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Concern at Jed Stumps Cameron Orr Even with no official indication their living arrangement might change, residents of the Jed Stumps trailer court have taken their concern to town councillors in anticipation of a rezoning application. Vivian Douglas spoke on behalf of the “It won’t be very 68 residents of the trailer court, who are wor- much time until progress kicks ried that new owners of the property will seek us in the butt. a rezoning application And I’m only which would effectively remove residents in hoping you’re favour of new developon our side.” ments. “I know in a year and a half there will be [a zoning application]. I am just one of 68 people who live and have our families in the trailer court,” she said. The uncertainty has already impacted lives in the sense that it’s challenging to sell trailer units right now. Douglas said she had wanted to sell her unit but buyers aren’t there if they don’t know if they’ll be able to stay a year from now. “The other thing is if we wanted to sell right now there is no buyers and we can’t blame them because everything is up in the air,” she said. She added, “I bring these points to you because I think that while you’re sleeping in your bed, we are worried whether we will have a roof over our head.” Residents in the trailer court had been concerned last year as well. (Sentinel, October 13, 2013.) A special meeting of residents was held with the Kitimat Housing Resource Worker at the Northwest Community College campus to work out what was happening and what wasn’t. Residents were relieved to know there would be no immediate changes to the property but clearly the overall worry remains. At the April 28 committee of the whole meeting, Mayor Joanne Monaghan relayed that she had spoken with the current owner of the trailer court and asked about any imminent plans to do with the property and she had been assured there was none at this time. Douglas said that through her role of collecting rents at the property she had heard progress towards change may have been going faster than what may be realized. “It won’t be very much time until progress kicks us in the butt. And I’m only hoping you’re on our side.”
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
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The travelling carnival of West Coast Amusements arrived in Kitimat on April 28, bringing with it the usual array of bright lights and loud music. Cameron Orr
Shell increases stake in LNG Canada Cameron Orr While there is still a good deal of time between now and a potential final investment decision, the LNG Canada project proposal did reach a notable milestone with the formalized agreement of the project as its own company. The new entity, LNG Canada Development Inc., is headed by CEO Andy Calitz, and includes a new ownership arrangement. The same four partners are involved in the project but Shell Canada now controls 50 per cent of the project, PetroChina now holds 20 per cent ownership, and KOGAS and Mitsubishi each hold 15 per cent.
Calitz was joined by representatives of those partners and with Premier Christy Clark and Deputy Premier Rich Coleman during the announcement for this on April 30 in Vancouver. The “uncertainties” the company still has to deal with before there would be any construction at LNG Canada’s site at the former Methanex facility includes the environmental reviews through the Environmental Assessment Office and the Oil and Gas Commission, further consultation with First Nations, a front end engineering and design study (FEED), gas development strategies and labour ar-
rangements, as well as a final cost estimate. “That work will take 18 to 24 months,” said Calitz. Ensuring labour requirements and physically building a pipeline through the mountains are among the other issues Calitz is looking ahead to. LNG Canada has contracted TransCanada to build a proposed natural gas
pipeline called Coastal GasLink to deliver the gas to the Kitimat liquefaction facility. Premier Clark said that the announcement on April 30 is a “vote of confidence” that the province is prepared to work with investors and that its a signal of progress for “all LNG projects and for investors around the world.” “We cannot get to
that final investment decision eventually if we don’t take this important step that we’re taking today,” she said. She suggested there may be final investment decisions from some LNG companies by the end of this year but added she doesn’t expect to see an LNG Canada final investment decision until at least next year.
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2 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Day of Mourning
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Cameron Orr Unifor 2301 members, along with the District of Kitimat, paid respect to injured and killed workers on April 28, the National Day of Mourning. Speaking to those gathered, Unifor 2301 President Rick Belmont shared statistics that in 2012, according to the Workers Compensation Board, 181 workers died, and more than 100 of those were due to occupational illnesses. In Canada, he said, 1,000 workers die every year, nearly three dying each day.
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April April April April April April April Members of Unifor 2301, along with representatives of the District of Kitimat and its council, stand by the workers memorial plaque at Coghlin Park on April 28. April 28 is the National Day of Mourning to remember people injured or killed at work.
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New school district boss The Board of Education for the Coast Mountains School District has announce the appointment of Katherine McIntosh as Superintendent of Schools and Chief Executive Officer effective at some point in the spring of 2014. McIntosh is an experienced senior leader in public education, and currently serves as the Assistant Superintendent of Schools in School District No. 85 (Vancouver Island North). She has worked at all levels of education in rural, remote, urban and Aboriginal school settings across five vastly different school districts and two provinces. Her academic background includes a Bachelor of Education degree from the University of Alberta and a Master of Education degree in Educational Administration and Leadership from the University of British Columbia. In a news release the local school district describes her as an effective team builder and communicator who puts the learning needs of children first through innovative and collaborative leadership practices Board of Education Chair Art Erasmus said that “Having a leader with the leading edge assessment and instructional knowledge that Katherine brings to our district ensures a strong future for Coast Mountains learners and schools. She is an outstanding educator who already deeply understands the diverse and unique educational needs of our urban and rural learners, schools and communities.”
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THINK GLOBALLY...ACT LOCALLY
Susan Dobbin’s mixed grade 11/12 PE class with just 10 students allowed the girls to go to Vancouver to participate in the recent Vancouver Sun Fun Run. At right is them at the event itself.
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forming ideas for fundraising for the class trip to Vancouver and has taken up running as a personal hobby as well. “In the beginning it was painfully easy,” she said of the training. “Then it got hard.” The struggle of motivating herself to run has given way to her new favourite exercise. “That was ultimately my goal, that some of them would find this a form of fitness that they can use for the rest of their lives. She’s a prime example of that,” said Dobbin. Landry is not the only one who was an example to look up to in the class. Janay Hansen set an example by training for the run, even as she dealt with an injured foot.
As much as she resisted being forced to ‘sit out’ while she recovered, it didn’t take long for her to be back in running shape. She soon proved that an injury couldn’t hold her back from her goals as she said she had to work extra hard to get back to her classmates’ level of training. Dobbin adds that the whole class has been great at motivating each other leading up to the run. As for the run itself, the top runner for the class was Maddy Amado with a time of 54:53 placing 82nd out of 1,248 runners in her age category. She was closely followed by German exchange student Nathalie Langewith a time 56:57 placing 111th in the same age category as Amado.
SAR rescue boaters Cameron Orr Kitimat’s Search and Rescue (KSAR) came to the aid of a pair of fishermen who had become stranded up the Gilttoyees River on April 29. That river is about 55 kilometres down the Douglas Channel. The fishermen’s boat had broken down and they initiated a Spot Receiver which emits a distress call. With poor weather and limited details on the boaters’ condition two
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Having fun in the Sun Run Cameron Orr Some were nursing an injured foot. Some just didn’t like running. But whatever their state was at the start, this girls physical education class of 10 students have found strength in each other to master the Vancouver Sun Run. The annual marathon took place on April 27. Their teacher Susan Dobbin had been looking for a new way to present physical education to such a small group of students and decided early on that the Sun Run was the way to go. She since found that training for the Sun Run has impacted the students beyond the class room. Erin Landry, for instance, had taken a strong lead role in
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members of KSAR together with White River Helicopters flew to the river and found the boaters at around 7:45 p.m. Both were in good condition, but wet and cold, and were brought back to Kitimat. KSAR was also assisted by the Kitimat RCMP in their marine vessel, and the Kitimat Marine Rescue Society also responded with five members in their Snowflake Responder.
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Viewpoints
Published every Wednesday by the Northern Sentinel • LOUISA GENZALE - Publisher / General Manager • CAMERON ORR - Editor 626 Enterprise Ave., Kitimat, BC V8C 2E4 • Ph. 250 632-6144 • Fax 250 639-9373 • Email newsroom@northernsentinel.com • www.northernsentinel.com KITIMAT NORTHERN SENTINEL Reg. $41.65 Senior $37.50 Mail: out of town or business $60.45. Includes tax.
Springtime in Kitimat There are some sure-signs of spring in Kitimat. The sweeper trucks migrate the roadways of Kitimat. The snow is all but gone. And the fire hydrants around town are allowed to exhale their pressure of water. Even so, another sign of spring is the abundance of special occasions in town. Namely in the development sector. The trend began with a tour of the Delta Spirit Lodge, the ferry which has been converted into living quarters for Kitimat Modernization Project workers. From there a soil turning ceremony officially put the Baxter townhouses under construction, a development which will finally replace the empty lot where an apartment building once stood, before a fire forced its demolition. Even as the soil ceremonially turned, it seemed that just about every unit was already sold. That was quick. Soil turning became a theme with PTI Group turning their soil, kicking off the construction of their worker lodge in the Strawberry Meadows. That project as you remember kicked up some initial controversy, but those executives on hand and members of our council seem confident in the project’s benefits at this point. You’ll know I’ve never been a staunch opponent of the project either, so with the construction officially on its way we’ll soon see how well it fits in the community. But perhaps among the most significant, in a way, signs of spring was LNG Canada’s official birth into incorporation. All the partners you’ve already known who are proposing the LNG Canada project — that’s the Shell-led project at the former Methanex site — have now signed on officially to make LNG Canada its own entity. From a public standpoint — that is, you and me — such an announcement doesn’t change our lives dramatically. On the other hand, it does formalize the agreements with the partners. So in a sense LNG Canada shouldn’t evaporate into nothing anymore if things go sour. LNG Canada isn’t only a proposal, it’s also an actual incorporated business. As you may have figured out though, it’s not an investment decision. It’s not even the conclusion of those crucial FEED studies, the engineering and design documents that tell the company how the project will be built and for what costs. So in short don’t expect this announcement to bounce house prices up even further. But the bloom of corporate agreements, with the soft soils of new construction, really makes the air smell like spring. (Hope no one has allergies!) Cameron Orr
The digital wave is just beginning Have you got one of the new B.C. driver’s licences yet? By now most drivers have the one with the unsmiling black and white mug shot, to conform to passport standards so it could be used for border identification with the magnetic swipe strip on the back. About one million of us now have the newest version, with a credit-card style digital chip that proves your residence and eligibility for our famously “free” medical care. The motor vehicle office started issuing them about a year ago, as fiveyear licences expire. They replace the old “CareCard” that has no expiry date. Over the years there were more than nine million CareCards issued, twice the population of B.C., as people held onto their access to our defenseless, overworked medical system from wherever they moved to. Positive identification is only the start for this card. Each will be assigned a password that gives access to online medical records, so when patients show up at an ER, their eligibility is confirmed and any previous conditions or medications are accurately matched. (Note that medical information is not stored on the card, just an access code that goes with the password.) Patients will be able to call up their
From the Legislature Tom Fletcher
own files at home, book medical appointments and even renew prescriptions, which is where the efficiency comes in. In-person visits for routine prescription renewals are a cash cow for today’s doctors, generating guaranteed billings but often little or no health benefit. Most people will still think of it as a driver’s licence, but it’s intended as an all-purpose government ID. If you don’t drive, you are spared the $75 licence renewal fee, and within a couple of years the cards will start providing online access to a wide range of government services. Andrew Wilkinson, minister of technology, innovation and citizens’ services, says a public consultation has shown most people are comfortable using a system they already trust for their banking. By the end of 2015, Wilkinson says about two million people will have the new cards, roughly half of B.C.’s population. Application forms converted
to online access will include student loans, birth, death and marriage certificates, voter registration and even criminal record checks. All this will be costly to set up, but the savings from having customers do their own data entry are well known, as any banker or supermarket owner can tell you. “You can understand that if you’re in the vital statistics office and this can all be done from places like Telegraph Creek and Horsefly remotely, that actually saves them a lot of money,” Wilkinson said. “There will be conversion of existing services where you have to go into an office and wait around and fill out forms. Those will be converted to online services.” It also means a decline in the number of government office jobs, and the potential for further outsourcing of services, as we have seen with Medical Services Plan administration and the back-office functions of BC Hydro. Some older readers won’t be thrilled to hear about this. They don’t want a “smart phone,” just a phone. But they will also see their great-grandchildren becoming adept with tablet computers before they can even speak. Seniors will get the hang of it pretty quickly, and their lives will become easier.
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Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014 5
Cablecar kudos
Dear Sir, Once again I would like to use your media to thank those responsible for the installation of the 80 kilometre per hour zone in the vicinity of the Cablecar subdivision. A step further would see the 100km/h sign at the north end of the Hirsh Creek straight-away moved to the vicinity of the Snowflake giving an 80km/h limit all the way from town. As for the 100km/h sign just south of Cablecar heading south, if it was removed we would have 80 km from north of Cablecar all the way in to town. But I leave this to those responsible and knowledgeable. Next step hopefully will be the turn off lane into Cablcar from the north. I truly think this could be a life saver with all the traffic expected. I hope it won’t be too late. Sincerely, Kelly Smith
Mayor Joanne Monaghan signs a proclamation marking World Meningitis Day, which was April 24. With her is councillor Rob Goffinet, Eleanor Kendell, Donna Dueck, Monica Craft, Janet Munro and Brian Munro. Janet and Brian in particular have been very vocal in encouraging the District of Kitimat to call for more meningitis vaccines in the province, having lost their son to the illness. Information on the program is online at http://meningitisbc.org.
Some more things to think about on pipelines Dear Sir, Kitimat Mayor and Council have finally broken their silence concerning the prickly Enbridge file. While other concerned communities have declared their position-Terrace, Smithers, Prince Rupert and Haida Gwaii all saying thanks but no thanks- the majority of Kitimat’s elected officials followed the will of the majority who voted no to Enbridge in the recently held plebiscite. As Canadians now await the fateful decision from the Prime Minister’s office on the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines project I would like to take this opportunity to shed a little light on some of the concerns British Columbians might want to consider along with Prime Minister Harper. It would appear few give much thought as to how and where all this wonderful oil would come
ReadeR’s WRite from and what are the procedures needed to extract this life enhancing commodity. What exactly are Albertans doing to a rather large area of northern Alberta? All we hear in beautiful B.C. is they either suck it out of the ground after loosening the gunk oil from the buried sand deposits with heaping amounts of injected steam or by mining the sandy oil and then separating the two with large quantities of fresh water. Finally, the best part, everybody makes huge pots of money. Environmentally, what all this activity is doing to the Province of Alberta and some say on the rest of the globe, well that’s not really talked about. It’s not important, apparently. What is important and exciting is the potential of increas-
ing production two to three times present production. Imagine the size of the money pots, then. The oil companies would get the lion’s share, deservingly so, the presiding governments would be next provincial and federally respectively and then of course, all the workers who made it all happen. So, what’s there not to like? Its an obvious win, win, win. As the multi-national oil companies gear up for more production, land-locked Alberta can’t understand why anybody wouldn’t want to get in on some of the Action. The sooner we rip up the rest of northern Alberta and get at that Black Gold, the sooner the rest of Canada can handsomely profit as well- we’re constantly told. It’s a known fact that Canada possess the second
largest oil reserves worldwide, all-be-it mixed with sand. All we need now is a couple pipelines to move that product to markets that dearly want it. Heck, we won’t even process it, we’ll get it out to our customers as quick as it comes out of the ground, still warm, just the way the Chinese like it. Addedvalue, something we use to do, ancient history what’s “trending now” in Canada is raw exports. Why, raw-log
The Northern Sentinel welcomes letters to the editor on relevant or topical matters. It reserves the right to edit submissions for clarity, brevity, legality and taste. All submissions must bear the author’s name, address and telephone number. All letters must be signed. Unsigned letters will not be considered. Address your letters to: Northern Sentinel, 626 Enterprise Ave., Kitimat, BC V8C 2E4 E-mail: newsroom@northernsentinel.com or Fax: (250) 639-9373
little bearing when it comes to discussing the consequences of oil extraction in the Tar Sands country. As much as we would like to ignore the large amounts of pollution going up into the atmosphere over Alberta, the huge amounts of natural gas used to power the whole endeavour, or the ripping up of the Boreal Forest-which function as lungs for the northern hemisphere or the immense
amounts of fresh water used in the separating processes that are finally stored in giant ponds, actually lakes so toxic that any contact with life, be it fowl or mammals means certain death, all these, are the lasting negative imprints on our ailing planet. Now, the big players in the oil industry with P.M. Harper leading the charge, want to double even triple these lasting lethal effects. Continued on page 6
Weekly Crossword Solution in the Classifieds Clues Across
1. Point one point E of due S 4. Slithered 8. The brain and spinal cord (abbr.) 11. Direct the steering of a ship 13. Chops with irregular blows 15. Plural of hilum 16. Incline from vertical (geo.) 17. Simple word forms 18. Paddles 19. Roman garment 21. Meat skewers 23. Ethiopia (abbr.) 25. The cry made by sheep 26. Beatty-Bening movie 30. Concealed 33. Political action committee 34. High rock piles (Old English) 35. Scottish County (abbr.) 36. Goat and camel hair fabric 37. A very large body of water
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exports to China was a complete success, this oil sales should be a piece-of-cake. Well, if it was only that simple. I have a sneaking suspicion P.M. Harper doesn’t trust science to say the right things, probably why he axed 700 scientists across Canada. In this cutting-edge era, the return of knuckle-dragging, oxygen starved mentalities are once again championed. Such laws as cause and effect have
1. Schenectady County Airport 2. Small water craft 3. Opposite of ecto 4. The woman 5. Skeletal muscle 6. Devoid of warmth and cordiality 7. Decameter 8. Italian goodbye 9. Mediation council 10. Impudence 12. A desert in S Israel 14. Japanese seaport 15. Nob or goblin 20. Ingested 22. Swiss river 24. Protects head from weather 25. Lava rock 26. Designer identifier 27. 34470 FL 28. Petrified ancient animal 29. Gas used in refrigeration
38. Fabric stain 39. Israeli city ___ Aviv 40. Shoe’s underside 42. Military legal corps 43. Patti Hearst’s captors 44. Undecided 48. ‘__ death do us part 49. Supervises flying 50. Many headed monsters 54. Literary language of Pakistan 57. Halo 58. Hawaiian hello 63. Lubricants 65. Mild exclamation 66. Greek fresh-water nymph 67. Nickname for grandmother 68. A restaurant bill 69. Automaker Ransom E. 70. A young man
30. Journeys to Mecca 31. Eighth month, Jewish calendar 32. Small indefinite quantity 33. Taps 41. Extremely high frequency 44. Iguanidae genus 45. From the Leaning Tower’s city 46. Cologne 47. Moses’ elder brother (Bible) 50. A minute amount (Scott) 51. Hindu name for 4 epochs 52. Faded and dull 53. Radioactivity unit 55. The face of a clock 56. The inner forearm bone 59. Tai language of the Mekong region 60. Embrocate 61. Possessed 62. Public promotions 64. Sorrowful
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6 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Hospital auxiliary adds much to health care
It was a good old-fashioned chow down. The Kitimat Seniors Centre, the District of Kitimat, the Kitimat RCMP and the fire department went head-to-head to determine who makes the best chili in the annual chili cook-off at the Seniors Centre, a fundraiser for the Relay for Life. In all $165 was raised for the cancer fundraising event. As for the winner, it was the Kitimat RCMP which walked away as 2014’s reigning chili champions. Cool beans.
Two Kitimatians take healthcare to Haiti Cameron Orr Haiti is not a country you expect many people to pine for, but Hope Bechard leaves a piece of herself back there every time she leaves. The Kitimat nurse has done overseas volunteer trips since she was 18, starting in the Dominican Republic. She turned her sights to Haiti after the country was hit with a devastating earthquake. “When the earthquake hit Haiti I just felt the need I had to go,” said Bechard. The program they’re using to go to Haiti is called Hands Up for Haiti, and Bechard said she recently became the Canadian representative on their board, based in New York. For this latest trip, the third with Hands Up but the fifth overall to Haiti, she has recruited fellow nurse Amanda Slanina. Bechard said she’ll do a nine week stay in Haiti, and Slanina will do five. They’ll head to Haiti in October. But not before they’ve raised money to help with their trip. Each of their trips will run up roughly $2,400 to $4,000. That’s dependant on how long the trip is and how much they bring with them as far as medical supplies. The two are looking for help to get them on their way. The easiest way to donate is to give money to a special account at the Envision Credit Union. People can ask to donate to the Hope and Amanda Haiti Fund, and tax receipts can be given for donations over $20. Bechard said she’ll also collect people’s emp-
NOTICE OF HAISLA NATION COMMUNITY RATIFICATION VOTE Notice is hereby given that the Haisla First Nation has called a Vote in accordance with the Haisla Nation Community Ratification Process on the matter of determining if Registered Voters approve the Haisla Nation Land Code and Individual Agreement. The following question will be asked of the Registered Voters of Haisla Nation by Ballot: “Do you approve the Haisla Nation Land Code dated for reference January 31st, 2014 and the Individual Agreement with Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada?”
Two Kitimat nurses will head to Haiti to provide medical support. Photo submitted by Hope Bechard ties as well. E-mail her at hbechard@handsupforhaiti.org to arrange that. “To me, Haiti is not what is portrayed in the media,” said Bechard. “Haiti is mountains and it’s beautiful ocean waters and the people there are some of the nicest people you’ll ever meet. They’re very resilient.” She added, “It’s one of those places where I fly in...[and] you get this great feeling. It’s like my second home.” For Slanina, this trip is one she said her father always had wanted to take so she couldn’t say no. “I’ve wanted to do something like this, and now the opportunity came up. And there is huge need there.”
Pipeline Continued from page 5 Future generations will curse our wanton stupidity. Perhaps its time to rethink this whole affair of the Tar Sands. Does B.C. want to be part of this environmental destruc-
tive venture. Perhaps the advice of the well respected former Premier of Alberta Peter Lougheed may prove helpful, “go slow” tread lightly he often remarked concerning the Tar Sands.
It can surprise you how much count for a lot of that money, while of your day benefits from the work the gift shop in the hospital’s lobby of volunteers. is probably the biggest money genA patient at Kitimat General erator for them. Hospital using a bed lift to sit up To keep the wheels moving the while a television plays in the back- organization uses, as of right now, ground is one such moment brought 37 volunteers. Those volunteers’ to you by volunteers. time can be as little The Kitimat Hos“Once they’re in as an hour to several pital Auxiliary, the group you may know [the auxiliary] hours a week. “It depends what better as the ones they seem to they want to do,” said which run the gift shop Kean. “If they want to in the hospital lobby, stay.” work in the gift shop, are the ones which funeach gal works three draised to purchase a number of bed lifts for both acute and a half hours. Sometimes less care and multi-level care, as well than once a week, most often once manage the rental of televisions to a week.” It’s not just ‘gals’ the auxiliary patients. “We’ve now reached the point wants though, and they encourage where there will be a ceiling lift men to donate their time too. “You can’t have a 76-year-old above all 36 beds in the [multi-level care],” added Hospital Auxiliary woman [moving televisions],” said Kean, saying they usually rely on President Jennifer Kean. That is thanks to a joint effort hospital staff to help out. Anyone so inclined to join can by the hospital and the auxiliary. The auxiliary provided 10 of those ask for an application at the aux36 units. To pay for just five lifts iliary’s gift shop, or contact either cost around $40,000. Kean at 250-639-5639, or Armelle To fundraise the money they Kennedy at 250-632-2676. use to spend on patients’ comfort Just know that for most people and well being is a full-time job for they really enjoy the time they give. the group. “Once they’re in they seem to Those television rentals ac- stay,” said Kean about volunteers.
The Enbridge folks and the Prime Minister’s office gravely underestimated the concerns of a majority of full time Kitimat residents. As the plebiscite demonstrated, we’re a
cautious bunch for the most part and wary of risking our Kitimat valley to the rumbling of a bitumen filled pipeline and grotesquely large Supertankers on our Douglas Channel. Gaetan Pozsgay
RATIFICATION VOTE LOCATIONS 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM MAY 30TH & 31ST, 2014 VANCOUVER, BC
JUNE 6TH & 7TH, 2014 KITAMAAT VILLAGE, BC
Hilton Vancouver Metrotown 6083 McKay Avenue Burnaby, BC
Haisla Nation Administration Office 500 Gitxsan Avenue Kitamaat, BC
Copies of the Background Documents, the Ratification Documents and Ratification Process may be obtained from Whitney Lukuku, the Lands and Resources Manager, at the Haisla Nation Administration Office, 500 Gitxsan Avenue, Kitamaat, BC - Telephone 250-639-9361. AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that all Members of Haisla Nation, 18 years of age and older as of the date of the Ratification Vote are eligible to vote, PROVIDED THAT SUCH MEMBERS MUST COMPLETE A VOTER REGISTRATION DOCUMENT TO BE PLACED ON THE LIST OF REGISTERED VOTERS. Voter registration documents will be sent to all Eligible Voters whose address is on record with the Haisla Nation. VOTER REGISTRATION documents are also available from Lawrence Lewis, Ratification Officer at the website and contact information appearing below. Please Note: Any Registered Voter may vote by Mail-in Ballot. If an Eligible Voter has not received a Voter Registration Document by May 29th, 2014 please contact Lawrence Lewis, Ratification Officer so that the necessary form can be provided to you. Eligible voters may also obtain a Voter Registration Document at the Vote locations as indicated above. Dated at Victoria, Province of British Columbia this 27th day of March, 2014. Lawrence Lewis, Ratification Officer:
For more information please contact Lawrence Lewis, Ratification Officer Ph/Txt: 250 889-1582 TF: 1-855-458-5888 Fax: 250 384-5416 Email: lewis.l@telus.net PO Box 35008 Hillside, Victoria, British Columbia V8T 5G2 WWW.HFN-ELECTIONS.CA
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014 7
Quilters celebrate 30 years in stitches Cameron Orr The Kitimat Quilters Guild have been sewing fabric for 30 years now, and boy are their fingers tired. Or maybe not. Over three decades machines have slowly invaded the group, as they have in many areas of life, and at the start it was a big controversy over using machines over hand. “Originally you were a really good quilter if you did everything by hand. You were allowed to sew the pieces together by machine but when it came to actual finishing and doing the quilting part of it that was hand done. It was quite a conflict when all these machines took over quilting,” explained Lois Mendel, who joined the guild about two years after its inception at a house on Brant Street, under the leadership of a woman named Mary-Lee. “As time went on, you could see everybody wanted to machine quilt because it saved so much time,” she adds. The Kitimat Quilters Guild celebrated 30 years as a group, and five years hosting a quilting retreat at their annual retreat at the Riverlodge. To see the gymnasium at the facility turned into a quilters dream is a sight to behold. Wall to wall sewing machines, quilts, and the ladies from corner to corner. It’s not just a personal hobby though. The Guild has been providing their products to those in need since the start. “We make what we call community quilts. That means if someone has been burned out of their home we give them a quilt. Usually, more than not, if there’s children involved,” said Janet Malnis, who headed up organizing this year’s retreat. They also offer up quilts to medical patients and, as tradition, to the last baby born in the year. The annual retreat began as a way to ac-
Jesse Donaldson and Ashley Little enjoyed the area scenery and culture during their visit to the Northwest. Submitted
Authors bring stories to Kitimat on book tour
Lois Mendel at her sewing maching at the Kitimat Quilters Guild annual retreat at the Riverlodge. About 66 people attended the event which saw the Riverlodge gymnasium packed, wall to wall, with sewing machines and quilts. tually fundraise for the group in order to pay for the fabric of the quilts they hand out.
Malnis said 66 people attended this year, with people stretching from Haida
Gwaii to Houston, BC. The local group is approximately 30 people.
Bish Forestry Service Road (FSR) Chevron is continuing upgrading work on the Bish Forestry Service (FSR) that requires public access to the area be restricted in order to ensure public safety. This work is to flatten, straighten and widen the existing FSR to accommodate future traffic demands as the proposed Kitimat LNG project moves forward. • A 24-hour public safety and security checkpoint has been set up along the FSR to inform the public about access restrictions. • Access restrictions are in place during construction activity such as blasting as well as work on narrow sections of the road in order to ensure the safety of the public. Chevron places the highest priority on the safety of the public and our workforce. Temporarily restricting public access to the Bish FSR while construction is underway will help us achieve our goal of an incident and injuryfree workplace. When construction activity is complete, the Bish Forestry Service Road will re-open to the public. For more information: KitimatLNGfeedback@chevron.com Toll free: 1.844.800.0900 chevron.ca/kitimatLNG
Cameron Orr Two authors shortlisted for BC Book Prizes stopped in Kitimat for a book reading and chat at the Kitimat Public Library. Jesse Donaldson is the author of This Day in Vancouver, a collection of snippets of Vancouver history cover its 127 years. This book is a finalist for the BC Booksellers’ Choice Award in Honour of Bill Duthie. He was joined with Ashley Little, the author of the fiction piece The New Normal, about a 16 year old girl who begins losing her hair after her twin sister’s death. This book is a finalist for
the 2014 Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize “It’s probably the most authobiographical thing I’ve ever written,” she said. “I have been a 16-year-old girl in Calgary and some of the things that happen to her happened to me too.” For Donaldson’s book, it’s like a calendar that looks back in time. “It’s basically a day-at-a-time history of the city of Vancouver, and by extension the Lower Mainland,” he said. “Each page has a day dedicated to it and each page has a historical happening from the last 128 years.”
Do you care about the ocean environment? Does your living depend on the ocean? The North Coast–Skeena First Nations Stewardship Society and the Province of British Columbia want your feedback on the draft North Coast Marine Plan. Comments and input can be provided in person at the public meetings or online at www.mappocean.org
Open House: 5:30 – 6:30 pm Public Meeting: 6:30 – 8 pm
PRINCE RUPERT
KITIMAT
MAY 12, 2014
MAY 13, 2014
North Coast Meeting and Convention Centre, 240 1st Avenue West
Kitimat Valley Institute 1352 Alexander Avenue
www.mappocean.org MaPP is a partnership between the Province of British Columbia and 18 member First Nations
T:10.31”
8 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Over the last decade we have been carefully planning this project. It is the most advanced pipeline proposal under consideration that is responding to these challenges. The project has undergone the intense scrutiny of the Joint Review Panel of the National Energy Board–the most extensive scientific review of its kind in Canadian history–and received its endorsement for approval. By moving ahead, Northern Gateway will safely open new markets for Canadian oil much sooner than any other project under consideration. While this provides a huge economic benefit for Canadians, it is not the only opportunity Northern Gateway has to offer.
N E L N
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Most important, no matter what product we are moving, Northern Gateway will always ensure that ours is a safer, better project. That’s because Northern Gateway is already incorporating numerous measures specifically designed for British Columbia’s environment and landscape, and is already setting a new standard in Canada for safety and environmental responsibility. For example, every tanker carrying Canadian oil to new markets will be double-hulled and guided to open ocean by B.C. coast pilots. All loaded tankers will be escorted by two tugs, and every tanker coming into our terminal will be fully vetted for safety. At Northern Gateway we are working every day to build a project that will serve our country for generations to come. That passionate commitment is at the heart of our proposal. It drives us in everything we do. It has resulted in a project that measures up to its original promise of a safer, better pipeline that benefits every British Columbian and every Canadian.
Escort tugs will respond immediately in the case of an emergency, and one of the two escort tugs will be tethered at all times.
N
Learn more at gatewayfacts.ca
FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY
This is the main reason why Northern Gateway is urgently needed. Northern Gateway will open new markets for Canadian oil in Asia, creating thousands of good-paying jobs in British Columbia and generating much-needed revenues for taxpayers.
H
T:14”
Canada has vast oil reserves that have the power to ensure jobs and other economic benefits for generations of British Columbians and Canadians. But this resource is only going to one market–the United States–meaning Canadians are losing out on hundreds of millions of dollars.
All tankers calling on our terminal must be vetted by a third-party prior to leaving their port of origin.
LA S
Janet Holder, Leader of Northern Gateway
If, in the years ahead, a new refinery is built in Kitimat that offers the same benefits as international markets, Northern Gateway will be able to deliver product for that as well. Or, if a facility is built in Alberta, Northern Gateway will be able to move refined product to new markets. In fact, Northern Gateway can provide a safe means of transport from Alberta to Kitimat for oil wherever it is needed most, at home or abroad, always ensuring that Canadians get the value we rightly expect from our most valuable commodity.
2
G D O U
A solid plan years in the making.
1
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014 9
Public intoxications rounds out police report April 21 Kitimat RCMP responded to a call of a stolen wallet at a person’s home. The items were taken from an unlocked car in the driveway. An accidental 911 call had police responding to a home. Police determined the call was a misdial. April 22 Police were called to investigate a robbery at the Cooks Jewellers store at City Centre Mall. Police say over $11,000 in goods were taken. Police continue to investigate the case along with a similar file in Terrace that same day. April 23 An unwanted patron at a local pub had police attend, after the subject had returned to the business. Police found the person intoxicated and causing a disturbance and was arrested and held in the cells for the night. Was later released without incident. April 24 Police and paramedics responded to a person on the ground near a bus stop. The man appeared to have been beaten up but the person, who was intoxicated, had no recollection of what happened. Person urged by police to call them if he could recall any details. A drunk person was found passed out in a parking lot in town. Police could not find any person who could care for him for the night so the person was lodged in the cells for the night. He was released with a violation ticket in the morning. April 25 A pit bull was reportedly running at large. Police located the dog and its owner and the owner was told to keep the dog on a leash. The Humane Society was notified and later spoke with the pet owner. A mountain bike was stolen from a truck parked in the carport of a home. Theft
Police Beat took place sometime between 9 p.m. and
9 a.m. Bike was not locked or chained up. April 26 A vehicle stop discovered an impaired driver after the vehicle was noted to be speed-
ing and drifting. The vehicle was impounded and a roadside prohibition was served. Police found two intoxicated people while on patrol, wan-
dering in a public area. The persons could not care for themselves and were lodged in cells for the night. Both were given violation tickets.
April 27 Police responded to a false alarm at a business. Police were called to a pub on a report of a customer who re-
fused to leave and was causing a disturbance. On police arrival the server and customer had worked things out and the customer had left willingly.
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A groundbreaking for Baxter Landing, a 36-unit townhouse complex. With Mayor Joanne Monaghan, Pieter Kerkhoff of Kerkhoff Construction, and Ilona Kenny of Kitimat ReMax.
Mayor Joanne Monaghan, along with PTI Group executives, ceremonially turn the soil at the future site of the PTI Group lodge in Strawberry Meadows. For PTI, from left, is Phil Gruner, senior director of operations for the Pacific Northwest; Sean Crockett, vice president of business development; CEO Ron Green; and Bob Greaves, manager of business development.
PTI Group breaks ground Cameron Orr The head of PTI Group is looking forward to the eventual construction of their work lodge in Kitimat’s Strawberry Meadows. CEO Ron Green spoke to reporters shortly before a ceremonial groundbreaking event at their cleared site, which will make way for a temporary worker living facility which may eventually hold over 2,000 beds. He said the company was really put to task by the local council to ensure they live up to the company’s commitments in building their facility, which had initially been met with vocal concern from the community, particularly people who live in that neighbourhood. “Here we get to participate with the community,” said Green. “We’re intimate, with the proximity that we have. We can help drive some economic value.” To that he referred specifically to the fact that PTI facilities typically have their own shops, for instance, but that’s in places where they are far removed from a municipal boundary. Given their location essentially right next door to the downtown he said people staying in the lodge will have the opportunity to shop at local stores. “The merchants, hopefully, will be able to benefit to that approach to business.” He said construction of capacity in the lodge will depend on client commitments. The company is aiming for 400 rooms to be open by next February, added vice president of business development Sean Crockett. They are also looking to hire locally for people to work in the camp itself, which he said makes sense to not have employees continually rotating out of town. He repeated the company’s statements from its earliest stages in Kitimat that a flux of workers coming to Kitimat aren’t being brought in by PTI, they are coming anyway, said Green. The facility, he said, will help manage that spike in persons. As for concerns about the workers causing problems in the community, he said that guidelines for residents in their facility are strict and people causing trouble are removed, which for
an out-of-town worker will mean they’re out of work. He said given that there won’t be trouble. As for their immediate neighbours, he said there have been no complaints and they get along well with nearby homeowners.
You are invited!
AnnuAl GenerAl MeetinG and
AnnuAl GrAnt GivinG event MAy 6, 2014 7:00 to 9:00pM
north West Community College There will be coffee, desserts and a Silent Auction. The proceeds of the Silent Auction help fund the operations of the Kitimat Community Foundation. The Kitimat Community Foundation is accepting new board members!
See you there!
SAFER Sign Up Day on May 15th The Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters (SAFER) program helps make rent affordable for B.C. seniors with low to moderate incomes. SAFER provides monthly cash payments for eligible seniors 60 or older who pay rent for their homes. BC Housing staff will be available on Thursday, May 15th to assist seniors in completing their SAFER application forms.
Please Register for the SAFER Sign Up Day Please call 1-800-667-1235 ext 2150 to set up your appointment time. Thursday, May 15th
|
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Northwest Community College, 606 Mountain View Square, Kitimat, BC
Are you eligible? You may be eligible for SAFER if you meet all of the following conditions: 1. You are 60 or older. 2. You have lived in British Columbia for a full 12 months immediately preceding your application. 3. You and your spouse (with whom you are living) meet one of the following citizenship requirements: Canadian citizen(s); or authorized to take up permanent residence in Canada; or Convention refugee(s). 4. You pay more than 30 per cent of your gross (before tax) monthly household income toward rent for your home, including the cost of pad rental for a manufactured home (trailer) that you own and occupy. 5. You are not currently living in subsidized housing. To find out more about SAFER, visit www.bchousing.org, 604-433-2218 (Metro Vancouver) 1-800-257-7756 (elsewhere in B.C.)
H O U S I N G M AT T E R S
12 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014 13
The story of the famed Mrs. Wakita Kitimat merchant Mrs. Wakita of City Centre Hardware has an interesting past. Over the decades she has witnessed a lot of history and the stories she tells are from the communities of Steveston, Lillooet, Revelstoke and Kitimat. Mihoko Sakai was the third-born Nisei in her family of ten. Nisei means being second generation Japanese and refers to children born in Canada to Japanese immigrant parents. (Those born in Japan are called Issei). For her first 11 years Mihoko lived in Steveston, the cannery village in Richmond at the mouth of the Fraser River. Her parents were from a fishing family and in Steveston her Dad and his boat the Elva M were respected
and valuable forces. Mihoko’s Mom worked in the fish cannery while her Grandmother provided childcare for her grandchildren. At times Issei grandparents, including the elder Sakais and Wakitas, would get together, often with their grandchildren in tow. One of Mihoko’s best friends back then was Yae Wakita. Life for young Mihoko was easy. Surrounded by family, she lived in comfortable cannery rentals in Richmond with electricity and indoor plumbing. Japanese cuisine, supplies and the latest from around the world were readibly available. But all that came to a crashing end when on December 7, 1941, Ja-
It’s Our
Heritage Walter thorne
pan attacked the United States naval base at Pearl Harbour in Hawaii. With that act of hostility, Canada was at war in the Pacific. Anyone of Japanese descent living on the West Coast was considered a threat by the government which planned to eliminate the risk by relocating them. A schedule was drawn up to transport all 22,000 Japanese even those born in Canada were not exempt. Within months all were ordered to sell
their assets and prepare to evacuate the coast. For the Sakais that meant selling their treasured Elva M - their boat, their life and their livelihood. They were fishing folk, meant for the sea. Getting a decent price for the fish packer collecting vessel was impossible. There were hundreds of Japanese boats for sale creating a buyers market in which the longer you waited to sell, the less you got. And removing the ship from the water was
not an option with the prospect of dry rot. So the Sakais, like so many others of Japanese descent, were ripped off. The Wakita family operated a prosperous general store on Moncton Street in Steveston and they too suffered financially, having to sell the store for a ridiculous, rock bottom price.
Exchange program starts tomorrow change for several years. The visitors will also be given a special orientation to First Nation culture with festivities in Kitamaat Village with the Haisla, and will tour the Douglas Channel, as well as spending time in the high school and with our town council. Allsop has worked with the group from Italy for a long time and while he had to move away from Kitimat last year he’s continued to help arrange the trip and will return to see the group’s arrival. Nelson said that even local politics won’t be ignored on the visit. The Ital-
Cameron Orr A group of four Italians will be shown the red carpet on an exchange program which kicks off tomorrow in Kitimat. Two teachers and two students are set to arrive from Pergine, in northern Italy, the first half in a two-part exchange program that will eventually see students from Kitimat enjoy a week-and-ahalf in Italy as well. The coordinating team in Kitimat for this exchange is teacher Reid Nelson, Rob Goffinet, Gerald Amos, Nancy Nyce, and John Allsop who has worked on this ex-
ian teachers and students, he said, showed immense interest in the Enbridge Northern Gateway proposal and will be learning about pipelines and their impacts during their visit. Such a topic may be on the table when the students meet with Kitimat Council. The group will depart on May 18, but a Kitimat contingent of students will take to Italy in 2015 for a similar visit. The local coordinators made sure First Nations could be represented on the tour as there was a lot of interest on the Italian side to know more
about the Haisla. “We will have some of the very first ever Haisla students going to Pergine and the area around,” said Nelson. “They’ve never had students of a First Nations ancestry visit their location before and they’re very much looking forward to it.” As for Allsop, he’s pleased to have all the planning paying off for this cultural exchange program. “This is a culmination of a very, very exciting project which is going to continue when the Kitimat students, including First Nations, go there in 2015.”
Kitimat’s Almeida picked for Cougars The Prince George Cougars Hockey Club With the fifth overall selection in the 2014 WHL Bantam Draft, the Prince George Cougars are selected forward Justin Almeida, from Kitimat, of the North Shore Winter Club. Almeida, 5’7, 130 pounds, is a left-handed shooting center who
the Cougars feel will add strong depth and skill to the organization. “Justin has a very high hockey IQ,” said Prince George Cougars Head Scout and Director of Player Personnel, Todd Harkins, moments after making the selection. “He’s very quick around the ice and likes to go to
the net and make plays. We’re excited to have him as a member of the Prince George Cougars.” In 70 games with the North Shore Winterclub, Almeida tallied 80 goals and 67 assists for 147 points and 190 penalty minutes. He also added five goals and seven points during the Western Ca-
nadian Bantam Championships. Almeida joins an impressive list of forwards selected in the first round by the Prince George Cougars. Other notable recent first round forward selections include: Jansen Harkins (2012), Brad Morrison (2012), Alex Forsberg (2010) and Brett Connolly (2008).
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The Canadian government had designed a series of 15 settlement camps scattered through the interior in places like Revelstoke, New Denver and Lillooet. Some were government-supported barracks with little privacy but with all expenses paid.
Others were selfsupporting where Japanese Canadians with means looked after themselves. The Sakais were proud people they would support themselves. Their destination was to be a new instant “town” in Lillooet. (to be continued)
A Family Resource Centre
Kitimat Child Development Centre Association Turns 40! We are hoping to see you at our
AnnuAl GenerAl MeetinG and 40th AnniversAry celebrAtion on June 2, 2014! Details to follow.
District of Kitimat
Public Notice annual Water main flushing 2014 april 22 to June 6, 2014 The District of Kitimat will undertake the annual water main flushing. The scheduled dates for flushing water mains will be April 22 to June 6, 2014. This operation may cause temporary discolouration of the water supply and should clear up soon after the operation is completed. If the problem persists please contact the District of Kitimat. Thank you for your cooperation and patience in this matter. For further information please call 250-632-8930.
Public Advisory Please be advised the Rio Tinto Alcan’s BC Operations will be testing its emergency siren system on a monthly basis beginning 6 February 2014. While it’s unlikely, there is potential that the siren could be heard as far as Kitimat or Kitamaat Village. This is just a test and will repeat on the first Thursday of each month until further notice. For more information please contact Rio Tinto Alcan’s Plant Protection at 250.639.8273.
14 Sentinel, Wednesday, May 7, 2014 A10Northern www.northernsentinel.com
Wednesday, May 7, 2014 Northern Sentinel
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IN-FLIGHT Magazine...SOAR Magazine. This attractive business & tourism publication is published bi-monthly six times a year. Great impact for your BC Business more than 280,000 passengers fly Pacific Coastal Airlines. Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: fish@blackpress.ca Relay for Life is looking for performers/bands. Call Bill at 250-632-2069 if you have something to share!
Personals MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851 MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851.
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Deputy Operations Manager
District of Kitimat, exempt staff position, with competitive compensation and full benefit package. Reporting to the Operations Manager, assists in planning, implementing and tracking the operations, repair and maintenance of the municipality’s infrastructure, including water and sewer, buildings, roads, parking lots, traffic control, drainage, signage, sidewalks, parks, grass cutting,, cemetery, and equipment fleet. Candidates will have several years of experience in a municipal or similar work environment and post-secondary education in Civil, Building or Water Quality Technology, EOCP Sewage Treatment and Water Distribution certification, or related Trade Qualification. Submit resumes by May 15, 2014, 4:30 p.m., to Personnel, District of Kitimat, 270 City Centre, Kitimat, B.C. V8C 2H7, Fax 250-632-4995, email dok@kitimat.ca EMPLOYERS CAN’T find the work-at-home Medical Transcriptionists they need in Canada! Get the training you need to fill these positions. Visit CareerStep.ca/MT to start training for your work-athome career today!
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking
SERVICE Writer/Warranty Administrator required immediately for busy Heavy Truck repair shop in Kelowna, BC. Parts and/or service experience in the industry an asset. Attention to detail, clear communication and organization skills a must. Competitive wages and benefits reflecting experience. Please forward all resumes to jdiesel1@telus.net.
Help Wanted An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators, meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-(780)7235051. Pedro’s Grill in Kitimat is looking for experienced Cooks, Servers and Drivers. Wage negotiable. Drop off resumes at: 342 City Centre, Kitimat.
Information
Information
Full and Part time for Coastal Taxi Send resume & driver’s abstract to PO Box 56 Kitimat, BC V8C 2G6 No phone calls
LOOKING for contract logging trucks to haul in the Vernon, Lumby, Salmon Arm, Malakwa area. Steady work. Please call 250-597-4777 Vernon Service Company requires Journeyman Service Plumbers/Gasfitters, $36.00/hr Call (250)549-4444 or fax 250-549-4416
Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
LT D.
MECHANIC Cullen Diesel Power Ltd has an opening for a resident Mechanic for Prince Rupert and surrounding areas to Service the Industrial & Marine markets. Heavy Duty or Commercial Transport experience is required. Previous Diesel Engine experience with DDC & MTU products will be considered an asset. Strong electrical and computer skills. Safety driven. For additional information contact: Stephen Palm 1-604-455-2208 or email resume: sep@cullendiesel.com
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking Find us on Facebook
Trimac Transportation is North America’s premier provider of services in highway transportation of bulk commodities. Our Kitimat,Terrace and Prince George locations require...
Company Drivers Owner Operators
Excellent pay • Shared benefits • Safety equipment • Safety bonus Dry bulk pneumatic hauling • Shift work involved • B-train and mountain experience required Please send your resume to: Mark Davy, Fax: 888-746-2297 E-mail: canrecruiting@trimac.com Phone: 866-487-4622
KITIMAT
RESIDENT MECHANIC FOR PRINCE RUPERT
PUZZLE SOLUTION
INDEX IN BRIEF
(Trimac)
MILLWRIGHT • WELDER • PIPE-FITTER
Cariboo Pulp & Paper has exciting opportunities within Quesnel BC. We are a forerunning producer of NBSK pulp as well as clean “green” energy. Forward thinking ownership, capital investment and movement towards bio-product growth ensures a secure life long career opportunity as Cariboo Pulp & Paper has a bright future. Our ideal candidate possesses:
Signing Bonus
North America’s Premier Provider www.trimac.com
• A valid Inter-Provincial or BC Provincial Journeyperson Millwright, Journeyperson Welder (A Ticket) or Journeyperson Pipe-Àtter certiÀcation • Heavy industry experience • Commitment to working safely and creating a safe work place • Strong communication and interpersonal skills • Able to work independently and as part of a team • Flexible schedule for various shifts Our employees drive our success. We believe in providing opportunities for growth and advancement and are looking for someone who wants to build their career in our company.
Cariboo Offers: • Competitive Wages & BeneÀts • A Stable Rewarding Career • An Attractive Relocation Package
Applicants please send resume & proof of qualiÀcations in conÀdence to: cpphr@cariboopulp.com For more info on West Fraser & our current opportunities, visit our website at: www.westfraser.com/jobs
We thank all candidates for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
Is this you? Find the right job for you…
Visit our Website
www.localwork.ca
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Money Back & www.NorwoodSaw moreDVD: information call 250-635Revenue Canada. Email: r.galGuarantee. Call 1-866-882mills.com/400OT 1-800-566a Public Health Nurse. imat Public Library on KITIMAT 1861 ask for Nicole. len@shaw.ca C- 250-938-1944 5263, Ext. 81. Phone: Phone: 6899 Ext:400OT. House for Sale/Rent www.sunsetranches.net UNFILED TAX returns? Unreyour day off of school. For more information 63 Chilko St. - 3 bdr, 1 bath STEEL BUILDINGS. Hot savWe are looking for a part ported income? ELECTRICAL Avoid proseSTERLING GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad 20 ACRES $0 down, only TOWNHOMES in KITIMAT in excellent neighbourhood. ings Spring sale! 20x24 Fax: time Janitor to add to our alLego Creations happen call 250-632-3144. cution penalties. Callimmea tax QUATSINO APTS INC, inand Terrace BC, has credit? Bills? Unemployed? $119/mo. Owner no This house has afinancing, big fenced $4,348. 25x24 $4,539. 3 bdrm, 1 ½ bath, carport ready excellent staff at 30x30 City attorney first! for 855-668-8089 diate openings a full time Need Money? We Lend! If you credit checks! Near El Paso, backyard, including two $6,197. $7,746. 40x46 KITIMAT CHILD DEVELOPbetween 10:30 – 11:30 Centre 32x36 Mall in Kitimat. If (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET) Start $700. Sorry no Pets. Journeymen and an Apprenown your own home - you Texas. Beautiful sheds and flower mountain beds. $12,116. One you are 47x72 looking $17,779. for part-time • Downtown location Fax: UNFILED TAX Returns? UnCall Greg 639-0110 tice electrician. Candidates qualify. Pioneer Acceptance views! Money back guarantee. MENT CENTRE Famam and Just Dance Wii Comes with F/S and W/D. End wall included. Pioneer evening/weekend hours, ap• Balconies reported should have Income? 2-3 years ofAvoid exCorp. Member BBB. 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Bad 20 ACRES $035yrs. only TOWNHOMES in KITIMAT ling@sterlingelectrical.net. For space to Views! store 17ft boatBack & Tax experience, with Mountain Money QUATSINO APTS with Estates 778-281-0030 ABSOLUTELY NOfi8.5yrs. PARTIERS 1989 SUN RUNNER boat. come “A Great place -632-8985 INC,End in Terrace BC, has immecredit? Bills? Unemployed? $119/mo. Owner nancing, no Balance: Date: Nb. of Inserts: 3 bdrm, ½ bath, carport more information call 250-635trailer in Kitimat. Revenue Canada. Email: r.galGuarantee. Call 1-866-88221.5 feet,1 125 aq Volvo inINCLUDES HEAT! diate openings for a full time Need Money? We Lend!DRY If you credit checks! Near El Paso, KITIMAT KITIMAT A- STEEL SHIPPING 1861 ask for Nicole. 250-613-2120 len@shaw.ca C- 250-938-1944 5263, Ext. 81. Start $700. Sorry no Pets. for families to meet Ongoing board motor, Merc leg, exJourneymen and an ApprenownSTORAGE your own home - you Texas. Beautiful APTS mountain OCEANVIEW House for Sale/Rent CONTAINERS • Downtown location www.sunsetranches.net cellent running condition. UNFILED TAX back returns? UnreCall Greg 639-0110 tice electrician. Candidates qualify.Used Pioneer Acceptance views! Money guarantee. 63 Chilko St. 3 bdr, 1 bath 20’40’45’ 53’ (250)632-2822 Kitimat Taxes: over coffee and toys!” KITIMAT Girl Guides • Balconies We Member are looking $7000 (250) 698-7533 leave ported income? Avoid should have 2-3 years of exCorp. BBB.for a part Call 866-882-5263 Ext. prose81 or in message excellent we neighbourhood. and insulated • Security Entrances time Janitor tocontainers add to our all ala will call you cution www.sunsetranches.net and penalties. Call a tax perience in commercial and 1-877-987-1420 online Contact 250-632-3144 are looking for ladies This house hasavailable. a big fenced sizes in stock. • Some furnished suites ready excellent staff at City KITIMAT APTS back. Pictures attorney first! 855-668-8089 residential work have the www.pioneerwest.com backyard, including two SPECIAL Call for an appointment Centre Mall in Kitimat. If (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET) for more information. willing to spend time ability to work alone, with miniINCOME TAX PROBLEMS? BEST VALUE sheds and flower beds. are welcome. 250.632.4511 you Trades are for part-time 5 BDRM HOME IN mal supervision. JourneyUNFILED TAX Returns? UnHave you looking been under audited, reasComes with F/S and W/D. 40’ Containers $2500! • Starting at $725 www.kitimatapartments.com evening/weekend hours, apFIBRE with young girls. If KITIMAT Balance: man/RedTELKWA Seal is preferred, but reported Income? sessed or 544 disallowed certain 20 $0 Down, Avoid Only Call (250)279-8888 Also12 JD wheel • ACRES Balconies prox. 15&644 hours/week not required. The salary is neProsecution and Financing, Penalties. claims by -Canada Revenue $119/mo. FREE HEAT AND Loaders JD 892D • SecurityOwner Entrances ARTS GUILD: Interyou think this would and are able to work well FOR SALE gotiable depending on experiCall a Tax Attorney First! 1Agency? LCCallexcavator Bob Allen @ 2006 24’ Okanagan Trailer NO CREDIT CHECKS! Near • Cameras for your safety HOT WATER without direct35yrs. supervision, ence. Sendsqresume to ster3200 ft, 4 bath, 855-668-8089 (Monday-Friday 250-542-0295 Income Excellent to condition. Many exEl Paso, store Texas. Beautiful ested in knitting, spinappeal you, join us seeks a Ph Toll free 1-866-528-7108 Taxes: • Busy Now includes basic then this may be the position Bachelor 1 and 2 bedroom ling@sterlingelectrical.net. 9-6 ET). experience, 8.5yrs. tras. 250-632-7251 Mountain Delivery BC and AB with cable Views! Money Back includes washer & For Tax for you. Training is provided ning, weaving, or any more information call 250-635for an adult meeting Revenue Canada. Email: r.galGuarantee. Call 1-866-882APARTMENTS www.rtccontainer.com PART-TIME (14-16 hrs/wk) Visit our Website for the right Cperson. Fax redryer, fridge KITIMAT 1861 ask for Nicole.& stove, Largest, Brightest Suites len@shaw.ca 250-938-1944 5263, Ext. 81. ARE YOU USING YOUR www.kitimatapartments.com HOT (SPA) COVERS. sume TUB to: other fi bre? For more on the second TuesHouse for Sale/Rent Shiny Hardwood Floors dishwasher www.sunsetranches.net required at the Kitimat Northern Sentinel GARAGE? UNFILED TAXBest returns? Phone: 250.632.APTS Best 250-632-6784 price. All orquality. emailUnreUnfurnished 63 Chilko St. -&3Furnished bdr, 1 bath We looking for gas, a part Looking to rent enclosed hotaretub, natural ported income? Avoidavailable. proseday of the month. We information call Mau(2787) shapes & colours info@citycentremall.ca Daily - Weekly - Monthly Duties: in excellent neighbourhood. time Janitor to add to our alspace to store 17ft boat & cution and penalties. Call a tax ABSOLUTELY PARTIERS 1989 SUN RUNNER boat. 1-866-652-6837 contact This house hasNO aand bigrecord fencedflyer distribution • Receive reen 250-632-5444. ready excellent staff at City offer fun, trailer in Kitimat. attorney fi rst! 855-668-8089 21.5 feet, 125 friendship, aq Volvo inwww.thecoverguy.com/ HEAT! backyard,INCLUDES including two 250-845-3315 A- STEEL SHIPPING DRY Centre Mall in Kitimat. If 250-613-2120 (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET) The candidate must board motor,and Mercthe leg, opex• Collate and strap newspapers newspaper? love helping people, thrive on sheds and fl ower beds. KITIMAT MULTIPLE training OCEANVIEW APTS STORAGE CONTAINERS you are looking for part-time cellent running condition. UNFILED UnComes F/S and W/D. KILL BED TAX bugs Returns? & their eggs! •with Fill drop boxes located around town Used 20’40’45’ 53’ (250)632-2822 Kitimat evening/weekend hours, apKITIMAT HOME FOR SALE customer satisfaction and have a positive can do attitude. $7000 (250)to 698-7533 leave reported Income? Avoid SCLEROSIS - I have portunity help shape Call (250)279-8888 Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer and insulated containers all prox. 12 Executive - 15 hours/week 4 bdrm in quiet • Provide clerical support. a message we will call you Prosecution and Penalties. FREE HEAT AND Complete Treatment Program sizes in stock. and are able toLegal work suite well neighbourhood. M.S. but M.S. does If this sounds like you young minds for the KITIMAT APTS back. Pictures available. Heavy lifting is required. Call a Tax Attorney Hardware First! 12006 24’ Okanagan Trailer or Kit. Available: HOT WATER SPECIAL without directDouble supervision, in basement. carport, 855-668-8089 (Monday-Friday Excellent condition. Many exStores, Buy Online: homedepBEST VALUE Computer and orginizational skills are an asset Trades are welcome. then windows, this may be position not have me. You are new newtheroof, new future. Call Anna MaBachelor 1 and 2 bedroom 9-6 ET). 250-632-7251 ot.com 40’ Containers under $2500! • Starting $725& Wed. 9am to tras. for you. Training provided KITIMAT gas furnace, newishot water Hours:atTues. 1pm APARTMENTS not alone, male or ferie at 250-632-6967 for Also JD 544 &644 wheel • Balconies KILL BED BUGS & THEIR for thenew right water person.line, Faxnew retank, Largest, Brightest Suites Thurs. 3:15pm YOU Entrances USING YOUR until finished “We’d love •toARE be your Jeweller” MIDTOWN Loaders JD 892D Security EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug sume to: perimeter, new deck. Two Shiny Hardwood Floors male, and the Kitimat more information. GARAGE? • COOKS • PREP-COOKS LC excavator Cameras your safety Killer Complete Treatment 250-632-6784 or email storage sheds. Call for more Unfurnished & FurnishedUpper City• Centre Mall,for KITIMAT Drop Looking rent enclosed • SERVERS • BUSPERSON PhAPARTMENTS Toll 1-866-528-7108 • Now to includes basic off resumé at: Program or Kit. Available: info@citycentremall.ca information Dailyfree - Weekly - Monthly THE KITIMAT Public M.S. group would like space to store 17ft boat & FreeDelivery heat & Free Hot Water cooks@citywest.ca BC AB ABSOLUTELY NOand PARTIERS SUN RUNNER boat. cable Hardware Stores, Buy Online: Rosario’s Restaurant 250-632-4616 Northern1989 Sentinel trailer inVisit Kitimat. Furnished & Unfurnished www.rtccontainer.com Full-time and Part-time, 21.5 feet, 125 aq PART-TIME Volvo inhomedepot.com INCLUDES HEAT! Libraryhrs/wk) offers the high- to be here for you. To(14-16 our Website ASTEEL SHIPPING DRY 250-613-2120 1 & 2 (SPA) bedrooms days/evenings. motor, Merc 2E4 leg, ex626 Enterprise Ave.,board Kitimat, BC V8C www.kitimatapartments.com Kitimat House for Sale HOT TUB COVERS. KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris OCEANVIEW APTS STORAGE CONTAINERS Security Entrances No experience necessary. at the Kitimat Northern Sentinel ly engaging Mother tal confidentiality. For cellent required running condition. Phone: 250.632.APTS 15 Stikine St. Best price. Best quality. All Roach Tablets. Eliminate Used 20’40’45’ 53’ (250)632-2822 Kitimat Food safe and serving it right No Pets. No Smoking $7000 Duties: (250) 698-7533 leave (2787) Well maintained, updated, shapes & colours available. bugsguaranteed. No mess, and insulated containers all Goose StoryTime for more information conconsidered an asset. a message we will call you 250.632.7179 1,100 sqnegotiable ft, 3 bdrm house. 1-866-652-6837 odorless,sizes in long stock. lasting. Wage with exp. • Receive and record flyer distribution KITIMAT APTS back. Pictures available. 1.5 car garage/storage, www.thecoverguy.com/ Available at Ace Hardware & pre-schoolers Monday tact Mary at 250-639SPECIAL E-mail resume to: cov• Collate and strap newspapers ered deck and garden shed. newspaper? The Home BEST VALUE TradesDepot. are welcome. rosarioskitimat@gmail.com mornings from 10:30 6016. $325,000 obo. KILL BED bugs & their eggs! 40’ Containers under • Fill drop boxes located around town KILL ROACHES! Buy$2500! Harris • Starting at $725 Or Drop off resume to: 250-632-5566 Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Also JDTablets. 544 &644 wheel Roach Eliminate • Balconies 607 Legion Ave, Kitimat .am. Please AGLOW OF KITI• Provide clerical support. -11:15 Complete Treatment JD 892D Bugs- Loaders Guaranteed. No Mess, • Security EntrancesProgram Kitimat House for Sale Heavy lifting is required. register for this free or• Kit. Available: Odorless,LC excavator Long Lasting. Cameras for your Hardware safety MAT - All are welcome 5 Nass St. Stores, Online: homedepPh Toll free Available at 1-866-528-7108 Ace Hardware & • NowBuy includes basic Computer and orginizational skills are an asset Well maintained, updated, at our Care Group and program. ot.com Delivery BC and AB The Home Depot. cable KITIMAT Tues. & Wed. 9am to 1pm approx. 1,400 sq ft, 3 bdrm www.rtccontainer.com PART-TIME (14-16Hours: hrs/wk) Visit our Website KILL BED BUGS & THEIR SAWMILLS FROM only house with large family rm. Bible Study for men THURSDAYS, sign Thurs. 3:15pm until finished MIDTOWN www.kitimatapartments.com EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug HOT (SPA) COVERS. LOOKING to hireand a Property $4,397TUB - Make money & save Covered deck garden required at the Kitimat Northern Sentinel • COOKS • PREP-COOKS Phone: 250.632.APTS Killer Complete Treatment Best price. Best quality. All Manager for our team in Kitimat/ money with your own bandmill and women, singles or up for the BC Seniors shed. $285,000 obo. Drop off resumé at: APARTMENTS • SERVERS • BUSPERSON Program or(2787) Kit. Available: shapes & colours available. Terrace. 250-632-5566 License and training - Cut lumber any dimension. In Duties: Free heat & Free Hot Water married, Thursday at Games Zone 10, 1 to Hardware Stores, Buy Online: Rosario’s 1-866-652-6837 package available. stock ready to Restaurant ship. Free Info Northern Sentinel • Receive and record flyer distribution Furnished & Unfurnished Full-time www.NorwoodSaw and Part-time, homedepot.com www.thecoverguy.com/ http://randallnorth.ca & DVD: View Obituaries and 7:00 P.M. For infor4 p.m. at the Kitimat & 2 bedrooms days/evenings. •1Collate and strap newspapers newspaper? 626 Enterprise Ave., Kitimat, BC V8C 2E4 mills.com/400OT 1-800-566KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Memoriams Online at Security Entrances experience necessary. 6899No Ext:400OT. Roach Tablets. Eliminate KILL BED bugs & their eggs! • Fill drop boxes located around town Seniors Centre. Every mation phone Brenda Food safe and serving it right No Pets. No Smoking bugs- guaranteed. No mess, Buy Bedan asset. Bug STEELHarris BUILDINGS. Hot Killer savconsidered • Provide clerical support. Thursday as long as at 250-632-1616. CARLTON Cards is looking for a 250.632.7179 odorless, long lasting. Complete Treatment ingsWage - Spring sale! 20x24 negotiable withProgram exp. part time merchandiser for Kitimat, Heavy lifting is required. Available at Ace Hardware & or Kit.E-mail Available: Hardware $4,348. 25x24 $4,539. resume to: 30x30 DID YOU KNOW BC. Approx 2-6 hours per week. necessary. The Home Depot. Stores, Buy Online: homedep$6,197. 32x36 $7,746. 40x46 Computer and orginizational skills are an asset rosarioskitimat@gmail.com Must have computer with internet ot.com $12,116. 47x72 $17,779. KILL ROACHES! connection. Email resume to that literacy is more PICKLE BALL. Every Or Drop off resume to:One KITIMATBuy Harris Hours: Tues. & Wed. 9am to 1pm End607wall included. bruce.hayhurst@carltoncards.ca Roach Tablets. Eliminate KILL BED BUGS & Pioneer THEIR Legion Ave, Kitimat Thurs. 3:15pm until finished Steel 1-800-668-5422. Tuesday and Thurs- than just being able Bugs- MIDTOWN Guaranteed. No Mess, EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug www.pioneersteel.ca • COOKS • PREP-COOKS Odorless, Long Lasting. Killer Complete Treatment day, from 9:30 a.m. to to read? The Kitimat Drop off resumé at: APARTMENTS • SERVERS • BUSPERSON Available at Ace Hardware & Program or Kit. Available: Free heatDepot. & Free Hot Water Home STUCCO APPLICATORS Rosario’s Restaurant to Hardware Stores, Buy Online: The 11 a.m. at the River- Adult Literacy ProNorthern Sentinel Furnished & Unfurnished and Part-time, homedepot.com start Full-time immediately for a busy SAWMILLS FROM only 1 ƉƉůŝĐĂƟŽŶƐ ĨŽƌ dĞĂŵ DĞŵďĞƌƐ͕ ^ƵƉĞƌǀŝƐŽƌƐ ĂŶĚ WƌŽĚƵĐƟŽŶ WĞƌƐŽŶŶĞů & 2 bedrooms days/evenings. Collectors Currently stucco company located in 626 Enterprise Ave., Kitimat, BC V8C 2E4 lodge. For those aged gram provides FREE LOOKING to hire Buy aBuying: Property $4,397Security - MakeEntrances money & save KILL ROACHES! Harris experiencearea. necessary. Coin Collections, Antiques, WestNo Kelowna Position Manager forTablets. our team in Kitimat/ money with your own bandmill Roach Eliminate Food safe and serving itContact right No Pets. No Smoking 50+. Call the Kitimat tutoring services for Native Art, Old Silver, Paintstarts at $29.00/hr. Terrace.guaranteed. License and - Cut lumber any dimension. In bugsNo training mess, an asset. ings, Jewellery etc. We Deal Kevin considered @ 250-862-7418 or package available. stock 250.632.7179 ready WůĞĂƐĞ ƐĞŶĚ ƌĞƐƵŵĞƐ ƚŽ ƟmsϰϴϯϯΛgmail.com Žƌ ĂƉƉůLJ ŝŶͲƐƚŽƌĞ͘ to ship. Free Info odorless, long lasting. Wage negotiable with exp. Seniors’ Centre at 250- adult interested in imwith Estates email http://randallnorth.ca & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw Available at 778-281-0030 Ace Hardware & E-mail resume to: acestuccoltd@gmail.com mills.com/400OT 1-800-566The Home Depot. 632-3475 for further proving their reading, rosarioskitimat@gmail.com 6899 Ext:400OT. KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Or Drop off resume Transportation / Heavyto:Duty writing, math, commuinformation. STEEL BUILDINGS. Hot savRoach Tablets. Eliminate 607 Legion Ave, in Kitimat Mechanic required Nakusp, CARLTON Cards is looking for a ings - Spring sale! 20x24 BugsGuaranteed. No Mess, BC. Must be Red Seal Certinication, and informaTHE KITIMAT QUILpart time merchandiser Kitimat, $4,348. 25x24 $4,539. 30x30 Odorless, Long forLasting. fied, able to work on a variety BC. Approx 2-6 hours per week. $6,197. 32x36 $7,746. 40x46 Available at Ace Hardware & tion technology skills. TERS Guild meetings of makes, models of trucks, Must have computer with internet $12,116. 47x72 $17,779. One The Home Depot. trailers, components. A CVIP connection. Email resumeIN to 5 BDRM HOME are the first Thursday Is English NOT your End wall included. Pioneer bruce.hayhurst@carltoncards.ca Certificate, welding skills an SAWMILLS FROM only Steel 1-800-668-5422. asset. Full totime with LOOKING hireposition a Property $4,397 - TELKWA Make money & save We of every month, held first language? www.pioneersteel.ca flexible hours. ts. Manager for our Group team inbenefi Kitimat/ money with your own bandmill FOR SALE Competitive wages. or provide FREE tutoring Terrace. License and Fax training - Cut3200 lumber any dimension. In at M.E.S.S. Sewing sq ft, 4 bath, Busy store seeks a email resumes STUCCO to package available. to: 250-265stock ready APPLICATORS to ship. Free Info washer room. All experience and small group Eng3853 or whrepair@telus.net startincludes immediately for a &busy http://randallnorth.ca & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw ƉƉůŝĐĂƟŽŶƐ ĨŽƌ dĞĂŵ DĞŵďĞƌƐ͕ ^ƵƉĞƌǀŝƐŽƌƐ ĂŶĚ WƌŽĚƵĐƟŽŶ WĞƌƐŽŶŶĞů stucco mills.com/400OT 1-800-566dryer,company fridge &located stove, in Collectors Currently Buying: levels welcome. (19+) lish as a Second LanCoin Collections, Antiques, West Ext:400OT. Kelowna area. Position 6899 dishwasher Native Art, Old Silver, Paintstarts at $29.00/hr. Hot Contact Call Aileen at 250- guage (ESL) classes. STEEL BUILDINGS. savhot- tub, natural gas, or ings, Jewellery etc. We Deal Kevin @Spring 250-862-7418 WůĞĂƐĞ ƐĞŶĚ ƌĞƐƵŵĞƐ ƚŽ ƟmsϰϴϯϯΛgmail.com Žƌ ĂƉƉůLJ ŝŶͲƐƚŽƌĞ͘ CARLTON Cards is looking for a ings sale! 20x24 with Estates 778-281-0030 email part time merchandiser for Kitimat, contact 632-6225 or Wanda at For more information $4,348. 25x24 $4,539. 30x30 BC. Approx 2-6 hours per week. acestuccoltd@gmail.com $6,197. 32x36 $7,746. 40x46 250-845-3315 Must have computer with internet please call Brandi at 250-632-4458. DROWNING IN debt? Cut The candidate must love helping people, thrive on $12,116. 47x72 /$17,779. One connection. resume to Transportation Heavy Duty debts more Email than 60% & debt End wall required included. Pioneer bruce.hayhurst@carltoncards.ca 250-632-7393 or to see HEALTHY BABIES KITIMAT HOME FOR SALE Mechanic in Nakusp, customer satisfaction and have a positive can do attitude. free in half the time! Avoid Steel 1-800-668-5422. 4 bdrm in quiet BC. Must Executive be Red Seal Certibankruptcy! Free Consultation. what’s happening at www.pioneersteel.ca drop in is held every suite fineighbourhood. ed, able to work Legal on a variety If this sounds like you www.mydebtsolution.com or basement. Doubleofcarport, ofin makes, models trucks, Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 BBB the Community Corner Thursday from 10:30 STUCCO new windows, new roof, new trailers, components. A CVIP 5 BDRM HOME IN Rated A+ APPLICATORS to start immediately for a busy gas cate, furnace, new hot water Certifi welding skills an check us out at www. a.m. to 12 p.m. at the TELKWA ƉƉůŝĐĂƟŽŶƐ ĨŽƌ dĞĂŵ DĞŵďĞƌƐ͕ ^ƵƉĞƌǀŝƐŽƌƐ ĂŶĚ WƌŽĚƵĐƟŽŶ WĞƌƐŽŶŶĞů Collectors Buying: stucco located in tank, Full newCurrently waterposition line, new IF YOU company own a home or real asset. time with “We’d love to be your Jeweller” Coin Collections, Antiques, West Kelowna area. Position kitimatcommunityserKitimat Child Develperimeter, new deck. Two estate, Alpine Credits can lend flexible hours. Group benefits. FOR SALE Native Art,sheds. Oldwages. Silver, starts at $29.00/hr. storage Call PaintforFax moreor you money: It’s That Contact Simple. Competitive Upper City Centre Mall, KITIMAT 3200 sq ft, 4 bath, opment Center. They vices.ca/KALP.html or Busy store seeks a ings, Jewellery We 250-265Deal Kevin @ /250-862-7418 information Your Credit Age / Income or is email resumesetc.to: WůĞĂƐĞ ƐĞŶĚ ƌĞƐƵŵĞƐ ƚŽ ƟmsϰϴϯϯΛgmail.com Žƌ ĂƉƉůLJ ŝŶͲƐƚŽƌĞ͘ cooks@citywest.ca with 778-281-0030 includes washer & email 250-632-4616 not an issue. 1.800.587.2161. 3853Estates or whrepair@telus.net welcome families find us on facebook. acestuccoltd@gmail.com dryer, fridge & stove,
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Sports & Leisure
Trade connects us. From left to right: Brander Pacheco (15) silver 14/15 boys overall points. Alivia Soares (13) gold medal 12/13 girls overall points. Laurence Bouchier (13) first AA provincial qualifying time in 50 freestyle. Farmers like Barry Martin of Grande Prairie, Alberta depend on the Port of Prince Rupert. Our gateway connects their agricultural products to overseas markets, which means jobs and prosperity for people in northern BC. Our terminals may be located in Prince Rupert, but we’re building connections clear across Canada—and the globe. Learn about the value of trade at www.rupertport.com/connections.
Marlins compete well in PG Submitted The Kitimat Marlins had 23 swimmers attend the annual Prince George Long Course (50 meter pool) invitational swim meet. Competition was extremely tough with 300 swimmers in attendance from Prince George, Chetwyn, Tumbler Ridge, Fort St John, Grand Prairie, Kamloops, Quesnel, Williams Lake, Smithers, Terrace and Prince Rupert also in attendance. The Marlins held their own though and competed well. Alivia Soares (13) had a great meet and took the gold medal for overall points in the 12-13 year old girl division. Brander Pacheco (15) also had an excellent swim meet and took the silver medal for overall points in the 14 -15 boys division.
Laurence Boucher (13) achieved her first AA Provincial qualifying standard in 50 meter freestyle while leading off the team relay. If she qualifies for one more swim event she will be eligible to compete at the AA Provincial Championships (long course) in Victoria late June. Annika Desousa (9) had the largest one swim improvement for the Marlins, a 43 second improvement in the 100 meter freestyle. Accomplishing the tough task of swimming TO SERVE YOU BETTER long course personal best times in all their events newsroom@terracestandard.com were Charlotte Collier (11), Annika Desousa (9), advertising@terracestandard.com Leah Desousa (11), Hayden Dobbin (14), Zachnewsroom@northernsentinel.com 5/2/2014 Terrace Standard etc.indd 1 ary Dumas (14), Gabriel Lamarre (12), Hannah advertising@northernsentinel.com Pearson (11), Olivia Pearson (9), Nolan Striker classifieds@northernsentinel.com (13), Ethan Velho (13), Kemper Weightman (9) TO SERVE YOU BETTER and Morgan Winterburn (13).
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