RCMP to release report on northern B.C. murders today NEWS 5
Friday, September 27, 2019 | Your community newspaper since 1916
Temperature forecast to drop below freezing Mark NIELSEN Citizen staff mnielsen@pgcitizen.ca
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN
Enjoying the new playground Daniella Vdengwu, a Grade 2 student at Sacred Heart School, plays on some of the new playground equipment over the lunch hour on Thursday. The school is celebrated its 70th anniversary by holding a barbecue on Thursday evening. The school also thanked the many donors, including IDL Projects, Pittman Ashphalt and Novatone, who contributed more than $200,000 to refurbish the playground, basketball courts, garden area and field at the school.
The city’s first burst of subzero weather for this season is in the cards. The overnight low is forecast to dip to -2 Celsius over Friday night and is to be followed by dips to -4 C, -3 C and -1 C over the three nights to follow, according to Environment Canada. Daytime highs, meanwhile, are to reach 8 C on Friday, when there is a 40-per-cent chance of rain showers or wet flurries, followed by 9 C on Saturday and Sunday and 11 C on Monday. Given the time of year, it’s to be expected, said Environment Canada meteorologist Doug Jones, who attributed the event to a colder air mass moving in from the Yukon and Northwest Territories. He also urged drivers planning to drive through the Pine Pass or through the Rockies to be prepared. “Especially in Southern B.C., the mountain passes will be snowy likely at the beginning of the weekend, so people might want to put their winter tires on a little earlier if they’re planning on travelling out and about,” Jones said. Environment Canada is calling for warmer temperatures by the middle of next week but it should be short lived. “There is another system that may move down towards the end of next week, so the general pattern for the next week to 10 days is generally colder than average and unsettled,” Jones said. Meteorological fall began Sept. 1 and meteorological winter begins Dec. 1. Jones said the change over that time can be drastic. “So every time we head downhill, it feels worse because the drop is bigger than the rise,” he added. “It does give a little bit of a shock... but it’s Canada after all.” Expect below-zero daytime highs in about six to eight weeks. Looking back, Jones said rainfall over the past 30 days was close to the average of 55 millimetres. It was wetter than usual to the south and drier than usual to the north, he added. HANDOUT PHOTO BY LARRY JOHNSON
Make casinos cashless, local gov’ts say Jeremy HAINSWORTH Glacier Media The provincial government should move casinos to cashless gaming systems as seen in other countries to cut money laundering, Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) delegates voted Sept. 26. A motion from Delta said there’s credible evidence linking B.C. casinos to organized crime and large-scale money laundering but added, “The current regulatory and monitoring system has failed to stop money fraud in B.C. casinos.” The approved resolution requested Victoria take immediate steps to address money laundering in casinos and to undertake an evaluation of cashless gaming systems, whereby account-based card technologies are used to verify player identity and track gambling transactions on all gaming devices. Earlier this week, Simon Fraser University School of Public Policy Prof. Maureen Maloney said a key to combating money laundering
Today’s Weather Hi +7° Low -2°
Fantastic fungi
is ensuring governments, regulators and industry are sharing data across Canada. Maloney authored the report Combating Money Laundering in B.C. Real Estate. Researchers found $46.7 billion was laundered through Canada’s economy in 2018. Of that, Alberta had $10.2 billion, Ontario $8.2 billion and B.C. $6.3 billion. And, that, Finance Minister Carole James said, has added five per cent to the price of B.C. residences. James said that translates to an average price boost of $32,000 for a condominium, $39,000 for a townhouse and $71,000 for a detached house. The UBCM resolutions committee noted membership in 2011 endorsed a resolution calling for changes to provincial gaming governance in part to address concerns that criminals were using casinos to launder illegally gained money. In May 2019, the provincial government announced that it would hold a public inquiry into money laundering.
LOCAL HOROSCOPE NEWS OPINION SPORTS
1-3 2 4-5,7-8 6 9-10
COMICS CROSSWORD MONEY CLASSIFIEDS
He declined to provide specifics on where exactly he found it, but Prince George resident Larry Johnson found this mushroom of gigantic proportions last week while out exploring west of the city. Measuring nearly one metre across, it’s a shaggy parasol, and it’s edible. It was too big to fit the whole thing in his frying pan, but Johnson was able to make a meal of it by frying it in butter with salt and pepper. Johnson said he also made a point of cutting it off at the stem, rather than tear it out by its roots, so it could grow back.
11 11 12 13-16
Ex-fighting dogs find peace NEWS 8
See page 2 for more details and short-term forecasts
www.pgcitizen.ca
Newsstand $2.00 incl. tax Home Delivered 95¢/day
Contact Us CLASSIFIED: 250-562-6666 READER SALES: 250-562-3301 SWITCHBOARD: 250-562-2441
0
58307
00200
5