Kitimat Northern Sentinel, October 08, 2014

Page 12

12 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Deciding election boundaries a delicate task Josh Massey Deciding on boundaries for provincial electoral ridings is a delicate task because of low populations scattered over large geographical areas, says the chair of a commission given the job of recommending changes if considered necessary. One suggestion, made to the B.C. Electoral Boundaries Commission when it held a session in Prince Rupert, was to remove the Nass Valley from the current Skeena riding and add it back to the North Coast riding, said Tom Melnick. “But I think the direction we got from the people who presented these are already large areas that are difficult to service for an MLA, please don’t make them any larger,” said Melnick. “The temptation might be to make the areas in the north bigger, to balance off the numbers in the south, but you can only do that so much until it becomes unmanageable and unworkable.” Skeena NDP MLA Robin Austin doesn’t think removing the Nass and placing it in the North Coast riding would be a good idea. “North Coast already is the number

“I think the direction we got from the people who presented these are already large areas that are difficult to service for an MLA, please don’t make them any larger.” one most difficult constituency to represent,” said Austin of the riding which takes in Prince Rupert, Haida Gwaii and a number of coastal communities. “The last thing I think they would want is more geography. The Nass was in the North Coast constituency for a short time, but it has always traditionally been in the Skeena riding. I think because the Nass Valley has only one road into it, and it comes down to Terrace.” “Ultimately it’s an independent panel and not for MLAs to try to put in place things that just help them, so I hope they listen to people,” Austin continued about

the boundary commission. “I don’t think there is going to be lot of change in northern BC because the communities are so far apart. It’s very hard to make geographical changes which means MLAs have to go even longer distances.” Legislation brought in last year by the province sets a lower limit the number of ridings allotted to the northern region of the province and that number cannot surpass eight. The commission heard from four people when it met in Prince Rupert but no one showed up for its Terrace session Sept. 23. The commission has a mandate to review riding boundaries every second general election and this time has a $4.5 million budget. Although no one showed up to speak with the commission at the Sportsplex Melnick said there is still time to make written submissions in advance of an initial commission report due next May. The commission panel will be back again for a second tour. “I think we have scheduled 29

hearings across British Columbia in the next seven weeks or so and we just started last night in Prince Rupert,” said Archer Sept. 23 of the current tour. “Week one for us is to travel through the north and hear from British Columbians about whether they have any concerns about the current configuration of electoral districts, whether the maps makes sense, whether the right community are in the right districts, whether the size of the districts are appropriate, the names of the districts are appropriate, things of that sort,” said Archer. Chief Electoral Officer Keith Archer sits on the commission as does Beverley Busson, a former commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Island LNG plan gains executive Cameron Orr Steelhead LNG, which plans a liquefied natural gas export facility on Vancouver Island, has added Victor Ojeda as their president.

Ojeda, has experience on Kitimat’s own projects, having been a former managing director for LNG Canada, the Shell-led proposal on the former Methanex site.

A news release from Steelhead LNG says Ojeda worked on LNG Canada from its inception to July 2013. “Having a senior executive with Victor’s experience and exper-

Police investigating death on Kildala Arm September 22 A 15-year-old male under a court ordered curfew was spotted at around 1:35 a.m. around the Kildala Elementary school. Police arrested the youth and was held for court, and later released for further court dates in October. September 23 A traffic stop on Lahakas Boulevard resulted in a threemonth driving prohibition for a 26-year-old driver. The driver had been flagged by the Office of Superintendent of Motor Vehicles for the driving prohibition, but police did not elaborate on why. September 25 Police attended to a call of an unwanted guest at 8 p.m. on Teal Street and found the subject male leaving through a back door in the house. The man is on a probation order

Police Beat not to attend the home. The 45-year-old Kitimat man will appear in court later to face charges of not complying with a probation order. September 26 Police assisted the Coast Guard when a 62-year-old man was found dead in the area of the Kildala Arm. The man was fishing in the area, police say, and the cause of death is being investigated. If you’re missing a chainsaw the Kitimat RCMP may have it. One was found on Columbia Avenue. If you think it’s yours call the detachment at 250-632-7111 and quote file number 2014-3425. September 27 Police responded

to a break and enter on Konigus Street. The suspect pried open a back door and stole items including a laptop computer. The police are continuing to investigate. September 28 Police were called on a missing person’s file for a 15-year-old. Police say they have since made contact with the youth and verified her well being. Police were called on a report that an eight-year-old girl had been bitten by a dog in the Comorant and Albatross Avenue area. Police later learned that the same dog had bitten a woman. Both persons received treatment at the Kitimat General Hospital. The dog was surrendered to the Kitimat Humane Society and arrangements were made for it to be euthanized.

“Our ability to attract someone of Victor’s stature is an indication of Steelhead LNG’s strong industry reputation.”

tise represents a significant step forward for our company,” said Nigel Kuzemko, CEO of Steelhead LNG., in the company release.

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