Terrace Standard, February 13, 2013

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VOL. 25 NO. 44

www.terracestandard.com

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Go fluoride-free, says local man BY Margaret Speirs IF THE city wants to stop fluoridating its water, the issue will need to go to referendum because it was decided to add fluoride to the water by referendum. That’s what city council told fluoride opponent Barry Prince after listening to his reasons for why it should be discontinued at the monthly council meeting Jan. 28. Fluoride is designed to be a topical treatment, Prince Rupert eliminated the substance from its drinking water nine years ago, European countries don’t add fluoride to their water and only four or five BC communities continue to fluoridate their water, Prince told council. Prince said he researched the mineral for hours and hours on the internet and believes for a variety of reasons we don’t need, or want, it. “It’s considered a neurotoxin,” said Prince, adding that meant having fluoride in the water was drugging people without their consent. Fluoride is detrimental after a certain age and actually yellows your teeth, he said. “Council should take a long hard look at it,” he said, adding fluoride is said to lower people’s IQ. “It doesn’t make sense to have this in our water.” City councillor James Cordeiro said that Germany, France and Spain removed it from their water because they found it more costeffective to put into the table salt. “They’ve just chosen a different delivery system,” he said.

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Margaret Speirs PHOTO

barry prince wants council to take fluoride out of the city’s water because he says studies show it’s a poison.

New hospital in the planning stages PRELIMINARY planning has started on what Mills Memorial Hospital should look like, how large it should be, how many beds it should have and what services it should offer in the next decades. But it is still far too early to talk about details of size and services and whether parts of Mills will be rebuilt or whether a completely new building is called for, said Northern Health Authority communications official Steve Raper. “What we need to do is engage a broad audience for a picture of what we really need,” said Raper. “What we're looking at is planning for something to serve needs 20, 30 and 40 years out.” First steps involve hiring a con-

sultant to begin putting together a planning framework, Raper added. At the moment there is no construction timetable set, no budget established and no financial commitment from the province which will provide the majority of the construction money. “But I can tell you Mills Memorial is one of our priorities as part of a renewal plan,” said Raper.“What we need to do is be ready when it's time.” The Mills Memorial project has moved up on the Northern Health Authority's renewal list now that replacement hospitals for Burns Lake and the Village of Queen Charlotte on Haida Gwaii have been announced.

Work on each is scheduled to start this year and both are to be

“Mills Memorial is one of our priorities as part of a renewal plan... What we need to do is be ready when it’s time.” completed in 2015. Both the Queen Charlotte and Burns Lake hospitals are more than 50 years old and judged too out of date to be renovated. While there is no budget set yet for Mills, construction budgets for

both Burns Lake and Queen Charlotte provide an idea of current costs. The new hospital in Burns Lake will have 16 beds and cost up to $55 million and the Queen Charlotte hospital will have 9 beds and 8 residential care beds at a cost of up to $50 million. The core structure of Mills is also approximately 50 years old and it contains 29 acute care beds. But a series of projects over the past 11 years have resulted in a renovated 10-bed regional psychiatric unit, a kidney dialysis service in what was an administration wing and the construction of a new intensive care unit immediately beside a renovated emergency room

on the hospital's ground floor. How those newer facilities may fit in with an overall renewal plan has yet to be determined. Mills Memorial does sit on a sizeable piece of land and that may be an advantage in planning construction, said Raper. But he said that depends upon the final design and services decision. There's only been one full hospital replacement project in the north and that took place in Fort St. John where a 55-bed facility complete with numerous services accompanied by an adjacent 123-bed residential care facility was opened in June 2012 at a total project cost of $301 million.

A sister in need...

Erb for Herb

Major Midget

Terrace Big Sister and her Little Sister change each other’s lives \COMMUNITY A20

Local millionare spends hundreds of thousands on drug legalization drive \NEWS A12

Terrace Totem Ford Reps win first-ever Battle of the Ice in Prince Rupert \SPORTS A28


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