Man shot at restaurant was brother of ‘Surrey Six’ killer NEWS 4
Friday, September 13, 2019 | Your community newspaper since 1916
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN
The source of the orange glow Wednesday evening during the power outage was the flame coming from Husky Energy refinery on Pulpmill Road.
Refinery’s large flare was due to power outage Citizen staff The power outage on Wednesday night was the reason behind the extra-large flare coming out of the Husky Energy refinery’s stacks. In an email response to the Citizen, company spokesperson Kim Guttormson said
the outage caused all of the refinery’s units to shut down and when that happens, the equipment needs to be depressurized. As part of the process, light hydrocarbons are released into a system which safely handles them through flaring. “When a shutdown happens suddenly (compared to a planned shutdown), a
greater amount of light hydrocarbons are released, which leads to a larger flare,” Guttormson said. “In these cases there is often a smokier flare as steam, which is normally applied to the flare, isn’t available.” Especially amidst the darkness that enveloped the city, the plume made for a spectacular sight while also prompting concerns
Sawmill closures put drag on otherwise strong economy Nelson BENNETT Glacier Media As of May this year, an estimated 4,385 workers were employed on the $8.8 billion Site C dam construction project near Fort St. John. Kitimat and Terrace are humming with activity, thanks to the $40 billion LNG Canada-Coastal GasLink pipeline project. Port expansion in Prince Rupert has created an additional 1,000 jobs since 2016. Employment is strong in the Dawson Creek-Tumbler RidgeChetwynd triangle, thanks in part to Conuma Coal Resources reopening a third mine – Willow Creek – last year. And in the Golden Triangle of northwest B.C., mining exploration spending was up by about
Today’s Weather Hi +14° Low +9° See page 2 for more details and short-term forecasts
$165 million in 2018, according to EY. Economic growth in B.C.’s north is reflected in housing starts and construction permits. Residential building permits in northern B.C. were up 30 per cent in 2018 compared with the total in 2017. In addition, industrial permits were up 427 per cent and institutional and government building permits were up 42 per cent, according to the annual State of the North report. Overall, indicators show northern B.C.’s economy growing in 2018. But in small, forestry-dependent communities like Mackenzie and Fort St. James, it’s a very different story. Both have been hit hard recently with sawmill closures and curtailments.
LOCAL HOROSCOPE NEWS OPINION FAMILY SPORTS
1-3 2 4-5 6 8 9-10
A&E HEALTH COMICS CROSSWORD MONEY CLASSIFIEDS
Suspected home invader in custody
“You go to Kitimat and Terrace right now, things are hopping,” said Joel McKay, CEO of the Northern Development Initiative Trust, which publishes the State of the North report. “In Prince Rupert, where you’ve got the Port of Prince Rupert – you know, hundreds of new jobs created in a couple of years with their expansion – lots of activity there. So no question about it, some of those major industrial projects are really helping to keep some communities afloat,” McKay said. “If you pop up north to Mackenzie, Fort St. James, Vanderhoof, Fraser Lake and then down Highway 97 into the Cariboo, that’s where you start to see the impacts of the downturn in forestry. And that is a different story.” — see ‘WHAT HAPPENED, page 3
11 14 15 15 16 17-20
that the refinery was on fire. It was not, nor was the refinery the cause of the outage. Instead, B.C. Hydro says it suspects a lightning strike led to a transmission failure that left most of the city without power for about 20 minutes, and affected more than 120,000 customers across northern B.C. — with files from The Canadian Press
A 37-year-old Prince George man is in custody and faces charges after allegedly breaking into a home and assaulting an elderly woman. Phillip Christopher Roy Wood was arrested early Thursday morning after Prince George RCMP were called to a report of a home invasion. Police were told a lone male had gained entry into a unit in a downtown-area apartment building and attacked the woman who as asleep in her bed at the time before taking off with a small quantity of cash. Wood was arrested a short distance away after officers, including a dog and handler,
converged on the scene at about 3 a.m. The woman was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Charges of break and enter to commit a robbery, robbery, assault causing bodily harm and failing to comply with an undertaking have been approved against Wood. “This is an especially despicable crime” said Cpl. Craig Douglass. “To forcibly invade the privacy of someone’s home is absolutely horrible. To assault the 74-year-old resident is a whole other level of disgusting.” Although Wood currently lives in Prince George, RCMP said he has spent a significant amount of time in Fort St. John and Terrace and is well known to police.
Contact Us
Newsstand $2.00 incl. tax Home Delivered 95¢/day
Citizen staff
Raised by many mothers FAMILY 8
www.pgcitizen.ca
CLASSIFIED: 250-562-6666 READER SALES: 250-562-3301 SWITCHBOARD: 250-562-2441
0
58307
00200
5