12,000 Jackpot
$
SUPER BINGO
SATURDAY, JANUARY 27TH Saturday Evening Bingo at 6pm
($7,500 cash plus $4,500 Slot Free Play)
0
58307
00200
5
ON THE TRADITIONAL TERRITORY OF THE LHEIDLI T’ENNEH
Since 1916
THURSDAY, January 18, 2024
PGCITIZEN.CA
PRINCEGEORGECITIZEN
REF MAKES PRO DEBUT
Grace Barlow calls PWHL game in Toronto, second stint Feb. 3
PAGE 6
City posts warning signs at Moccasin Flats TED CLARKE Citizen staff
It was -29 C last Thursday with a wind out of the north that made it feel like -40 C when two City of Prince George pickups rolled into Moccasin Flats. The purpose of the city’s visit was to post signs on the more permanent buildings that serve as makeshift homes to warn residents those structures are not approved and could pose safety hazards. “We go through the camp on a regular basis and we check any of the new structures and unfortunately none of them are compliant with the building code and people haven’t gone through the permitting process,” said Charlotte Peters,
manager of bylaw services. “So it becomes incumbent on the city to put up the ‘Do Not Occupy’ and ‘Stop Work’ orders. Obviously with the situation with the result of the court case (which gave residents the right to live in the camp) and the current climate with homelessness it’s not going to be something that’s enforced. It’s just to make sure that we go through the process,” she explained. “Sure, liability plays into it, but ultimately the City of Prince George wants people to be safe. We want people to stay in structures that aren’t going to fall down around them and end up with somebody getting hurt.” See HEATING SOURCES, page 5
CITIZEN STAFF PHOTO
Bylaw services officer Braeden Rumming knocks on one of the structures that house residents of the Moccasin Flats homeless encampment last Thursday.
Snow Owls Are Wise: They secure the Best Travel Insurance Coverage Get a FREE QUOTE now!
Contact Gary Clarke
Go to snowowls.ca
250.564.2001 whoo@snowowls.ca