PRIVINCIAL LIBRARY JACK TALSTRA ; : f “Y 4 er a Serving Terrace, Kitimat, the Hazelions, Stewart and the Nass , VOLUME 7E NO, 123 Price: 20 cents THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 y, oe rs 0k MAYOR DAVE MARONEY .8 poor time for changes All acclamations? abut no race yet PARLIATEN! BLDSS VICTORIA BC Hee programs through BYDONNA VALLIERES when he has organized his devote more timeto council “the time required on HERALDSTAFF WRITER business affaris so he can duties. counci is alot and I'd like to th b ly,” Elections in Terrace this Go es jon propery year look like they're going This leaves Mumford's to be very quiet affairs seat open to Gerry Duffus _ shown by. prospective candidates before the Oc- who is so far the ony outside candidate to declare his intentions to run for council. tober 31 . nomination Duffus has stated he deadline. wants the counci seat Mea eliged (renagain The mayor's seat as well because “as an alderman I ame as three aldermanic seats can be most eggective in will be vacant in Novemenr but eo far no one has came serving the community.” Ald. Helmut Giesbrecht point to completion of any . major programs in the past because of being on the voter's list are that the elector be 19 years or older, a Canadian citizen chall year a 2 Dave Maroney for his eeat and Jack Talstra who have rearrangements in annual or British subject, a and there are only three have both declared ‘Scheduling of construction resident of Canada for 12 candidates for al an. their intentions of seeking work, He added that next months and of B.C. for six ; 1 olecth year's council should months, and you cannot be Maroney who just tool Te-bleciion. promote development of a disqualified’ under the office after a ‘June by election said, “it’s a r time to make changes.” There will be one new . cil “[ think I have no obligation to run again or they lose some experience,” Giesbrecht said, community plan and re- activate the paving and drainage programs. regulations. Youd do not have to reside or own property with the muicipalty, but you . i feels th Nomations for council will i i: Rramnfocd win got. sameway. Though he's only close Monday 25 oon 60 fyo' clectors in’ the “by-acclamation in’ et Heen on -councll for two there-is-still time for can- funiciplity to file : by election, has decided years, he’s practically an didatea to file nomination nomination papers. fot to run, leaving his seat open for outaide candidates. old hand considering the changes that have taken papers. The main requirement in Deadline for nominations is Monday and the election Wa Organization is the reason . Place in the district's ad- running for office is that the will be held November 19. GERRY DUFFUS Mumford gives. for not. ne ministrative staff. son have his name on th The inaugural meeting for may replace Mumford re-election. But DOUG MUMFORD He. said councillors voter's list as a registered the elected council will be “ said intends to run next year ° bowing out this year running for re-election can’t elector. Requirements for held December 5. cara re SRR RCD RROD SOUSA ES DORIC ORS OATS AS SSR AER Rae SE eR SARS Re Onl ‘VANCOUVER (CP) Continental Oil Co, (Conoco) told the West coast oil ports inquiry Wednesday that Canadian oil export cut- by Storrow and Rankin was off the mark because it did not relate to alternative oil transportation methods that would preclude the need for west coast port can supply northwest. U.S. barrels of oil a day more than can be supplied by the ting pi @ system. - Gonoce is ‘a member of Kitimat Pipe Line Ltd.,; a Cancel still faces _ PCB charges for spill Herald Staff writer Even though Canadian Cellulose has agreed on a method to deal with a spill of polychlorinated biphenyls im Porpoise Harbor, the federal en- vironmental protection service has no plans to with- draw the 16 charges against them. Keith Hebron, a senior environmental protection BCR costing pro to be examined in private VANCOUVER (CP) The royal inquiry com- mission on the British Columbia Railway was asked Wednesday to hear evidence of the railway’s ALLOW REVERSE Commission counsel Martin Taylor proposed if after hearing the evidence the commission decides it need not have been heard in cedures is being used by Canada Manpower and Capilano College in a retraining program for workers. Attempted backs and problems with the a port. consortium. : officer in Vancouver, sald Wednesday the agency has | costing procedures behind secret, it should be made existing pipeline system in Bowden said that by 1985, All alternatives, said | no plans to withdraw charges and will continue to | closed doors. available, to both news . Montana mean the state the northern tier of U.S. Bowden, will be costlier to | monitor the concentration of PCB's in the harbor after “Tt is the railway's view lB and pubic. murder . faces a cold winter. States will need 650,000 the consumer. . it’s been treated. that much of the materialis Mr. Justice McKenzie Kent Bowden, manager of , . Cancel announced in a news release Tuesday it extremely confidential and said the commissioners ets logistics raneport supply plans to contain the PCBS, a thick, syrupy | Substance we would ask you to exer- would examine the propos g , j 1 § collected a ottom of the Tr, cise eve recaution in material berore ma a department, told the inquiry More money, dumping about 35 feet of leached hog fuel on top. y ensuring that total con on the motion. two year. s a aay co scion ce ium Fem rita | Elngecumlsg ig tar eine ee 7 ont. > 4s ‘ » alk: vv +n om the harbor shortly after it originally ro evidenc ; PRINCE GEORGE, B.C despite the fact that refiners iF by: nr ocurred, but the costs of removing the pollutant wo commission chairman Mr. hearin that four riaiar Vaated éxport more than. twothirds ime in jo progr am . “be astronomical”. now, gue Pe uld Justice Lloyd George - microwave systems, in- (CF ard Kevin pbawn of Montana-produced crude. ” a He said once PCBs enter the food chain, by being | McKenzie. cluding the B.C. Rail Gove Sos’ sentenced Bowden said oil wells-in OTTAWA (CP) — More Duration of. the jobs consumed by tiny organisms in the harbor, the con- He estimated the system, were only miles 70. ay in British Co- Montana produce about jobs and longer working available under the | centration of the pollutant increased thousands of | proceedings would take five apart in the Cariboo and j hia “supreme Cour! to 88,000 barrels a day, but periods will be added to a ‘am are immediately times with each step up the chain to more complex days. sometimes shared the same two years fess a day in jail only about 32 per cent of it federal makework program eased to 26 weeks from | organisms, _— mming told the three- mountaintops, asked (WOU OO Oe ited finds its way to Montana for youth that started Oct.1, nine weeks, Cullen said. Meanwhile, about 30 demonstrators affiliated with man commission that he is communications chief C.D. 7 der of one RCMP officer refineries. The pipeline. it was announced Wed- ~ The federal government the Save Our Shores environmental group picketed prepared to have the Marlatt “why this com- 214 criminal negligence system, built at atime when nesday. provides up to 50 cent of Cancel’s pulp mill in Prince Rupert, saying the matters examined and pulsion to overbuild?” causing bodily harm to Montana got most of its po jovment Minister “e , wages d, to a protection methods announced by the company are cross-examined “in the Marlatt said the Crown oo oinor supply from Canada, con- , ah id ing Maximum of $1.50 an hour. | insufficient, eatest possible detail”, railway wanted complete “loosing sentence, Mr tinues to take Indigenous tat th is wilin to ut “public disclosure (of control of a single system in Justice J. @ Bouck said he ctude away from the state. PECmeN: T° OS ie fom . the _railway’s —_— cost spite of duplications. He Jos keeping the sentence . Bowden said a west coast cleawhere in his department Department spending cuts calculations) carries sucha said ‘‘despite this vas! short so Hayward could oil port was the only (‘beef up the pe Job ett real danger of damage to overbuild,”” commercia: serve it in a provincial in- economic way tosupply the for Pp 6 few vc t l] b ; the railway that they shall revenue which B.C. Rail re- stitution “mainly because of northern United States from (iby) Steger 8 Stl see ance 10 ge be heard in camera,’ ceives for leased circuits your age, not because of eastern Washington to program. * ° . _ He agreed with Mr. has ‘‘grown slowly and your crimes or your at- Minnesota. _ Adepartment official said == VICTORIA (CP) — The compared with revenues of with a substantial surplus, Justice McKenzie that, the steadily over the past 20 fitudes towards them.’’ Lawyers Marvin Storrow, it has not yet been decided British Columbia govern- $978.1 million and ex- we are predicting a Pew) Mellel snake mi yehor mechanical Sentences of two years or for the Kitimat Oil Coalition, from which other pre am ment had a cash surplus of penditures of $782.1 million balanced budget for the Should bé a ban against any engineer, G. D. Kelly told more are served in federal and Harry Rankin, for the the money for JE be . §100 million at the endof the in the first quarter. year.” Sublication of theevidence, the inquiry his department penitentiaries. «that vated une, aed | Eimrentfscal year, Finance “We vill be asking al the Wolfe said that all govern QUGLAGR Jf ESIDELIREA 2 acting os, caretakers ot sitempted murder con Allied Workers Union, tried 1, said ‘the amount of Minister E ye Vhife said ministries to restrain their ment departments will be vcoecentnotts e,vacated Rail West plant iii P l ms a to ‘shake Bowden's con” money to beadded to the $5- van. Wolfe said vpenditures in the last six asked to cut expenditure by aTree nse curt of the | WEN ROHE viction usually "means tention that Conoco, could million JET program will eh rel the months because the cash approximately live per cent disclose eB. part of the Raed said B.C. Rail se PF svereed vith not otherwise wae Mont and depend on the response from co's selene!” quarter flow will be decreased,”- between now and the end ol The news media, he said, openings are first offered lo Hayward's lawyer that neries # ings, Mont.and Chambers ofCommerce and report for the period ending Wolfe told a news con- the year to offset the am could have copies of any displaced Rail West em- serving his sentence in a Wrenshall, Minn. other business organizations Dec. 30,- which showed ference. ticipated loss of $122 million briefs presented, but these ployees but that ‘‘the federal pentientiary would Commissioner Andrew which come up with job revenue of $2 billion and ‘‘Nevertheless, because inrevenuesfrom thefederal wouldhave to be returned at open 8 were very few.”’ be “quite devastating” to Thompson said questioning proposals. expenditures of $1.9 billion, we are going into this period government. the close of each session. lesaidaportionof theplant Hayward. |. 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