A2 - The Terrace Standard, Wednesday, March 1, 1995 STOP | Gitwangak mill ited | | a CITYOFTERRACE | | Pre | Sbcyear forest licence ee] NOTICEOF UPCOMING | | = —_ WORKERS OF C GED Forest operation,” said C GED chairman _ licence. a Products and their familias at Larry Moore. The Cranberry Management : y «©6Gitwangak have a more secure “The. tenure represents our Corporation, made up of area res- ’ future thanks to being awarded a future, the continued Ife of the idents, asked for 20,000 cubic . a ” Schools get licence last week to cul wood, sawmill, securily. for the 60 metres. ZONING BYLAW REVISION The mill was one'of four bid- amployees now working, a co- Bidder niimber four was $1 82,000 ders for a six-year licence to log’. operative woods operalion, and Cranberry Forest Products a an You are invited we te CaO eet tonitent ot aaa oe owe HIGH-TECH equipment and | up to 100,000 éubic metres a year expansion plans for the sawmill” grouping of the Gitksan villages of soning 3 fawetor the Cit peter Ming ‘0 ire Inernet “ i the Cranberry Timber Supply Ironically, the award lo CGED Gitsequecla, Gitwangak and The City of Terrace hes commissioned an update of the current |” al scnools rea. returns to a situation In the early Gitanyow, Nisga'a Economic * thanks to a $182,000 grant from ~_ Up. until now the mill, owned: . 1990s.when the mill was owned.’ Enterprises Inc., the development Salle ee eee eee paitbe aralnen for feat * the province. |: by the Gitwangak -band, had by Wastar using wood from Tree arm of the Nisga'a based in the at the aa House. prep 9 ve The Skills Now program depended upen spot purchases to ~~ Farm Licence 51. ; Nass .Valley and Rayonier This vm be an informal session where City staff and the plan- ° grant to School District 88 is to keep it In operation. | . Westar closed the mill in the Canada, which acts as a contract ning consultant will be available to explain the draft Zoning Bylaw |” be used to increase computer lit- Approximately. 60. people are early. 1990s and three years ago, —_ logger for the Nisga’a in the Nass, ondito fi PI asedo in anytime b: Ween 4. ” eracy and electronic communi- now working .at the mill and more | surrendered TFL §7’s licence: This bid was intriguing 8 p.m answer your qUestONs. Fie pin anylime be " cation, teach students to plan jobs. are promised when a $3 mil- - back to the provincial government. because it Involved the Gitanyow _ their careers, and improve lion value-added expansion. is The Gitwangak band then and the Nisga’a, both of whom WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1995 course offerings for nalive complete. - . * formed C GED Forest Products to claim the area covered by the 4:00 - 8:00 P.M. students. “"C GED must show that ‘it is’ buy. the mill and the provincial Cranberry TSA. COUNCIL CHAMBERS a The money is also. supposed providing employment and con-° government turned TFL 51.into _—Pettar’s licence condition that HALL, 3215 EBY STREET . lo help in a range of other areas, tract opportunities to Gitanyow — the Cranberry Timber Supply Area both the Gitanyow and the Your janes te vetaration of a new Zoning Bylaw for |: such as work experience and and Nisga’a people in their tradi- (TSA). Nisga’a receive work from the C1 Terrace is welcomed and we look forward to seeing you at the -f 2 apprenticeship progranis for | — tional territories,” announced tor-: There were three olher bid- GED apparently recognizes that.’ |. OPEN HOUSE, iS high school students, ests minister Andrew Pelter-as a: ders forthe CranberyTSA, ~ —-_both-groups have claims on the | Skeena. MLA -Helmut licance condition. ~The other bidder with a mill land within the Cranberry TSA. ‘s Gicsbrecht, who’ made the “The uncertainty of a wood was Kitwanga Lumber, owned by : oe 2 announcement’ Monday al supply for the sawmill has been the Hobenshield family. It said it ; : oe i Caledonia Sr. Secondary school, the major concern for the future would add a shift if granted the hawt oo. SR oa ele SE: ee ee | said he runs into former Caledonia graduates in Victoria | 8 | . a a erThese students have com- Li b | ead e I V | S | is pleted their degrees, but they're still working in restaurants and PROVINCIAL LIBERAL Bulkley Valley-Stikine riding retail service stores.” leader Gordon Campbell is Liberals. He said students need train- scheduled to visit the northwest Campbell’s northwest visit is ing that is relevant to the job tomorrow. geen as a sign that provincial market. He'll be atthe founding meet- _ Liberals are expecting an election Tires slashed ing of the provincial Liberal sometime this year. Skeena riding constituency asso- His appearance up here is the over weekend ciation here tomorrow evening. first since -he said-last fall he RCMP ARE investigating a And on Friday, Campbell will = would, if premier, kill Alcan’s rash of tire-slashings in be travelling first to Hazelton and = Kemano Completion Project. Thornheights over the weekend. then to Smithers to meet with . Staff Sgt. John Veldman said police received at least four complaints of slashed tires on Cypress and Hawthorne Streets on Friday night. Anyone with information is requested to contact police at 638-7400. Centennial 2 i] | t “CENTENNIAL Christian The friendliest “Inn” town! | School's junior boys hase thall Make our place “Your Place” to enjoy an evening £od , j YS Das of intimate dining with reasonable prices! leum put together four straight wins: to capture the junior boys ‘B’ northwest zone title on | , Saturday. The team clinched the cham- TIGE R Pp RAWN SAR ‘ART . jonship with a win in the final . Srer Thorn Tr Secondary | | mttaer All Sale Merchandise School. ; aoe Shrimp Stuffed Skiers strike | gold in Comox eis 1 Tigers A Great Selection of POS, RE REE YE LOCAL SKIERS struck gold hr a or | a, ; ; bo! tm ~~. ic Ti | 7 ] a crite meted inteconor | | fila [ice Garlic Tigers Mens and Ladies Fashions. | ™ Chris Paziuk of the Shanes a 3 " Cajun Tigers a Mountain club weaved his way : , to top spol among male 15-16 : ; year olds in the slalom event, a” each $ 15.95 , fi : T U rs ay, ri ay Meanwhile, down on the cross-country course, Dale Young of Kitimat was blazing a Can't Decide? iry a sample ; & Satu rd ay Classi. of all three for $16.95 | Also on the slopes, Terrace luge sledder Todd Taylor scored doubles in the senior men’s sin- Open For Lunch For Reservations - 635-9161 gles and senior mixed doubles. OUT OF TOWN - TOLL FREE In the ring, Terrace boxers | Tuesday - Friday 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. 1-800-513-9161 Jonathan Doane (178 lb Junior Dinner FAX 635-9142 BY) and Lee Maximehuk (125 Monday - Suncay 5:00 p.m. - 11:00 pm. 4992 Lakelse - Terrace eee eeuentapas make Ib Junior C) both punched their wiy ta the gold-medal podium. Terrace figure skater Grice Mitchell added a silver with her performance in juvenile ladies singles. — Gymnast Eva Mateus earned BCEGE rete piers ees bronze medals for provincial ‘A’ = team competition and for all- a around performance. . = Terrace wheelchair basket- THIS YEAR z ball athletes George Joseph and > Jeff Kirkaldy came away from Feb. MAX, MIN, PCPN SUN «. the weekend with silver medals. 18 1.2 9.4 30.8 0.0 : Robyn Brown, Mike Cooper, 19 5.1 -1.7 40 0.5 Steven Miller, Corey Trogi, Michelle Wiebe and Eva 20 61 0.4 21.4 37 Wilkinson also brought back 21 4.3 0.1 6.6 3.3 silver in the mixed team bowl- 22 32 -0.7 TR 15 ing competition. ne The zone boys hockey team a 27 0.6 12.0 0.1 battled through fierce competi- 3.6 -3.1 5.8 4.9 tion to capture bronze at the games. Terrace Chit to-Ryu Karate Club competitors Janine Arnold and Paul Fleming took bronze in the team kumite event, In the pool, Kevin Andolfatto. also captured a bronze in the 200 metre boys breast stroke. And Terrace masters swim- mer Joe “The Fish” Mandur ROAD MAINTENANCE OPERATIONS ===> | ~ BROUGHT TO YOU BY: Winter is upon us once again with snowfalls and freezing temperatures, Because of NECHAKO { a gif NORTHCOA ST bridge decks, they ice up faster and more frequently than roads, a CONSTRUCTION SE RVICES Reduce your speed to suit conditions. Even with sand and salt, roads may still be slippery especially If the temperature changes suddenly, Please watch for and obey traffic control signing. To report road hazards, call 638- J 8389 during office hours. After hours, please call 1-800-665-5051, : ~~ ee Tem ew eee RR EE eee ee eee eee ee a f Your Road Maintenance Contractor a "eterna ee once again finished in the med- An Environmental Citizenship Message From Environment Canada : als, returning with silver, Many of our communities chlorinate their drinking water to kilt bacteria, Although chlorination can also form harmful by-products, its benefits ara much . See next week’s Standard for greater than the small risk of health effects from these compounds, : full Games results...