August 31, 2012

Page 1

NOR-BURD RV

HAS MADE A

MAJOR

Inside

◆ NEWS Seniors win at games, P. 4 ◆ NEWS More Cow Bay Day scenes, P. 14

◆ SPORTS Race season continues, P. 27 ◆ CLASSIFIEDS, P. 18-25

PURCHASE OF

Free

SUNSEEKER

MOTORHOMES FIRST 8 UNITS ARRIVING SOON! Liquidation Pricing Available on all 2007 to 2009 Units Now! Friday, August 31, 2012

Forest River Model # 2300 #2450 #2600 Lexington Model #235

Volume 7 Issue 8

TMC 20,700

People’s choice… SHAUN THOMAS / THE NORTHERN CONNECTOR

PRINCE RUPERT - Prince Rupert Northern View sales manager Ed Evans presents Andy Enns with the Reader’s Choice Award for Best Actor during an awards reception on Tuesday night. As well as playing the lead in the community production of Fiddler on the Roof, Enns could be seen on the stage during a number of Udderfest performances. For more photos from the Reader’s Choice Awards, see page 16.

Call dea dealer m today for more detail’s detail’s! **Units not exactly as illustrated**

nortburd rv 250-635-6882

Contact us at:

sales@nor-burdrv.ca View our catalouge online and order 24/7 - 365 days a year!

www.nor-burdrv.ca

FINANCE RATES STARTING AT 4.9 OAC

Going through Olympic Withdrawal? You can still catch the golden moments on CityWest Digital TV on Demand.

On Channel 1 until Sept 10th

1-800-442-8664

www.citywest.ca

City, groups working around late ice in arena By Martina Perry THE NORTHERN CONNECTOR

PRINCE RUPERT - Since the City of Prince Rupert announced that the only ice arena in the community would not be open until November, winter sports groups have had to find a solution to make up for practices and the city has had to form an idea on how to make up for the lost revenue. Prince Rupert’s director of recreation and community services, Rudy Kelly, met with members from the Prince Rupert Minor Hockey Association, the Prince Rupert Skating Club, the Rupert Rampage and the Mixed Recreation League late last week and discussed the possibility of keeping the arena open later in the spring to make up the lost time. “The users seemed quite agreeable with that. Hopefully that would make up some of the

lost revenue and accommodate some of the inconvenience for them,” he said. “The good thing about the meeting was that the users were all very understanding and willing to work along with it. I was glad to see that because obviously it’s pretty inconvenient for them.” Ideally skaters would start practicing in the beginning of September, however this year skaters will have to train on dry ground for the first part of the season. Luckily this year, the club’s first competitive will be in December instead of its usual time in October, but that still only gives skaters one month to practice. Head coach of the club, Sheri Pringle, says that keeping the arena open later in the spring would be beneficial to skaters. “We could go well into May

or June. We would make it work. Unfortunately the competitions are already over in February, but you could then start building for the next year,” she said, mentioning that there are usually 80 to 90 skaters in all of the club’s programs. Youth in the Prince Rupert Minor Hockey Association generally start practicing on ice in mid-September, with competitions happening before November for older teams. Gene Storey, president of the association, says that practices running later in the spring could be beneficial, however it could also interfere with players who participate in other springtime activities such as soccer. “It’s unfortunate that we can’t have the ice until a little later but there’s not much we can do about it,” he said. The closure of the arena is caused by a mechanical failure

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REGULAR HOURS Monday - Thursday & Saturday 9:30 am - 6 pm Friday 9:30 am - 9 pm • Sunday Noon - 5 pm

Monday, September 3 Noon to 5 pm

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with the chiller, which is the piece of equipment that makes the ice. Bill Horne, acting city manager, explained that “there is a brine that goes through some pipes, and those pipes are surrounded by ammonia, but the pipes have rusted out and the ammonia is seeping into the brine”. The chiller was around 30 to 40 years old according to Kelly, with a new chiller expected to cost around $120,000 before taxes. “It’s just one of those things. [Equipment] just goes sometimes. It’s like a hot water heater, no one replaces it until it goes. It wasn’t foreseeable,” commented Kelly. Kelly explained that when the ice is back in the arena depends on the company that is designing the new chiller. “If they are able to get it done quicker we could open up the arena in late October,” he said.


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