Tri-City News August 16 2017

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TC ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT: 26

Rocky Milino Jr. sings the blues BIF HAS A BALL

TC

INSIDE: Cleaning up the Coquitlam River [pg. 3] / TC Sports [pg. 29] WEDNESDAY, AUG. 16, 2017 Your community. Your stories.

TRI-CITY

NEWS

PROVINCIAL ELECTION

BC Liberals spent big in the Tri-Cities Hundreds of thousands spent in local races DIANE STRANDBERG Tri-CiTy News

Money can’t buy you love, but if it did the BC Liberals would have won an additional seat in Coquitlam and BC Greens wouldn’t have doubled their vote. Election expenses published Tuesday by Elections BC showed that Liberals were

the big spenders in the May 9 provincial election while BC Greens running in the TriCities spent a comparably tiny sum but still managed an impressive showing. The report also showed that BC Liberal incumbent Linda Reimer, who lost to NDP candidate Rick Glumac in Port Moody-Coquitlam, didn’t file her expense report by the Elections Act deadline, an error that will cost her $500 in late filing fees. The next deadline is Sept. 7. see ISAACS, page 5

WILDLIFE

Cougars killed in Coquitlam DIANE STRANDBERG Tri-CiTy News

STEVE RAY PHOTO

Vancouver rock singer Bif Naked — pictured with her husband Steve ‘Snake’ Allen on guitar — headlined the city of Coquitlam’s Kaleidoscope Arts Festival at Coquitlam Town Centre Park Plaza last Saturday night. More than 7,000 people visited the grounds during the day-long event, which was sponsored in part by The Tri-City News and included such music acts as The Matinée, West My Friend and Coquitlam’s own Jennifer Hayes. For more photos of the second annual fest, turn to page 15.

A Burke Mountain neighbourhood is sleeping easier this week after two cougars that were stalking pets and approached a Coquitlam family were destroyed by conservation officers last Friday night. Spokesperson Jack Trudgian said the officers were called

to the area behind Sadie Crescent, off Coast Meridian Road, after receiving reports that two small children were approached by a big cat and a pet feline was also killed. “They weren’t afraid of us when we arrived,” said Jack Trudgian, acting sergeant with the Conservation Officer Service. see BE AWARE, page 7

CONTACT THE TRI-CITY NEWS: newsroom@tricitynews.com / sales@tricitynews.com / circulation@tricitynews.com / 604-472-3040

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ENVIRONMENT

Cleaning up the Coquitlam River ‘If a few more people took care, it would be a really clean river’

HOW TO HELP Here’s how you can help keep the Coquitlam River clean: • If you carry something to the river, you should take it with you when you leave. • No fires and no smoking. • Walkers, dogs and cyclists should stay on authorized trails. • Bag your dog’s feces and dispose of it responsibly — don’t just toss it into the bushes. • If you see litter, carry it out. • If you see someone smoking or having a fire, speak to them or call the fire department.

MARIO BARTEL

The Tri-CiTy News

There’s nothing Christopher Moreno and his wife Natalie like to do better to beat the heat than floating down the Coquitlam River on an inflatable raft with their daughters, Saige and Amber. But their cooling cruise during the recent hot spell was soured by the amount of trash and litter they spied along the riverbanks and in the water itself. So a few days later the Morenos went out again — this time without their kids and equipped with garbage bags — to do something about it. As they floated from David Avenue to Lions Park in Port Coquitlam they collected more than five pounds of costume jewelry, assorted flip-flops and sandals, beer cans and water bottles. What they couldn’t fit into their bag were the discarded lawn chairs and even a shopping cart. “It becomes such a daunting task when you see how much trash there is all along the river,” said Natalie. In fact, the couple had to cut their clean-up mission short at Lions Park because they ran out of bags. Verne Kucy, the environmental projects manager for the city of Coquitlam, said while the city doesn’t have a staff person dedicated to patrolling the riverbanks, it does work closely with community organizations and vigilant

MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Christopher Moreno and his wife Natalie were dismayed by the amount of garbage and debris they saw along the Coquitlam River when they recently did a family float with their daughters, Saige and Amber. So they went back, this time equipped with garbage bags, and filled one of them with junk like flip flops, bottles, cans and plastic bags. citizens to respond to calls about excessive trash heaps or large discarded items. Parks staff also check the river and its shores during their routine servicing of parks or trails. “There’s quite a few eyes on the river,” Kucy said. One of those sets of eyes belongs to Jeff Rudd, a volunteer with Coquitlam RiverWatch, a volunteer initiative that was started in 1997 to protect the Coquitlam River watershed. Members of the group patrol

the watershed monthly to observe the level of human activity, litter and pollutants, as well as water quality and wildlife. That information is then compiled to create an ongoing profile of the river’s health. “I find litter and garbage all along the river, but it is usually concentrated at the beaches,” Rudd said of his regular patrols along the river from David Avenue to the Patricia footbridge. He said he’s found every-

thing from cigarette butts to deflated inner tubes to a patio table. In 2016, he collected 124 flip-flops, all of them singles except for one pair. “It demonstrates very clearly the heavy use the river receives,” Rudd said. And that use is growing as the population of the Tri-Cities increases, especially when the weather gets warm. “People picnic on the beach, tube down the river, swim, drink,” Rudd said.

Kucy said the city’s efforts to keep the rivershed clean have been aided by its adopt-a-trail program that allows individuals, organizations, schools, businesses or even families to take stewardship of a section of trail to keep it clear of litter, graffiti and hazards. About 10 kilometres of trails along the river have been adopted. “I think people are becoming more conscientious,” Kucy said. The Morenos said they were reminded of the importance of

keeping the river clean when they also saw an owl and a deer as they floated along. “You realize how much lives along the river,” Moreno said. “You want to make sure it’s safe for the wildlife that lives here.” That wildlife includes up to 24 species of fish, mammals, birds, amphibians like the redlegged frog, reptiles and insects as well as native vegetation, Rudd said. “Human use of the river affects all these creatures.” Even seemingly innocuous acts like taking a shortcut through some bushes or letting the dog run loose to cool off in the water can stress the habitat, Rudd said. It’s all about taking personal responsibility, Moreno said. “If a few more people took care, it would be a really clean river.”

AROUND THE REGION

Metro urges residents to ‘Put waste in its Place’ Illegal dumping is costing taxpayers big bucks, says Mayor Moore DIANE STRANDBERG The Tri-CiTy News

Illegal dumping is costing taxpayers millions of dollars each year but the response of

most Metro Vancouverites to the illegal ditching of household goods is “meh.” That could soon change if Metro Vancouver’s Waste in its Place campaign bears fruit and Port Coquitlam Mayor Greg Moore, whose city spends more than $82,000 a year in clean-up costs for dumped goods — one of the highest in the region — said he hopes people start being more responsible

for their stuff. The chair of the Metro Vancouver board said he was “astonished” to find out that 60% of residents surveyed have either dumped household items illegally or would do it in the future, with inconvenience being a deciding factor. Another 40% told surveyors this past spring that they thought it was OK to dump items in public spaces, be-

lieving it was just another form of recycling. “I can’t believe the majority of the population believes it’s OK to put a mattress or a couch behind a dumpster somewhere,” Moore told The Tri-City News, adding, “Our survey told us we’re not doing enough, so that’s why were launching this campaign.”

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A4 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

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AROUND THE REGION

Illegal dumping costs millions, says Metro

YOUR VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY SHARE Family and Community Services is looking for a few key volunteers to join the Advisory Committee for the organization’s annual fundraiser, IMAGINE 2018.

continued from page 3

The education campaign began July 31, with Metro Vancouver launching wasteinitsplace.ca, which people can use to find places to legally drop off their items for reuse or recycling. On the website, which is available in a mobile format, users can find out the closest place to take large furniture, electronics, paint and a number of other items. They’ll also learn about municipal programs such as large-item pickup services, pop-up junk days and spring cleaning events. The initiative will also be supported via social media and advertising. Moore said he believes that when people know better, they will take steps to deal with their waste responsibly, pointing to the mattress recycling program as a positive example. Although people have to pay $30 to drop off their mattress and box spring at the Coquitlam transfer station, he said, they can feel better knowing the mattress will be recycled. Returning bottles and pop cans for deposit has also successfully kept drinking containers out of the waste stream, he said.

METRO VANCOUVER PHOTO

Metro Vancouver has launched a Waste in its Place campaign to encourage people to dispose of their household items responsibly. It costs $5 million a year to clean up large bulky items disposed illegally, according to Metro. “It’s a good news story at the end of the day. We have to encourage people to get bulky items into the right place for recycling,” Moore said, noting that taxpayers ultimately pay when people dump their junk in back alleys and ravines. “It’s not that this gets picked up for free by the city — there’s a cost.” According to Metro Vancouver, there were 37,257

YOUR COMMITMENT • Meet once monthly from the start of the event cycle (beginning in September) until 4 weeks from event date, Saturday, March 10, 2018. • 4 weeks from event date, the committee will meet weekly, or as required. • Meetings will be held at the SHARE King Edward Office, #200 - 25 King Edward St. Coquitlam. • The regular meeting date and time will be set at the first meeting for the committee.

incidents of abandoned waste in Metro Vancouver last year, with the most frequently dumped items noted as mattresses, furniture, appliances, carpeting, tires, green waste and larger amounts of household garbage. In all, cities in the region spent more than $5 million in costs to clean up the mess.

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TRI-CITY NEWS FILE PHOTOS

Left to right: Coquitlam-Maillardville NDP MLA Selina Robinson spent $99,650 on her spring campaign, while fellow NDP MLA Mike Farnworth (Port Coquitlam) spent $62,945 and Rick Glumac (Port MoodyCoquitlam) spent $92,405. Joan Isaacs, the lone BC Liberal elected in the Tri-Cities, spent $106,684 to win Coquitlam-Burke Mountain.

PROVINCIAL ELECTION

Isaacs leads the way in election spending continued from front page

Still, even without Reimer’s expense report, the BC Liberals look like they were targeting Tri-City ridings in a bid to boost their numbers or retain their seats. Coquitlam-Burke Mountain MLA Joan Isaacs, who is now a health critic in the BC Liberal shadow cabinet, spent $106,684 to capture her seat in a close race against BC NDP incumbent Jodie Wickens, who spent $85,811.75. Wickens failed to get the needed votes, while Isaacs pushed past her to win the seat with 44.28% of the vote, compared to 43.91% for Wickens. Ian Soutar, who ran for the BC Green Party in the riding,

was the biggest Green Party spender locally, shelling out $5,273.94 to win 11.81% of the popular vote. In Coquitlam-Maillardville, BC Liberal Steve Kim failed in his bid to win the seat away from BC NDP incumbent Selina Robinson despite spending $107,732.90. Robinson, who is now minister of municipal affairs and housing in the new BC NDP cabinet, spent $99,650.27 to win her seat. Nicola Spurling, who ran for the BC Green Party in the riding, spent just $1,093.42 but managed to win 11% of the vote. To win his Port MoodyCoquitlam seat, Glumac spent $92,405.71 to snatch the seat away from Reimer while Don

Barthel of the BC Greens spent $1,306, but managed to win 12.11% of the vote. Meanwhile, in the Port Coquitlam riding, Mike Farnworth, now public safety minister and solicitor general, handily won his seat, spending $62,945 in the process. His BC Liberal competitor, Susan Chambers, a business woman and Maple Ridge resident, spent only $31,564.44 for her bid, the lowest of any BC Liberal candidate in the local races. Running for the BC Green Party, Jason Hanley spent $1,427 on his candidacy and earned 12.75% of the vote, the best result of any local Green Party candidate. dstrandberg@tricitynews.com

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DIANE STRANDBERG/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Krista Wojciechowski and children Lilly, 11, and Lukasz, 9, check out the books at the Little Free Library at Blue Mountain Park in Coquitlam. The family has taken responsibility for the book kiosk to make sure it is well-stocked. It’s one of a number of mini libraries on a tour that people can take to see what’s available and collect a card, with prizes and a special event celebrating the initiative slated for Sept. 9 at Leigh Square in Port Coquitlam.

LITERACY

Tiny library a convenient alternative ‘The more places people can get books, the better’ DIANE STRANDBERG The Tri-CiTy News

It’s one of the tiniest libraries in the Tri-Cities, doesn’t have internet access or a checkout desk, and the number of books is small. But for Krista Wojciechowski and her children, Lilly, 11, and Lukasz, 9, a visit to the Little Free Library at Blue Mountain Park in Coquitlam is a daily ritual. The family looks after the little red library that was recently restored to its location near the playground after it was vandalized earlier this year. “I am very passionate about books and literature,” Krista told The Tri-City News on a recent sunny afternoon. “I am excited when people choose the books but it’s the kids who will run and get the door open. The adults are a little more hesitant and the kids are ‘Yes! Books!” Lilly and Lukasz, who are big readers, happily thumb through the collection that includes adult novels as well as a number of kids’ books, like Bad Kitty and Judy Blume titles. The Wojciechowski family is among several volunteer stewards who have been stocking books and keeping watch over the miniature libraries that have sprung up in the Tri-Cities over the last number of years in local parks and in front of homes.

They are simple to use: Just pick a book and read it, put it back or replace it with another book. For people who can’t always get to their local libraries, the little free libraries are a great way to make reading accessible for all, says Ann Johannes, Tri-Cities Literacy outreach coordinator. “As any librarian would say, the more places people can get books, the better.” The little free libraries got off to a roaring start when the literacy committee had money to give out as grants. Even when the money ran out, people still built the miniature libraries, many of them looking like quaint cottages. But with a recent bout of vandalism to a few of the libraries located in parks, Johannes said the public needs to be reminded about the project and take ownership of the little free libraries. “People need to realize how important they are to the community,” she said. To that end, a tour has been organized, where people can visit 16 of the little free libraries that have been pinpointed on a map and pick up a card indicating they visited. They are also encouraged to take a book and leave a book, and attend a special event on Saturday, Sept. 9 at Leigh Square in Port Coquitlam. The party takes place at 1 p.m. and prizes will be given away. • To check out the locations on the tour, visit batchgeo. com/map/31b8bcebd16d381 7c3280e93b712d6ff. dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC

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CITY OF P RT COQUITLAM

PHOTO BY BRIAN BAIRD

Bears have been making their way into urban neighbourhoods in search of food. This bear was spotted last Saturday afternoon walking in front of Coquitlam city hall at Guildford and Pinetree ways.

SATURDAY AUG 26, 12-9P

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WILDLIFE

Be aware of animal attractants, says CO continued from front page

The juvenile cougars were likely brothers and had been left to fend for themselves, he added. Having killed one pet cat, they were likely to kill another, and by hanging around the Burke Mountain neighbourhood could have gotten into conflicts with people living in the area. The cougars weighed about 50 pounds and were healthy and there was no sign of the

mother. “They were learning to fend for themselves and that’s why they got into trouble,” Trudgian said, noting that residents appeared to understand why the animals had to be killed. “They live in an area where there’s lots of wildlife and they always have to be aware. I think it’s an eye opener for them,” he said. The cougar deaths come at the height of bear season and

Trudgian admitted officers are “very busy” with bear complaints in the area. “This warm weather has killed a lot of the berries in the mountains,” he said. “We want people to be aware of their attractants.” One bear was recently destroyed in Coquitlam after it walked into a kitchen through an open door and rummaged through a fridge.

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POLICE INCIDENT

Woman busted driving wrong way on Hwy. 1 GARY MCKENNA The Tri-CiTy News

Mounties say it was “miraculous” more people were not seriously injured or killed when a woman drove west from Surrey to Coquitlam in the eastbound lane of the Trans-Canada Highway Thursday night. The incident started at around 7:45 p.m. in the 16000 block of Highway 1 in Surrey, continued over the Port Mann Bridge and ended when police used one of their vehicles to push the suspect driver off the road underneath the Brunette Overpass. “It was a dangerous situation,” said Coquitlam RCMP Sgt. Darren Pankratz. “The fact this didn’t end differently is miraculous. The potential for significant head-on collisions at highway speeds was high.” He added that it was “good old fashioned luck” that someone was not seriously hurt or killed. Still, there were some minor injuries when the woman caused another driver on the Surrey side to swerve out of the way, crashing into a concrete barrier before hitting another vehicle. The RCMP’s Air 1 helicopter followed the vehicle over the Port Mann Bridge, where she is believed to have caused another accident near the Cape

Horn Interchange. A short while later, police were able to catch up with her and disable her vehicle at Brunette. Pankratz said he would not be surprised if other vehicles were damaged during the incident. “We may still get some reporting of minor vehicle damage,” he added. “Whether there were vehicles that had gone off the shoulder or had damage, we would certainly like to have them report that into us.” Anyone who witnessed the incident or was somehow involved is asked to call the Coquitlam RCMP at 604-9451550. Pankratz said it is still unclear why the woman was

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driving in the wrong direction. Witnesses told The Tri-City News that the woman appeared distraught when she was taken into custody, however police are still investigating exactly what happened. “We don’t know the cause of this,” Pankratz said, adding the investigation could go in multiple directions. “Clearly, we are investigating the cause, whether it was impairment or other factors that led to the circumstances or whether there are grounds to pursue criminal charges for dangerous driving.” The incident snarled traffic on Highway 1 while police investigated. gmckenna@tricitynews.com @gmckennaTC

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A driver heading west in the eastbound lanes of the Trans-Canada Highway caused several accidents before being taken into custody by police Thursday night.

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MARIO BARTEL

The Tri-CiTy News

In cycling terms, Roger Steers is what’s known as a “Clydesdale” — a big guy who pumps out the kilometres. And it will be a big — and heavy — heart that will help propel him on Aug. 26 when the Coquitlam man hops on his carbon-fibre Trek bike and sets off for Seattle on the annual Ride to Conquer Cancer to support the BC Cancer Foundation. Steers’ fuel and his burden will be the memory of his daughter, Meredith, who died in 2000 from acute myeloma leukaemia. She was just 28 months old. Since that fateful day when Meredith’s daycare provider called to say she “just wasn’t feeling right,” cancer has had its tendrils wrapped around Steers’ heart. The phone call set off a quick cascade of doctor appointments that culminated with a parent’s worst nightmare the next day when she was diagnosed. Nine months later, she was gone. But Steers and his wife Darla never forgot the care Meredith received at BC Children’s Hospital, the caring extended to them by her whole medical and support team. For years, the couple donated time, energy and money even as they raised their two sons, Bennett and Emerson, who were born after Meredith passed away. In 2009, Steers found another way to give back. HIs employer, RJC Engineers, entered a team in the first Ride to Conquer Cancer, and although he wasn’t a cyclist, Steers volunteered to drive the support vehicle that would ensure riders stayed fuelled and hydrated as they made the 200-km, twoday trek to Seattle. The next year — the 10th anniversary of Meredith’s death — Steers decided to get out of the car and onto a bike. In the peloton, he discovered a whole community of cyclists whose lives had been touched by cancer in some way. “Everybody is there because of cancer, not because they’re

www.tenthousandwolves.com

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Coquitlam’s Roger Steers ride from Calgary to Okotoks and back at the Alberta Ride to Conquer Cancer event Aug. 1213, and then to Seattle in the BC ride Aug. 26-27. cyclists,” he said. They shared stories, some smiles, many tears. Steers has participated in every ride since, and he has become one of the event’s largest fundraisers. This year, he has already amassed nearly $18,000 in pledges. And he’s collected at least one convert. A few years ago, his wife decided to end her cycling widowhood by combining a visit to her family in Alberta with riding in that province’s Ride to Conquer Cancer, from Calgary to Okotoks and back. Last year, Steers joined her and did both events, a feat he’s repeating this summer (he did the Alberta ride on this past weekend). The couple’s sons have even started training so they can participate in next year’s ride. Steers said he began training for the successive events in March and by the time he heads to Calgary, he’ll have more than 1,500 km in his legs. “The challenge is to have the confidence you can do it,” Steers said. “It’s pretty daunting to ride 200 km.” But the tired legs and sore butt, along with the challenges of rolling hills and variable weather are diminished by the cause he and hundreds of other cyclists are riding for. “You’re riding along and you say this is nothing compared to what people are going through when they’re in treatment.” • To learn more about the Ride to Conquer Cancer, or to support a rider or team, go to conquercancer.ca.

bbq & CommuNiTy skaTe Looking for some free family fun? Head down to the Port Coquitlam recreation complex tomorrow (Thursday) between 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. for a community BBQ and skate — and learn about the city’s rebuild of the downtown facility.

The event, which will take place behind the centre off Kelly Avenue, is being put on by the city and Ventana Construction, the designer-builder of the $132-million project. Visit portcoquitlam.ca/reccomplex. jcleugh@tricitynews.com

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A10 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

HOSPITAL DONATION

• Are you unsatisfied with your dentures?

PoCo man’s mishap leads to hospital gift

• Unable to chew? • Unhappy with the looks?

DENTURE WEARERS!

Abou-Samra gives thousands to Philippine hospital

COME IN AND RECEIVE A COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION AND DENTURE CARE PACKAGE FREE!

MARIO BARTEL

The Tri-CiTy News

An accident that could have ruined John Abou-Samra’s vacation in the Philippines will instead help the small hospital that treated him serve its patients with new, modern equipment. Abou-Samra, a Port Coquitlam bus driver, was standing on a pier in Kayangan Lake, a resort about one hour from the city of Coron, in June, when a couple of wooden slats gave way and one of his legs plunged down to his hip. Bystanders rushed to his aid to pull him up, soothed his scrapes with ice and cold water, and helped him walk up and over a steep ridge where he could catch a boat that would transport him back to his hotel. It wasn’t until the next day that the pain and severity of his wounds started to cause AbouSamra concern. The hotel where he was staying arranged to drive him to Coron District Hospital to get checked out. The attending physician, Dr. Edgar Flores, sent Abou-Samra for X-rays to ensure he hadn’t broken any bones, then advised him how to treat his injury with hot and cold water, as well as rest. As he was waiting, AbouSamra was struck by the small hospital’s spartan condition. Machinery was old or non-existent. Supplies were spare. Yet, Abou-Samra said the staff treated him with the great-

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John Abou-Samra standing on the pier in Kayangan Lake, Philippines, just before he stepped through a couple of broken slats and severely scraped one of his legs up to his hip. est care and compassion. As he left the hospital, Abou-Samra started to think about how he might be able to return that concern. When he returned to the hospital the next day to thank Dr. Flores, and asked how he could help, the doctor showed him a small donation box. But Abou-Samra had a grander idea. A longtime supporter of the food bank in the Tri-Cities, Abou-Samra is a devout believer in contributing to his community, even on a bus driver’s salary. So his planned retirement cruise could wait; instead, he offered to purchase medical equipment for the hospital that helped him. He asked the doctor to compile a wish list that could help make him a better doctor, and his hospital better able to care for its community.

THANK YOU! Our thanks to the many Corporate and Media Partners, volunteers, community organizations, local businesses and staff who helped make this year’s Kaleidoscope Arts Festival such a great success. Thanks also to the many performers who made Kaleidoscope an event to remember. A special thank you to our Presenting Partner Kia West. And, finally, a very heartfelt thank you to everyone who came out to celebrate with us. See you next year!

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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A11

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MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

John Abou-Samra, a Port Coquitlam bus driver, is donating a three-page shopping list of medical supplies to the hospital in Coron, The Philippines, that treated him after he had an accident while on holiday in June.

HOSPITAL DONATION

‘Give them the means, they can work miracles’ continued from page 10

Months later, and only a few weeks from his retirement from Coast Mountain Bus Company, Abou-Samra has placed orders with a local medical supplies company for items like an ECG machine, oxygen gauge, stetho-

scopes, a centrifuge and even a defibrillator. And he’s working with a friend in the Filipino community, Freddie Baguno, to coordinate with the Philippines’ consulate in Vancouver to transport the equipment to Coron. The bill will come to more

than $16,000. But that number isn’t important to Abou-Samra; what really matters is the effect it will have on so many lives. “If you give them the means, they can work miracles,” AbouSamra said. “I like to make a difference.” mbartel@tricitynews.com

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A12 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

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TC OPINIONS

CONTACT

email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/opinion

THE TRI-CITY NEWS IS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, PUBLISHED AT 118-1680 BROADWAY ST., PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. V3C 2M8

INGRID RICE

OUR READERS SPEAK ONLINE COMMENTS FROM THE TRI-CITY NEWS’ FACEBOOK PAGE

I came head on with her while driving my kids to the drive-in in Aldergrove. It was horrifying. Had to swerve onto the shoulder to avoid a head on collision at 100+ km. MELISSA STEPHENS ON THE PERSON THAT DROVE WEST IN THE EASTBOUND LANE ON HIGHWAY 1

Simple. Lock your bins. Mine get knocked over every year, but they get nothing because they are locked. After a couple of times, they realize they aren’t getting anything and stop coming around. CRYSTAL GAITES MESSENGER ON LOCKING UP WASTE BINS TO KEEP THE BEARS AWAY

I love Bif! COURTNEY CATT-CAM ON BIF NAKED’S PERFORMANCE AT THE KALEIDOSCOPE ARTS FESTIVAL IN COQUITLAM

THE TRI-CITY NEWS’ OPINION

Major changes are required, but ICBC can still be salvaged I t will be tempting to call for the privatization of ICBC because of recent transgressions, which have made the auto insurer a cash cow in good times and a political football in bad. Yes, we need government to stop messing around with ICBC but, as the recent Ernst & Young report pointed out, there are a number of things the new NDP government can do to reduce accidents and the cost of insurance claims without eliminating the Crown insurer entirely. While some increase in rates may be necessary to stave off insolvency, the government should also crack down on danNEWSROOM 604-472-3030 DELIVERY 604-472-3040 DISPLAY ADS 604-472-3020 CLASSIFIED ADS 604-630-3300 n

gerous driving to keep claim costs down. This may require an entirely new view of how we drive and will alarm many who believe driving fast and dangerously is their right. The review of ICBC requested by the previous BC Liberal government suggested that the government tackle road safety as a number one priority. It recommended the return of photo radar, based on research that says it could cut fatal and serious collisions by a third. More red light cameras could be installed and more resources put into policing impaired and distracted driving.

TC

Not mentioned in the report is reinstitution of auto safety tests, similar to AirCare, where a car’s basic mechanics is examined to ensure they are safe for highway driving and, even more stringent, but possibly necessary, the enhancement and frequency of drivers’ tests and tougher penalties for those who break the law. While it would be nice if people just stopped driving dangerously of their own accord, that’s not likely to happen without some tougher rules. On the other hand, those with long safety records should perhaps receive even more incentives for good driving.

On the claim side, the report showed that increasing weekly wage and medical benefits while reducing lump some payouts for minor pain and suffering could reduce premiums and save between $770 million and $1.4 billion depending on the chosen model. That too, would be a radical change, but maybe necessary to keep insurance affordable. Can ICBC be saved? Yes, but to do so will require an entirely new perspective on driving and auto insurance. Can the new NDP withstand the political heat required to make such a change? Stay tuned.

ISTOCK

A review of ICBC requested by the previous BC Liberal government recommended bringing back photo radar and increasing the number of red light cameras on B.C. roads.

Shannon Mitchell PUBLISHER

TRI-CITY

NEWS

118-1680 Broadway St., Port Coquitlam, B.C. V3C 2M8 audited circulation: 52,692

Richard Dal Monte

Bentley Yamaura

EDITOR

DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING

Kim Yorston

PRODUCTION MANAGER

CIRCULATION MANAGER

THE TRI-CITY NEWS is an independent community newspaper, qualified under Schedule 111, Part 111, Paragraph 11 of the Excise Tax Act. A division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership, it is published Wednesday and Friday. Copyright and/or property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in this issue of The Tri-City News. Second class mailing registration No, 4830 The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The publisher’s liability for other errors or omissions in connection with any advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issue or the refund of any monies paid for the advertisement.

Connor Beaty

Matt Blair

INSIDE SALES MANAGER

n CONCERNS The Tri-City News is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent orga-

nization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please contact editor@tricitynews.com or 604-472-3030. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A13

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

TC LETTERS

CONTACT

email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/opinion/letters

DEVELOPMENT

City should focus on protecting its trees The Editor, Re: “PoCo, have your say on trees in your city” (The Tri-City News, Aug. 9) I am a resident of Port Coquitlam and was very disturbed by the city removing those beautiful old trees in the recreation complex redevelopment. I am as deeply disturbed by the city’s new approach of dealing with it’s citizens backlash of opinion of the city’s actions by setting up a distorted policy on tree management and tree inventory. Look at the city website: It’s all about private owner’s trees. The issue arose in public opinion because of the city’s action against the rec centre’s old trees. Why were these trees not incorporated into the redevelopment plans? Trees cut down also included a bunch on the outside of the rec centre lot that could have easily been incorporated into the plan. Instead of looking within to the city’s own actions,

SUBMITTED PHOTO

A letter writer tells The Tri-City News that a bruin in her neighbourhood has looks weaker and has become more aggressive when looking for food. FILE PHOTO

The tree stumps near the Port Coquitlam recreation complex this spring. the council is focused externally to trees on private lands. Let’s start with internal policies with the city on city lands and parks. How about developing internal city procedures on public consultation before the city is starts hiring someone to cut trees on city lands and parks? Show the public that the city has implemented procedures and plans so more trees are not carelessly cut down on city property and parks again. Don’t shift the attention. There are lots of people in the PoCo community that love and support trees on their own lands. What PoCo needs

is some introspection by city council to protect trees from it’s own city council and staff’s planning and implementation of plans for city land and parks. Show some leadership and take some accountability instead of shifting the conversation. I would certainly support initiatives to trees on private lands, but it seems to me that city council needs to show how city council will protect city trees from itself before telling PoCo citizens how to protect their own trees. Otherwise, the city comes across as hypocritical. Robert Magnusson Port Coquitlam

LOCATED LOC A TED IN

COQUITLAM CENTRE

BEAR AWARE

Frustrated & hungry bear causes concern in PoCo The Editor, For the past few weeks, a bear has been hanging around our neighbourhood. At first he was fine but the past few days I have noticed that the bear is very weak. He walks very slowly and struggles to climb the fence. The bear is now getting more aggressive in going into empty garbage bins due to

being hungry, I suspect. A few days ago, I had come out to the front driveway at around 9 p.m. to alert my daughter of the bear in the area when arriving home from work. As I walked on my driveway, there comes the bear behind me. Although I stood still in front of him approximately 10 feet away, the bear started to walk slowly toward me. As I

turned my back to walk away, he started accelerating toward me. I was lucky that I was only a few feet away from the front door. While I appreciate that people need to do their best to keep their garbage away from bears, it is now becoming a concern. Jacqueline Pickering Port Coquitlam

PUBLIC NOTICE: Site C Inquiry Initiated

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Dr. Paul Chedraoui Dr. Dana Behan Dr. Lina Ng Dr. Angela Lai IV Sedation

The BC Utilities Commission (BCUC) has initiated an inquiry into BC Hydro’s Site C project, as directed by the Provincial Government in Order-in-Council (OIC) 244 on August 2, 2017. The full scope of the inquiry is set out in the government’s terms of reference for the OIC, which is available online: http://www.bcuc.com/Sitecinquiry.html. The inquiry will be handled in two phases. In the first phase, the BCUC will gather information and produce a preliminary report. Those parties who would like to submit data and analysis to be considered for inclusion in the preliminary report are invited to submit that by no later than August 30, 2017. Data and analysis submitted during this first phase must be within the scope of the OIC. Opportunity for public comment on the preliminary report will be provided during the second phase of the review. Process details for the second phase will be provided once established.

• Dr. Jaskamal Heran • Dr. Pouran Rostamian Periodontics (Gum Treatment) • Dr. Samer Mudher Oral Surgery & I.V. Sedation

GET MORE INFORMATION To find out more about how to file data and analysis on the questions above, please check our Site C website at: http://www.bcuc.com/Sitecinquiry.html. The BCUC will make arrangements with members of the public not able to access or submit information online. In these instances, please contact our office using the contact information below.

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All documents filed on the public record may be made publically available on our website at www.bcuc.com.


A14 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

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ON THE LINKS

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Gather a foursome of friends and acquaintances for a day of golf and help Port Moody seniors make new friends, too. That’s the idea of the Links to Friendship Golf Tournament taking place Tuesday, Aug. 29 at Meadow Gardens in Pitt Meadows. “It will be a wonderful day of golf, lunch, a tee gift and a great banquet and it’s all going to support seniors in the community,” said Gerry Nuttall, president of the Port Moody Seniors Friendship Society. This is the first in what will hopefully be an annual event to raise funds to subsidize programs for a new social club for adults over 50 that is run by volunteers at 101 Noons Creek Dr., PoMo. Currently, The Club as it is known, offers day trips as well as meals, card games and other activities, but some seniors face challenges in getting to the centre. The longterm goal, Nuttall said, is to purchase a bus to pick up people so they can get to The Club and home again without worrying. Funds raised from the golf tournament will go towards that objective, he said. “These are people who are

MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Gerry Nuttall will be teeing off at a real golf course when he plays in the Links to Friendship tournament on Aug. 29 to raise money for the Port Moody Social Centre for Seniors. Joining Nuttall’s five-some are Wade Leslie and Donna Medway, of Pacific Coast Terminal, the event’s major sponsor, Barbara Nuttall, the golf committe chair, and Terry Hughes, of the Port Moody Seniors Friendship Society. on fixed incomes and may have trouble getting their on their own.” The golf tournament funds will also help subsidize programming and keep costs affordable for seniors. “Our goal is to provide special events for free or at a nominal amount so even low-income seniors can participate,” he told The Tri-City News. Wade Leslie, vice-president and general manager of Pacific Coast Terminals, said his com-

pany wanted to sponsor the event as a way of giving back to the community and supporting local seniors. Tee off time for the event, located at 19675 Meadow Gardens Way in Pitt Meadows, is 1 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 29. For more information about the Links to Friendship Golf Tournament, visit theclubportmoody.com. To participate in the tournament, email theclub@portmoody.ca or call 604-492-2595.

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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A15

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TC COMMUNITY

CONTACT

email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/community

KALEIDOSCOPE ARTS FESTIVAL

ELAINE FLEURY AND ROBERT MCDONALD PHOTOS

Thousands of residents from across Coquitlam and the region turned up for the second annual Kaleidoscope Arts Festival at Town Centre Park last Saturday. The event featured performances from The Matinee, The Paperboys, West My Friend, Derrival, Jennifer Hayes and Bif Naked. There was also an Art Zone, an artisan market and multiple food trucks.

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Pho Hoa Restaurant ................................(604) 945-9285 Pizza Hut.............................................. 604-945-3663 PizzaOne Hut...................................................(604) 945-3663 Pro Uniforms................................ 604-468-9903 Roo’s Liquor Store ............................... 604-945-6626 Pr One Pro Uniforms....................................(604) 468-9903 Robson Barbers.................................... 778-941-9570 Roo’ Liquor Liquor Store....................................(604) Store tor ....................................(604) tore Roo’s 945-6626 Safeway................................................ 604-941-8212 Safeway ....................................................(604) 941-8212 Shoppers Drug Mart............................ 604-468-8814 Shoppers Drug Mart ...............................(604) 468-8814 Sunwood Cleaners............................... 604-942-8557 Sunwood Cleaners..................................(604) 942-8557 Sunwood Veterinary Hospital............. 604-944-4442 d Veterinary V Sunwood Hospital.................(604) 944-4442 The Co-Operators Insurance Service .. 604-464-6112 Co-Operators o-Operators o-Operator I nsurance The Insurance Service ....(604) 464-6112 Tim Hortons ......................................... 604-941-3634 Tim Hortons .............................................(604) 941-3634 Westminster Savings Credit Union..... 604-517-0100 White Spot........................................... 604-942-9224 W Credi r t Union ........(604) redi Westminster Savings Credit 517-0100 White Spot ...............................................(604) 942-9224

Robson Robson Barbers Barbers ................................. COMING COMING SOON


%

59 0 $ 2,500

$

WEEKLY

AUG. 17TH - 21ST ONLY

DAY

5

0 72 $ 5,000 FOR

APR

LEASE* FROM $254 MONTHLY WITH $2,595 DOWN

THAT'S LIKE PAYING ONLY

AT

%

CANADA EQUIPPED

SALE

ON 2017 SENTRA S MT

MONTHS

TOTAL STANDARD RATE FINANCE CASH $

ON 2017 SENTRA TURBO MODELS

ON A 2017 ROGUE S FWD (AA10)

ON SELECT 2017 ROGUE

VISIT CHOOSENISSAN.CA OR YOUR LOCAL RETAILER •

AN ADDITIONAL

GET UP TO

SR model shown

SL model shown

$

1,000

MORREY NISSAN OF COQUITLAM 2710 LOUGHEED HWY, PORT COQUITLAM TEL: (604) 464-9291 ∞

SELECT NISSAN MODELS

BONUS CASH WHEN LEASING/FINANCING

SENTRA ®

FINANCE^ AT

$

PLUS GET

500

BONUS CASH

OR GET UP TO

OFFER INCLUDES

1,000

BONUS CASH

®

ROGUE

$

PLUS GET

500

APR FOR 39 MONTHS

BONUS CASH

OR GET

TOTAL STANDARD RATE FINANCE CASH $

OFFER INCLUDES

BONUS CASH

500

OFFERS END AUGUST 21ST

Premium (RL00). All Pricing includes Freight and PDE charges ($1,795/$1,600) air-conditioning levy ($100), applicable fees, tire tax, manufacturer’s rebate and dealer participation where applicable. License, registration, insurance and applicable taxes are extra. Offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers except stackable trading dollars. Vehicles and accessories are for illustration purposes only. See your participating Nissan retailer for complete details. Some dealerships may not be open on Sunday August 20th, 2017. Certain conditions apply. ©2017 Nissan Canada Inc.

will be deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes and is applicable only to customers financing any 2017 Sentra SR Turbo/2017 Rogue S FWD (AA00)/2017 Murano/2017 Maxima through NCF at standard rates. The cash discounts cannot be combined with lease or finance subvented rates or with any other offer. Certain conditions apply. ▲Models shown $37,918/$27,923 selling price for a new 2017 Rogue SL Platinum (PL00)/ 2017 Sentra SR Turbo CVT

term. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $15,773. $1,750 Finance Cash included in advertised offers on 2017 Sentra S MT. +Standard Rate Finance Cash discount of $4,000/$3,000/$4,500/$5,000

Ironically, there will also be demonstrations of electric vehicles. “It’s sure to be an afternoon to remember,” said Port Moody mayor Mike Clay. As parking in the area will be extremely limited, visitors are

new 2017 Sentra Turbo/2017 Sentra/2017 Rogue AA10, CC10, TE10, NV10, PL10, PR10/2017 Murano/2017 Altima through NCF between August 17, 2017 and August 21, 2017. *Representative monthly lease offer based on a new 2017 Rogue S FWD (AA10) at 0% lease APR for 39 months equals monthly payments of $254 with $2,595 down payment, and $0 security deposit. Lease based on a maximum of 20,000 km/year with excess charged at $0.10/km. Total lease obligation is $12,487. Lease Cash of $750 is included in the advertised offer. ^Representative finance offer based on a new 2017 Sentra S MT. Selling price is $15,773 financed at 0% APR equals 72 monthly payments of $219 monthly for an 72 month

St. Johns Street in Port Moody is going to be jammed on Sunday — but not by cars. The busy thoroughfare is going to be closed to traffic between Douglas and Moody streets from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. so the city can host its first CarFree Day from noon to 7 p.m. The event, which runs from Grant to Queens streets, will feature more than 90 booths representing local businesses, artisans and community organizations, as well as live music and family activities like rock climbing, street hockey and a bike skills and safety zone. Entertainers and mascots will rove the closed street and there will also be a beer garden at the Queens Street Plaza featuring favourite brews from Brewers Row.

Offers available from August 17 – August 21, 2017. Payments cannot be made on a weekly basis, for advertising purposes only. Total Standard Rate Finance Cash on a 2017 Nissan Rogue FEB/2017 Nissan Sentra/2017 Nissan Murano/2017 Nissan Altima consists of a combination of Standard Rate Finance Cash and 5 Day Bonus Cash. ∞ Offers available from August 17 – August 21, 2017. 5 Day Bonus Cash of $1,000/$500/$500/$500/$500 applicable when, leasing or financing a

A16 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

ON THE STREET

Car-free day ready to roll in Port Moody

Port Moody Mayor Mike Clay is looking forward to the day he can enjoy St. Johns Street without the din of passing traffic. He’ll get his chance on Sunday, when the city holds its first Car Free Day. TRI-CITY NEWS FILE PHOTO

being urged to take transit to the event, or walk or bike. For more information, including a list of vendors, as well as links to a map and traffic information to get around the road closure, go to www. portmoody.ca/carfreeday.


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A17

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

TRI-CITY LIBRARIES

Dip into someone else’s life with a book this summer A GOOD READ CAROLINE WANDELL

T

here are few things as inspiring as a first-hand account of greatness. One of the best ways to learn about human nature and the world is through reading biographies and memoir books. Whether the subject is your hero or someone about whom you are simply curious, each chapter reveals the struggles and challenges they faced along the way to make them the people they became. If you are looking for a bit of inspiration, or if you just need a new book to read, there is probably something here for you. Otis Redding: an Unfinished Life by author Jonathan Gould chronicles the too-short life of this musical genius from Georgia. He dives into the cultural and historical changes that led to the birth of soul music while delivering insightful descriptions of Redding’s live performances and recording sessions. This year marks the 50th anniversary of Redding’s death in a plane crash at the age of 26. This is a great tribute to this legendary musician. Mark Lukach writes a riveting read with My Lovely Wife in the Psych Ward: A Memoir. Newly married and looking forward to all life has to offer, his world crumbles when his 27-year-old wife suffers a terrifying and unexpected psychotic breakdown. Lukach takes us through the harrowing years of diagnosis, hospitalization, treatment and recovery. This book offers a personal insight into the caregiving side of the mentally ill and the struggles one faces to seek the best care for those we love.

Down Inside: Thirty Years In Canada’s Prison Service by Robert Clark details his time spent working for the Canadian Correctional Service, rising from student volunteer to deputy warden. This memoir gives one an inside look at Canada’s prison system as Clark writes about escapes, lockdowns, a riot, prisoner murders and suicides as well as his experience with solitary confinement. This book provides the reader with an authentic, unfiltered view of how prison staff perform their duties and how prisoners learn to survive. It held my attention from start to finish. Fans of the iconic musician and singer Tony Bennett are in for a treat with his latest memoir, Just Getting Started. Co-written with Scott Simon, this book acknowledges the people who contributed to Bennett’s success, such as Charlie Chaplin, Judy Garland, Martin Luther King Jr., Amy Winehouse, Fred Astaire, Lady Gaga and members of his family. Bennett explains how each of them played vital roles in the shaping of the person he has become both musically and artistically. And at 90 years of age, this legend believes he is just getting started! Manal al-Sharif, a women’s rights activist from Saudi Arabia, pens a gripping memoir in Daring to Drive: A Saudi Woman’s Awakening. She writes about living in a country where females are forbidden to talk with male colleagues, go on business trips, wear pants or drive a car. Daring to Drive covers the author’s difficult upbringing, her fight to be educated and all it took for her as a young Muslim woman to stand up to a kingdom of men. The book details the threats and

Get your Dental Calendar On Track Dr. Myrna Pearce, Dr. Candace Woodman and Dr. Darren Zomar Call us today

accusations she received for her actions and her incredible strength and determination to never give up on what she truly believed in. An honest account of growing up female in a deeply conservative society. Find these and other fascinating biographies at the Terry Fox Library. A Good Read is a column by Tri-City librarians that is published on Wednesdays. Caroline Wandell works at Port Coquitlam’s Terry Fox Library.

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A18 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A19

west coast auto group DEALS OF THE WEEK

West Coast Nissan’s

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SUMMER SAVINGS BEST DEALS ON WHEELS!

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11,650 24,399

$ $

34,980

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SUV, 4x4, 1.6L, Auto, 66,088 kms, UT010980

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126 **Bi-Weekly

12,500

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2016 DODGE DART GT

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2014 HONDA CR-V EX

Leather & Navigation

SUV, AWD, 2.4L, 86,725kms

INTERNET SALES PRICE

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27,899

Sedan, RWD, 3.6L, 8 Spd Auto, 12,506kms, UT828591

26,900

$

2016 FORD EDGE SEL

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2015 FORD FOCUS TITANIUM Sedan, FWD, 2.0L, 6 Spd Auto, 35,605 kms, UC331290

18,900

$

$

251 ***Bi-Weekly

32,800

$

INTERNET PRICE

SALE PRICE

16,800

$

22,500

$

2015 FORD F-150 LARIAT

ONLY

374 ***Bi-Weekly

$

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Only 99,620kms, MYFORD Touch, Heated Seats, No Accidents, FWD, 2.0L. Stock #UC554143

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159 **Bi-Weekly

$

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17,000

$

2015 MAZDA3 GS CONVIENENCE

MAKE

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17,995

17,995

$

$

AUTO, LEATHER, FWD, 2.0L, ONLY 44,300 KMS UC199811

HATCHBACK, FWD, 2.0L, AUTO, SILVER ONLY 38,458 KMS UC137769

2012 CHEVROLET ORLANDO LT

2014 MAZDA3 GS CONVIENENCE

7 Passenger Seating, Navigation, Power Sunroof, Leather, 3 Zone Climate Control, Power Rear Door, Power Seat, Power Group

47,800

2014 TOYOTA SIENNA SE-8 Passenger, Power Roof, Power Sliding Doors, Factory Body Kit, Alloy Wheels, Front Heated Sport Seats

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2015 HONDA ACCORD EX-L 1Local Owner, Low Kilometres, No Accident Claims, Leather, Roof, Auto, Factory Warranty

Sedan, FWD, 2.0L, 6 Spd Auto, 50,060 kms, UC320705

SALE PRICE

15,888

$

SUV, AWD, 3.5L, 6 cyl., CVT, 128,139 kms, UT106948

SALE PRICE

15,888

$

2015 FORD FOCUS ELECTRIC

Only 26,935kms, 107KW Electric Motor, FWD, Hatchback, NAV, 1 Owner, No Accident. Stock #UC349948

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162 ***Bi-Weekly

$

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2016 NISSAN ROGUE SV

Sedan, FWD, 4 Cylinder Engine, 9,950kms

SUV, AWD, 2.5, 31,125kms

INTERNET SALES PRICE

INTERNET SALES PRICE

14,799

23,999

$

Only 45,024kms, 6.8L V10, Air Conditioning, Cab/Cargo Access Door, Pullout Ramp, Step Bumper. Stock# UT024873

ONLY

259 ***Bi-Weekly

$

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32,629

$

1-855-829-5106 | www.WestCoastKia.ca

Only 68,397kms, Convertible, RWD, 5.0L, Auto, 19in Wheels, MINT. Stock #UC13035B

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$

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25,490

$

FORD LINCOLN

2010 TOYOTA MATRIX XR

15,495

$

13,995

$

LOW KILOMETERS! AUTO, SUV, FWD ONLY 73,580 kms UT580147

FWD, SEDAN, 2.0L, MANUAL ONLY 44,965 KMS UC119171

2008 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO

2015 CHEVROLET IMPALA LT

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2013 NISSAN SENTRA SR SPORT

2015 NISSAN MICRA S

Sedan, FWD, 1.8, 36,795kms

Hatchback, FWD, 1.6, 80,650kms

INTERNET SALES PRICE

12,999

$

2015 TOYOTA RAV 4 LE AWD

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6,988

$

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2013 MAZDA 3 SKYACTIVE

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9,995

$

$

SUV, AWD, 3.7L, V6, AUTO ONLY 165,577 kms UT159415

19,995

AUTO, LOW KMS, 3.6L, FWD ONLY 29,230 kms UC150018

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2006 TOYOTA YARIS RS

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2013 TOYOTA COROLLA CE Enhanced Convenience includes Power Group, Air, Heated Front Seats, Cruise, 1 Owner

2007 TOYOTA COROLLA SE

2012 HYUHDAI SONATA

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2013 FORD C-MAX HYBRID

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2012 KIA OPTIMA HYBRID Sedan, FWD, 2.4L, 4cyl., Auto, 47,136 kms, UC030995

8,995

AUTO, FWD, 1.5L, HATCHBACK ONLY 88,010 kms UC109264

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2016 NISSAN MAXIMA SV $

2015 CHRYSLER 300 LIMITED SALE PRICE

$

2015 MAZDA3 GS CONVIENENCE

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2014 FORD ESCAPE SE

21,995

$

AWD, SUNROOF, 2.4L, AUTO, ONLY 64,440 kms UT106838

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SUV, AWD, 2.7L, 36,117 kms

Hatchback, FWD, 2.0L, 6 Spd Auto, 19,200 kms, UT837155

2013 DODGE AVENGER BASE

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79,900

$

20092014 NISSAN MURANO SUBARU SL AWD FORESTER

2015 FORD EDGE SPORT

2016 KIA SOUL EX

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A20 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

TC CALENDAR

THURSDAY, SEPT. 14

• Coquitlam Foundation AGM, Coquitlam Public Library, City Centre branch (1169 Pinetree Way); reception at 6:30 p.m., meeting will start at 7 p.m. The public is invited to this free event. RSVP: email info@ coquitlamfoundation if you plan to attend.

SUNDAY, SEPT. 17

• Shoreline Writers’ Society meets, 1 p.m., Port Moody Arts Centre, 2425 St. Johns St. New writers welcome. Info: Helmi, 604-462-8942.

CLUBS

• Shoreline Writers’ Society meets, 1 p.m., on the third Sunday of every month at Port Moody Arts Centre, 2425 St. Johns St. New members welcome. Info: Helmi, 604-4628942. • Apex Netball Club is held Mondays, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Hillcrest middle school, 2161 Regan Ave., Coquitlam for women and girls of all ages. Beginners welcome. Info: Nicole, 778-240-8247 or nicmurphy26@gmail.com. • The Circle of Friends, a social group for 50+ singles looking to meet new friends and participate in social events such

as walking, dancing, dining out, travel, theatre, etc., meets on the third Friday of each month at PoCo Legion, 133–2675 Shaughnessy St., 7 p.m., to plan events. Info: Nina, 604941-9032. • The Tri-City Singles Social Club offers an opportunity for 50+ singles to get together and enjoy fun activities such as dining, dancing, theatre, travel, movies and more. Meetings are normally held on the third Monday of each month, excluding December, 7:30 p.m., at the Legion Manor, 2909 Hope St., Port Moody (on-street parking only). New members are welcome. Info: Darline, 604-4660017. • Lincoln Toastmasters meets from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays (except first Tuesday of each month) at Hyde Creek rec centre, 1379 Laurier Ave., PoCo (Room 3, upstairs). Improve your self-confidence, communication and leadership skills through public speaking; new members welcome. Info: Shirley, 604-671-1060 or shirleybrown@shaw.ca. • Tri-Cities Chamber of Commerce’s Toastmasters group meets Wednesdays, noon-1:15 p.m., PoCo city hall to improve communication and leadership skills. For more information, visit business.tricitieschamber.com/events. • City of the Arts Toastmasters, dedicated to improving leadership and public speaking skills, meets 5:30-7 p.m., Port Moody city hall, 100 Newport Dr. Info: Mike, cityofthearts@icloud.com or cityofthearts.toastmastersclubs.org. • Rotary Club of PoCo Centennial meets Thursdays, 4:15 p.m., Wilson Centre, 2150 Wilson Ave., PoCo; new

members welcome. Info: Barrie, barrie@barrieseaton.com or 604-945-6627. • Fraser Pacific Rose Society meets last Tuesday of each month except August and December, 7 p.m. Dogwood Pavilion, 624 Poirier St. Everyone welcome. • Downtown Coquitlam Toastmasters meet every Wednesday, 7-8:30 p.m.; first Wednesday of each Month at Coquitlam Public Library, City Centre branch, 1169 Pinetree Way, in the Coquitlam foundation Room; other Wednesdays in Room B2090, Douglas College, David Lam Campus, 1250 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam. The Toastmasters program addresses skills including public speaking, listening, evaluating and feedback, as well as leadership skills. Info: 604-936-1427. • PoCo Lions Club meets first and third Tuesdays of each month, 7 p.m., Royal Canadian Legion 133, 2675 Shaughnessy St., PoCo. New members welcome. Info:: Gord, 604-9415140 or pzcgrg@shaw.ca. • Coquitlam Gogos (Grandmothers to Grandmothers Campaign of the Stephen Lewis Foundation) meet third Wednesday of each month, 1 p.m., Parkwood Manor, 1142 Dufferin St., Coquitlam. Info: Pam, 604-469-0265. • Rotary Club of Coquitlam Sunrise meets Tuesdays, 7:15 a.m., City Centre Aquatic Complex, 1210 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam. New members welcome. Info: 604-464-7706. • PoMo Men’s 55-plus Curling League is looking for players who would like to curl regularly or as a spare; league runs Tuesdays, 10 a.m.-noon. Info: Tony, 604-461-5901 or Bill, 604464-1051.

RIGHT

BACK TO SCHOOL

Prices in effect August 1-31, 2017

> YOU CHOOSE < Baby Back Ribs or BBQ Pack Frozen, 10Kg case

each

100 100

$

1

5 x 7oz. Steaks

2600

$

Polish Farmers

Sausage $ 39

1

/100 g

SLOW COOK ON THE BBQ FOR GREAT PULLED PORK!

Pork Butt Roast

3

$ 39

$7.49/Kg

$

5

.00

OFF

YOUR PURCHASE OF $45 OR MORE

KEBET WAY

N

Pitt River Bridge

Y. HW

Fri. 9am to 5:30pm, Sat., 9am to 5pm Closed Sundays & Holidays

EED GH LOU

DaySept.16th

MARY HILL BYPASS

SWAY

Appreciation Mon. to Thurs. 9am to 5pm,

- Made by Arctic Meats

KING

1606 Kebet Way, Port Coquitlam STORE HOURS: Customer

/lb.

Must present coupon at time of purchase. Valid from August 1-31, 2017

BROADWAY ST.

118-1680 BROADWAY ST., PORT COQUITLAM

/100g

New York Steaks

www.coolvet.com | 604-945-4949

Donations are also being accepted in support of SHARE Family & Community Services.

/lb.

$ 89

2129 - 2850 Shaughnessy Street, Shaughnessy Station Mall, Port Coquitlam

DROP IN AND PICK UP YOUR FREE FAMILY FUN BOOKS OR HAVE THEM SET ASIDE BY CALLING 604-472-3021 OR EMAIL ADCONTROL@TRICITYNEWS.COM

3

$ 99

(Does not include Gypsy or Pepper Salami)

Sylvia lives in Port Moody with her husband, their toddler, one golden retriever named Dexter and her two senior cats.

C O L O U R I N G A N D B R A I N T E A S E R S

Lean Ground Beef Salamis

She also loves working with rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs, and rats and has a fondness of challenging surgeries.

GREAT FOR BIRTHDAY PARTIES!!

7oz New York Steaks 7oz Top Sirloin Steaks 145g Seasoned Burger Patties Boneless, Skinless Chicken Breasts Racks Baby Back Ribs

$8.80/Kg

Dr. Sylvia Huang, DMV

Sy lv ia

66682-

Ground Fresh in Store

Shaughnessy Veterinary Hospital is excited to announce the arrival of

I love ger iat ic do kn ow n to cuddle gs an d cats an d iʻm pu ppies an d kit ten s.

HERE

• Have you considered becoming a foster family? There are children and youth in the TriCities who require skilled, caring foster parents. To learn more, the Ministry of Children and Family Development invites you to attend an information session, 6:30-8:30 p.m., 200-906 Roderick Ave., Coquitlam. Info: call North Fraser Recruitment Team, 604-764-8098.

-

TUESDAY, SEPT. 5

Made Locally


CAR CRUISE

TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A21

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM

LIVE MUSIC PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY:

CLIMBING WALL TUMBLE BUS MINI GOLF and much more!

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

FREE

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

THE KID ZONE

RACE TRACK

car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old.

We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure Hunt Cars

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

AUGUST 19 & 20, 2017 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 - 6-8PM

MODEL CAR details at: WORKSHOP experienceit.ca

PRESENTED BY:

CAR CRUISE

TM

group

Join us on our AUGUST

19 & 20, 2017

EXTENDED PATIO! SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 - 6-8PM

CRUISE: 6-8PM SHOW: 10AM-5PM

CRUISE: 6-8PM SHOW: 10AM-5PM

PRESENTED BY:

Our existing patio will be extended into our parking lot during the Poco Car Show! CAR CRUISE

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM

PRIZE GIV EAWAYS

SPEC

CLIMBING WALL TUMBLE BUS MINI GOLF and much more!

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM

K DRIN L IA S

LIVE MUSIC

LIVE MUSIC

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

THE KID ZONE

PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

FREE

car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old. PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

PRESENTED BY:

PORT COQUITLAM THE KID ZONE 2233 McAllister Ave. | 604-942-1200

CLIMBING WALL TUMBLE BUS GOLF Visit MINI our 2nd TriCity location at 1121 Austin Ave., Coquitlam | 604-931-2468 and much more!

We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure Hunt Cars

PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

MODEL CAR details at: FREE experienceit.ca WORKSHOP car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old.

www.meneds.ca

RACE TRACK

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

RACE TRACK We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure Hunt Cars

PRESENTED BY:

TM

group

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20


A22 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

CRUI SHOW

AUGUST 19 & 20, 2017 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 - 6-8PM

PRESENTED BY:

2017 CRUISE ROUTE

CAR CRUISE

CRUISE ROUTE: 6:00 START........ LEIGH SQUARE LEFT................. WILSON AVE. RIGHT............ MARY HILL RD. LEFT.................... WESTERN DR. LEFT..................... EASTERN DR. RIGHT............... PITT RIVER RD. RIGHT............... CITADEL DR. RIGHT......... SHAUGHNESSY ST. RIGHT.............. LINCOLN AVE. LEFT............... CHELSEA AVE. RIGHT............... TORONTO ST. RIGHT.................... APEL DR. RIGHT............... VICTORIA DR. RIGHT.................. CEDAR DR. LEFT................ PRAIRIE AVE. RIGHT............. FREMONT ST. RIGHT.............. RIVERSIDE DR. RIGHT............ RIVERWOOD GATE LEFT............ COAST MERIDIAN RIGHT............ KINGSWAY AVE. LEFT................. WILSON AVE. RIGHT................. DONALD ST. 8:00 END........... LEIGH SQUARE

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM

LIVE MUSIC PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTE

CLIMBING WALL

5

Both ICBC and private insurance claims handled

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1978

604-461-3326

Available only at: Port Coquitlam, 2550 Shaughnessy St.

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PRESENTED BY:

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SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 Expires Oct. 31, 2017

RA

car model building class (model included) for ÂŽ ard lizzold. children 5-14 B years

TUMBLE BUS Contact Steve Paxon at 461-3326 and we’ll take MINI GOLF care of the more! arrangements.Free body and paint estimates. andallmuch

SUNDA

FREE

THE KID ZONE

$ 0 0 Of f

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

MODEL CAR details at: We accept cakeexperienceit.ca orders by PHONE OR ONLINE WORKSHOP WWW.DQCAKES.COM PORT COQUITLAM: 2550 Shaughnessy St. • 604-941-6343

2400 Barnet Hwy. Port Moody

riverside massage therapy

Riverside Massage & Chiropractic proudly welcomes

Dr. Afshin

Valentin

Janmohamed Oleinik Chiropractor, DC, BSc

RMT

Stefania

Huzyk RMT

Jason

Joly RMT

Laura

Johnson RMT

Sarah

Lalonde RMT

Felix

Lee RMT

Damon

Gina

Marchand DiMenna RMT

RMT

M.A., RCC

Registered Clinical Counsellor, Carrie is an affiliate EAP and CVAP provider. Services are often covered by extended heatlh.

107 - 2331 Marpole Ave.. Port Coquitlam www.riversidemassagetherapy.ca Accepting New Patients, ICBC, Worksafe, MSP and RCMP - Evening Appointments Available

604-474-2263

DIRECT BILLING FOR MOST EXTENDED PLANS

WE ARE HERE Marpole Wilson

Carrie A. Bove

Shaughnessy St.

OPEN SATURDAYS!

N


ALLEY WAY

500 CARS

ALLEY

MARPOLE AVE

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

PARKING

GATES PARK

TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A23

COMMUNITY POLICE STATION

WILSON AVENUE

2150

LIBRARY WILSON

LACROSSE BOX

LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 - 6-8PM

ATKINS AVENUE KELLY ROAD

LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

AVENUE

REC CENTRE

LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

PRESENTED BY:

SHOW: 10AM-5PM CAR CRUISE KINGSWAY AVENUE

CAR SHOW

ELGIN AVENUE

STREET CLOSURE MAP

SIGN-IN AREA

POCO BIA EVENT TENT

STAGE

LEIGH SQUARE

WHYTE AVENUE ALLEY WAY

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

ELK’S HALL

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

COURT HOUSE

PRESENTED BY:

WE ARE THE RADIATOR GO TO PLACE! PRESENTED BY:

MINI GOLF and much more! car model building class - LIVE MUSIC (model included) for - KID ZONE children 5-14 years old.

PARKING

GATES PARK

CHILDREN’S AREA & FIRST AID

WILSON AVENUE

KELLY ROAD

LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

details at: experienceit.ca

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

CRUISE: 6-8PM 19 & 20, 2017 SHOW: 10AM-5PM CAR CRUISE FREE RACE TRACK AUGUST 19 & 20, 2017 CRUISE: 6-8PM 19 & 20, 2017 SHOW: 10AM-5PM CAR CRUISE Oliveira Funeral Home SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 MODEL CAR details at: SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 - 6-8PM WORKSHOP experienceit.ca

E

D BY:

Hunt Cars

CRUISE: 6-8PM SHOW: 10AM-5PM TM

SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 - 6-8PM

PRESENTED BY:

We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone! PRESENTED BY: TM

group

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure

group

CRUISE: 6-8PM SHOW: 10AM-5PM

Specializing in heating and cooling systems for 50 years!

Hunt Cars

ANYTHING

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

You Can Trust LIVE MUSIC MODEL CARA Family details at: WORKSHOP experienceit.ca

D BY:

Treasure

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

DAY, AUGUST 20 LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM Y:

E

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY:

car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old.

Y:

We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

PRESENTED BY:

We are giving away PRESENTED BY: 2150 LIBRARY WILSON LACROSSE AVENUE 500 Hot Wheels Cars BOX SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 Treasure at our race track in BY:Hunt Cars PRESENTED REC Kid Zone! LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLYtheATKINS CENTRE AVENUE LOCAL TRAFFIC ONLY

PRESENTED BY:

RACE TRACK

car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old.

COMMUNITY POLICE STATION

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

& 20, 2017 - BEER GARDEN - VENDORS

ALLEY WAY

PRESENTED BY:

MARPOLE AVE CLIMBING WALL TUMBLE BUS

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

FREE

THE KID ZONE LIVE MUSIC 500 PRESENTED BY: FREE CARS RACE TRACK CRUISE:MODEL 6-8PM CAR WORKSHOP SHOW: 10AM-5PM AUGUST 19 PRESENTED BY: & 20, 2017 VOLUNTEERS

BY:

BEER GARDEN

BREAKFAST HERE

COURTESY OF WEST COAST EXPRESS

LIVE MUSIC

PARKING

VENDORS PRESENTED BY:

CITY HALL

FREE PARKING

RESTROOMS SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC

THE OUTLET

VETERAN’S PARK

KINGSWAY AVENUE

MAPLE AVENUE

ALLEY WAY

CLOSED STREETS

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

McALLISTER AVENUE MARY HILL ROAD

LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM

OPEN STREETS

DONALD STREET

NAVIGATION

Custom Heavy Duty Radiators Fabricated for Hot Rods!

ALLEY WAY

SHAUGHNESSY STREET

SUN. AUG 20, 2017

E

N

PARKING

PARKING

2017 POCO

Y:

Port Moody Radiators

CRUISE: 6-8PM SHOW: 10AM-5PM

CRUISE: 6-8PM AUGUST 19 & 20, 2017 SHOW: 10AM-5PM CRUISE: 6-8PM

&1920, 2017 & 20, 2017 - LIVE MUSIC - KID ZONE - BEER GARDEN - VENDORS

CHILDREN’S AREA & FIRST AID

PRESENTED BY:

AND

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC

SUNDAY,PRESENTED AUGUSTBY:20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC

LIVE MUSIC TM

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

PRESENTED BY: CLIMBING WALL

THE KID ZONE

PRESENTED BY:

group

PRESENTED BY: SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM TUMBLE BUS MINI GOLF SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 and much more! PRESENTED BY: car model building class We are giving away PRESENTED BY: (model included) for 500 Hot Wheels Cars SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 at our race track in BY:Treasure children 5-14 years old. PRESENTED Hunt Cars PRESENTED BY: SUNDAY, AUGUST 20the Kid Zone!

LIVE MUSIC FREE

THE KID ZONE

FREE

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old.

RACE TRACK

PRESENTED BY:

EVERYTHING RADIATIORS!!! PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 - 12-8PM

LIVE MUSIC 4:00-5:30 PM

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure Hunt Cars

ALL MAKES, MODELS AND YEARS! RACE TRACK NEW COMPLETES • REPAIR RADIATORS RECORE RADIATORS • HEAT EXCHANGERS For Foreign/Domestic/Industrial/Recreational /Marine/Hot Rods FOR ANY RADIATOR ISSUE

MODEL CAR details at: FREE car model building class WORKSHOP experienceit.ca

Our goal is to provide a MODEL service asCAR meaningful and FREE Thinking of Pre-Planning? RACE RACE TRACK TRACK WORKSHOP unique as the families Know your options. we serve, no matter their Treasure Feel free to call MODEL us for more CAR family traditions, ethnic WORKSHOP information. the KidWe’re Zone! here to help backgrounds, religious SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 PRESENTED BY: with any questions you may have. preferences or financial MODEL CAR details at: circumstances. experienceit.ca

FREE

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure Hunt Cars

TM

group

TM

group

WORKSHOP DAY, AUGUST 20

7 days a week

We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY: CLIMBING WALL (model included) for TUMBLE BUS SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 children 5-14 years old. MINI GOLF SUNDAY, AUGUST 20 and much more! details at: PRESENTED BY: experienceit.ca car model building class We are giving away PRESENTED BY: car(model model building class WeCars are givingSUNDAY, awayAUGUST included) for 500 Hot Wheels PRESENTED BY: 20 Treasure children 5-14 years old. forat our race track PRESENTED BY: (model included) 500in Hot Wheels Cars Hunt Cars the Kid Zone! details at: at our race track in children 5-14 PRESENTED BY: years old. Hunt Carsexperienceit.ca

MODELAvailable CAR details at: 24 hours experienceit.ca WORKSHOPa day

RACE TRACK

TM

group

FAMILY OWNED, same location for 40 years!

FREE SCAN

TM

Designated GOVERNMENT Inspection Facility

group

604-461-7856

2657 Shaughnessy St., Port Coq I 604.942.7920

oliveirafuneralhome.com

group

TM

Units 83 - 89 Moray Street, Port Moody www.portmoodyradiators.com I Email: portmoodyrad@telus.net


A24 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

THE KID ZONE

DETAILING SUPPLIES STORE NTED PRESE PR

LIVE MUSIC

SAVE 10% ON PURCHASES OVER $100 (WITH THIS AD)

#

20 AVE., , AUGUST SUNDAY, AUGUST 20#106-1320 SUNDAYKINGSWAY

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY:

PORT COQUITLAM

604.329.4929 tails at: ta L CAR dede ODER MODEL C MA .ca nceit n rie pe ex experie P P Driven O O H H S S K K R R O O W W By PRESENTED BY: YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD REALTOR SINCE 1987

GOLD MASTER MEDALLION CLUB

0

RACK

NTED BY:

i del bud mo r mo ca car inclu od (m (model 14 ren 5re ild ch child

CLIMBING WALL TUMBLE BUS GUST 20 - 12-8PM LF GOAU INNDI AY, MSU and much more!

PRESENTED BY:

E

RE FF

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

NE

ay ay rs ars Ca n n

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

BY: TED BY: SENTED PRESEN PRE

Treasure s Cars nt Car Hunt Hu

YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD REALTOR SINCE 1987

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

FREE

Hayes

Passion Working For You

RACE TRACK We are giving away 500 Hot Wheels Cars at our race track in the Kid Zone!

car model building class (model included) for children 5-14 years old.

PRESENTED BY:

Treasure

CALL TODAY FOR A MARKET EVALUATION:

604 •240 •1927 | rodandrhea.com

Hunt Cars

Let us manage all your catering needs for your special day!

PRESENTED BY:

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20

at: MODEL CAR experidetenailceist.ca WORKSHOP

604.941.9773 #3-1850 Kingsway Ave., Port Coquitlam www.lotrellcatering.ca

Come join the fun!

TM TM

TM TM

up group gro

group

Congratulations to the Port Coquitlam Car Show on 13 years of success in Port Coquitlam and good luck to all of this year’ year’ss entrants!

See yoeu ther

JOIN US!

SEPTEMBER 9TH, 2017 PORT MOODY, BC

KAYAK + BIKE +RUN PROCEEDS BENEFITING It’s an event like this that makes me proud to call Port Coquitlam home.

CHALLENGE YOURSELF! REGISTER TODAY at www.IFAC.ca FOUNDED BY

MEDIA SPONSOR

COURSE CHAMPION

PROCEEDS BENEFITING

Mike Farnworth, MLA Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General Proudly representing Port Coquitlam

Ph 604-927-2088 Fx 604-927-2090 mike.farnworth.mla@leg.bc.ca @mikefarnworthbc

107A - 2748 Lougheed Hwy., (Corner of Westwood & Lougheed) Port Coquitlam, BC V3B 6P2


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A25

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM M A K I N G H E A LT H Y CHOICES IN THE TRI-CITIES

well

I S M Y M E D I CA L E QU I P M E N T TA X D E D U C T I B L E ? Most medical equipment is tax deductible; repairs and service on that equipment may also be deductible. A prescription may be required in order to qualify. Please see the Government of Canada’s website for details.

HEALTH BENEFITS OF WALKING Walking may not seem as beneficial as other cardiovascular exercises like, running, biking or swimming, but there are a lot of health benefits to walking regularly. Especially for seniors. Walking just 30 minutes a day is recommended for seniors and people of all ages. A brisk walk can help you lead a happier, healthy life well into old age. It is very important as you get older to stay active. Maintaining your muscle mass and flexibility goes a long way in keeping you healthy and independent. It will also greatly reduce the need for a walker or other type or walking aid. However, if you do find that you need some support when you are getting around you may need a mobility aid.

10

Walking Can Stop Bone Mass Loss

9

Walking Strengthens Muscles

8

Improved Circulation

7

Weight Loss

6

Sleep Improvement

5

Mental Sharpness is Increased

4

Joint Support

3

Walking Makes You Happier

2

Increased Balance and Stability

1

Walking Increases Lifespan

EXPLORING

Health & Fitness Consistency is Key to Fitness Success Consistency with exercises and a healthy diet is the number one reason active individuals see results and feel their best.

WALKER RENTALS

35

$

/MONTH

Walk further, rest when you want with an easy to use walker from SelfCare.

Sales • Service • Rentals • Rent-to-Own

SelfCare Home Health Products Ltd.

Unit 114, 1533 Broadway St, Port Coquitlam

Phone: 604-944-9644

Email: infopc@selfcarehome.com

www.selfcarehome.com

DENTISTRY FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN Did you know that cavities are the most common chronic disease in children? In fact, the most common surgery at BC Children’s Hospital involves putting kids under general anesthesia to fix cavities. Prevent cavities with routine checkups at Kidsteeth.

Dr. Diederik W. Millenaar, Inc. Certified Specialist in Pediatric Dentistry

When thinking about your optimal health and fitness routine, something to consider is choosing activities that are enjoyable so you can develop consistency! Exercise must be safe, fun, challenging (in a safe way), accessible and most importantly, be consistent to become a habit. The best thing about trying something new in the City of Coquitlam is the variety we offer! Try anything from Zumba® Strong to Candlelight Yoga from one of our 150+ drop-in options. Interested in a registered program but need a free session prior to making the commitment? Register now for our FREE Fitness Try-it classes at coquitlam.ca/fitness. We look forward to seeing you loving your health and wellness in our community.

coquitlam.ca/fitness |

CityofCoquitlam

• Patient-centred dentistry for infants and children in a warm and caring office environment • No referral necessary • Direct billing to insurance • Contact us to schedule your child’s first visit! Tel: 604.343.3810 200 - 1060 Austin Ave. Coquitlam, BC V3K 3P3 contact@kidsteeth.ca

www.kidsteeth.ca

®

DIRECT AYMENT


A26 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

TC ARTS/ENT.

CONTACT

email: jcleugh@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3034 www.tricitynews.com/entertainment

MUSIC

Benefit blues concert JANIS CLEUGH The Tri-CiTy News

Rocky Milino Jr. is back singing the blues. The Archbishop Carney regional secondary grad started out in the genre, mirroring the likes of Stevie Ray Vaughan and Colin James. But, over the next 20 years, he went back and forth in pop, rock and new school styles until he finally came full circle last summer. Next month, he releases his eighth album — a project he wrote and recorded in a Port Moody basement suite in between working as a heavyduty mechanic for BC Ferries on the Queen of Oak Bay and Queen of Capilano as well as doing some contract work for his dad. The CD is titled Pleasantside Blues and stays true to Milino’s roots. “I love all kinds of music,” he said. “My playlist goes from Jay-Z to Hank Williams but when I pick up the guitar, I play the blues. For me, that’s where my heart is. That’s the thing that sounds the most natural to me.” The seven original tracks on his new album tell stories of love and heartbreak and are performed with his band, Cause4Drama. The tunes were mixed by Bill Buckingham at The Palace and mastered by Craig Waddell at Gotham City Studio. Milino has picked a venue close to home to launch his music: Romer’s restaurant in Suter Brook Village. And on Sept. 16, he and the band will combine its release with a fundraiser for the B.C. wildfire victims, with all CD sales from that night supporting the Red Cross relief fund. The EP will also be available for download on iTunes that same day. It’s not their only show to push the album. On Sept. 2, they’ll perform at the Fairview Pub in Vancouver as part of a two-day festival called

THE WORLDS

5th place for sFU, 12th for Dowco JANIS CLEUGH

The Tri-CiTy News

Port Moody musician Rocky Milino Jr. with some vintage effects pedals from Japan.

NEW TRACKS

Summarize Downhearted Blues Down South Evil Woman Blues Been a Long Time Everytime Since You Been Gone International Pop Overthrow. Milino said they’ve got a prime spot at 10:30 p.m.

Playing the blues live “you get to improvise much more than with pop or rock and the crowd gets it,” the 35-year-old bachelor said. “They’re dancing and watching and are more appreciative. It’s not stale.” After the two September gigs, Milino said he’ll be working on his fourth-class engineering certification through the BC Ferries apprenticeship program — with the aim to specialize in rebuilding mas-

PHOTO SUBMITTED

sive diesel engines — at BCIT and perhaps even cut a CD with his brother, Pat Milino, a former cruise ship singer. “Everything’s going right for me: I’ve got a great job. I’m healthy. I’m moving into a new place. I’ve got a bright future. I’d just like to find someone to share it with.” • Romer’s (101 Morrissey Rd.) is accepting reservations for the CD release party on Sept. 16. Call 604-917-0118.

Two Grade 1 pipe bands with more than a dozen TriCity musicians will return from Scotland this week without capturing the title. Last Saturday, the Simon Fraser University Pipe Band placed fifth overall at the worlds at Glasgow Green while the Port Coquitlambased Dowco Triumph Street Band — led by PoCo resident Pipe Major David Hilder — earned 12th spot. Taking the top three positions were Inveraray & District (Scotland), Field Marshal Montgomery (North Ireland) and St. Laurence O’Toole (Ireland). The six-time international titleholders from SFU — led by Coquitlam drummer J. Reid Maxwell — includes the Tri-Cities’ Richard Gillies, Alistair Lee, Andrew Lee, Dani Millar, Anna Smart, Louise Bentley, Gavin McRae, Duncan Millar, Stephen Paynter and Kyle Wallis; Robert MacNeil of Coquitlam is the president of the SFUPB Society. Pipe Major Alan Bevan said he wasn’t disappointed as the score was close. “This is a great result for the band. It feels great to be back in the top six,” he said in an SFU news release, which also noted the band took seventh place last year. “We’re really happy with all four performances. It just felt like the band kept ramping it up and getting more and more confidence every time out.” Bevan added, “There’s a great feeling in the band right now. Everyone is very positive and confident about the band’s advance-

SFU PIPE SGT. jACK LEE ment and success.” Meanwhile, SFU’s junior Robert Malcolm Memorial Grade 3 band took sixth place among a roster of primarily Scottish youth bands. This year was the 70th anniversary of the World Pipe Band Championships, which have been held in Glasgow for more than 30 years in a row. The competition drew a total of 219 pipe bands from around the globe — and 8,000 pipers and drummers — with more than 35,000 spectators at the international two-day event. Besides SFU and Dowco, other Grade 1 bands vying for the title were: Scottish Power, which took fourth place; Shotts and Dykehead Caledonia; People’s Ford - Boghall and Bathgate Caledonia; Vale of Atholl; Police Scotland Fife; Glasgow Police; and Pipes and Drums of the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Earlier in the week, SFU Pipe Sergeant Jack Lee won the Masters Solo Piping Competition. The Masters win is Lee’s second and earns him an invitation to the Glenfiddich piping championship this fall. jcleugh@tricitynews.com

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MUSIC ON THE GRILL

Tiller’s Folly marks 20 years of musical storytelling Last show for summer series JANIS CLEUGH

The Tri-CiTy News

Concert-goers to the final Music on the Grill show in Coquitlam will be served up 20 years worth of music from Tiller’s Folly on Saturday night. The award-winning folk/ roots band is marking the milestone by showcasing its repertoire at a string of performances this year including at the Evergreen Cultural Centre Aug. 19 (of which the “Grill” portion is already sold out). White Rock resident Laurence Knight (bass/vocals) said the Coquitlam crowd can expect to hear favourites as well as songs from their latest

PHOTO SUBMITTED

Tiller’s Folly is Bruce Coughlan (songwriter, vocals, guitar), Nolan Murray (fiddle, mandolin, mandocaster) and Laurence Knight (bass, vocals). They play Evergreen Cultural Centre on Aug. 19.

album Stirring Up Ghosts plus a new tune, titled The Far End of the Road. That track, which is expected to be included on their upcoming full-length CD, is a historical tune composed by Coquitlam-born Bruce Coughlan (vocals/guitar) about the gold rush. It tells the story of how miners and their families sold everything to seek fortune in California, B.C. and the Klondike — after all the good claims had gone by the mid1800s. “They were basically slave labour until they tried to get enough money to get back home again,” Knight said. History is a subject Tiller’s Folly enjoys singing about but the band also likes to dips into environmental awareness topics close to their heart. Recently, it teamed up with

Spirit Media to produce a music video for the Bring Lolita Home campaign in support of the Miracle March for Lolita initiatives. Lolita — or Tokitae — was the only survivor of five juvenile orcas captured in Penn Cove, Washington State, in 1970 and has lived in a tank since then. Tiller’s Folly is also due to perform a commissioned song about the impact of Snake River dams on the salmon runs in the Columbia River system. “Some of these dams are so cost inefficient and the southern resident orcas have been affected because of the lack of salmon,” Knight said. “It’s very sad.” The group also hopes to cover one of Canada’s most iconic folk numbers, The Black Fly Song, written by Wade

Hemsworth in 1949 about the building of a hydro-electric dam in northern Ontario, in which the river flow was reversed. Knight said it’ll be Tiller’s Folly third time at the Evergreen. “Coquitlam treats us very well,” he said, adding with a laugh, “and the band keeps getter better and better. As with fine whiskey, we keep distilling the product.” • Show tickets for Tiller’s Folly — with opening act Dawson Rutledge — are $35 by calling the Evergreen Cultural Centre (1205 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam) at 604-927-6555 or visiting evergreenculturalcentre.ca. Music on the Grill is presented by Greenline Dental and Evergreen Cultural Centre. jcleugh@tricitynews.com @jcleughTC

ARTS NOTES

Cantopop star raises funds for sUCCess Hong Kong Cantopop singer Frances Yip will perform at a benefit concert at Hard Rock Casino Vancouver in Coquitlam on Friday. A prominent recording artist and actor, Yip has sung

songs in English, Cantonese and Mandarin in more than 30 countries and was the first Hong Kong musician to play with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra as part of a fundraiser for SUCCESS.

For tickets to her Aug. 18 show, sponsored by The TriCity News, visit hardrockcasinovancouver.com.

ALL IN THE FAMILY

A Port Coquitlam family of

actors is in the Victoria Fringe Festival. Matt Lees, Krista Wallace and Riverside secondary grads David and Margaret Lees will on the same stage for the first time in All These

People Watching — a drama/ comedy about exploring relationships. It runs at the Langham Court Theatre (805 Langham Crt., Victoria) from Aug. 24 to Sept. 3. jcleugh@tricitynews.com

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A28 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

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Port Moody secondary grad Cori Caulfield at her St. Johns Street studio, Caulfield School of Dance.

ARTS EDUCATORS

Caulfield started PoMo dance biz at 12 years old Third story in a month-long series on Tri-City arts educators

evergreenculturalcentre.ca 604.927.6555

JANIS CLEUGH The Tri-CiTy News

On the shelves and the walls at Port Moody’s Caulfield School of Dance, student trophies and certificates are displayed prominently. They are from the dance competitions around the Lower Mainland, a sign of success for the students and the owner-operator Cori Caulfield, who started her booming business at the age of 12 in the basement of her parents’ home in Port Moody. Then, Caulfield had been studying dance with Dolores Kirkwood and Ellen Andrews at studios in Port Coquitlam and New Westminster when the mother of a fellow student asked Caulfield to teach her daughter privately. After distributing brochures and spreading the word about her skills, Caulfield’s roster grew to such a size that her father gave her the boot from the family residence, where her mother was also running a daycare facility. At 17, with the help of her iron-worker dad who advised her “the world needs artists just as much as it needs doctors,” a profession she had considered, the entrepreneurial Caulfield found a former lawnmower repair shop on St. Johns Street and stripped down the 2,000 sq. ft. space for a oneroom dance studio. By the time she opened, in September 1988, she had 40 children under her wing. A few years later, Caulfield moved to her Spring Street location where she stayed for 20 years and trained 80 students a year with her faculty. Today, she caters to 300 families annually in a former

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A promotional photo of dancer, choreographer and business owner Cori Caulfield. hair salon on St. Johns Street that has three classrooms and a small space for voice lessons. There, they learn ballet, contemporary, jazz, musical theatre, tap, acrobatics, hip hop, Chinese dance, character, pas de deux, stage and acting from nine core faculty members, including from her sister Hailley Caulfield Postle. Each June, they showcase their talents at year-end shows — which sell out quickly — at the Terry Fox Theatre in Port Coquitlam. Caulfield works hard to maintain her company’s reputation, typically spending 12hours a day, six days a week, on her practice. But hard work and dance are in her blood. Her maternal grandmother was a professional dancer, too: a “hoofer” who worked the West End of London circuit during the Second World War, performing eight shows a week including a few times with Julie Andrews (The Sound of Music). “Dancing has always been a big part of my identity,” Caulfield said. “At nine, people asked what I did. I said, ‘I dance. I will always dance.’” These days, though, Caulfield is somewhat more reflective than super-driven.

She takes great pride in her business and students but, with her parents ailing, she’s had to take time out this year to drive up to the Okanagan to care for them. Recently, she’s also enjoyed not having the pressure to perform as frequently as she used to. “I think that I’m always striving to do better,” the Vancouver resident said. “That’s just a part of who I am but I like just sitting in the audience, relaxing and having someone else be on the stage now.” “I started my business as a child,” she continued, “and I haven’t really stopped yet. I don’t know when that will be.” Seeing her students be challenged and excel “in a nonelitist” academy is her focus. Not all will go on to be professional dancers — like her past students Alex Wong (So You Think You Can Dance); Heather Dotto (Move: The Company); and Ben Freemantle (San Francisco Ballet) — but what they learn at her studio will translate to other areas of life, she stressed. They know how to stay healthy, physically and mentally, which for parents means better grades at school. They also know about having to perform under the limelight and teamwork. Caulfield is strict with her rules. “I love my students. They don’t always love me back,” she said, “and that’s OK with me. I’m not their pal. I’m a mentor, not a friend. In the end, it all pays off for me and them.” jcleugh@tricitynews.com


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A29

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TC SPORTS

CONTACT

email: sports@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3032 www.tricitynews.com/sports

PJHL

Panthers poised to pounce for playoffs Port Moody’s Junior B hockey team is looking to shake mediocrity MARIO BARTEL

THE TRI-CITY NEWS

The new general manager of the Port Moody Panthers is daring to utter a new word in the Junior B hockey team’s dressing room: winning. Peter Zerbinos inherits a team that hasn’t made the Pacific Junior Hockey League playoffs since 2011-’12 and last spring endured the tumult of a change of ownership and management. Zerbinos, who spent the past eight years as the director of hockey operations for the Delta Ice Hawks, is part of that change. And he’s been working hard since March to ensure the difference is more than just a new signature at the bottom of cheques. “The bar of expectation has been raised quite a bit for this coming season,” Zerbinos said as he attended to a myriad of details in preparation for the start of the Panthers’ training camp this week. To help his charges reach that bar, Zerbinos and new head coach Dave McLellan signed seven new local players

MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Port Moody Panthers general manager Peter Zerbinos makes sure all the team’s jerseys are ready to go for training camp, which opened this week in Richmond. The Junior B team plays its first exhibition game at the Port Moody Arena on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. from midget hockey programs with a pedigree for winning. Zerbinos hopes their hunger to continue winning rubs off on their new teammates. “Once you’re continuously losing, you need to change that,” he said. “The new recruits are used to winning.”

Not that the Panthers’ history of five straight fifth-place finishes in their division holds much purchase for Zerbinos. He’s wiped the slate clean. That means everybody is going to have to compete for their place on the team and then maintain a high standard to

keep it. “We have no attachments to anybody from last year,” Zerbinos said. “You’ve got to show what you’ve got.” Of course rare is the hockey executive who says, “Meh, we’ll just see what happens.” Tough talk can be tricky at the

Junior B level of hockey where young players hoping to catch an eye and an offer to take a next step up the rung share bench space with veterans who’ve aged out of the minor system but still want to stoke their competitive fires. “It’s a matter of getting to

know the players’ needs because we’re all in this together,” Zerbinos said. Rebuilding the Panthers off the ice is going to take some work as well, Zerbinos said. In a community surrounded by plenty of hockey options and other recreational opportunities that means getting the players out to community events like the upcoming car-free day on St. Johns Street where members of the Panthers will be playing street hockey or visiting local schools to play a little floor hockey in the gym and talk to young kids about leadership. “We have a lot of very mature young players who understand leadership,” Zerbinos said. Volunteers also play a huge role in cementing the team into the community. To that end Zerbinos is hoping to expand his pool of 10 dedicated helpers who take on every duty from selling tickets to laundering uniforms. “I can’t describe how important their role is for our hockey team,” Zerbinos said. Mix all those elements together, and Zerbinos is confident he’s concocted a recipe for success. Finally. “There’s a lot of good pieces,” Zerbinos said. “We’re setting some pretty lofty goals.” sports@tricitynews.com @mbartelTC

COMEBACK CHAMPS

Angels rise to the top in senior baseball finals Team rebounds from early losses to win first title

The Coquitlam Angels bounced back from three straight losses to open the BC

senior baseball championship and won their first provincial title in Prince George recently. Darren Honeysette hit an inside-the-park grand slam in the third inning to spark the Angels’ 8-7 win over the Burnaby Bulldogs in the championship game at Citizen Field.

It was a remarkable reversal for the Angels who dropped games to the Bulldogs, Prince George Greys and Kamloops Sun Devils before left-hander Shawn Schaefer was able to pitch them out of their slump and into the semi-finals with a complete-game 7-1 win over

NORM FLOCKHART

the Greys in the quarter-finals. Schaefer got the ball again in the last three innings of the semi-final, preserving a 12-11 win over Kamloops to set up a rematch against Burnaby, who had defeated Coquitlam in the five-game Lower Mainland championship series the week

prior to the provincials. With Honeysette’s slam in his pocket, along with a solo home run by Jordan Varga, Schaefer was again summoned to the mound to secure the lead the Angels had built. He didn’t let his team down, and was named the tournament’s

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most valuable player. Angels’ right fielder Grant Malm was the tournament’s top batter, hitting .600 with nine runs batted in. The Angels are comprised mostly of players who’ve graduated from baseball programs at colleges and universities.


A30 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

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MEC RACE SERIES

Trail run a chance to mix it up Course goes up and down Traboulay Trail MARIO BARTEL

THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Mountain Equipment Co-op is coming to Port Coquitlam. Sort of. The outdoor recreation store is holding the eighth event of its MEC Race Series on the Traboulay PoCo Trail on Saturday, Sept. 16. Both the 5-km and 10-km runs will start at Gates Park and double back along the trail; the shorter race turns around at the Patricia Avenue foot bridge while the 10-km race route goes north to David Avenue and back. The course offers a mix of terrain, from hard pavement to gravel and compacted dirt. That can create challenges for runners, said Leslie Eglington Uhlenbruck, the manager of The Running Room in Port Coquitlam. She said while pavement provides a fairly consistent, predictable surface, trails can be pocked with dips, rocks and roots that can easily cause a turned ankle or other injury. “Always look ahead and be aware of your next step,” Eglington Uhlenbruck said.

MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Leslie Eglington Uhlenbruck, the manager of The Running Room store in Port Coquitlam, says proper shoes with good tread will help runners navigate the mixed terrain of the Traboulay PoCo Trail.

Proper shoes that are in good condition can go a long way to absorb some of the trail’s undulations and imperfections. “A good shoe will be good enough to run on any surface,” Eglington Uhlenbruck said. Being prepared will also reduce the risk of injury. That doesn’t just include putting the mileage into your legs to ensure they can go the distance but also running portions of the course to get familiar with the trail and any imperfections

in its terrain. It can actually be good for runners to mix up the surfaces where they run, Eglington Uhlenbruck said. It gives the body a break from the hard pounding of pavement — and it’s an antidote for mental fatigue. “It’s easy to get into a zenlike state where your brain just empties.” Eglington Uhlenbruck said. With the event just a month away, Eglington Uhlenbruck said runners training for the

10-km should already be able to complete a 6-km run. But the most important part of training for the run, and race day itself, is to have fun. “Some days come easier and some don’t,” Eglington Uhlenbruck said. “Find a rhythm that’s perfect for you.” • The MEC run series is for all runners, from children to seniors. Registration is $15, or $25 on race day. For more information, including maps of the route, go to http://events. mec.ca/node/146331.

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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A31

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HOMES

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LISTINGS • NEW HOMES • OPEN HOUSES

Home Inventory Rising in Greater Vancouver – But So Are Prices

BURNABY/TRI-CITIES HOME SALES* 97 31

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MEDIAN SALE PRICE** Of the 274 homes sold in the Greater Vancouver board region July 31-August 6, 155 went for more than their asking price, an MLS data analysis reveals.

the Greater Vancouver Multiple Listing Service – compared with 8,515 as of the end of June and 8,168 at the end of May.

This is despite sales the same week (July 31-August 6, registered sold as of August 10) slowing considerably on week-by-week and month-by-month basis, as the warm weather kept potential buyers at bay.

This increased choice for buyers has not dampened prices, with median sale prices in all three home categories this week higher than last week, and a larger proportion of homes (56.6% versus 53%) selling for over asking price.

Sellers also continued to sit on the sidelines, with new listings coming on the market in the same week dropping below the 1,000 mark.

Looking at condos, 62% of the 175 homes to sell last week exchanged hands for more than their sticker price. The median sale price was $595,000.

Despite the lower numbers of newly marketed homes, overall resale inventory is rising because of the even slower sales. As of August 10, there were 9,162 active home listings on

Townhouses (including half-duplexes and row homes) also saw an increased median selling price at more than $800,000.

In fact, the most expensive home to sell in the Greater Vancouver region the week of July 31-August 6 was a townhome – a luxurious waterfront Yaletown unit that sold for $3,490,000, The detached home market continued to plod along, with 56 home sales across the entire Greater Vancouver region last week, 25 of which were sold above asking price. The priciest detached house to sell that week, registered as of August 10, was a beautiful heritagestyle, 2003-built house in MacKenzie Heights on the West Side, which sold for $3,410,000.

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BUILDERS & INVESTORS ALERT! FIRST TIME ON THE MARKET! FULL DUPLEX - R4 ZONING

BUY, HOLD OR BUILD…the possibilities are endless!! This rare property comes with 3 bedrooms up, 2 bedroom basement suite on each side and 3868 sq ft of comfortable living space. Sitting on a massive 72’ x 126’ lot minutes from SFU, Burnaby North, Lochdale Elementary, Kensington Shopping Centre, Burnaby Mountain Golf Course and much more. 1111 Duthie Avenue KAREN CHANG 604-700-8092

FAMILY ORIENTED

Welcome to a very well maintained “Move in Ready”, 1270 sqft. Townhouse in the Forest Grove area. Great trails and Gardens to share with Family oriented and pet loving neighbours. A very well appointed home with flexible upper level 3 bedrooms has 2 bathrooms with ample storage. Enjoy Sky-lights in the Livingroom with a South facing patio. A bright Kitchen with a great little Nook. Balcony off of the Master room allows you to enjoy that morning coffee before the children awake and ready for a short walk to Forest Grove Elementary School at the top of the street. Outdoor Pool at the club house with saunas and a Racquet ball Court. Skytrain and Burnaby Mountain High School 15 minute walking distance, and is close to Costco and the ever expanding Lougheed Town Centre Mall and SFU.

8592 Woodridge Place STEVE SEPTEMBER 604-368-7059

Welcome to Amanti! This brand new-bright and spacious north facing unit with partial mountain view is located in the heart of Port Coquitlam. Minutes walk to West Coast Express and bus stops, schools, shopping, restaurants, library, Gates Park and the Port Coquitlam Rec center. Minutes drive to HWY #1 and new Evergreen skytrain station. Features include 9 foot ceiling, stainless steel appliance, double sink, quartz counter top and laminate flooring throughout the unit. Don’t miss this great investment opportunity. Easy showing and quick possession! Bedroom: 2 Bathroom: 2 Size: 970 SQ Floor finish: Laminate, tile, mix Year build: 2016 Number of units in the building: 28 Amenities: Club house, Bike room, Wheelchair Accessible Construction: Concrete Foundation, Wood Frame Exterior: Brick/mix

Balcony: 1 Heating: Electric/Baseboard Title to Land: Freehold Strata


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A33

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

OUR MOST POPULAR HOME - COME SEE FOR YOURSELF!

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MOVE IN THIS YEAR to the 3,151 sq. ft. WICKSON SHOW HOME at Wynnbrook in Maple Ridge. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms, finished basement, chefs kitchen with stainless steel appliances, quartz countertops, pantry & trough sink. Great room featuring a linear fireplace and large windows looking out onto the park and creek! Master bedroom with sitting room featuring custom millwork & electric fireplace. Many show home upgrades including: security, AC, accent gable lights, metal picket stair rail, designer lighting fixtures, blinds, window coverings with matching bedding, custom millwork, flooring upgrades, TVs, designer landscaping & more!


A34 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

Your Community

MARKETPLACE Or call to place your ad at

Book your ad ONLINE:

tricitynews.adperfect.com COMMUNITY

FOUND

EMPLOYMENT

LOST

ADVERTISING POLICIES 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 of 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 of changes will be made in the next available issue. The Tri-CityNews 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!

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT CARE AIDE

required PT • FLEXIBLE Mornings or Evenings. Must have Care Aide Certification, First Aid & CPR. Call: 604-862-3071 Email: goldenagesupport@shaw.ca HOME CARE HOME SUPPORT WANTED P/T. Stretch, Lift, Clean. Will train. John • 604-944-0926

FOOD/BEVERAGE HELP

FARM PRODUCE Delivery Driver − 5 Tonne We are looking for a delivery driver to join our team. Good knowledge of the Lower Mainland is an asset. You will be re− sponsible to assist with loading trucks and making deliveries in a timely manner. Must be able to meet the physical de− mands of the job, heavy lifting is required. Apply with resume & drivers abstract by fax 604−465−4744 or email azhar@meadowvalleymeats.com or in person to 18315 Ford Rd., Pitt Meadows No Phone Calls Please

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

Production Floor Labourer Meadow Valley Meats is hiring a Production Floor Labourer. This is an entry level position and training is provided. This person is primarily responsible for processing & handling inedible materials, helping as directed by supervisor. This position has a variety of job duties and responsibilities.

Please email your resume to: azhar@meadowvalleymeats.com or drop off in person to 18315 Ford Rd., Pitt Meadows between the hours of 9 AM − 1 PM. No Phone Calls Please

CARRIERS NEEDED

The following routes are now available to deliver the News in the Tri City area. 8792 9038 8753 9030 6079 6071 9858

1355-1381 Beverly Pl, 3467-3501 David Ave (odd), 3440-3492 Galloway Ave, 1311-1367 Kingston St, 3464-3480 Stephens Crt. 2281, 2287, 2381 & 2387 Argue Street 3451-3458 Burke Village Prom 1238 Eastern Drive 101 Parkside Drive 90-149 April Road, 1-50 Bedingfield Street, 100-108 Roe Drive, 1-19 Symmes Bay 2900-2998 Cliffrose Cres, 1493-1499 Johnston St, 1400-1410 Planetree Crt, 2962-2996 Robson Dr, 2940-2962 Waterford Pl. 1823-1893 Coquitlam Ave (odd), 1817-1888 Fraser Ave, 3127-3171 Frey Pl, 1829-1872 Manning Ave, 3032-3172 Oxford St (even), 1820-1880 Prairie Ave (even), 3035-3151 York Street 1435-1517 Dayton St, 3402-3428 Harper Rd (even), 3425-3450 Horizon Drive, 1501-1521 Shoreview Pl. If you are interested in delivering the papers, please call Circulation 604-472-3040 Other routes not listed may be available, please contact our office

BE YOUR OWN BOSS!

Discover new job possibilities.

FOR SALE - MISC SAWMILLS from only $4,397 Make money & save money with your own band mill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT

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PETS

Looking for a New Career Direction? Discover a World of Possibilities in the Classifieds!

Call 604.630.3300 to Advertise

RENTALS

APARTMENTS/ CONDOS FOR RENT BBY Cameron Tower, Brand NEW garden lev 1 BR & Den, all appls, park’g. NS/NP. Avail Sep1. $1700. 604-253-5395

GARDEN VILLA

1010 6th Ave. New West. Suites Available. Beautiful atrium with fountain. By shops, college & transit. Pets negotiable. Ref req. CALL 604 715-7764 BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

PORT COQUITLAM Renovated 2 Bdrm Suite $1,200 Includes heat/hot water - 1.5 blks to bus stops - 2 blks to Safeway/medical - City park across street - Gated parking & elevator - Adult oriented building - References required * SORRY NO DOGS * Call for appointment 604-464-3550

SKYLINE TOWERS 102-120 Agnes St, New West

CALL 604 525-2122

VILLA MARGARETA

ALL SMALL BREED PUPS Local, Non-Shedding and Vet Checked. 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get the online training you need from an employer trusted program.Visit:CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-athome career today!

FINANCIAL SERVICES GET BACK ON TRACK Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We lend! If you own your own home you qualify! Pioneer AcceptanceCorp. BBB mem. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com 604-987-1420

REAL ESTATE

MOBILE/MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE NEW 2017 Manufactured Homes starting under $80,000 delivered! Best Buy Homes Kelowna. www.bestbuyhousing.com Canada’s largest in-stock home selection, quick delivery, custom factory orders! Text/Call 250-765-2223.

PRACTICAL NURSING

SPROTTSHAW.COM

AUTOMOTIVE

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

THE SCRAPPER SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL

CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H

E

Park your car here overnight and it could be gone in the morning.

HOME SERVICES APPLIANCE REPAIRS

ELECTRICAL

POCO APPLIANCE MART 604 942-4999 • Servicing ALL Makes of Appliances & Refrigeration. Work Guar’teed

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

CLEANING Bright and Spotklean cleaning services. Call us for all your cleaning needs. Free est. 778.387.6274 or call 778.228.1036.

Electrical Installations Renos & Repairs. BBB Member.

www.nrgelectric.ca

604-520-9922

.

Hi-Rise Apartment with River View & Indoor Pool. 1 BR & 2 BR Available. Rent includes heat & hot water. Remodeled Building and Common area. Gated underground parking available. References required. BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

We offer competitive wages, benefits after 3 months, and an excellent working environment

8794

BRING HOME THE BACON

Pitt Meadows Blueberry Picking You pick, no spray. Open daily from 3-6pm Call: 604-889-7418

STEEL BUILDING SALE “PRICED TO SELL!” 20x21 $6,296 Front & Back Walls Included. 25x25 $6,097 No Ends Included. 32x35 $9,998 One End Wall Included. Check Out www.pioneersteel.ca for more prices. Pioneer Steel 1-855-212-7036

9159

Earn extra money in your spare time as a food courier. Set your own hours, get paid weekly and keep 100% of your tips and fees delivering food from restaurants like Famoso, Moxies, Apple− bees and Fatburger! Apply now at: drive.skipthedishes.com

APPLIANCES POCO APPLIANCE MART 604-942-4999 • Rebuilt Washer•Dryer•Fridge•Stove Up to 1 Yr warranty • Trade-ins

BRACELET Aug 11th @ Town Centre Park by children’s park, call 604 944−7001.

Burquitlam + Lansdowne 14 CARAT gold ring. August 3. Lost in Coquitlam. Reward $75. Please call 604-421-1116 or 604-817-7049.

Email: classifieds@van.net

MARKETPLACE

TRUCKING & TRANSPORT

Phone Hours: Mon to Fri 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Office Hours: 9 am to 5 pm

604-630-3300

320-9th St, New West Suites Available. All suites have balconies, Underground parking avail. Refs. req. Small Pet OK. CALL 604-715-7764 BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

SUITES FOR RENT Westwood Point pl Coq 2 bdrm 2 bathroom apartment. 2 parking, gas fireplace, washer + dryer, gym, swimming pool, all the schools, shopping centers, transit and skytrain $2100/month - furn $2000/month - unfurn Call Mike: 604.655.7841

COMMERCIAL

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call. Lic#89402. Fast same day service. Insured. Guar’d. We love small jobs. 604-568-1899

CONCRETE DALL’ANTONIA CONCRETE Seniors discount. Friendly, family business, 40+ yrs. 604-240-3408

HERFORT CONCRETE

NO JOB TOO small! Serving Lower Mainland 26 Yrs! •Prepare •Form •Place •Finish •Granite/Interlock Block Walls & Bricks •Driveways •Stairs •Exposed Aggregate •Stamped Concrete •Sod Placement Excellent Refs•WCB Insured 604-657-2375/604-462-8620

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EXCAVATING Pedro’s ContraCting & drainage Landscaping, water lines, and cement work.

604.468.2919

•Stamped •Exposed •Pool •Decks •Seismic Upgrades •Disaster Repairs •Removal • Design • Landscape •Bobcat •Excavator

604-813-6949

.

DRYWALL

Boarding & Taping, Good Rates! Reliable, Free Est. Reno’s & Small Jobs Welcome! Call Gurprit 604-710-7769

#1 Backhoes & Excavators Trenchless Waterlines Bobcats & Dump Truck & All Material Deliveries

Drainage, Video Inspection, Landscaping, Stump/Rock/Cement/Oil Tank & Demos, Paving, Pool/Dirt Removal, Paver Stones, Jackhammer, Water/Sewer, Line/Sumps, Slinger Avail, Concrete Cutting, Hand Excavating, Basements Made Dry Claudio’s Backhoe Service

604-341-4446

PORT COQUITLAM: 775 - 3,000

sq ft, ground floor commercial area. Facing onto city park. 2 blocks from Lougheed/ Shaughnessy intersection. Call 604.464.3550 FIND HELP FOR YOUR PROJECTS

Looking to do some

Home Improvement? Refer to the Service Directory for all of your home improvement, decorating and gardening needs.

TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, A35

COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

SUDOKU

HOME SERVICES GUTTERS

LAWN & GARDEN

M.T. GUTTERS

Ed’s ROTOTILLING & LANDSCAPING

Professional Installation

5” Gutter, Down Pipe, Soffit 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

~ FULLY INSURED~

Call Tim 604-612-5388 GUTTER CLEANING ROOF CLEANING WINDOW CLEANING POWER WASHING 30 yrs experience WCB/Liability insured Simon 604-230-0627

HANDYPERSON

Window Cleaning House Washing & Roof Cleaning

*Rototilling *Levelling *Gardens *Loader Work *Brush cutting ~ Free Estimates ~ 604-941-2263 / 604-725-7246

A Gardener & A Gentleman Lawn, Garden, Trees. Prune. Clean-up. Junk.604-319-5302

Done Quick. Licenced. Done Right. Bonded. Guaranteed. Insured.

604-878-5232 handymanconnection.com

All Work Guar. Free Est. Donny 604-600-6049

SUMMER CLEAN UP •Hedge Repair •Tree Prune Lawn & Yard Maintenance Insured. Guaranteed. John • 778-867-8785 coquitlamlandscaping.ca

Landscaping Garden Design & Install Lawn & Garden Maintenance Shrub & Hedge Pruning Disposal & Recycle Pressure Washing Wilma • 604-618-8017

• Lawn & Garden Maint. • Planting, Pruning, Hedges • Tree Topping, Trimming • Power Wash •CLEAN-UP & MORE! • Senior Disc.

Gardening Team

Greenworx Redevelopment Inc. Paver stones, Hedges driveways/patios, ponds & walls, returfing, demos, yard/perimeter drainage, jack hammering. Old pools filled in, concrete cutting.

604.782.4322 LAWN & GARDEN

Summer Services Same Day Service, Fully Insured FREE ESTIMATES

• Lawn Maintenance • Fertilizing •Yard Clean-ups • Aeration • Pruning/Hedges • Power Raking • Rubbish Removal • Gardening •Yearly Maintenance Programs •

• Concrete New & Repair Retaining Walls, Sidewalks, Driveways • Rock & Gravel • Hedging & Trimming All Garden Work & Maint.

MOVING

Reliable Moving Ltd Family Owned & Operated Household Office Piano moves Licensed & Fully Insured WCB Call For Free Estimate 24/7

778.986.2758

ReliableMoving.ca

B&Y MOVING Experienced Movers ~ 2 Men $55 75 ~

Over 10 yrs. Exp. • Licenced & Insured • Professional Piano Movers

604-708-8850

ABE MOVING & Delivery & Rubbish Removal $30/HR per Person• 24/7. 604-999-6020

PAINTING/ WALLPAPER EXTERIOR & INTERIOR

BOOK A JOB AT

www.jimsmowing.ca .

ABSOLUTE BOBCAT & EXCAVATING LTD .

• All Bobcat / Mini-X Service • Small Hauls ~ Pickup / Delivery

Lawn Removal & Chafer Beetle Solutions!

• Concrete & Asphalt RYAN • 604-329-7792

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• Ceiling Texture Repairs • Drywall • Cleaning Services • Pressure Washing

Residential & Commercial

35%OFF

17 years exp. Free Estimates

604-727-0043

20 yrs. exp. • Free Est.

INTERIOR & EXTERIOR SPECIALS 10% OFF

“Award Winning Renovations”

37 Years of Experience

604-728-3009

7291234

PAY-LESS Pro Painting SUMMER Ext/Int SPECIAL LOOK for our YARD SIGNS Free estimates. Licensed BBB A+ Rating for 37yrs. Power Washing. Insured. Call 24Hrs/7 Days Scott 604-891-9967 paylesspropainting.com

info@jkbconstruction.com www.jkbconstruction.com

ROOFING

PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE

Bros. Roofing Ltd. Over 40 Years in Business SPECIALIZING IN CEDAR, FIBERGLASS LAMINATES AND TORCH ON.

Liability Insurance, WCB, BBB, Free Estimates

604-946-4333

PATIOS

RUBBISH REMOVAL

Got Rubbish ?

• Aluminum Patio Covers • Sunrooms and Windows • Aluminum Railings, Vinyl Decking

Trusted & lowest rate junk & rubbish removal in bc We remove & recycle everything From Renovation debris to household junk

Free Est. 604-521-2688

www.PatioCoverVancouver.com

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

www.GotRubbish.ca 1-888-Rubbish (782-2474)

JUNK REMOVAL By EARTH FRIENDLY JUNK REMOVAL

HOME REPAIRS RENOVATIONS INSTALLATIONS Done Quick. Licenced. Done Right. Bonded. Guaranteed. Insured.

604-878-5232 handymanconnection.com .

Furniture • Appliances • Electronics Junk/Rubbish • Construction Debris • Drywall • Yard Waste Concrete • Everything Else! **Estate Clean-up Specialists** PIANOS & HOT TUBS NO PROBLEM

604.587.5865

www.recycleitcanada.ca

604 - 32WASTE • • • • •

Residential Commercial Construction Yard Waste Free Estimates

Rick 604-329-2783 www.ricksrubbishremoval.ca

FERREIRA HOME IMPROVEMENTS All interior and Exterior Renovations and Additions Renovation Contractor Licensed and Insured Free Estimates “Satisfaction Guaranteed”

NORM 604-841-1855

tricitynews.adperfect.com

TREE SERVICES GREEN TREE

ARBORIST SERVICE • Tree Removal • Pruning • Hedge Trimming + more 15yrs exp. WCB. Full Ins’d. Call Tom for Free Est.

778-899-TREE (8733) greentreeservice.ca

PLUMBING Bridgeview Plumbing and Heating Ltd.

PRO*ACC PAINTING LTD

604.318.7950

778 PLUMBING AND HEATING Comm, res, repairs and installs, gas fitting, renos. drain cleaning. Fully ins’d and ticketed. Reas rates. Prompt.

778-834-6966

• Residential Specialists • WCB, Ins’d, Lic’d • Free Estimates

604-942-4383

www.pro-accpainting.com

Need a Painter? LOOK to Home Services in the classifieds

Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a Sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes.

.

778-984-0666 Est 1985

Residential & Commercial

Call 604-

• Hot Water Tank • Drain Cleaning • Service • New Construction • Available 24/7

A. RIGHTWAY PAINTING Ltd.

778-893-7277

wcb & Insured

778-680-5352

SPECIAL SUMMER PAINTING DISCOUNT

310-JIMS (5467)

loofaconstruction.ca

SUNLIGHT GARDENING

THAI’S

LANDSCAPING

Quayside Painting

FAIRWAY PAINTING Fully Insured

All Work Guar. Free Est. John 604-616-2934

HOME MAINTENANCE FREE Quote. Competitive. References. Services: Season Clean−up, Power Wash, Driveway Sealing, Window Cleaning, & More lui@ritewayhms.com ritewayhms.com 778−968−6260

604 -230 -3539 778-322-2378 604-339-1989

RENOVATIONS & REPAIR lam/wood flrs/tiling,finishing carpentry, drywall, sundecks, windows/doors new roof & siding repairs. Quality work, Free Est.

• Lawn & Garden Maint. • Power Rake, Plant, Prune • Tree Topping, Trimming • CLEANUP & MORE!

Repaired

HOME REPAIRS RENOVATIONS INSTALLATIONS

PAINTSPECIAL.COM

3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.

quaysidepainting.com

25 Years Exp.

Gutters Cleaned &

Mike 604-961-1280

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

BC GARDENING

WorkSafeBC insured

www.expertpowerwashing.com

PAINTING/ WALLPAPER

Local low cost Plumbing Heating co. Water heaters, boilers ,furnaces, plumbing, gasfitting. Service & installations. 604−209−3107 certisea@gmail.com

ACROSS

1. Would 7. Pitching stat 10. Wounded 12. Guitarist Clapton 13. Penalizes 14. Female MMA fighter VanZant 15. Proverb 16. Urban gym 17. Midway between northeast and east

DOWN

1. Typically noncoding molecules (abbr.) 2. Former Secretary of State 3. River in Belgium and France 4. Unnilhexium 5. “Fall Guy” actor Majors 6. Tooth caregiver 7. Lucci character “Kane” 8. Latvian capital 9. Pet detective Ventura 10. Sporting dog 11. External genitals

18. La __ Tar Pits 19. Go out to eat 21. Oral allergy syndrome 22. Where some are put 27. Spiral galaxy 28. Lethargic 33. Integrated circuit 34. Let your mind wander 36. Midway between north and northeast 37. Nomadic palace

38. Posted 39. Trouble 40. Wise 41. Make happy 44. Dog-__: worn or battered 45. One who fixes 48. Central European 49. Sleighs 50. Exponential time hypothesis 51. Puts within

12. “The Secret Room” novelist 14. Ancient wonder 17. Electronic data processing 18. Autocratic 20. Defunct European organization 23. Removed flesh 24. Indicating silence 25. Commercial 26. Chap 29. Farm state 30. Chief research officer 31. Poked holes in

32. Chutes and ___ 35. What cows say 36. A desert in southern Israel 38. Isaac’s mother 40. Sodium 41. Absence of effort 42. A way to articulate 43. Greek god of war 44. Midway between east and southeast 45. Run batted in 46. The longest division of geological time 47. Public broadcaster


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Burnaby Mountain

Price and availability subject to change without notice. This is not an offering for sale. Any such offering may only be made by way of Disclosure Statement. E.&O.E.

PRESENTATION CENTRE 8955 UNIVERSITY HIGH ST., BURNABY 604 559 5795

REGISTER NOW. TERRACESATSFU.COM

GH HI

ANOTHER INTELLIGENT OPPORTUNITY BROUGHT TO YOU BY INTERGULF

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CONCRETE HOMES AT SFU FROM $344,900

UNPRECEDENTED VALUE

A36 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM


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