Nanaimo News Bulletin, October 16, 2012

Page 1

Unsolved crimes Nanaimo RCMP could use some help to close files. PAGE 21 Good days Wide Mouth Mason performs its new album at the Queen’s. PAGE 30 Clippers confident City’s junior A hockey team beats league’s best. PAGE 4

Back to VIU’s roots PAGE 3

www.nanaimobulletin.com

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012

VOL. 24, NO. 72

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UP WHERE IT BELONGS

City grant aids shelter

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NEW GUIDELINES allow First Unitarian Fellowship to help in extreme weather. BY TOBY GORMAN THE NEWS BULLETIN

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Malahat crash claims the lives of three Nanaimo women BLACK PRESS

Three women from Nanaimo are dead, and five people injured after a motor vehicle crash Sunday on the Malahat Drive. Rob Patterson, chief of Malahat’s Volunteer Fire Hall, said the crash happened at about 11:30 a.m. during a two-vehicle cross-over along a non-median section near Whittaker Road. The rain-soaked highway reopened at about 5:30 p.m. after being closed in both

directions as police re-routed traffic along Shawnigan Lake Road. “It’s the worst [fatality] I’ve ever attended,” said Patterson. A Honda SUV, with five people, crossed the centre line and struck a northbound Chevrolet pickup truck containing three people, Patterson said. Identities of all eight people have yet to be released, but Shawnigan Lake RCMP confirmed Monday that all three victims, including the female driver, 31, a 20-year-old woman and one female teen,

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16, who died in the Honda SUV are from Nanaimo. One man, 20, who was ejected from the Honda by the impact was rushed by ambulance to Victoria General Hospital and remains there in critical condition. A six-year-old girl from the Honda, plus a truck passenger, were airlifted by medivac helicopter to Victoria hospital. Patterson referred to the crash area as NASCAR Corner with vehicles travelling at high speeds. ◆ See ‘HIGHWAY’ ‘ /7

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BY PETER RUSLAND

NANA IMO NEWS BU LLETIN

The First Unitarian Fellowship will receive $40,000 from the City of Nanaimo to operate a shelter when the weather gets too cold and wet for people without permanent housing to sleep outdoors. Earlier this year, the fellowship stated it would not be able to operate the permanent 24-bed shelter between November and March as it did last year because the demand taxed the administrators beyond their capabilities. Instead, the fellowship has agreed to run what it calls an extreme shelter with relaxed requirements. An extreme shelter opens at 0 C (or colder) wet or dry outside and at 2 C when it’s wet. Under the new guidelines, the shelter will also open if it is rainy and 5 C or colder. “We’re still running an extreme weather shelter but our definition of extreme has been eased up a little,” said Arthur Lionel, chairman of the weather task force for the fellowship. “We’ll be open when things are not quite as cold as what is considered extreme.” Temperatures will be considered in the morning forecast and that will determine whether the shelter opens that night or not. Weather events that fall under the extreme parameters will allow the fellowship to bill B.C. Housing for its costs while the nights that fall under the relaxed requirements will be paid for with the $40,000 from the city. ◆ See ‘EIGHT’ /6


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