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The Voice of North Grenville
Vol 8, NO 5
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February 5, 2020
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Campus Master Plan Open House
the Campus. The theme of the Master Plan process is ‘Regeneration Kemptville Campus: Building a campus for future generations in eastern Ontario and beyond’. Public and stakeholder input will help provide direction for the full repurposing and re-envision-
The public is invited to attend an Open House at Kemptville Campus, on Monday evening, February 10, from 5:30 – 8:30 pm. The Open House is part of the Master Plan process currently underway, and an opportunity for the community to have its say in the future direction of
ing of Kemptville Campus for the future. The consulting team led by the planning firm Re:Public Urbanism will facilitate the session. “If you have ideas, thoughts and feelings about the future of Kemptville Campus, please come out and share them,” said Mayor
Mayor and Council Proclaim February 2020 Heritage Month in North Grenville Industry Leader in Diesel Performance Truck and Equipment Maintenance & Repair
heritage. Three items were initiated at the January meeting. The February meeting will bring more into play. The Committee has recommended that Council proceed with the historical rehabilitation of Maplewood Hall in Oxford Mills, as proposed by Hubbard & Co. Another task is completing the architectural descriptions of many of the 17 Kemptville Campus buildings for possible heritage designation. Also, a sub-committee is drafting public criteria for the annual Heritage Awards. When finalized and published, nominations from the community will be invited. Rath-
by Heritage Advisory Committee Members Cam Stevenson, Chair, Michael Whittaker The Heritage Advisory Committee is pleased that Mayor and Council proclaimed February 2020 Heritage Month for the Municipality of North Grenville. The decree promotes public awareness of our history from pre-colonial times to the present deserving commemoration and preservation. To bring focus to our distinct heritage, the Heritage Advisory Committee developed a work plan to champion important elements of North Grenville’s
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er than rush toward an awards’ presentation in February, the 2020 honours will be bestowed later this year. The Heritage Committee is also encouraged by efforts to secure external funding for the rehabilitation of the old Court House (15 Water St., Kemptville). Under the Ontario Heritage Act, Council appointed the Heritage Advisory Committee to advise on matters including architectural, material culture, historical and natural heritage. To serve Council, the committee’s work plan includes, but is not limited to, conservation or restoration initiatives, education,
Nancy Peckford recently. “It’s about better connecting the community to Kemptville Campus and making sure everybody has a chance to be part of that experience” A page on the Campus website has been set up to provide information over the coming weeks. For those who can't make it but want to share their ideas, there is an online survey and comment form available at www.kemptvillecampus.ca/ regen. The Open House will be held at WB George Centre, 48 Shearer St., Kemptville Campus. Opening remarks at 6:30 pm. All welcome. Free admission. and heritage designation of built and natural environments. The Committee has the collective knowledge and expertise to serve Council as mandated, and as required will not hesitate to call on stakeholders, individuals and organizations with essential skills and experience to foster North Grenville’s heritage. As liaisons with the Municipality and Council, staff from Planning and Development attend the monthly meetings. The third Monday of February has been Heritage Day in Canada since 1974. This year, the National Trust for Canada designated February 17 as Heritage Day, and Heritage Week from February 17 to 23 with the theme: “2020 Vision: Bringing the Past into the Future”.
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John Brooks was the lucky winner of our last giveaway. NG Times would like to thank Kemptville Players Inc, Kemptville Youth Musical Theatre, Theatre Night in Merrickville and Dundas County Players for participating. Our next giveaway draw will me a night out at Kemptville Suites with a dinner for two at Salamnders. For more information see details in this issue. We would also like to thank all our subscribers.
Novel Coronavirus is being closely monitored by public health
by the Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit The first Canadian diagnosed with the Wuhan novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) was identified in Toronto on Saturday, January 25. Canadian and provincial health agencies are working closely with public health and hospitals to keep the risk of spread of the virus in Canada at a low level. Residents with a history of recent travel to Wuhan and related areas and who become ill with cough and/or fever should report their travel history to any health professional, or emergency department staff, when they visit. The Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit has been working together with health care agencies in our communities to share information about this virus. Local hospitals have protocols in place for their infection-control practices. The Health Unit’s Communicable diseases team has been in regular contact with hospitals and health care providers regarding measures to detect and test for the disease early and safely. Daily updates are being held internally to manage the situation and teleconferences with health care agencies will continue weekly. The coronavirus in general is a respiratory virus that causes symptoms ranging from a mild cold to pneumonia. The new corona virus 2019-nCoV appears to be capable of causing more severe lung disease as well as mild symptoms. “You have to be in close contact with a person who is sick with 2019 n-CoV virus for a significant length of time to risk being infected with the virus,” says Dr. Paula Stewart, Medical Officer of Health. Members of the public are advised to take the usual measures to reduce the risk of transmission of influenza and other respiratory illnesses, which include: • wash your hands frequently and thoroughly with soap and water or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer; • cover your mouth and nose when you cough or sneeze; • keep frequently touched surfaces clean (i.e., handles, door knobs, arm rests, phones) • if you don’t have a tissue, sneeze or cough into your sleeve or arm; • if you are ill, stay home; and • get a yearly influenza vaccination, available from participating pharmacies. Information is being updated often on our website at www. healthunit.org. For important updates, you can also connect with LGLHealthunit on Facebook and Twitter. 2
John Brooks has started the new year with a new snow sculture in his front garden on VanBuren Street, A great white grizzly bear - have you ever seen a white grizzly?
Seaway Surge to host Provincial Championships
by Dan Piche In exciting local baseball news, the Seaway Surge Baseball Club will be hosting the 2020 and 2021 Ontario Provincial baseball Bantam AA championships. Both tournaments will be played over Labour Day weekend, with games taking place at South Gower Park and Morrisburg Water Front Park. This is great news for the Seaway Surge, but, more importantly, it is exciting for baseball in our communities, as some of the best 15-year-old baseball players in the province will be here competing at a very high level. The Seaway Surge executive first applied for the right to host the tournaments back in the Fall and, in the end, it came down to a choice between the Clarington Orioles and Seaway Surge organizations. "We were thrilled to find out that we had won the application," said Tim Hamilton of the Surge, who spearheaded the application. "This is the first time ever that an Ontario Baseball Association provincial championship is played in the National Capital Region. This is another strong signal from the OBA of their commitment to growth and support for baseball in our region". The Surge are well poised to host the tournament, as the association has been hosting the largest amateur baseball tournament in Canada for a number of years now. In 2019 the Surge welcomed 88 teams over three weekends in July, hosting the Seaway Surge Shootout. "This year we are aiming for 100 teams for the Shootout. Between the Shootout and the Provincial tournament, we will be having over 1,300 families coming through our communities this summer". The Surge are hoping to attract media attention and will be approaching local TV and Radio outlets to help host the event, and this will also be a great opportunity for local companies to sponsor their organizations through outfield fence signage and other areas. "Over the next few weeks, a tournament committee will be organized, as there's a lot of work that goes into hosting an event of this size. But we are thrilled and looking forward to putting on a great show while welcoming people from all over the province to our region".
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The North Grenville Times
The Voice of North Grenville
Looking back: 22 years of the Sweetheart Brunch
by Jim Macmanaman The Sweetheart Brunch has been taking place for twenty two years and myself and Dermid O’Farrell have been involved in it right from the beginning, along with some others. The event is held the Sunday before February 14. This year, it will fall on February 9, but next year it will land right on Valentine’s Day. It used to take place in the Holy Cross church hall, where the most who could be served was from 60 to 90 people. The event used to raise a couple of hundred dollars back then. As the event outgrew the space, it was moved to the big gymnasium at Holy Cross School, which only had a small kitchen, but the Brunch was held there for three or four years. At the time, St Mike’s was being built, and it had a larger kitchen and a bigger space, so the event was moved there for the next four years. When the Municipal Centre was finished, the event was moved there and has been held
there ever since. The room at the Municipal Centre was designed to seat 200 for a dinner event, and we turn over 1,200 people in 3½ hours. The kitchen operates with 5 or 6 coffee urns, 4 or 5 slow cookers for beans, and 5 toasters, all supplied by the Knights of Columbus. Originally, the power in the kitchen could not handle all the electrical demands and we were regularly blowing the breakers. We had to get in four generators, that were donated by First Stop Tool & Equipment Rentals Ltd, to handle it all. One year, we even set off the CO2 alarm. The Municipality has been great. We have worked with them over the years to upgrade their kitchen and everything is powered safely these days. Although the event has kept growing to about 1,200 a year, we’re in pretty good shape, because we have a welloiled machine now. People know their roles and someone is in charge of just about everything. Judy Littau, from Royal LePage, helps to keep us organized. We have 100 to 125 volunteers a year, lots of them students and kids. Our corporate sponsors really help us, because we offer the food at break-even prices. It is the sponsorships that allow us to raise funds for local charities. We hope to get between $20,000 and $25,000
am on the Sunday for the final prep. That’s when I go through a spiel for the volunteers and all the teams, motivating them for the day ahead. I love doing the Sweetheart Brunch, it’s a community event. We enjoy doing the cheque presentations too. This year, $17,000 will be given out in cheque presentations at the Brunch. Another $16,000 or $17,000 will go out after the event, once we see what the surplus is. We don’t wait until the next year to distribute the money. The Knights of Columbus meet ahead of time and vote on how the funds should be awarded. What we are trying to do with this event is create greater awareness, not just of the event, but of the individual charities. Some of these are very small and not very well known, like Victory Time Farm Therapeutic Horse Riding, so they get a little exposure from the people who attend the event and on our Facebook page: KnightsofColumbusKemptville. There is a cheque presentation, a photo, a news piece, and an opportunity to say a few words. Many of the charities receiving cheques are the same from the previous years. We have had nothing but positive comments and hugs. But one person we are really going to miss this year is Pat Maloney. This Brunch will be in his memory.
a year from our sponsors, with any money we make going out into the community. We can’t really grow beyond the current facility; but 99.99% of the people who come “get it”, and are happy to line up for a good cause. This year, the Ontario Knights of Columbus have adopted the Coats for Kids campaign, the aim of which is to provide good quality coats to those who need them during the year. The goal is to supply 10,000 coats in Ontario over the next two to three years. So, we have ordered many cases of coats in various colours and sizes. They’re available now on our Facebook page which has lots of followers. We are going to set up a big coat rack so that people waiting in line can see the Coats for Kids. There will also be a 50/50 draw, carnations in memory of Harry Pratt, and other draws for tickets by the Knights of Columbus for the Arthritis Society’s raffle. The Mayor also asked us if the Municipality could set up a table for the Expand 43 campaign, and so people will also have the chance to sign a petition if they wish. It’s a fun event, and tiring as heck. We will be pre-prepping on the Saturday before, bringing in all the equipment, getting the kitchen all set up, setting the tables, and decorating. We will come back at 7:00
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Guest Editorial
The North Grenville Times
The Voice of North Grenville
We can do better by Hilary Thomson Friday was a sad day for North Grenville. Early in the day, a photo was circulated online showcasing a poster that a female student at St. Michael Catholic High School made to ask her boyfriend to prom. Called a “promposal”, this trend, made popular by social media, has been taking high schools by storm over the past several years, as boys and girls try and find unique ways to ask a potential date to the traditional end of high school celebration. The typical promposal often involves a poster with a cheesy pun, but some teens across Canada have gone as far as posing the question with large letters written in the snow, on a Tim Hortons doughnut bag, and even written on the side of a cow. While you might call some
of these grand gestures a bit outrageous and silly, they are generally harmless. Just a little bit of fun for these soonto-be-graduates at the end of their high school career. Unfortunately, the poster circulated on social media turned what is supposed to be a light, fun and romantic gesture into a racist nightmare. To ask her boyfriend to prom the student wrote: “If I was black I’d be picking cotton but I’m white so I am picking you for prom.” This, written on a black bristol board surrounded by white cotton balls. What made it even worse was that the students decided to post a photo of them holding the sign on social media, grinning from ear to ear. The original post spread like wildfire over social media, garnering almost 100 comments throughout the day. The general consensus was outrage that a local student could even think that this was
an appropriate joke to make, others implored the public to leave them alone because they were “just kids.” When CTV News picked up the story, the students submitted a comment to them saying that they were sorry for taking a picture with the inappropriate sign, and that they recognized the act was wrong. “We apologize to anyone that it has offended and feel deeply and truly sorry for our actions,” they wrote. “We hope to be able to move on from this in our lives.” St. Mike’s also issued a statement stating that they do not support, tolerate, or condone any act of racism, and that they are responding to the incident. “The school board has policies, procedures and programs in place which layout a definitive course of action in such situations.” Regardless of their apology, the fact that this act of racism occurred in this com-
munity in 2020 is shocking. Especially at the hands of our youth. While, compared to many, I haven’t been living and working in Kemptville for very long, I have heard that it has become a much more tolerant community than it was in the past. A great example of this is last year’s Pride parade, a first in North Grenville, which drew about 1,000 people into the downtown core to celebrate love in all forms. If that’s not the marker of a progressive and welcoming community, I don’t know what is. Until now, I haven’t witnessed such a blatant display of racism in this community since I moved here. Granted I am a young Caucasian woman, and I understand the privilege that comes with that. I have never experienced discrimination when I walked into a room, no matter where I was.
local quarries. The reality is that we all use aggregate. Every one of us, including Mr. Bertram – when he gets up and brushes his teeth (toothpaste), looks out the window (glass) of his house (bricks, mortar, foundation, paint), drives to work (roads) or goes shopping (buildings). Stone, sand and gravel (or aggregate) is the basic building material of modern society. But why in my community? The smartest, most environmentally responsible consideration when mining for stone, sand or gravel is to ensure that the gravel pit is located as close to market as possible to eliminate as many of the greenhouse gases as possible from shipping the product. And that’s not easy. Aggregate only exists where nature put it – so the location of potential aggregate pits and quarries is governed primarily by geology. We must work together. Ontario’s aggregate industry is one of the province’s most heavily regulated industries. Twenty-five different pieces of legislation and hundreds of regulations determine where, when and how stone, sand
and gravel is extracted. Aggregate is a clean industry and aggregate operators are professional stewards of the land. The industry employs hundreds of environmentalists, from hydrogeologists to species at risk specialists, biologists, ecologists and more whose focus is to protect Ontario’s environment. It is important we recognize that the aggregate industry is not the enemy. We are a responsible, conscientious industry supplying a vital raw material that builds Ontario – that you, the reader of this article, use every day. To find out more about the stone, sand and gravel industry, I invite you to visit gravelfacts.ca. Regards, Norm Cheesman, Executive Director Ontario Stone, Sand & Gravel Association
Letter to the Editor Dear Editor, Respect your neighbours, slow down! I’ve lived in Kemptville for the last 5 years. When we first moved here, the streets were safe and quiet. Kemptville has since grown tremendously and since then, things have changed. I’ve noticed more speed limit signs going up in neighbourhoods because of all the cars speeding up and down the streets. I’d like people to remember when they are driving down the street, that they are driving through a neighbourhood where people are sleeping, kids are playing, and people walking. I don’t think they would appreciate loud cars speeding by in their neighbourhood. We recently had a baby who can’t even sleep with two noise machines because of all the loud speeding cars and snowmobiles all day and all night. When our baby grows up, I’d like her to be able to cross the street without worrying about all of the speeding cars. From one Kemptville resident to another, please respect other neighbourhoods and keep them safe and quiet. Please
Slow down. Sincerely, A Kemptville Mom Dear Editor, I am writing today in response to an article that appeared on January 15 called Aggregate Wars Return. In this piece, Jim Bertram puts forward information that is misleading and OSSGA would like to correct the record. In his article, Mr. Bertram states a falsehood that aggregate extraction is harmful to water. This is untrue. Quarries and pits that operate below the water table are required by law to mitigate impacts of nearby sensitive features – such as wells, streams and wetlands. No chemicals are involved in the extraction or processing of aggregate materials. It is not correct to imply that residents are put at risk, either from any type of contamination or the quantity of water available in their local wells. The “war” this headline refers to, is the repeated misinformation perpetuated by groups which are opposed to
The North Grenville Times is published weekly by North Grenville Times Inc. Marketing Gord J. Logan gord@ngtimes.ca 613-258-6402 February 5, 2020
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als and ideas out of nowhere. It is not unlikely that her parents knew what she was doing, but didn’t care enough to tell her how inappropriate and discriminatory it was. It may have been an act of ignorance, but the fact remains that it was a racist statement that should not have a place in our schools or society in general. It is too bad, but also necessary, that this has been spread so widely online. It is unfortunate that our community is getting negative publicity because of the senseless act of two teenagers. At the same time, I am glad that it is getting this media attention, because it is holding them accountable for their actions. This type of racism should not be tolerated in this community. North Grenville may be much more tolerant than it used to be, but we obviously still have a long way to go when it comes to creating a community that is safe for anyone, regardless of sexual orientation, race, or ethnicity. Let’s take this as a serious learning experience to do better.
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That being said, I have been working as a reporter in this community since 2015, and have written stories about many people from other countries being welcomed to the municipality. The work of Refugees in North Grenville comes to mind, a group which brought two Syrian families to the area and helped them make the municipality their home. Another recently formed sponsorship group, called Open Arms, welcomed an Iranian man late last year and, when I interviewed him, he said he felt nothing but welcome in North Grenville. There will always be people in a community who are scared or intolerant of people they think are different than them. But it was my impression that these people were few and far between. With this blatant act of racism, it makes me think that we have a bigger problem in this community than I realized. Because, let’s be clear, the fact that the student who made the sign didn’t think her statement was an issue, is a big problem. Someone that young doesn’t get those mor-
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Municipality Matters
The North Grenville Times
The Voice of North Grenville
Building Community: North Grenville’s Way
by Councillor Kristin Strackerjan The Kemptville District Hospital Board reaffirms its mission of Building Healthier Communities at every meeting. This re-affirmation is often personal and means something different to everyone. At the last meeting, it was my turn. I took the opportunity to reflect upon my experience on Council, perhaps because I am approaching my first full year as part of this dynamic group, but primarily because I am proud of the work that we have done to build
a stronger community in North Grenville. As my daughter explained: “Neighbourhoods are where people live, and communities are built when people come together to support each other.” Your current NG Municipal Council continues to spend a significant amount of time on communitybuilding initiatives, such as the monthly Discussion Forum gatherings. These opportunities are open to all, and offer time to engage with residents in our community, to allow individuals to be heard, and to exchange information on almost any topic. We have yet to run out of topics to discuss! These gatherings have been well-attended and have laid the foundation of engaged and informed residents. Individual engagement is the investment needed to grow positive, inclusive communities. In addition to the Discussion Forums, the eight Advisory Committees of Council are made-up of NG residents
North Grenville continues to seek Federal Funding for CR43 Expansion The Municipality of North Grenville continues to amplify its efforts to secure federal funding approval for the proposed crucial expansion and safety upgrades to County Road 43 (CR43). “Since the public campaign launched in November, we have received tremendous support from business leaders and residents in the community,” said Mayor Nancy Peckford. “Our vision for the expansion of Country Road 43 is a four-lane Boulevard to improve traffic flow, increase safety, and allow for more active modes of travel for pedestrians and cyclists. “North Grenville is actively waiting with the United Counties to ensure that federal Ministry officials and the Minister of Rural Economic Development, the Honourable Maryam Monsef understand the urgency of this funding application,” added Mayor Peckford. Residents are encouraged to sign the Parliamentary Petition in support of the crucial expansion. The petition is available at the North Grenville Municipal Centre and the Public Library, as well as numerous businesses including Jonsson’s Independent, Saltastic, The Dance Workshop and To Be Continued. The petition is also available online at www.Expand43.ca. Businesses who would like to display the petition or window decal can send an email to expand43@northgrenville.on.ca with their request. If successful, this phase of the CR43 Expansion Project will expand approximately 1.15 km of existing roadway to a four-lane Boulevard through the main part of Kemptville, including improved lighting to increase safety and better service active modes of travel for pedestrians and cyclists. The full project will expand approximately 3.1 km of existing roadway to four-lanes, from Colonnade Mall through Kemptville to Somerville Road, and include the twinning of the existing bridge across Kemptville Creek. The total estimated cost of the full expansion of Country Road 43 is $27 Million. The County has committed to securing the remainder of the balance of the project. February 5, 2020
ing a space for residents to gather, these greenhouses represent inclusiveness and community-building. They are but one example in our amazing community. Your Council is driven to support, encourage and facilitate positive community engagement. Ideas planted by residents have a greater chance of growing into strong, sustainable solutions. Please don’t forget that ideas, much like plants, need ‘food’ to grow – so please get out and meet your neighbours, find out what their experiences are and communicate your own. You might learn something new and start a community of your own. Long-time residents, newcomers to North Grenville or Canada; francophone or not; kids, youth and adults; ruralite or urbanite… There is a place for everyone in North Grenville. Let’s come together more often to celebrate what we have, explore our differences and find new ways to support each other.
who volunteer their time and energy. They are driving a groundswell of creative, grassroots suggestions for Council to consider supporting. All of these committees are focused on making North Grenville better, stronger and healthier, while ensuring that it maintains the historical foundation and rural way which make this ‘house’ a ‘home’. Local and grass-roots initiatives are blossoming, even on these cold and dark winter days. The re-opening of the Kemptville Campus greenhouses was a beautiful example of this growth. Grass-roots and volunteerdriven, the efforts underway in the beautiful, sunny and warm greenhouses are about so much more than maintaining the plants of vacationing residents. This space will offer those who feel the winter blues a chance to escape, refresh and re-energize. Local artists have also seized the opportunity to gather in this welcoming space. From wintering plants, to offering workshops, to giv-
OPP smash major drug ring
Several residents from across Ontario, including the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), East Region (Ottawa, Smiths Falls, Perth and Kingston) and one in Quebec are facing numerous charges under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA), Criminal Code of Canada and the Cannabis Act after a complex investigation concludes. The Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) Organized Crime Enforcement Bureau (OCEB) began this nine-month investigation with the objective to strategically target key facilitators that supply illegal commodities to organized crime and drug distribution networks within our communities. Targets included drug traffickers who were significantly compromising public safety in communities throughout Ontario and into Quebec. These high-level targets included members linked to Traditional Organized Crime (TOC), Ottawa-based organized crime groups and other previously known organized crime groups, who distributed drugs to mid-level drug dealers and street gangs. At a news conference last Thursday, OCEB Director Superintendent Bryan MacKillop and OCEB Major Case Manager Detective Inspector Peter Donnelly unveiled details of
the investigation and a display of the evidence seized during the investigation. On January 22, 2020, police executed two warrants in Stoney Creek and Burlington, and an additional six warrants on January 23, 2020, in Ottawa, Carleton Place, Smiths Falls, Perth and Gatineau, QC. Members of the Emergency Response Team (ERT) and Tactics and Rescue Unit (TRU) assisted with the execution of the search warrants in Ontario, and Service de police de la Ville de Gatineau (SPVG) assisted with the execution of a warrant at a location in Gatineau, Quebec. During the course of the in-
UPDATE UPDATE UPCOMING MEETINGS COUNCIL Tuesday, February 18 at 6:30 pm in the Council Chambers at the Municipal Centre COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE (Budget Meeting) Tuesday, February 11 at 6:30 pm in the Council Chambers at the Municipal Centre. **NOTE: Council and Committee of the Whole meetings are live streamed and archived on the Municipal website. Agendas for upcoming meetings are published on the Friday prior to the meeting and minutes are posted after they are approved. Visit www.northgrenville.ca and click on Agendas, Minutes & Video in the Govern tab. COMMITTEE & PUBLIC MEETINGS Agriculture & Rural Affairs Advisory Committee – Tuesday, February 11 at 4:15 pm at the Municipal Centre Special Committee of the Whole – Wednesday, February 12 at 2:30 pm at the Municipal Centre Public Meeting – Proposed Zoning Amendment – Wednesday, February 12 at 6:30 pm at the Municipal Centre Arts & Culture Advisory Committee – Thursday, February 13 at 4:00 pm at the Municipal Centre
BUDGET MEETING
February 6 – Public Open House, Community Hall, Bishops Mills, 6–8 pm
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Summer Students
The Municipality of North Grenville is accepting resumes from interested and qualified candidates for summer student positions in the Engineering Department and the Parks, Recreation & Culture Department The closing date to receive applications is 4:00 pm on Friday, March 27, 2020. Information is available at www.northgrenville.ca/careers.
The Municipality of North Grenville
285 County Rd. 44, PO Box 130, Kemptville, ON K0G 1J0 Tel: 613-258-9569 Fax: 613-258-9620 general@northgrenville.on.ca Building: 613-258-9569 x130 Fax: 613-258-1441 Fire Services Info: 613-258-9569 x201 Fax: 613-258-1031 By-Law Services: 613-258-9569 x204 Police Administration: 613-258-3441 Animal Control: 613-862-9002
www.NorthGrenville.ca vestigation, the team combined to seize 8.5 kg of cocaine, 9 kg of methamphetamine, 4 kg of ecstasy, more than 100 pounds of cannabis, 8.5 kg cannabis concentrates and $30,000 in Canadian currency. Twelve people have been charged with 81 offences. The accused were held in custody upon arrest and are expected to appear at an Ontario Court of Justice in various locations on various dates. The investigation continues.
"Project DAYTONA is an intelligence-driven investigation into multiple drug trafficking networks that have had a negative impact on our communities. Whether directly part of a criminal organization or involved in facilitating their criminality, the people involved in this investigation were influential and compromised public safety." OPP Superintendent Bryan MacKILLOP - Director, Organized Crime Enforcement Bureau.
11 High Cost Home Inspection Traps You Should Know About Weeks Before Listing Your Kemptville Home for Sale
Kemptville - According to industry experts, there are over 33 physical problems that will come under scrutiny during a home inspection when your home is for sale. A new report has been prepared which identifies the eleven most common of these problems, and what you should know about them before you list your home for sale. Whether you own an old home or a brand new one, there are a number of things that can fall short of requirements during a home inspection. If not identified and dealt with, any of these 11 items could cost you dearly in terms of repair. That's why it's critical that you read this report before you list your home. If you wait until the building inspector flags these issues for you, you will almost certainly experience
costly delays in the close of your home sale or, worse, turn prospective buyers away altogether. In most cases, you can make a reasonable pre-inspection yourself if you know what you're looking for, and knowing what you're looking for can help you prevent little problems from growing into costly and unmanageable ones. To help homesellers deal with this issue before their homes are listed, a free report entitled "11 Things You Need to Know to Pass Your Home Inspection" has been compiled which explains the issues involved. To order a FREE Special Report, visit www. PassYourInspections.com Get your free special report NOW to learn how to ensure a home inspection doesn't cost you the sale of your home.
This report is courtesy of Angelika Rosato, Broker, Direct: 613-720-4888 Sutton Group-Ottawa Realty (2008) Ltd., Brokerage. Not intended to solicit buyers or sellers currently under contract. Copyright © 2019
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United Counties Council meeting report
The highlights of the regular United Counties of Leeds and Grenville Council Meeting held on Thursday, January 23rd and a special Committee of the Whole meeting are listed below. Major road projects this year will include paved shoulders: Counties Council has unanimously endorsed paved shoulders on all major capital road projects beginning this year. The Counties Asset Management Plan will also be updated to include paved shoulders on major capital road projects. Over the last few years, there have been several requests for paved shoulders from the public,
elected officials, and other stakeholders. Paved shoulders have recently been included for major capital projects on County Road 2 and County Road 10. Counties Council has asked staff to report back on the implications of paved shoulders in order to provide a consistent approach to future projects and development of a policy. A report from Public Works noted the department will continue to monitor the benefits of paved shoulders, including increased safety, financial, economic development, and active transportation benefits. A new policy is being developed and should
be final by spring or early summer. Paved shoulders are 1.5-metres in width. Funding for a review of regional fire services: Counties Council has asked staff to proceed with a Request For Proposal (RFP) for a regional fire services review after receiving Municipal Modernization Program funding from the Province. The Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing is providing up to $120,000 toward the joint project for the cost of an independent third-party reviewer to deliver a final report by June 30, 2020. Minister Steve Clark announced the funding in a January 20 letter sent to
the Counties and all Leeds Grenville member and separated municipalities. The intent is to ensure all local fire departments and fire chiefs are involved and consulted. The City of Brockville, and Towns of Gananoque and Prescott, will be asked if they wish to be part of the review. There is no cost if consulting fees are under $120,000. Investigating a strategic Leeds Grenville fire service, including a Counties-wide fire service, was discussed in 2018. At that time, a consultant was hired and a CAOs’ workshop was held involving 10 member municipalities. There was a
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consensus on completing a collective Community Risk Assessment and Professional Qualifications and Standards Assessments, both required by legislation, transparent communications between stakeholders, and a Services and Program Review. A Services and Program Review could identify opportunities to improve efficiencies and effectiveness. Budget recommended by Committee of Whole: The Committee of the Whole has recommended the approval of the 2020 budget. The levy requirement is increasing $1,268,141, but due to assessment growth and the phase-in of assessment increases, this will translate into a 0.33% tax rate decrease. The median value of a residential home this year is
$221,000, with a Counties tax total of $817. In 2019, the median home value was $218,250 with a tax level of $809. Council is expected to pass the budget at the next council meeting on February 19. Upcoming meetings: The Committee of the Whole meeting is on Tuesday, February 4 and the Joint Services Committee Wednesday, February 5. The February Council meeting scheduled for Thursday, February 20has been rescheduled to Wednesday, February 19. All regular meetings begin at 9 a.m. in the Council Chambers at 25 Central Avenue, Brockville. For more information, contact County Clerk Lesley Todd at 613-342-3840, ext. 2454.
Downtown Digest for February by Deron Johnston Small towns are built by volunteers. Not only are they built by them, but they’re also maintained and grown by them. Community development in rural areas is simply not possible without volunteers. Small towns typically don’t have the financial resources to offer the same variety of services that are offered by much larger centres. This is where community organizations run by volunteers step in and provide these services, sometimes even essential ones. The Old Town Kemptville Business Improvement Area (BIA) is no exception. The BIA relies heavily on its volunteers who make up our Board of Management, which makes all of the major decisions for the BIA. The Events Committee (which plans and organizes all events and promotions in the downtown), the Executive Committee, and the Expansion Steering Committee, are also comprised of volunteers (some of whom have no direct relationship to the downtown). Some volunteers often sit on multiple committees, meaning they make a significant commitment of their personal time to support the business and property owners of the downtown. This past year, the BIA lost four key volunteers from our Board of Management. All of them made considerable contributions in their own ways to the BIA during their time. Though they are February 5, 2020
no longer on the board, they all keep very close contact with the BIA and are all ready to offer their support whenever needed. Lee McIlvenna, coowner of Geronimo Coffee House, brought a practical and analytical voice to the table during his time. He often challenged ideas that were incomplete, and regularly asked how something was going to benefit our small business owners. His advocacy for his fellow business owners was widely respected and appreciated at the board table. We wish Lee and his wife Teri the absolute best as they move on to the next part of their lives in a couple of months. Connie Lamble, of the Law Office of Connie Lamble, was a constant voice of reason, and often gave solid advice to the board, including from a legal and liability perspective. She was also a passionate chair of the former Parking Committee that made a number of recommendations to enhance parking options in the downtown. This work resulted in more signage and additional parking spaces being added in the downtown area. Connie still regularly contributes to the BIA through participation in events and promotions, and willingly offers a legal opinion for the board when asked. Kim Smalridge of Stepping Stone Pediatric Physical Therapy was our Vice-Chair of the Board for the past two years. Kim often pushed
the board towards continuous improvement by asking tough questions about the activities of the board, if she felt they could be improved, or would question if certain things were even necessary for the board to do, based on its mandate and commitments to its members. Though she doesn’t have a business with traditional office hours, Kim is always supportive of, and participates in, BIA events and promotions. Paul Cormier stepped down earlier in 2019 after serving a full term on the Board of Management during the term of office of the previous municipal council. Paul held the positions of both Chair and Secretary, spanning five years. Paul’s background, with his company RANA Process, was
instrumental in the previous term of the board, as he took on the onerous task of updating all of the board’s governance and bylaw. Paul had high expectations of the board and its members, but was always the first one to offer support to anyone who was having difficulties. Paul’s leadership was essential in putting the BIA in the healthy position that it is today. Though these four volunteers may have left the board, and their mark on the BIA, we have been very fortunate to have new volunteers step forward who are knowledgeable, passionate, and eager to bring their own skills and experiences to the board and help it continue to build a sustainable path forward for the BIA in the years to come.
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Beat the Winter Bluess at the Kemptville Legion
Ambush Show February 29, 2020
8pm-12am Doors open at 7pm.
Time’s up on Bell Let’s Talk by Hilary Thomson Last week, Bell Canada held their 10th annual “Bell Let’s Talk Day”. It’s a day when the telecom giant encourages people, online and through phone calls and texts, to open up and start the conversation about mental health. They also donate five cents per call/text/tweet/view to mental health initiatives across Canada. I know, I know. I am late to the party. But there is a good reason for it. This year, I didn’t participate. I didn’t write a vulnerable post on my Facebook page, or share my story over Instagram. I didn’t use the hashtag, view any of the videos, or play around
with any of their social media filters. It’s not because I don’t think mental health is important. In fact, it is something that I am very passionate about. I’ve struggled with my mental health throughout my life, and I know how hard it is to speak up and ask for help. I support the conversation and I am always here to listen or provide support, at any time of year. When Bell first launched the campaign a decade ago, it was an innovative marketing coup that may have actually done some good. It got people talking about mental health, which was still a pretty taboo subject at the time. The initiative has also raised over
comes “cool” one day a year. And let’s be clear on another thing. Talk is cheap. Our mental healthcare system is severely lacking, and that hasn’t changed much over the past ten years. Earlier this month, there was an in-depth article in the Globe and Mail about the serious lack of psychiatrists in the country. It stated that half of all Canadians live in parts of the country where the number of psychiatrists per person falls below the ratio recommended by the Canadian Psychiatric Association, and that 2.3 million Canadians live in areas with no permanent psychiatrist at all. This is in-excusable for a speciality that should be one of the front lines in fighting mental illness; yet they are notoriously difficult to access, even in large urban centres. Not only is getting the proper care difficult in Canada, it is also very expensive. An hourly session with a psychologist can run anywhere
$100,000,000 over the past ten years for mental health initiatives across Canada. Nothing overtly wrong with that. However, I think the whole campaign has turned into a superficial fix to a truly deep seated problem in our healthcare system. One day a year, Bell has made it trendy to open up about mental health issues. It’s the popular thing to do now, create a heartfelt post about your struggles with mental illness, and share it on the internet with thousands of your closest friends, along with #BellLet’sTalk. It’s kind of ironic that something as horrible and debilitating as mental illness suddenly be-
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from $125-$255 a session, which is out of reach for many people seeking help. Some larger companies offer benefits that cover a certain amount of psychological services; however, it usually only amounts to a couple sessions, hardly enough to help a person struggling with their mental health. There is no quick fix for mental illness, it is often a lifelong battle that needs specific professional care long-term. A few sessions with a counsellor isn’t going to do it for most people. And then there is the money argument. How can you say that Bell’s Let’s Talk hasn’t done anything, when it has contributed millions of dollars to mental health initiatives across the country over the past ten years? Here’s the thing. Money is great, but it doesn’t fix all things. If you are funneling money into a broken system, then all it is going to do is fund inefficient services. Until we have a
process that follows a patient from the initial consult with their family doctor, through a system that supports them, makes them feel heard, and addresses their issues at their core, money isn’t going to cut it. We need a complete system overhaul, starting from the ground up. It is safe to say that I am disillusioned by the whole Bell Let’s Talk movement. It’s a sparkly band aid on a severely broken bone. It may shed some light on the issue one day a year, but, even after ten years, people still aren’t getting the help they desperately need and deserve. The Bell Let’s Talk campaign has run its course. It’s time that we stop buying into Bell’s marketing strategy and start seriously investing time, energy, and money into creating a mental healthcare system that supports people in need across the country. It’s been a decade of talk. Let’s finally see some action.
Road Safety Public Awareness Campaign Launched
1. Experienced and knowledgeable in Residential, Land Developments, Agriculture, Industrial and Commercial, with over 36 years of sales and listings throughout Eastern Ontario. 2. Won several major real estate sales performance awards 3. Community leader in both Kemptville and Merrickville Lions Clubs, and honoured with the Melvin Jones Fellowship Award for Humanitarian Services. 4. Involved in several annual community events 5. Church member for 49 years. 6. Dedicated to his Bride Donna for 49 years. 7. Living locally recognizing the needs of your communities. 8. Residing near Merrickville on a ecofriendly off grid property with his Bride, spending spare time gardening and watching the wildlife. 9. Two professional children living locally, with two loving grandchildren.
A road safety public awareness campaign has been launched to promote safe driving behaviours and make roads in North Grenville safer for all users. The North Grenville Road Safety Committee was formed in November, 2019, to develop this campaign. The Committee was facilitated by the North Grenville Police Services Board, and is comprised of the Municipality of North Grenville, the Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit, the Grenville County Ontario Provincial Police, and the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville. This year-long campaign will feature a different road safety topic each month, such as distracted driving, school bus safety, pedestrian crossovers, and driving without wearing a seatbelt. The theme for January is driving for win-
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ter conditions. “Road safety is a top priority for Council, and we are thrilled to support this public awareness campaign that will focus on key road safety themes specific to our community, and ultimately help to reduce collisions on roads,” said Mayor Nancy Peckford. “As one of the fastest growing communities in Eastern Ontario, we want to reinforce road safety topics that are pertinent to the Municipality of North Grenville.” “While the campaign is aimed at all road users, it is especially targeted at drivers – to change their behaviour and make the roads safer,” stated Constable John-Keith Small, Grenville County Traffic Management Officer. “Road safety is the responsibility of all of us as drivers, passengers, pedestrians, wheelers, and cyclists. Together we
can ensure people get to their destination safely and avoid injuries and potentially death,” said Dr. Paula Stewart, Medical Officer of Health at The Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit. The public awareness campaign will include social media ads, newspaper ads, videos, and radio promotion. Community Stakeholders will also be encouraged to share the information with their networks. This year-long education campaign is part of a broader Road Safety Strategy being developed by the Municipality. For more details on the campaign visit the webpage at www.northgrenville.ca/roadsafety.
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Ottawa Citizen reaches 175 years
Robert Bell, owner of the Ottawa Citizen, 1849-1865. Courtesy of The Association of Ontario Land Surveyors Archives by David Shanahan The announcement last week by Mayor Jim Watson of Ottawa that he would be presenting the Ottawa Citizen newspaper with the Key to the City in acknowledgement of 175 years of publishing history may not seem to have much relevance for North Grenville, unless, of course, you’re a regular reader of that publication. But there is, in fact, quite a strong link to this community.
The newspaper was founded in 1845, and was originally known as The Packet. Just four years later, it was purchased by Robert Bell, of Kemptville, who renamed it the Ottawa Citizen in 1851. Bell was born in 1821 in Strabane, Ireland, and emigrated with his parents to Oxford-on-Rideau in the 1820's. He attended local schools and then apprenticed with Francis Jones, a Provincial Land Surveyor who had been a school teacher in Oxford for many years. On 16 June 1843, Robert himself qualified as a Provincial Land Surveyor, and moved to Ottawa (then Bytown) to pursue a career in surveying. Around the time he bought The Packet, Robert became involved in railway construction projects, promoting the building of a railway from Bytown to Prescott, where it would connect with the railway at Ogdensburg, New York. Ottawa valley lumbermen would thus be provided with easier means of transport to the increasingly important
American market. Robert become secretary of the provisional committee of the Bytown and Prescott Railway (later the Ottawa and Prescott Railway) in 1850, with funds raised, in part, from businessmen in the Kemptville area. It is said that Robert Bell, more than anyone else, was responsible for overseeing the completion of the line and he was president of the company for many years. The railway reached Bedell Station (for Kemptville) from Prescott in August, 1854, bringing with it the first printing press to be established in North Grenville. Robert ran for an Assembly seat for Ottawa and had a somewhat controversial career, as he supported equal educational rights for Catholics, in spite of being a Presbyterian. He also supported the choice of Ottawa as the new capital of the Dominion of Canada in 1867. Confederation marked the turning point in Robert’s fortunes. He was defeated in an attempt to win a seat in Par-
liament in 1867. He had sold the Ottawa Citizen in 1865, and the Bytown and Prescott Railway Company went into receivership that same year. In 1868, his wife died, and he withdrew completely from public life, going to live with his daughter in Hull, where he died in 1873 at the early age of 52. So, the awarding of the Keys to the City of Ottawa to the Citizen should also include some recognition of the local boy who had such an important part to play in the early years of the Citizen, even in giving it its present title. “This award will be presented to the Ottawa Citizen in recognition of your extraordinary accomplishments in sharing news and information in Canada’s capital for 175 years,” Mayor Jim Watson said. A nod of appreciation to Robert Bell, then, from his community.
February 5, 2020
the “monomorphic leadback” populations of the Redback Salamander, Plethodon cinereus. “Redbacks” come in two colour phases, with reddish backs or lead-coloured backs, and most populations include both forms, with the proportion of redbacks increasing in colder climates, and declining through the 20th Century with climatic warming. Populations are mixed on the Frontenac Arch west of the Rideau Canal, in Quebec, in New York State, and even on islands in the Ottawa and St-Lawrence Rivers, but elsewhere in Eastern Ontario, only the leadback form is found. In 1979 we spent a good portion of our field effort looking for Salamanders in what’s now North Grenville, and found only Plethodon. While all we found were leadbacks, there were only 19 of them in the entire summer: as many as one might find in an hour in woods along the Ottawa or StLawrence rivers. We surmised that these low populations might be due to extensive historical ploughing, grazing, and deforestation of the land, so that ploughed or cattletrampled clay soils might have lost the natural holes which would allow Salamanders to get below the winter frostline. This idea was supported when we found Yellow-spotted Salamanders in the nowAgroforestry sugar bush of the
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Salamander Certification by Fred Schueler & Aleta Karstad, Fragile Inheritance Natural History The Kemptville Campus Education and Community Centre has recently announced that the Campus forests have achieved Forest Stewardship Council (FSC®) Certification through the Eastern Ontario Model Forest’s Forest Certification Program. The announcement was made without reference to the important Amphibian populations which inhabit these woods. When forest certification was first discussed in the early 1990s, some us suggested that the abundance and diversity of Salamanders, the dominant forest floor vertebrate animals, should make a major contribution to calculations of forest health, in the same way that entomologists suggested that the abundance and diversity of Carabid Ground Beetles could be used. Forest certification went its own way, however, focusing on activities and concerns that were more familiar to foresters, and the biodiversity concerns in most certification schedules are species at risk, rather than taxonomic groups of forest specialists. Our first summer in what’s now North Grenville was 1979, and one of our major interests was the Salamander populations in the area. We were especially interested in
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Kemptville Campus in 1980, and then, in 1981, on an area of sandy knolls along Cooper Road, near Limerick Forest. In the next few years, we saw this species again in the Campus sugar bush, our colleague Eric Snyder found it there in the early 2000s, and there’s a 2018 record from somewhere nearby in the Ontario Amphibian and Reptile Atlas. Yellow-spotted Salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) are abundant on the Canadian Shield, but found only very sporadically on the Eastern Ontario limestone plains. In that first 1980 visit we also found a Blue-spotted Ambystoma, and 12 leadback Plethodon, two thirds as many as we’d found elsewhere in the entire previous summer. In the early 2000s, Eric Snyder also found a Red-spotted Newt (Notophthalmus viridescens) in the Campus sugar bush, so that all the terrestrial Eastern Ontario Salamanders (except the Four-toed, which requires Sphagnum bogs for breeding) have been found there. Other Amphibians and reptiles we’ve seen in the Campus forests include a few Painted Turtles on Bedell Road, and numerous Garter Snakes. Since 1992, at our auditory listening station just southwest of the sugarbush, we’ve regularly heard Spring Peepers, Grey Treefrogs, American Toads, Wood Frogs, Leopard Frogs, Green
Frogs, and Bull Frogs; and in 1992 and 1993 we heard the declining Great Lakes-StLawrence Chorus Frog. All of these records are available from the Ontario Amphibian and Reptile Atlas. So, we have data to affirm a Salamander Certification of the Campus forest, and, after having neglected the site in recent years, we’ll try to again see all the Salamander species in 2020. Management recommendations for Salamanders include care of spring breeding ponds and retention of coarse woody debris. Any one, or any school, who would like to work with us in observing these forest creatures can contact Fred at bckcdb@istar. ca, or Aleta at karstad@pinicola.ca, or (613)299-3107.
Yellow-spotted Salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) Joe Crowley photo from Ontario Amphibian and Reptile Atlas
Redback Salamanders (Plethodon cinereus), leadback and redback forms. Scott Gillingwater photo from Ontario Amphibian and Reptile Atlas
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That special day that celebrates our love for each other is just around the corner! Just another opportunity to add some extra blessings to our family’s day. Valentine’s Day isn’t just for sweethearts, it can be for families too! Celebrate by having a special night out, no cooking, or have a meal catered in your home’s cosy atmosphere.
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Property owners fight back against new wetland designation by Hilary Thomson A few property owners in Merrickville-Wolford have been affected by a new Provincially Significant Wetland (PSW) designation in the municipality. Both John Miner and Paul Matteau own property in the north east quadrant of the Village where the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) has deemed over 600 acres as PSW. The problem is that both residents say there is no wetland on their properties. Paul says his land has undergone significant changes over the years. According to aerial photos, the now-PSW was previously a hardwood forest. When he purchased the property in 1984 there was an active colony of beavers living on it, which had caused a lot of flooding, killing trees and making it look like a wetland. Paul hired trappers to get rid of the beavers and, since then, the property has dried up, except for the spring run off. John has a similar concern, which he stated in a letter to Merrickville-Wolford council last week. “I have a seasonal Dale’s creek that
passes through my property, but I do not have any wetland,” he wrote. “The creek normally is bone dry from June to September.” Both residents are concerned that this new PSW designation will affect the value of their property and restrict anything they want to use it for going forward. Merrickville-Wolford Chief Building Official, Randy Wilkinson, confirmed that once land is deemed a PSW there are no uses allowed for the land save for existing ones. “If there is not a house already there, you cannot rezone or get an official plan amendment to allow a use such as a house on that property,” he says. Paul says he was told by the MNRF that the designation was made based on aerial studies carried out by the Ministry in 2010 and that no site visit was carried out by their biologists. In a subsequent statement to the NG Times, MRNF Media Relations Officer, Jolanta Kowalski, said at least one site visit is required in order for a piece of land to be designated a PWS. That being said, the evaluator does not have to traverse the entire wetland, and
existing information gathered by others about the area may also be used. “Existing information, such as documented species observations, mapping, and aerial photography, allow the evaluator to utilize information collected about the site by others,” she wrote in an email. “Site visits allow the evaluator to verify whether existing information is accurate, to record new field observations, and to adjust preliminary mapped boundary.” In order to have the PSW designation reversed, Paul has been told he must hire an independent certified evaluator to re-evaluate the land on his own dime, and submit a report to MNRF for review and decision. He has requested that the Municipality fund the hiring of this evaluator in the hopes of getting the designation reversed. Merrickville-Wolford council received the request and both letters from the landowners at the council meeting last Monday night. They passed a resolution at the meeting to throw their support behind the two landowners and ask the MNRF
for a detailed explanation as to why they have designated this area a PSW. “We are concerned that the designation of PSW has occurred throughout the province of Ontario without the provision of supporting evidence,” Mayor Doug Struthers said at the meeting. Deputy Mayor Michael Cameron is also concerned that the MNRF is being given carte blanche to deem any land they want as a PSW without being held accountable. “That would concern me, as we are in the process of developing more residences,” he said at the meeting. “If we are getting more and more wetlands identified, that is going to affect our ability to move forward.” Council passed a resolution to ask the MNRF to back up their decision for deeming this area in the Village as a PSW, and to re-evaluate their decision without delay. They are also sending a copy of the resolution to Premier Doug Ford, the MNRF, the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville, the Association of the Municipalities of Ontario, the Rural Ontario Municipal Association, and all Ontario municipalities. “We know we have to accept under the Planning Act what is provided in terms of wetlands designations, but we are not happy with it, and we want a justification and a process to move forward to have that addressed,” Mayor Struthers said. “Specifically for our property owners, but more specifically for our complete municipality.”
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February 5, 2020
613.258.7438
Call for Community Grant Applications Now Open The Program is an opportunity for community groups to request funds, fee waivers or reductions, and/or in-kind services from the Village. The call for applications is now open. The Policy, Application Form and Post-project Report Form can be found on the municipal website, or you can pick up copies at the Municipal Office during regular business hours (Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m). The deadline to apply for this year is January 31, 2020 at 4:00 p.m. If your organization received a community grant in 2019 and has not yet submitted the final report, it must be submitted prior to a new application for funding, or a new application will not be considered. For further information, please contact: Kirsten Rahm, Manager of Finance/Treasurer. E-mail: finance@merrickvillewolford.ca. Phone: 613-269-4791 ext. 228.
Class A Licensed Mechanics - Repairs to ALL Makes DOT & MTO Safety Inspections Fuel Injection, Electrical & A/C Specialists Complete Brake & Exhaust Service Tires & batteries-Front End & Suspension
Mark & Ginette Streit 1303 Kingdom Rd., Kemptville 613.258.6607
Wanted Advertising Sales Representative
Are you retired and looking for extra income? or looking for part-time work? We are seeking a motivated, creative salesperson who loves talking with people and possesses great interpersonal skills. Position involves sales associated with print advertising. Must be dedicated to build and manage a client base as well as maintain current customers. Experience an asset and must have own vehicle. Email resume to production@ngtimes.ca 11
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The North Grenville Times
The Voice of North Grenville
CLASSIFIEDS
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First 10 words are FREE for North Grenville and Merrickville/Wolford Residents. All service ads will be charged. Extra Words: 50 cents a word. Email classifieds@ngtimes.ca
FOR SALE For Sale 98 Harrowsmith magazines in pristine condition, 1977 to 1995, $100 call 613 269-3567. Michael Hill Infinity Bangle valued at $400 asking $200 e-mail Maya @ maya_ramsay2499@hotmail.com 2 BABY GATES, 1 BATH TUB, PLAYPEN IN CARRYING CASE EXCELLENT CONDITION 613 859 4644 PARTLY USED TONERS FOR HP COLOUR LASERJET 1600. FREE 613-7133347 CARTON OF 10 48" 34W, FLUORESCENT LAMPS.
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Folding dog crate 31in L x 19 in W x 21in H. Can be divided into two parts. Easily set up and folded down. Virtually brand new. $30. Call Bill at 613 258 6544 Firewood, hardwood, 3 cords/ load, $110/cord. Call Peter 613 913 0810 Yamaha Snowmobile $400. 613.258.6562 ask for Harry
Brand new patio door - opens left to right, comes with foot lock and brick mold. ordered wrong opening. $950 or best offer - retails for $1600. 613912-4006
2010 Arctic Cat snowmobile, 570 F-series. Electric start, reverse. 5660 km. One owner. Asking $3500. 613-2585769 Mixed seasoned firewood for sale, all hardwood, $110/3 3 cord minimum delivered, Jon 613-227-3650 Wheelchair Fuse2.0 with a tilt/Roho cushion. Call 613567-8533 or leave message. 04 CRIBS: 1 BROWN 1 WHITE WITH MATTRESSES AND SHEETS PERFECT CONDITION$100 EACH 613 859 4644 All Christmas decorations must go, tree, decorations, Nut Crackers and Noma in-
side and outside lites, 613215-0884, asking $200 for all
Looking to Rent Farmland for cash crops. Call or text Mitch @ 613-262-1204.
FOR RENT Commercial Property in Kemptville, corner of Prescott & Clothier. Call Mark at 613.620.3868
RIDE REQUIRED Ride required from French Settlement Road to Hallville , 7am to 1pm five days a week. 613.258.5870
Local internet supplier Storm Internet Services sent out a press release last week in response to Bell Canada, who had announced that they were filling a broadband internet service “gap” in Eastern Ontario. “We’re very concerned that residents of those communities may have received the erroneous impression that Bell Canada’s planned entry into the fixed, wireless broadband marketplace represents the arrival of something that didn’t exist before and somehow fills a void,” says Storm Internet Services VP Operations and Sales Michel Lalonde. According to the press release, Storm started providing internet services to rural areas in 1996. Since then, Storm has grown to provide high speed internet access across 8,000 square kms of the Ottawa Valley and beyond. “We’re a local Eastern Ontario company, employing local people, and
we service our clientele very, very well,” Michel says. “It’s a key reason we’re here and thriving after almost 25 years in business.” Storm Internet provided a map of the area they cover, which encompasses many of the places the new Bell internet is now servicing. Unfortunately, Bell was not able to provide a map of their service area, even though they had one for the official announcement of their new rural service a few weeks ago. It is not clear whether Bell is actually filling a need, or whether they are simply providing another option for rural residents in Eastern Ontario. “We wouldn’t comment on another company’s services,” Bell Canada told the North Grenville Times when asked to comment on Storm’s news release. That being said, it is clear that, even with Storm Internet and Bell, there are definitely underserved areas in Eastern Ontario. The original article about Bell’s announcement sparked discussion on Facebook and on the NG Times
website, with several people asking whether Bell’s new product would be available in their area. “Any news for Frontenac County and/ or those residents north of highway 7?” wrote NG Times reader, Linda MacDonald. “I’m in Sharbot Lake (½ hour west of Perth), where we (supposedly) have high speed. It’s provided by our very own telephone company (North Frontenac Telephone Company), whose server, as the kids say, sucks.” Another reader asked whether the service will be available for customers on Rideau Ferry Road outside Perth, which has little to no high-speed internet available. Storm’s VP says they are not afraid of a little competition. “We welcome the competition from Bell, quite frankly,” Michel says, noting that their service is notably superior to Bell’s offerings. He also added that local politicians should be concerned about the level of mobile wireless service in Eastern Ontario. He suggests these policy makers would do well
“to ask Bell how piggybacking its new service on to its existing cellular LTE network won’t cause undue strain on that critical mobile infrastructure.” The same issue was raised at the Merrickville announcement by Bell. Warden of the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville, and Mayor of Edwardsburgh-Cardinal, Pat Sayeau, brought it up. He pointed out that the Eastern Ontario Regional Network (EORN) is trying to expand and close the gaps in the region’s cell phone coverage, and that he hoped Bell's new wireless broadband service would not affect their continued interest in the area's mobile needs as well. Bell is encouraging people who are wondering whether the new broadband internet is available in their area to visit their website, where residents can plug in their address and see if they are included in the scope of the service. Anyone interested in Storm Internet can also visit their website.
SERVICES R&T PLUMBING & RENOVATIONS
Specializing in Water Treatment, Wells, Pumps, Bathroom/Kitchen/Laundry Renos, Plumbing, Foundation and Septic Repairs Affordable payment plans available Admin@rtrenovations.ca 613 558 5942 February 5, 2020
Love always from your 'Ma" Debbie Crawford, your son Daniel 'Dano", your brothers Mike & and Stephen, your sisters in laws Adora and Nicole, your nieces Charlotte, Prussia & and Hannah, & and your nephews Evan, Lincoln & and Chance. PLEASE NOTE: a bonfire/skating party/4 wheeler day has been planned for March 14, 2020, to honour Dale. He had wanted to do this for years & and everyone is invited to attend. We will start the day at 10am at Camp on Land O' Nod Rd.
HELP WANTED
Clarification on expanded broadband services by Hilary Thomson
The family of the late Dale Armstrong Jr. would like to thank all at Marsden & Mclaughlin Funeral Home for their heartfelt understanding & and compassion over such a tragic loss. Our thanks go out to the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 212 in Kemptville for hosting the Celebration of Life for Dale on December 22, 2019, which was an all-day event. Our thanks also go to Sally Thornburn who arranged everything for the food & and worked tirelessly in the kitchen. Thanks to all family and friends for their phone calls of support & and donationss thatwhich were greatly appreciated. The family knew that he had a lot of friends as a lotmany of you were members of our extended family, but never did we expect the crowd that attended - from his bosses and co-workers at Lafarge to all the friends he had had an impact on. Dale had a heart bigger than himself & so thanks to each & and every one of you for showing your support. Please don't forget Dale & and have a Canadian every once in a while have a Canadian for him & so we can keep the stories & and love alive. Dale is sadly & and deeply missed but he will never be forgottenen in the time until we meet again.
Garden Villa Retirement Residence in Chesterville, Ontario has openings for the following Part time positions • • •
Registered Practical Nurses Weekend Receptionist Cook/Prep Cook
Please send resume to Information@gardenvilla.ca or fax to 613-448-1115 Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
email classifieds@ngtimes.ca for pricing DEEP WATER AQUAFIT CLASSES Kars Call 613 826 3351 for available class times
RETIRED CARPENTER Renovations, kitchens, bathrooms, additions, decks, home repair. Call George at 613 462 7637
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PROFESSIONAL PAINTER Commercial and Residential Free Estimates 613 276 4583
HANDYMAN SERVICES Call Bill 613 774 2922
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The North Grenville Times
CROSSWORD
ACROSS 1. Carve in stone 5. Desiccated 9. Indian music 13. Breezy 14. Carnival attractions 16. Quaint outburst 17. Gull-like bird 18. Behind 19. Valuable metal 20. Electrical pioneer 22. Deficits 24. Bell sound 26. Bay window 27. Mesa 30. Lunatic 33. Tatwork 35. Anagram of "Coast" 37. Half of a pair 38. Andean animal 41. Explosive
42. 10 in a decade 45. Christmastime 48. Dapper 51. A hospital common room 52. Swindle 54. Shower 55. Endangered 59. Gash 62. Saturate 63. Creepy 65. Double-reed woodwind 66. Hubs 67. Binge 68. Adhesive 69. Biblical garden 70. Chore 71. Scream DOWN 1. Where the sun rises 2. Kid
COMMUNITY EVENTS
3. Crab or lobster 4. Muller's glass 5. Genus of macaws 6. Bones on your sides 7. Potato state 8. Distort 9. Fine or decorative clothing 10. All excited 11. Storm 12. Contributes 15. Stripes 21. Once more 23. Canvas dwelling 25. Jail (British) 27. Gambit 28. Paths 29. Website address 31. Affording grounds for legal action 32. Condominium 34. K 36. Flower stalk 39. Muck 40. Winglike 43. A small fireproof dish 44. Prod 46. Nestling hawk 47. Three book series 49. Layers 50. Named (archaic) 53. Latin name for our planet 55. Small island 56. State of mind 57. Rate 58. Perishes 60. Essence 61. Part of a foot 64. Startled cry
Easy
Medium
Hard
Solution to last week’s Crossword
The Voice of North Grenville
Feb 5
M onthly supper, Holy Cross Church, 505 Clothier St W . Full supper with salad, desert, coffee and tea. Adults $8, Child $4. All are welcomed. Serving from 5:30 to 7 pm. Take out available. Feb 9 Sweetheart Brunch, 8:30 am to 12:30 pm, NG Municipal Centre. Tickets $10 for adults, $5 for children 6–11 years, and under 6 are free! Feb 9 North Grenville Public Library local author Showcase, 1-4 pm. 19 local authors with diverse backgrounds including mystery, poetry, blogging, historical fiction, fantasy, non-fiction, romance, sci fi, children’s books and horror. Feb 10 Building a Campus for the future Open House W B George Centre, 5:30 – 8:30 pm. The Open House is part of the Master Plan process currently underway, and an opportunity for the community to have its say in the future direction of the Campus. Feb 19 Kemptville Horticultural Society February M eeting, Kemptville Pentacostal Church. Speaker: Shawn Yakimovich Kemptville Naturopathic Clinic "Backyard Pharmacy". Also a "Seed Exchange" will take place. M ar 14 Bonfire/skating party/4 wheeler day to honour Dale Armstrong Jr. He had wanted to do this for years & and everyone is invited to attend. W e will start the day at 10am at Camp on Land O' Nod Rd.
Weekly and recurring events M on Kemptville Quilters Guild, 2 nd Mon./mth at the Kemptville Pentecostal Church, 1964 County Road 43, 7 pm. New members welcome. Kemptville Cancer Support Group, 3 rd Mon/mth, St. John’s United Church, 2 pm. For info call Ellen Vibert-M iller at 613-258-7778. Arts Guild, 2nd Mon/mth, 7pm at the Masonic Hall on Van Buren St. Newcomer Bridge-St John's United Church 12:15pm. Cost $5.00. All levels welcome. Info 613-806-4495 or 613-795-7155. Gremlins Square Dance Club, NG Municipal Centre, 7:30-9:30 pm. Sept-April. Details at: www.grenvillegremlins09 or email : kemptvillesquaredance@gmail.com Tues Rotary Club meeting, Kemptville Legion, 6:30 pm. BNI Netw orking Group Breakfast, Grenville M utual Insurance Building, 380 Colonnade Dr, 7- 8:30 am. Info: 613-918-0430. Bridge St. John’s United Church, 12:15 pm. Cost $5. All levels of bridge players welcome. Info, call. 613-806-4495 to 613-795-7155. The Branch Artisans Guild, NG Community Church, 2659 Concession St. every 3 rd Tue/mth, 7pm. New members welcomed Photography Club - 1 st W ed./mth, 7-9 pm, at the Grenville M utual Insurance, 3 8 0 Colonnade Drive. See ngphotoclub.ca for info. Klub 67 Euchre every 2 nd &4 th W ed/mth, 1 pm, Kemptville Retirement Living, 2950 Cty Rd 43. Everyone welcome. $5.00. (No euchre July & August) Bingo- 1 st & 3 rd W ed/mth., Kemptville Legion, 1 pm. All welcome. New Horizon Club, Burritt`s Rapids Community Hall. Adults 55 plus welcome. For info re programs and membership, call Golida Tym 258-3894. Probus Club of North Grenville, 3rd Wed./mth. Everyone is welcome to join us at 9:30 am at St Paul's Presbyterian Church Hall for fellowship. NGPL Science and Technology Group meetings, 1st/W ed/mth, 7-9 pm in the program room at the Library. Euchre, Rideau Glen Golf Course, 6:30 sharp, $5, share the wealth tickets sold, all proceeds go back to the players. May 1-Oct 9. Thu Bridge - St. John’s United Church, 6:15- pm. Cost $5. All levels of bridge players welcome. For more info, call 613-806-4495 or 613-795-7155. North Grenville Toastmasters - Meeting 1 st & 3 rd Thurs/mth., 7 pm at O’Farrell’s Financial Services, Cty Rd 44. Info, call 790 7665. Fri Friendship Lunch, 11:30-1 pm, St. John’s United Church. Free, everyone welcome. Sat Kemptville Legion breakfast, 8 - 10 am 3 rd Sat/mth, 100 Reuben Crescent. Adults $6, Children 6 and under $3. All welcome. Euchre, Kemptville Legion, last Sat/mth. Noon-5 pm. Sun Bingo, Kemptville Legion – 1 st Sun/mth, Doors open 6 pm, guaranteed $400 jackpot. Refreshments available. M ,W ,F Kemptville and Area W alking Group meet at M unicipal Centre at 8 am.
Puzzled over Real Estate.....Give us a call ** Broker
February 5, 2020
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The North Grenville Times
The Voice of North Grenville
73's moving wrong way for play-offs fish and Egan, to give them a 3-2 win at 16:11. Kemptville with 11-8 SOG and Pembroke 2 PP attempts. Smiths Falls in our barn for back-to-back contest on Thursday night was a bad game, as Kemptville received another lopsided loss of 8-2. Kemptville, with a man in the sin-bin, struck first, as Nicholas Domitrovic’s aggressive defense, launched a heavy-handed one over Jake Smith for SHG at 9:36 for his first goal of the season. Bears countered at 13:53, when Thomas Quick, with helpers from Helmer and McKenney, punched it by William Anderson to even it at one. Smiths Falls broke the tie at 18:13, when Cameron McLean, with helpers from Lewis and Richardson, found the back of the net. Smiths Falls outshot Kemptville 12-7 with 2 PP attempts. Smiths Falls Bears on the prowl to slam in six unanswered goals to open the flood gates. Alex Lewis, after receiv-
by the sportsguy The Boys of Winter motored into Pembroke to face the Lumber Kings for a Sunday evening battle where they suffered a 3-2 loss. Lumber Kings came on strong to open the initial period, as Dennis Golovatchev, with helper from Holy, to beat William Anderson at 3:36. Jacob Shankar, with assists from Anderson and Egan, to put Pembroke ahead by two zip at 17:56. Pembroke had one SOG advantage, 14-13 with 2 unsuccessful PP. Second stanza, with Kemptville down a man at 17:00, Chase Broda stole the play to break over the line and hammer it by Reece Proulx for SHG and spoil his SO. 73's took it to Lumber Kings 15-10, and each with PP without results. Final twenty, Kemptville's Moretti combined with Wood to rifle a shot, so Madoka Suzuki could pounce on the rebound for the tie at 14:35. Pembroke broke the tie when Cameron Hough, with assists from Stock-
Protect your vehicle #22 from rust today at Krown Kemptville. Chase LAMMI Nickname: “LAMMI” Born: 2002-07-03 Home Town: Sudbury, ON Position: Right Wing Previous Hockey Club: Espanola Express Jr “A” Inspiration: My Brother Favourite TV Show: Suits Favourite Actor: Will Smith Favourite Musician: Thomas Rhett Favourite Food: Fetticini Alfredo with Chicken Favourite Hockey Memory: Signing with 73’s Life as a JR “A” player: We have to be role models for younger kids
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Canada’s National Game returning to Kemptville returning to the Ontario Lacrosse Association. Kemptville has a successful history of promotion of the sport, and it’s especially exciting to see the energy and enthusiasm of Wendy Embleton and the current Executive behind the Kemptville District Lacrosse Association”, said Ron McSpayden, Program and Marketing Director of Ontario Lacrosse. “We wish to thank the interim Board members, Greg Chapleau and Lee Brien, for their efforts and involvement. The community support and those who have volunteered to assist us up to this point has been astounding! We are looking forward to getting things started with a Skill Development Program, and
by Wendy Embleton After a long absence, Lacrosse is going to be coming back to Kemptville in 2020. The Ontario Lacrosse Association Board of Directors unanimously welcomed the Kemptville District Lacrosse Association into the fold. “It’s a pleasure today to support and approve the membership of Kemptville
Kemptville Physiotherapy
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ing dump from Richardson at 1:09. Brent Broaders, assisted by Lewis to make it 4-1 at 5:52. Sloan with Helmer to setup Justin Trudel to chase 73's Anderson to the showers at 6:51. Bears came on strong when Alex Lewis counted his second, as Richardson and Broaders found him open to dump it in by Riley McCabe at 8:00. Smiths Falls still on a roll with man advantage when Tate Leeson PPG, with helpers from Richardson and McLean at 11:00. Broaders and Lewis combined to award Ryan Richardson with a marker at 13:55. Smiths Falls doubled up on Kemptville 18-9, with 5 PP, resulting in 1, with 73's having 1 unsuccessful PP. Last twenty, with Anderson back between pipes for Kemptville and Smith Falls on constant attack, the 73's tried to claw back. PK for Kemptville had to play hard as two more slab time sittings to give Bears PP opportunities, and 73's Cole Dennison pulled his magic to mark up a SHG at 2:42. Smiths Falls doubled down with 12-5 advantage with two attempted PP's. Finally the bleeding was stopped for the 73's to end the battle with a 8-2 loss. Back-to-back games, as Kemptville 73's entered the den of the Smiths Falls Bears on Friday evening to impose their will, after their Thursday night slaughter. The Bears were hungry to close out their two contests against their rival 73's to walk away with a 5-3 victory. Kemptville drew first blood when short handed, as Domitovic controlled the attack from Smiths Falls with a quick transition to Makado Suzuki for SHG to beat Victor Desjardins at 16:42. Kemptville outshot
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continue our momentum into a Spring House League program”, said KDLA President, Wendy Embleton. Registration for the Winter Skills Development Program is currently open and accepting players from 4-21 years old. The program is running Thursday evenings from 6-9 pm at the W.B. George Gymnasium, located at the Former Kemptville College. For more information on the Programs offered, Registration, Volunteer opportunities, or more about the sport of Lacrosse, follow them on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram at @KemptvilleLax or reach out to KemptvilleLacrosse@Gmail.com.
Smiths Falls by 12-8, with 1 failed PP and Bears with 2 unsuccessful attempts. Kemptville capitalized while down a man to open the second, as Dennison sprung Chase Broda through the neutral zone to rifle it between the pegs for another SHG at 5:28. Justin Trudel, with helpers from Martin and Russett, shut down Riley McCabe's SO attempt to put the Bears on the board at 10:48. Brent Boaders, with assists from Helmer and Richardson, gave Smiths Falls the tie at 12:53. Kemptville responded to break the tie when Broda, with line-mate Domitrovic, to setup Jeff Taylor drifting through the middle at 13:22. Bears only managed 2 extra SOG at 12-10, and each club 2 declined PP's. Third final period totally controlled by Smiths Falls, as Kemptville took their foot off the throttle to allow them to get back in the game. Smiths Falls evened it up, as Broaders and Helmer to Ryan Richardson criss-crossing over the line at 12:08. Tate Leeson from Helmer to give the go ahead to the Bears at 18:44. 73's pulled their stopper at 19:21 for extra attacker and force OT. Unfortunately, Smiths Falls found the empty net when Trudel gained control of the puck to Dempsey, on to Brent Broaders for his second of evening. Bears with 14-7 SOG and no PP to end the game with 5-3 win. Coach Peters summed it up with: "Unfortunately, Thursday we were off our game and fell into some bad habits, playing soft, and allowed too much space and time for Smiths Falls to get their offence going. The second period was a complete collapse in our structure and commitment to our identity. Our leaders took over in the third and pushed us through to the end of the game. Not a game anyone wants to see repeated. Friday, after a players only meeting, the team came out with a balanced, focussed level of emotion. Our commitment to playing the right way returned. It was our game, controlling nearly all the play. We had several quality opportunities to finish them, but we didn't convert. They pushed hard in the second half of the third with success, but ran out of time". Diggers Award goes to Nicholas Domitrovic for his continuous effort and attitude. Kemptville 73' s will host the Navan Grads for a Friday, February evening battle at 7:30. Hockey with edge... a cut above the rest... show you care... see you there.
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The Voice of North Grenville
S BE ALE FR GINS IDA Y
North Grenville Library news North Grenville Public Library hosting local author showcase The North Grenville Public Library (NGPL) will be holding a local author showcase at the end of February to celebrate the end of Freedom to Read week, which is celebrated from February 23-29, and is an annual event that encourages Canadians to think about and reaffirm their commitment to intellectual freedom, which is guaranteed under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. “What better way to celebrate our own freedom to read than by celebrating our local talent?” says NGPL Coordinator of Community Engagement, Liz Dwyer. The showcase will be held at the NGPL on February 9, from 1-4 pm. There are 19 local authors with diverse backgrounds who have confirmed their attendance at the event. There will be representatives from almost every genre of writing, including mystery, poetry, blogging, historical fiction, fantasy, non-fiction, romance, sci fi, children’s books and horror. The showcase will give the authors a chance to share their work, and many will have their books for sale. At 3:00 pm there will be an author panel, where select authors will take questions from the public. Throughout the event, people will be able to enter a draw to win books by the local authors and a grand prize of a $50 gift certificate to Chapters. Liz says the NGPL believes that we are very fortunate to have such a talented group of people working and living in our community. “We want to give local residents a chance to meet, talk to, and get to know some of these fascinating people.” Library launches survey The Library is looking for your input. NGPL launched a survey last week, asking users to tell them when they are most likely to use the Library, and if they would be interested in seeing a slight change in their hours to include Sunday afternoons. NGPL CEO Rachel Brown says they decided to put together a community survey because they have been February 5, 2020
approached by several people about Sunday hours. Sunday is often a quieter day for people, and some may like to spend time at the Library in their down time. “Sunday hours are pretty common [at libraries],” she says. “It made sense that we should at least be exploring the idea.” To find the resources for these Sunday hours, the survey is also asking whether it would affect Library users if they closed at 8 pm, instead of 9 pm on weekdays. Rachel says they have already noticed a drop in library use during that time and are wondering whether these hours would be better used on a Sunday afternoon. “We want to make sure we are servicing the community as best we can with the resources we have,” she says. The response to the survey has been great so far, with 100 responses online in the first day. NGPL is planning on making the survey available, both online and in hard copy, at the Library and the Municipal Centre until at least the end of February. “The longer we keep it up, the longer people have to respond,” Rachel says. “We want as big a cross section as possible.” There is also a section on the survey allowing people to leave comments, which Rachel says is extremely valuable to them. They are hoping to have at least 500 responses, so that they will be able to do a meaningful analysis of all the data collected. “Based on that, we will be able to make some recommendations,” Rachel says. “After this, there may be more questions we have to answer.” To access the survey online you can visit the NGPL’s website, or pop by the Library or Municipal Centre to grab a physical copy. Rachel encourages anyone who has questions or concerns to come by the Library to speak to NGPL staff. Library looking for teen volunteers to help with tech programs The Library is looking for youth volunteers to help run a couple of tech programs this year. The first program, set to begin at the end of February, is the “Tech Buddies” clinic,
301 Rideau Street, Kemptville
Regular Store Hours: Mon.- Fri. 8 to 8, Sat. - 8 to 6, Sun. 9 to 6
where seniors and other community members who need help with technology can come to the library to have their questions answered by knowledgeable teens. Volunteers will need to have basic computer skills and be able to help people with things like social media, using apps, email, and settings on cell phones, computers and tablets. “It’s stuff that a young person would consider general knowledge, but an older person might not,” says the NGPL’s Project Coordinator for Digital Literacy, Adam Bergeron. Adam is also hoping that those who sign up to help with the program will also be willing to volunteer for their Coding for Kids program in March. With the help of funds raised by the Friends of the NGPL, the library will be purchasing programmable Lego robots to help kids learn how to code. The first workshop will be during the March break, on March 18, with Ottawa’s The Lego Guy coming in to help launch the program. “It will be the beginning of the Coding for Kids series,” says CEO Rachel Brown. They are hoping to offer the program at least four times a year, depending on demand and interest. Rachel says both programs are a fun way for teens to get involved and work towards their volunteer hours, which are mandatory in high school. Volunteers will learn valuable leadership and communication skills, and interact with seniors and children in a different setting, while teaching them a topic that they are already familiar with. “It’s a great way for teens to build meaningful connections and give back to their community,” she says. Adam says they are hoping to recruit volunteers by mid-February, so they will have time to hold a few training sessions before the start dates of the two programs. Between the two programs, volunteers will most likely get about a dozen hours towards the mandatory 40. To sign up, or learn more about volunteering at the Library, contact Adam at abergeron@ngpl.ca.
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613.258.3014 Prices effective:
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“We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements”
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The North Grenville Times
Catholic School Board embraces 21st Century Learning
Students and teachers of the Catholic District School Board of Eastern Ontario [CDSBEO] have worked collaboratively using technology to personalize learning, increase productivity, and enhance student success. The 21st Century classroom continues to transform in response to the individual needs of learners. Teachers are better prepared to respond, and schools are finding new and exciting ways to incorporate emerging technologies to create purposeful and meaningful learning experiences. Superintendent of School Effectiveness, Brent Bovaird, presented details of new and innovative ways that students are using technology to expand learning opportunities. Technology helps to engage, accelerate, and consolidate learning experiences for all students while creating opportunities for creative thinking, innovation, and problem solving. Four major categories for 21st century learning: blend-
ed learning, digital learning tools, Microsoft apps and STEM education. “Currently, four categories are used to help distinguish what experiences are available to students and teachers,” explained Brent. “The Virtual Learning Environment, known in the classroom as Blended Learning, Science Technology Engineering and Mathematical Education, also known as STEM, Microsoft apps and learning tools, and also other digital learning resources.” A starting point for teachers using technology is through a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). The VLE is a suite of tools designed to help teachers and students take advantage of numerous digital resources. Teachers have access to both Brightspace (a Ministry of Education licensed program), as well as Microsoft Teams. Both products allow teachers to share information with students through an online platform. The tools provide opportunities for
“Minecraft is one Microsoft app which is available to students,” noted the Superintendent. “It is similar to Lego, where students place blocks consisting of items like wood, stone, bricks, dirt and other countless raw materials to create, but in a 3D world. Students can also visualize, deconstruct and reconstruct monuments, houses, villages, ecosystems, and working prototypes with switches, sensors, and electricity. This program drastically changes student engagement. Minecraft naturally promotes creativity, collaboration, and problemsolving for students.” STEM education is broken into four subsections: growth mindset, programming and coding, robotics and virtual reality. “One of the most important aspects of STEM Education is embracing a growth mindset because things will not always work on the first, second or twentieth attempt. To fail is positive and we like to use it as an acronym that
discussion, as well as the ability for students to access teacher created materials or submit assignments. Teachers can track student achievement, and also engage with parents through classroom announcements, samples of student work and feedback, and reminders about upcoming assignments and events. “The VLE can also be used to connect to other digital learning resources, mostly provided by the Ministry of Education,” added Superintendent Bovaird. “These include video and book libraries, and hundreds of K-12 interactive resources designed and created by Ontario educators at no cost.” Microsoft apps and learning tools provide access to experiences that bring learning to life. These apps and tools are used by professional educators and reflect the fundamental shift in the way students interact and share, allowing learning to be enhanced in a collaborative way.
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stands for First Attempt in Learning. There is a quote by Thomas Edison that is often used, I have not failed 10,000 times - I've successfully found 10,000 ways that will not work.” Coding, which is the same as computer programming, teaches students how
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