OptimistThe Voice of Delta since 1922 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2010
Delta
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Day at the Farm
See Pages 10 and 11YOUR SOURCE FOR LOCAL SPORTS, NEWS, WEATHER AND ENTERTAINMENT! WWW.DELTA-OPTIMIST.COM
Pilot projectLonger trucks could be usedon port to Tilbury route 5
Fringe FestivalDSS grad in Capital, Alice!at Vancouver event 17
Labour DayUnion leaderschime in 21-28
Hawks taking flightJunior hockey team opensnew season on Tuesday 31
It’s a good first step but theprovincial government needs tostep up, says a member of theLadner Sediment Group followingDelta council’s decision to seekfunding for much needed dredg-ing.
Mike Owen was on hand withseveral members of the lobbygroup, which includes waterlot owners, local businessesand channel users, at councilMonday as the civic politiciansagreed to apply for grant fundingthrough the B.C. Flood ProtectionProgram.
The lack of funding for river
dredging in the secondary chan-nels has long been a concern inDelta, where the Ladner SedimentGroup says the waters havebecome increasingly difficult tonavigate. In addition to lobbyingsenior governments to get a long-term fund for periodic dredgingof the channels, the group notesimmediate dredging work is also
needed.“It’s an important first step to
try to get the province to recog-nize our issue. It’s been a long-time issue for both Delta staff andpoliticians to get the province toquit saying it’s a navigation issuewith the federal government,” saidOwen.
“We’re sitting on provincial
Crown land here in Delta andwithout the landlord at the tableit’s very hard to deal with it. Theprovince has put out this requestfor proposals for municipalities todeal with flood proofing and I’mvery glad Delta sees we have toat least try and do something like
BY SANDOR [email protected]
Giants training camp
PHOTO BY CHUNG CHOW
Vancouver Giants head coach Don Hay goes over a drill at the WHL team’s training camp at Ladner Leisure Centre on Monday. The Giants have two more exhibition games scheduled at the leisurecentre: Friday, Sept. 10 against the Chilliwack Bruins and Saturday, Sept. 18 against the Everett Silvertips.
Delta applies for dredging fundsProvincial government needs to step up on longtime issue, says Ladner Sediment Group’s Mike Owen
See DREDGING page 3
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A02 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
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Richmond and other munic-ipalities.”
Last fall the sedimentgroup received $125,000from Port Metro Vancouverto fund a study to look atthe ongoing sediment buildup in Deas Slough, LadnerHarbour, Ladner Reach, SeaReach and Canoe Pass.
The study is being under-taken by Hay & CompanyConsultants to determinesediment dynamics anddevelop a long-term sus-tainable solution to theproblem. A recently com-pleted interim report bythe consultant confirmedthat Ladner Reach is a netsediment deposition areaand that various structuresand dredging activity in the
region have accelerated theinfill problem.
Earlier this summer, theprovince announced fund-ing opportunities throughthe Flood ProjectionProgram. Delta has alreadysubmitted applicationstotaling $1.7 million forflood protection along theEast Delta Boundary Bayforeshore.
Another phase of theprogram involves floodprojects, which includesin-stream sediment manage-ment.
According to a staffreport to council, if success-ful, the cost share would be33 per cent for the munici-pality and the balance to bepaid by the province.
“A very rough cost esti-mate to dredge the second-ary channels to pre-1993conditions is in the $5million range. This wouldmean that Delta would berequired to contribute $1.65million to the project,” the
report states.CAO George Harvie told
council that while they’rewaiting for the final resultsof the consultant’s sedi-ment modeling study, it’sa good idea to submit thegrant application early.
The dredging issue andthe study were raised withsenior officials with thefederal environment andfisheries ministries whenDelta officials visitedOttawa a few months ago,noted Harvie. As far asDelta’s financial commit-ment, Harvie said that willbe referred to a councilbudget workshop.
Noting the majority ofthe sediment ending upin Delta waters originatesfrom the interior of theprovince, Owen said he’shopeful the governmentwill commit the funds nowthat Delta is willing to dolikewise.
“It’s kind of like say-ing we’ve got this massivewaterway, which drainsabout a third of B.C., andwe’re going to ignore the
sediment that comes downit. That’s akin to having theCoquihalla or the new Seato Sky highways and let-ting volunteers try to keepit clean so people can driveon it,” he said.
The federal and provin-
cial governments, as wellas the municipalities andusers all have a role, addedOwen.
“The province is thelandlord here and with themcontinuing to say it’s a fed-eral issue doesn’t cut it.”
DREDGING from page 1
Metro Vancouver’s newsolid waste plan is now inthe hands of the provincialgovernment.
Delta Mayor LoisJackson, chair of theregional district, wasaccompanied by wastemanagement committeechair Greg Moore and envi-ronment and energy com-mittee chair Joe Trasolinias they presented the pro-posed plan to EnvironmentMinister Barry Penner onWednesday.
“We presented over 500pages of documentationand I requested that heget back to us as soon ashe has his staff digest andmake recommendations tohim, to allow a basket ofoptions for us as regionalgovernment,” Jackson toldthe Optimist following themeeting in Victoria.
A few weeks ago themajority of the MetroVancouver board of direc-tors voted in favour ofthe plan, which aims toincrease the diversion rateof garbage going to theVancouver Landfill fromthe current level of 55 percent to 70 per cent by 2015.
The plan has an arrayof waste reduction initia-tives, such as region-widecomposting. The most con-troversial element whichhas grabbed most of theheadlines has been a waste-to-energy scheme.
The region currently hasan incinerator in Burnabythat processes some of theLower Mainland’s garbage,but, if approved, one ormore additional waste-to-energy plants would be
built, either within or out-side the region
The plants would recoverenergy from waste thatcannot yet be recycled.The landfill would takeonly materials that can’t berecycled or shipped to anincinerator.
The regional district saysa large volume of studieswere presented to supportthe conclusion that, basedon an independent analy-sis of long-term financialcosts, air quality impactsand greenhouse gas issues,some kind of waste-to-energy technology was the“clear winner” and mostsustainable option for wastedisposal.
Saying the minister was
impressed with the amountof information they pro-vided, Jackson noted theyneeded to provide answersto concerns raised by theFraser Valley.
“We responded to someof the negative informationwith juried comments fromall over the world. In fact,the majority of the informa-tion that had been given tothe public was addressedmany years ago,” she said,
“At least one or two ofthe incinerators referred towere the 1950 vintage. And,of course, they would neverbe built today. In termsof the international healthorganizations, the U.K., forinstance, don’t even requirehealth certificates around
these new facilities becausethere’s just nothing there.But we have anyway, willbe requiring all of that test-ing in our solid waste man-agement plan.”
Following the Metroboard vote, the FraserValley Regional Districtissued another statementreiterating its opposition towaste-to-energy as a viableoption.
Patricia Ross, FVRDboard chair, said “Acrossthe spectrum, there hasbeen strong oppositionto waste-to-energy incin-eration of municipal solidwaste as an option.”
Jackson, though, toldthe Optimist this week, “Alot of the negativism that
we have heard has beenrefuted.”
The City of Vancouver,which operates the landfillat Burns Bog, voted againstthe solid waste plan.
Jackson noted, “ Mr.(Barry) Penner did speakto me about the VancouverLandfill and what is thefuture of that. I did remindhim that they do have per-mit until about 2030.”
In a recent interview,Metro senior engineerDennis Ranahan said theVancouver Landfill current-ly takes 600,000 tonnes ofgarbage annually and underthe new waste manage planthat amount would drop toaround 100,000 by 2020.
If a large portion region’s
trash is to be shipped outfor incineration, one candi-date could be the VancouverIsland town of Gold River,which has been lobbyinghard to host an incinerator.
Locally, one possiblelocation that made newsa few months ago was theTsawwassen First Nation.Aquilini Renewable Energy,owned by VancouverCanuck’s owner FrancescoAquilini, confirmed theywere looking for opportuni-ties in green energy, includ-ing waste-to-power, and hadpreliminary talks with theTFN.
The regional districtsays once the new plan isapproved by the province, arequest for proposals fromqualified proponents will beissued to arrive at appropri-ate technologies and the sit-ing of facilities.
A thorough environmen-tal assessment review, aswell as an extensive publicconsultation process, willalso have to take placebefore any new facilitiesare built, according to thedistrict.
Garbage plan presented to provinceSubmitted proposal, which has over 500 pages of documentation, includes array of waste reduction initiatives
BY SANDOR [email protected]
FILE PHOTO
Metro says the Vancouver Landfill currently takes 600,000 tonnes of garbage annually and under the new waste manage plan thatamount would drop to around 100,000 by 2020.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Dredging is a long standing issue in Ladner.
“We presentedover 500 pages ofdocumentation andI requested that heget back to us assoon as he has hisstaff digest and makerecommendationsto him, to allow abasket of optionsfor us as regionalgovernment.”
Lois Jackson
“The province is thelandlord here and
with them continuingto say it’s a federal
issue doesn’t cut it.”Mike Owen
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A03
Messages in a bottletreasured by finder
It turned out to be a greatgoing away memory forformer Holly Elementaryteacher Sandy Houghton.
As she was about toretire in June, the Grade 2teacher took her class of 24students on what’s turnedout to be an annual eventfor her class.The teachertook herstudents toCentennialBeach to tossa bottle filledwith cheer-ful mes-sages intothe water.The studentsunderstoodthat the waters of theworld’s oceans are connect-ed and that the bottle couldend up anywhere.
“One child wrote, ‘Lookat a green tree with a trunkand you’ll have 50 yearsgood luck.’ They were allgood luck message andgood wishes,” she said.
The bottle was a clearwine bottle with the mes-sages inside written onbrightly coloured paper
Three weeks later, muchto her surprise, Houghtongot a reply from a woman
who was walking the shoresof Smuggler’s Cove on SanJuan Island — an island onthe waters off WashingtonSate — where the bottlehad washed up.
The woman and a friendwere watching orca whalesjumping from the waterwhen something caughttheir eyes. It turned out tobe the glistening bottle rest-
ing on a log.The womansaid shedoubted thebottle wasashore verylong becausethe island isfilled withvacationersthere for seakayaking andorca whale
watching.Houghton said the
woman and her friendwere delighted to read thechildren’s messages and feltthey had found a treasure.
“It was a very specialyear for the kids and theyknew I was retiring. So thiswas kind of a nice memoryfor them too,” she said.
San Juan Island in PugetSound is the second largestand most populated of theSan Juan Islands, locatedsouth of Canada’s GulfIslands.
BY SANDOR [email protected]
PHOTO BY CHUNG CHOW
Retired Holly Elementary School teacher Sandy Houghton had her Grade 2 students wrote mes-sages and put them in a wine bottle which they launched from Centennial Beach. The bottle andmessages were found three weeks later by two friends on San Juan Island.
Summer producesales going to charity
The grandchildren of Jack Guichon would like tothank the community for their support during thissummer’s produce season and dedicate all proceeds tothe Delta Hospital Foundation in memory of GrandmaLorraine Guichon whom we lost this past year. Anycorn bought will be matched for free on Sunday, Sept.5 at the corn and vegetable tent on Arthur Drive at thepullout across from Kirkland House.
“It was a very specialyear for the kidsand they knew Iwas retiring. So thiswas kind of a nicememory for themtoo.”
Sandy Houghton
A04 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
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Deltans could soon beseeing longer trucks travel-ing between Deltaport andTilbury Industrial Park.
At a recent councilmeeting, civic politiciansendorsed a pilot projectwith Maersk Distributionthat would seen the com-pany operating its extendedlength trucks between theirfacility on River Road andthe port.
The trucks, which areknown as extended lengthsuper B-trains (ELS B-trains) are combinationvehicles consisting of atractor and two trailers thatmeasure just over 12 metresin length.
Delta’s director of engi-neering, Steven Lan, saidthis week that the companymust obtain a highwayuse permit, a highway uselicence and a provincialpermit before the six-monthtrial period can begin.
If allowed to proceed, thetrucks would move betweenDeltaport and Tilbury via
Highway 17, 62B Street andRiver Road.
Some road improvementsare required before thetrucks will be allowed totravel that route. A report tocouncil from Lan outlinesthe need for road widen-ing improvements at theintersection of River Roadand River Way to providean adequate turning radiusfor the trucks, as well as analteration to traffic signaltiming.
If approved, the trial willbe implemented in phases.
“We’re going to be work-ing with them to ensure it’sa phased-in process,” Lansaid, adding that initiallythe trucks will only moveduring off-peak hours.
Combination trucks simi-lar to the ELS B-trains havebeen used in Saskachewanand Manitoba since the1970s and in Alberta sincethe mid-1990s.
At the meeting, MayorLois Jackson noted thattrucks carrying longer loadswill mean fewer trucksmoving in and out of theport.
Large truck pilotproject in worksLonger vehicles would travel fromport to Tilbury Industrial Park
BY JESSICA [email protected]
Back to the classroom!
PHOTO BY CHUNG CHOW
Jean Vinson gets ready to welcome her Grade 1 class for a new school year at Port Guichon Elementary. Students will be headingback to school on Tuesday.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A05
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A06 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
Everyone who rides has questions – aboutequipment, training, horse care and stable
management. Where do you turn for answers?Try the staff at Greenhawk. There’s a wealth
of experience behind that sales counter!Laura Loiacono, manager of the Vancouver
store, climbed aboard her first pony at theage of three, back when you just got on andstarted riding. Laura rides Western, but sheis also well versed in dressage, hunters andjumpers – thanks to her two daughters who arecompetitive riders in the English disciplines.
Being a show mom is exciting, but Laurasays she is most happy working with the horsesat her boarding barn in Ladner. Best of all istime spent with Rosie, her 24-year old Arabianmare.
“That’s my relaxing time,” Laura says. “Idon’t have to be riding. I have actually sat outin my horse’s paddock and read a book. It’s sorewarding, just being around the horses.”
As a barn manager, Laura has done it all– from nursing an orphaned foal to caring forretired horses. If she doesn’t know the answerto a question herself, she definitely knowswhere to find it.
Another familiar face at Greenhawk is eventrider Kendall Pugh. The demanding sport ofeventing requires horse and rider to competein dressage, stadium jumping, and on a crosscountry course.
“I like having the goal of getting your horseready for competition,” Kendall says. “I couldn’tsee myself riding for recreation. For me, it’s allabout competing!”
Kendall’s expertise includes basic equinehealth care, learned while working at a busyshow barn. Part of that job was to treatcommon ailments such as hoof absesses andstrained tendons, following a veterinarian’sadvice.
A regular part-time employee, Janice Jonesis a trail rider who has recently started learningnatural horsemanship, along with her mareDhalli. “You get a closer connection with yourhorse,” she says. “You become the alpha mare,instead of fighting the horse.”
Janice has no qualms about riding Dhalliout on the dykes around Delta and has evengalloped through the ocean at Pt. Roberts.
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Local CFUW chapter takes resolution to meetingThe South Delta
Canadian Federation ofUniversity Women have fol-lowed up on a local issue,to attempt to persuadethe federal government toimplement the precaution-ary principle in the caseof high voltage overheadpower lines.
In July, a delegationof three members of theSouth Delta CFUW, presi-dent Paula McLaughlin,Kathleen Jamieson andNadereh Houchmand,travelled to Ottawa for theCFUW national AGM.
They took with thema resolution written byJamieson and fellowmember Norrie Valencia,which urges the govern-ment of Canada to adoptthe precautionary principlein situations such as thatexperienced in Tsawwassenrecently.
The Canadian member-ship of CFUW is over10,000 women, with a mis-sion of equal status andeducation for women andgirls.
It is a not-for-profit,member-funded, voluntary,non-partisan organization ofgraduate women, students,and associate members.
The group advocates on awide variety of issues, andhave a strong and regularpresence on ParliamentHill.
Resolutions are votedupon each year, which willbe presented to the federalgovernment.
At the recent nationalAGM in July, these threewomen from South Deltamade a plea to the gather-ing of over 300 delegates,to accept the resolution.
After debate, discussionand voting, the resolution
failed, with only a few votesless than the required two-thirds majority.
However, the messagefrom the national presidentwas that this is still a veryvital and current issue.
For those who are inter-ested in learning moreabout the UniversityWomen’s Club, there willbe a prospective new mem-bers reception on Tuesday,Sept. 14, from 7 to 9 p.m.,at the home of CherylMcTait, 1232 Pacific Dr.,Tsawwassen.
Women with a post-sec-ondary degree, diplomaor certificate, or are post-secondary students, arewelcome.
Women who support themission of the club can alsojoin as associate members.
Call 604-943-4634 or604-943-0042 for moreinformation.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Three members of the local Canadian Federation of University Women chapter traveled to Ottawaearlier this summer for the national annual general meeting.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A07
The Corporation of Delta invites youto a FREE evening concert featuring
U.S. MARINE CORPS BANDWednesday, September 8 at 7pm
North Delta Social Heart Plaza11415 84th Ave., North Delta
Bring your lawn chair & enjoy this renowed band.In case of poor weather, the concert will be moved indoors
to the North Delta Recreation Centre.
For further information call theNorth Delta Customer Service Office 604-952-3045
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Vicki HuntingtonMLA, Delta South
An ImportantMessage FromYour MLA
CHANGES TO THE MOTOR VEHICLE ACTThis spring, the Legislative Assembly passed important amendments to the Motor Vehicle Act.Many of the changes are in response to society's concerns about the consequences of drinkingand driving.The amendments are far more rigorous than existing law: for instance, the new rulesfor drunk driving will include substantial penalties for "warnings".
These significant changes will come into effect this fall, and may radically alter the way we socializebefore getting into our cars.The goal: to increase safety on our roads.
To help highlight the coming changes and to ensure no one is caught off-guard starting onSeptember 20th, I am providing a chart which illustrates the new penalties. I hope you and yourfamilies will find it useful:
AdministrativeConsequences
"Warn Range"(0.05-0.08)
"Fail Range"(Over 0.08)
1st Time 2nd Time(within 5 years)
3rd andSubsequent
(within 5 years)
ImmediateRoadside Licence
Suspension
3-daysuspension
7-daysuspension
30-daysuspension
Immediate 90-dayAdministrative
DrivingProhibition
VehicleImpoundment
3-day1 7-day1 30-day 30-day
Estimatedminimum towing,
storage costs
$150 $210 $700 $700
AdministrativePenalty
$200 $300 $400 $500
Driver's LicenceReinstatement Fee
$250 $250 $250 $250
RDP2
Requirement?n/a n/a Yes Yes
RDP cost n/a n/a $880 $880
Ignition InterlockRequirement?
n/a n/a 1-year 1-year3
Ignition Interlockcost per year
n/a n/a $1,420 $1,420
Estimated TotalCost
$600 $760 $3,650 $3,7504
Criminal Charges n/a n/a n/a Possible
New Penalties (coming into effect on September 20th, 2010)
1Optional Vehicle Impondment, at police offer's direction.2RDP: Responsible Driver Program.32- and 3-year Ignition Interlock requirements for subsequent offences.4Plus any legal costs, court-ordered fines, penalties, programming requirements (i.e. RDP and Ignition Interlock on 2nd Offence), etc.NOTE: Graduated Licensing Program drivers with any alcohol in their system continue to face GLP-specific consequences & reviews, inaddition to the penalties outlined above.
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Opinion Page
Today’s planmight not befor tomorrow
TEDMURPHY
MURPHY’SLAW
The community we want today mightnot necessarily be the same one we desiretomorrow.
As we agonize over what to buildand where, particularly in Tsawwassenwhere an area plan is nearing comple-tion, I think it would be useful to use theMarina Garden Estates subdivision as aframe of reference.
Approved by Delta council in the mid-1980s, the sprawling property on thebanks of the Fraser River in Ladner wasto be primarily a single-family neigh-bourhood, the standard housing unit ofthe day. The pace of construction hasbeen, shall we say, measured, so evenmore than a decade after approvals only afraction of the more than 1,400 units hadbeen built. The market for single-familyhomes had slowed, so the developer cameback before council looking to swapsome of those approvals for townhouses.
Even today, a quarter century afterthe initial approvals, less than half ofthe units have been built and even morechanges to the original plan are in theworks. A park is to become a waterfrontwalkway, a resort hotel appears ready tomorph into a seniors complex and somestacked townhouses will be replaced bysingle-family homes.
The evolution of Marina Gardens,which has undoubtedly become one ofLadner’s nicest neighbourhoods, is liv-ing proof that what’s envisioned todaymight not always meet market demandsof tomorrow.
When Delta’s population began toboom in the post-tunnel ‘60s and ‘70s,single-family homes were built becausejust about every family could afford one.Even as late as the 1980s, when MarinaGardens was approved and the ill-fatedTDL proposal endured a record-break-ing ride, the single-family home was stillking.
Today, that’s not necessarily the case.It’s still a vital component of the housingmarket, but higher density options arebecoming increasingly popular, primar-ily born out of skyrocketing land costs.If that much has changed housing-wisefrom just 20 years ago, it’s hard to imag-ine what will be needed two decadesfrom now.
That, I guess, is why we develop areaplans, but for them to be truly applicable,those entrusted with devising them mustalmost be part soothsayer. What werequire today, or even what we envisionwe’ll need tomorrow, won’t necessar-ily prepare us for what the future holds.Marina Gardens is proof of that.
That’s not to say we go with the flowand throw away the planning process, butit lends credence to the argument aboutupdating area plans more frequently thanevery two decades.
The Optimist encourages readers to write letters to the editor. Lettersare accepted on any topic, although preference is given to those onlocal matters. The Optimist reserves the right to edit letters and thedecision to publish is at the discretion of the editor or publisher. Allletters must be signed, dated and include the writer’s phone number
(not for publication). The Optimist will not print “name withheld”letters. Copyright in letters and other materials submitted voluntarilyto the publisher and accepted for publication remains with the author,but the publisher and its licensees may freely reproduce them inprint, electronic or other forms.
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I have a bunch of very cool peo-ple at my house as I write this on abeautiful Wednesday evening.
I just finished getting them allset up at the card table after serv-ing one of the last sunny barbecuedinners of the summer holidays.
I’ve gone back and forth onwhether I am happy or sad for backto school over the years. Tonight Iam sad.
The gang around the table is14 and 15 year olds and they havelegitimate beefs as to why goingback to school is becoming boring.
It was easy when kids went backto school as 4, 5 and 6 year oldsbecause things were simple andsimply explained.
Back then your kids would drinkit in without wanting or needingmore. I miss those days to be hon-est with you.
Now, when those same kids have
been social networking and mean-dering through the artist paradiseof the Internet for several years,coming back to a curriculum that isusually same old... as in same oldfor years... things are not that excit-ing anymore.
For the most part, I am not hear-ing anything suggesting that goingback to school is going to great andlots of fun this year.
I’m not sure that the actual cur-riculum is to blame. It could bethat the way in which it is conveyedmight need an upgrade.
Perhaps it is time to integratethe strengths and knowledge ofthose who may have a better under-standing of how to learn in to thesystem.
Would it be so wrong to ask ourkids to develop their own curricu-lum and methods for teaching it fora certain part of the school year?
I don’t mean to offend the DeltaSchool District or the ProvincialMinistry of Education, but seri-ously... I do not see any major shiftor attempt to play catch up. For themost part I see the curriculum asmodestly evolved over 30 years asopposed to the major change that itprobably needs.
Let’s give our kids some creditand get them involved in the pro-
cess because they are learningfaster than anybody else right now.
Let’s shake it up and dump thisthing on its ear because if you arelike me you will know that theseguys deserve to have some input.
Let’s take a really simpleexample – food. Would it not makesense to talk about where it comesfrom, and how it relates to severalpressing issues of the day? Maybeas an add on to home economics orsciences?
Instead of just making the recipewhy not grow the stuff that goes into it?
Technology and the Internet areclearly in need of attention in ourcurriculum. The kids are alreadyavid users of the technology sowhy not teach them, from an earlyage, to develop ideas that wouldthrive in the online world.
Instead of “social networking”in between classes and at lunchwhy don’t we teach the kids howto use it in real world business andarts applications in class time?
The problem is that we don’thave enough teachers who couldpossibly teach our kids these typesof courses and that is why thecurrent trend will likely continuefor quite some time and that is ashame.
School curriculum needs a change
MIKESCHNEIDER
COMMUNITYCOMMENT
A08 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
Letters to the Editor
Editor:Re: Former premier
makes ingenious find topotentially re-enter politics,letter to the editor, Aug. 28
N. Spiros manages in hisor her short scrawl to insultBill Vander Zalm, thou-sands of volunteer anti-HSTpetition canvassers, andover 700,000 signatoriesto the petition. Mr. VanderZalm’s motives for spear-heading the campaign areimpugned, the volunteerswho worked very hard toconduct the first-ever suc-cessful citizen’s initiativepetition in Canadian historyare told their job was “theeasiest thing in the world,”and 700,000 people arebranded “irresponsible.”What breathtaking arro-gance!
I cannot speak for Mr.Vander Zalm, the volun-teers, or the rest of the sig-natories. They can addressSpiros themselves shouldthey wish; but as one of theinsulted signatories, I have
a message for Mr. or Ms.Spiros.
The message is that Ineed no guidance from you,sir or madam. I have con-ducted my own research,informed myself of thefacts, and reached an opin-ion regarding the merits ofthe tax, including how itwas instituted. I fully payall taxes for which I amlegally obligated, realizethat we all must share thegovernmental economicburden and am not “anti-tax, any tax,” as you soignorantly assert. But I willnot sit quietly in the cornerwhile others decide myshare.
If you don’t mind payingtaxes that were previouslythe responsibility of anothersector of society, andimposed upon you withoutproper consultation, that’syour own business.
I would invite you tomind it and stay out ofmine.
Lew Edwardson
Not going to sitquietly as othersdecide tax plan
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A09
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The 5th annual Day atthe Farm, the agriculturalawareness event held byDelta Farmland & WildlifeTrust and WesthamIsland Herb Farm, is fastapproaching. On Sept. 11,come to 4690 KirklandRoad on Westham Islandbetween 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.and learn about farming inyour community.
This event is uniquebecause many people today,especially if living in thecity, do not have the oppor-tunity to visit a workingfarm.
Without experiencing itfirsthand, it can be easy tobe unaware of how chal-
lenging farming can actu-ally be. Recently a friendwho operates a local farmand I were discussing thechallenges facing agricul-ture here in Delta, and itdidn’t take long to comeup with an extensive list.Here’s a few:
• Local processors whoused to buy beans, peas andcorn have closed down orbeen bought out, leavingfarmers with fewer marketsto sell to (an ironic fact,since the city of Vancouver,with a population of peoplepurportedly poised to pro-cure local produce, is only35 kilometres away).
• Profit margins can beslim, especially for smallerfarms, because large pro-ducers in America who
sell into local markets canundercut even the mostefficient growers here andproduction costs (includingfuel, fertilizer, and pesti-cides) are rising.
• Land tenure on rentedfarmland can be short (e.g.,less than five years) andthere is no incentive forfarmers to invest in long-term soil management whenthis is the case.
• The price offered forbeef cattle does not coverthe cost of raising them,and this means vegetablefarmers are unable toinclude livestock, which arecrucial for managing long-term soil fertility, in theircrop rotation.
• Many farmers are pre-paring to retire, without a
comparable demographic ofyoung farmers to take theirplace.
Although I am happy tosay that I know of morethan one young, local farm-er who is willing to take upthe plough to grow crops orraise livestock for a living.
• Migratory water-fowl like snow geese andAmerican wigeon canimpose economic hardshipon hay growers because oftheir insatiable appetite forforage grass.
• And ever-present is thepressure of development– roadways, urban andindustrial areas – whichthreatens to sever access tofarm fields and diminishthe amount of land availableto grow crops.
I’m not sure how awarethe community is of thechallenges facing localfarming operations. It isnecessary, however, thatthere is awareness of agri-culture, especially if wevalue keeping agricultureas a part of our community.And the decision to main-tain agriculture in our com-munity can only be made ifwe are all explicitly awareof what farming is.
One thing farming isnot, is a casual enterprise.For example, crop rotationsare not easily adopted andabandoned. Whether yourun a small scale organicfarm or a large-scale con-ventional farm, there is aneed to invest heavily inequipment and/or labour for
each crop.This amounts to a long-
term investment in a spe-cific crop rotation system(as is the case in Delta,with the Potato – Bean/Pea/Squash – Forage Grass/Grain crop rotation).
When markets for aspecific crop within therotation is lost, farmers arechallenged to find new ave-nues for generating revenuewhile trying to maintainsoil fertility and minimizepest outbreaks.
Please consider whetheryou are in favour of havingagriculture remain a part ofyour community or not.
Come to Day at the Farmto see what agriculturein our communities is allabout.
Day at the Farm set for Sept. 11Delta Farmland & Wildlife Trust to host annual agricultural awareness event
BY DAVID BRADBEEROptimist contributor
A10 The Delta Optimist September 4, 201009
0435
92
A DAY AT THE FARM
Another summer seasonis approaching its end; bar-ley, oats and spring wheatare being cut and swathed,the blueberry crops havealmost been picked, andlocal farmers are preparingto harvest potatoes.
As the fall approaches,migratory birds travel-ling from arctic breedinggrounds begin to arrive onthe Fraser River delta, andsome will find shelter andfood on the farmland.
As I look out over thepastures, berry crops, andvegetable fields on thedelta, I find myself wonder-ing what the agriculturallandscape in our communi-ty will look like in 30 years.In that time, the populationof the Lower Mainlandwill have increased, poten-tially by almost one millionpeople (based on the 2001and 2006 Statistics Canadacensuses, and assuming afixed growth rate). Withthat population growth willcome densification andexpansion of our urbancenters. As we grow, willsociety opt to locate morehousing, industry, andtransportation networks onexisting farmland? And ifso, what consequences willthis growth bring?
As I ponder these ques-tions, I can’t help but beaware that the landscapehere has already gonethrough a drastic changewithin the last 140 years.The Ladner brothers firstbegan working land herefor agriculture in 1868. Atthe time, the delta was com-posed of marshes, grass-lands, shrubs and, on higherground, trees. Interspersedamongst this was a complexof waterways and sloughs,
and the extent of bog landwas far larger than it isnow. These habitats wouldhave been rich in biodi-versity, including speciesthat no longer call this areahome (such as the westernbluebird, spotted skunk,common nighthawk, griz-zly bear, roughed grouseand Roosevelt elk). As landwas diked and drained foragriculture, marshes driedout, shrubs were cut andgrasslands ploughed underto make way for pasturesand field crops. Like mostchange, this would havehappened gradually, but theoverall impact would havebeen a declining ability ofthe landscape to supportbiodiversity.
Today, there are far fewerspecies present in Deltathan before the arrival ofpeople from the continentsof Europe and Asia. Yet thislandscape continues to sup-port an incredible level ofbiological diversity, includ-ing 280 species of birds.Land cleared for farminginitially removed significantamounts of habitat but,ironically, agriculture is theonly land use today that canhelp maintain the biodiver-sity that is left. Managedproperly, farms can provide
tall grass and hedgerowsthat mimic the historicvegetation communities ofthe Fraser River delta. Forinstance, Grassland Set-asides (the tall grass, fallowfields enrolled in DeltaFarmland & Wildlife Trustsstewardship program) coveran average of 500 acresof farmland a year andaccount for a quarter of allgrassland habitat in Delta.Comparatively, roads,housing developments,and industrial lots providelittle in the way of wildlifehabitat, except for the mostcommensal of species (e.g.,rats, raccoons, pigeons).
As our communitygradually changes, so toowill our use of the land.But before we make dras-tic changes, we must beexplicitly aware of what weexpect from the landscape.If we value the biodiver-sity that makes our regionunique, we must recognizethat certain land uses canbe managed to conserve it.Others cannot.
Join us on Sept. 11 atWestham Island Herb Farm(4690 Kirkland Road) for ADay at the Farm and learnabout the role agriculturecan play in wildlife conser-vation.
Landscape goingthrough changesCertain uses can preserve biodiversity
BY DAVID BRADBEEROptimist contributor
FILE PHOTO
Attend the A Day at the Farm event and learn about the roleagriculture can play in wildlife conservation.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A11
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Letters to the Editor
Editor:One may reflect on the
draft Tsawwassen AreaPlan’s affect on the futureof the Southlands. None!Will a designation appliedtwo decades ago somehowyield a different resultnow? Will there be bucolicfarms, or another proposeddevelopment? The commondenominator between all inthe debate was desire for alasting solution – one bothdeveloper and communitycould welcome. The com-mittee ignored this. Theyfailed, but there may be asolution. It is in what Deltacouncil received, but over-looked.
Delta owns land at thenorth end of Tsawwassenbetween 52nd and 56th andsouth of Highway 17. It isnext to 17 acres owned byCentury Group. Delta’s por-tion is farmed, Century’s isnot. Both are in the ALRand green zone. Together Iestimate they total perhaps80 acres. Delta’s is nowdesignated institutional, butthe new TAP would changethat to agricultural.
The plan calls for moretownhouses and condos.“Putting townhouses underthe hydro line” and inestablished single-fam-ily neighborhoods nearthe town centre is surelycontroversial. We hear italready. What if instead the80 or so acres at the “north-end” of town were desig-nated to receive that growth– perhaps 500 or 1,000townhouses or condos? Noneed to tear down dwellingsand disrupt people to makeroom for more. They would
be accessible to Highway17 by 52nd and the towncentre by both 56th and52nd, thus mitigating trafficissues. Best of all, it couldforever end the Southlandsissue!
The only true protectionof farmland is municipalownership. Delta nowowns about 60 acres ofit. Wouldn’t it be a gooddeal if they could swap it
for more than 400 acres?Acres that endless speak-ers, including experts, sayis prime farmland? Whatif Metro Vancouver weregiven an urban forest for apark? What if the ALR got500 acres in return for 80taken out? Perhaps OWLmight even find a bit of lessvaluable but quiet farmlandfor birds now stressed byairport noise.
Hidden in the plan thatwent to council is strongmotivation for residents,Delta, Metro, and the ALRto do a deal.
I hope for Century Groupalso. Here’s the deal. Delta,Metro, and the ALR gettogether, take all 80 acresout of the ALR and greenzone, and designate themfor townhouses and or con-dos. Then swap them forthe Southlands.
Ed Ries
A solution for theSouthlands issue
Hidden in the planthat went to councilis strong motivationfor residents, Delta,Metro, and the ALR todo a deal.
A12 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
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Girls FastpitchTryouts Reminder
AGE PLAYER TRYOUT LOCATION COACH NAME PHONEDIVISION BIRTH YEAR AND TIME NUMBER
Squirt 2000 Sat., Sept. 11 10am-12pm Brandrith VacantSat., Sept. 18 10am-12pm D1 (interim contact = Doug Steer) 943-7399
Squirt 1999 Sat., Sept. 11 1-3pm Brandrith Erin McGill 948-8000Sat., Sept. 18 12-2pm D1 [email protected]
Peewee 1998 Mon., Sept. 13 6-7:30 pm Brandrith D1 Wendy Gooding 946-7383Sat., Sept. 18 10am-12pm Brandrith D2 [email protected]
Peewee 1997 Mon., Sept. 13 6-7:30pm Brandrith D2 Gordon Chan 952-6679Sat., Sept. 18 10am-12pm Brandrith D3 [email protected] 992-6679
Bantam 1996 Tues., Sept. 14 6-7:30pm Brandrith D1 Julie Gillis 946-6415Sat., Sept. 18 12-2pm Brandrith D2 [email protected]
Bantam 1995 Sat., Sept. 11 1-3pm Brandrith D2 Vacant 943-7399Sat., Sept. 18 12-2pm Brandrith D3 (interim contact = Doug Steer)
Midget 1994 Sat., Sept. 11 1-3pm Brandrith D3 Terry Westerhof 946-4695Tues., Sept. 14 6-7:30pm Brandrith D2 [email protected]
Midget 1993 Sat., Sept. 11 10am-12pm Brandrith D2 Dough Steer 943-7399Tues., Sept. 14 6-7:30pm Brandrith D3 [email protected]
Please arrive 15 minutes early to register. If you are unable to attend these tryout sessions, please contact the appro-priate coach for your age group. Tryouts are based on weather permitting; please contact the corresponding coach ifweather is questionable. For any further information, please contact Doug Steer @ 604-943-7399 or [email protected]
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A lot of ramblers —readers who like these ram-bles — enjoyed the reportsof the voyaging by Jim andDonna Poirier up and downour scenic west coast sohere’s another installment:
“Before we leftRichmond Bay on DruryInlet, Jim decided to easehis conscience about all thetime he’s taken to go fish-ing while leaving me aloneon the boat. So his solutionwas to take me fishing withhim!! OK, I’ll go, if I haveto.
“He was determined forme to catch a fish and catcha fish I did! He cast outthe line and I played withit until I felt a tug — andmanaged to reel in a rockfish. The next one was onmy rod and it didn’t takelong to feel the tug. ‘Keeptension on the line,’ I amtutored. This time I brought
a little sole (or somethingresembling it).
“When we got backto the boat Jim went toretrieve the crab trap andthe contents revealed twocrab and a ginormous sun-star. How these big many-legged creatures manageto slither through such tinyholes is amazing — andannoying to the fisherman!
“Due to the lateness ofthe day we decided to putin to Sullivan Bay Marinafor an overnight stop beforegetting up early to tacklethe 30-mile passage acrossQueen Charlotte to PortMcNeill. It was a nicemarina, contrary to our firstimpression. The long dockwe were at was shared withfloat homes and they were
lovely, many of their patiosand decks trimmed withcolourful plants. Discoveredthat two years ago eight ofthe homeowners were dis-satisfied with conditionsand banded together andbought the marina.
“After getting thingsstowed and tidied up wewent for a walk-about,checking out the laun-dry, showers, store andLIQUOR STORE! HappyHour ensued on the ‘patio’where we met lots of inter-esting boaters with inter-esting stories to tell. Lotsof laughs followed. Chrisdiscovered that Jim playedmusic and offered us onenight of free moorage if Jimwould play guitar and singat Happy Hour. Jim said:‘This will be my first paidgig in many years.’
“Spent three more daysFREE as Jim continued toperform at Happy Hour.In this casual environmentpeople’s worldly status dis-solves and we all becomeequal. It’s like being naked.We all look the same with-out our worldly possessionin tow!”
EDGARDUNNING
RAMBLING
Another installment ofJim and Donna’s trekWest coast trip includes stop at Sullivan Bay Marina
The long dock wewere at was sharedwith float homesand they were lovely,many of their patiosand decks trimmedwith colourful plants.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A13
• Tuesday: September 7, 21• Tuesday: September 7, 21• Saturday: September 11, 18• Saturday: September 11, 18
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PROMOTING OUTDOOR LIVING IN WESTERN CANADA FOR OVER A DECADE
Danielle St. Laurent ofTsawwassen was the lat-est recipient this week of a$1,000 Tim Hortons schol-arship. St. Laurent receivedthe award on Tuesday forher commitment to givingback to the community.
The Tim HortonsScholarship Program isdesigned to recognize storeemployees, as well as theirchildren or grandchildren,who believe in giving backto their community throughvolunteer work and haveplan to pursue post-second-ary education.
In its sixth year, the pro-gram has already helpedmore than 1,000 studentsacross Canada and the
United States. This yearalone, $220,000 will bedistributed among 220 stu-dents.
“We are delighted topresent Danielle St. Laurentwith the 2010 Tim HortonsScholarship,” said DebbieCooke, who owns theTsawwassen Tim Hortons.
“We are proud of her com-mitment to this communityand the desire to pursuepost-secondary education.We are happy that TimHortons can help Daniellefulfill her future goals andwish her much success.”
***A South Delta man was
one of four lucky winnersannounced this week ofthe inaugural FreshwaterFisheries Society’s FishingBuddies Contest.
The free contest ran fromMay 28 until Aug. 15 and
drew people to the society’sFishing Buddies Program,which encourages experi-enced B.C. anglers to sharetheir knowledge and bringnew people to the sport.
Tsawwassen’s KeithJohnston won a one-weekRV rental, which includedinsurance and 1,000 pre-paid kilometres, from theCamping and RVing B.C.Coalition.
Johnston, who activelypromotes fishing and theproper techniques has giventhe gift of fishing to bothhis wife and daughter, andhe believes that “99.9 percent of the time people havea wonderful time fishing.
“It’s unbelievable, peopleare always so happy totalk about fishing out onthe water and are quick tounderstand the importanceof respect for the resource.”
The contest attractedmore than 1,000 entrantsand more than 800 peoplesigned up to be FishingBuddies over the contestperiod.
PHOTO BY CHUNG CHOW
Danielle St. Laurent (centre)receiving her Tim Hortonsscholarship cheque and cer-tificate from Tsawwassen TimHortons owner Debbie Cooke(left) and assistant manager,Becky Tweed (right).
Tim Hortons worker getsscholarship worth $1,000
briefsbriefs
A14 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
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Farming is a majorindustry in Delta and thereis something businessesand residents alike can doto support and protect it:Feed the Bees, the DeltaChamber of Commercesays.
There is a crisis affectingthe health of the bee popu-lation on a worldwide basis.The potential threat to thebee population is very realfor farming businesses andtheir ability to grow crops.Our farm crops and our gar-dens need bees as pollina-tors. If we feed bees we canattract them and keep them.
At the chamber’sCentennial Tailgate Partylast month, the businessgroup launched a pro-motional Feed the Bees
campaign in collaborationwith Earthwise Society.Earthwise Society is imple-menting a demonstrationproject using bee friendlyplants at the EarthwiseFarm in Tsawwassen, andoffers bee workshops andother educational programsto engage residents, stu-dents, and businesses inDelta in support of the localbee population.
The two organizationsintend to become part of asolution to the threat to ourbees and ensure a sustain-able bee population thriveson the flora of Delta.
The campaign will runthrough the fall and wintermonths and be in full swingin spring and summer of2011.
Business
Chamber launchesFeed the Bees effortwith Earthwise
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A15
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Jim ShortLadner United Church
On the day the Tamil refugee shipdocked in Victoria, my iPod touchshuffle played the classic Holliestune He Ain’t Heavy, He’s MyBrother.
As many B.C. folks talked angrilyabout pulling the welcome mat up on“queue jumpers,” the First Nationswomen of Victoria joined handsand prayed for those on the ship.Ironically, many of us are relatedto people who came to Canada onrefugee ships fleeing persecution andhard times.
They took without asking a landthat belonged to the ancestors ofthese women.
I do not wish Canada to become ahaven for terrorist and criminals. Itis also true that I enjoy the wealth ofthis privileged land simply because Iwas lucky enough to born here. I didnothing to specially deserve or earn
my birthright.In the Hebrew Scriptures, YHWH
called the people of Israel to be a“light to the nations” and a compas-sionate home to widows, orphansand refugees.
Matthew says that Jesus is“embedded” or hidden, not in thecathedral church but in the realneeds of human beings. Those whowould seek Jesus will find him intheir faces. (Matthew 25) In visitingthe sick and imprisoned, feeding thehungry, clothing the naked, givingwater to those who are thirsty andin welcoming the stranger, there wemeet Jesus.
Where, I wonder, was Jesus onthat ship and what kind of welcomedid we who profess allegiance as hisdisciples give him?
Jim Short can be reached at [email protected]
What kind of welcome?
A16 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
0901
3124
Benediction LutheranChurch
5575 6th Avenue (56th St. at 6th Ave.)
Tel: 604-943-3432
SUNDAYS, 10 AMWorship & Christian Education
“All are warmly welcomed to worshipwith us as we Celebrate God’s Grace.”
Pastor Courtenay Reedman
Ladner Christian Fellowship
Home of the South Delta Food Bank& Creation Station Daycare
Sunday Service at 10:00 am+ Nursery & Children Services
Pastors: Danny Stebeck, Gabriel Torrealba
5545 Ladner Trunk Rd., Delta, B.C., V4K 1X1604.946.4430 • www.ladnerlife.com
St. David’sAnglican Church
1115 - 51A Street, Tsawwassen604-943-4737
Sunday Services8:00 am - Holy Communion
(Book of Common Prayer)10:00 am - Holy Communion(Book ofAlternative Services)
with Children's programs
www.stdavidsdelta.com
SaviourLutheran Church
Sunday WorshipService10 am
Pastor Steven A Naylor4737 57th Street, Ladner
604-946-2112
Ladner UnitedChurch
“A Heart for God…in the Heart of the Village”
4960-48th Avenue, LadnerPhone 604-946-6254www.ladnerunited.org
The Rev. Jim Short
10 amWorship Service
and Sunday School
We Welcome You to Join Us!
CHURCH DIRECTORY
LADNER GOSPELASSEMBLY
4979-44A Avenue, Ladner604-946-9179 • 604-946-4224
WELCOMES YOUSUMMER HOURS
SUNDAY10:00 AM
Coffee & Refreshments
10:30 AMWORSHIP SERVICE
WEDNESDAY - 7:30 PMPrayer & Bible Study
0904
9018
cedar park church
Summer Schedule
10:00am Worship ServiceSermon title:
"Finding Good Among the Nations"Speaker: Tom Balke
5300 - 44th Ave., Ladner(Corner of 44th Ave and Arthur Dr.)
604-946-7410
Lead Pastor - Dave EsauYouth Pastor - Dan Peters
Worship Pastor - Roy Salmondwww.cedarparkchurch.com
St.Andrew's ChurchEVERY SUNDAY MORNINGEFFECTIVE SEPT. 12, 2010
9:00 amContinental Breakfast
9:30 amService of Holy Communion
New Location1710 56th Street, Tsawwassen, BC
(South Delta Artists’ Guild Arts Gallery)(at the Longhouse, next to SD Rec Centre)
www.standrewsdeltabc.org
YOU'REINVITED TO
Grand ViewBaptist Church
5425 Ladner Trunk Road778.240.2340
www.grandviewbaptistchurch.org
Sunday:Coffee With Pastor 9:45-10:15am
Morning Sevice 10:30amEvening Service 6:30pm
There is HOPEFriendly ~ Family ~ Fundamental
All SaintsAll SaintsAnglican ChurchAnglican Church
4755 Arthur DriveLadner
604-946-8413
SUMMERSERVICES
2010On Sunday mornings from
July 4th up to and includingSeptember 5th there will be
one Family Eucharist Serviceat 9:30 am
www.allsaintsladner.org
Welcomes you
Sunday WorshipSeptember 5 ~ 10:00 am
“Does It Make aDifference?”Ephesians 3:17-32Pastor Jed Schoepp
4594 - 54A St., Ladner, B.C.Call: 604-946-7033
Email: [email protected]: www.ladnercrc.orgPastor: Henry Jonker
Youth Pastor: Jed Schoepp
www.tsawwassenunited.orgGuest Minister: Sophia Ducey
Music Director: Sandra Dawn Nash
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leisure&lifestylesfeatures co-ordinator: Dave Willis 604-946-4451 email: [email protected] ....in South Delta
A twist on WonderlandDelta Secondary grad sets sights on stage
Anoushka Ratnarajah has a busymonth ahead of her.
The Delta Secondary grad willbe performing in a play, one shehelped to write, at the VancouverInternational Fringe Festival aswell as getting ready for a move tothe Big Apple for grad school.
The three-woman play is titledCapital, Alice!
“It’s kind of a spin on Alice inWonderland. That’s where we gotour idea. It’s got an anti-capital-ist critique of consumer culture,”says Ratnarajah, 24. “It basicallyrevolves around this retail workernamed Alice, who all three of usplay at some point in the show.”
She described the one-hour playas an absurdist dark comedy.
Alice, who works at a clothingstore in a mall, falls asleep on thejob one day and wakes up in a“dream state” version of the shop-ping centre.
“She goes through and meets allthese colourful characters, some ofwhom are icons of consumer cul-ture,” says Ratnarajah. “We tookdifferent scenes we thought wereinteresting and applicable from theAlice in Wonderland narrative andsort of put our own spin on it.”
For example Tweedledum andTweedledee have been transformedinto Karl Marx and Adam Smith,two political economists.
Alice “goes through this wholejourney and ends up at the trialscene with the Red Queen beingour idea of the ideal feminizedconsumer,” she says.
Ratnarajah, who graduated from
UBC after six years with degreesin creative writing and women’sand gender studies, is also prepar-ing to start grad school in NewYork.
She’ll be going to the TischSchool of the Arts at NYU for anarts politics program.
“I’ll be dealing with art andactivism, the social responsibilityof artists as cultural communica-tors and whether or not we havean obligation as creative people towork for social justice and thingslike that. It’s pretty exciting,” shesays.
As for future goals, Ratnarajahsays she’d like to stay and work inNew York for a few years.
“I love theatre, and that’s what Iwant to concentrate on for the nextcouple of years. I think theatre hasthe opportunity to reach people
on such an instant and immediatelevel.”
It can also create change in theworld and make people think, shesays.
“I’d like to do more activist,feminist, politically charged the-atre and make it fun. The showwe’re in right now is a blast. It’sdealing with serious stuff but itsalso very silly. So it’s presentingsomething that’s potentially newfor people to think about, but in avery accessible way.”
Capital, Alice! has an 18 and uprating. It will be staged at Studio16, 1555 West 7th Ave., Vancouver.The opening performance is sched-uled for Thursday, Sept. 9 at 8:30p.m.
Visit www.vancouverfringe.comfor more information on the festi-val or to buy tickets.
Capital, Alice!show times
Thursday, Sept. 9, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 11, 1:00 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 12, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 16, 6:35 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 18, 5:40 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 19, 3:15 p.m.
All shows are on the stageat Studio 16 (1555 West 7thAve.)
Tickets are available online atwww.vancouverfringe.com.
BY DAVE [email protected]
PHOTO BY CHUNG CHOW
Delta Secondary grad AnoushkaRatnarajah, 24, can be seenon the stage this month at theVancouver International FringeFestival before heading to NewYork City for grad school.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A17
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Touring through Venice’s ‘New Ghetto’
‘Hath not a Jew eyes?” askedthe most famous Jewish Venetian,Shakespeare’s Shylock. “If youprick us, do we not bleed?”
By the end of the 16th century,when The Merchant of Venice waswritten, the moneylender’s real-life Venetian brethren had beensequestered in a ghetto for closeto a century. In fact, Venice’sJewish ghetto was the first suchconfinement of Jews anywhere.The practice, of course, wasrepeated throughout Europe in thecenturies that followed, culminat-ing in the Jewish ghettos of theNazi era.
And of all of them, Venice’smay be the only one that couldever have been labelled as some-thing approaching charming.
The Ghetto Nuovo (NewGhetto) was established by thedoges, Venice’s ruling council,on March 30, 1516 (a date searedinto Jewish memories here) ona small, dirty island in the city’sCannaregio district. Touted inevery tourist guide, it is now atrendy destination, especially ifyou’re in the market for gorgeous,hand-blown Venetian glass candle-holders, dreidels or other religiousitems.
At roughly its original 5,000
square metres, today it consistsof a large cobblestoned centralsquare, a jumble of slender alleys,two kosher eateries, shops, tinyapartments and five synagoguesthat are so old they are no longerperpendicular to the ground. Evenif you don’t keep kosher, eitherrestaurant is a must for samplingthe great Italian-Jewish specialty:deep-fried, super-crunchy arti-chokes the size of your head.
Marco, our guide, gets ourattention when he tells us thatJews wanted to live in the ghetto:“It was like — how do you say inAmerica? — a gated community.The Jews felt safe.”
It’s true they were protectedfrom marauders, but they couldnot leave from sunset to dawn.Huge gates manned by Christianguards shuttered the area. Themarks of the hinges are still vis-ible.
Jews were permitted only tooperate pawnshops, lend money(the Church forbade the profes-sion for Catholics), work theHebrew printing press, practicemedicine (because they were themost equipped to understand thebest medical texts of the day,which were in Arabic) and bestrazzarioli, rag sellers.
At the height of the Veniceghetto, more than 5,000 peoplelived in these cramped circum-
stances. If they had to leave theghetto, the men were required tosport yellow badges stitched onthe left shoulder or sometimes apointy yellow hat; women wore ayellow scarf.
The ghetto was originally set upfor Ashkenazic, or European Jews.Following an influx of wealthierSephardic Jews from Iberia whoevidently wanted their own “gatedcommunity,” the Ghetto Vecchio(misleadingly, “old ghetto”) was
established in1541 right nextdoor.
The five syna-gogues (calledschole) were
built between 1528 and 1580, theEuropean ones teetering on thetop floors of existing buildings(anything more than six storeys iscalled a “skyscraper”), while thetwo Sephardi houses of worship,located across a lane from eachother, are the only synagoguesstill in use today.
Only one is heated, so worship-pers alternate them between sum-mer and winter.
A treat is a guided tour of theoldest one, the Great GermanSchola or Sinagoghe GrandeTedesca, a tiny jewel, dark withmahogany and crimson, creakyand musty. The weight of theimposing pulpit in the middle of
the sanctuary eventually made thefloor sag, which is why pulpits inother synagogues were henceforthlocated on the side.
The ghetto’s gates came crash-ing down when Napoleon’s armyentered Venice in 1797, thoughmany Jews chose to stay.
Venice’s Jewish communitytoday numbers about 400, thoughonly about two dozen live in theghetto.
Unlike in Florence or Rome,where expensive ghetto apart-ments have been renovated, theones in Venice remain crampedand dingy, with very low ceilings.
Who else lives here? “Veryshort people,” Marco says.
BY RON CSILLAGPostmedia News
PHOTO BY RICHARD SENNETT/NATIONAL POST
Only about two dozen Jews still live in the Ghetto Nuovo. The central square is a majortourist draw.
A18 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
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Tiller’s Folly toheadline gala
Tiller’s Folly, a bandsteeped in the Celtic andCanadian tradition of folkmusic, is joining the DeltaPolice – Pipe Band, that is.
The group will headlinethe pipe band’s third annualCeltic Gala, to be heldon Oct. 29 at the SouthDelta Baptist Church inTsawwassen.
The 7:30 p.m. concertpromises a variety of Celticmusic from Tiller’s Folly,the Delta Police Pipe Band,Clarion Creations HighlandDancers and the DeltaCommunity Choir, with itsyouth choir, Tapestry.
It is not the first timeTiller’s Folly has beeninvolved with the police.
The group was com-missioned to write asong by the village ofKinlochbervie, Scotland, tocommemorate their localhero, Robert McBeath, VC.
After the First WorldWar, McBeath immi-grated to Canada and wasa serving member of theVancouver police depart-ment when he was fatallyshot while making an arrest.
The concert is a fund-raiser for the internation-ally acclaimed Delta Police
Pipe Band, which has manynational and internationalmilitary tattoos to its credit,as well as standing invita-tions to tattoos in Russia,Scandinavia, Europe andAustralia.
Its scheduled overseastrip for 2011 is to the pres-tigious Windsor CastleRoyal Tattoo in England inMay.
This invitation is par-ticularly pleasing as it isthe band’s 40th anniversary.Travel expenses for theband’s 50 members whowill be participating arepaid for by the band and theindividual members.
On arrival in the hostcountry, it is usual that allexpenses are met by thehost.
At the Celtic Gala, the
audience can expect aninteraction between thevarious acts and specialtyitems from elements withinthe pipe band.
The staccato DrumCadence has become anaudience favourite andDueling Bagpipes will fea-ture piper David All on thetraditional pipes and piperZhongxi Wu on the ChineseSuona, a wind instrumentwith similar characteristicsto bagpipes, but without thebag.
Tickets for the concertare $25 and available local-ly at Grapes-4-U in Ladnerand My Party Rentals inTsawwassen.
Tickets may also bepurchased through www.ticketweb.ca or ordered byphone at 604-940-5040.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A19
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A20 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
!"bouquets
#August 25th – September 7th
Purchase a Cops For Cancer bouquet at Thrifty Foodsand all proceeds will go to support this worthy cause.
Look for the Cops For Cancer Ride in you community:
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Thrifty Foods’ very ownCourtenay Store Manager, Rick Gaigariding in 2010 Cops for Cancer Tour De Rock.
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Every year at this time,union leaders like me areasked to share our thoughtson the significance ofLabour Day and the contri-butions of working peopleto the communities wherewe live and work. I oftensay that working peopleare the true engines of theeconomy, and that willnever change. But this yearas Labour Day approaches,what has been changingis that senior levels ofgovernment are quicker toembrace the privatization ofpublic services that unionmembers provide.
These public services arebeing threatened more than
ever by so-called public-pri-vate partnerships (P3s) andother forms of privatization.This threat is based on thefalse argument that publicservices contracted out toprivate operators providebetter service at less cost– a myth reinforced daily inthe big mainstream media,where right wing commen-tators are given generouscolumn inches to extolthe virtues of P3s and theglobal market.
Few would disagree thatthe private sector does goodwork when it comes todesigning and building pub-lic infrastructure. But oper-ation is a whole differentstory. With profit motivethe key consideration, pri-vate contractors don’t have
the same social investmentin the effective operationof schools, hospitals andrecreation centres that thelocally-based public sectordoes. Nevertheless, whenbudgets are tight, federaland provincial governmentsoften turn to privatization asthe first and only solution.
So what are the alterna-tives? If governments areserious about generatingnew revenue to offset pro-gram costs, why not maxi-mize the multiplier effectof our existing tax dollars– creating more revenuefrom consumer spendingthat stays in the commu-nity? Why not provide moreopportunities for youngentrepreneurs to stay in thecommunities where they
live, so that they can devel-op innovative new productsat home rather than joiningthe brain drain? We couldalso create additional reve-nue by promoting programsthat use capital stock inmunicipalities. We could doleakage analysis in order tofind ways to slow down thenumber of dollars that leavethe community. We couldconsider programs that dealwith import substitution toreduce, for example, ourreliance on products flownin from other hemispheres.
These ideas have workedin the past, and they con-tinue to prove effectivein developing new rev-enue streams. Last year inDenver, Colorado, I sawthem in action at a con-
ference of the BusinessAlliance for Local LivingEconomies (BALLE),which represents more than21,000 independent busi-ness members across theU.S. and Canada.
When times are tough,federal and provincialgovernments are too quickto slash programs, throwpeople out of work anddeprive citizens of publicservices they’ve come torely on. And they’re tooquick to embrace privatiza-tion as the easy, short-termfix – even though it maycost them so much morein the long term. What wereally need right now is abold, visionary approach togovernment that is unafraidof trying creative new rev-
enue streams with an aim toprotecting public servicesand the dedicated workerswho provide them.
Barry O’Neill is presi-dent of the Canadian Unionof Public Employees, B.C.division.
Now’s the time for bold solutionsPublic services being threatened more than ever by P3s, says CUPE president
BY BARRY O’NEILLOptimist contributor
Barry O’NeillCUPE president
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A21
!look out for them.
BETTER CAREFOR B.C. SENIORSOn Labour Day, we mark the contributions that working people havemade towards building a more just and equitable society.
Pensions, medicare, unemployment insurance, quality educationfor our kids. It’s our parents and grandparents who championed theimportant social programs that our families depend on.
Today’s seniors were looking out for us.Now we need to look out for them.
Together, let’s defend the legacy today’s seniors have given us – andensure that they have access to the quality affordable health servicesthey deserve.
A Labour Day message from the 43,000 membersof the Hospital Employees’ Union
looking out for us.
#!!
0904
2978
W O R K I N G F O R A B E T T E R F U T U R E
Over the past 12 months,working people did some-thing they have not donefor a very long time. Theychanged their government’smind.
Last year, on Labour Day,unions called for actionon retirement security. Atthe time, the economiccrisis and recession hadleft people’s savings in tat-ters. Pension plans wereunder attack. RRSPs wereexposed as inadequate forthe vast majority of work-ing people. Everythingpointed to a looming crisis– Canadians were not sav-ing enough to avoid povertyin retirement.
Asking people to savemore was easier said thandone. The reality is thatmost Canadians have a hardenough time paying theirmortgages and putting theirkids through school, whichexplains why only one infour people can put anymoney into an RRSP or atax-free savings account.
The solution was simple.Almost every workingperson in the countryalready has access to thesafest, most secure andguaranteed retirement
savings plan in the world– the Canada Pension Plan.Throughout the economiccrisis, nobody’s CPP chequedecreased and nobody’sCPP savings disappeared.But, the CPP is capped andonly allows people to saveenough to cover a maxi-mum of 25 per cent of theaverage wage. That’s notenough for anyone to liveon today.
The Canadian LabourCongress launched a cam-paign to expand the CPPand help everyone savemore – enough to coverthe basics when they retire.We asked union membersto join our campaign andencouraged them to talkto their friends and neigh-bours. They did.
At a meeting in June, thecountry’s finance ministersagreed that the best way tohelp Canadians save morefor retirement was throughthe Canada Pension Plan.It was a sweet victory forworking people.
Working people make upthe majority of the coun-try’s citizens and voters. It’simpossible for politiciansto ignore so many peoplewhen they make their pres-ence felt. But getting work-ing people to engage thepeople we elect and send to
our legislatures and councilchambers is still not as easyas it should be. Too manythink it’s not worth theeffort, that it can’t possiblymake a difference.
Well, they should thinkagain. Over just one year,we moved the federal andmany provincial govern-ments away from theirprevious positions on howto fix Canada’s retirementsecurity crisis towards onethat benefits the vast major-ity of Canadians.
We beat out the high-paidlobbyists who were tellingpoliticians that the solu-tion was more tax cuts forpeople who could afford tobuy RRSPs. We beat outthe financial and insuranceindustries that have madeobscene profits by charg-ing some of the highestmanagement fees in theworld on the mutual fundsand small savings accountsCanadians have managed toput away.
Now, we need to get thejob done. We need to makesure that laws get intro-duced this year to changethe Canada Pension Planand deliver better retirementsecurity for everyone.
Ken Georgetti is presi-dent of the CanadianLabour Congress
‘Sweet victory’ forworking people
BY KEN GEORGETTIOptimist contributor
A22 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
CITIZENSOF DELTA
Labour Day is not justa long weekend.
Here are just some of the benefits we have as aresult of workers’ struggles in the past:
✔ Weekends✔ Safer Workplaces
✔ Pay Equity✔ 40-Hour Work Weeks
✔ Coffee Breaks✔ Pensions
✔ Lunch Periods✔ Overtime
✔ Benefit Coverage✔ Vacation Pay
This labour day, let us think about thecontribution workers make to our communities
today, in the past, and looking toward the future.
This message brought to you by:
CUPE LOCAL 1091Delta School Employees
CUPE LOCAL 454Delta Public Employees
DELTA TEACHERS’ ASSOCIATION
“What we seek for ourselves,we strive for all”
0904
3589
The International Brotherhoodof Boilermakers Lodge 359 has
represented working men and women inBritish Columbia for over 50 years in
heavy construction, shop, officeand technical fields.
4514 Dawson StreetBurnaby, British Columbia
V5C 4C1www.boilermakers.orgPhone: 604-291-7531
Fax: 604-291-9265
0830
7595
Labour Day is a special holiday that was established due to thedetermination of unionized workers who fought for the abolition ofthe law that decreed that “Trade Unions were criminal conspiraciesin restraint of trade”, even though Labour Day was conceivedby virtue of relentless activities and demonstrations of the TradeUnions. This is a holiday to be celebrated by all who labour.
We wish all labour a Happy and Safe Labour Day!
0830
8518
On Labour Day, wemark the contributions thatworking people have madetowards building a morejust and equitable society.
Pensions, medicare,unemployment insurance,and quality education forour kids are part of thelegacy that our parents andgrandparents establishedfor us. Their desire to builda better society for futuregenerations created a rangeof important social pro-grams that would be acces-sible to all regardless ofincome.
Along with these, work-ers and their unions foughtfor fair, family-supportingwages and benefits, andworking conditions thataddressed issues like occu-pational health and safetyand equality.
Today’s seniors werelooking out for us. Now weneed to look out for them.
The Hospital Employees’Union has a tradition ofcaring for seniors, withefforts to improve standardsin seniors’ care dating backto the 1970s. As the unionorganized workers in B.C.nursing homes, the criticallink between poor workingconditions for staff and sub-
standard caring conditionsfor residents became clear.
Over the next 20 years,improvements were madefor the seniors living inresidential care facilitiesand for the health careworkers who cared for andsupported them.
But in the last nine years,things have changed dra-matically. The provincialgovernment closed 2,400long-term care beds – mostof them in not-for-profitfacilities – and passed leg-islation to enable privatiza-tion and contracting out inboth direct care and supportservices.
Consequently, directresident care provided bycare aides, licensed practi-cal nurses and registerednurses, and support serviceslike dietary, housekeep-ing and laundry have beencontracted out in facilitiesacross the province.
And since 2002, thenumber of private, for-prof-it seniors’ facilities in B.C.has virtually exploded.
Private operators increaseprofit margins by contract-ing out and keeping wagesand staffing levels low, apractice that leads to highstaff turnover and fracturedcontinuity of care.
A comprehensive reviewof national and international
research – prepared for theB.C. Ministry of Health’sNursing Directorate – estab-lishes a clear link betweeninadequate direct carestaffing and higher rates ofadverse outcomes for resi-dents. Yet contracting out inthe sector continues.
The truth is the combi-nation of the privatizationof residential care, a con-tracted-out, low-wage work-force with high rates ofturnover, and short staffingand heavy workloads arecreating substandard caringconditions for seniors withmore complex care needsliving in many facilities.
We can work together– with advocates and com-munity groups, decision-makers, family membersand seniors themselves– to ensure that they haveaccess to the quality, afford-able health services theydeserve.
And this Labour Day, aswe enjoy this holiday withfamily and friends, let’sremember the hard-wonaccomplishments of ourseniors, and honour theseby ensuring that they con-tinue for our children andgrandchildren.
Judy Darcy is theHospital Employees’Union’s Secretary-BusinessManager
Caring for seniorsBY JUDY DARCYOptimist contributor
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A23
ENJOYLABOUR DAY
from the Union representingLongshore and Warehouse
Workers at Deltaport, WestshoreTerminals, Fraser Wharves,
Westnav Container Services, FraserSurrey Docks and
Annacis Auto Terminals.International Longshoremen’s Warehousemen’s Union
Local 50211828 Tannery Road, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada V3V 3W7
Telephone: 604-580-8882 • Fax: 604-580-4440http: ilwulocal502bc.ca Email: [email protected]
0905
2946
Come outLabour Day toannual Show N Shineon location.
Public invited
Have a Happy and SafeHave a Happy and SafeLabour DayLabour Day
CONSTRUCTION, MAINTENANCE, ANDALLIED WORKERS BARGAINING COUNCIL
(CMAW)BUILDING A CANADIAN UNION
FOR CANADIAN WORKERS
CMAW stands behind all workers in their fight for fair, just,safe and secure workplaces.
Our new Union will continue to help workers access training,recover unpaid wages, lost overtime and unpaid benefits inall sectors we represent.
You don’t have to be a member to receive our immediateservices.
604-437-0471 [email protected]
0905
3005
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0904
3019
BCGEU memberswrapping up dealsWorkers sacrifice better wages for security
After another round ofcollective agreements weresealed over the summer,more than half of union-ized workers employed bythe B.C. government havenow wrapped up deals forthe next few years, includ-ing major agreements in thehealth sector and the publicservice.
Not one included workersreceiving wage increases,which has some peoplesuggesting the Liberals aregetting too smooth a ride,largely due to the currentgrim economic climate.
The province faced a$2.8-billion deficit last yearand has a projected shortfallof $1.7 billion this year, anempty cupboard that washard for unions to ignorewhen sitting down at thebargaining table.
Darryl Walker, presidentof the B.C. Government andService Employees’ Union(BCGEU), said the bottomline is that members realizeeveryone has to have a handin working through tough
economic times.“We’ve done that by tak-
ing zeros,” said Walker.While their wages aren’t
going up any time soon,many BCGEU public sec-tor workers at least knowtheir jobs are secure for theimmediate future.
The Liberal governmentrecently announced it wouldcut no more than five percent of the 30,000 strongworkforce – a maximumof about 1,500 full-time-equivalent positions – overthe next three years.
“Barring any significantunforeseen changes to gov-ernment’s fiscal forecaststhrough to 2012/13, therewill be no more budget-driven workforce adjust-ment in the B.C. publicservice during this period,”said deputy minister AllanSeckel in a statement. “Ican say with confidencethat no further workforceadjustment is needed tomeet the budget objectivesset out in government’s cur-rent three-year fiscal plan.
Walker sees it as a neces-sary compromise.
“At least they can breathe
and they don’t have toworry about next week, ornext month or even nextyear,” he said. “They’ve gotthat security. That’s huge.”
“That was good news forour members, definitely,”agreed BCGEU commu-nications officer OliverRohlfs of the Liberals’promise. “There is a memo-randum of understandingthat’s been signed, so ourmembers have definite pro-tection.”
Rohlfs said that while nopaychecks were increasedthis time around, the unionshould be able to use thisto their advantage down theroad.
Roughly 144,000BCGEU members, just overhalf, are now covered underratified or tentative agree-ments signed in 2009 and2010. The most recent wasa deal signed Aug. 23 bythe Legal Services Society,which includes approxi-mately 106 BCGEU mem-bers, mostly legal secretar-ies, legal assistants, IT, andadministrative workers.
- with files fromPostmedia News
BY ANDREW FLEMINGOptimist contributor
A24 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
An Invitationto a
Better Future
THE UNITED STEELWORKERS:EVERYBODY’S UNION
usw2009.ca
THE FIRST STEPFor more information on what the Steelworkers cando for you and your fellow workers, call:
604.513.1850It’s your first step toward a better future.
You work hard at your job. And it pays off for the company.But what about you?
IT’S BETTER WITH A UNIONWhen you’re a union member, your rights are guaranteed in a contract.When you’re a member, you have expert help from lawyers, health and safetyprofessionals and experienced negotiators.
Choosing the United Steelworkers means choosing the largest industrial unionin Canada and getting the best contract possible at work. Start getting therespect you deserve.
UNITED STEELWORKERS
UNITY & STRENGTH FOR WORKERS
0904
3007
Dignity...justice...a voice in the work place.
These are the principles on whichorganized labour was founded.
No single union has everachieved these goals with more success
and consistency than theInternational Brotherhood of Teamsters.
Best wishes this Labour Day from themembership and officers of
TEAMSTERS LOCAL 31affiliated with the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters,Teamsters Canada, and theCanadian Labour Congress
#1 Grosvenor Square, Delta, B.C. V3M 5S1Stan Hennessy, President
Rod Blackburn, Secretary-Treasurer
For Organizing AssistanceTel: 604-527-2722 Fax: 604-540-6073
E-mail: [email protected]
0905
2959
Delta Firefighters’ Charitable Society“We’re there when you need us.”
The Delta Firefighters Charitable Society is a non-profit organization of the firefightersof Delta. Our goal is to support the local community where there is need. All the moneywe have raised goes back into the community to support groups, institutions, special fundsand individuals in need. The major portion of our fundraising comes from a magic show,we help produce with other firefighters’ charities.
The proceeds are shared equally and placed back into those communities.Last year the Delta Firefighters supported the following organizations:
Last year through the Magic Show we raised approximately $50,000 that went directlyto the community groups of Delta. We also sponsored the Delta Hospital FoundationGolf Tournament which was a success. We will be at your local malls in Septemberfor the Annual/Firefighters Charitable Society Boot Drive to raise funds for all theseorganizations in Delta.
Thank you Delta for your support
DELTA FIREFIGHTERSLOCAL 1763 IAFF
• Air Cadets• Alzheimer’s Society of BC• Boys’ & Girls’ Club• BC Guide Dogs• BC Wheelchair Sports• BC Cancer Foundation• Burns Bog Conservation Society• Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation• Delta Sundance Square Dancers• High School Bursaries• Delta 22nd Sitka Sparks• Delta Hospice Society• Delta Lawn Bowling Club• Delta Museum Foundation• Delta 3rd Boundary Bay Sea Scouts
• Hannah’s Heroes Foundation• Girl Guides• Delta Hospital• Delta Hospital Foundation Golf Tournament• Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada• Leukemia and Lymphoma Society of Canada• Ladner Seniors‘ SOCIETY• Muscular Dystrophy Association• Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada• Torch Run for BC Special Olympics• B.C. Professional Firefighters’ Burn Fund• REACH - Children and Youth Development Society
of Delta• The Variety Club for Children
0904
3586
The province’s mainenvironmental and labourleaders will be putting theirheads together next weekat a special “Jobs, Justice,Climate” conference heldin Vancouver on building agreen provincial economy.
The keynote speaker willbe David Foster, executivedirector of the BlueGreenAlliance, a U.S.-basednational strategic part-nership between labourunions and environmentalorganizations dedicated toexpanding the number andquality of jobs in the greeneconomy.
“I am a great believerthat an organization suc-ceeds not only becauseof the hard work of itsboard, staff and leadership,but because it anticipatesimportant trends and crosscurrents in our economy,”said Foster in a preparedstatement. “In a tightlyconnected global economy,where the imperative tosolve the climate crisis isinterwoven with the aspira-tions of six billion peoplefor a better life, any indi-vidual success of eitherthe labor or environmentalmovements is now depen-
dent upon their mutual suc-cess.”
For the past twenty years,Foster has been foster-ing a national partnershipbetween labor unions andenvironmental organiza-tions dedicated to expand-ing the green economy andadvancing workers’ rightsaround the globe. Under hisleadership, the Blue GreenAlliance unites more thansix million people in pur-suit of good jobs, a cleanenvironment, and a greeneconomy with a focus thatincludes global warming,clean energy, fair trade, andreducing toxins in the work-place.
The conference takesplace from 7 to 10 p.m.Sept. 10 in the HyattRegency Hotel (655Burrard St.). The event isfree but space is limited.Advanced registration is atwww.columbianinstitute.ca.
Organizations in atten-dance include the B.C.Federation of Labour,the B.C. Governmentand Service Employees’Union, the David SuzukiFoundation, the PembinaInstitute, the Sierra ClubBC, the BC Teachers
Federation, the BritishColumbia and YukonTerritory Building andConstruction TradesCouncil, the CanadaGreen Building Council,the Cascadia GreenBuilding Council, theCanadian Auto Workers,the Canadian Centre forPolicy Alternatives, theCommunications Energyand Paperworkers Unionof Canada, the CanadianOffice & ProfessionalEmployees Union 378, theCanadian Union of PublicEmployees, Eco Justice,the Federation of Post-Secondary Educators ofBC, the Hospital EmployeesUnion, the Health SciencesAssociation BC, theInternational Alliance ofTheatrical Stage Employees891, the InternationalBrotherhood of ElectricalWorkers 230,_theInternational Association ofHeat and Frost Insulatorsand Allied WorkersUnion, the T. Buck SuzukiFoundation, the Union ofEnvironment Workers, theUnited Steelworkers ofCanada and the WesternCanada WildernessCommittee.
A greener economyLeaders to put heads together at conference
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A25
Barry O’Neill PRESIDENT Mark Hancock SECRETARY-TREASURER
www.cupe.bc.ca
Happy Labour Day,from 80,000 of us!
On this Labour Day, we renew ourcommitment to work for fairness,
dignity and respect for all workingpeople and for the communities in
which they live and work.
THE CANADIAN UNION OF PUBLIC EMPLOYEES
Sustaining strong, diversecommunities throughout
British Columbia.
CEP 2000
0904
2974
0903
2951
2K:K5H7CKF7IK:&/
The 3,500 ambulanceparamedics who workin cities, towns andrural communitiesthroughout BC areproud members ofCUPE Local 873.
It takes well-trainedparamedics anddedication to serviceto save lives. Withstrong union and publicsupport for ambulanceparamedics, qualityservice is availablewhen you need it most.
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• Canada’s bloodi-est strike took placein Winnipeg in 1919.Although many Canadiancompanies had profiteeredfrom the First World War,wages and working con-ditions were dismal andlabour regulations weremostly non-existent. Highunemployment rates andinflation contributed togrowing unrest amongstmembers of the labourmovement, and the upris-ing in Russia in 1917 hadinspired trade unionists inWinnipeg and elsewhere.After talks broke downbetween workers in thebuilding and metal tradesand their employers, theWinnipeg Trades andLabour Council called for ageneral strike.
More than 30,000workers from differentoccupations, both publicand private sector, acrossthe city walked off theirjobs during the WinnipegGeneral Strike, effectivelycrippling the city. The strikefinally ended on June 25,but not before the infamous“Bloody Saturday” whenchaos broke out after thecity’s mayor literally readthe Riot Act to a crowd thathad assembled to protest the
arrest of the strike leaders.Mounties on horseback thencharged, swinging batonsand later firing guns at pro-testers. Two strikers werekilled and about 30 werewounded.
• Labour unions havebeen around in Canada foraround 200 years. There is arecord of skilled tradesmenin the Maritimes having aunion organization duringthe War of 1812.
• Jimmy Hoffa, presidentof the Teamsters union from1957 until 1971, is bestknown in pop culture forhis mysterious disappear-ance and presumed deathin 1975. It’s perhaps ironicthen that Hoffa’s middlename was Riddle.It was hismother’s maiden name andsome would say a fittingdescription of how his lifeended. Yet another mys-tery is if his parents wereaware that “Jimmy Riddle”was and still is Cockneyerhyming slang meaning “topiddle.”
• One of the earliestboosters of labour unions inNorth America was famedauthor Mark Twain. Hewrote highly of unions inthe river boating industryin his 1883 memoir Life onthe Mississippi, which was
later read in union halls fordecades afterward. Twainpublicly championed theunion movement, especiallythe Knights of Labor. In aspeech given to the group,he once said: “Who are theoppressors? The few: theKing, the capitalist, and ahandful of other overseersand superintendents. Whoare the oppressed? Themany: the nations of theearth; the valuable person-ages; the workers; they thatmake the bread that thesoft-handed and idle eat.”
• The well known songBread and Roses wasinspired by a strike ofwomen textile workers acentury ago in Lawrence,Massacusetts, who carrieda banner saying “We wantbread and roses too.”
Prompted by an indi-vidual mill owner’s deci-sion to lower wages whena new law shortening theworkweek went into effect,the strike spread rapidly andgrew to more than 20,000workers at other millswithin a week. The strike,which lasted more thantwo months, put an end tothe belief that that femaleand/or immigrant workersweren’t able to get orga-nized.
A few labour factsUnions have been in Canada for 200 years
A26 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
A message from the BC Teachers’ Federation
0904
3001
There’s a better wayto save more for retirement
Canada’s Finance Ministers agree.The best way to help Canadians save enoughfor retirement is by expanding theCanada Pension Plan.
The CPP is one of the safest andbest managed retirement savingsplans in the world. It already covers93% of Canada’s workers.And it’s guaranteed to deliver,as promised, for the next 75 years.
Imagine the security of knowingyou’ve saved enough and yoursavings are guaranteed – for life.
www.facebook.com/pages/Retirement-Security-For-Everyone
Now help us make it happen!Help us get those finance minsters movingso they expand the CPP this year.
canadianlabour.ca
Join the campaign. Invite your friends.Let’s get the job done!
Get the job done!for everyone
RETIREMENTSECURITY
0904
2971
Members of the PSAC are employed in large and small communities throughout BC.
Most of us work for the federal government, agencies, crown corporations, and airportauthorities.
We preserve Canada’s natural and historic heritage, collect statistics for the businesscommunity, maintain airport runways and navigation systems, monitor fish stocks, providesupport to the military and RCMP, administer pensions and employment insurance,respond to emergencies at airports and at sea, predict the weather, perform agriculturalresearch, help new Canadians get settled, stop guns and drugs at the border, makesure your food is safe to eat, work with inmates and parolees, provide security at federalbuildings, support veterans and their families and we even send you your tax refund.
Public services are an essential part of an equal and just society - on Labour Day and everyday.
www.psacbc.com · facebook.com/psacbc
PSAC salutesworkers in Deltaand around BC
On Labour Day
0904
3584
A pledge to B.C. workers
As I sat and listened, my mind kept say-ing this can’t be happening. These storiesbelonged to another era, long ago or atleast far away from British Columbia. Theybelonged to a time or a place where work-ers had no rights, where we worked 12 or14 hours a day for low pay or no pay, wherethere was no safety equipment, when wewere hungry most days and the governmentlooked the other way.
Unfortunately, the dozen workers sit-ting in the conference room at the B.C.Federation of Labour in early August werenot talking about working conditions inthe last century or in a far away land. Theywere talking about working conditions thissummer in B.C.
The story these tree planters toldshocked the people of British Columbia.They even shocked the provincial labourminister.
Within a week it was clear that not onlydid these workers find themselves work-ing for a terrible employer, they had alsobeen let down by government agenciesresponsible for ensuring their safety. Thiswas a company with a chronic record ofbad performance and unsafe conditions,yet the WCB, the health authorities, B.C.Timber Sales, Employment Standards andthe Ministry of Forests all failed to enforceregulations effectively.
The failure, however, doesn’t just belongto the Liberal government, which has spenta decade cutting back on enforcement,encouraging unrealistic low-ball biddingand watering-down legislation that protectsworkers. This failure belongs to all BritishColumbians. It is, after all, our province.
These were people working in our forestsand working for our government. Most ofthe workers were recent immigrants fromAfrica, one as young as 16-years-old.
This Labour Day, it’s time for BritishColumbia’s to look ourselves in the mir-ror. Do we really want a province wherethis kind of exploitation happens? Are wehappy to have gone from the highest mini-mum wage in Canada to the lowest? Do wesupport the dismantling of government andthe gutting of oversight and enforcementcapacities of government agencies?
The answer is no. We do not support thisrace to the bottom that the Liberal gov-ernment has set us on with deregulation,self-regulation and the watering down ofstandards and enforcement.
Yet, this is happening and the results areboth shocking and shameful.
On Labour Day, the trade union move-ment salutes the hundreds of thousands ofBritish Columbians who toil to make theprovince work whether they are in a unionor not. We understand that good jobs sup-port strong families and strong communi-ties.
We understand that when unions areunder attack, just as they are now, salariesare pushed down, jobs disappear and work-ing conditions deteriorate. The tree planterswe helped this summer understand this alltoo well.
For them, and for all the workers in theprovince, we pledge to continue to build alabour movement and a province that fightsfor everyone so they may go to work andlive in a province where decent wages,proper benefits and safe workplaces are thestandard for all.
Jim Sinclair is president of the B.C.Federation of Labour.
BY JIM SINCLAIROptimist contributor
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A27
BC NURSES’ UNION
0904
2967
Workingtogether,We build B.C.
B.C. and YukonBuilding Trades
[email protected](604) 430-0595
[email protected](604) 436-1126
B.C. & Yukon TerritoryBuilding & Construction Trades [email protected](604) 291-9020
0904
3011
Operating Engineers
Salute toLabour
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A28 The Delta Optimist September 4, 201009
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The International Longshore and Warehouse Union is an organization thatrepresents more than just Waterfront works. We are comprised of elevenLocals and three affiliates with over 5000 members. Our members consist of notonly Longshore workers in all B.C. ports, but warehouseworkers, office staff, tug boat operators, retail wholesaleworkers, grain service staff and waste recycling workers.
For many workers the issues of promotions, safety andbenefits top their list of concerns. A Union like the ILWUcan negotiate for benefits such as sick leave, dentalbenefits, pensions and welfare plans. The importance oflayoff procedures that provide proper notice and bumpingrights and maternity/parental leave are but a few benefitswe have achieved resulting from our superior ability tonegotiate your terms and conditions of employment.
Having a Union not only helps you on the job but alsooffers you assistance with WorkSafe BC appeals, human rights complaints,and occupational health and safety concerns.
Employers will say many this to discredit a Union and this is nothing new. Butfor your work place to be a fair and democratic site, a collective agreement willensure that you work because of what you know, not who you know.
The ILWU Canada’s motto is “An Injury to One, is An Injury to All” and wenegotiate collective agreements with this always in the forefront. So whetheryou work in a hotel, factory, an assembly plant, or office we can help youachieve a safe, secure and harassment free workplace.
Call us today at 604-254-8141 and ask what theILWU Canada can do for you!
For more information on ILWU Canada visit our website www.ilwu.ca orour blog www.ilwucanada.wordpress.com, or email us at
www.bccsa.ca
Raising awareness, reducing injuriesW
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The BC Construction Safety Alliance (BCCSA) salutes BC’s constructionlabour force!
The BCCSA delivers all the programs and services formerly offered byCSN and CSABC to the construction industry of BC.
A SALUTETO
LABOUR!
THE FUTURE OF SAFETY IN THECONSTRUCTION INDUSTRYDorothy Barkley, Interim General Manager, BC Construction Safety AllianceBy: Dorothy Barkley
According to WorkSafeBC statistics, the 2009 injury rate in construction showed asignificant 31 per cent reduction in claims from 2008. Claim numbers continue to reducein 2010. This has been accomplished through a coordinated effort by B.C.’s constructionemployers, their workers, their health and safety associations and WorkSafeBC.
The human and financial cost of these incidents is considerable. There’s a life longimpact on families who lose a loved one to a workplace fatality or face a lifetime of care forsomeone who has been seriously injured. All construction companies are impacted throughthe WorkSafeBC assessment rates and those construction sites that suffer a serious or fatalincident face considerable morale and productivity issues.
Since their inception, and as they worked to reduce the workplace injury rate, theConstruction Safety Network (CSN) and the Construction Safety Association of B.C. (CSABC)were supported by industry and WorkSafeBC as they created and implemented health andsafety programs.
On July 1, 2010, the CSN and the CSABC merged to form the B.C. Construction SafetyAlliance (BCCSA). While each organization has had specific programs there have beenoverlaps. The consolidation of the staffs and programs will be of significant benefit to theentire industry through administrative efficiencies and the streamlining of program delivery.
In September, BCCSA will open its new office in New Westminster.This will be the “one stopshopping” place for large and small construction sector companies who need traffic controladvice, require return-to-work information, want to become COR certified or wish to accessthe many video and print resources that will be available to employers. The same constructionsafety specialists you have always worked with will be available to give you advice andassistance.
The BCCSA has been developed with the support and advice of many industrystakeholders – from individual companies to the many construction-related associationswho encouraged the merger. In the world where we work, the benefit of the consolidation ofresources, and a sharper focus on worksite needs, is recognized and the new BCCSA is areflection of this reality.
We have much to accomplish as we move forward through the remainder of the year. Theboard of directors will be conducting a search for a general manager while finalizing businessand strategic planning. The staff will be settling into their new offices, while solidifying newwork teams to better meet the health and safety needs of present and new clients.
Both the new board and the staffs of the CSN and the CSABC have worked tirelesslythrough the past year to accomplish this merger for the basic reason that they believe it is inthe best interest of BC’s construction industry employers and workers. We hope you will dropby and introduce yourselves, and see what we have to offer.
Dorothy Barkley is the Interim General Manager of the B.C. Construction Safety Alliance.
Advertorial
0904
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leisure&lifestyles
Jogging for the bogTwo experienced runners
are turning their attention toa local cause this month.
On Sept. 26, CraigMoore and Ray Zahab, bothultra marathon runners andsocial activists, will par-ticipate in Run with Ray atJog for the Bog at WestviewPark to raise money to sup-port the conservation ofBurns Bog.
Moore is an active mem-ber of Club Fat Ass, anenvironmentally friendlyinternational club for activepeople. He’s completedmany adventures in his run-ning life and is now turninghis attention to Burns Bog.
Zahab, a Canadian celeb-rity, motivational speakerand well-known enduranceathlete, is running the entiredistance around the bog– 40 kilometres – duringthis annual Jog for the Bogfive and 10 km run.
Living with a chroniclung condition, Moore saidfeels a connection with thebog.
He hopes to raise $2,000for the event and joinZahab in running the 40 kmaround the bog.
“I feel a connection withBurns Bog, also knownas the lugs of the LowerMainland,” he said.
Zahab is also featured atanother Burns Bog fund-raising event that sameweek. He will take his mes-sage inside and speak at theBurns Bog Gala on Sept.24 at the Eaglequest CoyoteCreek golf course in Surrey.
For more informationabout either event visitwww.burnsbog.org, or callthe Burns Bog ConservationSociety at 604-572-0373.
Puppet showsat Tsa. library
The Tsawwassen Library puppeteers offer a charmingtheatre experience to children and accompanying adultsalike.
Drop in to enjoy a different story every second Thursdayof the month.
September’s performance is Three Little Pirates and theBig, Bad Shark.
Mark your calendars so you don’t miss the puppet showsThe Princess and the Pumpkin in October and ChristmasScramble in December.
This month’s show is on Sept. 9 from 3:30 to 4 p.m.The shows are offered on a drop-in basis. Not pre-regis-
tration is required.For more information, visit the information desk at the
library, or call 604-943-2271.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A29
SEWERMAINTENANCE
Sept 7th - Oct 20th, 2010
Metro Vancouver will beperforming maintenance work on asection of sewer pipe that runsthrough Delta’s Watershed Park.This work will include using amagnesium-based spray forcorrosion control. Park users andlocal residents may notice anodour, which is normal for thismaintenance work.
We apologize for anyinconvenience and appreciateyour understanding.
For more information, please callMetro Vancouver at 604.444.8474
SOUTH DELTA PAINT & DESIGN#131-4857 Elliott Street,
Ladner Harbour Centre, Ladner604.946.1333
PENINSULA PAINT & DESIGN#100-14936 32nd Avenue,
South Surrey604.538.1338
HILLCREST PAINT & DESIGN#106-2055 152nd Street,
South Surrey604.531.3811
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For a better lifestyle, security,companionship & good food.
Offering a comfortable andaffordable place to live.Just $1562 per month all inclusive.
Come for a visit.Call Kaye at 604.943.1321
Abbeyfield House1117 51A Street, Delta
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A30 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
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Sports Editor: Mark Booth Phone: 604-946-4451 Email: [email protected]
Delta SportsIce Hawks hope to build on momentumJunior hockey team opens regular season on Tuesday after making surprising run to PIJHL playoff finals
Peter Zerbinos didn’t have tolook too far when it came time toput together the core of his 2010recruiting class.
The Delta Ice Hawks directorof hockey operations also hap-pens to be manager of CycloneTaylor Sports at the RichmondIce Centre. Just steps away fromhis shop, the Seafair Islandersenjoyed a couple of outstandingseasons at the Midget “AAA”level, advancing to the provin-cial championships each time.Zerbinos affiliated three of theirplayers last season and couldhave as many as seven in uniformTuesday when the Ice Hawks openup the Pacific International JuniorHockey League regular season inLadner against the North DeltaDevils at 7:30 p.m.
“I was fortunate in that I got tosee a lot of their games and prac-tices,” said Zerbinos. I also got toknow them as people and they areall quality players on and off theice. “We’re very happy to have somany of them here.”
The remainder of the Seafair’skey graduates ended up with theRichmond Sockeyes, adding towhat already was the Ice Hawks’biggest rivalry.
Last season, Delta upsetRichmond in the playoffs enroute to a surprising run to thePIJHL championship series wherethe locals fell to the AldergroveKodiaks. Now they hope to buildoff that momentum and challengethe Sockeyes, Grandview Steelersand North Delta Devils for topspot in the Tom Shaw Conference.
Zerbinos’ other off-season taskwas finding a new head coachafter Jimmy Cammazola opted topursue other hockey opportuni-ties. He believes he has found theright candidate in Darryl Ericksonwho has coaching experience atjunior and the major midget lev-els.
“He was a school liason forthe Vancouver Police departmentand has worked with kids for along time,” said Zerbinos. “He isa well-rounded coach with solidknowledge of the game who has
the ability to get the most out ofhis kids.”
The PIJHL starts it regularseason ahead of the higher juniorlevels, creating nothing but head-aches for general managers andcoaches trying to figure out theirfinal roster. The Ice Hawks stillhave a number of players battlingfor roster spots in junior “A” andtheir fate could determine thisteam’s dystany.
Here is a breakdown of how theIce Hawks shape-up heading intoTuesday’s opener:
ForwardsThe trio of Liam Harding,
Cody Fidgett and captain KyeBenjaminsen tore through thePIJHL playoffs last March, com-bining for 70 points in 18 games.It was hoped the line would
remain intact and it still might,pending on what happens withHarding and Benjaminsen. Thepair of 20-year-olds are currentlyattending junior “A” trainingcamps in Coquitlam and SpruceGrove respectively. Fidgett, wholed the playoffs with 18 goals, ispoised to have a huge sophomoreseason.
The team will also be leaningheavily on another second-yearplayer — centre Spencer Traherwho thrived in all situations lastseason. The club is also expectinga big season from Seafair rookieAaron Merrick who looked morethan comfortable as a frequentcall-up a year ago.
DefencemenThe development of a young
and inexperienced blueline went a
long way towards the Ice Hawks’deep post-season run. It alsoled to opportunities elsewherefor a number of them. Hard-hit-ting Ryan Panichelli signed withQuesnel, while Dominic Toigoand Alex Martin are battlingfor roster spots with the SurreyEagles.
However, this is where the IceHawks will be relying heavilyon their Seafair recruits. RyanCuthbert was a regular during theplayoffs as an affiliate and he willbe joined by Taylor Kislanko andAndrew Talbot.
Both feature plenty of size,while Talbot captained Seafairtwo years ago and played junior inOntario last season.
The Hawks will also be lean-ing on Ryan Procyshyn who, likeCuthbert, saw plenty of ice time
last season as a call-up.
GoaltendingIt was no surprise to see
Andrew Hunt’s spectacular workin the playoffs earn him an oppor-tunity with the Surrey Eagles.Zerbinos was hoping to go a simi-lar route this season by signinganother Major Midget goaltenderwho was getting ready for thenext step of career.
That candidate was KirkThompson, however, the formerValley West Hawk is looking goodwith Prince George and might notbe back.
The Hawks have now turnedto Plan “B” which is a trio of20-year-olds battling for the twospots, including Seafair alumniDoug Birks and Aaron Chin. Alsoin the hunt is Kevin Currie.
BY MARK [email protected]
PHOTO BY MARK BOOTH
After an impressive rookie campaign, the Delta Ice Hawks are expecting a big season from South Delta product Spencer Traher. The Ice Hawks open the regu-lar season Tuesday when the North Delta Devils visit Ladner at 7:30 p.m.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A31
RICHMONDwww.aalltech.com604-270-9757
“ON THE ROAD AGAIN”PAYMENT PLAN
FOR THE BEST SERVICES:FOR THE BEST SERVICES:• Transmissions• Transmissions• Differentials• Differentials• Clutches• Clutches
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HappyLabourDay
These predictions are supplements to and notreplacements for the Canadian Tide and CurrentTables, which include the only authorized tidalpredictions for Canada and are provided byCanadian Hydrographic Service.
SAT., SEPT. 4
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Rob Cook showed there is still some gasleft in the tank.
The longtime member of the LadnerPioneers, who lost his starting job this pastseason to Matt Morehouse, earned firstteam all-star honours as a pick-up playerfor the Burnaby Burrards at the recentPresident’s Cup national senior “B” cham-pionships.
Cook was at his best in an all-B.C.battle against the Tri-City Bandits as he
turned aside 40 shots in a 10-5 victory forBurnaby over the three-time West CoastSenior Lacrosse League champions.
Despite his heroics, the Burrards werestill kept off the podium, falling 13-6 tothe Kahnawake Mohawks in the bronzemedal game. The tournament was domi-nated by eastern teams as CanAm Leaguechampions Onondaga Redhawks capturedgold with a 14-7 win over Ontario’s OwenSound Woodsmen in the final.
All-star honours for Pioneers goalie
Islander wins silver at nationals
PHOTO BY CHUNG CHOW
Delta Lacrosse product Kyle Jones helped Team B.C. capture the silver medal at last month’s PeeWee National Championships in Ontario. Jones played for Delta’s Pee Wee A1 team this season.
A32 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
September 11
Foghat
O U T D O O R C O N C E R T S E R I E S
September 18
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Chuck NegronFormerly of Three Dog Night
September 4
Show schedule subject to change
September 24
The Guess Who
350 Gifford Street . www.starlightcasino.ca
Tickets available atStarlight Casino
Guest Services or atwww.Ticketmaster.ca
or 604.280.4444Doors at 7pm . Show at 8pm
WIN 4 TICKETS TO FOGHAT!Email your name and daytime phone number to: [email protected]
Please have FOGHAT in the subject line. • Deadline for entries is Wednesday, September 8th at 12 noonWinners will be contacted by phone. *One entry per person.
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WIN 1 of 6 $15,000WestJet Vacations travel prizes.
Go from winter blahs to winter aaahhhs.September 10 to October 21, 2010.
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It takes11 musclesto readthis ad.
Pee Wee BTryouts Sept 8 ~ 6-7:15,Sept 11 ~ 10-12,Sept 14 ~ 6-7:15Please arrive 15 minutes early to register. Tryouts are based on weather permitting. If youare unable to attend these tryout sessions or if the weather is questionable, or for anyfurther information, please contact Fred Wells at [email protected]
Winter ClinicsLTP, Mite, Squirts, Peewee BantamPitching clinics start Sept 18 and will be held ON Saturdays.
Winter skills camp start first week of Januaryand will run most Saturdays until first week ofApril.
Catchers clinics will be starting in January andbe held mid week.Class size limited
Player registration deadlines for league play areearlier this year (December 31). Team sizes willbe strictly limited this year. Once we reach themaximum number of players for a division, thenregistration for that division will be closed. Firstcome, first served. Registering prior to close offdate will not guarantee a spot for child so pleaseregister now as players will be selected in theorder that they registered.
Girls Fastpitch Tryouts
0901
3399
In Appreciation of Your SupportIn Appreciation of Your SupportThe grandchildren of Jack Guichon thank their communityfor their support during this summer’s produce seasonand dedicate all proceeds to the Delta HospitalFoundation in memory of Grandma Lorraine Guichonwhom we lost this past year. Any corn bought will bematched for free on Sunday, September 5th at the corn
and vegetable tent on Arthur Drive at the pullout,across from the Kirkland House.
Delta ’96 Heat concluded a memorable season with a bronze medal at last month’s Pee WeeNational Softball Championships in Ile Perrot, Quebec.
’96 Heat reach national podium
Hawksworth named tonational rowing staff
Paul Hawksworth is quickly working his way up thecoaching ranks in the sport of rowing.
The Ladner native, who enjoyed a stellar competitivecareer at the University of Victoria, was recently appointedcoach of the Canadian under 23 men’s program.
Hawksworth has been working in the Canadian uni-versity rowing system and has also had several years ofexperience in the U.S. college system, including a stint atWashington State. His coaching duties will be based at thenational training centre at Elk Lake in Victoria.
“I’m particularly pleased with the additional support thatPaul will provide to our development program,” said PeterCookson, Rowing Canada’s high performance director.“This role will help shape the high performance programto ensure that talent is properly nurtured, which is essentialfor the future success of our national and Olympic teams.”
He is the son of longtime Delta councillor GeorgeHawksworth who passed away in March.
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A33
BUDGET 2011 CONSULTATION
Would you like to share your views on priorities for the next provincial budget?
SELECT STANDING COMMITTEE ONFINANCE AND GOVERNMENT SERVICES
Chair: John Les, MLA (Chilliwack)Deputy Chair: Doug Donaldson, MLA (Stikine)
WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!The all-party Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Services is invitingsubmissions on the Budget 2011 Consultation Paper, prepared by the Minister of Finance.
British Columbians can participate by attending a public hearing, answering an on-line survey,making a written submission, or sending the Committee a video or audio file. The consultationprocess concludes Friday, October 15, 2010.
For more information, please visit our website at: www.leg.bc.ca/budgetconsultations
or contact: Office of the Clerk of Committees, Room 224, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, BCV8V 1X4; tel: 250.356.2933, or toll-free in BC: 1.877.428.8337;fax: 250.356.8172; e-mail: [email protected]
Kate Ryan-Lloyd, Clerk Assistant and A/Clerk of Committees
O’ BehaveTHE STORE FOR MISBEHAVIN’ ADULTS
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Visit the photo gallery for pictures of all events at www.shoptsawwassen.com
ThankThank You!You!On behalf of the Business Improvement Association (BIA)of Tsawwassen Board Members and Executive Director, wewould like to thank the following groups and individuals fortheir support of the 2010 Tsawwassen Outdoor Movie Nights:
Our Fantastic SponsorsOur Fantastic SponsorsRandy's Excel Tire and Auto ServiceTsawwassen CollisionTsawwassen Town Centre MallDelta OptimistDelta TVSouth Delta LeaderVancity
Thumbs Up AdvertisersThumbs Up AdvertisersAlbany BooksBenjamin MooreCoast Tsawwassen InnEnvision FinancialFre-Joy of London Unisex Hair SalonIris Optometrists/OpticiansMcDonald's RestaurantPharmasaveScotiabankSublime Arts Supplies and GalleryThrifty FoodsTsawwassen Wellness CentreWagner's European FabricareWestcoast Cheer
Participating BusinessesParticipating Businessesand Groupsand GroupsBlenz CoffeeCapilano IDEA Program
Carlson Wagonlit TravelChocolate Bear ShoppeDeas Island DanceDelta Arts CouncilDelta Gymnastics ClubDelta PottersDomino's PizzaLola BleuLos Gitanos School of Spanish DanceMcDonald's RestaurantMud Bay WinesOasis Tanning - Mona ViePacific AdvertisingPeekaboo SushiPharmasavePop & Smoke ShopQueen of PearlsRandy's Excel Tire & Auto ServiceRBCRotary Club of TsawwassenSAVI BoutiqueScotiabankSouth Delta MidwiferySublime Art Supplies and GallerySylvan Learning CentreThat CandyThe CentennialsThe Peak RadioTsawwassen CollisionTsawwassen LibraryTupperware CanadaTutor DoctorUnited Martial ArtsUSC Education Savings
VancityWatkins Natural ProductsWellspring HealthYlium Alterations
Special Thanks!Special Thanks!Tsawwassen Lions, KiwanisClub & TOOBDelta Parks & Rec, especially RickOlesonDelta TV, especially Deneka MichaudDelta Optimist for the sponsorshipand coverageEnvision Financial & the Tent Guysfor the use of tents and popcornmachineJim Kinnear for your wonderfulphotographyJohn, Brent, Ken, Jeff, Rod & the restof the Century maintenance team foryour hard workMelanie and Shannon for all yourhelp this yearSt. John Ambulance for taking careof us every nightThrifty Foods for supplying the foodon Aug 21To Ken Usipiuk and Sean Hodgins forbeing such great sportsCanadian Cancer Society and Copsfor Cancer for their inspiring effortsTo our community for supportingthese events!
0904
5054
A34 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
Re/Max Progroup Realty100-5000 Bridge Street
dipl. in Marketing Commercialand Residential Real Estate
British Columbia Inst. of Tech.
TOP 1% OF ALL REAL-TORS IN GREATERVANCOUVER in 2009
fras
erel
liott
www.fraserelliott.com
Top 5% of all Realtorsin Greater Vancouverin 2006, 2007, 2008.
6 yrs of RE/MAXWesternCanada Awards
Medallion ClubMember
81 SALES BY FRASERin 10 months of 2009!
THAT IS 1 SALE EVERY 3.76 DAYS!!!
OWN YOUR OWN WINERY
2170 Westham Island Road-Ladner
What a rare opportunity! Westham Island Winery is beingoffered for sale! 32.63 Acres of assorted mature berries!
Beautiful 3,800 sq.ft home built in 1997 + beautiful winerystore, large barns, fruit stand, etc! WHAT an OPPORTUNITY!
priced @ $4,500,000
BEACH GROVE RANCHER!
1643 Enderby Ave-Tsawwassen
NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE IN & ENJOY! This fabulous 3bdrm rancher is not only VERY WELL MAINTAINED -It’s
IMMACULATE & located in the DESIRABLE BEACH GROVEAREA of Tsawwassen. Great yard! Great home! LOCATION
priced @ $590,000
360 degree
virtual tour online
GREAT 2-LEVEL WITH SUITE!
4724 Ashbury Place-Ladner
Well maintained 2,203 sq.ft 4 bedroom house located walk-ing distance from all shops, transit, etc. Newer roof, paint,gas "replace, and carpets. Large yard, with private hedge
and fruit trees! Sunny Exposure! West Ladner location.
priced @ $559,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
360 degree
virtual tour online
EXECUTIVE 2,930 sq.ft HOME
4712 Stahaken Place-Tsawwassen
Wow! Absolutely beautiful executive home in popularStahaken! Stunningly updated with cherry hardwood !oors,
New Zealand wool carpets upstairs, gourmet kitchen, granitecounters, professional landscaping, etc! Workshop. Cul-de-sac
priced @ $829,000
360 degree
virtual tour online
BEAUTIFUL 3,000 SQ.FT HOME
4651 Arthur Drive-Ladner
WOW! UNIQUE! 3,000 sq ft 2 level home in Ladner’sprestigious Arthur Drive! 5 bedrooms, spacious plan,
updated w/new paint, mouldings, laminate, bathrooms,landscaping, etc. Beautiful fully self-contained suite down.
priced @ $729,000
360 degree
virtual tour online
EXECUTIVE 2,800 SQ.FT HOME
6131 48A Ave-Ladner
Beautifuly renovated 2,800 sq.ft. 5 bdrm + den executivehome in great location near park + school etc! New laminate
designer paint, carpets, gas stove, light "xtures updatedbathrooms, etc. Very spacious, great plan, 5 bdrms up. Quiet
priced @ $649,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
SOLDjust sold by fraser for
98.9% of list!!!
SOLDjust sold by fraser
WINDSOR WOODS
#414-5518 14th Ave-Tsawwassen
Windsor Woods, 1 bed & den, mountain view penthouse!Bright top !oor corner suite with side windows & cross
breeze. Fantastic top !oor boasts Cathedral ceilings for open& spacious feeling. No one above, quiet location!
priced @ $245,000
360 degree
virtual tour onlineSOLDjust sold by fraser
WESTHAM ISLAND ACREAGE!
4485 Tamboline Road-Westham Island-Ladner
Rare! Rare! Rare! Estate-like 3,563 sf home on 3.17 acresin ladner’s best area, Westham Island! Waterfront on canal,direct views over beautiful farmland! Sunsets every night!
Double shop, garage, and TRIPLE CARPORT! Paddock! WOW
reduced to $1,419,000
360 degree
virtual tour online
0904
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September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A35
0329
1360
BEAUTIFUL 2 BDRM CONDO
B402-4821 53rd Street-Ladner
Beautifully renovated 1,123 sf 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom cor-ner unit with great sunset view! Updated with new laminate!ooring, blinds, hot water tank, paint, fridge, range & more!
priced @ $339,900
STUNNING EXECUTIVE HOME!
5506 Westminster Ave-Ladner
Excellent 14 yr young home backing waterway! 2,800 sq.ft,4 or 5 bdrm home! Absolutely MAJESTIC! Come and see
this home and you will be impressed! Guaranteed! Park-like100% private rear yard! This is it! Don’t miss it!
priced @ $799,900
604.728.2845
Fraser CURRENTLYRANKS 17 out of allindividual realtors in
GREATER VANCOUVERfor total sales in 2010.
(Over 6,500 realtorstotal) That is actu-
ally ranking in the TOP0.3% of ALL realtors in
Greater
fraser outsells thecompetition every
3.76 days!!!
fras
erel
liott
pers
onal
real
esta
teco
rpor
atio
n
360 degree
virtual tour online
360 degree
virtual tour online
SUBDIVIDABLE PROPERTY
5139 COOPER PLACE-LADNER
16,000 SQ.FT lot on quiet cul-de-sac in great West Ladnerlocation! Potential to subdivide into two 8,000 sq.ft lots!Call today for details! Great home on property currently!
priced @ $699,900
HUGELOT!
360 degree
virtual tour online
Re/Max Progroup Realty100-5000 Bridge Street
GREAT 3 BDRM TOWNHOME
#5-5635 Ladner Trunk Road-Ladner
3 bdrm townhome in quiet location, walking distance toVillage. 1,612 sq.ft, “half-stairs” to all levels, very unique
plan, single garage, private yard. Building totally renovateda few years ago! Multiple decks and patios! Quietly located
asking @ $389,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
PRICE REDUCED! WATERFRONT
4274 Arthur Drive-Ladner
Great 2,125 sq.ft 3 bedroom rancher on Prestigious ArthurDrive BACKING SLOUGH WITH WONDERFUL FARMLAND
VIEWS! Don’t miss it! Loft with huge “extra” BONUS gamesroom! 1/4 acre lot, circular driveway! Great home! UPDATED
reduced to $599,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
59 SALES by FRASERsince January 19th 2010!!
THAT IS 1 SALE EVERY 3.72 DAYS!!!
1,330 sq.ft 2 BDRM CONDO
#205-5550 14B Ave-Tsawwassen
Sought-After Highland Terrace! Beautiful 2 bedroomcondo ( very spacious 1,330 sq/ft unit!). 2 full bathrooms,
large kitchen/eating area. Updated w/ new appliances,hardware, crown molding, etc. Quiet, west facing location,
priced @ $339,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
SOLDjust sold by fraser
2 BEDROOM CONDO 1,033 SF
#301-1720 Southmere Crescent-South Surrey
Gorgeous sunsets are ready to greet you after a long day atthe of"ce. This 2 bedroom/1 1/2 bath, top !oor, spacious
corner suite is private yet airy and bright. You will feel on topof the world. With new kitchen appliances, counters etc.
priced @ $229,000
SOLDjust sold by fraser
GREAT PRICE! 2-LEVEL w/SUITE
1660 Babcock Place-Tsawwassen
What a wonderful 2295 sq ft 4 bdrm 2 level home ona quiet cul de sac in great location, walking distance toeverything! 1 bdrm, self contained suite downstairs withpatio doors to lovely sunny rear yard, updated kitchen,
priced @ $539,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
0904
4713
A36 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
Re/Max Progroup Realty100-5000 Bridge Street
dipl. in Marketing Commercialand Residential Real Estate
British Columbia Inst. of Tech.
TOP 1% OF ALL REAL-TORS IN GREATERVANCOUVER in 2009
fras
erel
liott
Top 5% of all Realtorsin Greater Vancouverin 2006, 2007, 2008.
6 yrs of RE/MAXWesternCanada Awards
Medallion ClubMember
Presidents Club Award 2009Top 1% of ALL realtors in Greater Vancouver 2009
Currently ranked in the TOP 0.3 % of ALL realtors in Vancouver
www.fraserelliott.com
3,150 SQ.FT COACH HOME
4837 47A Ave-LADNER VILLAGE
Wow! Beautiful 3,150 sq ft coach home property with a 1or 2 bedroom self contained coach home suite. Spacious
open plan, 4 bdrms + loft in main home. High-end "nishingsthroughout! WALK TO ALL AMENITIES IN MINUTES!
priced @ $769,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
GREAT 2-LEVEL WITH SUITE!
4754 West River Road-Ladner
Wow!! Massive 9,000 sq ft sunny lot! Parklike setting witha great 4 bdrm 2 level home with 1 bdrm suite downstairs!New roof, hot water tank, furnace, etc! Great shape! Walkto absolutely all amenities in minutes! Large sunny patio,
priced @ $499,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
STUNNING SHOW SUITE!
304S-1100 56th Street-Tsawwassen
This is ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFULLY REMODELLEDCONDO YOU WILL COME ACROSS! Come and see it!
TOTALLY Renovated! New kitchen, bathrooms, hardwood,stone "replace, mouldings, etc, etc! Outstanding quality!
priced @ $465,000
360 degree
virtual tour online
ENGLISH BLUFF BUILDING LOT!
1006 English Bluff Road-Tsawwassen
7,400 Sq.ft Rectangular building lot, SUNNY EXPOSURE,VIEWS OVER BOUNDARY BAY from your beautiful newliving room! Ready to build! Great opportunity! English
Bluff address! Make your dream happen today! BUILDERS
priced @ $499,900
360 degree
virtual tour online
SPACIOUS 3 BDRM HOME!
4754 West River Road-Ladner
Beautiful 3 bedroom townhome in sought-after Harbourside! Totally renovated new windows, new bathrooms, new
large, extended kitchen, laminate !ooring, etc! This is a realbeauty! Don’t miss out! Private yard backing green space.
priced @ $340,000
360 degree
virtual tour online
HOT NEW LISTING!NOT ON MLS YET!
#B304-4821 53rd Street-Ladner
HOT OFF PRESS! NO PHOTOS YET! Excellent 1 bedroomsouth facing condo overlooking garden area! Sunny
exposure, private deck, totally rainscreened building, 764sq.ft! Unit is updated and shows great! Don’t miss this one!
priced @ $242,900
check out 360 virtual tour @ www.pixilink.com/tours5/4513-45a-j
4513 45A STREET-WEST LADNERpriced to sell @ $659,900
WOW! RARE! 2,871 SQ.FT 2-LEVEL HOME WITH SUITE!
Wow! Rare! Wonderful 2,871 sf extensively renovated addition! Main !oor has 3 or 4 bedrooms, living room, familyroom plus rec room down! 2 bedroom suite downstairs! Updated with new bathrooms, kitchen, paint, !ooring,
mouldings, etc etc! Stunning private west facing rear yard w/inground pool & hot tub!! Double garage! Quiet street inwest Ladners one-of-a-kind! Don’t miss this!
0904
4715
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A37
0329
1360
let’s talk real estate in south delta...
0329
1360604.728.2845
Fraser CURRENTLYRANKS 17 out of allindividual realtors in
GREATER VANCOUVERfor total sales in 2010.
(Over 6,500 realtorstotal) That is actu-
ally ranking in the TOP0.3% of ALL realtors in
Greater
fraser outsells thecompetition every
3.76 days!!!
fras
erel
liott
pers
onal
real
esta
teco
rpor
atio
n
let’s talk real estate in south delta.....
.....phone me today.-fraser elliott.
Re/Max Progroup Realty100-5000 Bridge Street
call or email for pricing package.
BUILD A CUSTOM HOME
Build your dream home in the NEW LYNN PLACE SUBDIVISION of EXECUTIVE HOMES! UNBEATABLE LOCATION! Walk toall amenities in a matter of minutes, walk to High School and Elementary Schools in minutes! CUL-DE-SAC LOCATION!
QUIET STREET! Don’t miss this! What a wonderful opportunity to build your custom DREAM HOME! COMPETITIVEBUILDING COSTS!!!!! CUSTOMIZE! CUSTOMIZE! CUSTOMIZE!
only 5 LOTS left!!!
Prices starting at $529,900 including HST.
OPEN HOUSE SUN 2-4 PM
Nine brand new townhomes in Ladner’s latest and greatest ‘Manor Gardens’. 3 levels, spacious plans, double garages,high-end "nishings including hardwood, granite, 9’ ceilings on main etc! Private yards, 2-5-10 year national warranties,
quality built, 3 bdrms, 3 baths. Call today for an information package.
NEW HOME HST INCLUDED!4766 55b Street-In The Heart of Ladner
check out 360 virtual tour @ www.pixilink.com/tours5/5-4766-55b-j
0904
4716
A38 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
THE CHANCEY TEAM604.946.8899BOB LINDA
www.deltarealty.ca
0904
4709
Best value in town! 828 sq. ft., 1 bedroom suite with an updated kitchen, a large sunny patio in thepopular "Century House" - just a short walk to the shopping, transit, & coffee shops. Beautifullylandscaped & well kept building in the heart of Tsawwassen. No rentals, no pets. Very quiet buildingand location. Quick possession possible.
#202, 1175 Ferguson Rd,Tsawwassen
$209,500Call Bob or Linda at 604-946-8899
LARGE 1 BEDROOM IN CENTURY HOUSE
See Virtual Tour and
floor plans at www.deltarealty.ca
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL 706 SQ. FT., 1 BEDROOM CONDO ... Gorgeous NEW kitchen with NEW granite countertops,NEW cabinets and NEW stainless steel appliances, NEW tile flooring and sitting bar. Dining area and living room with NEW woodflooring, lovely gas fireplace & access to balcony. NEW paint throughout. NEW carpet in master bedroom featuring walk throughcloset to updated bathroom and french doors which lead to private balcony. Storage locker just down the hall. Secured undergroundparking. Close to shops & amenities yet tucked quietly away in a cul-de-sac. Pets allowed! Nothing to do but move right in!
REDUCED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE!
#220, 1141 Garden Pl.,Tsawwassen
$229,000Call Bob or Linda at 604-946-8899
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL 1 BEDROOM CONDO
Bright & spacious condo with over 1,150 square feet. This is one of the largest units in this complex.Very private and serene, looking out onto greenery. Living room with gas fireplace and french doorsleading to deck. Bright formal dining room. U-shaped kitchen. 2 bedrooms (master with 2 pieceensuite) and a super large storage closet. Very clean! Immediate possession possible!, Tsawwassen
#328, 1441 Garden Place,Tsawwassen
$264,500Call Bob or Linda at 604-946-8899
2 BEDROOM -TOP FLOOR- CORNER UNIT
See Virtual Tour and
floor plans at www.deltarealty.ca
OPENOPENSUN 2-4SUN 2-4
OPENOPENSUN 2-4SUN 2-4
Great family home! 2,242 square foot 2 level home in central Ladner. Living & dining room with vaulted cedar ceilings,refinished oak floors, new kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and laundry upstairs. Below is a terrific, freshly painted,spacious, clean 950 square foot in-law suite with new kitchen, 1 bedroom,dining room, living room, eating area andlaundry room. New Roof, New paint throughout, all new windows, new front door, new 16' x 16' covered sundeck.Large back yard - quick possession possible.
5629 - 45th Avenue,Ladner
$559,900Call Bob or Linda at 604-946-8899
MORTGAGE HELPER
See Virtual Tour and
floor plans at www.deltarealty.ca
OPEN SUNOPEN SUN4:30-5:304:30-5:30
See Virtual Tour and
floor plans at www.deltarealty.ca
OPENOPENSUN 2-4SUN 2-4
#1 REALTORS® IN SOUTH DELTA FOR 11 YEARS*
SUTTON GROUP WEST COAST REALTY
*As per career MLS Stat is t ics for ei ther Bob or Linda Chancey represented by the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A39
THE CHANCEY TEAM604.946.8899BOB LINDA
www.deltarealty.ca
www.deltarealty.ca
SUTTON GROUP WEST COAST REALTY
With competitive rates at over 50 institutions,I will find you the best rate and custom mortgage!Trusted name and real estate related experience that you can use:• Former Director of Franchising for Re/Max for Canada• Former President & CEO of Sutton Group Realty• Former President, CEO & Chairman of Realty WorldBob Dymont, AMP
Cell: 604-603-0203Fax: 604-940-2004email: [email protected]
We welcome Bob Dymont, Mortgage Expert, to our Team!
0904
4710
2346 Falcon Way, Tsawwassen$399,900
Call Bob or Linda at 604-946-8899
Fabulous 2 level home with 99 year lease onTsawwassenFirstNations land.Thiswell cared forhome is2,000squarefeet, 20 years old and includes a 1 bedroom suite down.Main floor with beautiful hardwood floors. Living room,dining room, kitchen with newer appliances, 2 bedrooms(master with 3 piece ensuite). Newer windows, newerhot water tank, etc. All located on a large lot just acrossthe street from the park. Views to the Ferries and gulfIslands. First time offered!!!
JUSTLISTED
LOOKING FOR A HOMEFOR THE NEXT 99 YEARS?
#204, 4733 River Road West, Ladner$386,500
Call Bob or Linda at 604-946-8899
Call now to view this recently renovated, 2 bedroom (or1 and a den) condo, Large kitchen with white cabinetsand brand new stainless steel appliances Formal diningarea and living room with gas fireplace, master bedroomwith large walk in closet and 5 piece ensuite. New items:carpets, paint, hot water tank, front loading washer &dryer. Nothing to do but enjoy the terrific lifestyle ofowning this beautiful condo in one of Ladner’s mostdesirable condo developments. adult oriented (19+)River west offers a terrific senic location, yet is just ashort walk to historic downtown Ladner.
JUSTLISTEDSTUNNING VIEWS OF
MARINA & FRASER RIVER
See Virtual Tour and
floor plans at www.deltarealty.ca
See Virtual Tour and
floor plans at www.deltarealty.ca
OPENOPENSUN 12-1:30SUN 12-1:30
MON 2-4MON 2-4
A40 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
www.ladnerhomes.comwww.ladnerrealestate.net
4676 54A Street, Ladner $579,000BIG 2500 sq ft Basement Entry 4 bed 3 bath 2 level home on a nice bright 68 X 122 foot lot in agreat Ladner neighborhood. Tar and Gravel low slope roof is just under 5 years old, 2 newer gas
fireplaces and lots of room to make some updates for a family with new design and decorating ideas.Plenty of room downstairs to comfortably accommodate Mom and Dad too!
4858 59A Street, Ladner $519,000Some nice updates in flooring and paint colors. Master bedroom has walk in closet and
a full 4 piece ensuite bathroom. It is a wonderful family Rancher home.Roof is only 2 years old, double car garage, very private yard and a nice neighborhood.
Close to schools, transit and the community rec center.
Townhome #322 13888 70th Avenue, Surrey $339,000Nice 1586 foot ground floor Rancher style 2 bed 2 bath with some nice updating in the past 2 years.Clean in floor hot water heat, thermo windows and a gas fireplace. Kitchen, Eating Area and FamilyRoom are all adjacent to each other. 1 car garage with storage room. The 23 acre site has low density
Townhomes, waterways, fountains & lovely gardens. There is RV storage on the grounds, and theClub House has guests suites, meeting room, Rec Room, Hot Tub and an outdoor pool. If you are a
Snowbird, this is your place!
Windsor Woods ~ #314 1359 56th Street, TsawwassenCozy 1124 sq foot 2 bed 2 bath condo, close to shopping, central to everything & the bus route.
Includes all appliances, gas Fireplace, 4 piece ensuite, new laminate flooring, large sundeck. Thiscondo feels like a rancher layout. Close to the park and the colorful Windsor Woods lagoon.
4856 Turnbuckle Wynd, Ladner $339,000Nicely updated 1538 sq. ft. 3 level, 3 bed, family room townhome with 1 car garage in downtown
Ladner. Updates include kitchen, bathroom, flooring, Low E windows, heat & lighting. Big deck andnew fencing. Great complex with clubhouse rec and exercise facility.
R E / M A X P R O G R O U P R E A L T Y 6 0 4 - 9 4 6 - 8 0 0 0
RUSS NUGENTDirect Line 946-2766email: [email protected]
Living & Playing in Ladner for over 50 years
0828
2314
SOLDSOLD
This image is an artists’ representation only.This is not an offering for sale. Any such offering can only bemade with a disclosure statement. E.& O.E.
R EG I S T E R NOW 6 0 4 . 5 3 1 . 9 0 3 0 WWW.AVRAL I V I N G . C OM
Can small town values and big cityamenities coexist?
Start with quality highrise residences located in the heart of the thriving
town centre. Add ocean views, amenity-rich shopping promenade of
Johnston Road, and top ranked local schools. Of course it can.
AVRA . I N T I MAT E & L I VAB L E . WH I T E ROCK .
1327 Enderby
#110-7751 Minoru Blvd. $309,000.New Listing in Canterbury Court.Updated 2 bedroom; 2bathroom.Largest deck in the complex.
#314-1359 56th $339,000.Windsor Woods.Come and enjoy this beautiful 2bedroom; 2 bathroom unit. Very openfloor plan. Great for entertaining.
The VUE – Cornwall. $1,999,000.This unique 4 unit complex is in the heart ofKitsilano. This unit was featured in House &Home. Polished concrete, limestone, black walnutcabinets, 3 balconies with unobstructed views.
#119-5800 Andrews Rd. $389,000.The Villas in Steveston. 2 bedroom;2 bathroom with stunning views ofthe farmlands. Come and enjoy theVillage life.
0904
4758
SOLD!
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A41
Word ChallengeWord ChallengeCLUES ACROSS
1. Chick sound5. Islamic pilgrimage9. Yeddo
12. Scottish hillside13. Arm bones15. The bomb ____ up16. Pouches17. Sandy seaside area18. Abba ____, Israeli politi-cian19. The woman20. Inhabitants of Seoul22. Restaurant bill25. Big man on campus26. Ethiopian lake28. Produces acorns29. Founder of Babism32. Sound of a hound33. Evil spirit35. Every36. Household god (Roman)37. Lips39. Cease living40. ___ Lilly, drug company41. Churns43. Talk44. No. Am. republic45. An athlete who playsfor pay46. Satiates48. Netherlands river49. A lyric poem50. Military quarter54. Basics57. Largest known toadspecies58. Helicopters62. Dove sounds64. America's eagle65. 4th Hindu month66. Tangelo67. They __68. Variant of Hui69. 100 = 1 kyat
CLUES DOWN1. Non-commercial TV
network2. Periods of time3. Those considered indi-
vidually4. Prior currency of Spain5. The center of a city6. Brew7. Genetic map8. Purple clematis group9. Italian Island
10. Doyen11. Has title to14. Trembled15. Spelling contest21. Red cross23. Not or24. Yellow edible Indianfruit25. Baby mistakes26. Afrikaans
27. It's capital is Damascus29. Emblem of identification30. False name31. Small blister32. Cheese containing mold34. City in Morocco38. As well42. Not happy45. A civil authority inTurkey47. Tempest in a ______48. Cellist Yoyo50. A leavened rum cake51. A culture medium52. Playing guideline53. Radioactivity unit55. An unidentified aircraft56. Carbonated soft drink59. Jurisprudence60. A mined mineral61. Chinese term for poetry63. Female sibling
LAST WEEK’S ANSWER
0904
9098
Thank You To Our2010 Mens Night Sponsors
PLATINUM LEVEL SPONSORS❖ The Delta Optimist ❖ Steve Knoblauch - Ram Construction
GOLD LEVEL SPONSORS❖ Ian Gordon - Longwave Group
❖ Doug Boychuk - Silver City Galvanizing
SILVER LEVEL SPONSORS❖ Bill MacLagan - Blakes Lawyers ❖ Rob Gillespie - Muscle Memory
❖ Warren Stanyer - Beach Grove Café❖ Randy Kaardal - Hunter Litigation Chambers
CORPORATE WEDNESDAYS SPONSORS❖ AMJ Campbell Vanlines International Movers
- Kevan Brown and Tom Finlay❖ Rogers Communications - Mike Barr
❖ Unitech Construction Management Ltd❖ Canaccord Genuity Corp - Bryan Claggett
❖ DJ Skinner & Associates ❖ Jarvis/McGee Trial Lawyers❖ Boston Pizza ❖ Longwave Group - Ian Gordon
❖ Randy Kaardal - Lawyer Hunter Litigation Chambers ❖ Canaccord Genuity Corp
STAG NIGHT WEDNESDAYS SPONSORS❖ John Cannon - Wales McLelland
❖ Mike Delotz❖ Brian Blundell - Blundell Malabar
PRESENTING & GRAND PRIZE SPONSORS❖ Molson Breweries ❖ Granville Island Brewery ❖ Illuminate Restorante
BRONZE LEVEL SPONSORS❖ Jim Froese - Williams Moving & Storage ❖ Paul Wiebe - Rack Attack
❖ Steve Menzies - OK Tire, Kingsway Ltd. ❖ Phil Cote - RE/MAX❖ Larry Wood - Aqua Coast Engineering ❖ Dan Boisvert - Notary Public
❖ David Ainsworth - Cellworks/Rogers Wireless❖ Ron Phillip - Iris Optical ❖ Tim McLean - Sicon Signs
MANUFACTURER WEDNESDAYSPing ❖ Titleist ❖ Taylor Made ❖ Callaway
BEACH GROVE GOLF CLUB 604.943.9381WWW.BEACHGROVEGOLF.COM
0904
1966
BeachGrove Golf ClubMens Tournament CommitteeShane Stevens (Chair), Darcy Heisler,Phil Savard, Tom Booth, Jim Froese,
Mike Delotz, Ron Dickie, Brent Derrheim
LotteryCalendarWinners2010
• Michelle Thomas .................$250• Jean Gaetz ...............................$100• Peter Leaf ................................$100• Sandy Wightman .................$100• Richard Avender ..................$100
–This Month's Sponsors–• Cran & Stuart • Ladner Chevron Service
• Thrifty Foods • CMS Telus• Jim Burnett - Royal LePage Regency Realty
AUGUST WINNERSAUGUST WINNERS
0904
9851
Want ThatNew ipod?
Need To MakeExtra Cash?
We're looking forresponsible
carriers.
Call604-946-4451for more info.
A42 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
Delta Open House.caTrisha Murphy.ca Teri Steele.com
604-312-7621 604-897-2010
Sutton Group - Seafair Realty1625 56th Street, Tsawwassen, BC V4L 2B2Tel: 604.943.3110 Fax: 604.943.6155
0904
4650
Beautiful Sundial townhome offering main floor livingand bedrooms up. Extensively updated it overlooks aprivate courtyard and is close to the town centre and
transportation to the city.
OPEN SATURDAY 2-4113 - 5421 10TH AVENUE
TSAWWASSEN$375,000
Lovely 2 bedroom suite with great floor plan - bedroomsare at opposite ends. Gourmet open plan kitchen withgranite counter tops, hardwood flooring, and designer
paint colors. 3 minutes walk to town centre and bus stop.
OPEN BY APPOINTMENT201 - 1175 55 STREET
TSAWWASSEN$429,000
Fully renovated every square inch - beach cottageonly a block to the beach with room for your watertoys. Plus back guest studio matching the theme of
this beautiful home.
OPEN SUNDAY 2-46674 - 1A AVENUEBOUNDARY BAY
$649,900
Just Listed! 2 bedroom, 2 bath suite in "The Olivia".Beautiful bamboo floors, open concept plan withblack appliances and granite counters, lovely northfacing balcony cool in the summer. Shows like new
and available for immediate occupancy.
OPEN SATURDAY 12-2203 - 1315 56TH STREET
TSAWWASSEN$339,900
12 year old one owner home designed and built byHoward Shmid. This 2550 sq. ft. home is situated
on a private park like lot and offers 3 bedrooms anda games room up plus den on the main. All on a
private park like lot in Victory Estates.
OPEN SUNDAY 12-25365 CHAMBERLAYNE WAY
LADNER$827,500
This lovely Pebble Hill 3 bedroom split levelis situated on a quiet cul-de-sac adjacent to
parkland and on a sunny westerly exposed lot.Extras include new windows, decks, roof, heatpump and a sun room overlooking the gardens.
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 12-2423 SHANNON WAY
TSAWWASSEN$589,900
5 year old craftsman home situated on a privateprofessionally landscaped lot. The open conceptplan offers great rooms on the main, plus denand full bath. Upstairs are 2 masters with full
ensuites plus 2 other bedrooms that have a Jackand Jill ensuite. Great value!
OPEN SUNDAY 2-45335 6TH AVETSAWWASSEN
$874,900
Lovely and very spacious corner suite offering 2bedrooms and a large walk out patio area. Bright
and spacious with larger than most workingkitchen. Lovely quiet area of Tsawwassen but
just 5 minutes to the town centre and recreation.Pets allowed.
OPEN BY APPOINTMENT205 - 5472 11TH AVENUE
TSAWWASSEN$329,900
Architecturally designed 2100 sq.ft. renovatedhome offering 2 bedrooms on the main plus a
750 sq.ft. master retreat up with 4 piece ensuite,fireplace, sitting room and 2 walk in closets. Allon a 7900 Sq.ft. private lot with cedar deck and
hot tub.
OPEN SUNDAY 3-54563 46A ST
WEST LADNER$689,900
Just Listed! Top floor west facing suite in “Fairview 56”Vaulted ceilings and separated bedrooms make this 2bedroom/2 bath suite feel larger than 983 sq. ft. Great
maple kitchen with granite counters and stainless appliancesoverlook dining and living rooms great for entertaining.
OPEN SUNDAY 3-5308-1375 VIEW CRESCENT
TSAWWASSEN$338,900
I’M AFRAID THE PLACE ISPRETTY SMALL ... PERHAPS
ONE OF YOU COULD GOINSIDE AND COME BACKOUT AND TELL THE OTHER
WHAT IT’S LIKE
www.bcfloatinghomes.com • 604.788.9727SuttonSeafairRealty
Proud supporter of the 2010 Junior Authors Short Story Contest
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2:30 - 4:30#8-3459 W RIVER RD. ~ $489,000
This well kept 3 bedroom float home located in Canoe Pass Village, a community of 43float homes, boasts a new roof. 17'x8'6 West view deck, fresh exterior design & paint andlots of TLC by the current owners who sadly are transferring. Wonderful open conceptwith kitchen upgrades, a cozy wood fireplace and great room entertaining. Master bath hastwo sinks, jetted tub and shower adjoining the spacious mster bedroom. Included is a 32'boat slip for easy getaways on the river, a garage and lots of storage.
www.bcfloatinghomes.com Sutton Seafair Realty 604-788-9727
0904
4649
NEW LISTING
660044--778899--66440055
New Just Got Even Better!ONLY 1 HOME LEFT - LAST CHANCE TO BUY
Beautifully crafted new home foronly $784,900 HST included.
Come bring your offer for this beautifully crafted new home.This must be seen! Spacious 4 bedroom, 3 bath featuring
a spacious floor-plan boasting over 2,500 sq ft with vaultedceilings and a very functional layout. Centrally located,
close to shopping & transit routes, you'll love spending timewith family and friends in your own backyard!
0904
5224
4876 53rd STREET, LADNERSHOWINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A43
LABOUR DAYDEADLINES
Classified DeadlinesWednesday, Sept. 8th, 2010
Display Ads Thursday, Sept. 2nd 4:00 pmLiner Ads Tuesday, Sept. 7th 9:30 am
Our office will be closedMonday, September 6th
604-630-3300
JUUL JENSEN, Vicki (Vera)(nee Hearn)
Beloved sister, aunt and great aunt,passed away peacefully in Delta Hospitalon August 16, 2010. Vicki was born inEssex, UK, on January 12, 1922, and livedan eventful life in show business, dancingand performing across Europe and theMiddle East in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.She came to Canada in 1971 and lived for
thirty years in Edmonton, Alberta, where she had many friendsamong her Woodward’s colleagues, Alberta Ballet School and theOrchid Society of Alberta. She moved to Tsawwassen in 2001,residing at Garden Place apartments, where she continued herenthusiasm for orchids with the Vancouver Orchid Society.Vicki will be remembered very fondly for her lively sense of fun,her sparkly smile and her unfailing good humour. She is survivedby her sister Margaret O’Hara, sister-in-law Adelaide Hearn,nieces Felicity Jenkins, Anne Murray and Christina Musson,nephew Martin Hearn, and great nieces and nephews.A Graveside Service will be held on Saturday, September 11,2010 at 1:00 pm at Boundary Bay Cemetery, Tsawwassen, BC.
Delta Funeral Home 604-946-6040
ANDREASEN, Dorothy May(nee Theobald)
Dorothy passed away peacefully Sunday, August29, 2010 at Delta Hospital. She was born May 28,1926 in Vancouver.She will be sadly missed and fondly rememberedby her husband of 63 years Mark, her daughterJane (Robert), sons Eric (Klaudia) and Jack(Corinne), 6 grandchildren and 8 great-grandchildren, extended family and many friends.
She was a lifetime member of the Delta Hospital Auxiliary and served on theboard for 9 years. An avid gardener, she was a lifetime member of theEvergreen Garden Club which she belonged to for over 40 years. Shevolunteered for Lifeline for over 20 years and also volunteered for theMammography program. She completed a business degree at DouglasCollege at 50 and worked many years for Tsawwassen Medical Clinic andInstant Lawns. She was a member of the Tsawwassen Tops Club.In lieu of flowers, donations to the Delta Hospital Foundation would beappreciated.A Celebration of Dorothy’s life will be held on Wednesday, September 8, 2010at 2:00 pm at Delta Funeral Home 5329 Ladner Trunk Road, Ladner, BC.The family would like to thank the Delta Hospital staff and volunteers for thecare and compassion given to her while she was there.
Delta Funeral Home 604-946-6040
1170 Obituaries1170
TAYLORGordon deRUPE
The Taylor families of Ladner,Ottawa, Parksville, and HighRiver, sadly announce thepassing of their Husband,Father , Brother , Uncle,Grandpa, and Great GrandpaGordon deRupe Taylor onAugust 28, 2010. Born inLadner, May 9, 1923 toChrissie and Vernon deRTaylor, a pioneering family onthe Delta. Gordon servedoverseas during WWII inEngland, the Netherlands, andGermany, attended UBC (B.A.,M.A.) and was the author of thebook; “A Century of Progress”the first book of Delta’s historypub.1958. In later years heserved as president of theBritish Isles Family HistorySociety for several years. Leftto mourn are his wife of 63years, Joan, his daughtersLinda (Glenn), Eileen (Heinz),four Grandchildren and fiveGreat Grandchildren, brotherKen (Dorothy) sister Phyllis(Norm) and many nieces andnephews in Canada.
1170 Obituaries1170
THAYER,Lorraine Verna
(Leach)
March 11, 1922 - August 18,2010. Lorraine passed awaypeacefully after a short battlewith cancer at the age of 88.Many thanks to the staff atDelta Hospital for her careduring her short stay. Lorraineis survived by her daughterJoyce, son Murray andgrandchildren Jessica and Arloand her beloved partner ofmany years Horace (Fletch).Lorraine is predeceased by herhusband Harold. Lorraine willbe greatly missed by her familyand her many friends in theLadner community and aroundthe world. Lorraine requestedthat no service be held. In lieuof cards or flowers, donationsto the Union Gosphel Missionwould be greatly appreaciated.
1010 Announcements1010
NOTICE OF 2010ANNUAL GENERAL
MEETINGNotice is hereby given thatan Annual General Meeting
of School District #37Business Companywill be held Tuesday,
September 28, at 7:00 PMat the Delta School Board
Office Building,4585 Harvest Drive,
Ladner, BC.CRIMINAL RECORD?
Canadian pardon seals record.American waiver allows legal
entry.Why risk employment, business,
travel, licensing, deportation?All CANADIAN / AMERICAN
Work & Travel Visa’s.604-282-6668 or1-800-347-2540
If you want to drinkthat’s your business;
If you want to stopdrinking it’s ours.
Alcoholics Anonymous
604-434-3933
1085 Lost & Found1085CAT LOST, grey silver collarFenton Dr. area, 604-946-5783
MEDFORD,Kenneth Alleyne
DSM, RCNVR, B.Comm.December 14, 1917 - August 25, 2010
Ken passed away after a short illness.He is predeceased by his parents, Mr.and Mrs. D. A. Medford of Montreal,brother Austin and sister-in-law Beverly.He is survived by his loving wife Sylvia,
sons Gary (Karen) and Brian, nephews Kenneth and Gordon(Sylvia) and sister-in-law Edith.He was born in Montreal and was a long time employee of theCNR at Headquarters. He served for 5 years in the RoyalCanadian Navy Volunteer Reserve, participated in the Battle ofthe Atlantic in many convoy battles during WW2 and wasawarded the Distinguished Service Medal.At his request, a private Anglican service was held September1st at Boundary Bay Cemetery in Delta. A drop-in reception inhis memory will be held at the family home on Sunday,September 12, 2010 from 1330 to 1630.Donations to charity of choice or Delta Hospital Foundation.
Delta Funeral Home 604-946-6040
FOUND I-POD found behindBeach Grove School.Call 604-943-1051.
1085 Lost & Found1085FOUND SKATEBOARD Helmet,at Diefenbaker Park. Call toidentify 604-948-0189
FOUND TOOLS, PSD and jacketat the Ferry Rd. boat launch onAug 24th. Call to id 604-946-2106
LOST: LOVEBIRD, green,yellow,red cheeks, in Tsaw Village onSept 2, very loved and missed.Call 604-943-7786
1105 PersonalMessages1105
Dear Jesus, In the past I haveasked for many favors, this time Iask for this special one, take itdear Jesus and place it with yourown broken heart where yourfather will see it then in hismerciful eyes it will become yourfavor not mine. Say for three daysand promise publication
REMOVE YOUR RECORD:A CRIMINAL RECORD can followyou for life. Only PARDONSERVICES CANADA has 20years experience GUARAN-TEEING RECORD REMOVAL.C a l l 1 - 8 - N O W - P A R D O N(1-866-972-7366)www.pardonservicescanada.com
ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTPart-time position at the University of Victoria – Centre on Aging (Ladner Office).Duties include: completing travel expense claims for staff and volunteers, paymentrequests for merchants, suppliers and staff and other light general office duties.Candidate will have post-secondary education, computer proficiency and theability to multi-task. Experience in administrative duties an asset.
Please send covering letter and resume by September 7, 2010to Sherry Lynch: [email protected]
University of Victoria – Centre on Aging#210 – 4907 Chisholm Street, Delta, B.C. V4K 2K6
Swissport International Ltd., a leading service provider in theglobal ground and cargo handling has Baggage Handler positions
available for our Vancouver International Airport Operations.Applicants must possess Canadian Citizenship or
Landed Immigrant Status and a valid BC Driver’s License.Flight Benefits • Group Health • Parking • Uniforms
Fax resume to Sharon 604-207-9941or email [email protected]
Swissport is an equal opportunity employer.We thank all applicants, however only those short listed will be contacted.
NOW HIRINGBaggage Handlers
Swissport has just been awarded2009 GLOBAL AVIATION GROUND SERVICES COMPANY
We Offer:• Health Benefits• Company Pension• Dedicated Fleet Managers• Pre-Planned Dispatch
Call Ron at 1-866-857-1375Visit our website @ www.canamwest.com
CarriersWe are seeking
Experienced Class 1 InternationalOpen Deck Long Haul and
Super Train Drivers
CONNECTING COMMUNITIESCONNECTING COMMUNITIES
jobscareersadvice working.com driving.ca househunting.ca
INDEX
Community Notices ....................................1000Family Announcements...........................1119Employment..........................................................1200Education .................................................................1400Special Occasions...........................................1600Marketplace ..........................................................2000Children ......................................................................3000Pets & Livestock ...............................................3500Health............................................................................4000Travel & Recreation ......................................4500Business & Finance .......................................5000Legals ............................................................................5500Real Estate ..............................................................6000Rentals .........................................................................6500Personals ...................................................................7000Service Directory .............................................8000Transportation ....................................................9000
Classified Line Ad Deadlines
Wed. Newspaper - Tues. 10:00amWed. Newspaper - Tues. 10:00amSat. Newspaper - Fri. 10:00amSat. Newspaper - Fri. 10:00am
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Wed. Newspaper - Fri. 4:00pmWed. Newspaper - Fri. 4:00pmSat. Newspaper - Wed. 4:00pmSat. Newspaper - Wed. 4:00pm
Changeyour lifetoday
604-580-2772www.stenbergcollege.com
Email:Email: [email protected]@van.netFax: 604-985-3227Fax: 604-985-3227
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Inc.
Place your birthannouncement
604.630.3300
Discover a World ofPossibilities in the Classifieds!
Call 604.630.3300 to advertise
Find aNewCareer
A44 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
To advertisecall
604-998-0218 All advertising published in this newspaper isaccepted on the premise that the merchandiseand services offered are accurately describedand willingly sold to buyers at the advertisedprices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions.Advertising that does not conform to thesestandards or that is deceptive or misleading,is never knowingly accepted. If any readerencounters non-compliance with these standardswe ask that you inform the Publisher of thisnewspaper and The Advertising StandardsCouncil of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: Thepublishers do not guarantee the insertion ofa particular advertisement on a specified date,or at all, although every effort will be made tomeet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, thepublishers do not accept liability for any lossor damage caused by an error or inaccuracy inthe printing of an advertisement beyond theamount paid for the space actually occupied bythe portion of the advertisement in which theerror occurred. Any corrections or changes willbe made in the next available issue. The DeltaOptimist will be responsible for only one incorrectinsertion with liability limited to that portion ofthe advertisement affected by the error. Requestfor adjustments or corrections on charges mustbe made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration.For best results please check your ad foraccuracy the first day it appears. Refundsmade only after 7 business days notice!
Amazing Opportunity!U p t o $ 8 0 0 / w e e k , n oc o m m i s s i o n , b e n e f i t sa v a i l a b l e . P r o m o t i o ncompany is gearing up for itsbusiest time of year. We offerfull paid training, and a fastpaced environment. Tons ofadvancement and travelopportunities! Must like music& work well with the oppositesex. Call today for aninterview.
Mindi, 604-777-2195
Junior Estimator/ProjectCo-ordinator
McKinley Electric is a growingelectrical company based inDelta. We require a highlymotivated individual tobecome involved in quotingand managing administrativeduties related to projects.If you are customer serviceoriented, on the job trainingwill be provided and thesuccessful individual willdevelop in an importantposition that will be bothchallenging and rewarding.Training and experienceusing quotation software andExcel is required. Our idealcandidate must be flexibleand able to multi-task, asother duties may be requiredfrom time to time in this fastpaced environment. We offera salary position with theindividual qualifying for ourbenefit plan after threemonths.
Please send resume tofax: 604-946-2800
or email: [email protected]
LABORATORY ASSISTANTAcme Analytical Laboratories(Vancouver), a premier BCmining laboratory, is looking to fillvarious Laboratory Assistantpositions for the graveyard shift(11pm - 7am) in its Vancouverfacility. Must be able to handle upto 40 lbs as some heavy manuall a b o r m a y b e r e q u i r e d .Experience in a lab environmentan asset but training will beprovided. Starting wage ofapproximately $13 (combinationof base wage, graveyard shiftpremium and daily productionbonus).Detail descriptions of the variouspositions are available on Acme’swebsite:
www.acmelab.comInterested parties should submitresume and cover letter by emailas instructed on the website.
1232 Drivers1232
Class 1 Drivers &Owner Operators Req.
Highway - BC & ABPlease fax resume
& Commercial “N” PrintAbstract to: 1 888 [email protected] # 604 273 5525 ext 2262
OUTDOORMAINTENANCEHELPER (LADNER)
Seasonal part-time.Must be able to drive a
tractor and operate powerlandscaping equipment.Need to be reliable and
able to work independently.Please send resume to:
[email protected] fax to: 604-946-1310
Personal Trainer CertificationEarn up to $70/hr as a PersonalTrainer. Government FinancialAid may be avail. 604-930-8377
See our ad in todayspaper under Education.
1248 Home Support1248LIVE IN caregiver req’d forElderly woman. Full time, $8/hr,40hr/wk, room & board, mustspeak & write english. 1 year exp.Please contact Mhels NannyAgency, 4708 Ashbury Place,Ladner, BC, 604-805-2200
1250 Hotel Restaurant1250ABC COUNTRYRESTAURANT
ServersDayshifts available,Flexible Schedule.
Apply in person weekdays5124 - 48th Ave, Ladner
or online [email protected]
CASUAL BANQUET STAFFreq’d at the Delta Town & CountryInn located in South Delta.Candidates should have:•Their own transportation•Speak fluent English•Serve it Right CertificationPlease only apply if you are willingto work Evenings and Weekends.Experience is an asset. To Apply:Fax resume to Sales & CateringDepartment: 604-946-5916 ore-mail [email protected]
COOK WANTEDFooze Gold Food ServicesLtd. dba Boston Pizza a busyrestaurant located at 12060Nordel Way, Surrey, BCurgently requires services of aF/T Cook. Main duties includeplan and cook meals frompreset menu for the chain,p r e p a r e s p e c i f i c f o o dpackages for small andmedium size groups and trainkitchen staff. Starting Salary is$15/hr. Minimum 3 years ofexperience as a Cook. Pleasefax resume to 604-596-6475.
DE DUTCHPANNEKOEK HOUSE
in Richmond is looking for a parttime Cook / Prep Person willingto work a flexible schedule.Great weekday, weekend andholiday hours for students andstay at home parents. Wageincrease upon knowledge ofpositions. Must have Food Safelevel 1. Please drop off resumeanytime btwn 8:00 am - 2:30 pm8031 Leslie Road, Richmond
WATERFRONT RESORT inTofino seeks managementcouple. Exc salary + accomoda-tions & bonus package. Exppreferred. Call 250-266-1711 oremail: [email protected]
1266 Medical/Dental1266A C C E N T U S M E D I C A LTranscription Services requiresC a n a d i a n M E D I C A LTRANSCRIPTIONISTS to workf rom home. Exper t i se inOperative Reports needed.Health Benefits now available!P l e a s e a p p l y o n l i n ew w w . a c c e n t u s . c a /employment.html
1270 Office Personnel1270LADNER CONSTRUCTION COseeks office support. P/T 1 to 2days/week. Position includes:clerical support, phones & basicbookkeeping/payroll duties. Ex-perience in word & SimplyAccounting a must. Fax resumeto 604-940-4527
1310 Trades/Technical1310REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY INDAWSON CREEK,Water + Sewer Grade Person.Must have good understanding ofgrades,reading plans, operating lasers.Knowledge of surveying an asset.Fax Resume to 1-250-782-1859orPhone 1-250-784-3993.
EMPLOYMENT
Enrol today! 604-248-1242
www.trainingforjobs.com
• Office Administration Diploma• Computerized Accounting Software
• Payroll Specialist• Microsoft Office Specialist
Flexible Scheduling, Start Monday! E/I Supported Training.3 Campuses to Serve you Better. Skytrain Accessible.
1410 Education1410
FOODSAFE1 DAY COURSES – ONLY $62!
Richmond: Sept 18 or Oct 9Surrey: Every Saturday
Also Bby • Coq • M.Ridge • VanHealth Inspector Instructors!
ADVANCE Hospitality EducationBC’s #1 Foodsafe Choice
www.advance-education.com604-272-7213
FOODSAFE 1 DAY COURSESGuaranteed best value!
Six Metro Vancouver Locations:Vancouver • Burnaby • Surrey
• Richmond• Coquitlam • Maple Ridge
All our Instructors are also work-ing local Health Inspectors!Classes held each week & week-end! Course materials available in6 languages. Same-day Certifica-tion. Visit our website atwww.foodsafe-courses.com orcall 604-272-7213ADVANCE Hospitality Education– B.C.’s #1 Choice for Foodsafe &
WorldHost Training.
INTERIORHEAVY
EQUIPMENTOPERATOR
SCHOOLTrain on Full-Size Excavators,Dozers, Graders, Loaders. OilField Tickets. Provincial lyCertified Instructors. GovernmentAccredited. Job Placementassistance. www.iheschool.com1-866-399-3853
1410 Education1410MEDICALOFFFICE
TRAINEESNEEDED!
Doctors & Hospitals need MedicalAdministrative & Medical OfficeStaff! No Experience? NeedTraining? Local Training & JobPlacement is also available.
1-888-748-4126
Personal TrainerPersonal TrainerCertificationCertification
Earn up to $70/hr asEarn up to $70/hr asa Personal Trainer.a Personal Trainer.
Government FinancialGovernment FinancialAid may be available.Aid may be available.
604-930-8377604-930-8377Hilltop AcademyHilltop Academy
1415 Music/Theatre/Dance1415
IN HOME OR STUDIO LESSONSPiano, Theory & other instruments.Allegro Music School 604-327-7765
Music LessonsAcoustic and Electric
Guitar, Bass and PopularKeyboard. Private lessonsor ask about learning with afriend. Rentals available.
Call Ross at 604.943.6865.Visit - www.steelstring.ca
1240 GeneralEmployment1240
EDUCATION MARKETPLACE
2010 Appliances2010
UNDER PRESSURESYSTEMS INC.
We sell & service allhot & cold pressure washers604.434.2188 upsi.ca#11 - 5850 Byrne Rd. Burnaby
LIKE NEW!Fridge $200 • Stove $150Washer $175 • Dryer $150604-306-5134
Warranty & DeliveryRemoval Available
2060 For Sale -Miscellaneous2060
4 WHEEL Shop Rider Scooter forSeniors. Excellent Condition,priced to sell. Originally $3000.asking $800. obo 604.940.8663
ELECTRIC BED, SCOOTER,others items suitable for sickroom. Best offer!! 604-943-8114
GIRLS SOUTHPOINT Uniformranges from Kindergarten tograde 7, 604-250-8052
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. BestPrice, Best Quality. All Shapes &C o l o r s A v a i l a b l e . C a l l1-866-652-6837.www.thecoverguy.ca
LARGE DOG KENNELFOR SALE $60.604-946-9612
2070 Fuel2070FIREWOOD, DRY 1 y.o. Cherry,cut & split, $100 cord p/u, $150delivered. Vancouver. Call778-233-2683 or 604-879-6019
2075 Furniture2075
BEST Deal Restwell Matt Sets.Full wrty, Dble $319. Queen $339King $559. Will deliver. 722-3636
COMPUTER DESK, $40 obo.Call 778-846-5275
CREDENZA, bookcase/desk,dresser, brass sofa table/2 endtables. reasonable.604-940-1925
DINING SUITE. 9 piece honeyoak. excellent condition. Orig.$2500. will sell for $750.
Call 604.940.8663
OAK BEDROOM set - King sizebed $500 good condition alsoKing size Brass bed $50604-943-7491
SOFA SECTIONAL burgundyleather, large, (Chintz & Co) pd$3500 (almost new) $2500 firm;black buffet & dining table, w/6chairs, seats 8, (Scan Design)$2500; solid pine armoire & 5drawer chest, new $500; craftedpine buffet & hutch, new $1500;604-943-9410
2095 Lumber/BuildingSupplies2095
#1A STEEL BUILDING SALE!Save up to 60% on your new
garage, shop,warehouse or storage building.6 different colors available! 40
year warranty!FREE shipping for the
first 20 callers! 1-800-457-2206www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
2118 Recycler21182 CHEST of drawers, 1 is 9drawer and other is 5, free youp/u, 778-836-2473
2 TV’S 22 inch & 17 inch. SONYBoth in oak entertainment units. UPICK UP. 604-946-7747
2080 Garage Sale2080
LADNERGARAGE SALE!
Sun. Sept 5, 10am - ????4582- 45A Ave.
Port Guichon areaLots of baby items, stroller, hi-chair, crib, etc, boy/girls bikesw/training wheels, toys,phones, blender, fireplace etc.
TsawwassenLeaving the Country!
Sun. Sept 5th9am - 1pm
The Old Veggie Shed@52nd St. & 28th Ave.
Time for deals!. Furn, gardentools, work storage cabs, New
items & all kinds of stuff.
2080 Garage Sale2080
TsawwassenGARAGE SALE
Sun & Mon, Sept 5 & 68am - 4pm
1189 Bayview DriveEverything must go!
Looking to clear out clutterto sell house
GARAGE SALES
Dreaming ofa career in
Education?
Find it in thecalssifieds!
Weekends were made for shoppping, so make sureyou check our Classifieds every Weekend for a
comprehensive listing of garage sales in your area!
Follow the garage sale trail every weekend in
The Delta Optimist ClassifiedsCall 604-630-3300 to book your ad
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A45
The Delta Optimist haspartnered with the BC SPCAto encourage responsible petguardianship and the humanetreatment of animals. Beforepurchasing a new puppy, ensurethe seller has provided excellentcare and treatment of the animaland the breeding parents. For acomplete guide to finding areputable breeder and otherconsiderations when acquiringa new pet, visit spca.bc.ca.
Cares!
3010-03 Music/DanceInstruction3010-03
PIANO LESSONS avail in Ladnerhome, grade 12 ARCT student,$15 per 1/2hr. refs 604-940-1602
3015 ChildcareAvailable3015
Bright EyesAcademy
Visit our website:www.brighteyesacademy.ca
Programs for ages 0 - 12Child Care Centres
Register Now for Preschool 2010/2011
EXP’D CHILDCARE provider hasfull time spot avail immed, CentralLadner. Call 604-946-6454
3020 ChildcareWanted3020
AFTER SCHOOL CAREneeded in the English Bluff
area. 3 children age 10, 8, & 7.3 or 4 days per wk until 4:15.
Walk home from school & stayat our home. Responsible
teenager considered.Laura or Steve: 604-943-8629
Sept 15 start.
3040 Daycare Centres3040
LicensedFamily
Daycare
FrenchImmersion0-12 yrs.Ladner
Activities includestory telling, crafts,
outdoor play.Openings available
Pls Call Marie-Claude604-946-7402CREATION STATION
DAYCARELicensed Group Daycare &
School Age has spaces avail.for ages 30 mos. - 10 yrs.
604-940-8077creationstationdaycare.com
3503 Birds3503COCKATIEL, Loving home req’d3 y.o. female, beautiful cage, toys& food incl. $85 604-943-5782
3507 Cats3507RAGDOLL KITTENS, males, vetcheck, 1 vac. dewormed, parentsSealpoints, $350, 604-850-7471
★CATS & KITTENS★
FOR ADOPTION !
604-724-7652
3508 Dogs3508
PuppyParadise
778-552-5366 or 778-298-5758Mon-Sat 11-7/Sun 12-6
puppyparadise.ca
E;G >;HGF:F;< ? EB>>F@BG;< ? <;C=HA;<BREED M F
LHASALIER $695MORKIE $795 $895HAVANESE/PUG $695 $795GOLDEN RETRIEVERS $695(BD> Registered, 1 left!)HAVENESE Registered $795 $895PEKAPOM $695 $795MIN PIN $595 -MINI PUGGLE $595 $695SHIHTZU/PUGS $695 $795PAPILLON Registered $695PEKEPOO $695 -WESTIE $795 $895SHELTIE Registered $795 $895BICHAPOO $695 -YORKIE Registered $795 $895COCKALIER $695 $795POM (8WEEKS,REG) $795 $895ENG TOY/BICHON $695 $795BEAGLE $795 $895
*** SPECIALS ***Shihtzu-Poodle X $275Maltese-Pekingese X $275Pomeranian Registered, M/F $395Yorkie-Poo $395
LOCATED INSURREY
9613 192ND Street
LHASALIER $595MORKIE $695 $795HAVANESE Registered $795 $895PEKAPOM $695 $795SHIHTZU/PUGS $495PAPILLON Registered $695PEKEPOO $695WESTIE $895SHELTIE Registered $495BICHAPOO $695YORKIE Registered $695COCKALIER $695ENG TOY/BICHON $695BEAGLE $795PUGGLE $695 $795CHIHUAHUA $695+DASCHUND $795 $895CHI-WEENIE $695 $795Pekingese $595Chi/Pug $795 $895Italian Greyhound $795Sheltie-Mo $795
****** SPECIALSSPECIALS ******Shihtzu-Poodle X $275Yorkie-Poo $395Shihtzu $495
VET CERTIFIED•VACCINATED•DEWORMEDBREED M F
778-552-5366 or 778-298-5758Mon-Sat 11:30-6:30/Sun 12-6
- Free Delivery -
2 HUSBY Yorkies (male andfemale).needs re-homing, theyare both A K C registered, if youare interested kindly send anemail to [email protected]
4 TOY Australian Shepherd pups2/merles 2/ tri parents to view604.799.3324/ $750 - [email protected]
3508 Dogs3508
AMERICAN PITBULL pups, P/B,$500. Call for more information,604-819-6006
CHOCOLATE LAB pups, PBboth mother and father come froma bird dog lineage father is ckc reg1st shots vet checked anddewormed $600 604-768-7130
CKC REG’D Rottweiller Pups, 11wks, Champion German lines, vetchk’ed, $1000+. 1-604-287-7688
FILA/MASTIFF GUARD DOGSowners best friend. Intruders
worst nightmare. all shots, $2000each. ready now! 604-817-5957
MALTESE PUPS, 2 m’s, trained,3.5 mths, vet ✔ 1st shots, famraised, ready to go. 604-464-5077
MINIATURE SCHNAUZERSMale. Ready to go! $650 firm.
604-591-2137
PB HAVANESE & Havanese Xpups, 8weeks, vaccinated, dew,$675/$875. Call 778-881-5966
PIT BULL Puppies. UKC reg.Great bloodlines. 604-240-1647.
www.heavylinepitbulls.com
3508 Dogs3508
POODLE/SCHNAUZER X, 8 moswks, shots, deworm, declawed,doc’d tails. 3F/2M. 604-951-6890
PUREBRED BLUE pitbulls$1000. Very healthy with firstshots Ph: 604-584-7885.
RARE! CHOCOLATE, Blue,cream & brindle. French Bulldogs,Reserve now! 604-802-6934www.westcoastfrenchbulldogs.com
SHIH TZU BIJON pups, 1st shots,dewormed, ready, family raised,non shed, $575 firm. 588-5195
3510 Feed & Hay3510Triple Five Trucking
SPECIAL • Cedar Shavings
KILN DRIEDHemlock, Fir, SpruceSawdust & Shavings
534-5544 290-8405
Tim Stephens' Astral Reflections Sept. 5 - Sept. 11★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Aries March 21 - April 19: The romance planetshave been in your partnership and opportunity signsince early August. They leave soon (Venus Sept. 8,Mars Sept. 14). If you’re unattached, this could beyour last chance for a while to find romance (withsomeone already met?). If you’ve recently formedan attraction, the weeks ahead could deepen it,bringing intimacy and questions of commitment.You’re having second thoughts about work, and thechoices you’ve made. What to do? It’s best just towork, period, at whatever. Don’t sweat decisions.This is an easy, smooth, romantic, inspired week!Taurus April 20-May 20: The emphasis lies onromance, beauty, pleasure, creativity, speculation,successful risk. You’re on a winning streak,especially Tuesday/Wednesday and Saturday! (Otherfour days: tackle practicalities.) Your social life willmeet luck and expanding popularity from this weekto next January. And better: starting this week andnext, romantic opportunities turn to partnershipopportunities, through November. Singles amongyou are in for a great time (unless you’re chainedto the couch). Remember, start nothing before Sept.12: if someone enters before this, hopefully he/she’sa former flame.Gemini May 21-June 20: Remember, start nothingnew before Sept. 12. That said, your romanticprospects, high for the last month, remain that wayuntil the 14th. But time is running out. If you haveyour eye on two or three people (or one) make yourbid (Sunday/Monday or, better, Thursday/Friday).Someone with whom you’ve shared love before isbetter than someone new. Saturday shows you whatawaits for the rest of 2010: work, career, ambition,health concerns. Midweek (Tuesday/Wednesday) payattention to home, kids, nature, real estate: a newproject might start, with a former situation or object.
Cancer June 21-July 22: Pay attention to details,addresses: mistakes are possible. You could find oldletters, emails from long ago. Siblings re-connect.Avoid major new starts before Sept. 12. An August-long influence of domestic friction will ebb soon,leading to romance, beauty, acceptance, creativework and general joy in life! (Might start this week, orearly next.) Wednesday begins an autumn of successand luck in legal, educational, international, loveand cultural spheres, especially if you work at them.Chase money/shop Sunday/Monday. Attend to home,kids late week. Romance Saturday!Leo July 23-Aug. 22: Start nothing big beforeSept. 12, especially in earnings, purchasing andpossessions – but a “renewed” start on an oldproject/venture might be slated midweek. All week,a former casual sensual relationship is good, a newone not. Your energy and charisma shine Sunday/Monday. Travel, friends, communications have beenlucky and intriguing the last few weeks – and areagain, Thursday/Friday. But this promising area willebb, recede soon – a powerful, perhaps romanticdomestic situation will replace it. Are you readyfor commitment? Saturday holds clues – in yourneighbourhood.Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22: Rest Sunday/Monday. Yourcharisma, energy and luck soar Tuesday/Wednesday!(And all month.) Continue to avoid big new startsbefore Sept. 12. Apply your high spirits to ongoingprojects and relationships, or those that return fromthe past. You’ve had a nice ”money run” for a monthor so (in which you’ve probably reduced your bankaccount by lax/optimistic spending) – this ends soon,so start tightening up. (Wait until Sept. 14 onwardto create a budget.) There will be many reasons tospend during the six-seven weeks ahead: travel willcall, perhaps via siblings. Job inspiration Thursday!
Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22: Start nothing brand newand important before Sept. 12. A romantic linkor creative opportunity inspires this whole week,especiallyThursday eve through Friday night. If you’vewanted to contact an old flame, this is the time to doso. (Best Sunday/Monday or Thursday/Friday.) Alsogreat for working on film, creative chores, etc. (Andfor health, sanitation regimes neglected for a while.)Your romantic clout/attractiveness, high since earlyAugust, is about to ebb mildly (though it still supportssensual relationships nicely through November) sodon’t delay. Rest, government, therapy midweek.Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21: Wishes could come true,especially ones you formed long ago – and especiallyTuesday/Wednesday. Remember, start nothingnew and significant before Sept. 12. Your career,ambitions and prestige relations demand attention(and reward it) Sunday/Monday. Midweek thrills withsocial joys, flirtations, entertainment, popularity andhigh hopes! Retreat for a breather Thursday/Friday.(All week, especially during this “breather,” problemsmagically dissolve. Your energy and charisma surgeback Saturday. Soon, very soon, your romanticmagnetism will rise – for four months!Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21: This week and next,the high hopes of August ebb into the “formingstage” – where you’ll contemplate them, plan,adjust to give them a path or room to grow, nurturethem, etc. (Leave the planning part until next week.)Mostly, those hopes involve(d) romance, creativeprojects, pleasure, social situations, gatherings, anorganization, and work or health. A meeting and/or conversation this week could inspire or informyou luckily about one of these hopes, especiallyThursday/Friday. Earlier, Sunday/Monday are gentle,wise. Be ambitious, friendly with higher-ups Tuesday/Wednesday.
Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19: Despite mistakes,delays and other irritants, life remains mellow, gentle,loving. Your understanding and compassion flow. Butdon’t start new ventures before Sept. 12, especiallyin legal, far travel, publishing, insurance, statisticaland cultural areas. It’s a great week for studyinghistory or classical works (or your own family trees/skeletons). You might receive a great idea about realestate, home, children, security or “Mother Nature”– let it percolate. Big finances, life’s mysteries andsubconscious desires rise Sunday/Monday. Ambition,late week. Happiness, social joys Saturday!Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18: Lots of dealings withothers this week. (Remember, in all this, don’t startnew ventures or new relationships before Sept. 12:delve into ongoing or past ones.) Sunday/Mondaycan bring exciting meetings, opportunities – and theneed for diplomacy. Secrets, mysteries circle youTuesday/Wednesday. Delve deep – you could solve apsychological puzzle, find the money, or grow moreintimate with someone. Legal, far travel, educational,publishing, cultural and love matters arise Thursday/Friday. These are building a long-term “base” forambition, worldly position (as Saturday hints).Pisces Feb. 19-March 20: Relationships,partnerships, enemies and allies, opportunities andobstacles, potential fame, the public, negotiations,litigation, relocation – one or more of these fills the twoweeks ahead. A new project or venture might beginhere Tuesday/Wednesday. For safety and success,focus on “renewed” starts. Temptation in some form(sex, money/greed) has tickled your interest sinceearly August (and does again Thursday/Friday). Soon,these lures will fade, to be replaced by a lucky, gentle,wise romantic urge. Saturday shows an early clue.Your financial intuition is correct this week.
[email protected] • Reading: 416-686-5014
3540 Pet Services3540CRITTER CAPERS dog walking.puppy play school. 604-836-4945www.crittercapers.ca
4035 HomecareAvailable4035
CAREGIVING AVAILABLESki l led and exper ienced,compassionate and fun-lovingcaregiver available. Providing:companionship, errands, outings& appointment management forelderly lady. Refs avail. ContactEileen Wray @ 604-952-3595
4060 Metaphysical4060LOVE! MONEY! LIFE!
#1 Psychics!1-877-478-4410
CreditCards/Deposit$3.19/min 18+
1-900-783-3800www.mysticalconnections.ca
5035 FinancialServices5035
Cut Your Debt by up to 70%DEBT Forgiveness Program
Avoid Bankruptcy, StopsCreditor Calls. Much lowerPayments at 0% Interest.
We work for You,not Your Creditors.
Call 1-866-690-3328www.4pillars.ca
NEED CASH ANDOWN A VEHICLE?You keep your keys anddrive away with cash.
Call Got Keys? Got Cash!(604) 760-9629
http://www.gotkeysgotcash.com
5040 Franchises/Business Opps5040
#1 JANITORIAL FRANCHISECustomers, (Office Cleaning),Training and support. Financing.
www.coverall.com604-434-7744 [email protected]
REAL ESTATE6002 Agents6002NEED A MORTGAGE -
1st and 2nd Mortgages,Self Employed, Refinancing,
Forclosures, Low Rates.604-629-8628
www.Mazuma.ca
6005 Real EstateServices6005
★ RENT TO OWN! ★If you have a small downpayment, I have a nice home foryou! Less then perfect credit OK.
Call Kim 604-628-6598
6007 BUSINESSES FORSALE6007
GAS STATION & Garage. Wellestablished, very successful. Ser-ious inquiries only . 604-724-4848
Own Your Own Retail Business!Prime White Rock location. Lowrent. $5900 incls $3000+ stock,fixtures. Turn Key. 604-541-9898
6020 Houses - Sale6020
6020-01 Real Estate6020-01
uSELLaHOME.com$99 can sell your home 574-5243
Chilliwack Promontory 4500sf 5br 5ba home,2 bsmt suites, $599,500 824-9700 id5206Coquitlam 10,000sf lot w/1000sf 3br 2bahome, outbuilding $440K 778-859-0717 id4272Langley renovated top floor 1161sf 2br 2bacondo, view $293K 778-996-3444 id5179Maple Ridge drastically reduced 4.9ac ser-viced vu acreage $440Kobo 722-3996 id4694Mission, Owner Retiring, profitable framingstore & gallery $47,000 826-7993 id5176Sry E Newton 1 acre lot with 2600sf 6br 2.5babungalow $499,900 778-549-2056 id5198Sry Guildford bargain, huge spotless 1227sf2br 2ba condo $235,900 589-6265 id5213
● DIFFICULTY SELLING? ●Expired Listing, No Equity, High Pymts?We Will Take Over Your PaymentUntil Your Property Is Sold. No Fees.Call Kristen today (604) 786-4663www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
❏ WE BUY HOMES ❏Any Price, Any Condition
Any Location. No Fees! No Risk !(604) 435-5555 OR (604) 786-4663www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
6020 Houses - Sale6020
6020-01 Real Estate6020-01★ WE BUY HOUSES ★
Foreclosure Help! Debt Relief!No Equity! Don’t Delay!
Call us First! 604-657-9422
* WE BUY HOUSES *Older House! Damaged House!Pretty House! Divorcing! Moving!
Mortgage too high! Too much debt!Quick Cash! Convenient! Private!
( 604 ) 626-9647www.webuyhomesbc.com
6020-06 Chilliwack6020-06
4 BR 3 bath, 3,336SF, priv & excl.over 1 acre of useable land, gatedentry, $659,000. 604-339-3431www.chilliwackestate.com
6020-12 Ladner/South Delta6020-12
LADNER, SPACIOUS 4 Br, 1/4acre lot, central location, lots ofextras, suite potential, nr hospital,$619,000. 604-946-2474 or driveby: 5007 57A St.
6020-20 Mission6020-20MISSION, BY OWNER, Reno’d2ste’s, 1900 sqft, 6100 sqft lot,Rent $1000 per side, $299,000.Call Kelly 604-418-3162
6030 Lots & Acreage6030
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING LOT.$75,000 in services paid! 33’ x130’. New Westminster. No HST!$325,888. Call 604-726-0677.
6065 RecreationProperty6065
MT. BAKER SKI AREA. 2 cabins,1 property. Rent one, use one.Gated community w/ amenities.35 min. from border $399,500U . S . M a r y a n n A n g u s360-224-6704 www.mymtbaker-home.com
A46 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
9155 Sport Utilities/4x4’s/Trucks9155
EVERGREEN DOWNS4600 Evergreen Lane, Ladner
2 BR apartment, $835/mo includes hot water and one parkingstall. Electricity, phone, cable is extra. Elevator in building andcoin laundry.
We are family housing so cannot rent a 2 bedroom to a coupleor a single person. Income guidelines are a range of $2850 to$4600 gross per month to qualify. We have no subsidiesavailable at this time.
Application, references, proof of income are required. Securitydeposit for unit is 1/2 month’s rent. We do accept small dogsand pets with an additional 1/2 month’s rent as security deposit.
If you are interested, and meet our guidelinesand would like to view, please call 604-451-6082
6508 Apt/Condos6508
CHOOSE YOUR NEWHOME FROM OUR LISTOF WELL MAINTAINED
AND MANAGED SUITES!
TSAWWASSENTsawwassen Terrace
Are you looking for a 1bedroom in a well maintainedbuilding? Bldg is located on16th Ave and is close to the
bus, shops and the beach. Toview please call604-943-7666
Kelly Court1 bedroom suite available in aquiet well maintained building.Rent includes 2 appl, drapes,heat and hot water. Locatedclose to school, shopping,recreation centre and busroute. To make an appt to
view please call604-782-4326
Shawnigan2 bedroom suites available in
clean and quiet building.Located 1 block from
shopping mall and on busroute. Minutes from parks andbeach area. For more info or
to view please call604-943-0002
Kerry Court1 and 2 bedroom suitesavailable in a quiet wellmaintained bldg. Rent
includes 2 appl, drapes, heatand hot water. Located close
to school, shopping,recreation centre and busroute. To make an appt to
view please call604-943-1487
Century Village andTsawwassen Manor
Beautiful complex consistingof 6 bldgs. & water fountains.1 & 2 bedroom suites, includedrapes, wall to wall carpets,balconies, elevators, andwheel chair access. Tsaw.
Manor includes heat. Close tobeach, parks, recreation
centre & school. To make anappt to view please call
604-948-9111
LADNERHarbourside
Affordable 1 and 3 bedroomsuites available in the heart ofLadner Village. Rent includes2 appl, carpets, drapes and
hot water. Shops and bus stopnearby. To view or for more
information please call604-946-9268
Sorry No Pets or BBQsReferences Required
WWW.CENTURYGROUP.CA/
DELTA WEST4895-55B St, Ladner
Bach, 1 & 2 BR, Available.Spacious suites, balconies,rent incls heat & hot water,prkg available. Refs. N/P.
CALL 604 946-1094BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
LADNER 3 bdrm $995 incl., heat,h/w, prkg. Some pets ok. Nod o g s . N o s m o k i n g .
604-940-8726
TSAW. 1 BR, all appls, FP, instewd, np, no BBQ, nr ammens. Suitadults. $1100 604-943-6163
6515 Duplexes - Rent65153 BDRM, 2 ba, updated 2 level,f/p, w/d, gar, ns np, Oct 1. $1750.nr schls, Ladner, 604-940-6874
6540 Houses - Rent65404 BR, in Tsaw, kitchen & 3 bath.2 levels. Oct 1st, 604-753-9028
4 BR rancher, Tsaw, 2.5 bath,sunny yard, fp, all appls, $1950,pet ok, Immed. 604-948-1966
7BD/6BA GEORGIAN Mansion.Prime Panorama Ridge loc. AvailUnfurn/Furn. $5500/$6500 + util.Sept/Oct 1. Call 604.831.0859
HomeLife Peninsula PropertyManagement
Julianne MaxwellProperty Manager
(604) 536-0220
Check our rental listings at
www.rentinfo.ca
HOUSE, on horse farm, 1 bath,28th ave, 1-2 adults, 5appl, ns,pet ok, dbl gar, $1600 Oct 1, callfor appointment. 604-940-0760
LOVELY CHARACTER bunga-low, 2.5 bedrm, 1 bath, fencedyard, close to schools, W Ladner.$1800 per month 604 834-1468
STOP RENTING-RENT TO OWNNo Qualification - Low Down
CHILLIWACK – 9557 Williams St,3 bdrm, 1 bath, cozy HOUSE on49x171’ lot, excellent investmentproperty in heart of town, close toshops & schools............... $888/MCall Kristen 604 435-5555 or 786-4663
www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
TSA 3 bd house, lg yard, nearschools, avail Oct 1 $1750.604-649-6101
6565 Office/Retail -Rent6565
APPROX. 850 sq. ft. of 2nd floorprofessional office space is availfor lease in Fawcett House, 5058-47A Ave, Ladner. Centrallocation just 1/2 block from thetown centre. Lease rate $20.00per sq ft plus a proportionateshare of expenses. Call BryanneEastwood: 604 946-8010.
Tsawwassen● Tsawwassen Town CentreMall has prime retail spacesavailable in Oliva● Windsor Woods – unit #5 –1,057 sq. ft.● Century Square1658 Sq ft of Office/Commer-cial Space for Lease - Smalloffice space available 291 sqft on ground floor.
For more information callTina or Sandra
at Century Group604-943-2203
6595 SharedAccommodation6595
ROOM AVAIL in Ladner house,nice area, ns, $500 incl utils &w/d. avail Sept. 1. 604-946-0088
6595-25 Lad./Tsaw./S. Delta6595-25
FEMALE TO share house withsame on horse farm. NS, $650.Oct 1, 604-940-0760 for appt
ROOMATE WANTED, $475. inclhydro,cable, w/d, 1 cat ok, suitworking quiet person. Av now.604-946-6586
SUITE IN Beachgrove B&B.Weekly/Monthly rates avail. Fullyfurnished, Call 604-948-2146
6600 Storage6600
RIDEK STORAGE1473 GULF RD, Pt Roberts
Washington state - just acrossthe border south of Tsaw.
Exterior & mini storage avail.Boats, RVs and morestarting at $20/month.
360-945-5242
6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602
1 BDRM suite, Ladner, newer,incl utils, shr w/d, $750 Avail Now.refs req’d. Call 604-763-4902
1 BDRM suite, walk-in shower,shared laundry, heat/hot water/cable incl. No pets/smoking/drugs. Arthur Dr/44 Ave.$750/mth. Derek 604-841-1119
1 BR, bright bsmt suite, Tsaw, nramen, incl all utils, cable/net, niceyard, np ns $775. 778-999-7450
1 BR large ground level bsmt,Ladner incl hydro, nr bus loop, ns,np, Oct. 1, $875, 604-946-3038
1 BR, Tsaw English Bluff, bright,large, w/d, d/w, n/p, suits single,ns, on bus route. Avail Now,$800+1/3utils. 778-386-3309
2 BR lrg lower lvl, own wd, inclutils, non smoking, non partyhouse, $1175. 604-943-0132
3 BR Ladner Bsmt, fridge, stove,wd, fenced yard, prkg, now, ns,$1000incl utils, 604-765-3642
3 BR upper flr. 1.5 baths, 80 &112th Ave. & schools, N. Delta,large back yard, $1250. now orSept 1 or 15, refs. Randy604-760-8005
3BR, 2000 sq ft fully renovatedupper house, quiet st, nr park andbus, f/p, d/w. No smoking or pets.Oct. 1st, $1,600. 604.946.9142
LADNER, DELUXE newer 2 BR& Den ste on acerage, own appls,priv entry, patio, parking, quietarea. $1300 incls utils/cable/net.NS/NP. Avail Now. 604-946-1229
TSAW, 1 BR, newer appl, shr w/d,sngle only. n/s, n/p, $700inc util/cbl, web. Sept 15/Oct 1 948-9737
TSAW 3 br upper, 1.5 bath, 1350sf, w/d, dw, h/wood flrs, nonsmoker, no pets. ref’s req’d.$1350 +50% util 604-943-9327
6605 Townhouses -Rent6605
3BR 2.5BATH Townhouse w/dd/w f/p - quiet subdivision acrossfrom school & park $1500Avail Sept 604-940-3333
OCT 1, CENTRAL Ladner, new1Bdrm coach house, private,gas f/p,w/d, balcony, n/s,refs,no pets. $1150 util.included.Call 604 202 9234
RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE9105 Auto
Miscellaneous9105$0 DOWN & WE MAKE YOUR 1st
PAYMENT AT AUTO CREDIT FASTNeed a vehicle?
Good or Bad Credit?Call Stephanie 1-877-792-0599
www.autocreditfast.caDLN 30309
9125 Domestic9125
2005 MALIBU, like new only 38K!4dr, V6, all options, pwr wind,locks air cond. etc. Golden tan wcream int. A good safe, reliablevehicle. Only $7798 OBO call
604-924-2088
2007 MUSTANG black in/outconv. (fully loaded), 28K, originalowner, $23,000, 604-812-6016
9130 Motorcycles/Dirt Bikes9130
HONDA VTX Retro 1300cc -$4950. Better than new, fullyloaded. N.Van 604-209-1416.
9145 Scrap CarRemoval9145
NO WHEELS, NO PROBLEM
(604) 209-2026
FREEScrap/CarRemoval
No Wheels No Problem
2 HOUR2 HOURFamily Owned & Operated
Service From Call
#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle RemovalAsk about $500 Credit!!!
$$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVALMinimum $100 cash paid for fullsized vehicles. 604-518-3673
*DELTA SCRAPVEHICLE REMOVAL$120 Min. FOR COMPLETE
FULL SIZE VEHICLESServing the Delta area for 20 yrs.Call 604- 649-1627, 946-0943
9145 Scrap CarRemoval9145
THE SCRAPPERSCRAP CAR &TRUCK REMOVALCASH FOR ALL VEHICLES
604-790-39002 HOUR SERVICE
9150 Services &Repairs9150
STEVE FALCOS - Licenced AutoMechanic. Fair rates & honest.
604-218-7079
6508 Apt/Condos6508
1999 TOYOTA Rav 4, 200K,silver, 4wd, service up to date,$5800, 604-980-0355
2003 CHEV Blazer 4x4, exc condlow miles, no reasonable offerrefused. 778-233-0572
2003 FORD Explorer EddieBauer, auto, 140 K, red, $9500obo 604-763-2905
9160 Sports &Imports9160
1999 VOLVO S70, good cond,runs well, non smoker, 275 k, noaccid, local $3100. 604-626-8009
9160 Sports &Imports9160
2006 HONDA Civic DX Coupe$12,500. Auto, dark blue, PWRLocks/Windows, heated mirrors,digital dash, 4 new tires, newbrakes. Honda Serviced. NOAccidents. 100k. Great on gas,+extras. Coq. ★ 604-868-3128
NEED CHEAP AUTOBODY ?www.cheapautobody.ca604-341-7738
9173 Vans9173
2005 DODGE Grand Caravan,89K, silver, 3.3L, V6, 7 seats, ac,all power, privacy glass, clean,exc cond. $7800, 778-772-3884
9522 RV’s/Trailers9522
1997 DIPLOMAT, 29' class C,Ford V10, 133k, exc shape,queen island bed, air new brks,$22,000, Call 604-943-2586
HOME SERVICES8055 Cleaning8055
SUNSHINE CLEANING'you’ve tried the rest,
now try the best.'Move ins - move outs,
weekly, monthlyWe guarantee our work.References gladly given.
For free estimates call Marcia604-716-8631
CLEAN AS A WHISTLEReliable cleaning team. Bonded &Insured. Susan at 604-312-9445
★CLEAN FREAKS★Trusted and reliable
home cleaning services!
Excellent attention to detail!Ladner owned & operated.
Call us today at604-908-5078
Cleo’s FriendlyCleaning Services.
★ A n y s i z e H o m eTownhouse or Business
★ Moving in or out.★ Don’t hesitate..call today.
★778-888-9115★Your Local Ladner Resident
EFFICIENT, CARINGHUSBAND / WIFE TEAM
will shine your homeusing the best
non-toxic products.Free estimates.
References.604-241-8394
EUROPEAN DETAILED Servicecleaning. www.pumacleaning.ca
Sophia 604-805-3376
EUROPEAN LADY available toclean your house. Referencesavail. 604-813-3863
MRS. BUBBLES In home laundryservices and more. Organizing,dog walking, ironing. For [email protected] 604-862-4112
8058 ComputerServices8058
Delta PC Service &Consulting
makes your computerwork again!
Best rates on the market.Guaranteed Virus
Removal.
Call 778-882-4128
8058 ComputerServices8058
CERT. COMPUTER & net coachfor small bus., moms & seniors.Provide lessons, maint. & troubleshooting. Miriam 778-888-3499
Sideline Graphics & Design.Prepress services, typesetting &design, Sandy 604-374-6634
8060 Concrete8060AdvancedConcreteEnhancements LimitedPlacing, finishing, Specializing instamped concrete, overlays, acidstaining, counter tops, faux rock,(Waterfall and ponds)
Dave: 604-940-1125Cell:604-220-3145
DRIVEWAY / CONCRETEREMOVAL. Free estimates.
Disposal King, 604-889-2085
GENERAL Masonry Specializesbrick, block, stone, exposed con-crete.Call Joe/Enzio 594-1960
8075 Drywall8075
GJ CONSTRUCTIONComplete drywall,
textured ceilings, Steelstud & T-bar etc.
Free Est. Graham604-644-6339
DON’S AFFORDABLEDRYWALL
PHONE/FAX 778-218-3403
*Drywall * Taping * Texture *Stucco*Painting * Steel stud fram-ing Quality Home 604-725-8925
8080 Electrical8080
Professional ElectricalServices
Panel Upgrades – RenosLic. #26765 • South Delta based
604-657-7957www.evansonelectric.com
VANSONLECTRICEE
#1167 LIC Bonded. BBB, lrg & smjobs, expert trouble shooter,WCB, low rates, 24/7. 617-1774.
ABACUS ELECTRIC.ca Lic ElectContr 97222. 40 yrs exp. 1 stop!Reas. rates! BBB. 778-988-9493.
8087 Excavating8087
# 1 BACKHOE,EXCAVATOR &
BOBCATone mini, drainage,
landscaping, stump / rock /cement / oil tank removal.
Water / sewer line, 24 hoursCall 341-4446 or 254-6865
8090 Fencing/Gates8090
S & SLANDSCAPING &
FENCINGFactory Direct Cedar FencePanel for Sale & Installation
8291 No.5 Rd RichmondCall 604-275-3158
West Coast Cedar InstallationsCustom fencing, decking & more604-244-8824, Cell: 604-788-6458
8105 Flooring/Refinishing8105
ALL ABOUT FLOORSHardwood, Laminate. Free
Estimates. Call Mo 778-789-4333
8125 Gutters8125
EDGEMONTGUTTERS
• Sales & Installation of 5’’Continuous Gutter
• Minor Repairs • Cleaning
604-244-9446Established 1963
fullarmourhomeservices.comWindows/gutters/pressure washingTestimonials. Insured. Jeremy
@ 778-384-3855
PRP GUTTER CLEANING& GUTTER REPAIRS.
Free estimates 604-764-0399
8130 Handyperson8130HANDYMAN SERVICES
Electrical, Gutters, Fencing,Plumbing, Carpentry, FlooringR e n o v a t i o n s , S h e d s ,
Contracting & moreAffordable, friendly, fast,
reliable, local, guaranteedSenior Discounts
Call Phil 604-307-6840
8130 Handyperson8130
TRUSTED HOMEIMPROVEMENTS
604-878-5232SINCE 1997
• Designs • Prunning •• Lawns • Fences • Decks •
• Stone/Masonary •
JOHN 604-943-4546(WCB Insured)
Too much to do, not enough time?... I can help!
• Lawn maintenance• Window cleaning• Gutter cleaning• Pressure washing• Pruning and Hedging• Rubbish removal Call HansTel: 604-948-0267 • 604-842-1468
NEED A HAND?• REPAIRS • RENOVATIONS
• WOODWORKING• PAINTINGCall PierreCall Pierre
604-649-0502 (cell)HANDYMAN RON
Renovations, repairs, tile, drywall,painting, 20yrs exp. 604-946-1705
Lawn Maint. window & guttercleaning, pressure washing, rub-bish removal etc. 604-948-0267
8155 Landscaping8155Above The Rest. Hedging, prun-ing, lawn care, owned locally, CallClayton 604-314-8273
COMPLETE YARD Redevelop-ment. Jackhammer. HedgeInstall, Removal and Trim.Returfing and Drainage. CallTobias 604 7824322
Landscape/Dirt Removal,Yard Grading. Free estimatesDisposal King, 604-889-2085
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To place your ad call604-630-3300
Find your car at
September 4, 2010 The Delta Optimist A47
To place your ad in “Call the Experts,” call 604-630-3300
Call ThE ExpertsHANDYMAN SERVICESBermuda JohnBermuda JohnHonest & Dependable • Lawn Cutting• Weeding• Power Washing• Trash Removal• Dump Runs• Deliveries• Pick-Ups604.948.3199604.948.3199778.688.1950778.688.1950 No Job too Small To place your ad in “Call the
Experts,” call 604-630-3300
Dale McLean, Certified ArboristMcLean Tree and Hedge
- Arborist reports for Development Applications- Tree pruning and removal- Hedge renovation and trimming- Danger tree- Certified Tree Risk Assessor
Tel: 604-943-8775 Cell: 778-232-1888
TREE SERVICE
BOUNDARY BAYWINDOWWASHING
• Exterior housecleaning
• Pressure Washing• Gutters
Steve Watts604-943-4134778-228-5639
HOME SERVICES8160 Lawn & Garden8160
Custom Decking& Fencing
Flagstone &Paver PatiosLandscaping
Hedging& PruningPainting
Home & GardenRenovations
604-948-5296PAUL WEATHERBY
Property Maintenance• Lawn Care & Maintenance• Pruning and Hedging• Full Yard Cleanups• Gutter Cleaning• Pressure Washing• Rubbish Removal• Fencing & Repairs
604 •240 •2194604 •943 •2401
“Summer Clean-Up”Reel Type Lawnmowing
Power Raking • WeedingMoss Control • Fertilizer
Trimming • PruningProfessional Maintenance• FREE ESTIMATES •
604-946-1348or cell: 604-710-1348
S.B. GARDENING& LANDSCAPING
WE ARE A YEAR-ROUND BUSINESS
604-946-7308“Give us a Call!”
For anythingYard Related!
AERATING +Exp greens keeper avail for allyour turf needs. Quality work.Free Est. John 604-940-1514
8180 Home Services8180
BE COOL!Talk to Someone
You Trust.
CENTRAL AIRCONDITIONING
Sears also installsROOFING,WINDOWS,
WINDOW COVERINGS& CARPETING
604-278-5542 ext 21324 HOURS
1-800-4-MY-HOME • (1-800-469-4663)
8185 Moving &Storage8185
• Local • Long Distance• International • Overseas
Senior & StudentDiscounts Up to 20%
FREE Boxes • FREE StorageInsured & Bonded
Toll Free1-877-964-4490
Local778-838-1275
South AmericanVan Lines Ltd.
MOVERS & STORAGE
Experienced Movers~ 2 Men $50 ~
• Includes all Taxes• Licenced & Insured
• Professional Piano Movers
B&Y MOVING
604-708-8850Family Moving Ltd.A
1
Specializing in:STORAGE & PIANOS604-781-4055
www.familymovingltd.ca
604-722-5454
FamilyMovingLtd.ca
POPEYE’S MOVINGSurrey 604-626-6651
Vancouver 604-377-2503www.popeyesmovingbc.com
Personal- reclaim your garage & yard- move that huge boat or RV- renovating- store those precious keepsakes
Need Space? We Have It!
MINI & MOBILE STORAGE
LADNER604-946-0020
Commercial- reduce your costly commercial square footage/
increase your profit by storing offsite atreduced rates
2 locations: POINT ROBERTS360-945-MINI (6464)
24/7 SecureGated AccessReasonable
Rates!
8185 Moving & Storage8185
8185 Moving &Storage8185
TWO BROTHERS MOVING &Delivery. Local & Long Distance;Best Rate! Joseph 604-720-0931
8195 Painting/Wallpaper8195
Angela WellsCASCADIAPAINTING
Interior & ExteriorWCB and Liability
Insured
604-943-4024
Cascadia Painting
Int. & Ext. Specialist, 20 yrs exp.* Reas. Rates, High Quality *Fast, clean, with ref’sLicensed, Insured &WCBJean-Guy Bottin
Cell 604.626.1975
CONFIDENTPAINTING LTD.
FAIRWAYPAINTING
Fully Insured20 years experienceFree EstimatesINTERIOR& EXTERIORSPECIALS
Call604-
729-1234
For all yourPainting needs!Richard Ryan604-946-4889604-649-4930
Member : Better Business Bureau
PAINT RITE BY RICH
PRIMO PAINTWORKSPRIMO PAINTWORKSPRIMO PAINTWORKSInterior & Exterior
* EXCELLENT PRICES *Free Est./Written GuaranteeNo Hassle Quick Work
Insured /WCB604-723-8434
MILANO Painting 604-551-6510Int/Ext. Good Prices. Free Est.Written Guar. Prof & Insured.
TAKE AWAY THE PRESSUREPainting, yard clean up - ContactIan 604-946-9395..604-812-7255
8205 Paving/SealCoating8205
ALLEN Asphalt, concrete, brick,drains, foundations, walls, mem-branes 604-618-2304/ 820-2187
8220 Plumbing8220
RED SEALDrainage & Plumbing Inc.
Plumbing, Drainage,Repairs & InstallationMain sewer lines, water lines,
camera inspections, plugged drains,hot water tanks and drain tiles.
24/7 Emergency availableSat/Sun/Holidays
Licensed, Insured, Bonded604-618-4988
#1 IN RATES & SERVICELicenced local plumber. PlugDrains, Reno’s 1-877-861-2423
10% Off with this Ad! Aman’sPlumbing Service, Lic. Gas Fitter,Reas. Rates. 778-895-2005
PLUMBERSWater Lines (without digging)Sewer Lines (without digging)Install. Drain tiles. 604-739-2000
Panorama Plumbing Heating/Gas Services No job too small ortoo big Res/Comm 604-818-7801www.panoramaplumbing.com
PRECISION 1 Plumbing & Heat-ing, Lic. & Ins. hw tanks, service,renos. No hst Rick 604-809-6822
8225 Power Washing8225
8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240
AL’SCERAMIC
TILEKitchen & Bathroom
RemodellingBathroom & Shower Repairs
20 years experienceFree estimates
604-948-9573Cell: 604-836-8943
604.374.2360
Kitchens, Baths,Home Repairs,
Decks....
Building on your ideas.
8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240
RDM ENTERPRISESFor All Your Household
Repairs and Renovations.Interior and Exterior Finishing,
Kitchens, Bathroomsand Plumbing
Refs Avail. Free EstimatesRob 604-946-4796
A1 CONTRACTING. Bsmt, bath,kitchen cabinets, tiling, painting &decks. Dhillon, 604-782-1936
8250 Roofing8250
Member BBB - Member RCABCFull Liability Coverage and WCB
Designated Project Managersand Third Party Inspections
www.crownresidentialroofing.com
Call 604-327-3086for a free estimate
Quote code 2010for a 5% discount
• Residential Roofing• Homes • Strata
• Installations • Repairs• 24 Hour Emergency
Service
#1 Roofing Company in BC
All types of RoofingOver 35 Years in Business
Call for your FREE ESTIMATE
604-588-0833SALES@ PATTARGROUP.COM
WWW.PATTARGROUP.COM
B-CheemaRoofing LtdFree Estimates
CCaallll PPaauull ((660044)) 772222--33660000bcheemaroofing.ca
SPECIAL $250 DiscountAll Types of Roofing & Repairs - InsuredAll Types of Roofing & Repairs - Insured
Call Paul (604) 722-3600
B-CheemaRoofing Ltd
• Repairs • Reroof• New Roof
10% lower than any other written estimate
604-726-6345SENIORS DISCOUNTWCB & Fully Insured
JJ Roofing
8250 Roofing8250
MAC ROOFING INC.Residential & Commercial
Tar & Gravel toTorch On Conversion
Member of Shell Busey’sHouse Smart Referral Network★ Govt Certified ★ 20 yrs exp
778-237-ROOF (7663)
MAC ROOFING INC.Residential & Commercial
Tar & Gravel toTorch On Conversion
Member of Shell Busey’sHouse Smart Referral Network★ Govt Certified ★ 20 yrs exp
778-237-ROOF (7663)
ROOFINGOUR SPECIALTY
778.886.8541Licensed, Insured, WCB
TMO Contracting
TOP DAWGTOP DAWGROOFINGROOFING
Delta’s #1 Residential RoofersNo Job Too Big or Too Small • Free Est.
778-883-3294www.topdawgroofing.ca
YOUNG BROTHERSROOFING
youngbrothersroofing.comRe-Roofing Specialist!
Shingles, Cedar Shakes, or Torch-on.30, 40, 50 material warranty
Member • WCB CertifiedCall: 778-896-4858
Roofing Experts 778-230-5717Repairs/Re-Roof/New Roofs. Allwork Gtd. Free Est. Call Frank
8255 Rubbish Removal8255
REMOVAL
RUBBIS
H $89 LOAD$531/2 LOAD
Ask about $30Tues & Thurs.
NO HIDDEN CHARGESWE GUARANTEE ALL COSTS
209-6663
NO HIDDENCHARGES
Ask about $35Tues. & Thurs.
$99$59$129 LOAD$791/2 LOAD
$40
$149 LOAD$89 1/2 LOAD
Ask about $30Tues. & Thurs.
WE DODEMOLITION
NoHiddenCharges
• Rubbish Removal• Garbage Collection• Recycling• Locally owned & operated
Best Rates inLadner & Tsawwassen
604-505-9496
BUSTERSJUNKDelta
'You Call It,We Haul It!'
ROD’S HAUL-IT-AWAYRubbish Removal
and Recycling778-668-HAUL
(4285)Locally Owned...
● So you pay less ●
8255 Rubbish Removal8255
49
Over 25 years serving South Delta• Rubbish Removal• Reno Clean-Up• Yard Trimmings
604-649-9600
LARRY’S CLEAN-UP
Student WorksDisposal & Recycling
John 778-288-8009Call anytime
Trips tothe dumpsstart at $49$49
With 17 cub ic yard trucks
DISPOSAL BINS4 - 40 yard bins. From
$179 - $565 including dump fees.Disposal King, 604-306-8599
JUNKBIDS.COM (save online)LOWEST COST GUARANTEED!!
1-888-946-5592 TOLL FREE
8300 Stucco/Siding/Exterior8300
J. PEARCE STUCCOCONTRACTING. Residential /
Commercial. 604-761-6079
Quality Home Improvement★ Stucco ★ All Kinds. No Job TooBig or Small. 604-725-8925
8309 Tiling8309AL’S CERAMIC TILE. Supply &install, samples avail. Free est.604-948-9573, cell 604-836-8943
8315 Tree Services8315Tree Removal - Stump GrindingBranch Chipping * Free Est. * WCBLocal resident, 34 yrs. 604-943-0043
8335 Window Cleaning8335
Edgemont BuildingMaintenance• Power Washing
• Window Cleaning• Gutter Cleaning
604-244-9446Established 1963
Find one in theHome Services
section
Need aLandscaper?
Need aPlumber?
Find one in theHome Services
section
A48 The Delta Optimist September 4, 2010
Total price does not include tax & insurance.
Dealer #303773174 King George Hwy., White Rock3174 King George Hwy., White Rock
Serving Satisfied Customers Since 1966www.PEACE ARCH TOYOTA.comwww.PEACE ARCH TOYOTA.com
Sales Hot Line 1-888-225-9279Sales Hot Line1-888-225-9279
make things better
PEACE ARCH TOYOTAPEACE ARCH TOYOTABACK TO SCHOOL
SPECIALS
2003 BUICKCENTURY
Only 89,000 kms. Very wellequipped. #X5803A
$$6,9806,980
1999 TOYOTACOROLLA
Legendary vehiclewith auto and a/c. #X5603A
$$6,8006,800
2003 CHEVYMALIBU
Like new with only 45,000km!!3C6768A
$$6,9806,980
2007 TOYOTAYARIS 4 DR.
Perfect commuter car.
#X5719-75
$$7,9807,980
2001 NISSANMAXIMAVery well equipped
IM6702A
$$6,9806,980
2007 YARIS5 DR.
Only 73,000km. Fuel miser.
7M6041A
$$9,9809,980
2003 MITSUBISHILANCER
Auto, A/C and much more- low kms. X5569A
$$6,9806,980
2009 FORDESCAPE LTDwith sync system, leather
and low kms. X5513
$$24,98024,980
2004 TOYOTACOROLLA
Automatic ONLY 67,000KM4H6385A
$$7,9807,980
2008 TOYOTACOROLLA
Moonroof, Mags, Power group,a/c, manual. X5325
$$11,98011,980
2009 TOYOTASIENNA
X5817
$$22,98022,980
2010 TOYOTAHIGHLANDER
X5771
$$32,98032,980
2007 TOYOTATUNDRA TRD
Double cab 4x4.Only 60,000 km. X5809
$$32,98032,980
2007 TOYOTATUNDRA CREWMAX
Power group and full powerrear window. 57,000km. X5813
$$29,98029,980
2005 CHEVYCORVETTE
60,000 kms. Heads up display,ebony leather, Navigation,
adjustable suspension
$$29,98029,9803.9%
FINANCE FOR5 YEARS
3.9%FINANCE FOR
5 YEARS
AFFORDABLECARSFOR
HARDWORKINGPEOPLE
TRUCKS, VANS & SUV SPECIALS OF THE WEEK09
0446
75
BUY OF THE WEEK
ONLY
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