Former Terrace city councillor charged with assault

ONE OF Terrace’s former long serving city councillors has been slapped with a criminal charge.

  • Jun. 20, 2011 12:00 p.m.
DAVID D. Hull has been suspended as the Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce executive director with pay until further notice.

DAVID D. Hull has been suspended as the Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce executive director with pay until further notice.

ONE OF Terrace’s former long serving city councillors has been slapped with a criminal charge.

David D. Hull, who sat on city council here in 1989 for one year and then continuously from 1994 to 2005,  was suspended from his job as the executive director of the Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce after being charged

with assault late last month.

In May 2005, Hull resigned from council here to take the position of chief executive officer for the Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce.

Abbotsford Police Const. Ian MacDonald said David D. Hull, 52, was arrested at an apartment building in central Abbotsford on May 28 after police received a report from a 35-year-old woman that an assault had taken place.

He said the call came in at about 3 a.m., and Hull was arrested 90 minutes later.

An assault charge was approved by Crown counsel on May 31.

MacDonald said he could not provide specifics of the incident.

“My caution is not because of who he is, but because of the (alleged) victim,” he said.

Hull has been suspended with pay from his full-time position at the Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce until further notice.

Chamber president Patrick Giesbrecht made the announcement in a press release June 5, but did not provide further explanation.

“The reason I’m not at liberty to comment is to protect the integrity of the Chamber of Commerce and the integrity of David D. Hull,” said Giesbrecht.

Hull has been with the chamber since May 2005, when he was brought on as executive director – a role created in 2001 to reduce the president’s workload.

The chamber’s website states that Hull’s addition was meant to step up the chamber’s advocacy role in the community.

Since then, Hull has been a strong supporter of the HST and raising the minimum wage.

On May 30, Giesbrecht and Hull represented the Abbotsford chamber at the B.C. Chamber of Commerce annual general meeting in Prince George.

With files from Ashley Wray and Vikki Hopes, Black Press.

Terrace Standard