National Post

POLICE CALLED TO DEAL WITH FREE SALT FRACAS.

Police called as crowds at fire halls get heated

- Camille Bains

• Police were called in Tuesday night when tempers became heated at Vancouver fire halls where free salt was being distribute­d to help citizens keep sidewalks safe during an unusually cold winter.

“We had to get Vancouver police to respond and intervene, partly because of the sheer volume of people,” said Capt. Jonathan Gormick of Vancouver Fire and Rescue, who said residents cleared some fire halls of salt soon after it arrived.

Crowds got out of control at three halls, he said. “Unfortunat­ely, ( the police) had to intervene in a couple of incidents where people were starting to get physical and heated with each other.”

The city offered residents two buckets of salt at 10 fire halls on Wednesday, but that was scaled back to one small bucket after all the salt was gone within an hour and more had to be delivered.

One man showed up at a fire hall with a pickup truck and tried to load it with garbage bins he had filled with salt, but firefighte­rs strongly discourage­d him from returning, Gormick said.

One online ad listed salt collected from a fire hall for sale for $ 50, and Gormick said the price went up to $ 80 according to someone he spoke with. He called the whole affair “salt-apocalypse.”

Staff at fire halls were keeping an eye on the little inventory that remained after a second delivery Wednesday, to ensure people “used their conscience” and didn’t go overboard with the handout, Gormick said.

Snow followed by slush and falling temperatur­es have turned streets into skating rinks in Vancouver, resulting in the high demand for salt.

“I don’t remember a situation like this,” Gormick said, noting some West Coast residents don’t even own a snow shovel, let alone have salt for ice. “It may seem unrealisti­c to ask residents to keep a couple of bags of salt on hand for when it does snow, and a snow shovel, but it’s not very costly to acquire a couple of bags of salt and keep it in the shed.”

The city said more than 260 staff have been reassigned from other projects and about 150 are helping to salt and sand residentia­l streets to protect people from falling on rock-hard ice, especially at higher elevations and around schools.

So far this winter, the city has gone through about 7,000 tonnes of salt, which is seven times the average amount used in each of the previous two winters.

It’s also working with salt suppliers to ensure adequate reserves are available as the forecast calls for cold conditions to continue until mid-January, the city said in a news release.

Plunging temperatur­es across B. C. have had residents turning up the heat, leading to an all- time- high demand for electricit­y.

BC Hydro said that between 5 and 6 p.m. Tuesday, power consumptio­n peaked at 10,126 megawatts, breaking a record from Nov. 29, 2006, when 10,113 megawatts were used during the same time period. But the utility said the new record is expected to be shattered again later this week as frigid temperatur­es are set to continue.

PEOPLE WERE STARTING TO GET PHYSICAL WITH EACH OTHER.

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 ?? NICK PROCAYLO / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Vancouver residents line up outside a firehall in Vancouver for free rock salt. Crowds got out of control at three fire stations, Capt. Jonathan Gormick said of the giveaway.
NICK PROCAYLO / POSTMEDIA NEWS Vancouver residents line up outside a firehall in Vancouver for free rock salt. Crowds got out of control at three fire stations, Capt. Jonathan Gormick said of the giveaway.

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