Listen Live
Listen Live
Listen Live

Quesnel Kangaroos Denied Request For Financial Help

The Quesnel Kangaroos Senior Hockey Club will not be getting a break on their fees for using the Twin Ice Arenas.

The North Cariboo Joint Planning Committee voted last night to keep the status quo as far as charges go and the body also voted not to forgive the 44-hundred dollar debt that the Roos owe from last season.

The club was looking for a 10-thousand dollar reduction in annual fees.

Three Quesnel City Councillors were opposed, including Scott Elliott, who was in favour of letting the team use the banquet room for free and letting them keep all of their revenue for advertising…

“and also the 160 dollars per sign, i think if they are going out and getting the advertising, as i say this is their last year, the signs probably won’t be used again in the rink, so i think we should be helping them on that as well

The banquet room costs the team just over 29-hundred dollars per year.

Councillors Laurey-Anne Roodenburg and Ed Coleman were also opposed to the status-quo and in favour of helping the team out.

The general consensus however was that the team was being charged what others were in the league.

Other sentiments included that it would set a standard for other user groups and that recreation was not a money maker.

The team will lose the rink board revenue once it moves into the new arena next year and the Roos’ Vice-President Mirko Pellizarri indicated back in June that they may not have a team if that happens.

Something going on in the Cariboo you think people should know about?
Send us a news tip by emailing [email protected].

Continue Reading

ckbx Now playing play

cffm Now playing play

ckcq Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Cariboo can expect a seasonal normal cooler temperatures and rain in first week of November

Envrionment Canada's forecast is predicting cloudy days with some rain during the first week of the new month with cooler nights. But meteorologists say that that's the seasonal norms for November in the Cariboo.

MLAs and stakeholders trying to find a way to revitalize railway corridor

MLAs across the province's regions met for a round table during September's UBCM conference in Victoria to gather ideas on a potential revitalization of the rail corridor between Squamish and 100 Mile House. There is another meeting set for November 26.

Clocks “fall back” an hour this weekend as daylight time ends

Clocks are set to “fall back” across much of Canada this weekend, as daylight time ends at 2 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 2. The post Clocks “fall back” an hour this weekend as daylight time ends appeared first on AM 1150.

KIJHL Weeks 5 & 6: Quesnel wins one while away; Mustangs clean sweep; and the Wranglers tumble again

Week 5 and 6 in the KIJHL have wrapped up. Here is how the games played out.

Investigation underway into the death of a Quesnel man

 The Independent Investigations Office of B.C. (IIO) is looking into the death of a Quesnel man.
- Advertisement -