a Castlegar News october 18, 1989 October 18, 1989 Quake hits northern California OAKLAND, Calif. (CP — Aftershocks continued today as rescuers struggled to free motorists from an elevated highway collapsed by the earthquake that jarred Northern California, killing more than 270 people and in- juring hundreds more. bg This is just.a devastating, terrible, terrible,situation beyond everybody's imagination,” Said Marty Boyer, the Alameda County spokesman The quake Tuesday, measuring 6.9 on thé Richter scale, collapsed buildings across the region as well as a sec tion of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and at least two spans in the Santa Cruz area. Severed gas lines sparked fires, including one in San Francisco that destroyed a block of buildings. ‘ The magnitude of the catastrophe emerged as officials made contact with hard-hit areas, where many telephones were cut off. As many as one million people were left without power and other services. State emergency services spokesman John Peterson said at least 270 people had died and 650 were injured. At least 253 people were killed when 1.5 kilometres of the up: per level of Interstate 880 in Oakland collapsed on to the lower level, said Dave Wilson of the state Office of Emergency Services “You could hear it crunching down — but you couldn't see anything,” said Leroy FitzGerald, who works nearby, ‘It was just a big white cloud. ‘‘You could hear people screaming for help.’ Tractors ybulldozers and dump trucks were called out, and trucks andvans took bodies from the site this morning The quak& the country’s second deadliest, hit at 5:04 p.m. Tuesday alonga segment of the San Andreas Fault 13 kilometres northeast of Santa Cruz and 120 kilometres south of San Francisco. Aftershocks today included one measuring 4.5 on the Richter scale at 3:25 a.m., said the Leaks forced couple out VANCOUVER (CP) — An elderly couple in Nelson found themselves locked out of their home five years ago because a fire marshal declared it un- To date, Bertha Whyte, 75, and her The husband, Robert haven't received a penny in compen sation. The problem was leaking into their basement from an safe underground gas tank Association of B.C. Whyte, 81, still National Earthquake Information Centre in Golden, Colo. Ltd.-Goy, Leo McCarthy said. damage would total “*the better part of a billion dollars.”” “You could see dozens, huge booms of smoke going into the air,"* said Greg Higgins, who was driving near San ta Cruz, close to the quake’s epicentre, when it struck. *‘It was Complete pandemonium.”* The quake sent thousands of terrified office workers rushing into the streets of Oakland and San Francisco, and many remained stranded hours later Dan Cressman, Canadian-born real estate broker, was in his 10th storey office in downtown San Francisco when the quake hit I thought the whole building was coming down," n, 35, told The Canadian Press in a telephone in terview from his home in Marin County “I was on the phone to someone in Banff. I said, *Hang on a second.” I put the phone down and the whole thing was shaking like hell, So | went out to the hallway, because the elevator (shaft) is the safest spot in the building. I stood there until it was over.”* ve never been through anything like this in my life," said Mary Garcia, who works in Oakland's Clorox building. ‘*1 was on the 17th floor and the building just rocked and rocked. I was scared out of my mind coming down the 17 floors.”” BRIDGES FA. At least two bridges in the Santa Cruz area collapsed, highways leading out of the city were damaged, and moun- tain passes outside of Santa Cruz were closed because of landslides and fissures in the road, the Highway Patrol Cressn said In San Francisco, at least eight people died, and looting and vandalism were reported in the city’s major crack-dealing area after dark. ‘When the power is off, op- Professional Engineers warned last week that many of the 60,000 buried storage tanks in the province are old and leaky. Environment Ministry official Barry Wood remembers seeing gas weeping up from the Whyte’s basement floor. gasoline Education briefs “You could actually scoop it up,”” he said. **There was certainly enough that the fumes were explosive."” The Whytes now live in rooms By CasNews Staff school board decided Monday night Grade 8s go to SHSS All Grade 8 students in the district will be housed at Stanley Hum- phries secondary school for as long as enrolment figures make the plan feasible once the high school’s renovations are completed, the Castlegar behind their antique shop, Yesterday’s Treasures, a few kilometres from Nelson. They never retired because they couldn't afford to. “We've come up with absolutely nothing,”” Bertha said. ‘We haven't a penny atall."” Whyte said she is not bitter, but she portunists come out," police Dispatcher Chris Curran said. San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos asked the army to help. National Guardsmen were being mobilized, including engineers, military police and medical workers. Still, Agnos said, ‘The city is in reasbnably good shape. We’ ve survived this so fa: Sixty-thousand baseball fans were evacuated from Candlestick Park before the start of Game Three of the World Series. No major injuries were reported at the stadium, which suffered structural damage Fire engines and ambulances, sirens howling, picked their way through’a darkened San Francisco. Headlights and an occasional office building running on emergency generators stood out. Commuters were left with no major transportation routes east out of San Francisco because of the closing of the Bay Bridge, two other spans and the Oakland-San Francisco subway, which apparently was unscathed by the quake. People walked around San Francisco, sat outside dingy hotels or on stoops and curbs, listening to radio reports of the disaster. Without power, there was no r \d bars opened with Agnos said five people died in the city after buildings collapsed on cars, and three died in San Francisco's Marina district in a spectacular fire that burned much of the evening before being brought under control. Up to 20 people were hurt in the fire, officials said Police Chief Fred Jordan said the fire appeared to have consumed an entire block, estimated by Agnos to be 2 buildings. The fire apparently was caused by a natural gas leak, Agnos said. Willis Jacobs of the earthquake centre said the quake was centred about 12 kilometres northeast of Santa Cruz, or 120 kilometres south of San Francisco, along the San Andreas Fault, That is the major earthquake fault blamed for the 1906 disaster that destroyed much of the city and killed hundreds — 700, according to traditional estimates, and more than 2,500, according to retent studies Canadian Press reporter Mike Bernard was 60 kilometres north of San Francisco sitting outside al a picnic table in the Napa Valley when the quake hit “Hr’s almost like @ feeling of vertigo, being dizzy, a momentary sense of dizziness and then you start to realize: ‘No, you're not dizzy’ when everyone else is reacting to something as well."” In San Francisco’s Haight- -Fillmore district, cracks were visible on some stoops and buildings, some in the-stuc co and some structural, Many buildings in the neigh borhood are Victorian-style homes that survived the 1906 earthquake A 10-metre section of the upper deck of the bridge connecting Oakland and San Francisco collapsed, leaving three cars dangling between the levels. In Washington, President. George Bush dispatched Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner to assess the damage. The quake was felt in Reno, Nev., 360-kilometres to the northeast; as far north as the Russian River area, 115 kilometres to the north; 290 kilometres southeast in Fresng and 130 kilometres due east in Stockton. High-rises in Los angeles also shook There were no reports of damage to the Golden Gate Bridge that connects San Franciscoto Marin County, to the north The Oakland Airport and the San Francisco Inter national Airport were both closed, but reopened this mor ning. The San Jose International Airport was open with only minor damage week after they moved in, The problem seemed to come and go. It took four years before they realized the problem was occurring every spring and fall, when the water table was high, she said. They began sleeping behind the antique shop during these seasons, to avoid headaches and nausea Three gas stations are nearby An investigation found some corrosion on the underground tanks of all three stations, said Jim Jensen, an environmental safety officer with the Environment Ministry. Investigators found soil in the area surrounding the tank was heavily con- taminated with gas. Last week, to get out of the mor- tgage, Bertha said the couple signed an Castlegar News TREEF- TALK TOURISM IN CASTLEGAR continued to show ases in September compared to the same period last year, the latest statistivs from the Castlegar Chamber of “ommertce show, Last month, 242 visitors went through ‘the Castlegar IntoCentre, a 27 per cent increase over Sep: tember 1988 when the InfoCentre received 198 visitors. Visitors came from as far away as Australia, Ber muda, England, West Germany as well as other parts of Canada, the chamber reports: The InfoCentre also received four requests for con. ference information packages on Castlegar As well, the chamber reports local hotels averaged a 90-per-cent occupancy rate for September with two hotels at 96 percent and one hotel at 98 per cent THE SLOCAN INN will hold its grand reopening this Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The bash will feature. Tommy and the T-Birds in Sam's Place Pub at the inn. New owner-manager is Glen CELGAR PULP CO.'s announcement that it in tends to spend $630 million upgrading the company’s Castlegar pulp mill nment approvals pending financing and gover has made news in B.C. Update, a Chet Ron Black sharpens his knife in preparation for the grand reopening this weekend of the Slocan Inn. weekly compendium of happenings around the provin- ce published by the provincial government's Public Af fairs Bureau FALL HARVEST OF SAVINGS Principal investors puzzled by rejection VANCOUVER (CP) British Columbia investors stung in the collapse of two, Principal Group com- panies are disappointed the province has rejected a key part of their proposal for compensation “We have heard from Finance Minister Mel Couvelier through our counsel that they have rejected the monetary aspects of our proposal,” Art Charbonneau, president of the Principal Association of British Calumbia said Tuesday ““It's a bit of a puzzle why the gover nment didn’t accept,”” Charbonneau said. ‘It would have gotten us off of their backs once and for all."” Many investors will now be angry enough to sue the government for failing to properly regulate First In vestors Corp., and Associated In- said association Investors Protection million it had vestors of Canada (AIC), said Char The government bonneau collapse. British Columbians lost an estimated $160 million Although other provinces have said Alberta is responsible for the collapse, British Columbia offered last month to representatives had offered to acquire remaining assets of First Investors and Associated: Investors, Charbonneau proposal to acquire the rights to the “*Some time early in the new year, a__ assets and then recover its money as association proposal that would ask the Alberta governmient to modify its requirement’ that all Canadian in vestors in First’ Investors and Associated Investors share equally in pay B.C. shareholders $45 million any compensation offers, Charbon $25 million in cash from the purchase of Principal assets In talks with the B.C. government, and $20 million neau said He said this proposal would pressure five other provinces, to contribute to investors’ compensation pot proposed that Victoria raise its com pensation offer to B.C $40 million in cash from $25 million, Charbonneau said WANT DIVERSION Investors suggested the government could increase the compensation by simply diverting $15 million of the $20 If Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland contribute $15 investors to million to.$20 million between them, investors could recover about 83 cents on the dollar, Charbonneau said Couvelier, in Montreal for a provin cial finance ministers’ meeting, could not be reached for comment Ombudsman — Stephen recommended earlier that the B.C government compensate investors in this province to ensure they get back 90 per cent of their losses, Owen believed its CHICK FRYING FRESH. 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SOU OF MusHROOM . 6 5 © Ss > * 284 mi — CENTRAL DELI DELITES — ov SMOKED BRATWURST $999 OVERLANDER $6.59/kg ERLANDER OKTOBERFEST BAVARIAN SMOKIES OVERLANDER EUROPEAN FRANKFURTERS $949) ounon $949 $5.48/kg UKRANIAN RINGS $5.48/kg BEEF OVERLANDER SALAMI CORNED BEEF Castlegar News 43 The renovations, which will bring the 35-year-old buildings up to current building standards and expand the school’s science, industrial education and home economic lab space, are expected to be completed by September 1991, superintendent of schools Terry Wayling said Tuesday Wayling told the trustees their decision may mean changes in the grade levels now housed at Kinnaird Junior secondary school which currently has Grade 8 students but would be left with Grade 7s and a few Grade 6 classes Teacher seeks military post A Kinnaird Junior secondary school French teacher is seeking a agreement in which Shell, one of the gas companies with a nearby station, bought the house by paying the credit union $64,000 in unpaid mortgage payments, taxes and legal fees litigation will be launched by those people who feel they have the time,"’ he said. *‘We (the association) will posed a hard question: ‘‘ How would it be possible for senior citizens to be treated like this?”* They moved to their house in 1975 Bertha began getting headaches one they were sold off was “cost neutral,"” He didn’t blame the government Charbonneau said over the Principal collapse but found But he said the government could negligence by the office of the superin providea vehicle forthat."” run into difficulty because some of the tendent of brokers enabled the two British Columbia accounts for assetsarein dispute 17,000 of the 67,000 Canadians who The B.C Tenancy Act changed F é : : =e sth nici Eine RCMP not hampered OVERLANDER g i) C] kecutar 66 ¢ 99 ¢ DOUBLE LEAN OR SLICED SMOKED 100 G HICKORY SMOKED 100 G. OR SHAVED 100 G. | LO HT) 1 0... 5 PASTRY LARD $409}! HALLOWEEN TREATS $499 WHOLE WHEAT OR UNBLEACHED Yas, TWIZZLER TENDER FLAKE subsidiaries to operate in a manner , government, contrary to the law and the public in seems to be receptive to aiother terest however, ASSORTED LICORICE BAG OF 16 HALLOWEEN TREATS | VICTORIA (CP) — The provincial government has changed the Residen- Holdings gave tenants of its Van couver apartment building about two teaching position with the Department of National Defense The board endorsed Doug Pinkerton’s application for the position which Wayling said could lead to a two-year position overseas, based on the experiences of other area teachers who have been accepted before If Pinkerton is chosen for a position he is likely to be sent to the Canadian Forces Base in Lahr, West Germany, Wayling said, where he would teach the children of the personnel stationed at the base The selection will likely take place in the new year, Wayling added School renamed as Annex The Special Education Centre on 7th Avenue has been renamed for the second time jn several years and will now be called the Twin Rivers Annex. Most of the special education students that were housed at the school, first called Silver Birch, are now at Stanley Humphries secondary school or Twin Rivers elementary or have graduated, Wayling said in ex. plaining the name change The school now houses Grade 2 Russian bilingual students and a challenge program, Wayling said Reports garner three replies The school board received three replies to the 4,600 annual reports that were sent out this year, trustee Evelyn Voykin reported. Two replies were positive and one was negative toward the report, she added However, the board doesn’t know exactly how many reports reached people’s homes or were seen because of a problem with mailing that Wayling said may have led to the reports being delivered as part of a stack of flyers. Mailing will be handled differently next year to ensure residents see the report, he said The board also voted to publicly tender the job of writing the report for next year which is now mandatory under the new School Act History committee set up A committee to be composed of senior district teachers and staff has ~ been formed to compile historical information about the district and is schools. Dick Wayling, who was a principal in the district for many years and is the brother of superintendent of schools Terry Wayling, will head up the commitice whose goal will be to write a book about the district, Voykin said District logo being designed The SchOO! distyict should soon have a logo, Voykin said A Selkirk College graphic arts instructor will assign the designing of a logo to his students and when they are done at the end of October one will be chosen by the board's communications and planning committee and brougfit to the board for approval, she said Recycled paper to be used The school district will begin using recycled paper * plicable’’ once existing stocks are used up, the board dec ided. The cost for recycled paper is approximately the same as for standard paper, the board was told before making the decision Unbleached paper will be used ‘once the price is comparable to present paper supplies,”’ the board decided. Current paper prices put un bleached paper at about twice the cost of standard paper, the board was told The decisions to use recycled and unbleached paper came as a result of a recommendation from the C ‘anadian School Trustees Association annual general meeting earlier this year which was attended by trustee Mickey Kinakin and chairman Gordon Turner ‘wherever ap tial Tenancy Act-so.that landlords-wilt have to get municipal approval before they convert rental apartments to units for purchase The move came after Fontainebleau weeksto pay for 99-yed@eases at prices of up to $500,000. Leases of less than 20 years already are covered by the Residential Tenancy FOCUS OF DISCUSSION . . . Transport Canada's recommendation that the control tower at Castlegar airport be closed due to an insufficient number of flights in and out of the sper nae drawn Act widespread criticism in the West Kootenay. Court news In Castlegar provincial court this week, Ronnie Mark Bublinger pleaded guilty to failing to notify the owner af ter colliding with an unattended vehicle and was fined $100 Walter Mark Ingertila was given a suspended sentence and six months probation for assault Brett Robert Dube pleaded guilty to uttering a threat and was given a con ditional discharge and probation for nine months Daniel Robert Friedel pleaded guilty to driving while impaired and was given a seven-day intermittent jail term and probation until Nov. 11 Michael Molnar pleaded guilty to Westar case postponed again By CasNews Staff An appearance by Westar Timber Lid. officials in Castlegar provincial court was postponed for the third time Tuesday and a court date is now set for Nov. 7 to hear the company’s plea and to receive further information from Westar and the Crown. Westar is facing four charges.under the Waste Management Act involving the burning of wood waste that Provincial Ministry of Environment Waste Management Branch officials deemed suitable for use by the Celgar Pulp Co. mill, regional waste manager in Nelson Jim McLaren said in August Each charge carries a maximum penalty of $50,000 although any fines would be determined by the judge. driving without current licence plates and was fined $35 Last week, Chad Wayne Carr pleaded guilty to driving while im- paired and was sentenced to a 14-day intermittent jail term and probation until the term is served. He also pleaded guilty to driving while disqualified and received a 14-day in termittent jail term and probation to be served concurrently with his first sentence. He pleaded guilty as well to possession of narcotics and received a one-day jail term and probation also to be served concurrently Edward James Adshead pleaded guilty to failing or refusing to give a breath sample when asked by a police officer, was fined $500 or, in default, 20-daye,-andise from driving for 12 months. Angela Smee pleaded guilty to driving without a lice was fined $10. e or insurance card and Tower continued from front page director for the Canadian Air Traffic Control Association, said shutting down the Castlegar tower will hamper the efficiency of the airport Castlegar, once an aircraft leaves Van couver's radar, which is usually about 10,000 feet on descent, there can be no other instrument arrivals or departures until that aircraft is on the ground, McDonald said, ** as soon as the controller can see the air Castlegar especially in the winter when aircraft delayed on the ground may be forced to stay overnight if they are not airborne before nightfall Dean McDonald, Pacific regional “In addition, as Vancouver airpc becomes more and more congested aircraft are increasingly required to depart surrounding airports during very narrow time frames called slot “If there is no control tower at _ times,"’ McDonald said. **Should an aircraft missa slot time asa result of an inefficient uncontrolled operation it is possible that the aircraft could be delayed up to an hour or more during peak periods until another slot is where with a tower, available.” The group also noted that the tower craft,.another can be given arrival or is important to Selkirk College's departure clearance. aviation technology program and to the safe operation of airborne water bombers stationed at Castlegar during the forest fire season McDonald said that is important to In memory Alexander Pater Alexander William Elbert Pater, beloved infant son of Lawrence and Lottery numbers The following are the winning num bers in the weekend lotteries LOTTO6/49— 1, 17, 20, 37, 42and 44, The bonus number was 38 The jackpot of $4,443,961.40 was won by the holders of two tickets, bought in Ontario and B.C., with each winning $2,221 ,980.70. The four Extra winning numbers for B.C. on Saturday were 28, 30, 41 and 52 LOTTO BC — 3, 10, 14, 21, 26, 27 B.C. KENO — 13, 20, 21, 31, 33, 36, 37, 56. These numbers, provided by The Canadian Press, must be considered unofficial Jac e Pater of Calgary, Alta., passed away Oct. 14 at age 22 mon ths. Besides his loving parénts, Alexander is survived by his brother Christopher; maternal grandparents John and Kathleen Smith of An tigonish, N.S.; paternal grandparents George and Irene Pater of Castlegar; maternal great-grandmother Bretta Kaiser of Port Bickerton, N.S.; paternal great-grandfather Elbert Pater of Burnaby; and numerous other relatives. Alexander was predeceased by his great uncle Louis Kaiser; great grandparents Burton Kaiser, Mr. and Mrs, John R. Smith and Angelina Pater and Mr. and Mrs. Emil Woodske He will be lovingly remembered by all who knew him Funeral services were held at the Chapel of Mountain V iew Cemetery and Funeral Home in Calgary today at 3 p.m. with the Rev. John Kerr of Beddington Pentecostal Church officia ating Interment followed at Mountain View Memorial Gardens : If friends so desire, memorial tributes may be made directly to the Canadian Foundation for the Study of Sudden Infant Di Box 5881 Station A, Calgary, Alta. T2H 1Y4. Arrangements were in care of Mountain View Cemetery Home. ath Syndrome, and Funeral by budget, Blais says OTTAWA (CP) — The RCMP had mers, rent cars or buy drugs for an and the high profile drug-strategy to reallocate some money within its arrest budget for the war on drugs, but its work is not being hampered, Solicitor General Pierre Blais said Tuesday “The problem is that this year, internationally as because we're working harder against drug traffickers, we need, more money,” Blais said in the Commons “And we have to reallocate the money from other parts of our budget in the RCMP The RCMP denounced a CBC Radio report Tuesday that its enfor cement program is stalled “The CBC’s imaginative and un substantiated conclusion is not sup: ported by the facts,” the force said ina Liberal critic John Nunziata said Mounties haye been rendered useless in the war on drugs and Canada is known budget does not cover day-to-day en forcement efforts. Brewin said his office has learned drug investigators are under ‘‘a freeze ‘the Maytag of the — order"’ that requires them to get special drug-laundering industry.”” The RCMP budget for drug enfor- cement is $60 million a year, said Blaine Harvey, a spokesman for the Department of the Solicitor General The force gets roughly $25 million under the national which allocated $210 million over five years for enforcement, treatment and education starting in 1987 NDP ‘critic John Brewin said the basic RCMP budget has been frozen approval from their superiors for discretionary spending The CBC said RCMP officers in the organized-crime unit, intelligence and the commercial-crime units are also out of money It quoted Shoemaker as saying the force may have no option except to ask cabinet for more money Shoemaker was unavailable for drug. strategy, comment Tuesday as were other senior RCMP officers. CAKE MIXES QUICK AS A WINK. 227G... 2.99 HERSHEY'S CHOCOLATE. BAG OF LIFESAVERS, BAG OF $989 BAKERS. ASSORTED . brief news release “The RCMP drug seizures are dramatically up and preventive measures of the drug strategy are well established and working well.”” The CBC reported that the federal government’s national drug enfor cement program ran out of money half way through the fiscal year The report quoted Michael Shoemaker,—deputy RCMP com missioner in charge of corporate management, as saying the force's budget has not kept pace with inflation for the last five years and has lost $40 million asa result The CBC said beginning three weeks ago, Mounties in the drug squad were denied routine requests to pay infor Custom Built ALUMINUM RAILINGS Won't Rust — Baked on Enome! on FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL PETE 365-7086 Kendrick-Twidale 877 Helena Street, Trail, B.C. VIR 3X3 Wishes to announce the relocation of our practice to: 1370 McQuarrie St., East Trail, B.C. 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