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THURSDAY, February 29, 2024
PrinceGeorgeCitizen.com
PRINCEGEORGECITIZEN
Comedy of Te nors
Some Adult Content
Mar.13th-Apr. 3rd
TIX at Books & Company
00200
5
ON THE TRADITIONAL TERRITORY OF THE LHEIDLI T’ENNEH
Miracle Theatre
SUPER BINGO
SA TU R DA Y, M A R CH 30TH Saturday Evening Bingo at 6pm
Eyesight at risk for residents after treatment axed CHRISTINE DALGLEISH Citizen staff
ZACHARY PETERS PHOTO
MEN OF BRONZE UNBC guard Darren Hunter congratulates forward Spencer Ledoux while Chris Ross looks on after the men’s basketball team captured its first Canada West medal in school history on Sunday in Winnipeg. See story on page 17.
As she sat on her couch tuned into the news to hear the words ‘everyone will get the healthcare they need’ during the provincial budget this week, the irony was not lost on Christina Watts. The 45-year-old Prince George resident had just received a letter from the only retina specialist north of Kamloops, telling her that the eyesight-saving injections she gets every month will no longer be covered under the BC Retina Disease Treatment Program as of March 31. Watts is an prominent local artist who knows she won’t be able to keep paying out-of-pocket for the very expensive and painful injections that cost about $1,700 each to prevent complete blindness in her left eye. “I will just have to let go of my sight in my left eye,” Watts said. She lost her central vision in that eye in January and now only sees on the periphery.
See THIS COULD BE A REAL FINANCIAL DRAIN ON PEOPLE, page 4
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