The city of Prince George vs UNBC

Plus jobs in the pulp industry and the opportunity to whittle pooper scoopers

Basically yes!

Another report from the Prince George Citizen’s Freedom of Information requests to the city, via Arthur Williams. I encourage you to read the whole thing but the short version is this: After the city illegally tore down shelters in a homeless encampment in 2021, a group of academics based at UNBC wrote an op-ed in the Citizen criticizing the action. When UNBC’s comms team shared plans to circulate the piece on its social media channels, the city’s communications manager Julie Rogers, said the article “comes across as political and uninformed,” and in a later email called the piece “misinformation,” and in yet another email, asked the authors to correct their piece arguing it was based on “social media rumours rather than fact.”

  • An October 2021 court ruling decreed the city cannot remove people and shelters from the Moccassin Flats encampment due to a lack of housing and shelters available in the community.

  • Despite this ruling, city staff did demolish several shelters.

  • In so doing, they destroyed the personal possessions of people who believed their belongings would be secure.

  • Doing so is a human rights violation.

I do see one factual error when the authors refer to the shelters as being “bulldozed” — while they were destroyed by heavy machinery they were not bulldozed.

However, pretty much everything else was borne out — and we’ve been over this before in this newsletter and in previous Citizen reporting. While the city insisted that it was not violating any court orders when it demolished the shelters, a later court judgement found the opposite and the Canadian Human Rights Commission did, indeed, use the action as a case study in how cities violate the rights of unhoused people.

The Citizen didn’t back down from the article, but UNBC’s communications team did decide not to share it on its channels.

I’m not looking to relitigate things here but we should also remember some of the other language Rogers used in internal emails surrounding this case, as previously reported by the Citizen, including, ““Apparently the professional protesters are becoming worked up today.”

So back to this most recent Citizen article. While the city did publicly apologize, they apparently never apologized to the academics for calling their op-ed misinformation:

On March 24, 2022, after the City of Prince George issued a formal apology for its role in the Nov. 17 incident, op-ed co-author Sims reached out to Rogers to ask if the promised meeting had ever happened and asked for an apology from the city to the op-ed authors.

“Given that we were criticized online for our op-ed by the city and in some instances our supervisors contacted by some of your coworkers, would it be possible to get an official apology on those same platforms regarding our piece,” Sims wrote.

“I am also concerned about the fact someone from the city contacted our supervisors to try to get us in trouble,” Sims added in a subsequent email.

In her response, Rogers said city staff acted with respect and professionalism, and the apology was for “the unintended consequence of causing harm to some of our citizens.”

“The City stands behind the facts presented in the statement issued in November correcting the misinformation in your letter,” she added.

Anyways, this is where I remind you that this newsletter is just an aggregator of information and relies on reporting like this. If you want to support the Citizen, here is their membership support page.

“Regarding my PG trips”

In a post I linked to yesterday, former Chamber of Commerce CEO Todd Corrigal talked about Prince George as a shopping centre:

“I always, half jokingly say, one of our biggest attractions is Costco,” he says. “You can go past Costco at any time of any day and that parking lot is packed. In the summer, there’s RVs galore that are loading up thousands and thousands of dollars worth of goods from Costco.”

He adds that even outlets such as Winners and HomeSense have realized that Prince George has a market share of around 200,000 people through serving neighbouring communities such as Quesnel, Vanderhoof, and Valemount but also further cities such as Smithers, Terrace, and even Kitimat.

I bring this up only because I came across this post in a Robson Valley Facebook page:

Wanted: Someone to whittle poop scoopers

One of the nice touches at the designated dog trails out at Otway are strategically-placed spoons which can be used to pick up your dog’s leavings and fling them into the woods to decompose. So this caught my eye from the Caledonia Nordic cross-country ski report:

WANTED: A wood whittler that has a fetish for whittling, and would like to create something useful for the club. We want to replace our red Betty Crocker plastic poop scoops (Betty would be so proud) with something a bit more durable and environmentaly friendly. In the cold the plastic tend to break, and end up becoming litter. The only wood one we have has outlasted everything else, and is still mighty functional. Whittling anyone? Stop by the shop & talk to the groomer  your choice, so we can give you the detailed engineering drawings.

Tell your whittling friends!

Quick news:

Events and opportunities:

Resource news:

May be an image of tree, outdoors and text that says 'PRINCE GEORGE, B’C WE ARE COMING TO YOU! MERCER INTERNATIONAL PULP CAREER FAIR we're looking for top talent to join our teams in Peace River, Alberta, and Castlegar, BC- meet with our hiring managers, learn more about our company, and the exciting opportunities we have available at our mills! 8:30 AM FEBRUARY 2-3, 2023 8:00 PM The Courtyard Marriott- 900 Brunswick St, Prince George Visit our website to learn more about Mercer: www.mercerint.com MMERCER international'

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