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Prince George Citizen April 23, 2020

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Local author picked for new Chicken Soup book, page 6 UNBC’s Stephen Rader explains the anatomy of a virus, page 12

Prince George Thursday April 23, 2020 Your community newspaper since 1916

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Hundreds of nurses needed Arthur Williams and Christine Hinzmann Citizen staff

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Northern Health is looking to fill more than 300 vacant nursing positions.

Citizen file photo

The UNBC women’s soccer team throws some swag from the stage at Exhibition Park on Saturday evening during the second day of Cariboo Rocks The North in August 2019.

Cariboo Rocks The North, BCNE face cancellation Ted Clarke Citizen staff

Cariboo Rocks The North and the B.C. Northern Exhibition in Prince George may be cancelled after provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the COVID-19 pandemic rules out big summertime events in B.C. where people crowd together.

Henry said it’s likely the Pacific National Exhibition in Vancouver will likely be cancelled and people will have to scale back wedding plans, funerals and graduation

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ceremonies to avoid large crowds. “Realistically, we will not be having those big events where people gather together this summer, that is a much riskier prospect than ever before,” Henry said. “We do not have enough herd immunity or community immunity to protect everybody and allow that type of event to happen. So I think we’ll be seeing globally those types of events like large parades and large mass gatherings where we all come together, those will not be happening this summer.” “All of us involved with Cariboo Rocks have been planning to move ahead as planned for the second weekend in August,” event organizer Kyle Sampson said. “We continue to monitor the situation and work with health officials and follow the orders. Nothing’s ruled out but, of course, nothing’s a guarantee and we’re going to have to connect as a team and make some plans to see what our next steps are. It may well happen, we don’t have the answers yet. It’s definitely not cancelled yet.” If it is not allowed in the summer months, Sampson said there is a pos-

sibility the concert could happen later in the year. If the BCNE and Cariboo Rocks events are cancelled, they would join a lengthening list of events that won’t happen this year in the city, including the world women’s curling championship, Western Canada ringette championships, Canadian masters badminton championships, Jehovah Witnesses convention and Backcountry Horsemen of BC trailriders jamboree. The BCNE is a member of the B.C. Association of Agricultural Fairs and Exhibitions, which has already announced the Cloverdale Rodeo and Country Fair in May and Williams Lake Stampede in late-June won’t be happening this year. “We can think about how we can celebrate important milestones, important things in our lives, that allows us to have a safe distance and we should start planning that now,” Henry said. “This is a challenging time around the world and it’s not going to be easy to get out of it, but those types of mass gatherings where we have lots of people together, this is not the time for that.”

Last week, Northern Health’s recruiting website had 235 positions listed for registered nurses (RNs) and registered psychiatric nurses (RPNs), 56 postings for licensed practical nurses (LPNs) and 11 jobs open for nurse practitioners. The job postings ranged from leadership positions such as two director of care positions based in Terrace and Smithers, to part-time and casual positions. Of the 302 total nursing positions Northern Health is looking to fill, 66 were based in Prince George – 44 RNs and RPNs, 19 LPNs and three nurse practitioner positions. “Spring time is always the busy time of year for recruitment,” Northern Health spokesperson Andrea Palmer said. “We use the postings to attract new graduates.” The number of postings isn’t unusual for this time of year, Palmer said, but Northern Health is constantly looking to fill positions throughout the region. “There are positions that are difficult to fill,” Palmer said. “Often specialist nurses can be difficult to recruit.” Northern Health needs more than a dozen intensive care unit nurses, emergency room nurses, operating nurses and critical care nurses, along with other assorted specialists. The vacant nursing positions puts immense pressure on the current nurses working across the region to provide adequate levels of service, the president of the B.C. Nurses Union said. “We know that the auditor general has already identified the north as having significant staffing issues,” Christine Sorensen said in an interview. “That the north is already staffing about 25 per cent below what is needed. We also know that provincially we have the lowest rate per capita of nurses per patient population.” See RECRUITING, page 3


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Prince George Citizen April 23, 2020 by Prince George Citizen - Issuu