the northern view, january 16, 2013
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January 16, 2013 edition of the The Northern ViewTRANSCRIPT
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Idle no more…
Shaun Thomas / The Northern ViewGerald Stewart passionately leads the drumming at the Jan. 11 Idle No More rally held in the Rupert Square Mall. For more on the rally, see Page 3.
owners question assessments spikesBy Quinn Bender
The Northern View
Following BC Assessment’s assertion early January that properties would see a modest increase of three to seven per cent this year, some Prince Rupert residents were shocked to discover the actual numbers when they arrived in the mail.
“Ours went up $50,000!” wrote Janis Alexander-Gray on The Northern View’s Facebook page.
“I thought it was a typo.” “We could never sell our house
for what its assessed at,” read another post.
As complaints filed in to social media sites, a number of Prince Rupert residents, who claim their properties underwent no improvements in the past year,
simply wanted to know why their property’s assessment spiked upward of 25 per cent — a dollar figure ranging from $30,000 to $60,000. Prince Rupert Blvd resident France Powell saw her property jump 26 per cent.
“I understand why properties are going up in value and I’m happy to pay taxes for things like schools — that’s my duty and I’m happy to pay for community services. But when I’m presented with such a steep increase, I would like to know why.”
u SeekIng a reaSon
$5 billion pipeline planned
By DeLynda PilonBlack Press
He never doubted Canada would win the gold medal in hockey at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.
In fact, Russ Girling was even happy when the teams tied two-all. It made it more interesting.
“I had no doubt they were going to win. Similarly that’s the case for B.C.’s development of this resource,” he said.
Girling is the president and CEO of TransCanada Corp. and TransCanada Pipeline Ltd., the company chosen to design, build, own and operate the proposed $5 billion Prince Rupert Gas Transmission project for Progress Energy.
The line will move natural gas from the North Montney region (near Fort St. John) to the Pacific Northwest LNG plant which will be constructed near Prince Rupert.
Girling said at TransCanada they have the view that natural gas may be one of the most significant drivers of the economy of Canada.
“These aren’t just words. We are putting our money where our mouth is,” he said.
u lng
““I have done nothing to the building that would
justify this assessment.”-France Powell
Baffled residents see properties soar 25 per cent
See Assessment,Page 2 See LNG, Page 3
Rampage hit the ice - Page 19
Page 2 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.comNeWs
For breaking news throughout the week, visit us on the web at www.thenorthernview.com
GATEWAYperspectives
Over the last few months, I’ve talked about the precautions, the safety measures, and the selection criteria involved in the marine elements of the Gateway project — all of them intended to prevent an oil spill on water. I’ve also discussed how Gateway’s marine safety program was examined by an independent risk assessment group, which determined that the chances of a major spill are once in more than 15,000 years.
Although statistics and reports suggest a marine oil spill is unlikely, you want to know — what if one does occur? How will Gateway be prepared? While the chances are slim, we continue to develop a world-class marine response program.
The Northern Gateway Project includes a spill response capacity that’s more than three times the Canadian regulation. And while the Canadian requirement for oil spill response is 72 hours plus travel time, our response time will be a fraction of that number — 6 to 12 hours in the marine channels. This is a signifi cant increase to the response capability available to B.C.’s north coast. Additionally, for immediate response, our tug escorts will be
equipped with booms, oil skimmers, and fi refi ghting equipment to provide enhanced initial containment, and they will be available to all marine traffi c in the event of an incident.
We will store equipment, such as containment and absorbent booms, skimmers, and waste storage, in multiple well-maintained, readily accessible response bases, providing a wider area of coverage in a shorter amount of time. Barges will also be located throughout the marine channels for additional storage and equipment mobilization. We are committed to having staff, contractors, and partners in place to maintain that enhanced state of readiness.
The Gateway project will likely never see a major marine oil spill. But if it does, we’ll be prepared to protect our coastline.
Janet HolderExecutive Vice PresidentWestern AccessEnbridge Inc.
Spill response plan
Join the conversation at northerngateway.ca
©2012 Northern Gateway Pipelines Inc.
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Powell says she refurbished her front steps last year, but has done no other home improvements. Comparable homes in Prince Rupert saw similar increases, but on Powell’s street the only home that sold last year did so for 16 per cent less of its assessed value.
“I have done nothing to the building that would justify this assessment,” said Powell.”
But without a formal review of the property BC Assessment said it is unable to offer a satisfactory explanation to homeowners like Powell.
“Our appraisers look at data,” said Geoff Radkie, a deputy auditor with BC Assessment.
“They analyze current sales in the area. Some of the newer homes in Prince Rupert were indicating sales of a 25 per cent increase. If there is a similar property in that area… it’s going to reflect that market value assessment.”
“That said, we will look at the type of home too. We’re not going to value a home built in 1940 the same as a brand new home. It’s about the characteristics — the age, the quality, the size, the condition,
what kind of view or the location it’s in… [But] we do mass appraisals, so there are ones that slip through the cracks.”
Radkie added less than two per cent of Rupertites contested their assessments last year. But his department is “more than willing to review any property, and if there is a mistake that needs looking at we’ll definitely look at it and make sure it’s correct.”
Property owners who feel their assessed value doesn’t reflect the actual value can request an assessment review by calling 1-866-825-8322 or stop by the BC Assessment office at 4545 Lazelle Ave. in Terrace.
Last year, 6th Avenue West homeowner Tristan Higginson requested a review of his $123,000 assessment, resulting in a $24,000 reduction. He said the two key reasons for the reassessment was comparable listings on his block and then-unfinished home renovations.
“I showed her similar listings and she agreed with my rational,” said Higginson.
“There’s a big difference between a finished house and an unfinished one.”
Bc assessment defends valuesu exPlaININg The Process
Continued from Page 1
makINg musIc…
Shaun Thomas/The Northern ViewA new music room at Charles Hays Secondary School moved closer to securing the dollars needed to start construction with a $15,000 donation from Northern Savings Credit Union. Currently students have to travel to Prince Rupert Middle School for band practice. The new band room would be located on the flat piece of land facing Rainbow Market on Prince Rupert Blvd. Left to right: Mark Mastroianni of Northern Savings Credit Union, society president Kristy Tillman, band instructor Tristan Fox, Stefan Delloch of Northern Savings Credit Union and CHSS principal Sheila Wells.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIeW - Page 3WWW.ThenorThernVIeW.com neWs
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The point now is building transportation to get the product to off-shore markets.
Participating in new markets is nothing new to TransCanada.
It was pivotal in bringing natural gas from the west to markets in the east. In the 1950’s it took natural gas to California, and other U.S. markets.
“Today it’s one of the largest pipeline companies in North
America,” he said. “We move about 20 per cent
of the supply in North America. We are the third largest base of operations in North America. It is this long-term experience we are going to bring to B.C.”
Girling spoke about the importance of safety to TransCanada as well as social licence.
“We do recognize maintaining our social licence is based on
trust,” he said.Girling said they have a lot
of community engagement, including Aboriginal groups, adding they have engaged with more than 150 communities within 50 kilometresm of the pipeline system.
He added they have the single largest gathering system in North America.
Girling said the descriptions, which start the environmental
process, one provincial and one federal, were both filed in April. In 2013, the company will be gathering data for an advanced engineer design.
The Pacific northwest LNG project should be in service by 2018.
“We are pleased to be partners with Progress on this project,” Girling said.
The project will extend Nova
Gas further into B.C., interconnect with Prince Rupert and travel further north to connect with additional reserves.
He added 20 Aboriginal communities have already been contacted with the news. More will follow as the engagement process begins.
Approximately 2,500 people will be involved in the construction process, and there will be numerous spin-off benefits.
Transcanada hopeful Lng will flow beginning in 2018u serVIng LeLu IsLand
By Shaun ThomasThe Northern View
The upper level of the Rupert Square Mall was packed on the evening of Jan. 11 as protesters came out for another Idle No More rally.
Speakers voiced their frustration with the actions of the Federal Government, and in particular Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in relation to Aboriginal rights and the omnibus budget bill that makes changes to the environmental assessment process.
“They are trying to take away our land and our water... We are still here and we are telling you it is not for sale. Harper can have
his oil, but we will still have our land,” said Stan Dennis Sr.
“On behalf of the Tsimshian people of the North Coast: You are breaking our laws,” added Murray Smith.
Gerald Stewart called for Aboriginal people across the country to stand up and send a message to the government.
“It takes all of us to come together to preserve our rights and our self-esteem... They have been waiting a long time until they think we are weak, and maybe we are. They are ignoring us and we need to stand together,” he said.
“My hope is for the future of my children and their children so that there is something here for
them... We have nowhere else to go, so we must make a stand.”
Three mall security and two RCMP officers were on the scene and when one of the constables asked organizers to take the rally outside the group performed a prayer song in memory of Kevin Brian from Lax Kw’alaams before drumming out of the mall.
“We are a peaceful nation, we are not here to wreck anything or disturb anyone. We just want our voices heard,” said Smith, who repeatedly stressed the importance or protesting in a respectful way.
Once outside, Smith and Dennis led the procession through downtown Prince Rupert.
Idle no more protester asked to leave Prince rupert mallu makIng a sTaTemenT
Shaun Thomas / The Northern ViewStan Dennis Sr. with Murray Smith on Jan. 11.
Continued from Page 1
Page 4 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.comNeWs
Volunteers - We Need You! 250-627-1313 SVP ET MERCI!
L’Association des Francophones et Francophiles du Nord-Ouest (AFFNO) invites everyone to experience a taste of Quebec January 26 at the Jim Ciccone Civic Centre. Francophone culture, food, and family fun in a festival you’ll never forget!
The 2013 Sugar Shack Festival d’Hiver
Early-bird special 2 adult tickets for $25
until January 18!
EaRlY-bIRd PRIzE buy your tickets by January
18 and you are eligible to win a return trip for two
(with vehicle) Rupert to Haida Gwaii with bC Ferries.
Sugar Shack brunch, Sat. Jan. 26 from 11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. at the
Jim Ciccone Civic Centre.
TICkETS NoW oN SalE! at Cooks Jewellers and the affno office
(inside the Hecate Strait building)
Saturday, Jan. 26:THE SUGAR SHACK BRUNCH at the Jim Ciccone Civic Centre @ 11:00 am. Tickets are $15.00 per adult, and $10.00 per child
(12-and-under). GRAND PRIZE trip for 4
with VIA Rail return Rupert to Jasper
Call 250-627-1313 or email [email protected] for more
information. The festival runs Jan 23- 26
We will be making electrical system improvements in Kitkatla and Oona River on Wednesday, January 23, 2013. To ensure the safety of our work crews, it will be necessary to interrupt electrical service for approximately 2 hours.
Where: All of Kitkatla and Oona River When: Wednesday, January 23, 2013 Time: 10:00 am to 12:00 pm
To prepare for this interruption and protect your equipment from damage, please turn off all lights, electric heaters and major appliances and unplug all electronics.
For the first hour after the power comes back on, please only plug in or turn on those electronics and appliances that you really need. This will help ensure the electrical system does not get overloaded.
We are sorry for the inconvenience. We will restore your power as soon as we can.
Prepare for outages and stay informed by visiting bchydro.com/outages or bchydro.com/mobile from your handheld device. Please call 1 888 POWERON (1 888 769 3766) for more information. 37
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Publication: Northern Connector (BCNG)Size: 5.8125” X 106 linesInsertion date: January 18, 2012
Publication: Prince Rupert Northern View (BCNG)Size: 5.8125” X 106 linesInsertion date: January 16, 2012
NOTICE OF POWER INTERRUPTION IN KITKATLA AND OONA RIVER
By Shaun ThomasThe Northern View
Crews are on the site of the old King Edward School in Prince Rupert, as work to demolish the building gets underway.
The school, which borders the 400 block of 7th and 8th Avenue East, shut its doors in 2001 and has been boarded up since. After years of sitting empty, the province sold the school to the Metlakatla First Nation. According to Metlakatla Chief Harold Leighton, initial plans for the site did not call for the building to be torn down.
“The previous plans we had
were based on using the existing facility. The plans were for a training centre and an elders centre,” he explained.
“We did a study of the building and the life of it and that brought us to the pilings holding the structure up. It is held up by many pilings, so we tested the pilings to see if we could get an extended life out of them, but unfortunately the pilings were deteriorated to a point where it didn’t make sense to try to salvage any of them,” he said.
With the building itself no longer being left on the site, Leighton said the Band is in the
midst of determining the best use for the lot.
“Because of the cost of the demolition, we need to look at something more viable that may recover the costs over time. We’re looking at different options, residential or commercial, but we will still move forward with the original plans for it if it is feasible,” he said.
“But once you remove the pilings you have to replace them with something, so the cost is going to be pretty high to develop that property. We’ve invested a fair amount in it already, so it is still worth pursuing the development.”
metlakatla development corp. tears down King edwardu PIlINgs uNusable
By Quinn BenderThe Northern View
A new officer-in-charge has been assigned to the Prince Rupert RCMP detachment, but at press time both City hall and the police force are
not releasing a name. Prince Rupert Mayor Jack Mussallem said he and council were active in the RCMP’s selection process. They chose a candidate with a background in municipalities similar to Prince Rupert, which serves as a hub
to outlying communities. Most importantly, said Mussallem, he and council sought someone experienced in dealing with an influx of workforce personnel due to municipal growth.
“We will experience that as
more and more port facilities develop,” said Mussallem. “When you have that kind of growth there are considerations you have to make for policing services, for health services, for fire and rescue services. There are a variety of
considerations.”Outgoing Inspector Bob
Killbery retires this month. No official start date has been set for the new officer-in-charge. Mussallem will release the officer’s name once he or she arrives in the city.
city confirms new inspector hired for rcmP detachmentu Name NoT yeT KNoWN
Shaun Thomas/The Northern ViewCrews spent last week beginning the demolition of King Edward School.
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wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIew - Page 5www.ThenorThernVIew.com news
J & E’s TackleWestern Canada Fire Protection
Port of Prince RupertPrince Rupert GrainHarbour MachineTraylings Tackle
Broadwater IndustriesAcklands Granger
Pacific Net & TwineThe Crest Hotel
MarinexWayne LundmanSomething Fishy
Sea Sport Outboard MarinaRupert Wood’n Steel
Certified WeldingAffno
Rupert MeatsPR Charters Mel Kemper
Norm’s Reel Repair
Maher TerminalFar West Sports
Entire AutomotiveDesautels Family
SlickersCanadian Fishing Company
Progressive SteelJM Contracting
Eddy Vermeeren/ Steve WardillBreakers Pub
Rainbow ChryslerKen Copping
HawkairPrince Rupert Northern View
Stuck on DesignAstral Media
Northwest FuelsMavrick Foods
Bank of Montreal
20th AnnuAl MArc (Dezi) DesAutels MeMoriAl Blue KnucKle DerBy
Without you our event would not have been the success it was. Please forgive us if we have inadvertently forgot
to list your name.
THANK YOU
The PRINCE RUPERT LIONS CLUB would like to say
to the participants and sponsors of our Press Release
The Prince Rupert Community Enrichment Society is proud to announce that the society has once again achieved a 4 year accreditation through Council on Accreditation.
COA accreditation is an objective, independent, and reliable validation of an agency’s performance. The COA accreditation process involves a detailed review and analysis of an organization’s administration, management, and service delivery functions against international standards of best practice. The standards driving accreditation ensure that services are well-coordinated, culturally competent, evidence-based, outcomes-oriented, and provided by a skilled and supported workforce. COA accreditation demonstrates accountability in the management of resources, sets standardized best practice thresholds for service and administration, and increases organizational capacity and accountability by creating a framework for ongoing quality improvement.
To achieve COA accreditation, the Prince Rupert Community Enrichment Society first provided written evidence of compliance with the COA Standards. Thereafter, a group of specially trained volunteer Peer Reviewers confirmed adherence to these standards during a series of on-site interviews with trustees, staff and clients.
Based on their findings, COA’s volunteer-based Accreditation Commission voted that the Prince Rupert Community Enrichment Society had successfully met the criteria for accreditation.Thank you to all who participated in this process.
MEClattenburgMary ClattenburgAdministrative Director
“Providing 32 years of service to the community” “We are here to provide support for change”
PRINCE RUPERT COMMUNITY ENRICHMENT SOCIETY
2012/2013 Resource Directory is now available at office. Resources are $10.00 per directory Please call 250-627-7166; ask for Mary Clattenburg or Esther Stewart.,
and or contact via email: [email protected], or [email protected]
710 Fraser Street Prince Rupert, B.C. V8J 1P9
Ph: 250-627-7166 Fax: 250-627-7482 Email: [email protected]
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By Shaun ThomasThe Northern View
More than $7 million of property was sold in Prince Rupert in 2012 than in 2011.
A total of 160 properties worth $26.8 million were sold in 2012 compared to 116 properties worth $19.3 million in 2011 — a difference of 44 properties and $7.5 million.
Of those properties, 127 were single family homes and the average selling price was $183,896. The numbers for 2012 are the highest in three years, as in 2011 there were 96 homes sold for an average of $175,217 and in 2010 there were 97 homes sold for an average of $179,090. In addition to the single family homes, there were five half-duplexes and 10 parcels of vacant
land sold during the year. “I think these sales can be
attributed to incoming investment and jobs in Prince Rupert. People are no longer leaving Prince Rupert to find work, and in fact the opposite is true and we have people coming to Prince Rupert for work,” said Keith Lambourne of Royal LePage Prince Rupert.
“We’ve left the buyer’s market behind, in my opinion. There have been multiple offers on a number of properties, and I think that is only going to continue in 2013.”
Another success story, said Lambourne, is the turnaround in commercial property sales in the community.
“For the first time in five years we are seeing significant activity in the commercial real estate sector, driven by incoming
investment and the high paying jobs coming with port activity,” he said.
“Charles Hays’ dream may have taken over 100 years to come true, but I think that is where we are going in the years ahead.”
However, Prince Rupert still has the lowest number of properties sold in the northwest. Neighbouring Terrace had 318 properties worth $65.9 million sell in 2012, Kitimat had 239 properties worth $41.3 million sell and Smithers had 235 properties worth $59.1 million sell.
The average selling price of homes in Prince Rupert was lower than in Smithers and Terrace, at $258,808 and $215,778 respectively, and was slightly higher than Kitimat’s $181,074.
home sales at a three-year highu realTy markeT
By Martina PerryThe Northern View
Prince Rupert RCMP executed a search warrant at a residence in
the early morning of Jan. 5 and seized several ounces of illegal drugs.
RCMP told the Prince Rupert Northern View a traffic stop
led to the seizure of cocaine on an individual. Further investigation led to the execution of a search warrant on Heron Road where investigators seized
approximately three ounces of cocaine and five ounces of marijuana, as well as items used in the trafficking of the drugs.
The investigation is ongoing,
and no charges have been laid at this time.
RCMP asking anyone that may have information regarding this incident to call 250-627-0700.
rcmP seize cocaine, marijuana from heron road home u crIme
TakIng home The TV…
Shaun Thomas/The Northern ViewChie Orton and her daughter Kiri were the winners of a 50 inch 3D TV and Blu-Ray home theatre system from Safeway. Another similar prize will be drawn later this month. Orton accepts the TV from Mike De Lima, Ranjit Gill and Navjot Chahal of Safeway.
British Colum-bia’s educa-tion system
is changing, so it only makes sense to modify the current standardized testing model of the Foun-dation Skills Assess-ment Test.
The British C o l u m b i a n government wants to modernize the education system by making it more flexible and responsive to students
I do agree a test to helps determine what area schools and teachers need to work on is a good idea, however the current model isn’t working. It’s widely known that students who come from wealthy families tend to do better in school than those who come from less fortunate families.
A report done by Moneysense magazine stated Prince Rupert’s unemployment rate was the second worst in Canada in the spring, which leads me to believe many of our school district’s children fall under the likely-to-not-do-as-well-as-wealthy-students umbrella.
Example of this? The Fraser Institute uses results to rank schools
in British Columbia, with private schools nearly always performing better than public.
Another problem with FSA testing is there’s little motivation for students to want to put all their efforts into the test. I remember being in Grade 7 and thinking if the test didn’t count as part of my final grade, why even bother?
It’s hard to motivate a child to care about performing at their greatest abilities on a test that doesn’t even count as part of their grade, but just a way for the government to see what areas schools need to work on.
One thing I keep hearing is “oh, of course teachers don’t like the current model, it shows when they’re not doing their job”.
How could the results reflect teachers’ abilities when there are so many other factors contributing to how students perform on the tests?
Pulling up to the Rupert Square Mall on Friday night, one couldn’t help
but notice the two police cruis-ers parked outside the upper entrance.
Of course, the reason for those of cruisers became evident when the throngs of people standing in the entry way came into sight.
The Idle No More movement once again took to the mall to send a message about their frustration with the Conservative government’s handling of Aboriginal issues. Unlike last time, however, there were two RCMP constables standing in the crowd, in addition to the three mall security guards standing beside mall owner Tom Cheng.
And when organizers took the megaphone and announced that the constables had requested the
rally move outside, there was an audible groan and a few shouts of unfairness due to the cold temperature and the elders present.
It was a situation that could have gone badly really quickly, given the numbers that were there, but it didn’t. Instead, the group played a prayer song in remembrance of the young Lax Kw’alaams man who was killed in an accident on the highway last week before drumming those in attendance outside to continue the rally.
The constables and the mall security let them finish and move on peacefully to drum through downtown.
In this case, everyone
involved is to be commended, but in particularly elder Murray Smith.
W h i l e everyone else was trying to figure out how to react to the request to leave the mall, Smith took the m e g a p h o n e and stressed the importance of respect — of the
government respecting First Nations and of those in the mall respecting the wishes of the owners. As Smith said, the Idle No More movement needs to be done in a respectful manner.
Idle No More is a movement that has garnered national attention and gained significant momentum, bolstered in
large part by the hunger strike staged by Attawapiskat chief Theresa Spence in Ottawa. While other rallies in other parts of the country have blocked highways and railways, here on the north coast the rallies have been peaceful, with one at the courthouse and two in the mall.
These types of rallies may not garner the same national attention as those designed to create conflict, but they send a message that things need to change.
And showing the impact of peaceful protests of this nature across the country, Friday’s rally came on the same day as the Assembly of First Nations met with Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Governor General David Johnston to discuss their concerns in a respectful manner.
As Smith said, it is all about respect.
Prince Rupert’s Idle No More all about respect
737 Fraser Street, Prince Rupert, B.C Ph: 250-624-8088 Fax: 250-624-8085 [email protected] www.thenorthernview.com
B.C. Press Council: The Northern View is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.BCpresscouncil.org
Shaun ThomasEditor
Martina PerryReporter
Lisa ThomasProduction
Ed EvansSales
Todd HamiltonPublisher
Adeline IgnasReception
Current FSA testing not working
ShAuN ThoMAS
The Prince Rupert Northern View, a politically independent community newspaper is a Division of Black Press Group Ltd. and is published every Wednesday in Prince Rupert B.C. at 737 Fraser Street, Prince Rupert, B.C, V8J 1R1. Phone (250) 624-8088, Fax (250) 624-8085. All material contained in this publication is protected by copyright. Reproduction in whole or in part is expressly prohibited without prior consent.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 THe nOrTHern VIeW - PaGe 6WWW.THenOrTHernVIeW.cOmPrInce ruPerT nOrTHern VIeW
MARTINA PeRRy
Editor:As the joint review panel
hearings wrapped up this week in Victoria, I feel grateful to have been one of a select few able to voice their opinion directly to the three-member panel.
With only 10 minutes to speak and two Enbridge representatives present (while the public was banned), I provided all the research and data I have found. In my opinion, the proposed tanker route is too dangerous for safe navigation.
Ironically, one report I found was completed for Northern Gateway Pipelines LP, (available on the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency website). It revealed that during simulated
tanker runs, pilots often gave the simulations a safety rating of two or three out of a possible five.
The report also revealed that these large vessels will travel through areas such as Principe Channel, which is just 1.4 kilometres wide.
Such vessels have a full turn radius of 1.8 km and can take up to 3.75 km to come to a full stop while running astern at 10 knots.
We have to keep in mind, that each of these vessels is carrying 1.5 million litres in fuel oil alone. Plus, coastal currents can reach up to 16 nautical miles per hour.
Winter storms frequently bring gale force and hurricane
force winds, and we cannot ignore the risk posed from earthquakes, such as the 7.8-magnitude event off the coast of Haida Gwaii a mere four months ago.
The risks are too great, and this is just a small portion of the concerning information I found.
While many were unable to voice their own opinions to the panel, I sincerely encourage all British Columbians to continue to investigate and question the proposed project, in order to protect our beautiful, unique and sensitive coastal ecosystems.
Julie Howe, LangfordAssistant lab instructor,
Royal Roads University
wednesday, January 16, 2012 - The norThern VIew - Page 7www.ThenorThernVIew.com oPInIon
TrIsTen rePoleJordan squIres glen Bellamy andrea danTas
“No I don’t. It’s too icy and full of snow.”
“I wait for the roads to clear up. Too much black ice. I don’t feel
safe.”
“No. The out-of-town drivers don’t know the
conditions.”
“No. I try not to drive in the winter. I drive safe
but what about the other driver?”
on The sTreeT
wITh quInn Benderdo you feel safe driving highway 16
in the winter?
Editor: Re: Will LNG become the
enviro-villain of 2013, Jan. 2 Prince Rupert Northern View.
At first reading of reporter Tom Fletcher’s confused missive sent to us from the smoggy confines of downtown Victoria, published in The Northern View under an attention grabber header, I felt angry but probably not for the reasons for which Mr.Fletcher was fishing.
He casts about taking shots at First Nations for wanting to develop sustainable industries that will benefit coastal communities and then from out of the wild blue yonder, misaligns the Yellowstone to Yukon conservation initiative over in the Rockies. The following terrifying mission statement from their website has Mr. Fletcher quaking in his slippers, “People working together to maintain and restore the unique heritage of the Yellowstone to Yukon region.”
Then he gets up on his high horse and condemns Canadian organizations who accept money from American outfits to help
fund a broader discussion into the activities of American and the other foreign investors who are lined up at our door ready to pour in billions of dollars, so that presumably they will take out of the country billions and billions of dollars in profit by reselling our resources. One gets the impression that Mr. Fletcher thinks foreign companies invest billions out of the goodness of the heart and that those who might have a question or two about these massive projects are suspect and in his words “eco-propagandists”.
British Columbians, as stewards of our lands and waters are currently writing the history of how we manage our resources. We are deciding how much foreign investment is appropriate, what type of
projects are environmentally sound or not, where the risks are or not, what our benefits will be or not? I have no problem with an in depth discussion around these critical and far reaching questions and it does not frighten nor upset me if outsiders, proponent or otherwise fund our discussions about our resources. So they should as long as there is disclosure and it’s all taxable income. That said we need to be aware that foreign ideological battles follow their money.
Mr. Fletcher’s lazy journalism, if you can call it journalism, is easy enough to sort out, also that he writes like a shill. But I do take exception to his cynical and high-handed attitude where he belittles local people’s interests and to his methods, which are to manipulate emotions and peddle mischief. We need intelligent and considered journalism so that good decision-making is supported, not this petty nonsense.
Peter ChristensenOona River, B.C.
leTTers To The edITor
Fletcher way off base with column on environmentalism
”“I do take exception to his cynical and high
handed attitude...”
Enbridge tanker route is simply too risky
Ridley Island Corridor Project LaunchedThis week marks the
official start of the Ridley Island Road,
Rail Utility Corridor proj-ect in Prince Rupert, and with it comes some significant changes to the indus-trial site that is currently home to Prince Rupert Grain and Ridley Terminals Inc.
The Road, Rail and Utility Corridor (RRUC) is a $90 million project that will create shared infrastructure for future terminal developments on Ridley Island, 17 kilometres from downtown Prince Rupert. The industrial site is administered by the Prince Rupert Port Authority.
The face of Ridley Island began to change over one year ago when Ridley Terminals Inc. began its Capacity Realization Project. 44 acres of new lands were cleared for expansion. A third stacker/reclaimer machine arrived late in 2012.
Now the pace of change has picked up. Surveyors for the RRUC arrived onsite this week, and construction crews are scheduled to break ground February 1st. They will begin work that could involve up to 90 workers by the end of March.
Given the scope of these projects, the entirety of Ridley Island is now classified as an active construction zone. Even stricter safety protocols for workers and visitors are expected to take effect before the end of January.
Of course, the flow of goods through Prince Rupert Grain and RTI needs to continue unimpeded. Ridley Island users will be meeting regularly to discuss how regular operations can be streamlined in the midst of the major project. They will consider improved safety measures such as a reduction in the speed limit for the Ridley Island road from 50 km/hr to 30 km/hr.
“The safety of everyone on Ridley Island is a priority for us and the terminal operators,” says Kerry Northcott, Health and Safety Officer for the RRUC project. “With that in mind, we’ll be discussing ways to maintain the high safety standards that already exist and discuss the potential of new policies that will have the least amount of impact to operations.”
The initial work on the RRUC will take place on the eastern side of Ridley Island along Porpoise Harbour. Construction crews will be working during daylight hours, taking into consideration the residents of Port Edward that may be affected by noise from the work sites across the harbour.
The RRUC Site Office was established on the island late in 2012. The project team is now stationed there for the duration of work.
The RRUC project team includes Project Accountant Joanne Donohoe, Field Superintendent Carlito Guzman, Health and Safety Officer Kerry Northcott, and Project Manager Roger Morin, with an Administrative Assistant to join later this month.
“We’re a small team, but we’re very energetic,” says Morin. “We’ve already been working together for several months to bring the project to this point, so it’s exciting for us to now have construction about to proceed.”
The Prince Rupert Port Authority will be launching a public webcam through its website that will give Prince Rupert residents—and the rest of the world—a birds-eye-view of the Ridley Island Road, Rail and Utility Corridor project in action.
The new feature will be available online at www.rupertport.com following the groundbreaking in February.
Re:port is a collaborative promotional venture by the Prince Rupert Port Authority and The Northern View.
Photo by Prince Rupert Port AuthorityPOISED FOR GROWTH: The Ridley Island Industrial Site will be ringed by a roadway, railway tracks, and utility services. The $90 million dollar project is funded by the Government of Canada, the Province of BC, CN Rail, and the Prince Rupert Port Authority.
RE:PORTRE:PORTRE:PORT
PORTCOLUMN number 000.indd 1 2013-01-14 2:46 PM
Page 8 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.comBusINess
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By Shaun ThomasThe Northern View
Documents obtained by the Prince Rupert Northern View show Northern Health and the IUOE are still far apart when it comes to remedies stemming from an Oct. 31 Labour Relations Board (LRB) ruling.
A Dec. 21 letter to the B.C. Labour Relations Board from Moore, Edgar, Lyster, the lawyers representing the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE), lists eight remedies being sought. These include reinstating the power engineers to the positions they held previously; compensating three of the five for monetary losses; an order
prohibiting the employer from engaging in acts that would achieve the same objective as this situation; continuing the power engineer positions; not changing those positions except under certain positions; posting future maintenance positions as IUOE jobs, and reimbursing the IUOE be for legal fees and other fees associated with the dispute. The union is further asking that former manager of facilities and support services Michael Curnes, health services administrator Sheila Gordon-Payne, northwest region human resources manager Fred Alaggia, director of strategic labour relations Fred Cummings and former Northern Health COO Marina Ellison, “have no further involvement in future
decisions affecting the power engineers”. “They have all participated in a deceitful
anti-union scheme. They should not be permitted to engage in any further discussions or decisions about these jobs and their unions. Their conduct, both in engaging in this initiative and in the board’s proceedings, make this clear,” Richard Edgar of Moore, Edgar, Lyster states in the letter to the LRB.
An earlier letter from Harris and Company, the lawyers representing Northern Health, states that remediation to the union should be minimal, if at all, based on the fact that the IUOE is on record as not objecting to the change in technology that saw the old steam boilers replaced with new electrical boilers.
“The effect of the IUOE not objecting to technological change is that it is not now in a position to claim any remedy that is based or founded on the pre-technological change situation at Prince Rupert Regional Hospital,” Peter Csiszar of Harris and Company states.
Northern Health contends there is no need for the engineers to be reinstated because the IUOE positions were changed due to the move to electrical boilers.
“There can be no legal basis for this employer to have power engineer positions which are not required with the technology that the IUOE accepts as having been appropriate for the employer to implement,” Csiszar stated.
Northern health, Iuoe still far apart after LrB ruling u aNTI-uNIoN acTIVITIes
By Rod LinkBlack Press
My Mountain Co-op announced on Jan. 11 the formal completion of the deal that gives them ownership of the Shames Mountain Ski Area.
On Dec. 21, 2012 the provincial government’s forests, lands and natural resources ministry transferred the operating agreement for the ski facility from the ski corporation to the co-op.
That move followed the payment by the ski corporation to the province of $125,000 to close the books on an unpaid tourism development loan that dates back years.
Paying the $125,000 to wind up the loan was a condition of the operating agreement being assigned to the co-op.
The payment was part of an agreement released in November 2012 which cleared the way for the non profit co-op to purchase the ski facility. The province wrote off the remaining part of the tourism loan, which is approximately $400,000, in return for the $125,000 payment from the ski corporation.
Shames Mountain Ski Corporation president Gerry Martin said the $125,000 was part of the purchase price paid by My Mountain Co-op in late 2011 to the corporation.
“It was being held in trust so that we could
pay the government,” said Martin.The transfer of the operating agreement
is about the last of the official transactions between the co-op and the ski corporation, he added.
Although the ski corporation dropped its original asking price drastically so that the co-op could make the purchase, Martin said the purchase to the co-op was the “best solution” to keeping the mountain open and in local hands.
“The co-op has had good support from people, from businesses and local governments. It’s had a good response from the public because they feel a part of the ownership,” Martin continued.
“It’s good for all of the communities in the area.”
Martin said good snow conditions last year and this year have helped the co-op establish itself.
Also owed the province was $130,000 in unpaid royalties and interest, an amount that was reduced to $88,579 when $46,767 in interest was written off by the province. The co-op agreed to take on the $88,579 debt and will repay it with interest over the next 10 years.
The co-op had paid the ski corporation $360,000 in 2011 to buy the ski facility and has been operating it under a lease pending a resolution of the money owed the province.
my mountain co-op finalizes ownership of shames mountainu securINg The fuTure of skIINg
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Wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIeW - Page 9WWW.ThenorThernVIeW.com
54th Annual All NativeBasketball Tournament
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New Year New LocatioN!
Call 250-627-5003 Office Hours: Monday to Friday 9:00am to 5:00pm
Macro properties
We Moved to
115 - 3rd St
Come And See The New office
Special Thanks to our Title Sponsor Prince ruPerT PorT AuThoriTy
Tickets available at Farwest Sports, Northern Savings Credit Union, Oceanside Sports,
Rupert Cleaners and Stuck On Designs
Sat. Jan, 19 Puck drops at 8:00
VS
By DonnaThe Northern View
Monday Cribbage Results: 1st-L. Mak and M. Stegavig, 2nd-A/ Johanson & R. Basso, 3rd-M. Gardiner & M. Arneson. Thursday: 1st-E. Page & Mary Shrubsall, 2nd-
S. Helgason & M. Gardiner, 3rd-M. Dickens and J. Christison.
We didn’t manage to get a quorum together for our January General Meeting, but we have a few directors still on vacation and there are a few feeling a bit under the weather. Hope everyone is feeling
better soon and everyone else has had their flu shot, it’s not too late…
Thank you to everyone who attended our Pancake Breakfast, it was our first after the Christmas Break and people are a little slow to get back into the routine of things so hoping for a little better turnout
come February.We were sorry to see that a few
of our friends at Acropolis Manor were down with the Noro Virus but happy to hear that things are getting better health wise up there.
We missed them at Bingo these last few weeks.
P.S. Waiting to hear from the Dart players when they’ll be starting up again, but I believe it’s sometime this month and they plan to play Mondays at 1 p.m. This is drop-in, if you are interested in darts please give me a call 627-1900.
Weekly notes from the Prince rupert seniors centreu uPdaTe
By Martina PerryThe Northern View
Francophone entertainers, film and food will all be part of the third annual Sugar Shack Festival L’Association des Francophones et Francophiles du Nord-Ouest (AFFNO) is currently preparing for.
“The Sugar Shack Festival celebrates francophone culture and in some cases introduces people to it… One of AFFNO’s goals is to get people more interested in the language,” Patrick Witwicki, executive director of AFFNO, said.
The festival will start with a kick-off social at Cowpuccino’s on Wednesday, Jan. 23, starting at 7 p.m.
The following evening the Prince Rupert Community Arts Council will play a francophone film at the Prince Rupert Cinema starting at 7 p.m.
For this year’s festival, a francophone artist will be travelling to Prince Rupert to entertain Sugar Shack attendees and to also educate local students on the French culture. Angela Roy of the musical group L’Expression Collective will be holding workshops at both Roosevelt E’cole and Prince Rupert Middle School throughout the week, and then will be joined by her bandmates for a performance at the Tom Rooney Playhouse at 8 p.m. on Jan. 25, where they will show off their folk/reggae sound to an adult-only crowd.
The festival will wrap up with the main event, the Sugar Shack Brunch, which will take place on Jan. 26 starting at 11 a.m. in the Dick St. Louis auditorium at the civic centre. The traditional brunch will include tortières and sugar pie, as well as the children-favourite, maple toffee served on snow.
L’Expression Collective will also be providing entertainment at the brunch, with more family oriented music than their Tom Rooney performance.
Tickets for L’Expression Collective performance at the Tom Rooney can be purchased at Teddy’s or at the door. Tickets for the brunch can be purchased at Cook’s Jewellers or through the AFFNO office at 250-627-1313.
sugar shack Festival expandingu FreNch culTure exPerIeNce
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salVaTIoN army suPPorT…
Martina Perry / The Northern ViewMembers of the Prince Rupert Lions Club presented a cheque for $5,120.91 to Captain Gary Sheils of the Salvation Army, centre, from the 20th annual Marc Desautels Memorial Blue Knuckle Derby held in December. Pictured are Lions Mike Kaardal, very left, Jim Martin, third on left, Wayne R. Lundman, third from right, and Paul Hurlburt, second from right. Also pictured is Jeff Carlson, very right, of J&E Tackle which donated the $1,000 grand prize and Fabien Pealey of Western Canada Fire Protection which donated $500 for the second place prize.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIeW - Page 11WWW.ThenorThernVIeW.com
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PRODUCTION NOTES
FINALS TO PRODUCTION
REVs
1 4PDF
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Page 12 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.comarTs aNd eNTerTaINmeNT
Call Mike MorseBuying? Selling?
Personal Real Estate Corporation
of course!147 - 5th Avenue West
This well maintained character home is centrallylocated. Take shelter on rainy days in the enclosed frontentry which offers access to a full-height dry basement.The house features a renovated bathroom with a clawfoot tub, upgraded electrical, and a new roof in 2010.Also featured are refinished fir floors, an open layout,2 large bedrooms and a study.
$178,000 MLS
716 - 6th Avenue WestThis 2 bedroom, 2 bath home has an open, brightlayout. The large kitchen has ample counterspace, and opens to the dining room and livingroom. Upstairs there is a spacious loft whichenjoys a view of the harbour. This home is cleanand tidy with vinyl siding & some newer vinylwindows. Outside, there is a fenced front yard andlane access parking.
$139,000 MLS
1871 Sloan AvenueWalk inside this 3 storey, 4 bedroom, 3 bath familyhome and be treated to an open entrance way, hard-wood floors and a functional layout. The master bed-room features a 3 piece ensuite and walk-in closet.The bright kitchen is equipped with an island, stain-less appliances, white shaker style cabinets and agarden window. There is a rec room on the groundlevel which walks out onto the fenced backyard.
$269,000 MLS
Serving Prince Rupert & AreaCoast Mountains
Cell Phone 250.624.1665Website www.mikemorse.ca
For full screen photos of these homes,please visit www.mikemorse.ca
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
Join other small businesses across B.C. who are saving money and reducing energy use by participating in the LiveSmart BC Small Business Program. A Business Energy Advisor willhelp you identify opportunities for energy reductions with lighting & hot water, apply for incentives and connect with contractors to complete upgrades. Gary Rysavy is the Business Energy Advisor for the North West region, from the Queen Charlottes Islands to Burns Lake.
Go Green and Save!
To � nd out more about the program or to book your FREE assessment, email Gary at
[email protected] or call him at
250.641.1553 or visit us online at
http://www.terracechamber.com/content/livesmart-bc-small-business-program.
A very special thank you to all who supported KAPS in the purchase of our raffle tickets and to those volunteers who
sold tickets on our behalf. The KAPS programs will be greatly enhanced with the infusion of funds.
Kaien Anti Poverty Society raffle winners are:
Melanie Basso - 1st prize Killer Whale wall hanging by Tracy Hughes
Kathleen Bennett - 2nd prize Air fare for 2 to Vancouver on Hawk Air
Jackie Bromley - 3rd prize Silver & gold pendant by James Sawyer
Prizes generously donated by Ridley Terminals Inc were the wall hanging and pendant and
Hawk Air donated the air fare for 2.
calmer, cleaner madchild still rocks stageSwollen Members frontman targets Prince Rupert for solo performance
Shane Bunting (“MadChild”) solo album, Dope Sick, a collection of tracks largely inspired by his recovery from drug addiction.
By Quinn BenderThe Northern View
When a course-voiced and groggy Shane Bunting answers the phone for our 1 p.m. interview, he apologetically asks for 10 more minutes. He and Swollen Members bandmate Rob the Viking were massaging some new studio tracks until early in the morning and he needs some time to wake up.
It’s a new side to Bunting (or Madchild as he’s known to fans). Not the long nights, of course, but how the Vancouver-based hip-hop star is spending those hours. Two years ago he pulled the plug on a notorious drug addiction and has focused ever since on personal well being. That includes a level of honesty and commitment to his recording career, but also to those around
him — whomever it may be: a relative, an audience or a reporter 1,500 kilometres away.
I give him 20 minutes and he’s noticeably more alert and articulate.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I push myself
extremely hard, but I’m mature enough and wise enough to know if I need a break in the middle of the day or need to sleep in, I need to give myself permission for that.”
Bunting, on tour for his solo album Dope Sick, which debuted last August on the Canadian Billboard chart at No. 3, is slated to perform at the Surf Club Jan. 18 and 19. The solo album is almost entirely dedicated to Bunting’s experience with drug addiction (by which he lost millions —roughly $500,000 to the OxyContin habit itself and millions more to neglected business investments.) Critics have applauded the clean and sober album for capturing a talented lyricist at the top of his game.
“Dope Sick has some dark songs, but it also has songs of celebration, of coming out into the light and climbing that mountain.”
Without question, this album has a message Bunting hopes people will hear. But he says it’s the last time he’ll reflect so deeply on his past drug addiction.
“This album is a cap on that part of my life,” says Bunting.
“It’s time to move forward and stop living in the past. Yeah, I have platinum records, but those are from nine years ago.
See Hip Hop, Page 13
Not AdvertisingIs like locking the door to your future
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIeW - Page 13WWW.ThenorThernVIeW.com
“For a person like me, and a lot of people out there, you have to keep striving for success and keep striving to be your best.
“For five years I was down for the count. When I got sober again and was myself again, it was very important for me that this journey not be over.
“I truly believe now that you have to keep making yourself happy—it might be showing your skills, it might be starting a family, it might be getting that promotion or loosing 30 pounds and getting healthy—whatever. The point is, what are you doing now? What are you doing to feel good about yourself today?”
Dope Sick might be laced with messages, but Bunting insists he’s not a preacher and his show is not a pulpit.
“Let’s not forget, the main thing is to have fun. If you come to my show it’s not going to be a lecture. I don’t drink or do drugs anymore, but I still rock out and have a blast. The great thing is I remember it the next day.”
Swollen Members bandmate, Rob the Viking, will be appearing to help with some of the band’s hits.
hip hop star leaving past behind him
Continued from Page 12
heaTed laughTer...
Martina Perry / The Northern ViewCanadian comedian Chris Campbell performs for a Prince Rupert audience last weekend as part of the Snowed In Comedy Tour, an international group of headlining comedians also including Arj Barker, Craig Campbell, Pete Johansson and Dan Quinn.
For breaking news throughout the week, visit us on the web at www.thenorthernview.com
arTs and enTerTaInmenT
Crossword answers
Page 14 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.com
Crossword See page 13 for answers
CLUES ACROSS 1. Tooth caregiver 4. Greek counterpart of Rhea 7. A numbered mail compartment (abbr.) 10. New Zealand parrots 12. Political action committees 14. Fringe-toed lizard 15. Reposes 17. Winglike structures 18. MacMurray of “My Three Sons” 19. Oprah’s Broadway show 22. Ceaser, egg and tossed 23. Oarlock 24. Agile, lively (nautical) 25. Skim or dart 26. And, Latin 27. Embodies 28. Gallivants 30. Hyperbolic cosecant 32. Rural delivery 33. Atomic #89 34. Opposite of wealthy 36. Imus and Knotts
39. Yellow ageratum species 41. Large tropical Am. lizard 43. Late Show star 46. Armor breastplate 47. “Death in the Family” author 48. Liquors from rice 50. Bread for a burger 51. Yeast 52. 100 = 1 tala in W. Samoa 53. Two-year-old sheep 54. Hyrax or cony 55. Engine additive CLUES DOWN 1. Danish krone (abbr.) 2. Insect repellents 3. Move sideways 4. October’s birthstones 5. __ Alto, California city 6. Mark of healed tissue 7. Somewhat purple 8. Egg mixture cooked until just set 9. Past tense of bid 11. Ancient stone slab bearing markings
13. 9th month (abbr.) 16. Thrown into a fright 18. A playful antic 20. “Waiting for Lefty” playwright 21. Ultrahigh frequency 28. Cutting gun barrel spirals 29. Youth loved by Aphrodite 30. Get by begging 31. Cleans by scrubbing vigorously 34. Bubonic calamity 35. Radioactivity unit 37. Bow (Sanskrit) 38. Legless reptiles 40. Thick piece of something 41. A distinct part of a list 42. Regarding (Scottish prep.) 43. Something that is owed 44. Mild exclamation 45. River in Spain 49. Variation of 17 down
Tree of lIfe…
Shaun Thomas / The Northern ViewCherie Davies of the North Coast Transition Society accepts a cheque for $2,077 from Amber Jackson and Shawna Kontzie of Shopper’s Drug Mart. The money was raised last fall during the Tree of Life Campaign.
comINg eVeNTsNorth CoastFEB. 24: Kaien Anti-Poverty Society An-nual General Meeting will be held at 2pm in 567 McKay St. Membership fee to be paid prior to the annual meeting. Everyone is welcome.
ONGOING
November & ongoing: Meetings for Prostate and Bladder cancer support group cancelled for the immediate future.
Friendship House of Prince Rupert Hosts: AamaGoot_Power Puff Girlz Club (ages 7-12), Tuesdays 3pm - 5pm, 3rd floor meeting rm. AamaGoot Women’s Carving “Learn to Carve” Wednesday eve. 6pm - 9pm, Main level-back entrance. AamaGoot Ladyz Club (18yrs +), Learn new artistic designs through sewing, beading, etc. Saturdays 1pm - 4pm, 3rd floor meeting rm. Contact Carol Doolan @ Friendship House 250-627-1717, ext. 64 for more information.
Kaien Anti-Poverty Society is seeking persons interested in becoming members of a group who wish to make positive changes for those living below the poverty line. For more info, call KAPS 250-627-5277, leave message.
Cornerstone MB Church: Coffee mornings @ 202-6th Ave. W. Tue & Wed 10am - noon, Sunday Celebration 10:30 every week. All are welcome! 250-627-1033
TOPS (Take off pounds sensibly) Prince Rupert meets Monday evenings in the basement of the Fellowship Baptist Church - 651-7th Ave. East. Weigh-in 6:30, meeting at 7:00. For more information call Lucille 250-624-2777.
School District 52 Band Program is look-ing for donations of band instruments! Help us bring music to all students by donating that trumpet you have in your basement or the saxophone in your coat closet! If you have a band instrument that no one is play-ing, please call Sandy Jones at 250-624-5031 ext. 226 for pick up.
The Heritage Advisory Committee is look-ing for new members, if you are interested please drop a note to: Heritage Advisory Committe, PO Box 181, Prince Rupert, BC, V8J 3P6
Meals on Wheels Volunteer drivers needed immediately. 3x/week, 11:15am-12:30pm.
Please call 250-622-6315 for Info.
Last Minute Market every Saturday 9:00 - 12:30 at the Moose Hall. Craft items, baking, home business and yard sale items. For table rentals call Rosa 250-624-4787 or Kathleen at 250-624-5652. The coffee is always on!
Prince Rupert Seniors Centre - Bingo every Friday 1:00 to 3:00 at the Seniors’ Cen-tre. Everyone 19 of age and older welcome.
Scouts Canada - Scouting in Prince Rupert, Beavers aged 5-7 years old meet on Tuesday evening at Pineridge School in the Gym, 6:30 - 7:30pm. Cubs aged 8-11 yearls old meet on Wednesday evening at Pineridge School in the Gym, 7:00-8:30pm. Contact C. Green, 250-624-3370
Calling all Musicians! Prince Rupert Com-munity Band and Choir are looking for new members. No Auditions necessary! PR Com-munity Band meets Monday nights 7:30 - 9:00 Pm at the PRMS (formerly PRSS) Band Room. PR Community Choir meets Wednes-day nights 7:30- 9:00 PM at the PRMS Band Room. Pls Call Peter Witherly, 250-624-9634
Prince Rupert Unemployed Action Cen-ter provides a range of FREE services to unemployed and underemployed people in Prince Rupert and Northwest BC. Need help applying for CPP, Canada Disibility Pen-sions, Old Age Security, EI, or WCB? We can help! Landlord or Social Service difficulties? We can help! Come see us Mon-Fri, 9am - 5pm at 869 Fraser Street, Fisherman’s Hall, Prince Rupert, BC, V8J 1R1 or call 250-627-8776.
Prince Rupert Alcoholics Anonymous - If you want to drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, that’s ours. Prnce Rupert A.A, 250-627-1119
North Coast Victim Services - Act Now! Protect yourself and your household and avoid becoming a victim. Obtain a free home security package and arrange for a free home inspection. Call 250-627-7779
“From Tears to Hope” Prince Rupert’s Community Grief Support Group provides education and sharing. Meetings run 8 con-secutive weeks, several times throughout the year. PRE-REGISTRATION is required. Call 250-627-7779 for more info.
comINg eVeNTsNorth Coast
To submit your coming event, e-mail [email protected] or stop by our
office at 737 Fraser Street
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIeW - Page 15WWW.ThenorThernVIeW.com year In reVIeWThe Northern View Wednesday, January 16, 2013 www.thenorthernview.com A15
It is with great sadness that we announce the sudden passing of Richard John Halas.Rick was born in New West Minster but lived most of his life here in Prince Rupert where he worked at Prince Rupert Grain.Rick will be dearly missed and is survived by his brother Dan Halas, daughter Melody Halas and granddaughter Adriana Halas.
A celebration of life will be held at on Jan 18, 2013 from 1-4 pm at Chances
North Coast Convention Centre room 101.
Richard John Halas
Sept 25, 1952 Jan 6, 2013
Kerrie & BrianJanuary 28, 2012
The wedding took place at the museum in Prince Rupert B.C. with family and
close friends in attendance.The wedding dinner was held at the
Crest Hotel and was also attended by family and close friends.
All the best to the new couple in the years to come.
Debbie Dion along with Evelyn Kennedy are happy to announce
the wedding and marriage of
Commercial Transport MechanicsNeeded in KitimatYou'll enjoy very competitive wages, benefi ts, and more in a safe, friendly, respectful workplace, with potential for future advancement. You'll be performing preventative maintenance& repairs on our well maintained fl eet of coach, transitand school buses.
Please e-mail: phil.malnis@fi rstgroup.comor fax 250-632-2154We are an equal opportunity employer.
CARRIERS WANTED
How you can...Make extra money
Get in shapeGet to know your
neighbourhood ALL AT ONCE?
250-624-8088 737 Fraser St, Prince Rupert
GREAT FIRST JOB
GREAT FOR ALL
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CARRIER
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Lost & FoundReward offered for the return of a very heavy large brown ceramic garden toad with two little ones on its back. Missing from 1324 7th Ave East after 1 a.m. Sunday Dec. 30th. 36 years of sentimental value. NO QUESTIONS ASKED FOR ITS RETURN. email:[email protected]
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DRIVERS WANTED:Terrifi c career Opportunity with outstanding growth potential to learn how to locate rail defects. No Rail Experience Needed!! Skills Needed - Ability to travel 3 months at a time, Valid License w/ air brake endorsement.
Extensive Paid Travel, MealAllowance, 4 weeks Vacation
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driving experience.Apply at www.sperryrail.com
under careers, keyword Driver. DO NOT FILL IN CITY OR STATE
Education/Trade Schools
EXCLUSIVE FINNING/Cater-pillar mechanic training. GPRC Fairview Campus. High school diploma and mechani-cal aptitude required. $1000. entrance scholarship. Paid practicum with Finning. Write apprenticeship exams. 1-888-999-7882;www.gprc.ab.ca/fairviewINTERIOR HEAVY EQUIP-MENT OPERATOR SCHOOL.NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks.Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options.SignUp online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853PUT POWER Into your career! As a Fairview Power Engineer. On-campus boiler lab. 4th Class-Part A 3rd Class. Af-fordable residences. GPRC Fairview Campus. 1-888-999-7882; www.gprc.ab.ca/fairview
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Employment
Education/Trade Schools
TRAIN TO Be an Apartment/ Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of gradu-ates working. 32 years of suc-cess! Government certifi ed. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-665-8339, 604-681-5456.
Help WantedAn Alberta Construction Com-pany is hiring Dozer and Exca-vator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodg-ing and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Con-struction at 780-723-5051.PR: Moby Dick is taking appli-cations for all positions. Bring resumes to front Desk. No Phone calls please.
Weddings
Obituaries
Employment
Help Wanted
CARRIERS WANTEDPrince Rupert
Routes available:- 6th & 7th Ave. E, Ambrose Ave, & Hays Cove Ave near PJs Store. (200 papers)- 4th & 5th Ave. East off McBride St. (200 papers)- 7th, 8th & 9th Ave. E off McBride (220 papers)- Borden St. Taylor St, parts of 5th, 6th & 7th Ave. W. (180 papers)- Summit Ave, Part of Sloan Ave to & incl. McKay (170 papers)Call Prince Rupert Northern View @ 250-624-8088
NEED A CHANGE? Looking for work? In the Provost re-gion, workers of all kinds are needed now! Visit our website today for more information:www.dreamscreatethefuture.ca
Weddings
Obituaries
Employment
Help WantedPYRAMID CORPORATION is now hiring! Instrument Techni-cians and Electricians for vari-ous sites across Alberta. Send resume by fax 780-955-HIRE or [email protected]
Career Opportunities
Employment
Help WantedWANTED SHORT Logger and Hayrack logging truck off highway and highway hauls for work till end of March. Call 604-819-3393.
Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
Your community. Your classifi eds.
250.624.8088
fax 250.624.8085 email classifi [email protected]
10 Family Announcements
20 Community Announcements
100 Employment200 Service Guide300 Service Guide400 Pets500 For Sale/
Wanted600 Real Estate700 Rentals800 Automotive900 Legals
WORD ADS ARE PUBLISHED IN...
The NorthernThe Northern
CLASSIFIED RATES:
As low as $15 per weekAll classifi ed and classifi ed
display ads MUST BE PREPAID by either cash,
VISA or Mastercard. When phoning in ads
please have your VISA or Mastercard number ready.
The Northern View reservesthe right to classify ads under appropriate headings and to setrates therefore and to determinepage location.The Northern View remindsadvertisers that it is against theprovincial Human Rights Actto discriminate on the basisof children, marital status andemployment when placing “For Rent:” ads. Landlords can statea no-smoking preference.The Northern View reserves theright to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement andto retain any answers directed to the News Box Reply Service,and to repay the customer thesum paid for the advertisementand box rental.Box replies on “Hold” instructionsnot picked up within 10 days of expiry of an advertisement willbe destroyed unless mailinginstructions are received. Thoseanswering Box Numbers arerequested not to send originaldocuments to avoid loss.All claims of errors in advertisements must be receivedby the publisher within 30 daysafter the fi rst publication.It is agreed by the advertiser requesting space that theliability of The Northern View inthe event of failure to publishan advertisement as publishedshall be limited to the amountpaid by the advertiser for onlyone incorrect insertion for theportion of the advertising spaceoccupied by the incorrect or omitted item only, and that thereshall be no liability in any event greater than the amount paid for such advertising.
REACH 75,000 READERS IN OVER 42,000 PAPERS
FROM THE QUEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS TO SMITHERS EVERY
WEEK
Our classifi ed ads are on the net! Check it out atwww.bcclassified.comReach 67,000
ReadeRs In moRe Than 27,000 PaPeRs
fRom PRInce RuPeRT To The hazelTons
Page 16 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.comA16 www.thenorthernview.com Wednesday, January 16, 2013 The Northern View
Maintenance Person needed for two Senior Citizens Apartments.
Total of 51 apartments plus lounges and laundry facilities.This will be a bidding contract in writing to:Prince Rupert & Kaien Place Senior Citizens Housing Societies PO Box 393 Prince Rupert BC V8J 1B6
The person will be responsible for their own medical plan, pension plan and taxes.
The qualified person must have a van or truck to transport such items of plywood and gyproc and other items from supplier to apartments. Must have the ability to do minor plumbing, electrical, painting and drywall repairs.
More information can be supplied over the phone if needed.For more information contact Rene at 250-624-3641
or cell 250-627-9872 or email: [email protected]
Bids will be accepted until January 31, 2013.
Canadian Fishing Company has an opening for a Maintenance Engineer at our Seal Cove Plant. Duties will include operation and routine maintenance of an ammonia refrigeration plant and fish unloading and processing equipment. Minimum 5th Class Refrigeration Engineers ticket required. Related trades ticket an asset. Pay is in accordance with capabilities and UFAWU Contract.
Reply in confidence to:Lori Wilson, Plant ManagerOceanside Plant181 George Hills WayPrince Rupert, BC V8J 1A3Fax: 250-624-5373Email: [email protected]
The Director is responsible for overseeing the operation of the Smithers Municipal Library under the direction of the Smithers Library Board.
Qualifications & Experience
Education: • Masters of Library Science or Library
Technician Diploma or Community Library Training Program Certificate.
Experience: • Preferred 5 years of directly related
experience.Knowledge:
• Library management & administration • Community program development • Strategic planning • Financial management and budgeting
Skills: • Excellent communication, oral and writ-
ten • Supervision and staff recruitment • Conflict resolution • Good working knowledge of library
software
Closing Date: February 1, 2013For a full job description, further qualifica-tions and application instructions visit: smithers.bclibrary.caEnquires about this position can be sent to the library board: [email protected]
LIBRARYDIRECTOR
Kaien Anti Poverty Society
has an opening for a temporary position of child & youth support worker for the afterschool drop in program.
Successful applicant must have education in the child care field and be available evenings and weekends.
Closing date January 18, 2013.
Submit cover letter and resume to [email protected] or drop off at 569 McKay St attention: Colleen Hermanson
Large recreational dealer, carrying Arctic Cat, Honda, Mercury and Kawasaki products is looking for a
Mechanic/Technician for our Marine Division
EXPERIENCE PREFERRED, BUT APPRENTICESHIP AVAILABLE TO THE RIGHT CANDIDATE
We offer a great working environment with an excellent benefits package & competitive wage for the successful applicant. We are willing to assist in moving expenses.
Please reply to:Greg Delaronde: General Manager
email: [email protected] orfax: 250.635.5050
no phone calls please
Lakeview Dental CentreEnergenic, motivated
F/T CDA OR HYGIENIST required for Mat leave in February of 2013.
Knowledge of the Cleardent Program and asset.
Potential to become permanent employment. Hours are Monday to Thursday. Please send resume to Lakeview Dental Centre, Box 310 Burns Lake,
B.C. V0J 1E0 or fax to 250-692-4251 or email to [email protected]
Kenn Long Certified Professional Dog Grooming
[email protected] find us on Facebook
Employment
Help WantedFILE CLERK
Our Chartered Accountants offi ce in Prince Rupert, B.C., requires an enthusiastic, positive and dedicated per-son who will perform the fi ling duties and errands for an active and busy account-ing fi rm - Possess a warm and helpful presence - Takes satisfaction in the importance of quality work - Accuracy is very important and likes to see jobs done well - Must be trustworthy and reliable and is able to keep information confi - dential.If you have these qualities, you would enjoy this Filing Position which offers oppor-tunities to learn .Salary is dependent upon experience and abilities.Please submit your resume to fax: 250-627-8056 or email: [email protected](attachments in pdf format)Application deadline date: January 31, 2013
Trades, TechnicalJOURNEYMAN AUTOMO-TIVE Service Technician. Han-na Chrysler Ltd. in Hanna, Al-berta needs a few more good people. Busy, modern shop. $25-$31/hour + bonus, bene-fi ts. Great community. Inquire or send resume. Fax 403-854-2845; Email: [email protected] MECHANICSrequired by heavy const com-pany. Start asap, must be fa-miliar with all heavy equipment Caterpiller, Komatsu, John Deere etc. competitive wage and superior benefi t package. Required to work in shop in ru-ral Winnipeg, MB and on job sites. E-mail [email protected] fax 204-224-9212.
Career Opportunities
Employment
Warehouse/FactoryCAREER Training Provided We are currently looking for a PT Company Town Driv-er/Warehouse Worker. Class 5 with air endorsement pre-ferred. We will provide paid training to employee to obtain Class One. Involves both driv-ing and warehouse work. Variable shifts and start times. Clark Freightways is a recog-nized leader in LTL (less-than-truckload) transportation within the province of BC, specializ-ing in the transportation of per-ishable and dry goods. We are a growing, progressive and well respected carrier with over 55 years of service to our valued customers. We are looking for an individual to support our CORE Values for future success at our Prince Rupert Terminal. Please apply in person with resume, cover letter and abstract to:341 Kaien Road, Prince Rupert, BC V8J 4B7.
Services
Health ProductsGET 50% off - Join Herbal Magic this week and get 50% off. Lose weight quickly, safely and keep it off, proven results! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.
Holistic HealthAdvanced Healing Technique. Great For Your Body, Mind and Spirit. $60 a session. Call Cindy at 250-624-9742
Career Opportunities
Services
Education/TutoringTransport Canada Certifi cations
MED - A1 Mar 18-22 MED - A2 Mar 18-23ROCMC or ROCM Jan 16-18 Mar 25-27 60T Chartwork Jan 21 - Feb 8SEN-L Apr 2 - 12Ship Const.Stability Apr 15 -26Nav. Safety Feb 18 - Mar 8Course dates & times subject tochange. Check website:
www.cappsmarine.com
Capp’s Marine
Education
410-309 2nd Ave WestPrince Rupert, BC
(250) 627-1265
Help Wanted
Services
Financial ServicesDROWNING IN Debt? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free con-sultation. Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 www.mydebtsolution.com
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420.
www.pioneerwest.com
IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: it’s that simple. Your credit/age/income is not an issue. 1-800-587-2161.
LOAN HELP - Consolidate all your credit cards, bank loans, income tax debt and payday loans into one small interest-free monthly payment. Contact us asap toll-free 1-888-528-4920.
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Help Wanted
Services
Legal ServicesCRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certifi -cation, adoption property ren-tal opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
Cleaning ServicesPR: House cleaning services, Care-Aid services. 250-624-1718
Pets & Livestock
PetsTROPICAL FISH Sale! All the products you need for your aquarium. Order online and re-ceive 15% off with coupon code: FISH15. Sale ends January 27. www.petland.ca 1-855-839-0555
Help Wanted
Pets
Help Wanted
Pets
Help Wanted
Place a classifi ed word ad and...
IT WILL GO ON LINE!
BCDailyRegister Online at www.bcdailydeals.com
SHOP ONLINE...
bcclassified.comAnytime!
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 - The norThern VIeW - Page 17WWW.ThenorThernVIeW.com year In reVIeWThe Northern View Wednesday, January 16, 2013 www.thenorthernview.com A17
213 Cormorant AveMLS#N223913 $339,000
1507 - 8th Ave EastMLS#N221791 $39,500
1326 Pigott AveMLS#N222872 $55,000
236 Silversides DrMLS#N223350 $399,000
Skyline Manor1200 Summit Ave.
Bachelor & 1 Bedroom Suites.Security Entrance, harbour views, balconies,
storage, laundry facilities, hot water & heat included. Sorry no pets. Close to hospital, bus stop & downtown.
References required.Contact our on site Manager at
250-624-6019
Offi ce: (250) 624-5800Suite 5 - 342 3 Ave. West, Prince Rupert, BC V8J 1L5
• 3 & 4 bedroom homes;• 1, 2 & 3 bedroom suites
and apartments
RENTALSAVAILABLE
PropertyManagementFREE PALLETS
Must be able to pick them up
yourself.
Stop by during work hours only
Monday to Friday 9 am - 5 pm
737 Fraser Street
Buying or Selling Real Estate?
Office and Cell: (250) 624-9298 Email: [email protected]
www.gordonkobza.comSuite 6 - 342 3rd Ave W. - Prince Rupert, BC V8J 1L5
Call Gordon today
Merchandise for Sale
Garage Sales
LAST MINUTE MARKETEvery Saturday
9:00am - 12:30pmat the Moose Hall
Craft items ative rts a iSilver Jewellery
eads me usi ess
& Yard Sale Items
For ta le re tals allRosa 250-624-4787 orat lee 250-624-5652
The coffee is always on!Table Rental Proceeds Go To The Moose
HAPPY
NEW YEARMarket
will re-open
January 26th
Heavy Duty Machinery
A-STEEL SHIPPING DRYSTORAGE CONTAINERS
Used 20’40’45’53 in stock. SPECIAL
44’ x 40’ Container Shopw/steel trusses $13,800!
Sets up in one day!Also Damaged 40’
$1950 Call Toll Free AlsoJD 544 & 644 wheel loaders
JD 892D LC ExcavatorPh. 1-866-528-7108
Free Delivery BC and ABwww.rtccontainer.com
JOHN DEERE Back-ho 310-D 4-Wheel Drive 5,500 hrs, EC $28,800 Can be viewed at Ma-randy’s Carwash in Smithers or phone 250-847-0400.
Misc. for SaleHOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/news-paper?
SAWMILLS FROM only $3997. Make money and save money with your own band-milll. Cut lumber any dimen-sion. In stock ready to ship. Free info and DVD: 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT www.NorwoodSawmills.com/ 400OTSTEEL BUILDINGS / Metal Buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100; sell for bal-ance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206.www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
Misc. WantedPrivate Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town
Real Estate
Houses For Sale
50 Tingley RoadPort Clements
Approx. 2000 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 6-yr old metal roof,
den, f/s, w/d, wood heat & oil furnace, detached workshop
w/woodstove & new roof. $100,000 OBO
Please call Dorothy or Jennifer at
250-723-9747
Other Areas20 ACRES Free! Buy 40-Get 60 acres. $0-Down, $168/mo. Money back guarantee. No credit checks. Beautiful views. Roads surveyed. Near El Pa-so, Texas. 1-800-843-7537 www.sunsetranches.com
Rentals
Apt/Condo for Rent
CLIFFSIDE APARTMENTS
1123-1137 Borden StreetAdult-oriented.
Quiet location with harbour view.
Heat and hot water included. Minutes walking to
downtown and hospital. References required.
1, 2, or 3 bedroom suites. Some furnished. Prince Rupert
250-624-5800
Free Items
Rentals
Apt/Condo for Rent
GATEWAY APARTMENTS
McBride & 8th Prince Rupert
Unfurnished - Furnished(Furnished short Term
Rentals Available)Close to downtown
Adult-oriented No Pets
627-7137
Free Items
Rentals
Rooms for Rent
PR - Short-term Rentals. Furnished bedroom, shared kitchen & bathrooms, laun-dry, wifi . Close to down-town. From $245/wk (min. 2 week) or $399/mo for stu-dents. Call 250-624-2334 www.pioneerhostel.com
www.princerupertrooms.com
Rooms starting at $45/daily, $249/weekly, $699/monthly,
Students $499/monthly.All-inclusive. 250-600-1680
Suites, Lower2 bdrm bsmt suite; 232 Alber-ta Place; Elec. heat. Ref. Req. Ph. 250-624-2842
Townhouses2 & 3 Bdrm Townhouses For Rent in Rupert Gardens. Call
250-638-1885.
Real Estate
Houses For Sale
Rentals
TownhousesPINE CREST
3 Bdrm. 2 Level T/H1 ½ bath No pets
Call Jenn 622-4304
PRINCE RUPERTHarbourview Apts.2 & 3 Bdrm, 1 bath,
Start at $600 No pets627-6697 or 622-2699
Real Estate
Houses For Sale
Apt/Condo for Rent
Commercial/Industrial Property
Apt/Condo for Rent
Commercial/Industrial Property
Help for today.Hope for
Tomorrow.Call 1-800-667-3742
4 OUT OF 5 PEOPLE WITH DIABETESDIE OF HEART DISEASE.
.Better your oddsVisit getserious.ca
Page 18 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.com
Salesperson
“Learning every day, meeting inspiring people and informing and enlightening public discussion. This is what I aim for. This is my work.”Matt Hoekstra, Reporter, Richmond Review
With over 90 publications in BC. We are deeply connected. You can be too.
Click on the Careers tab at www.blackpress.ca for details on these exciting positionsFor general career advertising check out www.bcjobnetwork.com
A career with Black PressBlack Press is home to some of the most established and well read newspapers in the province. We are the leading newspaper employer in our respective communities. We currently have several positions available. Check us out online.
ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVEThe Business Examiner, Vancouver Island’s leading business-to-business publication is seeking a full-time Advertising Representative to spearhead further growth in the product. Based in Victoria, the ideal candidate will demonstrate strong interpersonal skills, both written and oral, and excel in dealing with senior company personnel on a day-to-day basis. He or she will have an exceptional sales background, and print media experience is a defi nite asset. If you are self motivated, well
organized, and want to join a professional team in a fast-growing industry, we want to hear from you.
REPORTERThe Maple Ridge News, a twice-weekly Black Press publication in Maple Ridge, has an immediate opening for a temporary full-time general news reporter. Reporting to the editor, the successful candidate will provide top-quality work on a range of news and feature stories covering a variety of beats. A key attribute will be an ability to work well as a self-starting member of a competitive newsroom. You will be expected to contribute to regular newsroom meetings, and bring your creative talents to readers through concise, accurate, and entertaining writing.
The Prince Rupert Northern View is currently seeking a full-time salesperson. We offer a comprehensive benefits package and opportunity for advancement.
Black Press is Canada’s largest independent newspaper group with over 100 community, daily and urban papers located in BC, Alberta, Washington State, Hawaii, and Ohio.
Resumes should be forwarded with cover letter to: Todd Hamilton
Publisher, Prince Rupert Northern View737 Fraser St, Prince Rupert, V8J 1R1 Fax: [email protected] who have applied before are welcome to apply once again.
Carriers Wanted
How you can...Make extra money
Get in shapeGet to know your
neighbourhood ALL AT ONCE?
250-624-8088 737 Fraser St, Prince Rupert
Great first job
GrEAT FOr ALL
AGEs
Become a NewsPaPer
carrier
Community Correspondents
“Learning every day, meeting inspiring people and informing and enlightening public discussion. This is what I aim for. This is my work.”Matt Hoekstra, Reporter, Richmond Review
With over 90 publications in BC. We are deeply connected. You can be too.
Click on the Careers tab at www.blackpress.ca for details on these exciting positionsFor general career advertising check out www.bcjobnetwork.com
A career with Black PressBlack Press is home to some of the most established and well read newspapers in the province. We are the leading newspaper employer in our respective communities. We currently have several positions available. Check us out online.
ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVEThe Business Examiner, Vancouver Island’s leading business-to-business publication is seeking a full-time Advertising Representative to spearhead further growth in the product. Based in Victoria, the ideal candidate will demonstrate strong interpersonal skills, both written and oral, and excel in dealing with senior company personnel on a day-to-day basis. He or she will have an exceptional sales background, and print media experience is a defi nite asset. If you are self motivated, well
organized, and want to join a professional team in a fast-growing industry, we want to hear from you.
REPORTERThe Maple Ridge News, a twice-weekly Black Press publication in Maple Ridge, has an immediate opening for a temporary full-time general news reporter. Reporting to the editor, the successful candidate will provide top-quality work on a range of news and feature stories covering a variety of beats. A key attribute will be an ability to work well as a self-starting member of a competitive newsroom. You will be expected to contribute to regular newsroom meetings, and bring your creative talents to readers through concise, accurate, and entertaining writing.
The Prince Rupert Northern View is cur-rently seeking community correspondents throughout Prince Rupert and Port Edward.No experience is necessary, just an interest in helping us tell the stories of your neigh-bourhoods. For more information, call: Shaun Thomas
Editor, Prince Rupert Northern View737 Fraser St, Prince Rupert, V8J 1R1 Fax: [email protected]
WE NEED YOU... JOIN US
CASH PAID DAILY for relief carriers, drivers and collatorsCall Adeline today at 250-624-8088 to sign up
Prince Rupert Northern
COMMUNITY INVESTMENT FUNDThe Prince Rupert Port Authority’s (PRPA) Community Investment Fund (Fund) provides financial support for projects or initiatives in the Prince Rupert area that enhances quality of life or contributes to a lasting legacy to the community. Only Projects or Initiatives that are broad community-based and have a meaningful and wide reaching impact in the Prince Rupert and regional communities will be considered. Projects or initiatives leveraging other funding sources will be considered on a preferential basis.
Applicants submitting a request for financial support can be non-profit entities, , locally-based forms of government such as municipalities; Districts and First Nation Band Councils and non-profit cooperatives.Priority will be given to projects, initiatives or events which provide the greatest funding leverage from other sources. Community support could include written support by local community groups; Normally the Fund will not contribute more than 90% toward project costs, however, priority will be given to those seeking 50% or less for a project, initiative or event.All submissions will also include a budget and other funders of the project or initiative. Additional information on the Community Investment Fund can be found on the PRPA web site at www.rupertport.com Applications may be submitted to the Prince Rupert Port Authority either by regular mail or electronically by 4:00 p.m. Friday, February 15th, 2013.
Mailed applications shall be sent to:Prince Rupert Port Authority, 200 – 215 Cow Bay Road
Prince Rupert, BC, V8J 1A2Attention: Mr. Maynard Angus - Manager, Community Relations
Proposals sent by electronic mail shall be sent to: [email protected]
All Projects must: • Leverage other private and/or public funding; and• Be environmentally sound;
• Provide tangible longterm benefits to the community;• Have broad, demonstrated community support.
contributions will not be mAde:
• to the operating costs of a Project or Initiative; • to individuals;• to projects or initiatives that are restricted to the use or benefit of specific individuals or organizations within the community;
• to partisan political projects/ initiatives; • where activities related to or resulting from are in violation of any federal or provincial law, regulation or policy;• to refinancing of all or any part of any term debt obligations of the funding recipient.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 THe nOrTHern VIeW - PaGe 19WWW.THenOrTHernVIeW.cOmPrInce ruPerT nOrTHern VIeW
By Shaun Thomas The Northern View
The Prince Rupert Rampage knocked off the CIHL leading Smither Steelheads to start a double-header weekend
On Saturday night the team hosted the league-leading Steelheads, who were coming off their first loss of the past two seasons, and the powerful Smithers offence struck early when Adam Devries beat Keano Wilson less than two minutes into the first. But after some back and forth play the Rampage tied things up on a wrist-shot by Ryan Stace-Smith just over halfway through the first, and Brian Tates would give Prince Rupert the lead with 3:42 to play. Prince Rupert took a 2-1 lead into the second frame.
The two teams would prove an equal match for much of the second, until a late powerplay saw Lane Perry beat Wilson with just 12 seconds left to tie things up and set the stage for an exciting finish in front of the packed crowd.
In the third, Wilson came up with some big saves to shut the door on the Steelheads early. Just over halfway through the period Prince Rupert found themselves on the powerplay and, with the crowd cheering on the home team, Kory Movold capitalized to put the Rampage up late in the game. While Smithers kept up the pressure, the Rampage kept shutting the door to take a 3-2 win and hand the Steelheads their second straight loss.
On Sunday, the Houston Luckies were in town following a 6-2 loss to the Kitimat Ice Demons the previous night. Much like Saturday night’s game, it was the visitors who struck first and early as
Houston’s Jaden Janzen put the puck home just 29 seconds in from a scramble in front. Prince Rupert responded though, as captain Jared Meers tipped in a Kory Movold slapshot right in front to tie things at one. With 5:58 to play there was a scrum after the whistle that saw Greg Shephard and Cole Hasell drop the gloves, and the result was a four-minute Houston powerplay that the Rampage were able to kill off. While there were plenty of great opportunities late in the period, the teams went into the second tied at one.
In the second Houston again struck early, when a weak shot from just inside the line by Kurt Strimbold went five-hole with 17:21 to go. Prince Rupert was able to tie things up against just 69 seconds later when Movold finished off a great powerplay passing play at the side of the net. Eight minutes later it appeared as though the Rampage took the lead, but the goal was called back due to a player being in the crease, and that would prove to be a costly call as Houston’s Skylar Hasell put one past Wilson right off the faceoff with 1:40 to go to give the Luckies the 3-2 lead heading into the third.
The Rampage actually started the final frame with a two-minute powerplay, but it was Houston’s Derek Dinelle fired a slapshot over the glove of Wilson just 12 seconds in to put the Luckies up by two. Movold lessened the gap with 17:23 to play with a slapshot from right in front. But a goal by Janzen with 4:09 to go put Rupert down 5-3, and with 2:28 to play coach Frank Pyde pulled the goalie only for Janzen to complete the hat trick with an empty netter to give the Luckies the 6-3 victory.
The Rampage host the Omenica Ice on Saturday.
rampage defeat steelheads, but fall to the Luckiesu Face smITHers and HOusTOn
Shaun Thomas / The Northern ViewKory Movold gains the zone suring Sunday afternoon action against the Houston Luckies.
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By Shaun Thomas The Northern View
In just a matter of weeks the streets of Prince Rupert will be bustling and the hotels in town will packed as participants and fans arrive for the 54th annual All Native Basketball Tournament.
Tip-off for the tournament will take place on Feb. 10 with 54 teams competing in four divisions. The 2012 champions in each division are scheduled to be back to defend their title. In total there are 14 Seniors teams, 15 Intermediate teams, 14 Women’s teams and 13 Masters teams.
The opening ceremonies are scheduled for Feb. 10 and the tournament will be inducting four alumni into the All Native Basketball Tournament Hall of Fame. Two members of the 2013 Hall of Fame class come from the Haisla Nation in Kitamaat in the form of Rod Bolotn and coach Bill Wilson, joined by Prince Rupert coach and player Bill Robinson. The
final Hall of Famer will be inducted posthumously as Andy Peers Sr. of Bella Bella is inducted.
countdown on to all nativeu 54TH annuaL
In your Community Kate Toye Regional Coordinator [email protected]
250-622-9458
Play helps children face their fears and worries and to
overcome them.
Page 20 - The NorTherN VIeW - WedNesday, JaNuary 16, 2013 WWW.TheNorTherNVIeW.com
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Thursday NooN To MidNighT