LEGISLATIVE PARLIAMENT BLiG ATTNG VICTORIA VeV 1x4 RV, CARDIN BC CAN “© Opponents ‘of: the propo jail: csite presented. Kitimat. ; \ t i } | ‘ .T ‘ bo Toe if ' L of new, classrooms at “iwo- local. schools 3 is. coming @ bit © closer ith approval of | “projects; says, school, district “and ° three-. “More-- at. “Kiti- - K'Shan - ‘worth - nearly ’ $2: Working ‘drawings: for: the TERRACE - ae ~ Gonteution' , _ Seeretary treasurer. Barry wr Plersdorff. ; more ‘classrooms, at Uplands: *, approved, likly” wouldn’t * ‘start lintil this‘summmer when - - the: school, district. ‘begins its. NeXt: fiscal yeat.” . million : are ‘the “last |.stage, . “Uplands. will ‘replace. four _ before the projects will: go" ‘portables n now in: “USE, : “out to tender, Approval : -Of ‘the: shit the provincial government at oe is a ‘fairly good indication’*. “construction: ‘will “go:, ahead uthis- year, daid: Piersdorff.- “He said construction; once The. four” ‘clissrooriis at : on. oe A ASSEMBLY TERRACE — It won't be tong. |: Before the city révives its traffic . ticket: ‘program 1 now that a pro-_- blem. causing it to be. shelved last year has been solved. “I'm ‘confident that by, the. time: the: ‘snow has gone, ; we'll: - - have - “someone * pounding’ tlie. streets’: again,” ‘permits’: and .. _licenices. director Bab’ Lafleur "said last week, . __ benly. December local: titi fic: “court?:judge Colin. Jolley _ found writing in'the name of the’ - driver, .of a vehicle-on the sum- . mons scopy of. the bieket forms ‘constituted an alteration and so could ‘not be _ entered, as ~ evidence. . : Lafleur.said the problem oc- curred because ‘of the way the - various. copies. of the summons - weTe put together. ‘Information did not appear where it should -have on each.of the copies and ther naine Of the driver had to be “Written in ‘on the copy given that ‘Person, are The provincial Chief Tustice ‘has: now: approved an amended format’ which. ‘guaranteed they’ re" _Acceptable™ to the TERRACE _ More than: 40 Heme Mountain residents op-- _ model for — the Nisga’a a TERRACE — Plans for a pulp and paper mill south of Meziadin could become a model for major resource projects in- volving the Nisga’a’ Tribal Council, says its executive direc- tor, cil has met with mill'pr ‘pro oponents Orenda Forest P: Sand wants more information on the proposed $365 million project. “We do -not opposed any kind of development as long as ‘it takes" vito consideration’ ef-" fects on other parts of the eco- system," said Robinson, =~ He added. that any agreement between the-Nisga’a and Oren- da could involve environmental controls and say over land use. Orenda already cuts in areas -claimed by the Nisga’a and sells the wood to other mills or ex- ports it, The company wants to use the wood it now sells elsewhere and wood that can’t now be us- -ed to manufacture 173,000 ton- hes of magazine quality paper ‘each year, It filed the first of a series of Teporis with the provincial government last month‘as part of the environmental approval process. The mill would use hydrogen peroxide as a bleaching agent and mash pulp beiween large grinders. Orenda says that.pro-. cess developed in Finland is more environmentally sound than the chlorine process used by traditional kraft mills. Robinson said the Nisga’a want more information before commenting further on ihe pro- ject. “There are a lot of unknown factors. They say this project is environmentally safe — the Finns have proven it and so forth,’’ he said. Robinson added that the Nisga’a regard any: major pro- ject as another alienation of land it has under negotiation with the federal and provincial governments. ; wakke * In the meantime, - ‘another native group has also met with Orenda and wants more infor- Rod Robinson stid she-co coun- | been developed ‘by. the Attorney-General’s office’ and the city had been asked to use them, Lafleur said, “If the A-G’s office made the mistake in issuing the wrong informa- . tion to the printer...I think we'd be justified in asking for‘ some compensation. There definitely | was a loss in Tevenue.” : rut Although i it was hard to fix. ‘ah exact figure, Lafleur suggested ait could be as much as $75 4 day. That would work out: to’ more than $6,000: by. the time the new tickets arrived... Rod Robinson mation on the proposal. The Kitwancool’s land claim takes in the proposed mill site but its chiefs are reserving judgement, says band manager Richard Douse. “The chiefs have heard their Statements, They recognize the potential of a vast economic: benefit to the territory but they haven’t seen anything for Kit- wancool,’’ he said, Douse added that Orenda has told them the type of ‘qualifi ca: tions needed to work in the planned mill don’t fit the kind of training members of the Kit- wancool band now have. “TF he’s: Astening to’ us, he should kill it tight. there on the ~ -16th,’” Diane Campbell added, 5 ap, think: -he-knows ‘where: we stand. If he was with UB: ‘he'd. kill it “‘now:!? "Watmough ‘said the ctowd | was totally opposed to the plan antd-that it was clear-nd changes to it would appease them. £9) But dP the project: does’ go ahead, he sald her ‘wants to make ig in, sure there it a large buffer one _) between: the” dail and" houses and that a Soclety sal 4 Optlnaiatic over th chances, of t making sehr dm Ratcheting Sitar, par pday