burnaby now june 6 2012

31
Your source for local sports, news, weather and entertainment! >> www.burnabynow.com It’s a family affair at the Michael J. Fox golf tourney PAGES 16 and 17 Hats on at Hats Off Day PAGE 3 Burnaby’s first and favourite information source Delivery 604-942-3081 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 City drains pond – all invasive species to die The City of Burnaby is draining water from Central Park’s lower pond to help provincial government staff catch an inva- sive snakehead fish believed to be on the loose. “We are lowering the level to concen- trate fish in smaller areas to assist in the fish-catch operation by (the Environment Ministry) and to study the infiltration and evaporation levels in the pond,” said Dave Ellenwood, the City of Burnaby’s director of parks, recreation and cultural services. Ellenwood said government staff would be at the pond Friday. “Provincial conservation officers will be on hand to identify invasives (species), and these will be removed for disposal,” he said. On May 13, a Burnaby resident filmed a fish that appeared to be a snakehead and posted the video online, sparking a media frenzy and a hunt for the fish. Ten days later, the provincial govern- ment and city staff dragged nets through the pond looking for the snakehead, but they came up empty handed. Another Burnaby resident has since spotted and filmed the so-called “frankenfish.” Snakeheads are an invasive species that eat other fish, frogs and the occasional small mammal. They can breathe air and wriggle on land, travelling from one body of water to another. Because they are not native to the B.C., they have no natural predators to keep them in check. They are sold as pets and as food, so it’s likely someone dumped the snakehead in the pond. Most of the fish in Central Park – koi and carp, for instance – are also invasive spe- cies, and the red-eared slider turtles seen there are dumped pets. The pond’s fish will likely be killed. “What (provincial government staff) are concerned with is finding the snakehead. If they find the snakehead, they will remove and dispose of the snakehead. If they find other species of priority concern, they will do that as well,” Ellenwood said. More than 300 seniors gathered at SFU last week to demonstrate the benefits of tai chi. Tai chi is an ancient Chinese slow movement martial art. Fung Loy Kok Taoist Tai Chi hosted the event as part of National Seniors Week. For video coverage of this event, go to www. burnabynow.com VIDEO Senior power Jennifer Moreau staff reporter Pond Page 5 Larry Wright/ burnaby now www.BrianVidas.com YOUR BURNABY REALTOR centre realty BRIAN VIDAS 604.671.5259 Brian Vidas Personal Real Estate Corporation 3010 Boundary Road, Burnaby ® OLD ORCHARD MEDICAL CLINIC DR. GIDON FRAME MD, CCFP, ABAAM, NAMS WALK-INS WELCOME WOMEN’S WELLNESS CLINIC BOTOX & FILLERS COSMETIC TREATMENTS #11 4429 KINGSWAY BURNABY 604-431-6585 burnabymedicalclinic.com Open 7 days a week ALEX CHRONAKIS 604 240 0172 RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL WWW.ALEXCHRONAKIS.COM sutton centre realty - office 604 435 9477

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Page 1: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

Your source for local sports, news, weather and entertainment! >> www.burnabynow.com

It’s a family affair at theMichael J. Fox golf tourney

PAGES 16 and 17

Hats on atHats Off Day

PAGE 3

Burnaby’s first and favourite information source Delivery 604-942-3081 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012

City drains pond – all invasive species to dieThe City of Burnaby is draining water

from Central Park’s lower pond to helpprovincial government staff catch an inva-sive snakehead fish believed to be on theloose.

“We are lowering the level to concen-trate fish in smaller areas to assist in thefish-catch operation by (the EnvironmentMinistry) and to study the infiltration andevaporation levels in the pond,” said Dave

Ellenwood, the City of Burnaby’s directorof parks, recreation and cultural services.Ellenwood said government staff would beat the pond Friday.

“Provincial conservation officers will beon hand to identify invasives (species),and these will be removed for disposal,”he said.

On May 13, a Burnaby resident filmeda fish that appeared to be a snakehead andposted the video online, sparking a mediafrenzy and a hunt for the fish.

Ten days later, the provincial govern-

ment and city staff dragged nets throughthe pond looking for the snakehead, butthey came up empty handed. AnotherBurnaby resident has since spotted andfilmed the so-called “frankenfish.”

Snakeheads are an invasive species thateat other fish, frogs and the occasional smallmammal. They can breathe air and wriggleon land, travelling from one body of waterto another. Because they are not native tothe B.C., they have no natural predators tokeep them in check. They are sold as petsand as food, so it’s likely someone dumped

the snakehead in the pond.Most of the fish in Central Park – koi and

carp, for instance – are also invasive spe-cies, and the red-eared slider turtles seenthere are dumped pets. The pond’s fish willlikely be killed.

“What (provincial government staff) areconcerned with is finding the snakehead. Ifthey find the snakehead, they will removeand dispose of the snakehead. If they findother species of priority concern, they willdo that as well,” Ellenwood said.

More than300 seniorsgatheredat SFU lastweek todemonstratethe benefits oftai chi. Tai chiis an ancientChinese slowmovementmartial art.Fung Loy KokTaoist Tai Chihosted theevent as partof NationalSeniors Week.

For video coverageof this event, goto www.burnabynow.com

VIDEO

Seniorpower

Jennifer Moreaustaff reporter

Pond Page 5

Larry Wright/burnaby now

www.BrianVidas.com

YOUR BURNABY REALTOR

centre realty

BRIAN VIDAS604.671.5259Brian Vidas Personal Real Estate Corporation 3010 Boundary Road, Burnaby

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ALEX CHRONAKIS

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sutton centre realty - office 604 435 9477

Page 2: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A02 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

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Page 3: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

Visions*The Bay*Shoppers Drug Mart*Home Outfitters*Rona*Zellers*XS Cargo*

* not in all areas

6 Opinion

11 Community

18 Postcards

19 Taste

21 Healthwise

23 Sports

25 Classifieds

Last week’s questionDo you think the pipeline will pro-ceed despite opposition?YES 66.67% NO 33.33%

This week’s questionShould the invasive species inCentral Park’s pond be killed?

Vote at: www.burnabynow.com

6, 7 Readers write 8 Church forum on pipeline 9 Tank farm doubling?

TransLink is not moving ahead withplans to cancel its TaxiSaver program atthis point but that isn’t enough for a localprogram user.

Lilo Ljubisic, a Burnaby resident whois blind and uses HandyDart and theTaxiSaver program, spoke with the NOWwhen the cancellation was announcedlast month.

TransLink is meeting with stakehold-ers to discuss the issues and effects ofpossibly cutting the program, but Ljubisicsays the company should step away fromthe plan altogether and look at other costsaving measures.

“Quite honestly, what more do youneed?” she said. “How many more argu-ments from how many more marginal-ized and disabled people in Vancouverand British Columbia do you need to tellyou that you’re on the wrong path?”

Since the cancellation was announcedin May, seniors and people with dis-abilities in B.C. have been speaking tothe media about the importance of theprogram, she pointed out.

“To me, it’s almost an insult,” shesaid, regarding the current consultationprocess. “I just don’t know what elsethey want.”

The approximately $1 millionTransLink would save in next year’s bud-get by cutting the program is not enoughto greatly affect the company’s financialsituation, Ljubisic said, particularly asthe program is subsidized by the user forhalf the cost whereas, HandyDart is not.

“It simply doesn’t make any financialsense to most people,” she added.

The TaxiSaver service provides userswith $100 worth of taxi coupons permonth, with the user paying half the costand TransLink covering the other half.

The program has run for 20 yearsfor those with cognitive or physical dis-abilities, and was going to be phasedout, beginning in August and ending byJune 2013.

TransLink said in a press release

Community conversationsCommunity conversationsCommunity conversationsCommunity conversations

Connecting with our community online Visit www.burnabynow.com

Jennifer Moreau’s Blog

Let’s talk. From thepersonal to political.

Life in Burnaby

TransLinkto reviewTaxiSaver

Hats onfor HatsOff Day

The crowds braved intermittent showers onSaturday morning to line the streets for the HatsOff Day parade in the Heights.

The procession began with the police motorcycledrill team and marching bands, community groupsand parade floats followed soon after.

Hastings Street was jam-packed with revelersenjoying the festival, and by the time the paradeended, the day was warm and dry.

ONLINEEXTRAFor a photo galleryof this event, goto www.burnabynow.com

Hotwheels:At left, theshow andshine cardisplaywas bighit thisyear.

Low rider: Everyone decked out theirrides for Hats Off Day, even the kids.

Flyinglow:There werecostumedentertainersgalore atHats OffDay. Middleleft: MajaGrandinettiand VanessaFaccone donhandmadehats andwatch theHats OffDay paradeon HastingsStreet inBurnaby onSaturday.

Marching: Portuguese folk dancers makingan appearance in the parade.

All photos byJason Lang/burnaby now

TRANSPORTATION

Janaya Fuller-Evansstaff reporter

Stay of execution forprogram doesn’t impressBurnaby resident

TaxiSaver Page 4

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A03

Page 4: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A04 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

last month that theHandyDart system current-ly uses taxis if a HandyDartvehicle “is not readily avail-able and client care is notcompromised.”

The company wouldlook at directing some ofthe funding previously allo-cated for the TaxiSaver pro-gram into this option, threrelease added.

But Ljubisic said shehas never been offered ataxi when she called for aHandyDart and it wasn’tavailable.

“I have heard this,” shesaid of the option. “For me,it’s a myth. I have yet tomeet a person who has beensent a taxi.”

Two weeks ago, Ljubisiccalled HandyDart withsix trip requests a week inadvance, and could onlyhave two of the requestsmet, she said.

Ljubisic said she asked ifa taxi could be sent insteadand was told, “Oh no, wedon’t do that.”

Ljubisic is currentlyout of the country andmissed the annual generalmeeting where TransLinkannounced it wouldn’t becutting the program at thistime.

But she is a member ofthe HandyDart users’ groupwith the B.C. Coalition ofPeople with Disabilities, shesaid, and will stay involvedin the issue.

“I will continue to fightas effectively as I can,” sheadded.

TransLink is meetingwith stakeholders to dis-cuss their needs and began

that process at the meeting,according to Jason Martin,manager of corporate com-munications for the com-pany.

“We recognized the need

to listen to the concerns thatthe stakeholders broughtforward,” he said. “Weare committed to seeing itthrough and giving it asmuch time as it needs.”

TransLink expects tosave $1.1 million per yearfor the next three years ifthe program is cancelled,according to a companypress release. The money

would be used to expandthe HandyDart program.

For the first year,$200,000 would be put intothe supplemental taxi ser-vice, the release stated.

TaxiSaver: TransLink will review decision to cut programcontinued from page 3

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Page 5: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

The Environment Ministry’sSuntanu Dalal said provincial staffwill be using a variety of nets toremove all non-native aquatic speciesfrom the pond in order to catch thesnakehead.

“The City of Burnaby hopes torestock the pond afterwards withnative species, so they have asked pro-vincial staff to remove all non-nativespecies that are caught,” he said in anemail to the NOW. “We will take themoff site, keep some for analysis andhumanely euthanize the rest accord-ing to animal care protocols.”

The pond’s red-eared slider turtleswill also be removed and euthanizedby a veterinarian, Dalal added.

Ellenwood said the city startedlowering the water on May 23. Therealso are two new nets in the waterto help keep the fish concentrated insmaller areas.

On Friday, the NOW paid a visit tothe park and found three men fishingfor the snakehead.

“If I get him, he’s coming on shore,”said Burnaby resident Ken Renkema.“Unless he’s got a really full bellyfrom eating all the koi, he should bebiting.”

Renkema, an avid fisherman, saiddraining the pond was the worst thingthe city could do.

“They are going to destroy the hab-itat if they drain it – for the fish, the

turtles and birds,” he said.Renkema said he had permission

from the City of Burnaby to fish inthe public park, but Ellenwood saidRenkema was likely given the wronginformation, as the city doesn’t wantpeople fishing there.

“What we would do is ask peoplewho are fishing to stop. It’s contraryto the bylaw. What we want to dois have the ministry do their work,”Ellenwood said. “There’s other placespeople can fish other than a pond inan urban park.”

Central Park’s lower pond is a man-

made body of water. The inflow comesfrom a city pipe, and the outflow runsinto another creek in the park, whichthen flows through the city’s drainagesystem, eventually emptying into theFraser, Ellenwood explained.

Even though snakeheads have beenknown to travel on land, Ellenwooddid not think the fish could make it tonatural waterways, especially becausethe pond’s outflow has been screenedoff.

“That would be an epic journey,but right now that’s impossible,” hesaid.

Check www.Burnabynow.com for breaking news, photo galleries, blogs and more

Pond: Invasive species to be removedcontinued from page 1

Troubled waters: The city is draining a Central Park pond to helpgovernment staff remove invasive species, including the snakehead fish.

Jennifer Moreau/burnaby now

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A05

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Page 6: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A06 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

This province is gettingboxed around the ears inOttawa, and that’s unlikely

to change for a few more years.The federal Conservative

government has a majority anda serious budget problem, so it’staking things out onthe provinces. Tryingto right the fiscalship means spend-ing cuts that will inevitably beunpopular.

Compounding the prob-lem is the drift of the OfficialOpposition – the federal NewDemocratic Party – away fromthe West and more towards cen-tral Canada.

As a result, B.C. risks becom-ing marginalized by the twopolitical parties that have thebest chance of forming a gov-ernment in Ottawa (the fed-eral Liberals appear to be goingnowhere fast).

The looming closure of theKitsilano Coast Guard stationis a prime example of Ottawa’sdisconnect with this province.While budget cuts are inevitablewhen a government faces a seri-ous deficit problem, there aresome cuts that are more sensi-tive than others.

The closure of that sta-tion will be neatly contrastedwith the fact that thousands ofbureaucrats work in Ottawa,running programs that are basedin the provinces. While there arejob cuts to that part of the fed-eral budget, there will never be

enough to dispel the impressionthat more could occur if it meantsaving things like the KitsilanoCoast Guard station.

Former New Brunswickpremier Frank McKenna onceobserved there were more

department of fisheriesemployees working inOttawa than there wereworking anywhere near

an ocean. That pretty well saysit all when it comes to Ottawa’scentralized attitude towards theprovinces.

The Harper government ischopping other services in B.C.,of course. Several hundred jobsin immigration, public healthand tourism will disappear,which means service reductionsin all kinds of areas.

Of course, many people areunaware many federally fundedservices are there until theydisappear (how many wereeven aware there was a CoastGuard station in Kitsilano, forexample?).

But that ignorance does noteliminate public anger oversome of those budget decisions.And that anger could be sub-stantial in smaller towns wherethe cuts are to be felt dispropor-tionately deeper (in Revelstoke,for example, 14 parks positionswill be eliminated or reduced;that’s a noticeable reduction in asmall town like that).

There is also a bigger financial

denr

The Burnaby NOW is a Canadian-owned community newspaper published and distributed in the city ofBurnaby every Wednesday and Friday by the Burnaby Now, 201A–3430 Brighton Avenue, Burnaby,British Columbia, V5A 3H4, a division of Glacier Media Group.

Brad AldenPublisher

2008 WINNER

PUBLISHER Brad AldenEDITOR Pat TracyASSISTANT EDITOR Julie MacLellanSPORTS EDITOR Tom BerridgeREPORTERS Janaya Fuller-Evans, Christina Myers,Jennifer MoreauPHOTOGRAPHER Larry WrightDIRECTOR, SALES AND MARKETING Lara GrahamADVERTISING REPS Cynthia Hendrix, CamNorthcott, Domenic Crudo, Veronica Wong, JenniferKasteleinAD CONTROL Ken Wall

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THE BURNABY NOW www.burnabynow.com#201A - 3430 Brighton Avenue, Burnaby, BC, V5A 3H4MAIN SWITCHBOARD 604-444-3451CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 604-444-3000EDITORIAL DIRECT 604-444-3020FAX LINE 604-444-3460NEWSPAPER DELIVERY 604-942-3081DISTRIBUTION EMAIL [email protected] EMAIL [email protected] EMAIL [email protected] EMAIL [email protected]

Copyright in letters and other materials submitted voluntarilyto the Publisher and accepted for publication remains with theauthor, but the Publisher and its licensees may freely reproducethem in print, electronic or other forms.

Is committee hobbled by Liberal leadership?Pretty much everything nowadays is

tainted by politics.Taxes, transportation, entertainment,

food – you name it and someone hasan opinion that connects to apolitical position and a policy.And someone else is quick topoint out that their politicalposition isn’t represented.

So it should come as no surprisethat Burnaby Hospital’s newly-struckcommunity consultation committee hasignited a discussion about politics.

Politicians and pundits have said that

having the two Burnaby Liberal MLAslead the committee paints the committeeas a blunt political tool.

Meanwhile, the hospital’s medical co-ordinator, Dr. David Jones askspeople to stop being distractedby politicking and think aboutthe future of the hospital.

But, as sincere as Dr. Jonesis, and we have no reason to doubt him,unfortunately the perception of the com-mittee as a tool for the Liberals is hard toignore.

And, as an aside, who can blame the

Liberals? They are, after all, in power.We suspect the NDP would (and prob-ably have) done essentially the samething when they were in power. Doesgovernment ever have opposition mem-bers co-chairing community meetings?One can only imagine the endless argu-ments if the committee was ‘balanced’politically.

The broader question is: Will thiscommittee have any pull, even if it is ledby Liberals?

The health region is being run moreand more like a corporation with deci-

sions being made, not on what citizenswant or need, but on what is affordableand can result in long-term efficienciesand savings.

And what if the Liberals lose the nextelection?

Will the NDP or Conservatives throwout the committee’s work because it wasled by the Liberals?

Perhaps, it’s better not to look at anyof this through a political looking glass.Dr. Jones is right: concentrating on poli-tics is distracting. It’s also a bit depress-ing.

Fiscal problemsmean more cuts

Residents upset with highriseDear Editor:

Re: Residents rally against ‘Titanic,’ Burnaby NOW,June 1

I am a resident of The Regent, an 18-storey build-ing, situated on the southeast corner of PattersonAvenue and Kingsway, at 5790 Patterson Ave.

This mammoth of a building will be adjacent toour property on the south side and very close to ourproperty line.

I agree totally with the residents of the Parkcrest,and members of our strata council also attended thehearing on May 29. There are no buildings of thisheight west of Willingdon Avenue, with the excep-tion of the Jewel which is approximately 28 storeys.

The residents on the south side of The Regentwill be deprived of any sunshine, air circulation,etc., and I feel that this will also affect the value ofour property. I understand that it would be a matterof time before a situation like this developed, butany building in the area should not be higher than24 storeys.

Also, I am of the understanding that any devel-oper applying to build along the Kingsway corridoris required to donate public space. It would appearthat with a payment of $7.5 million, Burnaby isallowing them an additional 80,000 square feet.

It is also my understanding that this additionalspace is part of the lane allowance (between TheRegent and the proposed development) as well

OUR VIEWBurnaby NOW

LETTERS TO THE EDITORLETTERS TO THE EDITOR

IN MY OPINIONKeith Baldrey

The Burnaby NOW, a division of Glacier Media Group respects your privacy. We collect, use and disclose your personal information in accordance with our Privacy Statement which is available at www.burnabynow.com or by calling 604-589-9182.

UNION LABELCEP SCEP

200026

NDP Page 7 More Page 7

Page 7: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

The Burnaby NOW welcomes letters to the editor. We do, however, edit for taste, legality and length.Priority is given to letters written by residents of Burnaby and/or issues concerning Burnaby. Pleaseinclude a phone number where you can be reached during the day. Send letters to: The Editor, #201A-3430Brighton Ave., Burnaby, B.C., V5A 3H4, fax them to 604-444-3460 or e-mail: [email protected]

•NO ATTACHMENTS PLEASE•Letters to the editor and opinion columns may be reproduced on the Burnaby NOW website, burnabynow.com

The Burnaby Now is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing theprovince’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct ofmember newspapers. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverageor story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go towww.bcpresscouncil.org.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

headache headed our way.A few years from now,the federal Conservativegovernment will starttying annual increases tohealth-care spending toeconomic growth, whichwill undoubtedly reducethe amount of health-caredollars flowing the prov-inces’ way.

Then there’s the Harpergovernment’s strong sup-port for the EnbridgeNorthern Gateway pipe-line, which appears tohave significant opposi-tion in this province.Although the project maybe ultimately abandoned(shipping Alberta’s oilsands product east ratherthan west seems to be anidea picking up steam),the Harper government’sattachment to it is not win-ning it many friends inthis province.

Now we come to theother side of the politicalequation. Federal NDPleader Thomas Mulcairhas made waves with hiscriticism of this country’sreliance on revenues fromnatural resource exports,which is something that isthe backbone of the west-ern provinces’ economicmakeup.

As I and others pre-dicted when he won hisparty’s leadership, Mulcairappears to shifting hispriorities away from thewest and more towardswinning support in centralCanada. The high price ofthe Canadian dollar, whichpartly results from ournatural resource riches,hurts the manufacturingbase of Ontario, whereMulcair is trying to shoreup support.

He knows the pathto power in Ottawa

runs through seat-richOntario and Quebec, andnot through the naturalresource-rich westernprovinces, which simplydon’t have enough seats inthe House of Commons tomatch central Canada.

So B.C. is getting itfrom both ends of thepolitical spectrum.

The Harper govern-ment has a majority, andthe political reality is thatit doesn’t have to listento critics as much as inthe past (at least not untilcloser to election time).

And the federal NDPnow looks east, rather thanwest, when it comes toshaping priorities.

Add it all up and itcould be a gloomy fewyears for B.C.’s interests inthe national capital.

Keith Baldrey is chiefpolitical reporter for GlobalBC

continued from page 6

NDP: Shifting priorities East?

as a portion of the Barker Avenue cul desac. This lane is right next to The Regent’sfence on the south side.

Dianne Coleman, Burnaby

RCMP not accountableDear Editor:

Re: Bond lays down the law on policing,Burnaby NOW, June 1

In light of the current negative public-ity the RCMP is receiving in the media, Iheartily support Mayor (Derek) Corrigan’srefusal to endorse the 20-year RCMP con-tract.

Even if the federal government intro-duces legislation to empower the commis-sioner to dismiss offenders and criminalssuch as Sgt. Don Ray and Cpl. MonteRobinson, it will still not provide the localcontrol and accountability that is essentialin the functions of law enforcement andsecurity. Combined with the mayor’s res-ervations about the known and unknowncosts, I believe that executing a 20-yeardeal is in no way justifiable, and the pro-vincial government was wrong to do so.

The structure and bureaucracy of theRCMP has time and again been shownto lie at the core of the numerous defectsof this once proud national police force,and it is high time it was given a chance torestructure and reform by relieving it of itslocal policing responsibilities.

Since the province refuses to take theinitiative in this matter, individual munici-palities certainly can.

Thomas Hasek, Burnaby

HST tied to unemployment?Dear Editor:

Re: HST boosts Ontario, Letters to theeditor, Burnaby NOW, May 30

Subject: Re: Joe Sawchuck’s opinion onHST

If the HST is such a grand thing, as JoeSawchuck contends, then why is it that theunemployment rates in Canada are lowestin those areas of Canada that do not havethe HST, with the exception of P.E.I. at 11per cent, the Yukon at 9.5 per cent, N.W.T.at 9.1 per cent and Nunavut at 14.8 percent? Make no mistake, the lies told by pol-iticians about the benefits first with GSTand later with the HST are just that: lies.The first being that there would be a hugeincrease in investments and large increasesin employment. The greatest lie of all wasthat prices would be reduced as a result ofcorporations passing along their savings inthe way of reduced prices to consumers.Meanwhile, prices continue to increase atrecord levels, especially in the area of food.Unemployment has not improved and isabout to get much worse in Ontario, whereit was just announced that 2,000 jobs arebeing eliminated as a result of GM closinga plant in Oshawa.

James McQueen, Burnaby

continued from page 6

More details on high rise

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A07

Page 8: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A08 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

A Burnaby church is hosting a publicforum on the Kinder Morgan expansion.

The Saint Timothy Anglican Churchis inviting the community to comeWednesday, June 27, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. toa forum on the proposed Kinder Morganplan to expand the Trans Mountainpipeline, which runs oil from Alberta toBurnaby.

“This is something we are organizing,”said Pastor Stephanie Shepard. “We wantto have a balanced information meetingfor the community. ... We figured it wastime. There’s been a lot of press, but therehas not been a forum to bring peopletogether to discuss the issues.”

The church has invited federal, provin-cial and municipal politicians, as well asrepresentatives from First Nations groups,

Kinder Morgan and the local Chevronrefinery.

According to the church, the forumwill be one of the first opportunities forBurnaby residents to have their say aboutthe proposed pipeline expansion and hearthe views of local representatives andstakeholders. St. Timothy Anglican Churchis at 4550 Kitchener St.

Gordon Arthur, a spokesperson for thechurch, said the forum is not about advo-cacy or presenting a particular view.

“It’s an information session,” he said.“(The pipeline) goes past properties thatseveral of our people live in. We’re alsoconcerned about environmental issues.”

Kinder Morgan is hoping to twin theTrans Mountain pipeline, increasing capac-ity from 300,000 barrels per day to 750,000,but the company has not yet applied tothe National Energy Board for projectapproval.

Church holds pipeline forumJennifer Moreaustaff reporter

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Page 9: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

Kinder Morgan will need to doublecapacity of the tank farm on BurnabyMountain as part of the proposedproject to twin the Trans Mountainpipeline.

The line runs oil from Alberta tothe Burnaby storage facility and theWestridge Marine Terminal in theBurrard Inlet, where tankers fill upwith crude.

“As part of the proposed TransMountain expansion project, theBurnaby terminal will require approx-imately double the existing stor-

age capacity,” said Kinder Morganspokesperson Lexa Hobenshield.“Because we have an existing facil-ity, all work and addition to storagecapacity will occur on the existingfootprint if the project is approved.The configuration – size and place-ment – of the tanks are not deter-mined and will be subject to engi-neering design and consultation.”

Hobenshield said that althoughthe company is federally regulated,Kinder Morgan plans to work withlocal municipalities, providing themwith information as part of their per-mit application processes.

“Remember, we are in the early

stages of our process and are justinitiating our consultation activities,”Hobenshield said. “This is the startof a five-year process. We know thatresident have questions, and thislocal input will be critical to our plan-ning.”

The tank farm is used to temporar-ily store petroleum products. Thereare 13 tanks on Burnaby Mountain,with a total capacity of roughly 1.6million barrels of oil, mostly crudewith some storage space for gasolineadditives.

The company has launched a web-site for the pipeline expansion projectwww.transmountain.com.

Jennifer Moreaustaff reporter

Tank farm capacity would haveto double to handle new pipeline

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A09

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Page 10: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A10 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

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Page 11: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

18 Paper Postcards 19 Burger perfection

SECTION COORDINATOR Jennifer Moreau, 604-444-3021 [email protected]

13 Seniors Games

School may be out soon, but constructionwill continue at Burnaby Central Secondarythis summer, as the final touches go on thedistrict’s newest seismically sound school.

The $52-million high school features alarge central gathering space, a state-of-the-art kitchen for cooking programs, an autoshop, an aboriginal education room, a theatre,a large dance studio and a wrestling room.

The school is built for 1,300 students,roughly the size of Central’s population.There’s also space onthe roof where wallscan be added to cre-ate more classrooms.

C o n s t r u c t i o ncrews should finishthe Burnaby Central’s gymnasium and park-ing lot by October. The school’s new trackshould be ready the following fall.

The new school opened to students lastSeptember. The provincial government decid-ed it was cheaper to built a new school ratherthan seismically upgrade the old one.

[email protected]

New schoolalmost

complete

Hats Off Day wasa blast this year,despite a brief bout

of heavy rain.Hats Off Day, one of

Burnaby’s best-loved festi-vals, is an annual opportu-nity for Heights businessesto take their hats off to

local residents to thankthem for their patron-age. Thousands of peopleflooded Hastings Street tocheck out the various infobooths, street food andentertainment.

The line-ups for foodwere long, and all kindsof businesses had boothsset up in the streets, someoffering freebies, treatsand balloons.

There was a musicaltroupe in front of Cioffi’sMeat Market and Deli,doing a cover of RenatoCarosone’s Naploetano

classic Tu Vuò Fa’l’Americano. Stephanie andScott Jaeger, the husband-and-wife team that ownand run The Pear TreeRestaurant, were out onthe sidewalk, selling sam-ples from their kitchen.

I ran into some enthu-siastic young people fromShark Truth, a non-profitgroup run by Burnabyresident Claudia Li.

The group is tryingto have shark fin soupbanned to help stop “fin-ning,” a practice wheresharks’ fins are sliced

off and the creatures arethrown back in the oceanto die. I also ran intoStephen D’Souza fromBurnaby CommunityConnections, which hada kids’ table to make cute“campfire hats” with theBurnaby Camping Bureauas the inspiration.

Everyone huddledunder the awnings andcrowded into stores whenthe rain hit, but the weath-er was otherwise coopera-tive.

If you missed this year’sfestival, and you are look-

ing for something similarto make up for it, there’salways Car Free Day com-ing up on Saturday, June17 in Vancouver. Go towww.carfreevancouver.org for more.

Burnaby Northreunion tickets

Apologies for the mis-information I ran in theWednesday, May 25 edi-tion of this column regard-ing ticket sales for theBurnaby North Secondaryreunion. Tickets for the

reunion, which is on Sept.15 at the Executive PlazaHotel, are on sale thisWednesday (today) andThursday June 6 from5 to 7 p.m. at BurnabyNorth Secondary. (I hadwritten they were on saleat the hotel.) For moreinformation, go to www.classreport.org/can/bc/burnaby/bns/1972.

Have an interesting itemyou would like to sharewith the community? Emailit to Jennifer Moreau [email protected].

HERE & NOWJennifer Moreau

Rubbing shoulders with folks in the Heights

ONLINE EXTRAFor more photo coverageof this story, go to

www.burnabynow.com

Vertigo: Above, one of the stairwells at the new Burnaby Central Secondary. Theschool took roughly two years to build and cost $52 million. Top, Central’s maingathering space is used for school events and lunch.

Photos Larry Wright/burnaby now

Interior: A peek inside the metal shop at the new Burnaby Central Secondary.

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A11

Page 12: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A12 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

There will be vodka.The annual Russia Day celebration is

set for Sunday, June 10, and organizerspromise and day of family fun, food, drink

and dancing.The festival, which drew an estimated

1,500 people last year, is expected to draweven larger crowds for 2012.

Russia Day 2012 will feature a full dayof family events, including concerts bylocal Russian performers, a large selectionof Russian food, a special fun zone for thekids, art, a fashion show, a Russian DJ anddancing.

The celebration will be held at Burnaby’sSerbian Centre, at 7837 Canada Way.

Wine, food and music– what more could you askfor?

Don’t miss the annualRotary fundraiser Saturday,June 9 from 7:30 to 10 p.mat Lougheed Town Centre.The Rotary Wine, Food andMusic Festival is one ofthe biggest local fundrais-ing events of the year, and

people come out in throngsto support the cause.

There will be 17 winesponsors presenting theirwares, seven food spon-sors and the local SimonFraser University ChamberOrchestra as musical enter-tainment.

Money raised goes toB.C. literacy programs, theDown Syndrome ResearchFoundation and worldwideefforts to eradicate polio.Tickets are $40 and areavailable at the Lougheed

Town Centre customer ser-vice desk and through anyBurnaby Metrotown Rotarymember.

Buy 10 or more tickets,and each ticket will cost$35.

The Burnaby MetrotownRotary Club and Lougheedare partnering to hold theevent. The Rotary Club ofBurnaby Metrotown meetsevery Wednesday at 12:15p.m. at the Holiday InnExpress Metrotown, 4405Central Blvd.

Russia Day celebrationAnnual event with food,dance and more a big drawwith 1,500 at last year’s fest

Jennifer Moreaustaff reporter

Wine festival in BurnabyRotary fundraiserset for Saturday atLougheed Centre

www.burnabynow.com

GO TOFor breakingnews in Burnaby...

For a detailed schedule and your chance to wina dinner & hotel package, visit: www.bravoburnaby.com

Over 15 Million milkempties recycled at Return-ItDepots in 2011British Columbians get top marksfor their milk carton recyclingefforts as over 15 million milk con-tainers were returned to partici-pating Return-It Depots last year.“The volume of milk containersreturned to participating Return-It Depots has tripled since 2006.”says Mike Dick, president of theBC Dairy Council.

“The amount of cartons and jugsthat we have saved from landfillsis quite significant,” says Dick. “Itis hard to visualize the amount, butif you were to align 15 million jugsand cartons upright and side-by-side, the distance would cover fromVancouver to Prince George – andback. That’s over 1,500 kilometers!”The 15 million containers weighedin at 630,000 kilograms (380,000

kilograms of milk cartons and250,000 kilograms of plastic milkjugs). Year over year, the weightof recovered milk containers hasincreased by eight per cent – that’san increase of 47,000 more kilo-grams from 2010 and a trend that theDairy Council hopes will continue.

Number of participatingReturn-It Depots morethan doubledThe voluntary recycling programprovided by Return-It Depotsallows consumers to drop off emptymilk containers, at no charge,to participating depots and it is

proving to be a huge success.Services are provided by EncorpPacific, which manages the Return-It Depots throughout the provincethat accept milk containers forrecycling. Since the company wasfirst contracted to service thevoluntary milk recycling programin 2006, the number of Return-ItDepots that accept milk empties hasmore than doubled from 70 to 166.The growing network of partici-pating Return-It Depots has madeit easier for British Columbiansto do the right thing and recycleresponsibly. Research shows thatthe average BC household empties6.5 milk containers every monthand that there are more than1.8 million households in B.C.,so the potential impact on theenvironment is significant.

No deposit = no refundThere’s no refund on milk empties(because you didn’t pay a deposit),but you’ll have the satisfaction ofknowing you are doing the rightthing. Plastic jugs are the mostpopular form of packaging for milkin BC, polycoat milk cartons arealso commonly used. Althoughpolycoat cartons are not usuallyaccepted through curbside blue-boxprograms, milk carton recycling isoffered at 166 participating Return-

It Depots across the province. Allmilk, cream, and milk substitute(soy, almondand rice) beverage con-tainers are recyclable and accepted.

Rinse and crush milkcontainers for recyclingPreparing milk containers for re-cycling is easy; simply rinse themout and crush them. This stopsthe cartons and jugs from smellingand makes them more compactto store and carry. It also facili-tates the recycling process. Don’tforget to remove and bring inthe caps too, because they getrecycled separately.British Columbians can bringtheir milk empties to participatingReturn-It Depots along with theirdeposit-bearing bottles and cans.It’s easy and convenient.

B.C. gets top marks for 2011 milk recycling efforts

ADVERTORIAL

“The volume of milkcontainers returned toReturn-It Depots hastripled since 2006.”

– Mike Dick, president ofthe BC Dairy Council.

Environment

Vancouver

Prince George

Last year, 15 million milk jugs and cartons were recycled byBritish Columbians. If you were to stand them upright and side by side,

they would reach from Vancouver to Prince George – and back!(More than 1500 kilometers.)

This image is a simulation

Over the past five years, the volume of milkcontainers returned to participating Return-It

Depots has tripled.

Last year’s total volume returned: 630,000kilograms.

And did you know:

To find the Return-ItDepot nearest you, call1-800-330-9767 or visitwww.return-it.ca/milk

Page 13: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

Blazing a trail for the B.C. Seniors Games

The torch is lit: Les Robson and Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan light the torch for theB.C. Seniors Games on May 31 at Brentwood Town Centre.

It’s less than three months tothe B.C. Seniors Games, and onMay 31, local organizers hosteda torch-lighting ceremony atBrentwood Town Centre.

More than 350 people showedup at the shopping centre’s atri-um to mark the 100-day count-down to the Games, which willfeature 3,500 participants, aged55 and older. They will competein a variety of events rangingfrom sports to one-act plays.

The Games are celebrat-ing their 25th anniversary andwill be held in Burnaby forthe first time from Aug. 21 to25. The local organizing com-mittee is getting into gear forwhat it hopes will be the bestGames ever. The torch was lit byBurnaby Mayor Derek Corriganand Les Robson, who has com-peted in every seniors gamesince 1987.

– By Alfie Lau, staff reporter

Larry Wright/burnaby now

ONLINEEXTRAFor a photo galleryof this event, goto www.burnabynow.com

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A13

Free Gate Admission!

THE 100TH ANNIVERSARYOF THE C.W. PARKERCAROUSEL #119.Ride the carousel for $2.30 and receivea 100th Anniversary commemorative poster FREE.There’s a new poster in June, July and August(limited quantities). Make plans now to ridean icon from a simpler time.

6501 Deer Lake Ave.burnabyvillagemuseum.ca

Art Credit: José Rivas

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Page 14: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A14 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

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Page 15: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

Don’t miss a single bitof Burnaby news.

The Burnaby NOW isavailable anytime, fromanywhere, on multipleplatforms – so NOW read-ers always know what’sgoing on in their com-munity. Our print editioncontinues to go out in thecommunity on Wednesdayand Friday each week,

but check out our websiteat www.burnabynow.com for new stories andphotos daily. As well,connect on smartphonesat m.burnabynow.com ordownload the free BurnabyNOW app at the App Storefor iPhones.

As well, the NOW is onTwitter at @BurnabyNow_News and find us on

Facebook at www.facebook.com/BurnabyNOW.

Our news team isonline, too. Follow themon Twitter: @PatTracy, @AlfieLau, @janayafe @JenniferMoreau, @juliemaclellan, @nikimhope, @ChristinaMyersA, @TheresaMcManus, @LarrySWright, @ThomasBerridge.

Online and in the cityBurnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A15

We are Proud to Present ~The 5th Annual ~ A Taste of Amica.If you have never visited yourneighbourhood Amica atRideau Manor RetirementCommunity, this is the dayto satisfy your curiosity… andyour taste buds! Throughoutthe day of June 14, we willshowcase one of our truepassions… the fine dining experienceand the culinary excellence of our Chefs and staff. Join usany time during this complimentary day!

10:00 am to Noon - Self Serve Continental BreakfastFresh baked goods, juices, fresh fruits, herbal tea selectionand coffee. Relax and enjoy your breakfast, then ask for atour of our all-inclusive luxury retirement community.

Noon to 2:30 pm - Chef Action StationsOur Chefs will serve carved roast on mini rolls or willfeature a sauté station, a selection of hot and cold fingerfoods, vegetarian fare, pastries baked on-site, sparklingcocktails, teas and coffee.

2:30 pm to 4:00 pm - Chef Demonstrations &

Food SamplingAmica Chefs will showcase their talents and the secrets topreparing an assortment of delicacies using fresh localingredients, to sample and enjoy!

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The Burnaby to New Westminster Transmission Project will help meet thegrowing demand for electricity in the New Westminster area.

A new 2.8 kilometre, 60 kilovolt underground transmission circuit willconnect New Westminster Substation to an existing transmission linelocated near Lakefield Drive in a right-of-way close to Robert BurnabyPark. Three cable vaults will also be installed along the route.

Construction will begin in early June and is expected to be finished in Fall2012. Planned hours of work are Monday to Saturday from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

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Page 16: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A16 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

Michael J. FoxMichael J. FoxGOLF TOURNAMENTGOLF TOURNAMENT1313thth YEAR – ANOTHERYEAR – ANOTHERSOLD-OUT SUCCESS!SOLD-OUT SUCCESS!

Start spreading the news: The Michael J.Fox Golf Tournament was another rousingsuccess on June 1.

More than $65,000 was raised for upgrades tothe South Burnaby theatre and for scholarshipsfor Burnaby students pursuing study at a post-secondary institution in an arts or arts-relatedarea. In the 13 years the golf tournament has takenplace, $675,000 has been raised.

With a full roster of 144 golfers and 340 people forthe dinner at the Hilton Vancouver Metrotown,the event had a big–city feel befitting its New Yorktheme.

With Cathay Pacific on as a sponsor, several of thebig prizes included flights to the City That NeverSleeps.

A draw for two business class Cathay Pacific ticketsto New York City was very popular, as was theauction item of four plane tickets to New York,two rooms for two nights at the Roosevelt Hotel, alunch with Fox and tickets to a premier New Yorktheatre show of your choice. A bid of $7,500 wonthis trip of a lifetime.

Big donors for the night included Scotiabankdonating $15,000, the Hilton VancouverMetrotown donating $10,000 and Dr. Kenneth Hilldonating $5,000.

Another big highlight was a birthday cake for Fox’sson Sam, who turned 23 on May 30. The birthdaycelebration was reminiscent of last year’s birthdaycake, which was presented to Michael for his 50thbirthday on June 9, 2011.

The afternoon of golf on Riverway’s championshipcourse got the crowd amped for the deliciousbuffet dinner just up the hill at the HiltonVancouver Metrotown.

Tournament chair Gary Morrey was pleased withhow Friday’s event went, especially when theweather gods smiled down on them.

“The weather held out for us,” Morrey said. “Wewere relatively dry, and this was a very successfulevent. Michael had his whole family out, and it wasreally amazing how everybody enjoyed themselves.Everybody had a lot of fun.”

Another notable event that occurred Friday wasFox showing off the commemorative Canada Poststamp that has just been released to honour Fox’scharitable efforts.

“What an honour for Michael,” said Morrey.“The stamp honours his work with Parkinson’s(awareness).”

Signed Fox stamps were a key auction item, aswere some spectacular wines from Mission Hill,trips to Whistler and Victoria, a signed Travis LulayB.C. Lions jersey and a signed Masters flag fromgolfer Mike Weir.

Golf committee member and director of thetheatre, George Kawaguchi, also received a specialaward for all of his volunteer efforts.

Major sponsors of this year’s tournament includethe Burnaby NOW, Michael J. Fox, the MorreyAuto Group, the Michael J. Fox Theatre, theBurnaby Firefighters Charitable Society, MissionHill Winery, Scotiabank, the Hilton VancouverMetrotown, Bosa Properties Inc., CanaccordGenuity, DSDL Canada Investments Ltd., theVancouver Giants, Metrotown Mazda, CathayPacific, Tourism Burnaby, the City of Burnaby andGolf Burnaby.

Photos:1. Son Sam and mother Phyllis with

Michael J. Fox2. Kevin Walker, Rick Crook and Staff Sgt.

Major John Buis3. Global TV’s Chris Gailus and Rob Willman4. Michael J. Fox and the Hilton’s

Ed Jaskula5. The Hilton Vancouver Metrotown

served an incredible buffet Friday night6. John Gives, Joe Fedurick, Peter Martinek

and John Heinzl7. Michael J. Fox8. Michael J. Fox, son Sam Fox, Kyle Fox and

Paul Marsden watch Phyllis Fox sink a putt9. Dr. Kenneth Hill and Michael J. Fox

10. Aaron Fineran, Frank Affetuso,Dr. David Jones and Gary Morrey

11. Jack Nadeau and Michael J. Fox12. Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan13. Rob Wilkins, Cheryl Westgard, Dave Poole

and Rahim Rajan14. Burnaby Firefighters Miles Ritchie, John

McQuade, Jeff Clark and Mike Hurley15. Michael J. Fox autographs a skateboard for

the auction16. Gary Morrey and Phyllis Fox17. Jason, Steve and Jarrett Morrey and

Howard Chiang18. Gary Love with Patricia Temarick19. Michael J. Fox, Cheryl Westgard and

Dave Poole

8 9

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10 11

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Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A17

Page 17: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A18 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

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As part two of aseries of three col-umns on perfecting

homemade burgers, thisone will focus on ingre-dients to add to the ham-burger mix, and the nextcolumn will be on burgertoppings and bread selec-tion. If you missed myprevious column on meatselection, please email meat [email protected] and Iwill be more than happyto send it to you.

There are literallycountless ingredients onecan add to their ham-burger mix to create a fla-vourful burger patty, andtrying to cover all of themin a single food columnwould be next to impos-sible. Therefore I will focuson some general tips and

a handful of unique ideasfor you. Firstly, pleaseunderstand that the burgerpatty itself should be fla-vourful, and don’t rely onjust the toppings to makeit taste good. If it doesn’ttaste good on its own, youare not done making theburger patty yet.

Let your pantry andspice rack be your guide.Think of the type of burgeryou would like to cre-ate based on what youhave on hand. Maybeyou would like to createan Italian burger? Thenuse herbs such as basiland oregano and add lotsof garlic. An Asian typeburger would be bettersuited to sesame oil, sesa-me seeds, and maybe someChinese five-spice powder.A Southern Louisiana typeburger may come togetherwith some cayenne pep-per, onion, garlic, anda flavourful paprika. AGreek burger could bemade with oregano, rose-mary, tons of garlic, andmaybe some crumbled fetacheese.

Cheeses are a greatway to not only introduceflavour but also to addmoisture. A dry burgerpatty is not very palat-able. Sometimes I will alsoinclude a chunk of melt-able cheese in the middleof each patty, like mozza-rella, for a hidden cheesycenter. Also, keep in mindthe salt content of thecheeses you select; salt andpepper in your burger mixis crucial, but you don’twant it to be overly salty.

Breadcrumbs are notalways necessary to makea good burger, and withthe number of gluten intol-erant people seeminglyon the rise, this is moreimportant to know thanever. Breadcrumbs act as agood binder to help holdthe burger together by giv-ing it some stability, butbreadcrumbs also tend todry out the burger as well.Some of my best burgercreations were createdwithout any breadcrumbsat all and just relied on

TASTE

ON COOKINGChef Dez

Creating the perfect burger

Burgers Page 20

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A19

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Page 19: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A20 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

eggs to hold the pattiestogether when cooking.Keep in mind that thenumber of wet ingredientsone is adding to the mixmust then be kept to aminimum as there will beno crumbs to soak up theexcess moisture.

Celiacs can then enjoytheir burger patty servedin a lettuce cup, which Ialso find is a refreshingchange from the regularburger bun.

Probably the best tip Ican share when cookingred meat is to add a smallamount of dark berryjam, like blueberry jam orblackberry jam to your rawhamburger mix. The darkfull-bodied flavor of thejam compliments the full-bodied flavor of red meatvery well. This is a trickI have used many timeswhen creating such red

meat dishes as meat loaf,tomato meat sauce andburgers.

An approximation oftwo measured tablespoonsof dark berry jam to eachpound of red meat shouldresult in a complimentaryeffect.

My last suggestion isto simply be resourceful.Armed with a knife and acutting board, a look in therefrigerator may uncoversuch hidden gems to addto the mix such as pick-les, hot peppers, capers,anchovies, olives, sundriedtomatoes, celery and bellpeppers. Let your imagi-nation run wild, and youmay become famous foryour creation.

Dear Chef Dez:My homemade burger

patties always taste bland orat least never have as muchflavor as I expect there should

be. Any tips?Greg P.

Penticton, B.C.

Dear Greg:When creating a burger

patty from scratch it isalways good to taste itbefore all the patties areformed and cooked off.

This way you have achance to adjust the sea-sonings before they areserved. I am not suggest-ing you eat the raw meat.Instead take a small meat-ball sized amount of theraw mixture, flatten it intoa miniature patty and cookit thoroughly in a smallpan. This will give you anopportunity to taste andadjust ingredients and sea-sonings before grilling.

Chef Dez is a food colum-nist, culinary instructor andcooking show performer. Seewww. chefdez.com.

continued from page 19

Burgers: Add some blueberryjam for that special taste

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Page 20: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

After reading myrecent column onhealthy sleep, a

helpful reader wrote toremind me to mention therestorative power of thedaytime nap.

The siesta is more com-mon closer to the equatorthough many Canadiansfind that a midday napgives them the energy toget through the rest of eachday. Many of us thoughdon’t have the luxury tosleep during the day.

That doesn’t meaninvoluntary nappingdoesn’t happen. Anyonewho is sleep-deprived – orsuffers from a sleep dis-order such as obstructivesleep apnea – may havesuch severe daytime sleepi-ness that they can easilynod off when they shouldbe alert.

The student who hasstayed up studying pastmidnight may take aninvoluntary nap during alecture. They may not evennotice they have fallenasleep until they see theirnotes trail off the page.

The doctor who hasstayed up all night for adelivery may struggle tostay awake at a schoolconcert. My rule of thumbfor a school performance is

this. If I’m feeling refreshedat the end of the show, Imust have fallen asleep.

The worst time to napis when your hands areon the wheel of an auto-mobile. So if you are feel-ing sleepy, stay out of thedriver’s seat. You may beas dangerous as a drunkdriver.

If it takes less than fiveminutes for you to fallasleep during the day, youmay be suffering from asleep deficit, and the needfor a nap is your body andbrain telling you that youneed more sleep. The nap

is just a short-term solutionif you continue the habit ofsleeping too late or wakingup too early.

If you need a nap, it’sbest to do so early in theday – either the morningor in the early afternoon.Naps taken later in theday can perpetuate a badsleep-wake cycle by mak-ing it harder for you to fallasleep at your appropriatebedtime.

As our brains and bod-ies cycle through naturalrhythms throughout theday, we need a break– though not necessarily

a nap – every two hoursor so. When you feel rest-less or a little unfocussedduring the midmorningor midafternoon, you maywant to try a change ofpace. Take up a differ-ent activity, take a shortwalk, stretch, meditate orlisten to some music. Ifyou’re not sleep-deprived,you should feel refreshed– without the need for anap.

If you are sufferingfrom persistent or severedaytime sleepiness, seeyour doctor. You may needfurther testing to rule out

a sleep disorder, such asobstructive sleep apnea, ora medical problem affect-ing the quality of yoursleep.

A warning for students:I didn’t realize – until Ireturned to the lecture hallon the stage rather than inthe audience – that I couldsee every face in the hall,including the one who wasnodding off.

Dr. Davidicus Wong isa physician and writer. HisHealthwise column appearsregularly in this paper. Youcan find his posts at davidi-cuswong.wordpress.com.

Check www.Burnabynow.com for breaking news, photo galleries, blogs and more

HEALTHWISEDr. Davidicus Wong

Don’t discount the power of a daytime napBurnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A21

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A22 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

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24 Rebel third and long 24 Jr. Lakers lack punch 24 Golfer a stroke away

SECTION COORDINATOR Tom Berridge, 604-444-3022 • [email protected]

STM track posts second-best finish

The St. Thomas MoreKnights posted one of theirbest-ever results at the 46thannual B.C. High Schooltrack and field champion-ships.

The Knights finishedtied with VancouverCollege in sixth place inthe overall aggregate,while placing fifth in theboys’ team standings.

Coincidentally, the twoChristian Brothers schoolsalso tied for sixth in 2007.STM’s best finish was afourth-place in 1989, whenthe then-all-boy schoolwon gold in both relayraces at the meet.

Onceagain, itwasSTM’svaunted boys’ sprint relayteam, including SebastianAduglaski, Mikey Carney,Malcolm Lee and alternateJalen Jana that boosted theteam’s fortune, earning theschool’s fifth 4x100-metretitle in the past sevenyears. A huge anchor legfrom Giovanni Trasoliniallowed the Knights to niprival College at the tapeby five one-hundreths of asecond for the gold.

“It was a sick kick,”remarked Carney after thewin.

“It was probably ourmain goal coming intothe B.C.’s, said Adugalski,who ran the leadoff leg.

“I just wanted to winreally bad,” Trasoliniadded.

That win came just

moments after the STMgirls shaved two-tenths ofa second off their 4x100mqualifying time to finishwith the bronze medal in apersonal-best time of 50.40to claim the school’s firstmedal at the B.C. meet.

“We just wanted toPB, but when that chancecame, we’re so proud ofeach other,” said PaigeLlewellyn.

Adugalski claimed anindividual silver medal forSTM, placing runner-upin the 400m hurdles after

a long rain delay follow-ing thunder and lightningover Swangard Stadiumin the afternoon hours onSaturday.

“It affected me men-tally mostly,” Adugalskisaid of his 57.59 time. “Iwas warmed up and I wasready to run. … I got a PBin the final, so hopefully Ican get a gold medal nextyear.”

But the Knights’ trackteam left a lot of potentialpoints on the table.

Trasolini placed fifth in

the 200m and eighth in the100m, respectively, whilealso finishing eighth in the4x400m.

But the large numberof races over the two daysof competition took a toll,Trasolini said.

“I ran four races yes-terday, too. I put all myenergy into the 4x100,”said Trasolini after theboys’ 200m. “We’re OKwith that. Everthing elseis a bonus, winning a goldmedal is an accomplish-ment in itself.”

Lee and Adugalski bothearned fifth-place finishesin their respective 100mand 110m hurdles racesbefore finishing up themeet in the 1,600m relay.

But for the one STMsenior in the final relayrace of the meet the eighth-place result was bitter-sweet.

“I’m a little disappoint-ed with the final race,”said Carney. “But I’m verysatsified in my high school

Knight relay teamsled to fourth-placefinish in 1989Tom Berridgesports editor

Dave Wielki/burnaby now

High hurdles: STM’s Sebastian Adugalski, right, legged out a fifth-place finish in the boys’ 110-metrehurdles at the B.C. high track and field championships at Swangard Stadium on Saturday.

The Burnaby Lakers rodea perfect period of lacrosse totheir third consecutive win in theWestern Lacrosse Association.

The senior A Lakers playedperhaps their best 20 minutes oflacrosse since a run to the leagueplayoff final in 1993, downingthe once nationally No. 2-rankedNew Westminster Salmonbellies15-11 at the Bill Copeland SportsCentre on Friday.

“Our mindset coming in waswe wanted to play huge,” saidLakers’ Mike Brascia, who inter-cepted a pass in the defensivezone and opened the scoring inthe third minute with his fourth

consecutive transition goal of theseason. “We knew (playing NewWest) would be the ultimate test,so we wanted to come out withguns blazing.”

And come out the Lakers did.A minute later, Matt Quinton

cut the middle and took a neatpass from Shaun Dhaliwal tomake the score 2-0.

Dhaliwal then connected fromthe right crease with Burnaby’sfirst of three goals on the powerplay.

First star Scott Jones made it4-0 with his first of three goalsmidway through the frame.

Team scoring leader DaneStevens then made it five straightgoals for Burnaby on the powerplay.

The Lakers outshot the visitors18-8 in the opening period and bya long shot overall, nearly dou-bling the attempts on goal, 59-30.

But the Salmonbellies did notgo quietly despite a seven-goaldeficit early in the second stanzaon Jones’s second of the game.

The ‘Bellies rallied to close thegap to five goals with the help ofa second-period hat trick fromJeff Zywicki.

New Westminster pulled outall the stops in the final frame,outscoring Burnaby 6-5 in theperiod, but on each occasion, theLakers found a reply.

With the score 13-10 follow-ing a pair of long-range lazers byNew West’s Alex Gajic a minuteapart, and with the Fishmen on a

five-minute power play, Dhaliwalscored a timely first shorthandedgoal of the season on a bouncerfrom close range.

Gajic eventually scored on thepower play to bring the deficitback down to three with morethan five minutes still left toplay.

But Burnaby rookie CaseyJackson, the third overall pick inthe WLA junior draft, countedthe first goal of his senior careerto put the game away.

Joe Bell got the win in goal forBurnaby.

“It’s a huge team builder.Our offence was going and ourdefence was so solid. Now otherteams know we’re a potentialcontender and can’t take us light-

ly, Brasica added.In the first period, Burnaby

showed veteran poise when theSalmonbellies changed tacticsand attempted to intimidate theyoung Lakers. Burnaby fore-checked well and repeatedlythrew the transition-minded‘Bellies out of their rhythm.

With the win, Burnabypulled into a tie for second placewith New West. The VictoriaShamrocks took over first placefollowing a 17-7 win over theMaple Ridge Burrards.

Burnaby is in Langley tonight(Wednesday) before returningto the Copeland centre Fridayfor a home tilt with the winlessBurrards. Both games are 7:45p.m. starts.

Tom Berridgesports editor

SoccerKnightsfourth

at B.C.s

St. Thomas More fin-ished in fourth place at theB.C. high school AA girls’soccer championships for asecond straight year.

“I think we’re a littlebit disappointed. We beatSeycove to qualify for theprovincials,” said STMhead coach Carlo Zavariseafter witnessing the NorthShore school go on to winthe provincial banner inKamloops on Saturday.

“Last year, we lost inthe last moment, but in thisteam, I feel every playerfeels that we could havedone better. But at the endof the day, I’m happy withthe effort.”

STM opened its ninthconsecutive appearance atthe AA provincials withan off-performance againstParkland, coming back toedge the Vancouver Islandschool 2-1 on a pair of goalsby Samantha Drescher.Defender Leah Purdey wasnamed the player of thegame against Parkland.

The Knights bouncedback with two straightshutouts over Kalamalkaand Caledonia to win itspool. But the goals driedup for STM in the champi-onship round.

STM lost 2-0 to Pool B

Sr. A Lakers’ perfect period storm blows out ’BelliesTrack Page 24

Tom Berridgesports editor

Soccer Page 24

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A23

Page 23: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A24 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND FIELD

Rebel junior third and longTom Berridgesports editor

Burnaby South juniorAhmad Nizamani tookhome a bronze medal inthe long jump from the B.C.high school track and fieldchampionships.

The Grade 10 Rebel, theunder-16 Canadian nation-al champion in the fieldevent, leaped 6.48 metres toearn his team’s only pointsof the 46th annual provin-cial meet.

“It feels good, but itwould have been nicer toget gold,” said Nizamani,who has a personal bestof 6.60m in the event. “Itwasn’t my best day, butit’s nothing to worry about.I got a long season aheadof me.”

Konrad Piaseczny ofHoly Cross won the eventwith a leap of 6.80m.

Byrne Creek Secondary’sJamal Reta placed 12th in theboys’ 3,000m timed final onFriday. Later in the day,Reta failed to qualify forthe 1,500m following a 14th

place finish in heats.On Saturday, Santiago

Ward of Burnaby Centralplaced 13th in the boys’2,000m steeplechase.

Dave Wielki/burnaby now

A long jump: Burnaby South juniorAhmad Nizamanisoared to the bronze medal in the long jump at the B.C.high school championships Saturday.

career from Grade 8 to12. It’s more than what Iexpected it to be. … But it’sa tough way to go out.

“But all the hard workpaid off in the 4x100 that’sfor sure. That’s what I’mremembering – two goldmedals. I’m happy withthat.”

STM also earned teamaggregate points fromRyan Rickaby, who fin-ished seventh in the boys’1,500m race walk run, held

on Friday.Rachel Shuttleworth got

the STM girls’ team in thepoints with a sixth-placefinish in the 200m sprint.Shuttleworth just missedqualifying in the 100m,placing 10th in a time of12.91.

The Knights had a num-ber of other near-qualify-ing misses.

Jana was ninth in theboys’ 100m, while NicoRepole was 10th in theboys’ shot put and 14th inthe discus.

Bryant Lee threw morethan 41 metres in the boys’javelin to finish 10th over-all.

Kamila Wojiechowskiwas just short of the 10-mmark in the girls’ shot put,placing 10th with a 9.59mheave.

“We’re just blessedwith great athletes, and wedon’t miss a beat from ouralternates,” said STM trackcoach Dave Mattiazzo.“They love track, too, andthey’re all in it for nextyear.”

Track: Race walker also scores pointscontinued from page 23

winner Okanagan Mission in the cross-over match on Friday, surrendering afirst-half corner kick before a mixup inthe back end put the Knights two goalsdown midway through the second half.

STM took the game over in the final25 minutes but came up empty on thescoresheet despite outchancing the oppo-sition.

In the consolation final it was asimilar midfield-dominated match forthe Knights against Lambrick Park ofVictoria, before losing 2-0 on a pair ofquick goals coming in the 25th and 28th

minutes.In pool play, Daniella Falcone, Katrina

Abel and Commissioner’s XI pickDrescher all scored single goals in a 3-0win over Caledonia.

Against Kalamalka, Drescher, Abeland Kassia Hayek, with a pair of goals,all tallied. Midfielder Andrea DiLorenzowas named player of the game againstthe Vernon school team.

“Fourth is fourth, we’re not pleased,but it’s two times for us to make thesemifinal,” said Zavarise.

Seycove defeated OK Mission 1-0 inthe championship final.

continued from page 23

Soccer: STM beat winner in qualifier

Juniors lack punch against LangleyRyan Watson scored a

hat trick and Josh Simonspotted a pair of goals,but there was little else tocheer about at Burnaby’sjunior A lacrosse game.

The Burnaby Lakersslipped closer to the bot-tom of the B.C. JuniorLacrosse League fol-lowing a 12-6 loss to theLangley Thunder at theBill Copeland SportsCentre on Sunday.

The Lakers crumbledin the opening minute ofthe second period, surren-dering two shorthandedgoals to fall behind 5-1.

Simons tried to sparka mini-comeback with ashorthanded goal at 3:14of the third period.

Watson then scored apair later in the frame toshave the deficit to 11-5.

“It’s pretty frustrating… One time it’s the stron-

gest game we’ve played,the next time it’s down the(toilet),” said Simons. “Wejust have to look forwardto the next 20 minutes andcome prepared.”

With the loss, Burnaby‘srecord fell to 2-7.

Next up for Burnabyis last-place Nanaimo atthe Copeland centre onSunday at 5 p.m.

– Tom [email protected]

Final golf stopgoes to playoffat Mayfair

St. Thomas More’s Kevin Vigna finished a strokebehind the leaders with a one-over-par 72 at the Zone4 junior golf invitational at Mayfair Lakes on Saturday.Burnaby’s Alan Tolusso finished with a 75, while AlexFrançois shot 76 at the final stop of the junior tour.

Steven Hayes of Surrey defeated Vancouver’s JamesNugent in a playoff after both tied with even-par 71.

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Page 24: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

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All advertising published in this newspaper isaccepted on the premise that the merchandiseand services offered are accurately describedand willingly sold to buyers at the advertisedprices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions.Advertising that does not conform to thesestandards or that is deceptive or misleading,is never knowingly accepted. If any readerencounters non-compliance with these standardswe ask that you inform the Publisher of thisnewspaperandTheAdvertisingStandardsCouncilof B.C. OMISSIONANDERROR: The publishersdo not guarantee the insertion of a particularadvertisement on a specified date, or at all,although every effort will be made to meet thewishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishersdo not accept liability for any loss or damagecaused by an error or inaccuracy in the printingof an advertisement beyond the amount paidfor the space actually occupied by the portion ofthe advertisement in which the error occurred.Any corrections or changes will be made in thenext available issue. The Burnaby Now & TheNew Westminster Record will be responsible foronly one incorrect insertion with liability limitedto that portion of the advertisement affected bythe error. Request for adjustments or correctionson charges must be made within 30 days ofthe ad’s expiration. For best results pleasecheck your ad for accuracy the first dayit appears. Refunds made only after 7business days notice!

1085 Lost & Found1085WEDDING RINGS (gold with dia-monds) lost Tues May 22 atCostco Brighton Ave, LougheedMall & Real Canadian Superstoreareas. Reward. 604-420-3291

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GRANDE PRAIRIE RegionalCollege, Fairview Campus has anexciting opportunity for a full-timeWelding Instructor located inFairview, Alberta (the Heart of theP e a c e R i v e r r e g i o n i nnorthwestern Alberta). For moreinformation visit our website atwww.gprc.ab.ca/careers. Due toappren t i cesh ip en ro lmen tincreases we are expanding ourstaffing so we Need Instructors inthis program!

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1240 GeneralEmployment1240

Become a Registered PersonalTrainer. See our ad underEducation. Hilltop 604-930-8377

BLACKLINE CONSTRUCTION(New West) hiring Carpenter.Must have sev. yrs. of experi-ence. $24 hr/40 hr wk. E-res:[email protected]

CONCRETE RESTORATIONworkers needed. Exp’d in poly-urethane injection & membranes,waterproofing and swingstage.Valid D.L. Call 604-876-6561

INTERNATIONAL STUDENTADVISORS

Change of Phase Consulting Ltdin Burnaby requires 2 Internation-al Student AdvisorsSalary:$18.00 Hourly for 40hours per week Monday to Friday,Bonus, Commission, Medical Be-nefits, Life Insurance BenefitsREQUIREMENTS:Education: completion of college/ CEGEP / Vocational or technicaltraining, Completion of universityExperience: 2 years to less than3 yearsLanguages: Must be able tospeak, read and write English andKorean.Duties and Specific Skills :Career planning coaching, edu-cational counselling, consultingwith teachers, parents, adminis-trators and community agencies,referring students to other spe-cialized services as required, par-ticipating in staff meetings, edu-cational conferences and work-shops, developing course materi-als and curriculum content, pre-paring and delivering presenta-tions at workshops and confer-ences, arranging employment forgraduating students, visiting col-leges and secondary schools toprovide academic information toprospective students, their par-ents and educational institutionsSubmit your resume by email [email protected] or byto 604-931-2021.

TRUTH IN''EMPLOYMENT''ADVERTISING

Glacier Media Group makesevery effort to ensure youare responding to areputable and legitimate jobopportunity. If you suspectthat an ad to which youh a v e r e s p o n d e d i smisleading, here are someh i n t s t o r emembe r .Legitimate employers donot ask for money as part ofthe application process; donot send money; do not giveany credit card information;or call a 900 number inorder to respond to anemployment ad.

Job opportunity ads aresalary based and do notrequire an investment.

If you have responded to anad which you believe to bemisleading please call theBetter Business Bureau at604-682-2711, Monday toFriday, 9am - 3pm or [email protected] they will investigate.

1240 GeneralEmployment1240

PARTS TECHNICIAN, licensedor apprentice required for PeaceRiver Alberta GM dealer.Automotive knowledge an asset.$3,000 to $5,000 per month. Faxresume to 780-624-4124 or email:a d m i n @ m a r s h a l l - a u t o . c a .Attention: Parts Manager.

24 HR respite work in grouphomes available. Exp. with Aut-ism an asset. Fax 604-953-1236.

Now HiringFLAGPERSONS &

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Apply in person19689 Telegraph Trail, Langleyfax resume to 604-513-3661

or email:[email protected]

1250 Hotel Restaurant1250LUPO Restaurant seeking F/T FirstCook. $15/hr. Must have experi-ence in Italian/Argentinean cuisine.E-res: [email protected]

WORK IN CANADA’S ARCTIC.Hiring Co-op Management andCook positions. Career Fair to beheld at Inn at Laurel Point inVictoria Thursday, June 14, 201210:00 am to 5:00 pm. Drop in or

e-mail your resume [email protected]

1270 Office Personnel1270ORDER DESK /BOOKKEEPING

Temp position, possiblyleading to full-time. Mustspeak fluent English and bewell organized. Full trainingand benefits available.Email: [email protected] fax resume: 604-421-6918

WESTERN SAFETYhas immediate opening for

RECEPTIONISTOFFICE CLERK

Full-TimeMust have a pleasant phonemanner with good Microsoft

Word and Excel skills.Duties include collections,

filing incoming / outgoing mail,ACCPAC experience anasset, but willing to train.Benefits after 3 months.

Email resume to:[email protected]

Or fax to: 604-461-5446

1293 Social Services1293

Call 604-708-2628www.plea.ca

Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who needa stable, caring home for a few months.Are you looking for the opportunity todo meaningful, fulfilling work? PLEACommunity Services is looking forqualified applicants who can providecare for youth in their home on afull-time basis or on weekends for respite.Training, support and remunerationare provided. Funding is available formodifications to better equip your home.A child at risk is waiting for an open door.Make it yours.

1300 Teachers/Instructors1300

1170 Obituaries1170

Bojesen, IsabellaMay 7, 1917 - May 23, 2012

Isabella Bojesen nee Grant died peacefully at theCrossroads Hospice in the morning on May 23,2012, with daughter Renee by her side. Past her95th birthday, Isabella lived independently in herapartment, on her own terms. Until two monthsago Isabella walked to the Westminster Mall on

a daily basis to meet and talk with her friends. She did her own shopping,handled all her own financial matters and corrected everyone who pronouncedher name wrong. An accomplished seamstress who enjoyed making much ofher extensive wardrobe, she was also an accomplished dancer. Until the lastfew years she had enjoyed travel and a busy social life involving dancing atCentury House. Isabella was predeceased by husbands, Hans Bojesen andJames Gibson, by good friend Bill Richardson and her son Michael Gibson.She is survived her daughter Renee Nunn, sons Ken Gibson and Jim Gibson,sister Agnes Foster, many grandchildren and great grandchildren, cousins,nieces and nephews around the world. Special thanks to her favouritehomemaker, Helen, for everything she did. Also thanks to Dr. Yap for hisattention and wisdom, and the nurses and staff at Royal Columbian Hospitaland Crossroads Hospice who cared for her with both their heart and hands.RIP Isabella. By request there will be no service at this time. A memorial lunchwill take place later this summer (time and date to be announced).

HERINGER, Herman (Harry) HaroldMay 02, 1943 - May 25, 2012

Passed away peacefully at home after struggling with the effectsof bladder cancer for 18 months. Beloved husband of Joann.Loving father of Pauli-Ann (Dan) Carriere and Heidi Heringer.Proud opa of Danielle and Jack. Harry will be deeply missed byhis family. A 42-year resident of Queensborough, Harry will besadly missed by his many friends in the neighbourhood. Harryalso leaves behind extended family and friends worldwide,particularly in the village of his childhood, Langenschiltach,Germany, and Winnipeg, Manitoba, where he spent his schoolyears and young adulthood, met his bride, and apprenticed withthe Canadian National Railway. At the age of 23, Harry moved hisyoung family to New Westminster and continued his work as aheavy duty mechanic, eventually retiring from B.C. Hydro in 2002,after more than 20 years of service. Never without an opinion,Harry loved adventure and a hearty conversation, preferably overan ice-cold beer, after a long ride on his Harley Davidson. Harrytruly and forever enjoyed the company of his family and friends. Acelebration of life will be held in August 2012. In lieu of flowers, in-memoriam contributions to the Canadian Cancer Society wouldbe greatly appreciated.

Featured Employment Continues on next page

Take Your Pickfrom the

HOTTEST JOBS

Celebrate the lives ofloved ones with your stories,photographs & tributes on

remembering.ca

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A25

Page 25: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A26 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

3050 Preschools/Kindergarten3050

GARAGE SALES

2035 Burial Plots2035FOREST LAWN, Imper ia lGarden, 1 NICHE wall# 41, $3000604-502-0556 or 604-351-3775

OCEAN VIEW Cemetery PlotBurial plot in Calvary 6 section

of Ocean View Cemetery.Plot will hold 1 casket plus

1 urn or 2 urns. $9800.Call: (604) 557-0506

2060 For Sale -Miscellaneous2060

JANOME 8000 Embroidery/Sew-ing Machine, memory cards, mir-acle stitcher/piping ft. Complete,all manuals. $650. 604-435-0204

MOVING! Entire contents mustgo. Italian hutch, bookshelf,couch, Ikea kitchen table/4 chairs,chest of drawers, householditems/more. Reas. 778-879-3628

Scooter with new battery, withbasket, exc cond, 1 yr old, likenew, $1500 obo, 604-734-6685

COMPOST FOR SALEComposted cow manure.

Great for gardens. $5 per yardCall: (604)-854-0669Call: (604) 798-3498

2075 Furniture2075WOOD CRIB (cream colour);china cabinet & hutch; Roxtondining room table + 4 chairs +buffet; Sklar chesterfield & love-seat; 2 velvet forest green swivelrockers; La-Z-Boy Hide-a-bed,pink/beige velvet; Queen-size BRsuite: Headboard, dresser, arm-oire and 2 night tables; Sealy twinb e d + m a t t r e s s . C a l l604-789-1518 or 604-945-8535

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NEW & USED EQUIPMENT: 2 Middleyby Marshall Pizza Ovens • Lincoln Impinger Pizza Ovens• Doyon 2 Deck Oven & Doyon 2 Rack Proofer • New Adamatic 2 Rack Proofer • SeveralPcs New & Used (Kool-it • Beverage-Air • True & Traulsen) Refrig / Hot & Prep Cabinets• 1, 2 & 3 Well Sinks • Work Tables • Walk-in Coolers & Freezers • Approx. 8’ X 24’ Walk-inCooler • Dishwashers • Stoves • Ranges • Grills • Several Dough Mixers • Pizza & SandwichPrep Tables • Vac Packers • Holding Cabinets • Combi & Convection Ovens • Meat Band Saw• Booth & Bench Seating • Port. Kiosk / Bar • Small Wares • Glass Ware • Pots & Pans• Capp & Coffee Machines • Meat Slicers • Deep Fryers • Coffin Coolers • Kettles & Skillets• Harvest 3 DeckOven • Many New&UsedRestTables&Chairs • BarStools •Canopies • PlusMuchMore…TOOLS: HysterPropaneForklift•Generator•ChemPump•Welder•PressureWasher• E-Z Rect Shelving • Saws • Power & Hand Tools • Plus Much More…

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YARD SALE!!!4353/ 4363/ 4373 Halifax St

BurnabySaturday June 9, 9am-1pm

Brent Gardens isparticipating in the

City of Burnaby’s city-widegarage sale.

Multiple tables worthof stuff!

2075 Furniture2075QUEEN SIZE Mattress SetBrand New. Original Plastic.

Never Used.Must sell $200

Call: (604) 790-0021

ONYX Tables Onyx Coffee Tble$210. Onyx Nest $225.

Call: (604) 948-9862

MAPLE TABLE $350, fourchairs $235; Garden Harvestdishes, 64 pcs $175.

Call: (604) 307-0404

GORGEOUS Dining Room Set:$2900. Or

Buffet and Hutch: $1450.Gorgeous all wood dining roomset: table, 72" long, 44" wide,plus 2 leaves, each 18" long and44" wide. Buffet and Hutch, 85"high, 73" wide. Will only sellbuffet and hutch separately.email: [email protected]

MOVING - Excellent Furniturein Great Condition Solid 48"Oak Dining Table, leaf + 4 chairs$425; Almost new 8’ cotton sofa$275; Queen Solid Pine 4-posterbed $200; Solid Oak MediaCentre $25; New bone low-flotoilet - not used $50; DoubleMaple Bed $25; 18 SpdMountain Bike $40 email:[email protected]

2105 MusicalInstruments2105

FREEUPRIGHT PIANO & BENCHfull size. Moving - FREE to goodhome! Must move yourself, sorrycan’t deliver. Call 604-526-4096

PIANO NORDHEIMER andbench, apt sized, excel cond &tuned, $550 obo. 604 435-6338

2135 Wanted to Buy2135STAMPS wanted Collector

looking to buy stamp collections.email: [email protected]

4020 Health Products& Services4020

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3015 ChildcareAvailable3015

CREATIVE MINDS. Lic’d. 1-5 yrs.ECE teacher. 18th Ave, Burnaby.604-525-5778 or 778-968-2516

Funded by the Prov. of BC

For information contact us at:604.931.3400 (Tri-Cities)604.294.1109 (Bby/NW)

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Join the YMCA CCRR!• Referrals

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WAREHOUSEPart-time

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Coquitlam, BC V3K 5Z1Fax: (604) 942-7184NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE.

Precious MindsMontessori School1630 Edinburgh St., New West.

• Ages 2½ - 6 Years Old• Preschool & Kindergarten• Full Montessori Curriculum

604.516.7777

Kids on the Gois a local guide for KidsActivities, Lessons, Education& Childcare – If this fitsyour business then thisis the perfect advertisingopportunity for you.This Feature runs the lastFriday of each month in TheBurnaby Now and New West.Record.

To advertise call

Darla604.444.3054Email: [email protected]

3507 Cats3507

BENGAL KITTENS, vet ✔ 1stshots dewormed, sweet natured,$800 Mission 1-604-814-1235

CATS for ADOPTIONRoyal City Humane Society.

604-524-6447 www.rchs.bc.ca

$800 REWARD Lost CATFor Return of "Rocky".

All-Grey cat. Ear Tattoo LPV024. Lost near ClevelandSchool North Vancouver.

Call: (604) 985-1198

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3508 Dogs3508

ALL SMALL breed pups local &n o n s h e d d i n g , $ 4 9 9 + .604-590-3727 or 604-514-3474www.puppiesfishcritters.com

FEATURED EMPLOYMENT MARKETPLACE CHILDREN5035 Financial

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Fila Guard Dog Pupsowners closest friend. Thieves

worst nightmare. All shots. Readynow! 604-817-5957

Golden Lab. 12mths. CKC reg.Tattooed. Neutered . Championsired. Loving family dog. Call fordetails $600. 604.799.3717

LABRADOODLE PUP 3 mos,male, vet checked, shots, $750.

604-584-2701

SAVE A LIFE. Wonderful rescuedogs from Foreclosed UponPets. Spay/neutered, regularv a c c i n a t i o n s & r a b i e s ,microchipped. $449 adoption fee,avail at your local Petcetera stores.

ST BERNESE Beautiful blend ofSt. Bernard and Bernese mtn

dog. Ready now. $700Call: (604) 796-0116

email: [email protected]

3508 Dogs3508

AMERICAN Red Nose 3 Males,purebred, no papers, 8 wks oldwith shots.$800 (604) 842-4150

3540 Pet Services3540

MARKS/SCRATCHES FROM yourpet? Restore wood/marble floors.778-889-7106 WoodStoneTile.ca

5505 Legal/PublicNotices5505

NOTICE TO CREDITORSAND OTHERS

SHIRLEY ANN MCLEAN,otherwise known as SHIRLEYA. MCLEAN and SHIRLEYMCLEAN, DeceasedNOTICE is hereby given thatcreditors and others havingclaims against the estate of theabovenoted deceased, formerlyof Burnaby, B.C., are required tosend full particulars of suchclaims to the undersignedexecutors at Box 10083, PacificCentre, 700 West Georgia Street,18th Floor, Vancouver, B.C., V7Y1B6, on or before the 9th day ofJuly, 2012, after which date theestate’s assets will be distributed,having regard only to claims thathave been received.SHIRLEY HOLOWATY and THECANADA TRUST COMPANY,Executors

5060 Legal Services5060CRIMINAL RECORD?

M o n e y - b a c k g u a r a n t e e .100,000+ Record Removalssince 1989. A+ BBB Rating. Only$ 4 5 . 5 0 / m o n t h - A s s u r e sEMPLOYMENT & TRAVELFREEDOM. Call for FREE INFOBOOKLET - 1-8-NOW-PARDON

(1-866-972-7366)www.RemoveYourRecord.com

CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let itblock employment, travel,e d u c a t i o n , p r o f e s s i o n a l ,certification, adoption propertyrental opportunities. For peace ofmind & a free consultation call1-800-347-2540.

LAWYER REFERRALSERVICE:

Need a lawyer?Learn more by calling

604-687-3221;1.800.663.1919.

DIAL-A-LAW:Access free

information on BC law.604-687-4680;1.800.565.5297;www.dialalaw.org(audio available).

PLACE YOUR GARAGE SALE ADS 24/7Go to burnabynow.comand Click on classifieds

Find yourdream

job online.

To list your employmentposting on working.com

call 604-444-3000

PETS & LIVESTOCK

Page 26: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

6008-22 NorthVancouver6008-22

Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a Sudoku, the numbers1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, columnand box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues alreadyprovided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

SUDOKUSUDOKU

ACROSS1. Lots of crocus6. Keep up11. Green concern14. Actress Farrow15.Yemeni capital16. Angry18. Direct to a source for help21. Area where Hobbits live23. Decorative sticker25. __ d’, seats you26. City dwelling ranchvacationers

28. Set out29. Reduplicate31. Actress Zadora34. Behave in a certainmanner35. Manuscripts, abbr.36. Venetian waterman39. Forgivenesses40. Lowest layer of earth’scrust (pl)44. Cease to work at 6545. __ Castell, makers of pens

47. __ Walker, “The ColorPurple”48. Took to the limit50. Habitual twitching in theface51. Bark of the papermulberry tree56. Actress Lupino57. Keyboard partner62. Family cyperaceae63. Thou __ do it

1. Sore from rubbing2. Prefix for do again3. Old English4. The brain and spinal cord(abbr.)5. Marsh elder genus6. Macaws7. Authority to sign for8. Morning9. Atomic #5810. Deep-seated hatreds11. Fastened with a cord12. Not out13. ___ and feathered14. Mister17. Transfer property

19. European money20. Radioactivity unit21. Arabian greeting22. Sword handles24. Lower extremity25. Adult male human27. Airtight closures28. Lots30. Defunct phone company31. Covered walkways32. Relating to India33. Love intensely36. A language of the Celts37. A single unit38. Moroccan mountain range39. Foolish person

41. Mayan of SW Guatemala42. Goat and camel hairfabric43. Discriminatory based ongender46. Give advice, counsel49. Ducktail haircut51. Pull vigorously52. Fed53. 17th Hebrew letter54. Mainland China55. Doctors’ group58. Of I59. Palladium60. Not under61. We

DOWN

PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE

June 5/12

6002 Agents6002

Are you looking to makea move this year?

Contact Sarah Dennis778-896-0619

for a complimentary MarketAnalysis on your home +Receive a Report outlining

5 things to do beforeyou sell your home!

[email protected]

778-896-0619

SELLING / BUYINGEMMERY LEUNG

604-728-7170Have qualified BUYER!Realtor speaks English,Cantonese & Mandarin.

Homeland Realty

Seniors special age 55+Ask about free legal fees for

seniors. Chilliwack 604-846-6506Abbotsford 604-852-5592No obligation consultation.

Al Dahl...Lighthouse Realty.www.aldahl.com

6005 Real EstateServices6005

ADAM LLOYD 604.526.2888Re/Max Advantage Realty

Buy or Sell with Meand Use My Truck for Free!

[email protected]

Can’t Qualify for a Mortgage?Call for solutions.

Great rates!2.79% 5 year variable3.05% 5 year fixed3.99% 10 year fixed

Mortgage Broker SpecialistMartinique Walker, AMP

Verico Assent Mortgage CorpCall: 604-984-9159

Toll Free: 866-984-9159

ROGER BASIInterested In Selling Your Home?Lets Talk!!! Remax AwardWinner 100% Club. Certified inFeng Shui Home Stager. List andSell your home with me &receive $500.00 towardsmoving costs.

Cell: (604) 618-2820www.rogerbasi.com

PROPERTY CARETAKER

Having problems with a tenant?Need property maintence done?Call someone with 30 years exp.

Call Bentley • 604-539-2533

6005 Real EstateServices6005

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE.NO RISK program. STOPMor tgage & Main tenancePayments Today. 100% MoneyB a c k G u a r a n t e e . F r e eConsultation. Call us Now. Wecan Help! 1-888-356-5248

6007 BUSINESSES FORSALE6007

White Rock Tea & Giftshop$60K + Inventory

Call Jeff 604-889-9164 for info

FOR SALEAUTOMOTIVERepair Shop

Avail in North Vancouver★ with DEALERS LICENSE ★

■ all equipment included■ Ready to operate■ Established business

Serious Inquiries onlyCall OWNER604-612-5536

for further information.

FOR SALEAUTOMOTIVERepair Shop

Avail in North Vancouver★ with DEALERS LICENSE ★

■ all equipment included■ Ready to operate■ Established business

Serious Inquiries onlyCall OWNER604-612-5536

for further information.

6008 Condos/Townhouses6008

6008-06 Chilliwack6008-061 BDRM Condo in Chwk, 780sf,55+ bldg, $88,000. (furnished)604-219-8485 or 604-583-2510

6008-08 Coquitlam6008-08

2BDRM/2BTH 406-450Bromley, COQUITLAM

Private corner unit with a view;Recent upgrades OVER $22,000(new bathrooms/floors/appls).Well run building, new roof.Steps from shopping (Thrifty’s,Starbucks,Yoga,Subway,Sushi).$279,888. Call (604) [email protected]

6008-12 Langley/Aldergrove6008-12

WALNUT GROVE quiet 1311sf3br 1.5ba w/private back yard$297,800 778-565-5082 seeuSELLaHOME.com id5539

6008-18 NewWestminster6008-18

#210-815-4TH AVE, Uptown NewWest. 1 BR, $145,000, LargeBright Rms. 650 SF. Full Reno; Allflrs, 4 S/S Appls, New Plumbing,Roof, 125 Amp Panel, 20 outlets,Indoor Pool, Prkg, Dog, Kids OK.7 blocks to New West Skytrain, 4blocks to 180 stores.

Call John 778-397-0508

N. WEST: Uptown, 2 BR, Sunnywest exp, inste W/D + 4 appls,F/P, sec prkg, locker. Rentals/Pets OK. Near transit. $215,500.

HIRA • Sutton• 604-318-9474

OPEN SUN, 2-4. #1706-612- 5thAve. Incredible views! 1086 sf.1.5 baths. 1 BR + den. $288,000.Brian Erhardt, Royal LePageCoronation West, 604-649-4382.

6008-24 PortCoquitlam6008-24

DRIVE BY 1618 Grant deluxe 1br+den, 820 sf, nr all ammens,$220 k, Jim 604-786-7977 amexrlty

6008 Condos/Townhouses6008

Desirable North Vancouverwww.mytownhouseforsale.com

Paul: 604-789-4924

3BDRM/3BTH CITADEL 1024Yarmouth St PoCo V3C 5H4RE/MAX ALL POINTS REALTY

taracaldwellrealestate.com$608,800 Call: (604) 328-8127

6008-30 Surrey6008-30

ABSOLUTELY STUNNING! 3 br3 ba, 2045sf duplex style T/home,ss appls, fenced yard, finishedbsmt, dble garage. $462,900.Virtual tour www.cotala.com/[email protected]

NEWTON 723SF 1br groundlevel w/private entry, insuitelaundry $138,900 778-882-7411see uSELLaHOME.com id5546

❏ Quick Sale, below assesment -reno’d top flr, 2 BR, 2 bath,1225sf, $249K.❏ Top floor, renod 1BR, 1bath,752sf, asking $169k.Fully rained screened, nr amens.

Mala, Sutton, 778-859-4458

SENIOR’S ALERT beautifullyupdated 976sf 2nd fl 2br 2ba$208K 604-542-0233 +55 bldgsee uSELLaHOME.com id5527

6008-34 VancouverEast Side6008-34

OPEN HOUSE Sat/Sun June9/10, 2-4pm, #104 - 2600 E 49thAve. $314,500. 2 BR 843 sfcondo. Great loc, nr bus/shops atyour doorstep. Call Now Pat Ginn,Sutton WestCoast 604-220-9188

6008-42 S. Surrey/White Rock6008-42

S.SRY, 15298-20 Ave, Top floor,1185sf, 2 BR, 2 bath, 6 appls, f/p,lrg balcony, prkg, rec facility.$285,900 No agent 604-872-2485

6015 For Sale byOwner6015

LANGLEY [WILLOUGHBY]Immaculate 3 bdrm, 3 bath det.6 yr old home at $585,500 neg.Open plan, granite, ss appl.vaulted ceil. Tel: 604.721.4414

LOVELY VIEWS! 3BD/2.5BTHWest Vancouver, Best Location,Lifestyle, Kitchen, CherrywoodFoors, Like New, Just Gorgeous$1,690,000. Tel: (778) 855-7375

6015 For Sale byOwner6015

THOM CREEK Ranch - House forSale By Owner. In Chilliwack’spremier retirement complex. 2090sq ft finished plus 294 unfinishedready to model. In the top row withsuperb, unspoilable views of theCity, mountains and way beyond.Excellent Clubhouse. Friendlyneighbours $440,000 negotiable.No HST. 604-824-1892

372 East 48th Ave, Vancouver4 beds/2 baths, 1155 sqft+bsmt

suite, 45x143 lot. $1,069,[email protected] HOUSE SUN 2-4

2BDRM/2BTH#308-10186-155 Street

Move in ready! Designer colors,custom bar. Near transit, mall,park. $216,000 (604) 808-6847

[email protected]

6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-01 Real Estate6020-01BC Area Foreclosures

Free list w/pics $250K and UpThese Must be SOLD

www.bcareaforeclosures.com

★ WE BUY HOMES ★Damaged Homes! Pretty Homes!Any Condition! No Fees! No Risk!Quick Cash! Convenient! Private!

(604) 626-9647www.webuyhomesbc.com

❏WE BUY HOMES❏Any Price, Any Location

Any Condition. No Fees! No Risk!604-435-5555 / 604-786-4663www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca

www.bcforeclosures.com5 BR home from $27,500 down$2,600/mo. 604-538-8888, Alain@ Sutton WC Realty W. Rock

6020-02 Abbotsford6020-02

CENTRAL LOCATIONABBOTFORD

Price Reduced ★$419,000★

4 level split, 3 BR., 2 ½ baths,double att. garage, large dble. lotfully landscaped with large work/garden shed. Updated throughoutincl. oak floor and pot lights in thekitchen, new en suite, newwindow coverings, new paintinside and out, new roof andcompleted basement with wet barplus intercom/radio system upand down. Great for medium tolarge family – lots of room toinstall pool or play area in thebackyard. Good neighbors whohave lived on this street for years– well looked after properties.$419,000 (this price includes allappliances) and some furnituren e g o t i a b l e . P l e a s e v i s i tusellahome.com and key in#5458 to view the property.

Call for appointment to view604-855-7033 or 604-807-8441.For sale by owner. No realtors

6020-04 Burnaby6020-04

BURNABY South; CORNER8810sq ft lot 3 BR 1200sf home.$999,000. No agents. 604-439-7554

REAL ESTATE

Real EstateContinues on next page

Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a Sudoku, the numbers1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, columnand box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues alreadyprovided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

SUDOKUSUDOKU

ACROSS1. Lots of crocus6. Keep up11. Green concern14. Actress Farrow15.Yemeni capital16. Angry18. Direct to a source for help21. Area where Hobbits live23. Decorative sticker25. __ d’, seats you26. City dwelling ranchvacationers

28. Set out29. Reduplicate31. Actress Zadora34. Behave in a certainmanner35. Manuscripts, abbr.36. Venetian waterman39. Forgivenesses40. Lowest layer of earth’scrust (pl)44. Cease to work at 6545. __ Castell, makers of pens

47. __ Walker, “The ColorPurple”48. Took to the limit50. Habitual twitching in theface51. Bark of the papermulberry tree56. Actress Lupino57. Keyboard partner62. Family cyperaceae63. Thou __ do it

1. Sore from rubbing2. Prefix for do again3. Old English4. The brain and spinal cord(abbr.)5. Marsh elder genus6. Macaws7. Authority to sign for8. Morning9. Atomic #5810. Deep-seated hatreds11. Fastened with a cord12. Not out13. ___ and feathered14. Mister17. Transfer property

19. European money20. Radioactivity unit21. Arabian greeting22. Sword handles24. Lower extremity25. Adult male human27. Airtight closures28. Lots30. Defunct phone company31. Covered walkways32. Relating to India33. Love intensely36. A language of the Celts37. A single unit38. Moroccan mountain range39. Foolish person

41. Mayan of SW Guatemala42. Goat and camel hairfabric43. Discriminatory based ongender46. Give advice, counsel49. Ducktail haircut51. Pull vigorously52. Fed53. 17th Hebrew letter54. Mainland China55. Doctors’ group58. Of I59. Palladium60. Not under61. We

DOWN

PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE

June 5/12

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A27

Page 27: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A28 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

HOUSE ON 1/2 acre lot, rented,13690 Bentley Road, good invest-ment. $695K 604-324-0655

COQ 2 BR apts, quiet complex,$970, incls h/water, laundry facil,nr amens, N/P. 778-316-4777.

RENTALSREAL ESTATE

COQ. Princess Gate. 1,075 sq ft.Senior oriented bldg. 2 BR condo,2 full baths, f/p, laundry. Ns/np.$1,275/mo incl heat & 1 u/g prkgspot. Avail July 1st. 604-469-1742

M. RIDGE dwntwn Urbano Com-plex, 2 br, 2 ba, inste w/d, f/p, 2 ugprkg, nr amen, deck, n/s, n/p, Jun1. $1100+ utils. Refs. 512-8725

NEW WEST. 1 BR & 2 BR. From$785 to $1125. Nicely upgradedbuilding. Call 604-724-8353

www.metrovancouver.org

Thinking of moving?Metro Vancouver Housing Corporation

(the Regional Government) has affordable

rental apartment and townhouse suites

across metropolitan Vancouver.

Check us out at:www.metrovancouver.org/SERVICES/HOUSING/or 604-432-6300

6508 Apt/Condos6508

[email protected]

11 Bdrm fromBdrm from $$90090022 Bdrm fromBdrm from $$11401140Beautifully landscaped groundswith views of Fraser river.Outdoor swimming pool andclose to parks and shopping.

810 ST. ANDREWS ST.810 ST. ANDREWS ST.NEW WESTMINSTERNEW WESTMINSTER

Move In Bonus

CARM-ELLEAPARTMENTS

815 - 5th Ave, New West1 & 2 BR apartments.

Includes heat, h/w & cable.U/grnd prkg avail. No pets.

Call 604-521-2866 or604-619-5323

CALYPSO COURT1030 - 5th Ave, New West

Near Transportation &Douglas College.

Well Managed Building.

office: 604- 524-8174cell: 604 354-9112

COQ Austin & Blue Mnt. Bach$630, 1 BR $720, now. 2 BR $830Jul 1. Nr transit. 778-865-6696

BONSOR APTSRenovated high rise, concretebuilding. Penthouse, 1 BR &2 BR available. Very close toMetrotown, Skytrain & Bonsorswimming pool. Rent includesheat, hot water. Refs req’d.

Contact Alex604-999-9978

Bayside Property ServicesOffice: 604-432-7774

KING ALBERT COURT1300 King Albert, Coq

Close to Transportation,Schools & S.F.U.

office: 604-937-7343cell: 778-829-3567

JUNIPER COURT415 Westview St, Coq

Close to Lougheed Mall, allTransportation Connections,

Schools & S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-8905cell: 604- 916-0261

GARDEN VILLA1010 6th Ave, New West

1 BR & 2 BR Available.Beautiful atrium with fountain.By shops, college & transit.Pets negotiable. Ref required.

CALL 604 715-7764BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

COTTONWOOD PLAZA555 Cottonwood Ave, Coq

Large units some with2nd bathroom or den.

On bus routes, close toS.F.U. & Lougheed Mall.

office: 604- 936-1225

SKYLINE TOWERS102-120 Agnes St, N.West

Hi-Rise Apartment withRiver View & Indoor Pool.1 BR & 2 BR Available.Rent includes heat & hotwater. Remodelled Buildingand Common area. Gatedundergrd parking available.References required.

CALL 604 525-2122BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

ARBOUR GREENE552 Dansey Ave, Coq

Extra Large 2 Bedrooms.Close to Lougheed Mall &S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-4903cell: 778- 229-1358

AMBER (W)401 Westview St, Coq

Large Units.Near Lougheed Mall.

Transportation & S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-2136cell: 604-727-5178

AMBER ROCHESTOR545 Rochester Ave, Coq

Close to Lougheed Mall,S.F.U. & Transportation.

office:604- 936-3907

BALMORAL STREET

1 & 2 Bedroom AptsClose to trans, Highgate Mall &shopping. Rent incls heat &h/w. Refs req’d. Reno’d stesavail. Wheelchair accessible.

Ana 778-859-0798 or BaysideProperty Office 604-432-7774

BURQUITLAM. 2 BR. Nr LoughMall & SFU. 2 u/g prkg. Ns/np.$1195/mo. Immed. 604-939-4346

6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-04 Burnaby6020-04

4BDRM/3BTH 1881 DuthieAvenue Beautifully renovatedexecutive style home. OpenHouse Sun 2-4pm. $1,199,000Call:Leah @ (604) 787-8084email: [email protected]

6020-06 Chilliwack6020-06

OWN THE Land, 1092sf 2brrancher style mobile $185K604-824-7803 kids OK, seeuSELLaHOME.com id5541

OPEN HOUSE Sundays 1-3PM9420 Woodbine St, Chilliwack45+ Rancher in Quiet GatedCommunity, 2 BR, 2 f/bath, allappls, 1200sf, dble garage, maintfree yard, strata fee $136mo.

REDUCED $229,900.Motivated. 1 604 625-3498

6020-08 Coquitlam6020-08

4BDRM / 4BTH 2639 Delahaye,Coquitlam Luxurious, modern -

taracaldwellrealestate.com604-328-8127 RE/MAX

All Points $988,000

949 HARRIS AVE, COQUITLAMFabulous updated characterhome on gorgeous fenced lotwith lane access! $599,900.Call Joe Campbell Personal

Real Estate Corporation RE/MAXCrest Realty 604-985-7653

6020-14 Langley/Aldergrove6020-14

7243 199 Street, LangleyBeautiful 4 BR family home withlegal bsmt ste, central location,$629,000. Sutton West CoastRUPE MANN 778 240-7914

6020-18 Maple Ridge/Pitt Mead.6020-18

DEVELOPMENT POTENTIAL(Maple Ridge) 5 acres, southfacing view, owner occupied2 storey home in Thornhill’sdesignated Urban Reserve,

$1,550,000. No real estatecommission. Call 604 760-3792

6020-20 Mission6020-20

8186 Nelson Street, MissionBuilding lot 0.89 acres

RE/MAX All Points-taracaldwellrealestate.com

$335,900. Call: (604) 328-8127

6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-22 NewWestminster6020-22

N WEST 220 Queens Ave, circa1907, known as W.E. Vanstonehouse, 5 Br, 3 bath, 10,765 sf lot,approx 5,000 sf , inclds 2BR bsmtste. parlike back yd. $1,388,000.Gerri, Mac Rlty, 604-761-3464

6020-24 North Delta6020-24

7610 Barrymore Dr N DeltaPriced at $649,000Open House Sat/Sun June 9th& 10th 2-4 PMFabulous 3000+ sq.ft. FamilyHome in Royal York. Close to alllevels of schools, Sun God RecCtr, Burns Bog Trails and easyaccess to Richmond andVancouver

DAN SKALNIK 604-377-7008Coldwell Banker [email protected]

'Bringing People Together'

6020-28 PortCoquitlam6020-28

3BDRM/2BTH 747 Chelsea,Lincoln Park PoCo. $398,000greenbelt-1/2 duplex-no fees,

Re/Max All Points 604-328-8127taracaldwellrealestate.com

6020-34 Surrey6020-34

FLEETWOOD IMMACULATE1785sf 3br 2.5ba, double sxsgarage $409,900 604-507-8186see uSELLaHOME.com id5525

6508 Apt/Condos6508

NEWTON BEAUTIFUL cozy2479sf 5br 3.5bath ½ duplex,suite $464,500 604-592-6703 seeuSELLaHOME.com id5542

SRY; FLEETWOOD GEM!15556 - 92A Ave. Well maintained2850sf Home, many updates,new Yaletown style in-law ste.11,300sf Lot! Near all amens,schools, transit, shops. 1st timeon market original Builder/Owner.$658,500. By appt, seriousinquiries only please. No agents.BY OWNER Dave 604-589-2248

WANTEDWe Buy Homes & Town Homes

anywhere in the Lower Mainland.NO real estate commission.Please call 604 760-3792

6020-38 VancouverEast Side6020-38

SALE BY OWNER Vcr lotw/house, approx 37x103, Killarneypaved alley, mins to bus/skytrain nrschoo ls , shops , rec c t re .604-619-0964* 604-916-5104

6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-38 VancouverEast Side6020-38

OPEN HOUSE Sat/Sun May 12& 13th, 10am - 2pm, 2396 East39th Ave. 50x140 lot, 1,050 sqftbungalow, asking $1.2 mllion.

6030 Lots & Acreage6030

★ Five Stunning 5 acreoceanfrontlots near Horton Bayon Mayne Island from $404,[email protected] Rowland, Sotheby’s Intl RltyCanada, www.gregrowland.ca

Call 250-665-6868

6035 Mobile Homes6035

Seniors Park, privacy lots oftrees, newly renod 2 BR doublewide, storage, large decks, aircond. 10 mins from major shop-ping. $44,444. #18- 4426- 232ndSt, Langley. 604-534-2997

6040 Okanagen/Interior6040

10 ACRES OF OKANAGANVIEW PROPERTY FOR SALE

There are several suitablebuilding sites on the property withspectacular views of city ofPenticton, and both Lakes. Powerat lot line and only 10 minutesfrom the full service Hospital. Thisbeautiful property is being sold bythe owner at only $299,000.Contact: [email protected] further details, or call250-493-5737.

EXCEPTIONAL LAKEVIEWLots from $140,000. Nice trees.No time limit to build. Ownerwants to retire. Will carry financing.Also: 1 spectacular 3 acre parcel$390 ,000 . 1-250-558-7888

www.orlandoprojects.com

LIVE ON Mayne Island2 lots,one Turn Key house

all for $380.000, 250-539-5011http://members.shaw.ca/

mayneislandhome/

Summer get Away or YearRound Living. 1996-30 ft.Corsair 5th Wheel. #20 in SouthValley RV Park, 7th Ave. acrossfrom Christie Park on SkahaLake. Steps to beach. Great lot,lease $359/mth. R.V. $15,900Call: 778.867.8735

6050 Out Of TownProperty6050

COZY 2 bdrm on 10 acres in LoneButte, barn, 2 car garage, new, nosteps, complete reno, oak beamsin L/R, large deck, drilled well,outbuildings. Close to Horse,Watch and Green Lakes.$278,000. Call 604-467-7144 or604-250-1668

6050 Out Of TownProperty6050

Fabulous Summer HomeTerrific Retirement HomeCountry Bed & Breakfast

$537,500 USD* 2,750 sqft./ on .95 acres** 4 Bedrooms * 3.25 Bathrooms* Oversized 2 Car Garage* Carport & Outbuilding* Drive onto Beautiful SamishIsland, just North of Anacortes,Wa., to this custom Craftsmanhome with 25 feet of waterfrontwith adjacent road access. Parklike setting. Two level exoticwood deck with views of PadillaBay. Master with high ceilings,walk in closet, attached bath andsolid Carerra marble surfaces.Bonus room upstairs. Extensivehardwoods, solid fir doors, walk-in pantry, plenty of indoorstorage, maple cabinets.

For more information pls call:Robert & Nancy Chaney,

(for sale by owners)9418 Marshall Rd, Bow, WA

1-(360)[email protected]

MEXICO SAN CARLOS BeautifulExecutive retirement home 5 hrsfrom Arizona! 3000sf incls sepguest hse. $229k 604-364-6441

6065 RecreationProperty6065

6 Lakeshore Drive, Cultas Lake$1,229,000, Luxurious Lakesideliving at Cultas Lake, Vancouver’sclosest fresh water ski lake. Athoughtfuly designed 5 BR, 3lvlhome. Perfect for summervacation or year round living.Nancy-Jean O’Carroll, SothebysInt’l Rlty Canada, 604-825-7053

www.nancyjean.ca

BEST LAKE FRONT FROM VANonly 1 hr, nr Bellingham, 2,900 sft,5 br, 4.5 bath, 18 yr old home.Beautiful low bank waterfront,$739,000. Call 604-734-1300

BLACK MOUNTAIN RANCH,Mt Baker WA, 2007 BreckenridgePark Model dble loft trailer, 40ft,sleeps up to 12, Ranch has FREEPar 3 Golf, Horseback Riding,Indoor/Outdoor pools +. $85,000.By Owner. Tom 604-594-9342

6065 RecreationProperty6065

CWK 2 BR, 1 bath. 1 car garagecrn lot, fenced yrd, new reno, freehold $149,900. 1-360-637-8442

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★Exclusive & Private Lake Shore

Cottage, for all info:www.cottageonlake.ca $329,000

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

GETAWAY ON GALIANOISLAND (Lt.27 Stewart Rd).Completely furnished home &cabin on .9 acre w/private beach,deep water mourage, $999,000.604-802-8711. View website formore info, photos & virtual tour:www.yourlinktorealestate.ca

LOG CABINS For SaleFor rentals or ownershipplease join us for our openhouse during the May longweekend Sat May 19th, SunMay 20th 11am-4pm, andMon May 21st 11am-2pm.Where you can view thenewly renovated log cabins.Appreciate all the amenitiesthe 6700+ sq ft Lodgebuilding has to offer. At 5485Lac Le Jeune Rd. Lac LeJeune B.C. Take exit 336 offthe Coquihalla Hwy andfollow the signs to Lac LeJeune. $189,900.Call: (604) 834-2020 or visitus at laclejeuneliving.com

CULTUS LAKE beautiful year roundRV site grt location, low fees, allament., $117,500. 1-604-795-9785

6075 Sunshine Coast6075

SUNSHINE COAST 4-PLEXGrossing 49K - 7% Cap RatePrice $625,000.Located in upperGibsons. For info Call Neil Sandy(604) 989-6345 Remax top 20

BBY S. 1,2 BR $737/$915. 6187Kingsway, cat ok, h/w, h/wtr ugprkg, WiFi, Jul 1, 604-818-1129

6508 Apt/Condos65081 BR in Surrey, elev, nr transit,shopping onsite, no pets, from$670, incentives. 604-589-7040

6508 Apt/Condos6508AVAILABLE NOW or July 1,1 BR, $735/mo + utils, updatednew suite, 621 Colburne, NewWest. No pets. Ph 604-454-4540.

WHITGIFT GARDENS1 BR $775. 2 BR $950.

3 BR from $1150.Rent incls heat, hot water &prkg. Family Living. On sitedaycare available. NearCottonwood Park, BasketballCourt & Skytrain. No pets.

604 939-0944

ROYAL CRESCENTESTATES

22588 Royal Crescent Ave,Maple Ridge

Large units. Close to GoldenEars Bridge. Great view of River

office: 604- 463-0857cell: 604- 375-1768

ROTARY TOWER25 Clute St, New West

Reno’d concrete high rise.1 BR & Bach. By RoyalSquare Plaza, Safeway &transit. Rent incls heat, hotwater, hydro, cable. 55+ bldg.Contact Ana 778-859-0798

Bayside Property 604-432-7774

VILLA MARGARETA320-9th St, New WestBach & 1 BR Available.

All Suites Have Balconies.Undergrd Parking Available.Refs Required. Small Pet Ok.

CALL 604 715-7764Bayside Properties Services

1BD/1BTH. Reno’d suite NewWest JUNE 1ST $800/mo. N/S.Sm pets OK. [email protected]/604-898-8295.

700 PARK CRESCENT NewWestminster, 1 BEDROOM $925.Adult friendly building. visual in-tercom, gated parking. Nearshops & bus. Includes hotwater &storage. Sorry No Pets!!

Call 604-522-3391

PO CO 2 BR apt $800/mo. Quiet-family complex, No Pets! Availnow. Call 604-464-0034

RentalsContinues on next page

Page 28: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

$35/HOUR PER PERSON • 24/7Abe Moving & Delivery and

Rubbish Removal. 604-999-6020

BOB’S WINDOWGets that Clean, Clear Shine

No Drops, No Drips, No StreaksRight into the corners! Serving

you for over 20 yrs. Also doGutters 604 588-6938

Wildwood Tree Services, ExpHedge Trimming and Removal &Tree Prun ing . F ree Es t .604-893-5745

Dangerous tree removal, pruning, topping,hedge trimming & stump grinding.

Fully insured & WCB

Andrew 604-618-8585A-1A-1 TRI CRAFTTRI CRAFTTREETREE SERVICESSERVICES (EST. 1986)

$$ BEST RATESBEST RATES $$

8315 Tree Services8315

8300 Stucco/Siding/Exterior8300

Quality Home Improvement★ Stucco ★ All Kinds. No Job TooBig or Small. 604-725-8925

LOW COST Rubbish RemovalYARD & HOME Cleanup. Reno’s& Constr pickup. 604-727-5232

DISPOSAL BINS: All bins start at$145 + dump fees. 604-306-8599

www.disposalking.com

BEN’S RUBBISH REMOVALYard clean up + hedge trimming.

Bby/NW areas. 778-859-8760

604-RUBBISH, 782-2474We remove & recycle anything.Free est. Large or small jobs.www.604rubbish.com

$35/HOUR PER PERSON • 24/7Abe Moving & Delivery and

Rubbish Removal. 604-999-6020

8255 Rubbish Removal8255

LOW COST ®Rubbish Removal

❏ YARD & HOME Cleanup❏ DISPOSAL Construction,

Reno’s & Drywall / Demolition•7 Days/Week •Free Est’s

Isaac ★ 604-727-5232

YOUNG BROTHERS ROOFINGRe-Roofing Specialist!

778-896-4858

Roofing Experts 778-230-5717Repairs/Re-Roof/New Roofs. Allwork Gtd. Free Est. Call Frank

Samra Bros. Roofing Ltd. 40 yrs+Cedar / Fiberglass / Torch OnFree Estimates. 604-946-4333

NORTH WEST ROOFINGRe-Roofing & Repair. WCB &liability insur. Jag, 778-892-1530

A Eastwest Roofing & SidingRe-roofing, Gutter, Free Est, BBBMember, 10% disc, Seniors Disc,604-812-9721, 604-783-6437

Tried & True Since 1902Call for a free estimate:1.877.602.7346Visit us online to receive a special discount:

www.crownroofgutters.ca

8250 Roofing8250

PERFECT RAILING & AWNINGLTD. Sunrooms Patio Covers.BBB Member. 778 855-5574

A & W Landscape • Clean-ups,Disposal, Pruning, GUTTERSSeniors Disc. Al @ 604-783-3142

A Gardener & A GentlemanLawn, garden, tree svcs. Pruning,yard clean-up, rubbish. 319-5302

604-723-2468; Tran the Gardener.Lawns, aeration, power raking, cutting,trimming, cleanups. Very reliable.

HOME SERVICESRENTALS

WAREHOUSE/ OFFICE for rentavail. immed, clean, secure,

bright. Bolivar Park Area Surrey$950 month +half utilities

(604) 916-3473:

6620 Warehouse/Commercial6620

SHOPS & WAREHOUSE1500, 2000, 3000 to 16,000 sf inBurnaby, Langley, Maple Ridgeand Mission. Call 604-328-0411or email: [email protected]

WOODLAND PARKTOWNHOMES

Professionally managedfamily townhome complexon 28 acres located inbeautiful Port Moody.Spacious 2 BR & 3 BRunits, 5 appls, inste W/D,walk out bsmt, 1 parking.Cat friendly.

Contact [email protected]

RIVERS INLETTownhouses

(Coquitlam Centre area)

2 BR & 3 BR Townhouse2 levels, 5 appls, decorativefireplace, carport. Sorry nopets. Great Location!We also have apartmentsBachelor, 1 BR & 2 BR call foravailability.

604-942-2012coquitlampropertyrentals.com

8010 Alarm/Security8010

604-463-7919ALARM

Systems Ltd.

8015 ApplianceRepairs8015

SERVICE & PARTS. Washer &dryers, stoves, d/w and fridges.Lic’d & insured. 604-346-8925

8030 Carpentry8030* RENOS * Bsmt refinish * Drywall* Bath Tiles * Windows * Doors *Stairs. Call Norm 604-437-1470

*STRUCTURAL CHANGES*,framing, finishing, repairs. Profes-sional & precise, 778-233-0559

8055 Cleaning8055A QUALITY CLEANING -7 days/wk res/comm, senior discount lowrate 778-998-9127 778-239-9609

8060 Concrete8060

DALL’ANTONIACONCRETE

Remove Place & Finish. AllCarpentry. No Job too Small.Friendly Family Run Business

Serving you since 1957.

604-240-3408CONCRETE WORK of any kind.Third generation. Call Mike at604-945-8717 cel 604-318-3649

KT CONCRETE WORKSFor all your concrete needs!

For free estimate [email protected]

8080 Electrical8080

D & W ELECTRICALComm/Res/Ind. All electrical. Lic& Bonded. WCB. 778-862-0098

Electrical installations, renosand repairs. Member of BBB.www.nrgelectric.ca 604-520-9922

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 ser-vice call. Insured. Lic # 89402.Fast same day service guar’d. Welove small jobs! 604-568-1899

8087 Excavating8087

EXCAVATING &BOBCAT SERVICES

• Garage Teardowns• Demolition• Driveway Widening• Concrete & Asphalt Removal• Landscape Removal• Yard Leveling & Clean Up• Digging & Trenching• Dirt Removal• Retaining Wall• 10-40 Yard Disposal Bins

604-306-8599

8090 Fencing/Gates8090West Coast Cedar InstallationsNew or repaired outdoor cedar

★ specialists since 1991 ★604-270-2358 or 604-788-6458

8105 Flooring/Refinishing8105

Artistry of Hardwood FloorsRefinish, sanding, install, dustlessProf & Quality work 604-219-6944

Install Hardwood & Laminate FlrPrompt. Professional. Quality.Exc rates. Jesse 778-989-1585

8105 Flooring/Refinishing8105

Installation • Refinishing • RepairsART of HARDWOOD FLOORS

604-240-3344

INSTALLATION REFINISHING,Sanding. Free est, great prices.Satisfaction guar. 604-518-7508

8125 Gutters8125A1 Steve’s Gutter Cleaning &Repair from $98. Gutters vacu-umed/hand clean. 604-524-0667

PRESSURE WASHING,Gutter Cleaning and Repairs

Call George • 778-859-7793

8130 Handyperson8130

HANDYMAN Int & Ext repairs &reno’s. Carpentry, Kitch & Bath,Plumbing. Walter 604-790-0842

8155 Landscaping8155

AMAZING TOUCH LAND’GBobcat, paving, retaining walls,turfing, planting. 604-889-4083

CONSTRUCTIVELANDSCAPING

★ Stonework.paving stones★ Cedar decks/fencing★ Pergola’s ★ 30 yrs expCall Danny 604-250-7824

www.constructivelandscaping.com

Greenworx Redevelopment Inc.Hedges, Pavers, Ponds & Walls,Returfing, Demos, Drainage,Jackhammering. Old Pools Filledin, irrigation. 604.782.4322

★ OPERA LANDSCAPING ★Bobcat, retaining walls, irrigation,paving, fences. 778-688-2444

8160 Lawn & Garden8160

Residential and Commercial• Lawn Mowing • Gardening• Install Sod • Hedge Trim• Pruning • Lawn Repairs

Free Est. 604-779-6978email: [email protected]

CLIFF 604.931.0825

GARDEN GROOMERGARDEN GROOMER• Lawn Cutting • Power Raking• Rototiling & Pruning • Hedge Trimming• Power Washing • Open to odd jobs

Free Est, Established Since 1997Licensed Business, reasonable rates

Garden Maintenance Lawn Care

WILDWOOD LANDSCAPINGHedge Trimmimg & Tree

Pruning & Hedge RemovalSpring Clean Up

Chaffer Control & LawnRestoration. Comm/Strata/Res

Aerating & Power Raking.Free Estimates.604-893-5745

GARDENROTOTILLING

Tree services, stump grinding,lawn aeration, reseeding,

lawn and garden installations.Licenced for

Chaffer Beetle treatmentCall: 778-885-6488

8160 Lawn & Garden8160Lawn Maintenance, edging, trimclean-up/hedge/soil/mulch/powerrake/fertilize. Quality Service,Low $, Reliable. 778-241-9706

LAWNS MOWED, gardening,yard clean-up, hedges, gutters,rubbish removal. 604-773-0075

8175 Masonry8175Constructive LandscapingStonework.paving stones, Cedardecks/fences, Pergola’s, 30 yrsexp. Call Danny 604-250-7824www.constructivelandscaping.com

8185 Moving &Storage8185

AFFORDABLE MOVING

604-537-4140www.affordablemoversbc.com

1 to 3 Men1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 Ton

From $45We accept Visa, Mastercard & Interac

Licenced & InsuredLocal & Long DistanceFREE ESTIMATES

Seniors Discount

B&Y MOVING

604-708-8850

Experienced Movers~ 2Men $55 ~Over 10 yrs. Exp.

• Licenced& Insured• Professional PianoMovers

8335 Window Cleaning8335

AMI MOVING ★ 5 ton cube.Starting at $49/hour. Local & longdistances. 24/7 ★ 604-617-8620

BROTHERS MOVING & DeliveryLocal & Long Distance 604-720-0931Best rates. brothersmovingservice.com

NAHANEE MOVING.COM Fam-ily Owned. Evening moves avail-able. Bonded, Insured. NonSmoking, Free Est. 604-782-3973

WEE HAULMoving/Rubbish RemovalLow Rates. 778-968-3001

8193 Oil Tank Removal8193TANKTECH

Certified Oil Tank Removal& Remediation Specialists.

res/com. Free est. 604-328-1234

8195 Painting/Wallpaper8195

778.881.6096

• Exterior/Interior Projects• Written Warranty

• Years of Experience• Fully Insured • WCB Covered

Professional Crewof Ticketed Painters

QUALITY WORK. DONE RIGHT.

PRECISIONPAINTING

AAAAAA

ALLQUEST PAINTINGALLQUEST PAINTINGQuality Work You Can Trust!

Interior & Exterior★★ UNBEATABLE PRICES ★★

Free Est. / Written GuaranteeInsured/WCB

778-997-9582

FAIRWAYPAINTING

Fully Insured20 years experienceFree EstimatesINTERIOR& EXTERIORSPECIALS

Call604-

729-1234

INTERVAN PAINTINGPainting Contractor

Residential / Commercial• New Construction

• Re-paint Interior / ExteriorWe Provide the High-End Quality!

WCB Insured • Free EstimatesCall Henry

778-288-4560

8195 Painting/Wallpaper8195

Quayside Painting

604-727-0043

ProfProfessionalessionalPaintersPainters• WCB • Insured

DVK PAINTING LTD. Call DaveInt/Ext. Res/Comm. Quality work.Great rates. WCB. 604-354-2930

MAGIC PAINTING 604-315-7070We do it right the first time.

30 years exp, references avail.

8200 Patios/Decks/Railings8200

Aluminum & Glass RailingsFences & GatesPATIO COVERS

778-855-5574778-316-2116

Book by June 15/12, get 10% off

8205 Paving/SealCoating8205

ALLEN ASPHALT concrete, brick,drains, foundations, walls, mem-branes 604-618-2304/ 820-2187

METRO BLACKTOP CO. LTDCustom work for Driveways &new lane Aprons. Repairs/resur-facing. Call Gino 604-657-9936

PLUMBER • Reno’s•Rough-ins •Fixtures •H/W Tanks•Gas •Service. ★ 778-227-1119

LICENSED PLUMBER & Gasfit-ter. BBQs, ranges, etc. Repairs,renos. VISA ok. 604-830-6617

PLUMBER Service and repairs,Hot water tanks, Heating, GasFitting, Renos (604) 910-4116

8225 Power Washing8225DECKS, PATIOS, pools, drive-ways. 25 yrs exp on North Shore.Free ests. Call Al 604-782-3973

SMART CLEANINGJanitorial, Pressure Washing,Window Cleaning. 604-862-9797

8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240

Actual Plumbing & Heating,24/7, Seniors/Military Disc. Lic. &Insured BBB, 604-874-4808

ALLQUEST PAINTINGQuality Work You Can Trust!

778 997-9582

COASTAL RESTORATIONFully isured, bonded, licensed

25 yrs exp. 604-913-2228

FAIRWAY PAINTING604 729-1234

LOW COST CONSTRUCTIONRenos, additions, kitchens,suites, drywall tile. 604-657-9904

LOW COST CONSTRUCTIONRenos, additions, kitchens,suites, drywall tile. 604-657-9904

MATCO DESIGN - Renovations*Additions *Quality Work *Ref’s3 0 y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e !604-720-1564 [email protected]

8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240

8220 Plumbing8220

Actual Plumbing★ 24 / 7★

❏ Senior’s Discount❏ Military Discount❏ Same Day Hotwater Tank❏ No Job Too Small❏ Licensed & Insured ❏ BBB

actualplumbing.ca

604-874-4808We accept Visa, MC, Amex

$59/HR Lic’d/Ins. Exp & friendlyClogged drains, plumbing, smalljobs OK! Call 24/7! 604-805-2488

6595-40 NewWestminster6595-40

N.W. RENO’D, Furn, clean &quite, nr Sapperton stn, lndry,$430/mo incl utils. 778-385-2904

6595-20 Coq./Poco/Port Moody6595-20

COQ. Furnished room. $450/moincl hydro/cbl/’net. Sh’d w/d. Suits1 person. Ns/np. 604-552-4423

6595 SharedAccommodation6595

6595-10 NorthBurnaby6595-10

BBY ROYAL Oak, lrg 1 BR,Furnished. Nr skytrain. $500 inclsutls, cbl, net, W/D. 604-729-5610

6450 MiscellaneousRentals6450

GATED PARKINGAVAILABLE

New Westminster

CALL 604 723-8215BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

STOP RENTING-RENT TO OWN● No Qualification - Low Down ●

CHILLIWACK - 9557 Williams, 3Bdrm, 1 bath, Cozy HOUSE on49’x171’lot, Exc Investment. $888/MABBOTSFORD - 2087 Lonsdale,Handy Man Special House, 3bdw/ 2bd Suite, Quiet Area...$1,388/MVANCOUVER - 1066 East 8th Ave1Br Mt. Pleasant Condo, Quiet,Cental Area, Solid Bldg...$788/MRICHMOND - 8031 Ryan Rd, 3BrCondo, Quiet, Spacious Top Flr,Cental, Convenient Area...$888/MCall Kristen today (604)786-4663

www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca

NEW WEST Sapperton , 2 BRBungalo House, nr skytrain, &RCH, suits family, $1000 + utils,own w/d, Avail June 17,604-521-1008 or 604-789-6318

NEW WEST. 5 BR (inclds in-lawbsmt suite). By 22nd St Skytrain.W/D. Avail July 1. 604-861-7193

BBY, RENO’D home,1/2 block tobus/shops/schools. 2 BR, garge,$1600 + utls. 604-377-9908

BBY 4 BR 2 bath family home15th - Canada Way. $1995. CallQuay Pacific Property Mgmt Ltdfor Appointment to view at604-570-2786 Quoting code P22

BBY 3 BR top of hse, NewlyReno, granite c/top, 1600 sqft, 5appls, new carpets & h/w flrs, July1. ns/np. $1650. 604-833-7589

6540 Houses - Rent65404 BD, 2.5 bath, family homeBurnaby, nr Deer lake. Call QuayPacific at 604-570-2786 for appt

6510 Co-ops6510ANTRIM PLACE COOP

5300 Rumble Street, BurnabyGreat Location! 2 BR townhouse,$867. Share Purchase $2,000

No subsidy availableApplication download:

www.chf.bc.ca/antrimplaceEmail: [email protected]

6515 Duplexes - Rent6515BBY, EAST. Large 3 BR, upperflr. 1,400 sq ft. 1.5 baths. L/rm, f/p,d/rm, balc, private w/d. Nice area!$1,380/mo. No pets. Avail now.778-891-7132 or 604-525-9226

BBY S. 3 BR upper s/s duplex, 11/2 baths, 5 appls, N/s, N/p, refs,$1200, June 15. 604-431-6937

COQ, Lough Mall. 3 BR, upper flr.W/D. Beautiful yard! $1,600 inclutil. Immed. Ns/np. 778-318-6103

NEW WEST, Reno’d 3 BR grd lev$1150 + utils. New efficientfurnace. New h/w flrs & paint, w/d.Walk to RCH. N/S, N/P, refs req,credit check. Available July 1.

CALL 778-892-1936

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

BBY, 16 Ave/6th St. 2 BR grd/lvl.Ns/np, no laundry. $795/mo inclhydro/cbl. Immed. 604-777-9924

BBY 6TH/14TH, 2 BR bsmt, closeto amens. NS/NP. $850 incls utls.Avail June 15. 778-882-9004

BBY, Cariboo Hill. 2 BR, f/bath,f/p, sh-d w/d. Ns/np. $850/mo + 1⁄3util. Avail June 15. 604-540-1357

BBY CENTRAL. Lrg 5 BR mn flr,2.5 baths, big liv rm & 2 dining rm,lrg deck & fam rm, carport, lots ofprkg, big storage, very clean, 5appls, $2500 negotiable, AvailJuly 1, n/p. 604-298-6874

BBY, E. 10AVE/2ND St. New 1BR main flr ste, prkg. $800 inclsinternet & cable. 778-383-3232

BBY East , 2 BR grd lev, sh’d w/d,near school & bus. $850 + utils.N/s, no dogs. Suits family604-521-1008 or 604-789-6318

BBY, GOV’T Road area. Huge 2BR. 1,100 sq ft. Full bath, sharedlaundry, alarm. $1,100/mo + util.Ns/np. July 1st. 778-991-7058

BBY METROTOWN, 2 BR bsmt,very clean, nr BCIT, w/d, n/s, n/p,1 prkg, quiet area, $895 incls uitls,Avail Now. 604-433-5151

BBY N. reno’d 2 BR grnd lev ste,1000 sf, N/s, N/p, incls w/d, July 1,$1000/mo + utils. 604-291-6746

BBY S. nr Highgate, 2 BR bsmnt,super clean, nr amens, $900 inclshydro, N/s, N/p, 604-525-9821

BBY SUITE FOR RENTBby, N. Buffalo St. 1 BR bsmtkitchen & f/bath, clean, quiet place$850/mo incls utils. No Smoke/No Pet. Avail now. 604-420-1077

COQ CENTRAL, 2 BR bsmt ste,sh’d W/D, walk-in closets, stor-age, $900 incls utls. Av now. NS/NP. Nr school/bus. 604-726-6884

COQ Maillardville, 2 BR bsmt ste,sh’d laundry. Near LougheedMall, school, bus, shops. June 15.$850 incls utls. 604-931-7202

N WEST sm new 1 BR ste, inc w/d/cble/utils/Y-Fi, nr s/train/amens,np/ns. $750. Jun 1. 604-777-0977

6605 Townhouses -Rent6605

BBY 3 BR T/H in family orientedcomplex, 1.5 baths, 5 appls, stepsto Holdom Skytrain, ns/np, $1500+ utils, July 1, 778-231-2110

PITT MEADOWS 3 BR T/H, quietfamily complex, Rent geared toincome, n/p, 604-465-4851

PO CO 2 BR twnhse $850/mo.Quiet-family complex, No Pets!Avail now. Call 604-464-0034

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A29

Page 29: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A30 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

2006 CADILLAC DTS. Fullyloaded, luxury package, On Star,landau top, sunroof, a/c, heatedseats, no accidents. 71,000 km.$16,800 obo. 604-793-5520

TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS

604-273-0331 • 3771 No. 3 Road, Richmond

No Credit?No

Problem! GREAT CARS!

GREAT SELECTION!GREAT CREDIT TERMS!www.richmondsuzuki.com

2006 TOYOTA CAMRY

$8,888STK# Q11120A

• Auto• Air• Silver

2004 HONDA CIVIC Si

$7,995STK# V12253A

• Auto• Air• Blue

2000 CHEV CAMERO

$6,999STK# K12197A

• 5 Speed• Air• Black

2000 TOYOTA SIENNA

$5,995STK# V12480

• Auto• Low K’s

2001 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER

$3,888STK# V12445A

• Auto• Air• Silver

2000 BMW 328i

$9,999STK# V11993B

• Auto• Air• Black

1997 PONTIAC GRAND AM

$2,988STK#K12398A

• Auto• Air• White

1999 VOLVO S80

$7,999STK# Q11146A

• Auto• Leather• Roof

2002 FORD EXPLORER

$6,988STK# K12300A

• Auto• Air• Green

$25,000

$19,900

9115 Dealers9115

9105 AutoMiscellaneous9105

W A N T A V E H I C L E B U TSTRESSED ABOUT YOURCREDIT? Christmas in May, $500cash back. We fund your futurenot your past. All credit situationsaccepted. www.creditdrivers.ca1-888-593-6095.

9110 Collectibles &Classics9110

1968 THUNDERBIRD 429 quadrajet, 2 dr cpe, reblt mtr, new brakes&lines & paint, $9,500 604-376-8363

1985 BMW 735 Automatic160,000 kms Air-cared, Greatcollector car, New brakes andexhaust, Black, Tan interior, notears in seats. $5,260.

Call: (604) 889-2925

1978 MERCEDES 450SL,convertible w/hardtop, run grt,looks sharp $8500.604-922-5986

9110 Collectibles &Classics9110

1969 FORD Falcon Futura 302auto, fully restored, immac paint &body, numerous high perform-ance options. $13,500. Photos atwww.photobucket.com/69falcon

Call 604-307-0201

1986 CHRYSLER TC WoodyWagon, 1 owner, excellentcondition. $2350. 604-534-2997

1970 Jaguar E-TYPEIn excellent shape and ready togo for sunny summertimedriving. Too many upgrades tolist. Pictures and invoicesavailable. REDUCED - $64,[email protected]

1998 MUSTANG SVT CobraConvertible, 35,350 orig km,very detailed history, pristineshow quality, $17,900 obo.604-531-9373

9110 Collectibles &Classics9110

1989 JAGUAR XJS coupe, V12159 K, pristine cond $8,950 obo.Priv sale, call Bob 604-986-8516

1999 BENTLEY Arnage Stunningsapphire on cream interior. Quick4.4L twin turbo. Non smoker, Noaccidents. Mint. Looks new!$49,900. Call 604-889-2525

1981 LINCOLN Town car,signature series, stock, collectorplates, $5000 obo 604-792-6367

1979 MG Midget 75,000kmsReady to drive away $5,000. 604739-9234 [email protected]

9115 Dealers9115

Certified Pre-Owned VehiclesFinancing Available

3511 N0. 3 Rd, Richmondwww.richmondsubaru.com

604-273-0333

SUBARU 2010 WRX LTDStk#BB2953

$24,988

SUBARU 2010 IMPREZA SEDANStk#BB2946A

$15,988

SUBARU 2009 IMPREZA 2.5i SPORTStk#BB3024

$19,988

SUBARU 2009 IMPREZA BP H/BStk#BB3032

$18,988

SUBARU 2008 LEGACY 2.5 GT WGNStk#BB3004

$22,988

SUBARU 2005 LEGACY 2.5i SEDANStk#S12192A

$6,988

SUBARU 2005 OUTBACK WAGONStk#S12320A

$14,988

SUBARU 2002 SUBARU IMPRESZA TSStk#BB3005A

$9,988

9125 Domestic9125

1976 THUNDERBIRD, 1 owner,no accidents, serious inquiries.only. Call 604-465-7997

1986 OLDS Toronado, autosporty 2 dr coup,122k, a/c., a/c’d2013. Power everything, blue withblue int. 604-792-4517. $2500.

1992 CADILLAC Deville, navyblue, alarm, michelin tires, goodcond. $1850. 604-732-6991

9125 Domestic91251999 FORD Taurus stn wagonburgandy, exc cnd, 8 seats, gdtires,125k. $2,950. 604-986-9744

2001 FORD Focus ZTS, silver 4dr auto, a/c, radio/CD, peppy 4 cylZetec, 117 K, remote starter +4snows. $4200 604-985-8223

2001 OLDSMOBILE Aurora auto,only 81,000 kms Luxury $7500# 0 1 - 2 5 8 6 6 0 4 . 4 6 6 . 6 0 0 7mjautowholesale.com #30332

2002 OLDS AleroFully loaded car...$2,995 #4730 -

1-888-812-2511

2003 CADILLAC CTS, 49K, 4dr,white, auto, fully loaded, mintcondition, $19,500 604-864-8199

2004 DODGE SX 2.0, 127,000kms, aircared, air, sunroof, tiltsteering, p. windows, like newinside & out, 600 kms per tank,lady driven & owned since new.$5800 OBO Call 604-794-7426

2005 PONTIAC Sunfire sedana u t o $ 5 9 0 0 # 0 5 - 3 0 2 56 0 4 . 4 6 6 - 6 0 0 7mjautowholesale.com #30332

2006 BUICK Allure CX. 94K kms.No accid., local, garage kept. Exccond. $8,900. (1)-604-855-1335

AUTOMOTIVE

2006 CHRYSLER 300CUltimate Car,

All Options...$13,888 #83201-888-812-2511

2006 LINCOLN LS, 1 owner29,000K, garage kept, immac,loaded, dark wine colour ext, blkleather int, $16,900. Call604 584-4704 or 778 228-2721

2008 CADILLAC Escalade EXT$39,888. (604) 626-4548

www.bypassautosales.ca #30576

2011 CADILLAC CTS, LuxuryLeather, Panaramic SunroofMags...MSRP $46,980 now

$29,895 #4192 - 1-888-812-2511

2011 CHEVROLET MalibuPlatinum Edition

Top of the Line with Leather/ 75 toLiquidate MSRP $29,770

now$17,888 #40761-888-812-2511

2011 CHEVY ImpalaSports Sedan, Fully Loaded MSRP $28,980 now $13,995 #3582

1-888-812-2511

2011 CHEVY Malibu LSauto, air, loaded, cd MSRP

$26,890 $15,995 #41421-888-812-251

9125 Domestic91252011 FOCUS S SEDAN 4DR

SDN silver $ 11,950 #1109552AWWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM

1-866-549-8503 301 StewardsonWay, New Westminister

www.BurrellAuto.com3094 Westwood St, Port Coq

604 945-4999.2925 Murray St, Port Moody

604 461-7995.

FORD Taurus SE 1999 166,000kms, excellent condition, newtires, $3200. (604) 943-9862 oremail: [email protected]

2006 Ford Freestyle Ltd Blackleather interior - 7 Pass. 114Kkms. LOADED WITH OPTIONS.$12,500. Call 604-786-6001

2007 Ford Mustang GTConvertible fully loaded,automatic, 140,000km, local.$17,000. (604) 721-8411.

9129 Luxury Cars9129

1995 FERRARI F355 GTB.Meticulously cared for. Canadiancar. Recent full engine outservice, new clutch and releasebearing, Tubi exhaust, Hyperflowcats, wheel spacers. Drives andlooks perfect! A must see!$54,900. Call 778-834-6069

2001 CORVETTE Z06 black onblack, absolute mint cond, 55k.Must sell! $32,000. 604-574-7629

2005 ASTON Martin DB9. 'JamesBond style car!' Silver metallic.23,000 km. 6.0, V12, 450 hp. Newtires. 1 owner. You deserve thebest! $86,980. 604-781-7614.

2007 BMW 525I, black, loaded,leather, sunroof, very clean,122K, $24,900. 604-999-4097

2007 BMW 335 coupe62km 1 ownr, mint cond,

leather, auto, sunroof,Sports Package & Prem

Package $28,900. 604-616-7727 [email protected]

9130 Motorcycles/Dirt Bikes9130

1983 HONDA CM250, approx20,000 mi, low cost transport,dependable, new tires, saddlebags $1450. 604-880-9073

2007 PIAGGIO scooter MP3-250,silver, practically new, less than500 km, fuel injected engine,security lock, new battery, $4300.Call Don 604-987-9166

9130 Motorcycles/Dirt Bikes9130

2008 HARLEY D, Nighttrain, 110cu.in 11K, cost $31K, ask $20K,604-847-9353 (Chill) after 5pm

2008 HARLEY D, Sportster,1200low, 4400km, cost $14K, ask$10K, 604-847-9353 Chill aft 5pm

2009 KAWASAKI Vulcan, under5,000 kms, perfect beginner bike$5500. 604-467-8691

2010 TRIUMPH American Motor-cycle, 900 cc, never driven,$8700. 604-533-4962 morn/eve

9145 Scrap CarRemoval9145

THE SCRAPPERSCRAP CAR &TRUCK REMOVALCASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-39002 HOUR SERVICE

#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle RemovalAsk about $500 Credit!!!

$$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVALMinimum $150 cash paid for fullsized vehicles. 604-518-3673

★ FREE TOWING ★up to $500 CASH Today!

604-728-1965 John

THE SCRAPPERScrap Car & Truck RemovalCASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-39002 Hour Service

9155 Sport Utilities/4x4’s/Trucks9155

1961 TRIUMPH TR3A red,blackinteriorComplete & original goodengine& trany for details (Delta)604-816-9954, $9,500 obo

1986 FORD 250, good condition,runs good, blue, 1 owner, $5999obo, 604-925-3294

1988 CHEVY Silverado, auto, pb,pw, air, towing package, excellentcond, 6 mths away collectorsplate. $5500. 604-924-1511

1994 CHEV Blazer 4x4, 182K,a/cared ’14, 4.3L vortec eng, red,auto, loaded, a/c, gd michelins,$1900 obo, 604-556-7776

AutomotiveContinues on next page

Page 30: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

2003 MAZDA Protege 5, 5 spd,140K km, new water pump, timingbelt & front wheel bearings,sunroof, pwr windows, locks,cruise, nice cond. $7,500.778-227-2010

ROAD RANGER5TH WHEEL 24 FT.

Rear bath, queen bed,new tires. New cond.

$11,950.Call: (604) 325-7871 or

email: [email protected]

2011 COUGAR 28-6' Mint only 1trip. Loaded c/w slide + all options++ more $23,900 604 531-2841

2008 SPORTSMEN 28’ 5thwheel, 2 slides, spotless.Reduced $18,500. 604-230-2728

2007 TERRY 28ft, slide, autoawning, sleeps 6, exc cond. Used3 mths! $20,000. 604-367-7892

2007 PROWLER 5th wheel, 32 ft,grt family rv, fibreglass, slideout,bunkbeds, air/cond, sleeps 8$19,900. 604-824-1426

2006 GEORGETOWN XL, 35’ 9',3 slides, V10, 20k miles, tow caravail, $65,000 604-948-5048

2005 27' Zepplin Trailer, lightweight, slide, a/c, sleeps 6, fullbath, new awning, stored indrsexc cd. $15,500. 604-533-8744

2004 WESTWIND Trailer. 25 ft.Sleeps 6, incl private BR w/dblbed. Awning, bbq, full bath, fridge/stove. $10,000. 604-538-8120

2004 PLEASUREWAY PlateauM/H, Mercedes Benz diesel, Mi.61,588K, Immac cond & loaded.$54,900. Ph 1-604-220-5005

2002 WINNEBAGO Sunova,fiberglass roof, 51,400 kms, kit-chen slide, awning, tow bar incl,4K gen, $42,000. 604-943-2583

2002 Class A Safari TrekMotorhome 70K immaculatecondition, must be seen.$39,500. Call: (604) 790-7554

2002 GMC Adventurer. Greatcamping with snowbirdoption! 106,000 kms Excellent20’ motorhome. Sleeps 4, withoven, microwave, fridge & newstereo system. Low km, littleused. $20,000. (604) 833-4537

GETAWAY Camper Travel Van1989. 212K kms Sleeps 2, Seats4. $5,900 firm. (604) 792-7544

9155 Sport Utilities/4x4’s/Trucks9155

1990 GMC Suburban. 4 WD,underdrive, blue, well kept. NewBluetooth. $6,000. 604-584-0324

1998 JEEP TJ -5speed $5900# 9 8 - 1 7 5 4 6 0 4 . 4 6 6 . 6 0 0 7mjautowholesale.com #30332

2000 FORD Explorer 4x4, fullyloaded, 150K, exc cond, white, aircared. $3,750. 604-218-8499

2000 FORD F15Well Equiped Truck...$2,995

#8313 - 1-888-812-2511

2001 CHEVROLET SilveradoBig Selection of trucks under$ 1 0 k . . . . . $ 3 , 9 9 5 # 0 4 2 0 -

1-888-812-2511

2002 SANTA FE, 128K kms, 4cyl, 5 spd, air, pw, exc cond$5000 obo 604-710-8053

2003 FORD Ranger 5 speedTonneau cover-$6800 - #03-1311M J A u t o w h o l e s a l e . c o m604.466.6007. #30332

2005 JEEP Liberty Sprt 4x4 $8800#05-1840MJ Autowholesale.com#30332 604.466.6007

2006 F350 XLT 4X4 SC DIESEL4x4 auto power group, grey.

$21,988 #2618051WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM

1-866-549-8503301 Stewardson Way, New West.

2007 CADILLAC Escalade AWDLuxury, Leather, All Options

$31,988 #33391-888-812-251

2007 F150 LARIAT, fully loaded,white $25,888 - #276477XX

WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM1-866-549-8503

301 Stewardson WayNew West.

2007 RAV4, 4WD, grey$15,988 - #2791656

WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM1-866-549-8503

301 Stewardson WayNew West.

2008 MAZDA B4000, cab+SE4x4, new rear brakes, exc cond,85K, $13,500, 604-986-2595

2009 DODGE p/u 150 hemi SLT,loaded, matching canopy, rhinolined, show room cond. 8,000 orgkm ’s, $25,000. 1-604-613-37271-604-796-9060

2010 CHEVY Express 2500Cargos 10 Left, In house Leaseand Finance Available $19,995

#3330 - 1-888-812-2511

2010 JEEP Grand Cherokee 4wdLuxury, Fully Loaded SUV

Mags...$21,988 #42171-888-812-2511

2010 JEEP Patriot North Edition4x4 $19,888 #10-8231 MJAutowholesale.com #30332604.466.6007

9155 Sport Utilities/4x4’s/Trucks9155

2011 EDGE AWD,SYNC SYSTEM, black

$27,888 - #111168WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM

1-866-549-8503301 Stewardson Way

New West.

2011 FLEX AWD, power groupwhite, $26,488 #1111586

WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM1-866-549-8503

301 Stewardson WayNew West.

2011 NISSAN Pathfinder SV 4wd7Pass, Fully Loaded withmags....$28,888 #3776

1-888-812-2511

2011 NISSAN Xterra 4wdAuto, 6Cyl, Loaded, 10

Left...$25,888 #38981-888-812-2511

2011 NISSAN Xterra 4wd (Auto,V6, Loaded, Mags, 10 Xterra toc lea r ) . . . $25 ,995 #3895 -1-888-812-2511

2011 SUBARU OutbackLuxury SUV, Fully Loaded$25,995 #3626 - 1-888-812-2511

2012 CHEVY CruzeWell Equiped, 0% 84 Months

...$16,995 own for $93BW#28345s - 1-888-812-2511

2012 SILVERADO/Sierra Extended Cab,Brand New, Auto, V8,

Air and much more$21,995 #27886a1-888-812-2511

2012 GMC Yukon 4wdLuxury, Leather, Loaded, magsMSRP $56,880 now $37,995

#4237 - 1-888-812-2511

2002 Pathfinder Chilkoot 195Kkm Air, pwr, CD, foldflat rear$5,300 Call: (604) 649-6053Motivated seller!!

2009 GMC Acadia SLE50,000km;auto;cd/dvd/tv

$26,000. Call: (604) 727-7071

2011 Dodge Ram 3500 LOWKMs, DIESEL $42,990. (604)

780-2696, [email protected]

2006 Chevrolet Equinox LTAutomatic 86,000 kms 6cylinder,leather seats,sunroof,airconditioning 5x cd player 6 waypioneer speakers $12,250.

Call: (778) 859-7204

2005 Ford F-350 Lariat SuperDuty, Crew Cab, Dually

Automatic 84,000 kms, DVDPlayer, Fully Loaded $25,900.Call: (604) 780-2696 or email:

[email protected]

2002 Toyota SequoiaAutomatic 305,000 kms 1 owner,top condition, all records, newMichelins. $13,900 email:[email protected]

9160 Sports &Imports9160

1984 CORVETTE 383 strokerauto hard top - soft top Stainlessexhasummus t $8 ,995 Ph604-795-9967

1988 TOYOTA Corolla, Exc cond,new rad, tires & batt. Aircared.$800 obo. 604-598-3288

9160 Sports &Imports9160

1994 MERCEDES C280, 85K,grey, fully loaded, extras, exccond, $10K obo, Ladner604-940-6460

1994 MERCEDES E320. Silver,blue leather, 269K km. Aircared, 4snow tires. $4,500. 604-521-0691

1994 PONTIAC Trans Am GT redwith grey int., well maint., ladydriven $4800. Serious inquiresonly. Ph 604-997-2583

1995 BMW 328I Convertible,88,000kms, leather int, new tires/brakes, $7,999. 604 536-4293

1997 TOYOTA Camry LE. 4 drs,4 cyl, auto, a/c. Well maintained.Aircared. $3700. 604-936-1270

2000 MERCEDES E55 AMG,beautiful, exc cond, 113K, price tosell, $12,900, 778-846-2933

2002 INFINITY I35 4 dr auto,Luxury model, 1 owner, loaded,exc cond. Moving must sell.$8800 obo. Sry 604-541-0018

2003 CIVIC SDN 4DR SDN DX-GAUTO red $ 7,888 #2393112

WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM1-866-549-8503 301 Stewardson

Way, New Westminister

AUTOMOTIVE

2005 AUDI S4. Quattro (AWD).102,000 km. Blk leather. Incl 2 setof wheels & tires. 6 speed. Powereverything! Exc cond. $19,500.Call/text Rick @ 778-847-2975.

2005 TOYOTA Camry LE, 95,000kms, local, excellent cond $8880.604-988-7812

2006 HYUNDAI TIBURON SE.103K km. Leather, mint, sunroof,a/c, CD, alarm. 2.0 L, 4 cyl. Noaccid. $9600. 604-839-6253

2005 PONTIAC Sunfire 2 drcoupe stnd, 119,000k’s, $4800obo. Ph 604-798-0767 lve mess

2006 NISSAN Altima 2.5SSpecial Edition 94,000 kmautomatic, spoiler, fog lights, newtires, winter mats. $10,888. Call604-819-9596 Chilliwack

2006 VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT.46,000 km. Grey. 4 drs, auto, p/w,p/l, leather heated seats, sunroof,mag wheels. Good condition!$16,000 obo. 604-240-9912

9160 Sports &Imports9160

2007 PT CRUISER. Hot deal!Auto, low kms, very clean. Creamexterior, grey interior. A/C. Magwheels. Spoiler. Aircared. Rearwiper. $6,395 obo. 778-242-2018

2007 YARIS 4DR SDN AUTOpw pl green $7,888 #2791785

WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM1-866-549-8503 301 Stewardson

Way, New Westminister

2008 HONDA Civic, 4 dr, silver,auto, 60,000kms, excl cond, fullyloaded, $11,500. 604 518-3166

2008 NISSAN Versa Auto $8800#08-4339 MJAutowholesale.com604.466.6007. #30332

2011 HYUNDAI ACCENT GL4 dr, loaded. 25,500 km. $11,600.Exc cond. 1-604-793-5520 (5961)

2003 TOYOTA Corolla, all re-cords, tires, brakes, battery 2011,187k, $5300 604-869-0533 Chwk

2003 MERCEDES CLK 320,105k, 2nd owner, no acc. mint,local, $14,250. 604-626-8009

KIA MAGENTIS 2008 LX V6 auto185 hp - 20,300 km. Only$11,900. Chwk 604-847-3297

2003 Toyota Corolla S 124K.Very good cond. Must sell. Toomany cars.$7600. 778-888-1045

1993 Toyota Camry 4 dr. auto174 km, 4 cyl. service records$2,995. (604) 602-9066.

2005 BMW 645 Ci Convertible1 Owner,43KM,Immaculate,6spdManual, $35,000. 604-833-6931

2005 COROLLA Auto,96k, a/c,no acc, aircared, new tires$8,500. Call: (604) 274-8627

2007 Acura TL Auto, 122,000kms. Financing Available

$16,880. Call: (604)780-2696

2005 Jaguar X-Type 3.0L RareEstate Wagon Prem.Pkg Quartzon Charcoal, Auto, AWD106,000kms $15,750. NorthShore owned & serviced778.389.7626 [email protected]

9173 Vans91731988 CHEV 20 work van, 3/4 ton,Aircared, original owner, goodrunning order $2750 obo604-986-2430 [email protected]

9173 Vans91731996 FORD Aerostar Van, oneowner, excellent driving condition1 5 4 , 0 0 0 k m s $ 2 5 0 0 .604-987-1058

1999 HONDA Odyssey Van7 pass $5500 - #99-0752M J A u t o w h o l e s a l e . c o m604.466.6007. #30332

2002 SIENNA 4DR LEgray $ 8,888 #2299506

WWW.KEYWESTFORD.COM1-866-549-8503 301 Stewardson

Way, New Westminister

2002 WINDSTAR (Ford) 140 kms,good cond., $3700. 604-846-8597after 4pm or all day wkends

2004 FORD Freestar, V6, 4.2L,auto, low kms, new brakes, tires &battery $6800. 604-858-7553

CHEVY UPLANDER 2005. V-6,auto, 7 pass., grey, A/C, powerlocks & windows, cruise, tilt, 93Kkm. Runs very well. $6,400.604-241-2530 or 604-375-2570

2005 CHRYSLER Town &Country Touring, fully loaded, pwrside door/taildoor, store & goseats. $6,500 obo. 604-710-9030

2006 DODGE Caravan, 7 pass,well maintained, 187K, new tires,one owner, $4500, 604-988-4918

2008 PONTIAC Montana VansFully Loaded Vans, 15 toChoose. . .$7 ,995 #4199 -

1-888-812-2511

2010 CHRYSLERTown & Country Luxury Van12 Left, Power Sliding Doors

etc...$18,888 #42071-888-812-2511

2010 DODGE Grand CaravanFully Loaded with Stow n’ Go (25L e f t ) . . . $ 1 5 , 9 9 5 # 3 5 3 0 -

1-888-812-2511

2002 Chevrolet Venture Noaccidents, $3,900. Call: (604)309-4208; [email protected]

2006 GMC Savana Automatic190,000 kms 4.8l. Runs like new.Good Condition. Offers. $8,000Call: (604) 876-5015

2000 Honda Odyssey LXAutomatic 231,000 kms Grey,single owner, good condition,trans & brakes recently done.Bluetooth. Trailer hitch. Servicerecords avail. $4,999.Call: (604) 987-1595 email:[email protected]

9515 Boats9515

1974 TOLLY w/command bridge,26’ long, runs well, stove, head,dinette, fridge, sleeps 4, a beautyincls moorage at Horseshoe Bay$11,000, call 604-986-0731

9515 Boats9515

1976 CASCADE PilothouseKetch. 42 ft sail boat. New dinghy& outboard motor. Radar & autopilot. Perfect coastal cruiser. Liveaboard. $34,800. 604-538-1410

1986 RENNELL, 6 cycle mercury,9.94 cycle Yamaha, after 1 yr notused, not perfect, $1400 obo,604-462-1540

1996 MIRAGE 19ft , 4.3 litre goodon fuel, stocked, stored indoors,no salt, 600 hrs, w/trailer, goodcond, $8800 obo. 604-857-3344

19FT SEARAY, 165 merc in-board, w/trailer, runs awesome,$6000 obo. 604-817-9004

2005 HUNTER 33 Sailboat,$95,900. Moored @ PointRoberts. Call Greg 778-686-5299

2007 GTI SEADOOS yellow, 4Stroke, low hrs, 155HP. & 2003GTX Seadoo blue, 2 Stroke, 160hrs. With trailer, stored indoors,no salt water; $12,500 obo.LOTS of FUN! 604-857-3344

Aluminum Boat Wanted, 10, 12or 14 ft, with or without motor ortrailer. Will pay $. 604-319-5720

BOAT FOR SALE 17’ bowrider/144hp io/ready to go $5,000Call: 604-703-0133email: [email protected]

9522 RV’s/Trailers9522

1980 GMC C Class, 21ft m/h,w/motorcycle carrier, runningcond. $1500 obo. 604-937-0408

1984 COACHMEN 24’ Class C350 Chev, sleeps 6, 70,000 miles,gd cond. $6,500. 604-438-6330

1988 SLUMBER QUEEN. 5thWheel. Sleeps 4. Fridge - 3 way,furnace, a/c. Clean & well kept.No rust. $4,250. 604-298-4042

1990 FORD 28ft Classic, 120K,always roofed, sleeps 6, $8300,604-466-1469

1994 SPECIAL Edition Travelaire5th whl, 26.5, generator, lam flrs,$8000 obo (Abbot) 604-504-0408

1995 SEA Breeze 31 (Class A)Fully equipped, exc. cond., towc a r a v a i l $ 2 2 , 5 0 0 o b o604-746-5898'

1998 NOMAD 5th Wheel 25 ft.1 slide; Standup/walk aroundBdrm $12,000 604-796-2866

9522 RV’s/Trailers95222002 25’ Custom Coach traveltrailer, queen bed & bunks,$10,500. Call 604-984-9293

Burnaby NOW • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • A31

Page 31: Burnaby Now June 6 2012

A32 • Wednesday, June 6, 2012 • Burnaby NOW

GREAT BIG TOMATO PLANTSA classic summer garden just has to include a couple tomato plants!Choose from popular varities like Early Girl & Sweet 100. So big we’ve hadto include a tomato cage! 21cm pot (reg $14.99)

$9.97

Sal

een

ds

June

12

,20

12

BURNABY*6250 Lougheed Hwy604-299-0621

OpenMon-Fri9am-9pm

Sat & Sun9am-6pm

• 2 blocks fromHoldom skytrain MANDEVILLE

4746 SE Marine Dr604-434-4111

OpenMon-Fri

9am-9pm

Sat & Sun9am-6pm

Everything to Make Your Garden Work!w w w . g a r d e n w o r k s . c a

ROYAL CANDLESDWARF SPIKE SPEEDWELLTruly a classic for the summer perennialgarden, with spikes of blue flowersappearing in June, lasting for severalweeks! 11cm pot (reg $7.99)

$4.97

a classicsummer gardenguaranteed.

FRAGRANT COTTAGE PINKSChoose from a selection of deliciously fragrantDianthus, including new varieties that bloomPROFUSELY through the summer in shadesof red & pink. 11cm pot (reg $7.99)

$5.97

PINSTRIPE PETUNIASA striking petunia that can be used sowell for stunning contrasts & rich displaysin the summer garden! Each pack holds6 big plants in bloom, ready to fill yourgarden. Other colours also available.6 plants per pack (reg $16.99)

$12.97

ORCHID BEGONIASMake your own classic hanging

baskets for sun or shade starting withthese amazing orchid begonias,

available in red, orange or pink shades!10cm pot (reg $3.99)

$2.97

RAYMOND EVISON CLEMATISClematis is classic summer bloomingclimber, with spectacular flowers! Choosefrom a selection of stunning varietiesintroduced by famous Clematis hybridizerRaymond Evison. 21cm pot (reg $34.99)

$29.97

FRAGRANT HELIOTROPEClassic summer fragrance from a

sun-lover that is equally at home in acontainer or planted in garden beds.

10cm pot (reg $3.99)

$2.67

FIND US ON.....

join us...Sunday, June 10th at 1pm

for a FREE clinic:

Perfect Planters withProven Winners™