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NovDec

RCMP ask for help to find missing woman from Nakusp

RCMP Nakusp Detachment are investigating a report of a missing elderly female. The report was received on Friday afternoon Nov.4. Kay Mansour, 83-year-old, of Nakusp, B.C. is missing. Kay is 168 CM (5 feet, 6 inches) tall and weighs 91 kilograms (201 pounds), has brown hair and blue eyes. Mansour was last seen back on […]

Now that Hallowe’en is over, use immune boosters to prevent being up all night

Especially with the cold weather this year, I’ll be expecting phone calls from parents with sick children (or themselves if they were dipping into the candy too much) about a week after Hallowe’en. I see many colds and flus due to the increased amount of sugar. As I stated in a past article, one teaspoon […]

BC Transit expands service between Nelson and Castlegar

After all of the cuts to bus service in Nelson, finally a bit of good news. A new bus service will be provided to Blewett starting Monday, Nov. 14. The new route — 24 Nelson-Blewett — will make three return trips a day and will be monitored for customer use for a period of six […]

Traveller ALERT: tuberculosis identified in person who traveled by bus

The British Columbia Centre for Disease Control is issuing a public health advisory to identify passengers who traveled on Greyhound bus #5098 on Oct. 11 and were exposed to an active case of tuberculosis. The ill person took Greyhound bus #5098 from Vancouver at 5:45 p.m., arrived in Chilliwack at 7:45 p.m. left Chilliwack at […]

Candidate Questions 3: Should Rossland seek to expand its population and tax base?

One perrenial issue here in town is our rather anaemic tax base. Trail has Teck, whose taxes heavily subsidize life down the hill. Rossland, on the other hand, has no industry and no large employers other than the seaonal Red Resort. As our recreation programs face funding challenges, we asked the candidates, "Should Rossland...

Sustainable considerations now come into play with regional district's vehicle acquisitions

A green fleet and green purchasing policy have been adopted at the regional district level, helping mark another rung up the ladder of the Carbon Neutral Kootenays project. Sustainable considerations will now come into play when it concerns vehicle acquisition, replacement and usage decisions under the new policy — replacing the existing RDCK Vehicles Policy. […]

Province begins dropping onus for wildland fire risk management in regional district's lap

One quarter of $5 million is a lot of money. It’s more than the regional district has lying around, but it is a number that the Province of B.C. is now expecting the Regional District of Central Kootenay to cough up for wildland interface fuel treatment. Last year the Province funded West Kootenay projects — […]

Leading water expert Robert Sandford to speak in Nelson

Leading water expert and author Robert Sandford, co-chair of the Forum for Leadership on Water (FLOW) and chair of the Canadian Partnership Initiative for the UN Water for Life Decade, will stop in Nelson this Friday as part of a cross-Canada tour to raise awareness about water security issues. “Governments need a Canada-wide strategy that […]

Multi-material BC meeting in Nelson gains more insight into delivery of new recycling program

The onus for waste is shifting and West Kootenay folk have a say in how that happens. In one year the producers of packaging and printed paper in B.C. have to create a stewardship program for the collection and recycling of their end-of-use products. On Oct. 14 the not-for-profit agency, Multi-Material BC, was in Nelson […]

Trail woman wins right to sue children for support

A Trail woman is suing her adult children for parental support, the CBC reported early Wednesday. Shirley Anderson won the right to have her case heard in B.C. Supreme Court, after three of her children applied to have the matter dismissed. Justice William Ehrcke ruled Tuesday Anderson’s case for parental support can be heard, but […]

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