surrey north delta leader, october 02, 2012

32
WE WANT YOUR OPINION • A Central City Shopping Spree • Dinner at the Sheraton Guildford • Night at Fraser Downs • and more! surreyleader.com Enter to WIN $ 1,000 CASH Surrey-North Delta R E A D E R S C H O I C E 2012 A W A R D S 2012 by Jeff Nagel PREMIER CHRISTY Clark is pledging to begin work to replace the George Massey tunnel and ease intense traffic congestion on Highway 99 in Metro Vancouver. But she said it’s way too early to say if the new bridge or tunnel – to be built over 10 years – will be tolled. “I don’t know the answer to that,” Clark told reporters. “We don’t even know what the replacement would look like.” Some people in the region prefer a tunnel, while others want a bridge, she said. “We are just beginning the planning pro- cess.” She made the announcement Friday at the Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) conven- tion in Victoria, and cited projections Metro Vancouver’s population will grow by another million people by 2031 and that traffic volumes on major highways will grow 30 per cent over the same period. Premier pledges Massey Tunnel Replacement The buzz about ‘zombie’ bees page 5 Tuesday October 2, 2012 Serving Surrey and North Delta See CRITIC / Page 4 Another .500 weekend page 20 The pace to be Surrey’s Drew Nicholson was first among 350 full-marathoners at the inaugural Surrey International World Music Marathon with a time of 2:36.19. Thousands of others participated in the half- marathon, 10K and 5K runs on Sunday. For more photos from the event, see page 24. BOAZ JOSEPH / THE LEADER Editorial 6 Letters 7 Sports 20 Life 24 Classifieds 26 Save time, save money. No word on tolls in Christy Clark’s UBCM convention speech by Jeff Nagel AN EFFORT to block Metro Vancouver from exporting its garbage to the U.S. as a fallback waste-disposal option fell flat at the Union of B.C. Municipali- ties convention. Cache Creek Mayor John Ranta spoke in support of the resolution to ban all international exports of land- fillable waste, arguing his town stands to lose more than 100 waste-handling jobs at the Cache Creek Regional Landfill if Metro halts its shipments in 2016 as planned. Metro plans to build a new waste-to-energy plant, but that’s not expected to be ready until 2018 and it has reserved the temporary option of exporting garbage if necessary. But Surrey Coun. Marvin Hunt, a longtime backer of using garbage as a fuel for power, said the resolution was out of order because it would violate international trade deals. “ese are goods that can be exported just like coal or gas or wood,” he said of garbage. Hunt also noted some B.C. com- munities already export their waste to a Washington State landfill run by Rabanco, which hopes to land Metro Vancouver as a customer. “[A provincial ban] would make all those contracts null and void, which is contrary to international free trade,” he said. e resolution from the omp- son-Nicola regional district was defeated on ursday. Hunt said U.S. exports are just one option for Metro and the region could still negotiate to extend its use of the Cache Creek landfill if it needs to. Garbage export ban rejected Marvin Hunt

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October 02, 2012 edition of the Surrey North Delta Leader

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Page 1: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

WE WANTYOUROPINION

• A Central City Shopping Spree• Dinner at the Sheraton Guildford• Night at Fraser Downs • and more!

surreyleader.comEnter to WIN $1,000 CASH

Surrey-North Delta

RE

ADERS’ CHO

ICE2012

AWARDS 2012

by Jeff Nagel

PrEmiEr cHristY Clark is pledging to begin work to replace the George Massey tunnel and ease intense traffi c congestion on Highway 99 in Metro Vancouver.

But she said it’s way too early to say if the new bridge or tunnel – to be built over 10 years

– will be tolled.“I don’t know the answer to that,” Clark

told reporters. “We don’t even know what the replacement would look like.”

Some people in the region prefer a tunnel, while others want a bridge, she said.

“We are just beginning the planning pro-cess.”

She made the announcement Friday at the Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) conven-tion in Victoria, and cited projections Metro Vancouver’s population will grow by another million people by 2031 and that traffi c volumes on major highways will grow 30 per cent over the same period.

Premier pledges Massey Tunnel Replacement

The buzz about ‘zombie’ bees

page 5

Tuesday October 2, 2012

Serving Surrey and North Delta

See CRITIC / Page 4

Another .500 weekendpage 20

the pace to be surrey’s Drew nicholson was fi rst among 350 full-marathoners at the inaugural surrey international World music marathon with a time of 2:36.19. thousands of others participated in the half-marathon, 10K and 5K runs on sunday. For more photos from the event, see page 24.BOAZ JOSEPH / THE LEADER

Editorial 6 Letters 7 Sports 20 Life 24 Classi� eds 26 Save time, save money.

No word on tolls in Christy Clark’s UBCM convention speech

by Jeff Nagel

An EFFOrt to block Metro Vancouver from exporting its garbage to the U.S. as a fallback waste-disposal option fell fl at at the Union of B.C. Municipali-ties convention.

Cache Creek Mayor John Ranta spoke in support of the resolution to ban all international exports of land-fi llable waste, arguing his town stands to lose more than 100 waste-handling jobs at the Cache Creek Regional Landfi ll if Metro halts its shipments in 2016 as planned.

Metro plans to build a new waste-to-energy plant, but that’s not expected to be ready until 2018 and it has reserved the temporary option of

exporting garbage if necessary.

But Surrey Coun. Marvin Hunt, a longtime backer of using garbage as a fuel for power, said the resolution was out of order because it would violate international trade deals.

“Th ese are goods that can be exported just like coal or gas or wood,” he said of garbage.

Hunt also noted some B.C. com-munities already export their waste to a Washington State landfi ll run by Rabanco, which hopes to land Metro Vancouver as a customer.

“[A provincial ban] would make all those contracts null and void, which is contrary to international free trade,” he said.

Th e resolution from the Th omp-son-Nicola regional district was defeated on Th ursday.

Hunt said U.S. exports are just one option for Metro and the region could still negotiate to extend its use of the Cache Creek landfi ll if it needs to.

Garbage export ban

rejected

marvin Hunt

Page 2: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

2 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

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Page 3: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

BOAZ JOSEPH / THE LEADER

Kathleen Higgins suggests that North Delta’s lack of affordable housing could be remedied by doing more with less – specifically, fitting two to four modest homes on one full-sized lot.

Surrey killer’s parole denied

Lots of ideas about lots – and smaller family homes

by Boaz Joseph

KatHleeN HiggiNs didn’t make it to Delta council in two recent elec-tions, but she’s content to be involved in the process that took her in that direction in the first place.

Her goal: Smaller and more affordable housing.Higgins, who lives in a modest rancher in North Delta, has watched her

seven kids grow up and begin to move away – unable to afford homes in their own neighbourhood.

She has watched the area stagnate in population growth over the years while becoming increasingly expensive, the victim of larger homes on average-sized lots and new condos with high strata fees.

In July, the average price of a detached house in North Delta was $585,000, an increase of $33,000 over the same month in 2011.

“Luxury townhouses and large detached homes are not an option for ordinary first-time buyers,” says Higgins, who is spearheading a citizens’ circle aimed at increasing affordability through downsizing.

She’s formed the Smaller Homes and Smaller Lots Citizen Circle online, and with the help of about 50 area residents, aims to make its voice heard by Delta planners.

Her focus is to persuade the corporation to consider mandating the replacement of aging homes (those slated for replacement) with more affordable accommodations – specifically, larger numbers of units on the same lots.

Higgins has gone as far as to submit drawings of several plan options to council – with the help of her architect husband John – to show how a single rancher on a 66x100-foot lot could be replaced by two, three or even four detached homes with trim courtyards, basements and two storeys.

“Three residences could be on land divided from an existing single lot so that, rather than an oversized house with several tenant families, there would be stability of home ownership for three families,” she says.

Among those who would benefit from the concept, she adds, would be first-time buyers, seniors and the municipalities themselves, which would have a bigger tax base than with one home (with or without a suite).

“We are only proposing these smaller homes on smaller lots to replace aging homes on large lots which would be torn down anyway and which

would otherwise be replaced by very large homes,” Higgins says.This year, Higgins has an opportunity for her voice to be heard, as council

has asked for input from the community for its North Delta Area Plan Review.

Although they’re supposed to take place every 10 years, this is Delta’s first Area Plan Review since 1995.

Higgins says North Deltans should get involved because the next review may not take place before 2025, and by then, most aging homes on full-sized lots in the area will be either replaced or extensively renovated.

The 2012 review includes online surveys and requests for locals to share their visions – a process which will continue for several more weeks.

The process also received public input at a Public Ideas Fair at Sungod Arena on Sept. 19.

One earlier online survey included questions on topics such as economic priorities, social well-being, housing priorities, cultural priorities, environmental outlook, transportation needs, and the future of North Delta and the Scott Road area. A second survey will coincide with another open house in November (date to be announced).

“It’s very much a public-driven process,” says Marcy Sangret, acting director of community planning and development for Delta, who predicts a draft of the Area Plan Review will be published at the end of the year, fol-lowing further consultation with the public.

Higgins’ Smaller Homes and Smaller Lots Citizen Circle’s focus on smaller homes is an adaptation of one of the recom-mendations suggested by Delta council’s own Housing Task Force (HTF), which was formed in 2008.

Following its mandate to provide advice and general guidance to council on ways to preserve and expand the supply of affordable housing in Delta, the HTF suggested ways to explore other tenures for multi-family housing that does not require a strata council, including smaller homes, co-housing, and non-strata duplexes.

For more information about the North Delta Area Plan Review, visit http://bit.ly/PiWCbq, email [email protected] or call senior plan-ner Mike Ruskowski at 604-946-3382.

[email protected]

Kelly DavidMcKenzie beat

girlfriend todeath in 2008

by Sheila Reynolds

a surrey man who beat his girl-friend to death four years ago was denied day parole earlier this month because his temporary release from prison would place the public at “undue risk.”

A decision by the Parole Board of Canada dated Sept. 5 said not only was Kelly David McKenzie’s 2008 offence grave, but he has limited insight into his crime, was unlaw-fully at large on a previous release (with the help of family), and is assessed at a high risk for violence in a relationship.

McKenzie, now 39, was initially charged with second-degree murder in the beating death of Melissa Jean Chatham, 24, but pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced in late 2009 to nine years in prison, less three years for time served.

The parole document details how McKenzie assaulted Chatham over a prolonged period of time, in front of his young son, and then did not call 911 for several hours. McKenzie claimed he was drunk and high and was upset because he thought Cha-tham had stolen money from him.

McKenzie waived his right to an in-person parole hearing – prompting friends of Cha-tham to label him a “coward” for not being able to face her family – so his parole review was based only on submitted documents.

The parole board said

while McKenzie’s behaviour in jail has improved and he claims to have been sober for four years, he has demonstrated “pro-criminal values,” used violence to achieve personal goals, and has a lengthy history of abusing intimate partners.

The day parole was requested so McKenzie could attend a residential substance abuse treatment program. McKenzie wrote to the board him-self about his insight and remorse.

“In reading your submissions, the Board concludes that you continue to minimize your offence and blame the victim despite your claim that you accept responsibility and are remorseful,” says the parole decision.

Chatham’s murder inspired an anti-violence forum in North Delta last year called Take a Stand/Lend a Hand geared at targeting violence and assisting victims.

A North Delta woman wants the municipality to increase affordable housing

“Luxury townhouses and large detached homes are not an

option for ordinary first-time buyers.”

Kathleen Higgins

Melilssa Chatham

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 3

Page 4: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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Man critically injured after van smashes into house

Speed, alcohol, drugs all possible factors

4 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

by Kevin Diakiw

A mAn is in criticAl condition after being struck by a minivan that hit his home in the middle of the night on the weekend.

The 38-year-old man was watching TV in his basement suite at about 3 a.m. Saturday when a Chevy Uplander crashed through his home, pinned him against the

opposite wall and started a fire in the unit.

The man is described as in criti-cal but non life-threatening condi-tion. He suffered extensive injuries to his head and foot, and fractures to a leg and upper arm.

Mounties say the vehicle, driven by a 20-year-old, was traveling at a high rate of speed down 72 Avenue, when it attempted a turn

at 125 Street. The vehicle jumped a curb, crossed a lawn and crashed into the basement suite.

The driver then ran from the scene, but was apprehended by Mounties using a police dog to track him.

Speed, alcohol and drugs are all being considered as contributing factors in the accident. Charges are also being considered.

“It’s an economic bottleneck,” Clark said. “Talk to anybody who drives through the Massey Tunnel in rush hour commute and they will tell you it’s a huge headache.”

The announcement is being hailed by Delta civic leaders, who have been pushing the case for a rebuilt crossing with more lanes in light of growing container truck traffic from DeltaPort.

But the mere possibil-ity a new Deas crossing would be tolled is certain to inflame the debate in Metro Vancouver over whether the ad hoc tolling of some crossings must be reformed into some more consistent, equitable system.

A tolled tunnel or bridge there in addition to a possibly tolled Pat-tullo Bridge replacement would leave only the Alex Fraser Bridge as the only free crossing of the Fraser River to Surrey

and Delta.Langley City Mayor

Peter Fassbender, vice-chair of the TransLink mayors’ council, called it a “great announcement” but added it underscores the need to consider new funding solutions beyond bridge tolls.

“We need to sit down and talk about an integrated approach to funding transit and road pricing,” he said. “I believe the premier and the government are open to that.”

NDP finance critic Bruce Ralston said there are real benefits to replacing the tunnel, particularly with a bridge instead.

“You could have ships with a deeper draft go further up the river up to Fraser port in Surrey,” Ralston said, adding there’s no doubt traffic outstrips the tunnel’s capacity.

But he called Clark’s announcement vague and nearly meaningless.

“It is so far out in the future that it really amounts to just a decla-ration of intention,” he said.

Ralston said the announcement seems at odds with the province’s latest quarterly financial report signaling huge reductions in capital spending.

Clark also promised a new 16 Avenue inter-change at Highway 99 in Surrey would get some of $207 million in new capital spending.

Critic: Questions capital spendingFrom page 1

cars travelling through the massey tunnel.

Page 5: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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The taxi of mom & dad

by Kevin Diakiw

If you’re watching out for zombies this Hallowe’en, don’t look to insects, a bee expert with the province says.

For the past four years, stories of so-called “zombie bees” have spread through the media, scaring the pub-lic and terrifying the scientific community that insists the claims are inaccurate, according to Paul van Westendorp, provincial apiculturist at the B.C. ministry of agriculture.

“It’s totally bunk,” van Westen-dorp said Thursday. “There’s noth-ing to it.”

The vast array of coverage of zombie bees has caused some angst among local residents, most recently an 87-year-old Fleetwood man.

Two weeks ago, Al Browning thought his motion-activated light at the back of his house was malfunc-tioning when he saw it flickering outside his bedroom window.

He went outside and saw a large black bee with white stripes buzzing the light.

Browning didn’t think much of it, and resolved to fix the light.

He checked the light in the morn-ing, and it appeared to be working fine. He tried the light again about three days later, and it still appeared to be fully operational.

But when the cloak of darkness fell that night, the light once again began to flicker.

“I went out this time again, and I looked up and my God, there must have been about 100 bees, maybe even more, flying around the lights,” Browning said Thursday. “Bees don’t fly at night, and I couldn’t figure out what was going on. Some were on the screen of my door and some were on the deck.”

He had seen coverage of zombie bees being con-firmed in Seattle and figured they may have made it this far north.

Several claim that bees become “zombies” after being infected by the maggot (larvae) of the scuttle fly.

The maggot eats the bees from the inside out and the bees respond by frantically flying.

The condition was first discovered by San Francisco State University biologist John Hafernik in 2008.

The bees have since been found in South Dakota, Oregon and Seattle.

However, van Westendorp said what’s occurring is a natural process.

A fly “wouldn’t dare” plant its young in a healthy bee, van West-ednorp said. When a bee is sick or dying, then the fly may use it as a host of convenience to incubate its offspring.

Van Westendorp adds that at this time of year, food is in short supply for bees and wasps. Many of them that are sick or dying of starvation don’t return to the nest at night because they don’t want to pollute the hive with their carcasses.

They don’t fly at night because they can’t see in the dark.

“When there is a light, they’re strongly attracted to it,” van Wes-tendorp said, figuring that when Browning’s light went on, sick or dying bees flew to the light, buzzed around it for some time, and then some of them simply died.

Browning said he wouldn’t have given it a second thought until he read coverage about the so-called zombie bees.

He’s since left the light bulb unscrewed to deter them from coming back.

Whether that makes his neighbours’ homes more attractive to bees is yet to be known.

There have been no other reports of zombie bees in Surrey, and van Westendorp doesn’t expect any.

“If this is a new pest, then why is it, it has never been reported inside of a live colony?” van Westen-dorp said. “That is really the measure.”

Being a month away from Hallowe’en, van Westen-dorp said claims of undead bees caters to the public imagination.

“But scientifically, it’s just goofy.”

Scary insect sightings ‘just goofy,’ expert saysProvincial expert takes sting out of ‘zombie bee’ claims

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 5

EVAN SEAL / THE LEADER

Al Browning was concerned about some strange insects he encountered at his fleetwood home last week.

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Page 6: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

The electorate of B.C. could be forgiven for feeling dizzy.In the wake of recent developments, � acks for the provincial Liberals and

the BC Conservatives were producing enough “spin” to rival a row of tops.Last week, all that could be said to be spinning was the heads of voters.

� ese poor John and Jane Does must be wondering if there is still such a thing as political leadership in the province, or whether the 2013 election will be fought strictly on the basis of duelling disasters – or which party scores the least own-goals.

� ere is no way the resignation of Premier Christy Clark’s chief of sta� Ken Boessenkool can be termed good news for the embattled B.C. Liberals, spin it how they may. Clark may characterize it as a swi� ly dealt-with disciplinary matter follow-ing an internal investigation – and trumpet the advent of BC Hydro board chairman Dan Doyle, a career public servant who helped run the 2010 Winter Olympics and the Paci� c Gateway, as acting chief of sta� .

But there are questions about the requested resignation of the former Stephen Harper aide that suggests another leak in a badly listing ship.

Boessenkool’s own wording of his resignation letter – in which he refers to an incident in which he “acted inappropriately,” and to his family, which he says he “also let down” – carries with it a whi� of scandal that the media will � nd hard to resist chasing down. But the B.C. Liberals are not alone in their embarrassment.

� e results of the BC Conservatives’ AGM in Langley show that only 71 per cent of voting members believe enough in party leader John Cummins not to request a leadership review. While Cummins is still gung-ho to win the next election, it’s hard to view this result as a glowing endorsement of his leadership. Even worse for the BC Conservatives, it was accompanied by the resignation from the party of its lone MLA, John Van Dongen, and the defection of former Chilliwack-Hope candidate John Martin to the Liberals.

� e NDP have done the least to o� end in recent weeks. But, by the same token, they have also done the least to build their image, mend fences, or present a new vision for B.C. While the pollsters grant them a commanding lead, they seem to be holding their breath for fear of making a mistake.

� is cannot be interpreted as leadership, either – the only thing worse than plac-ing a foot wrong, a� er all, is not placing a foot at all.

– Black Press

The Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) convention is the political event of the year for B.C. party lead-ers, especially heading into a provin-

cial election.Up � rst was NDP leader Adrian Dix, who

drew a large crowd of local politicians last week for the traditional early-morning spot that follows a long evening of receptions.

In contrast to his debut last year, a typical litany of political attacks on the B.C. Liber-als, Dix declared he would take the high road. And perhaps mindful of Carole James’ downfall a� er her content-free speech to the 2010 UBCM convention, Dix set out policies.

He told delegates an NDP government would restore local authority over Metro Vancouver transit (no more toothless “mayors council”) and mountain resorts (no more Jumbo ski resort permits issued over local objections).

Dix would also let communities decide if they want public-private partnerships for large construction projects. (Federal Heri-tage Minister James Moore later noted that

if communities or provinces wish to decline federal funds due to this ideology, they are free to do so.)

� en Dix accused the B.C. Liberals of cutting forest inventory spending by 77 per cent over the last decade, meaning decisions like rebuilding the Burns Lake mill are being made “in the dark” for the � rst time in a century.

� at’s a damning charge, so I checked it against forest ministry budget records. As with all gov-ernment programs, accounting changes can give a misleading appearance of large cuts or increases from year to year. And indeed forest inventory spending has bounced around during the B.C. Liberal term.

� e budget for forest inven-tory sta� ng and operation was about $8 million in 2001-02, rising as high as $15 million and falling to a low of $5.1 million in recession-hit 2009-10. � e estimate for the current � scal year is $9.7 million, an increase to try to catch up with the pine

beetle disaster.Crown forest inventory has indeed fallen

behind due to rapid shi� s caused by unprec-edented insect and � re damage. But has spending been slashed as Dix claims? No. It has increased.

Next up was Premier Christy Clark, in full cam-paign mode. In the Gordon Campbell tradition, she brought the goodies out in her speech to close the conven-tion. More than $200 million has been scraped together to “accelerate” capital projects at schools, hospitals and other facilities across the province.

� ese projects were already on the books, but they’ve been moved up for obvious political

purposes. Or at least the announcements will be moved up.

Four-laning of the last narrow stretches of the Trans-Canada Highway east of Kam-loops will continue over 10 years. � is is a federal-provincial project that will eventu-

ally be � nished regardless of who is govern-ing in Victoria or Ottawa. It includes some of the most staggeringly expensive road building in Canada, in the Kicking Horse Pass, a short section that could require two tunnels and up to 12 more bridges.

Clark also announced a long-range plan to replace the George Massey tunnel under the Fraser River. It will likely be a bridge, because the tunnel is a bottleneck not only for Highway 99, but also for large ships going up-river.

� is is another project that will proceed eventually, and there is no speci� c � nancial commitment yet.

I haven’t found any outright false claims in Clark’s presentation, just the kind of cre-ative accounting and blacktop politics famil-iar to B.C. voters. As always, I’m pleased to hear from people with speci� c corrections.

For now, call it a tie. Neither speech rep-resents a proud moment for our provincial leadership.

Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and col-umnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com

t� [email protected]

Dizzying disasters

Leaders spin contest ends in a tie

B.C. POLITICS

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EDITORPaula Carlson

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6 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

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Page 7: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

In a letter to the editor, N.K. Robbins attempted to set the record straight on un-tolled bridges, but he came up a bit short.

Most Lower Mainland bridges were tolled prior to 1964, when the un-tolled Port Mann Bridge opened. The Oak Street Bridge was tolled from 1957 to 1959. The George Massey Tunnel was tolled for five years from its opening (as the Deas Island Tunnel) in 1959 until 1964. The Second Narrows Bridge (now Iron Workers’ Memo-rial Bridge) was also tolled from its opening in 1960 until 1963. The removal of the tolls on the Iron Workers’ Memorial Bridge, and other bridges in the Lower Main-land, conveniently coincided with the 1963 B.C. election.

Perhaps Premier Christy Clark could be inspired by then-premier WAC Bennett. His Socreds easily won a major-ity that year.

And while I am at it, the Queensborough Bridge was tolled from 1960 until 1966 when New Westminster sold the bridge to the province.

Yes, there was a 1966 election.

Yes, WAC Bennett won again.My flawed logic tells me that an

easy way for Clark to win the 2013

election is to remove some bridge tolls. Or perhaps the provincial economy in the mid-1960s was a

little different than it is today.

A.D. Ellis, Delta

re: “When does life begin?”, Letters, The Leader, Sept. 27.

Is she human when she is in the womb? This is the primary question.  Pro-choice advocates appeal to the right of a woman to have control over her own body. They frame abortion as a women’s health issue. Certainly, pregnancy and giving birth to a child is not easy on a woman’s body. I have supported my wife through three pregnancies. Each one had its difficulties, but each time a beautiful, unique human being grew inside her.

Motion M-312 has been

defeated. Two-thirds of our elected MPs appear to be afraid of asking whether a fetus is a human being. They are afraid of the implications. But we Canadi-ans should never be afraid of the truth. Let’s take courage. Across the nation, human hearts still beat in the wombs of mothers.

We should not rest until the beating hearts of unborn humans beat safely, without threat of violence. May our nation’s politi-cians see the light, so that our children may see the light of life.

Ben Vandergugten

Hey‘future,’

findanother home

the CIty of Surrey has a growth problem, and the prioritization of new interchanges on High-way 99 while the South Fraser Perimeter Road gets intersec-tions illustrates this very well.

The development of new communities in the middle of nowhere, like the one the inter-changes will serve (Grandview Heights), is expensive. It costs the city more to accommodate these communities, costs more to live in these communities (if you do you are probably car dependent), costs existing citizens, and it costs the envi-ronment.

The development of Grand-view Heights has required the introduction of bus #531, while a badly needed B-Line along King George Boulevard contin-ues to be delayed. Elsewhere, recent community proposals in undeveloped Anniedale may necessitate the construction of an interchange on Highway 15 at 96 Avenue, ignoring the critical need to also fund safety, traffic and transit improvements in Guildford on 104 Avenue.

There is another solution: the intensification of the exist-ing and still incomplete urban centres, but it has largely been ignored.

While new community development moves forward, resulting in the demolition of sensitive rural wildlife habitats, intensification proposals like the Newton revitalization plan have been pushed back.

The reckless growth is creating problems affecting everyone in Surrey while the alternative solutions are being largely ignored. If the city can-not recognize and pursue these solutions, then it should forget about “The Future Lives Here” and tell the “future” to find another home. Accommodating the growth is optional.

I don’t want others to be living in what lack of effective management is harbouring as a result: an unsustainable city.

If the city doesn’t set stan-dards for growth management now, a lot of people are going to lose.

Daryl Dela Cruz

I don’t quite understand why there is resis-tance regarding the new waste program. The City of Surrey started making the public aware of this program months ago. This is a great way to protect our environment as well as reduce waste going into the landfills.

Shortly after seeing what was supposed to go into the organics bin, I decided to start separat-ing the organics from the garbage. I bought a container with a lid and put it between the garbage and recycle cans in the kitchen. It took some getting used to and me constantly reminding everyone what went in which bin. Three months later and I think we pretty much have it down.

About a week ago I photocopied the pamphlet for each bin and taped it to the wall behind each one. Now there should be no excuse for not know-ing what goes where.

The most significant difference right away was the fact that we went down to one garbage bag a week between six people.

We use the paper yard waste bags to dump the

organics in. This will also keep the new bin from having to be cleaned as often.

 My only concern is over the fact that the recy-cling will only be picked up every two weeks.

We recycle everything we can and it gets to be a lot sometimes. The only consolation is that we can still fill our old blue bin and set it out as well.

  I think this is a great new program and once people get used to it, they will see the true benefits.

L. Koverola, Surrey

Self-responsibility is in order

I sImply cannot understand how people can complain about receiving the large 360-litre cans when there was a card mailed out to the homes months ago that actually allowed you to choose the size for all three cans so they would best fit the size of your household.

Since there are only two of us in our house, we chose the smaller cans. It was a simple process

to fill out the card and drop it in the mail. The card even informed you that if you don’t decide yourself you will get the ones the city says and that there will be a charge to change them out.

It seems obvious that people don’t read their mail they receive, so why blame it on others and the city when they gave you a chance to choose and you couldn’t be bothered to? A little self-responsibility is in order here.

Another complainer talks about the “over-whelming smells of organics and meat cooking in the can next summer.” The city has said repeatedly that these organic cans will be picked up once a week and that is exactly the same service that cur-rently happens. So what’s the problem here? Again people, read before you criticize a process that has been discussed for months and months.  

We should be pleased that Surrey is working to be ahead of the game when it comes to waste management.

Lynne Smith, Surrey

the thIng that surprises me about the abortion issue in Canada is not that there are people who are for abortion and people who are against it. That’s to be expected.

What surprises me in a supposedly democratic country is that people in the pro-abortion camp don’t want any discussion about the issue.

Why is it considered un-Canadian to want to debate the issue? When did we become afraid of talking about the hard questions? When did the issue go from “we want/don’t want access to abortions” to “we want/don’t want to be allowed to talk about it?” Does the belief in abortion need to come at the cost of democratic principles?

As Canadians, we might want to ask ourselves why the pro-abortion camp is so desperately afraid of open discussion.

Jan Bredenhof, Surrey

Bridge history takes its toll

Stop complaining and get with the program

Why can’t we talk about abortion?

A primary question

LETTERSTuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 7

Write to [email protected]

FROM FLICKR: ROLLY-FORD PHOTO / PUBLISHED BY NATURAL COLOR PRODUCTIONS LTD., VANCOUVER, B.C.

the second narrows Bridge (now Iron Workers’ memorial Bridge) in 1961, looking north from the toll plaza.

Page 8: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

8 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

SURREY’S RETHINK WASTECOLLECTION PROGRAM STARTS

Using your carts is easy and quick. Here are some important steps to remember:

HOW TO SET OUTYOUR CARTS

Place your carts at your designated collection spot by 7:30 a.m. on collection day, or no earlier than one day prior.

7:30 a.m. Collection Time

Place your cart so the arrow on the lid points towards the centre of the lane or street (the handle will be facing your property).

Point It

1.5 m 1 m(5 ft) (3 ft)

3 m(10 ft)

1.5 m 1 m

3 m

1.5 m 1 m(5 ft) (3 ft)

3 m(10 ft)

1.5 m 1 m

3 m

1.5 m 1 m(5 ft) (3 ft)

3 m(10 ft)

1.5 m 1 m

3 m

Place your cart so that there is at least 1m (3ft) of space on all sides and 3m (10ft) of clearance above. Do not park vehicles within 1.5m (5ft) of cart.

Please remove or cut back any hedges or branches to provide clearance for our collection crews.

Space It

After your cart has been emptied, remember to remove it from the street, lane or sidewalk and take it back to your property.

Bring It Back In!

OLD BIN COLLECTIONIf you want to get rid of your old waste cans and blue boxes, we will collect and recycle them at no cost starting in mid October. Watch for the ‘old bin’ collection schedule on www.surrey.ca/rethinkwaste later in the Fall.

Alternatively, you can hang onto them for use in case you exceed your weekly organics cart capacity. A ‘Yard Trimmings’ sticker can be used to re-purpose the old bin for setting out excess organics/yard waste. Additional yard waste can also be placed in paper yard and leaf bags.

You can also hang onto your old blue box in case you want to use it for setting out excess recyclables.

Excess garbage will require a $2.75 garbage sticker per additional bin or bag. Excess garbage stickers are available at City of Surrey Recreation facilities and at City Hall.

ORGANICS GARBAGERECYCLABLES

604-590-7289WWW.SURREY.CA/RETHINKWASTE

Page 9: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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During the months of April AnD mAy, one of the most common questions we get asked is whether tulips are for sale. We always explain how the best time to plant your tulip bulbs is actually in the fall. So if you are among those who don’t usually think about tulips until the spring, I am here to tell you that now is the time to plan ahead.

The recent beautiful weather we have been having makes it an ideal time to prepare your spring garden. By planting in October, your plants take advantage of the warm soil and the fall rains, which will arrive all too soon, I’m afraid. The perfect conditions will help your plants develop a strong and healthy root system. This encourages your plants to grow larger and flower more when the warm weather returns, hopefully before July like this year!

Tulip bulbs, which are not available in the spring, are one of the easiest to put in your garden in the fall. The motto for planting them is “Dig, Drop, and

You’re Done” because all you have to do is dig a small hole, drop the bulb in the hole and fill it back in with

soil. Then all you have to do is wait for the bulbs to sprout out of the ground in the spring and flower. If you don’t believe how easy it is, try some tulips this year and see how easy they are to plant and how beautifully they

bloom for you next spring.

During the next six weeks, there is an excellent selection of dozens of varieties of tulips you can grow in your garden. They come in a wide variety of colours from red, yellow and white, to pink, purple and orange. You can plant all the colours of the rainbow. One of the more impressive and easiest tulips to grow is the Princess Irene tulip. This beautiful orange tulip has a bi-colour flower and is fragrant when it blooms. This is also the tulip that has been chosen by the Surrey Memorial Hospital Foundation for its Tulips for Tomorrow campaign to raise funds to support the hospital.

So come in today and choose some tulip bulbs for your garden. We have everything you need for your garden to bloom next spring.

Miles Hunter is the General Manager of David Hunter Garden Centers which has two stores, one in Surrey on 72nd Avenue at 152nd Street and one store in Vancouver on West Broadway between Larch and Trafalgar. David Hunter Garden Centers has been in business serving Greater Vancouver gardeners since 1953. They are a proud supporter of the Tulips for Tomorrow campaign.

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by Kevin Diakiw

The GreaTer Van-couver Home Builders Association (GVHBA) is undergoing a reno-vation as it passes the keys to a new head of the lobby group.

The GVHBA has named South Surrey’s Bob de Wit to replace retiring CEO Peter Simpson.

De Wit, 44, was formerly the CEO and director of GreenAn-gel Energy, a green energy technology company. He told The Leader Friday much of the groundwork has already been laid for the association’s success.

“The organization is in great shape, 750 members, well-posi-tioned to do a number of new things,” de Wit said. “I think areas we can improve would be

with government advo-cacy, working with the different munici-palities. There are 21 municipalities within our area, and we need to work efficiently with all of them, and hope-fully more consistently with all of them.”

The selection of de Wit was the result of a national search that began in the summer. As well as holding degrees in marketing (BBA) and economics

(MA) from Simon Fra-ser University, de Wit has executive experi-ence in corporate development, finance and competitive mar-ket intelligence.

Simpson, 68, has been CEO of the GVHBA for the last 19 years and said he’s going to miss the chal-lenges and the action.

However, he thinks it was time to move on.

“It’s getting to a point where I want

to spend some time doing something else,” Simpson said, add-ing he rarely gets an opportunity to see his wife and two daughters – a situation that will change when he retires next month.

He feels his greatest achievement has been building the member-ship of the association from a couple hundred to the 750 it is now.

He did that by show-ing them the value of membership, which includes education and advocacy.

He’s also proud that he was able to “remove some of the impediments” placed on builders by local government. Remov-ing those obstacles, he said, reduced the costs of home ownership.

De Wit takes over from Simpson on Nov. 1.

Change of leadership at the GVHBA

Peter Simpson retires, Surrey’s Bob de Wit takes helm

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 9

Bob de Wit Peter Simpson

Page 10: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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by Jennifer Lang

When it comes to finding someone qualified to oversee an event the size of the Cloverdale Rodeo and Country Fair – plus day-to-day operations of the Cloverdale Fairgrounds – the list of potential candidates would seem a fairly select group.

But those are qualities Mike MacSorely has in spades.

A former vice-president of operations for the Pacific National Exhibition with more than 20 years experience in the event industry, MacSorely is the new general manager of the Cloverdale Rodeo and Exhibition Associa-tion.

So new, in fact, his first day on the job was Monday.

Reached on his mobile phone as he oriented himself on the expansive fairgrounds, home to eight facilities that host more than 700 events each year, MacSorely sounded upbeat and excited about his new job.

“I’ve been here six hours and I’ve met some really great people who seem very dedicated,” he said.

“One of the big things I want to do is make sure people know we’re an all-year operation,” he said, adding he is still getting acquainted with all of events and groups that take place at the fairgrounds, such as the weekly Cloverdale flea market, a long-standing Sunday tradition that remains a big draw.

He’s also looking forward to getting to know more of the team of dedicated volunteers who grow

into an army by the time the May long weekend rolls around each year to host the Cloverdale Rodeo and Country Fair.

But most of all he’s looking forward to getting back into this line of work. “Once you do events, it gets into your blood,” he said. “It’s just exciting.”

He was with the PNE for 14 years, most recently as the vice president of operations, a role that included acting as the PNE’s liaison for the 2010 Winter Olympics in addition to oversee-ing the exhibition each year.

Unlike many of his new col-leagues in Cloverdale, he can’t ride a horse. Well, he doesn’t ride, to be more precise. “I’m allergic to horses. I have to be careful.”

Planning is already underway for the 67th annual Cloverdale Rodeo and 124th Country Fair, slated for May 17 to 20, 2013.

One of MacSorely’s goals is to ensure visitors really feel like they’re visiting a rodeo, something he hopes will be evident the min-ute they enter the fairgrounds.

“I just want to make sure that when you think of Cloverdale and the Rodeo, you feel great pride in it.”

He fills a seat left vacant since June.“Mike brings a wealth of high caliber experience

in the events and facility management sectors, and we’re looking forward to having his expertise in moving our association forward,” association presi-dent Shannon Claypool said. “Mike’s experience will help make the association, and event, stronger.”

Ready for the rodeoExhibition association gets new general manager

10 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

“I Just want to make sure that when people think of

Cloverdale and the rodeo, you feel great

pride in it.”

Mike MacSorely

Page 11: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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by Dan Ferguson

Preliminary work on one of two long-discussed highway inter-changes in South Surrey is underway.

While the design process that will produce a four-way interchange at Highway 99 and 16 Ave-nue has begun, a long-sought-after exchange linking 24 Avenue to the highway remains on the backburner.

The 16 Avenue plan was revealed in a letter delivered last week to residents of the Cherry Brook mobile home park at 16 Avenue and 162 Street.

“The Ministry of Transporta-tion and Infra-structure and the City of Sur-rey are pleased to announce that they will be jointly funding a new interchange at Highway 99 and 16th Avenue,” said the message dated Sept. 14 and signed by Jay Porter, senior project manager with the pro-vincial ministry.

“The project will provide improved access to Highway 99 and the community of South Surrey/White Rock and includes on and off ramps in all four quad-rants of the intersection.”

Porter adds that the project is currently at “the preliminary design stage” and promised there will be consultation with affected residents.

The letter came with a map showing the south-

bound off-ramp running behind the mobile home park.

It was a surprise to Cherry Brook resident Pat O’Connor, whose backyard will border the off-ramp.

“I’m a bit concerned it will devalue the prop-erty,” O’Connor said. “Can you imagine the traffic on 16th? It’s going to be awful.”

Coun. Tom Gill – the chair of Surrey’s Trans-portation and Infra-structure Committee

– confirmed Monday that the province, city and TransLink have agreed to jointly fund the $2-million design work.

But he also said a deal on cost-sharing the

construction hasn’t been negotiated.

Gill estimated that cost at $24 million, but said the actual amount will not be known until the detailed design is complete and contractor bids received. 

Gill said the provincial government has just appointed R.F. Binnie and Associates Ltd. to carry out the design of what he described as a “tight diamond inter-change.”

The plans should be ready by mid-December, he said.

Gill said the move-ment on the interchange is a response to the “growing regional com-

muter demand from South Surrey, Langley and Abbotsford,” in particular the congestion on 32 Avenue at the 32 Avenue interchange that was built in 1999.

However, no equiva-lent planning agreement has been reached for the 24 Avenue crossing over Highway 99 – another South Surrey site that has been earmarked for an interchange for several years, and which now is home to Grandview Corners and Morgan Crossing.

“Ideally, we’d want both 16th and 24th (exchanges to proceed at the same time),” Gill said, “but I don’t think (the ministry) will fund both.”

Surrey transport planning manager Philip Bellefontaine said the deal to cost-share design work was the product of “quite recent” talks between Surrey and ministry staff.

Bellefontaine said 16 Avenue has been identi-fied as a “strategic con-nection” that has value to the city because it will reduce congestion on 32 Avenue.

The city planner stressed that a final agreement on who will pay how much to build the interchange hasn’t been reached.

That deal will probably not be done until after the design is completed, he said.

“We (the city) have said we will support funding, but we don’t have a project to fund yet.”

[email protected]

Ministry moves on 16 Avenue on-rampHighway 99 interchange in design stage, as 24 Avenue junction remains on backburner

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 11

DAN FERGUSON / BLACK PRESS

Pat o’Connor was surprised to learn preliminary planning work has begun on an interchange that would connect Highway 99 to 16 avenue. one ramp of the proposed exchange would run behind the row of hedges in her backyard.

Tom Gill

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Page 12: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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by Tom Fletcher

An nDP government would restore local control over Metro Vancouver transit, and decisions to establish mountain resort com-munities or use public-private partnerships on local projects. 

NDP leader Adrian Dix offered those promises in a speech to the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention Thursday, appealing for a more collaborative relations between all levels of government.

Dix’s promise on mountain resorts follows the B.C. Liberal government’s decision in March to issue a permit for the Jumbo Glacier Resort near Invermere, after the ski resort developer waited 22 years for a decision.

Former transportation minister Kevin Falcon appointed a new board to run TransLink in 2007, with a mayor’s advisory council. Falcon said he was fed up with regional rivalries interfering in decisions to select and fund new transit lines.

“I think local government should decide, not a diktat from Victoria, whether they use P3s on a project in their community,” Dix said. “They are in a position to be trusted about that.”

Dix received applause at several points, including his criticism of Tourism BC, which the Liberals brought into government control before the 2010 Olympics.

“I think we need to restore Tourism BC to an independent, industry-led independent agency that is formula funded, that can plan for the future and reflect

communities,” he said. “I think the centralization of that agency has taken away power from communities and the ability to plan, and every community in the province has an interest in promoting our tourism better.”

Pressed by reporters about a reference to the B.C. law requir-ing balanced budgets, Dix said he would repeal the law and strive instead to have a balanced budget over a four-year term. He said the B.C. Liberals have been forced to pass exemptions to run deficits in recent years, because they couldn’t cut spending fast enough to respond to slumps in

resource revenues or recessions that throw people out of work.

Dix said the long-running contest of accusations over which party chased more people out of B.C. is one reason a record 55 per cent of eligible voters didn’t vote in the 2009.

Despite B.C. Liberal claims of an exodus from the province during the NDP-led 1990s, he said there was a net gain of 129,000 in population during that decade. In 11 years of B.C. Liberal rule, the net gain has been 59,000, and B.C. has seen a net loss of population in every quarter of Premier Christy Clark’s time in office.

“Now is that her fault?” Dix said. “I don’t think so. We need to have a more serious debate about issues of productivity in our economy, and not name-calling about statistics that sometimes are more complicated than they appear.”

Dix vows to restore local powers

NDP says community projects should be civic gov’t decisions

12 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

TOM FLETCHER / BLACK PRESS

UBCm president Heath Slee listens as nDP leader Adrian Dix addresses local politicians in victoria

Who needs a Power of Attorney or a Will

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Many people these days recognize the importance of making financial plans for their future by investing their assets in a prudent fashion. However, it is surprising how many people overlook the importance of securing their assets if serious illness or incapacity strikes. Given that such unfortunate situations can arise unexpectedly, this can create a considerable amount of stress and hardship to loved ones.

Although one cannot predict when problems will arise, it is possible to plan for such contingencies by making a Power of Attorney or Representation Agreement. A Power of Attorney enables one to delegate another individual to manage one’s financial affairs. In situations where one wishes to grant such authority to another on a wider range of issues, such as healthcare related decisions, a Representation Agreement is appropriate.

Although a Power of Attorney or a Representation Agreement can be a useful tool to help protect and manage assets during one’s lifetime, one should prepare a Will to help manage and distribute assets upon one’s death.

A Wills and Estates lawyer can help you prepare an estate plan to ensure that your assets are protected and your wishes respected.

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Page 13: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 13

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Page 14: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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THE B.C. GOVERNMENT will ask local communities to nominate directors for the BC Transit board, in an e� ort to improve communi-cation on bus service changes and expansions.

Transportation Minister Mary Polak announced last Tuesday (Sept. 25) that communities will also have the option of setting up regional transit commissions, similar to the one in place in Greater Victoria.

� e recommendations follow a review of BC Transit administra-tion, sparked by complaints that the provincial agency was arbi-trarily changing service and costs a� er municipal budgets were set.

“We are also making sure that BC Transit provides su� cient notice to local governments of

any service adjustments, along with the type of information local governments need to make timely budget decisions,” Polak said.

Joe Stanhope, chair of the Regional District of Nanaimo, praised the review and BC Transit’s e� orts to give commu-nities more say. It was Stanhope’s complaints about a doubling of management fees and the proposed withdrawal of new buses from the Nanaimo service that provoked the review.

BC Transit CEO Manuel Achadinha said there has already been progress on new regional transit authorities. � e Kootenay region has nine di� erent bus systems, but has established a committee that could lead to a

regional service. � e provincial review identi� ed the Okanagan and Central Fraser Valley as other

areas that should consider amalgamating.

� e ministry will develop a policy for intercity transit routes that will focus on shorter trips and timing for commuters, Polak said, while leaving longer bus service to Grey-hound and other private bus lines.

Polak said the municipalities in the Greater Victoria Transit Commission remain split on whether they should transfer their service to the Capital Regional District. � e government will extend their ability to nominate commission members, which are now restricted to mayors of key communities.

Cities get more say on transitCommunities can now nominate directors to B.C. board

14 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Black Press

SURREY RESIDENTS have a new way to make their voices heard on issues such as transit and bridge tolls through the 2012 Metro Vancouver Urban Futures Survey – the online version of a historic survey that has been instrumental in shaping the way Lower Mainland municipalities have managed growth.

� is is the third chapter of the survey, which previ-ously helped set Vancouver on its path toward envi-ronmental protection, planning, preservation of open space and a transit-oriented transportation system. 

“� e � rst Urban Future’s Survey gave us as deci-sion-makers the con� dence to pursue policies that might have otherwise been dismissed as impractical,

Utopian or too costly,” said former Vancouver mayor Mike Harcourt.

� e 2012 survey is being conducted online through PlaceSpeak, a new online public consultation platform being developed right here in Vancouver, and includes all Metro municipalities, from Surrey to Coquitlam.

Organizers say it’s so far been dominated by Van-couver, New Westminster and the North Shore, while Surrey residents have yet to make their presence felt. 

To take the survey, Metro Vancouver residents must � rst verify their home address by registering with PlaceSpeak. � e survey takes approximately 22 minutes to complete and can be found at www.placespeak.com/urbanfuturessurvey.com

Have your opinions heardResidents urged to take Urban Futures Survey

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Page 15: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 15

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by Jeff Nagel

Metro VancouVer directors who oppose building a new garbage incinerator have per-suaded the board to rethink its planned pro-curement rules, arguing they could thwart new greener waste-to-energy technologies.

Metro directors were poised to approve the procurement strategy Sept. 21, but instead voted to send it back to staff and the zero waste committee to refine the regional district’s

approach to developing a new waste-fired plant.

Vancouver Coun. Andrea Reimer said emerging waste-to-energy technologies that might be much less polluting than a conventional incin-erator could be blocked because of a planned requirement that pro-ponents have operating plants where they can prove their system works.

That gives incin-eration, with its long history, too much of an advantage over rapidly evolving alternatives

that might be still at a small demonstration stage but on the cusp of being commercially viable, she said.

“We have been burn-ing garbage in large piles since we figured out how to do fire,” Reimer said. “It’s been happening for 50,000 years.”

Port Moody Mayor Mike Clay said he’s also concerned the proven track record require-ment will block emerg-ing operators in the first phase of Metro’s planned multi-stage bidding process.

The region intends to first identify viable technologies and pro-ponents, then potential

sites in and outside the region, before win-nowing the potential P3 partners to a short list of three who would compete in a final bid-ding phase.

“All of this leads down the path of prob-ably one large mass-burn incineration facil-ity serving the region,” Clay warned.

Surrey Coun. Mar-vin Hunt supported Reimer’s call to widen the scope for alternate technologies, which is to be considered further in committee, adding fairness is criti-

cally important.Richmond Coun.

Harold Steves also supported the change, saying Metro is other-wise on track to build a “fossil fuel power plant” that will burn plastic and increase particulate and greenhouse gas emissions.

Metro staff say the procurement of an extra 370,000 tonnes of waste-to-energy capac-ity is already highly complex and subject to a provincial directive that all sites and tech-nologies compete fairly.

They say the aim is

to ensure proponents can demonstrate their ability to perform, and loosening that rule would add more risk to an already challenging process, since the board won’t make a final deci-sion on what will be built where until 2016 and the plant or plants won’t open until late 2018.

“If we try to incor-porate the vagaries of a promising technology, it’s going to make it a lot more complicated,” Metro chief financial officer Jim Rusnak said.

Addressing concern the plan required proponents have a “full-scale reference facility” on which they would be judged, Metro manag-ers say it need not be a large plant, but perhaps one with a minimum size of 30,000 to 50,000 tonnes per year.

Burnaby Coun. Col-leen Jordan said she’s worried more delay in the process – because some politicians hope a “magical” and more palatable WTE technol-ogy will pop up – might result in rejected bidders going to court to challenge Metro’s eventual decision.

Reimer said she is reluctant to re-fight the issue in committee and cause further delay..

Also to be recon-sidered is whether an earlier decision to require any new plant is “publicly owned” be tightened to just Metro Vancouver-owned.

Some directors say the looser public own-ership term – which Hunt wanted so local cities could be co-own-ers – may lead private firms to start talks with cities, other levels of governments or even Crown corporations, adding more chaos to the process.

“You could have the port, you could have the universities, the airport authority, the health authorities,” Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie said. “You’re potentially opening it up very widely.”

He noted that even if Metro is the only permit-ted owner, other entities like the port or airport could still offer to host the new plant when the region asks interested land owners to step forward next year.

Metro looks to level field for incinerator alternatives

Waste-to-energy procurement sent back for rethink

16 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Port Moody Mayor Mike clay

by Jeff Nagel

ICBC workers are taking another one-day strike tomorow (Wednesday).

The Oct. 3 walkout by about a third of the workforce – mostly in the Lower Mainland – is the latest job action by members of COPE local 378 in a bid to press the province for a wage increase.

The union wants a four-year deal that keeps pace with infla-

tion but adds an extra two per cent in each of the final two years, while the province has sought a pay freeze.

“They’re still not willing to budge on wages,” union president David Black said. “Their proposals put our members far behind the rising cost of living.”

The walkout affects some driver service or licensing centres as well as some other offices in Surrey, Burnaby, Abbotsford, Port Coquitlam, Lang-ley, New Westminster, Richmond, Vancouver and North Vancouver.

Police nab final Stanley Cup beating suspect

Vancouver Police are seeking charges against 50 more accused Stanley Cup rioters, including the last of 15 alleged assailants who attacked a Good Samaritan who tried to hold back the mob.

Jonathan Stephen Mahoney, a 24-year-old Newfoundland man who police tracked down and arrested in Saskatche-wan, now faces charges of participating in a riot, assault, assault with a weapon and two counts of mischief.

He’s accused of join-ing others in swarming and beating Robert Mackay, who tried to keep a department store from being looted.

Crown has so far charged 13 of those accused of participat-ing in the assault, which was caught on video.

The new recom-mended charges to Crown target 44 men and six women rang-ing in age from 14 to 39.

A dozen of them hail from Vancouver, 11 are from Surrey, four are from North Vancouver and three each are from Langley, Maple Ridge, New West-minster or are from elsewhere in B.C.

Of all riot suspects, the top five cities they call home are Surrey (55), Vancouver (50), Burnaby (30), Rich-mond (21) and North Vancouver (18).

Eleven more charged in riot

Prosecutors have approved charges against 11 more adults for their alleged roles in the 2011 Stanley Cup riot in Vancouver.

Newly charged are Kevin Edward Bernard Mercier, Vasilios George Makris, Carlos Hernan Barahona-Villeda, Nathan Thomas Blake, Robert Douglas Viljo Dack,

Ionnis George Kangles, David Gerald Leonati, Michael John Stewart MacDonald, Jonathan Mahoney, Robert Chrisopher Timleck and Mark Stephen Blyth.

All are charged with participating in a riot and all except Blyth, who is charged with mischief.

Charges have now been laid against 156 accused rioters out of the 275 files police have forwarded to Crown. A few have already pleaded guilty and received jail time.

Burns Bog named Ramsar wetland

An ecological trea-sures of Metro Van-couver has been put on the international map.

More than 20,000 hectares of the Fraser River estuary, includ-ing all of Burns Bog, has been named a Ramsar Wetland of International Impor-tance.

Advocates hope the

designation will bol-ster efforts to protect the bog and other threatened wetlands.

But groups that fought for the naming, such as the Burns Bog Conservation Society, say the sensitive ecol-ogy of key areas is still threatened by develop-ment, including the South Fraser Perimeter Road and a proposed rezoning just northeast of the bog in Delta.

“As wonderful as the Ramsar designation is, it won’t stop the destruction of Burns Bog unless the federal government honours its commitments to the Ramsar Convention,” society president Eliza Olson said.

The bog is often called the lungs of the Lower Mainland and the South Fraser Delta wetlands provide key bird and salmon habitat.

Most of the bog has been protected as a conservancy since 2004, when four levels of government joined forces to buy 2,000 hectares of private land for $73 million.

ICBC workers strike again Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 17

REGIONAL BRIEFS

Man hurt in hit and runby Kevin Diakiw

A mAn wAs hospitalized after a hit and run last week.

A man in his 40s was doing maintenance work at the Dasmesh Darbar Sikh temple at 86 Avenue and 130 Street on Saturday (Sept. 29) at about 8:15 p.m. when he was struck by a car.

The car then took off.The man was taken to hospital

and is being treated for serious injuries.

The vehicle is described as reddish maroon in colour with severe front-end and likely windshield damage.

Surrey RCMP Traffic section is investigating. Anyone with informa-tion is asked to call Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502.

Man stabs brother

Police have a man in custody after a stabbing in the Tynehead area on Saturday.

At about 9 p.m., police were called to 94 Avenue and 159 Street after a report of a stabbing.

When police arrived, they found a man lying on the ground.

He was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries to his upper left chest.

A suspect was taken into police custody, and Mounties now say the victim and suspect are brothers.

Police also believe the altercation took place at a backyard party at the home. It turned physical and

eventually resulted in the victim being stabbed.The victim is in stable condition and is receiving treatment in hospital.

The investigation is ongoing. 

Intruder tries to undress sleeping woman

He broke into her Newton home and tried to undress her while she slept, and now Surrey Mounties are on the hunt for the man.

On Sept. 24, between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m., a 21-year-old woman was asleep in her home in the 7800 block of King George Boulevard when she was awoken by a man trying to undress her.

He fled after startling her.The man is described as a dark-

skinned male, in his 30s or 40s, approximately 6’ tall with a large stomach, large hands, no facial hair, and short, dark brown hair,  He was believed to be wearing black boots.

Investigators are asking for public assistance in identifying the man.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Surrey RCMP’s Child Abuse & Sexual Offence Unit at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.

The Surrey RCMP would like to remind the public to be vigilant of their surroundings and to lock their doors when they are at home sleeping.

For more information on personal safety please visit the Protect Your-self section of www.surrey.rcmp.ca.

POLICE BRIEFS

Page 17: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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by Jeff Nagel

Metro VancouVer directors who oppose building a new garbage incinerator have per-suaded the board to rethink its planned pro-curement rules, arguing they could thwart new greener waste-to-energy technologies.

Metro directors were poised to approve the procurement strategy Sept. 21, but instead voted to send it back to staff and the zero waste committee to refine the regional district’s

approach to developing a new waste-fired plant.

Vancouver Coun. Andrea Reimer said emerging waste-to-energy technologies that might be much less polluting than a conventional incin-erator could be blocked because of a planned requirement that pro-ponents have operating plants where they can prove their system works.

That gives incin-eration, with its long history, too much of an advantage over rapidly evolving alternatives

that might be still at a small demonstration stage but on the cusp of being commercially viable, she said.

“We have been burn-ing garbage in large piles since we figured out how to do fire,” Reimer said. “It’s been happening for 50,000 years.”

Port Moody Mayor Mike Clay said he’s also concerned the proven track record require-ment will block emerg-ing operators in the first phase of Metro’s planned multi-stage bidding process.

The region intends to first identify viable technologies and pro-ponents, then potential

sites in and outside the region, before win-nowing the potential P3 partners to a short list of three who would compete in a final bid-ding phase.

“All of this leads down the path of prob-ably one large mass-burn incineration facil-ity serving the region,” Clay warned.

Surrey Coun. Mar-vin Hunt supported Reimer’s call to widen the scope for alternate technologies, which is to be considered further in committee, adding fairness is criti-

cally important.Richmond Coun.

Harold Steves also supported the change, saying Metro is other-wise on track to build a “fossil fuel power plant” that will burn plastic and increase particulate and greenhouse gas emissions.

Metro staff say the procurement of an extra 370,000 tonnes of waste-to-energy capac-ity is already highly complex and subject to a provincial directive that all sites and tech-nologies compete fairly.

They say the aim is

to ensure proponents can demonstrate their ability to perform, and loosening that rule would add more risk to an already challenging process, since the board won’t make a final deci-sion on what will be built where until 2016 and the plant or plants won’t open until late 2018.

“If we try to incor-porate the vagaries of a promising technology, it’s going to make it a lot more complicated,” Metro chief financial officer Jim Rusnak said.

Addressing concern the plan required proponents have a “full-scale reference facility” on which they would be judged, Metro manag-ers say it need not be a large plant, but perhaps one with a minimum size of 30,000 to 50,000 tonnes per year.

Burnaby Coun. Col-leen Jordan said she’s worried more delay in the process – because some politicians hope a “magical” and more palatable WTE technol-ogy will pop up – might result in rejected bidders going to court to challenge Metro’s eventual decision.

Reimer said she is reluctant to re-fight the issue in committee and cause further delay..

Also to be recon-sidered is whether an earlier decision to require any new plant is “publicly owned” be tightened to just Metro Vancouver-owned.

Some directors say the looser public own-ership term – which Hunt wanted so local cities could be co-own-ers – may lead private firms to start talks with cities, other levels of governments or even Crown corporations, adding more chaos to the process.

“You could have the port, you could have the universities, the airport authority, the health authorities,” Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie said. “You’re potentially opening it up very widely.”

He noted that even if Metro is the only permit-ted owner, other entities like the port or airport could still offer to host the new plant when the region asks interested land owners to step forward next year.

Metro looks to level field for incinerator alternatives

Waste-to-energy procurement sent back for rethink

16 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Port Moody Mayor Mike clay

by Jeff Nagel

ICBC workers are taking another one-day strike tomorow (Wednesday).

The Oct. 3 walkout by about a third of the workforce – mostly in the Lower Mainland – is the latest job action by members of COPE local 378 in a bid to press the province for a wage increase.

The union wants a four-year deal that keeps pace with infla-

tion but adds an extra two per cent in each of the final two years, while the province has sought a pay freeze.

“They’re still not willing to budge on wages,” union president David Black said. “Their proposals put our members far behind the rising cost of living.”

The walkout affects some driver service or licensing centres as well as some other offices in Surrey, Burnaby, Abbotsford, Port Coquitlam, Lang-ley, New Westminster, Richmond, Vancouver and North Vancouver.

Police nab final Stanley Cup beating suspect

Vancouver Police are seeking charges against 50 more accused Stanley Cup rioters, including the last of 15 alleged assailants who attacked a Good Samaritan who tried to hold back the mob.

Jonathan Stephen Mahoney, a 24-year-old Newfoundland man who police tracked down and arrested in Saskatche-wan, now faces charges of participating in a riot, assault, assault with a weapon and two counts of mischief.

He’s accused of join-ing others in swarming and beating Robert Mackay, who tried to keep a department store from being looted.

Crown has so far charged 13 of those accused of participat-ing in the assault, which was caught on video.

The new recom-mended charges to Crown target 44 men and six women rang-ing in age from 14 to 39.

A dozen of them hail from Vancouver, 11 are from Surrey, four are from North Vancouver and three each are from Langley, Maple Ridge, New West-minster or are from elsewhere in B.C.

Of all riot suspects, the top five cities they call home are Surrey (55), Vancouver (50), Burnaby (30), Rich-mond (21) and North Vancouver (18).

Eleven more charged in riot

Prosecutors have approved charges against 11 more adults for their alleged roles in the 2011 Stanley Cup riot in Vancouver.

Newly charged are Kevin Edward Bernard Mercier, Vasilios George Makris, Carlos Hernan Barahona-Villeda, Nathan Thomas Blake, Robert Douglas Viljo Dack,

Ionnis George Kangles, David Gerald Leonati, Michael John Stewart MacDonald, Jonathan Mahoney, Robert Chrisopher Timleck and Mark Stephen Blyth.

All are charged with participating in a riot and all except Blyth, who is charged with mischief.

Charges have now been laid against 156 accused rioters out of the 275 files police have forwarded to Crown. A few have already pleaded guilty and received jail time.

Burns Bog named Ramsar wetland

An ecological trea-sures of Metro Van-couver has been put on the international map.

More than 20,000 hectares of the Fraser River estuary, includ-ing all of Burns Bog, has been named a Ramsar Wetland of International Impor-tance.

Advocates hope the

designation will bol-ster efforts to protect the bog and other threatened wetlands.

But groups that fought for the naming, such as the Burns Bog Conservation Society, say the sensitive ecol-ogy of key areas is still threatened by develop-ment, including the South Fraser Perimeter Road and a proposed rezoning just northeast of the bog in Delta.

“As wonderful as the Ramsar designation is, it won’t stop the destruction of Burns Bog unless the federal government honours its commitments to the Ramsar Convention,” society president Eliza Olson said.

The bog is often called the lungs of the Lower Mainland and the South Fraser Delta wetlands provide key bird and salmon habitat.

Most of the bog has been protected as a conservancy since 2004, when four levels of government joined forces to buy 2,000 hectares of private land for $73 million.

ICBC workers strike again Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 17

REGIONAL BRIEFS

Man hurt in hit and runby Kevin Diakiw

A mAn wAs hospitalized after a hit and run last week.

A man in his 40s was doing maintenance work at the Dasmesh Darbar Sikh temple at 86 Avenue and 130 Street on Saturday (Sept. 29) at about 8:15 p.m. when he was struck by a car.

The car then took off.The man was taken to hospital

and is being treated for serious injuries.

The vehicle is described as reddish maroon in colour with severe front-end and likely windshield damage.

Surrey RCMP Traffic section is investigating. Anyone with informa-tion is asked to call Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502.

Man stabs brother

Police have a man in custody after a stabbing in the Tynehead area on Saturday.

At about 9 p.m., police were called to 94 Avenue and 159 Street after a report of a stabbing.

When police arrived, they found a man lying on the ground.

He was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries to his upper left chest.

A suspect was taken into police custody, and Mounties now say the victim and suspect are brothers.

Police also believe the altercation took place at a backyard party at the home. It turned physical and

eventually resulted in the victim being stabbed.The victim is in stable condition and is receiving treatment in hospital.

The investigation is ongoing. 

Intruder tries to undress sleeping woman

He broke into her Newton home and tried to undress her while she slept, and now Surrey Mounties are on the hunt for the man.

On Sept. 24, between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m., a 21-year-old woman was asleep in her home in the 7800 block of King George Boulevard when she was awoken by a man trying to undress her.

He fled after startling her.The man is described as a dark-

skinned male, in his 30s or 40s, approximately 6’ tall with a large stomach, large hands, no facial hair, and short, dark brown hair,  He was believed to be wearing black boots.

Investigators are asking for public assistance in identifying the man.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Surrey RCMP’s Child Abuse & Sexual Offence Unit at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.

The Surrey RCMP would like to remind the public to be vigilant of their surroundings and to lock their doors when they are at home sleeping.

For more information on personal safety please visit the Protect Your-self section of www.surrey.rcmp.ca.

POLICE BRIEFS

Page 18: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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by Adrian MacNair

An energy efficiency project expected to generate big savings for the Delta School District broke ground at Neilson Grove Elementary on Oct. 1.

The school is just one of 11 buildings in the district receiv-ing a $6.4-million geoexchange system upgrade featuring pipes installed under the playing fields that provide heating and cooling to the schools.

FortisBC will provide the installation and initial funding for the project, meaning the school district won’t have to pinch their pennies to pay for it.

“Providing this type of technology to nine schools throughout the school district, in conjunction with upgrading all the boilers to high-efficiency boilers is a pretty significant energy solution,” says Michael Allison, a spokesman with FortisBC.

Geoexchange is based on solar heat that gets trapped in the earth during warmer months of the year. Heat pumps then draw that heat from the ground as the weather cools and pumps it into the building, explains Allison.

During warmer months it can use the cooler earth as a heat sync to cool the buildings.

The size of the geoexchange system is determined by the amount of energy required. In the case of Delta’s schools, the pipes will likely be stored under the athletic fields.

The system works in conjunc-tion with natural gas boilers to provide backup heat as needed.

The school district was origi-nally approached by FortisBC in late 2009 during a time when

it was looking at finding more energy efficient replacements for gas-fired furnaces that had reached the end of their lifespan.

“What we wanted to do was get away from spending considerable taxpayer dollars on replacing and operating the equipment, but at the same time we wanted to reduce our need for energy to heat our buildings and as a result pay less on our carbon taxes and carbon offsets,” says Frank Geyer, director of facilities and planning for the school district.

FortisBC came back with an offer to replace the exist-ing equipment, and provide the labour and installa-tion, which was very attractive to the school district.

Because FortisBC retains the asset, it also pays for mainte-nance, operation, and replace-ment costs.

The school district merely pays for the heat.

Geyer estimates geoexchange will reduce the school district’s carbon footprint by 2,000 met-ric tons.

“Which is enormous,” he says enthusiastically. “That’s about half of what our portfolio is, just on the building side.”

Between natural gas cost sav-ings and carbon offsets, Geyer expects the school district will save roughly $180,000 a year.

The school district spent just under $100,000 last year to buy Pacific Carbon Trust offsets at

$25 per metric ton in order to meet the province’s carbon neu-tral mandate for public sector organizations. That was money that wasn’t spent on education, and worse, it wasn’t budgeted for, explains Geyer.

“There’s a social conscience attached to it by reducing our carbon footprint, showing we are going to be indus-try leaders in this area, but also sav-ing $50,000 a year in carbon offsets that isn’t going to be taken out of education.”

The school dis-trict has received $1.4 million in funding from the Public Sector Energy Conserva-tion Agreement

fund, which was created in 2007 by the province to help public sector organizations reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.

That’s been added to $5 mil-lion being spent by FortisBC on the geoexchange project.

FortisBC is expected to take the next two summers to retrofit all 11 school buildings, but that’s considerably quicker than the school district’s capital replacement plan.

Eight other buildings in the school district will receive new boilers from Fortis that are expected to be up to 30 per cent more energy efficient than the old ones.

For more information on geoexchange visit www.fortisbc.com, click on energy solutions and then geoexchange systems.

[email protected]

Delta schools save $180K a year with new technology

11 buildings receiving system upgrades

18 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

“Providing this type of

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Michael Allison

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Page 19: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 19

Louise HutchinsonCity of White Rock LiaisonCouncillor

Peace Arch Hospital and Community Health Foundation is a separate legal entity incorporated in 1988 under BC’s Society Act and is registered with Canada Revenue Agency as a charitable organization. The Board is responsible for the stewardship of all funds gifted to the Foundation.

DONATE ONLINE:

www.pahfoundation.ca or by phone at 604-535-4520100% of your donation goes to its designated project and stays in this community.

Jane ManningPast ChairRetiredDesign Consultant, Special Education Teacher

Art ReitmayerVice-ChairPrincipalCherin Holdings Ltd.

Bob CooperRetired Accountant

Brent EllwynBusiness LawyerCleveland Doan LLP, Barristers and Solicitors

Len FowlerDirector/Of� cerCPAL Inc.

Louise McKnightReal Estate AgentPartnerBay Realty Ltd.

Jackie SmithSecretaryExecutive DirectorPeace Arch Hospital and Community Health Foundation

Greg SewellOwner Oliver Ridge Developments Ltd.

Barinder RasodeCity of Surrey LiaisonCouncillor

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Introducing Your Hospital Foundation’s 2012/2013 Board of Directors

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Learn about the scope and impact of the work of this voluntary board of directors in the fall issue of health+care

p01-20Cover_OBC.indd 1

12-09-06 1:17 PM

Look for the magazine in this issue of Peace Arch News or online at www.pahfoundation.ca

Dr. Dorothea BergenMedical RepresentativePsychiatristPeace Arch Hospital

Mary RhodeDirectorSite OperationsPeace Arch Hospital

Mary MartinCity of Surrey Liaison AlternateCouncillor

Dr. Semion StrovskiMedical Representative Alternate Physician Peace Arch Hospital

Page 20: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

at South Surrey Arena 2199 - 148 St.Visit www.surreyeagles.ca or call 604 531-4625

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by Nick Greenizan

Win one, lose one. Win one, lose one. Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

Such is life these days for the Surrey Eagles, who have been consistently incon-sistent through the first month of the BC Hockey League season.

As they have every weekend this season, the Eagles won once and lost once last weekend, defeating the Coquitlam Express 2-1 on the road Friday, before dropping a 3-2 double-overtime game to the Chilliwack Chiefs Sunday evening at South Surrey Arena.

The team now sits with a 4-3-0-1 (won-loss-tied-overtime loss) record.

“We at least had the overtime game, so we got the extra point, and if you had told me before this weekend that’d we’d get a win in Coquitlam and come out with three of four points, I’d have taken it,” Surrey Eagles head coach Erhart said.

“We’re a fairly young group, and we’re learning on the fly. But hopefully one of these weekends we can come away with all four points.”

On Friday, new goaltender Michael San-taguida – who was acquired last week from the United States Hockey League, taking the spot of Edward Dyson, who was released – made his mark with his new club, stopping 30 shots en route to the road win.

“With (Santaguida) and Glenn Ferguson, we really feel like we’ve got a solid, quality duo in net,” Erhart said.

Another newcomer to the Eagles’ nest, 18-year-old forward Joel Gaudet – a former member of Semiahmoo Minor Hockey Association – opened the scoring for the visiting team when he carried the puck into the slot and slipped the puck past Coquitlam netminder Cole Huggins.

Later in the period, Surrey extended its lead to 2-0 when defenceman Tommy Stipancik – yet another new Eagle who arrived last week from the Western Hockey League – fired a shot from the blue-line that, after a strange bounce, made it’s way across the goal line.

Neither team scored in the second frame, but Coquitlam cut the lead to 2-1 midway through the third period when Brady Shaw’s shot beat Santaguida.

Sunday, the Eagles saw their record fall back to .500 after the OT loss to the Chiefs.

As was the case in Friday’s game, the

Eagles – playing Chilliwack for the third time in a month – jumped out to an early lead after first-period goals from Brett Mulcahy and Devon Toews, but Chiefs’ forward Cooper Rush made it 2-1 with one second left before the first intermission, with a shorthanded goal.

Chilliwack’s Spencer Graboski – named the game’s first star – tied the game in the second period, and Ben Israel gave the Chiefs the lead six minutes later with a power-play marker.

In the third period, Surrey tied the game when leading scorer Demico Hannoun’s shot found the back of the net.

The game stayed knotted at two goals apiece until 1:46 into the second overtime frame, when Chilliwack’s Luke Esposito scored to give his team the win.

“It was a little frustrating because we were up 2-0 again, and had played one of our best periods of the season,” Erhart said.

The outcome was a reversal of fortune for Surrey, who earlier in the month had

defeated the Chiefs in the exact same, double-overtime fashion.

Santaguida was again between the pipes for the Birds, stopping 41 shots on net.

The Eagles, who at the beginning of the season were among the BCHL’s best squads on special teams, struggled on the weekend when the game was not five-on-five. Though they stayed strong on the penalty kill – they’re ranked sixth in the league – Surrey was a combined 0-for-12 on the power-play, and gave up one shorthanded goal.

DAMON JAMES / CONTRIBUTOR

Spencer Graboski of the Chilliwack Chiefs (18) crashes the net against Surrey eagles defenceman Devon Toews and goaltender Santaguida during Sunday’s BCHL game in the South Surrey Arena. Chilliwack won 4-3 in double overtime.

A win on the road, a loss at home for BCHL team

Eagles get a split - again

SECTION C0-ORDINATOR: riCk kupCHuk (PHONE 604-575-5335)

SPORTSTuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 20

Page 21: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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by Rick Kupchuk

After plAying .500 hockey for the first two weeks of the season, a four-game losing streak has dropped the North Delta Devils to the bot-tom of the standings.

The Pacific Junior Hockey League (PJHL) team was outscored 30-10 last week, drop-ping two games on the road before losing at home for the first time. The week concluded with a 5-4 loss to the Grandview Steelers Sun-day evening, the closest decision of the week.

North Delta fell 5-3 to the North Vancouver Wolf Pack Wednesday, then lost 8-1 to the Rich-mond Sockeyes. Playing at home Saturday in the Sungod Arena, where they had won their first two outings, the Devils were humbled 12-2 by the Delta Ice Hawks.

In the middle of the pack after a 2-2-0-0 won-loss-overtime loss-tied) record, the Devils have now slipped to 2-6-0-0, and are three points behind the Wolf Pack in the Tom Shaw Confer-ence standings. Four of the five teams will advance to the playoffs.

The Devils started slow in North Vancou-ver, trailing 4-0 before the game hit the halfway point. Matthew Tilton and Benjamin Vikich tal-lied to cut the difference to 4-2, but that was as close as they got. After a Wolf Pack goal midway through the third period, Matthew Painchaud of the Devils completed the scoring.

A positive for North Delta was special teams. They scored once on two power play chances, and killed off a pair of short-handed situations.

The Devils were never in the game Thursday in Richmond, falling behind 3-0 after 20

minutes then allowing four goals in the first four minutes of the second period.

Joshua Trisevic was the lone Devil to score, netting a goal with nine seconds left in the second.

Richmond outshot the visitors 46-30, and scored on one of seven power plays. The Devils were shutout on two extra-man opportunities.

North Delta didn’t fare any better on home ice Saturday. Although they held a 9-8 edge in shots on goal after 20 minutes, it was the Delta Ice Hawks holding a commanding 5-1 lead. The visitors scored once while shorthanded, another on a penalty shot, and three times at even strength.

The count was 9-2 after two periods, with the Ice Hawks adding three more in the third.

Several Ice Hawks were able to pad their scoring stats in the game, led by Mark Whiteley. The Surrey native scored once and assisted on six others for a seven-point night.

North Delta resident Anthony Brito tallied three times for Delta and assisted on two others, and now leads the PJHL scoring race with 13 goals and seven assists in just six games played.

The final shots on goal tally was 25-21 for Delta, a team which scored on almost half their shots.

Details of Sunday’s game weren’t available by The Leader press time.

After a four-game in five-days stretch, North Delta will play twice next week against opposition from the Harold Brittain Conference, visiting the 4-1-0-0 Abbotsford Pilots Friday night, before hosting the 2-3-0-0 Mission Outlaws Saturday at 6:45 p.m. in the Sungod Arena.

Devils go winless in

fourJunior B team falls to last

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 21

JIM KINNEARCONTRIBUTOR

tanner lenting (4) and goalie tyler read of the north Delta Devils can’t stop the Delta ice Hawks from scoring in a pJHl game earlier this season in ladner. the ice Hawks defeated the Devils 12-2 Saturday night at the Sungod Arena.

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Page 22: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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Rolland races to first in Maple Falls

Surrey’s MacKenzie Rolland has won first place at the 38th annual Mount Baker Invitational Cross Country Race.

Rolland, a Grade 12 student at North Surrey Secondary, represented her high school’s senior girls team in the junior var-sity race, which had over 500 participants.

She completed the 2.79 mile (4.7 km) course in 21:46.58.

The competition was held Sept. 22 at Silver Lake Park in Maple Falls, Washington.

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Want to work on your shot with basketball season just around the corner?

One Pass Ahead would love to help with their 3000 Camp.

The camp, which is run by Trinity West-ern Spartans men’s basketball coach Scott Allen and women’s national team head coach Allison McNeill, runs Oct. 6 to 8 and is for girls and boys in Grades 4-12.

Players will shoot 3,000 shots during the camp, working on their shooting technique, shot selec-tion, and game speed shooting.

Participants can register for either one day ($30) or all three days ($75).

The camp runs from 9 a.m. to noon on the first day and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the other two days.

To register, visit onepassahead.com or call 604-812-5908.

It will be held at Earl Marriott Second-ary (15751 16 Ave.).

22 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

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Page 23: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 23

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A discoloured patch of skin coincidentally led Lori Kittelberg to perform a self breast exam—something the 39-year-old had only done sporadically. 

She found a small lump. “That’s when it all started,” says Lori, whose young

age and breast-cancer-free family history had her physician thinking there was little reason for concern. 

“When they told me I had breast cancer, it was like being punched in the gut,” she remembers.

With her husband by her side, they were told she would undergo surgery, chemotherapy and radiation treatments. Lori awaits radiation or “insurance,” as she calls it.

Throughout treatment, Lori has been motivated to keep moving. Whether it’s yoga, walking or running with friends, she believes, “The stronger and � tter the body, the better it is.” Lori registered for the BC Cancer Foundation’s Bust a Move next April because, “Living healthy means I can potentially see my � ve-year-old son grow up,” she says. 

Bust a Move is a day-long � tness event that will support life-saving breast cancer research at the BC Cancer Agency, which motivates Lori who knows � tness is an important part of keeping the body healthy and in preventing breast cancer or a recurrence.

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Page 24: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Full-marathon runners begin their 42-kilometre run at the Surrey International World Music Marathon at Central City on Sunday.

Section co-ordinator: Boaz joSeph (phone 604-575-2744)

MILES& MUSICThe inaugural SurreyInternational MusicMarathon attracts thousands of participants

LIFE24 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Marathon winner Drew

Nicholson (above) relaxes

after the race. Below:

Jonquil Hallgate,

executive director

of Surrey Urban

Mission, was escorted by

a relay team of Surrey

Firefighers who

provided batteries for

her electric wheelchair

for a full 42-kilometre

run.

n Photos by Boaz Joseph

Bassist Frank

Holder plays

with the Caribbean

band Kenrick

Headley and

Friends.

Black Press

A Surrey man won the first Surrey International World Music Marathon, while a local man and woman came in third.

Surrey’s Drew Nicholson logged an impressive 2:36:19 to win the marathon on Sunday. The event, based at Central City and with routes throughout North Surrey, included a marathon relay, half marathon and Mayor’s 5K. Coming in second was Jeremy Waters of Coquitlam (2:47:26) and White Rock’s Chris Barth who came in at 2:50:26.

The top women were two from Langley, Kendra Braun (3:04:09) and Tracey Kuehn (3:21:35) and Surrey’s Tanya Zarin came in third with a time of 3:27:06.

“We’re thrilled with the results of the first-time event,” said marathon chair Elizabeth Model.

“It’s been our vision for two years to welcome the world to Surrey and provide an event that really is about inclusivity and celebration of our diversity.”

More than 2,000 people came out to the Surrey World Music Marathon, Run Inn Half Marathon Pros-pera Relay and Mayor’s 5K.

Left: Fauja Singh Chindsa, 101, finishes the Mayor’s 5K Run.Below centre: The ‘Real Housewives of Surrey’ – Norah Heath (left) and Shelley Lammers – leave no fingernails uncoloured for their race.Below: Racers start the Run Inn Half Marathon Prospera Relay.

Page 25: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

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Info: [email protected] www.sassyawards.ca

PRE-SHOW PARTY6:00pm featuring TOMMY ALTO

www.facebook.com/SassyAwardsTwitter: @SASSYawards

Victoria DuffieldWarner Music Recording Artist

Sarah TaylorMuchMusic VJ

Emcees

Voice of Semiamoo Peninsula

ELKAYDEVELOPMENTSLTD.

Hosted by:

Semiahmoo Rotary

Support from:

White Rock Rotary

New Generations

Rotary Club

October 19, 2012Bell Performing Arts Centre, Surrey

FRESHHTo 3 finalists “Canada’s Got Talent” International HipHop Award Winners

p

FEATURING

Ticket Prices: $25 - Student / $50 - Adult$10 from each ticket sold goes directly to youth group

Info: [email protected] www.sassyawards.ca

PRE-SHOW PARTY6:00pm featuring TOMMY ALTO

www.facebook.com/SassyAwardsTwitter: @SASSYawards

Victoria DuffieldWarner Music Recording Artist

Sarah TaylorMuchMusic VJ

Emcees

Voice of Semiamoo Peninsula

ELKAYDEVELOPMENTSLTD.

A late swing

Jump Joint dance season postponed

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 25

EVAN SEAL / THE LEADER

Buzz cutAdam Boran, 6, gets his head shaved next to Surrey RCMP Chief Supt. Bill Fordy during the 15th-annual Cops for Cancer kick-off event outside the Surrey Courthouse Thursday. Boran

raised $595 through family and friends in honour of his grandfather who died of cancer two years ago. In total, more than $11,000 was raised by the policing organizations involved. The Cops for Cancer Tour de Valley riders will ride from Tsawwassen to Boston Bar and back to

raise funds for children living with cancer. Since it’s inception, the campaign has raised more than $27 million. For more information, visit www.copsforcancerbc.ca

SwIng InTo The new season with drop-in retro swing dances every Sat-urday night starting on Oct. 13 at the Jump Joint Dance Hall, #110, 12332 Pattullo Pl.

The Saturday Night Jump is hosted by Kirk MacIntyre of the Metro Kids

Society. Doors open at 9:45 p.m. and swing dancing takes place from 10 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.

The cost is $5. Visit www.jump-jointswing.com

The event was originally set to start in late September.

Page 26: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

26 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

The Richmond Review has an immediate opening for an experienced Advertising Consultant.By joining the number one community newspaper serving Richmond, you can develop a rewarding career in advertising and marketing while contributing to one of the most culturally diverse communities in Canada. The team environment at The Richmond Review will inspire you to the highest level of customer partnership and reward your motivated approach to excellence. You should be a strong communicator, well organized, self motivated and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. Print and/or online advertising sales experience is preferred. A car and a valid driver’s license are required. The Richmond Review is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.Send your resume with cover letter by Friday, October 5, 2012 to:Elana Gold [email protected] Richmond Review#1-3671 Viking Way, Richmond, BC, V6V 2J5

Advertising Sales Consultant

www.blackpress.ca REVIEW the richmond

Donald’s Fine Foods is a Richmond based food processing and Distribution Company currently seeking a Production Supervisor. Will be responsible for organizing and managing meat processing and packaging. Previous experience in meat fabrication, processing and packaging is essential. Must be able to organize and lead a production team in a fast paced environment.

This opportunity starts Immediately. Donald’s Fine Foods offers a Competitive

Wage, Full Medical & Dental Benefits.Please fax your resume: 604.875.6031

or email: [email protected]

PRODUCTIONSUPERVISOR

IMMEDIATE FULL TIME OPENINGS FOR SKILLED TRADESHiring electricians, mechanical assemblers, fabricators and welders

for fabrication shop in Delta.Competitive wages, day and evening shifts, long-term employment and benefi ts.

For more information, visit www.sonicenclosures.com/careers

Bindery WorkersBlack Press has anticipated opportunities for Bindery Workers to assist with the mechanical

insertion of advertising flyers into our Lower Mainland newspapers. Applicants must be available to work a variety of scheduled day, evening, night and weekend shifts.

Additionally, successful applicants will need to be available on a call-in basis for our locations in Surrey and Abbotsford. Excellent remuneration. Experience an asset, but not a requirement. Reliable transportation is a pre-requisite.

Please forward resumes to:Bindery ForemanCampbell Heights Distribution CentreUnit #113, 19130 24th Ave.Surrey, B.C. V3S 3S9or Fax 604-538-4445

www.blackpress.ca > www.bclocalnews.com

College DirectorWe are conducting a general recruiting drive for College Directors in BC. The College Director serves as the leader, team-builder and operations manager for our student focused campuses. Candidates will have a degree or professional designation accompanied by two years’ experience in education/teaching or 5 years’ combination of academic and related experience. Superior people management skills and business operations experience is a must. A willingness to relocate is an asset. Please apply at our website:

http://www.sprottshaw.com/about/were-hiring/

BC CANCER

GRANT, Margaret Rose (Croy)

July 19, 1927-September 26, 2012

Margaret passed away peace-fully at Surrey Memorial Hospi-tal on Wednesday, September 26, 2012, at the age of 85 years. Born in Blaine, Wash-ington, Margaret lived most of her life in Surrey, B.C. She is survived by her beloved husband of 64 years, Ross; sons John (Charlotte), Gor-don, Corey (Judy); grandchil-dren Heather, Cody (Zoe) and Ashley.She will be greatly missed, for-ever loved and always in our hearts.A Celebration of Margaret’s life will be held on Tuesday, Octo-ber 2nd, 2012, at 10:00am at Valley View Funeral Home, 14660 72nd Ave., Surrey In lieu of fl owers, remem-brances to a charity of one’s choice may be made in Margaret’s name.

Valley View Funeral Centre

604-596-8866

IF YOU ARE... S Moving, Expecting A Baby S Planning A Wedding S Anticipating Retirement S Employment Opportunities

1-866-627-6074We have Gifts & Information

www.welcomewagon.ca

FOUND: adults bike, Sun. Sept. 23, Royal Heights (604)584-4237

Co-ed Ball Hockey team looking for fem. players & goalie. Season starts Oct.21/2012. Games - Sun-days in Sry. Lv msg,604-657-6013

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248

VISITING ARIZONA for the Winter? Meridian RV Resort. Good Sam-Trailer Life Top 100 RV Resorts in America. Check us out at www.meridianrvresort.com or call 866-770-0080.

Bring Them to My Daycare! 778-387-5008

96th & Scott Road AreaD Lic’d family childcareD Cooking, music/pre-school progD Christian facilityD First Aid/CPRD Food SafeD Large bright colourful facility & large yardD Lots of indoor/outdoor toysD Lots of LOVE

DAYCARE available in Cloverdale. Transp to & from school. 14yrs exp. Ref’s. Reasonable. 604-574-9977

$294.00 DAILY MAILING POST-CARDS! Guaranteed Legit Work. Register Online! www.ThePost-cardGuru.com ZNZ Referral Agents Needed! $20-$95/Hr! www.Free-JobPosition.com Multiple $100 Payments To Your Bank! www.Su-perCashDaily.com More Amazing Opportunities @ www.LegitCash-Jobs.com

BEST SPORTS HANDICAPPING! 64% NFL 82% College football. Documented on beating over 7,300 contestants. www.jefferson-sports.com. Start an honest, prof-itable investment for years to come!

Help Wanted!!! Make $1000 a week mailing brochures from home! FREE Supplies! Helping Home-Workers since 2001! Genuine Op-portunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.themailing-program.com

OWNER RETIRING. Heating Service Business for sale, 3400 clients, $20k inventory. Campbell River, BC. Call Alan at (250)480-6700.

This is creating MILLIONAIRES! Earn $30,000 to $50,000+ weekly with ABSOLUTE proof. This is real! Call 1-800-887-1897 (24 hrs.) This is a serious life changer!

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

7 OBITUARIES

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

33 INFORMATION

42 LOST AND FOUND

56 SPORTS & RECREATION

TRAVEL

74 TIMESHARE

75 TRAVEL

CHILDREN

83 CHILDCARE AVAILABLE

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

604.575.5555

fax 604.575.2073 email [email protected]

Your community Your classifieds.

bcclassified.com

INDEX IN BRIEF

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

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

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

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

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

Advertise across thelower mainland inthe 17 best-read

communitynewspapers.

ON THE WEB:

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

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . 9-57

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Advertise across theLower Mainland inthe 18 best-read

communitynewspapers and

5 dailies.

Advertise across the

Lower Mainland in

the 18 best-read

community

newspapers and

3 dailies.

ON THE WEB:

Page 27: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 27

CALL SURREY: 604-583-1004 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM

BUSINESS HEALTH ANDDEVELOPMENT

EDUCATION

FIND YOUR BEST FIT

Business ManagementAccounting & PayrollAdministrative AssistantBusiness AdministrationInternational TradeLegal AssistantMarketing & Sales

Sales Professional

Practical NursingCommunity Support Social ServicesAssisted LivingHealth Care AssistantHealth Unit ClerkLive-In CaregiverPharmacy AssistantSpa Body Therapy

International HospitalityTourism & HospitalityFood & BeverageHotel ManagementConference Management

Early Childhood EducationBasic & Post Basic

TRADESConstruction ElectricianLevels 1, 2 & 3

Before embarking on a sucessful career, you need to know what industry and general position you are interested in. Speaking with one of our career advisors will help you outline your career goals and what fields are best suited to you. You can even tour the campus, speak with current students, and find out where our graduates are now. A new career and life path is only a meeting away.

CREATINGBRIGHTER FUTURESSINCE 1903

TOURISM &HOSPITALITYMANAGEMENT

learn to turn income

tax into

income

H&R Block needs tax professionals.Classes begin mid SeptemberStudy with us.

Choose a class schedule and location convenient to you.

Receive high quality training.

Start a rewarding career.*

Register online at hrblock.ca or call1-877-32BLOCK (322-5625)for details.

*Enrolment in, or completion of, the course is neither an offer nor guaranteeof employment. Some restrictions apply.

Classes begin October 22nd

• Surrey-North Delta• Must own 3/4 to 1 ton cargo van - no minivans or SUV’s• Pick up newspapers from our warehouse

and deliver to carrier’s homes.If interested please call 604.575.5312

SURREY LEADER

Now HiringBundle Drivers

ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC THE 2013-2015 BC FRESHWATER FISHING REGULA-TIONS SYNOPSIS.The most effective way to reach an in-credible number of BC Sportsmen & women.Two year edition- ter-rifi c presence for your business.

Please call Annemarie

1.800.661.6335 email: fi sh@

blackpress.ca

LEARN FROM HOME. EARN FROM HOME. Medical Transcrip-tionists are in demand. Lots of jobs! Enroll today for less than $95 a month. 1-800-466-1535 www.can-scribe.com [email protected]

Govt funded 5 wksjob search class with 5 wks

possible job placement

Info sessionOct 4&9 -1pm ISSofBC

604-598-8545, #303 7337 137 St, Sry

A & S Plumbing Ltd., Surrey, BC2 Plumbers needed; 3-5 yrs of relat-ed exp; Completion of high sch; in-stall, repair & maintain plumbing fi x-tures & systems; knowledge of Punjabi & Hindi an asset; $25/hr full time; Email resume:

[email protected]

CLASS 1 DRIVERS WANTED! Sign bonus $2000 for Owner/op ph: 604-598-3498/fax: 604-598-3497

Hiring 2 people with clean driving abstract, and current Class 1

Driver’s Lic. Must have at least 2 yrs Canada / U. S border crossing exp. Have a valid passport & be able to handle a logbook. Wages

neg. Call Joe (778)858-1800

WELLS Transportation Ltd. requires Class 1 Long Haul Truck Drivers. $23.50/hr, 50hrs/week. Send re-sumes to: 9251 127 Street. Surrey BC V3V 5H4 or Fax: 604-496-5009

DRIVERS WANTED: Terrifi c career opportunity outstanding growth potential to learn how to locate rail defects. No Rail Experience Needed!!

Extensive Paid Travel, MealAllowance, 4 wks. Vacation &

Benefi ts Package.Skills Needed - Ability to travel 3 months at a time Valid License with air brake endorsement. High School Diploma or GED.

Apply at www.sperryrail.comunder careers, keyword Driver DO NOT FILL IN CITY or STATE

LONG HAUL TRUCK DRIVER ~ Mehat Trucking Ltd. Hiring F/T Long Haul Truck Driver, Wage $23.00/hr. Apply by Mail: PO Box 33560 Central City Post Offi ce, Surrey, BC V3T 5R5. Fax 604-591-2069

LONG HAUL TRUCK DRIVERS

TMG Logistics Inc. (Surrey) is hiring of Long Haul Truck Drivers ($23.00/hr, 50 hrs/ week + benefi ts.) Apply by Fax: (604) 598-3681

S.G.L. Trucking Ltd. requires Class 1 Long Haul Team Truck Drivers. $23.50/hr + benefi ts for 50 hrs per week. Duties include: driving truck, keeping log book, inspection re-ports etc. Apply by mail at: 11835 - 81 Ave. Delta, BC, V4C 7H7 or Fax to: 604-572-1235

SUPERVISOR - TRUCK DRIVER

Over The Top Freightways (SURREY, BC) hiring for Supervisor, Truck Driver ($29.12/hr 40hrs/wk+benefi ts.) Apply by Fax: 604-574-7252

OWNER OPERATORSSigning Bonus

Van Kam’s group of companies req. Owner Ops. to be based out of our Surrey Terminal for runs throughout BC & Alberta. Applicants must have winter and mountain driving experience / training.

We offer above average rates and an excellent employee

benefi ts package.Call Bev at 604-968-5488 or send a detailed resume and current driver’s abstract, and details of your truck to:

[email protected] Fax: 604-587-9889

Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.Thank you for your interest however only those of interest to us will be contacted.

TRUCK DRIVERS

Marvell Logistics Ltd. is hiring for Long Haul Truck Drivers ($23.00/hr, 50 hours/week + benefi ts.) Apply by Fax: (778)297-4401

TRUCK DRIVERS ~ North Delta Transport Ltd. is hiring F/T Long Haul Truck Drivers, Wage $23.00/hour. Mail: 7820 116A Street, Delta, BC V4C 5Y4. Fax: 604-858-2431

TRUCK DRIVERS

Safeco Trucklines Ltd. is looking for FT Long Haul Truck Drivers (10 positions). Salary $24.50/hr. 2 years to less than 3 years ex-perience. Duties: Drive truck, load / unload goods, pre-inspec-tion/ maintenance of vehicle, do emergency repairs, maintain log book. Punjabi/Hindi speaking an asset. Please email resume to:

[email protected] or Fax at 604-888-6095

TRUCK DRIVER SUPERVISOR & TRAILER MECHANIC

Fast Freight Transport Ltd. (Sur-rey, BC) is hiring of Truck Driver Supervisor ($29.12/hr) & Trailer Mechanic ($26.00/hr) both 40hrs/ week + other ben. Apply by Fax:(604)574-7252

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL.NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks.Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options.Apply online! IHEschool.com 1-866-399-3853

JUNIOR GROWERRequired for Windset Farms (Canada) Ltd. Responsible for daily hydroponic greenhouse operations. Start Date: November 1, 2012. Agriculture degree and 2 – 5 years agri experience a must!

Salary: $45,000 - $55,000/yr. Plus Benefi ts Package

Fax Resume: 604-952-2763E-mail: [email protected]

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

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

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

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

on weekends for respite. Training, support and

remuneration are provided. Funding is available for

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

for an open door. Make it yours.

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

BARBER WANTED in Quali-cum Beach. Min. 3 yrs exp. Must do tapered haircut with a straight razor outline. Call Bob 250-752-0618 or Cell 250-752-0618.

GREAT CLIPS

Is HiringHair Stylists

For Full & Part-Time

positions for our LANGLEY LOCATIONS

We Provide Customers

for Hair Stylists That Love To Cut Hair!

Sam 778-898-4120

ADMINISTRATOR ~ MEAT CLERK ~ MEAT WRAPPER

644773 BC Ltd. dba Buy Rite Foods #6 (SURREY, BC) hiring for Offi ce Administrator ($20/hr), Meat clerk, supermarket (Meat Wrapper) ($12.74/hr) both 40 hours/week + benefi ts. Apply by Fax:(604) 588-6597

An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experi-enced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Con-struction at 780-723-5051.

ATTENDANTS &SUPERVISORS

Mac’s Convenience Store o/a Subway is hiring Food Counter Attendants ($10.25/hr), Food Ser-vice Supervisors ($12/hr). All 37.50 hrs/wk. Mail CV: 1013- 7445 132 Street, Surrey, BC, V3W 1J8 [email protected]

CASHIER P/T required for Langley convenience store, $10.25/hour. Call Devinder at 604-534-3664

CHRISTIAN Youth Leader position avail. at Christ The King Lutheran Church in Surrey. Qualifi cations in-volve music leadership. Contact [email protected]. 604-581-9427.

CLEANER WANTEDMarquise is seeking a Cleaner to join our team at beautiful Tsaw-wassen Quay! Shifts are Tues. & Wed. 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. Prev. exp. power washing an asset. Candidates will be required to complete a Criminal Record Check.

Please e-mail resumes [email protected]

or fax: 604-214-8526

Construction Workers req’d F/T for JM Stucco Ltd. Surrey, BC Sal: 18/hr. Duties; Load, unloads, mix, and pour construction material. Assist heavy equipment. Perform other construction activities as directed. Contact Jagdeep Sidhu E-mail: [email protected]

EXCAVATOR OPERATORS:RDK Homes Ltd. is hiring for F/T Excavator Operators, Wage $29.00/hr. Mail: 11269 82 Avenue, Delta, BC V4C 2B8. Email:

[email protected]

F/T FORKLIFT OPERATOR NEEDED

Min. 32hrs/wk.Must have a valid ticket.

Send resume to: [email protected]

LABOURERS required Full-Time for local landscaping company in Surrey. $13/hr. & up commensurate with experience. Previous exp. is a must. Must have valid drivers license. Please call: (604)725-8521

Live-in Caregiver req’d. Sal: $11/hr. F/T, Pmt. 1+ exp. Duties: Look after and supervise child`s activities. Perform house hold light duties like preparing meal, etc. Lang: English. Hindi or Fijian as asset. Location: Brook Rd, Delta, BC. Contact Dinesh at [email protected] or fax 604.583.2720

FOOD SERVERSThe Moose Sports Pub & Grill in Surrey looking for 2 Food Servers F/T to greet customers, present menus, take orders, recommend wines, serve food / beverages, Prepare and serve specialty foods. Present bill to customers, order and maintain inventory of wines/glassware. Wage$10.30/hr Punjabi/Hindi an asset. Email:

[email protected] or fax: 604-496-5069

Landscape Labourer req’d F/T for dahliwal gardening & land scaping. Duties; Spread top soil, lay sod, plant fl owers, grass, shrubs and trees, operate and maintain power movers, tractors & other landscape maintenance equipment. Basic English and heavy lifting is required. Salary:$18/hour. Contact Harbhajan Dhaliwal @ [email protected]. Location Surrey, BC.

NOW HIRING!!!10 Customer Service positions available!

Up to $20.00/hr paid weekly

Must work well with others!!!

Call Erica 604 777 2195

SOUTH ROCK is hiring for: Paving Personnel (raker, screed, general labourers); Heavy Equipment Op-erators. Send resume to: [email protected] or 403-568-1327.

F/T LIVE-IN FEMALE CAREGIVER req’d for disabled senior female. Must have secondary school edu-cation or equivalent, fi rst aid cert. and min 6 months experience or training. Punjabi & English speak-ing. Ref’s req’d. Call 604-512-5549.

RESPITE CaregiversPLEA Community Services So-ciety is looking for individuals and families who can provide respite care in their homes for youth aged 12 to 18, who are attending a recovery program for alcohol and/or drug addiction. Qualifi ed applicants must be available on weekends and have a home that can accommodate one to two youth and meet all safety require-ments. Training and support is provided. If interested, please call a member of our Family Re-cruiting Team at:

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

BURGER KING. Looking for responsible employees, Full & Part Time. Apply at: 1035 Columbia St. (Columbia Square) New West.

FOOD COUNTER ATTENDANT req’d F/T for Dairy Queen Restau-rant. Sal: $10.50/hr. Duties: Take customers’ orders. Assemble and wrap fast food items or place it directly on plates for service to patrons. Package take-out food. Also, req’d KITCHEN HELPERS. Sal: $10.50/hr. Duties; Wash work tables and appliances. Unpack and store supplies in refrigerators. Remove trash and clean kitchen garbage containers.Contact: Gary Gill @ [email protected] Fax: 604-575-8331Location: Surrey, BC

Food Counter Attendant req’d. Sal:$10.25/hr. F/T, Pmt. No exp. Duties: Take customer orders. Prepare, heat & fi nish simple food items. Serve customers. Use manu-al & electrical appliances to clean, peel, slice & trim foodstuffs. Portion, wrap or serve food. Package take-out food. Stock shelves & refrigera-tors. General cleaning of work area. Lang: English. Contact: Surinder from Subway in Vancouver, BC at [email protected] or fax: 1.855.235.7720

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

124 FARM WORKERS

125 FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE

127 HAIRCAREPROFESSIONALS

130 HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

131 HOME CARE/SUPPORT

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

Page 28: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

28 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

CARRIERS NEEDEDIN SURREY

Please Call 604-575-5342

UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTESROUTE #PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION12-16 100 184 St - 186 St, 53A Ave - 56 Ave 12-18 89 188 St - 189 St, 53A Ave - 54 Ave 15-06 114 142 St - 144 St, 68 Ave - 70A Ave 16-06 135 148 St - 150 St, 86 Ave - 88 Ave 16-13 97 144 St - Wiltshire Dr, 74 Ave - 76 Ave 16-19 113 147 St - 150 St, 82 Ave - 84 Ave 17-04 137 142 St - 144 St, 84A Ave - 86A Ave 21-17 89 133 St - 135A, 83 Ave - 84 Ave 23-08 94 117B St - 119A St, 97A Ave - 99 Ave 23-12 110 Princess Dr - 116 St, 96 Ave - 97B Ave 23-16 74 121 St - 123 St, 96 Ave - 97 Ave 24-05 80 126 St - 128 St, 102 Ave - 104 Ave 28-22 106 152 St - 154 St, 86 Ave - 88 Ave 29-04 120 150 St - 152 St, 92 Ave - 95 Ave 36-07 116 146 St - Ellendale Dr, 111A Ave - Wallace Dr 36-12 97 136 St - Park Dr, 110 Ave - 112 Ave 36-13 94 Berg Rd - Hansen Rd, Cowen Rd - Park Dr 39-01 77 128A St - 132 St, 111 Ave - 112A St 40-01 69 128 St - 129 St, 113B Ave - 115B Ave

KITCHEN HELPERS & DISH-WASHERS Lovely Sweets & Banquet Hall is Hiring F/T Kitchen Helper & Dishwash-ers. All $10.25/hr. Send re-sume by Mail: 7168-128th St., Suite 101 Surrey, BC V3W 4E2 or Fax: 604-591-6888

KITCHEN HELPERSThe Moose Sports Pub & Grill in Surrey looking for 2 kitchen helpers FT to wash/peel/cut vegetables/fruits, clean work ta-bles, cupboards/appliances, re-move trash and clear kitchen gar-bage bins, unpack/store supplies in refrigerators / storage areas, mop fl oors, assist cook/kitchen staff. Wage $10.30/hr. Punjabi/ Hindi an asset. Email:

[email protected] or Fax: 604-496-5069

EARN EXTRA CASH! - P/T, F/T Im-mediate Openings For Men & Women. Easy Computer Work, Other Positions Are Available. Can Be Done From Home. No Experi-ence Needed. www.HWC-BC.com

FASHION SALES PEOPLE

Part-Time Position, 1-2 weekdays, ap-prox. 5 hours per day. Ideal for semi re-tired sales people. No evenings or week-ends. If you enjoy fashion sales and working with seniors, this position is for you. Requirements: clothing sales exp. & own transportation. Only those with these qualifi cations will be consid-ered. Position is for immediate start.

Please fax resumes to:604-528-8084 or email

[email protected]

AUTOMATED TANK MANUFAC-TURING INC. is looking for Weld-ers. Due to a huge expansion to our plant located in Kitscoty, Alber-ta, 20km west of Lloydminster. We have openings for 10-3rd Year Ap-prentices or Journey Person Weld-ers. We offer best wage in industry. 3rd Year Apprentice $28-$30/hour, Journey Person $32-$35/hour, higher with tank experience. Profi t sharing bonus plus manufacturing bonus incentive. Full insurance package 100% paid by company. Good working environment. Join a winning team. Call Basil or Blaine at: (offi ce)780-846-2231; (fax)780-846-2241 or send resume to [email protected]; [email protected]. Keep your feet on the ground in a safe welding en-vironment through inhole manufac-turing process. No scaffolding or elevated work platform.

Car Mechanic req’d.Sal $26.00/hr. 40hr/wk. Full time, Pmt, 2+ yrs. exp. req. Duties: Inspect & test mechani-cal units. Locate & diagnose faults and malfunctions. Determine work to be performed. Repair / replace mechanical units / components. Use hand & power tools. Test and adjust units to specifi cations. Lang: English. Contact: Dinesh from On Time Auto Body in Delta, BC. Apply to fax: 604.583.2720 or e-mail: [email protected]

CONSTRUCTION WORKERS req’d F/T for Dl-demolition Sal:$18.00/hr. Duties; Load and unload, mix, pour construction materials. Assist heavy equipment. Also, req’d CRANE OPERATORS. Salary:$28.00/hr. Duties; Operate mobile and tower cranes to lift, move, position or place equipment and materials. Contact Lucky @ [email protected] Fax: 604-576-9920 Location: Surrey,BC

ELECTRICIANS ~ Sharp Management Corporation Ltd. is Hiring F/T Electricians ($25.00/hr). Mail: 8227 158 Street, Surrey, BC V4N OR6. Fax: 604-599-7920

FABRICATOR with pressure vessel exp. req’d for Maple Ridge union shop. Stable F/T position.

Email resume: [email protected]

KAMLOOPS Honda, has an open-ing for an Journeyman Automotive Technician. We offer top industry level wages and benefi ts in a great working environment with the latest and best shop tools and equipment. If you’re interested in escaping the rain, the Kamloops area provides the opportunity to live and work in a vibrant community within easy reach of ski resorts, championship golf courses and world class fi shing and recreational lakes. Apply in strict confi dence to: Jim Oakley - General Manager 1308 Josep Way Kamloops, BC V2H 1N6 Email: [email protected] Fax: (250) 374-3656 While we thank everyone for their interest, only those candidates selected for an in-terview will be contacted.

Mechanic Helpers Req’d for Akal Diesel Truck & Trailer Repair Ltd. Sal: $16/hr. Duties; Move tools, equipment and other materials to and from work areas. Assist in repairing, maintaining and installing machinery and equipment. Assist in mechanical repairs of trucks, clearing debris from area of work, perform other tasks as required. Contact: Bhupinder Bajwa @ E-mail: akaldieseltrucktrailerrepair @yahoo.ca or Fax: 604-580-5568 Location: Surrey, BC

BEST MASSAGE IN SURREY. Beautiful girls. Master level. Magic hand massage. $60 1/2 hour. $80 45 min. $100/hour. 778-552-8886

Facial Slimming Massage

Sensation Skin Care

Tel: 604-583-6603

Piano, Guitar & VoiceLessons

----------------------------Kindermusik

Group PreschoolMusic & Movement Classes

---------------------------In Home/In Studio Lessons

Call 604-614-3340www.nuvomusicschool.com

GRAND OPENINGDANDELION SPAGet A MASSAGE From A

GORGEOUS Gal.New to Burnaby. 7805 6th St.

604-553-3222

GRAND OPENING!Green IslandRelaxationBody Care

6 0 4 -5 9 8 -8 7 3 38673A Scott Road

GREAT MASSAGEONLY $25.

20372 Fraser Highway, Langley (across from Casino) 604-510-0588

OPEN HOUSE - Join this week for only $9.95 a week. Lose weight quickly and safely and keep it off, results guaranteed! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.

Specializing in Private Events!We Come To You! Doing It All,

From Set-Up - Clean-Up.

• Home Dinner Parties • Meetings • Funerals

• Weddings • B-B-Ques• Birthdays • AnniversariesUnique Taste, Unique Menus...

Gourmet, Customized MenusTailored To Your Function...

Kristy [email protected]

DROWNING IN DEBTS? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower pay-ments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. AVOID BANK-RUPTCY! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500

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

www.pioneerwest.com

MONEYPROVIDER.COM. $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.

Need CA$H Today?

Own A Vehicle?Borrow Up To $25,000

No Credit Checks!Cash same day, local offi ce.www.PitStopLoans.com

604-777-5046

CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, educa-tion, professional, certifi cation, adoption property rental opportu-nities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

REPAIR FRIDGES, Stoves, wash-ers, dryers, d/w’s & garberators. Plumbing. Reas. 604-916-6542

ACTION CARPET & FURNACE CLEANING

Special pkg $79. Call 604-945-5801

EVA’S PROFESSIONALCLEANING SERVICES

• Housecleaning• Organizing

• Weekly./Bi-Wkly. • Move-in/out

• New Construction • Offi ces

* References * Bonded * Insured

Eva 778-886-6857IN HOME CLEANING 25 years exp

Same customers - Good Ref’s. 604-583-5885 or cell 604-347-3351

AKAL CONCRETE. All types of reno’s. •Driveways

•Sidewalks •Floors •Stairs •Forming •Retaining walls. Best rates! Best Service!

Call 778-881-0961

Concrete Lifting SpecialistBonniecrete Const Ltd

Free Est & Warranties

D Crack Repairs D Driveways D Patios, etc.

D Provide Proper Drainage

Ross 604D535D0124

PLACING & Finishing * Forming* Site Prep, old concrete removal

* Excavation & Reinforcing* Re-Re Specialists

34 Years Exp. Free Estimates.

Call: Rick (604) 202-5184

SEMI-RETIRED contractor will do small concrete jobs. Patio’s, side-walks, driveway’s. Re & re old or damaged concrete. Ken 604-532-0662

UNIQUE CONCRETEDESIGN

F All types of concrete work FF Re & Re F Forming F Site prepFDriveways FExposed FStamped

F Bobcat Work F WCB Insured778-231-9675, 778-231-9147

FREE ESTIMATES

2 GUYS-A-MUDDIN, You board it - we’ll tape it. Over 20 yrs exp. David 778-317-3065 2guysamuddin.com

A Call to Vern. Free Est. Drywall, Reno & Texture Specialist, Painting. “No job too small”. 604-825-8469

DRYWALLReliable Work ❖ Res. & Comm.

Mike 604-789-5268PSB DRYWALL ★ All Boarding, Taping, Framing & Texture. Insured work. 604-762-4657/604-764-6416

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

#1 QUALITY WORK, Big or sm. Exp. Electrician avail. Reas.rates.604-773-0341. Lic#9902

#1113 LOW COST ELECTRIC Panel Upgrade • Reno’s -Com/Res.

Heating • Trouble ShootingLicensed & Bonded. 604-522-3435

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

Mini excavator, concrete breaking, drainage, hauling. (Fully insured). PK Contracting

(604)218-0279

6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE.$11/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work.Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.

WALT’S YARDWORKSYard Clean-up / Care

- Lawn Mowing - Trimming & Edging - Yard Improvements - Planting -Gardening/Weeding - Rubbish Removal - Power Washing

~ Reasonable Rates ~Call 778-227-2431

www.riverrocklandscape.com

(778)886-7773 COMPLETE LANDSCAPEINSTALLATION SERVICES

Pavers, Retaining Walls, Sundecks. Maintenance, Fall Clean Up and Pruning.

Gutter, House & Window Washing

“Deep Clean - Brush Wash” Free Est. Randall 778-828-2127

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

135 INCOME OPPORTUNITY

154 RETAIL

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

PERSONAL SERVICES

171 ALTERNATIVE HEALTH

173 MIND BODY SPIRIT

PERSONAL SERVICES

173E HEALTH PRODUCTS

175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

182 FINANCIAL SERVICES

188 LEGAL SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

206 APPLIANCE REPAIRS

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

224 CARPET CLEANING

236 CLEANING SERVICES

242 CONCRETE & PLACING

257 DRYWALL

260 ELECTRICAL

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

260 ELECTRICAL

263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE

269 FENCING

281 GARDENING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

281 GARDENING

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

604-575-5555 toll-free 1-866-575-5777

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

Page 29: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 29

with the i e Power Pack…

Call 604.575-5555

$12ONLY

3-LINE EXAMPLESize not exactly as shown

Sell your home FAST in the highestread community newspapers & largest online sites!

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BCCla i e .com ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week!

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CARRIERS NEEDEDIN DELTA

Please Call 604-575-5342UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTESROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION1-05 112 Westview Dr - Huff Bvld, Westview Pl - Southridge Rd 2-05 110 113A St - 115 St, 77 Ave - 80 Ave 2-08 85 Bridlington Dr - 112 St, Sutton Pl - Monroe Dr 2-15 105 112 St - Fairfield Pl, 72 Ave - Glenbrook Pl 3-12 114 116 St - 118 St, 72 Ave - 73A Ave 5-06 106 Wiltshire Bvld - 108 St, 80 Ave - Hermosa Dr 5-09 50 Wiltshire Blvd - Westside Dr, Santa Monica Dr 5-10 71 Westside Dr - Modesto Dr, Wiltshire Bvld 6-02 96 114 St - 117A St, 87A Ave - 88 Ave 6-10 124 114 St - 116 St, 83 Ave - 84B Ave 7-07 83 116 St - 118 St, 94 Ave - 96 Ave 7-08 105 116 St - 117 A St, 92 Ave - 94 Ave 7-16 130 112 St - 115 St, 88 Ave - 90 Ave 7-22 77 116 A St - 117A St, 94A Ave - 95A Ave 8-01 90 River Rd - 112 St, 90 Ave - 92A Ave 8-16 55 Centre St - Karr Pl, Private Rd - Main St

Gutters -Windows -Tile Roof- Pres-sure Cleaning, Please Call Victor between 4 & 9pm. 604-589-0356

BEAUT BATHROOM & KITCHEN Plumbing + Drywall + Elect. + Tubs & Showers & Sinks + Toilets & Tile + fl oors + countertop + painting. Sen disc. Work Guar. 21 yrs exp. Call Nick 604-230-5783, 604-581-2859

BEN’S RENOVATIONS New bsmt, drywall, texture, paint, kitchen, bath, hardwood, laminate, plumbing, tiles, windows, doors & fencing. Snr’s disc. 604-507-0703.

HANDYMAN SERVICESReno’s & Repairs 604-625-4655.

Electrical, Flooring, Plumbinglangleyhandymanservices.com

RenoMan. Laminate fl oor & Tile SPECIALIST. Deck & Stairs repair

Kitch & Bath, Roofi ng. All Jobs Welcome! Res. & Comm. Many yrs of exp. QF Renos 604-728-3849

RENOVATIONSBathrooms, KitchensAdditions, Carpentry Work, Painting. Refs.

We Do Small Jobs

Spruce Bay Construction 604-613-1018

SUNDECK’S & PATIO’SVinyl or wood. Stairs, Railings, etc. 40 Yrs exp call Don (604)596-0652

KITCHEN & BATHROOMSCabinets, fl ooring, elec. & plumbing

(604)625-4655langleyhandymanservices.com

TOP NOTCH ASSOCIATES.Bathrooms, electrical, plumbing,

tile. Repairs and renos, sm jobs ok. Mike 604-506-9410.

QUICKWAY Kitchen Cabinets Ltd. ****Mention this ad for 10% Off ****

Call Raman @ 604-561-4041.

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

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

AFFORDABLE MOVINGLocal & Long Distance

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

Licenced ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 MenFree Estimate/Senior DiscountResidential~Commercial~Pianos

604-537-4140

BEST RATE MOVING

EXPERIENCED MOVERS W/ AFFORDABLE RATESStarting $40/hr.

LICENSED & INSURED✶ Local & Long Distance ✶

✶ Seniors Discount ✶

604-787-8061BEST WEST MOVING. FAST 24/7 short notice moves. Great mid mo. rates! Free Est. Tim (604)319-1010

EZ GO MOVERSQuick & Reliable Movers

From $48/per

604-580-2171www.ezgomovers.com

SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured

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

“ ABOVE THE REST “Interior & Exterior Unbeatable

Prices & Professional Crew.• Free Est. • Written Guarantee

• No Hassle • Quick Work • Insured • WCB

778-997-9582

A-OK PAINTINGForget the Rest Call The Best!

Harry 604-617-0864

A-TECH Services 604-230-3539Running this ad for 8yrs

PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299,

2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls

Cloverdale Premium quality paint.NO PAYMENT until Job is

completed. Ask us about ourLaminate Flooring &

Maid Services. www.paintspecial.com

~ PRO PAINTERS ~INTERIOR / EXTERIORQuality Work, Free Estimates

Member of Better Business BureauWCB INSURED

Vincent 543-7776AWD Interior/Ext Painting. Dry-wall/Ceiling Repairs. Call Will for a Free Estimate. (778)709-1081

INTERVAN PAINTING* Painting Contractor *

* Residential / Commercial* New construction* Re-paint Interior / Exterior We provide the hi-end quality.

WCB, Insured, Free Est’s! Call Henry 778-288-4560

Northstar Painting Ltd.- The Residential Specialists. BIG jobs, Small jobs - We do it all! Interior and Exterior Projects. Master Painters at Students Rates. WCB Safe, Reliable, Effi cient & Quality Paint. 778.245.9069

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

Hot Water TanksFurnaces ~ Boilers

Fischer Heat778-926-1017

CLOGBUSTERS Sewer & Drain We’ll clean out your drains...not your wallet. Plumbing repairs, licensed & insured. (604)861-6583

AT PANORAMA PLUMBING, HEATING & GAS SERVICES. Re-pairs & new installs. Furnace, Boil-ers, Hot water tanks etc. Jobs Small-Big, Res/Com 604-818-7801. www.panoramaplumbing.com

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

~ Certifi ed Plumber ~ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

Reno’s and Repairs

Furnace, Boilers, Hot Water HeatPlumbing Jobs ~ Reas rates

~ 604-597-3758 ~

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

Furnace cleaning with truck mounted machine

604-507-4606 or 604-312-7674

POWER WASHINGGUTTER CLEANING

SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE Call Ian 604-724-6373

Tile Roof, Window, gutter cleaning. Pressure Wash. Please Call Victor between 4 & 9pm. 604-589-0356

Best Local Roofs & Repairsin Cloverdale. WCB & liability.

Great price/refs Paul 604-328-0527

Mainland Roofi ng Ltd.25 yrs in roofi ng industry

Family owned & operated. Fully insured. We do

Cedar Shakes, conversions,concrete tiles, torchon, fi bre-glass shingles, restoration

& repairs. 20 yr labour warranty. 604-723-2626

www.mainlandroof.com

bradsjunkremoval.com

Haul Anything...But Dead Bodies!!

604.220.JUNK(5865)Serving The

Lower Mainland Since 1988

RECYCLE YOUR JUNK!Rubbish Removal, Caring for the

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

EXTRA

CHEAPRUBBISH REMOVAL

Almost for free!

(778)997-5757, (604)587-5991

DISPOSAL BINSResidential & Commercial

Services

• Portable Toilets• Fencing • Containers• Waste Management

• StorageWe Recycle!GO GREEN!

www.EconPro.com604-882-2733

RECYCLE-IT!JUNK REMOVALRecycled Earth Friendly• Estate Services • Electronics

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

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

604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca

Honest Man Rubbish removal. Fast on his service,best rates, clean-up, handyman Services. 604-782-3044

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

Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-782-9108www.PatioCoverVancouver.com

AN EXPERIENCED TILE SETTERInterior / Exterior

Call BRUCE @ 604-583-4090We always advertise with

“THE LEADER”

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

Arborist ReportsAndrew 604-618-8585

$ Best Rates $

Morris The ArboristDANGEROUS TREE REMOVAL* Pruning * Retopping * Falling

Service Surrey 25 yearsFULLY INSURED

**EMERGENCY CALL OUT**Certifi ed Arborist Reports

Morris 604-597-2286Marcus 604-818-2327

PRO TREE SERVICES Quality pruning/shaping/hedge trim-ming/ removals & stump grinding. John, 604-588-8733/604-318-9270

Tree removal done RIGHT!• Tree & Stump Removal

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

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

~ Fully Insured • Best Rates ~

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

[email protected]% OFF with this AD

HORSE BOARDING avail. in Port Coquitlam, Westside Stables. Full/semi/self board. Sandy (604)941-5434 or 778-388-5434

BERNESE MOUNTAIN Dog puppies, vet checked, 1st shots.Parents on site. Jen 604-807-3853 or [email protected]

Boston Terriers pups, ckc reg, vet checked, reputable breeder, excel-lent pedigree. (604)794-3786

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

CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are

Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at

fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977

DALMATIANS, 2M, born july 9, ckc reg., shots, dewormed, $1000-$1500. (604)793-5130, (604)723-2232

GERMAN SHEPHERD X pups, 8 weeks, $100/ea. Call (604)792-9097

GERMAN Short Hair Pointer pups, exc hunting & family dogs, cham-pion bloodlines, AKC & CKC reg’s parents, CKC reg litter, 3 F & 5 M avail. $650. (604)703-5744

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

PEK-A-POM puppies born Aug 10, 1/fem, 4/male. $650. 604-582-4095. email: [email protected]

SHELTIES SABLE COLOUR full white collars, 3 months old, taken out on leash, 2M 1F (604)826-6311

YELLOW LAB Puppies - exc stock. No papers. $400: 1-(604)820-2687

YORKIE PUPS. P/B no papers. Shots, vet checked, female, born June 20 $700. 604-702-8338 Chwk

Fridge $195; Stove $175Washer $175; Dryer $175

Stackers & DishwasherWarranty, delivery, low prices

604-534-4402-----------------------------------------

APPLIANCES WANTED* Free pick-up*604-339-0744

BLOWOUT SPECIAL. 58 New ladies umbrellas, $5 each. Call (778)239-9517.

KITCHEN TABLE & 6 Chairs, metal frame, good shape, $125 obo. Call: (778)889-6492

1YR Seasoned Alder Birch MapleClean, Split, DRY & Delivered.

Family Operated for 20 yrs. (604)726-3024

FULLY SEASONED, Alder, Maple, Birch. Split & Delivered. Free kin-dling. Phone 604-789-1492 anytime

A New Pillowtop Mattress SetStill in Packaging! Can Deliver!

$100 - Call: 604-484-0379

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

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

STEEL BUILDINGS - CANADIAN MADE! - REDUCED PRICES NOW! 20X22 $4,455. 25X26 $4,995. 30X38 $7,275. 32X50 $9,800. 40X54 $13,995. 47X80 $19,600. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca.

Chilliwack Prestigious home on 5acresw/2bdr ste & 3bdr mobile home. Near all amenities $1.225 million. 604-798-4639

W. Abbotsford: 7 bdrm Custom Built - 3676 sf, $579,900. Open House Saturday (778)549-6411

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

288 HOME REPAIRS

296 KITCHEN CABINETS

320 MOVING & STORAGE

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

320 MOVING & STORAGE

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

338 PLUMBING

341 PRESSURE WASHING

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

372 SUNDECKS

373B TILING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

374 TREE SERVICES

PETS

453 BOARDING

477 PETS

PETS

477 PETS

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

506 APPLIANCES

523 UNDER $100

524 UNDER $200

545 FUEL

548 FURNITURE

626 HOUSES FOR SALE

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

560 MISC. FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE

625 FOR SALE BY OWNER

626 HOUSES FOR SALE

GARAGE SALE Sunday September 30 from 9:30am to 4:00pm 13094 104 Ave. House-hold items, sports accessories, lots of car care items.

551 GARAGE SALES

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

Page 30: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

30 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Live the Cariboo Dream Life

Five 5 Acre LotsIn a new development with paved roads, Hydro/Tel at the lot line, gravel driveways, 2 lots with wells. Beautifully treed lots only 5 minute walk to Lone Butte store and pub, 20 minutes to 100 Mile House and right in the middle of some of Cariboo’s most famous lakes, Horse Lake, Watch Lake & Green Lake - all within 15 min’s!

Call Martin Scherrerat 250-593-2253.

WE BUY HOUSES!Older House • Damaged House

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

Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-626-9647

HOMES FOR SALE-SUPER BUYSwww.dannyevans.ca

Homelife Benchmark Realty Corp. Langley

GUILDFORD GARDENS

1 MONTHFREE RENT

1 Bdrm. From $7002 Bdrm. From $850

• 24 Hour On-site Management• PETS ALLOWED

• Minutes Walk To Elementary School & Guildford Mall

Heat & Hot Water IncludedACROSS FROM GUILDFORD

RECREATION CENTER

To Arrange aViewing Call Grace

at 604-319-7514

CEDAR COURT & CEDAR LODGE

Call for seniors specialCLEAN 1 & 2 BDRM SUITES (some w/ensuites) in Park-like

setting. Cable, heat, & hot water incl. Laundry rest area

on each fl oor. 604-588-8850 604-584-5233

www.cycloneholdings.ca

ANSWERKennedy Place Apts

604-596-9588QUESTION

Where do over 300 Adults and Children live in Peace andrespect for one another.

On a Budget orMoney No Problem,

we have a home for you.

CROSSROADSWhere Good Things Go On.

CLOVERDALE, Senior / 50+ bldg Quiet. Heat, h/w, storage included, onsite lndry 2 bdrm, corner suite, $865. No dogs. 604-574-2078 [email protected]

.Encore 1 bdrm; 2 bdrmRent Now $950 - $1225

FROM $799 “ALL IN”For less than rent,

You can own today!Affordable condos in New Town Surrey. S/S Appliances, laminate H/W Floors, W/D.

Pets Okay!

604-575-9009Guildford; Holly Park 2 bdrm condo W/D. NS/NP. $950/mo. Avail now. (778)549-6444 or (604)931-3753

GUILDFORD

RENTAL INCENTIVESFamily Friendly Complex

1, 2 & 3 Bdrms available. Close to shopping, bus route, schools & park. Small pets welcome. Ask about our senior discount.

Call: 604-585-1966.

Guildford Mall / Public LibraryEVERGREEN APARTMENTS

Crime Free Multi-Housing Certifi edAsk About Incentives!Spacious Suites, very

competitive prices. Extra large1 & 2 BDRM ste’s, lots of

storage. Heat/hot water incl. Access to Vancouver

via freeway, 1 bus to Skytrain. No pets.Phone 604-582-0465

MAYFLOWER CO-OP2 Bdrm unit. $812/mo.

Close to Surrey Ctrl Skytrain. Well maintained, clean, quiet,sec’d adult only bldg. No Pets.

Shared purchase required. Call: 604-583-2122 or

email: [email protected]

Newton Location

VILLA UMBERTO

Lovely 2 bdrm. Quiet building. 2 full baths. In-suite laundry,

secured underground parking.Adult Oriented.

Available Sept. 1st

Call: 604-596-5671 orCell 604-220-8696

SURREY

Regency Park Gardens

Large 1 & 2 bedroom units Rent from $725.00/mo.

Phone: 604-581-8332 & 604-585-0063

SOMERSET GARDENS (S. Sry) Family housing, 1851 Southmere Crescent E. 2. bdrm appt. starting at $875/mo. incl. heat. Fully reno’d

2 bdrm. $1100/mo. incl. heat w/ D/W. Pet friendly, near all

amenities. Community garden. 604-451-6676

SUNCREEK ESTATES * Large 2 & 3 Bdrm Apartments * Insuite w/d, stove, fridge, d/w * 3 fl oor levels inside suite * Wood burning fi replace * Private roof top patio * Walk to shops. Near park, pool, playground * Elementary school on block * Clubhouse, tennis court * On site security. Sorry no pets

Offi ce: 7121 - 133B St. Surrey

604-596-0916

SURREY 72 & Scott. 2 bdrm. grnd. fl r condo, 1 prk., Ldry., N/S N/P. Immed. $950 mo. (604)418-0858 or778-552-9940

SURREY CENTRAL. 1 Bdrm apt. $650. Available now. N/P. Call: 778-317-5323 or 604-916-2906.

SURREY

CUMBERLAND PARK MOVE IN INCENTIVE

• Nice, clean and quiet 1 & 2 bdrms

• W/d in some suites• Walk to Guilford Mall• Close to transit and schools• Upgraded, condo style suites• Exterior fully upgraded, new

windows & balconies• On site manager

Please call Al at 604-589-1167 for viewing.

SURREY

PARKSIDE APARTMENTS

1 Bdrm. $685 - $7152 Bdrm. $825

• Close to Skytrain, Sry. Central Mall, & SFU Sry. Campus

• 24 Hour On-site ManagementPETS ALLOWED

• Minutes Walk To Park, High School & Elementary School

Heat & Hot Water Included

“Part of the Crime FreeMulti-Housing Program”

To Arrange aViewing Call Joyce

at 604-319-7517

Lose your landlord and join our family oriented community

ARLAND MEWS CO-OPis holding Orientation on Thurs Oct

4/12 at 7:30pm in our clubhouse11865 80th Ave. Delta

Taking applics for wait list for3 & 4 bdrms market.

Participation mandatory. Share purchase $1500.

Income verifi cation required. (604)597-4773

[email protected]

NEWTON MOBILE HOME PARK.2 Large RV Pads available for

mobile home. Call 604-597-4787.

DELTA 3 bdrm., unfi nished bsmnt., near all amens. $1100 mo. Available now. (604)807-8655

FLEETWOOD - 3000sf. modern house, 5 lrg. bdrms. + den, 3 full bath, new kitchen, S/S appli. large fenc’d yrd. 2 car garage, nr. library, schools, rec. centre. N/P N/S $1950/mo.Avail. Now 604-866-3923

FLEETWOOD 3bdrm top unit of Duplex. 1100 sq ft. NS/NP. Fenced yard. Quiet lctn. Avail Immed. 15028 92A AVE. $1100+60% utilities. Ty 778-772-5754

FLEETWOOD rancher at 89 Ave and 154 Street. 2-3 bedroom and bathroom. $950/month. Call 604-591-2609 or 604-591-2958

Langley Willowbrook. 3Bdr up, 1bdr ste down, recrm, new paint &carpet. ns/np, Oct1. $1650. 604-574-4057

N.DELTA 117/92A. 4Bdr, 2ba, new paint/fl rs. Oct1, n/p, refs req. $1290 604-596-4898 or 604-765-0700.

N. DELTA. 79A & 113. 3 bdrm up & 1 bdrm down. $1150/mo. Oct 15 or Nov 1. (604) 781-2755 or 599-1040

Newton- Beautiful, Quiet area home 3 Bdrm + Den, Full bath up 1/2 Half bath lower. All new roofi ng, carpets, fl ooring and blinds. 5 appliances. Close to Kwantlen College, Parks, and Amenities. $1400/month + utilities. N/S N/P.

Rancho Management Services604-331-4278 or leave message

at 604-582-1568.

SOUTH SURREYDeluxe, Fully Equipped 2 bdrm. + Rec. Room + 2 Full Bath T/House. 6 S/S appli. D/W, W/D, & Garburator. Crown Mouldings, 9ft. ceilings, H/W laminate fl oor-ing and slate tile. Gas F/P & Alarm. 1 car garage parking. No - Smoking inside, covered patio & outdoor patio. Amenities room incls. full gym, outdoor hot tub & pool. $1900/month. Available November 1st.

604.488.9161SURREY 11836-100 Ave. 3 Bdrm up, 1 bdrm down, 3 baths. Oct 1/15 or Nov 1. $1300/mo. 778-574-0593

SURREY 128 St. nice 4 bdrm. house. Huge fenced yard, new appl. (w&d). New paint & carpets. $1290mo. N/S N/P. Avail. now. C.21 Prudential 604-889-2470

SURREY 148/Fraser. 2 Kitchens, 3 bdrms up & 2 down, lam. fl oors, garage, new countertops, w/d, fenced, covered deck. N/P. *Whole house: $2100/mo or *Up: $1300/mo & *Down: $800/mo. 604-575-3253.

SURREY- NEW 2 bdrm, no laun-dry, NS/NP. $675 inclusive. Avail Oct 1 or 15. Call 604-725-0441, 604-719-2155, 604-710-3955.

W.Clayton 188/74 3 bdrm 2000sf on 3 acres fully renov’d avail now $2100+utils Pets OK. 604-727-6058

WHALLEY: 3 bdrm rancher, newly reno’d. 2 bthrms, d/r, kitch, 2 l/rms. Laundry rm. 6 appl. fenced back-yrd, 4 prkg. 5 min walk to bus. Nr parks & school. n/s, n/p. Oct. 1st, $1700/mo. (778)889-5116

LINDA VISTA Motel Luxury Rooms w/cable, a/c & kitchens. 6498 King George Hwy. Mthly, Wkly & Daily Specials. 604-591-1171. Canadian Inn 6528 K.G.Hwy. 604-594-0010

SURREY, Scott/72nd. Nice, bright furnished room to share in house. $400/mo incl all utils. NO drugs/ alcohol. Avail now. 604-880-4944.

GUILDFORD: fully furn’d room. $400/mo inc util/sat.. Oct. 1. No drugs or parties. (604) 992-2247

S. SURREY 152/44 Ave. Room avail. full hse privileges. No drugs. $475 604-575-7271, 778-899-8095

142ST/114, $650, NEW 1 bdrm bsmt ste, bus, parking, sep. entry, incl utils, internet. N/p. 778-869-1808.

BEAR CREEK, 91/138th. Large beautiful ground level 2 bdrm suite. Near hospital. $700/mo incl utils. N/P. N/S. Call 778-222-5438.

BEAR CREEK lrg 2 bdrm grnd lvl ste, NS/NP. Avail Nov 1st. $650/mo incl utils. Call: 604-306-2346

BOULIVAR HEIGHTS. 2 bedroom basement suite for rent, new house. Available Now. Rent includes all ap-pliances, utilities,cable and wireless internet. No laundry, no smoking and no pets allowed (small dog may be given a preference). Walking distance to bus stops, schools, sky train stations and Surrey Central Mall. Laundromat only a block away. Ph: 778-322-9478

BOUNDARY PARK 125/60 Ave. 1 Bdrm gr/lvl, shrd w/d, avail. Oct. 1. n/s, $600 incl utils. (604)996-4127

BRIGHT, SPACIOUS one bedroom basement suite located in Sullivan Heights, 66A&150 includes utilities, no laundry, no smoking, no pets $550 per month. Ready for Oct 1. 604-593-8021

CHIMNEY HEIGHTS 148/72. New 2 bdrm suite,near schools. NS/NP, avail now. $650/mo incl utils. 604-594-4825 or 604-773-6110

CHIMNEY HEIGHTS NEW large 2bed suite. Near all amenities and school. $800 inc. hydro/utilities. Avail. Oct 1. 778-578-3334

Chimney Hills 1 bdrm bsmt suite large kitchen $575 util/cbl incl Cls to ament NS/NP no ldry 604-594-8576

CHIMNEY HTS. 2 bdrm bsmt. New carpet/fresh paint. Cls to schools. $700: 604-507-1815, 778-881-7402

CHIMNEY HTS. Bright 2 bdrm ste 800s/f, quiet area nr golf course. Sep. ent/alrm. Ns/np. $700/mo incl utils. 604-719-4376; 604-725-5533

Clayton 191/70 2 bdrm nr schls $700 incl hydro. 1 bdrm coachhse $750 incl hydro/ldry. 604-314-2855

CLOVERDALE 1 Bdrm. Oct. 1 or 15. $500 incl hydro/cable. Suit sin-gle, NS/NP. (604)576-6484.

CLOVERDALE, 60/168: Grd level 1 bdrm $525. Full bath, new carpet & paint. Oct 1. N/P. Suit semi-retired person. Bill 604-576-9777.

CLOVERDALE new 1 bdrm., incl. utils. & ldry. $625 mo. Available now. 604-753-9359 604-866-6230

CLOVERDALEWant the best landlords in

the world??? Then rent me...Beautiful 1,000sf. Newer 1 bdrm. + den, pri. ent. lrg. liv. rm. F/bath, quiet area NP/NS, insuite lndry.

incls. utils. cls. to transit & amenities. Available Now!!!

604-328-1883

FLEETWOOD,156/82. Lrg 3 bdrm, 1300 sf. No lndry. Avail Oct 1. $800 incl. utils. N/P. N/S. 604-543-5226.

FLEETWOOD 2 bdrm gr/lvl, nr all amens, nice quiet area, no laund, n/p. $650 incl utils. 604-442-6920.

FLEETWOOD 80/155. Very clean spac 1 bdrm quiet area, near park, $525 incl utils. NS/NP. Avail asap. Call: 604-375-4158 aft 2pm

FLEETWOOD 92/162. New lge. 1 bdrm suite. Cbl/utils/net & lndry incl. $625. NS/NP. Avail Oct 1st or 15th. Call 778-384-7933 or 604-377-8867

FRASER HEIGHTS: Brand new 2/3 bdrms, W/D, N/S, Avail anytime. Call: (604)581-0616.

N.DELTA 83/116 St. Newer 1 or 2 bdrm. prkg, storage. Quiet area. Avail Oct. 1. NS/NP. 604-594-5760

NEWTON (121/68) 2 Bdrm bsmt, $685/mo. Avail now. Newly painted. NS/NP (604) 594-1169 or 351-5609

NEWTON 1 bdrm g/l ste new bath lge bdrm nr bus & schls, $550 hy-dro incl. 604-507-4019, 833-4019

NEWTON, 64A/123. Reno 1 bdrm suite, grnd lvl. Priv ent. Near schls & bus. NS/NP. $550 incl cable. No lndry. Avail. now. 778-882-5173.

N. SURREY Bolivar Hts. Lrg 1 bdrm near skytrain ns/np, avail immed. $600 incl utils/cble. 778-889-3605.

OCEAN PARK-3 bdrm. partially furnished, all utils. incls. broadband wireless, $1535 N/S 778-294-5951

Panorama 127/61 Ave 2 bdrm cvrd deck, suit sgl or cpl. ns/np. $650incl utils. 604-644-3099 / 604-596-3478

PORT KELLS 2 bdrm, 1500 sq.ft., insuite lndry, alarm, $900/mo incl utils. Oct 1. NS/NP (604)830-6921

S.SURREY, 2 bdrm ste in new house, $1200 incl utils/net & W/D NS/NP. Avail now. 604-726-5259

Strawberry Hill. 124/75 Ave V.clean 1 bdrm. Walk to bus & schls. NS NP. $500. Avail now. 604-591-2877

SULLIVAN HEIGHTS:1 bdrm. bach. suite, $525 incls. utils./cbl./WIFI, prkg. on street, ns/np, refs. req. Avail. Oct. 1 604-710-2695

SURREY 144/74 Ave Large 2 bdrm bsmt. Own prkg. NS/NP. $675 incl net/cbl/utils. Oct 1. 604-599-9395.

SURREY 14690 63rd Ave. Brand new 1 bdrm. Avail now. $540 incl cbl/net/utils. NS/NP. 604-593-1745

SURREY 148/68 Ave. 2 Bdrm, lrg & bright. Avail now. $725/mo incl wifi , utils & cable.NS/NP. (604)572-7765

SURREY 148/76. Chimney Heights1 Bdrm suite, nr bus/amens, ns/np.Avail now. $550/mo. 604-790-5060.

SURREY 168/86. 2Bdrm with stor-age room. Ns/np. $700 incl utils & /cable Avail immed. 604-671-0477

SURREY 1 bdrm grnd level suite. Incl utils, cable, internet. N/S. N/P. Avail immed. Call 604-593-4867.

SURREY 2 bdrm. bsmnt. suite, avail. immed. N/S N/P. $600 mo. 778-928-4526 (604)572-4526

SURREY 2 bdrm bsmt in newer house. Near bus, schls & amens. Avail immed, ns/np. (604)543-0872

SURREY 71A/150A St. 2 Bdrm walk-out bsmt suite. $750/mo incl lndry, hydro & cable incl. Avail now. N/S, N/P. Call: 604-594-1244

SURREY 72/152. 1 Bdrm bsmt ste. Avail now. N/S, N/P. $625/mo incl utils/cable/WD. 778-241-2738.

SURREY 7748 146A St. 2 Bd, $650 incl util/cbl/net. Avail. now. ns/np 604-594-2782, 778-859-2782

SURREY, 8069 135A St. 2 Bdrm suite. Incl utils, cable, internet. Avail now. N/S, N/P. (604)593-4867.

SURREY 95A/132. Brand new lrg 3 bdrm grnd lvl. Full bath, near all amens. Rent neg. Incls utils, WIFI & cble w/1year lease. NS/NP. Now! 604-496-2250, 778-838-0865

Surrey Central 96/134 1100sf, 3 bdrm G/L, 1.5 bath, own w/d. Priv prkg. $1100+util. 778-891-9086

SURREY CENTRAL, Gateway Stn 1 bdrm grnd lvl suite, students wel-come. Avail now, ns/np, ref’s req’d. $495/mo + hydro. 604-951-3747.

SURREY Fleetwood 1 bdrm newly reno’d grnd lvl suite. NS/NP. Avail immed. $550/mo. (604)340-7497

SURREY Sullivan Hts 151/67Ave.Lrg 1bdr, nr all amens, ns/np, now $575 incl hydro/cble. 604-724-6609

FLEETWOOD 3 bdrm + den 1400sf, Oct 15. $1350/mo. NS/NP 604-728-6003, 778-318-4155

N.DELTA 117/90th. Totally reno’d lrg 3 bdrm upper, 1.5 baths, W/D, walk to schls, bus & shops, NS/NP, refs, lease, $1300. 604-277-5666

N. DELTA 84/Brook; reno’d 3 bdrm,liv/rm & fam/rm, lots of prkg. Lrg fncd deck & yard. $1300/mo + utils. Avail now. NS/NP. 778-242-0787

SURREY 102/141 St. 3 Bdrm upper ste & 2 bdrm bsmt ste. Avail Oct 15. Good loc, cls to schl/bus/Skytrain. Call: (778)565-1778

SURREY: 3 bdrms 1.5 bth, nr amens. Avl. now. $1150/mo pet ok. 604-521-0032, 604-318-8227.

SURREY City Ctre 1 bdrm beautiful views, Nr university, SkyTrain, shops. Newton 3 bdrm, nr Kwan-tlen, amens. Both Nice & clean. Now. 604-537-4600, 604-783-1836

EPSOM DOWNS 13699 76 Ave.3 bdrm. T/H with w/d hook-up &

car port $1010/mo.2 bdrm. T/H $900/mo. Close to

amen’s, schls & transit. Avail.NowCall: 604-451-6676

GUILDFORD GLEN 14860 101A Avenue. Clean 3 bdrm. T/H. Family housing. Available NOW. $990/mo.

Near all amenities & transit.604-451-6676.

LANGLEY, 5255 - 208 St. NEWLY PAINTED 4 bdrm T/H. 1400 sf. in cozy 9 unit complex. 1.5 bths, gas f/p 5 appls. dbl glazed windows. Cls to schools, shops, bus rt. Backs onto park. Sm pet allowed. 2 prkg spaces. $1400/mo. Avail Now. Call 778-285-0096.

LANGLEY- lrg 3 story, 3 bdrm, 3 bath. H/W fl oors. Cls to Willowbrook 5 S/S appls, 2 car garage. In-suite lndry. Now $1450 / 604-613-5742

NEWTON. 3 bdrm 5 appl, wood fl rs, mrbl/tile, i/d pool, nr amen. NS, pet ok. $1100.Oct 15. 604-594-2654

NEWTON 3 bdrm t/h, 5 appls, close to schools & shopping. Avail Nov 1, $1075/mo. Call Sue (604)594-2184

SURREY 65/135 3 Bdrm T/H, $955, washer/dryer, quiet family complex, no pets call 604-596-1099

SURREY SUTTON PLACE 13834 102 Avenue. Family housing near amenities, transit, schools. Crime-free multi-housing. 2 bdrm. - $850/mo. On site laundry. Available Now! Call 604-451-6676

SURREY TOWNHOUSES “SIMRAN VILLAS”

2 & 3 bedrooms$1100 - $1200/m

Quiet, Clean & Spacious 2.5 bath, patio, storage, d/w, w/d, f/p, N/S, N/P, 2-car garage, next to high school. Avail. Now!!

604-592-566312730 - 66 Avenue

You can buy a 2/3 bdrm town-home with $13,250 down. Choosefrom several updated units with fenced yards, 2 pets ok, new kitch-en cabinets, SS appliances, close to shopping and good schools. Costs $960/MO +$250 maint OAC, requires $42K comb’d income + good credit. Quick pre-approvals available, quick possession dates ok. Call Jodi Steeves from Re/Max Treeland for more details @ 604-833-5634.

REAL ESTATE

627 HOMES WANTED

660 LANGLEY/ALDERGROVE

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

711 CO-OP RENTALS

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS

RENTALS

736 HOMES FOR RENT

739 MOTELS, HOTELS

746 ROOMS FOR RENT

RENTALS

748 SHARED ACCOMMODATION

750 SUITES, LOWER

RENTALS

750 SUITES, LOWER

751 SUITES, UPPER

752 TOWNHOUSESWE’RE ON THE WEB

www.bcclassified.com

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

Page 31: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Surrey/North Delta Leader 31

with the i e Power Pack…

Call 604.575-5555

$12ONLY

3-LINE EXAMPLESize not exactly as shown

Sell your vehicle FAST in the highestread community newspapers & largest online sites!

Li iteTime Offer!

Sell your Car!

2010 VENZA: Like new, only 20,000 kms, fully loaded, automatic, 6 cylinder, dvd sys-tem. $22,800. 604-575-5555.

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On July 23, 2012, in the parking

garage of 13380 108 Avenue,

Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the

Surrey RCMP seized, at the time

indicated, a vehicle that contained

the subject property, described as:

$8,123.27 CAD, on or about 19:33

Hours.

The subject property was seized

following a search pursuant

to a warrant granted pursuant

to section 268(1) (Aggravated

assault) of the Criminal Code of

Canada (CCC) because there was

evidence that the subject property

was obtained by crime pursuant

to section 354(1) (Possession of

property obtained by crime) CCC

in respect of offences pursuant

to the Controlled Drugs and

Substances Act of Canada.

Notice is hereby given that the

subject property, CFO file Number:

2012-1190, is subject to forfeiture

under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will

be forfeited to the Government

for disposal by the Director of

Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of

dispute is filed with the Director

within the time period set out in

this notice.

A notice of dispute may be filed by

a person who claims to have an

interest in all or part of the subject

property. The notice of dispute

must be filed within 60 days of the

date upon which this notice is first

published.

You may obtain the form of a

notice of dispute, which must meet

the requirements of Section 14.07

of the CFA, from the Director’s

website, accessible online at www.

pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The

notice must be in writing, signed

in the presence of a lawyer or

notary public, and mailed to the

Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234

Station Provincial Government,

Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.

In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:

PEOPLEMost wonderful SurreyiteMost wonderful North DeltanBusiness personEntrepreneurEnvironmentalistSocial activistAnimal advocate

POLITICSMost trustworthy politicianPolitician most seen around townMost invisible politicianBest use of taxpayers’ moneyWorst use of taxpayers’ money

LIFEOutdoor activity (in good weather)Outdoor activity (in bad weather)Indoor activityPlace to take a touristPlace to take your parentsPlace to take your kidsPlace to escape stress (in Surrey or North Delta)Spot to people watchNeighbourhoodNew housing developmentNew non-residential buildingSeniors’ care homeParkLocal charity

HEALTH & FITNESSFitness TrainerFitness facilityPilates studioYoga studioMartial arts studioSporting goods storeRunning clubWeight loss centreDental clinicMedical clinicChiropractorMassage therapist

CULTUREFestival or eventTheatre companyDance companyChoral groupArt gallery

STYLEHair salonManicure/pedicureLaser eye centreEyewear storeSpaJewellerTattoo/piercing shopTanning salonWomen’s clothing storeMen’s clothing storeKids’ clothesVintage clothing shopShoe store

SERVICESAuto repair and serviceTire storeCar washBanquet hallEducation facilityTravel agencyFinancial institutionRealtorReal estate agencyMortgage brokerConstruction/renovation contractorHome improvement storeHotelTaxi companyPawn shop

SHOPPINGShopping centreCar dealership (new)Car dealership (used)Home furnishings storeHome appliances storeHome electronics storeFlooring retailerOffice furniture storeCellphone/mobile devices storeGarden centreFloristThrift shop/2nd-hand storeArt supplies storePet storeAgriculture/farm suppliesBaby/toddler storeToy storeUnique gifts

LEISUREBowling alleyCommunity centreGolf courseMovie theatreBook storeMusic store

DINING INGrocery storeEthnic grocery storeOrganic products storeFarm marketHome deliveryTake-outLiquor storeU-brew beer/wine

DINING OUTNew restaurant (opened in 2011)Chain restaurantDinerFast foodFine diningBreakfast/brunchLate-night eatingFamily-friendly restaurantRestaurant for a first datePatioNeighbourhood pubCoffee shop Bakery Sweet shopBurgerButter chickenFish and chipsSandwichesPizzaSteakhouseSushiChineseGreekIndianItalianJapaneseFilipinoKoreanMalaysianMexicanThaiVietnameseVegetarian

AFTER DARKBar (casual)Bar (classy)Cheap drinksAppiesPlace to hear live musicPlace to dancePlace to hang out with friendsPlace to meet new people

WE WANTYOUROPINION

Here is How You Vote...surreyleader.com

$

Surrey-North Delta

RE

ADERS’ CHO

ICE2012

AWARDS

Vote forYOURfavourite

local places, people, etc.

2012

TRANSPORTATION

810 AUTO FINANCING

DreamCatcher Auto Loans“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -

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

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

FIRST TIME AUTO BUYERS WANTED. Friendly staff will guide you through the process. www.cre-ditdrivers.ca 1-888-593-6095.GUARANTEED Auto Loans 1-888-229-0744 or apply at: www. greatcanadianautocredit.com

818 CARS - DOMESTIC

1988 Olds Cutlass Classic Supreme 154,000 km, V8, 5L, well maint. $3600. 604-534-6098

TRANSPORTATION

818 CARS - DOMESTIC

2000 SUNFIRE - 87K, Sports car, spoiler. Auto, a/c, cd, Keyless entry, alarm. $3300: (604)502-9912

2006 PONTIAC Pursuit - 4 dr auto, gray colour. Spoiler p/l, cd, a/c, p/s, p/b. 122K. $5500 604-502-9912

2007 Pontiac Wave. 52,900/kms 1 Owner, blue, 5/door h/back. Gas miser, 4/cyl, 5/spd. Like new $6500/obo. Call 604-575-7468.

DODGE Red 2005 SX 2.0 I have owned it since new and has 116 km’s. Is in excellent condition and me-chanically sound - Auto, power locks, A/C, 4 cylinder with recent tune-up/excellent fuel mileage. Has full sized alloy wheel spare tire. $3800 OBO Brian - 604 831 2582.

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

1992 TOYOTA Camry, fully loaded, rebuilt, 4 dr auto, AirCared, good cond, $1300 obo. (778)889-6492

1995 BMW 740i, 92K New tires/brakes. No accidnts or mech problems. $5950. 604-530-5431.

1996 VW JETTA, 4 door, p/b, p/w, sunroof, a/c, cruise, heated seats, etc. Mech. good, clean inside. Must be seen. $5,499. 604-746-7559

2002 NISSAN SENTRA GXE 128k, manual trans. One owner, no acci-dents. $3900. (604)657-6844

2004 MERCEDES E500, 4-matic, 4 dr full load auto black 145K gd cond no accid, $9300. 778-881-1216.

2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT 4 dr auto, silver - p/w, a/c, sunroof, Only 6000k. $12,500: (604)825-9477

818 CARS - DOMESTIC

TRANSPORTATION

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

2006 MAZDA 3 - 4 dr sedan. auto, 70,000 kms, Blue. Many options. $7000/fi rm. Call (604)538-4883

2011 NISSAN VERSA 4/dr h/back, auto, 25,000/km, red, many options, $8600/fi rm. 604-538-9257.

830 MOTORCYCLES

2002 Honda Goldwing 50,000K. Travel pegs, $12,500. Well main-tained. Kept inside (604)657-6844

2005 Honda VTX 1300C - $5000 (Port Coquitlam) 44,509kms, Co-bra pipes, Stage 1 performance system, lots of chrome.

778-240-4008.

838 RECREATIONAL/SALE

1996 22’ SLUMBER QUEEN 5th wheel. Interior like new, has to be seen to appreciate. New stereo, back up camera, fl at screen TV, new HD antenna, m/w, a/c. Incl. hitch. $7,000. 604-625-7761 Aldergrove

2007 28’ Deluxe Springdale Trailer with 1 pullout, slps 6, exc cond, $16,900 obo. Call: 604-928-5441.

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL

ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME

604.683.2200

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

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TRANSPORTATION

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

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

Metals •Batteries •Machinery •Lead

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Autos • Trucks• Equipment Removal

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

851 TRUCKS & VANS

2005 DODGE CARAVAN - 145K, no acc. Very clean, good cond. Burgundy. $6500: (604)502-9912

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS

Re: The Estate of Raymond Stephen Listwin, deceased, formerly of Surrey, British

Columbia.

Creditors and others having claims against the estate of

Raymond Stephen Listwin, are hereby notifi ed under section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be sent to

the executrix c/o Rosberg Sawatzky LLP #201, 20353 64th

Avenue, Langley, BC V2Y 1N5 on or before November 1, 2012 after which date the executrix will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having re-gard only to the claims of which the executrix then has notice.

Notice to Creditorsand Others

Re: The Estate ofFRANK KRAHNBEL,

deceased, formerly ofDelta, British Columbia.

Creditor and others having claims against the estate of Frank Krahnbel are hereby notifi ed under section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be sent to the Executrix at 42 - 1480 Foster Street, White Rock, British Columbia on or before October 31, 2012, after which date the Executrix will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having regard to the claims of which the Executrix then has notice.

Page 32: Surrey North Delta Leader, October 02, 2012

32 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, October 2, 2012

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