Prices Free Est. 444-4715 cel 805-4319
SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL
No Wheels No Problem
A Eastcan Roofing & Siding Ltd Re-Roof, Repair. Ins. WCB. BBB. 604-961-0324 or 604-562-0957
Tiling
THE SCRAPPER
1997 TOYOTA Camry 109K km, no acc, 4dr, auto, pwr everything, ac, air cared $5500 778-322-3314
604-618-4988
604
YARD CLEAN-UP, Trim/Prune hedges, rubbish removal, Free estimate. 604-710-9670
TwoGuysWithATruck.ca Moving, Storage, Free EST 604-628-7136. Visa, OK
Auto Miscellaneous
#1 Roofing Company in BC
604-729-3864
LAWNS CUT, yard and garden clean-up, hedge trim, rubbish removal & gutters. 604-773-0075
9105
TOP Painting & Pressure Wash Res/Comm. Best Rate / Free Est Top Quality! Joe 604-782-1377
8205
8309
8315
AUTOMOTIVE
Call AFFORDABLE QUALITY ROOFING LTD.
All types of Roofing Over 35 Years in Business Call for your FREE ESTIMATE
Stucco/Siding/ Exterior
Quality Home Improvement ★ Stucco ★ All Kinds. No Job Too Big or Small. 604-725-8925
$50-$150 FULL TRUCK LOADS Rubbish & Lawn & Garden Work fast service Patrick 604-808-1652
’06 CHEVY Aveo 5. Only 38Kkms. “Total Plus” plan (60/60)till 07/11/11. $7,500. 604-765-4252.
604-984-9004
8300
Dangerous tree removal, pruning, topping, hedge trimming & stump grinding. Fully insured & WCB
Roofing
SUMMER SPECIAL SAVE THE HST
A+
604-537-4140
B&Y MOVING
8240
Renovations & Home Improvement
604-723-8434
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Book by Oct. 1 & Save 15%
★ASK DISCOUNT RUBBISH★ Best Prices, Yard, House/Const, Demo. 7 days Ray, 604-727-6153
PACIFIC ACE PLUMBING INC. •Repairs •Installation •Insured Free Est. Call • 778-836-8835
MATCO DESIGN - Renovations
Free Est./Written Guarantee
Good Day Painting Fully Insured, Quality Work, Res/Comm, No Payment till Job is Completed! Call Thomas 604 377-1338
1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 Ton $ From
LICENSED PLUMBER & Gasfitter. BBQs, ranges, etc. Repairs, renos. VISA ok. 604-830-6617
* EXCELLENT PRICES *
Interior & Exterior
778-838-1275 1 to 3 Men
PLUMBERS
Complete Bathroom Reno’s Suites, Kitchens,Tiling, Skylights, Windows, Doors, 604 521-1567
604-432-1857 or 604-773-7811
AFFORDABLE MOVING
$30 P/HR. Abe Moving & Delivery & Rubbish Removal. ★ Available 24 hours. Abe at: 604-999-6020
Water Lines (without digging) Sewer Lines (without digging) Install. Drain tiles. 604-294-5300
PRIMO PAINTING
1-877-964-4490
AAA ADVANCE MOVING Experts in all kinds of Moving, Storage & Packing. Different from the Rest. 604-861-8885 Lawn & Garden • Clean-ups & Disposal, Gutters/Press Washing Seniors Disc. Al @ 604-783-3142
FAIRWAY PAINTING
Senior & Student Discounts Up to 20%
Local
Free Estimates
Painting/ Wallpaper
8195
Rubbish Removal
BEN’S RUBBISH REMOVAL $50-$150 a load. Yard clean up. Bby/N West/Vncr. 778-859-8760
www.crownresidentialroofing.com
8155
8255
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $100 cash paid for full sized vehicles. 604-518-3673
2004 HONDA Civic coupe, std, 54 k, pwr pkg, ac, clean, no accid, 1 owner $10,000. 604-812-4314
★ FREE TOWING ★ up to $300 CASH Today!
2004 SUBARU WRX 4 dr sedan, std, red, 1 owner, full service, only 57k Kms, only serious enquires. $18,650. 778-340-0212
604-728-1965 John
2003 32’ Cougar by Keystone 5th wheel In exc cond; two large slides; lots of solid oak cabinets, oak table w/4 oak chairs; 2 swivel arm chairs, sofa hide-a-bed, ent. unit; a/c, furnace; hydraulic front jacks; large awning; heated underbelly; corner shower; walk around queen bed with new Sealy mattress, full closet, 4 drawer oak dresser; new washer/dryer; lg living room windows; skylight; full width storage; outdoor shower; too many extras to mention. $19,900. 604.316.1018
A40 • Wednesday, September 22, 2010 • Burnaby NOW
annual fall tree & shrub sale on now!
save up to 40%!
(until Oct 11, 2010)
autumn bliss
and The Promise of Spring FALL BLOOMING ASTERS
Classic fall blooming perennials available in shades of pink, purple, blue & white! (10cm pot - reg $3.99)
$2.47
SEA SOIL OMRI Certified Organic Compost works wonders in the garden! Produced on Vancouver Island. (32 litre bag - reg $7.99)
BELGIUM GARDEN MUM PLANTERS Each planter produces hundreds of blossoms in fall shades. (25cm planter - reg $19.99)
$5.97 Spring Blooming Bulbs have arrived!! Choose from a great selection of tulips, daffs, hyacinths & many more!
‘TAHITI’ NARCISSUS RHS award winning double daffodil. Absolutely fabulous in containers or as cut flowers! (5 bulbs/pkg - reg $4.99)
$3.97
$12.97
we make it easy™ (Sale ends Sept 28, 2010)
‘PRINCESS IRENE’ TULIPS Unique colour - a favourite for cut flower bouquets! (12 bulbs/pkg - reg $9.99)
$6.97 FRAGRANT!
BLUE POPPY ANEMONE
Enjoy a display of deep blue blossoms next spring! Plant in the garden or containers. (10 bulbs/pkg - reg $3.99)
$2.47 Open 7 days a week!
Sunday, Sept 26 at 1pm for a FREE clinic: “Better Late Than Never” Fall & Winter Veggie Gardening
Open 7 days a week!
Sat-Wed 9am-6pm BURNABY 6250 Lougheed Hwy* 604-299-0621
Join us...
Sat-Wed 9am-6pm
Thur & Fri 9am-9pm
Everything to Make Your Garden Work!
*2 blocks from Holdom Skytrain
w w w . g a r d e n w o r k s . c a
Thur & Fri 9am-8pm
MANDEVILLE 4746 SE Marine Dr 604-434-4111