24
It’s like winning an Oscar 12 years straight. Being voted best collision repair in Vancouver 12 years in a row is an honour – and proof that our quality, service and exclusive AIR MILES ® reward miles have made an impression. We thank our customers for so many encores. And expect our future performances to be even better. ®™ Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under licence by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Craftsman Collision Ltd. @craftsmanshops by Jeff Nagel A NEW SURREY-COQUITLAM bridge bypass- ing New Westminster is one of six recom- mended options TransLink has unveiled to replace the aging Pattullo Bridge that could profoundly change traffic patterns. ey were released Monday as part of a new round of public consultation this month. And no matter which option is chosen, TransLink’s review of them suggests the replacement span will be tolled. “Costs of $1 billion would be recoverable through user fees,” the report says, while adding a crossing costing more than that would need senior government contribu- tions as well. e most unusual option studied was a possible new four-lane Tree Island crossing well downstream of the Queensborough Bridge. It would have offered a more direct Delta-Burnaby connection that would have taken traffic from the Alex Fraser Bridge in a near straight line over the Fraser’s north arm, instead of splitting either leſt to Rich- mond or right to Queensborough. But TransLink’s screening review found it wouldn’t serve the existing Surrey-New Westminster traffic and Burnaby and Rich- mond fear more agricultural and industrial land would be lost. It would act more as an alternative to the Queensborough Bridge than the Pattullo, the review said, but most motorists won’t pay the tolls to cover the $825-million cost of a bridge there if the Queensborough is free. Two of them don’t call for a new bridge at all, but rehabilitating the existing Pattullo for safer three- or four-lane use at a cost of $330 to $400 million, still funded by tolls. Both would improve seismic and struc- tural safety but risks of head-on crashes would continue as there’d be no median barrier either in the three-lane counterflow or four-lane configuration. An all-new bridge near the existing one – either four, five or six lanes – would bet- NEW PATTULLO BRIDGE CROSSINGS PROPOSED by Jeff Nagel KINDER MORGAN Canada plans to stake out an almost all-new corridor for its second oil pipeline from Port Kells in Surrey to Burnaby to avoid digging through private property in densely popu- lated neigh- bour- hoods. Greg Toth, senior project direc- tor of the Trans Mountain pipeline twinning, said following the existing right-of-way – as the company intends on most of the rest of the route through the Fraser Valley and the Interior – would be too disrup- Pipeline to take all-new route from Surrey to Burnaby Oil transport: Kinder Morgan aims to avoid homes Multiple medals at high school meet page 17 Serving Surrey and North Delta See PATTULLO / Page 5 See MP / Page 5 Life sentence for young mom’s murder page 8 FILE PHOTO / THE LEADER The six new Pattullo Bridge replacement options all come with tolls. Editorial 6 Letters 7 Life 14 Sports 17 Classifieds 19 Save time, save money. www.surreyleader.com New crossing could offer a more direct Surrey-Coquitlam link Tuesday June 4, 2013 “We’re trying to align the pipeline in those pre- existing corridors.” Greg Toth

Surrey North Delta Leader, June 04, 2013

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June 04, 2013 edition of the Surrey North Delta Leader

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It’s like winning an Oscar 12 years straight.Being voted best collision repair in Vancouver 12 years in a row is an honour – and proof that

our quality, service and exclusive AIR MILES® reward miles have made an impression. We thank our customers for so many encores. And expect our future performances to be even better.

®™ Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under licence by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Craftsman Collision Ltd. @craftsmanshops

by Jeff Nagel

A NEW SURREY-COQUITLAM bridge bypass-ing New Westminster is one of six recom-mended options TransLink has unveiled to replace the aging Pattullo Bridge that could profoundly change traffi c patterns.

Th ey were released Monday as part of a new round of public consultation this month.

And no matter which option is chosen, TransLink’s review of them suggests the replacement span will be tolled.

“Costs of $1 billion would be recoverable through user fees,” the report says, while adding a crossing costing more than that would need senior government contribu-

tions as well.Th e most unusual option studied was a

possible new four-lane Tree Island crossing well downstream of the Queensborough Bridge.

It would have off ered a more direct Delta-Burnaby connection that would have taken traffi c from the Alex Fraser Bridge in a near straight line over the Fraser’s north arm, instead of splitting either left to Rich-mond or right to Queensborough.

But TransLink’s screening review found it wouldn’t serve the existing Surrey-New Westminster traffi c and Burnaby and Rich-mond fear more agricultural and industrial land would be lost.

It would act more as an alternative to the

Queensborough Bridge than the Pattullo, the review said, but most motorists won’t pay the tolls to cover the $825-million cost of a bridge there if the Queensborough is free.

Two of them don’t call for a new bridge at all, but rehabilitating the existing Pattullo for safer three- or four-lane use at a cost of $330 to $400 million, still funded by tolls.

Both would improve seismic and struc-tural safety but risks of head-on crashes would continue as there’d be no median barrier either in the three-lane counterfl ow or four-lane confi guration.

An all-new bridge near the existing one – either four, fi ve or six lanes – would bet-

NEW PATTULLO BRIDGE CROSSINGS PROPOSED

by Jeff Nagel

KINDER MORGAN Canada plans to stake out an almost all-new corridor for its second oil pipeline from Port

Kells in Surrey to Burnaby to avoid digging through private property in densely popu-lated neigh-bour-hoods.

Greg Toth, senior project direc-tor of the Trans Mountain pipeline twinning, said following the existing right-of-way – as the company intends on most of the rest of the route through the Fraser Valley and the Interior – would be too disrup-

Pipeline to take all-new route from

Surrey to Burnaby

Oil transport: Kinder Morgan aims to avoid

homes

Multiple medals at high school meet

page 17

Serving Surrey and North Delta

See PATTULLO / Page 5See MP / Page 5

Life sentence for young mom’s murder page 8

FILE PHOTO / THE LEADER

The six new Pattullo Bridge replacement options all come with tolls.

Editorial 6 Letters 7 Life 14 Sports 17 Classi� eds 19 Save time, save money.

www.surreyleader.com

New crossing could offer a more direct Surrey-Coquitlam link

Tuesday June 4, 2013

“We’re trying to align the pipeline in those pre-existing

corridors.”

Greg Toth

2 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

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EVAN SEAL / THE LEADERWhile it’s relatively easy to get public agreement on what transit improvements are needed, TransLink CEO Ian Jarvis said it’s more difficult to hammer out consensus on a fair and equitable way to pay for it.

Police to seek charges in rodeo

attack

by Jeff Nagel

TransLInk bOard chair Nancy Olewiler hopes the re-elected B.C. Liberal government soon clarifies its plans for a referendum on increased transit funding.

“The premier made that commitment and I’m waiting like everybody else to find out what that actually means,” Olewiler said Wednesday following TransLink’s annual general meeting.

Olewiler said there’s considerable skepticism about a referendum on paying more taxes for transit after the defeat of the Harmonized Sales Tax.

The promised referendum in November 2014, at the same time as municipal elections, was pledged in the B.C. Liberal platform with few details.

Transit advocates fear voters will block new funding and leave the system unable to expand.

During the election campaign, Transportation Minister Mary Polak suggested voters wouldn’t have a veto over all new funding – they’d have to approve some new revenue source for TransLink from a menu of options.

Olewiler said that would have been “wonderful.” But Premier Christy Clark quickly contradicted her minister and emphasized no new money for TransLink would be extracted from residents without their consent in the referendum.

Newly elected B.C. Liberal MLA for Surrey-Fleetwood Peter Fassbender is expected to play a significant role in the debate within government, but said Thursday he can’t predict how the referendum promise will play out.

“Everybody’s saying ‘What’s the question?’ I don’t know because we haven’t done the work to formulate what it is and where we want to go. But I don’t think we should be afraid of it.”

Fassbender said government might as a first step decide on short-term funding that would bridge TransLink through, while more complex details of longer-term options are worked out, possibly over “five or six years.”

TransLink CEO Ian Jarvis said it’s relatively easy to get public agreement on what transit improvements are needed, but more difficult to hammer out consensus on a fair and equitable way to pay for it.

“You can have all sorts of ideas, but if they don’t resonate and aren’t sup-ported by the people who actually pay the taxes and fees, we’re hooped,” Jarvis said.

“There’s so many options with respect to what question you put forward and what you’re asking the public. If that’s the direction we’re going, what does it mean?”

While TransLink has focused in the last two years on cost savings, Jarvis said that won’t solve the need for much more money to expand the system.

He said new funding is needed because TransLink’s gas tax has declined and is unsustainable and other sources like fares and property tax are maxed out.

“You can’t save your way to growth,” he said. “We have one million more people coming to this region and half-a-million more jobs. We need to be ready for that growth.”

One of the more contentious funding ideas is road pric-ing, and both Olewiler and Jarvis continue to talk up the idea, while saying it would depend on political support.

Jarvis said both transit fares, through the new Compass card system, and road tolls could be used to control congestion by pricing travel differently at different times and routes, to encourage more trips to shift to off-peak times or underused routes.

Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart said if taxpayers won’t pay for more transit they face not just much worse congestion but bigger bills to upgrade the road network.

Womanvideotaped

altercation with a protestor in May

by Kevin Diakiw

POLICE havE interviewed a woman behind a racial-themed verbal attack near the Cloverdale Rodeo earlier this month and will be recommend-ing charges of assault to Crown counsel.

The Langley woman does not have a previous criminal record, but approached an animal rights protes-tor at 4 p.m. on Saturday, May 18, shouting racial slurs at her.

The protestor had been hold-ing a sign that read, “Rodeo... where coward boys have fun.”

The Langley woman took offence to the sign and began shouting at the protestor, who started filming the episode for 47 seconds.

The woman made reference to colour of the protestor’s skin.

“I like the colour you are because it comes out of my a--,” she says in the video. “Yeah, I am f---ing racist, I am. I will blow your country up...”

The protestor filmed the attack and posted it to YouTube.com

“I was protesting the cloverdale rodeo may 18/13 and this lady did not like my sign,” she wrote below her video. “She called me racist names, spat on my face, then grabbed me by my hair punched me and kicked me.”

TransLink board chair, CEO wait for Christy Clark government to clarify intent

Provincial GunAmnesty Program runs

throughout June by Kevin Diakiw

Police across B.C. are collecting firearms during the annual Gun Amnesty.

The program is designed to get unwanted guns out of B.C. homes, making them safer for everyone and reducing the chance they will fall into the wrong hands due to theft.

“Unwanted weapons consistently represent a potential hazard,” says Surrey RCMP Cpl.

Bert Paquet. “Too often we have seen the dev-astating consequences of firearms not prop-erly stored or falling into the wrong hands.”

The program will run throughout the month of June, when residents of Delta and Surrey will be able to safely dispose of unwanted weapons and ammunition that have not been used in a criminal offence.

They will not face weapons-related Crimi-nal Code charges as a result.

Anyone who possesses guns, ammuni-tion and weapons, even imitation and pellet weapons, along with pepper spray and knives, are being asked to phone local police on the non-emergency line (Delta Police are at 604-946-4411 and the Surrey RCMP are at 604-599-0502).

Then, uniformed police officers will attend the caller’s residence to retrieve the weapons.

Do not bring the firearm to the door, and don’t attempt to bring it to the police station.

What should you tell the operator when you call?

• Describe the items as best you can. Many firearms are marked with the make, model, serial number and caliber.

• Be clear about any ammunition that you may have, especially if anything could be considered explosive.

For further information on the B.C. Gun Amnesty visit www.bcgunamnesty.ca

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“Everybody’s saying, ‘What’s the question?’ I don’t know because we haven’t done the work to formulate

what it is...”

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Woman filmed at rodeo.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 3

UP IN THE AIR:Liberals’ referendum promise

hangs over transit’s future

by Jeff Nagel

A federAl NDP MP predicts Kinder Morgan will have to offer B.C. and affected communities hundreds of millions of dollars a year if it wants its Trans Moun-tain oil pipeline twinning to be seriously considered.

Kennedy Stewart, the federal NDP’s science and technology critic, said he expects the company to make a low-ball offer to satisfy the B.C. government’s demand for a share of benefits to compensate for the risk.

The Burnaby-Douglas MP estimates Kinder Morgan stands to earn $5 per barrel of oil it transports, so company profits on the 890,000-barrel-per-day dual pipelines could top $1.5 billion a year.

An offer to B.C. of a few cents per barrel shipped for a provincial benefits fund supporting First Nations, affected communities, and clean-up response measures would be far too low, Stewart said.

But he said a much more generous figure would have to be considered.

“If Kinder Morgan said $2.50 a barrel – half of the revenue would

go to the province – you would take that back to the community and talk to the community about it,” Stewart said.

It’s one of the first suggestions from the ranks of pipeline oppo-nents that a sufficiently attractive offer could trump environmental worries.

“I’m against this project. But I think you always have to keep your mind open when you’re looking at economics and then go back to your community with particular offers.”

Stewart said he didn’t pick the $2.50 figure – he says it arose through conversations with his constituents, who are seeking a series of commitments from Kinder Morgan, including assur-ances that no homes will be expro-priated, that temporary foreign workers won’t build the pipeline and that no construction will begin without local referenda.

Stewart noted he’s not in any position to negotiate, adding re-elected Premier Christy Clark will have to decide what price is fair.

“This is where this conversa-tion is heading – how much does Kinder Morgan have to pay to put this pipeline through

communities.”Ben West, a ForestEthics

campaigner opposed to transport of bitumen from the Alberta oil sands, said he was surprised by Stewart’s comments.

“There is no amount of money that would make this a good idea,” West said.

He said the environmental risk of a spill outweights any amount of financial compensation.

West called the notion a “non-starter” because he doubts Kinder Morgan would ever offer anywhere near $2.50 a barrel.

Asked about the company’s plans to ensure Trans Mountain’s expansion benefits B.C., senior project director Greg Toth called B.C.’s demand for a fair share a “government-to-government” question.

He said local and regional benefits will come from the jobs in building and operating the new pipeline.

“We are looking at a community investment program at a local level,” Toth added. “What are the things we can do as part of the project to offset or mitigate the potential impacts of constructing the pipeline.”

NDP critic suggests price to accept oil

$2.50 per barrel offer might sway communities: MP

4 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

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ter resist a moderate quake, river scour or ship collision, all of which could knock the existing 75-year-old span out of service.

Those three options range from $820 mil-lion for four lanes to $1.1 billion for six. An eight-lane option was ruled out as attracting too much traffic and running counter to goals to move more people by cycling, walking and transit.

The five- and six-lane options may spur more auto-oriented development than four lanes, it said.

A last option recom-mended for more study offers a new four-lane Surrey-Coquitlam bridge, while also rehabilitating the old Pattullo for two- or

three-lane use.That would cost an

estimated $1.4 to $1.5 billion, running from King George Boulevard through Surrey’s Brid-geview neighbourhood across to Braid Street and Highway 1’s Bru-nette interchange.

It lets traffic bypass

New Westminster, going the farthest to address concern there about worsening con-gestion.

“Travel times and reliability would improve for most users,” the report said. “Goods movement would likely benefit overall, given more direct connections to Highway 1, United Boulevard and the northeast sector.”

TransLink’s review recommends against simply dismantling the current bridge or converting it to either a two-lane bridge or one for cyclists and pedestrians only. Doing so would cause much heavier truck congestion at other crossings, it said.

Also panned were four-lane tunnel sce-narios on the existing

route ($2.9 to $4.8 billion) and four or six-lane bridge options at Sapperton Bar ($1.7 billion to $3.1 billion.)

Spokesperson Patri-cia MacNeil said the

issue of tolling isn’t yet settled and TransLink wants public feedback on all studied options, not just the recom-mended ones, to see if “we are on the right

track.”Public open houses

are set for June 6, 11 and 15 in New West-minster and June 8, 12, and 13 in Surrey, with additional small

group meetings also scheduled in both cit-ies. For more details see pattullobridgere-view.ca

[email protected]

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 5

tive to existing land owners.“We’re looking to municipal infra-

structure, highways, railway lands and others that we can co-locate with,” Toth said in an interview Monday. “We’re trying to align the pipeline in those pre-existing corridors.”

Besides following local streets or utility corridors, the pipeline could be dug through municipal or regional parks and greenways, the company confirmed.

A lengthy project description filed last week by Kinder Morgan sheds little new light on precisely what land would be dug up.

A 150-metre wide corridor is to be unveiled for study purposes as part of Kinder Morgan’s formal application by the end of this year to federal regulators to build the new pipeline.

Detailed engineering would later nar-row the construction zone to a smaller area within an 18-metre right-of-way. Further 30-metre “safety zones” created on either side of the right-of-way would give the company a perpetual sign off on any land alterations.

According to the new filing, the existing tank farm in Burnaby would be doubled to 26 tanks and one more tank would be added at Sumas.

Toth said the expansion in Burnaby – more than tripling storage capacity to 5.6 million barrels of oil – is necessary to provide scheduling flexibility, as the company doesn’t control when tankers arrive.

Burnaby-Douglas NDP MP Kennedy Stewart said the Burnaby tank farm expansion is a concern.

“They’re all up on a hill,” Stewart said. “What if you had an earthquake? That’s the big one for me. In the Japanese earthquake a lot of the things blowing up were refineries and storage tanks.”

Even if the pipeline right-of-way runs down alleys or municipal roads, he said, the 30-metre safety zones on either side could still lower property

values because homeowners may be constrained from installing a pool or making other improvements in their yard.

The project would include replacing the existing tanker dock at Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby with two new docks that have three berths for tankers.

Dredging may be needed as part of dock construction, the project descrip-tion says.

But officials say they have no plans to dredge the Second Narrows or to use bigger tankers than the ones already in use in the harbour today.

Capacity of the line is currently 300,000 barrels a day, and Kinder Morgan’s second pipe would increase capacity to 890,000 barrels a day.

The project description says the ter-minal currently handles an average of five tankers and three barges a month, with two barges outgoing with crude oil and one incoming with jet fuel. Shipments have varied widely in recent years depending on market demand.

The expansion would boost the num-ber of oil tanker shipments to as many as 400 per year.

In operation since 1953, the Trans Mountain system extends 1,150 kilo-metres from Edmonton along Highway 16 through Jasper National Park, then southwest along Highway 5 to termi-nals at Kamloops, Sumas, and Burnaby.

The original 24-inch line has been modified several times over the years, allowing it to transport refined fuels as refineries closed in Kamloops and the Lower Mainland in the 1980s and 1990s.

The pipeline supplies crude oil to Chevron’s Burnaby refinery and the Westridge Marine Terminal, where since 1956 ships have carried crude to California, the U.S. Gulf Coast and Asia. A branch line from Sumas sup-plies refineries at Anacortes, Ferndale and Cherry Point in Washington state.

– with files from Tom Fletcher

Pattullo: Public open houses held through JuneFrom page 1

MP: Expanding Burnaby tank farm a concernFrom page 1

“Travel times and reliability

would improve for most

users. Goods movement

would likely benefit

overall...”

Report

In the minds of many Canadians, the purpose of the Canadian Senate is a bit of a mystery.

It’s a body that’s not elected, what it accomplishes is less than clear, and news about it only erupts when politicians talk about reform, or more

recently, when senators play fast and loose with the purse strings of taxpayers.The original purpose of the Senate was to give a sober second thought to bills

passed by elected Members of Parliament, and, according to its website, to bolster underrepresented groups, such as women, aboriginal people and minorities.

When it comes to being a champion of aboriginal, women’s or minority rights, the Senate is perhaps the last organization that leaps to mind.

As well intentioned as the Senate was when created in 1867, today the body is effectively a patronage system for the ruling party to reward loyal and often high-profile Canadians with prestigious well-paid jobs. A more cynical interpretation is the Senate acts as no more than a slush fund to carry out political favours.

This week B.C. Premier Christy Clark reiterated her stance that the Senate should be abolished. She said if that’s not possible, B.C. will start electing its sena-tors in an attempt to bring some validity to the body which cost Canadians $106 million in 2012 (minus the $90,000 paid back by senator Mike Duffy).

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has long advocated reforming Senate terms and appointment procedures, or even doing away with it altogether.

That hasn’t stopped Harper from appointing 56 Conservative senators (and two elected in Alberta) over his time in office.

If Parliament can’t abolish the Senate or it accepts that it has a reason to exist, change is desperately needed. The number of senators per province isn’t based on population and it’s not supposed to be, but the current distribution is all over the map.

Does it make sense that New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have 10 senators each and Quebec has 24, while Alberta has six and B.C. has five?

For the Senate to have credibility, rather than act as a vehicle for patronage and self-serving party loyalty, each province should have an equal number of elected senators, perhaps two or four each.

Senators themselves should not be sitting silent, and should be seeking to reform an institution that has no accountability or credibility in terms of work-ing in the interests of Canadians.

One of Premier Christy Clark’s first tasks of the new term will be to re-sume trade talks with Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Several daunting tasks await. Clark must repair relations with Alberta Premier Alison Redford after B.C.’s theatrics over oil pipelines before the election, and prepare for the results of a federal environmental review of the Enbridge Northern Gateway proposal in the fall.

Some people were surprised on Friday when the B.C. government released its final written submission to the federal environmen-tal review panel on Northern Gateway. It was widely interpreted as B.C.’s outright rejection of the project, but it’s not as simple as that.

Clark and B.C. Environment Minister Terry Lake signalled several times before the election that they were not getting the answers they wanted from Enbridge. But they stuck to the principle that the hearings must be completed.

The NDP repeated for months that the B.C. Liberal government had forfeited its

own review and handed jurisdiction over the environmental assessment to Ottawa. In fact, a pipeline that runs across two provinces is by definition a matter of federal jurisdiction. B.C. could have held its own parallel set of hear-ings, which was the NDP’s stated preference, but in no circumstance does the province have a veto. And both the B.C. Liberal government and Enbridge were careful to leave the door open for further talks.

A closer reading of their com-ments shows that the key differ-ence at this stage is one of timing.

“The panel must determine if it is appropriate to grant a certificate for the project as currently pro-posed on the basis of a promise to do more study and planning after the certificate is granted,” Lake said. “Our government does not believe that a certificate should be granted before these important questions are answered.”

According to Enbridge executive Janet Holder, those important questions can’t all

be answered until the hearings are over. The company maintains that every river crossing and spill response plan can’t be done in detail during the two-year hearings.

B.C.’s final submission runs to nearly 100 pages. It goes into detail on the inconsistencies and unanswered questions on such vital topics as whether diluted bitumen can sink in water.

In short, the province argues that it can sink if the oil is in fresh water, or if it is exposed to weathering so lighter fractions evaporate, or if it is mixed with sediments that increase its density.

These are pertinent condi-tions if heavy oil were to leak

into a river in springtime, when water runs fast and cold and brown with sediment. Then there are the obstacles presented by respond-ing to a spill in remote wilderness and heavy snow.

Given both provincial and aboriginal oppo-

sition in B.C., the Enbridge pipeline is unlikely to be imposed, and last week Conservative cabinet minister James Moore clearly ruled that out.

The B.C. government has consistently maintained that the current project does not meet Clark’s often-repeated five conditions, including the vaguely defined “fair share” of revenues, and Moore said the federal govern-ment agrees with those conditions.

The B.C. government has to face some other uncomfortable realities as well. If heavy oil pipelines are such a risk, how does B.C. man-age the one that has stretched across remote and populated areas for 60 years?

Does the government take a stand against new pipelines, and then watch as rail cars full of heavy oil cross those same rivers?

No permit is required for that, and in fact there are more hazardous materials than oil moving by rail and road across the province today.

Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and colum-nist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com

[email protected]

Elect or abolish?

Enbridge pipeline isn’t dead yet

CANADA’S SENATE

ENERGY

The Leader

editorPaula Carlson

CirCulation Manager

Sherri Hemery

RAESIDE

Published and printed by Black Press Ltd. at 5450 152 St., Surrey, B.C.

OPINION

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newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder.

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6 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

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Ma Murray Awards

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Last year, TransLink delivered more and bet-ter service more efficiently and achieved record-level customer satisfaction.

This is the opening statement in TransLink’s invitation to their Annual General Meeting on May 29.

That statement is a travesty. Over 30,000 HandyDART trips were denied last year. Trans-Link has taken 10,000 hours of HandyDART service and given it to taxis. Up to 28 HandyD-art drivers are to be laid off on July 22.

Devastating working people’s lives and forc-

ing vulnerable people into taxies is no answer to a crisis. HandyDART passengers are not ‘satisfied’ while being stranded in their homes. HandyDART passengers receive safe, door to door service in a HandyDART when they can get it.

Taxi trips cannot replace HandyDART, a service that took over 30 years to build.

Eroding HandyDART by removing hours of service and dispatching cabs is not a solu-tion. HandyDART’s drivers have training and accountability that will never be equaled by the

taxi industry. The provincial government ran under a

family first banner. Now untold HandyDART passengers are put at risk and HandyDART drivers are forced on to the streets to look for employment.

Instead of taking the carbon tax and improv-ing public transit, the provincial government and TransLink hurt the very people they are meant to serve.

Mark BeechingLangley

BiLL reid was a great citizen and a great friend of the Surrey RCMP. 

Bill’s community involvement included being a big part of our community policing programs, particularly in Cloverdale and South Surrey, where he was highly respected and very involved. His wise counsel and always positive and cheerful atti-tude will be truly missed. 

 Bill worked closely with the Cloverdale/Port Kells office of the Surrey RCMP as a member of the Cloverdale Community Consultative Group, Integrated Services Group, and of the Homeless Committee, since 1998.

 Through the years he took on many endeavours, which had a direct and positive influence on the well being of local citizens.

Through his efforts a soup kitchen was established which included laundry facilities and donated clothing for those that required it. The soup kitchen is no longer in existence, however, those who originally operated it,still partner today, by provid-ing meals at a local church.

In later years, Bill garnered community support, funds and assistance by establishing the currently operating Cloverdale Hyland House – a place for the homeless to go to for accommo-dation and support.

Bill took pride in ensuring Cloverdale remained graffiti-free by working closely with the RCMP and Surrey bylaw department. Bill was extremely supportive of the Cloverdale/Port Kells RCMP office by lend-ing support over the years as an “auctioneer” for the various volunteer fundraising events, or by simply garnering and offering support for various community initiatives.”

As the executive director of the Cloverdale Chamber of Com-merce, he worked closely with us for all local community events, such as the annual Santa Claus Parade, Rodeo parade, and Blue-berry Festival ensuring the safety of the public at all events.

Bill Reid’s passion for the com-

munity of Cloverdale and for the City of Surrey was outstanding and will not be forgotten. He has given thousands of voluntary hours to various community endeavours and is a role model for everyone in the community. He has been an inspiration to all those who have worked with him to go above and beyond their normal course of duty to the citizens in the area. He will be missed by all those who have had the privilege of working with him. 

For Bill’s efforts, he was recog-nized by the City of Surrey and awarded the Good Citizen Award this year, as well as being pre-sented with a Queen’s Diamond Jubilee medal in 2012. 

On behalf of the Surrey RCMP, I would like to express our deep-est condolences to Bill’s wife Marion, their daughters, sons-in-law, grandchildren, and extended family. 

Bill FordyChief Superintendent

Officer in ChargeSurrey RCMP

Enthusiasm and generosity were legend

BiLL reid was the heart and soul of the Cloverdale Chamber of Commerce and worked tirelessly for 12 years as executive director.

Around the board table and particularly at the microphone, Bill’s upbeat attitude and con-stant smile was an inspiration to us all.

He believed in community involvement and tirelessly and constantly involved his many friends and acquaintances in Cloverdale events and Surrey fundraisers.

His enthusiasm and generos-ity were legend and everyone enjoyed working with him simply because he was fun to be around.

As Surrey’s Citizen of the year in 2013 and a recipient of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Award, Bill was very proud of the hon-

ours, but he was proudest of his achievements in the Cloverdale Business community by uniting those who believed that a sup-portive business organization that gets involved in the commu-nity can make a big difference in the economic prosperity of that community.

Bill was a leader, a mentor, and a very good friend to all of us. Our thoughts and deepest sym-

pathies are with his wife Marion and his four daughters and their families.

It is with heartfelt sadness we face the loss of our friend and executive director.

Farewell Bill. Rest in Peace.

Addison HubertPresident

Cloverdale District Chamber of Commerce

‘Bill was a leader, a mentor, and a very good friend’

HandyDART layoffs put people at risk

FILE PHOTO / THE LEADER

Letter-writers praise Bill reid for the contributions he made to the community.

Resign your seat, Mr. Hunt

isn’t it ironic that Premier Christy Clark is asking municipal governments to function short-handed for a year-and-a-half so as not to trigger byelections? At the same time she is asking one of her caucus members to step down and allow her to run in a byelection.

Surrey’s Marvin Hunt has offered to take a leave of absence or do both jobs until next January. The premier and Mr. Hunt are defeating the spirit of the byelections rules of the Local Government Act. The honourable move is for him to resign his seat immediately and allow for a demo-cratic process to replace him on city council.  

 Mr. Hunt and Mayor Dianne Watts have grossly inflated byelec-tion costs of $600,000 to $850,000 as justification for delaying Hunt’s resignation. By cutting out advance polls, reducing the existing voting locations from 52 to 25 (using only secondary schools and town centre facilities), and offering mail-in ballots to care facility residents, the election can be held at a fraction of that cost.

 Mayor Watts and council could also seize this opportunity to gauge public opinions in non-binding referenda on the byelection ballot.

Do you wish to review the opportunity for neighbourhood representation prior to the next general election? (A ward system would dramatically reduce the cost of future byelections).

Would you be willing to pay an annual two-per-cent park acquisi-tion levy to fund a third urban forest in an identified ecosystem hub?

Are you in favour of banning union and corporate donations to political candidates and limiting individual donations to $100?

Are you in favour of a second destination casino in Surrey?

Are you in favour of exporting U.S. thermal coal from the Fraser Surrey Docks in North Surrey?

 With 13 municipal politicians elected to the legislature just 17 months into their mandate, changes to the Local Government Act and the Community Charter are in order. To avoid byelections in the future maybe the candidate with the next highest number of votes in the last election should be offered the posi-tion on an interim basis.   

 Grant Rice, Surrey

Write to [email protected]

Letters to the editor must identify writers by proper name, and provide address and phone numbers for verification. The Leader reserves the right to edit for brevity, clarity and legality.

LETTERSTuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 7

Pattullo Bridge Review – Public Consultation

From June 3 to June 28, 2013, New Westminster, Surrey and TransLink will be consulting with local residents and businesses, local and regional stakeholders, and bridge users about the initial screening of the alternatives for rehabilitating or replacing the bridge.

The Pattullo Bridge Review builds on previous consultations and outreach efforts and responds to previous feedback requesting additional information and evaluation of all practical alternatives.

You can learn more and provide feedback by:

•   Attending a public open house or small group meeting (schedule below); members of the Pattullo Bridge Review Team from the City of New Westminster, the City of Surrey and TransLink will be available to answer questions at all of the open houses and small group meetings

•   Visiting our website www.pattullobridgereview.ca, to complete an online feedback form, or PlaceSpeak at www.placespeak.com/PattulloBridgeReview

•   Sending written submissions to [email protected] or  PO Box 2225 Vancouver Main, Vancouver, B.C. V6B 3W2

PUBLIC OPEN HOUSE SCHEDULE*The first half of the open house will be a drop-in format. The second half will consist of a 30-minute presentation followed by a 60-minute question and answer session.

The City of New Westminster, the City of Surrey and TransLink are working together to review and evaluate alternatives to rehabilitate or replace the Pattullo Bridge and to determine a solution that meets the needs

of communities connected by the bridge, as well as the broader region served by the bridge.

June 3 – June 28, 2013

* Please check www.pattullobridgereview.ca for any potential revisions to this schedule.

Community date / time loCation

new Westminster thursday, June 65:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

Sapperton Pensioners Hall 318 Keary Street

Surrey Saturday, June 810:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.

SFu Surrey 13450 102 Avenue

new Westminster tuesday, June 115:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

inn at the Quay 900 Quayside Drive

Surrey Wednesday, June 125:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. 

SFu Surrey 13450 102 Avenue

Surrey thursday, June 135:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

City Centre library 10350 University Drive

new Westminster Saturday, June 1510:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. 

inn at the Quay 900 Quayside Drive

Community date / time loCation

new Westminster tuesday, June 46:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

Sapperton

Surrey Wednesday, June 51:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.

City Centre

new Westminster thursday, June 61:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. 

Sapperton

Surrey Wednesday, June 121:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.

City Centre

SMALL GROUP MEETING SCHEDULE*Small group meetings are scheduled for two hours and are not a drop-in format. Please register to attend a small group meeting by going to www.pattullobridgereview.ca or calling 604-684-6840.

Black Press - Surrey Leader and New Westminster Leader 7c (10 5/16” Wide) x 98 lines (7” Deep)

CARRIERS NEEDEDIN SURREY

Please Call 604-575-5342ROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION11-03 113 184 St - 186 St, 62 Ave - 60A Ave12-05 142 Sundance Dr - 184 St, 61 Ave - 64 Ave15-21 106 144 St - 146 St, 67A Ave - 68A Ave16-19 111 147St - 149 St, 82 Ave - 84 Ave17-04 108 142A St - 144 St, 84A Ave - 86A Ave21-10 148 134 St - King George Blvd, 80 Ave - 81B Ave23-06 78 River Rd - 116 St, Royal Cr - Bailey Cr23-09 104 120 St - 121 St, 96 Ave - 100 Ave23-16 74 121 St - 123 St, 96 Ave - 97 Ave24-05 81 126 St - 128 St, 102 Ave - 104 Ave28-09 119 158A St - 160 St, 93A Ave - 96 Ave28-31 129 153 St - 156 St, 82 Ave - 84 Ave30-47 83 164 St - 168 St, 110 Ave - 112 Ave36-05 100 138 St - 140 St, Kalmar Rd - 114 Ave36-10 93 143A St - Caledonia Dr, 110 Ave - Currie Dr40-01 69 128 St - 129 St, 113B Ave - 115B Ave

One guilty, one free after murder retrialAmjad Khan convicted – again – of pregnant Surrey mom’s first-degree murder

8 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

by Sheila Reynolds 

After more than five years in prison, two men accused of kill-ing a pregnant Surrey woman learned their fates on Friday after-noon.

Amjad Khan was found guilty of first-degree murder and Naim Saghir was found not guilty in the 2005

death of young mother Tasha Lynn Rossette.

Khan, who once had a relationship with Rossette, was handed a lifetime prison sen-tence with no chance of parole for 25 years.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Ian Josephson delivered the decision Friday afternoon (May 31) in New Westmin-ster.

For Rossette’s fam-ily, the guilty verdict marked a turning point in what has been a long road to healing.

“We haven’t been able to bury our daughter,” said Simone Rossette, Tasha’s mom. “She’s in the ground but she’s been alive for seven years in the media…and through court cases, but now

we have to go to the second phase…”

She said she was nervous prior to the verdict, but relieved afterwards.

“I wasn’t sure what was going to happen,” she said. “The right person is in there (jail) and I’m glad the other guy (Saghir) gets to go home. I think he was a pawn with the rest of them that got pulled in.”

She embraced one of the witnesses out-side the courtroom, thanking him for his testimony during the trial.

Tasha’s younger sis-ter, Michelle Dimick, said the family never doubted Khan was responsible for Tasha’s death.

“Nothing will ever comfort us, but it’s good to know that he’s there (in jail),” Dimick said, adding they still face a future without Tasha. “My family has been very silent because everybody has been traumatized in a

very big way. At least now we can start to regroup our family and move on.

“Time does not heal anything. It just makes life go on.”

Dimick said she is now raising Tasha’s daughter, who was just three when her mom was murdered and is now 10.

“She’s been a blessing to us. We’re apprecia-tive for her and we’re glad we’re left with

something.”Rossette was killed

on Nov. 20, 2005, her body found two days later lying in the entry of her home near 72 Avenue and 142 Street. Her throat had been slashed and she had been stabbed 40 times. She was 17 weeks preg-nant with her second child.

Khan and Saghir were both found guilty

See JUDGE / Page 9

tasha Lynn rossette

SHEILA REYNOLDS / THE LEADER

tasha rossette’s family, including younger sister michelle Dimick (above), believes the right person has now been sent to jail for killing the 21 year old.

CARRIERS NEEDEDIN DELTA

Please Call 604-575-5342UPCOMING AVAILABLE ROUTESROUTE# PAPERS AREA DESCRIPTION2-01 112 109A St - 110A St, 78 Ave - 80 Ave2-08 85 Bridlington Dr - 112 St, Sutton Pl - Monroe Dr2-14 84 Blake Dr - 112 St, 72 Ave - 73A Ave4-04 94 Cherry Ln - Stoney Cres, Hamlin Dr - Lyon Rd4-08 97 Bond Blvd - McKenzie Dr, 64A Ave - Carstone Cres5-03 107 108B St - 111A St, 82 Ave - 84 Ave5-07 105 Mackie Crt - 111B Ave, 80 Ave - 81A Ave6-04 83 114 St - 116 St, 86 Ave - 87 Ave6-09 94 112 St - 114 St, 82 Ave - Greenhill Pl8-02 44 Norum Rd - Norum Cres including Norum Pl8-10 94 Dunlop Rd - River Rd, Suncrest Dr - Terrace Dr8-19 49 Glenrose Dr - Dunlop Rd, Centre St - 84 Ave

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JUNE 9, 12-4PM

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DROP IN FORACTIVITIES

inspired bythe exhibitionSpectacular Sangeet

• Be an Art Detective!

Discover how the exhibiting artists use SouthAsian music and dance as inspiration.

• Create your own art!

Use colourful collage materials, clay,pastels, and more!

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Learn basic Bhangra, Bharatanatyam,and Bollywood moves with dancers

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Suggested donation $4 per childChildren must be with an adultEveryone welcome

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of first-degree mur-der after a jury trial in 2008.

But the pair appealed their con-viction and in 2011 were granted a new trial, which ran for several weeks earlier this year.

At the second trial, which began in late January, Crown prosecu-tors alleged Khan wanted Rossette dead because she was pregnant with his child and wouldn’t get an abortion, thereby shaming his family.

Prosecutor Donna Ballyk alleged Khan drove Rossette home from bingo the evening of her death, while Saghir waited at her suite to kill her. A former roommate of

Saghir testified Saghir came home one night in 2005 with scratches on him and admitted he had killed Rossette.

The defence sug-gested Khan and

Saghir weren’t respon-sible at all, instead arguing there was the possibility a third party killed Rossette. The court heard that a woman named Ruby

Jubbal had paid Rossette to enter into a sham marriage with a man from India, but that Rossette kept wanting more money and threatened to tell the authorities of the marriage plot. Khan’s lawyer Robert Claus suggested there was “ample” evi-dence Jubbal had motive, means and opportunity to murder Ros-sette.

But Friday afternoon Jus-tice Josephson deemed Khan responsible for the murder, and

then said he had rea-sonable doubt about the evidence against Saghir, clearing him of the charges. Joseph-son’s 47-page judgment

should be released within weeks.

Khan’s father was sullen and quiet fol-lowing the court deci-sion, and chose not to speak to media. Other family members were upset and said justice had not been served.

[email protected]

Car dealers

nab thief

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 9

Judge: Had reasonable doubt aboutco-accused’s guilt in Surrey murderFrom page 8

COURT ILLUSTRATION BY SHEILA ALLAN

Amjad Khan (left) was convicted of the first-degree murder of tasha rossette on friday, following a new trial in which the judge found co-accused Naim Saghir (right) not guilty.

Man drove car over a 1.3 meter drop, then fled on

footby Kevin Diakiw

A 52-yeAr-oLD man is in custody after he was nabbed by staff at a car dealership for allegedly trying to boost one of their vehicles.

Just before 6 p.m. Sat-urday, a vehicle was taken from the Applewood Kia dealership in the 16200-block of Fraser Highway.

Shortly after, the vehi-cle was driven back onto the lot. The driver then revved the engine and drove over a 1.3 meter drop and onto a parked vehicle at a restaurant.

The driver took off on foot. Staff from the dealership gave chase and apprehended the man.

They held him until police arrived. Kevin Douglas Pickering is being charged with dangerous operation of a vehicle, theft under $5,000 and driving while prohibited.

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by Evan Seal

It’s usually complicated land use issues, inches-thick staff reports, or contentious zoning amendments that demand the attention of Sur-rey city council.

But on Tuesday, the only topics being tabled were roasted chicken-bacon roulade, mushroom ravioli, and home-made ricotta cheese, along with brown hazelnuts, asparagus, and wild onions.

These were just some of the sumptuous dishes prepared for Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts and members of council by Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary culinary arts students and possibly the next best chef in the country.

On May 28, Matthew Stowe, a competitor on the current season of Top Chef Canada, worked alongside students to prepare the meal.

It was homecoming for Stowe, a Cloverdale native and Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary grad (Class of 2000).

A product of the school’s culinary arts program, Stowe left the Lower Mainland for New York at age 18 to attend the Culinary

Institute of America, interning at a classic French restaurant that later hired him. He returned to B.C. to work as the executive chef at Sonora resort from 2004 to 2010, and now develops menu items for Cactus Club Cafe restaurants.

Stowe, 30, is the last remaining B.C.-based contestant on the Food Network’s Top Chef Canada. His superb skills and driven-yet-likable personality have made him a viewer favourite on the popular show (airing on the Food Network Mondays at 10 p.m. PST). The show is pulling in 1.8 to 2 million viewers an episode.

Stowe said it was great getting back to his culinary roots.

“It was because of that start at Tweedsmuir that I’m kind of where I am today,” he said, praising the school’s culinary program – a trades program with a co-op com-ponent that enabled him to land a job at the Hotel Vancouver and set him on his skyrocketing career path.

“It’s like going full circle, start-ing where it all began,” he said Tuesday. “I really wanted to work with the students… it’s great see-ing the looks on these guys’ faces

when they try the food and some products that they may not have had before.”

Josh Hutton, a Grade 12 student at Lord Tweedsmuir, has been involved in the culinary arts pro-gram for three semesters and says he has learned a lot.

“I like the whole atmosphere (of cooking)… it’s a fun time – work-ing hard in the kitchen.”

Hutton admires Stowe for his accomplishments and says he showed the students some tasty tricks for Tuesday’s meal.

“We learned how to do ravioli… it sounds like a good recipe.”

Guests from the Surrey School District were also on hand to tuck into lunch.

Win or lose the Top Chef Canada competition – and though ending has been taped, Stowe’s not talking – Stowe said is glad he did it, and notes the experience has led to more opportunities to teach people of all ages about food and the ins-and-outs of how restau-rants work.

Stowe lives in Clayton with his wife Amber and two-year-old son Gavin.

– with files from Cloverdale Reporter

Top Chef Canada contender returns to his culinary rootsMatthew Stowe cooks alongside Lord Tweedsmuir teens

10 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

EVAN SEAL / THE LEADER

Chef Matthew stowe gives students at lord tweedmuir secondary some firsthand cooking instruction at the school tuesday.

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by Jeff Nagel

Up to 28 HandyDart drivers are facing potential layoffs as TransLink opts to make more use of taxis instead to carry elderly and disabled passengers.

Unionized HandyDart workers packed into TransLink’s annual general meeting Wednesday to denounce the move to cut 10,000 service hours in favour of taxi subsidies.

“Taxi service is not a solution,” said HandyDart employee Mark Beeching, who contends taxi service is more costly and is unsafe for passengers because cabbies don’t have adequate training.

“This is what happens when you have

a contracted-out service and profit is the motive for most decisions,” Amalgamated Transit Union local 1724 union president Bob Chitrenky said of the pending layoffs by opera-tor MVT Canadian Bus.

TransLink predicts taxis will save money and allow more trips with the same outlay of money because some long-distance routes currently dead-head back empty.

“We can provide more trips for more people with the resources that we’ve got,” CEO Ian Jarvis said, adding two

audits last year directed Trans-Link to pursue HandyDart service reforms.

“You’re dancing around the problem,” Chitrenky said. “You’re not telling us how this is going to be solved.”

He said 37,000 people were denied HandyDart rides last year.

Jarvis said TransLink needs more long-term funding to meet expected growth in HandyDart demand as well as provide other transit service expansion.

Described as a pilot pro-

gram, the first phase of the shift to taxis targets four routes: Surrey to New West-minster, Surrey to Vancouver, White Rock to Vancouver and Delta to Vancouver.

The move is just one plank of TransLink’s reforms for greater efficiency.

Other measures, such as optimizing bus routes to better meet rider demand, has helped TransLink increase transit revenue by 3.5 per cent by serving more passengers with the same amount of bus service.

Chief financial officer Cathy McLay also said TransLink took advantage of low interest rates last year to borrow $250 million through 40-year bonds, providing low-cost financing for the Evergreen Line and SkyTrain station upgrades.

Union fights HandyDart shift to taxisTransLink CEO says move will allow more trips

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 11

“This is what happens when

you have a contracted-out service and profit is the motive for most

decisions.”

Bob Chitrenky

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by Jeff Nagel

Drivers who received 20 free crossings of the new Port Mann Bridge by registering early with the TReO tolling system have lost any unused credits.

Bridge officials say last week about half of the more than 800,000 TReO-registered drivers still had some free trips remaining, but they expired as planned on May 31.

It means many Port Mann Bridge users who have so far crossed for free will now have to start paying out of pocket to continue to cross the new span.

Drivers of regular vehicles who signed up by the end of February are still charged the half-price $1.50 per crossing until December, while those who aren’t registered pay the full $3 toll and some of them are also charged a $2.30 licence plate processing fee if they don’t pay within a week.

More than 90 per cent of regular morning commut-ers over the bridge are registered for electronic tolling detection, said Transportation Investment Corp. spokesman Greg Johnson.

The small minority who aren’t yet registered are offered yet another carrot to sign up for TReO. Those who do so by Nov. 30 get two free crossings. And if they sign up by the end of June, TReO will convert any licence plate processing fees they were charged in the previous 30 days into an additional credit.

Johnson said use of the bridge continues to fluctu-ate between 100,000 and 115,000 vehicles per day, or about three million per month.

He said that’s essentially the same as with the old untolled bridge, adding that while some traffic has diverted to crossings such as the Pattullo or Alex Fra-ser to avoid tolls, other drivers who avoided the Port Mann due to congestion have come back.

“As construction progresses through Burnaby and Coquitlam, drivers will see even more time savings,” Johnson said.

The Port Mann/Highway 1 Improvement project is still slated for completion by the end of this year, with work continuing on interchanges and lanes in Coquitlam, Burnaby and Vancouver.

One of the final stages of the work will be to open the remaining two lanes of the 10-lane Port Mann. The additional lanes will be segregated from the rest of traffic and offer a direct connection between Surrey and Coquitlam.

Meanwhile, the dismantling of the old Port Mann Bridge is becoming more obvious.

All the deck and most of the girders have now been removed from the north approach.

And Johnson said crews will begin dismantling the main span arch this summer, gradually lowering seg-ments down to barges in the Fraser River.

HOV cheaters on Port Mann could lose discount

Toll collecTor TReO may use its cameras to detect and punish Port Mann Bridge users who improperly use the HOV lane to get a 25-per-cent discount.

The HOV discount applies in the morning and afternoon weekday rushes and there have been reports of lone motorists swerving into the HOV lane just before the tolling sensors in order to pay less.

Transportation Investment Corp. spokesman Greg Johnson said the RCMP enforce HOV lane rules but added TReO may take its own steps to deal with discount cheaters.

“We’re looking at doing our own monitoring,” he said, adding it’s too early to provide details on how that will work.

Solo drivers who TReO determines were using the HOV lane to get the discount could lose their HOV discount privileges, he said.

Johnson maintained HOV lane abuse on the bridge is not rampant.

[email protected]

Free credits for Port Mann bridge expireHalf of toll bridge’s registered users didn’t use trips

12 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Between 100,000 and 115,000 vehicles per day – about three million per month – use the Port Mann Bridge.

COMUNITY CHARTER, S.B.C. 2003, CHAPTER 26NOTICE OF INTENTION TO

SELL CITY LANDSPursuant to Sections 26 and 94 of the Community Charter S.B.C. 2003, Chapter 26, as amended, the City of Surrey hereby givesnotice of the intention to dispose of the following City lands:Legal Descriptions: Parcel Identifier: 007-499-990 Lot 1 Except:

Part Dedicated Road on Plan LMP2476, Section 26 Block 5 North Range 2 West

NWD Plan 15724Civic Address: 13961 – 100 Avenue, Surrey.Property Description: The City lot has an area of 836 m² (8,994

ft.²). It is contiguous to an assembly of three lots located to the east that are proposed for a mixed, primarily residential development project proposed by Phoenix Drug & Alcohol Recovery and Education Society. The City recently purchased the City lot to facilitate its consolidation into the land assembly incorporating the three lots located to the east at 13971, 13981, and 13991 – 100 Avenue.

The City lot is zoned Single Family (RF) Zone, is designated “Multiple Residen-tial” in the Official Community Plan and is designated “Mixed Use” in the Surrey City Centre Land Use and Density Concept Plan.

Purchaser: Phoenix Drug & Alcohol Recovery and Education SocietyNature of Disposition: Fee SimpleConsideration: The City lot is being transferred to the

Purchaser in exchange of the Purchaser transferring to the City the Purchaser’s lot located at 10029 – 140 Street, legally described as PID: 010-133-364; Lot 5 Section 26 Block 5 North Range 2 West NWD Plan 15724 Except: Part Road on Plan BCP36335 and the Purchaser paying the City the sum of $5,000. The Purchaser’s property is a vacant 814 m² (8,762 ft.²) lot.

Further information can be obtained from the City of Surrey, Realty Services Division, Engineering Department, 14245 - 56 Avenue, Surrey, BC V3X 3A2. Phone (604) 598-5718.

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Delta will join Surrey, Richmond, Vancouver, New Westminster and Burnaby in a mobile business licence pilot project, following pleas from local businesses.

The purchase of the business licence would allow mobile businesses, like contractors and caterers, to operate across participating municipalities and regional districts.

“For a company in the construction sector operat-ing in multiple communities the many thousands of dollars and time spent to take out an individual busi-ness licence for each community every year is a great burden,” said Delta Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Peter Roaf. “Under this new system, that company can take out a business licence where it is based then an additional business licence for multiple communities for maybe $200 or so.”

Chambers of Commerce and Boards of Trade across Canada have been advocating for the mobile business licence for years.

The Okanagan-Similkameen region piloted the first 12-month mobile business licence project beginning in January, 2008, across 17 communities. This past January, nine Fraser Valley municipalities launched a similar pilot.

Inter-municipal business licence agreements already exist in the Victoria region, Cowichan Valley, North Okanagan, North-West Vancouver, Courtenay-Comox, and the Trail region.

Corporation of Delta staff will now come forward with a proposed bylaw to support the pilot some time in October, 2013. The project is expected to run for 24 months, after which participating municipalities will decide whether to keep the program.

Delta businesses go mobile

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 13

by Jeff Nagel

B.C.’s auDitor General For Local Government (AGLG) is targeting several municipalities for audits over the next year, including Sur-rey, Delta, New Westminster and West Vancouver.

Surrey-based Basia Ruta said value-for-money audits on opera-tional procurement are planned for Delta, West Vancouver, Revel-stoke and the regional districts of Fraser-Fort George and Comox Valley.

Surrey will be audited for oversight of the RCMP budget

and policing agreement policing. Victoria, New Westminster, Mer-ritt, Port Alberni, and Williams Lake also face policing oversight audits.

Other audits examining capital procurement projects and asset management programs will target North Vancouver District, Cran-brook, Rossland, Sechelt, Dawson Creek and Campbell River.

The initial sets of audits are to be finished by March 31, 2014.

Other audits are still to be announced on how well cities ensure clean drinking water and

challenges to sparsely staffed municipalities.

The AGLG was created by the provincial government despite objections from some B.C. cities which feared it could turn into a witch hunt for waste that failed to take into account differing municipal priorities.

The Canadian Federation of Independent Business released a study Wednesday saying municipal spending in Canada’s four biggest cities far outpaces population growth and the rate of inflation.

Auditor targets citiesSurrey is among municipalities to be probed

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

by Robert Mangelsdorf

t’s an overcast day over Boundary Bay, but for Trevor Skillen, any day with-out rain is good for flying.

His Second World War-era Boeing Stearman biplane has an open canopy, exposing him to the elements.

“You’re going so fast the windshield blows it right over top of you,” he says. “The real problem with the rain is the visibility.”

That won’t be a problem on this day. Mount Baker looms in the distance as Skillen pilots his bright yellow warbird over the Semiahmoo Peninsula.

Flying a few hundred feet above White Rock Beach, he pitches the plane suddenly upwards before curling off and hurtling back towards the ground.

“A wingover,” he says, his voice crackling over the radio headset.He points the plane skywards again, and then, like a roller coaster reaching its apex, the

plane evens out momentarily before plummeting towards the ocean below.Skillen pulls back on the stick once more, and the plane climbs and climbs, until finally it

can climb no more, and once again submits to gravity and returns to Earth.

This time, however, the plane is upside down.“An inside loop,” he says.Below the residents of White Rock no doubt watch puzzled, as the 70-year-old biplane

barnstorms above the beach on this Friday afternoon.Having thoroughly impressed the onlookers below, he points the nose for home, and

touches down softly on the manicured grass strip at the Delta Heritage Air Park.Skillen hops out, a grin stretching from ear-to-ear.“There’s no way to describe that feeling,” he says, beaming.Trevor Skillen isn’t your typical recreational pilot. But then, the Delta Heritage Air Park

isn’t your typical airport.For more than 50 years, it has been home to some of the most impressive vintage aircraft

in the Lower Mainland.“We’re a well-kept

secret out here,” he says. The idyllic grass strip is just five miles east of Boundary Bay Airport, but it might as well be in the middle of nowhere.

“There’s nothing like this in any major city in Canada,” says Skillen, who is also the chair of the Delta Heritage Airpark Operating Committee (DAPCOM).

The air strip is uncon-trolled, and is actually part of the Metro Vancouver Regional Parks system. The slow pace suits Skillen just fine.

“You can come and go as you please,” he says. “You don’t have to talk to the tower, you don’t have to ask permission.”

The airpark is a living aviation museum, home to dozens of classic aircraft.There is a Cold War-era Chinese trainer, Harvard trainers, a Pitts Special biplane, a

handful of the legendary Piper Cub bush planes, Aeronca Champions, as well as the usual assortment of Cessnas, Cherokees, and Beechcrafts.

In the golden age of aviation, all you needed was a grass strip to get off the ground, and the pilots here still like to keep things just that simple.

ROB NEWELL / BLACK PRESS

Trevor Skillen, chair of the Delta Heritage Airpark, checks his map before taking off in his 1942 Boeing Stearman biplane (below).

SECtiON CO-ORdiNAtOR: BOAz jOSEPh (PhONE 604-575-2744)

Flying into the pastDelta Heritage Air Park is home to some of the most impressive vintage aircraft around

LIFE14 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

See AIR PARK / Page 15

I

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Some choose to fly without GPS, instead relying on maps sewn into the inside of their jackets to chart their course.

“You don’t even need a radio to fly out of here,” says Skillen.

Many of the hangars are con-verted old barns. While they’ve been renovated on the inside, Skil-len says the air park wants to keep them looking as rustic as possible, like patina on vintage furniture.

But the air park isn’t a play-ground for the wealthy – far from it. The air park’s low user fees have attracted aviation enthusiasts of all tax brackets, many of whom have built or restored their own aircraft.

It’s just $35 per month to park a plane on Delta Heritage Air Park’s grass apron, and little more than $200 to rent a hangar.

“Less than what a parking spot would cost you downtown,” says Raymond Colley, the air park’s former chair. “Ideally, we want to run it like a public golf course, and be accessible to everyone.”

And just as every golf course has its clubhouse, the Delta Heritage Air Park has its coffee shop as its social hub.

The walls of the shop are festooned with maps, yellowed photos of airplanes, and all man-ner of aviation memorabilia. Here the pilots can help themselves to hot coffee behind the counter, provided they drop some change into the cup. There’s always great conversation to be had, and the pilots love to talk shop.

Colley has been flying nearly his entire life, and spent much of his career captaining 747-400s across to Hong Kong and back for Cathay Pacific. After retiring close to 10 years ago, he rediscovered the joys of light aircraft, and fell in love with flying all over again.

Flying at Delta Heritage Air Park is back-to-basics, he says.

“This is grassroots flying,” says Colley. “This is how it all started.”

The land the air park occupies at the end of 104 Street was once a farm owned by Darmel Embree, who fell in love with flying later in life after taking flight with a friend.

Embree carved a grass landing strip out of his field and in 1960, began renting out tie-downs to other pilots. Due to overwhelm-ing demand, he decided to build hangars a few years later.

“This was all before Boundary Bay Airport was reopened (in 1983), so there was nowhere to really fly in and out of Delta at the time,” says Skillen.

In 1995 the air park was bought by the Greater Vancouver Regional District and is now part of Bound-ary Bay Regional Park. The air park has only one staff member, a janitor/custodian/groundskeeper, whose major responsibility is to cut the grass of the 800-metre runway and adjacent apron.

“Day to day it doesn’t cost taxpayers anything,” says Metro Vancouver parks manager Mitch Sokalski.

Once a month, the air park holds a pancake breakfast at the coffee shop that’s open to the

public. But the public is invited to use the facilities any time, and many cyclists and hikers using the Boundary Bay dike trail often pop in for a quick visit.

“It’s a great place to come and visit, even if you’re not a pilot,” says Sokalski.

Not surprisingly, the air park is frequent stop for aviation buffs, and it’s hard not catch their infec-tious enthusiasm for flying.

Skillen caught the flying bug as a child growing up in Quebec, listening to his father’s tales of being an airman in the Second World War.

“You hear the stories around the dinner table, and it becomes a part of you,” Skillen says.

Success in the software industry has allowed him to pursue his aviation hobby. In addition to his Stearman, he has a de Havilland Beaver, and is looking to acquire a Second World War-era North American Aviation Harvard.

But Skillen says he sees himself as a custodian of history, as opposed to a just an airplane owner.

“We get to take care of them for a while, and then we pass them on,” he says. “These planes were around before I was born, and hopefully they’ll be around long after I’m gone.”

So too is it his hope for the Delta Heritage Air Park.

“You would never be able to cre-ate something like this today,” he says. “It’s totally unique. That’s why it’s important we preserve it.”

[email protected]

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 15

Air park: Not just for the wealthyFrom page 14

A shower. A hot meal. A load of laundry. All of these things seem impossible to a parent whose child is seriously ill. This is why we are building a Ronald McDonald Family Room, a refuge for family members of children being treated at Surrey Memorial Hospital. With your help, families will have access to accommodation, kitchen and laundry facilities, and a welcoming lounge – all with the comfort of knowing their sick children are always close by.

Please donate today to build a

Surrey Families Need Your Help!

Ronald McDonald HouseBRITISH COLUMBIA

SURREYBOARD OF TRADE

RONALD MCDONALD FAMILY ROOM

and keep Surrey families together in their time of need.

Contact Joe at 604-736-2957 or [email protected] www.rmhbc.ca

The 2013 Love Your Community Vintage Affair Presented by Envision Financial

Thursday October 3, 2013 7:00 – 10:00 pm

Hazelmere Golf Course 18150 8th Avenue, Surrey

Tickets $150 Cocktail Attire

Call or email: Melissa Christopherson 778-292-1367 [email protected] wrsscf.org/vintageaffair.php

*Previously White Rock South Surrey Community Foundation

16 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Black Press

SeniorS and family mem-bers are invited to Power of Attorney & Joint Accounts, the first of a series of three workshops, on June 12 from 7:15-8:15 p.m.

Delta Police Const. Steve Wilson, responsible for eco-nomic/technical crime, will provide local information and

answer questions.In recognition of Seniors

Week, the Delta Seniors Plan-ning Team, in partnership with the Delta Police victim Ser-vices, is hosting these Protect Yourself workshops. 

The remaining financial literacy workshops will be Frauds and Scams (June 19) and Responsible Gambling (June 26). 

Protect Yourself workshops, hosted by the BC Centre for Elder Advocacy and Sup-port, provide seniors with the information needed to protect their finances, recognize and respond to financial abuse, access community resources for further information or assistance, and make informed financial decisions that meet their needs.

Seniors’ workshopsElder advocacy groups offers series to assist in

financial protection and decision-making

Arts

To celebrate Aboriginal History Month in June, visit the George Mackie Library’s artist in residence Loretta Williams on June 9 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. as she works on her current project. Williams is a weaver who works in traditional and contemporary styles in both cedar and wool. The library is located at 8440 112 St. For more information, call 604-594-8155.

The Arts Council of Surrey is hosting its first Plein Air Challenge on June 22

at Bear Creek Park. Paint anywhere within the park from 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Sign-in is from 9:30-10 a.m. and display and awards time is before 4 p.m. A 12x16-inch painting surface is supplied. There is no fee and there are prizes. Jurors are Bob McMurray and Wendy Mould. Register in advance at 604-594-2700 or [email protected]

EvEntsA guided walk in Burns Bog for Delta newcomers will take place June 8 at 10:30 a.m. starting the Planet Ice parking lot, 10388 Nordel Ct. For more information or to register, contact Gurpreet Kaur at PICS at 604-594-3455, Ext. 128 or [email protected]

Bundle up that treasured item and bring it to the ninth-annual Surrey Antiques off the Roadshow at the Surrey Art Gallery on Saturday, June 8 between 12:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. The cost is $10 for the first item and $5 for each additional item. This is a drop-in event; registration is not required. Observers are welcome.

Submissions for Datebook should be posted at www.surreyleader.com Click Calendar. Datebook runs in print most Tuesdays and Thursdays.

DATEBOOK

by Rick Kupchuk

Two aThleTes combined for five medals, lifting Lord Tweedmuir Secondary to 10th in the team standings at the B.C. High School Track and Field Champion-ships in Langley.

Ben Ingvaldson, 16, won a gold medal, and he and teammate Jasmine Grant each collected a pair of bronze medals. Along with a fifth-place perfor-mance from the school’s 4x100m relay team, Lord Tweedsmuir totaled 38 points at the two-day meet, tying for 10th place with Langley Secondary.

Ingvaldson won his gold medal in the boys shotput, with a throw of 15.64m that was almost a full metre better than the runner-up. Chitraj Dosanjh of Delview Secondary placed fifth at 13.57m.

Ingvadlson was also the bronze medalist in the ham-mer throw and discus. His best effort was 51.93 metres in the hammer, while his throw of 45.26m in the discus edged the fourth-place athlete by eight centimetres.

Jasmine Grant won her bronze medals with two per-sonal best times, bouncing back from a Grade 11 year that saw her performance slowed by illness.

“Last year I had mono for three months before (provincials), so I ran the 100 and 200 but not the 400,” she said. “I didn’t make the final in either, it was a lot to overcome. So this year was a bit of a comeback, I guess. It felt pretty good.”

She was third in both the 200m race with a time of 25.76 seconds, and the 400m in 57.76 seconds.

“I was ranked fourth in both events before the pro-vincials,” Grant said. “I was so so happy in the end to get a couple of medals in my Grade 12 year.”

Ephraim Tadesse of North Surrey Secondary won a pair of silver medals, finishing as the runner-up in both the boys 2,000m steeplechase and the 1,500m race.

He completed the steeplechase in 6:11.12, 2.25 seconds off the pace. He was bumped up into the runner-up position in the 1,500m race after crossing the line in third place. His time of 3:57.28 was good for the silver medal, after a competitor was disqualified for interference.

“I think I could have run faster in the 1,500,” said the Grade 12 student. “But I’m happy with the meet overall. Of course I wish I could have done a bit better in my last high school meet, but it was a good meet.”

Timothy Delcourt of Kwantlen Park Secondary took the bronze medal in the boys 3,000m run, his time of 8:38.07 just 2.2 seconds back of the winner.

Jasmine Gill of Sullivan Heights Secondary just missed a medal by placing fourth in the girls 800m race, her time of 2:16.50 just 26 one-hundredths of a second behind the third place finisher.

Asianna Covington, a Surrey resident attending Little Flower Academy in Vancouver, had little trouble winning in the shotput with a throw of 48.2m, 1.13m further then the second place thrower. Prabhjit Dosanjh of Delview was one position out of the med-als, placing fourth at 36.48m.

Covington also won the gold medal in the hammer throw, easily outdistancing the runner-up with her toss of 53.83m, more than five metres further than the silver medalist.

She added a third medal in the shot put, her effort of 12.83m earning the silver medal. Avneet Nijjar of Queen Elizabeth Secondary placed fourth, her best throw of 11.2m just 24 centimetres shy of a medal.

Colleen Butler of Holy Cross high school took the bronze medals in the 1,500m race walk. She finished in 8:12.05.

Brent Reston of Surrey Christian placed fourth in the boys javelin, his toss of 49.75m just 85cm shy of a bronze medal.

Five medals by Tweedsmuir athletes at BC meet

Photos by Boaz Joseph, Bob Friesen

Gold for Ingvaldson

SPORTSTuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 17

Section co-ordinator: r ick kupchuk (phone 604-575-5335)

local athletes on the medal podium at the B.C. Track and Field Championships in langley last weekend included asianna Covington (above) of little Flower academy receives one of her three medals; Jasmine Grant (below) sprinted to bronze medals in the 200m and 400m events; ephraim Tadesse (lower left, right side) ran to silver medals in the 1,500m and 2,000m steeplechase.

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BC SoCCer announced their annual awards Friday afternoon, and several Surrey resi-dents are among the recipients.

Steve Reed and Robert Sawtell were among five people receive Life Member-ship Awards.

“These individuals have dedicated their time and passion to the sport of soccer in areas ranging from administration and governance to refereeing and board leadership,” said a BC Soccer press release. “BC Soccer thanks them for their endless contribu-tions and is proud to acknowledge them with this achieve-ment.”

Surrey United goal-keeper Paul Shepherd was named the Adult Player of the Year for “establishing himself as one of the best goalkeepers in the Vancouver Metro Soccer League (VMSL).

“His agility and reflexes are razor sharp and he never ceases to amaze his own teammates with outstanding saves, which are quite often the post-game topic of discussion,” said VMSL vice-president

William Azzi. The Surrey United

Soccer Club did well in the Coach of the Year awards, winning in both the Youth and Adult categories.

Frank McCann is the Youth Coach of the Year after leading his team to a provin-cial title and a trip to the under-16 boys national champion-ship in Char-lottetown, Prince Edward Island.

“This past October his team won the Canadian National Club Cham-pionship Gold Medal which is the pinnacle of his long and distinguished coaching career,” said Surrey United execu-tive director Martin Foden.

Niall Thompson is coach of United’s men’s team, and was

named BC Soccer’s Adult Coach of the Year. In four seasons with Thompson as coach, United has won two league titles, two Imperial Cups, one Pacific Cup, and the BC Soccer Pro-vincial Cup in 2012 and 2013.

BC Soccer will hon-our all of these award

recipients by hosting them Sat-urday at BC Place when the Vancouver Whitecaps FC take on the New England Revolu-tion.n BC

Soccer also announced the recipi-ents of 12

scholarships worth more than $13,000 to “some of BC’s most inspiring and promis-ing individuals.” 

Julia Lauzon of Surrey is the recipient of this year’s Sandra Duncan Scholar-ship funded by the

South District Girls Soccer Association for her outstanding academic achieve-ments combined with her dedication to soccer. Lauzon has several opportunities to play varsity soccer at the university level after playing with Surrey United and BC Soccer’s Provincial Program.

“Julia is a great example of student athlete,” said BC Soc-cer programs coach Markus Reinkens. “Her dedication both on and off the field is first class and she is an excellent recipient for this award.”

The Dancey Family Scholarship, funded by the Surrey Metro Soccer Association in memory of George, Mary and Ron Dancey, is being awarded to Adrienne Juni of Burnaby. 

Her involvement in soccer includes play-ing for the past nine years, refereeing for the last six years, and being the head coach for the under-11 Burnaby Girls Thun-derbolts.

ACTION BMXResults from May 30, 2013

FIVE-AND-UNDER NoVIcE1. colton McKinnon2. Roman Peregrym 3. Gavin NilesSEVEN yEAR-olD INtERMEDIAtE1. Jack MacQuarrie2. tyler Bernabe3. Will HuttonEIGHt yEAR-olD NoVIcE1. Sydney clausen

2. Madison Kirby 3. claire HuttonEIGHt yEAR-olD INtERMEDIAtE1. Adrian McKorcza2. Reighen Hill3. Ansh Sachdeva10 yEAR-olD EXPERt1. Noah clausen2. logan Fields3. Nathan Saulnier13 yEAR-olD EXPERt1. Ethan Kreuzkamp2. Natasha Bruce

3. lukas Ferguson15 yEAR-olD INtERMEDIAtE1. taylor Brown2. Ryan Willison3. lachlan Hotchkiss17-24 yEAR-olD EXPERt1. Darien landers2. E.J. Scott3. Martin MclaughlincRUISER 40-44 FEMAlE1. christine Podavin2. Kelly Gudmandson3. Jeannie Mansell

Local participants prominent in BC Soccer’s annual awards

Coaches, players recognized with individual honours

18 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

“...he never ceases to

amaze his own teammates

with outstanding

saves...”

William Azzi

BMX (BICYCLE MOTOCROSS)

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 19

SAWMILL SUPERVISORLakeview Lumber Division

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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

7 OBITUARIES

BC Cancer Foundation Legacies accepted 604.930.4078 or visit: bccancerfoundation.com

Hugh Tolland Cathcart, WingCmdr RAF

Feb12,1923 - Mar25, 2013

Hugh passed away peacefully the morning of March 25, 2013, his wife Elsie and family by his side. Hugh leaves be-hind his beloved wife Elsie of 66 years, son Michael (May), daughters Patricia (Gordon), and Diane; nine grand-chil-dren, and eight great grand- children. As an RAF Lancaster Bomber Pilot, Hugh met Elsie in Liverpool at a friends wedding during the war. Married 1946, they moved to Belfast N.I. emigrating to BC in 1965. Hugh taught at William Beagle Jr Sec. School,Surrey. Hugh created a Special Education program, until retirement 1988. A Celebration of Hugh’s Life will be held Sunday, June 9, 2013 2:30 pm, at Relate Church. 6788-152nd St, Surrey, BC. In lieu of fl owers, please send a donation to World Vision CAN.

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

21 COMING EVENTS

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EVERYONE WELCOME!For info call 604-543-7580

33 INFORMATION

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

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CHILDREN

86 CHILDCARE WANTED

Family of 4 in Delta area req F/T live-in NANNY, min wage. Email, [email protected]

Family of 6 req F/T, LIVE-IN NANNY, min wage. Surrey area. Email, [email protected]

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIESA+Drink Snack plus Healthy Vend-ing machine Route. Turn Key Busi-ness. Invest With Confi dence, $4,000 UP. Training and Secured profi table Locations. Limited Must Sell. 888-979-8363

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

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109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

OVER 90% EMPLOYMENT rate for CanScribe graduates! Medical Transcriptionists are in demand and CanScribe graduates get jobs. Payments under $100 per month. 1-800-466-1535. www.canscribe.com. [email protected].

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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC or a 3rd yr or 4th yr

apprentice enrolled in a Heavy Duty Mechanic

program is required for our Lower Mainland concrete

operations. This position will perform maintenance and safety inspections, trouble-shooting and repair of mixer trucks and other equipment.

Applicants must have a Commercial Vehicle

Inspectors Certifi cate (MOU#) or are capable

fi nishing their 3rd or 4th year apprentice program to obtain the necessary trades qualifi -

cations and certifi cation.

Please apply at: www.lehighhanson.ca

or fax:604-261-0135

TRAIN TO BE AN Apartment/Con-dominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thou-sands of graduates working. 32 years of success! Government certifi ed. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-665-8339, 604-681-5456.

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

Marine Superintendent/Detachment Superintendent, Canadian Forces Auxiliary Fleet, a civilian component of the Department Of National Defence, seeks Marine Managers for positions in Nanoose Bay and Victoria (Vancouver Island), British Columbia. Online applications only through the Public Service Commis-sion of Canada website, Refer-ence# DND13J-008697-000065, Selection Process# 13-DND-EA-ESQ-373623, Marine Superinten-dent/Detachment Superintendent.pplicants must meet all essential qualifi cations listed and complete the application within the prescribed timelines. **http://jobs-em-plois.gc.ca/index-eng.htm. Surintendant / Surintendant de de-tachement de la Marine. La fl otte auxiliaire des forces canadiennes, une composante civile du ministère de la Defense nationale, cherche des gestionnaires marins pour des postes situes a Nanoose Bay et Victoria sur l’ile de Vancouver, en Colombie-Britannique. Les candi-dats interesses doivent postuler en ligne a travers le site internet de la Commission de la fonction publique du Canada, Reference n DND13J-008697-000065, le processus de selection # 13-DND-EA-ESQ-373623, Surintendant / Surin-tendant de detachement de Marine. Les candidats doivent posseder toutes les qualifi cations essentielles enumerees dans la publicite en ligne et remplir la demande dans les delais prescrits. http://jobs-em-plois.gc.ca/index-eng.htm

111 CARETAKERS/RESIDENTIAL MANAGERS

CARETAKERLIVE-IN CARETAKER COUPLE req’d for busy seniors apt bldg.

Electrical, plumbing and hands -on maintenance required.

Call: Dunwood Place(604)521-8636 or email:

[email protected]

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

DRIVERS; Premier Freight Systems Inc. req’s Long Haul Truck Drivers. $23.50/hr. 50 hours/week. Send re-sumes 12345 84th Avenue, Surrey BC V3W 3G8 or Fax: 604-543-1685

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

DRIVERS; Sohi Bros. Enterprises Ltd. req’s Long Haul Truck Drivers. $23.50/hr. 50 hours/week. Send re-sumes 12345 84th Avenue, Surrey BC V3W 3G8 or Fax: 604-543-1682

EXP CLASS 1 TEAM DRIVERS Earn up to $6500/mo. Send re-sumes [email protected] Fax:604-598-3497

HEAVYWRECKEROPERATOR

Required by DnR Towing. Please apply w/ abstractto 10671 Timberland Rd. or Fax: 604.580.2405 or

e-mail: [email protected]

Long Haul Truck Drivers req’d F/T for Guru Truck Lines Ltd. $23/hr. Drive & operate trucks as a team. Record cargo info & trip details. Truck driver exp required. Contact: Varinder [email protected] Fax: 778-565-4041 Surrey, BC

TRUCK DRIVERS

I5 Logistic Services Ltd is hiring Long Haul Truck Drivers $23./hr, 40 hrs per week. Apply by mail : P.O. 88720 Newton RPO Surrey, BC V3W 0X1

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

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.

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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

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20 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

13276

www.surrey.ca/careers

ARENA OPERATIONSCity of Surrey

The City of Surrey Community Recreation Services - Arena Operations is hosting a Job Fair seeking energetic individuals for the following positions:

All positions require a completion of Criminal Record Check. Staff from all areas including Human Resources will be on hand to answer any questions. Please bring your resume and certificates.

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125 FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE

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

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130 HELP WANTED

An Alberta Oilfi eld Company is hir-ing dozer and excavator opera-tors,Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)723-5051Edson,Alta

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

CA$H DAILYFOR OUTDOOR WORK!

Guys ‘n Gals 16 years & up!No experience necessary.

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CARPENTERS & CARPENTER HELPERS

Kooner Enterprises Ltd. is hiring Carpenters ($23.51/hr) and Carpenter Helpers ($18.69/hr). Mail: 9264 126 A Street, Surrey, BC V3V 5G2.

CLEANER For Commercial Buildings

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CONSTRUCTION HELPERS &DRYWALL INSTALLERS

Neat Restoration and Contractors is hiring for Construction Helpers $18.00/hr and Drywall Installers $25.00/hr. All 40 hours per week apply by email: neatrestorationandcontractors

@yahoo.ca

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

DRYWALL INSTALLERSCONSTRUCTION HELPERSMATERIAL HANDLERS &

CARPENTERS

Best Standard Construction Ltd. is hiring Drywall Installers ($25/hr), Construction Helpers ($18/hr), Material Handlers ($16/hr) and carpenters ($24/hr) All 40 hours week. Apply by email:

[email protected]

DRYWALL INSTALLERS / PAINTERS / HELPERS /

HANDLERS / PLASTERS

A and I Drywall Ltd is hiring Drywall Installers ($25/hr), Paint-ers ($19/hr), Construction Help-ers ($18/hr), Material Handlers ($16/hr) and Plasters ($25/hr). All 40 hrs/week. Apply by mail - 13522-88A Ave., Surrey, BC V3V1A2 and email:[email protected]

EXPERIENCED Lane Closure Tech’s and Traffi c Control people req’d. immediately. 604-996-2551 or email Traffi [email protected]

GUARANTEED Job Placement: General Laborers and Tradesmen For Oil & Gas Industry. Call 24hr Free Recorded Message For Infor-mation 1-800-972-0209

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

.

.Flagpersons & Lane Closure Techs required. Must have reliable vehicle. Must be certifi ed & experienced. Union wages & benefi ts. Fax resume 604-513-3661 email: [email protected]

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

LOOKING FORWORK?

Check out bcclassified.com Help Wanted - Class 130

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

F/T GREENS CREW(Seasonal)

Poco golf course is now Hiring for Seasonal Greens Crew to start immediately. Must have min. 1 year previous exp. or enrollment in Turf Grass management program. Excellent Work Environment.

Wages & Benefi tsCommensurate w/ experience!

E-mail resume & references:[email protected]

or Fax: 604.464.3745

PAINTERS &PAINTER HELPER

Chahal Painting is hiring Painters $19/hr & Painter Helper $18/hr. All 40 hours per week. Apply by Email: chahal [email protected] or by mail: 7940 122nd St., Surrey, BC V3W 3S7

PAINTERS & PAINTER HELPER

Star Painting Ltd is hiring painters $19/hr and painter help-er $18/hr. Both 40/hrs per week. Apply by email:

[email protected]

RJAMES WESTERN STAR FREIGHTLINER Journeyman Truck & Equipment Partsper-son. Busy commercial trans-port truck dealership in Kam-loops has an immediate opening for a journeyman parts person. This position is permanent full time with com-petitive wage and benefi t package. Resumes to Attn: HR Dept 2072 Falcon Rd., Kamloops BC V2C 4J3 Fax: (250)374-7790 Email: [email protected] Only applicants selected for an in-terview will be contacted.

Sports Minded?Earn up to $800/wk.

CS team has 10 Fulltime openings available now.

Must work well with team. Competitors welcome!

Call Sarah at 604-777-2195

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

TAILORS

Punjab Cloth Warehouse Ltd is hiring 3 tailors ($13.00/hr) 40 hours / week + benefi ts. Apply to:

[email protected]

115 EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

THE LEMARE GROUP is accept-ing resumes for the following posi-tions:• Coastal Certifi ed Hand Fallers-camp positions• Coastal Certifi ed Bull Buckers (Falling) –Includes Vehicle/Accom-modations • Grapple Yarder Operator• Boom Boat Operator• Chasers• Hooktenders• Hand Buckers –dryland sort expe-rience an asset • Grader Operator • Log Loader Operator• Heavy Duty Mechanics• Off Highway Truck DriversFulltime camp with unionrates/benefi ts. Please send re-sumes by fax to 250-956-4888 or email to offi [email protected]

115 EDUCATION

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 21

Classes Start SOONin Surrey!

Your Career Starts Here

www.discoverycommunitycollege.com

CALL NOW!Limited seats available!

604-584-4322

Scan here to learn more

Become aCOMMUNITYSUPPORTWORKERThree powerful certifi catesin one exciting diploma.• Personal Support• Education Assistant• Community Mental Health - Hands-on professional training. - Small class sizes. - Three specialized practicum placements. - Earn your professional diploma in only 54 weeks.

Campus conveniently located next to theKing George Sky Train.

Where YourSuccess Matters!

96% Employment Rate**2012

Rated best painting & moulding company (2010 & 2012) by consumers. www.benchmarkpainting.homestars.com

CALL 604-595-4970

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

131 HOME CARE/SUPPORT

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:

604-708-2628 [email protected]

www.plea.bc.ca

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

COOKS: Il Uk Jo Korean Restaurant in Surrey is looking for a F/T Cooks, 3-5 yrs exp. Prepare & cook meals. $15-18/h Fax: 604-583-9632

FOOD ATTENDANTS

PH Restaurants Ltd. dba Pizza Hut is hiring Food Counter Attendants $10.25/hr 40 hrs/week. for Kamloops, Delta & Richmond locations. Apply by Fax to:

(888) 413-7782

TANDOORI & CURRYCOOKS

GMC Food Enterprises Ltd o/a Chimney Hill Pizza & Indian Cuisine in Surrey is hiring Tandoori Cooks & Curry Cooks. ($17/hr). 40 hrs / week + ben. Apply by email: [email protected]

UMAMI Sushi in Surrey./F.T Hot Food Cook, Sushi Cook. $ 1 5 / h r , 4 0 h r s / w k , S e c o n d a r y School/3+yrs exp/basic Eng. [email protected], 205-17725 64Ave,Srry,V3S1Z2

We are currently interviewing for F/T & P/T Experienced

LINE COOKSIf you are looking for

secure employment withlong term prospects please

apply in person to: ABC Restaurant, 2160 King George Blvd. Surrey/W.Rock

to Rod or Kammiebetween 8am -4pmMonday to Sunday.

Phone 604-531-2635

115 EDUCATION

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

ELECTRICIANS

Swaich Electrical Ltd. is hir-ing Electricians ($25/hr). 40 hours week + benefi ts. Apply by Email:

[email protected]

FULL-TIME CABINETBUILDER/INSTALLER

We require an energetic, cabinet builder / installer for our busy Surrey / Port Kells location. The ideal candidate will have 3+ years experience, benefi ts after 3 mos.

Position available immediately.Please email resume:

[email protected] or mail: Continental Store Fixture Group Inc. Bldg. # 4, Unit #17,

19272 96 Ave., Surrey, B.C.V4N 4C1. Fax 604-882-3561

Journeyman Carpenters

Dorosh Construction Ltd. is currently looking for experienced

Journeyman Carpenters with concrete forming experience.

F/T employment and competitive wages offered. Please send your

resumes and references to:

[email protected] or contact Adam at 604-897-5695

KLASSIC AUTOBODY (Hay River, NT) seeking Working Shop Foreman/Assistant Manager - Over-see Bodyshop, estimations, quality/safety, team-player. $37-$42 hourly+OT, company matched pension plan, benefi ts. Apply to: [email protected]. Fax: 867-874-2843.

MACHINISTRequired for Maple Ridge com-pany. Boring Mill and Lathe exp. required. Part-time position, ideal for semi-retired person.

Please email you resume to:[email protected]

PROFESSIONAL SALESCONSULTANTS. Central Alberta’s leading Ford dealer requires two professional sales associates. We maintain a large inventory of New & Used vehicles & friendly country atmosphere with big city sales volume. We are closed Sundays and all Statutory Holidays. We offer a competitive pay plan with an aggressive bonus structure, salary guarantee and moving allowance. Attention: Dean Brackenbury, GSM. Email: [email protected].

TRUCK & TRANSPORTMECHANICS

AC Transport Ltd (Delta) is hiring Truck and Transport Mechanics $26.00/hr for 40/hrs per week.

Apply by email:

[email protected]

115 EDUCATION

We’re your #1 source for

Classified Advertising

bcclassified.com 604-575-5555

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

TWO FULL-TIME positions available immediately for an Import Auto dealer in the interior of BC. Service Advisor -minimum 2-3 years experience. Apprentice or Journeyman Technician - Both applicants must have good attitude, quality workmanship. Email: [email protected].

PERSONAL SERVICES

171 ALTERNATIVE HEALTHAMAZING MASSAGENew Location. Hot Oil.

10am - 10pm. Call: 604-719-5628

HEALTH MASSAGEGrand Opening

11969 88th

Ave. Scott Road10:00a.m.-10:00p.m.

778-593-9788175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS

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]

or Visit us at: www.threescompanycatering.ca

180 EDUCATION/TUTORING

APPLY NOW: Pennywise Scholar-ship For Women to attend Journal-ism certifi cate course at Langara College in Vancouver. Deadline June 15, 2013. More information: www.bccommunitynews.com.

182 FINANCIAL SERVICES

DROWNING IN DEBT? Cut debts more than 50% & DEBT FREE in half the time! AVOID BANKRUPT-CY! Free Consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+

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

If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161.

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

NO CREDIT CHECKS •MONEY TODAY! •$500-$5000

• Instant Approvals • 60 Day Loans • Privacy Assured

• Burnaby & Surrey Locations

www.topdogloans.com604.503.BARK (2275)

188 LEGAL SERVICESCRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certifi ca-tion, adoption property rental oppor-tunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

CRIMINAL RECORD?Guaranteed Record Removal

since 1989. Confi dential, Fast, & Affordable. Our A+BBB Rating

assures EMPLOYMENT &TRAVEL FREEDOM.

Call for FREE INFO. BOOKLET1-8-NOW-PARDON(1-866-972-7366)

RemoveYourRecord.com

STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

203 ACCOUNTING/TAX/BOOKKEEPING

J. KANG& ASSOCIATES

☛ Bookkeeping & Payroll☛ Full Cycle Accounting

☛ Personal & Corporate Returns Small Businesses Welcome!

Certifi ed ManagementAccountant of 20 years.

604.512.1872

224 CARPET CLEANING

Carpet Cleaning 4 bdrm & up

$89-$139 Automobiles

Deodorize & Sanitize. All Natural, Guaranteed

778-772-9164

242 CONCRETE & PLACING

SEMI-RETIRED contractor will do small concrete jobs. Patio’s, side-walks, driveway’s. Re & re old or damaged concrete. Ken 604-307-4923

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

257 DRYWALL

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

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

260 ELECTRICAL

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

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

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

C & C Electrical Mechanical• ELECTRICAL

• FULL PLUMBING SERVICES• HVAC GAS FITTING

*Licensed *Insured24hr. Emergency Service

604-475-7077

263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE

Affordable Mini Excavating, grad-ing, driveways, ditch-infi ll, stump re-moval, septic fi elds. 604-841-6644

269 FENCING

1-A1 BRAR CEDAR FENCING, chain link & landscaping. Block retaining wall. Reasonable rates. Harry 604-719-1212, 604-306-1714

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

6 FT FENCING, Retaining Walls, Blacktop/Concrete driveway’s, Reno’s, Roofi ng, Bobcat Service. Snow Removal. Gary Landscaping Call (604)889-8957.

281 GARDENING

A Dream Landscaping. Lawn mowing, aerate, power rake, trim, prune. Res/Com. 604-724-4987.

Landscaping & Lawn Maint. *Grass Cutting *Hedge Trim *PowerRaking *Fencing. Free Est. 778-688-3724.

.Jim’s Mowing. 310-JIMS (5467).

ALL BEST LANDSCAPINGAll Lawn Care ~ Free Est.

Lawn Cut, Ride-on mower, Pwr Rake, Aerating, Weeding. Hedge Trim, Pruning, Reseed, Edging, Moss Killer, Bark Mulch, Pressure Wash., Gutter Clean. Roof Clean. Res/Comm. Reas. Rates, Fully insured. WCB.

Bill, 604-306-5540 or604-589-5909

EB Gardening. Complete property maint. Landscaping, pressure wash 778-926-1634 / 604-318-5636

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

281 GARDENING

port kells 604-882-1344 18730 88

.supersoil

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

ALWAYS! GUTTER Cleaning & Roof Blowing, Moss Control,30 yrs exp., Reliable! Simon 604-230-0627

Gutters - Windows - Tile Roof cleaning - Pressure Cleaning, Please Call Victor 604-589-0356

283A HANDYPERSONS

Retired Firefi ghter Handyman • All Interior Work • Tiles • Trim • Drywall • Plumbing • Painting

* Experienced * ReliableRoger 604-679-0779

SENIOR’S HANDYMAN SERVICE & Pressure Washing. Semi- Retired. Honest - Reliable - Insured. Free Est. Call Brad. 604-837-5941

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

“QUARTZ/GRANITE/ARBORITE”JMS Countertops, 30 yrs/refs

★ John 604-970-8424 ★

SMALL Job Renos Int. & Ext. Home Repairs & Renos Quality Workman-ship Call Steve 778 888 7489

“QUARTZ/GRANITE/ARBORITE”JMS Countertops, 30 yrs/refs

★ John 604-970-8424 ★

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

MOON CONSTRUCTIONBUILDING SERVICES• Additions • Renovations

• New ConstructionSpecializing in • Concrete

• Forming • Framing • SidingAll your carpentry needs

& handyman requirements.

604-218-3064BEAUT 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

TIMWOOD HOMES** Specializing in Reno’s **

D Framing. Sundecks.D Stairs. Rooms. Garages.D Sheds. Patios. Bsmts.D Interior/Exterior Painting.D Tiles. Laminate Floors.D Vinyl Siding.

Call Prem 604 761-1743

288 HOME REPAIRS

A1 BATH RENO’S. Bsmt suites, drywall, patios, plumbing, siding, fencing, roofi ng, landscaping, etc. Joe 604-961-9937 or 604-581-3822

296 KITCHEN CABINETS

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

Call Raman @ 604-561-4041.

320 MOVING & STORAGE

GET the best for your moving 24/7 From $40/hr. Licensed & Insured.Seniors Discount. 778-773-3737

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.

ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-4 ton truck, 1 man $35/hr, 2 men from $45. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576

A FAST MOVING & CLEANING. Prof. movers. *Garbage removal. Insured, great rates. 778-888-9628

GET THE BEST FOR YOUR MOVING

Experienced Mover w/affordable rates,

STARTING AT $40/HR24/7 - Licensed & Insured.

** Seniors Discounts **fortiermoving.ca

Call: 778-773-3737

AFFORDABLE MOVINGwww.affordablemovers.bc.com

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

Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 MenFree Estimate/Senior DiscountResidential~Commercial~PianosLOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

604-537-4140

329 PAINTING & DECORATINGAAA PRECISION PAINTING. Quality work. 778-881-6096.

PSK PAINTING

INTERIOR/EXTERIORDrywall Repairs/Texturing

Quality work at the lowest pricePhone & compare.

In business 25 years.Fully Insured. Free Estimates.

Peter 778-552-1828

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

A-OK PAINTINGForget The Rest, Call The BEST!

Harry 604-617-0864

PAINTING 1/2 PRICE Until June 30 Interior & Exterior *35Years Exp.Free Estimates 604-498-3050

POLAR BEAR PAINTINGExt. paint special! Split level home starting @ $1500. 604-866-6706

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

“ ABOVE THE REST “Interior & Exterior Unbeatable

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

• No Hassle • Quick Work • Insured • WCB

778-997-9582

www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland

604.996.8128 Fraser ValleyRunning 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.

SL PAINTINGInterior/ExteriorFREE Estimates

Quality jobFully insured - WCB

Please call Sonly(778)980-8368

(New phone number)

~ PRO PAINTERS ~INTERIOR / EXTERIORQuality Work, Free Estimates

Member of Better Business BureauWCB INSURED

Vincent 543-7776

TONY’’S PAINTING

PRICES SO LOW I MUST BE MADCall MAD ABOUT PAINTING. Free Estimates. Int/Ext. 778-773-3918

338 PLUMBING

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

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

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

Bro Marv Plumbing24/7 plumbing, heating,

plugged drainsBBB ACCREDITED

call (604)582-1598bromarv.com

CRESCENT Plumbing & HeatingLicensed Residential 24hr. Service• Hot water tanks • Furnaces • Broilers

• Plugged Drains 778-862-0560

A Gas Fitter ✭ PlumberRENOS & REPAIRS

Excellent price on Hot Water TanksFurnace, Boilers, Plumbing Jobs &

Furnace & duct cleaning✭ 604-312-7674 ✭

FULL PLUMBING SERVICES• Hvac Gas Fitting • Electrical

*Licensed *Insured24hr. Emergency Service

C & C Electrical Mechanical604-475-7077

~ Certifi ed Plumber ~ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

Reno’s and Repairs

Furnace, Boilers, Hot Water HeatPlumbing Jobs ~ Reas rates

~ 604-597-3758 ~

341 PRESSURE WASHING

POWER WASHINGGUTTER CLEANING

SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE Call Ian 604-724-6373

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

22 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

341 PRESSURE WASHING

Gutters - Windows - Tile Roof cleaning - Pressure Cleaning, Please Call Victor 604-589-0356

Always! Power Washing, Window & Gutter cleaning, all your exterior cleaning needs. 604-230-0627

Pressure Washing: Drwys patios decks, etc, Res/Comm Lic/Ins. Spe-cializing in moss removal fr roofs Same day service 604-779-8741

IMPACT PRESSURE WASHING - Gutter, Windows, Full Houses. Excellent Rates. (604)780-4604

Gutters - Windows - Tile Roof cleaning - Pressure Cleaning, Please Call Patrick 778-865-9432.

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

A & G ROOFING LTD., all kinds of re-roofi ng. Fully insured. Free est. 25 yrs exp. Jag 604-537-3841

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

Mainland Roofi ng Ltd.25 yrs in roofi ng industry

Family owned & operated. Fully ins. We do Cedar Shakes, conversions,

concrete tiles, torchon, fi bre-glass shingles, restoration

& repairs. 20 yr labour warr.604-427-2626 or 723-2626

www.mainlandroof.com

Eastcan Roofi ng & Siding •New Roofs •Re-Roofs •Repairs

Liability Insurance/BBB/10% off with ad604.562.0957 or 604.961.0324

10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofi ng & Siding. WCB. Re-roofi ng, New Roof Gutters. 604-812-9721

.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

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

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

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

EXTRA

CHEAPRUBBISH REMOVAL

Almost for free!

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

RECYCLE-IT!JUNK REMOVAL

• Estate Services • Electronics• Appliances • Old Furniture• Construction • Yard Waste• Concrete • Drywall • Junk

• Rubbish • Mattresses • More

Recycled Earth FriendlyHOT TUBS ARENO PROBLEM!

604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca

bradsjunkremoval.comHauling Anything.. But Dead Bodies!!20 YARD BINS AVAILABLE

We Load or You Load !604.220.JUNK(5865)

Serving MetroVancouver Since 1988

Honest Man Rubbish removal. Fast honest service,best rates, clean-up, Handyman Services. 604-782-3044

372 SUNDECKS

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

374 TREE SERVICES

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 & STUMPremoval done RIGHT!

• Tree Trimming• Fully Insured • Best Rates604-787-5915/604-291-7778 www.treeworksonline.ca

[email protected]

PETS

456 FEED & HAY

COURSE CEDAR HOG FUELCall 604-856-6500

477 PETS

Airedale Terrier pups. P/b, ckc reg., micro, health guar, 604-819-2115. email: [email protected]

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

PETS

477 PETS

German shepherd cross with husky puppy, Female. 2-1/2 mos. $600/obo. (604)463-8924

GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups P/B. 1st shots, vet checked, dewormed, 10 weeks old, $700. (604)850-3329

ITALIAN MASTIFF(Cane Corso)

P/B blue brindle ~ 1 Female Ready to go. 1st shots &

tails/dew claws done. ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIAN

$1000 604-308-5665

JACK RUSSELL pups 3F 1M. 8wks old, short legs, smooth coat. Dew claws done. $500. 778-883-6049

MAREMMA PUPS, working stock guard pups, protectors of livestock, family or property, will guard what-ever it bonds to. Being raised with livestock. No Sunday calls. 1 (604)796-8557

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

SHELTIES: Sable colored. One 7 month old, two 3 month olds. Ready now. Shots/dewormed. 604-826-6311

TOY POODLE PUPS 4 wks old, 2 males; 1 white, 1 blond/white. $700 each. Avail. June 15. 604-820-4230, 604-302-7602

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

509 AUCTIONS

Big Valley Auction6 0 4 - 8 5 7 - 0 8 0 0www.bigvalleyauction

ANTIQUE AUCTION

June 5th @ 5:00pmPreview 9:00am

Furniture, Artwork, Crystal & China. Featuring Hardy

& other Fishing Rods. CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

Unit # 4 - 26157 FRASER HWY., accredited appraisals available

542 FRUIT & VEGETABLES

LOCAL STRAWBERRIES available Surrey Farms. 5180 - 152 Street. 604-574-1390

548 FURNITURE

*NEW QUEEN MATTRESS SET*Pillow Top in Plastic. Mfr. Warranty Must Sell! $200 ~ 604-484-0379

559 MEDICAL SUPPLIES

AQUASSURE Walk-in Tubs & Showers Local service. Save $$ 1-866-404-8827www.aquassure.com

566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

PIANO, Full keyboard, all the bells and whistles. Yamaha Clavinova. $500. Good cond. (604)531-1267

REAL ESTATE

625 FOR SALE BY OWNER

ALDERGROVE; correct Phone # 778-878-1586, 3215 266A St.

3 Bdrm bsmt entry home. $398,500 Some Furniture avail.

CLOVERDALE - Immaculatecondo 1 bdrm + den ( 2nd bdrm?) + fl ex 900 + sf. Newly upgraded, furnished, move in/rent pets okSee uSELLaHOME.com id5716

Open House. Sun. June 2, 11-3pm. Apt 316 - 17661 - 58A Ave. $154,900: (604)351-2083

REAL ESTATE

625 FOR SALE BY OWNER

Fleetwood 2540 sf, granite coun-ters, 7100 sf. lot, dble garage, 4 bd, 3 ba $529,000. 604-727-9240

SURREY. House on 1/2 Acre Lot.

GOOD INVESTMENT. 13690 Bentley Rd. $695K.

By Owner. Call 604-324-0655

627 HOMES WANTED

WE BUY HOUSES!Older House • Damaged House

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

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

OKANAGAN

PRIME LAKEVIEW LOTSFROM $140,000

Also; Spectacular 3 Acre Parcelat $390,000 1-250-558-7888

www.orlandoprojects.com~ FINANCING AVAILABLE ~

630 LOTS

11+ ACRES overlooking beautiful Bridge Lake, majestic fi r trees, good building site, $169,000.(250)945-9944

CLOVERDALE LOTS FOR SALE,Building lots - full bsmts allowed. Call: (604)244-1112

Searching for your dream homeor selling it? This is the location. Listings

include everything from acreage, farms/ranchesto condos and waterfront homes.

bcclassified.com

REAL ESTATE

633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS

New 2bdrm, 2bath in nice Surrey park. Home $119,900. Pad rent $570/mo. Pet ok. 604-830-1960.

639 REAL ESTATE SERVICES

• DIFFICULTY SELLING ? •Diffi culty Making Payments?

No Equity? Expired Listing? Penalty? We Take Over Payments! No Fees!www.GVCPS.ca / 604-786-4663

RATES ARE GOING UP! Call now for 2.60% Variable

2.79% 5 yr FixedCommercial and Residential

Self Employed, Credit Damage OKMartinique Walker

Verico Assent Mortgage Corp.Call: 604.984.9159

641 TOWNHOUSES

LARGEST TOWNHOME in Lincoln’s Gate

10620 - 150th St. Surrey

Updated unit, new fl oors/cabinets Community Building with pool.

3 LARGE BEDROOMS.Properly priced at $255K.

Quite area, but close to all amens. Shannon - Sutton 604-309-0537

684 SURREY

1.95 ACRES OF FUTURE develop-ment with renovated home, 190 St. & 76 Ave. $1,395,000 - call: Global Force Realty (604)761-6935.

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

CLOVERDALE 1bd $780. 2bd $930 Rents incl heat & hot water. N/P. 604-576-1465 or 604-612-1960

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

GUILDFORD GARDENS

1 bdrm. from $7002 bdrm. from $875

• 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

604.319.7514CEDAR APTS

$50 off/month for the fi rst yearQuiet community living next to

Guildford Mall. Clean 1 & 2 bdrm suites (some w/ensuites)

Cable, heat & hot water included. Walk Score = 92

604-584-5233 www.cycloneholdings.ca

CLOVERDALE: Kolumbia Garden* 17719 58A Ave. Reno’d Spacious 2 bdrm. with laminate fl ooring, large closet room & balcony. Near transit & shops. No pets. Ref’s req’d. Call: 778-789-3007.

GUILDFORD: 2 Bdrm, 19th fl r, mtn view, 5 applis, hot water, gas f/p, 1 prkg, 2 pools, exercise room, tennis courts, ns/np, avail June15. $1200. 604-581-7171 or 604-588-2797.

GUILDFORDMOVE-IN BONUS

Family Friendly Complex1 & 2 BR APTS

available Now & July 1Close to shopping, transit, schools & park. Some small pets welcome. On-site security. Sea-sonal swimming pool.

Call: 604-585-1966SOMERSET GARDENS (S. Sry) Family housing, 1851 Southmere Crescent E. 2 bdrm apt. $880/mo.

incl. heat. Pet friendly, near all amenities. Community garden.

604-451-6676

551 GARAGE SALES

ANNUALGARAGE SALE

June 7th & 8th9:00a.m. - 4:30p.m.

Save upto 80% onassorted Mouldings, Flooring & In-Stock

Columns.

Check Out OurUnbelievable Prices &Products on-line at;

westcoastmoulding.com

Balloons, Hot Dogs,Beverages & Prizes!

18810 - 96th Avenue Surrey

604-513-1138

551 GARAGE SALESMULTI-FAMILY Complex Garage Sale, Murrayville Glen, 21928 48 Avenue, Langley. Saturday June 8, 2013 from 9-3pm. Rain or shine.

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

call 604.575-5555

$12ONLY

with the Power Pack… Time

Offer!

3-LINE EXAMPLESize not exactly as shown

Sell your Home!

SURREY: 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, hard-wood fl oors throughout and new roof. $549,000. 604-575-5555.

Power Pack PRINT AD: Includes photo and 3-lines for one week.

ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week!

USEDVancouver.com ONLINE AD: Local reach — until you cancel it!

Tuesday, June 4, 2013 Surrey/North Delta Leader 23

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

MAYFLOWER CO-OP2 Bdrm unit $847/mo.

1 Bdrm units $695 - $725/mo5 Min walk to Surrey Ctrl Skytrain, and all amenities. 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 UMBERTOLovely 2 bdrm with 2 full baths in Quiet building.

In-suite laundrySecured underground parking.

Ph: 604-596-5671 Cell: 604-220-8696

SURREY

Regency Park Gardens

Large 1 & 2 bedroom units Rent from $725.00/mo.

Phone: 604-581-8332 & 604-585-0063

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 13277 108 Ave. 1 Bdrm condo, inste laundry, sec u/g pkng, next to Gateway Skytrain. Ns/np, avail now, $850/mo. Call after 5pm: 604-765-8146.

SURREY 75/120A St. 2 Bdrm $960 + $40 cable. 3 Bdrm $1080. Quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-501-0505

SURREY CENTRAL. Brnd new 1 bdrm condo on 37th fl r avail June 1. $1300/mo. (604)835-2744

SURREY Central. Large 1 & 2 bdrm apts. Close to skytrain. Incl heat, cable, pkng & 3 appli’s. N/P. 604-588-4664 or 604-588-8121.

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.

WALNUT GROVE 2bdr exec condo 2bths, 6appl, 2prk, lrg deck, strg rm 1yr lease. $1400 incl ht/wtr. July1st. 604-589-7772 or 778-241-0071

WHITE ROCK. Large 1 or 2 bdrm newly remod, new carpets/paint. Start @ $650. Quiet & clean. Close to beach & shops. Avail now. N/S. Incl heat & hot water. 604-900-1092

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

SURREY

PARKSIDE APARTMENTS

1 Bdrm. $715.002 Bdrm. $825.00

• 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

SURREYSOMERSET HOUSE

LUXURY 2 bdrms suite available immediately, In-suite W&D, fi re-place, 5 app and freshly painted and new carpets. 1 blk to King George Sky train & Mall, Sec. Under Ground Parking.

To view-call The Manager @ 604-580-0520

709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

S. SURREY. Warehouse, approx 1000 sf. 220 wiring, One -14’ door, gated. Suitable for storage. Avail. June 1. $750m. Call 604-835-6000.

715 DUPLEXES/4PLEXES

AVAILABLE NOW - Guildford Reno’d lrg bright 1000s/f 2bdr, w/d, lrg deck, fenced yd, nr amens/schls, $900 +utils. Ns/np. 604-283-9055.

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS

NEWTON MOBILE HOME PARK.2 Large RV Pads available for

mobile home. Call 604-597-4787.

736 HOMES FOR RENT

. Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244

RENTALS

736 HOMES FOR RENT

Langley Willowbrook 3 Bd, 2bath up 1bd f/bath ste down. Recrm. Ns/np. June 1st. $1650/mo 604-574-4057

SOUTH SURREY, 4 bdrm., 2 full & 2 part baths. fam. room., lge. lot, $2500 mo. Avail. immed. Refs. Lease Call 778-565-3155

SURREY: 134 & 95 Ave. Reno’d 3 bdrm rancher. Cls to Hosp. $1499: Now. 604-341-0371, 604-351-0162

SURREY 74/184 Ave. whole hse, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 2.5 acre, avail now. $1750. Ref’s req’d. 604-574-4135

SURREY - Avail July 14 Bdrm Bsmt Home3 Appliances. Fenced Yard,Garage. No pets. $1500/mo

Drive by: 8958 151 StreetCall 604-617-9373

739 MOTELS, HOTELS

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

750 SUITES, LOWER

2 BRM. Surrey Central near schools buses/train. Utilities inc. No Laundry/Pets. $800. Call 604-833-3347

BOLIVAR HEIGHTS. 2 bdrm g/l ste, NS/NP. $750 incl utils. Clse to amen. Avail now. 604-317-7576

BOLIVAR HEIGHTS. 2 Bdrm gr/lvl suite, avl now, ns/np. $600 incl utils & cbl. 604-582-9194, 604-441-6756

CHIMNEY HEIGHTS. 1 bdrm g/l ste Incl utils. $600/month Avail Now NP/NS No lndry. Ref. 604-591-8654

CHIMNEY HTS. Extra large 1 bdrm. Sep kitchen. NS/NP. $590/mo incl utils/net. Now. 604-598-1010

CLOV/LANGLEY 2 bdrm suite, Avail. June 1 or July 11. N/S, N/P.Nr all amenits. 604-574-6400

FLEETWOOD; 2 BDRM BSMT $850/mo or 3 bdrm bsmt $1150/mo. Close to all amenities. Utils incl.N/S, No pets. Avail June 1st.(604)582-8913 or (604) 616-4477

FLEETWOOD 82/156 new lrg 1 bd $600/mo incl basic cable/hydro. Nr amens, NP/NS. Now 778-233-1498

FRASER HEIGHTS: Lrg 1 bdrm liv/rm & kitc, sep entry w/patio. Utils incl. NP/NS. $675. (604)584-9111

FRASER HTS. Large clean 3 bdrm ste. Insuite W/D. $1000 incl all utils, cbl, net. Avail now. 604-957-2666.

GUILDFORD: 2 Bdrm bsmt ste, nr school & bus. June 1st. $750/mo incl hydro. N/S, N/P. 778-895-0566.

Guildford lge 2 bdrm g/l on green-belt & creek. lge patio. Incl util/ldry $870 NS/NP Immed 604-715-1667

GUILDFORD nr 99/159 2 bdrm above grnd ste, NS/NP. Avail now. $750 incl utils & ldry. 604-725-9714

N.DELTA. 1 Bdrm suite, nice &open nr bus, schls, shops, library. NS/NP $600 incl utils/lndry. 778-996-7681.

NEW: S.S Apps no smoking/ pets, NEAR Skytrain, Elem/High SCHL/ Mem. Hosp. 3 (4) bed w/ WIC for $950. 778-881-8734

NEWTON: 148 & 68th Ave. 2 bdrm, 2 full bthrms, 1150sf. sep entr. Avl. now. N/S, N/P. 604-626-5727

PANORAMA 133/58. Large 1 bdrm g/lvl suite. Avail June 1st. N/S. N/P. $500/mo incl utils. 604-649-0406.

SULLIVAN HEIGHTS 150/59A, 2 bdrm in newer hse $650 wifi , utils incl. NS/NP. Now. 604-537-5794

SURREY 119/98th Ave.Newly Renovated 2 Bdrm suite - $750/mo incl utils & cable. Close to bus stop. Sorry NS/NP. Avail now. Call: 604-728-3377.

SURREY, 14211-61A Ave. Newer 2 bdrm bsmt suite, full bath, ns/np, Nr schools. $750/mo inc util & lndry. No cbl, internet. 604-501-9582

SURREY. 14571 82A Ave. 1 bdrm, near amens. NS/NP $500 incl utils. & cbl. Avail now. 604-590-9353

SURREY 146A/68. 2 Bdrm suite. Avail now, ns/np. $600 incl hydro, cable, heat & pkng. 604-725-8366.

SURREY 147/63 Ave large 1 bdrm $600/mo incl utils, cable & laundry. Avail immed. (604)807-2967.

SURREY 148/68 Ave. Spac 3 bdrm grnd lvl. Incl alarm, sep w/d. Ns/np. Avail July 1st. Jas 604-599-5036.

SURREY 148/84. 2bdrm grd lvl ste, Nr schl,bus,shops. No cable/laund. N/P. $775 incl utils. 778-823-1200.

SURREY 15931-95A Ave. 1 Bdrm near schl/bus. $550/mo incl hydro, & washer. No dryer. NS/NP, No parties.Avail. Now. 604-580-2051

SURREY 163/80A Ave 3 Bdrm new reno’s, near schl & bus, $1100/mo. N/S, N/P, No lndry. (604)591-2786

SURREY - 5908 138th St. Reno’d 1 bdrm $500/mo. Incl utils & cable. Near amens/schls/transit. N/P. Avail immed. Call: 604-996-7860

SURREY 71/149 St. Bright 2 bdrm in new house, full bath, nr bus/schl. Ns/np. Avail now. $650 incl utils/cbl. 604-507-3156 or 604-710-1782.

SURREY, 8098-163A St. Fleet-wood area. 1 bdrm. $600 incl hy-dro/gas/lndry. Avail now. N/P. N/S. Suit quiet person. 778-885-5511.

SURREY 95A/132. BRAND NEW Large 2 or 3 bdrm grnd lvl suite. Full bth, nr all amens. Rent nego. incl utils, WiFi & cable. NS/NP. Now. 604-496-2250, 778-838-0865

SURREY - Fleetwood 88/163 St.2Bdr suite.Ns/np, no laund,no cable July1. $750 incl utils. 604-584-4084

RENTALS

750 SUITES, LOWER

Surrey, ENVER CREEK. 1 bdrm bsmt suite Avail now. Nr bus & school. N/S. N/P. $450/mo. 778-928-4745 or 778-960-6067.

SURREY: Large 2 bdrm bsmt suite- $700m inc util & lndry. n/s, n/p. Avail. now. (604)582-4377

SURREY, Panorama. 2 Bdrm bsmt. $650 incl hydro & cable. N/S. N/P. 778-668-0179 or 778-386-0179.

SURREY Sullivan Hts 151/67Ave.Lrg 1bdr, nr all amens, ns/np. Now. $600 incl hydro/cble. 604-724-6609

SURREY Sullivan Hts. 2Bdr gr/lvl in new house, avail now. Ns/np, $700 incl utils/cbl/wifi . 604-375-6052.

751 SUITES, UPPER

AVAILABLE 2 Bdrm level entry base ste, 1250 sqft, 5 appls, newly

renovated, fncd backyard. 10793 142A St. No Pets.

$850/mo + utils. (604)583-6844

NORTH SURREY. Bolivar Hts upper fl oor 1600 sf, 3 bdrms, 1-1/2 baths, 5 appl. Cls to schools & bus. $1300/m. 604-968-6147

SULLIVAN HTS: - Beautiful bright newer 1 & 2 bdrm suites. New appl. Cls to bus, church nr by. Avl now. 604-543-7878 or 604-724-9608

SURREY; 101A/146, newly reno 3 Bdrm, nr Superstore, Guildford Ctr & buy. No lrg dogs, no drugs. Credit check $1200 + utils. (778)708-9938

SURREY- 2 Bdrm upper suite. Cls to shopping, bus, schools. n/s. n/p. Avail now. 604-782-0596

SURREY 3bdrms, 2 livrms, 2 baths, near last skytrain station, SMH, Surrey Place Mall, elem & high schools. $1300/mo +1/2 utils.Avail immed. Call (604)727-2525.

SURREY, Fleetwood. 3 Bdrm upper house. $1100 + utils. June 1st. N/S, N/P, Ref’s. Gary (778)861-2644

752 TOWNHOUSES

EPSOM DOWNS 13699 76 Ave.

3 bdrm T/H with w/d hook-up, car port $1040/m. Close to all amen’s,

schools & transit.Call Now! 604-451-6676

KINGSTON GARDENS 15385 99 Ave.

2 Bedroom Townhome $895/month.

Near Guildford Mall, schools & transit. Call Now!! 604-451-6676

SURREY 139/68 Ave. 2 Bdrm T/H $890/mo. Quiet family complex, no pets. 604-599-0931

SURREY 174/57 Ave. 2 bdrm town-house $900, quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-576-9969

SURREY, Applications now being accepted for 2 & 3 Bedroom town-houses at Waldon Place Co-op. Please pick up Applications at 12185 - 82nd Ave, Surrey BC. Sorry, No Subsidy available at this time.

TRANSPORTATION

810 AUTO FINANCING

Need A Vehicle! Guaranteed Auto Loan. Apply Now, 1.877.680.1231 www.UapplyUdrive.ca

A1 AUTO LOANS. Good, Bad or No Credit - No problem. We help with rebuilding credit & also offer a fi rst time buyer program. Call 1-855-957-7755.

DreamTeam Auto Financing“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -

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TRANSPORTATION

810 AUTO FINANCING

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

• Autos • Trucks• Equipment Removal

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

Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022The Scrapper

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

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

WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com

TRANSPORTATION

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE

REMOVALASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT

$$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200

FREE Scrap Vehicle RemovalUp To $500 CA$H Today

Fast Service. JJ 604-728-1965

847 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

2006 DURANGO SLT. Loaded! 7/pass, lthr, moon roof, rear dvd steering wheel audio controls, reg maint. $12,000. 604-218-8850

NOTICE TO CREDITORSAND OTHERS

Re: The Estate of Mohammed Yunus Khan (deceased) formerly of #26 - 8289 - 121A St.,Surrey, B.C.

Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Mohammed Yunus Khan are hereby notifi ed under Section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be sent to the Executrix, Jamila Bibi Khan, c/o Lindsay Kenney LLP, #400 - 20033 - 64th Avenue, Langley, BC, V2Y 1M9 (Attention: Timothy N. Grier) before July 15, 2013, af-ter which date the Executrix will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having re-gard to the claims of which the Executrix then has notice.

REPAIRERS LIENWhereby Qickfi x Auto Body Ltd.is indebted to IP Auto Services Ltd (604-542-0624) for mechani-cal repair & storage on a 2003 Ford Windstar, Vin# 2FMZA5S403BA718442. A lien is claimed un-der the act for the amount due and owning of $6133.12 incl. storage, seizure, lien and sale. Notice is hereby given that on May 30, 2013 or thereafter the given vehicle will be sold.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND

OTHERS

Re: Estate of JULIA KELLEY PHILP,

Deceased Date of Death:

November 14, 2012

Creditors and others having claims against the estate of Julia Kelley Philp, late 13365 82B Avenue, Surrey, BC, are hereby required to send the particulars of their claims to the Administra-tor at 1212 - 1175 Doug-las Street, Victoria, BC, V8W 2E1 on or before July 12, 2013, after which date the Adminis-trator will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having re-gard to the claims of which the Administrator has notice.

KATHRYN GAY LAWRIE

Administrator

By her solicitors:Jones Emery

Hargreaves Swan

NOTICE TO CREDITORSNotice is hereby given that credi-tors and other having claims against the estate of Katherine Margaret P. Wilson, formerly of #102 - 16447 64th Ave., Surrey, V3S 6V7, Deceased, are hereby required to send the particulars thereof to the undersigned execu-tor, C. Elias, at the above ad-dress on or before June 7, 2013, after which date the estate’s as-sets will be distributed, having re-gard only to the claims that have been received.C.Elias, Executor.

Sell your vehicle FAST in the highest read community newspapers & largest online sites!

call 604.575-5555

$12ONLY

with the Power Pack… Time

Offer!

3-LINE EXAMPLESize not exactly as shown

Sell your Car!

2010 VENZA: Like new, only 20,000 kms, fully loaded, automatic, 6 cylinder, dvd sys-tem. $22,800. 604-575-5555.

Power Pack

PRINT AD: Includes photo and 3-lines for one week.

ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week!

USEDVancouver.com ONLINE AD: Local reach — until you cancel it!

18 Surrey/North Delta Leader Tuesday, June 4, 2013