ATAMANENKO: Home heating costs: make or break
When I think of winter coming, I imagine cosy weekends filled with children’s laughter and hot chocolate shared in the warm glow of a living room. But for too many people here in the BC Southern Interior, that first snowfall may feel a little more ominous. For some of our friends and neighbours—maybe even your […]
Outposts
Whatever the Western media calls them, the illegal Jewish settlements on the West Bank are very far from being outposts. They are connected to Jerusalem and Tel Aviv by fast, Jews-only motorways. Their villas have swimming pools and lawns (a settler is allocated eight times more water than a Palestinian). Even the most recent and […]
Sea to Sky shadow toll story makes national news courtesy of Mark Hume and the Globe and Mail
Mark Hume of the Globe and Mail has done an outstanding job of taking the Sea to Sky highway shadow toll story to an entirely new level in the Monday edition of the paper, and managed to get some rather creative answers from both Macquarie and the BC government. Truly,creative doesn’t even begin to describe […]
Tick-tock: let James run out the clock
Make no mistake about it: Carole James will be gone as NDP leader well before the next provincial election. But remember: in politics, like comedy, timing is everything. And the next BC election isn’t scheduled until Tuesday, May 14, 2013. Yes, 2013. So for the NDP there’s no rush: in fact, it would be politically dumb to replace James […]
Katrine Conroy steps down as Opposition Caucus Whip
Katrine Conroy released a statement today from her office in Victoria. Effective immediatley she has stepped down from her role as Whip for the opposition caucus. Andrew Zwicker of the Rossland Telegraph caught up with Conroy shortly after her announcement today to chat further in depth on why she’s stepped down, if she’s still behind Carole […]
Harper’s flip-flop on Afghanistan
We should have known it was too good to be true. Harper’s many, many repetitions of his government’s commitment to get all the troops out by July 2011 are well known. I think he may actually have meant it because by these repeated statements he framed the issue so strongly that all Canadians expected – […]
New policy sets snowplowing priorities
Just in time for the first snowfalls of the year, city council has okayed a new snow removal policy. The shift in policy was largely driven by a continuing effort at City Hall to separate policy directive from operational issues, reduce the city’s potential liability risk, and maintain a top notch snow removal service. The...
Campbell's resignation must not kill the BC Rail story
Now that I’m back from some well-enjoyed fun in the sun, I am amazed at the number of people who have suggested the biggest story that happened in BC in the past few weeks was the decision by Premier Gordon Campbell to step down. They are wrong. As repeatedly explained on this blog long […]
Ode to ole Olaus: Rossland soon to have an iconic structure all its own
If Rossland could pick one iconic person to represent the town who that would it be? If you could pick one scene to become the iconic image of Rossland on postcards, marketing material and people’s impressions going forward into the future what would it be? All great cities have one. San Francisco’s got the Golden Gate Bridge,...
Blacklisted bands and noise complaints - RMFF clears last minute hurdles
Just how late should parties be allowed to go at the Miners' Hall and how hard should bands in the venue be allowed to rock? The question arose this week and briefly put a hurdle in the way of the Rossland Mountain Film Festival, which has hired BC/DC to rock out at their Saturday night gala event. Unbeknownst to the Film...