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A2 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A2 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
LOOKING BACK/LOOKING AHEAD: SCHOOL DISTRICT’S DEFICIT
Grant [email protected]
Back to school meant back to the cutting board for New Westminster school trustees in 2012.
When the board of education members headed off for summer holidays after their final meeting in June they were feeling pretty good about the district’s finances. They’d been told it appeared the 2011-12 budget would be balanced and the previous $521,000 deficit that was
carrying over would be covered.
Hopefully they enjoyed their summer vacation, because their first day back they learned appearances were deceiving and the district’s finances had a failing grade in 2011-12. Instead of a balanced budget the district was actually headed for a deficit of more than $2.2 million for 2011-12. Combined with the previous deficit they were looking at a shortfall approaching $2.8
million overall.That’s an F on any report
card.This was nothing new,
however, since it was the district’s third deficit in 11 years. Parents demanded to know what happened. The answers were vague.
The board’s composition wasn’t exactly harmonious to begin with, and they were divided on how to deal with it. Board chair James Janzen and vice chair Michael Ewen, now chair, proposed a consultant be
hired to look into what happened and how to fix it. Other trustees weren’t so sure it was the right way to go since consultants had been hired previously and the problems hadn’t been fixed. It took a while for the board to decide to go ahead, meeting several times behind closed doors to hammer out the consultant’s terms of reference.
At the end of October they finally decided to go ahead and announced
a couple of weeks later former Ministry of Education finance employee Joan Axford had got the gig at a cost of about $15,000.
In late November, her report painted a picture of the district’s financial management tracking procedures leaving a lot to be desired. Axford warned the board if the district kept on operating the way it had it would have an additional $2.2 million deficit for 2012-13, on top
of the one it was already grappling with.
Also in November, the New Westminster parent advisory council passed a motion of non-confidence in the board of education and senior administration for their handling of the district’s finances. The NWSS PAC also called for the provincial auditor-general and the Ministry of Education to intervene. The motions were backed by several other school PACs.
Board ‘surprised’ by $2.8-million deficit
see ‘ADJUSTMENTS’, A12
2013 CURBSIDE COLLECTION SCHEDULEThe 2013 Curbside Collection Schedule has been delivered to all single-family households in New Westminster. If you have not received your schedule, you can pick one up at the following locations: City Hall, Library, Community Centres, Recycling Depot, and Tow Yard/Animal Shelter.
Be sure to keep your calendar handy all year round as it contains important information on the City’s collection programs. You can also visit the City website at www.newwestcity.ca for more information.
MY-WASTE GARBAGE & RECYCLING COLLECTION APPWant pick-up schedules and collection reminders at your fi ngertips? Then get the app!
It’s easier than ever to remember your collection dates and access more information about the city’s collection programs. The new City of New Westminster app for smartphones and tablets can send customized weekly reminders or for when the collection day changes, such as holidays or special events. Never miss a garbage, recycling, or cleaner greener collection again!
The free app is available on your phone’s app store or at newwestcity.ca.
Please note, the app is currently only available for iPhones, iPads or Android phones.
FREE NUTRITION TOURSAt Thrifty Foods, Sapperton Store
Join Thrifty Foods’ Registered Dietitian Jessalyn O’Donnell for a fun, informative session on making healthy choices in the grocery store. Cut through confusing food marketing to shop wisely! This session will focus on areas of the store that most people fi nd diffi cult to make choices in such as breads, cereals, yogurts, etc. Bring your enthusiasm and questions to this informative session!
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HAPPY NEW YEAR!The Mayor, Council and staff of the City of New Westminster would like to wish all residents a very safe and happy New Year!
RECYCLE YOUR CHRISTMAS TREEPresented by New Westminster Fire Fighters
January 5th & 6th, 2013, 11:00 am - 4:00 pmCanada Games Pool parking lot
Join us for a BBQ, popcorn, face painting, music, extinguisher demos (weather permitting).
Trees will be chipped and recycled. All proceeds go to the New Westminster Fire Fighters’ Charitable Society. Make a donation and support local community charities!
For more information, call 604-519-1000.
CITYPAGE
UPCOMING
COUNCILMEETINGSMonday, December 31 No Council MeetingPlease note that council meetings are now video streamed online.
511 Royal Avenue, New Westminster, B.C. V3L 1H9 | Ph. 604.521.3711 | Fx. 604.521.3895 | www.newwestcity.ca
26 WEEKS TO EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESSARE YOU PREPARED?For 26 weeks, leading up to Emergency Preparedness Week starting May 5th, 2013, the New Westminster Emergency Management Offi ce will be providing weekly tips on how you can start your own emergency kit and emergency plan. Use our list to add small items to your emergency kits every week. This can make the job of creating a complete kit a little less daunting and intimidating, and remember most items can be found in your home.
New Westminster Emergency Management Offi ce is encouraging everyone to be prepared in case of an emergency. For more information on preparedness tips, please visit www.newwestcity.ca/emo.
Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A3Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A3
Infocus OpInIOn page 6 | Letters page 7
Mario [email protected]
Two giant construction cranes pierce the sky above Columbia Street at Eighth. Another will soon join them across the road. Hard-hatted construction workers scurry around, through and over the sites of the Anvil Centre and the Trapp + Holbrook condo development like busy ants.
There is life again in Downtown New Westminster.
But will these two high-profile projects, along with the Northbank condo tower at the east end of the Columbia Street strip, be the final pieces in the redevelopment puzzle that has stumped so many planners, schemers and entrepreneurs trying to reinvigorate the city’s historic heart?
For a straight strip of pavement, it’s been a long and winding road from Columbia Street’s glory days as the Golden Mile. Shoppers traveled from Vancouver and as far away as Chilliwack to spend their money at major retailers like Eaton’s, Kresge’s, Woolworth. In the evenings, the street was alive with young people attending its lively nightclub scene, or a movie at the resplendent Paramount theatre.
Malls tarnished the street’s glamour. The showcase retailers left for the swanky new climate-controlled digs, surrounded by acres of free parking. The nightclubs and theatres closed.
A sprawling parkade along Front Street—half built in the late ’50s, the rest in the early ’60s—couldn’t bring the people back. Nor could two stations for the new SkyTrain commuter rail service that easily connected
New Westminster’s Downtown to more than a million potential customers. People used it to get out of town, rather than come to town.
Except for the drug dealers, who exploited the cheap transport and occupied Downtown’s shadows and alcoves.
Over the years there have been any number of hopes and schemes that were to have been the catalyst for redevelopment, the spit that would bring the polish back to the Golden Mile: The parkade; a posh billiards club; a Russian submarine parked along Westminster Quay, followed by a riverboat casino; Antique Alley on Front Street; a giant tin soldier; the refurbishment of the Raymond Burr Theatre; the relocation of the police department into the former post office; Hyack Square; and even recent moves to create angled parking and the licensing of hot dog carts.
Along with each of those ideas came optimistic business people and retailers, each of them buying into the Downtown’s “potential,” its unique blend of reasonable rents, history, interesting spaces, central location and easy access. Most came and went, the potential unrealized. The only ones that stuck and multiplied were the wedding shops.
The completion this past summer of the $25-million Westminster Pier Park, the realization of Mark Shieh’s concept for a reimagined River Market, the start of construction of the Anvil Centre and the creative marketing by Robert Fung and Bob Rennie of the new Trapp + Holbrook condo
development have brought the buzz back.
This time, it’s louder than ever.Some of the credit must go to
Fung and Rennie, who built their sales pitch for Trapp + Holbrook around the history of the building and surrounding area. They also used social media to tap into a younger market, eager to be at the vanguard of the Next Big Thing
before prices go beyond their reach, as has occurred in other gentrified areas like Yaletown and Gastown in Vancouver. For the most part, it’s worked. Big City media from Vancouver have taken notice, profiling New West with breathless prose of hope and optimism.
But challenges remain.The Pier Park, for all the
accolades thrown its way, is still isolated from the Downtown, separated by a busy truck route, railroad tracks, the parkade and a vast expanse of privately owned asphalt that make it a challenge for casual visitors to access. It has a festival lawn, but the city has yet to host a festival there.
In 2001, before he was mayor, Wayne Wright pitched a tall ships festival as a way to lure visitors to New Westminster’s Downtown and waterfront. Despite renewed optimism and energy from new businesses like Michael Richardson’s Red Brick Home, the area still has a ways to go. Jason McGill’s Urban Gypsy is the latest casualty that won’t see the realization of the Downtown’s potential.neWsLeADer FILe
LOOkIng BAck/LOOkIng AheAD: cIty’s reneWAL cAtches eye OF the BIg MeDIA
The buzz is back, but how much is spin?
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A4 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A4 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
newsmaker of the year: jon cornish
Grant [email protected]
Jon Cornish has had his fair share of breakout years but 2012 was his best yet.
It paled in comparison to previous ones, and was so good he not only blew away Canadian Football League defenders, he blew away the competition in being named New Westminster NewsLeader Newsmaker of the Year.
In 2001, Cornish took B.C. high school football by storm racking up the yards (2,136 yards rushing) and rumbling over his opponents in his senior season with the St. Thomas More Knights, which won two provincial titles with Cornish in the backfield.
His play propelled him to a scholarship with the University of Kansas Jayhawks, where after a redshirt (training) season he saw limited playing time to begin with. But in his final year, 2006, he busted out big time, setting a single-season school rushing record with 1,467 yards. What makes that fact even more impressive is the Jayhawk
running backs that came before him: The list includes two pro football hall of famers, John Riggins and Gale Sayers.
From there he joined the Calgary Stampeders, at first playing on special teams and serving as a backup to American Joffrey Reynolds. Cornish eventually wrestled the starting position from Reynolds, and in 2012 he proved the doubters wrong.
What did they doubt? Well, there has been a long-held belief Canadians aren’t capable of being star running backs in the CFL.
Cornish and B.C. Lions running back Andrew Harris, a native of Winnipeg, blew that myth to smithereens in 2012.
Just like he did in 2006, Cornish rushed for 1,467 yards to set a record for Canadian running backs that former
Edmonton Eskimos rusher Normie Kwong had held for 56 years. It was also the first time a Canadian had been the CFL rushing leader since Orville Lee of the Ottawa Rough Riders in 1988.
Cornish did it by running over and through opposing tacklers. He scored 11 touchdowns in the process as the Stampeders made it all the way to the Grey Cup.
His play made him a big story on the national stage, and he brought his hometown along with him. During every Stampeders game on TSN the broadcasters would note he was a New Westminster native at least once. His on-field exploits earned him the honour of being named the CFL’s Most Outstanding Canadian, and he was a runner-up for the league’s Most Outstanding Player award.
Off the field, Cornish’s personality also captured the country, although not always in a positive way.
Biggest breakout yet
mario BarteL/newsLeaDerJon Cornish in 2002, after he signed a letter of intent to play for the University of Kansas Jayhawks.
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Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A5Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A5
Newsmaker of the year: JoN CorNish
His so-called Moon over Mosaic episode gained him almost as much national notoriety as his power runs through opposing defensive linemen and linebackers. Cornish was having a bad day at the office during a September game at Regina’s Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field. The Saskatchewan Roughriders fans were taunting him unmercifully. Cornish responded by pulling down his pants and mooning them.
The next day, however, he was profusely apologizing for his actions to head coach John Hufnagel, his teammates, the Stampeders organization and the Saskatchewan fans.
“It was a bad call on my part. It was an extreme lack of judgment,” Cornish said at the time.
Along with such accountability, his reputation was more than revived during Grey Cup week. Already known for being socially aware, and for
his community work, Cornish talked openly with the national media about how his mother, Margaret, an Anglican priest, had told him on one of his Christmas breaks during his university days that she was a lesbian.
He impressed reporters by telling them it took him mere seconds to accept this fact, and then said he’d like to see more acceptance of gays in society.
Just six days after the Grey
Cup, Cornish proved that although you can take the boy out of New Westminster you can’t take New Westminster out of the boy by being the marshal for the city’s Christmas parade down Columbia Street.
Returning to his roots was a fitting way to close out a spectacular 2012 for the city’s hometown hero.
It would be quite the feat if he could top 2012, because he’s certainly set the bar high.
2012 will be tough to top⫸ from previous page
mario BarteL/NewsLeaDerNew Westminster’s Jon Cornish returns to his old high school stomping grounds at St. Thomas More, where he embarked on a football career that’s taken him to the University of Kansas and now the Calgary Stampeders of the CFL, where he was the league’s best Canadian this past season.
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A6 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A6 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
OPINION
Jean Hincks Publisher
Chris Bryan Editor
Matthew Blair Creative Services Supervisor
Richard Russell Circulation Manager
The NewsLeader 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, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org
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For better and for worse, it’s been a busy year in the Royal City. Here’s my take on the good, the bad, the ugly of 2012.
Good: Vancouver condo king Bob Rennie comes to town and says the “Royal City” moniker reminds him of the name on a can of peaches. It’s tired, he says—time to spice things up and get a new brand. Mayor Wright affably says thanks Bob, I’m not touching that with a 10-foot pole. And Vancouver Sun columnist (and Moody Park resident) Shelley Fralic hits the nail on the head with a column (“Keep your mitts off the Royal City, Bob”) in which she writes “we’re all for progress, but it’s somewhat annoying… for you to waltz into town and declare that our much-cherished history is in need of Renniefication.”
The “Royal City” is about a name, to be sure, but it’s also about where we draw the line as this city rapidly develops and changes with the times.
Where will we be in 10 years? Will this little gem of a city lose
its soul? Most folks are happy to see new development begin to re-energize Downtown, for instance, and lord knows it was time for Hyack Festival Society to update its annual slate of events. But when does updating, invigorating and growth lead to throwing the baby out with the bathwater?
In some things—like whether to keep the Royal City name—we get a choice. In others, well, we’ll just have to ride it out, and hope for the best.
Good: More amenities, shops and services. Banks, drug stores and grocery stores are returning to the Royal City. Once the old Blockbuster Video store at Sixth Street and Seventh Avenue is redeveloped into a two-storey, 10,000-square-foot Rexall drugs, Uptown will have three large
drug stores (I’m assuming the new Rexall will replace the little IDA three doors down, owned by the same company). Rona brought a hardware store back to the New West mainland this year. TD Canada Trust now has three branches in New West. And in Uptown, an upscale restaurant is being eyed for the new Queen’s Park West building under construction at Fifth Street and Sixth Avenue. In all, there are a lot more businesses in New West than five or six years ago. According to the city’s licensing manager Keith Coueffin, business licences more than doubled between 2006 and 2011, from 1,762 to 3,805. Licensing of trades and stepped up enforcement has played a part, but Coueffin says much of that growth comes from a lot of vacant space getting filled, and new commercial space at places like Queensborough Landing shopping centre, Plaza 88 and the Brewery District.
Bad: There is always a fair bit of turnover in New West, particularly among the marginal
mom and pop retail, but a lot of businesses have either shut down in recent months or are about to. Some are retirements, at Quay Celebrity Lingerie in Uptown and Copp’s Shoes in Downtown, but many simply failed in a tough economy. Recent closures include Heather’s Boutique, Cone Zone, Modern Home Furnishings, Milli’s Pita Pizza, Kids Closet, Ranch BBQ, Farm Cottage Bakery, Shine Wellness, TINY and Emilio’s deli (at River Market) and Pearl Kitchen. I’m sure you could add a few more.
Good and Bad: Traffic. We should all be tense about the situation right now. Will the Pattullo Bridge replacement be four lanes, six, three with a counterflow, or will it be something different entirely? This was the year New West residents stood up and—after years of being frustrated with the 450,000 or so vehicles that blast through our 15-square-km city each day—said with almost one voice, maybe a bigger bridge isn’t such a good idea.
The good, bad and ugly of 2012
The federal government is bent on pushing medical marijuana grow operations out of residential homes. Crime and safety – home invasions, faulty wiring and mould – are the main reasons, and the plan has the backing of fire chiefs in B.C.
An apartment fire in Maple Ridge on Dec. 13, which left dozens of people homeless, illustrates their concerns, as investigators found three grow ops on the second floor, where the fire started, and which they believe was electrical in origin.
But Health Canada has said that the proposed legislation, which would regulate medical marijuana grow ops and push them to industrial or agricultural areas, where they would be subject to inspections, will drive up the purchase price.
Would that not fuel illegal grows and trade, similar to what occurs now? Wouldn’t that nullify any changes to eliminate safety risks?
Part of the plan is to let Health Canada medical possession and grow licenses expire in 2014.
What if, under the new regulations, some who do need it for medicinal purposes can’t afford to buy from newly licensed growers? Who benefits then?
Ottawa’s plan seems only to serve those who can afford to establish commercial grow op businesses, and put those who subvert the process into prison.
Why not regulate, license and disclose small grows in homes, window-sill-type operations for personal, medicinal use?
Why not follow Washington and Colorado, and just legalize recreational use? Clearly there is much money to be made in marijuana, and in Canada, we’re wasting way too much money and time trying to curb what is beyond the control of our authorities.
Taking away patients’ personal production licences is akin to punishing all because of a few bad seeds.
– Black Press
NEWSLEADER’S VIEW:
THIS WEEK:
Are you optimistic about the coming year?Vote at www.newwestnewsleader.com
LAST WEEK:
Do you think our schools are safe?
ADRIAN RAESIDE: QUESTION OF THE WEEK:
A few bad seeds
Chris Bryan
88%12% NO
YES
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Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A7Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A7
Now we’ve got the South Fraser Perimeter Road, a tolled Port Mann... Hard to believe, but things could get worse. As a city, and as residents, we must be clear and firm. Now is our chance. This city at the crossroads of Metro Vancouver is at a major crossroads on the issue of traffic. Let’s not screw it up.
Bad: School board (Think: $2.8 million deficit).
Good: Westminster Pier Park. It rocks. If only we could get to it.
Ugly: The controversy around the city’s decision to build the office tower and borrow $59 million. If it’s sold soon, for say $60-$65 million, well, that’d be beautiful.
Just plain frustrating: Waiting to get the new schools built. There’s a plan, a schedule, and the first (the ‘St. Mary’s’ elementary) should break ground in 2013. But as we’ve all seen, things can go awry.
Well, enough pontificating from me. Happy New Year, everyone.
And thank you for reading.
Time to be firm on traffic⫸ continued from page a6
As I rush to finish holiday preparations, I’m struck by how many people in New West make a special effort to take care of people this time of year. The public employees that we and our families connect with: teachers who collect mittens and gloves so the kids who come to school without any can stay warm. Daycare staff who create a place where—no matter how the morning went—children feel special when they come in the door. Health care workers who arrive to take care of overflowing waiting rooms despite the snow. The police and firefighters who are on the job night and day to keep our
community safe. The volunteers—gathering donations for Christmas hampers overflowing with New West generosity. Serving meals to people without a home. Creating holiday cheer for people isolated and lonely.
And there are our local businesses who contribute to supporting our community—and those most in need—in so many different ways.
This really is a special community, one where families are connected by these people who care and pitch in. At this time of year, let’s show our appreciation for those who do so much to make it all happen.
Judy Darcy, NDP CandidateNew Westminster
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A8 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A8 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
Grant [email protected]
As New Year’s Day 2012 dawned, there was a big hole in the ground at Columbia Street and Eighth Avenue. The pit was gradually filled in as a foundation for a civic centre, parking lot and office complex emerged.
But as the year
progressed there were many who feared taxpayer dollars were being dumped into the pit along with concrete and steel.
It was revealed in early 2012 the tentative agreement the city had with Uptown Property Group to take over the office complex part of the project had fallen through. With no other
private sector company coming forward, the city decided to continue construction without a partner.
Money would be saved on the infrastructure if both projects were built at the same time, council said. Although they couldn’t convince anyone to replace Uptown in assuming
the risk, council decided it was worth taking on themselves. Commercial real estate experts had told them the office space would be highly desirable because it’s so close to a SkyTrain station.
“Our view of the world is by the time that building is about half up we hope to
have the cost covered,” said Coun. Bill Harper at the time.
But to make it happen, the city had to do some financial shuffling to pay for the structures that are expected to cost more than $90 million. The biggest move to make it happen was council authorizing going to
the Municipal Finance Authority (MFA) to borrow up to $59 million. They asked the MFA for the financing for capital projects already planned that were supposed to be paid out of city reserves. That would allow the city to use the reserve money to pay for the construction.
At first, the decision didn’t create much of a fuss, although Coun. Chuck Puchmayr said while the risk wasn’t extremely high, he wasn’t comfortable enough to support the borrowing.
Despite his concerns, at first it seemed to be just another bylaw passed by council. But then some residents began to take notice. Emails and Twitter messages expressed concern the money would be going, albeit indirectly, toward paying for a risky private venture that could leave the taxpayers on the hook for big bucks.
“The public has not approved building an office tower on the taxpayers’ backs,” cried James Crosty, a former mayoralty candidate and past president of the Quayside Residents Association.
NEWSLEADER FILECompletion of the entire Anvil Centre civic centre and Merchant Square office tower complex is expected by December 2014.
LOOKING BACK/LOOKING AHEAD: CITY DECIDES TO GO IT ALONE
A big loan, petitions and fear of a money pit
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A10 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A10 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
“That’s a really low way of approaching taxpayers and borrowing the money for this. The public has the right to know where the money is being spent … Whether it’s right or wrong, the motivation behind that is suspect to me.”
But the only way to force a referendum on council’s borrowing decision was to collect petitions signed by at least 10 per cent of registered voters in the November 2011 municipal election. That meant 4,528 signatures were needed by Aug. 7 just to force a civic referendum on the bylaw—a tall task considering it was summertime in the city.
Crosty spearheaded the campaign that gathered more than 2,000 signatures. Not nearly enough, but a message had been sent.
The controversy didn’t die down either. Freedom of information documents
detailing Uptown’s proposal released late in the year revealed the company had offered to build the civic centre, now officially named Anvil Centre and expected to cost well over $40 million, for $35 million, along with developing the office complex and parking lot.
Although it’s been eight months since council made its decision to go it alone on the project and still no buyer has been announced for the office complex, council remains optimistic the city won’t be on the hook.
“I am aware there are people out there who are apoplectic but if they look at it they will see it makes sense,” said Mayor Wayne Wright recently.
The mayor believes the
building’s location is key for the city’s expectation either a partner will be found or for businesses to lease in the building. That’s why going ahead with the office component made sense to him instead of just building
the civic centre.“When you have the location
you do not build less than the best for that location,” said Wright.
“[Not building the office tower] doesn’t give us the help (economically), the jobs for the area and the tax revenue.”
Despite council’s confidence—in addition to the real estate consultant company looking for a buyer, Avison and Young, saying in August it had two potential large tenants—New Westminster heads into 2013 with no purchaser having been announced for the office complex.
Until that happens, the fear of it being a taxpayer money pit will remain.
twitter.com/lonegrangerbnw
More than 2,000 signatures gathered in petition campaign⫸ from PAGE A8
LOOKING BACK/LOOKING AHEAD: CITY DECIDES TO GO IT ALONE
Mayor Wayne Wright When you have the location you do not build less than the best for that location. [Not build-ing the office tower] doesn’t give us the help (economically), the jobs for the area and the tax revenue.
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A12 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A12 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
They even received support from the board, sort of, with trustees voting to ask the auditor-general to monitor its handling of resolving the deficit.
Trustees head into the new calendar year still trying to figure out what they can do for the rest of the 2012-13 school year to reduce the deficit.
During December, superintendent John Woudzia came up with a 27-point plan that would cover all but $76,000 of the deficit. The trustees said that wasn’t enough, and told senior administration to go back to the spreadsheets and give them options over and above what would be required to recover the deficit. They wanted to have more choices to decide what could go and what could stay.
In addition, some trustees balked at one of Woudzia’s proposals to sell land the district owns in Queensborough to cover $450,000 of the deficit saying eventually it could serve as the district’s new works yard. Although Ewen supports that sale, he admitted the district
would eventually have to deal with finding a new maintenance yard.
Woudzia also proposed deferring payments of other capital expenditures that are due, but some trustees are worried they’ll only be creating more problems for future school boards.
A week later, Woudzia came up with basically the same plan but threw in another $500,000 in staffing adjustments, which would see a lot of redeployment of staff to cover absences in the district instead of replacing them. He said there will be no layoffs and that the move would affect the classroom as little as possible.
The details of the “adjustments” still need to be
worked out with the board, the teachers union, the support staff union (CUPE), and other stakeholders. NWTU president Grant Osborne said the district has already cut all the fat and it will be difficult avoiding cutting into bone and muscle.
The board is trying to fast track the process of making the final decisions on how to recover the deficit, even soliciting public feedback online instead of at meetings. Both Ewen and trustee Casey Cook say the sooner they decide the more money they can recover.
Trustees may have put sharp knives on their wish list to Santa. They’ll need them as they put Woudzia’s line-by-line options on the chopping block in January.
‘Adjustments’ need to be sorted
A rendering of the new elementary to be built on the old St. Mary’s Hospital. Construction is slated to begin in 2013.
LOOKING BACK/LOOKING AHEAD: SCHOOL DISTRICT’S DEFICIT
⫸ continued from PAGE A2
Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A13
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A14 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A14 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
EvEnts
Heritage Christmas: Annual salute to Christmas gets lit up with over 24,000 lights to complement the traditional sights, sounds and tastes of Christmases past at the village. Features holiday scavenger h u n t , s e a s o n a l entertainment and special displays by the Miniature Club of BC and the Canadiana Costume Soc iety. When: Dec. 15 to Jan. 4, 12 to 9 p.m. (closed Dec. 24 and 25). Where: Burnaby Village Museum, 6501 Deer Lake Ave., Burnaby. Cost: Gate admission free, carousel rides $2.30 each.
New West Artists: Presents The Small and Crafty Show, a collection of art priced under $100. When: Until Feb. 7, Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Where: The Network Hub, Second floor of The River Market, 810 Quayside Drive, New Westminster.
OngOing
Sunday Afternoon Dances for 55+: Live music each week – come join us. When: Sundays, 12:45 – 3:45 p.m. Where: Century House, 620-Eighth St., New Westminster. A d m i s s i o n : $ 5 members and $6 non-members. Includes r e f r e s h m e n t s a t intermission. Info: 604-519-1066.
Adult Skate: Join the Royal City Skating Club on the ice for an evening of skating, suitable for all levels. When: Mondays, 8-9:30 p.m. (mid-October to March) Where: Queen’s Park Arena, New Westminster. Drop-ins welcome, $8. Info: www.royalcityskating.com or 604-520-1052.
Parent & Grandparent Support Circles: Parent Support Serv ices Society of B.C. offers free weekly Parent & Grandparent Support Circles across the Lower Mainland led by trained facil itators. Learn new ways to nurture your child through discussing parenting techniques, challenges, stresses, and receiving support. Register: 604-669-1616 or [email protected] a . I n f o : w w w.parentsupportbc.ca.
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A16 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A16 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
Looking Back/Looking ahead: PattuLLo Bridge’s future in the sPotLight
grant [email protected]
The Pattullo Bridge celebrated a milestone in 2012. The big question is how many more will it be around to mark in the future?
The decaying structure turned 75 on Nov. 15, 2012 amidst a great deal of concern for its health. There were differing opinions
on whether or not to do major surgery on it, replace it with a newer model, or kill the crossing entirely.
The year started with TransLink, which operates the Pattullo for the province, proposing the narrow four-lane bridge be replaced with a six-lane structure.
TransLink presented
the community with several options on where it would cross and where the entrances and exits would be. But they were all minor variations on what’s already there. The transportation authority said the replacement cost would be between $750 million and $1 billion.
While the trucking industry and the Surrey side seemed to be on board with the plans, a couple of workshops in February made it evident New Westminster residents and politicians weren’t.
The fear a six-lane structure would just serve to clog New Westminster’s already gridlocked routes with commuter traffic even further was strong. Mayor Wayne
Wright and several city councillors kept hammering New Westminster’s views with senior levels of government, and even set up a summit with Surrey officials in December to hash the issue out.
It would seem their concerns were heard. Despite its warnings of the bridge being too unsafe to fix, TransLink relented and put the proposed
replacement plans on hold late in the year. Instead, the transit authority announced it was doing a new assessment to see if it was possible to extend the Pattullo’s life by a couple of decades with safety and seismic upgrades which, if done, would reduce the Pattullo to three lanes.
The bridge was also front-and-centre late in 2012 with the new tolled Port Mann
Bridge opening. All year long many in the city feared commuters would flock to the Pattullo Bridge to avoid paying to cross the Port Mann, and anecdotally those fears appeared to be coming true when the new crossing was opened in early December.
The Pattullo made lots of noise in New Westminster in 2012, and the din isn’t likely to die down in 2013.
newsLeader fiLeMany New Westminster residents came out of TransLink’s open houses on the replacement of the Pattullo Bridge early in 2012 shaking their heads, feeling they were not given any real options.
What will it take to bridge the gap?
cLuBs & grouPs
New Westminster Lions Club: Meets the second and fourth Mondays of the month at 6:30 p.m. at Boston Pizza, Columbia Square, Columbia Street in New Westminster. Visitors are welcome. Info: 604-525-4477.
Overeaters Anony-mous: Out of control when it comes to food? We can help! When: Wednesdays, 7 to 8:15 p.m. Where: First Presbyterian Church, 335 7th St., New West. Info: 604-524-5244.
Tillicum Toastmasters: Solid public speaking ability is a great skill to have. Guests welcome. When: Mondays, 7:20 - 9:30 p.m. Where: Unity in Action Hall, 1630 Edinburgh St., New West. Info: http://3435.toastmastersclubs.
Thank you B.C. for digging safely in 2012This year, more calls to BC One Call for natural gas pipeline information and safe digging practices resulted in fewer pipeline hits.
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Terms: Cash, Visa, MC, Amex, and certified cheques. 15% Buyers premium plus HST in effect. Some items in advertisement are subject to prior sales/error/omissions. All sales are final. For more info call 1.604.808.6808. Licensed auctioneers.
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Going out of businessALL ITEMS ARE FREE OF ENCUMBRANCES OR LIENS.ALL ITEMS ARE GUARANTEED AS HAND WOVEN OR HAND MADE WITH NATURAL FIBERS.
PERSIAN: ORIENTAL CARPETSLARGE WOOL AND SILKS.
Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A17Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A17
Looking Back/Looking ahead: city’s renewaL
Challenges remain in Downtown
Save for the occasional special event, Hyack Square has yet to become the Downtown gathering place the city envisioned.
The parkade’s future is a divisive issue. Antique Alley is a shadow of its former self, outnumbered now by empty storefronts.
The River Market has become a jewel for Downtown and Quayside residents but has yet to be discovered by many who live Uptown or elsewhere.
The innovative Shops at New West Station has brought some much-needed mainstream retail energy to the area but at the expense of a huge three-tower concrete edifice that is more sentry to the Downtown than gateway. It’s also turned Carnarvon Street into a disaster zone with too much traffic and too many jaywalking pedestrians for its narrow lanes.
The Paramount’s showpiece marquee still advertises two-for-one table dances on Sundays, hardly the kind of entertainment demanded by sophisticated young urbanites and families. The anchor retailers at each end of Columbia are a thrift shop and Army & Navy, decidedly downmarket. There’s too many wedding shops that are of little interest to residents and visitors beyond one visit. The proliferation of discount dollar stores has become a standing joke in the social media.
And for the next two years, construction activity connected at the Anvil Centre and Trapp + Holbrook will create huge gaps in the streetscape along the Columbia Street strip, and will be difficult for cars and pedestrians to navigate.
Nobody who runs a business in Downtown New West does so to get rich.
Many don’t survive. Jason McGill’s Urban Gypsy is the latest casualty after five years, and venerable Copp’s Shoes is closing due to the retirement of owner Terry McBride. They’ll likely be replaced by new shopkeepers, fueled by the
Downtown’s potential and their own boundless optimism that they’re opening at just the right time to take advantage
With more people living Downtown, and the city and developers investing in its historical character, the odds are beginning to tip in their favour.
Mario Bartel has covered many of the efforts to revitalize New
Westminster’s Downtown in his 21 years as the NewsLeader’s photographer/reporter. He now lives there.
For all its accolades,
the new Pier Park is
still isolated from New
Westminster’s Downtown.
newsLeader fiLe
⫸ continued from page a3
For more information contact www.newwestchamber.com or by calling Miranda at 604-521-7781
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A18 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
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Mitsubishi
MITSU-4C-FP-N-E-5 CAR WISHLIST-LANG-RICH-BURN.indd
MasterCard Holiday
CB
Alisa Pellizzari
Nov 29, 2012
Nov 30, 2012
10.3125” x 14”
N/A
N/A
N/A
Langley Times, Richmond Review, Burnaby
N/A
Dec 6 (Langley) Dec 7 (Richmond, Burnaby)
Full Page - 4C
N/A
Laser is at 100%
NOTES: THIS IS NOT A COLOUR PROOF. Refer to pantone chips and process match books for accurate colour samples. No trapping has been done to this fi le. Our artists have done everything possible to make this fi le mechanically perfect. However, before signing approval please check all copy, dimensions and colour space.
MITSUBISHI-MOTORS.CA / FIND A DEALER: MITSUBISHIDEALERS.CAMITSUBISHI-MOTORS.CA / FIND A DEALER: MITSUBISHIDEALERS.CA
Offer(s) available on new 2012 and 2013 models purchased through participating dealers to qualifi ed retail customers who purchase a new vehicle by January 2, 2013. Dealers may sell for less, some conditions apply. Offers are subject to change without notice,
see dealer for complete details. ‡ 2012 RVR GT model shown has an MSRP of $28,998 and a selling price of $30,828. Includes destination, delivery and fees. Taxes, PPSA and dealer fees of up to $599 are excluded. § AWC standard on RVR SE 4WD and GT. ^ Limited-time
offer available on all new 2011/2012/2013 vehicles through participating dealers to qualifi ed retail customers until January 2, 2013. Offers are subject to change without notice. Some conditions apply. See dealer for details. MasterCard cards are issued by Citibank
pursuant to a license by MasterCard International Incorporated. ® MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. ° No payments for 90 days is available on select new 2012 and 2013 models fi nanced through Mitsubishi Motor Sales
of Canada subvented fi nancing programs on approved credit through participating dealers to qualifi ed retail customers until January 2, 2013. Interest charges (if any) will not accrue during the fi rst 60 days after purchaser signs contract for a participating vehicle.
After the fi rst 60 days, interest (if any) starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest (if any) monthly over the term of the contract. See participating retailers for complete details. ◊ 0% purchase fi nancing available through Bank of Montreal
for up to 84 months on all new 2012 Outlander models and up to 72 months on select new 2012 RVR models (terms vary by model, see dealer for details). Representative examples: 2012 RVR ES 2WD (CS45-A)/2012 Outlander ES 2WD (CO45-A) with 156/182 bi-weekly
payments of $140/$153 over 72/84 months equals a total obligation of $21,828/$27,828 and a cost of borrowing of $0/$0. Includes up to $1,450 in freight, $250 in PDI, $100 in air tax, up to $30 in EHF. Excludes $15 duty on new tires, taxes, PPSA, registration, insurance,
licensing, administration, up to $599 in other dealer fees and any additional government fees. * Best backed claim does not cover Lancer Evolution, Lancer Ralliart or i-MiEV. ® MITSUBISHI MOTORS, BEST BACKED CARS IN THE WORLD are trade-marks of Mitsubishi Motors
North America, Inc. and are used under license. ** Whichever comes fi rst. Regular maintenance not included. See dealer or mitsubishi-motors.ca for warranty terms, restrictions and details. Not all customers will qualify.Best backed
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2012 RVR ES THE FUEL-EFFICIENT CROSSOVER
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RVR GT model shown‡
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MITSU19008-4C-2-3-N-E-5 CAR WISHLIST-LANG-RICH-BURN.indd 1 12-11-30 3:57 PM
Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A19
RE LestateREVIEWpresented by
Great view of the Fraser RiverBeautiful walnut � oorsModern kitchen with updated appliances
This week’s feature ...
at 502-209 Carnarvon Street, New WestOpen house Saturday and Sunday 2-4pm
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A beautiful new kitchen with granite countertops, new cabinetry
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Priced at $275,000For more information please contact Sandy or Lyle Longridge from Assist 2 Sell at 604-540-7253
C M Y CM MY CY CMY K
A20 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012A20 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
Jeff NagelBlack Press
Vancouver Police are seeking charges against another 40 alleged Stanley Cup rioters.
Eight of the new suspects are from Vancouver, five are from Coquitlam, four from Burnaby and three each are from Calgary, Surrey and Langley.
The investigation of other riot suspects continues, said VPD Insp. Laurence Rankin.
“It’s been over 18 months, and we haven’t forgotten our commitment we made to the victims and the residents of our community,” he said.
Police have so far recommended more than 1,000 charges against 315 riot suspects, while prosecutors have so far approved charges against 169 of them. Some have already
pleaded guilty and been jailed.
New suspects police want charged include a 27-year-old North Vancouver man accused of breaking into a business and trying to flip a marked police car. He tried to hide his face but investigators say they identified him by comparing video clips.
Charges including aggravated assault and assault causing bodily harm are also sought against two Langley men aged 26 and 20 and a 20-year-old
Calgary man.Police say the trio
attacked two Good Samaritans who tried to keep rioters from damaging a business. One badly beaten victim suffered a collapsed lung and concussion.
That was just part of what police called their “rampage” through downtown that night “looting businesses, damaging property and assaulting bystanders.”
Surrey and Vancouver each account for 58 of the 315 suspects who are
either already charged or could be, pending approval by Crown, in connection with the June 15, 2011 riot in downtown Vancouver after the Vancouver Canucks lost Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final to Boston.
Large numbers of accused rioters also came from Burnaby (34), Richmond (22), North Vancouver (20), Vancouver Island (15), Langley (14), Coquitlam (13), Maple Ridge (12) and Delta (11).
Black Press fileVancouver police are seeking charges against 40 more alleged Stanley Cup rioters.
Police want charges for more Stanley Cup rioters
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LYLE LONGRIDGE
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2011
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Beltone - helping people hear better for over 70 years!3776 Hastings Street, Burnaby, BC
this Christmas.
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on HastingsA division of GG Hearing Alternative Inc.
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Merry Christmas
Everyone!
Beltone - helping people hear better for over 70 years!3776 Hastings Street, Burnaby, BC
this Christmas.
Help Your Hearing...and help a Child
Registered under the College of Speech & Hearing Health Professionals of BC
Call us Today for an In-Home Hearing Test & demonstration!
604 569 1162www.beltoneonhastings.com
on HastingsA division of GG Hearing Alternative Inc.
Beltone delivers bag of toysto Burnaby Christmas Bureau.Beltone on Hastings Hearing Clinic donates unwrapped toy to Christmas Bureaufor every hearing aid purchased in December.
Merry Christmas
Everyone!
Beltone - helping people hear better for over 70 years!3776 Hastings Street, Burnaby, BC
this Christmas.
Help Your Hearing...and help a Child
Registered under the College of Speech & Hearing Health Professionals of BC
Call us Today for an In-Home Hearing Test & demonstration!
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on HastingsA division of GG Hearing Alternative Inc.
Beltone delivers bag of toysto Burnaby Christmas Bureau.Beltone on Hastings Hearing Clinic donates unwrapped toy to Christmas Bureaufor every hearing aid purchased in December.
Merry Christmas
Everyone!
Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A21
Digital Media ManagerBlack Press Digital (B.C.)Black Press is seeking a creative, web-savvy free-thinker to work in our Digital division.This is an immediate opportunity for a full-time, permanent post, based out of our head office in Surrey.Reporting to the Director of Content for Black Press, the Digital Media Manager is integral in managing online initiatives with our 120 Black Press websites in B.C., Alberta and Washington State.A key feature of the job is training and support for those web-based initiatives, so you’ll need to be a clear thinker with a high degree of patience.You will be part of development and ongoing projects and site improvements to enhance the user experience for our clients, viewers and staff.You will:
implementing new web features
analysis, site traffic, campaign effectiveness
create and enhance site design , content and navigation
escalation as needed
updates to project participantsKey Competencies
to detail
A-Type teamRole Essentials
related field
and determining best practices for audience engagement and retention
related best practices (Facebook, Twitter), and monitoring tools (HootSuite, TweetDeck, etc).
editingWe want you to bring new ideas to an old industry. We are looking to expand in areas we haven’t even thought of yet.As a trusted second-in-command to the Director of Content, you will help generate ideas for site improvements, then work with our technical team to make them happen.Applications will be accepted until Dec. 31, 2012. Rob DeMone Director of Content, Black Press B.C.#310 - 5460 152 Street Surrey, B.C. V3S 5J9
[email protected] more details, visit www.blackpress.caOnly those candidates short-listed will be called for interviews.
www.blackpress.ca
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
7 OBITUARIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
33 INFORMATION
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING
CLASS 1 DRIVERS B.C/ABWE ARE HIRING!
COMPANY DRIVERS ANDOWNER OPERATORS
Permanent positions open. Lots of miles, great pay and benefi ts package. New equipment with
lease opportunity EXPAND YOUR CAREER!Contact: George Costello
PH: 1-877-914-0001WWW.TRANSX.COM
115 EDUCATION
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL.NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks.Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options.SIGN UP ONLINE! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853
125 FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE
Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home
for a few months. Are you looking for the opportunity to do
meaningful, fulfi lling work?PLEA Community Services is looking for qualifi ed applicants
who can provide care for youth in their home on a full-time basis or
on weekends for respite. Training, support and
remuneration are provided. Funding is available for
modifi cations to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting
for an open door. Make it yours.
Call 604-708-2628 [email protected]
www.plea.bc.ca
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experi-enced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Con-struction at 780-723-5051.
CARRIERS NEEDED
YOUTH and ADULTS
Deliver newspapers (2x per week) on Wednesdays and Fridays in your area. Papers are dropped off at your home with the fl yers pre-inserted!
Call Christy 604-436-2472for available routes email
Email [email protected]
LOOKING TO HIRE?
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B.C. COLLEGE OF OPTICS#208 - 10070 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC
www.bccollegeofoptics.ca
604.581.0101
starts Feb. 11th, 2013
BC COLLEGE OF OPTICS
Programmer/DeveloperBlack Press Group Ltd., a leading international media company, is seeking a talented programmer and developer to build, integrate and maintain its software and websites. Ideal candidates will have a can-do attitude, passion for technology, extensive programming and web development experience, and the ability to get up to speed quickly.
Required SkillsPHP4/PHP5 - Candidate should be a top-notch PHP developer, familiar with the latest features;POSTgreSQL/MySQL - Modern database development expertise - familiar with PHPMyAdmin and command line access;HTML 5/CSS 3 - Expert level development in HTML & CSS will be necessary;Javascript/JQuery - Intermediate level Javascript/JQuery development will be necessary;Server Admin – Complete understanding of Apache Tomcat, FreeBSD and basic server administration;RESTful APIs & SOAP – Demonstrated skills problem-solving with RESTful APIs and SOAP;Self-Starter - Looking for candidates who can jump in quickly.
Bonus SkillsExperience using AJAX in both PHP and Perl;Java development experience;Experience in Perl and Python;Comfortable in a Macintosh OS X and Linux environments.
Other DetailsBlack Press offers a competitive salary and benefits package. You will work at our Surrey corporate offices with a talented group of individuals who have a passion for creating content in print and online.
Please email your resume and cover letter to [email protected] (no phone calls please). Deadline is Monday, Dec. 31, 2012 at 5 pm. Only those candidates short-listed will be called for interviews.
www.blackpress.ca
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
Required for an Alberta Trucking Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a mini-mum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Scheduled Days Off. Call Lloyd 780-723-5051
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
115 EDUCATION
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
115 EDUCATION
bcclassified.com
INDEX IN BRIEF
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bcclassified.com cannot beresponsible for errors after the firstday of publication of any advertise-ment. Notice of errors on the first dayshould immediately be called to theattention of the Classified Departmentto be corrected for the following edi-tion.
bcclassified.com reserves theright to revise, edit, classify or rejectany advertisment and to retain anyanswers directed to thebcclassified.com Box Reply Serviceand to repay the customer the sumpaid for the advertisment and boxrental.
DISCRIMINATORYLEGISLATIONAdvertisers are reminded thatProvincial legislation forbids the pub-lication of any advertisement whichdiscriminates against any personbecause of race, religion, sex, color,nationality, ancestry or place of origin,or age, unless the condition is justifiedby a bona fide requirement for thework involved.
COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist inall advertisements and in all othermaterial appearing in this edition ofbcclassified.com. Permissionto reproduce wholly or in part and inany form whatsoever, particularly by aphotographic or offset process in apublication must be obtained in writ-ing from the publisher. Any unautho-rized reproduction will be subject torecourse in law.
Advertise across thelower mainland inthe 17 best-read
communitynewspapers.
ON THE WEB:
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . . . . . . 1-8
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . 9-57
TRAVEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61-76
CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80-98
EMPLOYMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102-198
BUSINESS SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . 203-387
PETS & LIVESTOCK . . . . . . . . . . . 453-483
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE . . . . . . 503-587
REAL ESTATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603-696
RENTALS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703-757
AUTOMOTIVE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 804-862
MARINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 903-920
Advertise across theLower Mainland inthe 18 best-read
communitynewspapers and
5 dailies.
Advertise across the
Lower Mainland in
the 18 best-read
community
newspapers and
3 dailies.
ON THE WEB:
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
A22 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
Sell your home FAST in the highest read community newspapers & largest online sites!
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
PACKAGING MACHINE OPERATOR required by
Coquitlam coffee plant. He or she will be working as part of a team which packages and ships coffee. Duties include set-up and
operation of a variety of packaging machines. The
successful applicant would besomeone who is responsible, a problem solver, capable of multi-tasking safely in a fast paced environment and is
interested in long term employment. Some heavy lifting required. Forklift experience an
asset. Benefi t plan available after 3 months.
Please forward resume toGlenn at
[email protected] fax to 604-524-6030
134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES
Canuel Caterers
BC’s largest High School Cafeteria Company with over 50 locations is now interviewing. Team leaders, counter attendants / cashiers / food prep, 4-8 hour shift during the school year to start at a high school near you.
Fax resume to 604-503-0951.
REQ’D F/T FOOD COUNTER AT-TENDANTS for 0926944 BC LTD Sal: $10.50/hr Duties: take custom-ers’ orders wrap fast food items and package take-out food. Reqd F/T kitchen helpers Sal: $10.25/hr Du-ties: wash work tables and appli-ances, unpack and store supplies in refrigerators. Contact Jatinder Saini Email:[email protected] Fax: 604-436-1311 Location: Burnaby, BC
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
151 PROFESSIONALS/MANAGEMENT
WHLS grower of native plants seek-ing creative, experienced individual with passion for environment to in-crease market share and sales. De-gree req’d. Part-time/ fl exible hours. Submit resume by Jan 10th to: [email protected]
154 RETAIL
FASHION SALES PEOPLE
Part-Time Position, 1-2 weekdays, ap-prox. 5 hours per day. Ideal for semi re-tired sales people. No evenings or week-ends. If you enjoy fashion sales and working with seniors, this position is for you. Requirements: clothing sales exp. & own transportation. Only those with these qualifi cations will be consid-ered. Position is for immediate start.
Please fax resumes to:604-528-8084 or email
PERSONAL SERVICES
171 ALTERNATIVE HEALTH
PERSONAL SERVICES
173 MIND BODY SPIRIT
Grand OpeningGEMINI STUDIO
MASSAGE& BODY CARE
604.523.6689Unit D - 768 Princess Street@ 8th St. New Westminster
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
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HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
260 ELECTRICAL
#1113 LOW COST ELECTRIC Panel Upgrade • Reno’s -Com/Res.
Heating • Trouble ShootingLicensed & Bonded. 604-522-3435
C & C Electrical Mechanical• ELECTRICAL
• FULL PLUMBING SERVICES• HVAC GAS FITTING
*Free Est. *Licensed *Insured24hr. Emergency Service
604-475-7077
263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE
Rick’s Bobcat Service. Leveling, Back Filling, Trucking Reas.
Rates.778-355-2978, 604-290-2978
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
A-1 CONTRACTING. Renos. Bsmt, kitchens, baths, custom cabinets, tiling, plumbing, sundecks, fencing,
reroofi ng. Dhillon 604-782-1936.
Additions, Home ImprovementsRestorations, Renovations,
& New Construction.Specializing in Concrete, Forming, Framing & Siding. 604-218-3064
HOME IMPROVEMENTSCarpentry, painting, drywall, tilesQuality work - reasonable price
Martin 778-355-5840
320 MOVING & STORAGE
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.
AFFORDABLE MOVINGLocal & Long Distance
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Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240
329 PAINTING & DECORATINGNorthstar Painting Ltd.- The Residential Specialists. BIG jobs, Small jobs - We do it all! Interior and Exterior Projects. Master Painters at Students Rates. WCB Safe, Reliable, Effi cient & Quality Paint. 778.245.9069
www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland
604.996.8128 Fraser ValleyRunning this ad for 8yrs
PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299,
2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls
Cloverdale Premium quality paint.NO PAYMENT until Job is
completed. Ask us about ourLaminate Flooring &
Maid Services.
338 PLUMBING
Gas Fitter ✭ PlumberFurnace Boilers, Hot Water TanksHot Water Heat, Plumbing Jobs.
Furnace cleaning with truck mounted machine
604-507-4606 or 604-312-767410% OFF if you Mention this AD!
*Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fi tter. Aman: 778-895-2005
.EnterprisePlumbing, Heating, Gasfi tting
FULL PLUMBING SERVICES• Hvac Gas Fitting • Electrical*Free Est. *Licensed *Insured
24hr. Emergency ServiceC & C Electrical Mechanical
604-475-7077
WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
338 PLUMBING
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTSCanuck Roofi ng All Roof Repairs Any job big or small. Free Est. *WCB *Insured *BBB 778-772-1969
FIVE STAR ROOFINGAll kinds of re-roofi ng & repairs.
Free est. Reasonable rates.(604)961-7505, 278-0375
626 HOUSES FOR SALE
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTSGL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, As-phalt Shingles, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters. $80. 604-240-5362
Mainland Roofi ng Ltd.25 yrs in roofi ng industry
Family owned & operated. Fully ins. We do Cedar Shakes, conversions,
concrete tiles, torchon, fi bre-glass shingles, restoration
& repairs. 20 yr labour warr. 604-427-2626 or 723-2626
www.mainlandroof.com
356 RUBBISH REMOVAL
RECYCLE-IT!JUNK REMOVALRecycled Earth Friendly• Estate Services • Electronics
• Appliances • Old Furniture• Construction • Yard Waste• Concrete • Drywall • Junk
• Rubbish • Mattresses & More!On Time, As Promised,Service Guaranteed!
604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca
626 HOUSES FOR SALE
WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
356 RUBBISH REMOVAL
bradsjunkremoval.com
Haul Anything...But Dead Bodies!!
604.220.JUNK(5865)Serving The
Lower Mainland Since 1988
FREE! ScrapMetal Removal...FREE!!!
*Appliances *BBQs *Exercise Equip *Cars/Trucks/Trailers *Hotwater Tanks *Furnaces
* Restaurant EquipmentAll FREE pickup!
604-572-3733 T & K Haulaway
374 TREE SERVICES
ABC TREE MEN ✶ Pruning & Shaping ✶ Tree Removal ✶ Stump Grinding
☎ 604-521-7594☞ 604-817-8899
626 HOUSES FOR SALE
Friday, December 28, 2012 NewsLeader A23
Sell your vehicle FAST in the highest read community newspapers & largest online sites!
call 604.575-5555
$12ONLY
with the la i e Power Pack…
Li iteTime Offer!
3-LINE EXAMPLESize not exactly as shown
Sell your Car!
2010 VENZA: Like new, only 20,000 kms, fully loaded, automatic, 6 cylinder, dvd sys-tem. $22,800. 604-575-5555.
Power Pack i clu eBurnaby-New Westminster NewsLea er PRINT AD: Includes photo and 3-lines for one week.
BCClassi e .com ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week!
USEDVancouver.com ONLINE AD: Local reach — until you cancel it!
PETS
477 PETS
Bluenose Pitbull Pups genetics/ razoredge UKC reg, 6M/1F, 9wks $500-$1500. 778-237-2824.
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are
Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at
fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977
Chihuahua pups- males, 6-8 lbs full grown. L/C. 10 wks. Vet checked 1st shots. $550/ea. (778)708-6771
German Shepherd/Lab pups, 4F/1M, 2 blk, 2 wht, 1 mix, Jan 1. (604)316-2757. No Sunday calls
NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604-856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com
PUGS, 2 fawn female, ready now. $400. 2 male/2 females, ready Jan 2. $600. (604)796-2727/799-2911
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
527 COMPUTER EQUIPMENT
APPLE Mac Book, iPhone 5 16GB and lot more at wholesales prices. visit our website: www.pvandcos-tore.com for more information.
533 FERTILIZERS
WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $160 or Well Rotted 10 yards - $180. 604-856-8877
548 FURNITURE
MATTRESSES starting at $99• Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings
100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331
*NEW QUEEN MATTRESS SET*Pillow Top in Plastic. Mfr. Warranty Must Sell $200 ~ 604-484-0379
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
551 GARAGE SALES
BRIDGEVIEW FLEA MARKET Every Sunday, Year Round, 80 Vendors 7am-3pm, 11267-125a St. Sry. Info./Book Table 604-625-3208
560 MISC. FOR SALE
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?
REAL ESTATE
627 HOMES WANTED
WE BUY HOUSES!Older House • Damaged House
Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments
Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-626-9647
RENTALS
706 APARTMENT/CONDO
COQUITLAM
Welcome Home !
1 Bedrooms available near Lougheed Mall and transit. Rent includes heat & hot water. Sorry No Pets. Refs required.
Call (604) 931-2670
NEW WESTMINSTER
Panorama CourtSpacious & clean 1 & 2 bdrms avail. From $750 - $1020/mo. No pets.
Call 604-540-6732
709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL
KINGWAY CORPORATE CTR Quality corner offi ce 1480sf 2nd fl r, $1227.16/mo nnn. 604-970-0144
736 HOMES FOR RENT
MAPLE RIDGE, 2 bdrm rancher, Hammond area, well kept, pri bkyrd close to schls & transit. $1195/mo, avail immed. Refs & good credit req 604-462-1673
RENTALS
751 SUITES, UPPERBURNABY S. nr Metrotown, Sus-sex/Victory. Upper lvl 3 bd,1600 s/f, 1.5 baths, 2 car carport, h/wood & carpet fl rs, w/d, avail now. Refs req, n/s, $1750 +2/3utils. 604-322-0180
752 TOWNHOUSES
PITT MEADOWS: 2 - 3 bdrm co-op T/H $1030/mo - $1134/mo. Shares req’d. Close to WCE, schools & shopping. No subsidy available. 19225 119th Ave. For more info & to book an appt. call 604-465-1938
TRANSPORTATION
810 AUTO FINANCING
Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402
TRANSPORTATION
818 CARS - DOMESTIC
LOOKING FOR A DEALON A NEW VEHICLE?
Save up to 40% OFF your next new vehicle...
No games or gimmicks, dealdirect with local dealerships.
www.newcarselloff.com
No qr code reader?
Text info: 778.786.8271
845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVALMinimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673The Scrapper
#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL
ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME
604.683.2200
Notice is Hereby Given that Creditors and Others,
Having claims against the Estate of Ryan Marty Brown, formerly of #1808 - 14 Begbie Street, New Westminster BC, V3M 0C4, deceased, are hereby required to send the particulars thereof to the person, Sharon Elizabeth Campbell, (in the process of applying for administration) 7121 129A Street Surrey BC, V3W 6T4 on or before January 7th 2013, after which the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to claims received.
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
A24 NewsLeader Friday, December 28, 2012
Harmony Court EstateBurnaby’s Affordable All-Inclusive
Retirement Living Community7197 Canada Way, Burnaby BC • Tel: 604.527.3300
Harmony Court EstateBurnaby’s Affordable All-Inclusive
Retirement Living Community7197 Canada Way, Burnaby BC • Tel: 604.527.3300
Harmony Court Estate
From our house to your house...Warmest Holiday Wishes
Move in for the New Year!Large Newly RenovatedSuites Available Now!
Starting at $1795
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