| eo Ot side of — the rive ro ana al i se Sabai meena ncenme ely Te a EE ee immediate vicinity of Terrace is about to be thrown wide open. The mountainous country. overlooking the west see major logging and recreational developments as ‘side of the Skeena River between Usk and Cedarvale will eT Se eee ee te ee ce ee a eat ee ee ee em me early as next spring. Skeena Cellulose announced last week plans to bridge the Skeena from St. Croix Creek 25 kilometers east of Terrace across to Pitman. The $1.5 million project will give the company access to a Forest License that will provide it: with 100,000 cu- bic meters of timber per year for 20 years. The license is separate from ‘ and over and above SCI’s an- nual allowable cut on Tree Farm License 1. . SCI representative Pat Ogawa said last week that the company is currently in the process of awarding the bridge-building ‘contract to Neco, a Vancouver- based engineering firm. He said their intent is to take advantage of low water flows that generally occur in the river during Janu- ary and February to get the structure in place, ‘We expect to be hauling wood out of there in the spring of 1989,”? Ogawa said. The tree species composition in the area is primarily old growth overmature hemlock and balsam, much like the forest in other parts of the company’s holdings around Terrace. The new bridge will also bene- fit smali logging firms who work the Kalum Timber Supply Area. District forest manager Gerry Dodd says the Forest Service will allocate wood equal to 20 - percent of the Skeena Cellulose annual cut in the West Skeena area for the ministry’s Small Business Enterprise Program, which will make an additional 20,000 cubic meters per year available, DOORS OPEN AT + 4330 P.M. G0000 ~ Lucky Dollar Bingo Palace “ SUNDAY: Terrace Athletics Assn. MONDAY: Terrace Minor Hockey World class recreational area planned The quiet and idyllic coun- try on the east side of the Skeena above Cedarvale will be the site of an ambitious hiking trail and lodge net- work development in the next & few years, according to Sev- en Sisters Ventures, Inc., a | Vancouver-based company whose vice-president is a for- mer Northwest resident, Art Bates. In a statement issued this month, the company says it is close. to reaching an agree- ment with the Gitksan Wet’suwet’an Tribal Council and the Gitwangak Band on a - land usage proposal. The ‘project is massive in scale, with plans for cutting hiking trails into and through the alpine areas on the upper slopes of the mountains. west of Cedarvale. dation are proposed at -vari- ous points along the trails. One trail indicated on maps supplied by Seven Sis- . ters Ventures shows a trail following Lorne. Creek to its source and then descending through the pass north of Wesach (Goat) Mountain to the head of” _ Kitsumkalum Lake. The company undertook consultation with the Gitk- san Wet’suwet’an Tribal Council because the area of -proposed development falls almost wholly within the Council’s comprehensive land claim. A statement is- 4818 Hwy. 16 West TUESDAY: Kermodes or Jaycees WEDNESDAY: Terrace Blueback Swim Club | THURSDAY: 747 Air Cadets Ladies of the Royal Purple FRIDAY: Parapelegic Assn. SATURDAY: Parapelegic Foundation Regulor 18 sm EVERYONE WELCOME! {Age 14 years and up} ‘Thank youl Have a Nice day! C A series of ~ lodges for overnight accommo- - over the next 20 years [In the West Skeena forest area. One of the last relatively inaccessable areas in the | This is. the view from St. Croix Creek, 25 kilometers upriver from Terrace, where Skeena Cellulose plans to bridge the Skeena and get access to two millon cubic meters of timber sued by Gitwangak chief councillor Glen Williams in- dicated optimism that an agreement in principle will be signed by both parties in the near future. SCHOOL OF HEALTH SCIENCES | BCITS GENERAL NURSING PROGRAM IS NOW OFFERED PROVINCE-WIDE The B.C. Institute of Technology has teamed up with five regional community colleges to offer the GENERAL NURSING two-year diploma program province-wide. First year of the program Is taken at one of the colleges closest to I you. Second year is taken at BCIT In Burnaby. Next Intake for first year at EAST KOOTENAY COMMUNITY COL- LEGE, NORTH ISLAND COLLEGE and NORTHERN LIGHTS COLLEGE starts January, 1989. Next Intake for first year at FRASER VALLEY COLLEGE and NORTHWEST COMMUNITY COLLEGE starts August, 1989. BCIT Is also currently accepting applications for first year be- ginning January, 1989 and August, 1989. - To find outif you are eligible, call or write the collage closest to you: BCIT, Burnaby 434-3304 East Kootenay Community “This is the first time a prospective developer has approached the band with plans and the desire to work together,’’ Williams noted. The two sides have been in- volved in discussions since March. College, Cranbrook 489-2751 North Island College, Campbell River 287-2181 Northern Lights College, Dawson Creek 782-5251 Fraser Valley College, Chilliwack 792-0025 § (local 490) Him Northwest Community . College, Terrace (635-6511 § Extra ‘Games ere