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On the way to Super Bowl
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Golden finish for skaters
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Tell me a story
Cornelia Naylor/burnaby now
Storyteller: Kevin Kaardal, superintendent of the Burnaby school district, reads to a class of South Slope Elementary students during Literacy Week. Kaardal was one of several volunteers who spent time reading to children.
“Celebrity” guest readers from across Burnaby converged on South Slope Elementary and the B.C. Provincial School for the Deaf last Wednesday to wrap up a week of fun-filled reading activities. Each day of the school’s third annual literacy week featured a different reading-themed event, including book trivia, drop everything and read (DEAR) time, dress-up-asyour-favourite-book-character day and reader’s theatre. To cap off the week, special guest readers and American Sign Language storytellers visited each classroom. This year’s readers included School District No. 41 superintendent Kevin Kaardal, deputy superintendent Gina Niccoli-Moen, Burnaby Coun. Nick Volkow, Burnaby Edmonds MLA Raj Chouhan, district principals Heather Hart, Reg Leplante, Ben Pare, Patricia Finlay and Brandon Curr; and RCMP Const. Jary Koskelainen.
Multimillion-dollar ad campaign under fire Jennifer Moreau staff reporter
The City of Burnaby is taking aim at Kinder Morgan’s pro-pipeline advertising campaign and questioning whether consumers will end up paying for the publicity. The city filed a motion Thursday with the National Energy Board asking for several things, including details on how Kinder Morgan is funding its ad campaign, and
whether the money is coming from extra “firm service” shipping fees approved by the National Energy Board. “It’s a bad policy, regardless of what aspect of the project proposal the fees are paying for. But if these federal government-sanctioned shipping fees are funding Kinder Morgan’s current multimillion-dollar ad campaign, it would be particularly inappropriate,” Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan said in a media release. “We want to know whether or not some of these ‘firm
service fees’ are being used to pay for the cost of Kinder Morgan’s advertising that is clearly nothing more than an attempt to improve their tainted corporate image.” A couple years ago, the National Energy Board gave Kinder Morgan permission to charge some of its Westridge Marine Terminal customers firm service fees averaging an extra $1.45 per barrel of oil. Those fees total roughly $29 million annually, according to Ian Anderson, president of Kinder Morgan Canada. The money is used
to offset the pipeline expansion’s development costs, so if the project is rejected, there is no risk to investors. Robyn Allan, former CEO of ICBC, cried foul and suggested those costs would ultimately be passed onto consumers. Anderson refuted her argument in a letter to the Burnaby NOW last July, saying the oil will sell at a higher prices overseas. Allan maintains that will drive up crude costs in Canada, and refineries will pass Kinder Morgan Page 4
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