Terrace Standard, March 20, 2013

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VOL. 25 NO. 49

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Recycle depot set to close

josh massey PHOTO

ROCK OUTCROPPING looms over construction site of troubled Dasque-Middle run-of-river hydro project.

Unpaid bills mount up at hydroelectric project By Josh Massey LOCAL companies and others are owed hundreds of thousands of dollars by the main contractor hired to work on a major industrial project southwest of Terrace. And a dispute between that main contractor, Dowland Industrial Works, and Veresen, a Calgary energy company, has resulted in Dowland pulling its workers and equipment out of the $75 million Dasque-Middle run-of-river hydroelectric project owned by Veresen. Dowland says it can’t pay its subcontractors because Versen hasn’t been paying them. In turn, Veresen

says it isn’t responsible for commercial arrangements between Dowland and the companies it hired. One of the local companies affected is Geier Waste, which was hired by Dowland last fall to remove garbage and other waste from the site located 20km southwest of Terrace. Geier Waste owner Rob Geier says he’s owed approximately $20,000, money he says he’s likely never to see. “And that’s probably not a lot compared to other people in town,” said Geier. “This doesn’t bode well for the future.” Geier said he’s perhaps better able to absorb the

loss than other companies because he did not have to purchase goods in order to service his contract with Dowland. “Alberta people who are wanting to open up our area for export come in and then do not pay their bills. Maybe you guys should stay home and we’ll suffer in silence like we have been for the past 10 years,” said Geier. A March 6, 2013 memo sent by Dowland to its subcontractors and suppliers said that “Dowland has performed a significant amount of work for which we are owed payment by Veresen and, due to the owner’s unwillingness to compensate

Dowland as per agreements, we have submitted several claims.” According to the memo, Dowland is “actively pursuing all available avenues to collect compensation for work performed to date and will provide another update on our progress by the end of the month.” Veresen official Doreen Miller said “the company has had some issues with the civil works. Our focus right now is to move forward as quickly as we can and we’re still really excited about the project and want to see it through to construction completion.”

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WASTE Management is closing its recycling depot here at the end of March, citing the expense of running a no-charge service. “We gave it a good shot but in the end, we just couldn’t do it,” Waste Management official Jay Maybin said last week. Waste Management did not charge a fee to use the depot and did not receive a subsidy or financial support from anyone else. The depot, a collection of large, marked bins in an enclosure right beside Waste Management’s compound near Irly Builders/Timber Mart, was opened about 11 months ago. There was no employee at the depot location and it was up to users to place the right material in the right bin. Paper, cardboard and plastics were accepted but glass was not. A separate bin placed by Allen’s Scrap and Salvage took tin and metals. It replaced a pilot project run and paid for by the city that was located on the old Co-op property. Although there were costs absorbed by having to separate recyclable material from garbage at times, Maybin said the biggest expense was the cost of fuel to transport material to a place where it could be handled. “Diesel is now more expensive than gas,” said Maybin of transportation costs. Maybin said it was very rare to operate a free recycling service anywhere and that the Waste Management depot here is the only one of its kind in the province. The city’s pilot project, in which it hired Geier Waste to haul recyclables to the Do-Your-Part private recycling depot in Thornhill, cost the city $70,000 a year. Maybin said Waste Management’s free service was also an attempt to expand the company’s name in the area. “We very much want to be a community partner,” he said. Waste Management will continue to recycle cardboard collected from commercial clients, something it has been doing for years here, Maybin said. City administrator Heather Avison said the city is disappointed by the news. “It is a service to the community and it was fairly well utilized, but if Waste Management could not make a business case to keep operating, that’s their decision,” she said. Although the Waste Management depot replaced the city’s pilot project, Avison said there is no contract between the company and the city and there is no monetary support by the city. The city has no immediate plans to open a recycling depot, she added. “Council will need some opportunity to consider what’s involved,” said Avison. What is happening, Avison continued, is a change next year in how waste is treated. Producers of packaging and paper and stores that sell products using packaging and paper will become directly financially responsible for resulting recycling costs. That’s going to change the way garbage and waste now being picked up by local governments is handled. “We’re going to need the time to regroup and get a sense of exactly what that means,” said Avison. The changes to paper and packaging recycling costs coming next year is called extended producer responsibility. In this area, the effort to reduce what ends up in landfills includes the city and the regional district. Maybin from Waste Management said it has every intention on bidding for whatever paper and packaging handling plan emerges here.

Building in Belize

No spitting

Hopes dashed

Church members head to Central America for humanitarian project \COMMUNITY A19

Man jailed for assaulting police officer while being arrested \NEWS A12

Hockey Canada decision means Terrace midget reps’ season over \SPORTS A29


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