Richmond Review, August 27, 2014

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Wednesday, August 27, 2014

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Salmon fishery opens, but docks sell more than sockeye Steveston Landing abundant in tuna, line-caught salmon, and even octopus by Martin van den Hemel Staff Reporter Martin van den Hemel photo Highway 99 was looking warped Tuesday after a culvert collapsed beneath the highway. The collapse prompted a lane closure on the normally-busy highway.

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Section of Highway 99 collapses Culvert that runs beneath highway collapsed by Martin van den Hemel Staff Reporter Tuesday morning’s commute became much messier when a section of Highway

99 roadway buckled just south of the Oak Street Bridge. According to a Mainroad Contracting worker, it’s believed a section of culvert that spans the width of the highway, collapsed. An engineer was being brought in to assess the damage, and traffic was narrowed to just a single northbound lane, causing bumper-to-bumper traffic.

The engineer will have to determine whether the other half of the culvert is at risk of collapse, which would snarl southbound traffic. The culvert connects a waterway that runs from west to east sides under the fourlane highway. The section of buckling runs the entire width of the slow lane all the way to the edge of the water.

Monday’s 24-hour commercial salmon fishery was a disappointment, according to Bob McKamey, vice president of the Area E Gillnetters Association. “We thought there were going to be more fish there than what there was.” About 325 boats were out Monday, and returned Tuesday morning with various levels of success. Some boats sat heavy in the water, with 1,500 salmon, while others had in the neighbourhood of 500. With the average being in the 1,000 range, that meant about 325,000 fish were caught, less than what the Department of Fisheries and Oceans was shooting for, which was around 400,000, McKamey said. “We’re all standing by to see if it will open again this week,” he said. Some fishermen were hopeful for a repeat of the numbers from 2010, but that doesn’t appear likely to happen with the season coming to a close in to near future. See Page 3

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