Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

20
JEFF NAGEL One less coal train a day will roll through Delta, South Surrey and White Rock next year as a result of a U.S. coal company’s decision to suspend shipments through West- shore Terminals at Deltaport. Cloud Peak Energy exports four million tonnes a year through that coal port but cited “extremely de- pressed” international coal prices as it announced a three-year halt to shipments through B.C. – from 2016 through 2018. KEVIN DIAKIW, JEFF NAGEL Driving on the road to Bamfield, B.C. two years ago, Peter McQuade’s truck veered off of a bridge and rolled down an embankment. e Surrey resident was cut and banged up a little, but he didn’t sustain serious injuries. However, he soon began suffering searing pain in his left shoulder, possibly the result of a torn rotator cuff. “I’ve been in pain since about April of this year,” McQuade said, adding he was sent for X-rays and ultrasounds, both of which showed nothing. He’s been to chiro- practors and massage therapists, and has been on four different anti-inflammatory medicines. CANCELLATION ADDS DOUBT FOR FRASER SURREY DOCKS’ PROPOSAL PATIENTS NEEDING SCANS ARE RECEIVING APPOINTMENTS WITH A CALENDAR CAUTION – AS LESS-URGENT CASES NOW TAKE MORE THAN A YEAR Toll all bridges and tunnels, economists urge 4 Trevor Cox comes home 13 Surrey resident Peter McQuade holds up an appointment notice for an MRI at Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre indicating his scan date is April 16, 2016. McQuade’s notification includes a prominent warning to ‘please note the YEAR of the appointment.’ EVAN SEAL MRI: A LONG WAIT IN PAIN FEWER COAL TRAINS AS U.S. FIRM HALTS EXPORTS continued on page 3 Wednesday November 4 2015 Leader The continued on page 3 ®™ Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under licence by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Craftsman Collision Ltd. 3 nearby locations: 9585 120th St., 8268 128 St., 15050 32nd Ave. W. Rock fo fo fo fo fo fo fo fo o o or r r r r r r r r F F Fu u u u u ut t t t t tu u u u u u u u ur r r r r r r r re e e e e e e H H H H H H H H H H H H Ho o o o o o oo o o o od d O O O O O O O Or r r r r rn n n n n n n n n n n na a a a a a a a am m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m me e e e e e e en n n n n nt t t H u g o B u g o v Bad Driver Award #177: Future Hood Ornament Tuned-out pedestrians like Hugo bring us careful drivers like you. So watch out for guys like him (and never be one yourself) And when you do need collision repair, remember BC’s favourite, Craftsman Collision. CHECK INSIDE FOR DETAILS VANCOUVERGIANTS.COM • 604-4-GIANTS Fun for the entire family! Family Paks $99 * * Plus fees and taxes. Hockey: Just Add Ice

description

November 04, 2015 edition of the Surrey North Delta Leader

Transcript of Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Page 1: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

JEFF NAGEL

One less coal train a day will roll through Delta, South Surrey and White Rock next year as a result of a U.S. coal company’s decision to suspend shipments through West-shore Terminals at Deltaport.

Cloud Peak Energy exports four million tonnes a year through that coal port but cited “extremely de-pressed” international coal prices as it announced a three-year halt to shipments through B.C. – from 2016 through 2018.

KEVIN DIAKIW, JEFF NAGEL

Driving on the road to Bamfi eld, B.C. two years ago, Peter McQuade’s truck veered off of a bridge and rolled down an embankment.

Th e Surrey resident was cut and banged up a little, but he didn’t sustain serious injuries.

However, he soon began suff ering searing pain in his left shoulder, possibly the result of a torn rotator cuff .

“I’ve been in pain since about April of this year,” McQuade said, adding he was sent for X-rays and ultrasounds, both of which showed nothing. He’s been to chiro-practors and massage therapists, and has been on four different anti-inflammatory medicines.

▶ CANCELLATION ADDS DOUBT FOR FRASER SURREY DOCKS’ PROPOSAL

▶ PATIENTS NEEDING SCANS ARE RECEIVING APPOINTMENTS WITH A CALENDAR CAUTION – AS LESS-URGENT CASES NOW TAKE MORE THAN A YEAR

▲ Toll all bridges and tunnels, economists urge 4▲ Trevor Cox comes home 13

Surrey resident Peter McQuade holds up an appointment notice for an MRI at Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre indicating his scan date is April 16, 2016. McQuade’s notification includes a prominent warning to ‘please note the YEAR of the appointment.’ EVAN SEAL

MRI: A LONG WAIT IN PAIN

FEWER COAL TRAINS AS U.S. FIRM HALTS EXPORTS

continued on page 3

Wednesday November 4 2015

LeaderThe

continued on page 3

®™ Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under licence by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Craftsman Collision Ltd. 3 nearby locations: 9585 120th St., 8268 128 St., 15050 32nd Ave. W. Rock

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Page 2: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

2 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

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Page 3: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 3 Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 3

Th e pain has abated somewhat, but when Mc-Quade goes to bed, it becomes unbearable.

“Since May, I’ll bet you I haven’t slept 12 (full) nights,” McQuade told Th e Leader. “I’m actually taking sleeping pills now to try and help me, and they don’t help. I still wake up with the pain.”

McQuade’s doctor says eff ective treatment needs a proper diagnosis, which means an MRI.

So in August of this year, the doctor ordered one and was told McQuade could have it done at the Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre in Surrey.

Th e problem? It’s not scheduled until April 16, 2016.

Dismayed by the wait, McQuade wrote Health Minister Terry Lake and Opposition NDP Health Critic Judy Darcy.

Lake didn’t respond, but Darcy got back to him the next day and subsequently referenced McQuade’s case in the legislature.

Lake, responding to a question in the legis-lature about MRI delays, said the province is “working very hard” with health authorities to shorten waits.

“Th ere are people waiting longer than we would like for some of these procedures,” he said.

In fact, lengthy MRI waits have become endem-ic in the B.C. health care system. Lower Mainland patients are waiting so long for non-urgent MRI scans that they’re cautioned to carefully note the year of their appointment on notices.

McQuade’s notifi cation includes a warning to “please note the YEAR of the appointment,” in addition to a reference to “note year 2016.”

Darcy said she’s aware of cases where patients were booked for MRI appointments more than 12 months away and mistakenly showed up a year too soon.

“It’s because some patients show up the wrong year,” said Darcy, calling it more evidence MRI waits are unacceptably long.

A snapshot of MRI wait times for Fraser Health released through a freedom of information request shows that as of mid-August, the average wait time for the least urgent (priority 4) patients was more than seven months, and one out of 10 of those patients faced a wait of at least 15 months.

Just 15 per cent of Fraser Health patients were scheduled for an MRI within 60 days, which is the priority 4 target the health region strives for and the benchmark set by the Canadian Radio-logical Association.

“Th e reason for that benchmark is your risk for further deterioration increases after that,” Darcy said.

Long waits for MRIs also delay diagnosis and getting a place in surgery wait lines.

“You can’t get treated until you have your prob-lem diagnosed,” Darcy said. “Th e longer you wait for treatment, the more serious your condition becomes and the more it costs the health care system in the end.”

She said B.C.’s MRI waits are the worst in Can-ada. Fraser Health performed 41,347 MRIs last year, an increase of 7.5 per cent from 2013.

“Although the number of MRI procedures in Fraser Health has increased, so too has the demand for MRI procedures – not just at Fraser Health but across B.C.,” said Sue Avery, executive

director of medical imaging for the Lower Main-land health authorities, in an emailed statement.

“It is important to note that benchmarks are currently being met for emergent cases.”

Urgent cases (priority 1 and 2) do get done rapidly – most happen within their respective targets of 24 hours and seven days.

But the lower priority 3 cases, which are to be done within 30 days, are waiting four-and-a-half months on average and just 18 per cent of them meet the benchmark.

Even the lowest-priority MRI scans should not be considered frivolous, Darcy said.

“I’ve spoken with seniors who’ve been waiting a year to two years to diagnose a hearing prob-lem. It’s not life-threatening. But boy oh boy, it aff ects their quality of life.”

Darcy argues the waits could be drastically shortened if the province was willing to staff and run more MRI machines at later hours when they currently sit idle.

Th e Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Sur-gery Centre schedules MRIs between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m., Monday to Friday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday and statutory holidays.

“Th ere is no reason why people could not come in at other times – includ-ing late at night – to get an MRI,” Darcy said.

“We need to use our diag-nostic equip-ment to its full capacity.”

▶ FOOTBALL ON THE FLYFrank Hurt

Hornet Marco

Lucarino pushes

Sheldon Gangloff of the Langley Secondary Saints out of bounds

during a B.C. High

School football

game Saturday at Frank Hurt Secondary.BOAZ JOSEPH

▶ “You can’t get treated until you have your problem diagnosed.”JUDY DARCY

▶ QUALITY OF LIFE AFFECTED: NDP HEALTH CRITICfrom page 1

It will pay Westshore compen-sation for the cancelled volume. Westshore’s stock price fell 18 per cent Th ursday after the announcement, which included a reduction in its dividend.

Cloud Peak’s agreement with Westshore remains in place for 2019-2024.

“We believe in the long-term opportunity for Asian exports of Powder River Basin coal as over-supplies of seaborne thermal coal are rationalized,” Cloud Peak CEO Colin Marshall said.

Climate change activist Kevin Washbrook said the cancellation raises further doubt about the wisdom of Fraser Surrey Docks’ plan to press ahead with its own new coal terminal on the Fraser River in Surrey.

“Th ere’s no future in export-ing U.S. thermal coal and the economics are catching up with that,” Washbrook said.

He said China is serious about cutting its coal use and the car-bon emissions that result, and the world remains awash in coal because of declining use.

“All the boosters at the Surrey Board of Trade and the chambers of commerce have to rethink their support for these kinds of projects, because they’re going to be white elephants.”

Cloud Peak’s suspension cuts Wests-hore’s expect-ed output next year to 26 million tonnes. Much of that is B.C. metallurgical coal rather than U.S. thermal coal that’s burned as fuel and is a major greenhouse gas contributor.

U.S. thermal coal currently accounts for about two trains a day on the BNSF rail line to Westshore.

Fraser Surrey Docks’ $15-mil-lion terminal would have an initial capacity of four million tonnes per year, adding back one train per day on the line if it is built.

Th e company has said early 2017 is the soonest it could be operating. It’s awaiting port authority approval of its revised plan and faces at least two court challenges.

Kevin Washbrook

▼ THERE IS NO FUTURE IN COAL, ACTIVIST SAYSfrom page 1

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Page 4: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

4 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 4 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

JEFF NAGEL

Metro Vancouver’s bridge and tunnel traffi c pinch points should all be tolled as part of a road pricing pilot project to battle worsening congestion.

Harmonized bridge tolling here is one of the proposals on the potential for congestion pricing outlined in a new report by Canada’s Ecofi scal Commission, a think tank of econo-mists.

It provides more ammunition for area mayors – who are already studying road pricing – and makes the case that road space is a scarce resource in high demand that is overused if it’s free, and is con-served and used more effi ciently when there’s

a charge.“Governments have

been trying lots of things and for the most part they haven’t been working,” said commis-sion chair Chris Ragan, a McGill University econo-mist. “Our congestion is getting worse as our cit-ies grow. So we think it’s time to try a diff erent solution and one that for which there’s growing evidence that it actually works.”

Ragan visited Vancou-ver earlier this month and spent an hour and 45 minutes going to Sur-rey in rush hour via the free Pattullo Bridge and then just 25 minutes back again via the tolled Port Mann Bridge.

He said the clogged conditions on the Pat-tullo and its approaches stem from the decision to toll the Port Mann Bridge without a coordi-nated approach at other crossings.

“You want to not just toll one bridge, you want to toll the set of

bridges,” he said.He said that change

would eliminate the problem of drivers going out of their way to get to an untolled free bridge and in the process add-ing to traffi c congestion.

“We’ve seen tolls work

to reduce congestion on bridges like the Port Mann. But a single toll bridge can push traffi c elsewhere.”

Adding tolls to the free crossings would encourage some drivers to travel a little earli-er, or later, switch to transit, or perhaps work from home some of the time, he said, resulting in much less congested conditions at peak hours for drivers who opt to

pay the tolls.“Th e fundamental

problem with road con-gestion is not that there are too many cars. Th e problem is there are too many cars on a particu-lar road at a particular time.”

Ragan suggests tolls vary depending on the time of day and the intensity of congestion.

“At 2 in the morning your toll might be zero because the road is emp-

ty. But at 6 p.m. that is peak time and that is when you actually pay a toll.”

Th e commission’s proposal for bridge tolling is based strictly on delivering relief from congestion, not as a method to raise more revenue for transit or to replace existing bridges.

It acknowledges the provincial government would have to change its tolling policy, which currently allows tolls only on new infrastruc-ture and only when there’s a reasonable free alternative.

Distance pricing by GPS

Ultimately, the report says, comprehensive distance-based pricing is a possible long-term op-tion for Metro Vancou-ver, potentially by using GPS tracking to charge for the distance driven.

It concedes privacy concerns would be a “major point of conten-tion” and such a system is “unlikely to be a real-istic policy option in the immediate future.”

But the report argues

it would be more fair than bridge tolls, which don’t capture long trips that don’t cross the Fraser River or Burrard Inlet.

“Each driver pays directly for the time and use of the roads, no matter where they live in the region.”

Would that mean drivers having to pay a charge to drive any-where in the region?

Not necessarily, Ragan said.

It would only be necessary to charge per kilometre fees on routes where there’s signifi cant congestion and poten-tially only at peak times.

“If you have a road where even at the worst times it fl ows very well, then you don’t have a problem to solve.”

Letting solo drivers pay a toll to use HOV lanes is another poten-tial option outlined in the report, although it says that seems more promising for other cit-ies with larger networks of controlled-access freeways.

Pay parking a tool

More pay parking in areas where it’s currently free can also help, the report says.

Priced parking adds incentive to take transit instead of driving.

Ragan said it also has been found to reduce traffi c congestion be-cause motorists don’t have to spend as much time circling blocks in search of an empty stall.

Premier Christy Clark has said any move to road pricing or universal tolling would require another referendum.

Ragan argues a pilot project should be allowed to proceed as a temporary test case.

In Stockholm, Sweden, he said, residents were lukewarm to a proposed road pricing system but support jumped after a 10-month pilot project, resulting in referendum approval.

“A lot of people think this wouldn’t work,” Ragan said.

“Th ey say ‘It’s a crazy idea. It’s just a tax grab. We’ve already paid for the roads. We don’t have any other choices.’

“But you put these in place and you try them out and they actually do work and people kinda go ‘It does work. It is worth it. I’m getting home 30 minutes faster. I like this.’ And public support builds.”

▶ ROAD PRICING CAN RELIEVE CONGESTION: ECONOMISTS

Report urges harmonized bridge tolls

A report by a Canadian economic think tank suggests that all bridges in Metro Vancouver should be equally tolled. LEADER FILE

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Page 5: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 5 Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 5

13-year-old nabbed in carjacking

KEVIN DIAKIW

A 13-year-old has been arrested, and two people are still at-large, af-ter a Surrey cabbie had his taxi stolen at knifepoint last Wednesday. The cab driver was also tied up and left by a road in Guildford.

Michael Small, man-ager of Surdell Ken-nedy Taxi, said his driver told him that in the early morning hours of Oct. 28, three individuals coaxed him out of the car to put some-thing in the trunk at 105 Avenue and 152 Street.

At that point, someone produced a knife, bound the driver’s hands with red packing tape, and put him in the back of the cab.

Small said the driver managed to work his hands free and the carjackers dumped him by the side of the street at 168 Street and 96 Avenue.

At about 2 a.m., a passerby heard the cries of the taxi driver and called police.

Small said the carjackers seemed to know what they were doing, as they knew about the vehicle’s GPS and turned on the meter to avoid detection.

“Th ey asked the driver how to shut off the GPS; they turned the meter on when the got in the vehicle to make it look like he was driving around a fare,” he said.

Th e attackers then took off in the cab, which was disabled by a spike belt laid down by police at 95 Avenue

and 132A Street, caus-ing the vehicle to crash into a fence.

A 13-year-old Surrey boy, who is known to police, was taken into RCMP custody.

The other two es-caped police capture.

“Unfortunately, this young person is definitely off to a wrong start,” said Sur-rey RCMP Sgt. Paul Hayes. “(He’s) defi-nitely not going down

a path we want to see him continue.”

Because of provi-sions under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, the youth cannot be publicly identified.

Police say the cabbie was not physically harmed, but is emo-tionally traumatized from the ordeal.

Th e teen could be fac-ing charges of posses-sion of stolen property over $5,000, forcible

confi nement, robbery and dangerous driving.

One thing the attack-ers were not aware of was a camera inside the vehicle – which may have recorded images of them.

Surrey RCMP were anticipating releasing further information after The Leader’s press deadline Mon-day.

Check surreyleader.com for updates.

BLACK PRESS

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Brew Ha-Ha! - Cof-fee, Comedy and Art takes place Friday (Nov. 6) from 6-9 p.m. at the Rising Sun Social Innova-tion Centre and Art Gallery.

The evening will feature two comedy shows at 6:20 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. as well as the first of many art displays – showcasing work of Surrey artists and high school students – at the gallery. The event also marks the unofficial opening at the centre, located at 13969 100 Ave.

Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door. Proceeds will benefit the Sur-rey Food Bank.

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Page 6: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Premier Christy Clark’s government has been steadily backed into a corner on its apparent deletion of emails involving sensitive government topics.

A week-long barrage of accusations by the NDP Opposition peaked with their most damning evidence of a cover-up, in the long-running case of eight health researchers suspended or fi red from drug approval studies.

Most have been paid settlements or reinstated after the biggest personnel management blunder in memory. One committed suicide.

We are now into a second independent review of this tragic case, after an inde-pendent lawyer was unable to determine what went wrong, because she couldn’t compel testimony or demand records. It is now in the hands of B.C.’s new Om-budsperson, Jay Chalke, who has that authority.

Everyone agrees that the deputy health minister of the day, Graham Whitmarsh, was legally responsible for the decisions and records. Yet somehow the only record released to the NDP for

the two-year period of the fi rings and subsequent investigation was a heavily blanked-out update from his successor, Stephen Brown, to the premier’s deputy, John Dyble.

It refers to an “update on litigation resolution from investigation,” the sub-stance of which is blanked out, and off ers to discuss the situation by phone.

Here’s an exchange between NDP MLA Adrian Dix and Citizens’ Services Minister (and Surrey-Tynehead MLA) Amrik Virk:

Dix: “Can the minister explain why the Offi ce of the Premier, the Deputy Min-ister to the Premier, has no records and why the successive Deputy Minister of Health had one record over two years?”

Virk: “Th e suggestion from the member opposite that there are no documents is false…. Th ere are more documents now that the Ombudsperson has conduct of the matter and is undertaking a compre-hensive review. I fully expect that he will do a comprehensive review and will con-sent to the release of more documents.”

Th ere will be more sound and fury

over this, but only Chalke’s report can provide new information. And even then, the damage is done, settlements and non-disclosure deals have been signed, and Clark and Health Minister Terry Lake have formally apologized.

Th e larger issue is how freedom of information legislation should work. Should the Opposition be able to sec-ond-guess decisions of bureaucrats by going through their emails?

Th e traditional answer is no. Elected offi cials are responsible, even if they had no actual role, as should always be the case in hiring and fi ring ministry staff and awarding government work contracts. Th e buck stops with Lake and Clark, not their deputies.

Th ere are sound reasons for this. Consider another sensitive decision, to shoot wolves from the air in a last-ditch eff ort to preserve dwindling mountain caribou herds.

Protesters, pop stars and politicians can sound off as they like, but these

hard decisions are made and carried out by wildlife experts working for or consulted by the province. Th e minis-ter, in this case Forests Minister Steve Th omson, authorizes the use of heli-copters and rifl es and takes the political consequences.

One can imagine the agonizing dis-cussion that goes on behind the scenes, as provincial and First Nations wildlife experts watch caribou herds dwindle despite widespread habitat protection eff orts. Th ey not only make the techni-cal call, they have to pull the trigger.

Would wildlife biologists be able to provide frank advice for or against this decision if they knew their names and opinions could later be used in a political battle in the legislature and in the streets?

No. And can you run a public service if everyone is subjected to the scrutiny that only politicians choose to endure? No.

Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press.

Th e fi rst Sunday in Novem-ber was last weekend and that means we’re now a few days into the semi-annual time change.

Adopted by Germany during the First World War, the practice of observing Daylight Saving Time (setting the clocks ahead one hour in the spring time) quickly spread to Canada.

Th e idea, apparently, was that people could take the best advantage of daylight in the mornings and advancing clocks ahead each spring and turning them back each autumn – for the return to standard time – would help maximize useful hours of morning sunlight.

In doing so, the theory was, energy would also be saved, reducing the need for electric light.

Back when many people – farmers in particular – rose and retired with the sun, it made sense.

Today, not so much. Most of us punch a clock that requires us to be somewhere at a certain time, regardless of the sun’s place in the sky.

Even Saskatchewan – a province known for its agricultural base – and traditionally farm-dependent parts of northern B.C. don’t observe Daylight Saving Time. Granted, it can get confusing as to whether you’re in sync with the rest of B.C. or Alberta at a given time of year, but that is a small price to pay for not having to spend a whole week readjusting your internal clock – not to mention your external clocks.

Of course, most of us enjoy

“falling back” and gaining that precious extra hour of sleep. And, according to the CBC, that preference is borne out in Swedish studies that indicate more heart attacks occur in the week following spring change, while there are fewer than average in the week fol-lowing fall back in November.

It’s not all good news, though.

According to police, the number of pedestrian deaths increases threefold after the fall time change, as drivers to adjust to a darker evening commute.

It’s a debate that comes up every year and of course there are arguments to be made for and against. But to us, it seems like changing the clocks is an idea whose time has come – and gone.

RAESIDE

The Surrey/North Delta Leader is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, withdocumentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, P.O. Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9. For information, phone888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org

PUBLISHERJim [email protected]

EDITORPaula [email protected]

ASSISTANTAD MANAGERShaulene [email protected]

CIRCULATION MANAGERSherri [email protected]

The silence of the email servers

BCVIEWS▼Tom

Fletcher

Time changes are no longer relevant

VIEWPOINT6 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

#200-5450 152 St., Surrey, B.C. V3S 5J9Published by Black Press Ltd.

Switchboard 604-575-2744Classifi eds 604-575-5555Circulation 604-575-5344

LeaderThe

Page 7: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

On Wednesday, Sept. 30, my daughter and her friend were crossing at a pedestrian crosswalk at 116 Street and 86 Avenue. They were hit by a car traveling north on 116 Street. They were thrown 13 metres. Thankfully both girls survived.

On one side of 116 Street is a school (Hellings Elementa-ry), and on the other side is a park.

I have seen many near miss-es at this intersection. People just don’t stop for the children and adults trying to cross.

If ever there was a need for a crosswalk light at a spot, this would be the one. Not just a pedestrian-activated flashing yellow light, but a pedestri-an-activated red light. People are too busy looking ahead to

the Nordel light to notice the crosswalk.

My only regret is that I did not send this letter sooner, as I have witnessed and expe-rienced scary near misses in

the past.Delta: Please do something

to rectify this big problem before a child gets killed.

Angie Peterson

As Canada’s prime minister-in-waiting, Justin Trudeau reit-erated his promise to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada be-fore the end of 2015.

Now that he is prime minister, no doubt he would love to fulfi ll all his campaign prom-ises to highlight how diff erent his Liberal government is. Hubris is admired in a boxer,

but when the hubris of a politician is being underwritten by tax-payers, it’s a diff erent matter.

Th e logistics of screening, transport-ing and accommodat-ing 25,000 refugees, all within a two-month period, is mind-bog-gling and will be exces-sively expensive.

Trudeau criticized Stephen Harper when

he demonstrated his military hubris by “whipping out our CF-18’s.” Apparently Trudeau sees no prob-lem with whipping out the taxpayers’ cheque book to demonstrate his political hubris.

Memo to Justin: Get real. A budget doesn’t balance itself.

 Lloyd Atkins

Delta: Do something▼ PEDESTRIAN-ACTIVATED RED LIGHT NEEDED AT 116 STREET AND86 AVENUE

A letter writer says a pedestrian-activated red light is needed at the intersection of 116 Street and 86 Avenue. BOAZ JOSEPH

▼ SYRIAN REFUGEE PROMISE IS POLITICAL HUBRIS

INBOX Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 7

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SATURDAY

CITY HALL PLAZA13450 104 AVE, SURREY, BC

12NOON-7PM21st

2015

Central City 11AM-4:30PM

12PMSanta’s Arrival

City of Surrey — Cemetery ServicesPhone: 604-598-5770

Email: [email protected]

REMEMBRANCE DAY — FAMILY EVENTSurrey Centre Cemetery

16671 Old McLellan Road, Surrey

12:00 PM to 3:00 PM

Wednesday, November 11, 2015(rain or shine)

All are encouraged to place a Canadian ag or poppy on one of the graves of over 500 Veterans buried in our cemetery.

Remember and re ect alongside our new award winning Veteran’s Memorial.

REMEMBERING OUR VETERANS• Past and Present •

Page 8: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

8 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 8 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

SHEILA REYNOLDS

A driver who crashed his pick-up truck in Cloverdale two years ago has been found guilty of lying to ICBC about the incident.

Abbotsford’s James Steven Baker, an RCMP constable in Surrey at the time of the crash, was charged with providing false or mis-leading information in relation to an accident claim with the insurer in December 2013.

According to an Abbotsford Provincial Court judgment on Tuesday (Oct. 27), Bak-er was driving his black Dodge Ram pickup on 64 Avenue at about 5:35 a.m. Dec. 10 when the incident occurred.

While Baker claimed he was struck by anoth-er vehicle before he fi shtailed into a ditch, the Crown argued the crash involved only his truck and resulted from Baker driving too fast for the winter road conditions.

Judge Kenneth Skilnick acknowl-edged there was one piece of evidence that “somewhat” corrobo-rated Baker’s version: a video recording from the intersection of 64 Avenue and 168 Street

showed a dark sedan following his vehicle through the intersec-tion

However, the judge pointed to three other pieces of evidence that contradicted Baker’s story.

First, the driver of a City of Surrey salt truck witnessed the crash and was ada-mant there was no other vehicle involved. Th e city worker tes-tifi ed Baker’s truck passed him on a medi-an on the left and lost

control when he tried to merge back into the right lane.

Second, there was no damage to the left side of Bakers’ vehicle and the damage that did exist wasn’t consistent with being struck by a car cutting across its path from the left side, as the accused had suggested.

“Troubling,” said Skilnick, was that Baker failed to mention passing the city salt truck to an ICBC adjuster, despite testifying in court his truck slid behind and in front of the city

vehicle after being hit by another car.

“…when the Accused gave the information that he gave to the ICBC adjuster, he knew that material portions of the state-ment were false,” said Skilnick in convicting Baker. “Specifi cally, he knew that there was no second vehicle which struck him and which was the cause of his accident.”

Baker’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for Nov. 20.

▶ ONLY ONE VEHICLE WAS INVOLVED IN ACCIDENT, DESPITE JAMES BAKER’S TESTIMONY TO THE CONTRARY

Offi cer found guilty of lying about crash

SHEILA REYNOLDS

Th e Kwantlen Stu-dent Association (KSA) has lost a lawsuit it launched against the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) over membership and fees paid to the national organization.

While the KSA claimed that a vote of its directors early this year terminated its membership in the CFS, the CFS argued the termination wasn’t valid because it requires a referendum of individual Kwantlen Polytechnic University students.

Th e KSA has been a member of the CFS since 1981. Fees are collected from students (approximately $3 per student per semester) by the university and paid to the CFS.

Th e KSA campaigned 2008 to leave the na-tional student group, saying doing so would save the Kwantlen stu-dent body thousands of dollars. After some controversy, a student referendum was held that year, with 56 per cent voting in favour of continuing as CFS members.

In B.C. Supreme Court decision early this week (Oct. 26), Justice John Steeves referred to the 2008 matter and said the

current case was not about the right to dis-affi liate from the CFS, but how to do so. A student referendum is still required, he ruled.

“Th ere has been no change to the disaffi li-ation procedures of the respondents which still require a referendum of individual mem-bers,” Steeves said.

The KSA also alleged a change in the CFS’s rules last year amounted to the national organization taking over the gov-ernance of Kwantlen students and effec-tively forced the KSA to collect membership fees for the CFS.

Th e judge disagreed with both claims.

“Th ere is no evidence that the change was made to somehow thwart the legal rights of KSA,” said Steeves.

“Nor is there a basis for finding that the respondents’ bylaws with respect to the collection and re-mittance of fees are illegal or otherwise objectionable.”

▶ JUDGE SIDES WITH CANADIAN FEDERATION OF STUDENTS IN LEGAL DISPUTE OVER MEMBERSHIPS AND FEES AT KWANTLEN

KSA loses lawsuit against national organization

▶ “...when the Accused gave the information... he knew that material portions...were false.”KENNETH SKILNICK

GLENFIDDICH RARE WHISKY TASTING AND SEMINARFriday, November 66:00 P.M. – 7:30 P.M.

Join Glenfiddich Canadian Brand Ambassador Beth Havers for a Rare Whisky Tasting and Seminar.

Tickets $40. Available at the 39th & Cambie Store, 5555 Cambie St., Vancouver.

2015 SPIRIT RELEASE AND TASTINGSaturday, November 79:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M.

Join our BC Liquor Store Product Consultants for a complimentary tasting and food pairing featuring select products from the 2015 Premium Spirits Release.

39th & Cambie, Vancouver

Alberni & Bute, Vancouver

Park Royal, West Vancouver

Langley

Westwood Centre, Port Coquitlam

PREMIUM SPIRITRELEASE

2 0 1 5

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The 2015 Premium Spirit Release features a large collectionof whiskies from around the world as well as an exquisitecognac from Camus. Visit our website for more information.

www.bcliquorstores.com

Thursday, November 26, 2015

10:00 - 11:00 a.m. Meeting

11:00 - 11:30 a.m. Public Question

& Answer Period

Executive Plaza Hotel and Conference Centre

(Grand Ballroom A)

405 North Road, Coquitlam, BC

You are invited to attend an open meeting of the Board of Directors of Fraser Health. The meeting will include a presentation on the health care services offered in the Tri-Cities, as well as an update from our president and CEO, Michael Marchbank. The Question and Answer Period will provide an opportunity for the public to ask questions. You can also submit questions in advance at www.fraserhealth.ca/asktheboard. This is a valuable opportunity to connect directly with the Fraser Health Board and Executive. Everyone is welcome to attend. For more information, contact us at: [email protected] 604-587-4600

Call now for your Complimentary Consultation

604.582.2772 (Emergency No. 778.868.6776)

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10115 Whalley Blvd, Surrey (behind Fresgo’s Restaurant)

Page 9: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 9 Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 9

KEVIN DIAKIW

A man is in critical condition and a toddler is being treated for a broken leg after two separate Halloween accidents where cars hit pedestrians.

At about 7 p.m. Saturday, Surrey RCMP

responded to a report of a car striking a child while trick-or-treating in the 13200-block of 62 Avenue.

Police arrived to fi nd a woman and a 13-year-old boy who had been struck and injured.

Th ey were taken to hospital and police say the child suff ered a broken leg.

Police believe a male driver was turning in a Dodge pick-up truck when he saw the woman and child, but wasn’t able to stop in time.

Alcohol and speed

are not believed to be factors in the accident.

It is not clear wheth-er the woman and child were in a marked crosswalk.

Th ere have been no charges laid, however they may be pending the outcome of the investigation.

On Saturday at 9:10 p.m., police respond-ed to a report of a pedestrian hit in the 8300-block of 144 Street.

A blue Toyota Yaris was travelling north on 144 Street when it struck a pedestrian.

A 57-year-old man

was taken to hospital where he remains in critical condition.

Alcohol and speed are not believed to be factors in the accident.

Anyone who wit-nessed either accident or has further infor-mation is asked to call the Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers, if they wish to remain anonymous, at 1-800-222-8477 or www.solvecrime.ca

▶ MAN IN CRITICAL CONDITION AND A THREE-YEAR-OLD SUFFERED A BROKEN LEG IN ACCIDENTS

Two pedestrians hit by cars on Halloween

KEVIN DIAKIW

Surrey will get more provincial representa-tion next election as Victoria introduces a bill that will redraw the electoral map in B.C.

Bill 42, the Electoral Districts Act, is being brought to a vote in order to adopt the rec-ommendations of the Electoral Boundaries Commission (EBC).

Th e recommenda-tions increase ridings by two in the Lower Mainland.

One of those ridings is in Surrey and the other is Richmond/New Westminster. Th e proposed ridings are Surrey South and Rich-mond-Queensborough.

Th e new boundaries in Surrey would essen-tially push the riding of Surrey-Cloverdale northward, allowing for the creation of a new riding in South Surrey, just north of Surrey-White Rock.

It will bring the number of MLAs in Surrey to nine and the number of representa-tives in the legislature from 85 to 87.

Th e changes could be in place in time for the May 2017 provincial election. Th e Electoral Boundaries Com-mission Act requires that an independent three-member com-mission be appointed within one year after every second provincial general election.

For more, visit http://bit.ly/1kWwz0K

Surrey mapped to get one more MLA

S U R R E Y

S O C I E T Y

Homelessness& Housing

When Susan’s husband passed away, she began receiving survivor pension benefi ts, but her disability allowance and other benefi ts were clawed back. Unable to afford rent, Susan was evicted.

In the process, a lot of Susan’s things were damaged or stolen, including her identifi cation and other documents. This has made it hard for her to fi ll prescriptions, rent a storage unit, or apply for jobs.

“I’m stuck, I’m a non-entity. I’m sitting here homeless. I’ve spent a lot of time crying.”

Local shelters are not the best option for Susan. “They expect me to sleep with the people who robbed me in the fi rst place. How can I possibly close my eyes and feel safe?”

Though she hopes things will get better, for now she sleeps wherever she can – sometimes behind the park, others times in an empty lot across the street.

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society makes a difference in the lives of people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness in Surrey. Find out more at surreyhomeless.ca

DONATE ONLINESURREYHOMELESS.CA/GIVE

SUSAN

Buy-In with $100 Canadian and Receive the day’s Exchange Rate value in Gaming PLUS

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On I-5 at Exit 236 • theskagit.com

Dr. Dhillon Naturopathic PhysicianUnit 203, 7238 - 137 Street Surrey, BC • 778.858.6501

www . s u r r e y n a t u r o p a t h . c o m

In his many years as a Naturopathic Physician, Dr. Dhillon has helped many patients with variety of health concerns. One common factor in most of his patients is the impact of diet on health. Dr. Dhillon offers a simple comprehensive blood test to help determine the impact of food sensitivities on your health. From his experience, he’s determined that the elimination of food sensitivities can help resolve many health issues.

The Dhillon Naturopathic Clinic is fully

licensed with extended health benefi ts coverage so if you are tired of feeling sick, think of an alternative approach at Dhillon Naturopathic Clinic.

They include:• Weight Loss• Arthritis• Diabetes• Skin Conditions• ADHD

• Migraine Headaches• Irritable bowels•Depression/Anxiety

Sick of Feeling Sick? You may have food Allergies

Page 10: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 11

November Specials!November Specials!

Early Bird Dine-In Special! Early Bird Dine-In Special! 4-6pm Daily

2 Dinners for $22Choose from: - Schnitzel with Mushroom Gravy

- Liver with Bacon & Onions - Salisbury Steak

served with roast potato, veggies,  garlic toast & tossed salad

Souvlaki Sunday - $15ALL SOUVLAKI’S (dine-in only)

Includes: rice, roast potato, Greek salad, pita and tsatziki

Book your Christmas Party at Little Greek.

Group menus available for dine-in or

take-out.

LITTLE GREEK RESTAURANT

604-882-191919110 - 96th Ave, Port Kells

www.littlegreek.ca

8487 - 120th Street, Delta 604.590.1717 [email protected]

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THURSDAYCrab Legs ........................ $4/4

FRIDAYPrime Rib Dinner ..... $11.99

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ENENTREETREE

Centre Stage at City Hall (13450 104 Ave.) performance series features local alt-roots favourites The Nautical Miles on Nov. 5 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $23-28, including all fees. For advance tickets, call the Surrey Civic Theatres box offi ce at 604-501-5566 or visit https://tickets.surrey.ca. Tickets will also be available at the door.

Surrey Fiddlers Old Time Dance takes place Nov. 5 from 7:30-10 p.m. at Clayton Hall, 18513 70 Avenue Admission is $4. For more information, call 604-576-1066.

Author Peter Busby is at the Surrey Arts Centre Nov. 5, 7:30 p.m. to talk about Vancouver artist Jack Akroyd, who wrote a book about. There will be time for questions and conversation during and following the talk, which concludes by 9 p.m. The arts centre is located at 13750 88 Ave.

Event: Brew Ha-Ha, an evening of coffee, comedy and art, takes place Nov. 6 from 6-9 p.m. Rising Sun Social Innovation Centre and Art Gallery, 13969 100 Avenue.

inFlux, a night of local music, art and performance, takes place at the Surrey Art Gallery (13750 88 Ave.) Nov. 6, 8-11 p.m. Admission is free. Call 604-501-5566 for more information.

Gary Cyr his hosting an eight-week ukulele “Sing and Strum” class starting Friday, Nov. 6 at 12:45 p.m. at the Kennedy Seniors’ Recreation Centre, 11760 88 Ave. Learn a few basic chords and strums to play your favourite tunes. For more information, email [email protected]

Tradewind Books is organizing a book-signing event for Caravaggio: Signed in Blood, a historical adventure novel for middle-grade youth written by children’s author Mark David Smith, a former resident of North Delta. The event will be held Nov. 7 from 1-3 p.m. at Chapters Strawberry Hill, 12101 72 Ave.

The 2015 SFU Community Summit event – THRIVE! Surrey in 2030: A Residents Lab on the Future of their City? takes place Nov. 7. Apply now to be one of 100 selected residents to build a vision for a city where everyone can thrive. During this day of city planning, visioning, community building, and discussion, participants will have the chance to creatively construct their Surrey of 2030, learn about civic issues, and inform the City of Surrey’s updated Sustainability Charter. Apply here and build your vision: http://at.sfu.ca/baXesI. Only a few seats remain.

Singer Lisa Brokop brings The Patsy Cline Project to the Surrey Arts Centre (13750 88 Ave.) on Nov. 7, 8 p.m., paying tribute to her favourite country music legend. Tickets are $40 for adults, $35 for seniors, available at

tickets.surrey.ca or by calling 604-501-5566.

The African Children’s Choir is holding two concerts in Surrey. They’re on Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. at Good Shepherd Church, 2250 150 St., and on Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. at at Legacy-Church of the Nazarene, 9012 160 St. For more information, call 604-589-4670.

Cloverdale United Church (17575 58A Ave.) is hosting a craft fair on Nov. 14 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Crafters are needed ($25 per table). Call 604-574-5813.

Creative Treasures’ 12th-annual Christmas Craft Fair takes place Nov. 11-14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at (Nov. 12 until 8 p.m.) at East Delta Hall on the corner of Highway 10 and 104 Street. Free admission and parking. The event sponsors the Christmas Pyjama Drive. For details, email [email protected]

A Night of Hope & Remembrance, benefi ting the BC Cancer Foundation and SEMO Foundation, takes place Nov. 14 at the Bell Performing Arts Centre (6250 144 St.) The show features performances by Artistic Expressions, Emma Alves, Matt Borck and Shan-E-Punjab Arts Club. Tickets are $10/15, available at www.bellperformingartscentre.com or 604-507-6355.

Writers are wanted for the Youth Arts Council of Surrey’s one-act play competition, Write On. Youth aged 13-21 are encouraged to submit their work for a chance to win cash, be mentored and see their creation come to life on stage. The deadline is Nov. 15. Email [email protected] for details and an entry form.

Elim Village’s seventh-annual craft fair takes place Nov. 13 from 6-9 p.m. and Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Oasis Building, 9008 158 Street (enter off 160 Street and 90th Avenue.) Art, crafts and baked goods. Admission is free.

The Vaudevillians present their annual fundraising show Vintage Vaudeville, Nov. 14 and 15 at 2 p.m. at the Surrey Arts Centre (13750 88 Ave.) Tickets are $22, with proceeds benefi ting a bursary for performing arts students at Douglas College. For tickets and more information, call 604-501-5566 or check tickets.surrey.ca

The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra performs Nov. 16, 8 p.m. at Bell Performing Arts Centre (6250 144 St.), featuring pianist Stephen Hough and conductor Bramwell Tovey. Tickets ($28-42) are available at www.bellperformingartscentre.com or by calling 604-507-6355.

On Nov. 18 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Surrey Art Gallery and the Surrey Art Gallery Association present a guided bus tour of four galleries in this rapidly changing area, once the site of light industry and now home to

a cluster of new visual art venues. For ages 16 and up. Cost is $75. Bring a bag lunch or pick something up on site. Check the “Events” section at www.surrey.ca/artgallery to register.

Just For Laughs, Relationship Edition, comes to Surrey Nov. 19 7:30 p.m., featuring Gerry Dee, Cristela Alonzo, Robert Kelly and Graham Chittenden. The show takes place at the Bell Performing Arts Centre (6250 144 St.) Tickets are $45.50, available by calling 604-507-6355 or online at www.bellperformingartscentre.com

Surrey Little Theatre presents Tim Firth’s Calendar Girls until Nov. 21 with evening shows Thursdays to Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinées Nov. 8 and 15 at 2 p.m. The theatre is located at 7027 184 St. Phone 604-576-8451 or visit brownpapertickets.coms for for ticket information.

Now is the chance to get ahead on your Christmas shopping! The Surrey Art Gallery Association’s annual Art & Craft Show & Sale is happening on Friday, Nov. 27 from 5 to 8 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 28 from 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Surrey Arts Centre. Browse one-of-a-kind items from the SAGA Gift Shop for that special someone in your life and help support local artists. In the spirit of Christmas, we invite you to bring a non-perishable food item to support our local food bank. Admission is free.

#101 - 13588 88th Ave, Surrey 604-593-6818 Open 11am - 1am DailyBEAR CREEK PUB

WATCH ALL YOUR FAVOURITE GAMES HERE!

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WINGS 30¢WITH BEVERAGE PURCHASE

Instructions:1. Set oven to 350ºF.2. Combine pork with seasonings, salt through paprika. Mix well with your hands.3. Add raw egg, onion, peppers, carrot, and parsley and combine well.4. Spread half the pork mixture out on a baking sheet, forming an oval about 6”

long x 4” wide x 1” thick.5. Wrap a couple of spinach leaves around each boiled egg and place lengthwise

over pork base mixture.6. Cover each egg/spinach with half the remaining pork mixture.7. Shape the loaf into a regular meatloaf shape and place in loaf pan.8. Bake 30 minutes 9. Glaze with sauce (optional)

AnytimeMeat LoafMeat LoafServes 4Ingredients:1 lb ground pork1 tsp salt1 tsp dry sage1 tsp dry mustard1 tsp black pepper1 Tbsp maple syrup (plus another for the glaze, below)½ tsp paprika1 raw egg½ cup diced onion

½ cup diced bell peppers and/or jalapeño1 carrot grated2 Tbsp minced parsley2 hard boiled eggs, peeledFew laves spinach

Glaze (optional):1 Tbsp maple sryup1 tsp Sriracha sauce

8170- 120th St, Surrey Corner of 82nd & Scott Rd. 604-596-4994

Fall FavouritesFall Favourites

8170- 120th St Surrey Corner of

Everything you about breakfast.

NovemberNovember EventsEvents and and EntertainmentEntertainment

Surrey’s Home For Live Music

CALL US TO BOOK YOUR SCHOOL/SPORTS TEAM FUNDRAISERS HERE!

Donegals Irish House • 12054 96 Ave, Surrey • (604) 584-2112Donegals Irish House • 12054 96 Ave, Surrey • (604) 584-2112

LIVE JAM’SLIVE JAM’STues & ThursTues & Thurs

8:30pm8:30pm

MEAT DRAWSMEAT DRAWS1-4pm, 1-4pm, SundaySunday

• $7 Mondays - New York Steak • $7 Mondays - New York Steak Sandwich with fresh cut friesSandwich with fresh cut fries

• $6 Tuesdays - Surrey’s Best Burgers handmade with fresh Burgers handmade with fresh cut friescut fries

• 39¢ Wings - Sunday & Wed, always Fresh!always Fresh!

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Nov 6 - 7 HeadroomNov 6 - 7 HeadroomNov 13 - 14 The ShindiggersNov 13 - 14 The ShindiggersNov 20 - 21 Smith and JonesNov 20 - 21 Smith and JonesNov 27 - 28 Hamilton HarvyNov 27 - 28 Hamilton HarvyDec 4 Ray Roper ProjectDec 4 Ray Roper ProjectDec 5 TramaDec 5 Trama

Page 11: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

10 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 11

November Specials!November Specials!

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served with roast potato, veggies,  garlic toast & tossed salad

Souvlaki Sunday - $15ALL SOUVLAKI’S (dine-in only)

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Group menus available for dine-in or

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8487 - 120th Street, Delta 604.590.1717 [email protected]

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Burger $2.95 (& every day

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THURS & SUNDAY 35¢ WINGS

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WEDNESDAYWings .......25¢

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THURSDAYCrab Legs ........................ $4/4

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✁Buy 1 lunch or dinner entree and get the 2nd at 1/2 price with the

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Centre Stage at City Hall (13450 104 Ave.) performance series features local alt-roots favourites The Nautical Miles on Nov. 5 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $23-28, including all fees. For advance tickets, call the Surrey Civic Theatres box offi ce at 604-501-5566 or visit https://tickets.surrey.ca. Tickets will also be available at the door.

Surrey Fiddlers Old Time Dance takes place Nov. 5 from 7:30-10 p.m. at Clayton Hall, 18513 70 Avenue Admission is $4. For more information, call 604-576-1066.

Author Peter Busby is at the Surrey Arts Centre Nov. 5, 7:30 p.m. to talk about Vancouver artist Jack Akroyd, who wrote a book about. There will be time for questions and conversation during and following the talk, which concludes by 9 p.m. The arts centre is located at 13750 88 Ave.

Event: Brew Ha-Ha, an evening of coffee, comedy and art, takes place Nov. 6 from 6-9 p.m. Rising Sun Social Innovation Centre and Art Gallery, 13969 100 Avenue.

inFlux, a night of local music, art and performance, takes place at the Surrey Art Gallery (13750 88 Ave.) Nov. 6, 8-11 p.m. Admission is free. Call 604-501-5566 for more information.

Gary Cyr his hosting an eight-week ukulele “Sing and Strum” class starting Friday, Nov. 6 at 12:45 p.m. at the Kennedy Seniors’ Recreation Centre, 11760 88 Ave. Learn a few basic chords and strums to play your favourite tunes. For more information, email [email protected]

Tradewind Books is organizing a book-signing event for Caravaggio: Signed in Blood, a historical adventure novel for middle-grade youth written by children’s author Mark David Smith, a former resident of North Delta. The event will be held Nov. 7 from 1-3 p.m. at Chapters Strawberry Hill, 12101 72 Ave.

The 2015 SFU Community Summit event – THRIVE! Surrey in 2030: A Residents Lab on the Future of their City? takes place Nov. 7. Apply now to be one of 100 selected residents to build a vision for a city where everyone can thrive. During this day of city planning, visioning, community building, and discussion, participants will have the chance to creatively construct their Surrey of 2030, learn about civic issues, and inform the City of Surrey’s updated Sustainability Charter. Apply here and build your vision: http://at.sfu.ca/baXesI. Only a few seats remain.

Singer Lisa Brokop brings The Patsy Cline Project to the Surrey Arts Centre (13750 88 Ave.) on Nov. 7, 8 p.m., paying tribute to her favourite country music legend. Tickets are $40 for adults, $35 for seniors, available at

tickets.surrey.ca or by calling 604-501-5566.

The African Children’s Choir is holding two concerts in Surrey. They’re on Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. at Good Shepherd Church, 2250 150 St., and on Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. at at Legacy-Church of the Nazarene, 9012 160 St. For more information, call 604-589-4670.

Cloverdale United Church (17575 58A Ave.) is hosting a craft fair on Nov. 14 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Crafters are needed ($25 per table). Call 604-574-5813.

Creative Treasures’ 12th-annual Christmas Craft Fair takes place Nov. 11-14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at (Nov. 12 until 8 p.m.) at East Delta Hall on the corner of Highway 10 and 104 Street. Free admission and parking. The event sponsors the Christmas Pyjama Drive. For details, email [email protected]

A Night of Hope & Remembrance, benefi ting the BC Cancer Foundation and SEMO Foundation, takes place Nov. 14 at the Bell Performing Arts Centre (6250 144 St.) The show features performances by Artistic Expressions, Emma Alves, Matt Borck and Shan-E-Punjab Arts Club. Tickets are $10/15, available at www.bellperformingartscentre.com or 604-507-6355.

Writers are wanted for the Youth Arts Council of Surrey’s one-act play competition, Write On. Youth aged 13-21 are encouraged to submit their work for a chance to win cash, be mentored and see their creation come to life on stage. The deadline is Nov. 15. Email [email protected] for details and an entry form.

Elim Village’s seventh-annual craft fair takes place Nov. 13 from 6-9 p.m. and Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Oasis Building, 9008 158 Street (enter off 160 Street and 90th Avenue.) Art, crafts and baked goods. Admission is free.

The Vaudevillians present their annual fundraising show Vintage Vaudeville, Nov. 14 and 15 at 2 p.m. at the Surrey Arts Centre (13750 88 Ave.) Tickets are $22, with proceeds benefi ting a bursary for performing arts students at Douglas College. For tickets and more information, call 604-501-5566 or check tickets.surrey.ca

The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra performs Nov. 16, 8 p.m. at Bell Performing Arts Centre (6250 144 St.), featuring pianist Stephen Hough and conductor Bramwell Tovey. Tickets ($28-42) are available at www.bellperformingartscentre.com or by calling 604-507-6355.

On Nov. 18 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Surrey Art Gallery and the Surrey Art Gallery Association present a guided bus tour of four galleries in this rapidly changing area, once the site of light industry and now home to

a cluster of new visual art venues. For ages 16 and up. Cost is $75. Bring a bag lunch or pick something up on site. Check the “Events” section at www.surrey.ca/artgallery to register.

Just For Laughs, Relationship Edition, comes to Surrey Nov. 19 7:30 p.m., featuring Gerry Dee, Cristela Alonzo, Robert Kelly and Graham Chittenden. The show takes place at the Bell Performing Arts Centre (6250 144 St.) Tickets are $45.50, available by calling 604-507-6355 or online at www.bellperformingartscentre.com

Surrey Little Theatre presents Tim Firth’s Calendar Girls until Nov. 21 with evening shows Thursdays to Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinées Nov. 8 and 15 at 2 p.m. The theatre is located at 7027 184 St. Phone 604-576-8451 or visit brownpapertickets.coms for for ticket information.

Now is the chance to get ahead on your Christmas shopping! The Surrey Art Gallery Association’s annual Art & Craft Show & Sale is happening on Friday, Nov. 27 from 5 to 8 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 28 from 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Surrey Arts Centre. Browse one-of-a-kind items from the SAGA Gift Shop for that special someone in your life and help support local artists. In the spirit of Christmas, we invite you to bring a non-perishable food item to support our local food bank. Admission is free.

#101 - 13588 88th Ave, Surrey 604-593-6818 Open 11am - 1am DailyBEAR CREEK PUB

WATCH ALL YOUR FAVOURITE GAMES HERE!

BEARBEARCREEKCREEK

& GRILL& GRILL

Appy Hour Special $5

Everyday, 7 days a week from 11-4 pm and7-10 pm

$$669999Beer & BurgerBeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerrrr &&&&&&&&&& BurgeerBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB rr

GAME DAY SPECIAL

WINGS 30¢WITH BEVERAGE PURCHASE

Instructions:1. Set oven to 350ºF.2. Combine pork with seasonings, salt through paprika. Mix well with your hands.3. Add raw egg, onion, peppers, carrot, and parsley and combine well.4. Spread half the pork mixture out on a baking sheet, forming an oval about 6”

long x 4” wide x 1” thick.5. Wrap a couple of spinach leaves around each boiled egg and place lengthwise

over pork base mixture.6. Cover each egg/spinach with half the remaining pork mixture.7. Shape the loaf into a regular meatloaf shape and place in loaf pan.8. Bake 30 minutes 9. Glaze with sauce (optional)

AnytimeMeat LoafMeat LoafServes 4Ingredients:1 lb ground pork1 tsp salt1 tsp dry sage1 tsp dry mustard1 tsp black pepper1 Tbsp maple syrup (plus another for the glaze, below)½ tsp paprika1 raw egg½ cup diced onion

½ cup diced bell peppers and/or jalapeño1 carrot grated2 Tbsp minced parsley2 hard boiled eggs, peeledFew laves spinach

Glaze (optional):1 Tbsp maple sryup1 tsp Sriracha sauce

8170- 120th St, Surrey Corner of 82nd & Scott Rd. 604-596-4994

Fall FavouritesFall Favourites

8170- 120th St Surrey Corner of

Everything you about breakfast.

NovemberNovember EventsEvents and and EntertainmentEntertainment

Surrey’s Home For Live Music

CALL US TO BOOK YOUR SCHOOL/SPORTS TEAM FUNDRAISERS HERE!

Donegals Irish House • 12054 96 Ave, Surrey • (604) 584-2112Donegals Irish House • 12054 96 Ave, Surrey • (604) 584-2112

LIVE JAM’SLIVE JAM’STues & ThursTues & Thurs

8:30pm8:30pm

MEAT DRAWSMEAT DRAWS1-4pm, 1-4pm, SundaySunday

• $7 Mondays - New York Steak • $7 Mondays - New York Steak Sandwich with fresh cut friesSandwich with fresh cut fries

• $6 Tuesdays - Surrey’s Best Burgers handmade with fresh Burgers handmade with fresh cut friescut fries

• 39¢ Wings - Sunday & Wed, always Fresh!always Fresh!

BANDBANDCALENDAR:CALENDAR:

FOODFOODSPECIALS:SPECIALS:

Join us for Join us for CANUCKSCANUCKS

Action!Action!

Nov 6 - 7 HeadroomNov 6 - 7 HeadroomNov 13 - 14 The ShindiggersNov 13 - 14 The ShindiggersNov 20 - 21 Smith and JonesNov 20 - 21 Smith and JonesNov 27 - 28 Hamilton HarvyNov 27 - 28 Hamilton HarvyDec 4 Ray Roper ProjectDec 4 Ray Roper ProjectDec 5 TramaDec 5 Trama

Page 12: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 12 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

JEFF NAGEL

Juggernauts like car-hailing app Uber and room renter Airbnb may be the biggest and most ob-vious examples of the

cloud-based sharing economy.

But speakers at Metro Vancouver’s Zero Waste Conference Th ursday said they ex-pect much more peer-to-peer collaboration

as the fi eld expands.And they told

delegates it holds great promise to help consumers reuse prod-ucts they’d otherwise throw out, or not buy new “stuff ” in the fi rst place – by borrowing or renting anything from a power drill to a pick-up truck from a willing stranger.

Borrowing from oth-ers to put underused equipment to broader use isn’t new, noted Sunil Johal, policy di-rector at the University of Toronto’s Mowat Centre.

But online networks mean instead of dozens of people you can ap-proach for something, there are thousands or millions.

Th e sharing revolu-tion is transformative in part because we increasingly live close together in cities but disconnected from our neighbours.

“Th e bonds of social cohesion have frayed as

our cities have gotten bigger and bigger and the sharing economy has stepped into that void to some degree,” Johal said. “Th e scale of these markets is much, much bigger than it ever has been.”

Repairing products that don’t have to be tossed out is a focus of a growing number of players.

“You’ve got to think of recycling as the last resort because it’s ultimately a lossy process that’s one of destruction,” said Eric Doster, of ifi xit.com, an open-source site that connects repair experts with learners.

Th e Vancouver Tool Library is one local service that lends out mainly donated tools, the Metro waste con-ference heard.

Founder Chris Diplock said the tool library has almost no problem with borrowed tools not coming back.

Critical to over-

coming trust issues – whether it’s for someone to rent out their tools, apartment or their car – are the recommendation systems that borrow heavily from social networks.

John Atcheson, who helped launch car-shar-ing service Getaround before becoming CEO of Stuff str, said it’s critical to have eff ec-tive systems to judge which users are good or bad.

Unlike car-shares like Modo or Car2Go that either collectively or corporately own vehi-cle fl eets, Getaround – which operates in fi ve U.S. cities and aims to launch in Vancouver – pairs individuals who

are willing to rent out their cars with others nearby who need one.

It’s not just physical products that can be shared or used more effi ciently as the shar-ing economy grows, but also real estate and storefronts.

Services like Task-Rabbit that take out corporate middlemen and connect people with marketable skills to buyers who need them will be increas-ingly popular, the panel said.

Peer-to-peer trans-actions in fi ve key sectors – transporta-tion, retail, accommo-dations, services and fi nance – are forecast to balloon from $15 billion to $335 billion over the next 10 years, Johal said.

“People are voting with their feet and their thumbs,” he said.

Finance is being re-shaped by crowdfund-ing services and online banking alternatives.

Johal credits Uber for opening many eyes to the change taking place and the potential for the future, although he said it’s arguably not truly a sharing econo-my company.

“It’s not peer-to-peer in the sense I can’t decide how much I am going to charge somebody for a ride. Th ere are set rates and Uber takes 20 per cent of the fee.”

Th e company, worth more than $50 billion, owns no vehicles of its own but like eBay connects willing buyers and sellers.

Car owners run their personal cars as taxis for extra money. Passengers who order a ride with the Uber app on their smart phone.

▶ PEER-TO-PEER SERVICES CAN CUT WASTE, SAY PANELISTS

The sharing revolution is just starting to roll▶ “People are voting with their feet and their thumbs.”SUNIL JOHAL

[email protected]

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Legal Services DirectoryLawyers Dwell on Small Details The lyrics from Don Henley`s The End of the Innocence– “lawyers dwell on small details “– proved to be true in the recent Supreme Court case of Matias v. Lou. The Judgment details precise shoulder movements over 15 medical visits to decide if the car crash caused a severe frozen shoulder.

The Judge also relied on an ultra sound done three years after the collision to conclude the collision did not cause the frozen shoulder. Earlier imaging might have won the day. Following the collision the doctors focus on the immediate problems, not testing for future problems. By contrast, lawyers focus on the need to get evidence to help prove the long term consequences. As is often true, future complications were not known early on. Only with the most diligent of investigations can potentially important future problems be discovered and proven.

Greg Smith, lawyer, has worked for accident victims for over 30 years. John M. Green | Lawyer

SINGLE GAME TICKETS ON SALE NOW. VISIT BCLIONS.COM

This project is a partnership between the University of Victoria and Fraser Health Diabetes Health Centres. We are seeking men who have experience with type 2

diabetes either themselves or with family members to provide telephone support as a Coach to another person who is currently having diffi culty managing their diabetes.

We will involve you in a 3-day training session and then pair you with a study participant. Each week the Diabetes Coach is expected to spend

30 minutes speaking to a participant over the telephone.

During the six month period we will provide you with ongoing support.

If you are interested in becoming a Diabetes Coach please contact the study coordinator, Suzanne at (604) 940 8973.

DIABETES COACH STUDYLooking for male coaches

Page 13: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

RICK KUPCHUK

For the first time in five years, Trevor Cox will be playing at home.

The 20-year-old Western Hockey League (WHL) veteran will soon suit up for the Vancouver Giants, who acquired the Surrey native in a trade with the Medicine Tigers last week, a deal which saw 19-year-old

defenceman Clayton Kirichenko and a draft pick head to Alberta.

“At first, I was a little surprised and a little upset about leaving Medicine Hat,” said Cox, who had played four full seasons with the Tigers prior to this season. “But at the same time, I was excited about coming to my hometown, and playing in front of family and friends every night. I’ve been getting more excited each day since the trade.”

Cox will give the Giants some offensive punch. The five-foot-eight, 165-pound forward finished second

NICK GREENIZAN

Halloween weekend was a scary one for the Surrey Ea-gles, as the BC Hockey League team dropped two games to division rivals.

On Friday at Chilliwack’s Prospera Centre, the Birds fell 7-2 to the Chiefs, and Sunday, kicked off the month of November with a 5-2 road loss to the Langley River-men.

“Th ings got a little bit rough for us there in Chilliwack, but on Sunday in Langley, I thought except for a couple last-minute goals, that was our game to win,” said Ea-gles coach Blaine Neufeld.

Th e Eagles sit in last place in the BCHL’s Mainland Division, with just four wins in 18 games. Th ey’re just three points back of the fourth-place Prince George Spruce Kings.

Defence continued to be a trouble spot for Surrey – the team has now given up 86 goals-against, which is second-worst in the league – who have played of late without a handful of injured regulars on the blue-line, as well as in net, where 20-year-old starting netminder Justin LaForest has bee sidelined.

Th ough the injuries have continued to pile up, Neufeld expected to have a full complement of players – or close – within the next week.

“We need to lock it down (defen-sively) – we want to eliminate second chances and quit chasing the play in our own end,” Neufeld explained. “I thought we did a lot better job of that Sunday, I thought we improved.”

In the goaltending department, reinforcement came prior to the team’s two-game weekend series, as Forbes Ploszaj was acquired from the West Kelowna Warriors for future considerations.

Th e 18-year-old newcomer started Sunday’s game against the Chiefs, stopping 32 shots. He was also pressed into action Fri-day, relieving starter Daniel Davidson late in the game.

“Daniel’s been playing really well for us lately, but we don’t want to put him in a position where he has to play every single game for us (until LaForest comes back),” Neufeld said. “Forbes will help us, and he fi ts in really well with our group.”

Th e second-year coach said he would play the hot hand in net until LaForest returns in December.

“Whoever is going well is going to (play),” Neufeld said.

Against the Chiefs Friday, Paul McAvoy and John Wesley scored for the Eagles, while McAvoy also scored Sunday, along with Donovan Ott.

Th e Eagles have another busy week upcoming, with a road game set for Langley Th ursday night, followed by a Friday game at South Surrey Arena against the visiting Salmon Arm Silverbacks, and a Sunday afternoon tilt, also at home, against the Vernon Vipers.

On Wednesday, Nov. 11, the Eagles will host a Re-membrance Day contest, at 2 p.m., against the Chiefs.

Surrey’s Trevor Cox dealt to the Giants

SPORTS

After four seasons with the Medicine Hat Tigers, Trevor Cox was traded to the Vancouver Giants last week. The Surrey native is expected to play his first WHL game in Vancouver some time in the next two weeks. COURTESY MEDICINE HAT TIGERS

▼ SURREY’S JUNIOR A HOCKEY TEAM LOSES TO CHILLIWACK CHIEFS AND LANGLEY RIVERMEN

▼ WESTERN HOCKEY LEAGUE VETERAN SPENT FOUR SEASONS WITH THE MEDICINE HAT TIGERS

Eagles drop two games on the road

continued on page 16

The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 13

Blaine Neufeld

Page 14: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

14 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 14 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

RICK KUPCHUK

Th eir three-game losing streak has been snapped, but not

before the Valley West Hawks lost another po-sition in the standings.

Th e Hawks lost 3-2 to the Fraser Valley Th underbirds at home Saturday afternoon in Langley, but won the rematch 2-0 Sunday in Abbotsford.

“It was a tough weekend, I thought we

deserved a sweep based on the way we played,” said Hawks head coach Jessie Leung. “But (Fraser Valley goalie Paul) Tucek played very well for them.”

Th e Hawks have a record of 8-3-1 (win-loss-tie), which leaves them tied for third place with the Okana-

gan Rockets in the BC Hockey Major Midget League, one point back of both the Vancouver Giants and Cariboo Cougars.

Valley West has two games in hand on the Cougars and the Rockets, and will visit Okanagan in Kelowna next weekend.

Against the Th un-derbirds, the Hawks had a pair of one-goal leads in Saturday’s game, yet lost for the third consecutive time. Ben Evanish opened the scoring midway through the fi rst peri-od, giving Valley West a 1-0 lead after one period. Ilijah Colina

assisted on the goal.Fraser Valley tied

the score just eight seconds into the second period, and the score remained 1-1 for the next 18 minutes. Evanish and Colina set up Christian Bosa, who scored a powerplay goal with 27 seconds left for a 2-1 Hawks

lead. But the Th un-derbirds responded quickly, tying the game 12 seconds before the second intermission.

Th e Th underbirds scored the only goal of the third period, net-ting the winner with

Hawks end slide with win over Thunderbirds▶ MAJOR MIDGET TEAM WINS ONE, LOSES ONE, SLIDES TO THIRD PLACE

continued on page 16

E N G I N E E R I N G

www.surrey.ca

The City of Surrey will be conducting smoke testing and video inspection of the sanitary sewer system in November and December 2015 in the area shown on the map below.

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t Rd

124

St

Old Yale Rd

Bc Hydro (SWM) Rwy

Lien Rd

109 Ave

Fir R

d

125

St

125A

St

Winram Rd

Larson Rd

106A Ave

124

St

150P

VC

150PE

1500

RC

P

125P

E

100PVC

75PVC

200AC

200DIP

1405RCP

1405

RCP

150P

VC

100PVC

100PVC

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100PVC

150P

VC

75PVC

100P

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C

75P

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150PE

75PVC

Schedule A-1: South Westminster Vacuum Sewer - Sanitary Service Laterals on "J" Line GIS SECTION

LEGEND

Sanitary Chambers - In Service

Inspection Chamber

Low Pressure Chamber

Vacuum Valve Chamber

Sanitary Laterals - In Service

Sanitary Laterals - In Service

Sanitary Mains - In Service

Surrey Owned

Metro Vancouver Owned

Properties with Private Service Lateral

To be Inspected (CCTV and Smoke Testing)

0 20 40 60 80 100Meters

SCALE: 1:3,300

Smoke testing will involve introducing a non-toxic, odorless, non-staining smoke into the sanitary sewer to identify potential leaks or areas where rainwater can enter the sanitary sewer. Smoke may be visible at building roof vents or seeping from other points of entry to the sanitary sewer system during the test. The smoke will dissipate quickly following the testing procedures.

Video inspection will involve inserting a small camera into the sanitary sewer to identify structural issues or groundwater leaks in the sanitary sewer.

By identifying and ultimately eliminating sources of rainwater and groundwater into the sanitary sewer system, we can help our environment while reducing the cost of sewage treatment and the need for system upgrading.

The Contractor’s typical hours of work will be from 7am to 6pm, Monday to Friday. Parking restrictions during working hours and minor traffi c obstructions should be expected.

For further information please contact the Contractor (Superior City Services Ltd.) at (604) 591-3434 or Samantha Ward at the City of Surrey, Engineering Department at (604) 591-4326.

NOTICE FOR SANITARY SEWER SMOKE TESTING AND VIDEO INSPECTION PROGRAM

A division of

Page 15: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 15 Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader 15

RICK KUPCHUK

Despite fall-ing short in the PACWEST provincial championship game, the Kwantlen Poly-technic University

(KPU) men’s soccer team achieved their main goal and will be playing in Quebec a week from now.

The KPU Eagles dropped a 2-0 decision to the

Capilano Blues in the Pacific Western Athletic Conference (PACWEST) final Saturday in Burnaby. In addition to their silver medals, the KPU men earned a

trip to the Canadian Colleges Athletic Association (CCAA) national champion-ship tournament in St. Lambert, Quebec Nov. 11-14.

After a strong first

half of the PACWEST regular season which saw the Eagles as-sume first place with a 5-1-2 (win-loss-tie) record, KPU went 0-4-2 in their next six games before

winning the season finale.

Kicking off against the Douglas College Royals in Friday’s semifinal match, also in Burnaby, the Eagles upset the first-place team 3-2 in overtime. Mateo Serka netted the win-ner late in the second extra period, and was named the Player of the Game.

In the final against Capilano, KPU conceded the first goal just six minutes into the game, and the second in injury time.

Just prior to last weekend’s playoff, PACWEST announced their all-star team which included a pair of KPU Eagles. Serka, with five goals in 10 games played, and Nawaf Binsaleh, with four goals scored in 12 games, were among the 11 players on the all-star squad.

Other local players on the all-star team included Douglas College forwards Yassin Essa and Spencer Deboice of Surrey. Deboice was also selected as the tournament’s Top Midfielder.

The Royals placed third, clinching the bronze medal with a 4-3 win over the Vancouver Island University Mariners. Douglas forward Isaac Kyei of Delta was the Player of the Game.

The KPU Eagles women’s soccer team had their season come to an end in Burnaby.

The Eagles placed fourth in the PACWEST standings with a 4-6-5 record. They then lost 2-0 to the first place Doug-las College Royals in Friday’s semifinal round. KPU lost by the same 2-0 score in the bronze med-al match Saturday against the Quest Kermodes.

South Surrey native Haley Eburne, a mid-fielder and graduate of Elgin Park Sec-ondary, was the lone Eagle named to the PACWEST women’s all-star team.

A pair of defenders from North Delta, Delview Secondary graduate Olivia Kap-peli of the Langara Falcons and Natalie Douglas of the Quest Kermodes, were also selected to the all-star team.

Kwantlen Eagles qualify for soccer nationals▶ MEN’S TEAM WILL COMPETE FOR CANADIAN CHAMPIONSHIP IN ST. LAMBERT, QUEBEC

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Page 16: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

16 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015 16 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

Kaelen Anderson of the Fraser Valley Thunderbirds goes down as he tangles with Valley West Hawks defenceman Ian Ross during a BC Hockey Major Midget League game Saturday at the Langley Events Centre. The Thunderbirds won 3-2. BOAZ JOSEPH

in the WHL scoring race last season with 29 goals and 109 points.

“We’re thrilled to add an elite level offensive player like Trevor to our lineup,” said Giants general manager Scott Bonner said in a release.

Cox, who played in the Semiahmoo Minor Hockey Association before moving to Medicine Hat, netted four goals and eight points with the Tigers before he was sidelined with an injury. He is expected to make his debut with the Gi-ants within the next week, and is excited at the opportunity.

“It was tough to day goodbye to my billet of the past four years, and to say goodbye to some of the guys I’ve played with for several seasons,” he said after practice with the Giants Monday. “But I’ve met with the team, they are a great group of guys. It’s been a crazy few days, but playing in front of my family will be a cool thing. My parents are very excited.”

While living at home with his parents in South Surrey, Cox is making the drive to South Delta almost daily to the Giants practice facility in Ladner, but expects to billet in Tawwassen to be closer to his teammates.

One of three 20-year-olds on the roster, Cox finds himself in a leadership group that includes a pair of 19 year-olds recently acquired from the Cal-gary Hitmen. Defenceman Ben Thomas and forward Chase Lang were acquired by the

Giants a day before trading for Cox. Surrey’s Jakob Stukel, forward Jackson Houck and netminder Cody Porter were sent to Calgary.

“They seem to want to push for the playoffs, and with the guys from Calgary coming in, we have more leadership and experience so it’s an achievable goal,” said Cox. “They (Giants) know I’m an offensive guy who can put up some numbers. I hope to keep doing that, and provide some leadership.”

As the Giants near the end of the first quarter of their season, they have slipped out of a playoff position in the Western Conference. Vancou-ver was swept by the Tri-City Americans last weekend, dropping a 2-1 overtime de-cision Friday night in Kenne-wick, Washington and losing the rematch 4-1 Sunday evening at the Pacific Colise-um. The G-men also lost 5-2 at home to this Lethbridge Hurricanes last Wednesday, leaving themselves with just one win in their last 10 starts.

With 11 points in 15 games played, Vancouver is in fourth position in the B.C. Division, two points out of the final playoff position in the West-ern Conference, which is now

held by the Americans.The Giants earned one point

Friday against Tri-City. Ty Ronning scored with seven minutes remaining in regu-lation time to tie the game 1-1, forcing a three-on-three overtime period. The Ameri-cans needed just two minutes to notch the winning goal.

Payton Lee was a standout in the Giants net, stopping 38 of 40 shots. Vancouver direct-ed 32 shots at the Americans net.

The Giants surrendered three unanswered goals in the last half of Sunday evening’s contest, allowing Tri-City to complete the sweep. The Americans took a 1-0 lead into the second period, but the Giants pulled even when Elliott Peterson beat Tri-City netminder Nicholas Sanders three minutes in.

Parker Bowles scored twice to put the Americans up 3-1 after 40 minutes, and Tri-City added another goal in the third period to clinch the victory.

The Americans outshot their hosts 27-20 and went one-for-four on the powerplay,. Van-couver was scoreless on five mad-advantage opportunities.

The Giants will host the Kamloops Blazers Friday night in the Pacific Coliseum at 7:30 p.m. The Blazers are in the B.C. Division basement, two points back of Vancouver. Af-ter a rough start to the season, Kamloops has won four of their last five games.

The Giants will travel into Washington again Saturday night to face the Everett Silvertips.

▶ EVANISH SCORES WINNING GOAL

▶ PARENTS ‘VERY EXCITED’ WITH TRADE

3:35 remaining.“Fraser Valley played very well

Saturday,” said Leung. “Th e diff er-ence was they capitalized on their chances, and we didn’t.”

Reece Klassen earned the shutout in Sunday’s victory, the second time this season the Hawks have held the opposition scoreless.

Neither team could score until Valley West went on the power-play late in the game. Evanish got the winning goal with 80 seconds

remaining, with Colina and Josh Bruce assisting.

“Evanish stepped up with a huge goal like he’s done all season,” said Leung. “We got the powerplay, drew up a play, and got the goal.”

Justyn Gurney added an insurance goal in the fi nal minute of play into an empty net.

Th e Hawks were without forwards Luka Burzan and Avin Gill, who were with Team BC at the Western Canada U16 Challenge Cup tourna-ment in Calgary. Team BC defeated Saskatchewan 7-2 in the bronze medal game.

▶ “It’s been a crazy few days, but playing in front of my family will be a cool thing.”TREVOR COX

from page 13

from page 14

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Page 17: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 17

A/P Clerk Needed - 1 year Contract

Career Need a lift? As a leader in Western Canada’s material handling industry, Arpac is seeking an A/P Clerk for our Delta location. This is a 1 year contract position ending on or before Nov 26, 2016.

We offer a competitive compensation package (including Competitive Wages, RRSP Program,

and Extended Health Benefits).

Find out more about this exciting opportunity by visiting www.arpac.ca.

How to apply: [email protected]

Accounts Payable Clerk Position Available

Career Need a lift?As a leader in Western Canada’s material handling industry, Arpac is seeking an A/P Clerk with 1-3 years’ experience for our Delta location. We offer a competitive compensation package (including Competitive Wages, RRSP Program, and Extended Health Benefits).

Find out more about this exciting opportunity by visiting: www.arpac.ca

How to apply: [email protected] or fax 604-940-4082

Carrier SupervisorThe Surrey Distribution Centre is looking for energetic and customer friendly individuals for its Circulation Department. The right candidate must have excellent communication and organizational skills. Your attention to detail and ability to work with minimum supervision set you apart from other applicants. Basic knowledge of MS Word, Excel and Outlook Express recommended.

Duties include overseeing 100+ youth carriers, recruit and hire new carriers, survey old and new delivery areas, monitor carrier performance and follow-up reader delivery concerns. A reliable vehicle is a must.

A vulnerable sector criminal record check is also mandatory. This permanent part-time position is available immediately.

Please forward resume to:Circulation ManagerSurrey Distribution CentreServing : • Surrey Leader • Surrey Now

• Cloverdale Reporter#200-5450 152nd Street, Surrey, B.C., V3S [email protected]

No phone calls please

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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

5 IN MEMORIAM

In Memory ofGary T. Robinson

March 4, 1956 - November 2, 2013It’s been two years since your sudden death. You continue to be present in our thoughts, deeds, prayers and hearts. Your legacy of the Trilogy Houses endures stronger than ever. Throughout much of your life you inspired many to change and live to their potential; in your death you continue to inspire us to be all we can be.

“I know for certain that we never lose the people we love, even to

death. They continue to participatein every act, thought and decision

we make. Their love leaves anindelible imprint in our memories. We fi nd comfort in knowing that our lives have been enriched by

having shared their love.”~ Leo Buscaglia

In Loving Memory,the residents, staff, board of

the Realistic SuccessRecovery Society; your manyfriends; red army teammates; colleagues; extended family;

your sons Derek, Trevor,and your wife Susan.

www.therecoverysociety.com

6 IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

Make a gift that honours the memory of a loved one.

604-588-3371championsforcare.com

8 PLACE OF WORSHIP

Need A Healing?A healing prayer.org

courtesy of the Christ mind.org

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

21 COMING EVENTS

ANTIQUE SHOWSunday, November 8th

Admission $1.75703 Terminal Ave. Vancouver

8:30am to 4:30pm Over 80 tables of antique &

collectible treasures.Join us on Facebook

For info 604 685 8843Always buying

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TABLES ONLY $40www.vancouverfl eamarket.com

33 INFORMATION

2016 BC Hunting Regulations Synopsis

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

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TRAVEL

74 TIMESHARE

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CHILDREN

86 CHILDCARE WANTED

CHILDCARE REQUIREDFull time caregiver required in Surrey at 14184 64A Avenue, Surrey, BC V3W 1R5 for 3 children ages 6 years, 4 years & 8 months. Duties include: prepare kids for school, lunch, dinner, bedtime, supervise while parents away from home, as well as some household chores and cooking.Salary: $11/hour, 40 hours/week.

* Optional accommodation available at no charge on a live-in

basis, this is not a condition of employment.

Please email resume to:[email protected]

Family of 4 req F/T, in-home CARE-GIVER/Hsekeeper. Flex Schedule a must. [email protected]

Family of 5 seeking in-home f/t caregiver for 3 children. Min Wage. Email: [email protected]

CHILDREN

86 CHILDCARE WANTEDF/T In-Home Caregiver/Hsekeeper is req for family of 4. Salary neg. Email: [email protected]

F/T In-Home Caregiver/Hsekeeper is req for family of 5. Driving is a must. [email protected]

IN HOME CAREGIVERKang family requires permanent, full time (40 hrs/week) Caregiver (Nanny) for their newborn baby and 7 year old daughter at their home located at 180 St. & 58 Ave in Surrey, BC. Duties include: supervise and taking care of the children, looking after their daily activities like bathing, dressing, prepare & serve meals, sterilizing bottles, taking care of emotional comfort, ensuring healthy and safe environment for children and take children for appointments. Speaking English is mandatory. Min 6 months training or 1 year experience in a similar role and high school or equivalent educa-tion. Optional accommodation available (own secured room with private bathroom and full use of household amenities for the dura-tion of employment available) at no charge on a live-in basis.Please note: This is not a condi-tion of employment. Salary:$10.70/hour. Email resume to:

[email protected]

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIESDRIVERS WANTED - Earn $20 per hour. Go to kater.com/drive or call 604-501-6921 for more information

GET FREE VENDING MACHINES Can Earn $100,000.00 + Per Year. All Cash-Locations Provided. Pro-tected Territories. Interest Free Fi-nancing. Full Details CALL NOW 1-866-668-6629Website: WWW.TCVEND.COM

HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in Walking/Dressing? Disability Tax Credit $2,000 Tax Credit $20,000 Refund. Apply today For Assistance: 1-844-453-5372.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

START A NEW CAREER in Graph-ic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Edu-cation or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

DRIVERS or HELPERS Full time, with own vehicle for

deliveries in Vancouver suburb.

Pay per delivery + gas.

Call George 604 - 594 - 4970 604 - 618 - 0480

102 ACCOUNTING/BOOKKEEPING

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

Long Haul Truck Drivers Gur-Ish Trucking Ltd. requires Class 1 Long Haul Truck Drivers(with air brake endorsement) for hauling loads throughout North America. Job duties will include: Operate and drive articulated trucks to transport goods; Plan travel schedule the routes; Con-duct pre-trip inspection; Monitor vehicle’s performance; Maintain log book. Must know English. Job is permanent full time, 50 hours/ week. $24/hour. Apply by mail to:

#207, 12837 76 Ave. Surrey, BC V3W 2V3 or Fax 604-591-8369

115 EDUCATION

Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca

HUGE DEMAND for Medical Tran-scriptionists! CanScribe is Canada’s top Medical Transcription training school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today! 1-800-466-1535. [email protected]

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!

130 HELP WANTEDCANADIAN FARMS Produce Inc. located at 16185 48th Ave. Surrey, B.C., V3Z 1E8, urgently requires full time, seasonal farm workers to work year round on their vegetable farms. Wages offered are $10.49/hr and duties incl; planting, maintain-ing, harvesting, washing & grading vegetables. This position requires no education, formal training or work experience. Accommodation is available if required. Interested candidates should be available to work anytime in different weather conditions and must be able to lift up to 55 lbs of vegetable boxes.Please fax resume: 604-574-5773.

WATKIN MOTORS FORD, Vernon, B.C. requires a Service Manager to lead 3 Advisors, 12 technicians. Go to watkinmotors.com, About us, Employment, to review required qualifi cations.

102 ACCOUNTING/BOOKKEEPING

FREE English for the Workplace 4

This project is made possible through funding from the Government of Canada

and the Province of British Columbia.

To register: please call Lynn at 604-547-1297Location: DIVERSEcity, 13455 76 Avenue, Surrey, BC

FREE English for the Workplace 4

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

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

118 EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES/RESUMES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

FLAG PEOPLEMust be Certifi ed and have a car. Full-Time. Medical/Dental. $15 - $21/hour post Probation. Please send resume to: [email protected] or visit bcroadsafe.com

. Hiring Flaggers-Must be certifi ed, $15-$18/hr. 604-575-3944

118 EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES/RESUMES

To advertise in print:Call: 604-575-5555 Email: [email protected]

Self-serve: blackpressused.ca Career ads: localworkbc.ca

Browse more at:

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used.ca reserved the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the used.ca Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ......... 1-8COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS .. 9-57TRAVEL .................................61-76CHILDREN ............................. 80-98EMPLOYMENT .................... 102-198BUSINESS SERVICES ............ 203-387PETS & LIVESTOCK ............... 453-483MERCHANDISE FOR SALE .... 503-587REAL ESTATE ..................... 603-696RENTALS .......................... 703-757AUTOMOTIVE .................... 804-862MARINE ........................... 903-920

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Two open heart surgeries.

One big need.

130 HELP WANTED 130 HELP WANTED

Page 18: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

18 The Surrey-North Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

BC’s largest High School Cafeteria Company

Now Hiring At A School Near You!!4-8 hour shifts available during the school day.

If you would enjoy summers, Christmas & spring break offemail: [email protected] or fax: 604-503-0951

with over 60 locations now interviewing for

www.benchmarkpainting.caCALL TODAY! 604-866-7080

Ask about our$99

ROOM SPECIAL

Immediate Openings:

RAMP SERVICES AGENT Vancouver International Airport (YVR)

About Us: Swissport Canada Inc. is the leading Ground Services Provider to the aviation industry. Job Responsibilities:

Please send resume: [email protected] or Fax: 604.207.9941 or apply online: www.swissport.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

GREENHOUSE LABOURERSP (Delta) Limited Partnership operation looking for steady, hardworking, energetic individu-als that are able to do plant care, harvesting, sorting grading & packaging and general cleanup and workday preparations. The positions advertised are full time permanent positions for all seasons. Job Location 10250 Hornby Dr. Delta, BC V4K3N3 Wage $10.50/hr plus AD&D benefi ts. Positions available immediately. English language not required. Positions open to all persons (incl. youth, aboriginals, new immigrants and all others) demonstrating their ability to meet expectations of full time, physical work in greenhouse environment.

To apply submit resume to: [email protected] or by fax to 604-607-7656

• Grocery Clerks• Cashier • Sushi Clerk• Meat Clerk • Bakery

New Store Opening in Station Square, Burnaby. On skytrain route.

• Competitive Benefi tsPackage & Industry Wages

• Flexible Hours • Opportunity For Advancement

Apply on-line today for yourNovember 9th interview

www.pricesmartfoodsjobs.com

132 HOME STAY FAMILIES

MATURE couple wanted for full-time, live-in, caretaking position on a private island near Whaletown, B.C. Must be familiar with boats, have valid driver’s license, basic fi rst aid. Familiarity with basic main-tenance, groundskeeping. Able to live in a remote location. Send re-sume to Subtle Island Enterprises, P.O. Box 286, Whaletown, B.C. V0P 1Z0 or to [email protected]

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

COOKChili House Restaurant located at 19571 Fraser Highway, Surrey BC offers Indian style Chinese dishes (Hakka Cuisine), and needs aCOOK specializing in Indian style Chinese dishes. Job Duties will include menu design & planning, cooking daily meals and take out, labour and food cost control, and kitchen staff development and su-pervision. Salary is $19.50/hour. Some high school required, and a minimum 3 years combination of work experience and training.

Email resume to:[email protected]

COOKS Experienced only need apply.

Apply within with resume. Attn MikeNew York New York Restaurant,

Unit 301 - 6361 152nd St., Surrey.

130 HELP WANTED

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

INDUSTRIAL MECHANIC(MILLWRIGHT)

The Langley Concrete Group Wants You!

We are a local progressive concrete pre-cast company based in Chilliwack. Duties include; preventative maint., scheduled repairs, and quick response repairs to ensure our modernized equipment runs effi ciently. Routine equipment inspections and repairs are required.The Successful candidate must have good problem solving, diag-nostic, interpersonal, and time management skills. Must be able to work fl exible hours in a variety of conditions. Experience working with electrical systems and PLC programs would be a defi nite asset.Minimum requirements include completion of ITA certifi cate of qualifi cation as an Industrial Mechanic, inter - provincial red seal endorsement, & a certifi cate of apprenticeship. Previous work experience in a related industry would be an asset.

OUR COMPANY OFFERS:1.) Attractive Wages &

Excellent Employee Benefi ts.2.) Supportive, Engaged

Atmosphere With ChangeMinded Management Group.

3.) Company SponsoredSocial Activities.

Please e-mail resume,including cover letter &

references: [email protected]

PLUMBERSJourneyman & Apprentices

(2nd, 3 rd & 4 th Year)Respected Mechanical Contractor req. Journeyman and Apprentice Plumbers for all aspects of Com-mercial Institutional Mechanical work (New Construction). Previ-ous experience is an asset. Team Environment.

Long Term Opportunities Avail.Competitive Wages, & Excellent Benefi ts.

Fax: 604.576.4739 or E-mail: [email protected]

Production Welders Surrey light metal fabrication shop requires experienced welders. Applicants must have minimum of 1 year experience welding .035 MIG or have CWB ticket. Wage: $16.42/hr to start, $18.24/hr after 30 days worked.We offer a complete benefi t package.

Email resume to:[email protected]

130 HELP WANTED

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

164 WAREHOUSE

NOW HIRINGWarehouse Positions

Ingram Micro is hiring for multiple general warehouse positions on a contract basis. Positions start imme-diately.

Apply by:Fax: 604-276-8359

Email: [email protected]

OR Drop off at: 7451 Nelson Road,

Richmond, B.C.www.ingrammicro.ca

PERSONAL SERVICES

182 FINANCIAL SERVICES

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB.

1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

NEED A LOAN? Own Property? Have Bad Credit? We can help! Call toll free 1-866-405-1228 www.fi rstandsecondmortgages.ca

. Need Cash? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000. SnapCarCash. 604-777-5046

TAX FREE MONEYis available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mort-gage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.

Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or

604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

242 CONCRETE & PLACING

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

* Excavation & Reinforcing* Re-Re Specialists

34 Years Exp. Free Estimates.coastalconcrete.ca

Call: Rick (604) 202-5184

UNIQUE CONCRETEDESIGN

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

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

FREE ESTIMATES

257 DRYWALL

PSB DRYWALL LTD.★ All Board-ing, Taping, Framing & Texture. In-sured work. Dump Removal Ser-vice. 604-762-4657 / 778-246-4657

260 ELECTRICAL

NEIGHBOURS ELECTRICLicensed, Warrantied, Affordable. Renos & small jobs. Res & comm. 7 Days. Free est. 604-710-5758.

LOW RATES 604-617-1774Licensed, Bonded, Expert trouble shooter. 24/7. 100% guaranteed.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

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

All Electrical. Low Cost. Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos Panel changes ~ 604-374-0062

269 FENCING6’ CEDAR FENCING.

Free est. Red Rose Landscaping. Harbiee 604-722-2531

281 GARDENINGSHINE LANDSCAPING

*Grass Cutting *Hedge Trimming*Yard Clean *Pruning *Pressure Wash

[email protected] 778-688-3724

.Port Kells Nursery

.Jim’s Mowing. 310-JIMS (5467).

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

281 GARDENING

Prompt Delivery Available7 Days / Week

Meadows LandscapeSupply Ltd.

✶ Bark Mulch✶ Lawn & Garden Soil

✶ Drain Gravel ✶ Lava Rock✶ River Rock ✶Pea Gravel

(604)465-1311meadowslandscapesupply.com

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTSGUTTER & ROOF Cleaning/Power Washing since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Simon, 604-230-0627

****GUTTER CLEANING****SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE

~~ Call Ian 604-724-6373 ~~

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

RICHGOLD Contr. Ltd. Bsmt suites, framing, drywall, paint, deck-ing, fl ooring, crown moulding & all kinds of reno’s. Sam 604-992-8474.

HANDYMAN CONNECTIONHANDYMAN CONNECTIONHandyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations - Repairs - 604.878.5232

All kinds of renos. Framing, fl ooring, kitchen, bath, bsmt, roofi ng, siding, fi nishing carpentry. 778-898-6815

A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing,

reroofi ng. Dhillon 604-782-1936.

BEAUTIFUL BATHROOMPlumbing + Drywall + Elect. + Tubs &

Showers & Sinks + Toilets & Tile + Fan + Countertop + Painting = = BEAUTIFUL BATHROOM!!

Sen disc. Work Guar.17 yrs exp. CallNick 604-230-5783, 604-581-2859

288 HOME REPAIRS

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

296 KITCHEN CABINETS

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

Call Raman @ 604-561-4041.

317 MISC SERVICES

✶Dump Site Now Open✶SBroken Concrete RocksS

$25.00 Per Metric TonSMud - Dirt - Sod - ClayS

$25.00 Per Metric TonGrassSBranchesSLeavesSWeeds

$59.00 Per TonMeadows Landscape Supply

604-465-1311

320 MOVING & STORAGE

ABE MOVING & Delivery& Rubbish Removal$30/hr. per Person • 24/7

604-999-6020

AFFORDABLE MOVINGwww.affordablemoversbc.com

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

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

604-537-4140

.Miracle Moving 604-720-2009

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

polarbearpainting.com$299 ~ 3 Rooms walls only 2 coats

call: 604-866-6706

NORTH STARS PAINTINGwww.northstars-painting.com

AMAZING WORK,AMAZING VALUE!

778.245.9069

www.paintspecial.com 778-322-2378 Lower Mainland

604-996-8128 Fraser ValleyRunning this ad for 10yrs

PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299

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

Cloverdale Premium quality paint.NO PAYMENT until Job is

completed. Ask us about ourLaminate Flooring.

A-1 Painting Company - Interior / Exterior 20 years exp. Summer Special 10% off (604)723-8434

~ PRO PAINTERS ~INTERIOR / EXTERIORQuality Work, Free Estimates

Member of Better Business BureauWCB INSURED

Vincent 543-7776

338 PLUMBING

LOCAL PLUMBER $45 Service Call Plumbing, Heating, Plugged Drains. Mustang Plumbing 778-714-2441

~ Certifi ed Plumber ~ON CALL 24 HOURS/DAY

Reno’s and RepairsFurnace, Boilers, Hot Water Heat

Plumbing Jobs ~ Reas Rates

~ 604-597-3758 ~Full Service Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area.1-800-573-2928

A Gas Fitter ✭ PlumberFurnaces, Boilers, Hot Water

Heating, Hotwater Tanks, Drain/Duct Cleaning & Plumbing Jobs.

✭ 604-312-7674 ✭✭ 604-507-4606 ✭

10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More

Call Aman: 778-895-2005

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

341 PRESSURE WASHING

All Gutter Cleaning. Window & RoofFULL HOUSE CLEANINGCall Victor 604-589-0356

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

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

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT!604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca

ABIAN RUBBISH REMOVALPROMPT & RELIABLE.

Free Estimates. (604)897-3423

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

Brads Junk Removal.com. Same Day Service. Affordable Rates! 604.220.JUNK (5865)

RICK’SRUBBISH REMOVAL

- Residential - Commercial - Construction - Yard WasteIN BUSINESS OVER 20 YEARS

~ FREE ESTIMATES ~Call Rick 604-329-2783

372 SUNDECKS

. Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688.Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com

374 TREE SERVICES

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

TREE BROTHERSSPECIALIST

Tree Removal/Topping/Spiral Thinning/Hedge Trimming/Stump

Grinding. Free Estimates.WCB/Fully Insured

$25 Off with this AdJerry, 604-500-2163

PETS

477 PETS

5 month old male MASTIFF PUPPY all shots, tail docked. Also male DOBERMAN, 2 yrs old. $900/each. 778-895-8611 or 778-218-3050

AKITA PUPSChampionship. $800 each.

Call 604-751-0191

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

UKC/ABKC Reg. Extreme Pocket Size American bully champion bloodline pups $1500 604-763 7063

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

524 UNDER $200

DIESEL GAS TANK - $150 OBO. (604)507-8733

560 MISC. FOR SALE

TARGET STEEL SALES. New and Used sea containers. 604-792-3434 or [email protected]

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

WHERE DO YOU TURN

YOUR NEWSPAPER:The link to your community

TO LEARNWHAT’S

ON SALE?

Page 19: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

Wednesday November 4 2015 The Surrey-North Delta Leader 19

The right legal expertise, without the legal jargon.

Legal issues can feel overwhelming if you do not understand the jargon that goes with them. We explain the law in plain language and break

complex problems into understandable, manageable pieces so you can make informed decisions about your options.

Rosalyn Manthorpe Nicole Tam Michael Gemmiti

Manthorpe Law Offi ces 200, 10233 - 153 Street | Surrey, BC V3R 0Z7 Phone: 604.582.7743 | Fax: 604.582.7753 | manthorpelaw.com

Centrally located near the Guildford Town Centre Mall in Surrey

Just right...for all your legal needs.

ACROSS1. Young oyster5. French

revolutionist10. Rages14. -- au rhum18. Bonito cousin19. Roman magistrate:

Var.20. Dismounted21. Sikorsky or

Stravinsky22. Dorothy’s

destination: 2 wds.25. Small part for a

star: 2 wds.27. Maul28. Kind of glass29. Blades or Tejada31. Functions32. Reddish color33. Hardened by heat34. Metric measure35. Rock or

Hemsworth38. “Miss --”40. With anger44. -- couture45. Ancient monument47. A certain promise48. Italian isle49. Compare51. Specialty52. DEA agent53. English isle54. “-- Pyle, U.S.M.C.”55. Cretan king56. Club performer57. Like a plant part59. Wand60. Buck’s Fizz61. Not suitable62. -- -cousin63. Dilate64. Krueger or Fender66. Reduced67. Appointment book70. Stands71. Drays

72. WWII weapon73. Story of a kind74. Says further75. Something

soothing76. -- -- Salaam77. File78. Teachers’ org.79. Film production

company: 2 wds.81. Chiastolite82. Grains of salt84. Parsed anagram86. Signed87. River in Italy88. Droplets89. Boundless91. Became less94. Caustic95. Hardy’s

Durbeyfield96. Liturgical vestment99. Like a tiara101. Pacific Fleet

headquarters: 2 wds.

104. Wings105. Simon or Diamond106. Type size107. Marine plant108. Lake109. Whig’s opponent110. Senior member111. Athletic eventDOWN1. Short distance2. Mountain lion3. Freshly4. Seaman5. Pertaining to song6. Confuses7. Stack of hay8. Clay, subsequently9. Quadrilateral10. Confronted11. Man in New

Zealand12. Faint13. Place for some

passengers14. Two-tiered galley15. Greek contest16. Flee17. An Olympian23. Entertain24. Gold-rush region26. Leaf shape30. Profited32. Fiber plant33. Muzzled dog34. Fellows35. Nestling’s cry36. City in Germany37. Rolling Stones hit:

2 wds.39. Inquired40. Coastal bird41. Deadly snake42. Slow-moving

primate43. New Mexico’s

flower46. -- guard49. Deranged50. False: Abbr.52. Old Roman name54. Flowers, for short55. Pals56. Kind of vinegar58. Chile’s range59. Mixologist60. Davis the

trumpeter62. Incise

63. Conduct64. A Euro

predecessor65. Jockey66. Grows ashen67. Malediction68. Airplane area69. Lassoed71. Monte --72. Heat and

hurricane75. Tending to climb76. Ticketless

passenger77. Declaim79. Scatter80. Understand81. -- brevis83. Lustrous fabric85. Slender88. Without skill90. Wan91. Blind as -- --92. Lugosi or Bartok93. Open94. Scion95. Serving item96. Competent97. Place for theatergoers98. Unruly one100. Man in galleon102. Past103. Broadside

Answers to Previous Crossword

CrosswordCrossword This week’s theme:Lapidaryby James Barrick

© 2015 United Feature Syndicate, Dist. by Universal Uclick

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

560 MISC. FOR SALE

SAWMILLS from only $4,397 - MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD:www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.

566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

PIANO - Beautiful Antique Upright. Gerhard Heintzman- made in 1900. Good cond! $1200/obo. Leave msg

at 604-852-2238 (Abbotsford)

REAL ESTATE

625 FOR SALE BY OWNER

N. DELTA - Sunshine Hills, totally reno’d home. large corner lot, lots of potential. $970,000: Phone (778)237-7925 or 778-714-0554

627 HOMES WANTED

Yes, We PayCASH!

Damaged or Older Houses! Condos & Pretty Homes too!

Check us out!www.webuyhomesbc.com

604-626-9647

639 REAL ESTATE SERVICES

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

CEDAR GARDEN APARTMENTS

13370 King George Blvd.Bachelor units - $595/mo

1 bdrm - $675/mo2 bdrm - $750/mo

Wheelchair accessibleNear skytrain

604-771-2609

Cedar Lodge and Court Apts

Quiet community living next to Guildford Mall.

Clean 1 & 2 bdrms, Corner units avail. (some w/ensuites)

Call for Availability. Cable, Heat, Hot Water incl. Onsite Mgr.

604-584-5233 www.cycloneholdings.ca

SUNCREEK ESTATES★ Large 2 & 3 Bdrm Apartments★ Insuite w/d, stove, fridge, d/w★ 3 fl oor levels inside suite★ Wood burning fi replace★ Private roof top patio★ Walk to shops. Near park, pool, playground★ Elementary school on block★ On site security/on site Mgmt★ Reasonable Rent★ On transit route ~ Sorry no pets

Offi ce: 7121-133B St., Surrey604-596-0916

SURREY, 126/72 Ave. 2 Bdrm apt, $945/mo. Quiet family complex, no pets, 604-543-7271.

SurreyBeautifully Upscale

1 Bdrm Suites - perfect for the discerning renter!

Classic suites starting at $729.Elite suites starting at $839.

Located close to bus routes & skytrain, 20 min walk to Surrey

City Centre.Max occ. 2 people. Sorry no pets.

Call Surrey Gardens Apts at 604-589-7040 to view

our Elite Suites!

733 MOBILE HOMES & PADSNEWTON MOBILE HOME PARK.

2 Large RV Pads available formobile home. Call 604-597-4787.

RENTALS

736 HOMES FOR RENT

.Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.

LANGLEY, 5 Yrs new. Renovated 1 bdrm & den. $900/mo. New appls incl W/D. Garden view. N/S, N/P. Ref’s req’d. Nov.1st 604-514-4888

N. SURREY, Grosvenor Rd. 3 bdrm Cls to schl/shops/bus, easy access to freeway/K.G. Blvd. Avail immed. 604-594-6502 or 604-596-8681.

SURREY 107/130 St. - 4 bdrm house with 2 living areas, kitchen, lndry. $1650/mo + utils. Avail. now. (778)321-7192 or 604-825-3838

739 MOTELS, HOTELS

LINDA VISTA Motel Luxury Rooms w/cable, a/c & kitchens. 6498 King George Hwy. Mthly, Wkly & Daily Specials. 604-591-1171. Canadian Inn 6528 K.G.Hwy. 604-594-0010

750 SUITES, LOWER

CEDAR HILL 1 bdrm grnd lvl suite, Avail now. NS/NP, $650/m inc utils cble. 604-588-9871, 604-803-7144

N. DELTA; HUGE 1 bdrm ground fl oor ste. Brand new kitchen & bath. $750/mo. N/S, N/P. 778-237-7925

NEWTON 1 Bdrm bsmt ste, near Kwantlen College. $750 incl prkg & wifi . No cable or laundry. Avail now. N/S, N/P. (604)502-6806

751 SUITES, UPPER

GUILDFORD 3bdr upper, 1.5 baths, laund, internet, pet ok, n/s. Dec 15. $1340 +60% utils. 778-862-3600.

RENTALS

752 TOWNHOUSES

SURREY 174/57 Ave. 2 Bdrm T/H. $920/mo. Quiet family complex,shopping mall across the street, no pets. Call 604-576-9969

TRANSPORTATION

818 CARS - DOMESTIC

2004 CHEVY CAVALIER130,000kms auto, all power, a/c, c/d, keyless entry, alarm, spoiler. Very clean. $3000. 604-500-5540

2006 Chrysler Sebring Touring135K, Auto, Loaded, Exc cond!! $4900 fi rm. 604-715-7469 (Sry)

2007 Chrysler PT Cruiser, auto, 4cyl. 85,000 kms. Lots of options, red. $4400 fi rm. 604-538-9257

2013 MAZDA 2 - 4/dr hatch, auto 48K, some options, green, clean car, $9000 fi rm. 604-538-4883

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

2005 PT CRUISER convertible, Custom paint & body work,

$16,800 into car. 5yr 110,000kms warranty. $8500. 604-445-1596

TRANSPORTATION

838 RECREATIONAL/SALE

2008 FLEETWOOD FIESTA LX 34’ MOTORHOME, 2 slides, 92,000kms, all new tires, many extras. SNOWBIRD SPECIAL$59,500. Pls call: 604-808-2230

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVALThe Scrapper

#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle REMOVAL~~ ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT ~~

$$$ PAID FOR SOME. 604.683.2200

851 TRUCKS & VANS

2004 CHEV VENTURE, 152,000 kms, automatic, exc. cond. Silver. $3000: (604)364-2391

2005 CHEVY UPLANDER - 166K, exc. cond. Garage kept.

Reg. maint. $4200/obo. 778-893-8151

TRANSPORTATION

851 TRUCKS & VANS

2008 UPLANDER LT, 130K, Cherry colour, all power,

No accidents. Very clean. $5400. 604-500-5540

Browse more at:

Your localClassifi edsSolution.

Page 20: Surrey North Delta Leader, November 04, 2015

20 The Surrey-Nor th Delta Leader Wednesday November 4 2015

15930 FRASER HWY HOURS: EVERYDAY 7am - 10pm

www.freshstmarket.com • [email protected] • 778.578.8970

facebook.com/freshstmarket twitter.com/freshstmarket

AD LIMITS IN EFFECT WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

FLEETWOOD, SURREY

SALE3 DAY NOVEMBER 3-5TUES, WED & THU

329eachSAVE $1.70 each

GREEK HOUSE

HOMOUS OR TZATZIKI 227 g

SAVE $5 each

KASHI

GO LEAN CRUNCH CEREAL 1 kg

SAVE $2 each 369each

SAPUTO

NATURAL CHEESE SLICES 160 g – 200 g

599each

178/100g

SAVE $1.71/100g

Ocean WiseCOHO SALMON FILLETS frozen

SAVE $16 each

COOKED TIGER PRAWNSpeeled & deveined frozen 31/40 count 907 gLIMIT 3 PER FAMILY

399each

CHINA

FRESH ORGANIC MANDARIN ORANGES 1.81 kg

15930 FRASER HWY FLEETWOOD, SU

eachSAVE $1.70 eachTZATZIKI 227g

CHI

1.8

4

HOT

BUY ONE, GET ONE

FREE!SAVE $16.99 on 2

SCHNEIDERS

HAM HALVES fat free or old fashioned 800 g

1199each

SAVE $7 each

NEW ZEALAND SPRING LAMB

ROSEMARY & GARLIC RACK OF LAMB frozen 354 g

each

LBBAG2

HOT HOT

SAVE $1 each

ALL BUTTER CROISSANTS fresh baked in store 3994

PK

SAVE $2.38 on 2

SANTA CRUZ

ORGANIC LEMONADEor Limeade 946 mLplus recycle & deposit $52

FOR

ALL BUTTER CROISSANTS

HOTSuper

1599

QUANTITIESWHILE

LAST!