Slave Lake donations buried in Calgary dump: driver
Beginning of Story Content A Calgary garbage hauler says he was sickened when he found a truckload of <a href="http://wk.putianb2b.com/"><strong>兼职网 </strong></a> clothing, bedding and toys marked for Alberta wildfire evacuees at a city landfill this week. And to make matters worse, Paul Nielsen says when he alerted a supervisor at the Spyhill landfill about what he had discovered, the products were buried rather than salvaged because the dump has a no-scavenging policy. Nielsen, <a href="http://wk.putianb2b.com/"><strong>网络兼职联盟 </strong></a> who owns DumpRunner Waste Systems, says the boxes were clearly marked for donation to relief efforts in Slave <a href="http://wk.putianb2b.com/"><strong>广州兼职 </strong></a> Lake, Alta., where fires earlier this year left hundreds of people homeless. He said there were video games, children's clothing still on the store hangers, a crib, coats and new blankets. The material was donated by Total E&P Canada Ltd., which conducted a charity drive to help the town. Nielsen says he doesn't know how the items <a href="http://rooyee.org/view.php?id=26549"><strong>Discount nba jersey lover | fansmarktplace</strong></a> ended up in the dump and calls to the City of Calgary, which runs the facility, were not immediately returned. End of Story Content Back to accessibility links
|