High flyers UP, UP and away to greater Rotary auction heights is the ob- Ject of organizers Bob Walch and Wes Beeston. Two of the items up for bid this year are helicopter rides from Canadian and Northern Mountain. The auction concludes tonight and ree. ie ee Conflict suggestion shot down TERRACE — Conflict-of- interest guidelines council members. received from the city’s lawyers last week border on the ridiculous, says one’ alderman, ; “According to this, we can’t be at the meeting — period,” noted Danny Sheridan. ‘I real- ly wonder where it’s coming to these days,” Sheridan was referring to a memo from lawyer Ray Young of Lidstone, Young and Ander- son ihat says it's not good enough that an alderman walk away from the table and not vote on an issue where there’s a potential conflict-of-interest. ‘*A council member must stay away from all that part of the meeting prior to the one agenda can be heard on the radio or watched on television. item on which he or she wishes Recycle society perks up TERRACE — The Skeena Valley Recycling Society is in the pracess of changing its con: stitution to bring in two new directors. Gary Mills and Maureen . Bostock ‘volunteered as -new directors at the society’s board meeting last Wednesday. The addition of new directors was one of the things organizer Scott Schooner hopes will help save the society’s recycling depot on Hwyl6, Building owner Dave McKeown has served eviction notice on the society and the depot could be out of business by the end. of the. month if the Society doesn’f come -aipiWith | <2 $14,000 in unpaid rent, City aldermen were to meet with society members this week and re-consider a proposal by |" alderman Rick King to extend up to $16,000 in emergency aid to the depot from the city's surplus accounts. ~ The grant could have been made last week, but King’s original motion wasn't voted on. Aldermen Danny Sheridan, Bob Cooper and Darryl Laurent voted 3-1 against King to table it - to this week. Schooner said he can unders- tand the city’ § reticence to get involved in what could be an open-ended commitment. -*We.can’t expect the city ta piss great gobs of money down the tubes and two years later not have anything to show for it,” Schooner said. ‘‘That’s what they’re worried about and I can understand that.” He said he believes the depot will be self-sufficient over the long term. But aid will be re- quired to keep it from closing this year, he said, and possibly. through the first few months of next year. ‘I think we can be viable in the long run," he said. ‘But it’s going to take some help to stay afloat right now.” The society is putting together an application for a federal Environmental Partners grant. That would provide the depot with a federal grant mat- ching.moneys, raised locally up to a total of $100,000, Schooner said’ they’ re alsa in the process of organizing a beer} bottle depot and getting a one- night bingo licence. Both of those prospects would help cover the depot’s $2, 000.mon- thly rent.” - . Schooner said he'd also like to see the ‘clty.and the regional district find.a way to halt the dumping of cardboard. in the landfill by major stores in town. He said Overwaitea and: Co- - Op continue to dump their card- board, ..which. is the - only recyclable. ‘material «the depot can currently ship at a profit.: ~ They hope to purchase-an in- dustrial baler soon to. compress [~~ . the cardboard and reduce ship to abstain,” Young says, The legal advisory is an inter- pretation of the meaning of a recent B.C, Supreme Court .. decision involving the District of Surrey. The ruling implies that an alderman who temporarily leaves a meeting to avaid voting in conflict, would be assumed to be abstaining, and therefore voting with the majority. Young said that means the alderman in question can’t be present at the Meeting at all until after the - vote. Sheridan said it could mean council meetings won’t be held because of a lack of quorum when a number of aldermen have to abstain because of potential conflicts with issues on the agenda, ‘Council received the advisory for information. L 4637 Lakelse, Terrace, B.C. ~ Terrace Standard, Wednesday, November 20, 1901 — Page Ag BLRGERSSTESAS-CHICKEVAEAFOOD MaRRBBCIOUS ” oe FOOD BAR. 638-0065 ' d " ‘tlonal: Subaru AL Whee Drive? The most . ‘ advariced road handling technology on the mar- ‘ket, Subani All Wheel. Drive gives you complete : driving control in all, kinds of ‘weather under the ran, drizah ‘ on wenear are most. difficult, road | conditions:, tain, freezing t's’ ‘ihn safe but to: ‘control yourself - ° Sedan of the year two’ years running by the - Autorniotive Journallists ‘Association of Canada. * Want: to control yourself and carrying space “as well? -Consider‘the 1992 Subaru Loyale _ Wagon. 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