Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 20, 1981, Winnipeg, Manitoba
M a p Al u a Winnipeg free november 1981 3 Charleswood ministers dispute Moores bum rap on Road by Ron Campbell ministers at Charleswood Temple and Friendship Baptist Church say they receive no special treatment from the City in the provision of services to their the clergymen took exception to statements by Jim Moore that their untaxed right to build outside the perimeter Highway Cost the City last year for an Access Road to serve there is no truth to no integrity at said Eugene Laird of Friendship who represents Charleswood appeared monday before civic environment committee to relay a re quest by Assiniboine Par fort Garry Community committee that religious buildings in the cites additional zone outside the perimeter be made a conditional they Are now permit Ted if made a conditional applications for such buildings would have to go to a Public councillors would then decide whether to approve it and under what Laird explained that it int True religious institutions pay no property they pay tax on Church owned buildings not for religious Pur poses and on Church owned land of More than two he said Friendship Baptist will pay about in property taxes to the City this part of it for improve ments to Rokeby the Access Road which serves the Church and part of it for property owned by the Friendship Baptist sits on Hect ares and has a cinder lock building not used for religious it will pay full property tax on the building As Well As hectares of Laird said Moores implication that Rokeby Road was built to service the Church is the Road was there Long before the Church was built in the Church was told it would have to upgrade the so it paid for Levell ing and for several loads of gravel on Laird because the condition of the Road was still a City official Peg free press striking Boeing workers attempting to return to their jobs press against Plant door As Security staff stands James Haggarty Boeing press 3s to get Back to work by Manfred Jager citing nip election promises of compulsory first contract legislation and shouting work several Hun dred Boeing of Canada strikers made an unsuccessful bid to return to their jobs yesterday after a month Long the to which they had tipped off was Plant Security uniformed Security men Boeing had hired after the walkout started and a senior Security official from beings seat told the strikers the Only Way they would get Back to work would be through a signed Union officials said later they had been assured by management representatives a number of people would be recalled starting next Hemi International representative of the United Auto workers in said last night that while the company was informed employees would return to work next Boeing has refused to take Back 99 of the workers Given Termina Tion we think its a violation of the labor relations he consult lawyers Mitic said the Union would consult its lawyers today and would be negotiating with Boeing after Boeing of Canada Plant officials could not be reached for com conciliation talks started under government auspices monday and Mitic said yesterday both sides have been meeting facet face since the Law has been certified official bargaining agent for the Boeing Mitic said the strikers held a mass meeting at 10 yesterday and decided to end the strike because we have a commitment from the new government that they will pass com first contract the strikers were at the Plant door an hour unsuccessfully de manding we just dont see any sense in prolonging this were now in the pre Christmas season and our people would just As soon wait for the government to come up with the Mitic told he said he understands the promised legislation would see the government impose arbitration to break deadlocks and in effect write the first after each Side presents its counting on nip Bob Nickerson of administrative assistant to Canadian Law president Bob said the Union will hold the nip to its the purpose of this strike is to arrive at a first the legis lations purpose is to Stop confrontation and impose a first Earl Spadero of beings Seattle head office and in charge of Plant Security at the Winnipeg Plant during the strike said the workers were denied entry yesterday because there is another Way of getting Back to work and they know what that Way we told them and they dont seem to want to Spadero said he had been instructed to Tell Union officials to Contact Boeing Plant officials at the Birch Wood inn negotiating under Way since earlier were not holding these people up from coming in to All they have to do is go Down to the hotel and talk to the Boeing negotiating the Boeing walkout has involved about 400 workers atthe firms 99 Murray Park Road location and an other 40 in a smaller Plant the company operates at 255 Hutchings the dispute is Over outstanding issues including a Union request for costo living adjustments of pay rates initial increases of 13 per bringing firs year demands to Between 15 per cent and 20 per Boeing has offered 11 per cent for the first contract followed by two annual 10percent Lone worker navigates strike idled floor of Boeing Plant judge concludes Kotelniski trial Fin killed self my suggested the like any other should petition the City to upgrade Laird this was done and the City complied with the re he said the Church is now being charged for the improvement and will make the payments Over the next three we have not been treated with any special treatment at and neither have we asked for Laird adding that Moores statements and a free press report of them were a bum Laird and John Howson of neighbouring Charleswood Temple said it was also untrue that the two churches had paid for sewer and water hookups to City in both have their own sewer and water holding Howson said Charleswood Temple is not located on Rokeby its on which the Church paid in City taxes last is bordered by an Access Road which the province built and upgraded on its own trustees defer vote on Touchy an by Glen Mackenzie Winnipeg school division trustees voted yesterday to implement their superintendents less controversial recommendations for the nutrition pro but deferred decision on the tougher trustees voted unanimously to have continuing and close Liaison with provincial and civic health and social services departments and to have nutrition education continued and re viewed for they also voted unanimously to ask the provincial government for extra Brian acting Secretary trea said of the spent on the program last year came from the the new provincial Edu cation support program implemented this year provided Only Block funding to the division As a not to specific All Board members except Brian Dixon voted for involvement of the school nurse in the nutrition that children apparently neglected Over Long periods be referred to the childrens Aid society and that the pro Grams Independent management com Mittee become an advisory committee meeting twice a year and headed by the elementary programs superintend Dixon said the recommendation about nurses could give them authority to measure childrens Waist sizes to see if they qualify for he also said the recommendations were not de tailed but failed to get trustees approval to have the Board meet with chief superintendent Wes Lorimer before any changes Are meeting planned trustees voted to meet with Lorimer deciding about his three most controversial recommendations the Overall program be constrict d informal arrangements be made at schools where numbers Are Small and can be kept that d casual feeding of All children who show up should be Jack secondary schools superintendent who substituted yester Day for said the constriction recommendation resulted from the provincial civic task Force study which said reports of massive numbers of intercity children were Over Norrie to set Date for by elections by elections to fill two vacant City Council seats will probably be held in late mayor Bill Norrie said Norrie said he plans to announce the by election Date Stevenson Ward was vacated last month when its Pearl was appointed Manitoba Charles Ward Ric Nordman attended his last Council meeting wednesday night after being elected to the legislature tuesday As tory la for Assiniboia the loss of represent Ives in the two wards Means the Jame Assiniboia Community committee will hang in Norrie the Forward West Winnipeg com which handles such matters As zoning requires three councillors to form a quorum for meet the Only remaining councillors on the Jame Assiniboia committee Are Deputy mayor Jim Ernst Grants Mill and Jae Eadie Deer since the nomination deadline is 21 Days before election candidates would be Able to file their papers after the new Eadie Eadie said the Community commit tee had its last meeting and he Doest expect it will reconvene until the Agenda has been virtually non existent the last few he with Many items simply being received for the Only real problem is we cant hold Public which Are Nec Essary on zoning applications such As Winnipeg killed in Accident a 13yearold boy was killed while crossing Regent Avenue at Kelvin Frayne Swan of suite 394 Keenleyside was in collision with a westbound car on Regent ave nue Between panel Road and Highway the name of the Driver has not been Tan not Guil by Kevin Prokosh a lonely Man killed his Girlfriend and another Man with a gunshot blast through the Back door of a Transcona House in september and turned the gun on himself a few Days an inquest was told at the conclusion of the on Day judge Howard Collerman found that Gladys and Wallace were killed 12 in a wholly unlawful act by Rudolph Alvin Kotelniski body was discovered 16 by his son near an autopsy determined he died from a Bullet through his judge Collerman said the most gruesome shootings were triggered by an apparently minor dispute be tween Kotelniski and three suicide letters left to members of his family revealed a lonely Man despondent Over a falling out with i went to Winnipeg to see my Friend she promised me to get wrote and i loved but it had to be Mary who lived on Bridge Crest drive where the shooting took told the court that her common Law husband bar Nard and Kotelniski were at a hotel drinking when a conversation began Between Barnard and three Dur ing the evening she danced with the the court was couple quarrelled Barnard asked the three men to join the other two couples for Coffee at a nearby when the three a quarrel ensued Between Kotelniski and court was Gulay testified Barnard shouted she didst have to listen to Kotelniski or do what he Kotelniski stormed saying he was going to pick up his belongings at her place and As he left he told the three if you want you can have Shes All said Barnard asked her compan ions to accompany her Home because she was afraid Kotelniski would be he want and the four men and two went on to gulags Gulay said they were All seated in the Kitchen for Only a few minutes around when she heard an explosion and saw a Hole in her Back a Bullet from a High powered Rifle had been fired through the Winnipeg police Ken Beiner told the court that who had been singing Only seconds was killed instantly when a Bullet severed the major arteries in his he said Barnard was wounded when shrapnel blown from the door in the gunshot blast penetrated her she died two Days later in Krysowaty suffered a head following the Gulay said she saw Kotelniski through the door and heard him say you looked for you got Kotelniski drove off in his two Days the wanted mans truck was found by his Nephew in some Bush nine Kilometres South of Angus two Days Kotelniski was found dead by his son on a nearby family a Rifle was found near the body with an expended Cartridge in the of by Murray Mcneill the first Winnipeg Man to go to trial on a charge of soliciting an undercover policewoman for the purposes of prostitution was acquitted Robert Joseph of College Avenue was cleared of the charge after provincial court judge Howard Collerman said he was not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Clou tier had committed the As it is defined under judge Collerman said the supreme court of Canada ruled in another prostitution Case during the 1970s that to be guilty of soliciting for a person must be pressing and Persis there is in this particular the Type of evidence that could satisfy the court beyond a reasonable doubt that the actions of Cloutier were pressing and judge col Lerman Cloutier was one of 10 men charged in late August with soliciting undercover policewoman Linda the offi cer had been sent to walk Austin Street Between Henry and Higgins avenues on three consecutive nights As part of a police crackdown on the arrests marked the first time Winnipeg police charged alleged Cus instead of with the offence of soliciting for pros Titu Cloutier was the first of the 10 to plead not guilty and go to his halfday trial was held on with judge Collerman reserving four of the others pleaded guilty earlier and were another went to trial on 4 after hearing the crowns the judge adjourned that Case until after judge Collerman gave his ruling on the Cloutier the remaining four accused Are still waiting to go to Kisil testified during the trial that Cloutier twice asked her to have sexual Intercourse with him As she walked along Austin Street she said that in the first instance Cloutier pulled up to the curb As she wis walking Down the sidewalk and her to come Over to the she did so and said he then propositioned her through the open about two minutes she Cloutier pulled up to a Stop sign at the Corner of Austin and Henry and spoke to her As she was crossing the intersect in his judge Collerman noted that evidence showed the two conversations lasted less than 30 seconds each and that at no time did Cloutier Force her to speak to he said other key Issue in the Case was whether the two encounters happened in a Public he noted that although Cloutier had been inside his car when he spoke to she was outside the judge said he was satisfied the conversations took place in a Public he added that entrapment was not an Issue in the Cloutier he said it also was unnecessary for him to Rule on the Issue of whether a customer who asks a prostitute to have sex with but Doest offer her is guilty of soliciting for
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