Smell of natural gas causes evacuation at Twin Rivers Elementary

Twin Rivers Elementary School in Castlegar was evacuated this morning due to the smell of natural gas. The Castlegar Fire Department were the first to respond at roughly 11:00 AM.

“When we arrived on scene the building was evacuated, as per their emergency response procedures, and we quickly determined that the concern was coming from an area on the outside of the building near the gas meter,” said Chief Sam Lattanzio.

Similar incidents have also occurred at Castlegar Primary School in recent months, but according to Chief Lattanzio this is the first time they’ve responded at Twin Rivers in quite a while.

FortisBC crews arrived at 11:45 AM and the building was safe for re-entry by noon. Spokesperson Nicole Brown confirmed a leak was found at the meter and it was shut off.

She added, “this is a great example of taking the right step when people smell gas – leave the site and call us, and we’re were happy to assist and make the situation safe.”

 

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Trail breaks 27-year-old temperature record

According to Environment Canada, the thermometer hit 36.9 degrees yesterday. The old record for Sept. 3 was 36 degrees set in 1998. Record-keeping dates back to 1928.

BCGEU deal must be ‘fair to taxpayers,’ says Premier David Eby

Premier David Eby said British Columbia is facing “fiscal headwinds” that will impact what deal the province can make with striking public service workers. 

Two Trail men die suddenly in separate incidents

The men, both in their 60s, died within a day of each other.

Temporary foreign worker program should be “cancelled or significantly reformed,” says B.C. premier

Premier David Eby said it’s time for the federal government to reassess Canada’s temporary foreign worker program.

Wildsight calls for emergency order on Record Ridge mine

Wildsight says it will seek the order for the endangered mountain holly fern after BC's environmental assessment office decided the Record Ridge project doesn't need to be subjected to a full-blown review.
- Advertisement -