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4 2015
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INTERACT WITH THE NEWS at N S N E W S .C O M
Heavy rains fill water reservoirs
Sprinkling ban remains in place amid predictions of a dry autumn JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
The weekend storm and change in the weather that dumped between 100 and 150 millimetres of rain on the North Shore in just a few days is good
news for water reservoirs, but officials still don’t know if it will be enough to loosen sprinkling restrictions in the Lower Mainland. “The rainfall was extremely welcome news,” said City of North
Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto, who is chair of Metro Vancouver’s utilities committee. “We had more rain in the last week than we had in the last four months.” Last weekend’s rain pushed water levels in the region’s three reservoirs back up to 60 per cent of capacity — from a low of 53 per cent before the recent storm.
That’s enough to put the reservoirs back to almost-normal levels for the beginning of September. “The bad news is it’s still not enough to change our watering restrictions,” said Mussatto, particularly given predictions of a warmer and drier-than-usual fall. “We still have to take that weather forecast into consideration,” he said. It’s possible that may
change after some of the rain that’s seeped into the ground and into local creeks over the past week makes its way to the reservoirs. But in the meantime, those who look after the region’s water system are using this summer’s drought as a bad-news beacon from which to consider changes to future water-use policies. “Everything will be on
the table” for discussion, said Mussatto, including the possibility of more widespread use of water meters, limiting sprinkling at earlier stages of a drought and changes to who gets to use water at different stages. One possibility might be to ban sprinkling at a certain stage while still allowing soaker hoses, See Tighter page 3
Banner year for bike thieves BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
You might want to go check on your bicycle. North Vancouver RCMP say they’re disappearing in record numbers. There have been 182 reported bike thefts in North Vancouver so far this year compared to a total of 132 in all of 2014 — a 38 per cent increase. “It’s been an excellent summer for bike thieves,” said Sgt.Warren Wilson. “From 2014 to 2015, the stats have skyrocketed.” The hardest hit neighbourhood has been Lower Lonsdale, where the SeaBus is used as a de facto getaway vehicle. Other hot spots have been Capilano Mall and Lynn Valley, especially for mountain bikes. Most of the stolen bikes wind up on the Downtown See Bike page 5
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