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Independent September 29, 2016 | 44 pages

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AppleFest 2016 – Wasn’t that a party! By Sarah Hyatt

Brighton – The streets of Brighton sparkled with a rainbow of colours during AppleFest, bringing thousands together to celebrate the apple harvest. Chairwoman for the 2016 AppleFest committee, Christine Waterhouse, estimates around 15,000 people flooded streets and parks for the country festival and Brighton’s largest attraction of the year. And with another extensive lineup, the four-day celebration brought apple-inspired fun to all ages. There was a little something for everyone festival-goers agreed. Over the years, the festival continues to grow. This year’s lineup easily featured more than two-dozen special events, with community clubs and organizations hosting all sorts of activities and with a number of visitors coming to town for the 42nd annual AppleFest. Waterhouse is calling this year another “huge success.” The Main Street was “packed” with more than 150 vendors Saturday who shared all kinds of unique treats – those with a sweet tooth weren’t let down. Crafts, art and other products on display for the street fair as part of the vendor lineup, showcased Brightonians’ talents in other areas. Both new and returning vendors were a part of the action on Main Street. Elsewhere in the community and in just about every nook and cranny, Brighton was bustling with events like the car and antique tractor show and the dog agility show which pulled in big crowds. Just under 300 cars were on display for the car show, said Waterhouse. An array of models ranging in the ages offered people the chance to revisit various time periods. Many who brought cars for the show brought vintage items such as historical restaurant characters, old menus and food arrangements, along with other memorabilia to add to the “nostalgia” and to their displays. Throughout the weekend, Cold Creek County was also welcomed home and rocked the stage at King Edward Park, performing hits and raising some cash for the Brighton and District Minor Hockey Association. The band also warmed some hearts as they welcomed kids on stage to sing along with the group, as reported on social media. Among other big highlights were the Lions Club Children’s Village and Applefest Kings of Strength events. “They were a great attraction at King Edward Park,” said Waterhouse. Kim Cheer from Cheer Farms shows off her AppleFest spirit during the street fair. (For more photos from Applefest please see The chairwoman is already looking forward to see what Page 4.) Photo by Sarah Hyatt. AppleFest in 2017 will bring.


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Brighton-Cramahe Township-Trent Sept 20 Hills -- Northumberland OPP dealt • Two vehicles were egged sometime with 320 incidents over a four-day pe- overnight on Dufferin Street in riod (Sept. 19-22), including an elderly Brighton. couple in the Campbellford area being • Police investigated a complaint of a swarmed by hornets in their home in a domestic dispute between separated call that came in Sept. 20. partners that had occurred days Officers contacted an exterminator earlier in Brighton. One partner who discovered a large nest in their at- was arrested for spousal assault as tic. a result. The couple were not injured despite one of them being allergic to hornet Sept 19 stings. • A residence on County Road 30 near Old Wooler Road in Brighton was Sept 22 broken into. A side door was forced • Police received a noise complaint open and a red wooden musical jewabout loud machinery at 1:30 a.m. elry box engraved ‘Nana’ and a quanin Colborne. Officers discovered a tity of jewelry were taken, including business had its large bay doors a ladies’ blue sapphire ring with 12 open due to the heat. Workers small diamonds and a men’s gold were asked to close the doors and wedding ring engraved ‘B S’. complied. No further complaints • Police responded to four domestic diswere received. putes throughout Northumberland • There was a disturbance at a County related to issues of child cusCampbellford rental unit. Para- tody, separation and property. Police medics took the adults respon- request that anyone simply looking sible for the disturbance to the for advice of this nature to consider hospital due to their levels of in- consulting a family court lawyer first. toxication. Northumberland OPP officers also Sept 21 investigated eight accidental 911 calls, • There was more mischief commit- 11 motor vehicle collisions, and 40 ted at Memory Junction Railroad traffic-related complaints, and conMuseum in Brighton. Windows and ducted four RIDE programs during a door were damaged. the same period.

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Have apples? Will travel Ontario’s first mobile apple cider mill was put to work at Cheers Farm in Brighton Sept. 18. Geissberger Farmhouse Cider, the winner of a Premier’s Award for Agri-Food Innovation Excellence in 2013, travels around the province producing cider for more than 40 apple growers. The apples are washed, crushed and pressed, and the fruit juice extracted is

filtered through a press cloth before being pasteurized and packaged. The Brighton Fire Department, which lifted its fire advisory last week, set up a display, promoting fire safety. Harry’s Hots was also present, in support of the firefighters.

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Cold Creek County rocks Brighton’s Applefest It’s been an extraordinary 12 months for Cold Creek County, featuring Brighton’s Brandon Scott as lead vocalist and Hastings’ Doug Oliver on drums. It has had hit singles, including Our Town and Beer Weather, and won three Country Music Association of Ontario awards (Group of the Year, Rising Star and Fans’ Choice). It also earned three Canadian Country Music Association nominations. Hundreds of enthusiastic fans took to the ball field at King Edward Community Park Saturday Night to hear the band perform at Applefest. The other members are brothers Josh and Justin Lester, guitarists/ vocalists (Frankford), and lead guitarist Trevor MacLeod (Stratford). Photo by John Campbell

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Cheer employee Richard Palmer fed Paula Red apples into the cider mill Photo by John Campbell

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Ash beetle boring in on Brighton, Presqu’ile, residents fear By Sarah Hyatt

Brighton – As the tiny green beetle known as the emerald ash borer (EAB) chews its way through Ontario, a few residents are worried – it’s only a matter of time before “devastation” reaches Brighton. The borer is an invasive insect native to Asia that was first discovered in Ontario and in North America in 2002. “The beetle has proven to be highly destructive in its new range,” Natural Resources Canada reports. Since its arrival, the beetle has killed tens-ofmillions of ash trees and continues to spread into new areas. Karen Caravaggio, who lives with her husband Angelo at 154 Harbour St., has seen first-hand what it can do. “I have seen the emerald ash borer devastate York Region’s ash trees,” said Karen. The Vaughan neighbourhood Karen lived in was relatively new. “Every single ash tree was killed, removed at great expense and replant-

ed,” she said. A lot of Vaughan’s trees were ash and “everyone in the community was quite sad after,” said Karen. Karen and another Harbour Street resident, Lee Ostapuk, would like to something “proactive” done by the municipality, to save some of the ash trees on the street and in the community. While Karen isn’t an expert, she admits, she’s fearful if no preventative measures are taken, Harbour Street, the parkette there and the overall landscape of Brighton “will be negatively impacted for a lifetime.” The borer was identified in Northumberland County back in 2013 near Roseneath, as reported by Northumberland News. The insect can kill healthy ash trees in as little as three years once infested. In Vaughan, “death occurred quickly – the trees were then weakened and brittle, posing a danger in storm situations,” said Karen. “The city was tasked with removal. The trunks shot up suckers that made the

stumps into bushes.” This continued to attract the beetle. Down on Harbour Street, Ostapuk estimates some of the ash trees are around 40-feet tall. “These old trees have protected us from hot summers,” she said. “This summer, our grass was kept green without watering.” Ostapuk worries about losing her long-loved canopy. “We need clean air – we need these trees for the birds and other animals too,” she said. The spread of the beetle has often been depicted as almost inevitable as well as costly and complicated. Canadian Forest Service (CFS) scientists estimate costs for treatment, removal and replacement of trees may reach $2 billion over a 30-year-period. Also expected to be significant, are the ecological impacts of ash tree mortality on aquatic organisms, birds and understory vegetation, which are currently under study. Brighton residents aren’t the only

ones worried either. “The presence of the emerald ash borer in Ontario has been known for over a decade and it was also known here at the park, the EAB would eventually reach Presqu’ile,” said David Bree, senior natural heritage education leader for Presqu’ile Provincial Park. The ash tree species are a major component of Presqu’ile. “The death of these trees will substantially alter the look and feel of the park for years to come, until replacement trees grow up,” said Bree. In 2012, the park learned there was a major infestation near the 401 outside of Brighton. A full-scale protection program is not practical for Presqu’ile, which has tens-of-thousands of ash trees, said Bree. In 2015, with help from the Friends of Presqu’ile, the park initiated an inoculation program. The program focused on protecting 10 trees along Jobes’ Wood trail and three different ash species, “to create a living muse-

um of trees.” The inoculation process is repeated every two years at least. Traps laid out in 2015 by the CFS didn’t indicate the borer’s presence. Visual inspection in 2016 didn’t either. “But early stage infestation is very difficult to detect – so we are not 100 per cent sure, there are no EAB in the park now,” said Bree. “We do know they are certainly not here in large numbers yet.” In the best-case scenario, the park will be maintaining a population that will be able to re-seed once the beetle disappears or is eradicated, explained Bree. This would be achieved through the 10 trees, protected by chemical inoculation. “Once the beetle gets into the park and trees start dying, considerable costs will be incurred, as we will have to remove the dying trees in campgrounds and along trails for visitor safety,” said Bree. Please see “Ash beetle” on page 8

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OPINION

Next Secretary-General: No Charisma Required It’s not an election, it’s a Selection. And although all the countries in the United Nations General Assembly have equal rights, some are more equal than others. Ban Ki-moon retires at the end of this year, and it’s time for the United Gwynne Dyer Nations to choose a new SecretaryGeneral. By the end of this year’s session of the General Assembly, in early October, we will know who it is. Which raises two questions: how do they make the choice, and why should anybody care? The secretary-general of the United Nations is, in some senses, the highest official on the planet, but the selection process is hardly democratic. In fact, it has traditionally been a process as shrouded in secrecy as a papal conclave. It is the Security Council’s fifteen members who pick the candidate, although all 192 members of the General Assembly then get to vote on their choice. And even on the Security Council, it’s only the views of the five permanent members (the P5) that really count, because each of the five great powers has a veto and the others don’t. This is why people with strong opinions and a record of taking decisive action don’t get the job. That sort of person would be bound to annoy one of the P5 great powers – Russia, Britain, China, France and the United States – or even all of them one after the other, so the entire system is designed to prevent a maverick with big ideas from slipping through. The secretary-general must never come from one of the great powers (that might give him access to enough resources to make a nuisance of himself), and the successful candidate should not be charismatic. The final choice is usually a “safe pair of hands”, some blameless diplomat from a middle or smaller power like the incumbent, a career diplomat from South Korea who ranks 32nd on the Forbes list of The World’s Most Powerful People. Candidates therefore tend to be relative unknowns. If you look through the current list of candidates, for example, the only two names you might recognise, even if you are a political junkie, are former New Zealand prime minister, Helen Clark, now Adminis-

Brighton Independent 250 Sidney Street Belleville, ON K8P 3Z3 Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 Published weekly by:

trator of the United Nations Development Programme, and Antonio Guterres, former prime minister of Portugal and later UN High Commissioner for Refugees. But who is Irina Bokova, Natalia Gherman, or Igor Luksic? They are, in that order, a former acting foreign minister of Bulgaria, the current foreign minister of Moldova, and a former foreign minister of Montenegro. Well, all right, Bokova is also the current director-general of UNESCO, but you still didn’t know her name, did you? You might also ask why Eastern Europe is a whole separate region at all, given that its total population from Poland to Bulgaria is less than the population of Bangladesh, Brazil, Indonesia or Pakistan. Same reason: it used to be seen as a separate region because it was occupied by Soviet troops and most of its governments were ultimately controlled from Moscow. History looms very large at the UN. There is some progress. Half of this year’s candidates are female, and there is a strong feeling around the UN that it is high time for a woman to become secretary-general. There is also an attempt this time to make the process more “transparent”, but it is otherwise unchanged. The Security Council still comes up with a single candidate who doesn’t offend any of the great powers, and the General Assembly then rubber-stamps its choice. It’s basically a civil service job, suitable for persons of cautious disposition. How could it be otherwise? You only get what you pay for, and no great power is yet ready to pay the price in terms of its own sovereignty of having a powerful independent leader at the United Nations. What would be the point of choosing such a leader anyway, so long as the UN has no military forces or financial resources of its own? It would only lead to frustration: the secretary-general can’t act independently of the will of the great powers because they designed it that way. The job is still worth doing, and there is never a shortage of applicants. The secretarygeneral can speak out as the conscience of the world when there are massive violations of human rights, and once in a while she can actually organise a peace-keeping mission to stop the horrors (if all the great powers agree). And she becomes, by virtue of her position, the most striking symbol of that more cooperative, less violent world that most politicians, diplomats and ordinary citizens actually aspire to. But we are still a very long way from the promised land.

AHL announcement ends years of political drama Editorial by Stephen Petrick Belleville Mayor Taso Christopher is probably too polite to say it publicly, but I bet there’s a part of him that wants to call up Gord Simmonds and say, “how do you like us now?” Simmonds was the owner of the Belleville Bulls until he sold the Ontario Hockey League franchise to a Hamilton sports owner suddenly on a spring day in 2015. Simmonds had repeatedly said the city-owned Yardmen Arena was getting too old and needed to be upgraded or replaced for the team to be viable in Belleville long term. The status of the Yardmen and to what extent the city should work with Simmonds to keep the Bulls in Belleville then became a hot issue, leading up to the municipal election of 2014. From the moment Christopher was elected, the Bulls days were numbered. Simmonds and Christopher didn’t see eye to eye and, I suspect, had a deep-rooted dislike for each other. That became ridiculously obvious to me, following roughly 10 minutes of interviews I conducted with both of them upon hearing news of the Bulls sale in March of 2015. Christopher, rightly so, was upset that the team was yanked from Belleville suddenly and the city was given no opportunity by the OHL to respond to Simmonds’ Hamilton offer. One would think league officials would have given Belleville that chance, since it had been an OHL city or more than 30 years at that point. But, Simmonds insisted it didn’t matter. The team was destined to lose money year after year if the Yardmen wasn’t upgraded, he said, and there was no other potential owner looking to buy the team. Plus, he said, the city was about to let the Bulls’ lease on the Yardmen expire before entering into any discussion with him about a long-term investment in the arena. On that point, Christopher had an interesting

How to reach us for Letters to The Editor Do you have a burning issue you want to Take it to the letters section of our paper. share with other readers? A burr under your Please e-mail (electronic submissions only saddle, perhaps, about the local council, a – no typed or written letters accepted) to community need you see needing a fix? How chris.malette@metroland.com about senior levels of government – provincial Please mark Letters to the Editor in the or federal? subject line.

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answer: “You can’t make an investment unless you have a solid relationship with the tenant,” said the mayor for an article published in these pages on March 19, 2015. So Simmonds, wherever he is today, must be stunned at the news that was announced Monday. City council had voted to spend roughly $20 million to upgrade and expand the Yardmen Arnea, so the Ottawa Senators can bring their American Hockey League affeliate team to the city for the 2017-18 season. It’s the type of announcement Simmonds wanted, but never got. It means one of two things (or maybe both). One, the city learned the hard way that, yes, it had to expand and upgrade the Yardmen Arena to keep competitive hockey in Belleville. And two, the city felt more comfortable making an investment with a completely new parter – Senators owner Eugene Melnyk – than it ever did with Simmonds. During the Bulls’ last two years, the community’s interest in the team and the once rowdy atmosphere at the Yardmen fizzled. By the time the Bulls were sold, the team had one of the poorest attendance rates in the OHL, with only about 2,500 per game. Was that the fault of the owner, the coaches and players (the Bulls were one of the poorer teams in the East in their two final years), or the fan base itself ? Hard to say – there’s good arguments to make both for and against in each of these cases. But we know that, for the AHL to succeed in Belleville, attendance rates must be way higher than what the Bulls saw in their final years. Fortunately, for hockey fans here, there’s an owner willing to bet Belleville can be a great hockey city again. And there’s a municipality willing to work with that owner to try and make it happen.

ADVERTISING SALES Jean Convey, 613-966-2034, ext 527 Tim Sheppard, 613-966-2034, ext 528 Louise Clutterbuck, 613-966-2034, ext 503 Laura Ajayi, 613-966-2034 ext 518

CLASSIFIEDS 1-888-Words Ads EDITORIAL Brighton News John Campbell jcampbell@metroland.com Sarah Hyatt sarah.hyatt24@gmail.com PRODUCTION Rob Purvis, 613-966-2034, ext 520 rob.purvis@metroland.com This edition serves the following communities: Brighton, Colborne and area

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016 7


Ash beetle boring in on Brighton, Presqu’ile, residents fear Continued from page 6

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Within the town, there’s no program currently in place to protect trees. Whether or not Brighton goes ahead with a program in the future, that will be a decision of council, CAO Bill Watson said. Costs for insecticides injected into trees over several years however, do cause concern. “You’re looking at somewhere around $200-$400, maybe more based on the size to treat a tree and at least twice,” said Watson. Currently, Brighton doesn’t have a good inventory of its trees either, Watson noted. This would be the first step in shifting towards a program, he explained. The municipality could get then identify “high value trees,” as was done in Cobourg. “But this would still be pretty costly,” said Watson. “Even if you’re looking at like 30 trees…it all adds up quick and with at least two years of treatments.” Brighton could also look at a replacement program for ash trees, said Watson. “It hasn’t quite got to us yet, so we have some time still,” said Watson. Karen argues the removal of trees however, with associated regular disposal, stump grinding and replanting could cost more. The CAO noted the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry is also working on research and other methods, such as the introduction of some native predators like bees, to address the borer spread. -With files from Northumberland News

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The Jobes’ Wood Trail at Presqu’ile Provincial Park. Photo by Sarah Hyatt.

A closer look at the emerald ash borer As reported by Presqu’ile Provincial Park senior natural heritage education leader, David Bree: • The history of trees in the park has been a “rollercoaster ride” with plenty of trees before the European Settlement. Many trees were then cut and burned. Trees came back through both natural regeneration and tree planting. • “Now it looks as if trees will be disappearing from the park once again.” • The larva of the borer eats the inner bark of ash trees, with this, they “ring the tree and kill it.” • It’s well documented the EAB is 99 per cent fatal to ash trees in Ontario. • The ash tree is often the first native tree to re-colonize an old farm field after it’s abandoned. Presqu’ile has many abandoned fields. • White Ash grows in upland areas, Red Ash in damp fields and Black Ash in swamps. • All three species are in the park, “in great numbers – perhaps as much as 40 per cent of the trees in Presqu’ile are ash.” • An insecticide injected into the base of the tree in the spring, kills any larvae that start eating the bark or adults that eat the leaves. • Even doing 10 trees is “no small effort, as it is a life-time commitment.” • The ash trees must be treated at least every two years and every year when infestations first arrive in an area and then this must continue for the life of tree. • “While most ash trees will likely be gone from the park in the next decade, we are committed to keeping the ash tree legacy alive along the Jobes’ Woods Trail.” • Moving firewood infected with the emerald ash borer larva is the single biggest way the beetle has moved around the province. • Those looking to help with ash trees in the park may consider a donation to the Friends of Presqu’ile’s environmental fund.


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Brighton backing Purple Ribbon campaign By Sarah Hyatt

Brighton – A purple glow will be seen downtown Brighton in October. The sea of colour will be a reflection of council and the community’s support for the Highland Shores Children’s Aid Society’s Purple Ribbon campaign. Through the campaign, societies provincewide aim to increase awareness “about the community’s important role in the prevention of child abuse and neglect.” Representatives for the Highland Shores society and Children’s Foundation recently appeared before Brighton council, asking for a show of support from the community. Council agreed to get behind the initiative aimed at stopping child abuse and to show its support for local kids and the local CAS, declaring October as Child Abuse Prevention Month in the munici-

pality. Council agreed Highland Shores staff could in addition, decorate downtown with purple ribbons. Mayor Mark Walas said he’d pull out his purple tie too. “We all have a role to play to help protect kids,” Jennifer Bishop told council and the public, at the Sept. 19 meeting. Through the campaign, staff stress the importance of speaking up for kids and for people to contact the CAS “promptly” if someone has concerns or suspects a child or youth may be in need of protection or help, due to abuse and neglect. People are asked to show their support in October, by sporting a purple ribbon and to wear purple, on Dress Purple Day, which is Wednesday, Oct. 19. People can also purchase a purple item from The Children’s Foundation to wear during the month. Visit www.childrensfoundation.ca for more information.

Council also approved Highland Shores’ requests at the meeting, for Oct. 16-22 to serve as National Foster Family Week in Brighton and in November, proclaimed the month as Adoption Awareness Month. In other council news: The physician recruitment and retention committee’s recommendation to council, to have a recruiter present a candidate to health professionals in Brighton for considerations has been approved. While the committee previously decided it would not proceed with its doctor hunt by way of a professional recruiter, “in this once instance,” it was decided a recruiter should be allowed to present his/her candidate.

The Municipality of Brighton invites applications from members of the public who are interested in serving on the following committees. We are seeking interested people from the Brighton community. To apply you must be a resident of Brighton. Brighton Public Library Board: This Board is responsible for the Brighton Public Library. The Library is at the core of the community, serving children, teens & adults. This is a working board that will see the Library through upcoming changes in the next couple of years. Public Appointment: 1 person from the public Community Events & Civic Awards Advisory Committee: This Committee is responsible for Canada Day celebrations, the Santa Clause Parade and other community events that bring the whole community together. Public Appointment: 2 people from the public Quinte Economic Development Committee (QEDC): Two openings for private sector representatives from Brighton, to be appointed by Council, to sit on the QEDC. Public Appointment: 2 people from the private sector Quinte Health Care Advisory Committee: One position to represent Brighton on the QHC Advisory Council. We are looking for an individual with recent hospital experience as a patient/family member or a person who has experience as a caregiver. Public Appointments: 1 person from the public If you are interested in becoming a member of one of these committees, please express your interest and applicable background, in writing by Friday, October 21, 2016 to: Vicki Kimmett, Deputy Clerk vkimmett@brighton.ca P.O. Box 189, Brighton, Ontario K0K 1H0 Or, drop off your application at the Municipal Office at 35 Alice Street. Please be sure to include your residential address, telephone number and email address. 10

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016

Committee members discussed the use of recruiters again at length, during a Sept. 14 meeting, after this recruiter made an offer to assist the committee. If a successful placement or agreement was achieved, the recruiter is to be paid a finders fee. The Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) will be sending out assessments for the next four-year phase in mid-October and “there will be significant increases in the current value assessment of farmland,” deputy mayor Brian Ostrander has reported. While MPAC has already provided

some public consultation meetings and outreach information sessions within Northumberland County, in places like Cramahe Township and in Port Hope, Brighton was not on the list as of Sept. 19. Staff is working to co-ordinate a session. Council has awarded the contract for the water and wastewater rate study to Watson and Associates Economists Ltd., for $27,500, plus HST. Brighton previously completed a study in 2011. Director of finance and administrative services, Linda Widdifield, explains municipalities are required to prepare a financial plan for the drinking water system, for a period of at least six years – starting with the year the water license would expire. Brighton’s license expires in 2020. The financial plan would be a 10-year plan (2017-2026), “which is sufficient to meet the requirements for the next license renewal,” Widdifield reports. In the 2016 budget, council included $40,000 for the study. Responses were received from six firms, ranging from $18,760-$38,720. A review committee comprised of senior staff scored proposals and recommended Watson and Associates, “due to their breadth of experience, qualificaCouncil has agreed to get behind the Highland tions and public consultation process.” Shores Children’s Aid Society’s Purple Ribbon camBrighton has also updated its reserve paign in October. Photo by Sarah Hyatt. policy. Revisions include the addition of a process, where the transferring of all funds received from the sale of surplus equipment will go to departmental reserves. The addition to the policy means staff will not be required to request approval for these transfers at yearend, Widdifield reports. The process will ensure all proceeds from the sales of surplus equipment will be used for the purchase of future equipment departmentally, she explained. Councillor Steven Baker was the sole member of council to express some concern over revisions. He did not wish to the see Trenton High School Cafeteria the policy revised, stating the needs of 15 Fourth Ave, Trenton the community are (just off Hwy 2 West) ever changing and therefore, funds may be needed at year-end for other reasons.

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More regular reports and updates concerning the status of the water pollution control plant may be coming soon to council meetings. Council and staff are working to etch out a plan to have more regular reports on the plant, with Jeff Graham of GSS Engineering attending one council meeting monthly, for the purpose of reporting and answering questions. Brighton is also lending its support to General Motors. Mayor of Oshawa, John Henry, wrote to Mayor Mark Walas and Brighton council requesting support from the community recently. His request stemmed from the June announcement from GM Canada, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne “to hire 1,000 software engineers,” for the development of self-driving, autonomous connected cars. The jobs are to be divided between the Oshawa engineering centre, KitchenerWaterloo, a Kapuskasing cold weather facility and a new facility in Markham,

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Brighton – Residents may be able to catch up with council in real time soon. Councillors John Martinello and Roger McMurray put forward a notice of motion and the idea on Sept. 19, that staff prepare a report on options and associated costs for the live streaming of Brighton council meetings. The pair have also asked a report be presented to council and the public no later than Nov. 7. Martinello sees the live streaming of council meetings as an opportunity to improve accessibility, accountability and transparency and also as a way to “increase public participation in local governance in Brighton.” Several neighbouring municipalities including Belleville, Quinte West, the County of Prince Edward and Cobourg already provide live streaming of municipal meetings, he noted. A construction project for a new storm sewer system on Chapel Street has been approved.

Council has approved the Chapel Street drainage construction project for a value of $25,755, plus HST to QBT Excavating Ltd. The new storm water system will collect the water from a discharge pipe that is located at the rear of a lot at 42-A Chapel St. Council received three responses for the project; QBT Excavating came in at the lowest. The remaining two bids were in the $36,700 range. Council has also directed staff to prepare a report on recoverable costs from developers for Mac’s Milk and Lakeside Landing. McDougall Insurance has been given the OK, to plant a tree in town as a way to celebrate the company’s 70 years in business. Where the new tree will be planted, it’s unknown, but McDougall’s has no preference. Katelyn Orr wrote to council recently regarding the company’s request, stating McDougall’s wanted to celebrate the milestone and help “beautify our little town.”

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Brighton’s Own A Brighton Love Story By Vic Schukov

Like the Boy Scout that he was in his youth, Brighton lawyer/ musician Daniel Thompson has amassed his share of proverbial merit badges. At 15, as a drummer/singer he formed his first band, No Such Animal, their debut gig being a strawberry social in Brighton Memorial Park. By 16, he was playing the circuit of high schools, teen clubs and - weekly, during summers - at Presqu’ile Pavilion with The Westbury Union. One summer evening in 1968, he garnered a precious achievement when 16 year old Laurie Hart accepted a ride home on his motorbike from the Pavilion. His highest “badge” came four years later when she accepted his proposal of a marriage that would endure for 44 years. After high school, Thompson transplanted the band and Laurie to Peterborough where he attended

12

Rocker with musicians based in Belleville. Destined to become Brighton’s virtual house band, their first album, “Not Taken,” led to a Quality Records contract. Their subsequent release, “Take Me to Heaven” rocked Canadian and European markets. After several years of performing extensively, Bentwood Rocker cut back on live shows; today, they do about six a year, mostly fundraisers such as the Brighton Rotary Club Street Dance, Belleville’s Big Brothers and Sisters Rib Fest and the Trenton Hospital Foundation Gala. The band continues to record new songs. By the time Thompson had been called to the Bar in 1980, he settled in the Thompson family’s winterized cottage in Presqu’ile, assuming the Brighton practice established by his grandfather in 1931. Thompson became involved in the community, first as a director of the Northumberland Housing Au-

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Trent University while she went into Early Childhood Education at Sir Sanford Fleming College. Although his grandfather and father were both lawyers, the latter also a Family Court Judge, Thompson remained undecided about carrying on the tradition. “They were okay with whatever career decision I made,” says Thompson. By his second year of university, the band was going gangbusters, the income allowing Thompson to support a young family. Graduating with Honours in History and Politics, Thompson pursued his musical career full-time for another year before making a pivotal decision. He applied for law school: “Having a family to support, I was struck by the idea of being my own boss and not on the road constantly,” he says. So, off he went to Queen’s University Law School in 1975. During his second year of law school, he assembled Bentwood

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016

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Dan and Laurie Thompson on vacation in Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.” Photo submitted. thority, then a director of Trenton Memorial Hospital (the first board member actually born in the hospital, where he still sits), a warden of St. Paul’s Anglican Church, and in 1989, a charter member of the Rotary Club of Brighton where he is the last surviving member from the original 25. Thompson exudes the joy of a man who has found his place in his community. His favourite thing

about Brighton is “the way people treat each other.” Yet, what a man so talented, so involved in giving back to his forefather’s hometown, was most proud of during our interview, was his wife. He says, “After we moved back to Brighton, Laurie started ‘Great Beginnings’ Nursery School in the Brighton Public School. Please see “Brighton’s Own” on page 15


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The society is working on getting the matter straightened out and it’s also putting together Brighton – The Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse a request to have the lighthouse declared a naPreservation Society finished its fiscal year with tional heritage building in order to secure feda surplus of almost $31,000, with more than eral funding. It’s a process that could take up to a year. half of its $35,300 in income being generated by “I don’t think we’re going to have that much close to $21,600 in fundraising. A new venture, a fashion show organized by of a problem,” society chair Spencer Dennis Red Stone Clothing, generated about $2,000 in said. “I think we can prove to the federal governnet proceeds and the store presented a cheque ment that this is a national heritage structure.” The organization is also close to reaching a last week for an additional $155 earned on apmemorandum of parel it has sold understanding bearing the lightwith the provinhouse society cial government logo. covering restoraMembership tion of the lightin the Presqu’ile house. Point Lighthouse “They wanted Preservation Soit worded in such ciety has steadily a way that if we grown, increasing don’t do any from 55 in 2014 fundraising that to 178 by Jan. 1 they’re not on the this year but with hook to cover all more than 60 the costs,” Sharpe people still to renew, “that’s a little Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society said. The society has bit concerning,” chair Spencer Dennis is confident the group’s re- received letters director Dave Sharpe said at the quest to have the lighthouse recognized as a nation- of support from organization’s an- al heritage building will be successful but it will be a Brighton council which it can use to nual general meet- long process. Photo by Joh Campbell apply for funding ing Sept. 19. However most of them have committed to elsewhere, “which we are going to need extenstaying on and “we’re pretty confident” the or- sively,” Spencer said. He reported the cleanup of the lighthouse ganization will reach its goal of 200 members, basement has been completed. he said. “The four-foot-high basement walls are now A membership drive will take place Oct. 28actually eight feet high,” he said. “There was so 29 at Sobey’s. The society is currently selling tickets on a much garbage in there... You can actually now raffle that has as its top prize a $1,000 gift card see a concrete floor.” from the grocery store. The third annual gala will take place Nov. 4 at the King Edward FUND Community Centre. Up for auction will be a plane ride for four as well as RAISER FOR 12 tickets to an Ottawa Senators game along with $500 in cash. SUNNY DAYS SCHOOL The Fade Kings are celebrating their 25th anniversary this year and PROGRAM the band has agreed to donate all the SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1 • 9AM - 2 PM profits of a concert it will perform, provided a venue and an organizer can Sponsored By be found. BRIGHTON SPRINGS & Sharpe said the organization is having problems with the Canada ReveSINGLE BREW DISTRIBUTION nue Agency which has failed to post its charitable tax number on the agency’s 65 Applewood Drive, Unit 6 website. As a result, it missed out on (Brighton Industrial Park) applying for Ontario 150 grant money because the provincial government Featuring: needed proof it has one. • R and R performing from 10am – 1pm

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Pilot project will shed light on the murky question of the lighthouse’s condition By John Campbell

Brighton – There have been all kinds of reports done and observations made about what’s wrong with the Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse since it was built more than 175 years ago, but “very few of these things have ever actually been physically documented and substantiated,” says an engineer hired to find out exactly what kind of shape the structure is in. Speaking to members of the Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society at their annual general meeting Sept. 19, Mark Shoalts said many of the reports written since the 1980s “simply repeated things that people had said before,” and while some involved “a bit of investigation” none “seems to really support much of what is said,” yet their claims are “still accepted as true.” The existence of iron bands around

the tower has not been confirmed, and the “inferior stone that was supposedly used isn’t necessarily in evidence on site,” he said. “The stone actually looks pretty good.” Nor has it been proven there are “essentially two towers with a space in between them,” Shoalts said. “That’s the thing about a lot of this, we don’t know much.” Which is why he described his presentation as “shedding some light on the tower. It might be a lighthouse but there isn’t much light.” He and his business partner, Paul Jeffs, have been hired to carry out a pilot project next spring to get the answers the society needs before moving ahead with any repair work that needs to be done. “There’s so much uncertainty, it’s really difficult to map out a strategy,” Shoalts said. “We’ve got to do a lot more investigation to be able to really

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firm up the design for the restoration and then we can be reasonably assured that what we’re asking people to price is what they’re going to do and we aren’t going to be getting a whole bunch of surprises.” The in-depth investigation is “fairly pricey” - $140,000 plus the cost of putting scaffolding around the tower from top to bottom, another $60,000 -- “but a good deal of it is work that would have to be done regardless ... as part of the conservation of the building,” he said. It’s “actually the first stages of restoration of the tower.” The work, which involves removing the outer layer of shingles to perform a series of tests, represents a small portion of the restoration project, which is expected to cost more than $1 million to complete. Asked if the investigation might show the structure isn’t worth saving, Shoalts replied: “If it’s that bad, there’s going to be some evidence of it now before we ever get there. It’s

Mark Shoalts, an engineer hired by Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society to carry out a pilot project at the tower, says there is “so much uncertainty [surrounding its condition that] it’s really difficult to map out a strategy” at this point to restore the 19th century structure. Photo by John Campbell

unlikely, [but] nothing is definite.” Society director Dave Sharpe said the society will be looking to the municipality of Brighton to provide “a reasonable amount” to help cover some of its costs

and the organization feels “very confident of a financial commitment” from Ontario Parks that will be “substantial,” as it has been “very supportive” of the group’s efforts thus far.

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Then she founded and co-ordinated the Brighton Family Resource Centre, now the Early Years Centre. Later, with a group that included Gail Ellis, Laurie started the Brighton Children’s Centre Day Care. One day last year, I spoke at Brighton Community Care, and Gail introduced me. All she talked about was my wife (laughing). Over the years at St. Paul’s, Laurie ran the nursery, taught Sunday school and served on the altar guild. She also sat on the Board of Directors of Northumberland Big Sisters, and served on the steering committee which brought the YMCA to Brighton.” A skilled potter, Laurie often donated her pieces to fundraisers. In recognition of her extensive contributions to Brighton, she was awarded a Paul Harris Fellowship by the Rotary Club in 1999. In the midst of all this, she managed a busy household of three boys. Thompson says, “Not only is she smart, beautiful and talented, Laurie is a real fashionista, always stylishly dressed, but somehow spends very little on clothes. She never pays full price for anything. It’s the same way she decorates our house in town and the cottage. She loves hosting parties and dinners for friends and family at both places.” Sadly, (originally diagnosed with breast cancer in 2003) his beloved Laurie died on the afternoon of August 26th, 2016, quietly, at home, in the arms of her soulmate Dan - just the two of them, together to the end. More than 800 people attended the visitation at the Brighton funeral home and/or the service at St. Paul’s. They waited in long lines, filling the church to overflowing to pay their respects and offer their sympathy to Dan, sons Trevor, Shane and Myles and his wife Jessica, and grandchildren Euan and Ruby, as well as her siblings Cathy Brunger, Donalda Macleod, Peter, Paul and Philip Hart. I think of the lyrics to the theme from Love Story: “Where do I begin to tell the story of how great a love can be? I have no answers now but this much I can say: I know I’ll need her ‘til the stars all burn away. And she’ll be there”. (Brighton resident Vic Schukov is a long-time journalist and writer of biography books for everyday people. Please visit his website at www.foreverwithyoumemoirs.com; victorschukov@gmail.com)

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016

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Former president of Community Living remembered as a role model and pioneer By John Campbell

Campbellford – Jason Rae, who died suddenly Sept. 15, will be remembered for many things – his constant smile, his love of dancing, his joy in playing ball, and, most prominently, his mark in history when he became the first person with an intellectual disability to become president of a Community Living association in Ontario in 2003. All this and more of his life was celebrated at a special tribute held in his honour by Community Living Campbellford/Brighton at its community resource centre in Campbellford Sept. 21. So many attended that the Acorn Room was overflowing, and several hundred paid their respects the night before at the Weaver Family Funeral Home. “Jason’s journey in life has touched us all in different ways, and we’ve been blessed to have him in our lives,” executive director Nancy Brown said in an interview. “He will always be in our hearts and not forgotten. “What I found so amazing is that Jason had far more connections than any of us could imagine,” she said. “He brought us all together.” She said he did so by living a life of inclusion in the community, being a member of Rotary, working at the agency’s office supplies store, and playing in the Campbellford Men’s Friday Night 3-Pitch

League, where he was affectionately known as J-Dog. “He was a role model, he was a pioneer, he was proof that your dreams can come true ... if you set your mind to it, even if people have told you it’s not possible over and over again,” said Dawn Lee, director of quality enhancement and community development. “That’s what I think a lot of people will re-

member about him.” Lee said Rae talked often about being bullied in school and being told what he would never be able to do, such as earning a driver’s licence or buying a car – two things he ended up doing. “It scared him, but it also motivated him to want to prove them wrong, and he was proud (of what he accomplished),” she said.

Rae had served on the agency’s board of directors six years before becoming its president, and he remained a board member until his death at age 41, possibly the result of a heart attack. “He always had a smile on his face, always had a good joke, and always had a story about his wife (Jennifer),” Lee said. “Being her husband was the most important

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thing to him.” The couple were married in 2008. Rae was also “an awesome dancer,” Lee said. “He was always kicking up the dance floor.” “He was a kind individual ... (who) was always enthusiastic,” said Gary Wilson, president of the three-pitch league and Rae’s teammate. The league honoured Rae by raising $5,715 for Rae’s wife at its season-ending tournament. “It was wonderful how the whole town came together and supported our tournament,” Wilson said. J-Dog’s T-shirt was also on display “to show he was still there in spirit,” and players knelt together on the ball field as a show of respect. The tournament has been renamed the J-Dog Memorial to commemorate Rae, who was “the face of Community Living,” Wilson said. “Jason thought so much of the ball league. He loved it. We loved him ... Every time he got up to bat, everybody cheered him on.” At the family’s request, players from the league’s six teams attended the visitation wearing their team shirts, and Wilson spoke at the celebration of life, offering up humorous recollections, including Rae being the only one who knew how to operate the printer at the office supplies store. “He said ‘I don’t know what they’re going to do when I’m gone,’” Wilson said, adding with a chuckle, “There will be chaos over there now.” Speaking at council Sept. 20, Trent Hills Mayor Hector Macmillan said Rae “was a great person in our community for opening all our eyes” about people with intellectual disabilities. Brown was contacted while attending Community Living Ontario’s annual general meeting, which observed a minute’s silence in recognition of Rae’s accomplishments, which included having served on its board. He received the James Montgomerie Award at its AGM in 2004, for being “a self-advocate who has demonstrated a strong commitment to promoting inclusion and equality of people identified as having an intellectual disability.” In 2012, Rae was presented a Diamond Jubilee Medal for his contributions to the community. He is survived by his wife, his father James Rae, four siblings – Shauna, Shane, John and Tim Rae -- and his wife’s family. He was predeceased by his mother, Gail Stafford.

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016 17


Train whistles continue to irk Cramahe, Colborne residents dent, told council Sept. 19 the whistles “are extremely loud and have a negaCramahe Township – The train whistles tive impact on people ... They are absoaren’t going away and neither are the lutely ridiculous and unnecessary.” He said he and his wife and their complaints about them by residents in two children moved into the Colborne Colborne. Steve Koehl, an Arthur Street resi- Creek subdivision in May 2015 only to discover that night how “disconcerting” the train whistles could be. Koehl said residents have been VETERINARY SERVICE asking the townSMALL ANIMAL CARE ship to do someDr. Lex Luttikhuis, Dr. Michelle Chiunti and Associates thing about the “Modern Approach, Traditional Appeal” train whistles since Medical • Surgical • Dental • Dermatology 2006, when people began moving into • Open 7 Days a Week • the subdivision, but they have been “rejected time and 86 Big Apple Drive, RR#5 Colborne time again.” PLEASE CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT He referred to a study the municipality commissioned in 2014 By John Campbell

905-355-1622

which looked at what work could be done at two of the many level crossings in the township to eliminate the need for trains to blow their whistles. Council chose to do nothing because of the potential costs, he said, without investigating further what those costs might be. Koehl suggested two crossings, Ontario and Victoria streets, that could be brought up to a standard to warrant the cessation of whistles. “This will greatly improve the quality of life for all residents in proximity to these crossings,” he said, noting Brighton has one level crossing and Cobourg two where it’s been done. He urged council to meet with CN “to clearly define what safety measures are needed to allow whistle cessation” at the two crossings. Another option would be to close the Victoria Street crossing with the help of up to $20,000 in funding from Transport Canada, and to upgrade William Street, which would become the access route to the soccer fields. “I certainly have sympathy for your

situation but successive councils ... haven’t supported doing much more on the issue,” Mayor Marc Coombs said in response to Koehl’s presentation. Asked for further comment at the end of the meeting, Coombs said council had dealt with the issue several times but if he were “petitioned by council,” he would put it back on the agenda. Councillor Ed Van Egmond said the cost to make the two crossings candidates for whistle cessation is “prohibitive.” An engineering study done in 2014 estimated it would cost $46,000 to implement safety measures at Ontario Street before Transport Canada would consider any application for exemption from regulations governing train whistles. Closing Victoria Street, to make one fewer crossing where trains would blow whistles, is also problematic, Councillor Tim Gilligan said. “I know the noise is a nuisance and everything else but there’s going to be

greater liability when fire trucks and EMS cannot get to a place that’s hindered by us closing a crossing,” he said. One resident suggested Cramahe enforce a noise bylaw to reduce train whistles sounding at night but Combs said “CN and CP would probably say they trump it.” Koehl’s mother, Gritt, who’s also a member of the Cramahe Community Association, said the township should use the money it plans to put toward the rehabilitation of the Barnes Road bridge to upgrading a level crossing. “You’re putting residents’ wellbeing, actually their mental health, in jeopardy by this constant noise level,” she said. Her son and his family “need some peace and quiet.” Van Egmond said the issue has been studied at length and “it always comes down to the same thing, it’s too much money to take the whistles out of the picture.” “Nobody has come up with something that makes that easy for us,” he said.

DR. GERARD ERARD A. M MAGNE AGNE Brighton library announces winners of short story contest A. Family Dentist

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which ultimately aimed to foster and en- clerk, Lisa Lanning. courage creativity and writing amongst Completed during the summer, the conOffering you and your family the kids and youth, explained library test also offered kids and youth the opBrighton – There are some talented youth Offering you and your family portunity to engage in some writing deand kids in Brighton, says Bob Burke, a full range of dentistry. a full range of dentistry. spite it being the off-season for school, chairman for the Brighton Public Library WE ACCEPT ELECTRONIC ELECTRONIC BILLING BILLING which is important, said Lanning. Board. WE ACCEPT The idea to hold the contest was actuVISA • MC • DEBIT Burke also served as a judge for the liVISA • MC • DEBIT ally put forth by youth from the library’s brary’s recent short story contest, which Open Monday Monday to to Friday Friday Teen Advisory Group (TAG). Open the winners were just revealed. 8 a.m. a.m. to to 5 5 p.m. p.m. Winners of the contest for the 13-16 age “It wasn’t easy coming to a consensus,” 8 category include Mikayla Trainor and Cosaid Burke, while handing out a few prizes New Patients Patients Welcome Welcome New lin Bauer. on Thursday, Sept. 22 to the kids. RINCE DWARD DWARD QUARE QUARE Mikayla, 15, took first place for her The library received nearly 20 entries RINCE story titled, “Only One Way to Go.” from kids and youth in two age categories NITS RIGHTON Her story tells the tale of a person, who NITS RIGHTON for the contest – and a lot of good work, spends their life walking through fog and said Burke. searching to find the right door in life. A first and second place was awarded “The message really is, we have to keep for the top two stories in the 13-16 age F RANCOPHONE FRANCOPHONE moving forward and we can’t look back,” category and in the nine-12 age category. said Mikayla. “We can’t quit.” The Friends of the Winners for the contest in the nine-12 Brighton Public Li- (Far left) Brighton Public Library Board category include Rachel Flindall and Lobrary donated gift cerchairman Bob Burke, and library clerk, gan Lloyd. tificates for the winLisa Lanning (far right), celebrate with Logan took second place for his story ners. Logan Lloyd and Mikayla Trainor, who titled, “The Mystic Key.” Library staff, board NOTICE “I read a lot of books,” said the members and members just earned top spots in the library’s reThe Corporation of the Municipality of Brighton of the public served as cent short story contest. Photo by Sarah 10-year-old. “And I kind of just got the idea, I could write like that.” judges for the contest, Hyatt. 2016 Realty Taxes To earn his Final Billing recent win, LoDue Date for the 2016 Final Tax Installment is gan put his idea to work with the Friday, September 30, 2016 library’s short story contest and Tax Bills for this installment were mailed out on July 6, 2016. told the story of If you did not receive a bill, please contact the Municipal Office a boy taken to a at (613) 475-0670. You are still responsible for payment of taxes, different world. The boy goes and penalties are added for late payment at 1.25% per month. on an adventure with a group of Payment Options: Payments may be mailed to The Municipality people to find his of Brighton, PO Box 189, Brighton ON. K0K 1H0. Payments may way back home, also be made by Online or Telephone banking, or at the Municipal eventually finding the mystic office by Cash, Cheque, Debit or by Pre-authorized Payment. key that saves the Cathy Kelly day, explained Logan. Tax Collector

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016


Feral cats strike fear among Cramahe pet owners By John Campbell

Cramahe Township – Feral cats have become “a critical health hazard” and municipalities need to do something to address the problem, says a Brighton woman has written area councils voicing her concerns. In a letter included in Cramahe Township council’s Sept. 19 agenda, Margaret Fleming said there seems to be “disturbingly minimal concern about rabies as a public health issue” in the area, based on her experience of trapping feral cats that have come onto her property on County Road 21. Her municipality and private pest companies “refuse to process” the animals she has caught and she has been

Tobey Developments shines provincially, nationally, and beyond By John Campbell

Brighton -- Gordon Tobey Developments Ltd completed the trifecta by winning an Ontario Home Builders’ Association award this month for architectural design in the Most Outstanding Production Built Home (one-storey) category. The Hawthorn won the same category at the national level earlier this year, and the Brighton developer took top honours for energy efficiency in a North American competition, the RESNET (Residential Energy Services Network) Cross Border Builders’ Challenge, with its model, The Twisted Willow. The company was recognized as the Canadian custom home builder with the lowest HERS (Home Energy Rating System). President Stephen Tobey said “detail, detail, detail” accounts for the two models doing so well in winning awards. “You walk in them you have a great feel,” he said. “People love the way they feel.” The builder offers between 15 and 20 standard designs. The Hawthorn has been it’s “most successful ... for several years.” Tobey stressed his whole team was responsible for winning the awards, from the people who design them to those who build them, and all of them are local. “Everybody here contributes,” he said. The Hawthorn is open for viewing. “If you want to see what a national award winner looks like, what a provincial award winner looks like, we’re open five days a week,” Tobey said. Hours are 1 to 4 p.m. Monday to Thursday, as well as Saturday.

forced to release them back into the wild. She got in touch with Cramahe after her most recent capture and was told “there was nothing they could do because there is no cat by-law,” Fleming wrote. “They offered absolutely no help and could suggest no recourse.” She fared no better with Brighton, two pest control companies, and the public health unit. “The onus is clearly on the municipalities to establish a comprehensive by-law regarding domestic and feral cats,” Fleming argued.

Cat owners need to be “made aware of the extreme health risk (i.e rabies, among others) inherent in allowing a cat to roam free” and they should have to pay “substantially for licensing and/or chipping” of their pets, as well as pay for their return when they go free. Cats should also be spayed or neutered as a condition of licensing and the revenue raised from fees could help fund a “special service” to trap feral cats. “Feral cats and stray pet cats wreak havoc on our native species,” Fleming wrote.

Moreover spay and release programs “do nothing to address this issue,” because cats that have been released “still prey on native wildlife, pose a substantial health risk, and reveal the gross indifference of the owner for the welfare of the cat itself,” she said. “I speak for many who have tolerated free-roaming cats defecating in our yards long enough,” she continued. It’s time a bylaw was put in place that ensured cat owners “are held responsible for their pets and the health of the environment.” Cramahe Mayor Marc Coombs said

“it’s a problem that’s outside the capability” of the township. “We don’t have any resources to look after that situation, as serious as it is,” he said. “We have enough of a problem trying to deal with dogs.” Bylaw enforcement officer Holly Grant said she had contacted the Northumberland Humane Society and was told Cramahe has “the lowest reported feral cat situations” of all the municipalities in the area. “There are programs out there that do help look after this,” she added.

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016 19


Employment Opportunity Currently, we are looking to fill the following existing vacancy: - Roads Operator 1 (seasonal) Check out the full job posting on our website at www.northumberlandcounty.ca Please note that accommodations are available, upon request, to support applicants with disabilities throughout the recruitment process.

A coalition of over a dozen agencies in Northumberland will join a national movement involving 33 other communities across the country whose goal is to permanently house 20,000 of Canada’s most vulnerable people by July 1, 2018. As part of the ‘20,000 Homes Campaign’, the Northumberland team will bring greater visibility to the state of homelessness in our area. With a plan to get to know every homeless person by name, and assess their housing and health care needs, this committee will design a community-wide response model of infrastructure and supports that will deliver the most significant impact.

Please e-mail your request to accessibility@northumberlandcounty.ca or call 905-372-3329 ext. 2327.

Northumberland County is seeking qualified proponents to submit a competitive proposal for the provision of Hairdressing and Barbering Services at the Golden Plough Lodge Long Term Care Home

Also in this issue online: • Scenic ‘Hidden Jewel’ captures Buy Local photo contest win • Joint emergency services base for Roseneath moves forward • Council calls on province for energy solutions for rural Ontario Next County Council Meeting: October 19, 2016 For Minutes & More visit: www.northumberlandcounty.ca/Portal For News and Notices go to: www.northumberlandcounty.ca/newsroom

RFP #16-40 Submission Deadline: October 20, 2:00 p.m. For more information and to obtain bid documents please visit our website

https://northumberlandcounty.bidsandtenders.ca OctOber 19th 2016

20

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016


Sports www.insidebelleville.com

Trenton Golden Hawks pound Panthers By Erin Stewart

Trenton – The G-Hawks continue to run up the score on their opponents, winning 14-3 over the Pickering Panthers on Fri. Sept. 23. Led by hat tricks from newcomers Austin Bottrell, who also added one assist, and Michael Silveri, the G-Hawks were up 8-1 by the end of the first period. Liam Morgan led the Hawks with five points, two goals and three assists, co-captain Lucas Brown picked up four points, one goal and three assists, and Ture Linden scored two goals and two assists. Brandon Marinelli, Ben Scheel and Austin Tonkovich each scored one goal and one assist, Gary Dhaliwal registered three assists, Jeremy Pullara, co-captain Josh Allan and Mac Lewis picked up two assists each and Jordan Chard, Rex Moe, Alex Potter, Louis

DiMatteo and Nick Boddy each registered one assist. The Panthers’ Thomas Hernandez, Daniel Tsiampas and Andrew Poulias each scored one goal and Lucas Rogers, Daniel Lowe, Joseph Franzin and Anthony Stavrou added one assist. Trenton’s goaltender Charles Grimard saved three shots out of the six sent his way in 23 minutes and Chris Janzen saved all 11 shots he faced in 36 minutes. Pickering’s Aidan Link saved 28 of the 35 shots he faced in 40 minutes and Koskinas Spyros saved 8 out of 15 shots in 19 minutes. Coach Jerome Dupont said it can be difficult to keep up the intensity when the team starts off the game ahead by seven points. “I thought we sustained it pretty well for the most part today and I thought our start was exceptional,” he said. “We have to be better at our transition game and I think we’re still

spending too much time in our zone so we’ve got to work on those areas.” The Hawks hit the road for the 2016 OJHL Governors’ Showcase at the Harborcenter in Buffalo, New York from September 26-28. Trenton will play North York and Milton. Newcomer Ture Linden said the Hawks will be prepared for a busy couple of days. “We have a lot of games in a short period of time so we’ve just got to keep the legs I guess and be ready to go.” He said it’s been a great transition becoming part of the G-Hawks’ team. “The leaders have been great, welcoming us into the team and making us part of the team, so it’s really been a great experience so far, I really like it here.” The G-Hawks beat the Aurora Tiger 4-2 during their away game on Sunday, Sept. 25. Trenton will host Whitby on The Trenton Golden Hawks’ Ben Scheel, #19, focused on game action. Friday, Sept. 30, at 7:30 p.m. Photo by Amy Deroche/OJHL Images

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Ph: 613-395-2353 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016 21


“An exciting season lies ahead” for ENSS cross-country team Brighton – East Northumberland Secondary School’s cross-country team started the 2016 competitive season Sept. 21 at Trinity College School Harrier and the results suggest “an exciting season lies ahead,” says coach Anne Falla. The junior girls – Abbey Cooper (who came in 12th), Emily Lange (20), Brittany Pennington (23), Victoria Sommerville (30), Miriam Murtha-Anderson (34), Molly Patrick (35), Martina Cooper (40), Sarah Pennington (42), Taylor Hansen (61) and Katelin Rupke (75) – finished fourth. As did the senior boys, led by Andrew Brown, who placed sixth. The other members were Cole Bond (17), Tristan Robinson (50), Alex Buche (52) and Benny Scarr-Crosmas (75). The midget girls’ team – Penny Matthews (23), Maddie Chislett (50), Katie Clarke (53), Sarena Piccolo (59), Chloe Barnes (61), Camille Vroegryk (65), Nela Stuckmann (66) and Breanna Poot (70) – finished fifth. The senior girls – Julia Martin (6), Abby McDougall (33), Megan Ostrander (66), Charlotte Coxhead (75) and Dana Godfrey (89) – were eighth. Both the midget boys’ team and the

junior boys’ team were eleventh. The midgets’ squad comprised Sebastian Jones (24), Kyle Crowe (30), Ewan Morreau (78), Levi Palmer (90), Ben Hunt (108), Ethan Taylor (109) and Josiah Rupke (113). For the junior boys it was Jake Hollinger (6), Mason Brown (27), Zac Boomhoover (74), Kurtis Forget (98) and Brandon Bevaart (99).

Next up for the Blue Dragons will be the Dave Watson Memorial meet at Ganaraska forest (Sept. 28) followed by a road trip to Rochester for the McQuaid Invitational (Oct. 1).

The senior girls’ team of, l-r, Abby Cooper, Brittany Pennington, Victoria Sommerville, Sarah Pennington, Katelyn Rupke, Taylor Hansen, Molly Patrick, Emily Lange, Martina Cooper, and Miriam MurthaAnderson finished fourth at Trinity College. Photo L-r, Alex Buche, Benny Scarr-Crosmas, Cole Bond, Tristan Robinson and Andrew Brown placed fourth as a team in the junior boys’ class. Photo submitted submitted

Stars have one more game before long road trip ends By John Campbell www.redgreen.com

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Colborne – Seven games on the road, and one more to go before they make it home ... in another 13 days. Just as the lyrics to this revamped country tune need a bit of work, so do the Northumberland Stars, who lost four straight, won a pair, and then fell once again last Sunday.The St. George Ravens showed no mercy, overpowering the visiting team 10-1 and firing three times as many shots, 6923, as their opponents. It was 5-0 before Matt Davies put the

Stars on the board, and Ian Elvery added another power play goal with 6:30 to play. Much more satisfying were the back-toback wins over the Tottenham Steam. Maksim Kuteinikov was the game’s first star in the team’s 4-1 win Sept. 24, stopping 41 shots. Justin Duek was the second star with a goal and an assist. Also scoring were Davies, Malik Henry and Andy Senties Piedtra. Davies was star No. 1 in the team’s 7-1 win at Tottenham Sept. 19, scoring two goals and adding two assists. Kuteinikov was the second star, making 27 saves, and

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Robin Garibay, with a goal and two assists, completed the sweep of game honours. Also scoring for Northumberland were Elvery , with a pair, Reed Westington and Tyler Bracken The Stars currently are tied with the Oshawa RiverKings in 15th spot overall in The Greater Metro Junior A Hockey League League, ahead of 10 others. They don’t play again until Oct. 8 at London and will finally play their first home of the season Oct. 12 against Oshawa at the Keeler Centre. Game time is 7:30 p.m.

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McPherson, Potts, Turner, French, MacGregor, Golden earn wins on night 1 Of PartSource Applefest Shootout By Clayton Johns

 BRIGHTON - The 12th annual PartSource Applefest Shootout presented by Cool 100, Image Factor, Lucas Oil and Coca-Cola kicked off with a full night of action at Brighton Speedway last Friday night. The final points night of the season determined track championships in six divisions. The DIRTcar Sportsman Invitational headlined the evening. In total, 162 cars were signed in for competition.  McPherson Claims DIRTcar Sportsman Invitational  St. Catharine’s, Ont. native Cody McPherson (No.7 St.Louis Bar & Grill) drove through the top-10 starting positions to claim Friday’s DIRTcar Sportsman Invitational. Polesitter Jonathan Ferguson (No.44 Splash Well Drilling) of Prescott, Ont. led early and through a handful of cautions.  Luke Carleton (No.2c Van Mil Landscaping) took the lead on lap six before Ferguson retook the point one lap later. Behind them, McPherson was on the move, racing in to second from his 10th starting spot on lap 14. Two laps later, McPherson took the lead from Ferguson in turn four and never looked back. He led the final 20 laps and overcame a late charge from Merrittville Speedway champion Brad Rouse (No.18r Rick’s Delivery) over the final five laps to claim the win.

 Potts Claims Pro Late Model Win and Championship  Brighton native Phil Potts (No.29 Vanderlaan) entered the night with a 45-point lead over Charlie Sandercock (No.57 Bellevue Fabricating) in the Vanderlaan Building Products Pro Late Model standings. The final point night saw 23 cars sign in for competition with a handful of outside invaders set to battle the home track regulars.  Sandercock, who started third, led the opening lap and began to pull away until a lap 11 caution. The ninth-starting Potts took matters in to his own hands to secure the championship. Potts used the restart to regain track position and moved in to second on lap 13.  Sandercock held off Potts on one final restart on lap 21, but as the two raced through traffic with two laps to go, Potts managed to dart past Sandercock in turns one and two. He led the final three laps to earn his fifth win of the season and claim the championship. Sandercock, Brandon Mowat (No.46 Target Fabrication), Andrew Hennessy (No.87 Bellevue Fabricating) and Adam Turner (No.92 Village Variety) rounded out the top-five. Comeau Tops Vintage Finale  The Eastern Ontario Vintage Stock Car Club rolled in to Brighton for its second visit and the championship-deciding race. Polesitter and point leader John Stanley (No.2)

jumped out to the early lead, but was After a spin in turn one and two inslowed by a pair of cautions on laps volving Carissa Burrows (No.02 7&25 2 and 3. Paul Pekkonen (No.19) took Tire) and James Ellis (No.75) on lap the lead following the restart while 18, Turner survived the green-whiteBrian Comeau (No.7) was on the checkered finish to claim the third win move to second past Stanley by lap 7. of the season for the Purchase team  ahead of Doug Anderson (No.72 Comeau caught Pekkonen for the Hunt’s Landscape Service), Brian lead on lap 11, but the final yellow Cross (No.08 Sobey’s), Justin Ramsay on lap 12 slowed the pace. On the re- (No.03 Empey Tire) and Kyle Pelrine start Comeau made no mistakes as (No.47x Semenuk’s Roofing). he drove past Pekkonen in the out side lane to claim the victory. StanFrench Tops Comp 4s ley was crowned the series champion  while Tim Hagerty (No.4) was the The Bill’s Johns Comp 4s saw their champion of the 1950s-60s style biggest field of the season with 31 sub-division. drivers signed in to the pit area for  the invitational event. Entering the Turner Drives Purchase Ride To Pro night, Tyler French (No.0 Empey Stock Victory Tire) had already sewn up the track  championship, but had plans to go After Wade Purchase suffered out on top. Pole starter Adam Flieler a broken elbow in August, Adam (No.11 Double D Sports Bar) led the Turner offered to help him finish opening lap until French got an exout the Brighton Automotive Pro cellent jump on a lap two restart. Stock season. Turner completed  the task perfectly on Friday night, From there, French pulled away to winning the final points race of the a straightaway lead over his brother season for the division in the No.88 Josh French (No.08), but had it Independent Alternator and Starter erased by a caution on lap 14. The Monte Carlo. restart only allowed Tyler French to  Art Rodgers (No.38 Dunford’s of Havelock) led the opening two laps until a spin on the second circuit. That gave the lead to Turner who paced a fourcar breakaway Sweet Mosley has unfortunately suffered some from the rest of trauma in his short life. He was returned to us the 26-car field.

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regain his composure as he was flawless over the final six laps to claim his seventh win of the season. Josh French and Joe McNichols (No.14x) rounded out the podium.  Kotsilidis, MacGregor Win Stinger Features  Del MacGregor (No.19 R Ward Construction) claimed his third win of the season in Quinte Septic Super Stinger action and his fourth career division championship. MacGregor’s battled over the final three laps with Arthur McCauley (No.99 East Side Tire) and Jorden Pickell (No.93 Sowerby Signs) for the lead and emerged with the win and the title.  In Quinte Septic Junior Stinger action, Jim Kotsilidis (No.11) led from the drop of the green flag and paced a tough field for all 12 laps to finish the season on a winning note. It was his first career victory. He held off Brittany Golden (No.85 Rapid Rad) over the final two laps, who’s second-place finish gave her the division championship in her rookie season.

PET of ThE WEEK! Mosley

from his “forever� home after he developed autoimmune problems and his owner elected not to pursue veterinary treatment. But this special boy bounced back, has had some surgery with us, and is now patiently waiting for a new family at the Cat’s Cradle. Mosley is just over a year old and friendly with cats, dogs, and people. He’s a little shy at first but quickly becomes a lap cat with anyone who shows him attention. Drop by to meet Mosley and see if he’s The One!

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If you think you might like to help our not-for-profit organization please stop in and talk to us. We sure could use volunteers to help us with everything from spending an hour in the store to play with our kitties to being a driver when we need one - just about anything you might have time to spare to do. Every little bit of help counts. You can visit our Website at: www.catcareinitiative.com You can also find us on our Facebook Page: (https://www.facebook.com/CatCareSpayNeuterInitiative) Our email address is: trenthillscatcare@gmail.com Give us a call 705-947-3002

FAMILY OWNED, SERVING OUR LOCAL COMMUNITY SINCE 1994! Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016 23


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16 CHEVROLET COLORADO Z71 15 CHEVY SILVERADO HIGH COUNTRY 14 GMC SIERRA ALL TERRAIN 28849 Step bars, alloys, leather trim seats, heat seat, rev cam, Bluetooth, OnStar, cruise, touch screen, tow mode, hill descent ctrl, auto, 3.6 6cyl, 4x4, keyless entry, trailer hitch, box liner, fog lights, tint windows, airbags, trac ctrl, pwr seat//windows/locks/mirrors, lumbar support, height adj seat, AC, MP3, sat radio, steer ctrl, curb side mirrors. 40,967 km.

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 29, 2016


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Bikes roll to raise $200K for Wounded Warriors

Trenton - This past weekend, nearly 200 cyclists, many of them military veterans and active service members, embarked on a two-day bike ride from Trenton, Ontario right into the heart of Toronto at Queen’s Park during the inaugural Wounded Warriors Canada Highway of Heroes Bike Ride. Participants were required to raise a minimum of $1,000 in funds to support ill and injured Canadian Armed Forces members,

Veterans, First Responders and their families, living with operational stress injuries like Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. To date the ride has raised a total of $200,000. This year, in true maverick form, Wounded Warriors Canada was cheered on by long-time partners, distiller Glenfiddich as they rode along a 170-kilometre stretch of Ontario’s Highway of Heroes, Macdonald-Cartier Freeway

(better known as Highway 401). The route has been designated the “Highway of Heroes” to reflect its use for funeral convoys carrying fallen Canadian Armed Forces service men and women. “Since 2013, our partners at Glenfiddich have supported us in raising a tremendous amount of money through the sale of their 15-Year-Old Solera Reserve (scotch whisky),” said Scott Maxwell, Executive Director,

Wounded Warriors Canada. “Our mission is to support our ill and injured Canadian Armed Forces members, Veterans, First Responders and their families by funding innovative mental health programs across the country. We simply couldn’t do this without the support of our partners and the generous Canadians that donate their time and hard earned dollars to our cause.” Participants began their ride

from the Afghanistan Repatriation Memorial in Trenton at 9:30 a.m. Along the way, they witnessed the unveiling of two LAV III Monuments, visited the Wounded Warriors Park of Reflection in North Whitby, enjoyed a Glenfiddich victory toast at the team dinner, and experienced three commemorative services. For more information about the ride, visit http://woundedwarriors. ca/highway-of-heroes-ride/home/

The nearly 200 cyclists, many of them military veterans and active service members, embarked on a two-day bike ride from Trenton, Ontario right into the heart of Toronto at Queen’s Park during the inaugural Wounded Warriors Canada Highway of Heroes Bike Ride. Photo / Submitted

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Childcare centres receive new playground equipment through Healthy Kids Challenge By Stephen Petrick

Outdoor playtime at several local childcare centres is going to be super fun now – and healthy too. Eighteen different childcare centres recently had new outdoor natural play equipment installed in their yards. This equipment was purchased by the Healthy Kids Community Challenge Hastings Prince Edward as a part of its first theme, Run. Jump. Play. Everyday, which focused on the importance of physical activity for kids through a mix of structured and unstructured activities. The provincial government recently granted Hastings County up to $375,000, to be spent from 2016 to 2018, for participating in the challenge.

The money is being spent on projects that will help kids live healthier lifestyles, such as the installing of new playground equipment. Earlier this year, the funds helped train elementary school teachers on how to provide more engaging activities to young children in phys ed. But the money for the playground equipment is the latest project. “When children are outside, they move more, sit less, and play longer,” said Emma Pillsworth, project manager for the Healthy Kids Community Challenge. “This equipment will encourage children to move in new and creative ways, and make it easier for local Early Childhood Educators Allie, a toddler at the Belleville YMCA daycare, carries what looks to be a large stick, but to engage children in outdoor, active play from a is actually new playground equipment. The equipment, provided to the Y by a company called Nature’s Instruments, is intended to get kids excited about nature. The equipment young age.” Continued on page 3

was purchased through Healthy Kids Community Challenge funding.

More than $13.5 million in infrastructure funding coming for Prince Edward-Hastings

Got Events?

D A E R P S E

By Stephen Petrick

Roads, bridges and other infrastructure in the Prince Edward-Hastings riding will soon likely get upgrades, as the provincial government appears ready to commit $13.5 million to the region through its Community Infrastructure Fund. The news was announced by Prince EdwardHastings MPP Todd Smith on Friday, Sept. 23. His office provided breakdowns of how the money will be split by Belleville, Prince Edward County and Hastings County’s 14 rural municipalities, over a four-year period from 2016 to 2019. The City of Belleville is expected to receive the biggest sum, with about $7.6 million committed

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to the city over the next four years, starting with a $744,355 in 2016. The city is expected to receive $1,496,593 in 2017, $2,116,067 in 18 and 3,215,691 in 2019. Centre Hastings is expected to receive a total of $460,394 over four years, while Stirling-Rawdon is expected to receive $196,842 in the same time span. Tweed is expected to receive $298,486 over the same four years and Marmora and Lake is expected to receive $241,599. The remaining Hastings County municipalities are each expecting similar sized six-figure investments. Hastings County itself is expected to receive $175,000 over the four years for projects it can spread out between its 14 municipalities. Meanwhile, Prince Edward County is earmarked to receive over $2.7 million over the four years. The news is exciting for Smith.

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A backhoe moves along a stretch of Dundas Street West in Belleville, which is being expanded to meet the city’s traffic growth. The city will soon have more money for such infrastructure projects, following a provincial announcement for infrastructure funding. Photo by Stephen Petrick

Low-cost rabies vaccination clinics offered on Oct. 1

The annual low-cost rabies vaccination clinics for cats and dogs will be taking place on Saturday, Oct. 1 at various locations throughout Hastings and Prince Edward counties, the health unit has announced. At the clinics, rabies vaccine will be offered at the reduced cost of $25 per cat or dog. The clinics are offered annually through an ongoing partnership between local veterinarians and Hastings Prince Edward Public Health. In the 17 years since the clinics started in 1999, these clinics have administered more than 75,000 rabies vaccinations to cats and dogs in Hastings and Prince Edward Counties. Rabies vaccination is the best way to reduce the occurrence of rabies in pets, as well as prevent the transmission of rabies to humans. “The goal of these clinics is to make it easier for animal owners to prevent

rabies in their pets,” says Dave Dodgson, Program Manager for Hastings Prince Edward Public Health. “By keeping pets protected, we also protect people from getting infected with the rabies virus.” The recent outbreak of rabies in Hamilton, Ontario, shows the importance of remaining vigilant with rabies vaccinations for pets. Rabies is still prevalent in many parts of the world which is why the World Health Organization has declared September 28 as World Rabies Day to help raise awareness about the importance of vaccination in preventing the spread of this disease. To protect your pets and your community from the risk of rabies, find a low-cost vaccination clinic near you. Information about the vaccination clinics is available in the Clinics and Classes section of the HPEPH website. For additional information, contact HPEPH at 613-966-5500.


Childcare centres receive new playground equipment through Healthy Kids Challenge Continued from page 2

selected based on their participation Workshop held earlier this summer. The 18 centres that received in the Healthy Kids Community Over 80 early childhood educators natural play equipment were Challenge Bringing Nature to Life attended this workshop, which focused on the importance of reconnecting children with nature. Equipment was selected based on the unique needs of each childcare centre, and Continued from page 2 projects at Queen’s Park. ranged from “In the five years I’ve been an MPP, the “Obviously we have a number of biggest issue from municipalities in my riding infrastructure needs in the area including has been the lack of predictable infrastructure Highway 49 which was just named the worst funding from the upper levels of government,” road in Ontario by CAA,” Smith stated. “But he said in a statement. “With the release of this Highway 62 North of Maynooth and the information, we now know that 16 municipalities Stirling-Marmora Road remain major local in our area, including the County of Hastings, concerns and I’ve already submitted questions will be receiving over $13.5 million until 2019 to to the Minister this fall about those projects help meet infrastructure needs.” specifically.” The funding formula used to determine how Smith said he’ll continue lobbying the much each municipality receives depends on a government about projects that local variety of factors including core infrastructure, municipalities raise as needing special attention. median income and property assessment. “There are a bunch of projects that I want That accounts for the disparity in amounts to see done that will make the Quinte region a between municipalities that may have similar better place to live and work.” Smith concluded. population sizes. However, Smith says, he will “And I’m going to try and get money for every continue to lobby on behalf of several local last one of them.”

More than $13.5 million in infrastructure funding coming for Prince Edward-Hastings

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Trenton, ON 613-965-1837 Gananoque, ON 613-382-1937 Williamsburg, ON 613-535-1837 Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016 B3


EVENTS BELLEVILLE

HALL RENTALS at The Royal Canadian Legion, 132 Pinnacle Street, Belleville 613968-9053 The Retired Women Teachers of Ontario (Belleville and area) fall luncheon, Emmanuel United Church, Foxboro, Wednesday, October 5, 11:30 am. Following lunch, there will be a presentation entitled “Healing with Horses” $15 per person. Info and to reserve: 613-962-2938. Belleville Club 39 Presents The Music of Emily Creek Band (Fall Ball), Friday Sept. 30, Belleville Royal Canadian Legion Branch 99, 132 Pinnacle St. Belleville, 8pm to midnight. Doors open 7pm. Lunch served. Members $10, non members $12. For Singles & Couples. for info 613-392-1460 or 613966-6596 Belleville fish and Game Club Sportsman Show, Oct 2, 10:00 am to 2 pm. $5 per person. Members and 18 years and under free. Bring a non parishable food for Gleaners Food Bank and your name will be put in for a door prize. Oct 1, 11 am - 3 pm Kenneth McKnight, book signing, Quinte Arts Council Gallery and Gift Shop, 36 Bridge St. East, Belleville. Oct 2, 2-4 PM Harry Benson: Shoot First - Culture Days Free film at The Empire, 321 Front St, Belleville. More at downtowndocfest. ca Oct 2, 2-4 pm Quinte Opera Guild Meeting, Quinte Sports and Wellness Centre , 265 Cannifton Rd, Belleville Oct 5, 2pm & 7:30pm Dheepan - A Quinte Film Alternative Great Movie Wednesday Presentation. Matinee – $9, Evening – $11, Student – $5.50. The Empire Theatre, 321 Front Street, Belleville. The Canadian Hearing Society offers Walk In Wednesdays from 10 am-noon and 2-4pm. Speak to a Hearing Care Counsellor. No appointment necessary. Bayview Mall, 470 Dundas St. E Belleville Quinte Quilter’s Guild, 7 PM, first Wednesday of the month. St Columba Church, Bridge St. E. Everyone is welcome. Monday Bingo; Tuesday Cribbage; Wednesday Euchre; Thursday Carpet Bowling and Shuffleboard; Friday Darts and the 3rd Sunday of every month Cribbage. All start at 1:00 p.m. Open to all seniors 50 and over. Trillium 2000 Seniors Club, 75 St. Paul St., Belleville Quinte Region Crokinole Club, every Tuesday, 6:30 p.m., Quinte Wellness Centre, Cannifton Rd., Belleville. http://www.qrcc. ca . Info: Dave Brown at 613-967-7720 or Louis Gauthier at 613-849-0690. Home Help & Home Maintenance support service (cleaning, meal prep, shopping, snow removal, etc). Fees arranged between the worker and client. Info: Community Care for South Hastings Belleville at 613-969-0130 or Deseronto at 613-396-6591. Meals on Wheels Delivery Drivers Required, Community Care for South Hastings. Once a week or once a month. Info: Lee at 613-969-0130 ext. 520 Family Space supports families learning through play. Drop-in playrooms, 100 Station Street., Belleville. Open 6 days a week. B4

Info: www.familyspace.ca or 613-966-9427. RCL Belleville, Last Sunday of Month:12-4 pm, Moonshot Euchre, Open 8 Ball Tournament Quinte NeedleArts Guild Stiching for Fun! Workshops and lessons or work on your own piece. Salvation Army, Bridge St. W., Belleville. 1st and 3rd Thursday of month. 9:30am - 3pm. 613-473-4831 or 613-476-7723 Fundraising Committee members needed for Community Care South Hastings. Info: Deb at 613-969-0130 ext. 5214 or debm@ccsh.ca

BRIGHTON

Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church Clothing Depot, 58 Prince Edward St, Brighton. Wednesday-Thursday, 10-2, Friday, 10-6pm and Saturday, 10-1. All donations welcome. Interested in Volunteering? Call Jean 613-242-5387 Low-Cost Rabies Vaccination Clinic, Saturday, October 1, 9 am to 2:30 pm, Codrington Fire Hall (County Road 27). $25/ animal (cash only). Dogs should be on leashes and cats in carriers. Info: Health Unit at 1-866888-4577. NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY: S.T.O.P. (Smoking Treatment for Ontario Patients) Program, Saturday, October 1, 10 am. STOP Program supports smokers trying to quit by providing them with five weeks of nicotine patches at no cost. To see if you are eligible, call the Health Unit at 1-866-8884577 or (905) 885-9100. Meet Brighton’s newest family, the Al Refai family, newly located to Brighton from Aleppo Syria. Brighton Community Centre, October 6, 7:30 -8:30 pm. Help us welcome our refugee family to Canada! SUPPER¹S READY - Wednesdays, 5-6 pm at Trinity-St.Andrrw¹s United Church, 56 Prince Edward St., Brighton. There is no charge for this meal but donations are gratefully accepted.

CAMPBELLFORD

7th Annual Christmas in October Craft & Collectible Show, Saturday Oct 22, 10AM - 3PM, 50 Bridge St. W, Campbellford. Over 25 vendors. Free admission and parking. On Facebook “Christmas in October-Craft & Collectible Show”. BBQ 10AM - 2PM IOOF Indoor Yard Sale at the Campbellford Odd Fellows Hall, 240 Victoria Street,. 8am – 4pm; BBQ 9 am – 1 pm Low-Cost Rabies Vaccination Clinic, Saturday, October 1, 9 am to 1 pm, English Line Veterinary Services (527 County Road 38) in Campbellford. $25/animal (cash only). Dogs should be on leashes and cats in carriers. Info: Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577. Sexual Health Clinic, Tuesday, October 4, 10 am to Noon. Confidential access to cervical screening, low-cost birth control, pregnancy testing and sexual health teaching, testing and treatment of sexually transmitted infections. Info, locations or to make an appointment, call the Health Unit at 1-866888-4577, ext. 1205. Mexican Cooking Workshop, Thursday, October 13, 6-8pm. Fee: $10.00, Forrest Dennis Senior Citizens Centre, Campbellford. Pre-register at Community Care Northum-

Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

berland’s office, 174 Oliver Road, Unit #15, Campbellford, (705)653-1411 or campbellford@commcare.ca Fungi Walk – Friends of Ferris Provincial Park, October 1, 1 – 3 pm. $5/car. Rain or shine. The Campbellford Baptist Busy Bee Yard Sale, every Thursday, Friday and Saturday 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. until Thanksgiving weekend. Every Monday, 7 p.m. Campbellford Citizen’s Choir meets at Senior Citizen’s Building. All welcome Soup & sandwich lunch, 1st Wednesday of each month, 11:15 a.m., Campbellford Senior Citizens Club. $7. Soup, sandwich, dessert and tea or coffee. Forest Denis Centre, 55 Grand Road, Campbellford. Learn the Art of Taoist Tai Chi - classes available throughout the week, Community Resource Centre 65 Bridge St, Campbellford, Join at anytime. Info: 705 696 1841 or 705 243 5216. Men’s Social Group, Tuesdays at Community Care Northumberland, 11 King St. E. Colborne, 10-11 a.m. Info: 905-355-2989. Scottish Country Dancing: Come alone or bring a partner. Classes Tuesday evenings, 7:30-9:30pm, Harry J. Clarke School, 77 Rollins Dr., Belleville. Info 613-965-4212 or 613-967-1827. Drop in Program: Knitterati at Belleville Public Library, every other Tuesday, September 6 to December 13, 5:30-7:30 pm, 2nd floor. Free drop in program. No registration required. Call 613-968-6731 ext. 2237 for more information. Volunteers Needed. Bibles for Missions Thrift Store, 315 Pinnacle St. Belleville, is seeking volunteers of all ages to fulfill positions in all area of operations (cashiers, sorters, receiving area). Contact Esthel at 613-962-5665 or drop by the store to fill out an application. Soup & sandwich lunch, 1st Wednesday of each month, 11:15 a.m., Campbellford Senior Citizens Club. $7. Soup, sandwich, dessert and tea or coffee. Forest Denis Centre, 55 Grand Road, Campbellford.

COBOURG

Women’s Group, every Wednesday, 2 pm, Halcyon Place, 580 Courthouse Rd, Cobourg. To register: Community Care Northumberland: 905-372-7356.

CODRINGTON

Euchre, every Friday, 7 pm. Codrington Community Centre. All welcome.

COLBORNE

The Colborne Art Gallery presents “Infinite Light,” works by Jillian Roos-Markowitz, October 1-November 6. Opening reception October 1, 2-4pm. Free Exercise Class, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10-11am, Keeler Centre, Colborne. Designed for seniors or those with physical limitations. For more information, please contact Brenda at (905) 355-2989. Play Group, hosted by Northumberland Cares for Children, Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred St. Colborne, Fridays, 10 a.m. to noon. Info: Cheryl McMurray 905-885-8137 ext.209.

Food Addicts Anonymous Meetings, Wednesdays, 11-noon, Prospect House, 1 Elgin Street (at King), Colborne, www.foodaddictsanonymous.org

FRANKFORD

Beef ‘N Pork Buffet, Quinte Masonic Centre, 33 King Dr. Frankford, Friday Sept. 30. Social Hour 5:15 Dinner 6:15 $15.00. Open T.G.I.F. with games and meal, first Friday of month, 4 pm, Frankford Legion. Free Senior’s fitness classes, Mondays and Thursdays, 1 pm, Frankford Legion. To register: 1-888-279-4866 Ext 5350 Open Mic, Frankford Legion. First Sunday of the month. Moonshot Euchre every Wednesday, 1pm. Tournaments Every 3rd Sunday of the Month, 1pm. Frankford Lions Club Frankford United Church: Sunday service with Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. All are welcome. Alcoholics Anonymous Keep It Simple Group, 8 pm every Thursday at Holy Trinity Anglican Church Hall, 60 Trent St. N. (rear), Frankford. Info: www.quintewestaa. org or 1-866-951-3711

GLEN MILLER

TOPS (Take off Pounds Sensibly) meetings Tuesday mornings at Christ Church Glen Miller. Weigh ins 8:30-9:30 a.m. with a meeting following. Join anytime. Info: Brenda Kellett 613 392-8227

GRAFTON

Stoney and the Sundance Banc Open Mike Jamboree, October 1, 1-5pm, Grafton Legion, Hwy 2. Dave and Wendy of Cedarail and Stphen Stoneman. Bar & lunch.

HASTINGS

Friday, September 30 and Saturday, October 1, Rummage Sale at St. George’s Church, Hastings, from 9 am - 2 pm. Wednesday, October 5, 12 and 19, 10 am - 2 pm. Book sale at bargain prices, St. George’s Church, Hastings. The Hastings Kitchen – A Trent Hills Community Kitchen, October 6, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm. YMCA Ontario Early Years Centre . Registration required. 705-696-1353 Friends of the Hastings Branch Library Annual Author’s Night featuring Susanna Kearsley, September 30, 7:30 pm. Hastings Civic Centre, 6 Albert St. E.Admission is free will offering. Info: 705-696-2111 or www. trenthillslibrary.ca Line Dancing Wednesdays, 10am, $4. Yoga Wednesdays, 1pm, $4. Knitting Group Thursdays, 1pm. Civic Centre, 6 Albert St. East, Hastings Hastings Legion, Friday Sept. 30, Karaoke. Doors open at 8:30 dance starts at 9. $2.00 cover. Age of majority. Security on premise.

St. weekly events. Monday Senior Darts, 12:30 pm. Bingo 6:30 pm. Tuesday Shuffleboard, 12:30 pm. Thursday Ladies’ Darts, 1 pm. Saturday Meat Roll 3-4pm Havelock Seniors Club Bid Euchre, first Saturday of the month, 1 pm. Havelock OddFellows Brunch, first Sunday of month, 8am-noon. Pancakes, sausage, eggs, bacon, home fries, coffee, tea, juice. Adults $6, Under 12 $3. The first Sunday of the month, Bid Euchre at the Havelock Lions Club. Games start at 1 p.m. $5.00/person. For information, contact Glen Shearer 705-778-3169 or Glen Ellis 705-778-3039.

IVANHOE

Sunday Night Sing hosted by Ivanhoe Wesleyan Standard Church, 6:30 PM. Bring your instruments. Open mic. Refreshments to follow. First Sunday of each month.

MADOC

Royal Canadian Legion Br 363 Madoc: Mixed Darts every Thursday 7 pm. Random draw for teams. Camaraderie featured at First Sunday Festival, St. John’s Anglican Church, 115 Durham St. N, Madoc, Sunday Oct. 2, 10:30. Sunday School as usual for the children. Everyone Welcome. New Finding Your Way clinics. Free ID kit to help those with memory loss and their loved ones be prepared and prevent a missing person event. Call for your one hour appointment: 613-395-5018 TOPS (take off pounds sensibly), every Wednesday, Trinity United Church in Madoc. Weigh-ins 5.30-6.p,m. Short meeting follows. Info: Lila 613-473-4668 Madoc Active Living Exercise, Wednesdays, 10:30AM, Trinity United Church, 76 St Lawrence St E. Opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Call Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if not already a member of the Program.

MARMORA

St. Andrew’s United Church New to You Shoppe sale, Saturday October 1, 8:30 until noon. The Deloro UCW is also having their Coffee Party at the same time. EUCHRE in Deloro Hall each Friday 7 p.m. sponsored by Marmora Crowe Valley Lions Club. Bring light lunch to share. Good Food Box depot, Marmora Pentecostal Church, 53 Madoc St. Fresh fruit and vegetables in $10 or $15 size boxes or bag of fruit for $5. Order/Pay by the first Wednesday of the month. Pick up on the third Wednesday. Order any Wed. between 10am-2pm. Elaine 613-472-3219

NAPANEE

Photo Art 2016 Thirty-second Annual Exhibition & Sale of Photography, gallery of the Lennox & Addington County General Hospital October 7-November 3. Parking HAVELOCK and exhibition free. Open daily 9am-8pm. Diner’s Club, first and third Wednesday Awards presentation on October 11, 7:30pm. of each month, Havelock United Church, www.napaneephotoclub.ca 12pm. $9.00. Info: 705-778-7831. Continued on page B5 RCL Havelock, Branch 389, 8 Ottawa


EVENTS Continued from page B4

NORWOOD

Norwood Legion: Wing Night Thursdays, from 4:30pm. Meat Draws Fridays from 5 p.m. Dance to Donegal Fiddlers Orchestra, Saturday October 1, 7-10 pm, Norwood Town Hall, 2357 County Rd 45. Admission $5.00. Lunch is finger food pot luck. Jigs, reels, 2 steps and square dance tunes.

P.E. COUNTY

Meals on Wheels, Picton: Daily noon time meal delivered to your door. Info: Prince Edward Community Care 613-476-7493. Free Seniors Exercise Classes – VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888279-4866 ex 5350. Picton Shout Sister Choir welcomes new members. Practices are Thursdays, 7-9 p.m., St Mary Magdalene Church, 335 Main St, Picton. www.shoutsisterchoir.ca

STIRLING

Retired Women Teachers, Trenton & District, Thurs. Oct. 6, 11:30 A.M., St. Paul’s United Church, Stirling. Grant Ketcheson is

the guest speaker. Soup & Sandwiches $10 (Guests $12). All retired women teachers welcome. Diane 613 398-0952. New Finding Your Way clinics. Free ID kit to help those with memory loss and their loved ones be prepared and prevent a missing person event. Call for your one hour appointment: 613-395-5018 Stirling Al-Anon Family Group, every Friday, 8 p.m., St. Paul’s United Church, Stirling. 866.951-3711 Seniors’ Euchre every Thursday, 1 pm, Stirling Legion Branch #228, StirlingMarmora Rd. Only $2.00 to play, refreshments provided. Info: (613) 395-2002.

Bridal Boutique or at the door. PROBUS CLUB of Quinte West meets 1st Thursday of the month, 9:30 a.m., upstairs at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 110, Trenton. All seniors welcome. Info: call Janet 613-475-5111 Quinte RegionCraft Guild annual Fall Show and Sale, Saturday, October 1, 9 am - 3 pm, Trenton High School Cafeteria, 15 Fourth Ave, Trenton. Admission $2. Cold Creek Cloggers, Monday nights. Beginner class 6:30pm. Trenton Baptiste Church 15 South St. First night free. For info call Debbie 613-920-9034 The Trenton Memorial Hospital Auxiliary is looking for new volunteers (18 years THOMASBURG +). Give back, make new friends and learn Turkey Supper, Thomasburg United important skills. Training provided. Call the Church, October 1. Continuous settings 5 to 7. volunteer office at 613 392 2540 ext. 5454 Advance Tickets Only. Adult tickets $14.00, 12 and under $6.00, under 5 Free. Take out TWEED available. Call Doug at 613-477-2628 or Tweed & District Horticulture Society, Sheila at 613-477-2636 Tuesday, October 4, 7 p.m., Tweed Public Library, Jenna Empey: natural process of TRENTON fermentation in preparing foods. Also Dorothy Unveiled Bridal Event Sunday Oc- Hunt: dehydrating fall vegetables. $3 fee for tober 16, 10am – 3pm, National Air Force non-members. Museum, 220 RCAF Road, Trenton. Tickets available at Unveiledbridalevent.ca, Lily’s Tweed Library: Bridge every Tuesday

from 1-4. Knitting every Friday from 2-4 Movies at Tweed library starting biweekly October 6. List of films shown is posted at the library. Movies start at 2:30 Popcorn and drinks are provided Zumba Dancercise Class for everyone, every Wednesday, 9 - 10 am., Tweed Legion. Bring your water and yoga mats. Info: 613-478-1824 Tweed LegioN: Bi-weekly Open Bingo in the Upstairs Hall, 7 pm. Euchre every other Saturday in the Clubroom, 1 pm. Info 613478-1865 Senior Men’s ‘Huff and Puff’ Exercise Class, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10-11 AM, Land O’ Lakes Curling Club. Instructed muscle toning, balance and stretching. Light weights available, bring your own mat. 7/ class or $40 monthly. Show up or contact Larry: 613-478-5994 Bid Euchre every Tuesday, 7 p.m., Actinolite Recreation Hall Attention Teens: Are you bored? Looking for a challenge? Join the Truth & Dare Youth Group, Fridays, 7 p.m. Fun, Food, Games, Trips and more. Tweed Pentecostal Church, 16 Jamieson St. W. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for Gateway

Community Health Centre Pole Walking program. No experience necessary. For more information, please call the Dietitian at 613478-1211 ext. 228.

TYENDINAGA

Orange Lodge Dance, Oct. 1, Orange Hall, York Rd, Tyendinga Territory. Band is Jeff Code & Silver Wings Dancing from 8pm to midnight. Cost $12.00 each Dance,Lunch,Prizes Contact 613-396-6792 Diner’s Club, 1st Wednesday, 12-2 pm. Deseronto Community Centre, $6/member. $7/non-member. Reservations required. Call 613-396-6591

WARKWORTH

Warkworth Community Lunch, October 3, 11 am, The Gathering Place - St. Paul’s United Church Trent Hills Grannies for Africa Jewellery Show and Sale, October 1, 10:00 am – 4:30 pm, The Gathering Place, St. Paul’s United Church, 60 Main St, Warkworth.

WOOLER

Soup and Sandwich, Monday October 3, at 11:30 am – 1 pm $7 per person, Wooler United Church

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Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

B5


LIFESTYLES

The Good Earth:

Now’s the time to get busy in the garden

Dan Clost Now is, indeed, the time Gentle Reader. It is time to get busy in your piece of this good earth. Experience gardeners will know that “getting busy” doesn’t always mean physical exertion. The first part of getting busy

is determining what needs your busy-ness. So take a pad and paper and have a seat on your thinking bench. If you don’t have a thinking bench then that is the first item to jot down. A thinking bench (could be an Adirondack chair, a rustic birch log settee or even a chaise lounge) is an integral part of any properly designed landscape. Simply defined it is a place where you can sit and enjoy your estate; a place where you can watch the seasons play out; a place where you go to relax, perhaps listen to a favourite piece of music. (It is not a coincidence that I am listening to Neil Diamond’s Kyrie Gloria from his Jonathan Livingstone Seagull sound track as I write this.) Now that you’re in the proper frame of mind, start making notes. I suggest that write down how you felt at the height of this summer’s double whammy of heat and drouth. I know I was trying to convince myself that all

would be well but deep down I thought almost everything was gone. (And thanks to Sharon for sharing that she felt that way, too.) Once your Gloomy Gus persona has had the opportunity to smudge your entries with negativity, turn the page. The next notes might focus on all that is good on your estate. At Clost Commons the zinnias and dragon wing begonias are in spectacular bloom; the Siskiyou guara (think butterflies) are dancing on the end of their long stems; the butternut squash are finally getting some size; the pole beans have taken over not only the cucumber tower but also the tomato strings, the backyard fence and the broom corn; and, the glads have finally decided it is time for them to bloom. Most of the lawn has returned to mostly green grass, and only two plants (Blue Muffin viburnum standard, Bloodgood Japanese Maple) actually succumbed although we have a few young

trees that will need some tlc to make it through the winter. You should be feeling relieved with a true gardener’s optimism fully restored. Your observations will now be positively critical, accompanied with actions/solutions. At this point, physical activity attends the notes. For example, “overseed and top dress bare spots on the lawn.” Here is a list of my fall activities: 1. Overseed and top dress bare spots on the lawn. 2. Empty out the composters using the finished compost for top dressing. 3. Plant Bulbs. If I happen to dig up bulbs I planted before, then I will move those old bulbs to a backyard holding area. 4. Collect fallen leaves and hold them for covering tender perennials after the first hard frost with the remainder being used to make leaf mould.

5. Plant a pear tree where the ancient (25 years old) dwarf Paula Red apple tree is hanging on for one final fall. 6. Find places for about 30 pots of perennials- mostly astilbe with a few ferns (Maidenhair, Red Lady and Barnes) and Sibirica iris. I could heel them into the unused part of the veggie garden but then I’d have to move them again in the spring. I’ll likely spend a few extra minutes on the thinking bench figuring out how to minimize that extra work. 7. Continue to dig up old shrubs and perennials from under the black walnut treeyes, the same tree that pulled apart our fence. Over the winter, we’ll come up with a garden plan for the new space. 8. Take time to be grateful we have a garden and the opportunity to enjoy it.

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Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016


TRAVEL

A dozen of the U.S.A.’s best national parks

By John M. Smith

This past summer, I wrote an article in which I briefly talked about a dozen of Canada’s best National Parks, for next year, as part of our 150th birthday celebrations, entrance to our national parks will be free. However, the U.S. is celebrating the centennial celebrations of the National Park Service this very year, so I thought that it would only be fitting to list a dozen of their very best, too: Acadia: If you want to catch that first sunrise in the country’s most easterly national park, then I’d suggest a visit to Maine’s Cadillac Mountain, the highest point along the nation’s eastern coast, located on Mount Desert Island. While in this beautiful park, enjoy travelling on its historic carriage roads. Arches: Utah’s Arches National Park, located just outside of Moab, has the world’s largest concentration of natural sandstone arches. More than 2,000 arches, along with many other fascinating geological formations, are to be found in here, and it’s, therefore, a photographer’s delight. Be sure to check out Delicate Arch, Double Arch, Landscape Arch, Balanced Rock, Fiery Furnace, and the Devil’s Garden. Bryce Canyon: This Utah park would be my choice for the most beautiful U.S. national park, for its awesome horseshoe-shaped amphitheatre, majestic red rock spires, pillars, domes, and its plethora of eye-popping hoodoos make this park like no other. Many of its best lookout points are located near the

park entrance, as is the incredible Navajo Loop Trail, which will take you from the rim of the canyon to the floor and back. It’s a stunning adventure trek! Denali: There’s only one main road into the interior of this Alaskan park, and it’s narrow, with many twists and treacherous curves. Therefore, individuals are not allowed to drive their own vehicles past mile 15 on the Denali Park Road, at the Savage River Check Station, and bus drivers must pass a stringent driving test that includes being able to drive backwards around those dangerous curves. This is simply because the buses often meet along the narrow road, so one must back up and give way to the other, and this is particularly challenging when the two large vehicles meet on a hairpin turn high above the valley floor! The high point of the 8-hour bus tour, both literally and figuratively, is over Polychrome Pass, and from up here there’s a fantastic view of the Plains of Murie that stretch all the way to the Alaska Range. Glacier: The best way to get an overview of this spectacular park, located in Montana, is to simply drive across its cliff-hugging Going-to-theSun Road (but it’s only open between late June and early September because of the heavy snowfall). Another great way to explore the park is on its trail system, for the park offers more than 1,000 km. of hiking trails. I’d visit soon, though, for global warming is playing havoc with its glaciers. Grand Canyon: This one is probably on most tourists’ ‘bucket lists’. It’s mammoth, and it’s Arizona’s

most distinguishable landmark. This awesome gorge is usually considered to be one of the “Seven Natural Wonders of the World”. It stretches for well over 200 miles from end to end, and it’s over 200 miles by road from the South Rim to the North Rim. Great Smokey Mountains National Park: This is the most visited national park of them all. It’s divided between North Carolina and Tennessee, covers an area of more than half a million acres, and is located within a day’s drive of about a third of the nation’s entire population. It was the Cherokee who described these ancient mountains as “shaconage”, meaning “blue, like smoke” (hence the name of the park). Haleakala: One of my fondest memories is watching a sunrise on Maui’s Haleakala. “Haleakala” means “House of the Sun”, and I find it difficult to find the right words to convey to you the special feeling that I had on that summit (at over 10,000 feet) in the stark blackness of the night – and then to witness those first rays of light in the sky as the sun was about to emerge – and then to see the sudden bursting forth of that bright yellow ball of light! Then, to top it off, I descended this volcano by bicycle. It was awesome! Rocky Mountain National Park: I find this Colorado park’s Alpine Visitor Centre particularly appealing, for it’s the highest one in the country’s entire National Park Service, and it offers extraordinary alpine tundra views. On one occasion, I ascended a trail here and saw a herd of elk in the valley below!

Yellowstone National Park: Most of this exquisite park, the U.S.’s first national park, is in the northwest corner of Wyoming, but it also spills over into a bit of Idaho and Montana. If I had to choose one U.S. national park as my favourite, it would be this one, for it has such spectacular and varied terrain and abundance of wildlife. I’ve never been in this park without seeing wildlife – and check out its thermal pools, canyons, and geysers, too. Yosemite: California’s Yosemite Valley, the most popular part of this park, includes such spectacular

granite monoliths as Half Dome and El Capitan (both very popular with rock climbers), such magnificent waterfalls as the Bridalveil Falls, Vernal Falls, and Yosemite Falls, and such incredible outlook points as those found at Valley View and Tunnel View. Zion: My favourite stop along the Zion Canyon Scenic Drive by shuttle bus was at the Temple of Sinawava, for here I found the River Walk, and this led to the Narrows. This is an opportunity to walk in Utah’s Virgin River, into a very narrow canyon, surrounded by towering cliffs, and it’s a real adrenaline rush.

A view of a glacier that was taken during my flightseeing tour in Alaska’s Denali National Park.

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Protein’s important for Salvation Army Mark De Jong stacks packages of pork inside the Salvation Army kitchen while Doug Farrell looks on Friday, Sept. 16. Both were representatives of the Northumberland Quinte Pork Producers, who stopped by the Salvation Army’s downtown Belleville location to deliver a large donation of pork. The packages spread across the table, represent the donation of one rougly 235-pound hog. It marked the first time the Pork Producers had donated to the Salvation Army Belleville and it was a much needed supply, said Community and Family Services Director Abby Mills. The number of people accessing Salvation Army Belleville food programs this year is up 13 per cent from last year, which means more than 2,000 extra meals to serve this year. Mills said the Salvation Army appreciates meat donations, because the organization wants to provide clients, with healthy, balanced meals.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

October is an all-important month for cancer awareness, especially for women Dear Editor, At the Canadian Cancer Society, October is about more than just raising awareness for breast cancer, it’s about taking action to save lives. Women over 50 account for more than 80% of breast cancer cases in Ontario yet only 61% have regular mammograms. We need to change this. Regular mammograms are the most reliable way to find breast cancer early – when it’s most treatable. I’m doing my part by volunteering with the Canadian Cancer Society as a Women to Women Ambassador to promote

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Karen White Women to Women ambassador Canadian Cancer Society Hastings, Prince Edward and Brighton Contact Tracey Reid 613-962-0686

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screening in my community. I lead by example and get a mammogram every two years. I also fundraise to help the Society support 76 clinical trials and world-class breast cancer research. Early detection and increased screening rates combined with better treatment therapies have resulted in a 44% decrease in breast cancer death rates since the 1980s. This month folks in Hastings, Prince Edward and Brighton can take action against breast cancer by buying a pink ribbon, volunteering to sell pink ribbons or joining the Women to Women movement.


Monitor to aid in endoscopy procedures monitor that will improve the observation of sedated patients The endoscopy department at undergoing a colonoscopy or Prince Edward County Memorial gastroscopy procedure. Pictured Hospital is now home to a new here is a GE B850 Monitor that By Briar Boyce

was required for our hospital under new health care standards for patients undergoing sedation. This replacement will result in greater patient safety as the

screen has a wide viewing angle so the medical staff can easily read critical data right at the bedside. It is a high tech monitor with functions to help staff assess the tolerability of anesthesia in the operating room. The B850 Monitor will help our staff get accurate medical information, when and where they need it. Prince Edward County Memorial is the low risk endoscopic centre for this region, performing 3,139 scopes in 2015. The ongoing replacement of scopes and equipment for this department is needed to keep the service efficient and of high calibre in the County. Medical equipment is expensive and has a short lifespan. Unlike many medical costs, equipment is not funded by the government; it expected that the community finances the replacement of medical equipment. The PECM Hospital

Foundation was able to purchase this much needed monitor through the generosity of the Stark Family Fund. The grant, administered by a local selection committee including Tim and Linda Beatty and family, is overseen by the Community Foundation for Kingston and Area and helped offset the cost of this $30,437 monitor. This monitor is part of the Foundation’s LIFE SAVER II Campaign for replacement equipment. Phase II of the LIFE SAVER Campaign focuses on acquiring medical equipment for the Endoscopy and Pharmacy Departments at PECMH at a cost of $201,022. Again, the Foundation is asking for the community’s generous support to help us equip our local hospital and thanks all those who have already stepped forward with their commitment to quality health care for the patients at PECM Hospital.

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for 40 years! Shown here with the new monitor in the endoscopy Department at Prince Edward County Memorial Hospital from left are: Anaesthetist Dr. Jack McGugan, Shannon Reid, registered practical nurse, Surgeon Dr. Francesco Barnabi and Delores Chalmers, RN and team leader of the endoscopy department at PECMH.

When MacEwen Petroleum was founded in August 1976, we were confident that a company based on integrity, reliability and personal service would succeed. And we were right. Over the years, we’ve grown into one of Canada’s leading independent petroleum products companies. Thank you for making all this possible. We look forward to serving your needs for many more years to come.

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NAFMCF gala will be ‘Out of This World’ By Ross Lees

When the National Air Force Museum of Canada Foundation (NAFMCF) named their semiformal annual gala “Out of this World, Astronaut Portrait Gala,” they weren’t just launching baking soda rockets. Their gala event on Oct. 21 will feature two very well-known Canadian personalities – renowned Canadian artist Cyril Leeper and Colonel Chris Hadfield, a former Canadian astronaut and the first Canadian Commander of the International Space Station. So when the NAFMCF says it is “out of this world stuff,” they kid you not. Cyril Leeper is well known for painting portraits of members of the Royal Family, senior military officers, government officials and business leaders. More recently, Leeper created a portrait of Col. Hadfield, which will be unveiled and presented to the museum by Leeper and Col. Hadfield at the gala. “We are very excited about this year’s gala,’ said development coordinator Brigitte Frances. “It’s going to be a special evening where those in attendance will have the good fortune to hear from an artist

whose talents are known across the country. Everyone will also be able to meet and listen to Col. Hadfield.” Tickets for this event are being sold for $150, and can be purchased at the NAFMC, the Chamber of Commerce in Belleville and Trenton as well as Smylies Your Independent Grocer. Doors will open at 6 p.m. for cocktails, followed by dinner, portrait unveiling, live auction and a dance. Money raised from the event will go towards supporting the NAFMCF and the Theatre campaign, an effort by the NAFMCF to build an educational theater within their space that will benefit Quinte West and the surrounding communities. “8 Wing remains committed to the National Air Force Museum of Canada Foundation and its efforts to support the museum,” explained 8 Wing Commander, Col. Colin Keiver. “The yearly gala is one of the great ways our Foundation is able to present something special to the community, while at the same time raising money needed to help further the important stories of the amazing men and women in the RCAF in new and exciting ways.” Col. Chris Hadield, a former Canadian astronaut and the first Canadian Commander of the International For those who have questions Space Station shown here in an appearance in Belleville in 2014, will be on hand at the NAFMCF gala on Oct. please contact nafmcftickets@ 21 to unveil and present his portrait painted by renowned Canadian artist Cyril Leeper. gmail.com or 613.965.7314. Contact file photo by Ross Lees

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Syrian benefit concert a treat of stuff, nonsense By Jack Evans

Syrian concert. Greg Garrett directs the Prince Edward County community choir, Command Performance at Holloway Street Church Belleville, Sunday afternoon in a benefit concert to aid Syrian refugees. Garrett was spelled off during the program by Belleville’s Moira Forrester. Photo by Jack Evans

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“Stuff and Nonsense” was a solid title for the benefit concert in aid of Syrian refugees by Command Performance recently at Holloway Street Church. The nonsense was aplenty and the “stuff ” was non-stop, with swing dancers, chests of treasures and dozens of old-fashioned props, not to mention old-fashioned songs. Some might say even “antique” songs. But, with some jazzy contemporary numbers and arrangers like Dr. Leslie Bell and a complete cantata based on the nonsense poems of Victorian era Brit, Edward Lear, it all came together.

The Picton-based community choir has a knack for finding programs that really works with almost any audience. This concert was no exception. The several dance numbers by Carla and Jerry McCoy added an extra attraction to songs like “Choo Choo Ch Boogie,” “Flat Foot Floogie” and “Blue Skies.” Emerson Pringle on drums, Greg Garrett on electric bass and Samantha Hirst on keyboard helped keep the chorus on track. Getting back to the cantata, it was written by American musician and composer Vergil Thomson, using contemporary styles with Lear’s inane poetry, such as “The Owl and the Pussycat,””The

Roy MacGregor to speak about bumblebees and maple leaves at Historical Society Banquet What do bumblebees and maple leaves have in common? You’ll have to come to the Hastings County Historical Society’s Annual Banquet and Celebration of History to find out.

Guest speaker, Roy MacGregor, awardwinning Globe and Mail columnist and author, was born in Whitney, Ontario, and raised in Huntsville; so he is no stranger to the wilds of Ontario’s north.

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Jumblies,” and “The Pelican Chorus.” Challenging music to sing, but a delight to the audience. Members of the choir were quick and unanimous to respond to the benefit concert challenge to help raise funds for some of the Syrian refugees already here to bring over some of their other family members. Command Performance, while based at Bloomfield, draws members from across the county and a good number from the Belleville community. It launched its new fall season as of Monday, Sept. 17 in Bloomfield Hall from 7:30 to 9:30. Interested singers may contact Moira Forrester at 9685049 or Greg Garrett, at 476- 4148.

He has devoted several books to life in Algonquin Park and especially artist, Tom Thomson. His most recent book, Canoe Country: The Making of Canada for Random House in 2015 has been hugely successful. The recipient of multiple awards for his writing, he won the prestigious Rutstrum Award, given every five years to the best book on wilderness writing in North America in 2001 for his memoirs on his father, A Life in the Bush. Also described as “the Wayne Gretzky of hockey writing” his sports writing has garnered him inclusion in several hockey and sports halls of fames. In addition he is a multiple winner of national magazine awards, national newspaper awards and twice has been awarded the ACTRA “Nellie” as Canada’s top television dramatist. In 2005 Roy MacGregor was named an Officer in the Order of Canada. He promises to be an most interesting speaker at the HCHS banquet, and how he connects the bumblebee and maple leaves will surprise you. The banquet is at the Travelodge on Saturday, October 22. It will begin with a social hour at 6 p.m. and dinner follows at 7:15 p.m. This year in response to several requests over the last few years, there will be a choice of main course entree: salmon or chicken, rather than the traditional prime rib. Tickets at $65 are available at Quinte Arts Council and by calling Mary-Lynne Morgan (613-961-7091) or Richard Hughes (613-961-7772). For more info on the work of the Hastings County Historical Society, go to www.hastingshistory.ca .


Andrews named new public board superintendent

*Metroland distribution area. Source: BrandSpark International Survey 2016. Story credit: simcoe.com

The Hastings and Prince Edward District School Board has announced the hiring of Laina Andrews as the new Superintendent of Education – School Climate & Well-Being Services. She is taking the place of Mark Fisher who accepted a role with the Durham District School Board in August. “Laina is a dynamic educational leader with experience at the school and district levels. Her passion for excellence, equity and well-being was evident during the hiring process. All Board members gave their full support to Laina joining the senior leadership team and are looking forward to her becoming part of HPEDSB,” said board chair Dwayne Inch in a statement. Andrews has been recognized for her depth of experience in designing,

implementing and monitoring successful teaching and learning environments, a statement from the board says. She is known for her ability to create cohesive, collaborative teams who champion and achieve school and organizational goals. In addition, Andrews takes an inclusive approach to student well-being and engagement. She is a proven leader with experience in accommodation reviews, developing parent-school-system communications, leveraging student achievement through technology, mentoring colleagues. “Laina’s experiences make her wellsuited for this senior leadership role at HPEDSB. We’re looking forward to her contributions to our vision of all students prepared and empowered for the possibilities of today and tomorrow,”

said Mandy Savery-Whiteway, Director of Education. Andrews obtained her Bachelor of Arts (Honours) at Mount Saint Vincent University, Bachelor of Education at Dalhousie University, Masters of Education at the University of Toronto, and her Principal and Supervisory Officer qualifications through the Ontario Principals’ Council. Andrews comes to HPEDSB from the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board where she was a secondary school principal. Andrews will transition into her new role over the next two weeks and officially join the HPEDSB on October 3, 2016. Andrews lives in Northumberland County with her two children who are engaged in post-secondary endeavours. Laina Andrews

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Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Quality workmanship guaranteed. 519-777-8632 .

$ MONEY $

Annual Toledo Ride-AThon, Saturday Oct. 15. New start location for this year!! Civic address306 ElizabethtownKitley Line #3, Toledo, ON. See our website for directions. Watch for signs. You don’t want to miss a great day of riding through our scenic trails, enjoying a homemade chili lunch at our “chuckwagon” and a chance to take home some fabulous prizes. Tack up your horse and enjoy the ride. Registration: 10 a.m.noon. Register on-line or day of the ride. See website for details: www.saddleupintoledo.c om

MORTGAGE TEAM

Collectibles • Signs • Old Tins • European Deli

WANTED - WANTED

613-847-9467

NEW & USED APPLIANCES USED REFRIGERATORS

Cty. Rd. 30, 3 miles south of Campbellford For vendor space, call Tom or Lola Holmes Home (705) 696-9843 • Work (705) 653-3979

Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, 3 months old & up. Sold with written guarantee. Fridges $100. and up.

FOR SALE

NEW APPLIANCES

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

Portage and Main Canadian Made

• Renewals • Mortgages & Loans • Leasing - 1st, 2nd & Private Mortgages • Free Down Payment Program OAC • • Bank turn downs, self employed welcomed

WANTED

IN BUSINESS FOR 30 YEARS PLUS

• Tack Shop • Carved Horses • Furniture • Candy • Clothing • Computer guy

CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income Bad credit OK!

Carpet, laminate, hardwood Unsprayed Organic Cider Wanted. 26” riding mowflooring deals. 12 mm Apples. You picked er, good working condilaminate installed with free 613-475-6129obc tion. 613-475-3286. Better Option pad $2.29/sq. ft.; engineered hardwood $2.49/sq ft.; Free Mortgage Wanted: Standing timber, shop at home service. #10969 FITNESS & mature hard/softwood. saillianflooring.com 1-800-282-1169 Also wanted, natural HEALTH 1-800-578-0497, www.mortgageontario.com stone, cubicle or flat, any 905-373-2260. size. 613-968-5182. GET FIT FOR FALL FOR SALE Zumba Fitness 1 hour classes. Mondays 5:30 pm MORTGAGES MORTGAGES Brighton Masonic Hall, Wednesdays 6 pm at ENSS single gym. Call METRO CITY Cynthia 613-847-1183.

(Scrap or unwanted) Cars, Trucks, Vans or Farm Tractors, etc. for scrap recycling. Cash Paid. Pick up from Norwood to Tweed to Belleville.

Nadia

Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

WANTED

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

SIMMONS

B14

FOR SALE

Call 1-888-967-3237 or 613-966-2034

DEATH NOTICE

Passed away peacefully at The Bridge Hospice in Warkworth on Sunday, September 18th, 2016 in her 69th year. Beloved wife of Gregg. Loving mother of Preston. Nana will be sadly missed by Madison, Meghan and Sarah Grace. Dear sister of Gay Marie Folkman of Cobourg, Ont., Susan Poste of Kelowna B.C. and the late Jamie Quinton. Predeceased by her parents Jim and Gaynel Quinton of Campbellford. In keeping with Nadia’s wishes a cremation has taken place and there will be a small gathering of remembrance at the family farm that will be held at a later date. Arrangements entrusted to NISBETT FUNERAL HOME, 600 MONAGHAN ROAD S, PETERBOROUGH 705-745- 3211.

FOR SALE 2005 Rockwood 26’ travel trailer for sale, good condition, air, separate bedroom, kitchen slide-out. $7,500. Call 613-267-4463 after 5 weekdays.

FARM

CL460910

CLEANING / JANITORIAL

Annual Toledo Ride-AThon, Saturday Oct. 15. New start location for this year!! Civic address306 ElizabethtownKitley Line #3, Toledo, ON. See our website for directions. Watch for signs. You don’t want to miss a great day of riding through our scenic trails, enjoying a homemade chili lunch at our “chuckwagon” and a chance to take home some fabulous prizes. Tack up your horse and enjoy the ride. Registration: 10 a.m.noon. Register on-line or day of the ride. See website for details: www.saddleupintoledo.c om

COMING EVENTS

CL460541

DEBT OR CREDIT CRISIS NEED HELP? ALLEN MADIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLING .COM Visit Our New Web Site For details of our unique service Free consultation Call 613-779-8008

COMING EVENTS

CREDIT PROBLEMS? I HAVE SOLUTIONS! Andrea Johnston A.M.P 200 Dundas Street E, Suite 305 Belleville, ON K8N 1E3 Office: 613-968-5151 Toll Free: 1-855-968-5151 ext 306 Email: andrea005@sympatico.ca Web: www.mortgagesbyandrea.com FSCO Lic# M08002475 Broker# 12236 DLC Smart Debt Independently Owned and Operated

FARM

FARM

HONEY FOR SALE Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products

At the lowest prices in the area. Trade-ins accepted on new appliances. Big selection to choose from.

NEW CROP HONEY AVAILABLE - RAW & REGULAR

PAYS CASH $$$

231 Frankford-Stirling Road, Stirling

For good used appliances in working order or not, but no junk, please. VISA & MASTERCARD accepted. We have our own financing also. Shop at our competitors and then come see for yourself, quality at low prices. Open evenings 7 days a week. WE DELIVER.

CL447164 CL642293

ANNOUNCEMENT

We Sell Gas Refrigerators!

SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287

We sell bulk honey in your containers, prepackaged liquid and creamed honey, wedding favours, buckwheat honey, beeswax skin creams & lip balms, candles, pollen, maple syrup, honey butter, gifts and more.

Open Saturdays only, 10 am-4pm. Call 613-827-7277

FOR RENT 2 Bedroom spacious apartment, downtown Trenton (across from Metro). All inclusive, $950/mth. Quiet, senior’s residential buildings, Senior discount, nonsmoking, no pets. Call 613-922-5528. Brighton, semi-detached with town services. Quiet couple preferred. No s m o k e r s / p e t s . $900/month includes water. 613-475-0306.

HALL RENTALS

Belleville Shrine Club 51 Highland Ave Belleville Rooms available for large or small parties or meetings. Now taking bookings for Christmas. Licensed by LLBO. Catering available. Wi-Fi available. Air conditioned. Handicap access w w w. b e l l e v i l l e s h r i n e club.com. For more information call 613-962-2633 or 613-921-9924

LEGAL Criminal Record? Canadian Record Suspension (Criminal pardon) seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation, peace of mind? Free c o n s u l t a t i o n : 1-800-347-2540

Births $ 20.91 Ads starting at

69,000 homes


TRAVEL/VACAT/COTTG

HELP WANTED

Cancel Your Timeshare. No Risk Program. Stop Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consultation. Call Us Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248

GLEN ELLIS HEATING is looking for an experienced sheet metal worker. please send resumes to info@glenellisheating.com or call Glen directly at 613-921-0439

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Looking for a way to get ahead? Learn to operate a Mini-Office Outlet from home. Free online training, flexible hours. Great income backed by 60yrs of proven s u c c e s s . HELP WANTED Home Based Business. Do www.123missionsuccess. You Have 10hrs/wk you com would like to make more Do You Have 10hrs/wk, Work from to turn into $1500/mth productive? using your PC and phone? home, online Free training Free info: www.gofree4life.com www.BossFree123.com Medical transcription! Indemand career! Distilling Technician in Employers have work-atHillier, ON. - Monitor and control distillery operation. home positions available. Get online training you 5 years of experience in need from an employer ARAK DISTILLING. trusted program. Visit: To apply, email at CareerStep.ca/AtHome or hr@ahilliervineyard.com 1-844-272-7617 to start training for your work-athome career today! HELP WANTED FOR RENT

brighton 1-2 bedroom unit on the second floor-sliding doors leading to balcony, laundry facilities on site and walking distance to downtown. Now available August. $800/mth plus Hydro. 1-2 bedroom lower level available in September $765/mth plus Hydro.

MADOC

SELF STORAGE

FOR RENT

FOR RENT

CL442555

613-392-2601

(Since 1985)

Property Management

ApArtments ApArtments ApArtments ApArtments ApArtments ApArtments Featuring Featuring2 2bedroom bedroomapartments apartments ApArtments Featuring 2BRIGHTON bedroom apartments with allallamenities including: with amenities including: Featuring 2 bedroom apartments

Part-time Drivers

in Campbellford, Norwood, Havelock, Hastings, Warkworth, Marmora and surrounding areas.

Metroland Media Classifieds

The shifts are weekdays from 4 p.m. to 12 a.m. and weekends 4 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. Candidates must be 25 years of age or older for insurance purposes. Must have a valid driver’s licence and a clean driving abstract. Pay is based on commission and gratuities.

For more information please call Deal Taxi Limited at 705-778-7979

between the hours of 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. Please leave your name and number

HELP WANTED

1-888-967-3237

HELP WANTED

APPLE PACKERS

required Immediately Knight’s Appleden Fruit Ltd. Please apply within or email amycook@knights-appleden.ca

is looking for

HELP WANTED 36 Prince Edward St. Brighton

Pneumatic tank operation an asset, but not required.

613.475.0568

Competitive wage and benefit package. Please forward resume to: Box 160, Norwood, ON, K0L 2V0 fax: 705-639-2422 or dheayn@archertrucking.com

Pizza • Dining • Take Out Est 1977

HELP WANTED

Owner Operators and Company Drivers US capable

• Excellent earning potential with flexible schedules… Great discounts and plenty of opportunities to kick back & have fun! • Great food - staff discounts of 40% for you and three of your friends. • Flexible schedules, school, other jobs no problem!

NOW HIRING Crew Needed for 6-8 weeks to

Install Cage Equipment in Newburgh, ON.

Some experience with light hand tools or mechanical ability required. Must be able to work Monday to Friday and a half day on Saturdays. Approx. start date Oct. 1st. Reply with resume to rivervalleyherefords@kos.net or fax to 613-378-1646

The Heart of Hastings Hospice is a volunteer based community organization serving individuals coping with life-limiting illness, and their families and caregivers. Our services include residential end of life care, visiting volunteers, equipment loan, as well as caregiver and grief support groups.

Retail Store Clerk - Warkworth

Retail Store Clerk - Warkworth

BELLEVILLE

Ann Street – Bachelor apartment 675.00+Hydro (available September)

Agricultural Experience Agricultural Experience Customer Oriented Customer Oriented Computer Literate Computer Literate Heavy Lifting Required Heavy Lifting Retail Store Clerk -Required Warkworth Responsible, Independent & Organized Responsible, Independent & Organized Team Experience Player Agricultural Team Player

Reporting to the Board of Directors, the full time Executive Director, supports the Board in articulating and implementing the hospice’s mission, strategic priorities, and policies. The Executive Director leads the development, implementation, and evaluation of programs, human resources, financial management, quality improvement, communications, marketing, and community integration. Ideal qualifications: • university degree in a related field • work history of progressive responsibility and change management • experience working with a community board • experience in human resource management, including volunteers • experience in inter-agency collaboration for care delivery • financial management and fundraising skills • excellent oral and written communication skills • current information technology skills • knowledge of the catchment area • knowledge of hospice palliative care philosophy, delivery structures, and funding environment • energetic, motivational, analytical, creative • willingness to be on call after hours on a rotating basis • personal capacity to work in the field of death and dying

Customer Oriented Computer Literate Please send yoursend resume along with wage Heavy Lifting Required Please your resume along withexpectations Responsible, Independent & Organized 19 Industrial Dr., Campbellford, wage expectations to ON K0L 1L0 Team Player cfs1@nexicom.net

29 Dunbar St. – 2 bedroom $750.00 + Heat & Hydro (available October)

386 Front Street – 1 bedroom $615.00 + utilities (available October)

Kenmau Ltd.

613-392-2601 or visit

Property Management (Since 1985)

19 Industrial Dr., Please send your resume along wage expectations to Campbellford, ONwith K0L 1L0 19 Industrialcfs1@nexicom.net Dr., Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0 cfs1@nexicom.net

to

Please submit resume and covering letter, including salary expectations, by October 15 to EDposting@HeartOfHastingsHospice.ca

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Job Posting

Residential items only

ARCHER TRUCKING HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Buy 1 wetek ge 1 free!

Executive Director

Kenmau Ltd.

www.kenmau.ca

Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.

www.vitosbrighton.ca

www.pradacourt.com

234 Dundas St West – 1 bedroom 735.00+Hydro (available September)

BUSINESS SERVICES

Tues.-Thurs. 11am-9pm • Fri. 11am-10pm • Sat. 12pm-10pm • Sun. 12pm-9pm

9am 9am- -5pm 5pm 613-475-3793 1-800-706-4459 613-475-3793 9am - -5pm www.pradacourt.com 9am 5pm www.pradacourt.com 613-475-3793 9am - 5pm www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com

TrEnTon

BUSINESS SERVICES

Paid training. We offer paid comprehensive training for all job functions plus performance paid wage increases are regularly reviewed Interested applicants should email their resume to nick@vitosbrighton.ca

with all amenities including: Featuring 2 air bedroom apartments fridge, and fridge, stove, airconditioning conditioning and Featuring bedroom apartments with allstove, including: with allamenities amenities including: Featuring 22 bedroom apartments fridge, stove, air conditioning and with all amenities including: with all amenities including: wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, airairconditioning and fridge, stove, conditioning and with all amenities including: wheelchair access. fridge, stove, stove, air air conditioning conditioning.and The apartments are attractive and The apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, air are conditioning The apartments attractive and wheelchair access. The apartments are attractive the buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. TheThe apartments are attractive and apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. The apartments attractive and the buildingsareare secure. and Ideal for Seniors or retired couples Ideal for Seniors or retired couples theIdeal buildings are the buildings are for Seniors orsecure. retired couples The apartments are attractive and the buildings aresecure. secure. Ideal for retiredorcouples. Ideal for Seniors retired couples CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL the buildings areorsecure. Ideal for Seniors retired couples CALL 1-800-706-4459 1-800-706-4459 CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL 1-800-706-4459 CALL 613-475-3793 613-475-3793 1-800-706-4459 1-800-706-4459 CALL

Call

Deal Taxi is looking for

PluS

p pr ra ad d a a cc oo uu rr tt p r a d a c o u r t p pr ra ad d a a cc oo uu rr tt p r a d a c o u r t p r a d2 bedroom a c o u r t Featuring apartments

HELP WANTED

TAXI DRIVER’S WANTED

STORAGE

15 Burnside St. Madoc, ON 613-921-0372

Kenmau Ltd.

HELP WANTED

Job Title: Department: Division:

Customer Service Rep Customer Service Metroland East/ Performance Printing

ABOUT US A subsidiary of Torstar Corporation, Metroland is one of Canada’s premier media companies. Metroland delivers up-to-the-minute vital business and community information to millions of people across Ontario. We have grown significantly in recent years in terms of audience and advertisers and we’re continuing to invest heavily in developing best-in-class talent, products and technology to accelerate our growth in the media landscape and strengthen our connection to the community. For further information, please visit www.metroland.com THE OPPORTUNITY Metroland East/Performance Printing is looking for a Customer Service Rep for our print Division. You will be working out of our Head Office, in Smiths Falls, providing front line contact for all our external and internal customers. Coordinating quotes with our print departments. This is a temporary 9 month contract. KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES • First point of contact in a customer service role, answering general phone and e-mail inquiries and providing solutions in a timely and professional manner. • Provide excellent customer service in addition to maintaining positive relationships with customers. • Accurately update and verify customer information and managing additional Excel tracking sheets and internal database. • Communicate with managers and team members as needed regarding client data and confirmation of information. • Special projects and other duties as assigned. • As part of this role, you will be required to handle credit card information. Metroland Media is a PCI compliant company, and requires people in this role to take PCI training to handle cards in a safe and compliant manner. • Plans, coordinates and monitors print projects from time order is given through to shipment of finished product . • Coordinates purchases of outside services as may be required to complete a print project • Ensures customers are kept current with status of the work in process and works to resolve manufacturing problems with both internal production staff and customer. WHAT WE’RE LOOKING FOR • Post Secondary Education in any or related field. • Minimum 4+ years in Customer Service environment. Ideal printing or manufacturing business experience • Proficient with Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook. • Strong written and verbal communication and competent listener. • Superior customer skills including having the ability to placate challenging and demanding clients. • Strong administration skills with accurately updating and maintaining information. • Capable of taking initiative and can work independently with minimal direction. • Ability to excel in a fast-paced, deadline driven and demanding environment with strong attention to detail. • Effective organizational skills, ability to manage time and prioritize tasks appropriately. • Successfully handle confidential information and use appropriate discretion. OUR AODA COMMITMENT Metroland is committed to accessibility in employment and to ensuring equal access to employment opportunities for candidates, including persons with disabilities. In compliance with AODA, Metroland will endeavour to provide accommodation to persons with disabilities in the recruitment process upon request. If you are selected for an interview and you require accommodation due to a disability during the recruitment process, please notify the hiring manager upon scheduling your interview. Please apply on line at www.metroland.com/careers or to sonya.mcrae@metroland.com

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com and on Twitter @InBelleville Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

B15


BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

GARAGE SALE

Wavelengths Yoga Classes for all levels, workshops, individualized yoga therapy. Over 25 years teaching experience. Group classes start Sept. 19. Register online, mail or by appointment at the studio. 2351 Country Rd 45 Norwood. wavelengths@gmail.com, w w w. w a v e l e n g h t s y o ga.com, 705-639-8937

Roger’s Mobile Wash and Detailing: For all your washing needs. Auto, Boats, RVs, Homes, Decks, Patios, Driveways, Heavy Equipment, and Monument cleaning. Also, Store Front, and Graffiti cleaning. Bug Spraying available. Free Estimates Home 613-962-8277 or Cell 613-885-1908.

Indoor Garage Sale, rain or shine, Friday, September 30 and Saturday, October 1. 9-4. Just North of 401, #1622 County Rd 30, Brighton.

BUSINESS SERVICES

Book your ad

613-966-2034 BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

MIKE RICHARDS CPA, CMA

mrmwrichards12@gmail.com

613-403-0881

CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE

Seamless Eavestroughing Soffit and Facia

613-243-5605

1-888-967-3237

All classified ads must be received by 3 p.m. on Mondays to be placed in the Thursday paper.

Steven Switzer

In the event that Monday is a holiday, the deadline moves back to the Friday prior by 11 a.m.

OWNER

stevenswitzerconstruction@gmail.com www.stevenswitzerconstruction.com

Call or visit us to book your ad:

613-478-1936 613-920-3985

613-966-2034 ext 560 250 Sidney St. Belleville

Social Notes

HELP WANTED

FULL TIME & PART TIME Contract Drivers

needed for Belleville/ Trenton Courier Service. Must have own vehicle. Call Tues. To Fri. 8 am - 2 pm. 613-392-5585 or 613-967-5941

BUSINESS SERVICES

FLOORS & MORE

Buy 1 wetek ge 1 free!

Residential items only

BUSINESS SERVICES

Hardwood Floor Installation & Resurfacing, All Ceramics, Your Light Renovations & Upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate.

Small business bookkeeping, accounting, financial statements, tax returns and consulting.

Metroland Media Classifieds

BUSINESS SERVICES

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Airport Service pArt time driverS required Excellent opportunity for a retired person. Extra Income! Must enjoy driving and be customer orientated. Apply at 96 South John St., Belleville, Ontario K8N 3E6 or fax 613-968-9526 email ontariocoachway@bellnet.ca

Help Wanted

Don Woods Fuels Fuel and Propane Driver Starting approx Oct 20, 2014 to April 30, 2014 Clean Driving Abstract and CVOR DZ License Good Listening and Communication Skills Strong Work Ethic Will need to pass Fuel Oil and Propane Exams Drop off Resume at 20 River Street Tweed at Office Or Mail to Box 100 Tweed K0K 3J0 We Thanks all interested applicants, however, only qualified candidates for current posting will be contacted

ONE AD, 4 NEWSPAPERS, OVER 69,000 HOMES

Announcments, Births, Birthdays, Card of Thanks, Coming Marriage, Engagement, Graduation, In Memoriam, Obituary, Retirement, Weddings

without photo with photo

in memoriam

1 column ad

75 words

20 $ 57 31 $

91

2 column ad

Up to 75 words

1 column ad

26 $ 67 36 $

47

2 column ad

Starting at

13

$

01

25¢ per extra word Border extra

Up to 75 words

Municipality of Centre Hastings Emloyment 0pportunity The Municipality of Centre Hastings is currently accepting applications for experienced Drivers/Operators for their part-time Operator/ Labour Pool. Successful applicants would be on an on-call part-time basis, to cover full time staff vacation periods, winter road maintenance and larger construction projects. Some Winter Road Patrol could also be included in job assignments. Applicants should hold a valid Class “DZ” Drivers Licence with a clean abstract and demonstrate experience in operating Tandem Dump Trucks. Experience in operating heavy equipment would be an asset. All applications should be submitted to: Roger Taylor Superintendent of Public Works Phone: (613)473-4030 Fax: (613)473-5444 Email: rtaylor@centrehastings.com B16

Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

1/2 PRICE!

50+ Anniversary and 80+ Birthday ads

FREE!

70+ Anniversary and 100+ Birthday ads Wording and photo must be received in our office by Mondays at 2 p.m. or by email: slacroix@metroland.com

TO PLACE YOUR AD CALL 613-966-2034 ext. 560


As of September 28, 2016, the Municipality of Brighton surplus equipment will be auctioned through GOVDEALS.CA. Surplus equipment has been listed on the website at http://www.govdeals.ca/brighton Current Equipment and Vehicles up for Auction are: (1) 2002 Ford F250 Regular Cab, long box, 4X4 pickup, with 8ft Western snowplow (1) 2002 GMC 2500 Regular Cab long box 4x4 pickup (1) 1987 International Single Axle Truck with steel water tank (1) 2004 Sterling Tandem Combo Dump Sander with snow plow & wing (1) 8ft Western drop in gas powered sander (ran when taken out of service 2016) (1) 8ft Western drop in sander (not running/missing parts) (3) Sterling front truck bumpers (1) International front truck bumper (model 7500 SBA) (1) Lot of obsolete parts (filters/heavy plow parts etc) (1) Steel tank (previously used to haul water, condition unknown) All Equipment and Vehicles are AS IS WHERE IS Opening Bid Date: Friday, September 30, 2016 Closing Bid Date: Friday, October 14, 2016 Murney Gibson, Staff Mechanic 67 Sharp Road Brighton, Ontario, K0K 1H0 mgibson@brighton.ca – 613-475-1162 x 115

20 words, residen ads only.

FREE! tial

314 CLOSSON RD, RR #1 HILLIER PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8 AT 10:30AM 6 miles north of Wellington on County Rd 2and turn WEST onto Closson Rd for 2 miles TRACTOR, EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS Massey Ferguson 35 diesel tractor- good running condition; Bush Hog 3 pt hitch 5ft rotary mower. Mott 3pt hitch 6ft flail mower. Triple K 3 pt hitch8ft cultivator, 3pt hitch 4′ scraper blade, 3 pt hitch 5 ft single auger snowblower, 2 furrow plow, set of garden discs, Land Pride 2.572 3 pt hitch,6ft finishing mower, 50 US gal. estate sprayer. Yard Works 19hp riding lawnmower. Troy Bilt walk behind grass trimmer. Craftsman rear tine garden tiller, power lawn mowers, back pack sprayers, Poulan chainsaw; garden tools, gas powered grass trimmers, gas powered water pump, Yard Machine power edger. 200 gal. diesel fuel tank with hand pump, cedar rails, quantity of lumber, electric fence supplies, power washer. WOOD WORKING TOOLS Busy Bee 10” table saw, Busy Bee 14” band saw, Mastercraft 36” wood lathe, Ryobi 10” mitre saw, Rockwell Beaver 6” jointer, Hobby drill press, belt sander, hardwood work table, wood working clamps .ATV 2005 Yamaha 350cc Brute 4 x 4 with front mount winch- good running condition. HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS including 12 signed duck decoys, apartment size piano, Royal Doulton figurines, oil lamps, cups and saucers, living room furniture, camping supplies, barn lanterns, electric guitar, Simplicity bar fridge, Danby refrigerator, VEHICLE1998 Chrysler Sebring convertible. 190,000 kms ,e-tested, good running condition; Numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

1-888-967-3237 • 613-966-2034 ext 560

The Municipality of Brighton, Sale of Surplus Equipment and Vehicles

AUCTION SALE MR. CHARLES PALMER

$

Notice

12n3d w.0ee1k

Have an auction coming up? Call to book your ad today! 613-966-2034 ext 501

CLASSIFIEDS

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON Public Works & Development 67 Sharp Road, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0 Tel: 613-475-1162 Fax: 613-475-2599

Call or visit us online to reach over 69,000 potential local buyers. Deadline: Mondays at 2 p.m.

1206 REDNERSVILLE ROAD – CO RD 3 R.R.1 BELLEVILLE, ONT FRIDAY OCTOBER 7TH AT 11:00 AM 5 miles WEST of Belleville Bay Bridge on Rednersville Road. Original antique brass locomotive bell and frame, maples butchers block, antique long box telephone, antique Jacobean side table and mirror, antique oak centre pedestal side table with carved top, antique parlour table, antique high chair, antique spinning wheel,antique nursing rocker, antique school chair, antique wicker chair, antique walnut sewing table , 4 piece wicker sun room furniture, mahogany 4 poster bed, chest of drawers, dresser;walnut 3 drawer chest of drawers, pine coffee and end tables, pine entertainment cupboard, antique pine washstand, oak bar chairs, 2 La-Z-Boy leather chairs, chesterfield, massage table, vintage Coke picnic cooler, European oil painting, Cranberry glass pieces, Aladdin lamp,Royal Doulton figurines, LLadro figurines, doll furniture, 2 McDonald restaurant hi chairs-new; TOOLS King 6″ jointer, King Industrial 10″ table with TRU RIP fence, King 14″ wood cutting band saw, Rigid 13″ thickness planer, Sno King 10 hp portable wood chipper, Toro 4 hp garden tiller, Tanaka gas powered leaf blower, Mercury 5 hp outboard motor, garden tools, wheelbarrow, extension adder, garden statuary, submersible pump, numerous other articles TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

Your ad appears in 4 newspapers plus online!

1402 FISH AND GAME CLUB ROAD R.R.#2 FRANKFORD, ONT. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 5TH AT 11:00 AM 3 miles SOUTH of Stirling on Highway 14 (Stirling – Foxboro Road) and turn WEST onto Fish and Game Club Road for 4 miles. ATV 2009 Polaris Ranger side x side 4 x4 ATV- good running condition; FIREARMS- PAL REQUIRED-SELL AT APPROX 12:30 PM Winchester “Buffalo Bill” lever action 30- 30, Lakefield moss berg 4000 12 ga., Remington 44-40 Model 14 1/2, Remington Model 572 “Field master” 22 pump, stainless steel ammo cabinet, HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS AND COLLECTIBLES – SELL AT 11:00 AM Pine 10 tft dining table, 10 matching hoop back chairs, curved glass china cabinet, flat to the wall display cupboard, antique coffee table, antique drop leaf table, antique trunk, antique oak chest of drawers, antique slat back chairs, white wicker pieces, chaise lounge, leather chair,vintage tricycle, 5 theater seats, signed Mats Sundin Leafs jersey, maple dresser, maple chest of drawers, bedroom furniture, patio furniture, glassware’s,china, lamps, lanterns, camping deep fryer, prints, pictures, children’s toys, numerous other articles TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

Post an ad today!

AUCTION SALE DAVE AND LEONE STEWART

METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

AUCTION SALE AMBER SINE

Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

B17


Rummaging in the forest: A fall field day Have you ever rummaged through your closet and found those favourite, comfy old shoes? When you rummage through your woodlot, you find treasures too. Come to the Fall Forest Field Day in Tamworth (north of Napanee) and see the forest through the eyes of the experts. On Oct. 1, the Ontario Woodlot Association (Quinte and Limestone Chapters) is offering a Saturday morning of forest activity – including field tours and games - in a unique location: the Kennedy Field Station just north of Tamworth on the Salmon River. Everyone is welcome, from 9am to 1pm. What’s in a woodlot? A morning walking tour will examine pine plantations, mixed hardwoods, and the shoreline of the Salmon River with guides discussing tree and plant species, plantation management, and general forest health. The Kingston Field Naturalists will explain a “bio-blitz,” a comprehensive inventory of species, and Friends of the Salmon River will give advice about healthy shorelines. Whatever your question: tree health, invasive species, horse logging, or something else forest-related, come out and talk to the experts. A friendly competition will test your knowledge of species and forest

health; there are rumours of prizes of unbelievable value! A light lunch is provided and there are optional afternoon activities. The Kennedy Field Station is a very distinctive place north of Tamworth at 669 County Road 15. Recently

entrusted to Queen’s University, it is now used as a site for ground water studies. Join us and learn the history of the site and the current Queen’s program. Come and rummage in a splendid forest. Registration is required.

OWA members are free; the cost for non-members is $10 (including lunch). To register, contact Dave at sexsmithd@ gmail.com (613-373-9334), or Susan at susan@moorepartners.ca (613-3795958). Also visit www.ontariowoodlot. com.

This event is the first in an educational series called “The Full Value of Woodlots,” offered by the Ontario Woodlot Association in concert with Friends of the Salmon River and the Lennox & Addington Stewardship Council.

The Kennedy Field Station is a very distinctive place north of Tamworth at 669 County Road 15. Recently entrusted to Queen’s University, it is now used as a site for ground water studies. Submitted photo

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Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016

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Important to know importance of grasslands An Alvar and Grassland Stewardship Workshop took place on Tuesday, September 20 at Roblin Wesleyan Church in Roblin, Ontario, hosted by the Napanee Plain Initiative group. The Workshop was very well attended. About 75 participants learned the relevance of the unique plants and specific wildlife that live in this habitat. Specialists from Wildlife Preservation Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service, Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement, and the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry explained the programs that support alvar and grassland conservation.

Land management for grassland birds (such as the Shrike, Bobolink and Eastern Meadowlark) and provincial grassland initiatives for farmers and landowners were well examined. The field trip was a big hit as everyone explored three local alvar sites in Roblin, Newburgh and Odessa. At Newburgh, this was a good opportunity to view an actual stewardship project – shrike protection - by local landowners. For more information, contact Susan Moore from the Lennox & Addington Stewardship Council at 613-379-5958 or lastewardship@ gmail.com

More than 75 people turned out for a grassland stewardship workshop last Tuesday at Roblin. Submitted photo

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Water crisis to be topic of Oct. 3 Barlow talk Belleville - World-renowned author and activist Maude Barlow will visit Belleville on Monday, October 3rd for a public presentation on “Canada’s Water Crisis”. The event will be held at Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge Street East, at 6:30 p.m. “We are delighted that Maude Barlow is able to bring her depth of knowledge and recent experience as Senior Advisor on Water at the United Nations to a Quinte area audience,” says Dr. Aruna Alexander, President of the Quinte Branch of the United Nations Association in Canada, which is hosting this event. “Seating is limited in the auditorium, so we encourage those interested in attending to reserve tickets (cost is $12) as soon as possible by e-mailing the branch at unac. quintebranc@gmail.com.” The event is presented in partnership with the Council of Canadians Quinte and the Canadian Federation of University Women, Belleville & District. Maude Barlow is the National Chairperson of the Council of Canadians

and chairs the board of Washington-based Food and Water Watch. She is a board member of the San Francisco–based International Forum on Globalization and a Councilor with the Hamburg-based World Future Council. Barlow served as the Senior Advisor on Water to the 63rd President of the United Nations General Assembly and was a leader in the campaign to have water recognized as a human right by the UN. The recipient of fourteen honorary doctorates and many awards, including the 2009 Earth Day Canada Outstanding Environmental Achievement Award, the 2009 Planet in Focus Eco Hero Award, and the 2011 EarthCare Award, the highest international honour of the Sierra Club (US), Maude Barlow is also the author of dozens of reports and eighteen books. Her latest book is entitled “Boiling Point: Government Neglect, Corporate Abuse, and Canada’s Water Crisis.” For more information or to reserve seats, please e-mail unac.quintebranch@ gmail.com.

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Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016 B19


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Come & mingle with us on Sunday, October 16th, 2016 • 10am-3pm National Air Force Museum of Canada - 220 RCAF Road, 8 Wing/CFB Trenton Tickets $12 at the door; $10 in advance, now available at Lily’s Bridal or online at

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PLUS, prior to the runway shows we are pleased to have guest speaker Marian Meade, Certified Couples Coach, speak about ‘Having the relationship of your dreams’. B20

Section B - Thursday, September 29, 2016


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