â–ş Listen Live
â–ş Listen Live

Mother turned away from local hotel for being from Prince George

Full version of Bespoyasny's open letter
Full version of Bespoyasny’s open letter

A Prince George hotel is in damage control after a facebook post by a local woman has gone viral across the country.

Aimee Bespoyasny says Esther’s Inn turned her and her two children away because she was from the area.

She says the manager at the hotel told them they have problems with locals partying and trashing rooms.

Bespoyasny says as a single mother, she can’t afford big vacations.

“So that’s what we do, is these mini-holidays. I know lots of other families do it, you know we support our local businesses and I would expect that is as community members would be treated a little bit better.”

Several other similar stories have since surfaced across social media

In response, the hotel issued the following statement via Facebook;

Something going on in the Prince George area you think people should know about?
Send us a news tip by emailing [email protected].

We apologize for the delayed response regarding the recent misbehavior of a manager at Esther’s Inn. We unfortunately encountered technical difficulties when attempting to log into our Facebook account as too many posts triggered a warning from Facebook resulting in the account being flagged.
First and foremost, Esther’s Inn management extends our deepest apologies for the recent behavior in which a manager, who recently took over a new role at the front desk, has conducted. The alleged tone and context of his words are not a reflection of our business’ practice and belief. The manager has personally contacted Ms.Visona, and the GM, who was out of town at that time, will follow up shortly.
Furthermore, we would like to make it absolutely clear that there has been a misunderstanding and that we do not have such a policy that rejects locals from our hotel. No such “no local” policy exists within our establishment. Our hotel is very much a part of the Prince George community and has been for the past 30 years and we will learn from this incident to better communicate with customers in order to ensure they experience the best of what we have to offer.
The actions of one misinformed employee does not reflect the entirety of our establishment of 30 years.
We will update our progress shortly.

Colin Dacre
Colin Dacre
Raised in Surrey BC, graduate of BCIT that moved north to pursue the news. Email me at [email protected] or find me on twitter

Continue Reading

cjci Now playing play

cirx Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Light wildfire smoke prompts special air quality advisory from Environment Canada

Environment Canada has issued a special air quality statement for the Prince George area.  They say Prince George, along with a large number of other areas of the province such as the Fraser Canyon and Okanagan, are likely to be impacted by wildfire smoke for the next 24-48 hours. 

Miracle Theatre founders honoured with Medal of Good Citizenship

Prince George's Ted Price and Anne Laughlin are being recognized for their contributions to the community with one of the highest honours one can receive in British Columbia.  The Miracle Theatre founders are among 18 individuals in the province who will be receiving a Medal of Good Citizenship in 2025. 

19,000 BC Hydro customers in PG area to be affected by outage Monday afternoon

BC Hydro says roughly 19,000 customers will be without power in the Prince George area this afternoon.  According to BC Hydro, this is due to a vehicle incident last night (Saturday) on Highway 16 West near Art Knapp Plantland that resulted in extensive damage to BC Hydro infrastructure. 

Hockeyfest 2025 to help raise funds for cancer equipment for UHNBC

September 19-21 will bring plenty of hockey action to the CN Centre, both inside and outside the arena.  The Spirit of the North Healthcare foundation is hosting Prince George's first Hockeyfest in the CN Centre parking lot, a travelling street hockey tournament fundraiser that weekend. 

Quarter of drivers admit to nodding off behind the wheel: ICBC

A new Ipsos survey done for ICBC says about a quarter (24%) of B.C. drivers have admitted to momentarily nodding off while driving in the past year, while half (52%) have driven while tired or drowsy.  ICBC is reminding drivers that long drives and hot weather can be a dangerous combination, leading to fatigue and serious crashes. 
- Advertisement -