VANCOUVER an Entry Fee of $5 a Curler

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VANCOUVER an Entry Fee of $5 a Curler / Legislative Library, OT- Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C. *a rn~. ~... Vol. 2, Issue No. 41 TERRACE, B.C., WEDNESDAY, October 8, 1986 50 (..b N i,~ II I Wildlife Shames corp.oration danger gets sk equ pment / TERRACE -- The president of the Shames throughout the coming cited Kitimat-Stikine Regional Mountain Ski Corpora- winter on the ski trails, TERRACE- Lamont District board of direc- tion. "We're excited -- and he said blasting to Bassett, a member of the tors voted unanimously this is one more hurdle build the access road to Spatzizi Association, Oct. 4 to have a contract we've gone over." the base area will also recently warned board drawn up for Sale of all Lissimore went on to continue. directors of the Kitimat- assets from the Kit- confirm that the Shames In correspondence to Stikine Regional District sumkalum Ski Hill to the corp. will open the Kit- the regional district, Ed that use of a coal-fired Shames Mountain Ski sumkalum operation for , Opal from the Ministry power generator at the Corporation. Final business during the of Forests and Lands in- Mt. Klappan coal project ratification of the con- 1986-87 season, pro- dicated that his ministry will endanger wildlife on tract will be voted on by - riding local skiing for is presently considering the Spatzizi Plateau. the board at a special Terrace-Kitimat area the formal development Bassett said the Spat- meeting Oct. 9. residents. proposal from the zizi Association has been The successful bid In the mean time, Shames Corp. The pro- closely studying the came in at $306,000 for work will continue on posal calls for develop- habits of large mammals everything on the moun- the Shames Mountain ment on 1955 hectares of such as caribou, moose, tain that isn't nailed development in an effort land in four phases with mountain goats and down, including T-bars, to meet the target com- an eventual capacity of stone sheep since 1980 chairlifts, grooming and pletion date of fall 1987. 4000 skiers per day utiliz- through the use of elec- Why wait for spring -- Do It Now! maintenance equipment, Lissimore said that log- ing a system of seven tronic telemetry. Bassett City works crews have been busy lately in painting yellow the rental shop inven- ging will go on lifts. curbs for no-parking areas. Years ago workmen used a tory, and the lodge and explained that caribou brush, but now spray painting Is "in". and, to a lesser extent, everything in it. The con- Inside Outside tract terms will be four some of the other Business Guide 14 Date HI la P!~'e¢. animals axe dependent equal payments of Church Directory 16 Sept. 29 14 9 10.4rnm on lichens as a primary. Appeals filed $76,500 with the final Classified Ads 22 Sept. 30 15 8 nil payment May 31, 1988. Coming Events 18 Oct. 1 13 :~ 1~ ram. and essential source Of TERRACE ~ The currents; will the sewage Oct. 2 12 '9 10.4ram Clean-up fees to restore Comics 21 O¢t.3 14 12 3.6ram foodi ,Due to the fact Kitimat-Stikine Regional discharge disperse even- Crossword 21 Oct. 4 14 11 14,0mm that lichens absorb ,the mountain to its Oct. 5 15 13 25.0nlm District has received a ly, or will it accumulate original condition are set Dining Directory 8 nutrients directly from Entertainment 15 Forecast: Clearing report from the B.C. in one area of the lake? at five percent of the bid the air rather than Waste Management It took six years after the Horoscope 15 trend -- sunny sky through root systems, he price, equivalent to Letters 4, 17 Thursday and Friday. Branch indicating that last operation shut down Opinions 4 said, they are extremely to clean up the bacteria. $15,300. Clouds and showers several appeals have "I guess we bought Sports 6 Wednesday. Afternoon sensitive to airborn been filed in opposition The regional district ourselves a mountain~" Stork Report 11 highs 12, ovel'nlght chemicals and sulphur in to the terms of a disposal should demand a public Talk of the Town 5 said Dennis Lissimore, lows 7. particular. Bassett told permit issued to the Mt. hearing." the board that lichen Layton Hot Springs. Eide added in clari- "deserts" are a widely Bob Marcellin, assistant fication, "Don't confuse. documented phenome- administrator for the pollution of the lake with non in industrialized regiofial district, in- development- our areas, and he added that formed board directors quarrel is with the Waste lichens have died off in a that he has confirmed by Management Branch, wide radius around telephone that a public not the developer." Prince George due to hearing will be held in In a letter to the Waste emissions from the pulp Terrace sometime in the Management Branch, mills there. near future to allow Williamson and fellow "The Spatzizi Plateau complaints to be ad- lake resident Geoff Ap- has been called the dressed. pleton Stated they are not Serengeti of the north- opposed to the hot west due to the diversity by Michael Kelly springs development, but of wildlife there and the they expressed strong variety of habitat. The Terrace resident Kol- concern about the quali- largest population of bjorn Eide addressed the ty of the drinking water Osborne caribou in the regional district board at that lakeshore residents world live there. The 30 the October 4 meeting. draw from the lake. megawatt coal-fired "The opposition to Other points in the letter generator which Gulf is sewage discharge into the include the implied considering for the Klap lake was clear at the possibility of a full year pan project, even with public meeting in Ter- operation, the fact that the use of low-sulphur race earlier this year," the operator is responsi- coal, will result in a mass Eide said. "Now I see ble for securing samples displacement of wildlife; that, instead of the sum- rather than a govern- the effect will be extreme mer operation stated in ment agency or indepen- and negative," Bassett the permit application, a dent third party, lack of said. "The association permit has been issued water flow in the has lots of concerns which will allow year- discharge canal which about the Klappan round discharge. We could lead to stagnation development. We're not have appealed, and we and unpleasant odors, opposed to the mine, but ask the regional district interference with the there are a number of to appeal as well." system by beavers, and Banquet and dinner planned alternatives to the coal- Lakelse Lake resident the possible addition of Members of the Board of Directors for the Child Development Centre In Terrace urge local burning generator. Ideal- Jim Williamson also unspecified treatment residents to attend the annual Terrace Child Development Centre banquet and dinner ly, we would like to see which takes place Saturday, Oct. 11 at the Arena Banquet Room. Board representatives spoke to the board. chemicals to the effluent. Marianne Kormendy, Dabble Sluggett and Christine Elde said It Is Important that the event Gulf use a single 138 "The Waste Manage- The regional, district Is well attended as the banquet and dinner Is the major fund-raiser of the year. Money Is kilovolt hydroelectric ment Branch is not con- board directed ad. used to aid youngsters who require professional help with physical, social, emotional and line to supply power to cerned enough about ministration to confirm languagb delay problems. The evening event begins with refreshments which will be the mine, run along the water quality in the in writing the date and served st 7 p.m. and dinner at 8 p.m. Live music will be provided by Bad Manors and cater- road transportation cor- lake," he said. "There is place for a public hear- Ing by Manuel's Restaurant. Tickets are available at the Child Development Centre, Jeans ridor." no data on the flow of ing into the matter. North or from any board member. 2 TerraceReview- Wednesday, October 8, 1986 Ex po , il e gaey where the money's gone As Terrace continues $965,000 to build an Kempf, Minister of member; the Giscombe $335,000 for a communi- toria is removed, the to wait patiently for a agricultural and his- Forests and Lands, Portage Historical Socie- ty recreation complex in NDP figure drops to ruling on its Expo torical facility at represents this riding ty will build an historic Smithers. $6.14. Total funds Legacy " Fund applica- Agassiz, restore the old which" got a total of farm in Prince George Victoria - the City of distributed as of July 23 tion, here's a look at suc- CPR station in the same $736,393 for five with a grant of $250,000. Victoria, represented by came to $20,027,784. cessful applications from community, and build a separate applications. Rossland-Trail - NDP NDP members Robin other parts of B.C. The recreation complex in. Projects will be a com- member Chris D'Arcy's Blencoe and Gordon Eligible constituencies information was obtain- Chilliwack. munity hall in Fort riding got $400,000 for a Hanson, got a whopping which have received no ed by the Terrace Review Dewdney libraries Fraser,.• a ski lodge for library in Castlegar and $7,275,000 for a conven- legacy money as of July from the office of Jim will be provided for Fort St. James, a tourist an athletic park in Trail. tion center. 23 were the NDP ridings Hewitt, the MLA for Maple Ridge and Pitt information center for Shuswap-Revelstoke Yale-Lillooet - Social of Alberni, Comox, Boundary-Similkameen Meadows and a sports Granisle, a recreation -the Revelstoke Legacy Credit member Tom Cowichan-Malahat, who is responsible for park will be built in Mis- park for Houston, and a Plaza, a community hall Waterland's riding Esquimalt-Port Ren- examining the applica- sion with $1,138,000 for community park for in Pritchard, a wharf received a total, of flew, Nanaimo, North tions and disbursing the Environment and Park Telkwa.
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