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Sentinel
Northern
Volume 58 No. 25
Drug related incidents
Cameron Orr Over 24 hours last week there were a series of crimes which the RCMP suspect are all connected, and tied to the drug trade. The incidents starting on June 10 when police say two men allegedly forced their way into a person’s home on Nalabila Boulevard. Police say both suspects wore masks, one with a Halloween devil-style mask, complete with a full costume including a tail. The two suspects allegedly pepper sprayed the people in the home after forcing their way in, and RCMP and paramedics treated three people in the home for the injuries. RCMP Corporal Darryl Peppler said that the three people in the home were known to police, and said last week it is believed drugs were a factor. The three people say they did not know who the attackers were. The following evening, police say there were two incidents, one in which a person apparently attempted to kick in a door to a different home, and also a car was lit on fire on Egret Street. “We believe it to be all the same people,” “When you he said, saying that police are treating this as have a lot a conflict in Kitimat’s of people drug trade. in the drug “When you have a lot of people in the drug trade, they’re trade, they’re always going to have competi- always going tion…and we’re having to have a lot of conflict right competition.” now,” he said, emphasizing that he’s not calling it a drug war in Kitimat. He said that a van has been recovered that is thought to be involved somehow with these incidents and investigators are at work looking at the situation. “We’re trying to piece this all together.” Anyone with information regarding these incidents are encouraged to call the Kitimat detachment at 250-632-7111, or call Crime Stoppers to remain anonymous, at 1-800-222-8477. As of late last week, Cpl. Peppler said the investigation is ongoing, and the Kitimat RCMP is being assisted by their Forensic Identification unit. He did say that at this early stage the police believe there may be a connection of these latest events to the incident from last September when a house on Fulmar was shot at. Egret Street, where the car was burned, connects to Fulmar Street.
www.northernsentinel.com
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
1.30 INCLUDES TAX
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Electric car owner, and member of the Advisory Planning Commission, Mark Gravel charges his Chevrolet Volt with Mayor Joanne Monaghan at the unveiling of new public charging stations.
Fuel up your electric cars Cameron Orr The District of Kitimat has unveiled two charging stations which will allow electric vehicle owners to zap some juice into their vehicles. One station is set up outside Envision Financial, while the other is set up outside the Riverlodge. To help pay for these devices, the District received money from the Plug-In BC program, which is administered by the Fraser Basin Council, and also through the Climate Action Revenue Incentive Program, which is a grant the District receives for having signed on to B.C.’s Climate Action Charter. “We can now be part of the regional system where we can use electric cars,” said Mayor Joanne Monaghan at the event, where she was joined by councillors Mary Murphy and Rob Goffinet. “I’m really excited about it and I think it’s something that Kitimat is right on the edge [of].” Demonstrating the charging station to onlookers was Mark Gravel, who works locally for Lapointe Engineering and sits on the Advisory Planning Commission. He purchased a Chevrolet Volt electric car last September, as response to his family’s desire to live sustainably. “We live a relatively small footprint at home,” he said, noting that they raise rabbits and bees at their home. “We are concerned about our footprint on the environment.” The Volt itself fit the bill when it came to wanting an electric car which suited northern living. While mileage does go
down — because the battery does need to heat — he can still get around. He said it takes about four hours to charge the battery — he’s until now usually charged it at a charging station at Lapointe’s — and that charge will get him through the week. It takes no more than $2 to reach full. There is a back-up gas engine in the vehicle as well, which charges the battery while in use. That gas engine allows him to make the trip to Terrace, as the charge itself isn’t quite enough, getting roughly 55 kilometres on a charge. He said the gas tank can hold about $30 worth of gas and he’s filled it up five times since he purchased the car last September. Michael Bergen with E.B. Horsman and Son supplied the charging units to the District and said that they’ve installed them in Dawson Creek but it’s still a relatively knew community feature in the north. He said people can go to the Charge Point website to find charging locations and even reserve the station for certain times. While a Charge Point card or PayPass enabled credit or debit card is required to unlock the device, the unit is actually free to use. With Kitimat’s two Charge Point stations, they join one unit in Terrace, one in Houston, one in Burns Lake and three in Prince George.
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