burnaby newsleader, july 27, 2012

28
page 3 page 6 page 8 WOULD YOU LIKE TO NAME A CREEK? CAFÉ INSTILLS SOME HEART AT ROYAL OAK B.C. SEEKS MORE PIPELINE BENEFITS www.burnabynewsleader.com FRIDAY JULY 27 2012 Mercedes smashes through Safeway window Driver hit gas instead of brake Wanda Chow [email protected] There were surprised shoppers at the Safeway store at the corner of Kingsway and Royal Oak Avenue Monday night when a high- end car smashed through the front window. Burnaby RCMP Corp. Rick Skolrood said police were called just before 9 p.m. The driver had pressed the accelerator instead of the brake while parking. It’s unknown if anyone was injured, but fire and ambulance crews arrived to check out the car’s occupant, Skolrood said. The driver was issued a ticket for driving without due care and attention. Burnaby resident Janet White said by email that she was shopping in the store when she heard a loud crash. “I thought a whole row of shelving in the Royal Oak Safeway, had fallen, but as I rounded the corner, inside the store near the bread section, I saw a beautiful black Mercedes in front of me with 3 boxes of crackers on the hood. Puppies, kittens, rabbits and turtles often end up abandoned, in shelters Wanda Chow [email protected] An animal welfare organization is calling on Burnaby city hall to ban the sale of puppies, kittens and rabbits in local pet stores. In a recent presentation to council, Kathy Powelson, executive director of the Paws for Hope Animal Foundation, said puppies and kittens sold at pet stores often come from “mills” where the animals are bred for profit under substandard and unhealthy conditions. “Without a doubt, animals sold in pet stores are not coming from a responsible, reputable source that has the best interests of animals at heart,” said Powelson, a Burnaby resident. In fact, she said, to be certified with the Canadian Kennel Club, breeders are prohibited from selling to pet stores under its code of practice. The BC SPCA has rescued hundreds of animals from mills, but the problems extend also to people who buy animals from pet stores, she said, noting that animals bred in such conditions often end up with health and behavioural issues. Powelson cited the example of Shelby, a dog purchased by a Burnaby resident at a pet store in Brentwood Mall in 2004. Since then, its owner has spent more than $32,000 on veterinarian bills to treat its myriad of ailments. People without the resources to pay such bills often end up surrendering the pets to local animal shelters, causing a heavy burden on the taxpayer-funded facilities, she said. In 2011, more than 100 cats and dogs were surrendered to the Burnaby SPCA, not including strays it found that were not claimed. That same year, she said, the Vancouver Orphan Kitten Rescue Association rescued about 150 feral, free-roaming and abandoned cats in Burnaby. In Richmond, about 60 per cent of pets at its animal shelter were originally bought at pet stores, Powelson said. Ban sought on sale of pets in stores MARIO BARTEL/NEWSLEADER Kathy Powelson loves her dogs, Chilli and Max, and she’s hoping Burnaby council will ban sales of animals from pet stores. Please see BAN ON TURTLE SALES, A3 It’s time to meet your maker at Burnaby Village. See Page A9 Please see ‘GLASS’, A3 POP POP BOTTLE DEPOT YOUR BURNABY AGENT centre realty www. BrianVidas.com Brian Vidas Personal Real Estate Corporation 3010 Boundary Road, Burnaby BRIAN VIDAS 604.671.5259 5 Bed, 5 Bath Inlet Water View Westridge Home $1,398,000 12 Bed, 6 Bath Multifamily Duplex Close To BCIT $1,548,000 2009 - 2011

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July 27, 2012 edition of the Burnaby NewsLeader

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Page 1: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

page3 page6 page8WOULD YOU LIKE TO NAME A CREEK?

CAFÉ INSTILLS SOME HEART AT ROYAL OAK

B.C. SEEKS MORE PIPELINE BENEFITS

www.burnabynewsleader.com

FRIDAY JULY 27 2012

Mercedes smashes through Safeway windowDriver hit gas instead of brakeWanda [email protected]

There were surprised shoppers at the Safeway store at the corner of Kingsway and Royal Oak Avenue Monday night when a high-end car smashed through the front window.

Burnaby RCMP Corp. Rick Skolrood said police were called just before 9 p.m. The driver had pressed the accelerator instead of the brake while parking. It’s unknown if anyone was injured, but fire and ambulance crews arrived to check out the car’s occupant, Skolrood said.

The driver was issued a ticket for driving without due care and attention.

Burnaby resident Janet White said by email that she was shopping in the store when she heard a loud crash.

“I thought a whole row of shelving in the Royal Oak Safeway, had fallen, but as I rounded the corner, inside the store near the bread section, I saw a beautiful black Mercedes in front of me with 3 boxes of crackers on the hood.

Puppies, kittens, rabbits and turtles often end up abandoned, in sheltersWanda [email protected]

An animal welfare organization is calling on Burnaby city hall to ban the sale of puppies, kittens and rabbits in local pet stores.

In a recent presentation to council, Kathy Powelson, executive director of the Paws for Hope Animal Foundation, said puppies and kittens sold at pet stores often come from “mills” where

the animals are bred for profit under substandard and unhealthy conditions.

“Without a doubt, animals sold in pet stores are not coming from a responsible, reputable source that has the best interests of animals at heart,” said Powelson, a Burnaby resident.

In fact, she said, to be certified with the Canadian Kennel Club, breeders are prohibited from selling to pet stores under its code of practice.

The BC SPCA has rescued hundreds of animals from mills, but

the problems extend also to people who buy animals from pet stores, she said, noting that animals bred in such conditions often end up with health and behavioural issues.

Powelson cited the example of Shelby, a dog purchased by a Burnaby resident at a pet store in Brentwood Mall in 2004. Since then, its owner has spent more than $32,000 on veterinarian bills to treat its myriad of ailments.

People without the resources to pay such bills often end up surrendering the pets to local animal shelters, causing a heavy

burden on the taxpayer-funded facilities, she said.

In 2011, more than 100 cats and dogs were surrendered to the Burnaby SPCA, not including strays it found that were not claimed. That same year, she said, the Vancouver Orphan Kitten Rescue Association rescued about 150 feral, free-roaming and abandoned cats in Burnaby.

In Richmond, about 60 per cent of pets at its animal shelter were originally bought at pet stores, Powelson said.

Ban sought on sale of pets in storesMARIO BARTEL/NEWSLEADER

Kathy Powelson loves her dogs, Chilli and Max, and she’s hoping Burnaby council will ban sales of animals from pet stores.

Please see BAN ON TURTLE SALES, A3

It’s time to meet your maker at

Burnaby Village.See Page A9

Please see ‘GLASS’, A3

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Page 2: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A2 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

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Page 3: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A3Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A3

SuperValu coming

Loblaw isn’t bringing No Frills to North Burnaby after all.

Instead, it is opening a SuperValu in late fall of 2012, according to a Loblaw spokesperson. “We have a franchisee in place and we are finalizing the layout and ordering equipment.”

The store will be in the Greystone Plaza shopping complex on Burnwood Drive, formerly the site of a Marketplace IGA which closed last November.

While Loblaw had earlier stated it was opening a No Frills, the plans changed “due to a change in the strategy of the business,” the company said.

Infocus OPINION page 6 | LETTERS page 7 | SPORTS page 10

“The only way to eliminate the mills is to stop the demand.”

Rabbits, meanwhile, are commonly dumped at Central Park, Forest Grove, Foreshore Park and the Edmonds SkyTrain area in Burnaby. The low feral rabbit population is likely due to their being preyed upon by raccoons, coyotes and birds of prey, she said.

Pet store staff would likely not educate customers on what to expect with rabbits, which reach puberty at six months, when they can become aggressive, and can cost three to four times the cost of a dog or cat to sterilize, she said.

In 2010, Richmond was the first city in Canada (still the only city in B.C.) to ban sales of puppies in pet stores, although Powelson noted, sales of kittens in such

stores then increased. Since then, Toronto has banned retail sales of all animals.

Coun. Sav Dhaliwal suggested that pet stores tend to encourage impulse buys and not making the animals so easily available would lead to more people turning to shelters or reputable breeders for pets.

Coun. Colleen Jordan expressed concern about such a ban hurting legitimate businesses.

Powelson noted that not all pet stores sell animals. She cited Bosley’s Pet Foods as an example of a company that supports animal rescue groups and helps facilitate the adoption of animals from shelters.

Council also heard from Val Lofvendahl of the Reptile Rescue, Adoption and Education Society which similarly wants to see a ban on the sale of

turtles in pet stores. Red-eared sliders are the most common turtle used as a pet, but are an invasive species in B.C. which causes a problem when people abandon them in local lakes and waterways, Lofvendahl said.

From 2004 to the present, her Richmond-based organization has taken 127 turtles into care and turned away more than twice that due to lack of space. In the last two months alone, it has picked up nine “stray” turtles in Burnaby. Council forwarded both Powelson’s and Lofvendahl’s presentations to staff for consideration as part of its review of its animal control bylaws.

The review is aimed at reflecting more modern attitudes towards pets and animals, said Mayor Derek Corrigan. Further discussion on the bylaw review will take place in the fall.

“It had plowed through the cement lower wall and taken out two (almost) floor to ceiling plate glass windows. The metal framing to the windows was all bent and broken cement and glass everywhere.”

The female driver backed the car out of the store, parked and got out.

White paid for her groceries “from a cashier who was shaking as much as I was” then comforted the woman until her husband arrived about 10 minutes later.

“I could see he was saying to her it was most important that she was all right,” she said.

“I was amazed how little damage that beautiful car had incurred, with its big Mercedes hood ornament unscathed. The bumper was wrecked, but the windshield unbroken…just plate glass everywhere.”

Burnaby has 38 creeks that need names and is seeking residents’ suggestions.

Currently, they sport rather bureaucratic sounding monikers such as “CV-17” and “BI-6.” They range from short little creeks off Burrard Inlet and streams in Burnaby Fraser Foreshore Park to waterways dotting the Central Valley.

City hall published its first “Waterways of Burnaby” map in 1993 and at the time named all of its major creeks with historic and community names suggested by Burnaby citizens.

Since then, 38 more creeks have been documented and mapped.

And like newborns, they need names.Burnaby residents have a deadline of Aug. 31 to nominate

names and share their stories about the creeks. All the names should “uniquely describe and celebrate” the specific creek’s location or character, its history or that of its neighbourhood, the ecosystem sustained by the creek and/or a person instrumental in preserving it or the Burnaby environment. Visit http://bit.ly/LAgJii to view the waterways map, the locations of the unnamed creeks, submit an online nomination or to print out a nomination form to send in by mail. Names can also be submitted by telephone, 604-294-7400. The selected names will be announced by Burnaby council on Sept. 17.

COURTESY CITY OF BURNABYThe Central Valley Watershed occupies the city’s unique basin that drains both the south slopes of Burnaby Mountain and Capitol Hill and the north slope of the Kingsway ridge. Forming part of the Fraser River system this watershed covers 60 per cent of Burnaby’s land area. It includes the large green spaces of Deer Lake Park, Burnaby Lake Regional Nature Park and the Still Creek, Cariboo, and Brunette River conservation areas.

Would you like to name a creek?

Ban on turtle sales also sought ‘Glass everywhere’

⫸ continued from FRONT PAGE ⫸ continued from PAGE AX

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Page 4: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A4 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012A4 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

First class to graduate from current buildingWanda [email protected]

Organizers of the 50th reunion for Burnaby North secondary’s Class of 1962 are in full sleuth mode, trying to track down the classmates they haven’t found yet.

To date, they’ve found 215 out of the 341 graduates, said Morgan Wilks, 68. Of those 215, 29 have passed on. That leaves 126 people they haven’t found yet.

The 50th reunion will be held on Saturday, Sept. 22 at the Executive Plaza Hotel in Coquitlam starting at 6 p.m.

It’ll be just the second get-together for the class, which last met for their 20-year reunion.

Morgan said at the 20th reunion, everyone was trying to show how successful they’d become.

“At 50, who gives a crap,” he said with a laugh. “I am what I am.”

Morgan still lives in Burnaby with his wife and high-school sweetheart, known as Susan

Armstrong back in their school days.

They met in Grade 10 in homeroom. “We didn’t start dating until Oct. 27, 1961,” he added with a laugh.

Theirs was the first class to graduate from the current Burnaby North building on Hammarskjold Drive (Kensington Junior High, located next door, and North later combined to become the expansive campus it is today).

Prior to that, the school was located at what eventually became the Willingdon Resource Centre, at Willingdon Avenue and Albert Street, which was only torn down in 2010.

“It was decrepit when we arrived there,” said Morgan.

“I was amazed it stayed open as long as it did after we left,” added Susan.

“Nearly every lunch hour there was a food fight in the cafeteria in the basement,”

recalled Morgan. “They knew they couldn’t wreck the place, I guess.”

So when they moved to the current building for their Grade 12 year, it was like night and day.

Everything was more spacious. The hallways were wide enough they could walk to their lockers without getting jostled too much. They didn’t have to share lockers. The cafeteria, windows, gym, were all bigger.

And while at the old school, science classrooms consisted of gas taps and equipment only for the teacher, who would demonstrate while students watched, at the new school, every student got to do hands-on science experiments.

All the rooms were designed for the subjects they were meant to accommodate, said Susan, who recalled they were greeted with shiny brand new equipment in all the sewing and cooking classrooms.

Things were different back then, of course.

Burnaby North seeking 1962 grads for 50th

WANDA CHOW/NEWSLEADERHigh school sweethearts Morgan and Susan Wilks look over mementos from Burnaby North secondary where they graduated 50 years ago. The Class of 1962, the first to graduate from the current building, is holding its 50-year reunion Sept. 22 and organizers are still trying to track down grads for the event.

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Page 5: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A5Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A5

When the couple started dating, Morgan would walk Susan to the bus stop holding hands.

“We got in trouble,” he recalled. “The principal called us into his office, saying it was too much of a show of affection.”

They got off with a stern warning, but never held hands again heading to or from school. “Back then, the school had jurisdiction until you got home,” he said.

The Wilkses both went on to become teachers themselves. Susan taught primary in Richmond until she became a stay-at-home mom, and Morgan taught computer science, math and calculus at a number of schools, ending with 19 years at Burnaby Central before he retired 13 years ago. But today, they’re detectives, along with other reunion organizers, trying to track down their fellow grads.

Anyone with information is asked to contact [email protected], or the Wilkses at 604-433-2932, [email protected] or [email protected].

Grads sought⫸ from previous page Four young male drivers,

residents of Burnaby and Coquitlam, have had their high-end vehicles impounded after being stopped by police for street racing and excessive speeding early Tuesday morning.

Shortly after 2 a.m. a Port Mann Freeway Patrol officer was monitoring traffic on Highway 1 at Gaglardi Way in Burnaby when he heard several high-performance vehicles speeding westbound. He estimated they were travelling at about 140 km/h in the posted 80 km/h construction zone, said RCMP spokesman Sgt. Peter Thiessen in a press release.

The officer activated his emergency equipment and followed the suspect vehicles, catching up to them at the Cassiar Tunnel, where the speed limit is 70 km/h. He had paced all four vehicles at more than 160 km/h in that zone.

When the suspect divers noticed the patrol car, they slowed to a near stop, allowing the officer to pass them safely, blocking access to the Iron Workers Memorial Bridge.

All four vehicles were

registered to their drivers, who were issued $483-tickets for excessive speeding and had their cars impounded for seven days.

“A report has been forwarded to the Provincial Government Civil Forfeiture Office for consideration and decision regarding the permanent forfeiture of all four vehicles,” Thiessen said.

Three of the four were new drivers required to follow certain regulations, including displaying an “N”, and had previous driving prohibitions.

The first was a 2011 BMW M3 driven by a 22-year-old man with a previous driving prohibition from Dec. 29, 2010 to March 29, 2011.

The second was a 2009 Subaru Impreza operated by a 23-year-old man, with previous prohibitions from Aug. 29 to Oct. 29, 2008 and from Oct. 7, 2010 to Jan. 7, 2011.

The third was a 2010 Nissan 370Z driven by a 21-year-old man with a previous prohibition from Feb. 4 to Aug. 4, 2010.

The fourth vehicle, a 2008 Porsche Cayman was driven by a 22-year-old man with a Class 5 drivers licence.

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Page 6: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A6 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012A6 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

OPINION

Jean Hincks Publisher

Chris Bryan Editor

Matthew Blair Creative Services Supervisor

Richard Russell Circulation Manager

The NewsLeader is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org

7438 Fraser Park Dr., Burnaby, B.C. V5J [email protected]

burnabynewsleader.com | newwestnewsleader.com

Newsroom: 604-438-6397

Delivery: 604-436-2472

Classifieds: 604-575-5555

Advertising: 604-438-6397

Fax: 604-438-9699

There’s a new flavour to the intersection at Rumble and Royal Oak. Julia Tanaka, the owner of Jules Café, and chef Jose Ventura are creating it.

“Just what the neighbourhood needs,” is the comment most people make when asked if they have been to Jules. I’ve wanted a good café close by for years, and apparently so have a number of people. I value and support a family run café as an essential part of the neighbourhood.

The intersection has seen plenty of changes over time. Don’s Restaurant and The Captain’s are long gone. The drug store burned down. Two banks moved out and new tenants moved in. The video store is gone—no more browsing the shelves hearing impromptu reviews from neighbours. The second-hand bookstore became condos—no more conversations about authors or genres. I’m glad the acupuncture clinic/brothel closed, and pleased the hobby store is still there. Until May it was a purposeful corner: insurance offices, dry cleaners, liquor store, hairdressers, gas

station, and groceries. But it didn’t have a gathering place (other than chatting in the cookie aisle at Buy Low). Jules opened in May and has begun to change that. Students from Burnaby South swarm in at lunchtime eager for burgers, fries or sandwiches. Home cut fries taste like potatoes! Julia says the teenagers are courteous and appreciative of the good service they get. Rod from Buy Low likes the clubhouse sandwich and the cheddar bacon burger. Brent, Judy, and Graham cross the street from their Autoplan office to grab some lunch. The constituency office of Raj Chouhan, MLA for Burnaby-Edmunds, is across the street and he likes to order the turkey panini. Young couples in the new condo and

townhouse developments come in for breakfast on weekends, and pick up baking during the week. The older generation has discovered Jules too. Drop by in the afternoon and join “the gentlemen” for tea and scones.

I like the way Julia reaches out to the neighbourhood. One long red wall is dedicated to self-portraits by art students from Burnaby South. The art department plans to send new work during the school year.

Aaron, 16, who helps out in the café after school, has a section of wall too, and a sketch in the making.

It’s a friends-and-family affair. Julia’s brother Ken is the technical guy and sister Abby works the front counter. Her brother-in-law, Martin Kobayakawa, plays acoustic guitar—really well for a retired planner from TransLink! Friends come to help manage the rush hour at lunchtime when school is in session.

I recall the Vancouver Sun series on urban isolation, how people felt estranged from their neighbours, and felt there was

little opportunity for interaction in their busy lives. Community centres, places of worship, volunteer groups, sports teams, and fine arts groups can help to bring people together. And so can a good café! “Meet you at Jules,” may become a common invitation. Now our little part of Burnaby has a sit-down, fresh-food space that provides residents with an opportunity to connect. Or just go for the great food.

Julia’s background is in nutrition, as a supervisor, diet technician and nutrition manager. When Jose says fresh he means it. You can watch him cook in the open style kitchen. Hamburgers are made from scratch. Turkey, beef, and chicken are roasted on site for sandwich meat. And homemade soup is truly homemade.

It’s easy to be separate in our society; long working hours, commuting, wide screen TVs and Internet social websites can take up people’s time. If we want a feeling of belonging to a community we have to make the effort—and it’s pleasant and tasty to make the effort at Jules.

What a difference a café makes

The sixth Olympic ring is schadenfreude.

In the days leading up to Friday’s opening ceremonies for the 2012 Summer Games in London, the international media have been gleefully chronicling the myriad of gaffes and shortcomings that have organizers scrambling and issuing statements of reassurance that all will be well.

First it was the weather, cold and rainy then suddenly so hot power lines for a new rail service to the Olympic stadium are melting, resulting in delays and shutdowns.

Ah yes, transportation, the eternal Achilles heel of every modern Olympics; if it’s not cabbies protesting on the Tower Bridge, it’s everyday commuters fretting through gridlock to allow Olympic officials free passage along exclusive traffic lanes.

There are worries about security, as the private company contracted to make the Games safe underestimated the magnitude of the job, necessitating the deployment of the military. Customs agents are threatening to strike. And nobody is sure how much it will all cost in the end.

Sound familiar?Two years ago we were sweating

many of those very same issues in the days preceding Vancouver’s Winter Olympics. And no one was more vocal in their criticism than the British media; one paper even girded their readers for “the worst Games ever.”

But all of the problems were forgotten as soon as Wayne Gretzky lit the Olympic cauldron at Jack Poole Plaza. Just as they will be when the torch is set ablaze in London.

And then we’ll all settle in for two weeks of dazzling athletic competition, compelling human interest stories and national pride. We’ll cheer everyone in red and white, but especially for our local heroes, Burnaby’s Christine Sinclair and Curtis Moss.

NEWSLEADER’S VIEW:

THIS WEEK:

Do you think encounters with wildlife in our urban areas are cause for concern?Vote at www.burnabynewsleader.com

LAST WEEK:

Would you welcome a cooling housing market, with lower prices?

ADRIAN RAESIDE: QUESTION OF THE WEEK:

Fun and the Games

88%12% NO

YES

PUBLISHED & PRINTED BY BLACK PRESS LTD. at 7438 Fraser Park Drive, Burnaby, B.C. V5J 5B9

Anne Hopkinson

Page 7: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A7Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A7

COMMENT EMAIL [email protected]

Re: Campaign financing needs tighter rules (Letters, NewsLeader, July 20) 

It’s difficult to disagree with the first part of Trevor Richie’s letter.

Unfortunately he carries on as if only industry expects to be rewarded for having made campaign contributions.

Some of us find union contributions even more difficult to accept because those paying into these funds are never consulted (and sometimes even opposed?).

So, I am all for laws as voted in by Ottawa.

But why are those with better-paying jobs always expected to have “cushy jobs?”

My bosses’ cars were usually in their parking spots when I arrived 45 minutes early and guess what: their cars were still there when I left as the last person in my department.   

Here is another reality to ponder. Former NDP Premier Glen Clark became associated with the Jim Pattison Group. We can be sure that Jim Pattison

was not just stuck with another “cushy-job-to-be-disposed-of” and Glen Clark did not expect a “do-nothing” appointment!

Reality should always trump dogma, Trevor!

Ziggy EckardtBurnaby

NOTE OF GRATITUDEI wish to express my

appreciation and gratitude to the three people who came to my assistance when my motor scooter tipped over at the corner of Nelson Avenue and Kingsway at 11 a.m. Saturday, July 14.

Two young women and another woman lifted the scooter off me. One of the young women called 911 on my behalf and at the request of the emergency dispatcher, stayed with me.

When the ambulance arrived, the young women flagged it down.

I never got their names. I greatly appreciate the help these people gave me when I needed it.

K. Stewart ShearmanBurnaby

SOUND AND THE FURY

Had I wished, I could have sat on my street and comfortably listened to the concert at Deer Lake Park on Friday evening. I live five kilometres away. I can only imagine what it was like for those who live near Deer Lake. 

In fact a friend who does live nearby described it as “an acoustical atrocity, a public health time bomb, and an insult to the nearby residents.”

The hearing of those attending may well have been damaged, particularly the hearing of the small children who were present. Surely the City of Burnaby should ensure that the sound level is below that which causes damage, and preferably below that which is a public nuisance.

Does anyone from City Hall actually measure the sound level? If not why not?

If it does, what was it and how does it compare to the level at which damage to hearing occurs?

David HuntleyBurnaby

Reality should trump dogma

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A PRINCIPLED PIPELINE POSITION

I had to laugh when it was revealed by B.C.’s Environment Minister that the impetus for the province to seek intervenor status in the Enbridge pipeline process, as opposed to government status, came from an offhand comment by an NDP MLA.

As it turns out, intervenor status gives the province way more flexibility to pose questions to other participants in the process, including Enbridge, than government status does.

Considering the criticism the NDP and others have directed at the province for supposedly not taking an active role in the Enbridge process, the minister’s revelation is highly ironic.

It also shows that the province has done a lot more work, been a lot more involved, and given a lot more thought to the pipeline issue than anyone has previously given them credit for.

And the end result is a well-considered, well-documented, and principled policy position.

Donald Leung  Burnaby

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Page 8: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A8 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012A8 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

Province lays out preconditions for Enbridge, Kinder MorganJeff [email protected]

The B.C. government is demanding extensive pipeline and coastal tanker safeguards as well as a bigger share of cash benefits for the province and First Nations as preconditions for considering any new oil pipeline.

The announcement applies not just to Enbridge’s Northern Gateway pipeline proposal across northern B.C. to Kitimat but also to the proposed twinning of Kinder Morgan’s existing Trans Mountain pipeline that diagonals southwest through B.C. and runs through the Lower

Mainland to a Burnaby terminal.

“This isn’t tacit approval of the project,” Environment Minister Terry Lake said Monday, referring to Northern Gateway, which is further in the review process.

“These are the minimum conditions we require in order to consider support.”

Both projects would greatly increase the ability of oil companies to export crude oil through B.C. and via tanker to Asia, reducing reliance on the U.S. market.

The provincial government has found itself caught between a public deeply concerned about spill risks and enormous pressure from Alberta and the federal government to allow a new westward outlet for Canadian oil.

“We want a fair

share of the benefits in order to be considered partners in a project like this,” Lake said. “Given that British Columbia would shoulder 100 per cent of the marine risk and a significant portion of the land-based risk we don’t feel the current approach to sharing these benefits is appropriate.”

He did not spell out B.C.’s price on royalty sharing, but said that would rest on discussions between Premier Christy Clark and the prime minister and premiers of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

“It doesn’t matter what that number is if we don’t have adequate environmental protection.”

B.C. wants Ottawa to insist industry provide provide a bigger marine spill response – up from the current 70,000 barrel capacity to something closer to the 300,000 barrel spill response mandated by Alaska. (Spills larger than the local response threshold trigger mutual aid agreements with neighbouring states.)

The government also notes Alaska requires cleanup crews reach a spill site within 72 hours, while Canada’s current 72-hour rule also allows travel time to reach a site, potentially adding days to a response.

The province also envisions a levy charged on each barrel of oil shipped that would – as is done in Washington State – help fund cleanup responses.

A land-based industry spill response co-op will also be proposed, similar to the Western Canada Marine Response Corp. that’s charged with offshore response.

Ship owner insurance and industry funding available for a spill response totals $1.3 billion in Canada, according

to the province’s findings, while the equivalent U.S. fund is approaching $4 billion.

Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation Minister Mary Polak said B.C.’s insistence on greater aboriginal participation and compliance with their rights does not extend to a First Nations veto over new pipelines.

Lake said B.C. can’t simply make a yes-or-no decision on a project like Enbridge right now because the federal National Energy Board review is still unfolding and the project is evolving along the way.

He noted Enbridge last week committed to up to $500 million in further safety upgrades to Northern Gateway – including thicker pipe walls than previously proposed as well as more round-the-clock spill monitoring staff along the route. That move followed a damning U.S. report on the company’s 2010 spill in Michigan.

B.C.’s five preconditions are successful completion of the federal environmental review; a world-leading marine oil spill prevention, response and recovery system; world-leading land spill prevention and response measures; the addressing of aboriginal and treaty rights, including First Nation participation and benefits; and a “fair share” of the fiscal and economic benefits of a proposed heavy oil project that reflects the elevated risk to B.C.

There are doubts as to whether B.C. could block a federally approved pipeline if it wants to. Lake noted even then Enbridge would require dozens of provincial regulatory approvals, which he said would be carefully considered.

• More on A12: No change to Enbridge pipeline will sway NDP: Dix

B.C. seeks more oil pipeline safeguards, benefits

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Thanks to our partners:

Make it, bake it or grow it!Come check out the locally produced items.

Page 9: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A9Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A9

Vendors include everything from pottery and leather to pesto and plants

This coming holiday Monday, why not meet your makers at the

Burnaby Village Museum?Market Mondays, Aug. 6 and

Sept. 3, feature the makers of hand-made crafts and food in the heritage village setting of the Burnaby Village Museum.

Vendors scheduled for B.C. Day on Aug. 6 will be selling everything from pottery and leather, to pesto and plants.

Visitors can meet local crafters and food producers, and learn more about how they make their products.

More opportunities to learn about how things are made are offered throughout the village, where costumed interpreters offer demonstrations in a replica 1920s blacksmith shop and the museum’s working print shop.

To celebrate the B.C. Day holiday, old-fashioned games will be offered in the village meadow.

Visitors can try out a variety of schoolyard games, including stilts and marbles.

A treat at the Ice Cream Parlour and a ride on the restored 1912 carousel are also must-dos for visitors.

Family entertainment starts at 11:30 a.m., and includes a jazz trio,

Punch and Judy puppets, and “the amazing Yo Yo Man.” Footlight Theatre’s family friendly Vaudeville Varieties show is featured at 1, 2, 3 and 4 p.m.

The interactive performances encourage audience participation, and are fun for people of all ages.

There is no admission fee for the museum this year, and free parking is offered.

Visitors can also take advantage of nearby activities, including pedal boat rentals at Deer Lake (www.deerlakeboatrentals.com), and access to a 5.6-km walking trail that circles the entire lake,

where you can spot turtles and tadpoles, as well as several impressive heritage buildings. See the City of Burnaby website for maps and information, www.burnaby.ca.

The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday and holiday Mondays, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., until Sept. 3. For more information, visit www.burnabyvillagemuseum.ca, or call 604-297-4565.

Lisa Codd is the curator at the Burnaby Village Museum.

Meet your makers

LEANNE SCHERP/BURNABY VILLAGE MUSEUMMuseum interpreter Brian Ross at work in the blacksmith shop at Burnaby Village Museum.

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Page 10: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A10 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012A10 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

SPORTS

With every team in the Western Lacrosse Association having just two games remaining in the regular season the Burnaby Lakers were in the thick of the hunt for one of four playoff spots.

They bolstered their chances of reaching post-season play for the first time since 2008, when they defeated the hometown Nanaimo Timbermen 11-10 on Sunday, eliminating the T-men from playoff contention. It followed on the heels of a 10-5 loss to the Coquitlam Adanacs at Bill Copeland Arena on Friday.

Heading into play Wednesday, Burnaby (8-6-2) was tied for third with the Victoria Shamrocks (9-7-0). They were just two points back of Coquitlam (10-6-0) and Langley (10-6-0), but just two points ahead of the New Westminster Salmonbellies (8-8-0) who haven’t missed the playoffs since 2004. Having beaten the Salmonbellies twice in their three encounters this season, the Lakers hold the tiebreaker advantage over New West. Victoria, however, beat Burnaby twice this season giving the Shamrocks the tiebreaker.

The Lakers have split their games with Langley and Coquitlam. They not only have a chance to gain the tiebreakers on both of them, but also to secure a playoff spot this weekend. On Friday, the Thunder will visit Copeland Arena

starting at 7:45 p.m., before the Lakers finish out the season against the Adanacs in Coquitlam on Saturday (7 p.m.).

Last Sunday’s game in Nanaimo was a strange one. Burnaby started out with a 2-0 first period lead. But in the

second period the goals came fast and furious with the Lakers getting eight

to six for the Timbermen and a 10-6 Burnaby lead. In the third, Nanaimo managed to claw their way back into the game. A goal by Cayle Ratliff with 59 seconds left in regulation to reduce the Timbermen’s deficit to one created a nervous final minute for the visitors from the mainland.

Colton Clark and Carlton Schuss both scored twice and had an assist for Burnaby. Singles went to Scott Tinning, Shaun Dhaliwal, Dane Stevens, Casey Jackson, Mike Brascia, Peter McFetridge and Scott Jones.

Dan Lewis made 43 saves for Burnaby which was outshot 53-43.

Last Friday, when Coquitlam came calling to Copeland, it was a different story. The Adanacs took control in the second period to take a 7-4 lead and extended it to 10-4 in the third. Dhaliwal, Stevens, Jackson, Schuss and Trevor Moore scored for Burnaby. In this case, Lewis made just 20 saves while his Coquitlam counterpart, Nick Rose, stopped 38 of the 43 shots the Lakers threw his way.

Lakers looking to secure spot in WLA playoffs

Mariya Chekanovych of Burnaby will represent Canada at the junior Pan Pacific Games swim meet in Hawaii next month.

Chekanovych, who just graduated from Burnaby Central and will swim for Simon Fraser University this fall, made the squad after finishing fourth in the 100 and 200-metre breaststroke at the Canadian summer championships in Alberta last weekend.

She’ll be joined in Hawaii with another SFU swimmer Dimitar Ivanov and Clan assistant coach Dmitriy Kononenko.

Burnaby girl to swim for Canada at junior Pan Pacific meet

To battle top two teams on final weekend of season

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Page 11: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A11Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A11

John Gallacher of Burnaby tied for 16th at the B.C. senior men’s golf championship held last week at the Nanaimo Golf Club. Gallacher shot 77-78-76=231, 15-over par. Banks Scott of Burnaby tied for 41st (788-80-80=238, +22) while another Burnaby golfer, Gerry Babcock, missed the cut at plus-31.

Midget Lakers take titleBurnaby Lakers defeated Ridge Meadows 6-2 to

capture the provincial midget girls box lacrosse championship in Nanaimo last weekend. In the pee wee division, Burnaby downed Coquitlam No. 2 4-2 to take third place.

Triumphant mosquitoesA New Westminster Little League team with

nine Burnaby players on it won the Burnaby Minor Baseball Associations mosquito A/AA tournament at Kensington Park last weekend. New West defeated Ladner 14-1 in the final of the tournament for 10- and 11-year-olds, although five of the team’s players are aged nine. They won five of the six games they played in the three-day tourney, and tied the other as they beat out nine other teams for the title.

Gallacher ties for 16th Medallist despite broken footChristina JungBlack Press

Confidently swimming to the beat of the Black Eyed Peas, no one would ever have suspected Burnaby’s 14-year-old Rachel Nixon just resumed practising two months ago.

The Fraser River-Delta (Zone 4) synchronized swimmer broke her foot swimming at the beginning of May, just six weeks before the provincial championships.

“I wasn’t able to swim for a little over a month,” said Nixon. “I wasn’t even allowed to go into the water, but I still went to every practice and did the land drills.”

Luckily, Nixon’s foot healed in time and she was able to swim again the day before leaving for provincials.

“I’m pretty happy I was able to get back in without any long lasting injuries,” Nixon said.

As if having an injury wasn’t enough, Nixon and her duet partner, Burnaby’s Claire Hein-Salvi, had to quickly change their routine from a trio to a duet.

“It used to be a trio,” Nixon said, “but one of the members couldn’t come... so we had to relearn all new counts and find different times to do everything.”

Nixon and Hein-Salvi earned a silver medal for their routine. Nixon hopes to continue synchronized swimming and make it to nationals.

“It’s a huge commitment and a long commute, but I really want to go to nationals,” Nixon said.

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Page 12: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A12 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012A12 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

NDP leader Adrian Dix, who has vowed to pursue a legal strategy to block the Enbridge project, said his party will continue to oppose it – no matter what deal might be struck to steer benefits to B.C. or reduce risks.

“We remain serene and determined to take steps to oppose this pipeline, which we don’t see as being in British Columbia’s interests,” he said.

B.C. is just 10 months away from a provincial election that could elect the NDP, which opposes Northern Gateway under any circumstances but has yet to define a position on the Trans Mountain expansion.

Dix said Northern Gateway is a non-starter because it would require consenting to oil tanker traffic on the north coast.

Dix also accused the government of belatedly trying to catch up to public opposition after it ceded jurisdiction for the environmental review process to Ottawa and then failed to intervene earlier in the Northern Gateway review when it could have still tabled evidence.

“They gave up our jurisdiction, they missed the deadline for evidence,” Dix said.

“Now having been pressured by us but mostly by tens of thousands of people – business groups, environmental groups and First Nations – and they feel they have to take some step to show they’re defending British Columbians’ interest.”

Several environmental groups responded saying no amount of safeguards will offset the damage of a serious spill, especially one involving heavy oil sands crude.

The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs Grand Chief Stewart Phillip said most First Nations remain deeply opposed to the Enbridge pipeline, adding “it’s not about the money, it’s about the environment.”

Dix said it was too soon for the NDP to take a stand on Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain twinning because the project has not yet been formally proposed.

BC Conservative leader John Cummins said his party would also try to negotiate a benefits sharing deal for oil that moves through B.C.

No change to Enbridge pipeline will sway NDP: Dix

Adrian Dix, NDP leader They gave up our jurisdiction, they missed the deadline for evidence.

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Page 13: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A13

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onata Limited/2012 Tucson Lim

ited AW

D/2012 S

anta Fe 3.5 Limited A

WD

is $18,644/$28,064/$30,109/$32,059. Delivery and D

estination charges of $1,495/$1,565/$1,760/$1,760 included. Registration, insurance, P

PS

A, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. D

elivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D

.E., dealer adm

in fees and a full tank of gas. ▼Fuel consum

ption for 2012 Elantra Touring G

L 5-Speed M

anual(HW

Y 6.4L/10

0KM

; City 8.9L/10

0KM

)/2012 Sonata G

L Auto (H

WY

5.7L/100K

M; C

ity 8.7L/100K

M)/2012 Tucson L 5-speed (H

WY

7.4L/100K

M; C

ity 10.1L/100K

M)/2012 S

anta Fe GL 2.4 A

uto (HW

Y 7.2L/10

0KM

, City 10.4L/10

0KM

) are based on Energuide. A

ctual fuel efficiency m

ay vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for com

parison purposes only. ‡Price adjustm

ents are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustm

ents of $3,699/$2,569/$3,764/$4,464 available on 2012 Elantra Touring G

L 5-Speed M

anual/2013 Sonata G

L Autom

atic/2012 Tucson L 5-speed Manual/2012 S

anta Fe GL 2.4 P

remium

Pkg

. P

rice adjustments applied before taxes. O

ffer cannot be combined or used in conjunction w

ith any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. N

o vehicle trade-in required. †♦‡O

ffers available for a limited tim

e, and subject to change or cancellation without notice. S

ee dealer for complete details. D

ealer may sell for less. Inventory is lim

ited, dealer order may be required. ̂

Based on N

atural R

esource Canada’s 2012 ecoE

nergy award for m

ost fuel efficient full-size car. ▲G

overnment 5-S

tar Safety R

atings are part of the U.S

. National H

ighway Traffic S

afety Adm

inistration’s (NH

TSA’s) N

ew C

ar Assessm

ent Program

(ww

w.S

aferCar.gov). ††H

yundai’s Com

prehensive Limited W

arranty coverage covers most vehicle com

ponents against defects in workm

anship under normal use and m

aintenance conditions.

HyundaiCanada.com5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

ADVANTAGE

THE

HYUNDAIFINANCING FOR UP TO 48 MONTHS

LOWERPRICES

0%†

HIGHWAY 6.4L/100 KM

44 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 5.7L/100 KM

50 MPG▼

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING WITH GLOVE BOX COOLER ■ HEATED FRONT SEATS & MIRRORS ■ 6 AIRBAGS WITH FRONT ACTIVE HEAD RESTRAINTS ■ CRUISE CONTROL ■ REMOTE KEYLESS ENTRY ■ POWER WINDOWS, DOORS, LOCKS & MIRRORS

ELANTRA TOURING GL 5-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ HEATED FRONT SEATS & MIRRORS ■ 6 AIRBAGS WITH FRONT ACTIVE HEAD RESTRAINTS ■ CRUISE CONTROL ■ XM RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM

SONATA GL AUTO. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ EZ LANE CHANGE ASSIST ■ DOWNHILL BRAKE CONTROL AND HILLSTART ASSIST ■ MOTOR DRIVEN POWER STEERING ■ REAR SPOILER ■ iPOD®/USB/MP3 AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS

TUCSON L 5-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

THE MOST FUEL-EFFICIENT FULL-SIZED CAR – NATURAL RESOURCE CANADA’S 2012 ECOENERGY VEHICLE AWARD^

AWARDED THE HIGHEST GOVERNMENTCRASH SAFETY RATING▲

U.S. NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION

SANTA FE PREMIUM PKG.2012

2012 ELANTRA TOURING GL

2013SONATA

2012 TUCSON

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ POWER SUNROOF ■ HEATED FRONT SEATS & MIRRORS ■ CRUISE CONTROL ■ XM RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM ■ 18" ALLOY WHEELS

SANTA FE GL 2.4 PREMIUM PKG. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

NOW

$15,995 ♦

INCLUDES AIR CONDITIONING

WAS

$19,694

INCLUDES AIR CONDITIONING

NOW

$17,995 ♦

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

WAS

$21,759

NOW

$24,995 ♦

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHSINCLUDES AUTO & AIR

WAS

$29,459

NOW

$22,995 ♦

INCLUDES AUTO & AIR

WAS

$25,564

HIGHWAY 7.4L/100 KM

38 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 7.2L/100 KM

39 MPG▼

WAS

$

WAS

WAS

$

WAS

$

Limited model shown

Limited model shown

Limited model shown

GLS model shown

11087_DBC_12_MASTER

DOCKET #CLIENT

PROJECTDATE

MEDIAAD TYPEREGION

ART DIRECTORCOPYWRITER

MAC ARTISTPRODUCERACCOUNTS

PROOFREADERCLIENT

LIVETRIM

BLEED

COLOUR

H12Q3_PR_DAA_1087HYUNDAIJULY Retail AdsJuly 19, 2012Newspaper3-Car AD #2 BCDBC

REV

______ Peter B______ Client______ Roy S.______ Monica Lima______ Erin Phillips______ Leah Lepofsky______ Hyundai

____ PDFX1A to Pub____ Collect to AdPlanner____ Lo res pdf____ Revision & new laser____ Other _____________________ __________________________ __________________________

N/A10.50" X 20.79"N/A

C M Y K

[JOB INFO] [MECHANICAL SPECS] [APPROVALS] [ACTION]

[PUBLICATION INFO]NONE

[FONTS]Arial; Arial NarrowUnivers LT

[PRINTED AT]65%

Please contact Monica Lima e: [email protected] t: 647-925-1315 c: 416-806-0468 INNOCEAN WORLDWIDE CANADA, INC. 662 King St. West, Unit 101, Toronto ON M5V 1M7

[SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS]NONE

TMThe Hyundai nam

es, logos, product names, feature nam

es, images and slogans are tradem

arks owned by H

yundai Auto C

anada Corp. †Finance offers available O

.A.C

. from H

yundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Veloster 6-Speed M

anual with an annual finance rate of 0%

/1.9%/2.9%

for 72/84/84 months. B

i-weekly paym

ent is $108/$103/$128. No dow

n payment is required. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0/$1,192/$2,215. Finance offers include Delivery and D

estination of $1,495/$1,495/$1,495. Registration,

insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. D

elivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer adm

in fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual for $16,694 at 0% per annum

equals $108 bi-weekly for 72 m

onths for a total obligation of $16,694. Cash price is $16,694. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0. Example price includes D

elivery and Destination of $1,495. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. †♦

Prices for m

odels shown: 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GLS A

utomatic/Elantra Lim

ited/Veloster Tech. 6-Speed Manual is $19,744/$24,694/$24,494. D

elivery and Destination charges of $1,495/$1,495/$1,495 are included. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. ▼

Fuel consumption for 2013 A

ccent Sedan 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity: 6.7L/100KM)/2013 Elantra Sedan L 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity 6.8L/100KM)/2013 Veloster 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity 7.0L/100KM) are based

on Manufacturer Testing. A

ctual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel econom

y figures are used for comparison purposes only. †♦

‡Offers available for a lim

ited time, and subject to change or cancellation w

ithout notice. See dealer for complete details. D

ealer may sell for less. Inventory is lim

ited, dealer order may be required. ††H

yundai’s Com

prehensive Limited W

arranty coverage covers most vehicle com

ponents against defects in workm

anship under normal use and m

aintenance conditions.

HyundaiCanada.com5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

ADVANTAGE

THE

HYUNDAI0%†

AWARDWINNINGLINE-UP

72MONTHSFINANCING

FOR UP TO

Tech. model shown

Limited model shown

GLS model shown

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

INCLUDES: 6 AIRBAGS ■ iPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS ■ POWER WINDOWS AND DOOR LOCKS ■ ABS WITH TRACTION CONTROL SYSTEM ■ DUAL HEATED POWER EXTERIOR MIRRORS

SELLING PRICE: $17,444♦

ELANTRA L 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ 7" LCD TOUCH-SCREEN MULTIMEDIA SYSTEM WITH AM/FM/XM®/CD/MP3 PLAYER WITH 6 SPEAKERS ■ REARVIEW CAMERA ■ BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM ■ 17" ALLOY WHEELS ■ iPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS

SELLING PRICE: $20,994♦

VELOSTER 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

2013ACCENTSEDAN

2013ELANTRASEDAN

2013VELOSTER

0%†

FINANCING72MONTHS

FORUP TO

$103OWN IT

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

1.9%†WITH

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$0AND

DOWNPAYMENT

$128OWN IT

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

2.9%†WITH

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$0AND

DOWNPAYMENT

2012 CANADIAN CAR OF THE YEAR2012 NORTH AMERICAN CAR OF THE YEAR

2012 AJAC BEST NEW DESIGN2012 AJAC BEST NEW SPORTS/PERFORMANCE CAR (UNDER $50K)

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ STEERING WHEEL AUDIO CONTROLS ■ FRONT SEAT WARMERS ■ FRONT, SIDE & CURTAIN AIRBAGS ■ POWER WINDOWS & DOOR LOCKS ■ AM/FM/CD/MP3/USB/iPOD® AUDIO SYSTEM

SELLING PRICE: $16,694♦

ACCENT 4 DR GL 6-SPEED MANUAL WITH AIR CONDITIONING. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

2012 AJAC BEST NEW SMALL CAR (UNDER $21K)2012 WARD’S 10 BEST INTERIORS2012 WARD’S 10 BEST ENGINES

11087_DBC_12_MASTER

DOCKET #CLIENT

PROJECTDATE

MEDIAAD TYPEREGION

ART DIRECTORCOPYWRITER

MAC ARTISTPRODUCERACCOUNTS

PROOFREADERCLIENT

LIVETRIM

BLEED

COLOUR

H12Q3_PR_DAA_1087HYUNDAIJULY Retail AdsJuly 19, 2012Newspaper3-Car AD #2 BCDBC

REV

______ Peter B______ Client______ Roy S.______ Monica Lima______ Erin Phillips______ Leah Lepofsky______ Hyundai

____ PDFX1A to Pub____ Collect to AdPlanner____ Lo res pdf____ Revision & new laser____ Other _____________________ __________________________ __________________________

N/A10.50" X 20.79"N/A

C M Y K

[JOB INFO] [MECHANICAL SPECS] [APPROVALS] [ACTION]

[PUBLICATION INFO]NONE

[FONTS]Arial; Arial NarrowUnivers LT

[PRINTED AT]65%

Please contact Monica Lima e: [email protected] t: 647-925-1315 c: 416-806-0468 INNOCEAN WORLDWIDE CANADA, INC. 662 King St. West, Unit 101, Toronto ON M5V 1M7

[SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS]NONE

TMThe Hyundai nam

es, logos, product names, feature nam

es, images and slogans are tradem

arks owned by H

yundai Auto C

anada Corp. †Finance offers available O

.A.C

. from H

yundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Veloster 6-Speed M

anual with an annual finance rate of 0%

/1.9%/2.9%

for 72/84/84 months. B

i-weekly paym

ent is $108/$103/$128. No dow

n payment is required. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0/$1,192/$2,215. Finance offers include Delivery and D

estination of $1,495/$1,495/$1,495. Registration,

insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. D

elivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer adm

in fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual for $16,694 at 0% per annum

equals $108 bi-weekly for 72 m

onths for a total obligation of $16,694. Cash price is $16,694. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0. Example price includes D

elivery and Destination of $1,495. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. †♦

Prices for m

odels shown: 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GLS A

utomatic/Elantra Lim

ited/Veloster Tech. 6-Speed Manual is $19,744/$24,694/$24,494. D

elivery and Destination charges of $1,495/$1,495/$1,495 are included. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. ▼

Fuel consumption for 2013 A

ccent Sedan 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity: 6.7L/100KM)/2013 Elantra Sedan L 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity 6.8L/100KM)/2013 Veloster 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity 7.0L/100KM) are based

on Manufacturer Testing. A

ctual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel econom

y figures are used for comparison purposes only. †♦

‡Offers available for a lim

ited time, and subject to change or cancellation w

ithout notice. See dealer for complete details. D

ealer may sell for less. Inventory is lim

ited, dealer order may be required. ††H

yundai’s Com

prehensive Limited W

arranty coverage covers most vehicle com

ponents against defects in workm

anship under normal use and m

aintenance conditions.

HyundaiCanada.com5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

ADVANTAGE

THE

HYUNDAI0%†

AWARDWINNINGLINE-UP

72MONTHSFINANCING

FOR UP TO

Tech. model shown

Limited model shown

GLS model shown

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

INCLUDES: 6 AIRBAGS ■ iPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS ■ POWER WINDOWS AND DOOR LOCKS ■ ABS WITH TRACTION CONTROL SYSTEM ■ DUAL HEATED POWER EXTERIOR MIRRORS

SELLING PRICE: $17,444♦

ELANTRA L 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ 7" LCD TOUCH-SCREEN MULTIMEDIA SYSTEM WITH AM/FM/XM®/CD/MP3 PLAYER WITH 6 SPEAKERS ■ REARVIEW CAMERA ■ BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM ■ 17" ALLOY WHEELS ■ iPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS

SELLING PRICE: $20,994♦

VELOSTER 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

2013ACCENTSEDAN

2013ELANTRASEDAN

2013VELOSTER

0%†

FINANCING72MONTHS

FORUP TO

$103OWN IT

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

1.9%†WITH

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$0AND

DOWNPAYMENT

$128OWN IT

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

2.9%†WITH

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$0AND

DOWNPAYMENT

2012 CANADIAN CAR OF THE YEAR2012 NORTH AMERICAN CAR OF THE YEAR

2012 AJAC BEST NEW DESIGN2012 AJAC BEST NEW SPORTS/PERFORMANCE CAR (UNDER $50K)

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ STEERING WHEEL AUDIO CONTROLS ■ FRONT SEAT WARMERS ■ FRONT, SIDE & CURTAIN AIRBAGS ■ POWER WINDOWS & DOOR LOCKS ■ AM/FM/CD/MP3/USB/iPOD® AUDIO SYSTEM

SELLING PRICE: $16,694♦

ACCENT 4 DR GL 6-SPEED MANUAL WITH AIR CONDITIONING. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

2012 AJAC BEST NEW SMALL CAR (UNDER $21K)2012 WARD’S 10 BEST INTERIORS2012 WARD’S 10 BEST ENGINES

11087_DBC_12_MASTER

DOCKET #CLIENT

PROJECTDATE

MEDIAAD TYPEREGION

ART DIRECTORCOPYWRITER

MAC ARTISTPRODUCERACCOUNTS

PROOFREADERCLIENT

LIVETRIM

BLEED

COLOUR

H12Q3_PR_DAA_1087HYUNDAIJULY Retail AdsJuly 19, 2012Newspaper3-Car AD #2 BCDBC

REV

______ Peter B______ Client______ Roy S.______ Monica Lima______ Erin Phillips______ Leah Lepofsky______ Hyundai

____ PDFX1A to Pub____ Collect to AdPlanner____ Lo res pdf____ Revision & new laser____ Other _____________________ __________________________ __________________________

N/A10.50" X 20.79"N/A

C M Y K

[JOB INFO] [MECHANICAL SPECS] [APPROVALS] [ACTION]

[PUBLICATION INFO]NONE

[FONTS]Arial; Arial NarrowUnivers LT

[PRINTED AT]65%

Please contact Monica Lima e: [email protected] t: 647-925-1315 c: 416-806-0468 INNOCEAN WORLDWIDE CANADA, INC. 662 King St. West, Unit 101, Toronto ON M5V 1M7

[SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS]NONE

TMThe Hyundai nam

es, logos, product names, feature nam

es, images and slogans are tradem

arks owned by H

yundai Auto C

anada Corp. †Finance offers available O

.A.C

. from H

yundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual/Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Veloster 6-Speed M

anual with an annual finance rate of 0%

/1.9%/2.9%

for 72/84/84 months. B

i-weekly paym

ent is $108/$103/$128. No dow

n payment is required. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0/$1,192/$2,215. Finance offers include Delivery and D

estination of $1,495/$1,495/$1,495. Registration,

insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. D

elivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer adm

in fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual for $16,694 at 0% per annum

equals $108 bi-weekly for 72 m

onths for a total obligation of $16,694. Cash price is $16,694. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0. Example price includes D

elivery and Destination of $1,495. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. †♦

Prices for m

odels shown: 2013 A

ccent 4DR

GLS A

utomatic/Elantra Lim

ited/Veloster Tech. 6-Speed Manual is $19,744/$24,694/$24,494. D

elivery and Destination charges of $1,495/$1,495/$1,495 are included. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. ▼

Fuel consumption for 2013 A

ccent Sedan 4DR

GL 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity: 6.7L/100KM)/2013 Elantra Sedan L 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity 6.8L/100KM)/2013 Veloster 6-Speed M

anual (HW

Y 4.9L/100KM; C

ity 7.0L/100KM) are based

on Manufacturer Testing. A

ctual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel econom

y figures are used for comparison purposes only. †♦

‡Offers available for a lim

ited time, and subject to change or cancellation w

ithout notice. See dealer for complete details. D

ealer may sell for less. Inventory is lim

ited, dealer order may be required. ††H

yundai’s Com

prehensive Limited W

arranty coverage covers most vehicle com

ponents against defects in workm

anship under normal use and m

aintenance conditions.

HyundaiCanada.com5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

ADVANTAGE

THE

HYUNDAI0%†

AWARDWINNINGLINE-UP

72MONTHSFINANCING

FOR UP TO

Tech. model shown

Limited model shown

GLS model shown

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM

58 MPG▼

INCLUDES: 6 AIRBAGS ■ iPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS ■ POWER WINDOWS AND DOOR LOCKS ■ ABS WITH TRACTION CONTROL SYSTEM ■ DUAL HEATED POWER EXTERIOR MIRRORS

SELLING PRICE: $17,444♦

ELANTRA L 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ 7" LCD TOUCH-SCREEN MULTIMEDIA SYSTEM WITH AM/FM/XM®/CD/MP3 PLAYER WITH 6 SPEAKERS ■ REARVIEW CAMERA ■ BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM ■ 17" ALLOY WHEELS ■ iPOD®/USB/AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS

SELLING PRICE: $20,994♦

VELOSTER 6-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

2013ACCENTSEDAN

2013ELANTRASEDAN

2013VELOSTER

0%†

FINANCING72MONTHS

FORUP TO

$103OWN IT

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

1.9%†WITH

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$0AND

DOWNPAYMENT

$128OWN IT

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

2.9%†WITH

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$0AND

DOWNPAYMENT

2012 CANADIAN CAR OF THE YEAR2012 NORTH AMERICAN CAR OF THE YEAR

2012 AJAC BEST NEW DESIGN2012 AJAC BEST NEW SPORTS/PERFORMANCE CAR (UNDER $50K)

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ STEERING WHEEL AUDIO CONTROLS ■ FRONT SEAT WARMERS ■ FRONT, SIDE & CURTAIN AIRBAGS ■ POWER WINDOWS & DOOR LOCKS ■ AM/FM/CD/MP3/USB/iPOD® AUDIO SYSTEM

SELLING PRICE: $16,694♦

ACCENT 4 DR GL 6-SPEED MANUAL WITH AIR CONDITIONING. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

2012 AJAC BEST NEW SMALL CAR (UNDER $21K)2012 WARD’S 10 BEST INTERIORS2012 WARD’S 10 BEST ENGINES

s t a y i n t h e n e i g h b o u r h o o d

445 Kingsway near 12th in Vancouver | 604 292 8188

Open 24/7 at destinationhyundai.com!

...your neighborhood Hyundai store

E 12th Avenue

Kingsway N

Dealer #31042

BURNABY AUTO FEATURE

TMTh

e H

yund

ai n

ames

, log

os, p

rodu

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ames

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ture

nam

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uto

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ada

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p. †

Fina

nce

offe

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rom

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Fin

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a n

ew 2

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nt 4

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eed

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ra L

6-S

peed

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elos

ter 6

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ed M

anua

l with

an

annu

al fi

nanc

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te o

f 0%

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2/84

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mon

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0/$1

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215.

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ance

offe

rs in

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e D

eliv

ery

and

Des

tinat

ion

of $

1,49

5/$1

,495

/$1,

495.

Reg

istra

tion,

insu

ranc

e, P

PSA,

fees

, lev

ies,

cha

rges

, lic

ense

fees

and

all

appl

icab

le ta

xes

are

excl

uded

. Del

iver

y an

d de

stin

atio

n ch

arge

incl

udes

frei

ght,

P.D

.E.,

deal

er a

dmin

fees

and

a fu

ll ta

nk o

f gas

. Fin

anci

ng e

xam

ple:

201

3 Ac

cent

4D

R G

L 6-

Spee

d M

anua

l for

$16

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at 0

% p

er a

nnum

equ

als

$108

bi-w

eekl

y fo

r 72

mon

ths

for a

tota

l obl

igat

ion

of $

16,6

94. C

ash

pric

e is

$16

,694

. Cos

t of B

orro

win

g is

$0.

Exa

mpl

e pr

ice

incl

udes

Del

iver

y an

d D

estin

atio

n of

$1,

495.

Reg

istra

tion,

in

sura

nce,

PPS

A, fe

es, l

evie

s, c

harg

es, l

icen

se fe

es a

nd a

ll ap

plic

able

taxe

s ar

e ex

clud

ed. †

♦Pric

es fo

r mod

els

show

n: 2

013

Acce

nt 4

DR

GLS

Aut

omat

ic/E

lant

ra L

imite

d/Ve

lost

er T

ech.

6-S

peed

Man

ual i

s $1

9,74

4/$2

4,69

4/$2

4,49

4. D

eliv

ery

and

Des

tinat

ion

char

ges

of $

1,49

5/$1

,495

/$1,

495

are

incl

uded

. Reg

istra

tion,

insu

ranc

e, P

PSA,

fees

, lev

ies,

ch

arge

s, lic

ense

fees

and

all a

pplic

able

taxe

s ar

e ex

clud

ed. ♦

Fuel

con

sum

ptio

n fo

r 201

3 Ac

cent

Sed

an 4

DR

GL

6-Sp

eed

Man

ual (

HW

Y 4.

9L/1

00KM

; City

: 6.7

L/10

0KM

)/201

3 El

antra

Sed

an L

6-S

peed

Man

ual (

HW

Y 4.

9L/1

00KM

; City

6.8

L/10

0KM

)/201

3 Ve

lost

er 6

-Spe

ed M

anua

l (H

WY

4.9L

/100

KM; C

ity 7

.0L/

100K

M) a

re b

ased

on

Man

ufac

ture

r Tes

ting.

Ac

tual

fuel

effi

cien

cy m

ay v

ary

base

d on

driv

ing

cond

ition

s an

d th

e ad

ditio

n of

cer

tain

veh

icle

acc

esso

ries.

Fue

l eco

nom

y fig

ures

are

use

d fo

r com

paris

on p

urpo

ses

only.

†♦‡

Offe

rs a

vaila

ble

for a

lim

ited

time,

and

sub

ject

to c

hang

e or

can

cella

tion

with

out n

otic

e. S

ee d

eale

r for

com

plet

e de

tails

. Dea

ler m

ay s

ell f

or le

ss. I

nven

tory

is li

mite

d, d

eale

r ord

er

may

be

requ

ired.

††H

yund

ai’s

Com

preh

ensi

ve L

imite

d W

arra

nty

cove

rage

cov

ers

mos

t veh

icle

com

pone

nts

agai

nst d

efec

ts in

wor

kman

ship

und

er n

orm

al u

se a

nd m

aint

enan

ce c

ondi

tions

. †Fi

nanc

e of

fers

ava

ilabl

e O

.A.C

. fro

m H

yund

ai F

inan

cial

Ser

vice

s ba

sed

on a

new

201

2 El

antra

Tou

ring

GL

5-Sp

eed

Man

ual w

ith a

n an

nual

fina

nce

rate

of 0

%/0

%

for 4

8 m

onth

s. B

i-wee

kly

paym

ent i

s $1

54. N

o do

wn

paym

ent i

s re

quire

d. C

ost o

f Bor

row

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is $

0. F

inan

ce o

ffers

incl

ude

Del

iver

y an

d D

estin

atio

n of

$1,

495.

FOR LOW PRICES AND GREAT SERVICE

IN VANCOUVER AND BURNABY

YOUR

Page 14: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A14 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

4278 Lougheed Highway, Burnaby | 604 571 4350 | Service Direct 604 571 4399

Open 24/7 at burnabytoyota.ca!

...your neighborhood Toyota store

BURNABY

Dealer #9374

Lougheed Highway

Will

ingd

on

Ave

nue

Mad

ison

A

venu

e

BURNABY AUTO FEATURE s t a y i n t h e n e i g h b o u r h o o d

*Toyota Canada Finance. $3000 down, 72 months. Upon credit approval. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. All vehicles are subject to a $395 documentation fee.

2011 Toyota FJ Cruiser STK#4025 ....................$34,900

2011 Toyota Rav4 STK#4030 .................................$28,900

2011 Toyota Venza STK#4029 ...............................$29,900

2010 Toyota 4Runner STK#4022 .......................$34,900

2009 Toyota Camry STK#4033 .............................$22,900

2009 Toyota Matrix STK#4037 ............................$16,995

2009 Toyota Matrix STK#4043 ............................$14,900

2008 Lexus GS 460 STK#A3769 ............................$29,900

2008 Toyota Yaris STK#4028 ..................................$11,900

2007 Toyota Yaris STK#4024 ..................................$9,900

2007 Toyota Rav4 STK#3998A ..............................$18,488

2006 Mercedes CLS500 STK#3979 ..................$24,900

2005 Toyota Camry STK#D20585A .....................$11,900

2007 ToYoTa CaMRYSE - ToyoTA CErTifED! WAS $15,995! SALE...

$13,900! Stk#3938

2011 ToYoTa CoRoLLaToyoTA CErTifED! SALE...

$14,900! Stk#4041

2008 ToYoTa CaMRYSE - C, leather package! WAS $22,995! SALE...

$17,900! Stk#3919A

2009 ToYoTa FJ CRuiSeR4x4 - ToyoTA CErTifiED! WAS $29,995! SALE...

$22,900! Stk#3985

2011 ToYoTa VeNZaV6, AWD, ToUriNG! oiL ChaNGeS FoR LiFe!

$27,900! Stk#4003

2010 ToYoTa 4RuNNeR Trail Edition - ToyoTA CErTifiED! 60,800 kms!

$39,900! Stk#4021

2011 ToYoTa RaV 4Sport - ToyoTA CErTifiED! oiL ChaNGeS FoR LiFe!

$26,900! Stk#3957

2008 ToYoTa TuNdRaCrewMax Sr5 4x4! oiL ChaNGeS FoR LiFe!

$27,900! Stk#4014

2009 ToYoTa YaRiSToyoTA CErTifiED! WAS $12,995! SALE...

$10,900! Stk#4020

• Legendary Toyota Quality • Zero deductible • Complimentary tank of gas • Warranty honoured at over 1,500 Toyota Dealers in Canada and the U.S.

• Extensive mechanical and appearance reconditioning process• First oil / filter change at no charge • 7 days / 1,500 kms exchange privilege

• CarProof Claims Report included • Each Certified Toyota has passed a rigorous 127-point Quality Assurance inspection • Minimum 12-month / 20,000 kms

Powertrain and Roadside Assistance coverage backed by ToyotaVehicles inspected by bcAA

$173 / MoNTh

BASED ON 4.9%*

1.9%

aVaiLabLe

$209 / MoNTh

BASED ON 4.9%*

1.9%

aVaiLabLe

$279 / MoNTh

BASED ON 4.9%*

1.9%

aVaiLabLe

TCuV 3.9%

aVaiLabLe

TCuV 3.9%

aVaiLabLe

TCuV 3.9%

aVaiLabLe

TCuV 3.9%

aVaiLabLe

TCuV 3.9%

aVaiLabLe

*Toyota Canada Finance. $3000 down, 72 months. Upon credit approval. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. All vehicles are subject to a $395 documentation fee.

MORE GREEN

TakE REcycliNG TO ThE NExT lEvEl

for less

and less for us!

Buy a Toyota Certified Used Vehicle

2012

Lease, 60 months, with $3,310.00 down payment (plus HST), on credit approval.

Total Paid: $21,647.00

PayMENT iNclUDES Tax!!!

2009 ToYoTa MaTRiXToyoTA CErTifiED! SALE...

$14,900! Stk#4043

2003 ToYoTa 4RuNNeRSR5! BCAA INSPECTED! ! only 113,000 kms!

$21,995! Stk#4048

MuST See!

$229 / MoNTh

BASED ON 4.9%*

1.9%

aVaiLabLe

aMaZiNG MPG!!! $299/month

SOlD

SOlD

SOlD

SOlD

$229 / MoNTh

BASED ON 4.9%*

1.9%

aVaiLabLe

Page 15: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A15

What do you drive? ZOO}-ZOO}

OFFERS END JULY 31ST. ONLY AVAILABLE AT YOUR MAZDA DEALER. VISIT MAZDA.CA FOR MORE DETAILS.

Make every kilometer count with

SKYACTIV TECHNOLOGYDelivering up to 1,000 km per tank of gas.▲

EVENT ON SELECT 2012 MODELS

YOUR CHOICE

0%

0%

PURCHASE FINANCING†

FOR UP TO 84 MTHS

LEASE FINANCING**

FOR UP TO 48 MTHS

GS model shown from $19,790

GT-V6 model shown from $39,385

2012 m{zd{3 GX

2012 m{zd{2

2012 m{zd{6

Starting from $15,590*

Starting from $13,495*

Starting from $21,940*

bi-weekly for 84 months.On fi nance price from $15,590

at$89† 0.99%

APR

bi-weekly for 84 months.On fi nance price from $17,590

at$97† 0%

APR

Finance from

2012 m{zd{3 SPORT GX

Starting from $16,590*

bi-weekly for 84 months.On fi nance price from $18,590

at$102† 0%

APR

Finance from

2012 m{zd{5Starting from $19,945*

bi-weekly for 84 months.On fi nance price from $23,845

at$131† 0%

APR

Finance from

2013 CX-5Starting from $24,990

bi-weekly for 84 months.On fi nance price from $24,890

at$157† 3.99%

APR

Finance from

bi-weekly for 84 months.On fi nance price from $25,840

at$142† 0%

APR

Finance from

Finance from

d l h ff $ 9$ 9 9090

$

GX 2012 m{2

$

GT model shown from $26,540

GT model shown from $34,640GT V6 d ld ll hhh ff $39 385

ecoENERGY for Vehicles Awardr

◆ ◆

SKYACTIV TECHNOLOGY

JWTMazda BC July 2012 Ads Rot 2

9 col x 165 lines (10.306” x 11.876”)4 colour process

Prepared July, 2012VanProv-MZBC-12-19A

Newspaper: Vancouver Province108570

BLK CYAN MAG YEL

†0% APR purchase financing is available on select new 2012 Mazda vehicles. Using a finance price of $18,590 for 2012 Mazda3Sport GX (D5XS52AA00)/$17,590 for 2012 Mazda3 GX (D4XS52AA00)/$15,590 for 2012 Mazda2 GX (B5XB52AA00)/$23,845 for 2012 Mazda5 GS (E6SD62AA00)/$25,840 for 2012 Mazda6 GS-I4 (G4SY62AA00)/$25,115 for 2013 CX-5 GX (NVXK63AA00) at a rate of 0%/0%/0.99%/0%/0%/3.99% APR, the cost of borrowing for a 84 month term is $0/$0/$553/$0/$0/$3,679 bi-weekly payment is $102/$97/$89/$131/$142/$157, total finance obligation is $18,590/$17,590/$16,143/$23,845/$25,840/$28,569. Finance price includes freight & PDI. Taxes are extra and required at the time of purchase. Other terms available and vary by model. **Lease offers available on approved credit on 2012 Mazda3 GX (D4XS52AA00)/Mazda3Sport GX (D5XS52AA00). At 0% lease APR the monthly payment is $149/$169 per month for 48 months with $1,940/$2,360 down payment. PPSA and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation equals $9,114/$10,495. 20,000 km lease allowance per year, if exceeded, additional 8¢ /km applies. 25,000 km leases available. Taxes extra and required at the time of purchase. Other lease terms available and vary by model. *The advertised price of $16,590/$15,590/$13,495/$19,945/$21,940/$24,990 for 2012 Mazda3Sport GX (D5XS52AA00)/Mazda3 GX (D4XS52AA00)/Mazda2 GX (B5XB52AA00)/Mazda5 GS (E6SD62AA00)/Mazda6 GS-I4 (G4SY62AA00)/2013 CX-5 (NVXK63AA00) includes freight & PDI, plus a cash discount of $2,000/$2,000/$2,000/$4,000/$4,000/$0.The selling price adjustment applies to the purchase and is deducted from the negotiated pre-tax price and cannot be combined with subsidized purchase financing or leasing rates. All prices include freight & PDI of $1,695/$1,495/$1,895 for Mazda3, Mazda6/Mazda2/Mazda5, CX-5. PPSA, licence, insurance, taxes, down payment and other dealer charges are extra and may be required at the time of purchase. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Dealer trade may be necessary on certain vehicles. Lease and Finance on approved credit for qualified customers only. Offers valid as of July 4-31, 2012 while supplies last. Prices and rates subject to change without notice. Visit mazda.ca or see your dealer for complete details. rBased on 2012 fuel consumption ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. ▲Based on Highway driving only. ◆5.7 L/100 km (50 MPG) Highway/7.8 L/100 km (36 MPG) City – Based on ENERGUIDE Fuel Consumption Rating for the 2013 Mazda CX-5 with 6-speed manual transmission. 4.9 L/100km (58 MPG) Highway/7.1 L/100 km (40 MPG) City – Based on ENERGUIDE Fuel Consumption Rating for the 2012 Mazda3 GS-SKY sedan with 6-speed automatic transmission. These estimates are based on Government of Canada approved criteria and testing methods. Actual fuel consumption may vary. MPG is listed in Imperial gallons.

1595 Boundary Road, Vancouver | 604 8714368 | Service Direct 604 291 ZOOM (9666)

the new

Open 24/7 at newmazda.ca!

...your neighborhood Mazda store

BURNABY AUTO FEATURE s t a y i n t h e n e i g h b o u r h o o d

Hastings Street

First Avenue

Graveley

Dealer #31160 Lougheed Highway

Boun

dary

Roa

d

Page 16: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A16 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

BURNABY AUTO FEATURE s t a y i n t h e n e i g h b o u r h o o d

4780 Hastings Street, Burnaby | 604 294 2111

Open 24/7 at burnabyhonda.ca!

A proud member of

Auto Group

...your neighborhood Honda store

Hastings Street

3 blocks east of Willingdon

Will

ingd

on A

venu

e

Dealer #30902

BCHD_March2012_2012-CR-V_4CPD_PAGEDOM_8x11.786

INTO SPRING EVENTINTO SPRING EVENT

MODEL RM4H9CKN(S)

StaRtiNg fROM ONLy

MSRP** iNCLUDES fREigHt aND PDi.

$27,580

**M

SRP

is $2

7,580

incl

udin

g fr

eigh

t and

PD

i of $

1,590

bas

ed o

n a

new

201

2 CR

-V L

X 2W

D m

odel

RM

3H3C

E(S)

. for

all

offe

rs li

cens

e, in

sura

nce,

app

licab

le ta

xes a

nd re

gist

ratio

n ar

e ex

tra.

Dea

ler m

ay se

ll fo

r les

s. D

eale

r tra

de m

ay b

e re

quire

d. *

Lim

ited

time

finan

ce o

ffer

bas

ed o

n a

new

201

2 CR

-V t

ourin

g m

odel

RM

4H9C

KN(S

) and

a 3

6 m

onth

fina

nce

term

ava

ilabl

e on

ly th

roug

h H

onda

Ca

nada

fina

nce

inc.

O.a

.C. f

inan

ce e

xam

ple:

$36

,580

at 1.

99%

per

ann

um e

qual

s $49

8 fo

r 36

mon

ths.

frei

ght a

nd P

Di o

f $1,5

90 in

clud

ed. C

ost o

f bor

row

ing i

s $5,

085.

05, f

or a

tota

l obl

igat

ion

of $

41,6

65.0

5. D

own

paym

ent o

f $23

,737

.05,

first

mon

thly

pay

men

t, en

viro

nmen

tal f

ees a

nd $

0 se

curit

y de

posit

due

at fi

nanc

e in

cept

ion.

Dea

ler m

ay se

ll fo

r les

s. D

eale

r tra

de m

ay b

e re

quire

d. †1

.99%

le

ase

aPR

for 2

4 m

onth

s O.a

.C. M

onth

ly p

aym

ent,

incl

udin

g fre

ight

and

PD

i, is $

498.

Dow

n pa

ymen

t of $

3,136

.01,

first

mon

thly

pay

men

t, en

viro

nmen

tal f

ees a

nd $

0 se

curit

y de

posit

due

at l

ease

ince

ptio

n. t

otal

leas

e ob

ligat

ion

is $1

5,08

8.01

. tax

es, li

cens

e, in

sura

nce

and

regi

stra

tion

are

extr

a. 9

6,00

0 ki

lom

etre

allo

wan

ce; c

harg

e of

$0.

12/k

m fo

r exc

ess k

ilom

etre

s. D

eale

r may

sell

for l

ess.

Dea

ler t

rade

may

be

requ

ired.

**/

*/† O

ffer

s val

id fr

om M

arch

1st t

hrou

gh M

arch

31st

, 201

2 at

par

ticip

atin

g H

onda

reta

ilers

. Off

ers v

alid

onl

y fo

r Brit

ish C

olum

bia

resid

ents

at B

C H

onda

Dea

lers

loca

tions

. Off

ers s

ubje

ct to

cha

nge

or c

ance

llatio

n w

ithou

t not

ice.

ter

ms a

nd c

ondi

tions

app

ly. V

isit w

ww

.bch

onda

.com

or s

ee y

our H

onda

reta

iler f

or fu

ll de

tails

.

@BCHonda

gEt tHE aLL-NEW 2012 CR-V.

PURCHaSE fiNaNCiNg fOR UP tO 36 MONtHS* OR

LEaSE fOR UP tO 24 MONtHS†1.99% *

RatES aS LOW aS

PLUS, LEgENDaRy HONDa

fUEL ECONOMy.

2012 HONDA ODYSSEY LX

LEASE FROM

@*O.A.C. MSRP$31630. PAyMent PluS tAxeS. BASed On $3500 dOwn PAyMent. 48 MOnth leASe. SOMe COndItIOnS APPly.

Roadtrip

$359/mo* 0.99%

ready

BRAND SPANKin’ NEW!

PLENTY

of ROOM

FOR THE

WHOLE

FAMILY!

• 7 day Exchange Policy • 6yr, 120,000km

Powertrain Warranty • Financing from 1.99%

SALESALE

SALESALE

2010 Honda CIVIC dX-G only 40,000km. Loaded with power

windows and locks, automatic with a/C!

$16995 Stk# L6092

2008 Honda aCCoRd EX-L This beautiful 2 dr cpe is fully loaded.

automatic. Black with 74,000 km!

$19995 Stk# L6098

2008 Honda CIVIC dX-G automatic with power doors and locks, a/c and fully certified with 76,000 km!

$14995 Stk# L6081

2011 Honda CRZ Executive demo with 3,000 km. Full

factory warranty and like brand new!

$19995 Stk# 26571

Page 17: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A17Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A17

Smaller $1.84b deficit includes big HST repaymentJeff [email protected]

B.C. ended the fiscal year with a smaller-than-forecast deficit of $1.84 billion, according to the provincial government.

The deficit would have been $241 million had it not been for the one province’s one-time repayment of $1.6 billion in HST transition funding to Ottawa.

Finance Minister Kevin Falcon predicted the province is on track to return to a balanced budget in 2013-14.

But he cautioned while the 2011-12 results are better than expected, B.C. still faces great economic uncertainty from fluctuating commodity prices and potential economic impacts from the European debt crisis.

“British Columbia stands out globally as a safe harbour for investment because our government continues to keep spending and debt under control,” Falcon said, adding Europe’s plight reflects “the perils of the tax-borrow-and-spend mentality.”

But B.C. Auditor General John Doyle pegged the deficit at $2.36 billion, finding the province understated it by $530

million due to its continued practice of deviating from accepted accounting methods.

Because the government posted a deficit, cabinet ministers lose 10 per cent of their salary. They’re all receiving the other 10 per cent of the legislated 20 per cent pay holdback because their ministries met their targets.

A deficit of nearly $2.5 billion had been budgeted.

B.C.’s economy grew by 2.9 per cent in 2011, third among the provinces and better than the national average of 2.6 per cent.

Retail sales, an indicator of consumer confidence, increased by 3.1 per cent in 2011.

Excluding the one-time HST repayment, government spending was held to an increase of 2.6 per cent, down from the 4.3 per cent budgeted.

The provincial government spent $42.8 billion last year, with an additional $934 million going to health, $67 million to education and $51 million to social services. There were cuts in most other areas to offset the HST repayment.

Nearly $3.6 billion went to capital spending on schools, universities, hospitals, roads, bridges and other infrastructure.

B.C. took in an extra $1 billion in tax revenue last year, half of it from more personal income tax.

B.C. on track to balance budget: Falcon

Black Press fileFinance Minister Kevin Falcon predicts the province is on track to return to a balanced budget in 2013-14, but B.C.’s Auditor General says he has understated the deficit.

10th

Str

eet

Royal Ave.

Columbia St.

I.G.A.

Columbia Square Plaza

XEntry

hidden in corner

www.fabriclandwest.com

VANCOUVER1678 Southeast

Marine Drive

604-321-1848

NEW WEST1015 Columbia Street

Columbia Square Plaza

604-525-0074

Store HoursMon.-Wed. & Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thurs. & Fri.

9:30 - 9 Sun. 12 - 5

NEW LOCATIONEXPANDED LOCATION

Want to get away?A four-season spectacle for the five senses – just a click away!

All you need to know about where to stay and where to play, in a vacation destination quite unlike any other, anywhere.

Page 18: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A18 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

Page 19: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A19

RE LestateREVIEWpresented by

Great floor plan with separate dining area Bright kitchen, loads of windowsLiving room with gas fireplace

This week’s feature ...

at 407-221 11th Street, New WestOpen House Saturday, July 28 2-4pm

super LOCATION

Big, bright corner suite condo complete with 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom &

bonus 2 parking stalls in a newer rain screened building with newer roof!

Excellent building with terrific roof top deck ,maintenance fees include gas

and hot water plus pets and rentals are allowed! Very nice floor plan with

loads of windows, peek-a-boo river view, cozy gas fireplace, separate dining

area, in-suite laundry and separate locker. This home really has it all and

more including a super central location steps to all shopping, SkyTrain,

parks, schools, Douglas College, New West Quay. Great home and great

investment.

Priced at $279,900For more information please contact

Sandy or Lyle Longridge from Assist 2 Sell at 604-540-7253

rennie.comexpert Burnaby & New West living

For sale for livingreGGIe tANZOLApersonal real estate corporation

604.657.7101 • [email protected]/reggietanzola

Voted #1 Realtor 2011

tHis coMMUnication is not intenDeD to caUse or inDUce BreacH oF an eXistinG listinG BroKeraGe aGreeMent or BUYer aGencY contract.

House for sale $1,299,000 3681 McGill street, Burnaby

amazing views from this extremely well-built home in desirable

Vancouver Heights! this 5 bedroom is in impeccable condition and offers bright open spaces, 2 wood-burning

fireplaces, lots of storage, 2 car garage, private wrap-around view

deck off the kitchen & much more. Fantastic location - about 15 minutes

from everywhere in the city!

 Kingsgate $246,000412-519 12th st., new Westminster Welcome to the Kingsgate. this spacious 700 sq ft top floor 1 bedroom home features an extra large bedroom with vaulted ceilings, a spacious and sunny balcony, gas fireplace and insuite laundry. includes the exclusive use of one parking stall and one storage locker which is located on the same floor as the home.

Page 20: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A20 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

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Page 21: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A21

Appia Development’s newest community has been given the green light by the City of Burnaby to begin sales, which it did on Saturday, July 21.

“We’ve already had an overwhelming response from people all around the Lower Mainland about SOLO District,” says Appia President Jim Bosa. “We’ve had several thousand people visit our sales centre to preview the units over the past few weeks. We’re now excited to be able to start selling.”

Short for South Of Lougheed, SOLO will include 1,400 suites in four towers ranging from 38 to 55 storeys, a Whole Foods, large rooftop garden, pedestrian pathways, elevated dog park and other

commercial and retail spaces, among other things. The Brentwood SkyTrain station is right across the street.

“We firmly believe that SOLO District is poised to change the way we live in the Lower Mainland,” says George Wong of Magnum Projects. “SOLO District will have everything anyone needs within a short distance. Buyers will not only get access to fresh produce at Whole Foods, but easily accessible transit via the SkyTrain, short commutes to downtown Vancouver (and) car-sharing options through Modo.”

For more information, visit www.solodistrict.com or call 604-298-8800.

by Kerry Vital

The Pacific National Exhibition is bringing in the big guns for this year’s PNE Prize Home, built by Britco Structures and featuring furniture from Lane Home Furnishings.

The home was designed by Jillian Harris, a former star of The Bachelorette, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition and Canada’s Handyman Challenge. She will next be co-hosting Love It or List It Vancouver. Recently she has been busy designing homes all over the U.S. and Canada, but the PNE Prize Home is close to her heart after living in Kelowna and Vancouver.

“I wanted to do something locally,” she says, adding that it seemed like a fun project and she was looking forward to being able to have creative freedom to design the home, which will be located at the Sun Peaks Resort.

The over 3,000-square-foot house includes three bedrooms, three bathrooms and a 20-foot vaulted ceiling, among many other beautiful features.

Designing the PNE Prize Home presented a bit of a challenge for Harris.

“The home has to appeal to everyone,” she says. “It’s going to be someone’s home away from home.”

She took inspiration from the classic Hudson’s Bay blanket, and aimed for a shabby chic feel.

“I tried to integrate modern details,” she says. “I was able to be more whimsical and edgy with this home because it’s a vacation home, instead of something they’ll live in every day.”

And whimsical it is, with a dedicated sports room on the lower level with a ski-in ski-out entrance and a sleep loft featuring four bunk beds and an interior Juliet-style balcony looking over the bottom floor. The master bedroom is going to be seriously comfortable, with a walk-in closet and amazing ensuite bathroom with a huge soaker tub, glittery chandelier, dual vanities and a large shower stall. A balcony is located off of the master bedroom as well, so you’ll have plenty of space to enjoy the view.

Downstairs, the kitchen is a gourmet’s dream, with stainless-steel appliances and lots of counter space. The walk-in wine cellar is a work of genius, though Harris says it was a bit of a hard-sell for her crew.

“It has a real wow factor,” she says, adding that it’s her favourite part.

The large dining room table sits in front of a fireplace, surrounded by windows to showcase the mountain all around you. A deck wraps halfway around the home, and an outdoor fireplace and hot tub will also be part of the grand prize.

The great room beside the kitchen has its own fireplace and curved windows, letting natural light pour into the home.

“It doesn’t feel like a show home,” says Harris. “I wanted to give it a cozy feel. The home gives you a hug.”

Outside, the home will fit perfectly into the mountain surroundings, with its rustic architecture and large windows. That rustic architecture continues inside. Homey stone walls, cork flooring and exposed wooden beams are featured throughout, really

giving you the atmosphere of being in a ski lodge.

“I started designing a dream house for people, but this is really my dream house,” Harris says. “It’s my dream (ensuite) bathroom, my dream bedroom, everything ... It was important that this home pulls at your heart strings. It has to make your heart go pitter patter.”

The Prize Home can be viewed at the PNE from Aug. 18 onwards, or on Aug. 5 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tickets are $25 for 5 or $50 for 15.

For more information visit www.pne.ca/pneprizehome. Tickets can be purchased online, by phone or in person at the PNE. The winner’s name will be announced on Sept. 12.

“I am so jealous of the person who wins,” Harris says.

Submitted photosDesigner Jillian Harris says that the PNE Prize Home is her dream house, with a spacious kitchen, top, and beautiful rustic features on the exterior, above. The huge living room features a 20-foot vaulted ceiling and a gorgeous stone fireplace, left.

PNE Prize Home makes your heart go pitter patter

A home away from home

Appia Development able to start sales

SOLO District gets city approval

“ It was important that this home pulls

at your heart strings,” says designer Jillian Harris.

Page 22: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A22 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

Mackin Park Ad for Black PressFull Page Ad – 10.333" x 14"File Name: BLU22094_Mackin_Ad_BlkPress_FP_July16.aiJuly16/2012/suikiHD/suiki

Insertion: left hand pageDue: July 16 – 5pm

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1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS from the low $200,000’s

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Page 23: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A23

Page 24: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A24 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012A24 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

In established neighbourhoods, residents often believe that new rental housing lowers property values. As a result, Not in My Backyard (NIMBY) syndrome can be a barrier to developers wanting to increase density.

Does affordable rental housing lead to lower property values?

The Chicago-based National Association of Realtors’ online library was a good resource, containing links to more than 20 comprehensive studies and articles, some of which, in turn,

reviewed and analyzed data from other studies.

The geographic areas studied included high-density urban areas, upscale suburbs and rural areas. Typically, studies compared the sale prices of nearby homes before, during and after rental housing is built.

WHAT DID THE DATA FIND?

There is increasing evidence that affordable rental units are not a threat to local property values and are instead a net plus. This is because compact development can help build

stronger, healthier communities.In Vancouver, whether

it’s laneway homes or new multiple family units, there has never been an example of neighbourhood property values declining because of higher density, reports the City of Vancouver.

In contrast, quality higher density developments bring benefits including decreased pollution since more residents walk, cycle and take transit.

Most often, average home prices increase more in areas where there is new high density

development than in areas where there is not, according to research in seven communities done by the BC Housing Policy Branch.

Michael Geller, an SFU adjunct professor at the SFU Centre for Sustainability, says a key benefit to higher density  affordable housing is keeping property taxes stable.

“If there are no new residents to share upgrading costs, then home owner property taxes are going to increase.”

Affordable housing a net plus

1237 PHILLIPS AVE$1,258,880• Immaculately maintained, beautiful, 6 bdrm, 4 bath home • 2 bdrm + den, ground fl oor mortgage helper/suite • On quiet cul-de-sac with easy access to the best schools in Burnaby • Bright, open & spacious home • Large kitchen with brand new stainless steel appl. • Large deck spaces & matured landscaped gardens

PARK PLAZA$374,0001707-1188 RICHARDS

CORAL COURT 1 BEDROOM$345,000407-3638 WEST BROADWAY

GROVE PENTHOUSE$439,900405-275 ROSS DR

VENICE COURT PENTHOUSE$885,000405-1869 SPYGLASS• Spectacular view • 2 bedrooms • 2 bathrooms • 1155sf • 3 balconies • Waterfront • False Creek freehold • Pet and rental friendly • Parking & storage • Tastefully renovated

PARKSIDE GREENE TOWNHOME$319,900103-3888 NORFOLK• Generous oversized 1 bedroom • Private townhome entry • Walking trails • Massive outdoor terrace • One year young • 2-5-10-year warranty • Parking and storage • Pet and rental friendly • Beautifully fi nished

L’HERMITAGE$638,0001403-788 RICHARDS• Live the dream, an exclusive residence at L’ Hermitage • An elegant lobby & 24 hrs concierge welcomes you • Located in the vibrant downtown core, an impressive 2 BR + den offers sleek & stylish fi nishings & more • Urban lifestyle living with cafes, restaurants, shops & transit, just outside your door • Terrifi c south cityscape views • Relax in your air conditioned unit or enjoy the terrifi c fi tness facility & amenities • Great location, great value & great unit

OPEN TUESDAYJULY 31, 11AM-1PM

OPEN FRIDAYJULY 27, 12-2PM

$30,000 PRICE REDUCTION

SOLD SOLD

RECENT SALES

212-2515 ONTARIO ST8-1250 WEST 6TH AVE#741/743 EAST 10TH AVE13-3855 PENDER 203-14824 N BLUFF RD 854 & 852 E.14TH AVE G04-1490 PENNYFARTHING C109-2943 WALL ST. 401-610 GRANVILLE 211-1011 KING EDWARD 504-1088 RICHARDS ST. 1407-608 BELMONT

SOLDIN 3 DAYS

Don Schmidt604-467-9300 www.donschmidt.ca

TRI-TEL REALTY

Fab post and beam home remodelled from top to bottom with over $400,000 spent and sits on 1/3 of an acre with extensive use of rock gardens and walk-ways of the highest quality. Vaulted ceiling throughout main, 2 river rock fi replaces. Entry, kitchen and both baths have heated tile fl oors. Lower level can easily be con-verted into a suite by the addition of only a stove & door. Upper deck is over 500 sq. ft. made of concrete, outdoor stereo system. 3 car garage and room for RV and boat. Quality details throughout.

$1,295,0007022 Fielding Court, Burnaby

OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1-4

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Highland Drive

Princeton Ave

Queenston Ave

Galloway Ave

Gislason Ave

David AveDavid Ave

Marg

uerite

Ave

Lougheed Hwy

CoquitlamCentre

BURKE MOUNTAIN

Page 25: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A25

Special Education Assistants School District No. 42 (Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows) is seeking qualifi ed persons interested in working as a Special Education Assistant, commencing on a casual basis. Special Education Assistants provide support to students with special needs as identifi ed by the District Special Education Department and assist teachers in the delivery of special education programs and services. In addition to the skills listed below, we are seeking candidates who have completed the Deafblind Intervention Certifi cate Program, are adept at managing amplifi cation equipment and have American Sign Language Skills using hand-in-hand signing with the ability to adjust to the signing, educational and communication levels of the student. We also are pursuing a Special Education Assistant who may support a student with visual impairments and will be required to change print into Braille. A CNIB Braille Correspondence course as well as the Braille Transcription Certifi cate are required for this particular role.

REQUIRED KNOWLEDGE, ABILITY AND SKILLS:• Successful completion of Grade 12 plus the Special Education Teaching

Assistant program or equivalent plus successful experience working with individuals with special needs.

• Knowledge of behaviour management, confl ict resolution and restraining techniques plus a variety of learning strategies and the ability to assist in modifying curriculum to suit individual student’s needs.

• Ability to function and communicate effectively as a member of a team in the support of complex programs requiring a high degree of courtesy, discretion and maintenance of confi dentiality with a wide variety of school personnel, students and parents.

• Flexibility, patience, stamina, emotional stability and maturity to assist students with a variety of challenges to develop to their maximum potential.

• Suffi cient physical strength, health and coordination to perform the duties and responsibilities of the job.

• May be required to have a valid B.C. driver’s license.

This position is part of the CUPE bargaining unit. The rate of pay is $25.72 per hour plus 12% in lieu of benefi ts. An additional 4% premium applies when individuals are required to use their skills using Deaf Blind Intervention or Braille.

Please send a complete resume and professional references by August 17, 2012 at 4:00 pm to:

Human Resources DepartmentSchool District No. 42 (Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows)22225 Brown AvenueMaple Ridge, BC V2X 8N6

Fax: 604-466-6278Email: [email protected] Web site: www.sd42.ca

We thank all applicants for their interest, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

Display Advertising DepartmentAdvertising Sales

Peace Arch News, a bi-weekly publication serving more than 37,400 homes in White Rock and South Surrey, has an immediate opening for a full-time Advertising Sales Representative.

Peace Arch News is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private, independent newspaper company, with more than 100 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.

This is a challenging career opportunity for a result-oriented individual. Candidates for this position will possess the ability to service existing clients and develop new business in one of the Lower Mainland’s fastest-growing markets.

If you have a proven track record in sales, thrive on working in a fast-paced environment, are highly motivated, career-oriented with strong organizational and communication skills, we would like to hear from you.

Our work environment sets industry standards for professionalism and combines a salary/benefit package designed to attract and retain outstanding staff.

Deadline for applications is Tuesday, July 31, 2012.

Please send your application in confidence to:

Rita Walters

Publisher

The Peace Arch News #200 - 2411 - 160th Street Surrey, B.C., V3S 0C8

or e-mail [email protected]

The interest of all applicants is appreciated, however, only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.

www.blackpress.ca

INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICIANGraymont’s Pavilion Plant is accepting applications for an Industrial Electrician. Candidate must possess current B.C. Red Seal certifi cation. Preference will be given to well-rounded individuals willing to also perform other nonelectrical maintenance work as part of the maintenance team. A background in lime or cement industry along with computer and or PLC skills is preferred as well as a proven track record of developing and maintaining a safe work culture. Additional skills required:

Graymont Pavilion Lime Plant.

willing to work in a team environment.

steady day shift.

Lillooet, B.C.

Qualified applicants please submit your resume to:[email protected] or

Graymont Pavilion PlantAttn: Dan BuisP.O. Box 187

Cache Creek, BC V0K 1H0

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

7 OBITUARIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

106 AUTOMOTIVE

We are seeking a highly motivated, energetic indi-vidual for the position of

automotive service advisor. If you are interested in a career in the automotive

industry and possess excel-lent customer service and communication skills, our growing company offers a

competitive wage and benefi t package and an

exciting work environment.Automotive experience is preferred but not essential

for the right candidate.

Email resumes to: [email protected]

or apply in person.

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

BUSINESS FOR SALEMagazine publishing

company for ambitious, outgoing entrepreneurs.

Fun, Lucrative.Startup Capital Required.We Teach & Provide Content.

1-888-406-1253CAREER INCOME

NEED ADDITIONAL INCOME?Earn an income you deserveStart a mini-offi ce outlet from

home www.123gotofortune.com

SERIOUS RETIREMENT Impact. Home based business online. Flexible hours FREE training. www.project4wellness.com

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

Opportunity in Financial ServicesiFreedom Financial Solutions is currently expanding its operations in the Surrey area and we are looking for ambitious, motivated individuals that enjoy working with people. Full training provid-ed. Work as an independent fi nancial consultant or build and manage your own agency. Flexibility to start part-time. Six-fi gure income potential with no or minimal overhead.

Contact us at 604-825-4910 for more information or email your

resume and cover letter to [email protected]

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

ATLAS POWER SWEEP DRIVERS

Power sweeping and water truck drivers. Air ticket or class 3 required. Must be hard working with a good attitude. Burnaby based. Must be available to work nights and weekends. Good driv-ing record required.

mail: [email protected] or Fax 604-294-5988

CLASS 1 TRUCK DRIVERThe Burnaby division of Upper Canada Forest Products requires a class 1 certifi ed truck driver for their local same day deliveries. The successful candidate will be customer-service oriented, and enjoys working in a fast paced environment. We offer well main-tained company equipment, a competitive compensation & benefi ts package with the added benefi t of no weekend or evening work. Fax cover letter & resume to 604-522-3006 or e-mail resumes to: [email protected]

DRIVER. Class 1 Drivers wanted. Offering top pay. Close to home. Home most weekends. Family comes fi rst! 1 year fl at deck exp. & border crossing a must. Fax resume& driver abstract to 604-853-4179.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

AUTOS: To buy or sell your car, truck, RV, van,4x4 or trailer - this category has it all. You’ll alsofind automotive supplies and classic cars forsale, or you can list the vehicle you’re seeking.

bcclassified.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

SUPER B DUMP DRIVERS

Local Haul Drivers Needed for the following positions;

Full Time - DayCasual Part Time - Nights

& Saturdays

Class 1 license req. Preference will be given to applicants with previous Super B experience.

SUMAS TRANSPORT INC.is a locally owned & operated

transport company with a Competitive Compensation

Package.

Interested applicants pleasefax resume and drivers

abstract Attn. Darcy(1)604-852-2650 or [email protected]

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

115 EDUCATION

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

bcclassified.com

INDEX IN BRIEF

AGREEMENTIt is agreed by any Display orClassified Advertiser requesting spacethat the liability of the paper in theevent of failure to publish an adver-tisement shall be limited to theamount paid by the advertiser for thatportion of the advertising spaceoccupied by the incorrect item only,and that there shall be no liability inany event beyond the amount paid forsuch advertisement. The publishershall not be liable for slight changesor typographical errors that do notlessen the value of an advertisement.

bcclassified.com cannot beresponsible for errors after the firstday of publication of any advertise-ment. Notice of errors on the first dayshould immediately be called to theattention of the Classified Departmentto be corrected for the following edi-tion.

bcclassified.com reserves theright to revise, edit, classify or rejectany advertisment and to retain anyanswers directed to thebcclassified.com Box Reply Serviceand to repay the customer the sumpaid for the advertisment and boxrental.

DISCRIMINATORYLEGISLATIONAdvertisers are reminded thatProvincial legislation forbids the pub-lication of any advertisement whichdiscriminates against any personbecause of race, religion, sex, color,nationality, ancestry or place of origin,or age, unless the condition is justifiedby a bona fide requirement for thework involved.

COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist inall advertisements and in all othermaterial appearing in this edition ofbcclassified.com. Permissionto reproduce wholly or in part and inany form whatsoever, particularly by aphotographic or offset process in apublication must be obtained in writ-ing from the publisher. Any unautho-rized reproduction will be subject torecourse in law.

Advertise across thelower mainland inthe 17 best-read

communitynewspapers.

ON THE WEB:

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . . . . . . 1-8

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . 9-57

TRAVEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61-76

CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80-98

EMPLOYMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102-198

BUSINESS SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . 203-387

PETS & LIVESTOCK . . . . . . . . . . . 453-483

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE . . . . . . 503-587

REAL ESTATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603-696

RENTALS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703-757

AUTOMOTIVE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 804-862

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

Advertise across theLower Mainland inthe 18 best-read

communitynewspapers and

5 dailies.

Advertise across the

Lower Mainland in

the 18 best-read

community

newspapers and

3 dailies.

ON THE WEB:

Page 26: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A26 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

BECOME AN OPTICIANIN ONLY 6 MONTHSOptical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Train for a “Career With Vision”. START YOUR OWN BUSINESS!!• 6-month program . . . starts Feb. 20th, 2012• Financial assistance available• Hurry . . . enrolment limited!!

B.C. COLLEGE OF OPTICS#208 - 10070 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC

www.bccollegeofoptics.ca

604.581.0101

starts Sept. 10th, 2012

BC COLLEGE OF OPTICS

The Richmond Review has an immediate opening for an Advertising Consultant.By joining the number one community newspaper serving Richmond, you can develop a rewarding career in advertising and marketing while contributing to one of the most culturally diverse communities in Canada. The team environment at The Richmond Review will inspire you to the highest level of customer partnership and reward your motivated approach to excellence. You should be a strong communicator, well organized, self motivated and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. A car and a valid driver’s license are required. The Richmond Review is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.Send your resume with cover letter by August 3, 2012 to:Elana Gold, [email protected] Richmond Review#1-3671 Viking Way, Richmond, BC, V6V 2J5

Advertising Sales Consultant

www.blackpress.ca REVIEW the richmond

Donald’s Fine Foods is a family owned, medium sized food processing company that has been in business for almost 20 years. The company is home to over 600 employees in three plants located in British Columbia and Saskatchewan. We have built the business around our mission statement: “A global provider of high quality food products delivered with integrity by our family to your family” and our core values of integrity, quality, innovation, superior customer service, and our dedicated people.

The Director of Sales will provide leadership to the sales team, developing a cohesive sales focus through the existing sales team, and working to further develop sales opportunities.

This ideal candidate will have a post-secondary education preferably in Business Administration. Experience in the meat industry in particular sales is a defi nite advantage.

Key areas of responsibilities include:• Maintain thorough communications with all stakeholders• Direct sales with major customers and product development• Supervision and leadership of sales team• Minimize production overstocks through balanced sales strategy• Cost/benefi t analysis of current sales based on profi t and balancing• Develop new sales accounts• Establish and maintain monthly visits to major customers• Assume responsibility for current sales by other management members

Please send covering letter and resume to:careers@donaldsfi nefoods.com or fax 604-875-6031

Director of Sales

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

115 EDUCATION

125 FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE

Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home

for a few months. Are you looking for the opportunity to do

meaningful, fulfi lling work?PLEA Community Services is looking for qualifi ed applicants

who can provide care for youth in their home on a full-time basis or

on weekends for respite. Training, support and

remuneration are provided. Funding is available for

modifi cations to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting

for an open door. Make it yours.

Call 604-708-2628www.plea.bc.ca

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

✓ CHECK CLASSIFIEDSbcclassified.com 604-575-5555

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

126 FRANCHISE

.Jim’s Mowingwww.jimsmowing.ca

130 HELP WANTED

$100-$400 CASH DAILYfor Landscaping Work!Competitive, Energetic,

Honesty a MUST!PropertyStarsJobs.Com

An Alberta Construction Company is hiring dozer, excavator and la-bour/rock truck operators. Prefer-ence will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alco-hol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-723-5051.

CARRIERS NEEDED

YOUTH and ADULTS

Deliver newspapers (2x per week) on Wednesdays and Fridays in your area. Papers are dropped off at your home with the fl yers pre-inserted!

Call Christy 604-436-2472for available routes email

Email [email protected]

WANTED INHOME COOK P/T, N. Burnaby, 3 days per week, $18.00 hr. Must be exp’d. Reply Box 125 c/o BC Classifi ed, 102-5460 152 St. Surrey BC, V3S 5J9

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

ALPINE TOYOTAAttention Toyota Product Advisors

Alpine Toyota has an imme-diate opening for a Toyota Product Advisor. Our dealer-ship is situated in Cranbrook B.C., the major business and recreation hub for the entire East Kootenay. We are cur-rently looking for a Product Advisor with a track-record of success who is interested in working in a positive team environment. We offer on-going training, a generous compensation plan and an engaged group of Team Leaders to help our Product Advisors achieve their goals.For the right applicant, relocation expenses and a guaranteed income will be considered.If you love selling Toyota products and the quality of life that can be found in the East Kootenay’s sounds in-teresting, please forward your resume in confi dence to our Sales Team Leader by email: kdunsire@alpinetoyo-ta or by phone at (250)489-4010. If you present the qualities and values we are looking for, we will contact successful applicants for an interview.

NEED A RAISE??10 Customer Service positions available!

Up to $20.00/hr paid weekly

Must be outgoing and motivated!!!!

Call Erica 604 777 2195

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

THE LEMARE GROUP is accepting resumes for the follow-ing positions:• Grapple Yarder Operator• Hooktender• Line Machine Operator• Chaser• 2nd Loader Buckerman• Off Highway Logging Truck Drivers• Excavator Operator with Log-ging Road Construction Experi-ence• Certifi ed Driller/Blaster• Heavy Duty MechanicsFulltime with union rates/benefi ts. Please send resumes by fax to 250-956-4888 or email to: offi [email protected].

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

BOSTON Pizza New West 1045 Columbia St. V3M 1C4 Permanent full time pizza cook to ensure quality control measures & health standards are followed.Shift 5:30PM - 2:30AM.Min 3 yrs exp. English speaking. $14.35/ hr.Mail, drop-off or fax resume to (604) 525-3384.

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

COMMERCIALROOF FOREMAN

$28.00 - $38.00 per hour based on experience. Commercial roof-ing co. hiring lead roofers with extensive exp. in commercial roofi ng, including: two - ply torch, single ply, sloped and metal. Offering Great Benefi ts Including: Company Vehicle, Paid Travel, Support Crews, Top Wages, Health/Dental,

Pension & Company Uniforms.Must have proven ability to install using RCABC roofi ng practices and follow WCB regulations.

Fax resume: 604-944-2916, Call Adam: 604-944-2977 or e-mail

aknipfel@designroofi ng.caVisit: www.designroofi ng.ca

130 HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

Certifi ed Heavy Duty Mechanics

Wanted For Surrey, Kamloops & Vernon.

Fast Paced, Dynamic Shops

Duties include:• Maintenance & Repairs

• Diagnostics of Trucks, Trailers,Forklifts and Hydraulics

• Reporting • Inventory control

Qualifi cations:• Strong command of the

English Language• 3rd or 4th year apprentices

• Certifi ed journeymen• Driver’s licence • Self-starter

WE OFFER

Competitive Wages &Full Benefi ts

Please e-mail resumes:[email protected]

or Fax: 604.534.3811

Super Save is committedto Employment

Equity and Diversity.

PERSONAL SERVICES

171 ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

182 FINANCIAL SERVICES

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad cred-it? Bills? Unemployed? Need Mon-ey? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Accep-tance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420.

www.pioneerwest.com

NEED A Business or Personal Loan? Get a Business start up Loan for up to $5 million bank-ruptcy. Bad credit ok, interest rate from 1.9%. Apply now at www.borrowusnow.com or call 1-855-937-8487.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

206 APPLIANCE REPAIRS

APPLIANCE repair all makes/mod-els. Furnace, boiler, gas stove. Cert tech. Andy 604-808-1383.

236 CLEANING SERVICES

BEST CLEANERS AROUND GUARANTEED! Since 1985.

Residential & CommercialWeekly, Bi-Monthly - Best Rates!

MAIDS R’ US 604-808-0212

242 CONCRETE & PLACING

DALL’ANTONIA CONCRETE Sen-iors disc. Friendly, family bus., 40+ yrs. 604-240-3408/604-299-7125

257 DRYWALL

FRANKS Drywall *Boarding*Taping *Spraying no job too sm. Seniors rts Free ests. 604-939-7029, 809-1945

260 ELECTRICAL

06951 Electrician Lic. Low cost. PANEL CHANGE. Big/small jobs. Residential/ Comm. 604-374-0062

#1113 LOW COST ELECTRIC Panel upgrade, trouble shooting

Lic & Bonded. Alfred 604-522-3435

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

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE

# 1 BACKHOE & BOBCAT servic-es, backfi lling, trucking, oil tank re-moval. Yard/clean-up, cement & pavement re & re. 604-341-4446.

275 FLOOR REFINISHING/INSTALLATIONS

HARDWOOD FLOORREFINISHING

✶ Repairs & Staining ✶ Installation

✶ Free Estimates

Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224

www.centuryhardwoodfl oors .com

281 GARDENING

BUDGETS FOR QUALITY WORK

DAerating D Power Raking D Pruning D Lawn Cutting

D Power Washing D Fencing D Organic Fertilizing

604-374-2283Milano Landscapers &

Garden Services Ltd [email protected]

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

GUTTER Cleaning Service, Repairs Free Est, 20 yrs exp, Rain or shine. 7 days/week. Simon 604-230-0627

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

❞A ALL RESIDENTIAL❞* Electrical * Plumbing * Heating* Painting * Carpentry * Tile Work* Laminate & Hardwood Flooring

Exc. Rates, Senior Disc. Work guar. Since 1986. Ken 604-418-7168

HOME IMPROVEMENTSCarpentry, painting, drywall, tilesQuality work - reasonable price

Martin 778-355-5840MLG ENTERPRISES All Aspects OF Home Improvements, Landscaping & Garden Solutions (604)501-9290

ZIGGY’S RENO’S. European quality work. Free Est. All types of renos. Best prices! 604-931-4224

320 MOVING & STORAGE

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.

ABBA MOVERS & DEL. Res/com 1-4 ton truck, 1 man $35/hr, 2 men from $45. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25 yrs of experience.604-506-7576

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

AFFORDABLE MOVINGLocal & Long Distance

From $45/Hr1, 3, 5, 7,10 Ton Trucks

Licenced ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 MenFree estimate/Seniors discount

Residential~Commercial~Pianos

604-537-4140

BEST RATE MOVING EXPERIENCED MOVERS WITH

AFFORDABLE RATES.Starting $40/hr.

LICENSED & INSURED.✶ Local & Long Distance ✶

✶Seniors Discount. ✶ (604)787-8061

SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured

Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

AWD Interior/Ext Painting. Dry-wall/Ceiling Repairs. Call Will for a Free Estimate. (778)709-1081

Duncan’s Painting: Int & ExtPressure Washing & Drywall repairs 35 years exp (604)459-3881

STAN’S PAINTING

Comm. & Res. BBB, WCB.

Kitchen Reno’s & Cabinets

Seniors Discount Book by end of

July - 10% off. 25 yrs exp. Guarantee on work. Refs.

(604)773-7811or 604-432-1857

MILANO PAINTING & RENOS.Int./Ext. Prof. Painters. Free Est. Bonded & Insured. 604-551-6510

ABOVE THE REST “Int. & Ext., Unbeatable Prices, Professional Crew. Free Est.

Written Guarantee. No Hassle, Quick Work, Insured, WCB.

Call (778)997-9582

D.J PAINTINGInterior & Exterior

• Drywall Repair • Many Years Experience

Free estimates604-258-7300

cell: 604-417-5917AAA PRECISION PAINTING. Quality work. 778-881-6096.

338 PLUMBING

Gas Fitter ✭ PlumberFurnace Boilers, Hot Water TanksHot Water Heat, Plumbing Jobs.

Furnace cleaning with truck mounted machine

604-507-4606 or 604-312-7674

.EnterprisePlumbing, Heaitng, Gasfi tting

10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fi tter. Aman: 778-895-2005

341 PRESSURE WASHING

A1 POWER WASHINGCommercial and Residental.Call Carmine 604-617-0715

Always!pressure washing, window cleaning, Gutter, lawn maintains, yard clean-up. Simon 604-230-0627

POWER WASHINGGUTTER CLEANING

SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE Call Ian 604-724-6373

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

Page 27: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27, 2012 NewsLeader A27

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

FIVE STAR ROOFINGAll kinds of re-roofi ng & repairs.

Free est. Reasonable rates.(604)961-7505, 278-0375

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

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

★ ★CALL NOW★ ★

LOW COSTRUBBISH REMOVAL★ Disposal ★ Renovations Debris ★ Construction ★ Drywall Pickup

★ Demolition ★ 7 days/week★ Free Estimates ★

Isaac 604-727-5232FLEETWOOD WASTE

Bin Rentals 10-30 Yards.Call Ken at 604-294-1393

RECYCLE YOUR JUNK!Rubbish Removal, Caring for the

Earth. Professional Quality Service at Great Rates. 604-787-8782

DISPOSAL BINSResidential & Commercial

Services

• Portable Toilets• Fencing • Containers• Waste Management

• StorageWe Recycle!GO GREEN!

www.EconPro.com604-882-2733

FREE! ScrapMetal Removal...FREE!!!

*Appliances *BBQs *Exercise Equip *Cars/Trucks/Trailers *Hotwater Tanks *Furnaces

* Restaurant EquipmentAll FREE pickup!

778-233-4949 T & K Haulaway

bradsjunkremoval.com

Haul Anything...But Dead Bodies!!

604.220.JUNK(5865)Serving The

Lower Mainland Since 1988

RECYCLE-IT!JUNK REMOVAL

Recycled Earth Friendly• Estate Services • Electronics

• Appliances • Old Furniture• Construction • Yard Waste• Concrete • Drywall • Junk

• Rubbish • Mattresses & More!On Time, As Promised,Service Guaranteed!

604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

359 SAND, GRAVEL & TOPSOIL

Always! deliver Top soil, bark mulch, sand & gravel. 7days/wk. Simon 604-230-0627 will spread

374 TREE SERVICES

A1-TRI-CRAFT Tree Serv. Dangerous tree removal, spiral pruning hedge trimming, stump grinding, topping. Insured, WCB Free Est

Arborist ReportsAndrew 604-618-8585

$ Best Rates $

Tree removal done RIGHT!• Tree & Stump Removal

• Certifi ed Arborists • 20 yrs exp. • 60’ Bucket Truck

• Crown Reduction • Spiral Pruning • Land Clearing • Selective Logging

~ Fully Insured • Best Rates ~

604-787-5915, 604-291-7778 www.treeworksonline.ca

[email protected]% OFF with this AD

PETS

477 PETS

BEAGLE PUPPIES. AKC reg’d. 2 males, 1 female, tri-colored. 1st shots, dewormed, micro chipped. Ready to go. $650. 604-826-1204 (Mission)

BOXER PUPS, family raised, de-claws, tailes, vaccinated, health cert exc quality. $975. 604-341-1445

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

NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604-856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com

P/B Choc. lab puppies, 5M, 6F, born June 27, CKC reg. vet✓ $750. 604-217-6551 or 604-825-1730

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

533 FERTILIZERS

WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $160 or Well Rotted 10 yards - $180. 604-856-8877

542 FRUIT & VEGETABLES

CHERRY JUBILEE Sour Cherries2017 - 272nd St., Aldergrove.

Open Sat. July 28th & Sun. July 29 8:00a.m. - 3:00p.m.

Call to Order: 604-856-5844

WE-PICK Blueberries $2.00 lb. 19478 Dewdney Trunk Rd. Pitt Mead. 763-2808

548 FURNITURE

ALL NEW Queen MATTRESS SET Still in Original Plastic! Must Sell. $150 - Call: 604-484-0379

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

548 FURNITURE

MATTRESSES starting at $99• Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings

100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331

560 MISC. FOR SALE

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?

POOL TABLE, $375. Trampoline, $370. Basketball hoop, $125. Kid’s desk w/lots of drawers, $90. Key-board, $125. Stationary bike $115. All exc. cond. 604-434-0548

566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

PEARL DRUM SET, $800, 6 cym-bals, 1 throne, 1 stool, double base pedal, in Hope. Call (604)869-7329

REAL ESTATE

627 HOMES WANTED

WE BUY HOUSES!Older House • Damaged House

Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments

Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-657-9422

657 HOPE

YALE, WOW 395K-3 acres + 2 houses, 600 ft Fraser River frt. 2 hrs from Vanc. Dan (604)860-3454

660 LANGLEY/ALDERGROVE

HOMES FOR SALE-SUPER BUYSwww.dannyevans.ca

Homelife Benchmark Realty Corp. Langley

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

BURNABY

Gable Gardens1 & 2 bdrms, available

Cable included, cat okayWalk to Highgate

604-521-3448

BURNABY

MAPLE PLACE TOWERS1 Bdrm Apts starting at $850

2 Bdrm Apts starting at $1100 Heat and hot water included.

Dishwasher, fridge, stove, balco-ny, shared laundry. Avail Immed. Close to amen, schools and mall.

Call 604-421-1235www.aptrentals.net

Coquitlam 996sf clean 2bdrm 2bath nr Coq Ctr Douglas Coll, pool np/ns Aug 1/15. $1250. 604-941-3259

Coquitlam Silver Springs beaut 2bdrm 2bath unobstructed view nr Coq Ctr all schls Doug Coll. np/ns $1325. Aug 1/15. 604-941-3259

NEW WEST 621 Colburne; Avail Aug 1, quiet & clean 1 bdrm, 1 blk fr Queens Park & Canada Games pool. No pets, $740. 604-454-4540

NEW WESTMINSTER

DORIC MANOR236 - 8th St.

Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 bdrm suites for rent. Includes heat / hot water and cable. Close to Massey Theatre, Douglas College, Royal City Mall.

Phone: 604-522-9153

New Westminster newly renovated 2 bdrm lrg l/rm & bal. 5 appl Clean safe quiet $1100m. 604-584-8862

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

NEW WESTMINSTER

Large newly renovated 1, 2 & 3 bdrm. units available from $950 in well-kept concrete building. New fl oors and appl’s. Freshly painted. Patio and large storage room inste. 3 laundries in bldg. Rent incl’s heat & hot water. Sauna & ja-cuzzi. 5 min. walk to skytrain, Douglas College & New West Quay. Close to all amenities.

Please call 604-834-1756 www.aptrentals.net

NEW WESTMINSTER

Panorama CourtSpacious & clean 1 & 2 bdrms avail. From $750 - $1020/mo. No pets.

Call 604-540-6732

PORT COQUITLAM

CEDARWAY APTBright & Clean 1 & 2 Bdrms

D/W, Heat and hot waterincluded. Close to schools,

shopping & public transportation.

Call 604-837-4589www.aptrentals.net

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

3400sf Warehouse 641 Lougheed Hwy 3 phase, sm offi ce, heated, 20x12 door. $2900m. 604-504-1825

715 DUPLEXES/4PLEXES

PORT COQUITLAM. 2 bdrm grd level duplex. Carport. Walk to WCX & shops. N/P. N/S. Refs. Sept. 1. $1050/mo. + utils. 604-464-4258.

748 SHARED ACCOMMODATION

NEW WEST: Reno’d furn. bright lrg rm, nr Saperton Skytrain stn. Lndry. Avl. now. $490: (778)385-2904

750 SUITES, LOWER

Burnaby North nr Brentwood mall & skytrain. 1 bdrm, g/l, n/s, n/p. n/d. $750/mo inc utils. (604)299-4025

COQUITLAM, 1018 Quadling Ave.Avail Aug 15th. 1 Bdrm bsmt ste in 4-plex. 4 Appls, peaceful backyard, close to shopping & bus. $775/mo. No Pets. 604-454-4540.

Coquitlam. Bright 2 bdrm. Pri. ent. w/d. Patio. N/S. N/P. $995 incl utils. Nr college. Aug. 1. 604-464-1494.

COQUITLAM CENTRAL, 2/bdrm bsmt suite. Shared W/D, w/i clos-ets. Storage. N/S, N/P. $895/mo. incl util. Sept. 1. (604)726-6884

MAPLE RIDGE Kanaka 2 Bdrm, very clean, own laundry, $1000 incl util N/S, N/P, immed (604)463-7235

Port Coq. off Pitt River. Newer 1 bdrm bright 850 s/f. lndry/cble/net Ns/Np. Aug 1. $875. 778-319-5713.

PORT COQUITLAM, 2/bdrm grnd level ste. Full bath. Sep entry. Cls to all amenities. $800/mo incl utils, cable, lndry. NS/NP (604)945-5911

751 SUITES, UPPER

PORT COQUITLAM north. 3 bdrm hse (main fl r) 2 bath. F/P. ldry. $990 + 2/3 utils. N/S. N/P. 604-306-1701.

PORT COQUITLAM. SXS 3 bd & 1 bd down, appls, view, nr amens, $1250 & $650. Call 604-941-4166

752 TOWNHOUSES

Burnaby. MC Bride Place. 415 Ginger drive. 2 bdrm T/H. Family Housing. Close all amens, schls, transit. Pet friendly great loca. $1015/m.604-451-6676

BURNABY

Spacious 2 & 3 Bdrm T/hses

With accessible amenities, in safe family oriented communities of, North Burnaby on Burnaby Mountain below Simon Fraser University. Market rents from $990 - $1175 for 2 - 3 bdrm units. Pet friendly.

If your income is between $35,640 and $70,000 you could

be qualifi ed for market rent.

If your income is lower than these ranges call

BC Housing 604-433-2218

For further info call 604-451-6075 to view

Metro Vancouver Housing Co-operation.

PITT MEADOWS: 2 - 3 bdrm co-op T/H $1030/mo - $1134/mo. Shares req’d. Close to WCE, schools & shopping. No subsidy available. 19225 119th Ave. For more info & to book an appt. call 604-465-1938

TRANSPORTATION

806 ANTIQUES/CLASSICS

810 AUTO FINANCING

DreamCatcher Auto Loans“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -

Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

818 CARS - DOMESTIC

1996 Sebring Conv. 118 Km, LADYdr, purple, $5500 in upgrades, exc.cond, $4695. 604-258-8852

2002 FORD FOCUS SE, 4 cyl. 4 dr. auto. low kms. loaded. Private. $3900 obo. 778-565-4230.

2006 CHRYSLER 300, 4 door, loaded, 77,000K, fresh AirCare, $11,900 obo. Call 604-780-8404

2009 Saturn Astra XE, 4 dr h/b. Automatic. Options. Silver. 18,000 kms. $8000/fi rm. 604-538-4883

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

1989 S-CARGO (NISSAN). New Paint & sunroof. Aircare Certifi ed.

Right hand drive. Well maint. Great Marketing Opportunity!

A real attention Grabber!Call 604-968-0856. $4500 OBO

2001 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA, 1.8T turbo, 4 dr sedan, std, all options, exc cond. $5300 obo 604-780-8404

2005 HONDA CIVIC SE 4 dr sedan automatic, 100,000km, incl 4 winter tires on rims, 2 yr Ex Warranty Pkg (transferable) $8500. 604-531-3562

2008 Honda Civic, 2dr, auto, a/c, 95,000km, extended warranty in-stalled halo HID and sub woofer, excellent condition. $16,000 fi rm. 604-796-2219

2011 NISSAN VERSA 4/dr h/back, auto, 25,000/km, red, many options, $9000/fi rm. 604-538-9257.

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

TRANSPORTATION

830 MOTORCYCLES

2007 Kawasaki Vulcan 900 Classic, mint, 24,000km, studded paniers, wind scrn,$5,500obo.604-209-1039

838 RECREATIONAL/SALE

1989 WINNEBAGOChieftain 36 foot, Chev-464;

very good cond. Offers? 778-908-4549

1995 PROWLER 5TH WHEEL 25.ft, slide out, fully contained, with shed, large deck and holding tank at Lakeview RV site at Nicola Lake in Merrit BC $10,000 Phone (604)826-6256 Bill

2007 HARLEY SPORTSTER, facto-ry custom, 74 cube (1200) big bore by Denco Cycle, Bassani pipe, Windshield, sissy bar, leather bags. 27,000Km, one old guy owner, $7,450 obo. Phone (604)817-1945

CROSSROADS Seville 38’ 5th wheel. Fiberglass ext., 4 slide-outs, fi replace, Corian counters, 17 cu.ft. double door fridge, oak cabinets, Queen size bed, 9’ ceiling, lots of heated storage. Luxury year round living! $43,800. 604-870-4799

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL

ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME

604.683.2200

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVALMinimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673The Scrapper

Metal Recycling Ltd.We Pay CA$H For •Auto •Scrap

Metals •Batteries •Machinery •Lead

Scotty 604-313-1887

Autos • Trucks• Equipment Removal

FREE TOWING 7 days/wk.We pay Up To $500 CA$H

Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026

TRANSPORTATION

851 TRUCKS & VANS

2000 DURANGO 4X4, loaded, seats 7, AirCrd, exc. cond. $4500 obo. Call 604-780-8404

2003 CHEV SUBURBAN Z71, black, rebuilt trans. w/warranty, used eng. new B.J. & brakes. In-spected $7995obo 604-826-0519

859 UTILITY TRAILERS

SMALL UTILITY TRAILER, box 44”x58”x18”, new tires, light & paint. Asking $950. (604)466-6323

MARINE

912 BOATS

11’ Walker Bay special edition. Side fl otation,new cond. Trailer/cov-er incl. $2500 fi rm. 604-535-8199.

ALUMINUM BOAT WANTED, 10’, 12’ or 14’, with or without motor or trailer, will pay cash, 604-319-5720

NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of the Deceased: Marion Winnifred Colton, late of 334 - 2855 Sophia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia V5T 3L2 Creditors and others hav-ing claim against the said estates are required to send full particulars of such claims duly verifi ed to: DA-VID COLTON c/o ROYAL TRUST CORPORATION OF CANADA1055 West Georgia Street, 7th Floor, Vancouver, British Columbia V6E 4P3 on or before July 16, 2012 after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to the claims that have been received.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS

Notice is hereby given that credi-tors and others having claims against the estate of GEORGINA FLOWERS TATTERS, otherwise known as GEORGINA F. TAT-TERS and GEORGINA TAT-TERS, deceased, late of #219 – 1945 Woodway Place, Burnaby, British Columbia, are hereby re-quired to send particulars of their claims to the Executor at the fol-lowing address:

C/O McQuarrie Hunter LLP, Barristers & Solicitors

Attention: ALLISON M. CATHERWOOD #1500 – 13450 102nd Avenue

Surrey, B.C. V3T 5X3

before the 29th day of August, 2012, after which date the Execu-tor will distribute the said estate among the parties entitled there-to, having regard only to claims of which the Executor then has no-tice.

551 GARAGE SALES

BRIDGEVIEW FLEA MARKET Every Sunday, Year Round, 80 Vendors 7am-3pm, 11267-125a St. Sry. Info./Book Table 604-625-3208

Page 28: Burnaby NewsLeader, July 27, 2012

A28 NewsLeader Friday, July 27, 2012

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NE

BO

X

CON

TACT

OFF

ER