surrey now may 17 2011

36
Y ou may have already noticed something different about today’s issue of the Now. As our community’s most-read newspaper, we wanted to update our look and bring it in line with the new, modern, ever- changing world of journalism. Our new look reflects this new world in several ways. Our redesign gives us a fresh, more modern look, using fonts that are sharper and more easier to read. Our new look is also designed to let stories and photos “breathe” more on the page, utilizing white space to make the Now a more pleasurable read for you. Also, you may notice that underneath staff reporters’ names at the top of stories, you will find the reporters’ Twitter addresses. This new aspect of our redesign reflects the new world we live in – you can now follow our reporters on Twitter to keep up to date with the news in your community – in real time. We have also tweaked our sections to improve both our Tuesday and Thursday papers. We have removed our Living section from Tuesday’s paper and will merge it with Thursday’s What’s On section, resulting in an exciting new section called Arts & Life that will be jam-packed with interesting articles and columns that range from parenting to food, to the latest in concert news. This change will also open up our Tuesday paper to allow for more community news, including more stories from North Delta and White Rock (improving our coverage in these areas is something we remain committed to). Through all these changes, though, we remain focused on our main objective – to continue to be your No.1 community newspaper and website. And that, dear readers, will never change. So, enjoy your new Now. Feel free to email me at [email protected] to tell me what you think about our new look or to pass along your ideas and suggestions. TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 YOUR NO. 1 SOURCE FOR NEWS, SPORTS, WEATHER AND ENTERTAINMENT THENOWNEWSPAPER.COM FOLLOW US ON TWITTER@THESURREYNOW Our updated look reflects the modern world of journalism From the editor Welcome to your new and improved ‘Now’ Editor’sDesk Beau Simpson Editor Inside Viewpoint 8 Letters 9 News Feature 11 Wellbeing 21 Sports 22 Classifieds 25 Automotive 32 The closing credits roll Business Finally succumbing to a nasty marketplace, a Surrey store packs up rental DVDs after 29 years in business. Meanwhile, a heartbroken community reels from the news and even tries to raise money to help keep it open. Page 11 Nicholas Gammon packs up DVDs in a box as Pacific DVD & Video prepares to close its doors for good after doing business in Surrey’s Ocean Park for 29 years. (Photo: Ted Colley)

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Surrey Now May 17 2011

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Page 1: Surrey Now May 17 2011

You may have already noticed somethingdifferent about today’s issue of the Now.

As our community’s most-readnewspaper, we wanted to update our look andbring it in line with the new, modern, ever-changing world of journalism.

Our new look reflects this new world inseveral ways.

Our redesign gives us a fresh, more modernlook, using fonts that are sharper and moreeasier to read. Our new look is also designed tolet stories and photos “breathe” more on thepage, utilizing white space to make the Now amore pleasurable read for you.

Also, you may notice that underneath staffreporters’ names at the top of stories, you willfind the reporters’ Twitter addresses.

This new aspect of our redesign reflects thenew world we live in – you can now follow our

reporters on Twitter to keep up to date with thenews in your community – in real time.

We have also tweaked our sections toimprove both our Tuesday and Thursdaypapers.

We have removed our Living sectionfrom Tuesday’s paper and will merge it withThursday’s What’s On section, resulting in anexciting new section called Arts & Life that willbe jam-packed with interesting articles andcolumns that range from parenting to food, tothe latest in concert news.

This change will also open up our Tuesdaypaper to allow for more community news,including more stories from North Delta andWhite Rock (improving our coverage in theseareas is something we remain committed to).

Through all these changes, though, weremain focused on our main objective

– to continue to be your No.1 communitynewspaper and website.

And that, dear readers, will never change.So, enjoy your new Now. Feel free to email

me at [email protected] to tellme what you think about our new look or topass along your ideas and suggestions.

TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011YOUR NO. 1 SOURCE FOR NEWS, SPORTS, WEATHER AND ENTERTAINMENT THENOWNEWSPAPER.COM FOLLOW US ON TWITTER@THESURREYNOW

Our updated lookreflects the modernworld of journalism

From the editor

Welcome to your new and improved ‘Now’Editor’sDesk

Beau SimpsonEditor

InsideViewpoint 8Letters 9News Feature 11Wellbeing 21Sports 22Classifieds 25Automotive 32

The closing credits rollBusiness

Finallysuccumbingto a nastymarketplace,a Surrey storepacks uprental DVDsafter 29 yearsin business.Meanwhile,a heartbrokencommunityreels fromthe news andeven tries toraise moneyto help keepit open.Page 11

Nicholas Gammon packs up DVDs in a box as Pacific DVD & Video prepares to close its doors for good after doing business in Surrey’s Ocean Park for 29 years. (Photo: Ted Colley)

Page 2: Surrey Now May 17 2011

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Page 3: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Fishermen fined for protest

Dad and sonOK after beingshot in Surrey

SURREY – Surrey Mountiesare trying to sort out a shootingin Newton early Mondaymorning that sent a father andson to hospital.

Police say the father, 47, wasshot in his arm and his son,23, in the hand. It happenedat about 2 a.m., in the 12400-block of 74th Avenue. Policebelieve the shots came fromthe same handgun, but had nosuspect at press time.

The shooting happened afterthe son came home from a latenight out, police say.

Foundryworker killedin Port Kells

SURREY – A Surrey foundryworker died in Port Kells Fridayafternoon during what appearsto have been a freak accident.

Fellow workers at HighlandFoundry at 9670 187th St.heard a loud noise and foundthe 48-year-old man, whosename has not been released,lying on the ground.

He’d apparently beenworking on a grinder whena piece of metal hit him inthe heart. WorkSafeBC andthe BC Coroner Service areinvestigating.

Young mansought afterbrutal beating

DELTA – Delta Police arelooking for a young man wholaid a horrible beating onanother man behind ScottsdaleCentre on Thursday afternoon.

The suspect is white, about19, five feet 10 inches tall andhad sideburns and chin stubble.He was wearing a white jacket,grey pants and a white ball capworn backwards.

The assault happened atabout 3 p.m., in the 7000-blockof Scott Road behind the mall.

The victim, 19, said astranger started punching andkicking him, cutting up his faceand knocked out some teeth.

A passerby yelled at him, andhe casually walked away weston Caribou Road, away fromthe mall. Police ask anyone withinformation to call them at604-946-4411.

Madelyn Sanderson, 3, and Gabriel Sanderson, 2, helped release the almost 5,000 chum salmon fry into Robson Creek on Saturday. More than 600

people showed up in North Surrey to celebrate the reopening of Robson Park. See more photos at thenownewspaper.com. (Photo: Amanda Sanderson)

Tom ZytarukSTAFF REPORTERtwitter@tomzytaruk

SURREY – Eighty-seven commercial fishermenhave been fined $200 or more each for dropping theirnets in protest against an aboriginal-only fishery onthe Fraser River back in August 2002.

Judge Michael Hicks presided over the masssentencing Monday in Surrey provincial court, afterall appeals were exhausted.

The accused – three women among them – werefined $200 each as first offenders, and $300 if theyhad a prior conviction for participating in similarprotests.

John Cummins, who recently retired from federalpolitics as Tory MP for Delta-Richmond East to leadthe provincial B.C. Conservative Party, was one of thefishermen hit with a $300 fine.

“These people that are charged today, in my view,are some of the finest Canadians that you’re going to

find anywhere and I’m really proud to be part of thatgroup, to be standing in that courtroom and face themusic with them,” Cummins said outside court.

“It’s government policy, it’s not legislation thatallows for this. I still think that it’s wrong and it canbe changed and it should be changed.”

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has subsequentlylaunched a judicial inquiry of the race-basedfishing policy. The inquiry is still underway withrecommendations expected to be released in October.

Nine years ago, Cummins’ boat was among roughly

200 vessels involved in three separate protests inAugust, 2002, held on the Fraser from StevestonHarbour to Barnston Island, after the Department ofFisheries and Oceans opened a commercial fishery onthe Lower Fraser for members of the Musqueam andTsawwassen First Nations, to the exclusion of otherCanadians. Those who fished in protest were charged,all told, with 132 counts under the Fisheries Act.

Phil Eidsvik, who ran unsuccessfully as a Tory MPcandidate in Newton-North Delta during the 2005election, was not among those convicted but served astheir representative in court Monday.

“The purpose of the protest was to bring ina constitutional challenge,” he said. “These arerespectable hard-working Canadians who just wantedto be treated fairly.”

Gary Sonnenberg, a 47-year-old gillnetter, was oneof those in court. Would he do it again?

“Effin rights,” he [email protected]

These are respectablehard-working Canadianswho just wanted to betreated fairly.

Send your story ideas or submit your community photos to ‘Now’ editor Beau Simpson at [email protected]

NEWSBriefly

SURREY – More than 600 peopleturned out Saturday to mark thereopening of North Surrey’s Robson Park.

The city began work in 2009 onenhancements to Robson Creek toprovide better salmon habitat, along withdrainage improvements and upgraded

recreational facilities in the park in the12500-block of 100th Avenue.

Improvements include a new sportsfield, paved walking trails, more parkingand a new playground with a rubberizedsurface made from recycled tires.

Saturday’s party included live music, a

barbeque, a bouncy castle, kite making,face painting and prize giveaways.

The day wrapped up with the releaseof almost 5,000 chum salmon fry raisedat the Tynehead hatchery into RobsonCreek. See more photos online atthenownewspaper.com The Now

Hundreds help reopen Robson ParkCommunity

Court

B.C. Conservative Party leader ‘proud’ to be among those who challenged race-based fishing policy

Court

Teen chargedwith Szendreimurder facesjudge in April

Tom ZytarukSTAFF REPORTERtwitter@tomzytaruk

SURREY – The NorthDelta teen charged withfirst-degree murder in thebeating death of 15-year-oldLaura Szendrei will have hispreliminary hearing nextApril and May in Surreyprovincial court.

The hearing is set for 14days, to begin April 10. Hisnext court appearance isscheduled for Feb. 27, for apre-trial conference.

He remains in custody.The accused was 17 years

old when Szendrei was killed,so it is illegal to publishhis name under the YouthCriminal Justice Act.

Szendrei died in hospitalon Sept. 26, a day after shewas viciously beaten in broaddaylight while walking alonga path in the Mackie Parkforest, in the 8200-block of110th Street in North Delta.

The Crown plans to seekan adult sentence if theaccused is found guilty.

That would work out tolife without eligibility toapply for parole until 25years are served.

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A03

Page 4: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Ted ColleySTAFF REPORTERtwitter@tedcolley

SURREY – It was her first campaign as acandidate and the experience has left her eager togo again.

After 20 years in the non-profit sector, SusanKeeping stepped down from her post as executivedirector of the Newton Advocacy Group Societyto run in the May 2 federal election and she likedit. A lot.

She ran on the NDP ticket in South Surrey-White Rock-Cloverdale, a riding held byConservatives of one stripe or another since1974. Keeping has worked on campaigns before,but never as the name on the ballot.

She was up against Conservative incumbentRuss Hiebert who has held the seat since 2004.Some people say the riding is so staunchly andabidingly Conservative the party could run abroom and win, but there’s no denying Hiebert’swinning ways. He’s run four times and increasedhis share of the vote every time.

Tradition has seen a Conservative come outon top, followed in second place by a Liberal andwith the NDP candidate running a distant third.

Not this time.Keeping inherited an experienced campaign

crew; some members have been around for morethan a couple of elections. Keeping was a breathof fresh air.

“l had to get my team fired up,” she said. “I toldthem ‘I’m all the way, I’m in it to win.’ They kindof said, ‘Aren’t you cute,’ but I meant it.”

Keeping said she and her crew targetted peoplewho don’t usually vote and took advantage of theprovincial party leadership race to double theriding membership.

In what became a very negative campaignfeaturing dogged attacks on Hiebert from LiberalHardy Staub and Independent Aart Looye,Keeping took the high road.

“The most surprising thing to me was thedebates and the candidates’ performance, thethings they said. It got pretty rough sometimes.”

In her mind, the candidates could competewith one another, disagree strongly, but stillremain civil.

Keeping decided to focus on issues, to work atgetting her party’s message out to the voters andto leave the rough stuff to others and it paid off.

When the dust settled on election night,

Keeping’s strong finishwhets political appetite

NEWSPeople

Keeping finished in second spot behind Hiebertwith a little over 20 per cent of the vote, theNDP’s strongest finish in the riding in years.

Keeping knows the spike in popularity of theNDP and leader Jack Layton helped, but alsothinks she played a part in her strong finish.

That’s just whet her appetite for more. Keepingsaid the Surrey Civic Coalition was interested in

having her on their municipal slate in November,but she’s got her eye on bigger fish.

“I think (Surrey Mayor) Dianne Watts is doinga good job, so I don’t see doing much there. I’mgoing to put my name up provincially. I’d bewilling to run in my riding (Surrey-White Rock),but that’s up to the party to decide.”

[email protected]

She put in a

good showing

as an NDP

candidate in

the recent

federal

election and

now former

Newton

Advocacy

Group

executive

director Susan

Keeping has

her eye on

the provincial

political

arena. (Photo:

Ted Colley)

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Page 5: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Tom ZytarukSTAFF REPORTERtwitter@tomzytaruk

SURREY – The family of Surrey murdervictim Christopher Roy Whitmee is marking thesecond anniversary of his slaying by offering a$10,000 reward for information leading to theconviction of his killer.

Whitmee, 34, was shot dead at the LegacyShow Lounge in Cloverdale on the night of May16, 2009.

Police do not believe he was the intendedtarget. On Saturday, his 11-year-old daughterLexus Burkholder-Whitmee and her momHeather Burkholder began posting flyers in theirrenewed campaign.

“Our goal is that someone sees the flyer and itrefreshes a memory from that terrible incidenttwo years ago and then reports it to police,”Heather Burkholder said.

Police believe the shooting may have beenlinked to drugs and gangs.

Cpl. Dale Carr, spokesman for the IntegratedHomicide Investigation Team, added that theythink they know who the shooter was trying to

hit but won’t release the name.Whitmee was in the lounge at about 11 p.m.

when he was shot. A man in his early 20s thenran out through a rear door and into an alley.Minutes later, there was a hit-and-run crash atHighway 10 and 176th Street that police suspectmight be connected to the shooting. They arelooking for witnesses to both the shooting andsubsequent collision.

“We are hopeful that someone that fled fromthe show lounge has had a change of heart and isnow ready to come forward to tell us what theysaw,” Carr said.

“You never know, it may be the piece that putsit all together.

“Often times people don’t approach policein the first instance after a serious crime likehomicide,” Carr noted. “We have experiencedthat when we make a plea to the public it triggerssomething that causes people to have a change ofheart and they decide to come forward to police.”

Anyone with information is asked to callthe IHIT tip line at 1-877-551-IHIT or CrimeStoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.

[email protected]

Family offers $10Kto catch son’s killer

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Page 6: Surrey Now May 17 2011

NEWSPhoto gallery: thenownewspaper.com

Kassandra Kaulius’s softball memories were on display during her funeral. (Photo: Heather Colpitts)

LANGLEY – About 1,000 mourners, joined byabout 30 Mounties dressed in red serge, packedLangley’s Christian Life Assembly Church onThursday afternoon to say goodbye to KassandraKaulius, 22, who was killed on May 3 when her

sedan was T-boned by a speeding van driven bya 34-year-old woman suspected of being drunkbehind the wheel.

For a photo gallery and full story from theemotional ceremony, see thenownewspaper.com.

Hundreds remember Kassandra Kaulius

Heartbreaking goodbye

A06 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

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Page 7: Surrey Now May 17 2011

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Page 8: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Political scenetakes a breather,so let’s startthe speculation

We want to hear from youThe NOW newspaper is a division ofPostmedia Network Inc. You can reach usby phone at 604-572-0064, by email [email protected] or by mail atSuite 201-7889 132 Street, Surrey, B.C. V3W 4N2

Our Commitment to YouThe Surrey Now Newspaper, a division of Postmedia NetworkInc. respects your privacy. We collect, use and discloseyour personal information in accordance with our PrivacyStatement which is available at thenownewspaper.com or bycalling 604-589-9182.

Publisher and General Manager: Marlyn Graziano General Sales Manager: Arlie McClurg Editor: Beau SimpsonSports Editor: Michael Booth Entertainment Editor: Tom Zillich Reporters: Tom Zytaruk, Marisa Babic, Ted Colley, Carolyn CookeOffice Manager: Jeanette Black Special Sections Marketing Consultants: Vivian Gillard, Sue Prasad, Winnie D’Souza, Margot Gauley, Angela WoodManager of Sponsorship Development: Laura Cunningham Marketing Consultants: Bonnie Steeves, Laurene Falkenberg, Dal Hothi, Dawne EdwardsAutomotive Manager: Rob Carlyle Marketing Consultants: Patrick Nixon, Mari Jacobsen, John BirgeneauProduction Manager: Darryl Schick Production: Colin Hartridge, Lizzy Kararusow, Adhil Naidu, Angela O’Neill, Jean DalgleishClassified Sales: Linda Bampton, Virginia McGinnis Ad Control: Sarah Sigurdson Reception: Christine Steele

Second Class Mail Registration 7434. Delivered free everyTuesday and Thursday to 115,000 homes and businesses.

Circulation: [email protected]

Marylyn GrazianoPublisher

Arlie McclurgGeneral Sales Manager

Beau SimpsonEditor

InTheHouse

Keith Baldrey

Send your letters to ‘Now’ editor Beau Simpson at [email protected]

VIEWPOINT

What do you think?E-mail your thoughts on this issue [email protected] or snail-mail a letter toSuite 201, 7889 132nd Street, Surrey, B.C., V3W4N2. Include full name, address and phone numberfor verification purposes.

Politics

Some idle musings,informed speculation andcomplete guesswork as

the political scene takes a bit ofa breather after two leadershipraces, one election and one bigby-election:

• They are both glass-half-full types, I guess: PremierChristy Clark and NDP leaderAdrian Dix were crowing withglee after last week’s by-electionresult. Clark won, of course,by a fairly narrow margin andbecame the first governmentcandidate to win a by-electionin 30 years.

But I suspect she wasn’texpecting such a close resultwhen she initially set the by-election date, and I can tell youthere was a lot of nervousnessat her campaign headquartersas the votes were beingcounted. Dix, on the otherhand, insisted the NDP hadscored a “great victory” eventhough its candidate, DavidEby, had lost. If anything, bothpolitical leaders took homethe prize for best “spinning”attempts for the week.

• The premier may want tocalm down her itchy triggerfinger when it comes to callinga general election. I’m not sure

her party is really prepared tofight another election so soonafter the last one. She saysshe’s looking at the fall for avote, but her party’s financesneed shoring up (which willundoubtedly occur over time asthe business community viewsDix with considerable alarm)and she presumably needsmore time to find credible,attractive candidates.

The NDP is in the sameboat, which may factor into hertiming, but if the polls don’tindicate a solid, substantial leadfor her party an early electionmay backfire on her.

• Another piece of advice forthe new premier: spend moretime actually being the premierbefore expecting the electorateto endorse you come electiontime. Clark earned publicity fordoing such things as workingas a waitress in diner, and goingon a ride-along with somecops, but people are lookingfor statesmanlike qualities in apremier as much as a penchantfor the “common touch.”

• Are our Crowncorporations about to bereined back under moregovernment control? Already,the government has announceda review of B.C. Hydro’s plan toincrease its rates by more than30 per cent, and now ICBC’sidea of linking insurance ratesto a single speeding tickethas been deep-sixed by thegovernment. But the fact that

both corporations were ableto get so far along a path thatwould potentially reach deepinto many peoples’ pocketsmakes one wonder what else islurking out there, away fromthe prying eyes of cabinet. Nexton the list: B.C. Ferries and thesize of its government subsidy(which directly affects ferryfares).

• Will the businesscommunity, much of whichfavours the HST, finally getinvolved in a major campaignto save the tax? Companiesthat find the tax works to theirbenefit should be explainingthat fact to its employees andencouraging them to vote forit. So far, I haven’t seen muchevidence of that happening.

• The legislative session willend soon – in early June – andso far, it hasn’t exactly createdsparks or much energy. TheNDP hasn’t really done muchin question period, which hasbecome on most days a shoutfest over the HST and notmuch else. Maybe the party issaving its ammo for when thenew premier finally takes herseat.

• Did new B.C. ConservativeParty leader John Cumminsdoom his party’s future withhis dumb comments on howpeople “choose” to be straightor gay?

They made him look like thestereotyped right-wing fringepolitician, the kind that hasensured that party remained

completely marginalized in thepast. I’m not sure he can fullyrecover from that gaffe, whichwould be very good news forthe B.C. Liberals, who can’tafford any vote-splitting on thepolitical right.

• On the federal scene, itwill be worth watching to see ifnew NDP Opposition begins tokowtow to Quebec’s interests

on some issues (such as seatdistribution) potentially at theexpense of B.C.’s interests (theparty was once dominated andinfluenced by the West, butnow more than half its federalcaucus comes from Quebec).

Keith Baldrey is chief politicalcorrespondent for Global [email protected]

A08 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

Page 9: Surrey Now May 17 2011

The Editor,Re: “At-risk students fight to

keep their ‘second home,’” theNow, May 10.

Just when I think we aremoving forward to providehelp for youth, somethinghappens to remind me we havea long way to go.

The announcement ofthe closure of the SeaquamAlternate School programfrustrates me. Actually, I was upat 4 a.m. thinking about it.

This is not right.May 7 was National Child

and Youth Mental Health Dayand I attended a conferencewhere youth, families andprofessionals worked ondefining outcomes withinschools, communities andwithin the medical system thatare meaningful to familiesdealing with mental healthchallenges. I was privilegedto meet several studentsfrom an alternate secondaryschool program within theSurrey school district at thisconference.

The difference between whatan alternate school programis able to do and what themainstream school system isable to provide is immense.

The students spoke ofacceptance, trust, flexibilityand success. These youth wereso positive and excited aboutattending school now butcould not say the same thingabout their experiences withmainstream school.

Mainstream school issometimes not able toaccommodate students withmental health challenges and itis a shame we, as a society, arenot ready or able to make thechanges necessary to amend thesystem to accommodate everystudent. That is why alternateschools exist. Without SeaquamAlternate, where are thesestudents going to go? Where arethey going to receive the typeof education that they need anddeserve?

The students I met statedthey probably would havedropped out of school hadit not been for the alternateschool. Where does that leavethe students of SeaquamAlternate?

As a parent of a child withmany mental health challenges,I see this type of school as apossible option for our son inthe future. Our son requires adifferent environment to learn.He requires flexibility in hisroutine, the ability to start andstop at his own pace. He needs

breaks and space and supportthat differs greatly from theother students in the room.

Knowing that the type ofschool he could need wassuccessful for the youth I metgave me hope that our soncould have a different place tolearn if he needs it.

If programs such as SeaquamAlternate are shut down, whathope does that leave my sonand other students like him? Isthe option conform or quit?

It is my hope that the DeltaSchool District is able to takeanother look at their decisionand reinstate the Seaquamalternate program. It does notfix the bigger issues the schoolsystem faces, but it is a step inthe right direction.

Marni Pastres, Surrey

Sandhu sendswrong messageThe Editor,

Each and every timeHarvinder Sandhu’s columnappears, there is a lot ofnegative reaction to it.

I understand that it makessense to want to have an Indo-Canadian opinion in yourpaper, but as an Indo-Canadianmyself, I find her columns to beappalling.

Although I agree that it’sa good idea to have a diverserange of articles in the paper,I don’t want to read a piecethat constantly prefers toseparate people instead ofbringing them together, onethat suggests that one culture isbetter than another.

Look, I love my Punjabiculture but I also love Canada.I was born and raised hereand I respect all cultures. ButI don’t respect that Sandhu isgiving us Indo-Canadians a badreputation and a bad name. Wedon’t need that.

There should be columnscelebrating cultures of all kindswith respect as the base, unityin the lines and love as themessage.

My Punjabi culture is richand beautiful but so are allthe other cultures. We all havesomething positive to give.

I don’t want to read anarticle where malicious pride isthe intent behind it.

But more so than that, Ihope people don’t fall for themessages she sends.

Rajdeep Dhadwal, Surrey

Let our kidsjust be kidsThe Editor,

Re: “When a boy doesn’t looklike a boy,” the Now, May 11.

It’s amazing how muchSurrey’s and B.C.’s mentalityhas changed over the past fiveyears.

In the West Coast magazine,May edition, there is a full page

ad to promote: “Two Moms.Two Babies. One Family.”

Many flyers, newspapers andother magazines also promotethe gay and lesbian lifestyle.

Not only that, but manychildren’s movies are prettywild. In Cats and Dogs, childrenlearn that cat terrorist areplanning to take over the world.In Dawn of the Dinosaurs theylearn that the end is near,and in Ella Enchanted theylearn how to take care of theircharming prince.

I read in the Now that atSurrey’s Kwantlen campus,students can buy rolling papersat the student association desk,in order to help them with their“higher” education.

So it won’t be long beforestudents can obtain them inschools too – to help them withthe stress of life because toomany parents want children,but want the state to take careof them.

It seems as if there is a racegoing on to make childrenmore violent and turn theminto sex models and drugaddicts, not because it’s natural,but due to the pushing andfunding of the movers andshakers behind the screen andSurrey seems to have a lot ofthose.

Catharina Leidel, Surrey

Some electionchange neededThe Editor,

A number of columns andletters have supported politicalreform in Canada.

One change that should beobvious to any who have readyour newspaper of May 3 ishow MPs are elected.

The winner of the Newton-North Delta riding won with33.4 per cent of the vote. Thetop three candidates werewithin 2.1 per cent, less than1,000 votes.

The fourth-place candidatehad over 1,500 votes. Thus, onethird of the people who showedup to vote selected the winner.

Perhaps the electedcandidate represented themajority will of the ridingelectorate, perhaps not. Of thefour elections in Surrey, threewinners got below 50 per centof the vote.

The only way to serve thewill of the people is to holdrunoffs between the top twocandidates.

Otherwise, multiple partiesrepresenting a generallycommon philosophy can onlyinjure the goals they seek toadvance.

Charles Holzer, Surrey

District must reinstate alternate programSend your letters to ‘Now’ editor Beau Simpson at [email protected]

LETTERS

Students protest Delta school board’s decision to chop a program for

at-risk youth, a decision one reader says is ludicrous. (Photo: Tom Zytaruk)

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Page 11: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Tom ZillichSTAFF REPORTERtwitter@tomzillich

SURREY – When is the last time you steppedfoot in a store that rents movies?

It’s probably been a while, given all the digitalalternatives for seeing the latest flicks. Not onlythat, the doors of long-established stores thatrent movies are closing at an alarming rate,leaving fewer options for customers.

Three or four years ago, for example, therewere 11 stores on the Semiahmoo Peninsula thatrented movies, and now there are four – andsoon there’ll be two or three.

In the Ocean Park area, Pacific DVD & Videois currently in shutdown mode after nearly 29years of business at the corner of 16th Avenueand 128th Street.

The doors will remain open until mid-June,and then that’s it for Mike Gammon’s threedecades in the movie-rental biz.

He just can’t justify keeping the doors openany longer.

“It’s not losing money, but it’s not reallymaking money either,” Gammon said. “It’s notsomething where I’d want to sign another five-year lease. That’s the issue.”

When word spread about the pending closureof Pacific DVD & Video, longtime customersbecame emotional upon hearing the news. Kidsin the area even set up a lemonade stand andoffered to donate sale proceeds to keep the storeopen.

“For a lot of people, it’s a community socialcentre kind of thing, you know,” Gammon said.“They stop by and chat, and Sue, she knows themall.”

Suzanne Pederson has worked at the store for13 years.

“Some parents are really upset, like this is theonly store their kids have known,” Pederson said.“Kids come in here now, they’re 20 years old, andI remember when they were seven and rentingthe kiddie movies.”

For movie-rental stores, competition iscoming from several angles. With a digital-TVbox, people can now rent a movie the same dayit’s released on DVD.

“There used to be a 90-day window for that,”Gammon said.

Also taking pieces of the pie are services suchas web-based Netflix and illegal downloads ofmovies, plus rental kiosks at grocery stores.

“A store like this is still the preferred optionfor a lot of people, but there are so many otheroptions now that we do only 60 or 70 per cent

of what we used to do, and the overhead doesn’tchange.... This business would be viable if youcould find a place with cheap rent, but aroundhere, that doesn’t exist.”

People still love movies and games, but theywant them anytime, anyplace and on differentplatforms. The people who run Rogers Plus

stores have figured that out, and are closing someof the stores accordingly.

“It’s all about options and we are giving themto (customers),” Sara Holland, Rogers’ seniorcommunications manager, told the Now.

“Our retail stores are a powerful distributionnetwork for us and we are evolving the retail

experience as our customers’ needs change. Interms of our video stores, we are closing theones that aren’t profitable as their leases comeup and evolving others to entertainment andcommunications experience centres.”

This month, Blockbuster Canada was placedinto receivership by an Ontario court, with thefuture of the chain’s 400 stores very much inquestion.

Gammon began working to open his firstmovie-rental store in the fall of 1982, with VideoStop first doing business in Langley in April1983.

It was a bit of a slow start, with independentstore operators trying to figure out how to bestmake money renting VHS and BETA videotapes.

“I remember we had these great big RCAmachines, 25 of them in plastic suitcases,” hesaid. “You could rent one of those and twomovies for the weekend for something like 25bucks, and we’d be sold out of those before weopened the doors on Saturday.”

Those machines sold for around $500 – bigbucks in those days.

“We also sold the machines, at cost,” Gammonsaid, “because everybody who bought one hadan insatiable appetite for renting movies, sowe made a fortune off the people with the newVCRs.”

The heyday of the biz was in the late 1980sand early 1990s. As chain stores came into playand DVDs replaced VHS tapes, things beganchanging.

“When DVD took over,” Gammon said,“everything was for sale in the $25 range, asopposed to $80 to $100 for a VHS cassette of themovie. “Now, Walmart has the new release of theweek every Tuesday for $17 or so. Every one ofthose sales takes away a rental.”

Starting June 1, a final “blowout sale” atGammon’s store begins in earnest, with anyremaining stock either shipped to a store he runswith a partner in Langley (also due to close, inOctober) or sold at flea markets this fall. Thefinal day of operation for Pacific DVD & Video,which Gammon took over in 2002, is probablyJune 18, Ocean Park Day.

“It’s going to be a sad day, because this hasbeen a good store and we had pretty much thebest catalogue library around,” Gammon said ashe surveyed shelves that once held 20,000 titles in2,881 square feet of space.

A word-of-mouth sale has reduced thatnumber by around 8,000, with a whopping 2,300DVDs sold in the first day of the stock-reductioneffort earlier this month.

“The bones have been picked at pretty goodalready.”

[email protected]

End of era for movie rentals

Send your story ideas or submit your community photos to ‘Now’ editor Beau Simpson at [email protected]

NEWS FEATURETrends

After nearly 29 yearsin business, Surrey storesuccumbs to new worldof movie-watching,much to chagrin ofheartbroken customers

Some parents arereally upset, like thisis the only store theirkids have known.

People still love movies and games, but they want them anytime, anyplace and on different platforms. Taking

pieces of the rental pie are services such as web-based Netflix. (Photo: Ted Colley)

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A11

Page 12: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Marisa BabicSTAFF REPORTERtwitter@marisababic

SURREY – Up until three years ago, manyof the books in Lena Shaw Elementary school’slibrary were tattered and torn.

Worse, they were woefully out of date,admitted Lisa Baker, teacher-librarian at theWhalley area school.

Some of the “country” books, for example,used for social studies to teach students about thepeople and industries of other lands were missingmany of the world’s newly created countries andmuch of the information that was there was nolonger relevant or completely useless.

“Even this year I was weeding books from the’70s and ’80s,” Baker said.

Now students doing research for their lessonsor checking out books for the sheer joy ofreading have shiny new volumes to chose fromon the library shelves.

Baker was able to refurbish the school’s aginglibrary with a grant from the Indigo Love ofReading Foundation. The grant of $162,000enabled Baker to go on a book-buying spree.

“Over the last three years we’ve purchased over9,500 books,” she said.

Educators at high-needs schools across the

country are eligible to apply for a grant.The foundation allocates grants based on

school population, over three years, to helpsupport literacy programs and the purchase newbooks, with the goal of improving literacy rates.

Baker used a portion of the grant to establisha special library for the school’s Ready, Set Learnprogram, which is aimed at getting three-year-olds ready for school.

Funding for school libraries has been erodingover the years, but the Surrey school district,faced with a substantial budget shortfall last year,was forced to make drastic cuts.

“We here in Surrey took a really big hit lastyear with cutbacks,” she said.

Baker said when companies like Indigo step upto the plate, it makes a big difference.

Baker said the new library is contributing toa rise in literacy rates at the school. She tracksliteracy by the number of books borrowedduring the school year, and the book borrowingfigures have shot up for both girls and boys overthe past two years.

She said the refurbished library is encouragingkids to read more and is setting them on rightpath for future learning.

“To start kids off right is vital,” she [email protected]

Grants and businesses helpschools keep books relevant

NEWSEducation

A12 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

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Page 13: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Sandor GyarmatiNOW CONTRIBUTOR

DELTA – A long and bitter chapter in Delta’sfarming history is finally coming to a closeas several pioneer families have secured theirexpropriated land.

A group of Brunswick Point farmers andthe Tsawwassen First Nation have reached asettlement that resolves a long-standing legaldispute over the expropriation of farmland.

“This is an important settlement whichsupports farming families at Brunswick Point,respects the Tsawwassen treaty and brings finalresolution to a long-standing dispute,” Ministerof Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation MaryPolak said.

The agreement allows the provincialgovernment to sell the Brunswick Point landback to the farmers, while still supporting termsof the TFN treaty. The Brunswick Point families– the Swensons, Montgomerys, Gilmours andMcKims – lost their land in a mass expropriationin the spring of 1968.

Brunswick Point was among 800 hectares(2,000 acres) of privately owned farmland in anarea known as the Roberts Bank back-up lands.It was to become industrial development to servethe new superport.

Another 800 hectares (2,000 acres) of land

owned by Delta would also be expropriated.The land was never used for industrial

purposes, so pressure built on Victoria to returnit to the farmers.

In 1999, the provincial government agreed tosell back much of the expropriated land, but thatoffer wasn’t extended to Brunswick Point farmersbecause their land was under a treaty claim bythe TFN. Although government negotiatorslater offered assurances the farmers’ propertieswouldn’t be included in a treaty settlement, theprovince also signed an agreement with the TFNstipulating it would have first right of refusal topurchase the land for 80 years.

The families maintained that because theindustrial development never took place,they were entitled to a return of their primefarmland without any encumbrances. Anotherbig concern facing the farmers was the price fortheir land, which they had been leasing from thegovernment since it was expropriated.

The families took the government to court, butthe judge reserved decision in order to allow allthe parties to negotiate a deal.

The deal, announced last week, allows theBrunswick Point families to regain title to theirland at a pre-negotiated purchase price. The landwill be consolidated into four large parcels, whilestaying in the Agricultural Land Reserve.

Province says expropriated landwill be returned to Delta farmers

NEWSBrunswick Point

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Page 14: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Sandor GyarmatiNOW CONTRIBUTOR

DELTA – Businessman Ron Toigo and hiscelebrity partners were on hand Thursday for theofficial sales launch of the Tsawwassen Springsdevelopment.

Singer Michael Bublé, former VancouverCanuck coach and GM Pat Quinn and recordproducer Bruce Allen joined Toigo, as well asmembers of Delta council and others, at the$400-million development to help kick off themarketing campaign.

“I’m blown away. This is just stunning. I knewit was going to be special, but it’s spectacular withthe views and the finish,” Toigo told the Optimist– a sister paper of the Now – of the completedfirst phase, a building comprising 55 condosoverlooking a new golf course.

The Shato Holdings president, noting thefinished product exceeded his high expectations,said there’s been a growing list of localsregistering to see what’s available.

The marketing is all about selling anexperience of high quality resort-style living,something Toigo described as “Disney-esque, ifthere is such a thing.”

Bordered by Springs Boulevard (formerly16th Avenue) and 52nd Street, the developmentconstructed by Talisman Homes, and designedby architect Wayne Fougere and interior designer

Martie Knockaert, will comprise 490 housingunits – 296 condos ranging from 750 square feetto over 2,300 square feet, and 194 detached bareland strata homes from 1,500 square feet to over3,000 square feet.

The buildings are to have an “Arts & Craftsstyle made famous at Torrey Pines Golf Club.”

The construction also carries LEED

certification and geo-exchange heating and airconditioning.

A focal point of Tsawwassen Springs is anall-season par 70, 18-hole golf course designedby Vancouver-based Ted Locke. Other amenitieswill include a 32,000-square-foot neighbourhoodclubhouse, a fully equipped fitness centre andspa, restaurant, pub, banquet facility, outdoor

skating rink, tennis court and neighbourhoodstore and café.

A limited number of pre-construction salesof the Tsawwassen Golf and Country Clubredevelopment took place last year, but Toigosaid at the time he wanted the remaining unitsto be sold when the first phase was completed,saying homebuyers would be captivated oncethey saw the finished product.

The 55-hectare (137-acre) developmentreceived Delta and Metro Vancouver approvala couple of years ago but Toigo later came backwith an application to amend it.

Delta approved the changes, the most notablebeing an increase in the number of condos byspitting larger units into smaller ones. Toigoexplained at the time that a major reason was theHST, which will not apply to the less expensiveunits.

The majority of the condos will sell for under$600,000.

According to the project website (www.tsawwassensprings.ca), strata fees will be “keptvery low, with all amenities such as golf greenfees or fitness centre costs on a pay_as_you_gobasis. Every home has its own natural gas andelectrical meters.

Simply put, at Tsawwassen Springs, the idea isthat if you don’t use an amenity or service, youdon’t pay for it.”

Celebrities help kick off housing project drive

NEWSDelta

Businessman Ron Toigo and his celebrity partners were on hand Thursday for the official sales launch of the

Tsawwassen Springs housing development. Singer Michael Bublé (left) and record producer Bruce Allen (right)

joined Toigo at the $400 million development to help kick off the marketing campaign.

A14 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

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Re: Public Open Houses to provide inputon the City of Surrey Dog Off Leash MasterPlan Strategy (2011 – 2020)You are invited to a public open house to provide input on the Master Planprocess for the City of Surrey’s Dog off Leash Strategy.

Staff will be on hand to receive community feedback and priorities.This information will help us guide the development of a final preferredMaster Plan to be completed in the winter of 2011. The Master Plan willprovide direction to the City of Surrey in the development and provision ofDog off leash spaces in Surrey.

The Open Houses will be located throughout Surrey in the month of May.Residents are encouraged to attend the Open House planned for their towncentre.

Time: All Open Houses will run from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.

Date and Location:

Wednesday May 18, 2011Fleetwood — Frost Road Elementary (8606 - 162 Street)South Surrey — Morgan Elementary (3366 - 156A Street)

If you have any questions, please call 604 501-5050. We look forward toworking closely with the residents of Surrey on the development of the DogOff Leash Master Plan (2011 – 2020)

Page 15: Surrey Now May 17 2011

NEWSRichmond

Tip gets dealer off the streetRICHMOND – An anonymous tip to police has landed a

Delta drug dealer in the slammer for seven years.James Choi, 37, has been sentenced to seven years in jail and a

20-year firearms prohibition after he was convicted on a cocainetrafficking charge. Back in February Richmond Mountiesreceived a tip that a guest at a hotel had a gun.

“When police arrived, they recognized the hotel guest as aprolific offender,” Const. Tammy-Lyn Walker said.

She said police found Choi with a large duffel bag containing30 kilograms of cocaine, worth about $3 million.

[email protected]

Mission

Charges laid in double murderSURREY – A Surrey man has been charged with two counts of

first-degree murder in the slaying of a Mission couple.Jack Douglas Woodruff, 52, was arrested Thursday for the

2008 double murder. Lisa Dudley, 33, and Guthrie McKay, 37,were shot in their rural home in the 31000-block of GreenwoodDrive.

A Mountie was reprimanded for “disgraceful conduct” fornot properly following up on a complaint of shots fired in thatneighbourhood on Sept. 18, 2008. The couple was found fourdays later, with Dudley still clinging to life.

[email protected]

Surrey

Mom holding baby muggedSURREY – A Surrey man accused of going on a “48-hour

violent crime spree” in Metro Vancouver has been charged with11 crimes related to six robberies in Surrey, Vancouver, NorthVancouver and Coquitlam.

Among his alleged crimes, Joon Woo Lim, 32, is accused ofmugging a Vancouver woman on Beatty Street while she washolding her six-month-old daughter Friday. Police say he pulleda weapon on her, ripped her purse from her arms, struck her legwith the weapon, ran away and then took off in a car.

Lim is to appear in court [email protected]

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Page 16: Surrey Now May 17 2011

DELTA – Ever wonder how much work goesinto training police dogs so they can chase crooksand help officers fight crime?

Drop by Scottsdale Centre in North Deltanext week and learn all about Delta policedepartment’s K-9 unit.

Members of the Delta police department arehosting “Police Week” events for the whole familyfrom May 26 to 28.

As part of national Police Week, Delta policeofficers and their helpers will be setting up anumber of displays and information booths atthe North Delta mall at 72nd Avenue and ScottRoad.

The event is aimed at educating the publicabout police work and offering visitors a chanceto get better acquainted with the dedicated menand women who keep their community safe.

Delta police department spokeswoman Sgt.Sharlene Brooks says the event offers the publican opportunity to mingle with officers from thedepartment’s various sections and learn aboutpolicing.

The displays will include the MunicipalIntegrated Emergency Response Team, the DPDDog Squad and community partners, including

ICBC, CN police andRCMP Dive Team.

The Delta policedepartment CanineSection was formed in1983 and currently haseight dogs. In 2003, theunit joined forces with theNew Westminster policeservice canine sectionto form the IntegratedCanine Service.

Delta’s Emergency Response Team wasestablished in 1975, following the tragic death ofStaff. Sgt. Ronald McKay in November of 1974while on duty.

In 2003, the Delta Emergency Response Teamjoined forces with Port Moody, Abbotsfordand New Westminster to form the MunicipalIntegrated Emergency Response Team,sometimes referred to by its acronym MIERT.

Visitors to the exhibit will be able learn someinteresting stories behind those facts.

Mall officials expect the exhibit to draw anumber of school tours.

– The Now

Police Week reachesout to the community

NEWSDelta

Sharlene Brooks

A16 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

0517

11

Front row: Cllr. Heather King, Mayor Lois E. Jackson, Cllr. Anne PetersonBack row: Cllrs. Scott Hamilton, Ian Paton, Robert Campbell and Bruce McDonald

Delta Council salutes the Delta Police fortheir commitment to excellence in policing and

ensuring public safety in our community.

The Corporation of Delta4500 Clarence Taylor CrescentDelta, BC V4K 3E2(604) 946-4141

May 26-28, 2011 is Police Week in DeltaDelta Police are hosting displays and events for families

at the Scottsdale Centre in North Delta

Police Week

0517

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The Surrey NOW will be running a special section for Gradsof all ages and we’d like to include as many graduates as wepossibly can. Send us the name of the graduate, their schoolgraduating photo and include a brief message of congratulationsand who it’s from.

This section will run Tuesday, June 7Deadline is Wednesday, June 1

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Page 18: Surrey Now May 17 2011

DELTA – The arrival of eight new state-of-the-art buses could give another competitive edgeto Charter Bus Lines, the largest independentmotorcoach operator in British Columbia.

This month, the family-owned and operatedcompany welcomed the delivery of eight new2011 Prevost H3-45 coaches to its bustlingcompound, located on River Road in Delta.

These new high-tech buses, built at the Volvo-owned Prevost plant in Quebec, will cover CharterBus Lines’ large service region with near-zeroemissions and greatly improved fuel efficiency,thanks to their well-engineered D13 engines.

Equally important to Sheldon Eggen, longtimePresident and CEO of Charter Bus Lines, is thatthe new Prevost coaches are equipped with three-point safety belts for use by all passengers.

“We are ahead of the curve with that, becausethere is no legislation yet for safety belts on busesin B.C.,” Eggen said. “We are very excited to bethe first in the region to have buses with thisimportant safety feature.”

Each of the new Prevost buses is valued atmore than $550,000. “This is one of the largestdeliveries of coaches in our company’s history,”Eggen said. “Adding eight new buses to our

fleet is exciting. We look forward to rolling intothe future with safer, more environmentallyresponsible coaches.”

Close to 100 buses are operated andmaintained by Charter, a subsidiary of VancouverTours and Transit Ltd., which has been in thetransportation business for more than 60 years.

In the mid-1970s, the Eggen family becamefinancially involved in the company and took thecharter bus business in new directions.

The Now

Seat belts on new busesbought by Charter co.

NEWS

Shelden Eggen at Charter Bus Lines’ compound on

River Road in Delta.

Business

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Page 19: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Green leader in SurreyJane Sterk, the Leader of the Green Party of

BC, will be at the Surrey Board of Trade office(#101, 14439 104th Ave.) on Thursday, May 19for a roundtable meeting, scheduled to run from8 to 10 a.m.

“You are invited to attend and ask anyquestions regarding the economy and businessdevelopment,” said board CEO Anita Hubermanin an email invitation.

Sterk is the founder and partner of acomputer business for 12 years. “She is aninteresting speaker, and has some ideas onemerging opportunities in sustainable business.”

For details, visit businessinsurrey.com.Meanwhile, Surrey Board of Trade’s Top 25

Under 25 awards reception is slated for Monday,May 30 at Eaglequest golf course in Surrey.Hurry, the nomination period ends today(Tuesday, May 17). Details are online at theboard’s website, businessinsurrey.com.

$298K donated forquake relief in Japan

BC Liquor Store customers and staff havedonated more than $298,000 to help support RedCross relief efforts in Japan.

BC Liquor Stores collected the donations

between March 21 and May 3 at 197 locations.The funds raised have been added to the CanadianRed Cross Japan Earthquake Relief Fund.

Donations to the Canadian Red Cross haveprovided more than 192,000 blankets, 183,000pieces of clothing, 26,000 emergency relief kitsand 11,000 evacuees have been given sleepingkits. Efforts are now shifting from emergencyresponse to early recovery and will include theprovision of 70,000 transitional homes benefiting280,000 people.

NEWS

The infamous Canucks “Green Men” were at King of

Floors in Surrey last Saturday for a promotional visit,

raising money for BC SPCA and mingling with fans

including Now entertainment editor (and massive

Canucks fan) Tom Zillich.

Briefly

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Page 20: Surrey Now May 17 2011

SURREY — In an effort to make the eventmore family friendly, the Canadian CancerSociety’s Relay for Life at the CloverdaleMillennium Park Amphitheatre will start earlierthis year.

The society’s Relay for Life is staged annuallyto celebrate cancer survivors, remember lovedones that have been lost to the disease and raisefunds to fight cancer.

The Surrey event, to be held June 11, is partof a series of relays that will be hosted across thecountry this spring. Elsewhere, the White Rock/South Surrey relay is slated for June 24, whilethe Delta event was held Friday, May 13 at NorthDelta Secondary.

Coordinator Caitlin Berndt says this year’srelay in Cloverdale will see a few changes.

“It’s starting at noon. Part of our goal isto integrate more with the families and givethem more of an opportunity to come out andparticipate in the relay,” Berndt said Friday.

But you don’t have to participate in the relayofficially in order to support the event. Visitors

can drop by and partake in other activities onoffer at the park.

Berndt said a local Ford dealership will bringseveral vehicles to the park and the public cantest drive them for a $20 donation, money thatwill go to support the relay.

“It’s a special program that Ford offerscommunity and charity events to raise money,”she said.

Other festivities include an all-day barbecueand entertainment.

The local event has a strong bank ofvolunteers, about 120 of them signed up so far.

“We’re feeling pretty good about the numberof volunteers we have, but we’re alwayswelcoming new students or anyone that isinterested in participating in the relay,” she said.

Volunteer duties are largely “ambassadortype” roles such as meeting and greeting relayparticipants and visitors to the event, and helpingto supervise children’s activities.

Anyone interested in signing up as a volunteercan contact Carissa Halley at [email protected]

To register for the Relay for Life visit theCanadian Cancer Society’s website at www.cancer.ca/relay.

Relay for Life eventsspring into action

NEWSCommunity events

Marisa BabicSTAFF REPORTERtwitter@marisababic

A20 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

15th ANNUALSURREY BOARD OF TRADE 2011

CALL FOR NOMINATIONSnominated by the community

AWARD CATEGORIES:1. Police Officer of the Year: The recipient will be

a police officer who has demonstrated by his orher conduct, department, work ethic, ability andleadership the qualities of a role model withinthe detachment and worthy of this type of peerrecognition.

2. Police and Business Partnership Award: The recipientwill be a business person, organization or companywhich has through their crime prevention initiativesto policing made a significant impact on the ability ofSurrey Detachment to serve the city at a higher level.

3. Arnold Silzer Community Policing Initiative Award:to recognize outstanding community policing andproblem-solving initiatives which, through theco-operative effort of individuals or groups, reducedor eliminated a problem, thus impacting positivelyon the safety and well-being of the community

INSTRUCTIONS:

Your nomination should include the name of thenominee, description of the event or events which leadyou to put their name forward and one or more of thefollowing points:

1. INNOVATION: the individual or business hasdeveloped an innovative idea, project or strategy

2. COMMITMENT: the individual or business hasparticipated

3. CONTRIBUTION: the individual or business hascontributed towards their department or reductionof crime or enhancement of community safety

4. PERSEVERANCE: the individual or business has helpedto encourage others to actionSubmissions indicatingthe event or events, which led you to put forwardyour nomination should be typed on an 8 ½ x 11page and should be no longer than 400 words. Pleaseinclude your name, address and phone number, aswell as contact info for the nominee.

Deadline: Friday, June 17, 2011 at 5:00E-mail your nomination to: [email protected]

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Page 21: Surrey Now May 17 2011

VOLUNTEERINGAlzheimer Society of B.C.’s WhiteRock office is looking for both officevolunteers and support group facilitators.A commitment of 2-4 hours weekly orbi-weekly over a one-year time period isrequired. Training is provided. ContactAvalon for more information: 604-541-0606 or email [email protected]. Info: alzheimerbc.org.Surrey Memorial Hospital needsvolunteers in a wide variety of areas. Fordetails or to apply, call 604-588-3381 oremail [email protected] National Institute for theBlind (CNIB): “For only a few hours aweek, you can make a huge differencein the life of someone with vision loss.Become a ‘Vision Mate’ and be matchedwith someone living near your home,work or school. Assist with reading,errands, shopping, or going for walks.You set up mutually convenient timesto meet.” Contact Caragh, [email protected] or 604-431-2146.Fraser Health Crisis Line is recruitingvolunteers to provide assistance topeople in the region who are experiencingemotional distress. Pick up an informationpackage at Options Community Services,9815 140th St., Surrey, or [email protected] Sisters of BC Lower Mainlandis looking for women, age 19 or older,to volunteer as Big Sister mentors. Theorganization provides Little Sisters with amentor who is there to listen to her, havefun with her, and be a supportive friend.Call 604-873-4525, email [email protected] Hospice Society hostsvolunteer training sessions to prepareindividuals to assist those dealing witha life-limiting illness, their loved ones

and the bereaved in its palliative andbereavement programs. Call BarbaraMorningstar, 604-543-7006, or visit www.surreyhospice.com.Surrey Search & Rescue seeks newmembers. If you live and or work inthe Lower Mainland and can make acommitment of time to the team, youare invited to apply. Email [email protected] or call 604-320-3063.

ACTIVITIESRhythm Friends invite people to joinin on informal drum circle held everyMonday at 2:30 p.m. at White RockCommunity Centre, 15154 Russell Ave.“Bring your drum or percussion instrumentor borrow one of ours. Rhythm-wise,anything goes. We may start eveningsessions if there is sufficient interest.”HappyTime Square Dance Club:Lessons and musical fun for singles,couples, youth, seniors and families,Tuesdays from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. atWalnut Road Elementary, 16152 82ndAve., Surrey, with caller/teacher TylerWagner. Call Wendy Krueger for info or toregister, 778-878-4244.Surrey International Folk Dancers:Group meets Thursday evenings (Sept. toJune) at Walnut Road Elementary, 1615282nd Ave., North Surrey, from 7-10 p.m.Call Dale (teacher), 604-594-9946, oremail [email protected] Neighbourhood House atCrescent Beach events: Every Wednesdayis Seniors Hot Lunch, noon to 2 p.m.604-592-6970.Scottish Country Dance classes: newmembers welcome, no partner needed,from September to April at Sullivan Hall,6303 152nd St., Surrey. Info: 604-536-1367 or 604-531-4595, www.wrscdc.org.

Surrey Square Wheelers SquareDance Club hosts events at Port Kellscommunity hall, 18918 88th Ave. Menwanted for females who don’t havepartners to dance. Call 604-513-9901 or604-594-6415.The Vaudevillians seniorsentertainment troupe is looking forvolunteers interested in performing orin backstage positions. Rehearsals heldMonday afternoons, 10 months a year,at Kennedy Senior Centre in North Delta.Phone Pat or Jim at 604-541-9591 or clickon www.thevaudevillians.com.

CLUBS/GROUPSSouth Surrey Garden Club: Theclub meets at 7:30 p.m. every fourthWednesday (except August andDecember) at St. Mark’s Anglican Church,12953 20th Ave. Visitors welcome (for $3fee). Info: contact David Broomhead at604-533-1142 or [email protected] Cycling Club: White Rock LeisureServices hosts group of cyclists age 50and over for rides and related eventsSundays at 9 a.m. (April to Sept.). Meet atSouth Surrey Cycles, 2055 152nd St. Call604-531-5004 or 604-541-2199.Mann Park Lawn Bowling Club: Groupinvites newcomers to get involved in clubactivities this summer at 14560 NorthBluff Rd., White Rock. Info: 604-531-0833.Dutch-Canadian events hosted in thearea by not-for-profit Dutch-CanadianCultural Society of Greater Vancouver.“Incorporated in 1965, our goal is toprovide entertaining venues in the LowerMainland whereby Dutch-Canadiansand their friends can come together topreserve, enhance and celebrate, theirheritage and cultural traditions.” Info:604-536-3394, www.dutchnetwork.ca.Newcomers Club of White Rock/

South Surrey: Meetings the firstTuesday of every month at Mount OliveLutheran Church, 2350 148th St., startingat 7 p.m. Free parking. All newcomerswelcome.Cloverdale Garden Club meets on thesecond Thursday of each month (fromSeptember to June) at Clayton hall, 1851370th Ave., 7 p.m. Guest speakers, fieldtrips, raffle, etc. Call Linda at 604-539-0068.North Delta Newcomers & Friends:Club welcoming ladies who are newto the area and/or those interested inmeeting new friends. Monthly dinnermeetings and more. If you would likemore information about the club and itsactivities, call Kathy at 604-583-3691 orPam at 604-597-7974.

Email listings for Wellbeing [email protected]

WELLBEINGTHE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A21

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Page 22: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Michael BoothSPORTS EDITORtwitter@surreynowsports

Surrey United capped an undefeated seasonby capturing their eighth consecutive women’sProvincial Cup title in Aldergrove Sunday.

The runaway regular season winners of theMetro Women’s Soccer League’s premier divisionmaintained their winning ways with a dominantpostseason. Surrey won the MWSL’s Premier Cupin March and then blew through the first tworounds of the Provincial Cup draw, outscoringtheir opponents 12-0. Sunday’s finale againstVancouver’s Westside was much closer but Surreywas still able to celebrate following a 1-0 win.

“That game was not an indication of how weplayed all season,” said Surrey veteran RandeeHermus. “It was not our best game but it showedthe Surrey United grit — it wasn’t pretty butwe pulled out on top. It was a testament to theplayers and the drive and determination we haveon this team. No matter what it takes, we’ll find away to win.”

In the first half it didn’t look like Surreywould need grit and determination to extendtheir seven-year-long win streak of ProvincialCup games. For the first 10 minutes Surreyexerted strong pressure with a half-dozen scoring

chances, all of which either went wide of the goalor were stopped by Westside goalkeeper JackieDennett.

“Their keeper was absolutely on fire,” saidSurrey coach Jeff Clarke. “She was probablythe best keeper I’ve seen all year. We played heronce before and she was alright but in the finalyou could tell their game plan was to have hershow up big and give them a chance to win.

She definitely did her job; she kept them in thegame early and gave them hope for making acomeback.”

Surrey did manage to squeak one goal pastDennett. In the 20th minute, Nicole Stewartunleashed a hard shot that deflected off adefender’s head and into the goal for a 1-0 Surreylead.

After that however, the play reverted to form

with Surrey building up to a scoring chancefollowed by Dennett spoiling the opportunity.

Thanks to Dennett, Westside stayed withinstriking distance into the second half as theyawaited a chance to score against the flow of play.

“Westside is a great team and we knew theywould be tough,” Hermus said. “They are by

Surrey downs Westsidefor eighth consecutiveProvincial Cup title

Women’s Soccer

Eight is great for Surrey United

Surrey United’s Megan Blaker (18) chips the ball past a sliding Westside defender during Surrey’s 1-0 Provincial Cup win Sunday. (Photo: Richard Howes/bcsoccerweb.com)

Send your team’s highlights to Sports Editor, Michael Booth at [email protected] or phone 604-572-0064

SPORTS

see SURREY › page 24

It was a testament tothe players and the driveand determinationwe have on this team.

A22 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

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Page 23: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Last November, members of Newton’sICST Pegasus were lower than crabdroppings, wondering what had gonewrong in their Vancouver Metro SoccerLeague premier season and staring at thedistinct possibility of being caught up in abattle to avoid regulation.

Sunday afternoon those thoughts werelong gone as Pegasus players were higherthan the North Shore mountains as theycelebrated their first B.C. championshipafter a 1-0 win over Vancouver’s Columbusin the men’s soccer Provincial Cup final.

“It was an epic day for us,” marvelledPegasus coach Rob Reed. “To winthe Provincial Cup is a fantasticaccomplishment and it was our numberone goal at the start of the season. But towin it the way we did this year – knowingthe path we took with all the struggles wehad in the first two or three months of theseason – made it all the more sweet.

“It was a colossal struggle at times butthrough it all the players stuck together,righted the ship and got on a roll theother way. It was a very powerful roll thatultimately couldn’t be stopped by anyone.”

After losing to cross-town rival SurreyUnited Firefighters in the VMSL’s ImperialCup title game in March, Pegasus playersvowed they would be better prepared thenext time they battled for silverware. OnSunday in Aldergrove they made good onthat promise with a solid showing against adetermined Columbus team.

Pegasus came out of the gates hard,

pressing into the Columbus zone andcreating a string of dangerous scoringchances. Azad Palani had two goldenchances in the opening half whileteammates Sahil Sandhu, Jag Gill andDiaz Kambere each had their own shot atopening the scoring only to come up emptyon their chances. Despite dominatingmuch of the play in the first 45 minutes,Pegasus had nothing to show for it otherthan zeros on the scoreboard.

“It was a very close game,” Reed said.“We could have been easily up by three orfour goals at halftime but instead it was still0-0. We had probably four quality chances

in the first half but couldn’t score. Thenthey kind of clawed their way into the gamewith some good chances themselves in thesecond half and our keeper had to make acouple of fantastic saves.

Columbus came on strong to openthe second half but, like Pegasus in thefirst half, could not capitalize on theiropportunities. Pegasus slowly reassertedcontrol, and began to create pressure inthe Columbus zone. The Horsemen’s hard

work was finally rewarded in the 70thminute with what turned out to be thegame’s only goal.

Sandhu created the chance by sending acrossing pass for Gill, who nodded it overthe leaping Columbus goalkeeper. TheVancouver goalie got a piece of the ballwith his hand, but not enough to keep itout of the net.

“It was a massive relief for us,” Reedsaid. “Nobody said anything but everybodyon our team was wondering if the missedchances we had earlier would come back tohaunt us. When the ball went into the netit was a huge relief for us to finally have thelead.”

Pegasus defence protected their zoneextremely well for the final 20 minutes,denying Columbus any scoring chanceswhile coming close to adding an insurancegoal on the counterattack.

“When that final whistle went it was anunbelievable feeling for every player,” Reedsaid. “The elation and the celebrating withthe players was just phenomenal. Thenwhen they presented the cup to our captain(Paul Bahia), he didn’t lift it. Instead hegave it to Lavy Mangat, a player who hasbeen with the club for a long time and wassupposed to be retiring this year.

“Lavy was the guy who actually liftedthe Provincial Cup for us and it was a very,very emotional moment for everybody onthe team.

Reed then added with a laugh, “It wasthe first provincial championship for Lavy.He was supposed to be retiring but nowhe has to come to nationals with us onThanksgiving.”

Pegasus caps roller-coastercampaign with B.C. title

SPORTSMen’s soccer

Michael BoothSPORTS EDITORtwitter@surreynowsports

Nobody said anythingbut everybody on ourteam was wondering ifthe missed chances wehad earlier would comeback to haunt us.

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A23

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Phil Reimer’sgolf reportFor awhile on Sunday I didn’t thinkany player wanted to win the TPCPlayers Championship. This is thetournament the Americans love tocall the fifth major. KJ Choi andDavid Toms, who were at the topin the final round, were missingshort putts, and in the case of Tomsputting it in the water when a lay-upmight have been better suggested.

Toms righted himself, of course,and came through on 18 to tie Choi with a brilliant 20-footputt and force a playoff at the famed 17 “Island Hole.”

OK, if this is a near major should you be deciding thewinner with one shot on an island green?

Choi won because Toms missed a short put—again. Bothwere doing it all day.

Interesting with all the young hot shots in the final daymix, it was a veteran twosome that was left standing.

What do we make of Tiger Woods and his withdrawal afteronly nine holes on the first day?

Woods is the last guy who is going to tell you how much ofhis body is under repair but if its his Achilles and knee andpossibly a new knee is in the offing then perhaps he willthen be able to play at the level he used to dream about.There is no consistency to his game right now and that’swhat Woods has always thrived on. While others werefalling around him, he was so consistent shot after shot.

*********************************************************************Good news for Abbotsford’s Nick Taylor, one this county’stop amateur players. Taylor is going to make his pro debutat the Canadian Tour event in Victoria next month andhas already received six exemptions to date for the season.The tour then heads to Kamloops where the BC Lions arepractising. Maybe a tour—a Lions hitting contest for charity.

*********************************************************************GolfBC, Western Canada’s largest golf course owner andoperator, has announced the launch of an iPhone mobileapplication to allow golfers to book real-time tee times24/7 through their iPhone or iPad at all of GolfBC’s 12courses throughout B.C. and Maui.

The GolfBC app can be downloaded for free from theiPhone App Store.

I wonder if they have an app to cure the shakes over mythree-foot putts.

*********************************************************************Remember A.J. Eathorne, the pride of Penticton and awoman who was destined for big things as a pro? Well itdidn’t turn out that way.

However, Eathorne is still on the course. When her careerturned south she turned to caddying and now will be onthe bag of one of the bright stars on the LPGA: BrittanyLincicome.

That’s all for this week—surely better weather is coming.

You can reach me at [email protected]

Page 24: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Surrey wins eighth B.C. crown

SPORTS

no means a team that we tookfor granted and we knew itwouldn’t be easy. We weredefinitely the stronger team onthe day but all they needed wasone goal and anything couldhave happened.”

Hermus almost providedan insurance marker midwaythrough the second half whenher header in traffic appearedto cross the goal line. Thereferee was unable to seethrough the group of bodies inthe penalty box, however, andthe game continued with the

score 1-0 in Surrey’s favour.“Who’s to say but it looked

like it was across the line,”Hermus said. “The gamewas won anyway so it didn’tmatter. If that goal wouldhave been the difference thenmaybe I would have fussedmore about it but in the end itdidn’t matter — one goal wasenough.”Surrey’s defence held forthe remainder of the gameand when the final whistlesounded, United wasmaking plans for an eighthstraight strip to the nationalchampionships. This year’s

tournament will take place inMontreal on Thanksgivingweekend.

When asked if winningprovincial titles is getting oldfor Surrey players, Hermusquickly denied it.

“Are you kidding? Not atall,” the national team stalwartsaid. “When the final whistleblew it was the same intensityand craziness and excitementas all the other times we’vewon. We all still feel it andit’s definitely not boring tous. That’s one the big reasonsI’m still hanging on and stillplaying.”

‹ from page 22

Earl Marriott’s Josh Lester (left)

didn’t need any hair gel to get

the desired carefree spiked look

thanks to a steady downpour

during the Mariners’ 34-14

win over Port Moody in junior

boys rugby playoff action last

Wednesday.

(photo: Kevin Hill)

A24 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

You‛ve probably heard and seen a lot about HST — some negative, some positive.Well, now you can have your say. From June 13th to July 22nd you‛ll vote whether tokeep HST or go back to PST plus GST. It‛s an important decision for our province,so be sure to take the time to understand all the implications of the two taxsystems. And before you decide, put each tax option to the test at HSTinBC.ca

Decide for yourself. Learn more at HSTinBC.ca

Page 25: Surrey Now May 17 2011

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A25

All advertising published in this newspaper isaccepted on the premise that the merchandiseand services offered are accurately describedand willingly sold to buyers at the advertisedprices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions.Advertising that does not conform to thesestandards or that is deceptive or misleading,is never knowingly accepted. If any readerencounters non-compliance with these standardswe ask that you inform the Publisher of thisnewspaper and The Advertising StandardsCouncil of B.C. OMISSIONAND ERROR: Thepublishers do not guarantee the insertion ofa particular advertisement on a specified date,or at all, although every effort will be made tomeet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, thepublishers do not accept liability for any lossor damage caused by an error or inaccuracy inthe printing of an advertisement beyond theamount paid for the space actually occupied bythe portion of the advertisement in which theerror occurred. Any corrections or changes willbe made in the next available issue. The SurreyNow will be responsible for only one incorrectinsertion with liability limited to that portion ofthe advertisement affected by the error. Requestfor adjustments or corrections on charges mustbe made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration.For best results please check your ad foraccuracy the first day it appears. Refundsmade only after 7 business days notice!

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“Children are our most valuablenatural resource.”

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OUR FOCUS IS ON THE LEARNER

PAYROLL ASSISTANTCome be a part of a highly motivated and goal-oriented team! If you are someone who wouldlike to learn a great variety of tasks related to a large, complex, in-house payroll, then this maybe the job for you.The Richmond School District is seeking a qualified, full time (35 hours per week), permanentPayroll Assistant to carry out the duties of processing payrolls and benefits administration inthe department. One year of relevant experience and Payroll courses are required, along withexceptional analytical and interpersonal skills, plus the ability to compute with accuracy andspeed.The rate of pay for this position is $21.36 per hour, plus a pension and excellent benefit package.Qualified individuals are invited to submit a resume and covering letter, along with proof ofcourse work. Please apply to competition #E-PA-001-11-02 by 4:30 p.m. on May 31st, 2011.

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Department 7811 Granville Avenue Richmond, BC V6Y 3E3All interested applicants are welcome to apply, however, only those being considered foran interview will be contacted.To learn more about the Richmond School District, please visit our website: www.sd38.bc.ca

“Children are our most valuablenatural resource.”

School District No. 38(Richmond)

OUR FOCUS IS ON THE LEARNER

TEMPORARY TRADESSchool District No. 38 (Richmond) provides the opportunity to work in a safe,clean, friendly and welcoming environment. There are temporary assignmentsavailable for Carpenters and a Painter.All applicants must possess a Certificate of Apprenticeship and a Certificate ofQualification (TQ) in the applicable trade, in addition to a minimum of two (2)years of experience in commercial or institutional service work at a journeymanlevel. The rate of pay is $30.57 per hour, which includes 4% vacation pay.Applicants must provide proof of qualifications in order to be considered,as well as an application form, by 3:00 p.m. on Friday, May 27th, 2011.Application forms are available on our website or between 8:30 a.m. and4:00 p.m. at:

Human Resources School District No. 38 (Richmond)7811 Granville Avenue Richmond, BC V6Y 3E3

All interested applicants are welcome to apply, however, only those beingconsidered for an interview will be contacted. For further information, pleasevisit our website at www.sd38.bc.ca.

1010 Announcements1010

New in town?New Baby?

Just Retired?Getting Married?New Business?

Our hostess will bringgifts & greetings, alongwith helpful informationabout your community

1-866-627-6074

New to Surrey/Delta,New to

White Rock/South Surrey,Baby Welcome,

Bridal Showcase,Baby Shower,

Career Opportunities

1010 Announcements1010CRIMINAL RECORD?

Canadian pardon seals record.American waiver allows

legal entry.Why risk employment, business,

travel, licensing, deportation?All CANADIAN / AMERICAN

Work & Travel Visa’s.604-282-6668 or1-800-347-2540

If it’s

JEWELLERYREPAIRS

Take it to

1010 Announcements1010

If it’s

WATCHREPAIRS

Take it to

1031 Coming Events10311964-1968 COURTENAY

HIGH SCHOOLReunion planned for July 1-3,2011. It is time to plan yoursummer trip to visit OLD friends.July 1-3 in Courtenay, BC.Contact Diane (250) 941-1912.Email: [email protected] forin fo rmat ion and reg is te r :Facebook Courtenay HighSchool.

LOST KEYS (ring of keys includ-ing car remote) on May 1st, near124th St/124th Ave, Ocean Parkarea of S. Surrey. 604-535-7994.

FEATUREDEMPLOYMENT

CLASSIFIED ISA CLICK AWAYPlace your print orPlace your print or online classified adonline classified adthrough our websitethenownewspaper.comthenownewspaper.com

yourcommunityyourclassifieds

24/7

IS THERE SOMEONE SPECIAL GRADUATING THIS YEAR?Let the community know how proud

you are of their achievement!

for a photo & message.

$27.50(plus tax)

The Surrey NOW will be running a special sectionfor Grads of all ages and we’d like to include as manygraduates as we possibly can. Send us the name of thegraduate, their school graduating photo and include abrief message of congratulations and who it’s from.

This section will run Tuesday, June 7Deadline is Wednesday, June 1

PLEASE PRINT LEGIBLYname of grad: __________________________________________________________

educational institution: _______________________________________________

message: ________________________________________________________________

your name: ________________________________your ph.#: __________________Please include a cheque for the full amount of $30.80 (incl. HST). If you wish topay by credit card, please check this box❑ and we will call you direct when wereceive your ad placement.

For more information, call Linda Bampton at 604-444-3058or Email: [email protected]

201A - 3430 Brighton Ave., Burnaby BC, V5A 3H4

Actual size shown

Graduate’sName

Message TextLove

Mom and Dad

Educational Institution

on-linewww.thenownewspaper.com

PAPER ROUTES AVAILABLE

CALL TODAY

604-534-6493EMAIL

[email protected]

A Great Way toEarn Extra Money!

FEATURED EMPLOYMENTcontinues on next page

To BookYour Ad Use MasterCard,Visa, Interac,Americian Express or Cash

DELANEY, RileyMarch 8, 1990 – May 17, 2009

Forvever our Son,Forever a brother,Forever a friend,Forever missed.

Love forever Mom, Dad and Kyle

604-444-3000

VICTORIA DAYDEADLINES

Classified DeadlinesIssue Date:

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011Display Ads Thursday, May 19th 11:00 amLiner Ads Friday, May 20th 11:00 am

Our office will be closedMonday, May 23rd

Page 26: Surrey Now May 17 2011

A26 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

1225 CustomerService1225

B.C.’s most innovative pre-cast concrete productsmanufacturer requires a highly motivated individual toexpand our success and provide an elevated level of engineeringsupport to our customers and the engineering community throughout our market.

With over 60 years history in pre-cast concrete products, The Langley Concrete Group, a familyowned enterprise, prides itself in being customer orientated and quality driven.

The successful applicant must have the ability to understand the technical aspects of pre-castconcrete products and with confidence present innovative and proven applications to engineers,and other product specifiers.

Working with our staff that has over 200 years of experience in this industry, the TechnicalMarketing Engineer will help develop and present effective marketing strategies to further theuse of pre-cast concrete products in all aspects of underground civil infrastructure construction.

The position entails working with established industry associations and public organizations withthe goal of expounding our success in providing practical, long term solutions at the overallleast cost for the construction of roads, storm and sanitary sewers, culverts and storm watertreatment.

You must enjoy working in a casual environment where teamwork is mandatory and support isprovided at every opportunity to make you the best you can be at this position.

Our team welcomes new ideas, fresh input and works by consultation, involvement and feedbackgiving you the opportunity to learn and grow bringing projects to completion.

Minimum Requirements;1) Registered P.Eng in British Columbia for minimum three years.2) Experience in technical marketing to engineers, municipalities and governmental agencies.3) Training or certification in AutoCad applications.4) Experience in structural engineering of civil construction products or projects.5) Excellent written and verbal skills with ability to effectively communicate to individualsor groups.

6) Positive attitude with outgoing personality and willingness to learn and grow.

Our progressive Company offers;1) Attractive salary and benefits including extended health, life insurance, critical illnessinsurance, employee assistance program, etc.

2) Future personal growth and development program.3) Ability to travel, network with other professionals and attend industry training events.4) Supportive, engaged atmosphere with change minded management group.

Please send cover letter and resume to our Human Resources [email protected]

Technical Marketing Engineer

The Langley Concrete Group of Companies, a family owned enterprise with over50 years history, is looking for a highly motivated person to fill the positionof Accounting Assistant working as part of our successful head office teamlocated in Langley, BC.

Working with our CFO, Controller, Account Payable/Receivable, and Payroll staffthe successful applicant will perform a variety of accounting, data input, andgeneral office duties. Key responsibilities will include Accounts Payable, Payroll,tax remittances and fleet insurance renewals.

Must enjoy working in a casual supportive environment with substantialconstructive feedback.

Minimum requirements:• CMA/CGA enrollment or completion• 3-5 years payroll/AP experience in a computerized accounting environment• Strong computer skills including Microsoft Office applications• Experience in manufacturing and inventory beneficial• Good interpersonal skills

Our progressive company offers:• Attractive salary plus benefits, extended health benefits, wage

incentive programs• Future personal growth and development, on the job training• Fun supportive atmosphere with extracurricular activities

Please send an updated resume, cover letter, and driver’s abstract [email protected]

AccountingAssistant

Terasen Gasand FortisBCnow share onename—FortisBC.

Take your energy to a whole new levelJoin our customer service team

The future.We’ve got our best people on it.

Now Hiring! In preparation for our in-house Customer ServiceCentre we want experienced leaders to join our team for a varietyof positions in Billing Operations. We offer appealing benefitsand compensation, and career development opportunities.We’re now hiring for:

· Manager, Complex Billing · Senior Billing Analyst· Billing Leader · Collections Leader

Discover a career at FortisBC—where customers come first and we liveour commitment to communities every day.

View complete job descriptions and apply online at fortisbc.com/careers.FortisBC uses the FortisBC name and logo under license from Fortis Inc.(11/05 11-228.6)

Ben, Customer Advocacy Manager

Customer Service /Order Entry Clerk

Req’d by growing wholesaleCompany. Permanent full-timeposition in pleasant workingenvironment with full benefits.Hours 8-4, Mon-Fri. Minimumof 2 years exp in data entry,invoicing, pricing & invoiceverification. Position requiresattention to detail, accuracyand excellent telephone skills.Fluency in French would be anasset. Send resume inconfidence to:

KIEF MUSIC LTD.13139-80 Ave. Sry, BC V3W 3B1

[email protected] Fax 604-590-6999

No phone calls please

1232 Drivers1232Tow Truck Operators

Roadway Towing Ltd. has twopositions available for tow truckoperators. Applicants must residein the area in order to meet ourcontract obligations. Applicantsmust have a minimum of a class 5d r i v e r ’ s l i c e n c e w i t h o u trestrictions. Most importantlychosen applicants must pass acriminal record check prior tobeing hired. Experience ispreferred however training will beprovided to the right applicant.Some mechanical skills and anunderstanding of automobiles isan asset. Shifts include weekendsand some on call nights.Company also offers an excellentbenefits package. Drivers arepaid on commission so the harderyou work the more you can make.Resume and drivers abstract caneither be faxed or emailed.

Fax# 604-940-1793 oremail [email protected]

1240 GeneralEmployment1240

DOG LOVERS! Enjoy a healthy,profitable career as a professional

dog trainer. Governmentaccredited program - student

loans and grants. Ben Kersen &the Wonderdogs.

www.wonderdogs.bc.ca/career/1-800-961-6616.

FEATUREDEMPLOYMENT To place your ad call

604-444-3000

Page 27: Surrey Now May 17 2011

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A27

Call Surrey Campus: 604-583-1004

PRACTICAL NURSING PROGRAMPRACTICAL NURSING PROGRAMOnly 3 seats remain for May 23rd

*$1000 GRANT for PN Students CALL TODAY!Sprott-Shaw is the largest Practical Nursing Trainer in BC and is one of the largest in Canada.

Start DateMay 23rd

Visit our Campus at12160-88th Ave in Surrey

604-635-2224www.lovecars.ca

Start Earning What You Deserve!

In under 1 year you can be trained and working in the Automotive Industry!Grade 12 and Driver's License not required.

Most programs areeligible for ServiceCanada funding and

Student Loans.Call for more information.

WORTH SWITCHING CAREERS FOR

SHIFT YOUR NEW CAREER INTO FIRST GEAR!

Program: Duration: Potential WagesAutomotive Service Technician 42 weeks $100k/yrAuto Body & Refinishing Technician 42 weeks $80k/yrAuto Body Technician 24 weeks $80k/yrAutomotive Refinishing Prep Technician 24 weeks $80k/yrBusiness Manager 2 weeks $50-$100k/yrCollision Estimator 13 weeks $36-60k/yrService Advisor 13 weeks $36-$60k/yrParts & Warehousing 6 weeks $32-$48k/yrAuto Detailing 2 weeks $15-$20/hrSales & Leasing 1 week $36-$75k/yr

EDUCATION EDUCATIONcontinues on

next page

ADMIN ASSISTANTWe are a downtown CA firmthat has been providingquality services for over 50years. We are looking for anexperienced AA to providea d m i n s u p p o r t t o t h eManaging Partner. Dutiesinclude diary management,preparing documentation,liaising with clients and localCRA office and other adminduties. Candidates must havestrong English language skills,able to type at 60 wpm,transcribe dictation, haveattention to detail, able tomulti-task, meet deadlinesa n d h a v e e x c e l l e n tpresentation.To be considered pleaseemail your resume to:Roz Eyre, HR Manager,Rolfe Benson LLP,Chartered [email protected]

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

Cadence & Cascade hiring Tri-l i ngua l (Span ish /Eng l i sh /Portuguese) translator. $25.00 hr/35 hr wk. Comp. Sec. School +min. five yrs of exp. as F/Ttranslator working in three lang.Fluency in the three lang. is req.as he/she will be working ininternational context. E-Resume:[email protected]

Country MeadowsGolf Course Ltd

is looking for a LandscapingForeman. Duties: Establishw o r k s c h e d u l e s a n dprocedures. Supervise and co-ordinate the activities ofworkers who perform thefollowing duties: maintainlawns, spread topsoil and laysod; spray, prune, cut andremove trees and shrubs;plant, cultivate and harvestflowers and plants. PermanentFull-time position. Experience:4 years. Wages: $18.27 perhour/ 40 hours a week.Speaking Spanish is an assetto communicate with currentemployees. Location of work:Richmond, BC. Apply by mail:

Country MeadowsGolf Course

8482 No 6 RoadRichmond, BC. V6W 1E2

To Attention: Alvaro Dussan

CUSTOM CABINET MFGLooking for recent high schoolgraduate with a good aptitude inwoodworking. Needed for a longterm position. Must be highlymotivated & reliable.

Resume to:Box S10 C/OThe NOW Newspaper Suite 201,

7889 132nd StreetSurrey, BC V3W 4N2

1250 Hotel Restaurant1250

Boston Pizza Guildford15125 100th Ave.,

Surrey BC, V3R 9P4,Needs closing shift pizzacooks to cook pizzas, steaks,ribs and pasta dishes. Ensurequality and quantity controlmeasures are followed. Strictadherence to all healths t a n d a r d s . B u s y h i g hpressure work environment.Closing shift 6:00 PM to 3:00AM. Applicants should haveminimum 3 years experienceas pizza cook. Speak fluentEnglish. Salary $14.25 / hr.Qualified applicants should

mail, drop-off or faxresumes to (604) 583-6764

Covenant HouseVancouver

is hiring casual

• Food ServiceWorkers

• CooksCheck out:

www.covenanthousebc.orgor fax your resume to:

1-888-744-4493TODAY!

ENTRY LEVEL LANDSCAPERShift is on Weds/Thurs/Fri. Class5 driver’s licence an asset, but not

necessary. 604-209-7369

Call 604-708-2628www.plea.ca

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

Pak Diamond Kitchen Cabinetsis hiring one full-time permanentlabourer for in the shop at # 108 -7750 128 St., Surrey, BC. Salary$13.50/hr. Duties: Assist machineoperators, clean work areas andperform other labouring activities.Language: Pakistani Punjabi anasset. Email resume to:

[email protected]

VANCOUVER’S LARGESTLawn and Property MaintenanceCompany pays $120-$360 DAILYfor outdoor Spring/Summer work.Hiring honest, competitive, andenergetic individuals to fill ourvarious 2011 positions.

Apply online @www.propertystarsjobs.com

WAREHOUSE PERSONCarpet Distribution Co.

Looking forWarehouse worker full-time.

Forklift experience andfluent English required.

Fax resume: 604-596-6961Email: [email protected]

Yale Construction Ltd. hiringF/T Cement Finishers. Must haveover 3 years of work exp. in thetrade and some high school.$ 2 6 / h r . E - r e s u m e :[email protected]

TA-KE JAPANESERESTAURANT

in Surrey is seeking exp’d cooksfor sushi bar & hot food. F/T,40hrs/wk, $19/hr. Min. 3yrs Sushiexp. Prep. & cook full coursemeals & individual dishes, Ensurequality of food & determine size offood proportions, Supervise kit-chen staff & helpers, Good rawfish handling skill is an asset.

Send your resume to:[email protected] or

#104-15335 56 Ave. HWY. 10,Surrey BC V3S 0X9

1266 Medical/Dental1266

Full-Time PHARMACYTECHNICIAN

No Sunday shifts. Daytimeonly. Long term care an asset.Fax resume: 604-513-1420Or apply at: #7 - 8948 202 St,

Walnut Grove, Langley

MEDICAL OFFICE traineesneeded! Hospitals & doctors need

medical office & medical adminstaff! No experience? Need

training? Career training & jobplacement available.

1-888-748-4126.

1270 Office Personnel1270

1240 GeneralEmployment1240

ADMIN ASSISTANT traineesneeded! Large & small firms

seeking admin staff! Noexperience? Need training?

Career training & job placementavailable. 1-888-512-7116

F/T RECEPTIONIST/ORDER ENTRY

Multi-tasking individual with 2years experience, required forfurniture manufacturer inSurrey. Must be fluent inEnglish (written and spoken),have good computer skills(with Word, Excel & Outlook),excellent time managementskills, be a high school grad &work well on your own. Sendresume and cover letter to:[email protected]

SERVICE BILLING/ADMIN POSITION

Available. Must have excellentorganization, computer andpeople skills. Multitaskingskills are a must for our busy,f a s t p a c e d , s e r v i c edepartment.

Email resume to:shannon@

hardingforklift.com

1290 Sales1290IF YOUR CAREER is in New &Used Vehicle Sales, we wouldlike to hear from you. WesternChevro le t GMC Buick inDrumheller, Alberta is looking fora Sales & Leasing Consultant tojoin our team. You will receive topremuneration for an energeticproducer along with full companybenefits package along with theability to sell both new & usedvehicles. We are a top CSI, (newor reconditioned) excellentfacility, great inventory, fullmanagement support Dealership.Located in one of the bestcommunities in boom townAlberta (set in the Badlands). Fullamenities for culture, sports,tourism, with a growing economywith no flat spots, close toCalgary. Respond in confidenceto: Bryan Borisow, SalesM a n a g e r , W e s t e r n G MDrumheller.Phone 403-823-3371.Fax 403-823-7237.E m a i l : b r y a n . b o r i s o w @westerngmdrumheller.com.

1310 Trades/Technical1310ARCHITECTURAL SHEET

Metal Apprentices& Journeymen Req’dTop Wages & Benefits

Email:[email protected]

Or Call:604-433-1813

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS.Salmon Arm GM on Shuswap

Lake in beautiful British Columbiarequires Full-Time journeymanAutomotive Technicians. Email:

[email protected]: 250-832-5314.

Equipment OperatorFor Commercial

Landscape ContractorReq’d immed. Must have exp.with Bobcats & Excavators.Wages depending on Exp.Must have own transportation.Fax resume to: 604-532-1716

EQUIPMENT OPERATORS andForemans required NW Alberta,

2011 construction season.Competitive wages, benefit plan.

Oilfield experience, standardsafety tickets; www.ritchiebr.com.

Submit to: Fax 780-532-9012;[email protected]

F/T CARPENTER neededimmediately for Better HouseRenovation. Min. 4 yrs of exp. andcompletion of high school. $24/hr.P lease ema i l resume [email protected]

Landscape LabourersFor Commercial

Landscape ContractorRequired immediately. WagesDepending on Experience.Must have own transportation.

Fax resume to:604-532-1716

METAL FABRICATORSrequired for Raja Trailer &Equipment Sales In Delta$27/hour. Full time. Benefits:Medical, Dental, life insurance &long Term Disablitiy. 3-5 Yearsexperience. College/Vocationalor technical training Punjabi andEnglish an asset. Duties Steelfabricating, welding, grindingdrilling, sheering & analyze datafrom Blueprint Layouts. Pleasefax resume to 604-940-8385

QUINN CONTRACTING LTD. isgrowing! We require full-time JMTrades for Northern Alberta.Competitive wages, benefits &RRSP. Email [email protected] call toll free 1-855-885-6233

SOUTH ROCK LTD. is hiringMilling Personnel, Paving

Personnel (Pavers, Rollers,Packers), General Labourers(Screed, Raker, Flag), Heavy

Duty Mechanic. Experience withasphalt preferred. Valid drivers

licence required;[email protected]. Fax

403-568-1327;www.southrock.ca

WELDERS - seeking welders forcustom manufacturing

environment. Competitive wages,Benefits, RRSP’s &

Apprenticeship opportunities.Apply to: Do All Metal Fabricating,

Estevan, SK. Email:[email protected]

Fax: 306-634-8389

EMPLOYMENT

Page 28: Surrey Now May 17 2011

A28 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

1415 Music/Theatre/Dance1415

2060 For Sale -Miscellaneous2060

A FREE TELEPHONE SERVICE- Get Your First Month Free. Bad

Credit, Don’t Sweat It. NoDeposits. No Credit Checks. Call

Freedom Phone Lines TodayToll-Free 1-866-884-7464.

CAN’T GET UP YOUR Stairs?Acorn Stairlifts can help. CallAcorn Stairlifts now! Mention thisad and get 10% off your newStairlift. Call 1-866-981-6591.

ENTIRE CONTENTS OFHOUSE MUST GO!

High end quality furniture: lamps,chandeliers, Thomasville coffee/end tables, couch, 4 wing backchairs, double bedroom set brandnew typewri ter /carburator;dishes/household items, 2 woolarea rugs, curtains & more.

604-576-6171.

GARAGE DOOR for sale. Inclremote. $1,000. 604-589-6032*

GAS LAWNMOWER, SearsCraftman, $85. 604-543-9643*

HOT TUB COVERS &Accessories. Lowest price,highest quality. All sizes and

colours available. Call1-888-611-7660.

www.spasuppliesonline.ca

PANASONIC Car Stereo, Radio& CD Player, $60. 778-565-6230*

PROPANE BBQ, sideburner,cov/ full tank, $75. 778-394-0228*

PANDORA CHARMCLEARANCE. Save 80% SterlingSilver Charms low as $1.99.Fits

Pandora, Troll, Chamilia. LeadingInternet retailer. Additional 10%

OFF Checkout code(AMAZING7). Log on now for bestselection. www.NewDreamz.net

TREAD MILL Sears Pro-Form, 1owner, maint. Cost $780. Asking$300. Clayton. 604-539-1011

2075 Furniture2075BABY CRIB + mattress. Goodcondition. $40. 604-596-7523*

2095 Lumber/BuildingSupplies2095

BUILDING SALE... CanadianManufacturer Direct. 25x40$7640. 30x40 $8995. 35x50

$12,500. 40x80 $22,790. 47x100$36,200. Front end optional.Many others. Pioneer SteelManufacturers since 1980,

1-800-668-5422.

DO-IT-YOURSELF STEELBUILDINGS Priced to Clear -Make an Offer! Ask About FreeDelivery, most areas! Call forQuick Quote and Free Brochure -1-800-668-5111 ext. 170.

SAWMILLS – Band/Chainsaw -SPRING SALE – Cut lumber any

dimension, anytime. MAKEMONEY and SAVE MONEY In

stock ready to ship.Starting at $1,195.00.

www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899

Ext.400OT

2105 MusicalInstruments2105

ELECTRIC ORGAN, Yamaha.Like new! $325. 604-594-3848*

2135 Wanted to Buy2135COLLECTOR BUYING Pre 1960toys, postcards, militaria, auto-mobilia, antiques, collectibles, an-tique fire arms, advertising items604-313-5479

3015 ChildcareAvailable3015

QUALITY LICENSED DAY-CARE CENTRE, P/T & F/TSpaces avail for Infant, Toddler &3-5 yrs old. Register/Info ContactLoretta 604-584-4896

MARKETPLACE

1.877.905.5491

ALLINCLUSIVE

single suites from$1575

per month

SURREY’SMOST AFFORDABLE

SENIORS’ COMMUNITY

4020 Health Products & Services4020

4060 Metaphysical4060TRUE ADVICE! TRUE Clarity!

TRUE PSYCHICS!1-877-478-4410 (18+) 3.19/min.

1-900-528-6256truepsychics.ca

In amatter ofmonths, you can earn your diploma fromCDI College in one ofmore than 50 programs inBusiness,HealthCare, andTechnology.

With campuses inVancouver, Surrey,Richmond,Burnaby,Abbotsford and 18 across Canada, CDI Collegeis closer thanyou think.

Ready foryour career? Make thecall.

It’scloserthanyouthink.

Acareer in

Makethecall 1800-320-8927

.com/CDICollege .com/CDICollege .com/cdicollege.com/CDICareerCollege

skills.cdicollege.ca

Accounting&PayrollAdministrator•AccountingCertificate•Addictions&CommunityServicesWorker•BusinessAdminComputerBusinessApplicationsSpecialist•ComputerProgrammer•DentalReceptionistCoordinator•EventCoordinator&MaExpandedTraininginOrthodontics•HealthCareAssistant•HelpDeskAnalyst•IntraOralDentalAIntroductiontoBusinessComputing•LawEnforcementFoundations•LegalAdministrativeAssistant•MedicalOfficeAssistant•MicSpecialist•Network&DatabaseAdministrator•Network&InternetSecuritySpecialist•NetworkAdministrator•Paralegal•PharmacyTechPracticalNursing•ProgrammerAnalysts/ISD•ProgrammerAnalysts/Web•RehabilitationAssistant•Travel&Tourism

gy

REDUCE STRESS!Jewellery Making, Salsa Dancingclasses. Call (604) 726-4670.

Become a Registered Personal Trainer• Earn up to $70/hr.• Government FinancialAid may be available.

Hilltop Academy604-930-8377$100 New BalanceShoes Voucherto our May class

1410 Education1410FOODSAFE

BEST VALUE GUARANTEEDClasses Every SaturdayTaught by Certified

Public Health InspectorsADVANCE Hospitality Education

BC’s #1 Foodsafe Choice Since 2003!www.advance-education.com

604-272-7213

EDUCATION To place your ad call

604-444-3000

3507 Cats3507

RAGDOLL KITTENS, males, 1stshot, worming, raised underfoot,post trained. $450. 604-581-2772

★CATS & KITTENS★

FOR ADOPTION !

604-724-7652

3508 Dogs3508

ALL SMALL breed pups local &n o n s h e d d i n g $ 3 9 9 + .604-590-3727, 604-514-3474www.puppiesfishcritters.com

CATAHOULA X. 6 weeks. Shots,dewormed. Family raised. Par-ents to view. $400. 604-583-6123

Fila/Mastiff Guard Dog Pupsowners closest friend. Thieves

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

JASPERBeautiful 9 month old brindleStaffordshire Terrior. Great withchildren. In need of comfy homeand experienced guidance.

FUR & FEATHER RESCUE604 719-7848

3508 Dogs3508

LAB PUPS yellow , male/ female,vet checked $500. Phone604-701-1587

SHELTIE PUPS, Reg’d, shots,tattoo, leash & house trained, 2female. $695.00. 778-773-9943

STANDARD POODLE blackmale, 4mths. house, kennel &leash trained. CKC reg. Chwk.604-823-2467 or 604-302-1761

3520 Horses35202 MINIATURE donkeys (F) needgood home. Great pets or live-stock protection. 604 514 1067Sale Negotiable $$

3545 Pets - Other3545

BC REPTILE Club Show & SaleSat June 11 • 10 am to 5 pm and

Sun June 12 • 10 am to 4pmAbbotsford Exhibition Park

32470 Haida Drive,Cadet Building Abbotsford B.C

Admission : Adults $4 , Kids $2 ,Children under 5 Free ; FamilyPass $10.00 (2 adults up to 3kids) For more info visit us at

www.bcreptileclub.com1-604-392-5715

CRIMINAL RECORD?Guaranteed Record Removal.

100% Free Information Booklet.1-8-Now-Pardon

(1-866-972-7366). Speak with aSpecialist- No Obligation.

www.PardonServicesCanada.com.A+BBB Rating. 20+ Yrs Experience.

Confidential. Fast. Affordable .

5020 Computer/Internet5020

COMPUTER REPAIRS:• Mobile Service • 7 days/wk• Virus removal & data backup• Website Design / Networking• Router wireless security

www.updatedIT.comCall 604-617-4371

5035 FinancialServices5035

IF YOU own a home or realestate, ALPINE CREDITS willlend you money: It’s That Simple.Your Credit / Age / Income is NOTan issue. 1.800.587.2161.

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

PETS&LIVESTOCKHEALTH

Cares!The Surrey Now has partnered with the BCSPCAto encourage responsible pet guardianship and thehumane treatment of animals. Before purchasing

a new puppy, ensure the seller has provided excellent care and treatmentof the animal and the breeding parents. For a complete guide to findinga reputable breeder and other considerations whenacquiring a new pet, visit spca.bc.ca

To Book Your AD useMasterCard, Visa, Interac,

Americian Express

on-linewww.thenownewspaper.com

BUSINESS & FINANCEcontinues on

next page

Page 29: Surrey Now May 17 2011

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A29

●DIFFICULTY SELLING?●Difficulty Making Payments?Alternative to Bankruptcy!Penalty? No Equity? We TakeOver Your Payment! No Fees!!www.GVCPS.ca / (604) 812-3718

5040 Business Opps/Franchises5040

#1 JANITORIAL FRANCHISECustomers, (Office Cleaning),Training and support. Financing.

www.coverall.com604-434-7744 [email protected]

5070 Money to Loan5070

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5505 Legal/PublicNotices5505

DIAL-A-LAW OFFERS generalinformation on a variety of topics

on law in BC. 604-687-4680(Lower Mainland) or

1.800.565.5297 (Outside LM);www.dialalaw.org (audio

available).Lawyer ReferralService matches people with

legal concerns to a lawyer in theirarea. Participating lawyers offer a

30 minute consultation for $25plus tax. Regular fees follow onceboth parties agree to proceed withservices. 604-687-3221 (LowerMainland) or 1.800.663.1919

(Outside LM).

NOTICE TOCREDITORS AND

OTHERSNotice is hereby given thatCreditors and others, havingclaims against the Estate ofMALCOLM ARCHIBALDLINDSAY, otherwise known asMALCOLM A. LINDSAY andM A L C O L M L I N D S A Y ,Deceased, formerly of #202 –1424 Martin Street, WhiteRock, BC, who died on April26, 2010, are hereby notifiedunder section 38 of the TrusteeAct that particulars of theirclaims should be sent to theExecutors at 1055 WestGeorgia Street, 7th Floor,Vancouver, BC, V6E 3S5, onor before June 10, 2011, afterwhich date the Executors willdistribute the Estate among theparties entitled to it, havingregard only to the claims ofwhich the Executors then havenotice.

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Bank On Us!Beat bank rates for purchasesand refinances, immediate debtconsolidation, foreclosure relief,and equity loans. Free, fast,friendly, private consultations.

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REAL ESTATE

6005 Real EstateServices6005

WE BUY HOMESIN ANY CONDITION

NO SIGNS OR OPEN HOUSESCall 604- 250-9007

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6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-01 Real Estate6020-01

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5035 FinancialServices5035

❏WE BUY HOMES❏Any Price, Any Location

Any Condition. No Fees! No Risk!Call Kristen today (604) 786-4663www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca

www.bcforeclosures.com6 BR home from $18,000 down$1,850/mo. 604-538-8888, Alain@ Sutton WC Realty W. Rock

6020-42 WestVancouver6020-42

GAMBIER ISLAND. SeasonalCottage Sea Ranch for sale1500sf 3 BR, 1 bath on GravesBay. $400,000, 604-266-6191

6035 Mobile Homes6035USEDUSED

MANUFACTURED HOMESMANUFACTURED HOMES

Quality Homes • www.qmhrv.ca1-800-339-51331-800-339-5133

12X60 $ 9,90014X66 $24,90024X36 $14,90024X60 $18,900

6035 Mobile Homes6035NEW SRI, dlx single wide inLangley Adult Park. Assumablemortgage. 604-830-1960

Repossessed mobile homes tobe moved, 1974-2008, Chuck atGlenbrook.ca 604-830-1960.

6050 Out Of TownProperty6050

LAND OF Orchards, Vineyards &Tides in Nova Scotia’s beautifulAnnapolis Valley. Live! Work!

Bring Business! Free Brochure -Website: www.kingsrda.ca

Email: [email protected]: 1-888-865-4647.

6508 Apt/Condos6508

SUNCREEK ESTATESLarge 2 & 3 bdrm aptsIn-Suite Washer & Dryer3 floor levels inside suiteWood burning FireplacePrivate roof patio on someShopping within walking distanceNear park, pool, playgroundParty room, tennis courtOn site security,Sorry no pets

Office 7121 -133 B St. Surrey604-596-0916

1 BR in excel bldg, elev, nr transit,shopping onsite, more, N/P, from$670, incentives. 604-589-7040

1 BR New, top floor, nr GatewayS/train, w/d, d/w, hardwood, patio,np/ns. $950. 604-375-3278

104AVE/148, 1 BR, 2 flr corner,heat & hot water, $700. Av Jun1604-575-9291 or 604-764-9307

AMBER ROCHESTOR545 Rochester Ave, Coq

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

office:604- 936-3907

6508 Apt/Condos6508

AMBER (W)401 Westview St, Coq

Large Units.Near Lougheed Mall.

Transportation & S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-2136cell: 604- 805-9490

ARBOUR GREENE552 Dansey Ave, Coq

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

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

BURNSIDE APTS13784 - 101 Ave., Surrey

Well maintained. Clean, large1 & 2 BR, incls f/p, 3 appls,heat & hot water, parking,storage. Nr Surrey Centre Mall,schools, shops, university, bus& Skytrain. Call 604-589-5505

www.aptrentals.net

CALYPSO COURT1030 - 5th Ave, New West

Near Transportation &Douglas College.

Well Managed Building.

office: 604- 524-8174cell: 604- 813-8789

CEDAR COURT &CEDAR LODGE

Clean 1 BR & 2 BR Apts.Mature oriented building nearGuildford Mall. Rent incl cable,heat, hot water. Prkg available.N/P. Resident Managers.604-584-5233 or 604-588-8850

www.cycloneholdings.ca

6508 Apt/Condos6508COTTONWOOD PLAZA555 Cottonwood Ave, Coq

Large units some with2nd bathroom or den.

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

office: 604- 936-1225

Guildford Mall/Public LibraryEVERGREEN

APARTMENTSCrime Free Multi-Housing

CertifiedSpac Stes, very competitiveprices. Extra large 1 & 2BDRM ste’s, lots of storage.Heat/hot water included.Access to Vancouver viafreeway, 1 bus to Skytrain.Clean, quiet buildings. Nopets. Outdoor Pool!

Call 604-582-0465

Guildford/RiversideBROOKMERE GARDENS

Quiet Family Complex14880-108th Avenue

2 br 920sf fr $720; 3 br 1,115sffr $920. Inc heat, n/p, 1 bus to

skytrain, security, all amens.604-582-1557

www.brookmeregardens.com

JUNIPER COURT415 Westview St, Coq

Close to Lougheed Mall, allTransportation Connections,

Schools & S.F.U.

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

KING ALBERT COURT1300 King Albert, Coq

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

office: 604-937-7343cell: 778-848-5993

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Fun By The NumbersLike puzzles?

Then you'll love Sudoku.This mind-bending puzzlewill have you hookedfrom the moment yousquare off, so sharpenyour pencil and putyour Sudoku savvy

to the test!

Here's How It Works:Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken into nine 3x3boxes. To solve a Sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill eachrow, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row,column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numberswill appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes.The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

SUDOKU

ACROSS

DOWN

1. Former CIA4. Fluid in a plant7. Power of Attorney (abbr.)10. Small mound or clump12. Ship’s workers14. Alternate unit ofmeasure15. Margarines17. Swiss river18. A place ____ itself19. Exterior arch support22. Repents23. Luxuriant dark brown fur

24. Chinese dynasty960 - 127925. Fishing lure26. Atomic #6327. Canadian province28. Plays Stokes on “CSI”30. Sonnet author32. Roman numeral 1533. Indicates position34. Porgy36. Quantitative fact39. Slang for famous person41. Swiss house

43. Bedroom bureau46. Acts as militaryassistant47. Scottish hillside48. Chilean pianistClaudio50. Put into service51. Without (French)52. Fire iron53. Confined condition(abbr.)54. Make lacework55. Bravo! Bravo! Bravo!

1. Word element meaning ear2. Antibacterial drugs3. Melts or fuses4. Borderland’s dog-likemonster5. Saudi man6. South American country7. A member of a panel8. Beginning point in time9. “____ and Andy”11. Peludo13. Moistens16. Committed a moraltransgression18. Svelte and refined20. Wine and hot waterwith sugar, lemon juice andnutmeg

21. The bill in arestaurant28. Went beyond29. Forcibly tear away30. Turkish title for civilofficers31. Canadian capital34. Megascopicallycrystaline rock35. An animal companion37. Warning signal ofdanger38. Intense fear40. Curtsies41. Center of a camberedroad42. Ethiopian lake43. Fetal head covering

44. Male undergraduatesocialclub (abbr.)45. “State Fair” actorAndrews49. Exclamation: yuck!

May 10/11

RENTALSCheck Us Out on LINE

www.thenownewspaper.com

To BookYour AdUse MasterCard,Visa, Interac,Americian Express

or Cash

Now ClassifiedsCALL 604-444-3000

To Book Your ADin the Now Classifieds

CALL604-444-3000

RENTALScontinues on

next page

Page 30: Surrey Now May 17 2011

A30 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

SRY, Chimney Hts. 2 BR, f/bath.Priv w/d. $895/mo + hydro. Cable/’net incl. June 1st. 604-598-3477

6508 Apt/Condos6508LADNER 2 br condo, new renoquiet spacious, 1125 sf, nr am-mens, avail Jun 1 778-317-7777

LANGLEY CITY

NEW SPECIALS!Spacious Bach, 1 BR, 2 BR& 3 BR Apts. Rent incls heat& h/w. Resident Mgr.

Call 604-530-0030www.cycloneholdings.ca

DELTITA GARDENS8507 120th St, N.Delta

$200 Move in Allowance1 BR fr $625. 2 BR fr $725. 3BR from $825. Incls heat, h/w& cble. Some stes with mntviews. For more info or to view

CALL 604 594-5211Baywest Mgmt. Corp.

SKYLINE TOWERS102-120 Agnes St, N.West

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

CALL 604 525-2122BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

ROYAL CRESCENTESTATES

22588 Royal Crescent Ave,Maple Ridge

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

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

Sry Large 1 BR & 2 BR aptnewly renod,104/140 balcony,storage, nr bus, pkng, n/s, n/p,Refs. Av immed. 778-558-0046

SRY, NORTH. Quattro bldg.Newer Bachelor & Den, top floor.Full bath, in-suite laundry, newSS appl, u/g prkg, gym. $725/mo.Immed. 604-507-2507.

SURREY BACHELOR apt65/135, $525, quiet complex, nopets, 604-596-1099.

SURREY, LUXURY 1 & 2 bdrms.dw/w/d, f/p, 5 app. Close to KingGeo. Skytrain & Mall. Sec. U/Gparking & entry. Small pets al-lowed. Avail Now. To view call604-580-0520.

SUSSEX PLACE APTS

MOVE IN BONUS!Clean & affordable. Bach, 1BR & 2 BR. Near seniors’centre. Rents incls heat, h/w &cable.

Call 604-530-0932www.cycloneholdings.ca

WHITE ROCK central, prestigi-ous living. 2 BR, 2 baths, 1279sf,gas f/p, 5 appls, 1 secure parking.fitness centre, n/s. Avail now.$1450/mo. 604-531-9435 oremail [email protected]

White Rock, FIR HAUS Apts.Adult oriented building. Perfect forSeniors. In the ♥heart of WhiteRock. Swimming pool. Beautifullyreno’d, spac 1 BR ste availablenow. $800 includes heat/hotwater, storage. Close to shops.To view call • 778-908-3714

White Rock, FIR HAUS Apts.AWdult oriented building. Perfectfor Seniors. In the ♥heart of WhiteRock. Swimming pool. Beautifullyreno’d, spac 1 BR ste availablenow. $800 includes heat/hotwater, storage. Close to shops.To view call • 778-908-3714

6510 Co-ops6510ARBORETUM HOUSING

Co-op located in Guildford Area,easy access to Port Mann.Spacious Townhouses, W/D hookup, D/W, F/P, 2 parking stall,4 BR Townhouse $1144mo +utils. - Share purchase $2000.N/P. Avail June 1. Call between10am - 9pm, 604 582-9520

6510 Co-ops6510

MAYFLOWER HOUSINGCO-OP located near Surrey Cent-ral. Spacious, well maint, cleanQuiet Adult Bldg. 2 BR Apt $797Rent includes hot water. N/P.Call 604 583-2122 or after hours

call between 9am-9pm604-585-9320 or

email: [email protected]

6515 Duplexes - Rent6515GATEWAY 2 BR Duplex, applswith lndry, front prkg, fncd yd,$850 + utils, Jun 1. 604-729-7590

NEWTON. Bright, spac 3 BRupper, 5 appl, f/p, N/s. N/P, $1150incl utils. Jun 1. 604-619-3508

SRY, Bolivar Hts. Spacious 4 BR½ duplex. 4 appliances, big yard.Near Skytrain. No dogs. $975/mo+ utils. Call eves., 604-944-2600

6540 Houses - Rent65403 BEDROOM rancher with base-ment, 2800sqft, Large 18,000sqftyard fenced, Avail Immed.Cloverdale.18087-58A, $1700obo Call Bal 778-833-4185

3 BR RANCHER hse, Avail Jun15, 14255 70A Ave, nr schl, bus &shops, very clean, big garage,n/p, n/s, $1100. 604-583-5058,1-360-393-5966

AVAILABLE NOW or June 1,6 BR house, 2653 James St.Abbotsford. Can also be used asan office. 4 appls. No pets.$1350/mo. Call 604-583-6844.

Fleetwood, Acerage. Very Clean3 BR Upper, 5 appls. NS/NP.Refs. Leasw Req. $1300.604-240-9965 or 604-816-1412

QUALITY RENTALPROPERTY SERVICESFOR LANDLORDS/

TENANTSwww.hughmckinnon.com

604-541-5244

LARGE 4 BDRM house (renov-ated), 2200 Sq Ft, in popularBirdland, family neighbourhood,N/S, avail July or Aug (datesflexible) $1775, 604-329-7714

SRY CENTRAL, near skytrain. 3BR detached bsmt house, appls,f/yrd. Avail June 1. $1,200/mo +util. 604-580-8017 or email:[email protected]

6565 Office/Retail -Rent6565

SRY, SOUTH. 820 sf office spaceon second floor, for rent. Excel-lent location! Near the border on176th St. Semi-truck parkingavailable. $800/mo + utils + HST.Avail immed. 604-538-3222

6590 Rooms6590CLOVERDALE 2BDRMS start-ing@$370, Females only! NS,NP,avail June 1st, call 778-241-2217after 4:30

6595 SharedAccommodation6595

6595-60 N. Surrey/North Delta6595-60

WHALLEY. $350 incl hydro/heat.Ns/np. Avail Immed. Gordon,604-953-1221, 604-377-0213

6595-65 S. Surrey/White Rock6595-65

ADULT to share modern 2 BRtownhse nr Morgan Hghts, $375incls utls. NS/NP. 778-294-0600

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

140 & 79 AVE, 3 BR, N/s, N/p,$850/mo incls utils. 2 BD STE,128 & 92 area, $650/mo inclsutils, N/s, N/p. both avail now.

Call (604) 671-3215

2 BDRM, new bsmt, $800,avail now, no pets, call/txt604-307-2071

2 BR Ste, 1000 sf, Guildford area,N/s, N/p, May 15 or June 1, $800incls utils/cable. 604-581-3807

2 BR very clean g/lvl ste, 77 & 144St, by bus/amens, No smoking,N/P, no lndry (nr laundry mat).$525. Avl now. 604-341-3565

72 AVE & 152 ST, 1 BR bsmt,Avail Jun 1, $550 incls utils, 2 BRbsmt avail May 15, $650 inclsutils, no w/d. 604-340-9070

92 AVE/SCOTT ROAD 1 BRbsmt, $575 incls utils & cbl, n/s,n/p, Avail jun 1. 604-543-5089

BOLIVAR HTS. 1 BR, fridge/stove, w/d, large yard. $600/mo +util. Call 604-944-2600, eves.

CHIMNEY HILLS. New Bright 1BR ste, $575 incl hydro/cable.Avail now. Ns/np. 604-805-8897

CLAYTON HGHTS Coach Hse1 BR, ALL appls, prkg. $800 inclsutl. NS/NP Av now. 604-448-2170

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

FLEETWOOD 160/89 Ave; Lrg 1BR gr lvl, $575 incls utls. Ns/Np.604-581-6290 or 778-999-6290

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

CLOVERDALE. 1 BR, full bath,priv w/d, d/w. $700/mo incl hydro.Jun 1st. N/s. 604-575-0969

CLOVERDALE, 176 St. NearHwy 10. Clean, big 2 BR suite,upper floor. 1300 sf. $880/mo inclinternet. Avail now. 778-809-2510

CLOVERDALE 192A/68A AVENew Lrg 2 BR, own w/d, sep ent,$910 incls utils & net. ns/np, June1, 604-575-1766, 604-812-1766

CLOVERDALE LRG 2 BR bsmtste, cls to park, schl & kwantlencollege, priv ent, gas f/p, w/d,small pets neg, n/s, $950 inclsutils. Avail Jun 1. 604-574-3132

CLOVERDALE. Upper 2 BR +,1½ bath, 5 appl. N/S. $1250 + ½util. July 1. Dog OK. 778-898-4032

ENVER CREEK 2 BR bsmt ste,Avail Immed, $650 incls utils &cbl, no w/d, np/ns, 778-865-2864

FLEETWOOD 1 BR bsmt ste, nrschools, $600 incls utils, no w/d,Avail Now, n/s, n/p. 604-594-1995

FRASER HTS. 109 Ave/168 St.1 BR bsmt stes. Avail now.Laundry. $550-$650/mo incl hy-dro & ’net. Ns/np. 778-318-6568

CLOVERDALE 1 BR 900sf bsmtste, newer home, Av Now, $750incls utils, cbl & net, sep entryshared w/d, Owen 604-345-2413

N. DELTA, 88 Ave & 117, 2 BR,N/s, N/p, no lndry, $700/mo inclsutils & cable, now. 604-724-3354

NEWTON 1 BR renod bsmt ste,incls utils/cbl, n/s, n/p. Now. $530.604-780-1642, 778-218-1533

NEWTON 152/68. 2 BR bsmt ste,own laundry, alarm. Avail now.$700 incls utls, cble. NS/NP.604-599-0594 or 778-883-0594

NEWTON 2 BR ste incls heat/light/cable, n/p, n/s. Suit 1 or 2.$675. Avail now. 604-599-8027

NEWTON, 64 Ave & 120 St, 1 BRg/lvl ste, Avail June 1, n/s, n/p,$500 incls utils. 604-591-6429

SRY 104/125 Central, Brand New2 BR main flr ste. View. Avail now.$825 incls utls, cable/net. N/S.604-525-4332 or 604-496-6279

SRY, 66 Ave/122 St. Newer 2 BR,f/bath. Ns/np, no w/d. $700/moincl hydro. Suits 1. 604-597-9875

SRY, 76 Ave /140th St. 2 BRrancher. $950/mo + util. Smokingok. 604-594-5882, 778-318-1286

SRY 88/150ST. newer 2 BR, lamflrs, by park. $775 incls utils &cable. NS/NP. Av May 15/Jun 1.604-957-2430 or 604-537-2471

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

SRY, 9978 - 117 St (off River Rd).4 BR upper, 4 appls, 2 full baths,new flrs, nice view $1300 + utils.NS/NP. Avail Jun 1.604-581-1875

SRY, Bolivar Hts. Bright, quiet,well-kept 2 BR. 5 appl, f/p, alarm,f/yard. $750/mo + 30% util. Ns/np.604-589-7888 or 604-618-3331

RENTALSTo place your ad call

604-444-3000

SRY, Enver Creek. 146/81A Ave.1 BR, $500 incl hyd/cbl. N/s, N/p,Avail June 1. 604-375-5134

SRY, FRASER Hts. Big 1 BR,grd/lvl. Sh’d w/d. Ns/np. $575/moincl hydro/cable. 604-612-6180

SRY, GUILDFORD. 70/150 St.Newer 2 BR. $700/mo incl hydro/cbl. Ns/np. Immed. 778-882-2310

SRY, NEWTON. 1 BR. $525/moincl hydro/cable. Avail June 1 or15. N/s, Cat ok. 604-805-0057

SRY, NEWTON. 143 St/78 Ave.Quiet 2 BR, g/lvl. Ns/np. $650/moincl hydro. Nr bus. 604-590-4361

SRY ROYAL Heights 96/116,2 BR suite, new home, NS/NP. Nrbus/shops. $700 inc utils. Now.604-496-6274, 604-761-6274

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

SULLIVAN HTS. 2 BR, g/lvl. Ns/np, no w/d. Immed or May 15th.$700 incl hydro. 604-561-2974

6605 Townhouses -Rent6605

SRY 65/135 3 BR twnhse washer/dryer, quiet-family complex, nopets, $940. 604-596-1099

6620 Warehouse/Commercial6620

LANGLEY. 2780 sq. ft. main floorwarehouse plus 600 sf mezzan-ine. Front office and rear gradeloading with 90’ turning radius!$7.25/sf. Ben Gauer, RoyalLePage Ben Gauer & Associates,604-644-0273 or 604-581-3838

LANGLEY small whse, $895/mo.Willowbrook hobby/storageshop $595/mo. 604-834-3289

7010 Personals7010DATING SERVICE. Long-Term/Short-Term Relationships, Freeto Try!!! 1-877-297-9883. Liveintimate conversation, Call:#4011 or 1-888-534-6984. Liveadult 1on1 Call: 1-866-311-9640or #4010. Meet Local SingleLadies. 1-877-804-5381. (18+).

HOME SERVICES

8015 ApplianceRepairs8015

** A-1 APPLIANCE REPAIRS **at reas. rates, cert. exp’d techn’s.Also APPLS 4 SALE. 588-2828

ALL MAKES & MODELS, CertTechnician, 20 yrs exp, Sales &Service. 24/7. Zeb 604-596-2626

8030 Carpentry8030DMG WOODCRAFT LTD

All kinds of inside stair railings inold & new homes. Call now & pay½ of the total HST! 778-889-2627

8035 Carpet Cleaning8035CHOICE CARPET CLEANINGFree Est.! Guaranteed Work!604-897-6025, 778-688-0117

STAIN/PET URINE Specialst.Restore. 604-536-7627

www.Emerald.ChemDry.ca.

UNITED CARPET CLEANING★ Satisfaction Guaranteed ★

BBB member ★ 604-783-6848

8055 Cleaning8055A.S.B.A. ENTERPRISE. Comm/Res. Free Est. $25/hour includessupplies. Insured. 604-723-0162

8060 Concrete8060DRIVEWAYS, Sidewalks, Stairs,Floors, Forming, Landscaping,Any renovations. 778-881-0961

8075 Drywall8075K. C. DRYWALL

Complete Drywall Services.604-533-2139 cel 604-417-1703

PSB DRYWALL ★ All Boarding,Taping & Texture. Guaranteedwork. Call Parm, 604-762-4657

8080 Electrical8080#1113 Low Cost Electric 522-3435Comm/Res/Panel change Heat-ing/Appl Repair. Lic & Bonded.

#1 IN QUALITY WORKLic. #9902. Big or small. 16 yearsexp. Mention ad: 10% discount!Reas. rates. Call 604-773-0341.

ABACUS ELECTRIC.ca Lic ElectContr 97222. 40 years exp. 1 stop!Reas. rates! BBB. 778-988-9493

HICH ELECTRIC Lic# 103213All electric work. Bonded. In-sured. WCB Adam 604-970-6669

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 servicecall. Insured. Lic # 89402. Fastsame day service guaranteed. Welove small jobs! 604-568-1899

8090 Fencing/Gates8090★FENCE Repairs •NEW Fencing•All Styles •Power Washing •Wrty•FREE Est. Dalvin 778-881-1359

8105 Flooring/Refinishing8105

CARPET, LINO, Laminate,Repairs. Best install. Best price.Free Est. Call Al 604-802-0674.

Century Hardwood Floors★Hardwood flr refinishing

★Repairs ★ Staining ★ FreeEstimate. Contact 604-376-7224

8125 Gutters8125GUTTER Cleaning, Power wash-ing; Roof, Windows, Powerraking,Aeration. Victor 604-589-0356

PRESSURE WASHING,Gutter Cleaning and Repairs

Call George • 778-859-7793

8130 Handyperson8130#1 HANDYMAN Services. Elec,plumbing & general repairs. Alsosell, repair& install all major appls,F/S, S/D, D/W etc. 604-588-2828

8155 Landscaping8155Prompt Delivery AvailableSeven Days a Week

Meadows LandscapeSupply Ltd.★ Bark Mulch

★ Lawn & Garden Soil★ Drain Gravel ★ Lava Rock★ River Rock ★ Pea Gravel

604-465-1311meadowslandscapesupply.com

meadowsgroup.ca

8160 Lawn & Garden8160

SALE

SPRINGSPRING

SUPER SOIL INC.SUPER SOIL INC.TOTAL LANDSCAPE SUPPLY SERVICES

Since 1979

10.000 Deliveries AnnuallyB.C.’S BIGGEST AND BEST SUPPLIER OF QUALITY

NATURAL ORGANIC & COMPOST SOILSGarden Soil MixLawn & Turf BlendsSuper Natural TopsoilComposted Black Bark Mulch#1 100 Fir Bark MulchMiracle Mix SoilTop Dressing BlendsSand & Gravel, RockHydroseeding ContractorSmall Orders Too Volume Discountswww.supersoilinc.ca

888-8881To view or pick up 5333 176 St., SurreyWE'RE THE GOOD GUYS IN THE GREEN TRUCKS

FREE DELIVERY

10,000 Deliveries AnnuallyBC’s BIGGEST AN BEST SUPPLIER OF QUALITY

NATURAL ORGANIC & COMPOST SOILS

100% Fir Bark Mulch

www.supersoil.ca

Spring ServicesSame Day Service, Fully InsuredFREE ESTIMATES

• Lawn Maintenance• Yard Clean-ups• Pruning/Hedges• Rubbish Removal

• Fertilizing• Aeration• Power Raking• Odd jobs

BOOK A JOB ATwww.jimsmowing.ca

310-JIMS (5467)

•Yearly Maintenance Programs •

8160 Lawn & Garden8160#1 SOILS, manure, gravels, lime-stone, lava. sand. Del or p/u604-882-1344 info etc visit www.portkellsnurseries.com/bulk material

ALL BEST LANDSCAPINGAll Lawn Care • Free Est.

Lawns cut, Power Rake, Aerate,Weed, Hedge Trimmed, Pruning,Reseed, Edging, Moss Killer,Bark Mulch, Pressure Washing,Gutters, Roof Clean. Reas. rates.Res/Comm. Fully insured. WCB.Bill, 604-306-5540 • 589-5909

GOLDY’S Complete Garden &Landscape Service, Powerwash,Fences, Rubbish. 604-502-9198

GRASS CUTTING services from$20 at home or business. Pleasecall Jordan at 604-360-0493

Lawn cut/pwr rake/aeration/hedge trim/clean-up/top dress.Reliable. No tax. 778-241-9706

8180 Home Services8180*Dump Site Now Open*

• Broken Concrete Rocks •$22.00 per metric ton

• Mud, Dirt, Sod, Clay •$22.00 per metric ton

Grass·Branches·Leaves·Weeds$59.00 per ton

Meadows Landscape SupplyCall 604-465-1311

8185 Moving &Storage8185

AFFORDABLE MOVING

604-537-4140www.affordablemoversbc.com

1 to 3 Men1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 TonFrom $45

We accept Visa, Mastercard & InteracLicenced & Insured

Local & Long DistanceFREE ESTIMATESSeniors Discount

8185 Moving &Storage8185

ADVANCE MOVING LTDADVANCE MOVING LTDMOVING & DELIVERY EXPERTS!!

Licensed, Bonded & InsuredSingle item to full house moves

We Guarantee the Cost of Every MoveFlat Rates always available(604) 861-8885

www.advancemovingltd.com

A+A+BBBBBBRatingRating

Experienced Movers~ 2 Men $50 ~• Includes all Taxes• Licenced & Insured

• Professional Piano Movers

B&Y MOVING

604-708-8850$35/HOUR PER PERSON • 24/7

Abe Moving & Delivery andRubbish Removal. 604-999-6020

A-1 MOVING Local/Long Dist.Seniors disc. Lic/insured. Specialsto Alta/Island/Interior. 930-3000

A Fast Moving & Cleaning. Allkinds of moves, garbage removalInsured & bonded. 778-888-9628

Fastback Moving & Rubbish.Social services moves welcome!Insur. & registered. 604-836-8291

8195 Painting/Wallpaper8195

PRECISIONPAINTING

AAAAAA• Exterior/Interior Projects

• Written Warranty• Years of Experience

• Fully Insured • WCB CoveredProfessional Crewof Ticketed Painters

QUALITY WORK. DONE RIGHT.

778.881.6096INTERVAN PAINTINGPainting Contractor • Res. / Comm.

• New Construction• Re-paint Interior / Exterior

We Provide the High-End Quality!Price Includes HST

WCB Insured • Free EstimatesCall Henry

778-288-4560

on-linewww.thenownewspaper.com

Our Classified Sales persons will help you with all your Classified needs! CALL The Now Classifieds604-444-3000

Page 31: Surrey Now May 17 2011

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A31

$0 DOWN & we make your 1stpayment at auto credit fast. Needa vehicle? Good or Bad credit call

Stephanie 1-877-792-0599.www.autocreditfast.ca

DLN 30309

8195 Painting/Wallpaper8195

WILLI’S PAINTING, EuropeanCraftman Quality, Over 20 yrsexp. WCB. Free Est. 604-575-9506

8205 Paving/SealCoating8205

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

8220 Plumbing8220Certified GAS FITTER

& PLUMBER*Furnaces *Boilers *Hot Water

Heating * Hot Water tanks.*Furnace Cleaning withtruck mounted machine

604-312-7674

Certified GAS FITTER& PLUMBER

*Furnaces *Boilers *Hot WaterHeating * Hot Water tanks.*Furnace Cleaning withtruck mounted machine

604-312-7674

Certified Plumber& Gas Fitter

* Reno’s & Repairs 24 hrs/day* Furnaces * Boilers * Hot Water

Heating * Reasonable Rates* Hot Water Tanks

604-591-2499

10% Off with this Ad! For all yourplumbing, heating & reno needs.Lic Gas Fitter, Aman. 778-895-2005

38/HR! Clogged drains, drips,garbs, sinks, reno’s, toilets, in-stalls, Lic/Ins. 778-888-9184

ALL PLUMBING HEATING &DRAINAGE Exp, low rates, Qualwork. 24/7, Zeb 604-596-2626

ANVIL Plumbing & HeatingService and RenovationsCall Jim • 604-657-9700

PLUMBERSWater Lines (without digging)Sewer Lines (without digging)Install. Drain tiles. 604-739-2000

FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATINGH/W tanks, boilers, furn, renos,drains, gas fitter. Ins. Acceptvisa/mastercard. 604-596-2841

8225 Power Washing8225

CALL VICTOR 589-0356

Power Washing, RoofCleaning, Gutter Cleaning,Window Cleaning,Driveway & Deck Cleaning,Power Raking & Aeration

COASTAL OUTDOORProf gutter cleaning/repairs,power washing, all applications,roof repairs. Brian 604-574-1399

8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240

HOME ADVANTAGECon t rac t i ng L t d

Residential & CommercialRenovations

licensed - Insured - WCBFor Free Estimates

Call Ryan [email protected]

Timwood Homes LTDSpecialized in Reno’s:

■ Framing ■ Sundecks■ Stairs ■ Rooms ■ Garages■ Sheds ■ Bsmts ■ Tiles■ Vinyl Siding ■ Int/Ext Paint■ Laminate Floors ■ Fencing■ Sm or Big Jobs ■ WCB

Call Prem 604 761-1743

8250 Roofing8250#1 Roofing Company in BC

All types of RoofingOver 35 Years in Business

Call now for Free Estimates

604-588-0833SALES@ PATTARGROUP.COMWWW.PATTARGROUP.COM

All SeasonRoofing

Re-Roofing & RepairsSpecialists

20 year Labour Warranty available

604-591-3500

ROOFINGOUR SPECIALTY

778.886.8541Licensed, Insured, WCB

TMO Contracting

PROFESSIONALTOP CLASS ROOFING

Re-Roofing & RepairSpecialist

WCB, fully covered& insured

For your free est call604-723-4470

PROFESSIONALTOP CLASS ROOFING

Re-Roofing & RepairSpecialist

WCB, fully covered& insured

For your free est call604-723-4470

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

B’S ROOFING. 25 years exp.Call for a free inspection

Brian Janes, 604-418-3802

JJ ROOFING, Repair specialist,Reroof, New Roof. Seniors disc.WCB, fully ins. 604-726-6345

8250 Roofing8250

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

8255 Rubbish Removal8255$35/HOUR PER PERSON • 24/7

Abe Moving & Delivery andRubbish Removal. 604-999-6020

DISPOSAL BINS: Starting at $99+ dump fees. Call 604-306-8599

www.disposalking.com

8309 Tiling8309ALL KINDS of Tiles Installation &Repairs. Affordable Prices. FreeEstimates. Call 604-771-9686

TOTAL BATH Reno’s: Gtd work.30 years exp. 15% discount forSeniors. Patrick 778-235-9888

8315 Tree Services8315

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

Fully insured & WCB

Jerry 604-618-8585

$ BEST RATES $

A-1 TRI CRAFTTREE SERVICES (EST. 1986)

Andrew 604-618-8585

CITY TREE SERVICE10 years Experience

• Tree Removal (large or small)• Land Cleaning• Stump & Bush Chipping• Prune & Trim604-825-8257 or 604-773-8361

Morris The ArboristThe Family 'Tree-dition'

for Over 80 YearsFully Insured • Cert’d Arborists

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

Treeworks 15 yrs exp. Tree/Stump Removal, Prun’in & Trim’in& View Work 291-7778, 787-5915

www.treeworksonline.ca

8335 Window Cleaning8335BOB’S WINDOW

Gets that Clean, Clear ShineNo Drops, No Drips, No StreaksRight into the corners! Serving

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

SellSellYourYour

RV or BoatRV or Boat

• 3 lines of text• 4 consecutive issues• add a photo for $10• extra lines of text $9/line

Suburban Market:Abbotsford/Mission Times,

Chilliwack Times, Surrey NowLangley Advance, Coquitlam Now,Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows Times

Urban Market:North Shore News, Burnaby Now,

Vancouver Courier,Delta Optimist, Ricmond News

New West Record

or

Book your ad today!Book your ad today!

604-444-3000604-444-3000

ONLYONLY$$45.45.9090+GST+GST* this offer is only valid for

private party/non-business clients.

9105 AutoMiscellaneous9105

INSTANT AUTO CREDIT Buyinga used car is hard enough withouthaving to worry about financing!

Get APPROVED for your car loanin minutes:

www.NanaimoCars.com

OVER $13 MILLION IN INVENTORY!APPLY ONLINE NOW

1-866-385-8502*All financing on approved credit. DL #7557

GOOD CREDIT?BAD CREDIT?NO PROBLEM!

GUARANTEEDGUARANTEED

1-HR.1-HR.

APPROVAL!APPROVAL!

$1000$1000CASH BACKCASH BACKWith Every Auto Loan!

With Every Auto Loan!

A division of Coquitlam Chrysler Dodge Jeep.

9125 Domestic91251998 CHEV Lumina. 160K km.New tires. $2900. 604-782-1936*

$CASH $FOR

CLEAN CARSD.J.

Auto Market535-0100

2010 FORD Focus: 33K, underwrnty, A/C, 4-dr, pwr locks,AUTO, keyless entry, MP3 jack,Satellite Radio Console, bucketseats, $13,400. 604-858-1901

2008 CHEVY Cobalt. 19,000 km.$8,700 obo. 778-785-6244*

2005 PONTIAC Sunfire 2 dr cpe,White/grey int, auto, aluminummags, spoiler, cd plyr, exc cond,n/s, female driven, no accid,75,000 k, $5,000. 604-916-5590

9125 Domestic91252001 CHEVY Malibu, blue, auto,4 doors, $1,650. 604-306-2417*

9145 Scrap CarRemoval9145

Dirty Bird

Cell: 778 233-5865

Scrap Car &Truck RemovalScrap Car Removal

CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES!No Wheels? No Problem!

FREE

Aarrow Recycling• Auto • Trucks• Equipment Removal

We pay up to $300 cashCALL RICK GOODCHILD604-551-9022

Cash for junk cars! $100 to $1000Ask about our $500 Credit!

Visit our website @ www.surreyscrap.comFree tow, no wheels, no papers no problem! Hassle

free friendly service. 2 hr service in most areas.604 628 9044

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

$$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200

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

STEVE TOWING SERVICESScrap Car Removal. We Pay $$for all cars. Call 778-316-7960

9145 Scrap CarRemoval9145

THE SCRAPPER

SCRAP CAR & TRUCKREMOVAL

CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-39002 HOUR SERVICE •

9155 Sport Utilities/4x4’s/Trucks9155

2007 ACURA RDX, 56k, turbo,$20,000. 778-237-7594 *

2007 CHEVY Avalanche SS, ex-cellent cond, champagne colour,fully loaded, 2 monitors, DVD,$32,000 obo. 778-999-3654

1986 CHEV Gruman. Propane.Step van style. Power lift. $4,995.604-607-7711 or 604-809-3847

9160 Sports &Imports9160

1997 TOYOTA Tercel, Goodcond, air cared, low kms, great ongas. $2850 obo. 778-242-2018

2003 VW Jetta TDI, 5 spd, ac,$5450. D9921 car in Abbts. tollfree 1-877-855-6522

2005 BMW 325 I. 14,000 km.Grey. $25,000. 604-591-7006*

2007 MERCEDES 350 CLK, con-vertible, 2 dr, auto, 34,000 kms,dark blue, fully loaded. very cond,$ 4 5 , 0 0 0 o b o . M u s t g o778-999-3654

9172 Utility Trailers9172HEAVY DUTY utility trlr steel, 2 ftsides, tie rails & 4 stake pockets.As New $995 obo 778-552-5171

9173 Vans91732000 GMC - 1 ton diesel cubevan. $8,900 obo. 604-374-1611*

9515 Boats9515Aluminum Boat Wanted, 10, 12or 14ft, with or without motor ortrailer. Will pay $. 604-319-5720

9522 RV’s/Trailers95222008 COUGAR, 30 ft 5th wheeltrailer with 2 slides. Complete withfull extended warranty until 2014for worry free camping. Asking$27,500 obo. Call 604-576-4040

9522 RV’s/Trailers9522

2006 ARTIC Fox 27ft wide body 4season trailer. ac, bunk model,solar panel, 3 burner stove,$17,500, Chwk. 604-345-9013

2010 HIDEOUT 24BH, $17,295.#HT10242 604-856-856-5722kustomkoachrv.com

2011 CHAPARRAL 267RLS,$ 3 6 , 9 9 5 . # C W 1 1 2 6 7 1604-856-5722. kustomkoachrv.com

2011 PASSPORT 238MLUltralite, b#PT112381. $18,995.604-856-5722. kustomkoachrv.com

29 FT 5th WHEEL, recentlyrefurbished, incls upholstery,awning, appls, new bed, wood flr,$4700 obo. 604-464-2702

8.3 CUMMINS Diesel pusher,36ft, 80,000 mi, loaded, w/d, rearcamera. $27,900. 604-539-0506

LEGAL HAULINGAvoid Fines

Scottsdale CentreMAY 26-28

120 St & 72 Ave,North Delta

Come and talk to the DeltaPolice Truck Squad (noenforcement) about your RV,pick-up truck, trailer and/or anytowed equipment. Get all the

FREE INFORMATIONto assist with correct licensing.Your equip. could weigh morethan your Class 5 driverslicense allows. An incorrectlylicensed truck/vehicle couldcost you money in fines anddown time.

FRIENDLY, FREEinspection

SAT, MAY 28 ONLY10am to 6pm

Bring your equipment to theparking lot (no enforcement).

We can even weighthem for you! In celebration of

National Police Week.

HOME SERVICES AUTOMOTIVE

Read.Read.11

Click.Click.22

Drive.Drive.33

www.thenownewspaper.com/autofind

Contact the dealer,check out your new ride and drive home.Easy, right?

1. Go to thenownewspaper.com/autofind2. Search by STOCK#3. Get details & photos of cars you choose

Read Autofind in the paperevery weekend.

Notes

Notes

• Usethis s

pacefor re

ference

…asyou b

rowse the

classified

s• Use

this space

for referen

ce…as

you brows

e theclass

ifieds

Now ClassifiedsCALL 604-444-3000

(Book Your Ad Today!

DL25555

154th & 104th604-583-7121 or

1-866-419-6361www.FREEWAYMAZDA.ca*Taxes, license, insur. extra.

FREEWAY

07 TOYOTA YARISAuto, power group, air cond. #7C959A

$11,995*

07 TOYOTA COROLLAAuto, power locks, air cond, only 38,500

kms. #7P1443

$12,995*

07 HYUNDAI SONATA GLSFully loaded, heated leather, pwrsunroof, dual exhaust. #7P1425

$12,995*

07 TOYOTA TACOMAAccess Cab, 4 cyl.

#7P1468

$14,995*

07 JEEP COMPASS 4X4SPORT

Auto, pwr grp, keyless, alloys, foglamps. #7P1349

$17,995*

10 MAZDA 3 GSBluetooth, cruise, a/c, keyless, power

pkg, #10A773

$17,998*

08 MAZDA TRIBUTE GTAWD

Auto, heated leather, pwr sunroof,60,000 kms. #8P1420.

$21,995*

07 TUNDRA LIMITEDCREW MAX 5.7L V8

Heated leather memory seats, pwrsunroof, Bluetooth. #7P1440

$32,995*

UNDER 100KMS!

ONLY 35,000KMS

ONLY 56,000KMS

LOW KMS

ONLY 45,000KMS

CHURCH CAR

FULL LOAD

VERY CLEAN

0517

11

Page 32: Surrey Now May 17 2011

A32 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

L angley Chrysler

TROTMAN AUTOMOTIVE GROUP DL#509719418 Langley Bypass | 604-534-5355 | langleychrysler.com(1) $0 Down payment, 5.99% Apr, over 96 months. (2) $0 Down payment, 3% apr, over 84 months. (3) $0 Down payment, 5.99% Apr, over 96 months. (4) $0 Down payment, 5.99% Apr, over 96 months. Plus all taxes and fees. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown.

0517

11

UP TO $10,000CASH BACK

HUGESELECTION

GUARANTEEDCREDIT

APPROVIAL

$128BIWEEKLY(4)

2011 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN

$20,890STK#M605242

$115BIWEEKLY(3)

2011 JEEP WRANGLER

$18,820

$130BIWEEKLY(1)

$21,180

INVENTORY REDUCTION

PURCHASE ANY IN STOCKPURCHASE ANY IN STOCKVEHICLEVEHICLE ANDAND CHOOSECHOOSE

A FREE BBQ ORA FREE BBQ ORFREE PATIO SET ORFREE PATIO SET ORFREE PATIO HEATER

WIWITH THEIR EMASSIVEHELP LANGLEY CHRYSLERHELP LANGLEY CHRYSLER

2011 DODGE RAM 1500

STK#M605242

STK#M578834

2011 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE

$37,384STK#M568094

$229BIWEEKLY(2)

1.99%1.99%FINANCINGFINANCINGAVAILABLEAVAILABLE

O.A.CO.A.C

EARN 1000 AIR MILESREWARD MILESON ANY NEW OR USED VEHICLE PURCHASED IN MAY

®TM Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license byLoyaltyOne, Inc. and Langley Chrysler. See dealer for terms and conditions of

the AIR MILES reward miles offer.

Page 33: Surrey Now May 17 2011

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A33

TheTheSouth FraserSouth Fraser

Region’sRegion’sMost ReadMost Read

Auto SectionAuto Section

■ Internet searchable vehicles ■ Easy click through to dealer websites■ Auto Buzz – auto ads and dealer promotions online.

0517

11

3 Day Sale!!3 Day Sale!! May 20, 21 & 22May 20, 21 & 22

0408

11

1-888-773-515519545 NO. 10 HIGHWAY (LANGLEY BYPASS), SURREY

#D8016

WWW.GOLDKEY.CA

TOLL FREE

#10 HIGHWAY

192N

D

FRA

SERH

WY.HAMPTON

INN

GOLD KEY LANGLEYVOLKSWAGEN

* 24 month term.

1998 SubaruImpreza

Sportwagon5 dr., pwr. group, auto,

exc. conditionStk#310920A

PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$10,99510,995PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$9,9959,995PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$6,9956,995PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$6,9956,995

1998 Ford F150Supercab 4x2

Matching tonneaucover, beautiful

cond.Stk#U5122A

2006ToyotaCorolla

Auto, very cleanStk#317723A

PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$23,06623,066PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$26,99526,995PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$14,97614,976PRICEDTO SELL AT

$$9,9959,995

GOCANUCKSGO!GOCANUCKSGO!Wave yourFlag with Pride1. Come to Gold Key2. Test drive any vehicle3. Get a free Canucks window flag

Including Volkswagen Certified

2011 VWJETTA

One available, asseen on TV ad...

$$17,24017,240

$15,875+ Freight $1,365

+ 0%for 36

months

$$20,31520,315

+ 0%for 36

months

2011 VWJETTA

Trendline + auto,& AC

2002 VW JettaGLS

VR6, auto, powergroup, leather

Stk#C0055A

2004 ChevroletMonte Carlo SS

Ex-lease, fullyloaded.

Stk#U5227

2003 JeepLiberty Limited

4x4Fully equipped

Stk#U5059A

2004 HummerH2

Fully loadeded,double DVDStk#UC0121

2007 VW PassatWagon

Auto, V6, nicelyequipped.Stk#C0059

0517

11

1-888-673-2162

Page 34: Surrey Now May 17 2011

A34 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

AUTHORIZED SIGNATURE • NON-NEGOTIABLE

1 YEAR/12,000 KMCOMPREHENSIVEWARRANTY COVERAGE

SPECIAL PREFERREDINTEREST RATES

AVAILABLE EXTENDED WARRANTYUP TO 200,000 KMS

24-HR ROADSIDEASSISTANCE

7 DAY/1,000 KMCUSTOMER EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE

FREEFREE%'$+' (#! &#- ,#+'"')*

- 3'0&2>$!""*""" 71 6+>>0'%>&& ,+1(>&<&.=:8& 62>>2.;0"

- 3'0&2>$!""*""" 71 (+6&>;>2:. 62>>2.;0- 3'0&2>$!""*""" 71 &4;>2 ,2>& >+2)=:)& 2==:=;2.,&- .+ )&)9,;:/5& ,<2>#&

KIA MEMBER REWARDSEarn points towards future discounts.

It’s FREE and it’s incredibly rewarding.

051711

“It’s all good at Applewood!”APPLEWOOD KIAAPPLEWOOD KIA

W W W . A P P L E W O O D . C A

1-877-275-6023

D106

59

16299 Fraser Hwy.Mon.-Thurs. 9-8, Fri.-Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-5

WE SPEAK ENGLISH, PUNJABI, HINDI, KOREAN, FRENCH, PERSIAN, CANTONESE, MANDARIN & ARMENIAN

0517

11

BC’s #1 KIA SUPERSTOREBC’s #1 KIA SUPERSTORE “APPLEWOOD KIA”VEHICLES AS LOW AS $78 BIWEEKLY — BRING YOUR TRADE AND SAVE MORE!

5 DAY VEHICLE CLEARANCE EVENTHURRY IN AND SAVE THOUSANDS ON A HUGE SELECTION OF QUALITY VEHICLES, ECONOMY VEHICLES, SUV’S, VANS AND MORE!

CASHGIVEAWAY!*

YOUCOULDBE OUR

SOME OF THE BEST BARGAINS IN THE AUTO INDUSTRY!

STOP INSTOP IN

GUARANTEED WINNER OFGUARANTEED WINNER OF

$1,500TRUCKLOADS OF FUEL-EFFICIENT VEHICLES WILL BE SACRIFICED REGARDLESS OF LOSS OF PROFIT

For five days only APPLEWOOD KIA NEEDS TO DISPOSE OFTRUCKLOADS OF VEHICLES from MAY 17TH- MAY 21ST.

This is our LARGEST SALE IN HISTORY with virtually every vehicleon sale. EXPECT TO SAVE UP TO $7000. Make no payments for 90days on select vehicles and receive 0% financing on all new models.

Lenders will be on hand to assist with easy financing.

APPLEWOOD KIA’APPLEWOOD KIA’ssVEHICLE CLEARANCE EVENT

EXPECT TO SAVEUP TO

$7,000 OFF0% APR FINANCINGHUGE SAVINGSOFFERED DIRECT TO PUBLIC**

$$00 DOWNDOWN 00 %%FINANCINGFINANCING

$$7878 BIWEEKLYBIWEEKLY5

DAYS

ONLY

! H

URRY IN & SAVE

HURRYHURRY5 DAYS5 DAYSONLYONLYTO SAVE!TO SAVE!

Tues. MAY 17 9am - 9pmWed. MAY 18 9am - 9pmThurs. MAY 19 9am - 9pmFri. MAY 20 9am - 6pmSat. MAY 21 9am - 6pm

CREDIT AMNESTY PROGRAMCREDIT AMNESTY PROGRAMWE HAVE LENDERS FOR BRUISED CREDIT.CREDIT PROBLEMS? NO PROBLEM. WE CAN HELP GET YOU APPROVED

BRING: PAYCHECK - HOME UTILITY BILL - DRIVER’S LICENSE - DOWN PAYMENT

WE WILL ACCEPT ALL TRADES!

BRING YOUR TRADE!BRING YOUR TRADE!UP TO $2,000UP TO $2,000

Valid at APPLEWOOD KIA May 17 to May 21 only.

PAYUP TO One thousand Five hundred dollars and 00 centsTO THE

ORDER OF APPLEWOOD KIA CUSTOMER, SURREY, BC

05/17/11

ADDRESS

OF

RECORD

$1,500.00UP TO

CALL TO REGISTERCALL TO REGISTER1-877-275-6023

TRUCKLOADS OF FUEL-EFFICIENT VEHICLESWILL BE SACRIFICED!

NO PAYMENTSFOR

90 DAYSON SELECT VEHICLES

DAREDARE

FORTEFORTE$98$98 BIWEEKLYBIWEEKLY

SOULSOUL$106$106 BIWEEKLYBIWEEKLY

RONDORONDO$122$122 BIWEEKLYBIWEEKLY

SPORTAGESPORTAGE$140$140 BIWEEKLYBIWEEKLY

SORENTOSORENTO$145$145 BIWEEKLYBIWEEKLY

No payments for 90 days available on select 2011 models and applies to purchase financing offers on on 2011 Rio/Rio5/Forte/Forte Koup/Forte5/Soul/Rondo/Optima models on approved credit (OAC). 0% purchase financing available on all 2011 Kia models on approved credit (OAC). Term varies by model and trim. Cash purchase credit andLoan credit available on select models and varies by model and trim. Credits are deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease and finance offers. Cash purchase prices includes Delivery and Destination fees, other provincial fees and excludes licensing, insurance, PPSA and dealeradministration fees (fees varies by model and trim). Other lease and finance options are also available. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Prices are subject to change without notice. Certain restrictions may apply. Financing and lease rates vary by vehicle and are valid on approved credit (O.A.C.) only. See dealer for full detail. Offersmay change with out notice and are for examples only. See your Kia retailer for full offer/program details. 2011 SOUL biweekly payments of $106 based on the selling price of $18845 over a 60/84 term at 1.49% interest the cost of borrowing is $1000 and the residual is $6600 OAC. 2011 SEDONA biweekly payments of $165 based on theselling price of $29895 over a 60/84 month term at 1.49% interest cost of borrowing is $1391 and the residual is $8439 plus HST.. 2011 FORTE SEDAN biweekly payments of $98 based on the selling price of $17595 over a 60/84 month term at 1.49% interest the cost of borrowing is $973. and the residual is $5906 plus HST OAC. 2011RONDObiweekly payments of $122 based on the selling price of $22,545 over a 60/84 month term at 1.49% interest, cost of borrowing is $1150 and the residual is $7000 plus HST OAC price. 2011 Sorento biweekly payments of $145 based on the MSRP of $25795 over a 60/84 term @ 1.9% interest the cost of borrowing is $1536 and the residual is$7356 OAC. 2011 Sportage biweekly payments of $140 based on the MSRP $23795 over a 60/84 term @ 2.9% interest the cost of borrowing is $2500 and the residual is $ 7900 OAC. 2011 Kia Forte 5 biweekly payments of $104 based on the MSRP of $18,295 over a 60/84 term the cost of borrowing is $1250 and the residual is $6,000. 2011KIA RIO biweekly payments of $78 based on the selling price of $15,100 over an 84 month term @ 0% the cost of borrowing is $0 and the residual is $0. All offers are OAC.Up to $2000 push pull drag offer is good only on used vehicles and is up to sales managers discretion. $1500 cash give away is for customers that purchase a brand newvehicle during the time of this sale and each customer will have one entry for one new vehicle purchased. Chances of winning will be decided by the amount of vehicles that are sold during this time. Cash giveaway offer is valid from May 17-May 21st only $7000 cash savings is available on the financed price only of a 2010 Kia Borrego.These Offers are not combinable. Offer ends May 31st, 2011

WE SPEAK ENGLISH, PUNJABI, HINDI, KOREAN, FRENCH, PERSIAN AND SERBO-CROATIAN

Page 35: Surrey Now May 17 2011

Prepare your bike for summer riding

AUTOMOTIVE

As our days slowly warm up, motorcycleowners are getting their wheels out ofhibernation.

But before revving the engine, it’s importantthat bikers take some time to get theirmotorcycles ready for the new season.

Preparing your bike is not only importantfrom a maintenance perspective, but also tomake sure that riding doesn’t get too rough onthe wallet.

“By asking the right questions and carefullybringing your bike out of storage, motorcycleowners will have a much greater chance of asafe and trouble–free 2010 motorcycle season,”said Mauro Convertini, an insurance expert

from Aviva Canada.Before you head out onto the highway, here

are a couple of preparations that Convertinisuggests you take:

– Test your equipment: Safely reinstall thebattery and examine all fluid levels. Check forcracked tires, broken parts or leaking oil. Setthe tire pressures back to riding specs.

– Take it slow: Your biking skills will berusty and road surfaces will be differentthan your last ride. Sand and salt depositson the edge and corners of the roads may behazardous.

– Install an anti–theft device: There area range of anti–theft devices designed formotorcycles and some insurance companieswill offer you a discount if you have anapproved one installed.

– Check your insurance: Follow up withyour insurance broker to ensure you havethe most comprehensive coverage. Ask aboutdiscounts for bikers with safe driving records.

More information is available from yourinsurance broker or at avivacanada.com.

www.newscanada.com

THE NEWSPAPER.COM TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 A35

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2010 CHEV MALIBU HYBRIDPower group, a/c, tilt, cruise, alloy wheels and much more! Stk#95051

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SALE PRICE ..........................................$15,900

2008 HONDA CIVIC DX-G5 speed, power group, A/C, CD and much more! Stk#100852SALE PRICE.................................................................$12,900

2009 HYUNDAI ELANTRA 4 dr auto, air, pw, pdl and more.Stk#94912. SALE PRICE ....................................$11,900

2003 HYUNDAI ELANTRAVery clean $7,900.00 value. Stk#91802.SALE PRICE ........................................................................................$5,900

2010 CHEV TAHOE LTFully loaded inc. leather and sunroof. Stk#94591

SALE PRICE ..........................................$39,9002009/2010 SUBURBANSFully loaded, incl. leather and sunroof.

STARTING AS LOW AS............................$37,9002009 CHEV TRAILBLAZERPower group, A/C, CD, sunroof and much more! Stk#95241

SALE PRICE ...........................................$25,9002007 SATURN VUE AWDFully loaded inc. leather and sunroof. Stk#94781

SALE PRICE ...........................................$17,9002005 NISSAN PATHFINDER SELoaded truck inc. power group, a/c, tilt, cruise and much more.Stk#1112381.SALE PRICE ................................................................$17,900

2010 GMC YUKON XL 2500Fully loaded including leather and sunroof! Stk#94941

SALE PRICE ...........................................$41,9002007 FORD F150 “HARLEY DAVIDSON EDITION”Fully loaded incl. leather, sunroof and navigation! Stk#94501SALE PRICE.................................................................$29,900FLEET PURCHASE 2010 EXPRESS 2500 CARGO VANSWith air and bulkhead - low low kms. $26,900.00 value! Stk#94371

STARTING AT.........................................$24,9002004 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN LTHard to find, fully loaded including leather, sunroof and rear a/c.Stk#94641SALE PRICE.................................................................$18,9002009 SIERRA REGULAR CAB 4X4 V8Auto., power group, tilt, cruise, and much more! Stk#94411

SALE PRICE ...........................................$19,900

FUEL SAVERS SUVs TRUCKS & VANS

Fully loaded inc. leather and sunroof.Stk#94353 SALE PRICE

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ONLY3000 KMS

2010 BUICK LUCERNE CXL

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2010 CADILLAC DTS

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2007 CADILLAC STS V6

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DIESEL!

2005 FORD F350 LARIET 4X2 SUPER CREW

Loaded car includes automatic, powergroup, navigation and ride control.Stk# 1100161

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2005 CHEVROLET CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

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Power group, a/c, tilt, cruise,alloy wheels, sunroof and much more!Stk#94972

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2009 CHEV MALIBU “HYBRID”

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2010 CADILLAC CTS

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ALL WHEELDRIVE

2007 V.W. PASSAT 3.6 4MOTION

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Page 36: Surrey Now May 17 2011

A36 TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2011 THE NEWSPAPER.COM

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