Kimberley Daily Bulletin, November 20, 2014

Page 1

THURSDAY NOVEMBER 20, 2014

WILDLIFE REPORT

VOLLEYBALL

Snow and cold doesn’t mean bears are hibernating.

Boys and Girls off to provincials.

Buying Selling Buying or Selling Call First Call Marilyn Marilyn First

See LOCAL NEWS page 4

See LOCAL NEWS page 5

250-427-8700 250-427-8700

STAY AWARE

STORMING TO THE TOP

THE BULLETIN PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 82, Issue 220 | www.dailybulletin.ca

Still waiting for Jumbo decision

Wildsight’s Robyn Duncan says no doubt in her mind, substantial construction has not started C AROLYN GR ANT Bulletin Editor

Opponents to the Jumbo Glacier Development are awaiting decision from the provincial Environmental Assessment Office as to whether Glacier Resorts Limited’s Environmental Certificate is still valid. If valid, the Certificate allows the company to build their proposed Jumbo Glacier Resort. The issue hinges on the question of whether the project was substantially started within the allotted 10-year time period, says Robyn Duncan of Wildsight, which has made a submission to the EAO to further their point that substantial construction has not begun. “Glacier Resorts hasn’t completed the water testing they committed to do prior to construction as part of the environmental assessment process” says Wildsight’s Robyn Duncan. “We’ve been following the law faithfully and honestly throughout this process and the company’s failure to comply with their commitments just reinforces our long-stated concerns about their ability to build and operate this project in an environmentally responsible manner.”

The deadline to prove substantial construction was October 12. Immediately prior to that date, Duncan says concrete trucks did drive up to the Jumbo site and pour two slabs. “We found out on October 8 that an EAO audit said that they were not in compliance with the environmental certificate pre-construction requirements. Whatever construction did start, started before they met their pre-construction requirements. It puts the integrity of the whole process in question.” Duncan says that to her it looks like Glacier rushed in to pour concrete before the deadline. “They are calling what they poured a foundation. To me there is a big difference between a foundation and a concrete slab. In my mind there is no way the Minister could declare it a substantial start. “It’s a massive project, with a budget between $450 million and a billion dollars. Two concrete slabs poured in the bottom of the valley, a few road improvements and a bridge paid for by the municipality is not a substantial start.” However, Duncan says the challenge is that there is no legal definition of substantial start. A decision is expected soon. “It is up to Minister Mary Polak to make the decision. There is no time line, but all indications are that she will make a timely decision. It is to no one’s benefit for this to drag out too long.”

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PHOTO SUBMITTED

Back in 2012, Kootenay Savings Kimberley staff donated their CareWear proceeds to put a bench on Rails to Trails. The bench was installed this fall. Staff dedicated the bench in memory of former co-worker Debbie Mousseau.

Council receives slope assessment report for Overwaitea Hill C AROLYN GR ANT Bulletin Editor

The Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations conducted a slope assessment of Blarchmont Hill (above Overwaitea) in 2013 and the study was finally sent to Council this month, where it was received. Several small debris slides have occurred in recent years and there tends to be visible seepage on the hill each spring. Because provincial highway 95A runs up the hill, the province wanted to assess the stability of the hill. One of the things the

report found is that prior to the construction of the Overwaitea store at the bottom of the hill in 1973, the toe of the hill extended beyond the building footprint. The hill was also used as a ski jump in the 1940s. The report concludes that the natural geometry and geology of the hill above Overwaitea combined with possible slope excavation at the time of, or before, construction has resulted in unstable slopes. The last few freshets have had large late snowpacks. BULLETIN FILE PHOTO Future landslides are possible, the report says. The hillside on Warren Avenue above Overwaitea has had several sloughs in

recent years including 2011 and 2012.

See REPORT, page 5


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