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Volume 57 No. 13
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Sentinel
Northern
www.northernsentinel.com
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
1.34 INCLUDES TAX
$
Radley Park: rescue or reconfigure? In this year’s budget council put Radley Park back on the front burner. The Kitimat River started eroding the city’s most popular park in 2006 and by the end of the year three sites had been claimed by the river. The following September Northwest Hydraulic Consultants outlined seven options to deal with the problem. Council of the day set aside $475,000 in its 2008 budget, but at the same time decided to go with option seven - do nothing, simply monitor the situation. While more sites fell victim to the river, the money that had been set aside was raided for other projects and in September 2009 the final $82,000 was redirected to another bail out of the new animal shelter. This year council approved $800,000 which Leisure Services director Martin Gould said is earmarked for “road armouring or site development.” He said the city had hired another consultant last year to come up with ideas on how to renovate Radley Park, replace some of the sites lost and expand the park in some areas. Gould said the next step was to take that conceptual plan and rough estimates, do some surveying and get hard estimates
This 2006 photo alerted Kitimatians to the destruction of Radley Park by river erosion. of the costs. But first the city will get another hydrology report on that stretch of river. He pointed out that since the Northwest Hydraulic Consultants report, referred
to above, the large island between Radley Park and the city’s water intake on the opposite side of the river had been increasing in size. “It’s slowly cutting off that flowing
water that has been eroding sections of the park,” Gould explained. A hydrologist would be able to give the city an idea of whether that trend will continue and in turn the problem would disappear. Gould pointed out that when it came to armouring, fisheries issues meant the city could not just pour rip-rap along the existing bank.. Instead a trench would have to be dug back from the riverbank and filled with rip rap - called passive armouring - to protect the existing road against erosion. [That’s what the Transportation ministry did last year just north of Nalbeelah Creek to protect the Kitimat-Terrace highway.] The alternative is to do nothing and use the road as long as possible, then abandon it and replace it with a new road on the Service Centre side of the park. “There’s a few options,” said Gould. But he cautioned people should not expect any major works until next year given the time it takes to go through design, costing and going out to tender. Other money has also been set aside in the budget to upgrade the old camp site shelters, bring in new gravel for all the sites and replace rotten logs on the log washroom.
Gateway: avalanche dangers raised Another council meeting, another antiEnbridge presentation. The Douglas Channel Watch kept up its relentless pressure on city council over the proposed Northern Gateway project at the latter’s March 5 meeting. This time it was Murray Minchin making the presentation and his focus was on the possibility of the pipelines being ruptured by an avalanche or rock fall. He zeroed in on the upper Kitimat Valley, specifically the exit of the proposed tunnel through Nimbus Mountain into the Kitimat River valley as well as Holt and Hunter Creeks. Minchin showed photos of the tunnel exit location saying the lack of mature trees suggested the area was regularly swept by avalanches. Another photo showed “middle-aged hemlock” the tops of which had been sheared off. On the subject of rock falls, he pointed out there was a rock bluff located 15 metres above the proposed tunnel portal and “you can clearly see the rock fall material on the forest floor.” He also noted several more rock bluffs
climbed the mountain above. Minchin noted the proposed pipeline would make an aerial crossing of Holt Creek meaning it would be fully exposed to any rock falls and avalanches. “Holt Creek would quickly deliver any spills into the Kitimat River,” he added. Five kilometres downstream of where Holt Creek enters the Kitimat was the Hunter Creek Valley.
line would parallel that same road. Earlier in his presentation Minchin had noted, “Enbridge admits in their proposal to the JRP (Joint Review Panel) that two million litres (of bitumen) could spill into the upper Kitimat River.” While the documentation said employees at the tank farm would respond to such a spill, along with local contractors, and be able to find and contain the spill in four
“Enbridge admits in their proposal to the JRP that two million litres (of bitumen) could spill into the upper Kitimat River.” “Enbridge’s own avalanche consultant warned that massive avalanches in this valley could dam the creek,” Minchin pointed out. The water would back up until it cut through the snow dam “unleashing a flash flood” which Minchin said could rupture the pipelines even when buried 12 feet below the creek. He also told council that in the 1980s debris had built up under the old Hunter Creek bridge - it was subsequently washed away in a flood - diverting the creek that then tore out 500 metres of logging road. And that Enbridge proposed its pipe-
hours, he said Enbridge had also said such a spill would reach the estuary in those same four hours. In the event of such a spill - which he said Enbridge admits could close the sport fishery for as much as four years - Minchin asked, “Where would Kitimat get its water?” He asked mayor and council to organise another public forum with speakers representing the Haisla, Enbridge and an environmental group. Minchin said a number of disturbing issues had come to light since the last forum and “Kitimat deserves to have as much
information as possible before deciding on this project.” Commenting on the presentation, councillor Phil Germuth said, “Obviously any threat to our drinking water needs to be looked at very seriously.” He also asked Minchin if he was aware of Enbridge having looked at an alternative route that would avoid the Kitimat Valley. Minchin said he was not. And in response to a question from councillor Rob Goffinet, Minchin said this presentation - “and more” - had been submitted to the JRP as written evidence and could be found on its website. Although council did not commit to another forum, at its following meeting councillor Mario Feldhoff moved that Enbridge be invited to make a presentation to council addressing the issues raised by Minchin. Noting they were important issues, Feldhoff said it would be “only appropriate” for Enbridge to be given an opportunity to - “and should” - respond to them. He suggested the community would benefit from hearing what the company had to say. The motion passed unanimously.
KGH acute beds under funded...page 3