TUESDAY APRIL 21, 2015
CULL OVER
84 WOLVES KILLED See LOCAL NEWS page 4
FUNDRAISER
SPAGHETTI DINNER
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THE BULLETIN PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 83, Issue 76 | www.dailybulletin.ca
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JOHN ALLEN PHOTO
The Kimberley Community Choir performed Field Behind the Plow and Peace Like A River at the East Kootenay Performing Arts Festival at Knox Presbyterian Church, Cranbrook two weeks ago. The Choir will present a concert in Kimberley the evening of Saturday May 2 at 7 p.m. at Kimberley United Church.
Policing priorities Sunday smoke in Kimberley was from C AROLYN GR ANT Bulletin Editor
Each year the Kimberley RCMP detachment, in consultation with community stakeholders, selects policing priorities. This year’s priorities, based on the Provincial Policing Priorities are Crime Reduction, Organized Crime, Family Violence, Road Safety, and First Nations. Cpl. Chris Newel, Acting Kimberley Detachment Commander, visited City Council last week to seek guidance on this year’s priorities. Council generally agreed with the priorities, though it was noted that there were few First Nations issues in Kimberley.
However, there was a suggestion around road safety. Councillor Nigel Kitto said he was concerned with little police presence at peak traffic hours on the very busy Kimberley Cranbrook corridor of Highway 95A. Newel explained that the corridor was under the auspices of the East Kootenay Traffic Unit. However, “I don’t believe we are getting the service on that corridor we should,” Newel said. Newel is still seeking input on 2015/2016 priorities though he said, unless there are local unique issues, the local police priorities should align with these provincial priorities.
a planned burn in Cherry Creek area
CRANBROOK - On Sunday, April 19, 2015, the Wildfire Management Branch conducted an ecosystem restoration burn near Cherry Creek in the East Kootenay. Wildfire Management Branch fire crews were monitoring the area again Monday day and extinguishing any hot spots within the fire’s perimeter. Wildfire Management Branch staff determined that the weather forecast, the venting index and wind direction were all favourable prior to igniting the fire. Smoke is an inevitable side-effect of burning and as the temperature drops later in the day, smoke tends to settle in valleys. As evidenced from the amount of smoke that was produced on Sunday, there was a significant build-up of forest fuels within the project’s
TRISH BARNES PHOTO
Crews from B.C.’s Wildfire Management Branch gathered at St. Mary Prairie to conduct a prescribed burn on Sunday, April 19. Pictured here are members of the Rocky Mountain, Flathead, and Invermere unit crews who converged on site to assist. Crews were monitoring the area again Monday and extinguishing any hot spots within the fire’s perimeter. boundaries. The majority of the smoke seen in Kimberley and surrounding areas dissipated within a few hours.
This burn project will help increase biodiversity in the area, improve badger and Lewis’s woodpecker habitat
and expand winter grazing grounds for a variety of ungulates. See BURN, page 4