Monday, May 7, 2012

Surrey Greening

The City of Surrey is transforming its waste collection process to reduce emissions and divert waste from landfill.

 


 

 


Starting October 1st, 2012, residential waste will be collected using new state-of-the-art automated Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) trucks, which emit 23 per cent less carbon emissions and 90 per cent less air particulates, compared to traditional diesel trucks. Studies show, replacing one diesel truck with a CNG truck is the equivalent to taking 475 cars off the road each year.
The new services will help residents separate kitchen and yard waste from solid waste by collecting organics separately from garbage, which will help the City meet its 70 per cent waste diversion objective before 2015. In the future, the organic waste will be delivered to the City's proposed Organics Biofuel facility, which will process it into fuel to power the waste trucks.
The new contract includes the use of standardized waste carts, which will be delivered in advance of the start date to all households receiving City waste collection service. The new carts will improve aesthetes and minimize scattered litter.
"The City of Surrey's new direction for waste collection and processing will help establish a benchmark in North America, and will go a long way to creating cleaner, more sustainable communities in the region," says Mayor Dianne Watts. "It's important for municipalities to demonstrate and advance new technologies, and to help facilitate new ways of reducing waste."

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Saturday, May 5, 2012

South Surrey/ White Rock & Cloverdale Garage Sales for May 5th 2012

 

Tonnes of sales this weekend including our associates, the White Rock Walkers’ Annual Neighbourhood Sale. Maps for all available – click on the picture.

 

 

Garage Sales South Surrey

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Saturday, April 21, 2012

Added Feature to #WhiteRock #SouthSurrey #Cloverdale Garage Sales Map

 

Good Morning!
For all you Smartphopne Garage Sale Hunters & Collectors out there, we’ve added the option to view the weekend Garage Sales List through Google Earth on your smart phone. Now, the clarity of this may be spectacular, but to be clear, you still won’t be able to see the items on driveway using this method. Smile

 

Click on the house to see the map.

 

House image

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Saturday, April 7, 2012

Easter Weekend Garage Sales–2012 #SouthSurrey #WhiteRock #Cloverdale

Here are the garage sales for Saturday. Don’t forget there is a pancake breakfast and Easter Egg Hunt in Ocean Park courtesy of our associates at Verico Dreyer Group Mortgages starting at 8:30.


Click the eggs for Garage Sales Map.

 

Easter eggs

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Friday, April 6, 2012

Good Friday Garage Sales–2012 #SouthSurrey #WhiteRock #Cloverdale

Because this is a long weekend (and the sun is shining), there are a few more garage sales than there have been lately. YAH!

 

Here is a link to Fridays.

We’ll update them each night. If you know someone in the area having a garage sale, and they aren’t on the list, let them (or us) know.

 

good friday

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Monday, February 6, 2012

Fraser Valley Real Estate Statistics January 2012

2012 KICKS OFF WITH NEW HOME PRICE MEASUREMENT; AND, A SLUGGLISH START TO SALES

 

Turtle 2

 

 

(Surrey, BC) – The Fraser Valley Real Estate Board’s Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) processed 799 sales in January, a decrease of 4 per cent compared to the 834 sales in January last year and 10 per cent fewer than were processed in December. In the last decade, January 2012 was second only to 2009 for lowest volume.

On the flip side, compared to other starts during the last 10 years, the Board received one of its highest influxes of new listings for January – 2,753 – 5 per cent more than January 2011 and 143 per cent more than December the month before. The increase in new inventory raised the volume of active properties in Fraser Valley to 8,320 by the end of January.

Sukh Sidhu is the Board’s president. “For spring house hunters this is great news. For buying power you can’t beat the combination of greater selection, the continuation of extremely low interest rates and stable prices.”

The Board’s new MLS® Home Price Index (MLS® HPI), launched today, reveals that residential home prices in Fraser Valley have decreased gradually over the last six months, while still showing increases year-over-year.

In January, the benchmark price of a detached home in the Fraser Valley was $567,700, an increase of 7.6 per cent compared to $527,500 in January 2011 and an increase of 0.1 per cent compared to December.

For townhouses, the benchmark price in January was $314,200, an increase of 2.4 per cent compared to the same month last year when it was $306,800 and down 1.1 per cent compared to December. The benchmark price of apartments in January was $199,600, a decrease of 0.1 per cent compared to January 2011 when it was $199,800 and an increase of 0.3 per cent compared to December.

The MLS® Home Price Index (HPI), replacing the Lower Mainland’s MLSLink® Housing Price Index, is a new measure of price for residential properties in five major markets across Canada. It includes Greater Vancouver, Fraser Valley, Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal, with more markets to be added. It was pioneered by six founding partners: the real estate boards of Calgary, Fraser Valley, Greater Montreal, Greater Vancouver, and Greater Toronto and the Canadian Real Estate Association.

Sukh Sidhu says the new MLS® HPI will be very helpful to REALTORS® in guiding homeowners. “It’s a bigger, better tool to measure the change in home prices in the Fraser Valley and now we can more accurately compare our market to other major cities in Canada.” Learn more at www.homepriceindex.ca.

 

Download Stats Package here.

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Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Supporting Local School Kids

 

Here is a message for you to support the wonderful people at Bayridge Elementary School:

 

Helping without having to do anything – sort of.

 

Thrifty Foods Smile Cards - If you don't already have one of our special Community Smilecards from last year, pick one from the counter at the office. The card comes with a zero balance, and each time you shop at Thriftys, just load the card at customer service and pay anyway you like. Every time you load or reload the card, Bayridge gets 5% of the amount loaded. Then use your card at the cashier to pay for your groceries. You still collect your Thrifty's points as normal. This can really add up over the year, so your support in remembering to load at the service desk before you shop is really appreciated! The program runs until June and please feel free to grab a card for friends and family as they work at any location.

 

If you would like one, let me know and I will drop one off at your door, complimentary.

 

604-773-3940

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Property Assessment Notice

Property owners throughout BC received their 2012 assessment notice the first week of January from BC Assessment (BCA).

This notice is BC Assessment’s estimate of a property’s value as of July 1, 2011, and for new construction or substantially renovated homes, the physical condition as of October 31, 2011.

BCA is the government agency responsible for determining and reporting property value estimates for the 1,917,394 properties in its database, a 0.75% increase in the number of properties since 2011.

BC Assessment and a REALTOR® assessment. Why the difference?

BCA’s assessment and the market value determined by a REALTOR® may be different. Why?

Both BCA assessors and REALTORS® calculate market value by analyzing sales of comparable homes within a local market, and look at factors that affect value such as size of home, view, location – on a busy or quiet street, number of bedrooms, construction quality, floor level, and garage or parking stalls.

Where every lot and every home on a street are typically the same, both BCA’s value and a REALTOR’s® value will be similar during stable market conditions.

Differences occur in neighbourhoods where lots have been rezoned or are different shapes and sizes, where architecture and views are unique, and where owners have made changes that BCA hasn’t yet taken into account.

Differences also occur during market instability when prices rise or fall during the six-month period between July 1 and January 1 the following year.

Wake-up call – how to appeal an assessment

Since July 1, 2011 home owners may have seen prices stalling in some neighbourhoods and rising in others. Assessments may reflect these changes.

 

Sample Changes Year Over Year
Location 2012 Assessment Roll 2011 Assessment Roll

$ change

% change

 

Burnaby (Capital Hill, detached) $665,000 $630,000   $35,000      5.6%
Coquitlam (Maillardville, detached) $621,000 $547,000 $74,000 13.5%
Ladner (Detached) $784,000 $759,000 $25,000 3.3%
Maple Ridge (Detached) $385,000 $382,000 $3,000 0.8%
New Westminster (Sapperton, detached) $523,000 $524,600 -$1,600 -0.3%
North Vancouver, District (Lynn Valley, detached) $878,000 $844,000 $34,000 4.0%
Pemberton Village (Detached) $499,000 $550,000 -$51,000 -9.3%
Port Coquitlam (Lincoln Park, detached) $486,000 $494,000 -$8,000 -1.6%
Richmond (Steveston, detached) $809,000 $738,300 $70,700 9.6%
Sunshine Coast (Gibsons, detached) $431,000 $459,000 -$28,000 -6.1%
Vancouver (Downtown, 2-bed apartment) $610,000 $542,000 $68,000 12.5%
Vancouver (East side, detached, 33’ lot) $1,031,000 $816,000 $215,000 26.3%
Vancouver (West side, detached 50’ lot) $1,645,000 $1,189,000 $456,000 38.4%
West Vancouver (Ambleside, detached) $1,577,000 $1,229,000 $348,000 28.3%
Whistler (Village, 2-bed apartment) $498,000 $583,000 -$85,000 -14.6%


The deadline to appeal is January 31, 2012

Property owners who disagree with their assessment should do their homework by visiting www.bcassessment.ca and then e-valueBC to compare their assessment with those of their neighbours. Each year, about 1.6% of all BC property owners appeal their assessment.

Property owners should first contact their local assessment office and talk to staff who can make adjustments if there is an obvious error, for example if BCA includes a new swimming pool, when, in fact, the pool is a shallow fish pond.

 

Area assessors’ phone numbers
Location Phone number
Vancouver, the North Shore, Squamish,
Whistler,  Pemberton, Sunshine Coast
604-739-8588 Local 450
Richmond, South Delta 604-241-1364  Local 254
Pitt Meadows, Maple Ridge 604-850-5900  Local 261
Anmore, Belcarra, Burnaby, Coquitlam,
New Westminster,  Port Coquitlam, Port Moody
604-294-6441  Local 256                    

Property owners who decide to appeal must file a written request by January 31, 2012. For information, visit www.bcassessment.ca and select Learn more about the Notice of Complaint (Appeal) process and the Property Assessment Review Panel.

What can an appeal mean for a property owner?

While BCA determines the assessed value of property tax for tax purposes, it’s the local taxing authorities – both provincial and local governments – which set tax rates each spring according budget requirements.

The formula for calculating taxes on property is:

   Tax Rate x Assessed Value / 1,000

If the tax rate is 4.000 and the property assessment is $1 million, then the taxes payable are $4,000.

No notice

Property owners who haven’t received an assessment notice by mid-January should contact the area phone numbers listed above or request their tax notice online at www.bcassessment.ca. (See Receive your assessment notice online - right hand side).

If a property owner has concerns about their local taxes, they should contact their local government office.  Taxes aren’t appealable.

New feature - save assessment data

Visit www.bcassessment.ca and select e-valueBC to view and compare the assessed value of any BC property. A new feature this year lets you download and save assessment data as a PDF or an Excel file.

 

© 2008-2011 Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Garage Sales for January 7th 2012

 

 

Happy New Year!

 

Similar to the holiday season, there are few sales going on at the moment. However, that does not mean that there is not quality to be found in the ones going on.

 

Click on the photo for the map and list.

 

HudsonHomeTeam - Garage Sales

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Fraser Valley Real Estate Statistics – Dec 2011

2011 REAL ESTATE MARKET SHOWCASES REGIONAL VARIATION

 

(Surrey, BC) – Overall, Fraser Valley’s real estate market in 2011 was below the 10-year average in property sales and above average in the number of new listings received, however, according to the president of the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board, results varied widely depending on the community and property type.

 

IMG_0288

 

Fraser Valley Real Estate Board President, Sukh Sidhu observes, “I can’t remember a year that illustrates better how local real estate is and the importance of talking to your REALTOR® before making a decision to buy or sell. For example, in my community of Abbotsford, sales of single family homes dropped by almost 7 per cent compared to 2010, pushing prices down slightly, while in South Surrey/White Rock sales increased year over year by 45 per cent resulting in double-digit price increases.”

The Board’s Multiple Listing Service® processed 15,529 sales in 2011 compared to 14,891 the previous year, an increase of 4 per cent, while the number of new listings remained about the same – 31,592 in 2011 compared to 31,437 in 2010. Over the year, the number of active listings for buyers to choose from dropped by 9 per cent going from 8,139 properties in December 2010 to 7,399 in December 2011.

Although 2011 ranks the third slowest year for sales in Fraser Valley since 2002, it was only 10 per cent less than the 10-year average of 17,210 sales. The volume of new listings received in 2011 was 6 per cent more than the 10-year average of 29,867 new listings, placing last year third in ranking since 2002.

Sidhu adds, “One trend from 2011 that is clear was the preference for single family homes. For the most part in our region, both sales and prices of townhomes and condos either stayed on par with 2010 or decreased.”

In December, the benchmark price of a detached home in the Fraser Valley was $522,998, an increase of 3.3 per cent compared to $506,145 in December 2010 and a decrease of 1.7 per cent compared to November.

For townhouses, the benchmark price in December was $315,330, a decrease of 2.1 per cent compared to the same month last year when it was $322,054 and down 3.8 per cent compared to November. The benchmark price of apartments in December was $237,285, a decrease of 1.2 per cent compared to December 2010 and a decrease of 0.5 per cent compared to November.

Average prices year over year show detached homes up 9.1 per cent – $610,269 in 2011 compared to $559,456 in 2010. The average price of townhomes increased by 2.6 per cent, going from $336,484 in 2010 to $345,138 in 2011 and the average price of apartments increased by 0.9 per cent going from $223,910 in 2010 to $225,976 in 2011.

The Fraser Valley Real Estate Board is an association of 2,893 real estate professionals who live and work in the BC communities of North Delta, Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Abbotsford, and Mission. The FVREB marked its 90-year anniversary in 2011.

 

 


Full package: Here

 

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