i Vo Lx 4 Legislative | Maar li anernt Bui icin Victoria B.C, Cry -ibrary, ches NCU TER TT | BARARR — Your body knows about wind chill, but how about your mind? Page A1O A celebration of animals — but these are orphans. Residents of| the Terrace Animal Shelter are featured throughout this issue. Orenda carries on — page A5. rei. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1991 wned and operated newspaper Vol. 7, Issue No. 2 a ae Phone 635-7840 Fax The parking situation downtown Is desperate, but that isn't what put this car on its side itr tha:hack lane of the Skeena Mall. RCMP spokesman Cst Don Oldham said it came loose from a tow truck's hook while being towed around the corer at the north end of the Sande Overpass and slid down the embankment, startling a few people on the other side of the wall. by Tod Strachan An apartment building is not golng to be built at Eby and Davis. At least not in the immediate | future. A standing-room-only crowd attended a public hearing in city council chambers Monday night, and when all was said and done it was a draw. Aldermen Ruth Hallock, Mo Takhar and Rick King were opposed; aldermen Bob Cooper, Danny Sheridan and Darryl Laurent were in favour, This left mayor Jack Taistra with the decid- ing ballot and he voted against the proposal. "If a change of this im- portance is to lake in this community we must have a better consensus of council,” he said. Taistra pointed out that nelgh- bouring residents had expressed concern over increased traffic, the vagueness of the proposal and the quality of life in the area. But he also indicated that if the developer, Ray Lovstad, could “clarify or tone down" his proposal he could bring it back to council for a second look. Lovestad described his proposal during the public hearing, saying it would be an attractive, three-story, 27- to 30-unit apartment building set on a nicely landscaped lot. He said each unit would be in the middle to upper range with two or three bedrooms and self-contained laundry. A type of rental accom- modation, agrees city planner Marvin Kamenz, that is rare in Terrace. Lovstad also said traffic would not be a problem: parking would flow off Walsh Ave. and exit onto Davis Ave. All he needed was to have his property rezoned from R2 two family residential to R3 mul- tiple family residential. One thing Lovestad didn’t have, though, was a set of drawings to show city aldermen and neighbour- ing residents what his building and landscaping would actually look like. This caused what alderman Rick King described as a lack of confidence in Lovstad’s proposal; some residents suggested that once the property was rezoned, Lovstad could build almost anything he wanted. There are other problems faci I City shoots down apartment plan Lovated if he brings a new pro- posal back to council, however. Besides the trust and support of his neighbours, Lovstad will have to prove to everyone that an apart- ment building is a suitable buffer between the downtown core and residential areas. And with | this established, will have to convince council that his property, presently zoned R2 and listed as high den- sity residential on the Official Community Plan, should be rezoned to accommodate a mul- tiple family dwelling. In supporting Lovstad, Cooper said he didn’t believe traffic would be a problem and added that the dedication of a 33-foot strip of — Continued on page A4 Wind topples weather records by Tod Strachan A number of weather records have been broken in the last eight months. 1990. was a ycar of extremes. a Last summer we broke an old high-temperature. record. On Dec. 3 a record snowfall all but closed Toads in the area. The storm began Sunday afterncon and by the time it. was. over the Terrace weather office had recorded a total of 100.6 centimetres (39.6 inches) of snow and 20. millimetres of rain. On Dec. 3 alone we had 82.8 centimetres (32.6 inches) of snow, amd this set a new 24-hour snow- fall record for the month of December. The previous record was set on Dec. 12, 1978, when we got a 50.6 centimetre (19.9 inch) dump of wet, heavy, snow. Even though this was a December record, however, the all time record is still secure. It belongs to Jan. 17, 1974, when we got 103.1 centimetres (40.6 inches) of the white stuff. A close second, which ‘still holds, was recorded Feb. 18, 1972, when 102.4 centimetres (40.3. inches) of snow were measured. : On Dec. 5 it began to rain... and forgot to stop. We got 16.2 millimetres (0.64: inches) of rain that day, another 20.2 millimetres (0.79 inches) the following day, and on Friday, Dec. 7 —- you guessed it — another record fell. We broke the all time, one-day rainfall record for December with 111.4 millimetres (4.39, inches) of rain. The previous record for any month was set on Tuesday, Oct. 31, 1978, when we got 114.8 millimetres (4.52 inches) of rain. We missed this one by just 13/100ths of an inch. oS — Continued on page A2 635-7269 | a]