B.C. dinosaur museum closes doors over funds, operations feud in Tumbler Ridge
VICTORIA — A dinosaur museum in the tiny northeast British Columbia community of Tumbler Ridge is facing a struggle against extinction as local politicians and residents feud over funding, operation, and development of the potential tourism gold mine.
The District of Tumbler Ridge council denied the museum its annual funding grant of $200,000 last month, essentially leaving the non-profit, largely volunteer-run society with few options but to shut down.
Tumbler Ridge Mayor Don McPherson said that after almost 20 years of providing grants to the museum, council needed to express unhappiness with the operation, and withholding the money was the best way to that.
“We had some issues about how this was being spent,” he said in an interview. “It’s a lot of money. We funded this museum for about 18 years. It’s to the tune of about $2.5 million.”