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September 16, 2015 edition of the Surrey North Delta Leader
Citation preview
KEVIN DIAKIW
A pristine area in South Surrey, teeming with fi sh and at-risk species of wildlife, is being examined for development potential as a future business park.
South Campbell Heights, near 16 Avenue and 192 Street, is more than half the size of Vancouver’s Stanley Park and is abundant with salmon, 100-year-old trees, an immense aquifer and many animals, including 13 species considered at risk.
Th e 245-hectare (600-acre) expanse of land is roughly bordered by 8 Avenue to the south, 20 Avenue to the north, 188 Street to the west and the Langley border (196 Street) to the east.
It has been identifi ed in several City of Surrey docu-ments as an ecologically sensitive area, but is now being eyed for a business park.
Th e particularly sensitive area south of 16 Avenue is called a “Special Study Area” which is defi ned as “an area where future land planning is projected, potentially lead-ing to land use changes.”
An environmental study commissioned by the city this year indicates the area is home to the Brookswood Aquifer which is “highly vulnerable to contamination.”
Th e study notes the aquifer is “nearing or at (devel-opment) capacity” to provide domestic water “without decreasing the water table.”
Th e study indicates the area includes tree stands be-tween 50 and 100 years old, which “dominate the forested landscape.” Some of those trees are 100 centimetres (more than three feet) in diameter at chest height.
Th e study also notes there are 13 at-risk wildlife species identifi ed in the area, including the Pacifi c water shrew, Trowbridge’s shrew and a two species of bat.
Th e expanse of land is just south of the Campbell Heights Business Park, which began development in 2003.
Th e David Suzuki Foundation described that development as one of the worst
▲ Surrey’s Lyles honoured by CIS 14
Carson Scheifner, 17, performs stunts with his pro scooter during Dario Jam at South Surrey Skate Park on Sept. 12. The event was dedicated to Dario Bartoli, a South Surrey teen and BMX and skateboarding enthusiast who was murdered last December. Proceeds from the event will got to local youth programs. BOAZ JOSEPH
▶ SOUTH CAMPBELL HEIGHTS, HOME TO 13 AT-RISK SPECIES, IS BEING CONSIDERED FOR A BUSINESS OR INDUSTRIAL PARK
ECOLOGICALLYSENSITIVE AREA EYED FOR DEVELOPMENT
continued on page 4
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Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 3
SHEILA REYNOLDS
Vulnerable kids in Surrey are scoring big after a visit from a couple of Vancouver Canucks on Monday afternoon.
Twins Henrik and Daniel Sedin were at Holly Elementa-ry to help offi cially launch Clubhouse 36, a program that provides inner-city students aged six to 12 with after-school and school break activities they might not normally be able to access.
Th e Sedin Family Foundation, Surrey School District and YMCA of Greater Vancouver launched the program, with support from founding sponsors Westland Insurance, the Robert L. Conconi Foundation, Bosa Properties Foundation, as well as BMO and Canucks for Kids Fund.
Clubhouse 36 was piloted at Holly, as well as two other local elementary schools – Georges Vanier and Lena Shaw – in July. More than 170 children at those schools had the chance to try archery, fi shing, robot-building and other activities during summer vacation.
Programming at the Surrey schools will continue to be off ered to 80 children two days per week after school, and full-day activities will be available during spring and sum-mer breaks to as many as 150 kids. Breakfast and lunch is also provided.
Th e goal is to “build the confi dence and self-esteem of at-risk and vulnerable students through social, emotional, life, sport, art, leadership and academic learning in a structured
out-of-school environment.” Daniel Sedin said it’s important that classroom learning is
enriched with interesting, fun and safe activities outside of school.
“For young children … school is the centre of their daily ac-tivity. Off ering Clubhouse 36 in partnership with the YMCA in community schools makes it as accessible as possible for students and their families.”
Clubhouse 36 will be co-staff ed by Surrey Schools and the YMCA, and volunteers from local high schools will also pro-vide support. Students are identifi ed to participate by school staff and take part in programs free of charge.
Henrik said he and his brother had the opportunity to take part in after-school activities growing up and wanted to help provide those experiences to other children.
“Th e four of us all grew up in a small town in Sweden and community was really important to our families,” he said re-ferring to he and his brother and their wives. “It is inspiring for us to see how Clubhouse 36 is already impacting the lives of students and their families in the Surrey community.”
Th e hope is that Clubhouse 36 can eventually be expanded to other schools.
Currently, 36 of Surrey’s 120 public schools are designat-ed inner city, based on factors such as low average income, single parent and refugee families and number of children in government care.
Shawn Wilson, chair fo the Surrey school board, was pleased to see obstacles to learning and success being removed.
“It is heartening to see the community coming to-gether for families,” he said.
JEFF NAGEL
The Canadian Cancer Society will stop op-erating its Volunteer Driver Program that for years has given patients free rides to and from chemotherapy and radiation treatment in many B.C. communities.
The society says declines in donations and volunteers have forced the end of the service, which cost $400,000 a year.
“Unfortunately, we’ve had to make the really difficult decision to close the program effective Oct. 6,” said Sandra Krueckl, vice-president of cancer control for the Canadian Cancer Soci-ety’s B.C. and Yukon division.
“Donor dollars have been shrinking in recent years,” she said, adding the cancer society has felt the same stresses as many other charities, including a slide in how many hours volunteers are now willing to commit out of their increas-ingly busy lives.
“As our current volunteers are retiring out of their current volunteer roles, we are not seeing
the same number of volunteers coming up behind them.”
About 80 cli-ents per month used the pro-gram, which was staffed by rough-ly 380 volunteers around B.C.
Drivers used their own vehi-cles and were reimbursed 41 cents per kilome-tre for gas and wear and tear.
Other transpor-tation alternatives exist in most communities, Krueckl said, adding demand for rides had been declining.
She stressed that the Freemasons Cancer Car Program, a separate ride service that the cancer society is a partner in, is unaffected and will continue to operate.
The society asked the province, which already contributes to the operations of its cancer lodg-es, to provide more funding to support the ride program, but was declined.
“While they certainly were sympathetic to our situation and understood our declining revenue situation and challenges with supporting this program in the future, they have competing priorities,” Krueckl said.
The loss of the cancer society program will be felt mainly in some parts of Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and Vancouver Island, she added.
The cancer society is advising clients on what other ride services may be available in each area. They can call 1-888-939-3333.
Sedins shoot to helpSurrey students succeed
Vancouver Canucks player Henrik Sedin, right, with his brother Daniel looking on, helps Holly Elementary Grade 5 student Jessie Nystrom build a flashlight during the official launch of Clubhouse 36, an after-school program for kids in Surrey. EVAN SEAL
▼ DROP IN DONATIONS AND NUMBER OF VOLUNTEERS BLAMED FOR END OF PROGRAM THAT GOT PATIENTS TO AND FROM TREATMENT
Cancer society ditches free rides
▶ “It is inspiring for us to see how Clubhouse 36 is already impacting the lives of students and their families...”HENRIK SEDIN
Sandra Krueckl
▼ CANUCK BROTHERS LAUNCH CLUBHOUSE 36, AN OUT-OF-SCHOOL PROGRAM TO PROVIDE OPPORTUNITIES TO INNER-CITY CHILDREN
4 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
A 245-hectare expanse of green space in
South Surrey is being considered for the development of a business park or
industrial enterprise. EVAN SEAL
▶ PUBLIC CONSULTATION TO COME ON PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT
examples of salmon habitat destruction in the province.
Th e large area south of 16 Av-enue includes the Little Camp-bell River, which is home to several varieties of salmonids.
Surrey staff say the area is being considered for an expan-sion of the business park or industrial uses.
Deb Jack, president of the Surrey Environmental Partners (SEP), said Monday her group is deeply troubled by the plan to pave the way for development in South Campbell Heights.
“We are very concerned and have been concerned from the outset,” Jack told Th e Leader.
At one time, SEP recommend-ed to council the city create “living legacy parks” in Surrey. Campbell Heights was the only
location specifi ed by the envi-ronmental watchdog.
Th ose concerned about the streams are particularly unnerved by the development plan.
Roy Strang, with the Little Campbell River Watershed Society, said he had no idea a Local Area Plan for the South Campbell was in the works.
He urges the city to go back to the basics and examine why the area needs to be considered for construction of any kind.
“I’m skeptical,” Strang said. “Th ey better ask themselves, do they have to develop? What is the purpose of development? Just to broaden their tax base?”
Mayor Linda Hepner said Monday some areas of the plan need to be protected, while others don’t have huge environ-mental values.
One area in the lands, near
176 Street, she said is an old gravel pit, and is probably ripe for development.
“But in discussion with the Little Campbell River folk, there are some concerns about areas in there you would never touch, and I expect that will be what happens within the Local Area Plan analysis,” Hepner said.
“But there are some areas that I think will prove valuable for us to achieve a couple of other elements,” Hepner said, adding that would likely take the form of industrial development.
A report was expected to be presented to city council at a meeting Monday night (after the Leader press deadline).
From there, city staff would begin taking the plan to the public through several consulta-tion sessions.
Th at process is expected to be completed by spring of 2017.
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Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 5 Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 5
JEFF NAGEL
Federal parties are racing to pledge sup-port for rapid transit, particularly in seat-rich Surrey, where the city council continues to push its plan for light rail lines.
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau said Th urs-day the Surrey lines, Vancouver’s Broadway subway and more SeaBus service would likely get federal contributions from an extra $20 billion his party is pledging for public transit over 10 years.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper had been expected to unveil Conservative commitments for transit a week earlier at a campaign event in Surrey, alongside for-mer mayor-turned-To-ry candidate Dianne Watts, until the announcement was bumped by the Syrian refugee crisis.
But support for tran-sit from Ottawa has never been a big ques-tion mark for Metro Vancouver mayors.
Th ey’ve assumed one-third federal contributions for the rapid transit projects will come regardless of which party wins.
Unless a federal lead-er off ers more than one third – and none has so far – the big roadblock to new transit lines will remain this summer’s referendum defeat by Metro voters of a small sales tax hike to cover the region’s one-third share of transit expan-sion.
Surrey is still aiming to advance its $2.1-bil-lion light rail project as a P3. But it has yet to produce a business case. And it remains unclear how the city’s taxpayers would eventually repay costs fi nanced by a private partner.
Nor is there any sign of a new deal afoot between the mayors and the province to deliver an additional TransLink tax source and get the new lines get built as part of a coordinated regional
transit plan.Th e campaign prom-
ises stacking up for the Vancouver and Surrey lines are likely to remain vague, leaving many questions unan-swered after Oct. 19.
One is whether the Surrey project will defi -nitely be ground-level light rail instead of elevated SkyTrain.
SkyTrain, at least down Fraser Highway, would allow a faster, seamless ride without
transfer to the rest of the system for passen-gers boarding in Lang-ley and Cloverdale.
It would be more costly up front, how-ever, and is resisted by Surrey politicians who say light rail better connects residents to local destinations.
Also unclear is the timing of federal grants – could that delay or help accelerate construction?
Th en there’s the
question of where fed-eral grants might actu-ally fl ow. To TransLink, possibly conditional on a broader regional transit solution? Or to Surrey and Vancouver to cover just their Plan B schemes?
Th e devil will be in the details.
For now, upbeat tran-sit funding promises off er no surprises and no breakthrough to the impasse left by the failed referendum.
Transit pledges unlikely to clear impasse▶ ONE-THIRD CONTRIBUTIONS FROM OTTAWA WERE WIDELY EXPECTED
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau meeting candidates and supporters in Vancouver Thursday after promising billions in funding for public transit. FLICKR/JUSTIN TRUDEAU
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Th e “Quebec First Party” (Liberals), the “Quebec First Since 2011 Party” (NDP), and the “Quebec Only Party” (Th e Bloc) all believe that the new Champlain Bridge in Montreal should not be tolled but rather be paid for by all Canadians.
NDP leader Th omas Mulcair has even said that it is the most important bridge in Canada. He says it shouldn’t be tolled because it goes over an international waterway.
I may not know much about geography, but Google maps shows the bridge starting and ending within Quebec, some 50 kilometres
from the U.S. border.What makes the St. Law-
rence River more important than the Fraser River and what does that have to do with how a bridge is paid for? Why do I have to pay directly for the two bridges in my neighbourhood that I use (Port Mann and Golden Ears) and also help pay for a bridge in Montreal that I likely will never use?
Th e Lions Gate bridge goes over an international water-way as well but it was funded without federal help.
Justin Trudeau and Mulcair as national leaders should better explain the reason for this apparent inequity. Only Gilles Duceppe need not explain; we already know he works exclusively for Quebec.
Kevin Mazerolle
The Surrey/North Delta Leader is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, withdocumentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, P.O. Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9. For information, phone888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org
PUBLISHERJim [email protected]
EDITORPaula [email protected]
ASSISTANTAD MANAGERShaulene [email protected]
CIRCULATION MANAGERSherri [email protected]
“I am tired of managing poverty.”Th e words of Lake Babine Nation
Chief Wilf Adam were quoted by both Aboriginal Relations Minister John Rustad and Premier Christy Clark at their second annual meeting with aboriginal leaders around the province.
In her closing remarks, Clark re-peated her aim to continue economic development and resource revenue sharing that have dominated the gov-ernment’s approach in recent years.
“Let’s eliminate poverty in First Na-tions communities,” she said, adding “the only way we can fi ght poverty is to grow the economy.”
Not surprisingly, Clark’s chosen example was the potential of liquefi ed natural gas development for the Haisla Nation near Kitimat.
Th at and similar proposals require new gas pipelines. And as is cus-tomary in B.C., what people most often hear about are threats and wild claims regarding protests such as the Unist’ot’en camp near Smithers, set up to block a gas pipeline.
Th ere was a round of this in late Au-gust, after Grand Chief Stewart Phillip
of the militant Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs claimed hundreds of RCMP offi cers were about to descend on the camp. Th is echoed previous false claims made by self-styled anarchists such as Victoria’s Zoe Blunt, who has been organizing outside support for the camp for the last couple of years.
Media jumped at the prospect of another Gustafson Lake-style con-frontation. Th is prompted an unusual statement from Cpl. Janelle Shoihet of the North District RCMP.
“To clarify, the B.C. RCMP has no intention of ‘taking down the camp’ set up by the Unist’ot’en,” she said, emphasizing that police are not taking sides or acting as security for pipeline exploration crews being harassed by protesters, who have token support from a couple of dissident members of a Wet’suwet’en clan.
Four elected chiefs of the Wet’su-wet’en issued their own statement, to correct media coverage that represents the Unist’ot’en as speaking for their communities.
“Our Nations support responsible resource development as a way to
bring First Nations out of poverty and bring opportunities for our young people,” said Burns Lake Band Chief Dan George.
Wet’suwet’en First Nation Chief Karen Ogen said job and benefi t agree-ments for the Coastal GasLink pipeline were entered into after careful consid-eration, and she objected to protests from outsiders, some from outside the country.
“Sustainability means standing on our own two feet, providing our young people with good paying jobs, and reducing the 40 to 60 per cent unem-ployment we now experience,” Ogen said.
Haisla Nation Chief Councillor Ellis Ross has no time for crude oil proj-ects, but he has been working towards gas-related development as long as anyone.
Ross spoke out in support of the elected Wet’suwet’en chiefs in their eff orts to resolve the dispute with Unist’ot’en members.
“Opposition is the easiest job in the
world,” he said. “What is diffi cult is fi nding an answer when a First Na-tions mother has concerns about her child’s future.
“Politicians are quick to shout out sound bites and get into camera shots, but where are the cameras when another First Nations member takes their own life or when they pass away from highway/alcohol related deaths?”
Ross noted that recent court deci-sions have put B.C. aboriginal leaders in the best position they have ever had, with governments and develop-ment project proponents coming to them “with inclusion in mind” after decades of resource development that has passed them by.
You wouldn’t know it most days, but First Nations along both the Coastal GasLink and Pacifi c Trails gas pipelines have agreed to them.
More aboriginal leaders are getting tired of managing poverty, and mis-guided protesters.
Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press.
Fraser River important, too▼ IF A BRIDGE IN QUEBEC RECEIVES FEDERAL FUNDS, IT SHOULD ALSO BE TOLLED
▼ WAR ON DRUGS IS A COSTLY ONE WHERE NO ONE WINS
VIEWPOINT
Protest stunts distract from real efforts
A letter writer says the new Champlain Bridge in Montreal should be a user-pay structure, just like the Golden Ears and Port Mann bridges here. FILE PHOTO
BC VIEWS
▼Tom
Fletcher
INBOX6 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
Re: “High time to talk about pot, ” Letters, Th e Leader, Sept. 2.
Th e Huffi ngton Post reports that in Canada, man-datory minimum sentences range from six months to three years, depending on the severity of the off ence.
Under the law passed in 2012, someone who grows six plants “for the purpose of traffi cking” is automat-ically sentenced to six months in jail.
In the same year the mandatory minimums were introduced here, a U.S. panel of former and current police offi cials warned the Conservative government about the consequences of launching a war on drugs.
“Th ese policies have bankrupted state budgets as limited tax dollars pay to imprison non-violent drug off enders at record rates instead of programs that can actually improve community safety,” they wrote in a letter.
So who’s not ready to be prime minister and who’s been there way too long?
Th e Tories cut and slash federal programs and services that will contribute to the death of Canadian citizens (Coast Guard, Veterans Aff airs, etc.) and hide huge health care cuts in an omnibus bill, yet are willing to spend (b)millions on a marijuana war they can’t win, even though 65 per cent of Canada’s voting-age population disagrees.
Georges Ducharme, Surrey
#200-5450 152 St., Surrey, B.C. V3S 5J9Published by Black Press Ltd.
Switchboard 604-575-2744Classifi eds 604-575-5555Circulation 604-575-5344
LeaderThe
Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 7
SHEILA REYNOLDS
“Look up, Bains,” she said after taking the stand in B.C. Su-preme Court.
Simrit Saran wanted her brother’s killer to see her face as she tried to express how his murder has affect-ed her life and that of her family.
Simrit was deliver-ing her victim impact statement at the sentencing hearing for Sarbjit Bains, 33, who admitted in April to killing 29-year-old Amritpal Saran in Surrey in February 2013, and two women – Karen Nabors and Jill Lyons – in New Westminster six months later.
Simrit asked Bains to imagine having to look at a mother’s eyes every day, know-ing her eldest son had been killed.
“I will never for-give you,” Simrit told Bains.
Moments earlier, Amritpal’s mother Jatinder also faced Bains to express the unbearable loss of los-ing a child. The family placed framed photos of Amrit in front of Bains, who was seated in the prisoner’s box.
Jatinder said after the murder her world was turned upside down and she’d stare at her son’s hockey jersey collection, knowing he would never wear them again.
“I can’t smile the way I used to. I can’t feel the way I used to,” Jatinder said through tears. “Part of me is gone without my Amrit. My house was warm until you took my son away.”
Amritpal Saran’s charred body was found two-and-a-half years ago on a seclud-ed section of Surrey’s Colebrook Road.
The court heard that Saran, Bains and his girlfriend Evelina Ur-baniak were drinking and doing cocaine on the night Saran was killed. At some point, Urbaniak went to bed. Bains and Saran kept partying, but when Bains left the room
briefly, he said he re-turned to find Saran naked in Urbaniak’s bedroom. It was then, the court heard, that Bains said “something just snapped.”
He put a fatal choke hold around Saran’s neck.
While Urbaniak wanted to call po-lice, Bains did not and instead, the pair purchased plastic containers and gaso-line and disposed of Saran’s body by the roadside.
A woman teaching her grandson to drive discovered the burned corpse and called
police. It was nearly a year before Bains and Urbaniak were arrested.
At that time, Bains was also charged in the August 2013 deaths of Lyons, 45, and Nabors, 48. The women, both moms, were neighbours in the same apartment complex and were killed 13 days apart.
The court heard that Bains intended to rob the women, who advertised as escorts, and ended up choking them both to death.
Sheri Hickman ad-opted Lyons in 1968, and it was “love at first sight,” she said in a statement read in court.
She remembered the day her husband told her about her daugh-ter’s death.
“He said ‘it’s Jill’ and I knew she was gone,” recalled Hickman, noting her daughter became addicted to drugs following surgery, but she was hoping to turn her life around. “That day all hope
was take away from me... all belief in the goodness of the hu-man race.”
Nabors’ youngest son said not a day goes by he doesn’t think of his mom.
“It hurts so much that she is gone. You have no idea,” he said. “Now I am lost.”
Wearing a T-shirt reading “Justice for Karen Nabors,” Katrina Cotten ex-pressed her sadness and anger. Having discovered Nabors’ body, she said she can’t erase the hor-rific image from her mind.
“I hope that in time I am able to remem-ber the good times we had,” she said, de-scribing Nabors as the life of the party who was selfless and loved everyone around her.
“This is always pain-ful,” she said, looking directly at Bains.
Bains pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of Saran. Lawyers are recom-mending a 10-year sentence for that killing.
He also pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder for Nabors’ and Lyons’ deaths. Second-degree mur-der carries a man-datory life sentence and both defence and Crown are suggesting parole eligibility set at 18 years.
Justice Miriam Maisonville will decide whether those sentences are to be served concurrently or consecutively. She will deliver her deci-sion Sept. 30.
Bains, with long dark hair and wearing a red prison-issue jumpsuit, hung his head for most of the day-long hearing, but read an apology later Thursday afternoon.
“I can’t ask you to forgive me because I can’t forgive myself and I sure as hell don’t deserve it,” he said.
“I cut these lives short and robbed you of your loved ones. What I did was horrible and I cannot fix it.”
He also apologized to his own family for the pain and shame he’s caused them.
Urbaniak pleaded guilty to interfering with a dead body ear-lier this year in con-
nection with Saran’s death and received a two-year conditional sentence plus three years probation.
‘I can’t smile the way I used to,’ mom tells son’s killer
Sarbjit Bains (not shown) pleaded guilty to killing (left to right) Delta’s Amritpal Saran, and New West-minster’s Jill Lyons and Karen Nabors. Bains will be sentenced Sept. 30. FILE PHOTO
▶ EMOTIONS HIGH IN COURT AS SURREY MAN FACES SENTENCING FOR KILLING DELTA MAN AND TWO NEW WESTMINSTER WOMEN
▶ “I cut these lives short and robbed you of your loved ones. What I did was horrible and I cannot fi x it.”SARBJIT BAINS
Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 7
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8 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
BLACK PRESS
Surrey Libraries’ fourth-annual Literacy Day Report reveals that the average cardholder realizes more than $600 in value with
their free library card.Th e information is
part of new research presented in the report which demonstrates the benefi ts of the library in the commu-nity.
Key facts in the 2015 Literacy Day Report include:
• Th e total value of benefi t provided by Surrey Libraries to the community in 2014 was about $111.4
million;• On average, Surrey
Libraries cardholders realized a benefi t of $610 each;
• An average card-holder visits the library 43 times and borrows 24 items;
• Traditional print items like books and magazines are still the number one material accessed by cardhold-ers at the library;
• On average, Surrey residents spend 113,500 hours per week using library re-sources and facilities.
“Th ese numbers are a sign of the import-ant place of libraries in Surrey and the role they play in provid-ing for so many of our society’s needs,” said Surrey Libraries chief librarian Mela-nie Houlden. “With a wide range of reading
materials in many lan-guages... programs for kids and adults... and free Wi-Fi and access to computers, it’s no surprise that the value of a Surrey Libraries card has been calculat-ed at $610.”
Surrey Libraries board chair Linda Stromberg said the bulk of the library’s funding – about 95 per cent – comes from public sources, total-ling $16 million dollars in the past year.
“I am, therefore, par-ticularly happy to see that for every dollar in public funding Surrey Libraries receives, our branches provide $7 in value to patrons,” she said.
The 2015 Litera-cy Day report was launched at the City Centre branch last Tuesday, where Sur-rey Board of Trade CEO Anita Huber-man also announced a special breakfast focusing on literacy and the business community on Sept. 16 at the Eaglequest Golf Course.
Surrey Libraries also announced that it had met and surpassed its 2014 Get Carded cam-paign goal of 20,000 new cardholders, with 21,112 new members joining Surrey Libraries in the past year.
▶ SURREY LIBRARIES’ REPORT SHOWS PRINT MATERIALS STILL REIGN
There’s big value in your free library card
BLACK PRESS
Motorists are invited to help fuel Surrey school projects by gas-sing up at Chevron next month.
Th rough October, for every 30 or more litres of fuel purchased, Chevron will contribute $1 (up to $565,000) towards Fuel Your School, a program that helps fund classroom projects in Surrey, Burnaby, Coquitlam, North Van-couver and West Vancouver.
A collaboration between Chev-ron and MyClassNeeds Founda-tion – a Toronto-based charity – Fuel Your School aims to support classroom projects through a crowdfunding website.
Teachers in the participating districts can submit requests for funds online. Once the funds are raised, MyClassNeeds purchases and co-ordinates delivery.
Last year, Fuel Your School en-abled South Surrey teacher Nicola
Erasmus to obtain Cubelets Robot Blocks for her Bayridge Elementa-ry kindergarten class. Th e blocks were “a great way to introduce (the students) to learning about technology and engineering,” she said.
At Surrey’s Cambridge Elemen-tary, Shelagh Lim was able to ac-quire four Polaroid Cube cameras and an iPad which her students used to make movies.
Since inception, Fuel Your School has raised $765,000 for public schools, with a focus on projects categorized under STEM – science, technology, engineering and math.
For more information, visit fuelyourschool.ca or myclassneeds.ca
▶ CHEVRON CROWDFUNDING PROJECT BRINGS CASH TO ELIGIBLE CLASSROOMS
Program aims to fuel your school
▶ “These numbers are a sign of the importance of libraries in Surrey.”MELANIE HOULDEN
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Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 9 Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 9
KEVIN DIAKIW
Somewhere in North Surrey, a contractor errantly strikes an un-derground pipeline.
It causes a spill of something, but exactly what is unknown.
Th e accident, which should have been caught on SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) a high-tech control centre for transmis-sion pipelines, wasn’t detected.
A recent study authored by Charles Jennings, U.S. public policy expert indicates the public spots leaks well before it’s picked up by SCADA.
Jennings was expected to speak at Surrey City Hall Sept. 15 (after Th e Leader’s press time) to give a seminar titled Pipeline Emergencies: Planning to Bridge the Commu-nications Gap.
Timeliness of spill response is “the most important step in incident management,” Jennings writes in the 2014 report to the
U.S. Transportation Research Board.
A worker would likely report a spill to his boss, who may call another superior be-fore emergency crews are called. Th e clock is ticking. Surrey Fire crews arrive, locate the general area of the leak, but can’t say for certain what it is.
Several pipelines ex-ist in some areas, and some of them can carry diff erent hazardous materials at diff erent times.
Knowing what is spilling can mean the diff erence in how the leak is attacked, wheth-er Hazmat teams are required, and wheth-er the nearby public should be evacuated.
SCADA needs to be informed to shut down valves, however, even when they are, a leak is likely to continue, Jennings writes.
Th e secret to a successful response is closing the communi-cations gaps that exist, he says.
More information is available at www.ufv.ca/researchpipeline.
Jennings’ full report to the U.S. Transpor-tation Research Board can be found here: http://bit.ly/1KOM-r0F
▶ U.S. EXPERT IN SURREY TO DISCUSS DAMAGE MITIGATION
Planning for a pipeline emergency
KEVIN DIAKIW
Shots rang out at about suppertime in New-ton on Saturday when a vehicle pulled up beside another and opened fi re.
At 6:35 p.m. on Sept. 12, Surrey RCMP received several reports of gunfi re in the 6800-block of 128 Street.
Police then received a call from a man who said he was driving on 128 Street at about 68 Ave-nue when another vehicle pulled up and started shooting at his car.
He drove a short distance and reported it. Th e victim is providing limited information.
Police do not believe it was a random act, but could not say whether it is related to a string of shootings this spring between two rival drug-dealing groups.
Anyone with information about the Saturday shooting is asked to call 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.
▶ NO ONE HURT WHEN SHOTS FIRED AT STOPPED VEHICLE
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10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015 10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
ICBC loses case against kava-drinking driver
SHEILA REYNOLDS
A judge has ruled the Insurance Corpora-tion of B.C. (ICBC) must replace the vehicle of a man who crashed into a fast-food restaurant seven years ago.
According to a Sept. 3 B.C. Supreme Court decision, Mohammed Yusuf Venka-taya, now 51, was visiting with friends on Oct. 12, 2008. Th e group of six talked, ate, watched TV and drank kava.
Kava is a South Pacifi c plant and a tea-like drink is made from the root of the plant. It is Fiji’s national drink and is often
consumed at celebrations or ceremonies, though its use is not regulated in Canada, according to the court document.
Venkataya testifi ed he was not feeling well the evening of the get-together and had a few bowls of fi sh soup, one bowl of kava and a cup of tea. He said he and friends had consumed kava for several decades and that he’d normally have it one or twice a month.
While driving home from his friend’s house after the get-together, Venkataya – a devout Muslim who does not smoke, drink or use any drugs – was about to turn right onto Scott Road from 88 Av-enue. But that’s the last thing the driver remembered before being handcuff ed and placed on the ground outside a Taco Time restaurant, where his vehicle had crashed into a building.
Two police offi cers were in the area and
witnessed Venkataya’s collision. Th ey said they saw the driver hit a meridian and saw the tires spinning as the engine accelerated on the temporarily stuck SUV. Th ey then saw the car break free, whiz by them, hitting several poles, signs, trees, a light standard and fi re hydrant before slamming into the restaurant. Th e driver suff ered minor injuries, but vomited several times after the crash. Th e car was severely damaged.
Th e court heard Venkataya had a blood alcohol reading of zero and readily admitted to drinking kava, which Health-LinkBC describes as having a calming eff ect, “producing brain wave changes similar to changes that occur with calming medicines such as diazepam (Valium, for example).”
At trial, ICBC’s lawyers argued Venka-taya was dishonest about how much kava
he had consumed.But Justice Peter Voith deemed Ven-
kataya an “unusually direct” witness and believed his testimony.
ICBC also argued that kava is an intox-icating substance that would have placed Venkataya under the infl uence at the wheel. Th ere was also suggestion that the driver having taken Benadryl the same day, either alone or in combination, could have rendered him impaired.
Th e judge, however, said ICBC failed to prove Venkataya was incapable of driving as a result of consuming a drug or intoxi-cating substance.
“Th e whole of the evidence does not, on a balance of probabilities, satisfy that bur-den,” Voith said in his written decision.
ICBC was ordered to pay Venkataya the cost to replace his 2006 Nissan Armada, plus court costs.
▶ SUV WAS TOTALLED WHEN IT SLAMMED INTO SURREY RESTAURANT
Man stabbed on transit
KEVIN DIAKIW
A suspect was arrested last week after a man was stabbed on a bus near the King George SkyTrain Station on Th ursday.
Surrey RCMP responded to a call for help at 2:30 p.m. on Sept. 12 after reports of a violent altercation on a bus at 100 Avenue and King George Boulevard.
When they arrived, Mounties found a victim suf-fering from stab wounds. He was taken to hospital with serious, but non-life threatening injuries.
A suspect was found nearby and arrested. He was taken to hospital with minor injuries.
Th e investigation is in the early stages and it is still not clear if the parties knew each other or what the altercation was about.
Anyone with more information is asked to contact the Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stop-pers, if they wish to remain anonymous, at 1-800-222-TIPS or www.solvecrime.ca
▶ POLICE ARRESTED A SUSPECT AFTER A VIOLENT ALTERCATION ON A BUS IN NORTH SURREY
Coroners inquest ordered after transit police incidentKEVIN DIAKIW
A coroners inquest is being held to look into the death of a man after he was transported to hospital by transit police last year.
On July 31, 2014, Er-nest Shawn Moosomin, 41, was taken into custo-dy by the South Coast B.C. Transportation Authority Police Service (transit police) on a bus near the Surrey Central SkyTrain Station.
He was taken to Surrey Memorial Hospital for examination, but when they arrived there, Moo-somin was found to be in medical distress.
He died shortly after.An inquest was initial-
ly scheduled for Sept. 14 , but has been moved forward to Nov. 2.
“Presiding Coroner Dr. D. Kelly Barnard and a jury will hear evidence from wit-nesses under oath to determine the facts sur-rounding this death,” the B.C. Coroners Service said in a release last week. “Th e jury will have the opportunity to make recommenda-tions aimed at pre-venting deaths under similar circumstances.”
Th e inquest is open to the public and will be held at the Burnaby Coroners Court, Floor 20, Metro Tower II, Metrotown, 4720 King-sway, Burnaby.
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12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015 12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
TRACY HOLMES
A lack of “good evidence” in the case against two men charged in the home-invasion
death of Corey Bennett two years ago in South Surrey has resulted in one pleading guilty to a lesser off ence and
charges against the other being abandoned.
“It just really was a reassessment of the evidence that we have,”
prosecutor David Simpkin explained last week of the evolution of charges against Donald James Chad Jr. to man-slaughter from murder.
Chad was facing trial for murder in B.C. Supreme Court in con-nection with Bennett’s November 2013 death.
Bennett, 44, was pronounced dead in hospital following a late-night incident that police described as a “targeted home invasion” at a house in the 2600-block of King George Boule-vard.
Chad and co-accused Mathieu Rene Bernard were arrested two weeks later; Bernard was charged with man-slaughter. Both men were also charged with “where a fi rearm is used in the commission.”
Simpkin said the charges against Bernard were stayed “a couple months ago.”
Chad, who has been in custody since his arrest, pleaded guilty to manslaughter using a fi rearm – along with a second fi rearm off ence – on Aug. 21.
As a result of the plea, the murder charge against Chad was stayed in B.C. Supreme Court.
Simpkin said both police and Bennett’s family were involved in the decision, which he described as “the right thing to do.”
Sentencing submis-sions are to be heard Nov. 10 in Surrey Provin-cial Court.
Trial cancelled for Surrey man accused in hit-and-run crash
TRACY HOLMES
A man accused of running down two joggers in South Surrey nearly three years ago is no longer going to trial on the charges.
But exactly what is happening with the case against Surrey res-ident Barry Russell Christiansen is unclear.
Criminal Justice Branch spokesman Neil MacKenzie confi rmed last Wednesday that Christiansen’s trial – which had been scheduled for nine days and set to get underway on Sept. 14 – has been adjourned “on the expectation that the accused will be disposing of the matter other than by way of a trial.”
Christiansen last appeared in
Surrey Provincial Court Sept. 3; the case is set for “disposition” on Sept. 25.
Christiansen’s lawyer could not immediately be reached for com-ment.
Th ree days after the 2012 hit-and-run, police an-nounced the arrest of a 53-year-old Surrey man and the seizure of a BMW X1.
Two charges of “fail to stop at acci-dent scene involving bodily harm” were sworn against Chris-tiansen in December 2013, one year after running partners Nola Carlson and Shelley Lam-mers were struck as they jogged across 152 Street at 32 Avenue.
Lammers suff ered a concus-sion, fractured ribs, a collapsed lung, two broken vertebrae and a lacerated liver. Carlson’s injuries
included a broken nose and cheekbone.
Evidence from the scene included traf-fi c-camera video that captured the impact and – about 25 sec-onds later – a fi gure approach the women, lean over them, then rapidly depart.
In the days imme-diately after, family members of the vic-tims expressed shock that someone could leave such a scene, describing the act as “disturbing.”
Carlson said she considered herself “extremely lucky to be alive.”
Murder charges dropped in South Surrey home invasion
▶ TWO JOGGERS STRUCK ON 152 STREET NEAR32 AVENUE IN 2012
▶ Case adjourned “on the expectation that the accused will be disposing of the matter ohter than by way of a trial.”NEIL MACKENZIE
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Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 13 Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 13
JEFF NAGEL
Oral hearings that were supposed to begin last week in Burnaby into Kinder Morgan’s oil pipeline expansion plan are on hold in the wake of the appoint-ment of one of the company’s consultants to the National Energy Board (NEB).
Steven Kelly was named this summer to a seven-year NEB term, beginning in October.
He won’t sit on the three-member NEB panel considering the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline twinning, but his ap-pointment has drawn fresh accusations that the process is unfair to project critics.
Th e NEB has struck the evidence pro-vided by Kelly from the record – citing concerns about the integrity of the process – and Kinder Morgan is having new consul-tants review and re-fi le those reports before the NEB lays out a revised schedule for the review.
Th e City of Burnaby is now arguing that doesn’t go far enough – it says a whole new review panel must be constituted to review
the project, eff ectively rebooting the process.
“Mr. Kelly’s evidence has tainted this entire hearing, and the pro-cess must begin again to erase the perception of bias towards Trans Mountain,” wrote Greg McDade, lawyer for the municipality.
The NEB had begun advertising for perma-nent board members in January, so Mc-Dade argues Kelly’s appointment had been in the works for months, with both he and the NEB aware of his application as he continued to work on evidence in support of the project.
“Replacing (Kelly’s) evidence at the elev-enth hour in no way legitimizes this hearing process.”
Burnaby is also de-manding draft condi-tions for the project that were released last month be withdrawn and reconsidered.
Kelly’s work had been focused on the eco-nomic justifi cation for the new pipeline.
Kinder Morgan estimated the revised evidence will be resub-mitted by Sept. 25 and it wants the NEB to expedite the conclu-sion of the review.
“Obviously restarting the regulatory process is not a viable option for us,” Trans Moun-tain spokesperson Lisa Clement said.
Th e $5.4-billion pipeline project would nearly triple Trans Mountain’s capacity and result in a sev-en-fold increase in
tankers carrying oil out through Burrard Inlet.
Deal-making on benefits okay, NEB rules
Meanwhile, the NEB has ruled against another intervener that had argued Kinder Morgan should stop off ering municipalities and universities lucra-tive community benefi t deals in advance of the hearings.
Th e group Water-Wealth had objected to the off ers of benefi t agreements – which some critics have called “bribes” to mute crit-icism at the hearings – arguing they erode trust in the NEB and cast doubt on the evi-dence of benefi ciaries
who are also interve-nors.
Th e NEB concluded the agreements or ne-gotiations toward them don’t undermine its credibility and author-ity, and are consistent with the consultation requirements placed on the company.
Trans Mountain offi cials had in part argued the NEB had no jurisdiction over
the company’s dealings with third parties.
Kinder Morgan struck a deal in June to contribute $300,000 over 20 years to Kwantlen Polytechnic University.
Earlier in the spring, Chilliwack council voted to defer an $800,000 off er for a pedestrian walkway until the project review ends.
Kinder Morgan has benefi t deals worth $5 million with 18 municipalities along the pipeline route from Hope to north-ern Alberta, and has had talks with others, including Abbotsford, Langley Township and Surrey.
All the contribution agreements are subject to approval of the project.
▶ NEW NEB DIRECTOR WORKED FOR KINDER MORGAN
Pipeline hearings on hold after appointment
A tanker loads from the terminal of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline in North Burnaby. BLACK PRESS FILE
Th e 75th-annual Battle of Britain Commemorative Parade will take place Sept. 20 at 1:30 p.m. at Boundary Bay Airport, 7800 Alpha Way.
Gen. Tom Lawson, Canada’s Chief of Defence Staff will be the reviewing offi cer.
Confi rmed fl ying activities
included the RCAF, a Harvard Mark II from the Canadian Museum of Flight and the Fra-ser Blues fi ve-aircraft demon-stration team.
Negotiations are ongoing to have a Spitfi re Mark IXe participate in the event, which includes static displays.
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14 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015 14 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
RICK KUPCHUK
Jamel Lyles is off to an impressive start with the Manitoba Bisons.
Lyles, from Surrey, was named the Cana-dian Interuniveristy Sport (CIS) Offensive Player of the Week on Sept. 9 following a 34-28 victory over the Saskatchewan Huskies.
Five days later, the six-foot, 205-pound running back was the Canada West Special Teams Player of the Week after a 44-38 loss to the Calgary Dinos.
In his fi rst season with the Bisons, Lyles began the season by rushing for 155 yards and one touchdown, adding another 89 yards in punt returns.
Against the Dinos, the Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary graduate returned the opening kickoff 107 yards for a touchdown. It set a University of Man-itoba record for the
longest kickoff return, and is the third-lon-gest in Canada West history.
Lyles totaled 314 all-purpose yards in the game, with 232
yards coming off kick or punt returns. His 563 all-purpose yards on the season leads the CIS.
Lyles played for the Lord Tweedsmuir Pan-
thers in the 2013 BC High School Football Association season, rushing for 1484 yards in seven games, an average of 212 yards per game.
A rookie with the University of Manitoba Bisons, Jamel Lyles of Surrey has won Player of the Week honours with both the CIS and Canada West. JEFF MILLER
Another weekly honour for Lyles▶ MANITOBA RUNNING BACK IS CANADA WEST PLAYER OF THE WEEK
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Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 15 Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 15
Eagles drop a pair on opening weekend▶ JUNIOR A HOCKEY TEAM LOSES AT HOME TO LANGLEY RIVERMEN, COQUITLAM EXPRESS
NICK GREENIZAN
Despite losing both games of a BC Hockey League opening-week-end homestand, the Surrey Eagles remain a confident – and
competent – bunch.So says head coach
Blaine Neufeld, who chalked up his team’s losses – 6-3 to the Langley Rivermen Friday night at South Surrey Arena and
3-1 to the Coquitlam Express Sunday after-noon – to early-sea-son jitters and more than a little bad luck around the net.
On Friday, Surrey came out of the gate
flat, and trailed their Langley rivals 4-0 after 20 minutes of play, and though they outscored their opposition 3-2 over the final two frames, the first-period hole
proved too big to climb out of.
On Sunday, mean-while, special teams, and a lack of offen-sive finish in general, proved to be the home team’s undoing. The
Eagles scored just once despite 36 shots on Express goaltender Braden Krogfoss, and went 0-for-6 on the power play.
“I thought that we were alright. Our first period (Friday), may-be we were a little bit nervous, and we came out flat – we were a little sluggish out of the gate both games,” said Neufeld. “We would’ve liked the two points, and big pic-ture, when you look at what happened (with last year’s struggles), we are anxious for a win, but I think there is a lot to build off of.”
In Friday’s game, Rivermen forward Ben Butcher – who played 11 games for the Eagles last season before being dealt to Langley – scored the first two goals of the game, and Justin Szeto and Matthew Graham also scored before the first inter-mission.
Neither team scored in the second period, and Surrey opened the third with two quick goals – Paul McAvoy scored on the power play just 35 seconds into the period, and Darren Hards scored his first BCHL goal just three minutes later.
Surrey’s third goal of the contest also came with the man-ad-vantage, with Darius Davidson – one of just eight players return-ing from last year’s team – potting his first of the year.
On Sunday, Surrey trailed 2-0 after the first period, with the team’s only goal com-ing midway through the third, when Gage Mackie beat Krogfoss with a five-hole shot.
Goals were hard to come by in both games, and Neufeld knows his club will need to pick up the offensive slack should they want to get into the win column soon.
“We certainly out chanced them (Sun-day), we hit four or five posts, but we need to find ways to score,” he said.
“On the power play, we scored twice but obviously didn’t get any on Friday, and the power play, that’s when you really need to bear down the most.”
While Neufeld admitted that no one player stood out
continued on page 16
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16 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015 16 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
among the rest, he was pleased with the play with import rookie centre Paul McAvoy, who finished the weekend with one goal and, according to the team’s statistics, won 68 per cent of his face-offs.
“He had a very good weekend, and really contributed all over the ice,” the sec-ond-year coach said
of the six-foot-two Kentucky native.
Neufeld was also pleased was with his team’s defence – a source of concern last season.
New goaltender Justin LaForest started both contests, stopping 35 shots Friday and 39 on Sun-day. And though the team still gave up a combined nine goals, Neufeld called the squad’s commitment to defence “night and
day” when com-pared to last season, in which the team allowed more goals-against and shots-on-net than any other team in the league.
The Eagles face a tough test this week in the hunt for their first win – they host the Penticton Vees Friday night at South Surrey Arena.
“We’ve got a tough test, for sure, but we’re not scared of those guys,” Neufeld said.
“If we can start put-ting a few more pucks in the net, we can win that hockey game.”
NICK GREENIZAN
A trio of famous To-ronto Blue Jays alumni are set to hit the fi eld in Surrey next week as part of the fi rst-ever White Rock Baseball Day.
Th e event, set for Sunday, Sept. 20, will include a private clinic for local youth base-ball players, and will be led by former Jays’ stars Roberto Alomar, Duane Ward and Jesse Barfi eld.
Th e Baseball Day event is being hosted in conjunction with the Jays Care Foundation, the charitable arm of the Toronto Blue Jays baseball club. Funds raised will go toward creating the fi rst-ever fully accessible baseball fi eld – perfect for Chal-lenger Baseball – in the Lower Mainland.
Th e clinic is open to players aged nine to 14, and will be held at South Surrey Athletic Park from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Sept. 20. Participants will learn from the former pros, while also having time for lunch and an autograph session.
For more on the base-ball camp, or to sign up, visit www.wrssba.com and click on the ‘Baseball Day’ graphic on the front page. Cost per player is $75.
Darius Davidson of the Surrey Eagels moves the puck past a Coquitlam Express opponent during a BCHL game Sunday at the South Surrey Arena. Coquitlam won 3-1.
Blue Jays alumni to host youth camp
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MELISSA SMALLEY
When Alison Ince treated a young man undergoing a leg amputation in 1977, she and the other nursing staff at Royal Columbian Hospital (RCH) knew there was something special about him.
“He was the kind of patient that stood out in your memory,” Ince, the hospital’s former associate director of nursing, told the White Rock Rotary club last week.
Ince, who turns 80 next week, shared her memories of Terry Fox, the young Port Coquitlam man who captured the world’s at-tention when he embarked on a cross-Cana-da run in 1980 to raise money and aware-ness for cancer research.
Ince’s visit to South Surrey came 35 years to the day that Terry was forced to abandon his Marathon of Hope outside of Th under Bay, Ont., when doctors discovered his cancer had spread to his lungs.
Refl ecting upon her time spent as Terry’s nurse, Ince, a Surrey resident, described him as stubborn, with a great sense of humour, an enormous sense of family and a pen-chant for modesty.
“He never considered himself special, or that what he did was extraordinary,” Ince said.
In early 1980, when Ince fi rst learned about Terry’s ambitious plan to run across the country, she was not overly surprised.
“We all thought if anyone could do it, he could,” she said.
She and the rest of the staff at RCH fol-lowed his progress closely, rooting him on, like millions of others across Canada.
Upon hearing the devastating news that his cancer had returned 143 days and 5,373 kilometres into his trek, Ince said she react-ed in a way that was “typical of the medical and nursing staff .”
“I said a very rude word, which I will not repeat, and I burst into tears,” she recalled.
Terry fl ew home from Ontario and was immediately admitted to RCH, where Ince held the position of deputy director of
nursing.Caught off -
guard by the intense public interest Terry’s arrival garnered, Ince was tasked with handling public relations surrounding his care.
“Th at evening, I had to call the radio stations and request that lis-teners not call the hospital about his condition,” Ince said, noting that callers were tying up the hospital’s main switchboard and emergency lines.
What followed in the weeks and months after Terry’s return was a fl urry of press conferences, daily
health bulletins, bags upon bags of mail from around the world and never-ending phone calls from people concerned about Terry and wanting to help.
Ince fi elded many of the phone calls, and recalled one from a little boy who wanted to contribute, but only had one dollar in his piggy bank.
“He had thought of a way he could help – he was going to sell their house,” Ince laughed. “I strongly suggested to him that he consult with his parents on that.”
As Terry’s condition began to worsen in the spring of 1981, Ince said she was forced to come to terms with the fact that he was going to die.
“God sure got an earful from me on that one,” she said.
True to form, Terry continued to live each day to the fullest extent that he was capable, Ince said, noting that all was not “doom and gloom” and there were many mo-ments of happiness and laughter.
Dawn was just begin-ning to break on the morning of June 28 when Terry passed away, one month shy of his 23rd
birthday.“In spite of our anguish, there was love
and an incredible feeling of peace,” Ince said.
Since the Marathon of Hope 35 years ago, close to $700 million has been raised for cancer research in Terry’s name.
His contribution to can-cer patients, survivors and their families, however, goes far beyond money, said Ince – who is a breast cancer survivor.
“He brought cancer front and centre in our society, at a time when it was still talked about in hushed tones, behind closed doors,” she said.
In the years since Terry’s death, Ince has volun-teered at several Terry Fox Runs in Surrey.
She also spends time speaking at local schools, sharing Terry’s story, and is inspired by the impact he has on those who were born decades after he passed away. His legacy, she said, has become an integral part of Canada’s heritage.
“He taught us the awe-some power of one,” she said. “How each of us, as individuals, can and do make a diff erence.”
Local Terry Fox Runs on Sept. 20:
• New for 2015: Fleetwood Park, 80 Ave-nue and 158 Street.
Registration starts at 8 a.m., and the run start time is 9:30 a.m. Th ere are 1K, 3.5K and 10K routes. Suitable for bikes, but not wheel-chairs or rollerblades.
• Fraser Heights Recreation Centre, 10588, 160 St.
Registration starts at 9 a.m. Warmup is at 9:45 and the run starts at 10 a.m. Th e run includes 2K, 5K and 10K routes. Suitable for bikes, strollers, wheelchairs and rollerblades. Dogs on leash are welcome.
• Bear Creek Park, 13750 88 Ave.Registration from 7:45-8:15 a.m., runs start
at 8:30 a.m. Th ere are 1K, 5K and 10K routes.• Cloverdale Legion, 17567 57 Ave.Registration starts at 9 a.m. and the run
starts at about 10 a.m. Th ere are 1K, 5K and 10K routes, which allow bikes, wheelchairs, strollers, but not rollerblades. Dogs on leash are welcome.
• Rotary Field House, 148 Street and 20 Avenue.
Registration starts at 8 a.m. and the runs begin between 9:00 and 9:30 a.m. Th e 1.6K and 6K courses are suitable for bikes, but not wheelchairs or rollerblades.
• Sungod Arena, 7825 112 St.Registration starts at 9 a.m. and the run is
at 10 a.m. Th ere are 1K, 5K and 10K routes, which are suitable for bikes, wheelchairs, strollers and rollerblades. Dogs on leashes are welcome.
Th e Terry Fox Run is non-competitive. Th ere is no pre-registration. Entry is by donation or by collecting pledges. For more information, visit www.terryfox.org
▶ TERRY FOX’S NURSE SHARES MEMORIES OF THE MAN WHO CROSSED CANADA, AS ANNUAL FUNDRAISING RUNS APPROACH
The ‘awesome power of one’
Terry Fox (below) ran more than 5,000 kilometres on his Marathon of Hope before he was forced to stop when his cancer returned. His legacy has inspired countless others – such as participants in last year’s Terry Fox Run in Bear Creek Park (above) – to raise funds in his name. Below left: Alison Ince, Terry’s nurse, spoke to the White Rock Rotary last week. FILE PHOTOS
ARTS & LIFE The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday S eptember 16 2015 17
▶ “I said a very rude word... and then I burst into tears.”ALISON INCE, UPON
LEARNING TERRY
FOX’S CANCER
HAD RETURNED
18 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
SHEILA REYNOLDS
Sometimes turning 50 has its perks. Like getting your very own song.
It may have taken a half-cen-tury of survival, but SFU’s longevity is fi nally something to sing about.
“Engage the World” was an-nounced as the winning song in the university’s 50th Anni-versary Legacy Song contest.
Composed by Surrey’s Brett Janzen and Richmond’s Caleb Sung, the song was among six fi nalists chosen from 35 entries. A panel of students, faculty, alumni and staff chose the winner.
While Sung is a fourth-year business student at SFU, a singer, composer and pianist, his friend Janzen is a profes-sional musician, producer and composer. Th ey spent about a week on the song.
“We were elated to win the contest. It’s a great milestone just before I graduate next spring,” said Sung, adding he and Janzen were inspired by the anthem-like qualities of some of the music they per-
form with their church band every weekend.
Th ey then worked to cap-ture the natural, mountain top location of SFU’s Burnaby campus in the music.
“We hope that this new song will become a part of SFU’s tradition and help foster pride and school spirit for years to come,” said SFU President Andrew Petter.
Runner-up and People’s Choice winners were also selected by online community voting.
SFU fi lm school alumnus Daniel Moxon’s song “We are SFU” was the runner-up while student Brendan Bernardo won the People’s Choice award for “Make a Simon Fraser U”.
Lyrics of Engage the World:
On mountain high we innovateBuild questing minds and
educateWith striving hearts initiate We honor this our native landWhile visions grow we take our
standWhere dreams are held in
student’s hands Engage the worldEngage the worldOur school will rise above in
victoryWe’re S.F.U We’re building here communityWhere knowledge grows both
strong and freeWe’ll change the world with
unity Engage the worldEngage the worldOur school will rise above in
victoryWe’re S.F.UWe’re S.F.U.We’re S.F.U.
▶ SURREY COMPOSER HELPS UNIVERSITY CELEBRATE ITS 50TH ANNIVERSARY
SFU gets its own song
▶ DINO-MITE DANCERElena Morris of the Surrey Dance Company (formerly Surrey Celebration Dance Team) entertains the crowd at the 17th-annual Fleetwood Community Festival at Francis Park on Sept. 12. BOAZ JOSEPH
Winners of SFU’s Legacy Song contest are Caleb Sung (singing) and Brett Janzen (drums).SUBMITTED
Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 19
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Dr. Sherry Cooper
“I think we are going to see up to 2 1/2 per cent growth
into next year.”
Chief Economist for Dominion Lending Centres
Ottawa, ON – Dr. Sherry Cooper, the chief economist for Dominion Lending Centres and long-time trusted economic commentator across North America, offered some strong opinion to recent reports Canada
is in an economic recession. “Everyone thinks it’s a recession except for economists! Real recessions see widespread contraction, which we simply aren’t seeing across the country. We have never seen consumption
growth, housing activity, auto sales and employment gains this strong, during any previous recession,” says Cooper.
Seen as one of the most influential economists in Canada for several decades, Cooper says a provincial sectoral decline is a far cry from a true national recession. “Really what drove the numbers down were the difficulties in the oil patch. For Alberta there is a recession but for Canada as a whole, no. When oil prices were high, Alberta was booming and the Canadian dollar was strong. That hurt exports from the manufacturing sectors in Ontario and Quebec.”
Overall, Cooper remains bullish on the current state of the Canadian economy, “I think we are going to see a significant rebound . . . roughly to 2 1/2 per cent growth for the second half of this year and into next year.” This is a far cry from recent reports of growth forecasts of a much more conservative 1.1 percent growth for the coming year by a survey of 16 economists
conducted by Census Economics. But Cooper is basing her forecast on a number of factors, including the rebounding US economy, with US growth revised up to 3.7 percent in the second quarter.
“It’s positive for Canada,” says Cooper. “We’ve seen that in the most recent export numbers . . . most of that trade is with US. In addition, despite the five-months of declining GDP this year, Canada’s job growth has been impressive. The 54,400 jump in August brought this year’s increase in full-time jobs to an impressive 174,000. Canadian consumers are buying big-ticket items, with home sales strong yet again last month (outside of Alberta), boosting mortgage activity, and auto sales showing big gains. Housing is likely to slow only modestly in the next year as the Bank of Canada keeps short-term interest rates at record lows and longer-term yields edge only modestly higher.”
When it comes to the effect of the federal election, Cooper points
out any change in government creates a market selloff to a certain degree, but says talk of balanced budgets and prudent fiscal policy currently being heard by all three main federal parties will likely stabilize the markets quickly.
Anyone who says Canada is in a recession isn’t an economist – says leading economist
Advertising Feature
20 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
6 IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
Make a gift that honours the memory of a loved one.
604-588-3371championsforcare.com
7 OBITUARIES
BOONE, Michael TrentMay 17, 1961 - Sept 3, 2015.
With great sadness we say goodbye to our son, father, brother and uncle who passed away suddenly. He will be missed by his predeceased mother, Daphne; and survived by his father, Jack; his children, Michelle, David, Mikey and stepson, Darryl; siblings, Ken, Heather, Pat & Denise; neph-ews, Clint & Chris; and niece, Brandi. A Service is being planned in his honor, for more details please visit:www.amherstcremation.com
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
7 OBITUARIES
LITCHFIELD,Phillip Harold1943 - 2015
On August 21, Phillip unexpect-edly passed away at the age of 71 of cancer that was con-fi rmed only 2 days prior. He was predeceased by his wife Joyce in 2014, his father Phillip in 2002, and mother Cora in 1981. He is survived by his brothers, Clifford, Donald & twin brother Frank, and his sister Beverly. Phillip was a gentle man with a beautiful heart who gave what he could and expected little. He enjoyed the simpler things in life and always had a joke to tell with a smile on his face. Phillip will always be remem-bered & loved for his kindness and caring personality. His de-voted wife Joyce stood by his side without hesitation for many years as Phillip battled with his lengthy medical conditions. He is now joined with Joyce to rest in peace for eternity, as she too sadly passed away of can-cer at age 69 only 10 months early. Many fond memories of Phillip and Joyce will live on in our hearts forever.
The family would like to thank all the staff at Fleetwood Place for their involvement in Phillips care. Private funeral services were held for Phillip on August 31, 2015. For those so wishing, memorial donations may be made in Phillip’s honor to the Canadian Cancer Society.
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
7 OBITUARIES
PORTER, Emma Agatha
On Sunday September 6, 2015, Emma passed into the presence of her Lord at the age of 92 years. Emma was born in Bruderheim, Alberta, the homestead area of the Prochnau family on July 16, 1923 the youngest child of Samuel and Pauline Proch-nau. A long time resident of Surrey. Emma is predeceased by her loving husband, Stanley of 60 years (Sept. 6, 2001) her brothers Nathan, Arthur, Leonard, sisters Pauline Cal-vert and Lydia Bielert, her daughter in law, Kathy Porter and grandson, Daniel Porter. To cherish her memory, Emma leaves her sister, Ruth McKay of Vernon, son, David and daughter Muriel (Ib) Larsen. Her love for her family extended to 5 grandchil-dren as well as her 14 great grandchildren. Emma enjoyed a warm relationship with her numerous nieces and neph-ews. Emma with her husband Stanley enjoyed many happy years of travel and adventure after retiring from their hard-ware business in Tsawwas-sen. During their time in Tsaw-wassen, they were founding members of both the South Delta Baptist Church and the Tsawwassen Alliance Church. Although Emma missed her husband dearly, she main-tained wonderful relationships with family and friends taking an active interest in their lives. Her “Marquis” family helped sustain her in her latter years while allowing her indepen-dence to be respected. As her physical health declined, her spirit and spunk never wa-vered. Emma’s deep founded faith from her Moravian back-ground was an anchor in her life giving her quiet strength. An invitation is extended from Emma’s family to a service on Friday September 15 2015 at 1:00 pm at Victory Funeral Centre 14831- 28th Avenue Surrey BC. A time of visitation will be at noon. In lieu of fl ow-ers donations may be made to The Bibles for Missions.
Condolences may be offered at www.victoryfuneralcentre.ca
Victory Memorial Park Funeral Centre 604-536-6522
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
21 COMING EVENTS
.21st Century Flea Market. Sept 20, 10am-3pm. Croatian Cultural Ctr. 3250 Commercial Dr. Adm $5.
Fall Fair 2015Bethany-NewtonUnited Church
Sat, Sept. 19, 8:30am - 2pm14853-60 Ave., Surrey
Garage Sale, Silent Auction, Concession & Tea Room,
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86 CHILDCARE WANTED
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33 INFORMATION
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INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ............... 1-8
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ... 9-57
TRAVEL............................................. 61-76
CHILDREN ........................................ 80-98
EMPLOYMENT ............................. 102-198
BUSINESS SERVICES ................... 203-387
PETS & LIVESTOCK ...................... 453-483
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE........... 503-587
REAL ESTATE ............................... 603-696
RENTALS ...................................... 703-757
AUTOMOTIVE .............................. 804-862
MARINE ....................................... 903-920_____________Advertise across
the Lower Mainland in the
15 best-readcommunity
newspapers.ON THE WEB:
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View obituaries in our permanent online archive bcclassified.com
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTSare in huge demand! Train with CanadaÍs top Medical Transcription school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today! 1.800.466.1535www.canscribe.com [email protected].
START A NEW CAREER in Graph-ic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Edu-cation or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765 TRY A CLASSIFIED AD
Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 21
10/14W_CP15
blackpress.ca bclocalnews.com
The Agassiz Harrison Observer, a once a week, award winning community newspaper has an immediate opening for an editor/reporter.
Reporting to the publisher, the editor/reporter will be instrumental in guiding the overall strategic direction of the Agassiz Harrison Observer. The successful candidate will possess above average leadership skills, will be a strong communicator, pay attention to detail and can work under pressure in a deadline driven environment.
This person will have the ability to perform editorial tasks and contribute to the editorial content both in print and online. Strong design skills with knowledge of InDesign, Photoshop and iMovie are an asset.
The editor will have a passion for, and is comfortable with, all aspects of multimedia journalism including diverse writing capabilities and advanced photography and video skills. You have a track record of turning around well-written, fact-based, concise, well-produced content quickly, for posting online immediately—with collateral (text, photos and video). You have demonstrable skills in all aspects of web journalism and a strong grasp of social media best practices (Twitter, Facebook, etc.).
Candidates should have a diploma/degree in journalism, or a related field.
The Agassiz Harrison Observer is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest privately held, independent newspaper company with more than 150 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.
Those interested should email a resume, writing samples and a cover letter to:Carly [email protected] for applications is5:00 pm Sunday, September 20, 2015.
Thank you to all who apply. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
EditorAgassiz Harrison Observer
MECHANICS WANTEDCareer Need a lift?
Are you looking to work for a stable company?
As a leader in Western Canada’s material handling industry, Arpac is seeking an experienced Mechanic (with a Journeyperson ticket in either Automotive/ Heavy Duty Mechanics) for our Delta location.
We offer a competitive compensation package (including Competitive Wages, RRSP Program,
Extended Health Benefits, and a Company Vehicle).
Find out more about this exciting opportunity by visiting http://www.arpac.ca or apply to: [email protected] or fax 604-940-4082.
Vantage Way
Bindery WorkersBlack Press has opportunities for Bindery Workers at our Delta location to assist with the mechanical insertion of advertising fl yers into our Lower Mainland newspapers. Applicants must be available to work a variety of scheduled evening and night shifts. Additionally, successful applicants will need to be available on a call-in basis.
Excellent remuneration. Experience an asset, but not a requirement. Reliable transportation is a pre-requisite.
Interested applicants should email their resume to Derrill Imrie at: [email protected]
Competition closes: October 16, 2015We thank all those who are interested in this position, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
109-7979 Vantage Way, Delta, V4G 1A6
blackpress.ca bclocalnews.com
#208 - 10070 King George Blvd. Surrey BCBC COLLEGE OF OPTICS
604.581.0101www.bccollegeofoptics.ca
BECOME AN OPTICIAN...in only 6 months!
...begins , 2015
Optical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Or, even start your own business!!
Afternoon Class’, 1:30-5:30pm, Monday through Friday
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
111 CARETAKERS/RESIDENTIAL MANAGERS
MOTEL ASST Manager Team to run small Motel in Parksville BC. Non-Smoking, no Pets, good Health, fulltime live-in position. Fax 250-586-1634 or email resume to: [email protected]
114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING
CLASS 5 DRIVERS WANTED F/T & P/T - car delivery throughout
L.Mainland. Retired & studentswelcome! Email resume:
Long Haul Truck Drivers
ACME TRANSPORT LTD. requires Class 1 (with air brake endorsement) Long Haul Truck Drivers for hauling loads through-out North America. Job duties in-clude: Operate & drive articulated trucks to transport goods. Plan travel schedule & routes. Con-duct pre-trip inspection. Monitor vehicle’s performance. Maintain log book etc. Job is permanent & full time, 50 hours/week. $24/hr.
Apply by mail at#100 - 15157 56 Avenue,
PO Box 39089, Surrey, BCV3S 9A0 or Fax: 604-593-5408
130 HELP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
115 EDUCATION
Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca
124 FARM WORKERS
MORGAN Creek Tropicals $10.49/h email [email protected] greenhouse, planting, labour
130 HELP WANTED
CASUAL LABOURCasual Fall Labour needed for a local turf maintanence company. Mowing, walking and shoveling required. Mainly weekdays, pos-sibly the odd weekend.
Send resume to: jfi [email protected]
DRIVER /LABOURER
Growing Surrey Co. requires. Driver / Labourer with Class 5 driver’s license. Must be willing to work occasional Saturday’s. Applicant must have leadership ability, positive attitude,dedication & willingness to learn.
Please e-mail your [email protected]
HEAD DISPATCHERJMG Carrier Ltd. is seeking a permanent, full-time Head Dis-patcher for a trucking company, located at: 12511 82 Ave, Surrey, BC V3W 3E8. High School or equivalent with 1 year of related experience is required.
Wage: $22.50 / hour.Please apply by e-mail only:[email protected]
115 EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
An industry leading grocerydistribution facility is
Hosting Job Fairs*Sat, Sept. 19, 9am-noon &*Tues, Sept 22, noon-7pm5111 - 272 St., Langley
Entry-level warehouse order selector positions are available at our Perishable Facility and
Dry Goods Facility.
Stable, part-time union positions with hours ranging 16-40 hours per week. Starting wage is $13.80/hrEV Logistics offers an attractive incentive program and regular progressive increases every 500-1000 hours worked. An excellent training program is provided.
REQUIREMENTS:Ability to do repetitive physical work that requires lifting 20-80lb cases of grocery products.Weekend work, fl exible daytime & afternoon availability. English communication skills essential.No access to public transit.
Please bring your resumeand 2 pieces of ID
(1 piece must havegovernment issued
photo ID) for the interview.
Check out our website tolearn more:
www.evlogistics.com
. HIRING FLAGGERS. Must be certifi ed! $15-$18/hr. 604-575-3944
WHOLESALE bakery has openings for line production staff. Mon-Fri @8 hour morning & afternoon shifts. Should have at least one year fac-tory line experience. Advancement & benefi ts. [email protected] or fax 604 534-2280
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]
FRAMER (HELPER)Pandori Framing Ltd. of 8466-123 Street, Surrey, BC, V3W 3V6, is seeking a permanent, full-time Framer. Required: Completion of Secondary School and 1 yr of related work experience and profi ciency in English language.Duties: Prepare layouts in conformance to building codes using measuring tools; Measure, cut, shape, assemble and join materials of wood, wood substitute, lightweight steel and other materials; Build foundations, install fl oor beams, lay sub fl ooring and erect walls and systems; Fit and install trim items; such as: doors, stairs, moulding & hardware; Maintain, repair and renovate residence and wooden structures in mills, mines, hospitals industrial plants and other establishments and Supervise apprentices and other construction workers. Wage:$28.00 for 40 hours per week.
Apply via email: [email protected]
or via mail: 8466-123 Street, Surrey, BC, V3W 3V6, Canada
Lot attendant/car washer$22,800 pa starting salaryPay increase after 90 days
Send resume [email protected]
Take a walk through the Classifieds for thebest bargains around! bcclassified.com
Phone 604-575-5555
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
GREENHOUSE LABOURERSP (Delta) Limited Partnership operation looking for steady, hardworking, energetic individu-als that are able to do plant care, harvesting, sorting grading & packaging and general cleanup and workday preparations. The positions advertised are full time permanent positions for all seasons. Job Location 10250 Hornby Dr. Delta, BC V4K3N3 Wage $10.50/hr plus AD&D benefi ts. Positions available immediately. English language not required. Positions open to all persons (incl. youth, aboriginals, new immigrants and all others) demonstrating their ability to meet expectations of full time, physical work in greenhouse environment.
To apply submit resume to: [email protected] or by fax to 604-607-7656
Real Estate AssistantP/T Days (Casual) - North Delta
Fluent in English with a very pleasant phone voice &
excellent computer skills. Will include: fl yer delivery, related offi ce duties, etc. Exp an asset.
Driver’s license & vehicle required.Email: [email protected]
Phone: 604-808-3888
STOCK PERSONCalvin’s
Farm MarketApply in person:
6477-120 St. N. Delta
134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES
MANAGERSASSISTANT MANAGERS
SUPERVISORSCOOKS
All positions fulltime for various Surrey locations
Email resume & position: [email protected]
Servers/Cook &Clean-Up Person to
set up Tables & Chairsrequired for
Mirage Banquet Hallon 64th Ave in Surrey
Fax resume: 604-575-0354Ph: 604-575-0304 or 604-355-4646
138 LABOURERS
BUSY Delta based restoration com-pany is now hiring. We will be look-ing at people with or without experi-ence. Also looking for experienced carpet cleaners and asbestos abatement experience. Driver’s li-cense and the willingness to work over-time is a must send resume to [email protected]
156 SALES
INSIDE SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Experience in moulding, millwork, doors and interior fi nishing detail required. Full-time Mon to-Fri.
We offer Competitive wages & health benefi ts after 3 months.
Fax: 604-513-1194 Email: [email protected]
160 TRADES, TECHNICAL
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
160 TRADES, TECHNICAL
Service Clerk / WriterThis is a full-time position at the Surrey location.• Applicant must have service counter experience.• Applicant should also have a good working knowledge of Microsoft Excel and Word.• Excellent communication skills, a pleasant manner, good customerrelations and working under pressure are a must.
Interested applicants canfax resume : 604-888-4749
Attn. Annish [email protected]
Only short listed will be contacted
163 VOLUNTEERS
PERSONAL SERVICES
ENSURE ACUPUNCTURE CLINIC Registered Acupuncturist Company insurance/MSP/ICBC/WCB Call for details:(778)892-6489
175 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
160 TRADES, TECHNICAL
PERSONAL SERVICES
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB.
1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
LARGE FUNDBorrowers Wanted
Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.
Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or
604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
NEED A LOAN? Own Property? Have Bad Credit? We can help! Call toll free 1 866 405 1228 www.fi rstandsecondmortgages.ca.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
242 CONCRETE & PLACING
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 LTD.★ All Board-ing, Taping, Framing & Texture. In-sured work. Dump Removal Ser-vice. 604-762-4657 / 778-240-4657
260 ELECTRICAL
All Electrical. Low Cost. Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos Panel changes ~ 604-374-0062
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
NEIGHBOURS ELECTRICLicensed, Warrantied, Affordable. Renos & small jobs. Res & comm. 7 Days. Free est. 604-710-5758.
LOW RATES 604-617-1774Licensed, Bonded, Expert trouble shooter. 24/7. 100% guaranteed.
263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE
PK Contracting,Mini excavator, con-crete breaking, drainage, hauling, trenching, etc. Peter, 604.218.0279
269 FENCING
6’ CEDAR FENCING. Free ests. Red Rose Landscaping.
Harbiee 604-722-2531
6 FOOT HIGH CEDAR FENCE.$13/foot. Low Prices. Quality Work.Free Est. Harbans 604-805-0510.
281 GARDENING
.Jim’s Mowing. 310-JIMS (5467).
SHINE LANDSCAPING*Grass Cutting *Hedge Trimming
*Yard Clean *Pruning *Pressure [email protected]
Call 778-688-3724
CURB APPEALLandscaping, Mowing, Pruning &
Clean-up. Fencing, Retaining walls. Sell your home faster.
Dale 604 - 785 - 5982
ALL LANDSCAPING. Hedge trim-ming, pruning, weeding, yard clean up. Free est. Jason 778-960-7109
Hedge Trimming, Tree Pruning, Complete Garden clean-up.
Bark Mulch. Call 778-383-7220
Experienced PT/FT
LINE COOKSrequired at
SUNDOWNER PUBWages commensurate with
experience + tips.
Call 604-596 9681or apply in person at
11970 - 64th Ave. N Delta
130 HELP WANTED
22 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
www.benchmarkpainting.caCALL TODAY! 604-866-7080
Ask about our$99
ROOM SPECIAL
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
281 GARDENING
Prompt Delivery Available7 Days / Week
Meadows LandscapeSupply Ltd.
✶ Bark Mulch✶ Lawn & Garden Soil
✶ Drain Gravel ✶ Lava Rock✶ River Rock ✶Pea Gravel
(604)465-1311meadowslandscapesupply.com
.portkells nurseries 604-882-1344
Best Lawn & Garden Service We don’t just maintain, we improve. 25 yrs exp. Call Mike 604-868-3554
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER & ROOF Cleaning/Power Washing since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Simon, 604-230-0627
GUTTER CLEANINGSAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE
Call Ian 604-724-6373
284 HEAT, AIR, REFRIGERATION
Furnace & Air Conditioning~ Hot water tanks ~Gasfi tting/Sheet metal
604-461-0999
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
RICHGOLD Contr. Ltd. Bsmt suites, framing, drywall, paint, deck-ing, fl ooring, crown moulding & all kinds of reno’s. Sam 604-992-8474.
A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing,
reroofi ng. Dhillon 604-782-1936.
RENO’S; Bsmt Stes, Kitchen, Bath, Hardwood/Laminate Floors, Tiles & Mouldings. Call: 778-549-9119
FULL BATHROOM RENO’S, *Basement & *Deck Development
and *Painting. CALL LES AT:778-688-5739 or 604-930-4956
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HANDYMAN CONNECTIONHANDYMAN CONNECTIONHandyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations - Repairs - 604.878.5232
Renovation SpecialistQuality workmanship
since 1968Commercial - Residential
KITCHENS - BATHRMSCROWN MOULDING -
SUITES, DECKS, REPAIRS- BUILDING MAINT.
REFS. WORK GUARANTEED
Emerson’s Contracting604-312-9209, 604-535-0566
BEAUTIFUL BATHROOMPlumbing + Drywall + Elect. + Tubs &
Showers & Sinks + Toilets & Tile + Fan + Countertop + Painting = = BEAUTIFUL BATHROOM!!
Sen disc. Work Guar.17 yrs exp. CallNick 604-230-5783, 604-581-2859
288 HOME REPAIRS
A1 BATH RENO’S. Bsmt suites, drywall, patios, plumbing, siding, fencing, roofi ng, landscaping, etc. Joe 604-961-9937.
296 KITCHEN CABINETS
QUICKWAY Kitchen Cabinets Ltd. ****Mention this ad for 10% Off ****
Call Raman @ 604-561-4041.
317 MISC SERVICES
✶Dump Site Now Open✶SBroken Concrete RocksS
$25.00 Per Metric TonSMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS
$25.00 Per Metric TonGrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds
$59.00 Per TonMeadows Landscape Supply
604-465-1311
320 MOVING & STORAGE
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPINGAcross the street - across the world
Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.
ABE MOVING - $35/Hr. Per Person*Reliable Careful Movers. *RubbishRemoval. *24 Hours. 604-999-6020
.Miracle Moving 604-720-2009
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
www.paintspecial.com 778-322-2378 Lower Mainland
604-996-8128 Fraser ValleyRunning this ad for 10yrs
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.
polarbearpainting.com$299 ~ 3 Rooms walls only 2 coats
call: 604-866-6706
PRISM PAINTING CO. Re-Paint Specialist15 yrs experienceInterior/Exterior, stucco painting. 20% discount on re-painting or 3 rooms $299Free Estimates
Call Sunny,778-893-1786
PAINTING 1/2 PRICEInterior Special. Top Quality.
Free Estimates! 604-498-3050
WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
TONY’’S PAINTING
~ PRO PAINTERS ~INTERIOR / EXTERIORQuality Work, Free Estimates
Member of Better Business BureauWCB INSURED
Vincent 543-7776
AAA PRECISION PAINTING. Quality work. 778-881-6096.
NORTH STARS PAINTINGwww.northstars-painting.com
AMAZING WORK,AMAZING VALUE!
778.245.9069
338 PLUMBING
~ Certifi ed Plumber ~ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY
Reno’s and Repairs
Furnace, Boilers, Hot Water HeatPlumbing Jobs ~ Reas rates
~ 604-597-3758 ~
FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATINGH/W Tanks, Reno’s, Boilers, Furn’s. Drain Cleaning. Ins. (604)596-2841
A Gas Fitter ✭ PlumberFurnaces, Boilers, Hot Water
Heating, Hotwater Tanks, Drain/Duct Cleaning & Plumbing Jobs.
✭ 604-312-7674 ✭✭ 604-507-4606 ✭
Full Service Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area.1-800-573-2928
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More
Call Aman: 778-895-2005
341 PRESSURE WASHING
All Gutter Cleaning. Window & RoofFULL HOUSE CLEANINGCall Victor 604-589-0356
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
Roofi ng Experts. 778-230-5717Repairs/Re-Roof/New Roofs. All work Gtd. Free Est. Call Frank.
356 RUBBISH REMOVAL
RICK’SRUBBISH REMOVAL
- Residential - Commercial - Construction - Yard WasteIN BUSINESS OVER 20 YEARS
~ FREE ESTIMATES ~Call Rick 604-329-2783
Brads Junk Removal.com. Same Day Service. Affordable Rates! 604.220.JUNK (5865)
EXTRA CHEAPJUNK / RUBBISH REMOVAL
Almost for free! (778)997-5757
RENTALS: These listings coverall types of rentals from apartments,
condos, office space, houseboats andvacation homes. So if you’re in the market
to rent, or looking for a roommate, starthere. bcclassified.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
356 RUBBISH REMOVAL
JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT!604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca
372 SUNDECKS
. Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688.Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
374 TREE SERVICES
PRO TREE SERVICES Quality pruning/shaping/hedge trim-ming/ removals & stump grinding. John, 604-588-8733/604-318-9270
TREE BROTHERSSPECIALIST
Tree Removal/Topping/Spiral Thinning/Hedge Trimming/Stump
Grinding. Free Estimates.WCB/Fully Insured
$25 Off with this AdJerry, 604-500-2163
PETS
477 PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
ITALIAN MASTIFF(Cane Corso)
1 Female, 3 Male blue Purebred1st shots, tails / d c removed.
ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIANPet homes. $1000. 604-308-5665
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
523 UNDER $100
FRIGIDAIRE GENERAL COOLER 41 x 34 x 21.5 Good working cond.$95. Call 604-761-8454 (Surrey).
STOVE: Kitchen Aid - self cleaning. In good condition! $95.
Call 604-761-8454.
560 MISC. FOR SALE
STEEL BUILDINGS... “SUMMER MADNESS SALE!” All Buildings, All Models. You’ll think we’ve gone MAD DEALS. Call Now and get your DEAL. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca.
REAL ESTATE
625 FOR SALE BY OWNER
1/4 Acre SUPER CLOVERDALE
LOCATION$703,000
18085 58th Ave
Call: (604)575-9199House a tear down
MISSION - 7544 Dunsmuir St.Good investment. Possible mort-gage helper. Walk to WCE. 5 bdrm 3 ba, granite, ldry rm. 2nd kitchen/dining area in bsmt. Lge deck w/canopy. Sep. garage, RV parking, fruit trees. 604-826-4909
http://propertyguys.com/property/index/id/88620
Surrey - Newton area 2 unauthorized
bsmt suites, 3 bdrms up, 8000 sf lot, 3000 sf
house. Asking $645,000:
(604)970-2254
RENTALS
706 APARTMENT/CONDO
Cedar Lodge and Court Apts
Quiet community living next to Guildford Mall.
Clean 1 & 2 bdrms, Corner units avail. (some w/ensuites), Cable,
Heat, Hot Water incl. Onsite Mgr. 604-584-5233
www.cycloneholdings.ca
CLOVERDALE 192nd/Hwy 10.Very clean secure 1 bdrm, 2nd fl oor alarmed apt with nice full kitchen; insuite laundry,large windows w/lots of natural light. Near all amens, shops, bus, park, schls. Avail now. $800/mo incl hydro. 604-307-6348.
CLOVERDALE lge updated 1 Bdrm apt $810/mo Incl heat, hot water N/P. 604-576-1465, 604-612-1960
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★ On site security/on site Mgmt★Reasonable Rent★ On transit route★ Sorry no pets
Offi ce: 7121 - 133B St. Surrey
604-596-0916
SURREY 75/120A St. 2 Bdrm apt, $920, quiet family complex, no pets, call 604-501-0505.
SurreyBeautifully Upscale
1 Bdrm Suites - perfect for the discerning renter!
Starting at $810. Located close to bus routes & skytrain, 20 min walk to Surrey City Centre.Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets.
Call Surrey Gardens Apts at 604-589-7040 to view
our Elite Suites!
WEST NEWTON 13780 - 76 Ave. Clean top fl oor 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 cvrd prkg. Oct 1. 604-671-3874
733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS
NEWTON MOBILE HOME PARK.2 Large RV Pads available for
mobile home. Call 604-597-4787.
736 HOMES FOR RENT
Homelife Pen. Property 604-536-0220
RENTALS
736 HOMES FOR RENT
.Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.
OCEAN VIEW HOME in Sunshine Hills, Delta. 4 Bdrm, 3 Full Renovat-ed bthrms, 2850 SF 2 Storey Home on 15,000 SF LOT! Tons of parking & dbl garage. Avail Sept. 1st. Rent $2,600 a month. 1 dog/1 cat OK. email: [email protected]. Details & Pics: http://vancouver.craigslist.ca/ rds/apa/5135371546.html
SURREY 12560 Wells Pl. 5 Bdrms, Nr schls/park. $1700/mo. Avail now. Ph: (604) 376-4120 or 996-3966.
SURREY Nr 124 A/100. 3 Bdr rancher unit w/fp, St Helen’s Park area nr church & schools, separate courtyard. NP/NS. $1100/m +utils (neg) 604-589-1975, 604-816-9319
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
746 ROOMS FOR RENT
CHIMNEY HTS ROOM FOR RENT. $425/mo. Available immediately.
Phone 778-552-4418.
750 SUITES, LOWER
FLEETWOOD- New 2bdrm bsmt-granite counter tops, lndry. $825. n/p, n/s. Avail. Now. 778-863-9683
FLEETWOOD-ON 88ave @154th. 1brm. n/p n/s Satelite/ internet/ utill all included. partial furnished. Suitable for single quiet person. Avail Sept 10. $650. 778-229-3141
GUILDFORD 1 bdrm fully reno’d grnd lvl suite with beautiful patio, nr shopping & parks. N/P. $675 incl utils/cable.Avail now. 604-589-3072
HIGHLANDS, 148/62. Brand new 2 bdrm bsmt ste in a nice neighbour-hood setting. Cls to schools & shop ctr’s. Incl inste w/d, prkg & utils. Oct 15th. $1050/mo. (604)535-5219
NEWTON, 141/65 Ave 2 bdrm bsmt ste new paint, lge bckyd, NS/NP no ldry, $700 incl utils. 604-591-3665
NEWTON: 2 BDRM ground level bsmt suite, avail now. Utils incl.
For info call after 4pm:604-572-2768 or 778-839-5721
SURREY 14075 108 Ave. 2 Bdrm 1250 sq.ft. grnd level suite. 5 Appls, no pets, available ASAP. $850/mo + 40% utilities. Call: 604-809-7796
SURREY 64th/122nd.- BEAUTIFUL & spacious 2bdr grnd lvl bsmt suite. Near transit, shopping & schools.N/S. Avail Oct 1st. 604-897-7083.
SURREY 88/146. Newly reno’d 2 bdr gr/lvl suite, full bath, avail now ns/np. $800 incl utils. 604-583-3074
751 SUITES, UPPER
FLEETWOOD 141/77 Ave. 3 Bdrm + 1 full bath + large living room. $1175 incl utils. NS/NP. Avail now. 604-597-3399 or 604-505-3564.
752 TOWNHOUSESSURREY 64/King George, 3 Bdrm T/H, $1140/mo, unfi nished bsmt, washer/dryer hook ups, quiet family complex,no pets.Call 604-596-1099
SURREY 72/126th. 3 Bdrm t/house $1135/mo. Quiet family complex. No pets. Call 604-543-7271.
TRANSPORTATION
818 CARS - DOMESTIC
2006 Chrysler Sebring Touring135K, Auto, Loaded, Exc cond!! $5700/obo. 604-715-7469 (Sry)
TRANSPORTATION
821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS
2012 Hyundai Veloster, 3 dr coupe, red, 6 spd manual.
All options. 65,000 kms.$9200/fi rm. 604-538-4883
2013 Honda Civic, 4 dr sedan, 5 speed manual. Base model.
50,000 kms. White. $7300 Firm. 604-538- 9257
845 SCRAP CAR REMOVALThe Scrapper
• Autos • Trucks• Equipment Removal
FREE TOWING 7 days/wk.We pay Up To $500 CA$H
Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022
#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle REMOVAL~~ ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT ~~
$$$ PAID FOR SOME. 604.683.2200
551 GARAGE SALES
Fall Fair 2015Bethany-NewtonUnited Church
Sat, Sept. 19, 8:30am - 2pm14853-60 Ave., Surrey
Garage Sale, Silent Auction, Concession & Tea Room,
Home Baking, Crafts, Antiques.Part of the community since 1917
MULTI-FAMILY strata garage sale SATURDAY SEPT 12 ONLY, 9-2. Something for everyone! 101 Ave at 139 St, Surrey.
www.bcclassifi ed.com
Recycle yourunused items,
place aclassifi ed ad
TODAY!
Wednesday September 16 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 23
ACROSS1. Doctrine6. -- -- -mountain10. Slips anagram15. Purpose19. Early computer20. Cacholong21. Sub: Hyph.22. Inmates23. Titivates: 2 wds.25. Qualifies: 2 wds.27. Range of vision28. Press29. Tasmania's capital31. Submission32. Pizza order33. Seraglio34. Trial36. Proverbial sages40. Bore42. Take hold of43. Old Dutch coin44. Works hard45. -- -mundi46. Draft org.49. White Cliffs site51. Asian New Year52. Franchise54. Multifarious57. Mr. Foxx58. Semiconductor59. Annul60. Evans or Carnegie61. Croquette63. Weekly: Abbr.65. Breakfast
preference: 3 wds.68. Spread to dry69. Prevailed72. Lepontine --73. Squander76. Saltpeter77. Hee-haw78. Quondam80. Cave or grotto83. Item for cricketers85. Harden: Var.
87. Elec. unit88. Beer brand89. Presbyter92. Genus of
honeybees93. Berkshire town94. Greasy spoon item95. "-- She Lovely"96. Ocean bird99. Augusta's state100. Insect102. Budget103. One-sided105. Understanding
words106. Hotshot109. Fell silent: 2 wds.111. Stops moping: 2
wds.114. The States: Abbr.115. Ruff's mate116. Gardner the writer117. Weld118. Withered119. Like SWAT teams120. -- ex machina121. "-- porridge..."
DOWN1. Escritoire2. "Don't Tread -- --"3. -- Carlo Menotti4. Damage5. Misbehave: 2 wds.6. Solidify7. Basilica part8. Greek letter9. Very early lesson10. Go heavily11. Girder: Hyph.12. Rise13. Of rural life14. R-V connection15. Public outburst16. City in Italy17. Small bead18. Catch sight of
24. Burdon and Idle26. Cardinals30. Mines' yield33. Apiary item35. Merit36. Unmatched37. Growth of trees
and saplings38. Partying heartily: 3
wds.39. Forbes or Carell 41. Triangular sail42. Needle45. Yielded by treaty46. Westerns,
oftentimes: Hyph.47. Go furtively48. Celerity50. Rule: Abbr.52. Fleur- -- - --53. A sib, for short55. Efface56. Ornamental button57. Grating60. Celtic god61. Downfall62. -- dixit63. Altar slab64. Postulate66. Nostril67. Performed badly70. Determine71. Period in Italian art
74. Native American language
75. Biblical Mount77. Cowhouse79. "-- Brockovich"81. Memorization82. Bubbly drink: 2
wds.83. Like a tabby84. Assistant86. Superlative suffix89. -- -dieu90. Reduces91. Principle94. Struggled for air96. Bract97. Modify98. -- Dame99. Purple shade101. Prepare to drive: 2
wds.102. Down with: Fr.104. The same105. Domed structure106. Vast region107. Budget
considerations108. Sword110. New Deal org.112. Wrath113. Compass pt.
Answers to Previous Crossword
CrosswordCrossword This week’s theme:High Jinksby James Barrick
© 2015 United Feature Syndicate, Dist. by Universal Uclick
Manthorpe Law Offi ces 200, 10233 - 153 Street | Surrey, BC V3R 0Z7 Phone: 604.582.7743 | Fax: 604.582.7753 | manthorpelaw.com
Centrally located near the Guildford Town Centre Mall in Surrey
Rosalyn Manthorpe Dominic Meslin
The right mix of legal services in your community.
Just right...for all your legal needs.
We are centrally located in the Guildford area of Surrey. We have
On May 27, 2015, at the 10700
block of University Street, Surrey,
B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the
Surrey RCMP seized, at the time
indicated, the subject property,
described as: $1,252 CAD, $3,520
CAD on or about 20:30 Hours,
$5,800 CAD, $1,840 CAD, $2,660
CAD, $2,780 CAD, and a 2007
Honda Accord, BCLP: 097TEL, VIN:
1HGCM56727A803286, on or about
20:45 Hours, and $1,835 CAD, on or
about 23:40 Hours.
The subject property was seized
because there was evidence that the
subject property had been used in
and/or obtained by the commission
of an offence (or offences) under
section 5(2) (Possession for
purpose of trafficking) of the
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada.
Notice is hereby given that the
subject property, CFO file Number:
2015-3071, is subject to forfeiture
under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will
be forfeited to the Government for
disposal by the Director of Civil
Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute
is filed with the Director within the
time period set out in this notice.
A notice of dispute may be filed by
a person who claims to have an
interest in all or part of the subject
property. The notice of dispute
must be filed within 60 days of the
date upon which this notice is first
published.
You may obtain the form of a notice
of dispute, which must meet the
requirements of Section 14.07
of the CFA, from the Director’s
website, accessible online at www.
pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The
notice must be in writing, signed
in the presence of a lawyer or
notary public, and mailed to the
Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234
Station Provincial Government,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:
On May 11, 2014, at the 14500 block of 108th Avenue, Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: $2,330 CAD, $180 CAD, $80 CAD, $231.60 CAD, $208.60 CAD, $1,255 CAD, $225 CAD, and $160 CAD (the Currency), on or about 04:30 Hours. On September 5, 2014, at the 13300 block of 108th Avenue, Surrey, B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey RCMP seized, at the time indicated, the subject property, described as: a 2004 red Ford F150, BCLP: HC3886, VIN: 1FTRX12W84NA57923 (the Vehicle), on or about 23:00 Hours. The Currency was seized because there was evidence that it had been obtained by the commission of an offence (or offences) under section 38 (unlawful sale of liquor) of the Liquor Control and Licensing Act. The Vehicle was seized because there was a warrant authorized by the court pursuant to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) to seize evidence in respect of an offence (or offences) under section 5(2) (possession for purpose of trafficking) of the CDSA and was
therefore offence-related property pursuant to section 11 (search, seizure and detention) of the CDSA. Notice is hereby given that the subject property, CFO file Number: 2015-3017, is subject to forfeiture under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will be forfeited to the Government for disposal by the Director of Civil Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute is filed with the Director within the time period set out in this notice. A notice of dispute may be filed by a person who claims to have an interest in all or part of the subject property. The notice of dispute must be filed within 60 days of the date upon which this notice is first published. You may obtain the form of a notice of dispute, which must meet the requirements of Section 14.07 of the CFA, from the Director’s website, accessible online at www.pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The notice must be in writing, signed in the presence of a lawyer or notary public, and mailed to the Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234 Station Provincial Government, Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:
On May 21, 2015, at 130th Street
and 74th Avenue, Surrey, B.C.,
Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey
RCMP seized, at the time
indicated, the subject property,
described as: a 2008 black Honda
Accord, BCLP: AL647H, VIN:
1HGCS22818A800089, on or about
15:45 Hours.
The subject property was seized
because there was evidence that
the subject property had been
used in the commission of an
offence (or offences) under section
5(2) (possession for purpose of
trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada.
Notice is hereby given that the
subject property, CFO file Number:
2015-3034, is subject to forfeiture
under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will
be forfeited to the Government for
disposal by the Director of Civil
Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute
is filed with the Director within the
time period set out in this notice.
A notice of dispute may be filed by
a person who claims to have an
interest in all or part of the subject
property. The notice of dispute
must be filed within 60 days of the
date upon which this notice is first
published.
You may obtain the form of a notice
of dispute, which must meet the
requirements of Section 14.07
of the CFA, from the Director’s
website, accessible online at www.
pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The
notice must be in writing, signed
in the presence of a lawyer or
notary public, and mailed to the
Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234
Station Provincial Government,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:
On September 12, 2012, at the 9900
block of Semiahmoo Road, Surrey,
B.C., Peace Officer(s) of the Surrey
RCMP seized, at the time indicated,
the subject property, described as:
$720 CAD, on or about 07:16 Hours.
The subject property was seized
because there was evidence that
the subject property had been
obtained by the commission of an
offence (or offences) under section
5(2) (Possession for purpose of
trafficking) of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act of Canada.
Notice is hereby given that the
subject property, CFO file Number:
2015-2976, is subject to forfeiture
under Part 3.1 of the CFA and will
be forfeited to the Government for
disposal by the Director of Civil
Forfeiture unless a notice of dispute
is filed with the Director within the
time period set out in this notice.
A notice of dispute may be filed by
a person who claims to have an
interest in all or part of the subject
property. The notice of dispute
must be filed within 60 days of the
date upon which this notice is first
published.
You may obtain the form of a notice
of dispute, which must meet the
requirements of Section 14.07
of the CFA, from the Director’s
website, accessible online at www.
pssg.gov.bc.ca/civilforfeiture. The
notice must be in writing, signed
in the presence of a lawyer or
notary public, and mailed to the
Civil Forfeiture Office, PO Box 9234
Station Provincial Government,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 9J1.
In the Matter of Part 3.1 (Administrative Forfeiture) of the Civil Forfeiture Act [SBC 2005, C. 29] the CFA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS
RE: ESTATE OF JOSEPH URPI ROIG, also known as Jose Roig Urpi and Jose Urpi Roig late of 5702-128th Street, Surrey, British Columbia, V3X 1T5 (the “Estate”)
NOTICE is given that creditors and others having claims against the Estate are required to send them to the executors, Jaime Robreño Roig and Alex Robreño Marco, at 1800 - 510 West Geor-gia Street, Vancouver, BC V6B 0M3, on or before October 30, 2015, after which date the Estate assets will be distributed having regard only to claims that have been received.
EXECUTORS: JAIME ROBREÑO ROIG and ALEX ROBREÑO MARCOSOLICITOR: Bull, Housser & Tupper LLP
REPAIRMAN’S Lien Failure To Pay Notice to Fred Duffy for amount of $6,186.62 for parts and repairs to 1999 Saab 93 VIN# YS3DD78N2X7053288 completed on or before February 28, 2015. Sale of vehicle by Langley Fiat in whole or parts will take place as of September 30, 2015 to clear in-voice on said vehicle.
Witness neededfor a hit and run motor vehicle accident that occurred on Friday, August 14, 2015 at 6:00am on 64th Avenue and 178th Street in-volving a 1996 Honda Accord with BC plate no. 590 LKT and a black Honda Civic.
If you have any information regarding this accident please
contact Harry Bains at 604.864.6131
Witness neededfor a hit and run motor vehicle accident that occurred on Satur-day, August 1, 2015 between 1:30 and 1:45 pm on 76th Ave-nue and Sinclair Crescent involv-ing a 2007 Honda Accord with BC plate no. GTX 1 and a black colored vehicle with BC plate no. 304 LVN.
If you have any information regarding this accident please
contact Harry Bains at 604.864.6131
24 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday September 16 2015
Monday - Wednesday7:30am-4:30pmThursday & Friday7:30am-5:30pmDELIVERY AVAILABLE
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