Trail, British Columbia




City in British Columbia, Canada





















































































Trail
City
City of Trail

Trail BC welcome sign
Trail BC welcome sign


Coat of arms of Trail
Coat of arms
Motto(s): 
Explore Your Trail


Location of Trail in British Columbia
Location of Trail in British Columbia

Coordinates: 49°05′50″N 117°42′38″W / 49.09722°N 117.71056°W / 49.09722; -117.71056
Country Canada
Province British Columbia
Region Kootenays
Regional district Kootenay Boundary
Government

 • Type Elected city council
 • Mayor Lisa Pasin[1]
 • Governing body Trail City Council
 • MP

Alex Atamanenko (NDP)
 • MLA

Katrine Conroy (BC NDP)
Area
[2]

 • Total 34.93 km2 (13.49 sq mi)
Elevation

440 m (1,440 ft)
Population
(2016)[2]

 • Total 7,709
Time zone
UTC-8 (PST)
Forward sortation area
V1R
Area code(s)
250 / 778 / 236
Highways
3B
22
Waterways Columbia River
Website City of Trail

Trail is a city in the West Kootenay region of the Interior of British Columbia, Canada. It was named after the Dewdney Trail, which passed through the area.[3]




Contents






  • 1 Geography


  • 2 Demographics


  • 3 Education and employment


    • 3.1 School district


    • 3.2 Education




  • 4 Economic situation


  • 5 Attractions


    • 5.1 Trail Memorial Centre & Sports Hall of Memories


    • 5.2 River Activities and Music in the Park at Gyro Park in Trail


    • 5.3 Teck Cominco Interpretive Centre


    • 5.4 The Historic Gulch




  • 6 Home of Champions


  • 7 Notable people


  • 8 Trail smelter arbitration


  • 9 Manhattan Project


  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 External links





Geography


Trail has an area of 34.78 square kilometres (13.43 sq mi). The city is located on both banks of the Columbia River, approximately 10 km north of the United States border. This section of the Columbia River valley is located between the Monashee Mountains to the west and the Selkirk Mountains to the east. The Columbia flows directly north-south from Castlegar, turns east near downtown Trail, and then meets the Canada–United States border at Waneta and the Pend d'Oreille River.




Trail Bridge crosses Columbia River in Trail BC


Summer climate in Trail is generally hot and dry with moderately cool nights. Temperatures often exceed 35 °C (95 °F) during summer afternoons, average 29 °C (84.2 °F). Thunderstorms are common during the late-Spring and Summer season, often moving into the valley from the south. The fall months bring dense river fog, especially overnight and in the morning, as a cold air inversion lingers above the relatively warm river surface. Winters are mild to cold with periods of moderate snowfall. Nearby villages such as Warfield and Fruitvale often receive greater amounts of snow due to higher elevation.



The Monashee Mountains are the first major mountain range east of the Coastal Mountains to intercept moisture laden westerly flow from the Pacific Ocean. As a result, areas west of Trail, including the Christina Range, Rossland Range, the city of Rossland, and the Blueberry-Paulson section of the Crowsnest Highway (Highway 3) receive greater amounts of winter precipitation, mostly in the form of heavy snow. Vegetation in the Trail area, although fairly lush, is noticeably drier than other areas with a more westerly aspect.




View of Trail BC looking north



Demographics


According to Statistics Canada, Trail's population was 7,709 during the Canada 2016 Census.[2]


The city is also noted for its large Italian community. There are 1,320 people in Trail with Italian ancestry (17.8%).[4]









































































































Canada 2016 Census Population % of Total Population

Visible minority group
Chinese 65
6999900000000000000♠0.9%
South Asian 45
6999600000000000000♠0.6%
Black 40
6999500000000000000♠0.5%
Filipino 55
6999700000000000000♠0.7%
Latin American 30
6999400000000000000♠0.4%
Arab 0
5000000000000000000♠0%
Southeast Asian 10
6999100000000000000♠0.1%
West Asian 0
5000000000000000000♠0%
Korean 0
5000000000000000000♠0%
Japanese 30
6999400000000000000♠0.4%
Other visible minority 0
5000000000000000000♠0%

Mixed visible minority
20
6999300000000000000♠0.3%
Total visible minority population 295
7000400000000000000♠4%

Aboriginal group
First Nations 220
7000300000000000000♠3%
Métis 395
7000530000000000000♠5.3%
Inuit 0
5000000000000000000♠0%
Total Aboriginal population 645
7000870000000099999♠8.7%
European Canadian 6,480
7001873000000000000♠87.3%
Total population 7,420
100%


Education and employment




The entrance of J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School


Trail is the location of the head office of the Kootenay Boundary Regional District, which is one of the city's employers.


Trail is part of School District 20 Kootenay-Columbia and schools in the town include:




  • Glenmerry Elementary School (Public elementary school K-7)


  • J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School (Public secondary school 8-12)


  • James L Webster Elementary School (Public elementary school K-7.)

  • St. Micheals Catholic School (Independent elementary school K-7)


  • Kootenay-Columbia Learning Centre (Public school for people with special needs or other problems 6-12)



School district


The school district in the Greater Trail area is focused on improving the district and schools and has a focused, well organized improvement plans in place. The strategies selected to achieve the goals are a blend of research, best practice, and innovative thinking. The district has implemented numerous strategies to support schools in improving student learning. Most schools have comprehensive, innovative and research-based strategies to meet the goals.[citation needed]


In 2007, the J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School Replacement program started the construction of a new facility in Trail to replace the existing school that was built in the late 1950s. The new facility opened in September 2009.



Education


Trail’s statistics differ sharply from that of the province in the percentage of the population aged 45–64 with a trades certificate or diploma: Trail—26%, compared to BC—14%. This is directly attributable to Teck Resources and the diversified mining and metals company's presence in the area. The percentage of this age group with a university level education is also very different: Trail—12%, compared to BC—22%. The general picture is a working population heavily geared to the trades and historically very reliant on Teck Cominco for employment.



Economic situation



Employing approximately 1,800 people, Teck Resources (formerly Cominco) is the region’s largest employer. The average age of an employee at Teck Resources' Trail operation is 47. It is anticipated that within 15 years Teck Resources' Trail operation will have a completely new and different labour force. A younger and perhaps more technical labour force will most likely replace those that are retiring. The big picture for the area is one of an aging population which brings about ongoing employment opportunities in the area. This is evidence based on the improved housing sales in the years between 2005 and 2007, making the Greater Trail area a target destination for people looking for better quality of life in a smaller community setting.




Trail Regional Airport


The City of Trail is also home to the largest hospital in the West Kootenay region.



Attractions



Trail Memorial Centre & Sports Hall of Memories


The Trail Memorial Centre currently plays host to the Trail & District Public Library, the Trail Smoke Eaters hockey team, the Trail Museum, and the Sports Hall of Memories, in addition to many local sports facilities. This historic landmark, located at 1051 Victoria Street, was home to two world championship Smoke Eaters teams.




Pedestrian suspension bridge Trail, BC


The Trail Memorial Centre is a hub of civic activity year-round, and has been a focal point of the community since its inception.



River Activities and Music in the Park at Gyro Park in Trail


Located at 1090 Charles Lakes Drive in East Trail on the route to Sunningdale, Gyro Park is the home to Music in the Park during the summer. Listen to the melodic tunes under the gazebo in Gyro Park, where visitors enjoy live music Thursdays in July and August. During long hot summer days, Gyro Park is extremely popular with locals and visitors to the area who enjoy a day at the beach.




Victoria Street Bridge


"The Onions" and other popular river currents that wind between the rocks on the East banks of the Columbia River, are a popular summer magnet for river activity. Often, throughout the summer, an abundance of avid swimmers and rapid paddlers with a deep respect of the Columbia River dare to navigate the frosty swift waters to ride the waves, such as the local favorite "Onions" river current at Gyro Park beach.



Teck Cominco Interpretive Centre


Trail is home to the largest non-ferrous lead and zinc smelter in the world and visitors can learn more about the areas largest employer by taking the 2.5 hour industrial tour of the Teck (Cominco) smelter which can be arranged in the Teck Cominco Interpretive Centre through the Trail & District Chamber of Commerce office located above the Toronto-Dominion Bank, in the heart of downtown Trail.[5] This centre is the starting point for the free tours beginning at 10 am, Monday to Friday during the summer; by appointment from September to May. Learn about the plants' operations in the mini-science centre featuring hands-on exhibits for the whole family.


View video presentations and displays which exhibit sophisticated environmental monitoring systems installed in the Trail area by Teck. Other presentations illustrate the history of Cominco's Trail smelting operations and provide information on career opportunities in the industry.



The Historic Gulch


In the early 1900s a large influx of Italian immigrants lent a distinctive character to "The Gulch" which is located at the entrance to Trail accessed by the Schofield Highway which drops down the long grade down from the city of Rossland and the village of Warfield and sub-division of Annabel onto Rossland Avenue.




The Historic Gulch in Trail BC


This neighbourhood which runs the length of Rossland Avenue is known as "the Gulch." Originally called the "Dublin Gulch" in the very early days, it eventually became known as "The Gulch" as it filled up with Italians who chose not to live on the original Trail townsite. The Gulch starts as throat of Trail Creek narrows between the high, sandy slope of Smelter Hill on its left bank and the West Trail bank where early pioneer houses were built by immigrants as the purchased properties along the west bank steep terrain.


In the early pioneer days, industrious Chinese launderers and cooks spent time gardening in the defile of the Gulch. Few of these immigrants ever acquired rights to own land[citation needed] in the Gulch and their gardens were gradually displaced by Italians and other European working families who terraced their properties into level plots. Despite the steep terrain, these immigrant families planted vegetable gardens reminiscent of the old country, fed by plenty of water from Trail Creek and the hot summer sun.


The Gulch is home to shops and the Terra Nova hotel, located at the entrance to Trail’s central business district at the foot of Rossland Avenue.



Home of Champions


The Greater Trail Area is known as the Home of Champions, in recognition of those who reside in the area, or are from the area, and have excelled in their chosen field of endeavour.


In 1995, Kootenay Savings Credit Union was seeking a project that would represent their commitment and appreciation to the Greater Trail community. The Credit Union decided to sponsor the construction of a monument which was constructed in the summer of 1996 outside their offices in Trail's downtown that would honour the "Champions" of the Greater Trail area in Sports, Industry and Lifestyle.


A society was formed to establish criteria for selection of the persons to be honoured on the monument. The monument was constructed in the summer of 1996 and forty-three champions were selected to be honoured at the inaugural dedication ceremony which took place on September 28, 1996. To date, eighty-nine individuals and organizations have been honoured with a place on the Home of Champions monument.[6]


The Home of Champions monument project is an ongoing one, managed by the City of Trail. Additional persons will be honoured regularly for their special contribution to the social, cultural, economic and educational fabric of the community.



Notable people




  • John Rogers Anderson, Chief of the Defence Staff


  • Thomas d'Aquino, Chief executive and president of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives, and one of the private-sector architects of the North American Free Trade Agreement


  • Jason Bay, former MLB player


  • Lauren Bay, Canadian National Softball Team and National Pro Fastpitch pitcher


  • Ed Cristofoli, former NHL player


  • Craig Cunningham, former NHL Player


  • Adam Deadmarsh, former NHL player, won Stanley cup in 1996 with the Colorado Avalanche


  • Dallas Drake, former NHL player, won Stanley Cup in 2008 with the Detroit Red Wings


  • Landon Ferraro, current NHL player for the Minnesota Wild


  • Ray Ferraro, former NHL player and current TSN analyst


  • Bruno Freschi, architect for Expo 86


  • Ken Georgetti, former President of the Canadian Labour Congress


  • Robert Hampton Gray, one of the last Canadians to die in WWII and the last Canadian recipient of the Victoria Cross


  • Tom Harrison, former MLB pitcher for the Kansas City A's, now known as the Oakland Athletics


  • Shawn Horcoff former NHL player, most notably a former captain of the Edmonton Oilers


  • Barret Jackman, current NHL player for the Nashville Predators


  • Mike Kobluk of the Chad Mitchell Trio


  • Richard Kromm, former NHL player


  • Kerrin Lee-Gartner, Canadian Olympic Women's Ski Team, Downhill Olympic Gold Medal 1992


  • Cesare Maniago, former NHL player


  • Seth Martin, former NHL player


  • Mike Matteucci, former NHL player


  • Steve McCarthy, current AHL player with Springfield Falcons, former NHL player


  • Ben McPeek, composer, arranger, conductor, and pianist


  • Bill McEwan, President and CEO of Sobeys


  • Faron Moller, President of the British Colloquium for Theoretical Computer Science


  • Martin Popoff, heavy metal music journalist


  • Garth Rizzuto, former NHL player


  • David Sylvester (academic)- Principal of King's University College (University of Western Ontario)


  • Steve Tambellini, former NHL player & former GM of the Edmonton Oilers



Trail smelter arbitration




Trail Smelter in 1929



In 1927, a smelter in Trail was polluting, via smoke deposition, farmlands south of the border in the United States. The US initially agreed to bring the issue before the International Joint Commission. A 1931 report the IJC recommended Canada compensate the United States for a sum of $350,000 to the farmers, the US rejected the offer. In 1935 the two countries agreed to arbitration, in which Canada again offered to compensate the US $350,000 for all damages caused before 1932. In April 1938, after extensive expert assessments, the tribunal acknowledged that the smelter had caused damage after 1932. Then in 1941, it held that "no State has the right to use or permit the use of its territory in such a manner as to cause injury by fumes in or to the territory of another or the properties or persons therein, when the case is of serious consequence and the injury is establish by clear and convincing evidence." [7] This case, known commonly as the "Trail smelter arbitration", is a landmark in environmental law,[8] as it helped to establish the "polluter pays" principle for transnational pollution issues.[9]



Manhattan Project


As part of its contribution to the Manhattan Project, a Canadian firm Consolidated Mining and Smelting (CMS or Cominco) built and operated a 6 T/a electrolytic heavy water plant at Trail, which started operation in 1943. Lt-Col Nichols noted environmental damage from emissions to the beautiful valley and mountain slopes in the first half of 1943.
[10][11][12]



See also


  • Trail Daily Times


References





  1. ^ "Inside City Hall". Trail BC. Retrieved 2014-11-16..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ abc Statistics Canada (2016 Census). Trail, City [Census subdivision, British Columbia and Canada [Country]]


  3. ^ Barman, Jean The West Beyond the West, University of Toronto Press, 2007, p. 130.


  4. ^ Ethnic Origin, both sexes, age (total), Trail, 2016 Census


  5. ^ "Teck Cominco Interpretive Centre". Kootenay Rockies Tourism. Retrieved 11 May 2015.


  6. ^ Trail Historical Society


  7. ^ Bratspies, Rebbecca M., Russell A. Miller. Transboundary Harm in International Law. Cambridge University Press, 2010.


  8. ^ A. Parrish, 'Trail Smelter Deja Vu: Extraterritoriality, International Environmental Law, and the Search for Solutions to Canada-U.S. Transboundary Water Pollution Disputes,' (2005) 85 B.U. L. Rev. 363


  9. ^ "Trail Smelter Arbitration, 1938/1941". University of Idaho. Archived from the original on 2004-08-22.


  10. ^ Chris Waltham (20 June 2002). "An Early History of Heavy Water". arXiv:physics/0206076.


  11. ^
    "Project '9' - Heavy-Water (Deuterium) Production". The Manhattan Project Heritage Preservation Association. Retrieved 2007-12-06.



  12. ^ Nichols, Kenneth (1987). The Road to Trinity. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 068806910X. p97



Coordinates: 49°5′42″N 117°42′36″W / 49.09500°N 117.71000°W / 49.09500; -117.71000



External links






Media related to Trail, British Columbia at Wikimedia Commons



  • City of Trail Official Site

  • Trail Chamber Of Commerce

  • Trail Transit

  • Trail Daily Times

  • Trail Rossland News











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