BN05-10: 1998 - THE YEAR IN REVIEW
Condensed from feature articles appearing in the Peace River
Block News between December 24, 1998 and January 5, 1999.
JANUARY
- Mikaela McKay, daughter of Amanda Jones and Rob McKay is
the New Year's baby
- Net value of property rose 1.3% over the past year, according
to the assessor
- Hart Hotel owners await word on their application for a casino
licence in Pouce Coupe
- Farm Crisis Committee prepares draft for a presentation to
government about the inadequacy of current aid programs for hard-hit
area farmers.
- Farmington area grain farmer Nick Parsons packs up his combine,
the Prairie Belle, and sets off on a 1,300 km drive to Victoria.
- Tumbler Ridge reels in the wake of notice by Teck Corporation
that approximately 700 employees will be getting layoff notices
at the Quintette Coal Mine.
- Disastrous harvest of 1997 has added another $31 million
in losses to Peace River area farmers.
- Fifty farmers protesting lack of adequate financial help
arrived home Jan 29 after lobbying politicians in Victoria
FEBRUARY
- Dawson Creek council awards final two contracts for the rebuiliding
of the Memorial Arena -- the front end and the sound system.
- City council passes a bylaw making it illegal for panhandlers
to ask for money or to loiter on streets
- Third floor of Rotary Manor seniors' home closed because
of concerns for safety in the aging buliding.
- Nearly 2,000 athletes arrive (February 5) for the Northern
BC Winter Games
- Louisiana Pacific delays its bark composting plans, citing
prohibitive costs resulting from environmental regulations.
MARCH
- The Hudson's Bay Company announces it will close Kmart and
move the downtown Zeller's store into the old Kmart location
at the Dawson Mall. It is unclear how many employees will be
losing their jobs in the change.
- The South Peace Health Council announces it has been given
the go-ahead to replace Rotary Manor. The council will first
explore the possibility to locate the 44-bed multi-level care
facility near the hospital at grounds owned by Northern Lights
College.
- Dawson Creek's Rotraud Lopp is to be given the Officer's
Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
in two days. The prestigious award is given for her work to promote
choir music and operas during many decades. The prize will be
presented to her by the German consul general in Vancouver, Peter
Maier-Oswald.
- A hefty discussion broke loose in city council when councillor
Dave Martin
proposed to double the financial rewards for mayor and councillors.
The
proposal was referred to the city's finance committee and salaries
remained
at $10,800 annually for councillors and $26,400 for the mayor.
- A week of speculation comes to an end when the Peace River
Regional District debates and puts to rest a report outlining
the regulations of the separation of the Peace from British Columbia,
possibly joining Alberta. Several large media were present at
the meeting, among which was CBC's The National.
- The B.C. Grain Producers announce they're going to start
variety trials for different hemp varieties, cleared for growing
by Health Canada just days earlier. The tests will determine
the viability of a commercial hemp crop for the Peace region.
March 17
- The community police station will leave the Dawson Mall and
make a move to the station museum at NAR Park. Financial savings
are cited as the mean reason for the move.
- Dawson Creek senior Beatrice Horrill blames underfunding
for a two day delay in having her broken wrist to be properly
set. The orthopedics program at the hospital is running a $267,000
deficit this year, the hospital reports.
- The Peace River Regional District will resume its weed control
program after Minister Corky Evans promised to reinstate the
weed control grant. The regional district's new budget spells
out lower taxes for regional district functions for area residents.
- The first of seven meetings leading up to the referendum
on cost sharing for Memorial Arena is held in Rolla. Rural residents
are not eager to pay for Dawson Creek's arena, despite the fact
about 30 per cent of the arena's users are rural residents.
- The Lake View Credit Union starts construction of its new
building on the corner of 102nd Avenue and 9th Street. Completion
is expected for as early as November this year.
APRIL
- Oil and gas revenues for the B.C. government continue to
drop significantly, compared to 1997's record prices. The March
sale netted $3.2 million, compared to $24.5 million in March
1997.
- After a year of planning, Dawson Creek developer Tom Kurjata
announces he will start building the Evergreen development at
108th Avenue and 17th Street this month.
- School District 59 will get a funding increase of $387,000
for its operating budget. The money is to cover the one per cent
wage increase for teachers implemented March 1.
- The Dawson Creek Chamber of Commerce launches its Business
Crime Watch program, designed to curtail thefts from businesses.
- The annual art auction nets close to $20,000 in funding for
the art gallery.
- A study done during the Northern B.C. Winter Games reveals
athletes, visitors and others spent an estimated $604,000 in
Dawson Creek during the three-day event in February.
- BC Hydro has settled with 36 of the 41 properties if offered
to buy in the South Taylor area, the company says. Hydro wants
to buy out all the residents currently living in the flood plain
of the Peace River in South Taylor.
- There's $16 million available for upgrades to South Peace
roads, $26 million for the Peace in total, says Highways Minister
Harry Lali in a festive announcement made at the city's traffic
circle.
- The number of seniors in the Peace is expected to increase
by 168 per cent in the next 25 years, says David Baxter, executive
director of the Urban Futures Institute, and the region should
be planning for it.
- Farmers could qualify for provincial disaster relief to pay
for repairs on farmland such as ruts and other deterioration,
says Bob Kelly, northern B.C. regional manager for the Provincial
Emergency Program.
- School District 59 gets $1.6 million in minor capital funding
for renovation projects
- The Peace River Regional District renews its fight for Fair
Share money after breaking off talks with the province a few
days earlier. The PRRD claims Victoria is stalling the project
that should give the region access to oil and gas money for infrastructure
upgrades.
- Disappointment of Dawson Creek officials was clear after
the region defeated the referendum that should have given approval
for rural funding for Dawson Creek's Memorial Arena. Three of
the four areas voted against. Only Dawson Creek voted in favor.
- City clubs working on the creek path say they will have the
path paved to 17th Street before the end of the year and lights
will be installed along the path as well for safety.
- More than 100 college students from Dawson Creek and Chetwynd
walk the walk to receive their graduation certificates at the
annual ceremony, this year at the George Dawson Inn.
- The 23rd annual Kiwanis Trade Show is held at the Kids Kin
Arena and Curling Rink and attracts thousands of area residents.
- Oil and gas sales are low still in April, netting only $4.6
million in revenue for the government, compared to last year's
$19.8 million. Energy and Mines Minister Dan Miller says the
revenues continue to play a significant role in the provincial
economy.
- The Peace region will be getting $113.5 million from provincial
oil and gas revenues for infrastructure renewal, Premier Glen
Clark announces in Dawson Creek. The region has been lobbying
for many years to achieve this 'Fair Share.' Dawson Creek's share
will be about $40 million over 10 years.
MAY
- Though Peace region officials had asked for taxing powers
of $15 million annually, they attested that a $12-million reallocation
grant per year was almost as good a deal, they said in a reaction
to the announcement of Fair Share April 30.
- Ground and airborne crews battled fires in log and bark piles
at Dawson Creek's Louisiana-Pacific oriented strand board plant
into the night on May 2. Fire fighting efforts on the long-smoldering
piles were not helped by high winds which drove the flames sky
high and started spot fires in neighbouring fields.
- The 100th anniversary of the arrival of the first white man
in the Dawson Creek area was proclaimed in Pouce Coupe council
chambers. In 1898, Hector Tremblay settled in the Pouce Coupe
Prairie, the hunting grounds of the Beaver Indian Chief Pouce
Coupe of Grande Prairie.
- Dawson Creek will replace 45 of its 400 water hydrants in
the city this year and the contract is awarded to Pipe-rite from
Vanderhoof for $230,000.
- The rail deal between BC Rail and Canadian National Railway
in Dawson Creek, aimed at stimulating grain transports through
the city, may be too little too late, says Dawson Creek grain
farmer Brian Haddow, as Rycroft is in the midst of building three
large grain terminals.
- Canadian National Railways put its rail line from Dawson
Creek to Hythe and Grande Prairie up for sale. The move will
have no effect on the reciprocal access agreement signed with
BC Rail during the same week.
- The Citizens' Advisory on Environmental Research (CAER) celebrates
the conclusion of a long environmental battle to have the former
Domtar site, behind Louisiana-Pacific, cleaned up satisfactorily.
- There won't be a casino in the Hart Hotel in Pouce Coupe
after all. The proposal by hotel owner Del Folk was not among
the three approved May 15 by Employment and Investment Minister
Mike Farnsworth. Hart Hotel owner Del Folk says his bid to bring
a destination casino to Pouce Coupe cost him $30,000. That's
now mostly lost money after Victoria approved three destination
casinos on May 15 elsewhere in B.C.
- Dawson Creek's Tyler Marion, a carpentry student at Northern
Lights College, is in the spotlight after winning the silver
medal at the National Canadian Skills competition in Vancouver
on May 15.
- After getting an early start on spring seeding, area farmers
are optimistic they'll be getting a much better crop this year
than the past two years.
- The Northern Development Act, intended to give northerners
a bigger voice in Victoria through the appointment of a Northern
Development Commissioner, is introduced in the legislature on
May 25.
- A renovated Memorial Arena sees its first use after the roof
collapse in January 1997 as country singer Paul Brandt is in
town for a concert.
- A proposal for a skateboard pad at Kin Park was taken to
city council. The cost is estimated at $14,000-$20,000 depending
on whether asphalt or more-expensive concrete is used. Dawson
Creek has a lot to offer local youth, but there's room for more,
according to s survey that accompanied a proposal to city council
for a skateboard park. Speaking of youth, 170 South Peace Secondary
School students prepare for the weekend of their lives - graduation.
JUNE
- In a bid to get local residents to come out to scheduled
hearings, the BC Electoral Boundaries Commission says the Peace
could lose one of its two MLAs in an amalgamation of Peace River
North and South.
- A recent Northern Alberta Development Council report points
to Dawson Creek as the cheapest route to ship grain to Prince
Rupert. The report was greeted as good news for Dawson Creek,
but not for Rycroft, Alberta, where three large grain handling
terminals are under construction.
- The Peace River Regional District called on the B.C. government
to eliminate the provincial sales tax and to decrease income
tax in a five-year project. The measures were billed as the next
logical step in making the B.C. Peace competitive with Alberta.
- The Bullmoose coal mine announced it will lay off 91 employees,
sending a further shock through Tumbler Ridge after Quintette
laid off 276 earlier in the year.
- June oil and gas sales are only a quarter of those of June
1997, but industry representatives say they've just shifted money
to drilling activity, which is at an all-time high in the Peace.
- With a push and a shove, six strong men maneuvered the long-awaited
CT scanner into place at the Dawson Creek and District Hospital,
marking the end of many years of fundraising and lobbying to
bring the equipment to the Peace.
- The City of Dawson Creek announces it will donate 17 acres
of land to the South Peace Community Health Council for the replacement
of Rotary Manor.
- Angry Prince George fishermen unveil plans to blockade the
Alaska Highway in their protest at the start of the 1998 fishing
season.
JULY
- The Canada Day celebrations in Pouce Coupe are once again
a big success as large numbers of people are drawn to the July
1 parade and the barbecue afterwards.
- Mayor Blair Lekstrom says the city needs a new $2-million
pumphouse and water main. The request comes just days after the
city imposed water use restrictions.
- A boom year in oil and gas also meant a boom year for hotels
and motels in northeast B.C. local owners and managers said.
That, and the low Canadian dollar has meant an increase in business,
they say.
- Local resident Jim Bacon had the honour of being the first
patient ever to undergo a CT scan at the Dawson Creek and District
Hospital.
- Ray Kitchen of Fort St. John is among five people being awarded
the Star of Courage by Governor General Romeo LeBlanc. Kitchen
died when he tried to stop an attack by a black bear on a U.S.
Mother and her son in Liard Hot Springs provincial park in 1997.
- The Dawson Creek and District Horticultural Society kicks
off its 60th anniversary celebrations by opening a Diamond Jubilee
Garden on July 17 with a ribbon cutting.
- City council gave three readings to a bylaw to borrow $2.25
million for construction of a new pump house at the Kiskatinaw
River and a water main to go with it after a sprinkler ban was
imposed for the second summer in a row.
- More than $1.7 million in federal funding is announced by
Agriculture Minister Lyle Vanclief for road improvements in the
Peace region.
- The first payment of $6 million in Fair Share money was presented
to the Peace River Regional District in Fort St. John by Municipal
Affairs Minister Jenny Kwan.
- Dawson Creek Beverages celebrates its 50th anniversary in
Dawson Creek. The 'Coke Plant' was started in 1948 by Jim Thompson,
but the actual bottling of Coca Cola ceased in 1972.
AUGUST
- The Dawson Creek Exhibition and Stampede was a success according
to exhibition president Toni Krantz, thanks in part to a new
ticket system that allowed patrons to go to either just the exhibition
or the exhibition and stampede for a higher price.
- The local Hire-A-Student office received 212 job orders,
25 per cent more than last year's total.
- John Denison, a former Dawson Creek resident was named to
the Order of Canada for his work in opening up the far North
in the 1960s.
- The Saulteau First Nation set up a roadblock near Chetwynd,
protesting intrusion onto what they say is a sacred area by BP
Amoco, which was establishing an oil field development.
- B.C. enjoyed a larger wave of American tourists this year,
and Dawson Creek was among the communities that was benefiting.
According to Tourism British Columbia statistics, the number
of overnight visits to the province were up by 9.4 per cent.
Dawson Creek shows a 9.3 per cent increase.
- Dawson Creek's skateboard park is in the construction phase.
A fence is already completed and ramps will be added soon.
- Bagpipe players and a ribbon cutting were part of the festivities
when the second phase of the Kin Park walking path was opened.
- South Peace farmers benefitted for $745,000 from the B.C.
government's $10 million Whole Farm Insurance program, the Ministry
of Agriculture reports.
SEPTEMBER
- Fire protection officials warn the fire danger in the Dawson
Creek Forest District is still extremely high. The hot and dry
weather, which has halted logging and welding operations, will
soon be at an end when predicted showers and cool weathers will
hit the area.
- A sluggish local economy is blamed for Calgary-based Genesis
Land Developers' decision to put on hold its 300-house development
along the Dangerous Goods Route
(Adams Road). A 17-home project on 92nd Avenue will be started,
however, as
well as the building of a Super 8 Motel on Alaska Avenue.
- The housing market in Dawson Creek continues a slow slide,
and the world market is partly to blame, says Blaine Nicholson,
president of the Northern Lights Real Estate Board.
- In front of 421 listeners, singer Keith Hall performs a benefit
concert for himself. Hall is raising funds for surgery to remove
his second kidney in an ongoing battle with cancer.
- Three weeks early and 80 per cent of the Peace's crops are
in the bins. Agriculture officials call the early harvest "exceptional"
and the quality of the grain "extremely high."
- There'll definitely be no curling this winter at the city's
Curling Rink, city council tells a disappointed curling club.
The city closed the curling rink as the structure is not safe
for public use.
- The City of Dawson Creek wins its court battle with insurer
Zurich Canada and hopes to start negotiating a settlement within
30 days.
- Not even the threat of rain could dampen the spirits of people
marching through downtown Dawson Creek with the city's first
Take Back The Night women's rally.
- City council removes the requirement for new businesses moving
into existing premises having to pay $1,000 to the city per parking
stall they're not able to provide. The move comes after one potential
but unnamed business would be faced with a $25,000 bill.
- City council votes to allow upright grave markers in portion
of Brookside cemetery.
- The City of Dawson Creek takes over ownership of the Silverado
Hotel as a result of the hotel owing the city $154,000 in back
taxes.
OCTOBER
- Canada Post confirms Dawson Creek is made the region's central
hub for processing and transferring mail. The decision was made
on flow of mail, not population, Canada Post says.
- With an official ceremony, Dawson Creek opens its Memorial
Arena, some 21 months after its roof collapsed. After the ceremonies,
the Dawson Creek Junior Canucks played the Slave Lake Lake Wolves,
a game the Canucks won 8-7.
- The Peace River Alaska Highway Tourist Association changes
its name to Northern Rockies Alaska Highway Tourist Association
and votes, at its AGM, to keep its office in Fort St. John.
- A series of natural disasters have decimated the hemp on
trial plots maintained by the B.C. Grain Producers. Despite the
apparent failure, trials are slated to continue next year.
- Zurich Canada, the city's insurer for Memorial Arena when
its roof collapsed, says is it going to appeal a court ruling
in the city's favour that says the insurance company should pay
up for the damages.
- Author Elaine Breault Hammond reads from her new book, Explosion
in Dawson Creek. The writer, with family ties to the city, wrote
the children's book as part of a series about time-travelling
children.
- The City of Dawson Creek announces it has sold five lots
of its Heritage Industrial Park to Peace Tractor, only weeks
after selling four lots to Arbutus Environmental. The industrial
park has sat empty for more than 15 years.
NOVEMBER
- There is record-drilling in the Peace, so far a 31 per cent
increase over 1997, and oil and gas industry spokespeople predict
that, with the current high gas prices, there will continue to
be record drilling in the B.C. Peace, the least explored portion
of the western sedimentary basin.
- Tumbler Ridge's Bullmoose Mine says that only one hour after
public bidding began in the sale of 22 of its vacant houses,
the seven houses not previously sold to employees were all snapped
up by local residents.
- Dawson Creek celebrates the official opening of the CT scanner,
about four months after installation. The official opening was
a tribute to all those organizations and individuals who contributed
in the fundraising for the scanner.
- The old Rotary Manor has met the standards of the Canadian
council on Health Services Accreditation, the South Peace Health
Council reports. Short-term solutions to safety issues have gained
the care home the right to stay open until the new Rotary Manor
is built.
- Dawson Creek officially opens the Christmas season November
19 with the traditional tree light-up at the Mile Zero Post...
err... Mile Zero Tree.
- The Canadian portion of the Alliance Pipeline Project is
given the green light by the National Energy Board, causing local
politicians and industry representatives to cheer as it means
increased industrial activity.
- Oil and gas sales remain low as the November sale brought
in $3.9 million in revenue, down from $13.8 million in 1997.
A Ministry of Energy and Mines spokesperson says the industry
is not acquiring, but developing properties it has acquired in
previous years.
- Another city building, the riding arena at the Fall Fair
grounds, has been condemned by the city as structural problems
are discovered that have made the building unsafe for use.
- There won't be a referendum on the Curling Rink, Mayor Blair
Lekstrom says. Instead, South Peace directors at the regional
district have chosen for a capital funding pool to pay not only
for the curling rink, but for the swimming pool as well.
- Mayor Blair Lekstrom is given a $7,500 annual pay raise by
council. His salary is now $34,200.
DECEMBER
- Yvonne Elden becomes the new school board chair for School
District 59, following Patrick Michiel who stepped down as chair
because his trustee term is ending in November 1999.
- Peace residents are elated about the report of the Electoral
Boundaries Commission that recommends leaving the two Peace ridings
largely intact. It was feared the commission would recommend
amalgamating the ridings.
- While B.C.'s unemployment rate has fallen below eight per
cent, Dawson Creek's continues to outshine the province's with
an unemployment rate hovering at about [4?] per cent, according
to provincial statistics.
- Proposed boundary changes between the Peace River South and
Peace River North electoral districts have local officials shaking
their head as it places the North Peace Airport in the South
Peace riding.
- Olympic speedskater Tom Overend gets a place on the South
Peace Senior Secondary School Wall of Fame. The SPSS graduate
was on the national speedskating team from 1971 to 1978.
- The Lake View Credit Union announces it will have moved into
its new building by Jan. 15, 1999. The grand opening is set for
Feb. 6.
- Aboriginal people join forces to bid on construction of the
Alliance Pipeline in a meeting at the Nawican Friendship Centre
that sees the creation of a lobby group called the North Aboriginal
Council.
- World renowned tenor Ben Heppner, who grew up in Dawson Creek,
is profiled on the Maclean's magazine 1998 Honour Roll.
- Falling coal prices will mean another blow for Tumbler Ridge,
a municipality already plagued with layoffs in the mining sector.
Japanese steelmakers have unilaterally cut coal prices by 18
per cent, and that blow will eventually be felt in Tumbler Ridge,
say mine officials.
- Victoria announces large cuts to municipal grants. The damage
to Dawson Creek will be about $130,000, Mayor Blair Lekstrom
estimates.
- A movement has started to build a downtown senior citizen
condominium complex in Dawson Creek. Developer Paul Kurjata says
he'll have to gauge serious interest first before deciding on
the project.
- The Mile Zero Metis Society has a new office and many plans
for the future, among which is an all-native radio station in
Dawson Creek.
- Chetwynd hospital has been given more than $900,000 in funding
to establish long-term care beds at the hospital.
- Dawson Creek's assessment rises with nearly two per cent,
causing Mayor Blair Lekstrom to say council may drop the mill
rate to hold the line on taxes.
- Nick Parsons is chosen as Newsmaker of the Year 1998 by the
Peace River Block News editorial staff. Parsons drove his combine
to Victoria in January to press the government for help for the
farmers.
- At the Chamber of Commerce New Year's Eve Gala Ball, Giles
Dudley and Judi McGowan are chosen as Citizens of the Year 1998.
Chosen as Businesses of the Year are Picture It!, Hug-A-Mug and
Lake View Credit Union.
This article is taken from the Peace
River Block Daily News, Dawson Creek, with the permission of the
publisher. The Daily News retains all rights relating to this
material. The information in this article is intended solely for
research or general interest purposes.