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Bay Days’ rays
Inside NEWS
Sunshine and music dominate festival’s return
All Saints students will hold their annual Terry Fox Run in late September. See how much money they intend to raise this year. – Page 3
David Johnston
COMMUNITY
Bye, Mom and Dad DEREK DUNN/METROLAND
Stonecrest students Marisa Bradley, left, and Keyra Lee Labonte, turn around and wave goodbye to anxious parents on Windward Way and Old Highway 17 on Tuesday morning. The girls, destined for Grade 2 and 1 respectively, weren’t nervous at all; it was sheer excitement as they joined hundreds of others doing the same in West Carleton.
COMMUNITY
Better put on a brave face while eating hot peppers near your boy. See if this MelonFest man survived. – Page 64
Poverty report ranks Ontario last in funding social programs Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com
EMC news – Ontario is dead last among provinces when it comes to funding social programs, a new report revealed. An Ontario-wide coalition of almost 100 groups and organizations, called Ontario Common Front, examines growing inequity. On Aug. 29 it released Falling Behind: Ontario’s backslide into widening inequity, growing poverty and cuts to social programs. Despite having among the world’s most highly educated workers, an abundance of natural resources, and an industrial base, the report shows that Ontario is falling behind the rest of Canada in terms of growing poverty, increasing inequity and flagging financial support for public services. It blames choices made by governments, not international economic trends, for the downward spiral.
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See Constance, page 2
“Today, 600,000 Ontario families find their incomes stalled or falling behind, while the richest 10 per cent gallop away with the bounty from the sustained period of economic growth stretching from the mid-1900s to 2008,â€? the report reads. The report found that: • 40 per cent of Ontarians, 600,000 families, are struggling with incomes that are stagnant or declining; • Ontario funds all of its social programs, including health care to education, at the lowest rate in Canada; • While poverty rates fell in five provinces, Ontario had the second highest increase in poverty rates and intensity, leaving 393,000 children in poverty (one in seven); • Ontarians pay the highest school fees, outof-pocket health care fees and tuition fees in the country while leading the nation in cuts to corporate and income taxes. It blames both the Liberal and Progressive
Conservative governments for prioritizing tax cuts for the wealthy over equality-creating public programs. The report tracks the decline with examples such as: the average CEO takes home 250 times the income of the average Canadian, while a generation ago that ratio was 25 times the average.
16
Morgan Goddard is the NDP riding association president for Carleton-Mississippi Mills. He said there is little difference between the Liberals and PCs when it comes to spending priorities. Both believe in the myth of “austerity.� See Solution, page 5
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Reach for the sky! The annual Valley Gun and Hunting Show drew another impressive crowd. – Page 45
EMC news - Wasn’t that a party? If you live in Constance Bay and surrounding area, you couldn’t miss the biggest community event to take place in decades. Bay Days ran from Aug. 23 to Sept. 3, providing a huge variety of entertainment and attractions for people of all ages and interests.
NEWS
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Constance Bay celebration finds activities for all ages Continued from front
A revival of a festival that marked summer in the riverfront community for more than 50 years, the current version of Bay Days comes after a 20-year hiatus. A spirited group of volunteers in the Constance and Buckham’s Bay Community Association (CBBCA) breathed new life into the traditional summer celebration. The ambitious 13-day event was run by more than 73 local volunteers and a host of supporters. With something for everyone and every age, Bay Days hit Constance Bay like a tidal wave. Bay Days 2012 came to its pre-closing much as it opened; larger than expected crowds, a few hiccups, and a lot of smiling faces. Last week, with bad weather and an impending burn ban on the horizon CBBCA president and Bay Days event general manager Ian Glen pulled some Bay Day’s outdoor activities back a day and pushed others inside to prevent cancellations. Despite the schedule changes an estimated crowd of 500 was on hand for the previously event closing fireworks display that started with a series of remote rockets, too large for the community centre property, followed by 25 minutes of continuous rockets and low level pyrotechnics that raised several ovations from what was a very impressed and appreciative audience. FIREWORKS DELAYED
“We’ve had a fireworks team working on this for months, lead by the David Goodkey for the CBBCA, Glen Howald of GSH, the Fire Service, and Ottawa Event Central, but in the end the pros have to make the choices on the ground to guarantee everything is safe. It delayed things 20 minutes but the 18 volunteers on the team, including GSH, and our sponsors at Deka gave us another best ever for Bay Days,� said Glen. Bay Days had a distinct historical flavor with a theatrical production of Samuel de Champlain’s arrival, events of the past, and 12 bands covering 90 years of music. “ When Bay Days was conceived last year it was to be a revival of an annual weekend event that started in 1923 and was last seen over 20 years ago. For rural north-west Ottawa Bay Days was the marquis summer event that brought area farmers and cottagers together. Bringing back the days of competition on the beach and the great evenings with friends at the Casino Dance Hall, and commemo-
rating the 40th anniversary of the Casino formally becoming the area community centre, were the original motives of the Constance and Buckham’s Bay Community Association. With the launch of Sandhills, the area’s infrastructure, program and service project, Bay Days morphed into a 13 day, 30 event festival. “It was like delivering an extra year of work into a week and a half time slot. In June and July the program seemed to grow every week as more volunteers, professionals, and local businesses came to the table; some like La Osteria and Copperdale added entire events while others like GSH and Dekka took a very good event and made it exceptional, and several of the bands who donated their talents to the cause. These people transformed our community event into a best in class show and a successful Sandhills fundraiser even though attendance was under our target of 2,700.� BAY DAYS 2013
Asked if residents could expect something bigger and better for Bay Days 2013 Glen was quick to respond; “the next year is about serious fund raising towards our Sandhills goals. We have a golf tournament Sept. 22 with Copperdale and have to move simultaneously into our sponsorship and philanthropy campaign. We’ll be looking at making a number of Bay Days activities part of our regular program but in 2013 Bay Days will need to be significantly reduced. Of course, there is now a Bay Days army and they may choose differently. As far as making it better goes; we had a dozen very different bands and each was exceptional in their genre, the sound and stage production was perfect, the food was top notch, and I can’t imagine drawing a broader cross-section of people or getting bigger smiles.� One of Glen’s personal favourite events was the big band night, featuring Standing Room Only along with a fish and chip dinner. “The fish fry was worth waiting for! Best fish and chips ever. Many thanks to Alf, Anita, Chris Nagy, and all the crew who worked so hard all day to get the new deep fryers going and cooked up that meal. That was a first for us and bodes well for what we will be able to do in our new kitchen!� Though some events over the span of the festival had to be cancelled due to lack of
ing
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PHOTOS BY DAVID JOHNSTON
Churun-Meru Dancers kicked up their heels to lively Salsa and Latin music along with the band Latin Breeze Sunday Sept. 2 at Bay Days in Constance Bay. participation, Glen says the majority of activities were well received and will figure prominently into planning for the second annual event in 2013. “We’ve got some things to consider and evaluate moving forward, but rest assured, Bay Days is back!� Proceeds from the festival will be used to help offset the development costs of Project Sandhills. In partnership with the City of Ottawa and Western Ottawa Community Resource Centre, the CBBCA and its local supporters are planning a comprehensive, two-phase expansion of the Constance Bay community centre. “The project is a response to the community’s most important program and service needs – the library, health and fitness programming,� said Glen. Phase One, slated for 2013, will see a 5,000 square-foot addition to the community centre complex at a cost of $1.9 million. The final phase, estimated at $100,000 will renovate about 1,000 square feet of existing space to launch a series of new programs and services. Another Bay Days highlight for Glen was greeting ‘Samuel de Champlain’ on his return to the bay to promote a celebration next summer to mark the 400th anniversary of the original landing. “Over 100 people visited SV Black Jack at the weekend,� said Glen. “Thanks to Andy for all the ferrying.� For many, the sold out dinner put on by local restaurant La Osteria was a memorable attraction, while others favoured the lobster and steak
night. Musical entertainment was provided by a wide range of local and professional acts, headlined by bands such as The Cooper Brothers and David Gogo. Also performing on the outside stage was The Stephen Thomas Band, Paperboys, and Latin Breeze. The Foxy Morons closed out the festival Monday night. Past president Len Russell also noted the fish and chip night as a standout. “It was another great night spent with our 120+ closest friends.� He said the popularity of the event could lead to an encore later this year. Russell also wanted to salute the hardworking and dedicated volunteers. “A sincere thank you to our 73 volunteers who brought us this far and a special thanks to George, Claudia and the kids for their wonderful generosity in bringing us a fabulous La Osteria night.� Volunteer Heather Lucente commented on the wide variety of items donated for the Silent auction. “There was original stained glass artwork, gift certificate and products from Kanata Plastic and Cosmetic surgery , fashion flip flops by Love Beach, memberships from Sparks Tae Kwon Do, original art by local artist Brenda Beattie, photo prints from our calendar, wellness water effects fountain, 750 chip deluxe poker set, lead crystal vase, gift baskets and more.� Tracey Bloom, volunteer organizer of the Dog Show, said, “Thank you so much for everyone who turned up for the dog show. What a fantas-
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2 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
Sumo wrestlers Austin and Brandin Boyd of Carp took a tumble during Kids Day Sept. 2.
Bay Days organizers Ian Glen, left, President of the Constance and Buckham’s Bay Community Association and Past President Len Russell put in countless hours organizing and running Bay Days. tic turn out on a very hot day! Thanks go to WAG dog agility group, Brenda Ambrose of the Arnprior Humane Society and Nancy Atchison for coming out to be judges, and all those who helped to put this show together. “I think for our first time it was a big success.�
Volunteer Jane Ellen Currie was in charge of the children’s events on the beach August 25. Though participation was less than what she had hoped for, she was proud of the efforts of her volunteers. See Bay Days, page 17
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NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Citizen advisory groups slashed from 15 to five Laura Mueller laura.mueller@metroland.com
EMC news – Twenty-three people lined up to give city councillors their swan song for advisory committees on Aug. 30. After it was all over, the city’s governance renewal subcommittee and finance committee had slashed the number of official citizen advisory groups from 15 to five. The move also shifted The Ottawa Built Heritage Advisory Committee from an advisory group to a subcommittee of planning committee mostly comprised of councillors, and a seniors’ group will become an annual round table event instead. The changes are aimed at saving $190,000 annually. Glebe resident Bob Brocklebank likened the restructuring to a “mercy killing.â€? The city has allowed the advisory committees to wither and become irrelevant, making the act of killing them simply the final stage, Brocklebank said. “Put advisory committees out of their misery,â€? he said. Patrick Quealey, former chairman of the environmental advisory committee, agreed, saying that the groups have been treated “disrespectfully and shabbilyâ€? by the city. “At a time when people are disengaging ‌ these people want to participate. That should be valued,â€? Quealey added. Many of the 23 delegates who spoke to the
committee on Aug. 30 agreed it was time for some changes to advisory committees. In 2011, 48 advisory committee meetings were cancelled due to lack of quorum, and most were cancelled at the last moment, which is administratively expensive for the city. Many things have changed since the city amalgamated in 2001, when the advisory committees were established. Access to technology and the availability of social media tools are changing how residents interact with the city and politicians. Other engagement strategies such as summits and departmental working groups have proven more successful as well, according to a report from the city clerk’s office. Representatives from the Federation of Citizens’ Associations were disappointed that the advisory committee restructuring wasn’t presented in a context of a broader citizen engagement strategy, something that won’t happen until December. “This kind of sounds like a bureaucratic triumph over common sense,� said Don Stewart of the FCA. The mandates of the five new advisory committees will be: accessibility; arts, culture, heritage and recreation; community services; environmental stewardship; and French language services. They will officially meet quarterly, but each group can call additional informal meetings. While some topics like poverty and diversity
will no longer have a dedicated advisory group, the function of many of the advisory committees will be absorbed in other ways. The transit commission and health board both now have citizen members who can represent residents on those topics, the city’s report states and business groups are to be represented by Invest Ottawa (formerly OCRI). Rural issues have a forum during the open mike sessions at agriculture and rural affairs committee meetings. The Ottawa Built Heritage Advisory Committee will evolve from a citizen group into a subcommittee of planning committee, with representation from three citizen experts and four city councillors. That was a point of contention amongst heritage advocates, who told the committee that the unbalanced representation would eliminate the group’s effectiveness. “Ottawa is proposing to become an anomaly of heritage in Ontario,� said Leslie Maitland, president of Heritage Ottawa. The built heritage committee used to have council members on its roster, but they asked
to be removed, Maitland pointed out. But planning committee chairman Peter Hume argued the change would create “advocates� for heritage issues on city council. “Right now, there are no council advocates around the table for heritage,� he said, adding that more time spent on heritage issues alongside experts would give built heritage subcommittee councillor members the ammunition and expertise they need to defend heritage issues to their council colleagues. A more formal structure will help the city attract the kind of citizen experts it wants to see on the committee, Hume said, referencing the problems the city has had in recruiting built heritage committee candidates. Maitland took exception to that. A four-time published author with 35 years of experience in architectural heritage, she applied two years ago and never received a response. While the advisory committee structure did need an overhaul, the city missed the mark on the built heritage committee, Maitland said. “You’re trying to fix something that isn’t broken,� she said.
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NEWS
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All Saints students look to raise $20,000 for cancer research School to hold Terry Fox Run on Sept. 28 Blair Edwards blair.edwards@metroland.com
Eddie the Yeti will storm the streets of Kanata Lakes to drum up support for the participants in All Saints Catholic High School’s annual Terry Fox Run on Sept. 28. The school mascot plans to travel ahead of the runners in a car along with several student council members who are organizing the event. The organizing committee began planning the event well before the start of classes this week. “It’s kind of like the first big event of the school year,” said Jen Ham, 17, a member of the student organizing committee. “We want to (rev) students up and Terry Fox will help us do it.” Many students’ lives have been touched by cancer in some way, said Aaron Doucet, 17, another member of the organizing committee. “It is kind of personal,” he said. “My grandmother died of cancer.” Aaron said he considered Terry Fox one of the greatest Canadians who ever lived. The student council hopes to raise more than $20,000 from this year’s run – $7,300
more than the total raised at last year’s event. “I feel we could exceed it,” said Aaron. The All Saints student council hopes to raise most of the money through pledges online at www.terryfoxrun.org. ROUTE
The five-kilometre run will start just before lunchtime on Sept. 28 at the high school and continue along Kanata Avenue, then loop back across several residential streets and parks. The event will stagger start times, with runners going first, followed by walkers. The school will offer a barbecue lunch for the participants. A week before the event, the school will hold an assembly to discuss the reason for and the importance of the annual run. “We’re hoping to (bring) a personal touch,” said Victoria Medeiros. “We’re hoping to have students come and share their stories.” The organizing committee hopes this will encourage all students to fundraise. FILE This is the ninth year All Saints has or- All Saints Catholic High School students are preparing for the school’s annual Terry Fox Run, ganized a Terry Fox Run. which will be held on Sept. 28 this year.
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NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Solution to poverty is restored class balance: Goddard It is meant to convince the middle and working classes to give up more just as the
wealthiest take even more. “Austerity measures are not working; it’s causing greater poverty, and that’s just not
Lansdowne Conservancy legal bid goes belly up laura.mueller@metroland.com
EMC news - The beleaguered Lansdowne Park redevelopment project cleared one of its last legal hurdles last week when the Ontario Court of Appeal dismissed a request for appeal from the Lansdowne Park Conservancy on Aug. 28. The decision effectively shut down that legal challenge against the $300-million project and allows work to move ahead on the project. The legal challenge brought by Glebe resident John Martin’s Conservancy group was dismissed as an abuse of process by Ontario divisional court on March 23. Between that decision and the most recent rejection by the Court of
Appeal, Martin and the Conservancy have been ordered to pay $11,000 to the City of Ottawa in legal costs. In a statement sent on Aug. 29, Martin wrote that it is unfortunate a competitive procurement process for the has been “sidelined.â€? “There is more than sufďŹ cient time for the City of Ottawa to conduct a competitive bidding process and develop this public asset in a manner respectful of the heritage and public nature of the site,â€? Martin wrote. “The choice is now up to our elected ofďŹ cials.â€? The Conservancy case is the second legal challenge to the project to be rejected by the courts. The Friends of Lansdowne spent $600,000 going to the Ontario Superior Court.
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serve power elites instead of the majority of voters. “Mostly it’s that people are willing to believe what is convenient. If they don’t want to give money to the poor, it can be as simple as greed,â€? he said. “I think that’s a false self-interest.â€? Ontario Health Coalition director Natalie Mehra, primary author of the report, said the province is on a ďŹ ve-year plan to cut public sector jobs and services that will worsen the situation for everyone. She said Ontario residents are paying for the current shortfall in “hundreds of ways,â€? from the highest tuition and school fees, the highest proportion of outof-pocket health care costs, a burgeoning array of user fees, and thousands of families wait years for support for children with disabilities. The full report can be found at weareontario.ca.
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He said the solution is to shift the burden away from the working and middle class to restoring a balance with the wealthiest. Increasing the income tax rate by one per cent of those making over $500,000 per year – about 30,000 people in Ontario – would “cover everything missing on social spending,� he added. However, Goddard admits there are plenty of catchy slogans and false arguments that convince poor people they deserve to be poor. There is the “rich people have earned their wealth� argument which often isn’t true because of inheritance laws. There is the “rich people create jobs� argument which isn’t borne out by statistics showing most jobs are created by small and medium sized businesses. There is the “government can’t do anything right� argument which blames civil servants rather than politicians who
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ADVERTORIAL
STOP the Destructive Mission of a Cigarette Butt Josée Adam, Project Officer
I am a cigarette butt and my mission in life is to cause mass destruction. Yes, I am like an evil superhero, a menace to society. I pride myself for being almost indestructible - I am not biodegradable, so I never really break down and die. I am also made up of harmful chemicals, making me a threat to children, wildlife and the environment. One of my favourite pass-times is to prey on the vulnerable. Toddlers and young children are curious and innocent, so I can easily fool them. For example, the other day, a 16 month-old girl was playing
in a park sand box and noticed me on the ground. She was curious about what I might be and she picked me up and put me in her mouth expecting a surprise. A surprise she did get, but not the one she wanted. She started to choke and her parents had to take her to the hospital. On the way there, the little girl was vomiting, lethargic and gagging because the poisonous material that I am made of was making her sick. She is only one of many who fall prey to my devious nature. My intention is not only to directly
cause harm to toddlers and young children, but I also love to surf the major waterways while contaminating the water with my super-toxic chemicals like lead, arsenic and cadmium. Yes, more than 200,000 of me were collected as part of the Great Canadian Shoreline Clean in 2010. My surfing activity leads fish to believe I am bait and they swallow me. Birds pick me up and bring me to their babies as food or use me as toxic nest-building material. Aha! I again succeed at spreading destruction wherever I go. All this is to say that I am a public nuisance and cities pay a lot of money to try and get rid of me. For example, the City of Ottawa spends $5.5 million dollars every year cleaning litter – including cigarette butts like me – from roads and parks. I am planning to continue my destructive journey and I dare YOU to try and stop my negative health, environmental and financial impacts. Are you up for the challenge? ..................................................... Cigarette butt litter is an important issue that must be addressed. What can you DO to stop its destructive mission?
• Put the evil butts in their place, where they belong: the butt box or a portable ashtray. • Dispose of fully extinguished matches and partially smoked cigarettes as well as lighters and packaging in the garbage bins. DON’T: • Put butts in storm drains • Throw them out of a car window since it can start a wildfire. • Bring them to places where children and toddlers play – parks, beaches and sports fields - or to natural environments that are contaminated by their presence. The fight against their destruction doesn’t end there. The ultimate action you can take is to reduce the numbers of cigarette butts in your community. This requires you to be a superhero in your own right, and to take courageous steps to quit smoking if you are a smoker or to encourage your friends to quit smoking. If you need help butting out, please visit ottawa.ca/ quitsmoking or call the Ottawa Public Health Information Line at 613-5806744 (TTY: 613-580-9656).
Immunization – Update your Child’s immunization Information with Ottawa Public Health Kathy Selst, Public Health Nurse
Routine immunization is one of the safest and most effective ways to prevent illness and death from many serious contagious diseases. These diseases, while rare in Ontario due to high vaccination rates, still exist, as seen in recent outbreaks of measles and whooping cough (pertussis).
Routine Immunization Schedule Immunization offers the best protection against diseases when given according to the recommended schedules. Publicly Funded Immunization Schedules for Ontario y
The Ontario government provides free routine Age Vaccines Diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, polio vaccines for all children. Ontario laws require parents 2 months and 4 months and Hib (5-in-1 vaccine) Pneumococcal conjugate of children attending licensed childcare or school Rotavirus (oral) 6 months Diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, polio to provide proof of their children’s immunization and Hib (5-in-1 vaccine) months (must be given on or Measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) or documentation of a legal exemption to their 12 after the first birthday) Meningococcal conjugate Pneumococcal conjugate local public health unit. All Public Health Units in 15 months Varicella (chickenpox) Diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, polio Ontario, including Ottawa Public Health (OPH), 18 months and Hib (5-in-1 vaccine) collect this information and enter it into a provincial 4-6 years old Diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus and polio (4-in1 vaccine) database. The records are collected when children Measles, mumps, rubella and varicella (4-in-1 vaccine) are registered to attend these facilities and must be 14-16 years old Diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus kept up to date. Doctor’s offices and clinics are (10 years after 4-6 year old booster) (3-in-1 vaccine) not required to provide immunization information Please check your child’s immunization record to to OPH. It is the parent’s responsibility to update find out if it is time for another vaccination. For OPH each time their child receives a vaccination. routine immunization, please visit your family physician or a walk-in clinic, then update your Surveillance of Immunization Records child’s immunization information with OPH. If you Every year, OPH nurses review the immunization do not have a family physician, you can call Health records of children attending licensed childcare Care Connect at 1-800-445-1822 to find one who facilities and schools. A notice is mailed to parents is taking new patients. For information on walk-in of any children with incomplete immunization clinics in your neighbourhood, call OPH at 613information. In some cases, a child may have 580-6744 (TTY: 613-580-9656). received the immunization, but the information has not been reported to OPH. Incomplete records can result in exclusion from a licensed childcare facility or suspension from school.
You can update your child’s immunization information with OPH in one of the following ways: • online form at ottawa.ca/health • Mail or drop off a photocopy of the immunization record to the Immunization Program at 100 Constellation Drive, 7th Floor West, Ottawa, ON K2G 6J8 Please do not mail original documents – send a copy! For more information, you can contact the Ottawa Public Health Immunization Program: • By calling 613-580-6744, extension 24108 • By E-mail at immunization@ottawa.ca • Via the web at ottawa.ca/health
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 7
OPINION
Your Community Newspaper
EDITORIAL
Students are ones caught in labour battle crossfire
P
lease, won’t someone think of the children? Ontario’s government and teachers’ unions don’t seem to be. The cash-strapped Ontario government and several of the province’s teachers unions are embroiled in a battle over proposed legislation to force a wage freeze on elementary and high school teachers. The unions say they are willing to accept a wage freeze, but call the government’s bill unconstitutional
and a violation of workers’ rights. The bill, titled Putting Students First, also calls for teachers to take a 1.5 per cent pay cut in the form of three unpaid professional development days and elimination of banked sick days. Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty insists these measures are necessary to maintain jobs and continue to roll out the full-day kindergarten program across Ontario. Meanwhile, a growing
number of teachers, angry over what they call heavyhanded legislation, are threatening to withdraw voluntary services, such as coaching teams and directing plays after school. The media also has reports of teachers who are considering removing class educational materials they have purchased out of their own pocket. Both the government and the teachers say they are fighting for students’ education.
We beg to differ. The Ontario government’s bill was created to balance the books – and preserve Dalton McGuinty’s legacy as the “education premier.� The teachers are simply trying to preserve their collective bargaining rights. But the kids are getting caught in the middle. If teachers individually choose not to volunteer after school, that could mean fewer extra-curricular activities available for students.
Our children should not be used as a collective bargaining chip. Premier McGuinty, for his part, should keep in mind that teachers freely volunteer their time to provide extracurricular activities for students. The dispute almost seems a little silly, as both sides have agreed a wage freeze is necessary, at least for the short-term. It’s ridiculous that both sides are engaged in what amounts to last-minute
negotiations. A deal should have been worked out months ago. Instead of ironing out a deal, it seems both sides have engaged in a little game of Russian roulette. Unfortunately, it’s the province’s children who will end up the ultimate losers in their little game. Both sides need to abandon their public posturing, and focus instead on working out a deal that addresses each other’s concerns.
COLUMN
Staying connected on the dock CHARLES GORDON Funny Town
R
eflecting back on the summer just passed, it is possible to conclude that there is something changeless about summer life in Canada – the lakes, the loons, the summer breezes, the sounds of the birds, the roar of the motorboats, the quiet two-lane roads, the trailers in front of you on the two-lane roads, the grilled cheese sandwich beside the highway. There’s good and bad in it, but it hasn’t changed much in decades. Sure the cottages are bigger, the toys are faster and louder and a simple lifestyle that once was common is now regarded as primitive. But can it really stay the same? The time spent at cottages and on the highway this summer makes me wonder. For this was the summer of Wi-Fi, the first of many. In the remotest parts of Northern Ontario, the smallest motels offered Wi-Fi on their signs along the highway. Wi-Fi or some other forms of connectivity were in evidence on devices brought to the cottage. Connectivity was everywhere. Getting away from it all was nowhere. Which is different, because the cottage used to be the one place that was unconnected. Sure, there might be a phone, but nobody used it much. Even the telemarketers didn’t seem to know the number. As for email, it was a distant dream, or nightmare, depending on how you viewed it. This was frustrating for some people, not so for others. The others were perfectly con-
tent to find out what was going on in the city when they got back to the city. They could live without the latest news, the latest blogs. But for some it was frustrating to be out of touch. And you could tell, this summer, by how often they sat with their devices, the phones and iPads and laptops, looking at newly-connected screens. The fact is that for most of us connectedness is no longer an option. People expect us to be online and answer immediately. We open emails with the expectations we used to have about opening the mail. Something good might be there: the Queen wants to meet you, a previously unknown rich uncle has died and left you millions, someone wants to film your life story. Not being able to have access to this news has been a drag. Now the drag is gone and we can stay in the real world – as if life in the city is somehow more real than life beside the lake. Will Wi-Fi spoil the summer experience? Not for those rare individuals who can take it or leave it, who can spend days without looking at a screen and only check their email once a week. But it will definitely be spoiled for those who hoped to spend a few weeks free of people reading them funny items found on the Internet. On the other hand, the absence of connectedness makes some people difficult to live with. They are antsy, irritable, always charging off to the library or the nearest coffee shop to check emails, even if the nearest one is a boat ride away plus many kilometres on the highway. Now that they can check their emails on the dock they will be easier to live with. And when you have a family argument about some arcane movie trivia you can refer it to Google, thus heading off hours of debate. Maybe you can even find the instructions for the chainsaw. You take your small blessings where you can.
Editorial Policy The West Carleton Review EMC welcomes letters to the editor. Senders must include their full name, complete address and a contact phone number. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. We reserve the right to edit letters for space and content, both in print and online at www.yourottawaregion.com. To submit a letter to the editor, please email to patricia.lonergan@metroland.com , fax to 613-224-2265 or mail to West Carleton Review EMC, 8 McGonigal St. West, Arnprior, ON, K7S 1L8.
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OPINION
Your Community Newspaper
The Farmer builds a canoe The happy sound of sawing and hammering has been coming from the shed for weeks squashed at the foot of the stairs like the Wicked Witch of the West, with my feet and arms sticking out from under the contraption. When we got to the top of the stairs, we realized we couldn’t get it through the door. “How did you get it downstairs in the first place?!” I asked. The Farmer deduced he probably put the saw and other heavy items like the freezer in the basement before putting the door – and possibly the walls – on. He had to let go to run out to the shed for a screwdriver and hammer. “Don’t move,” he said, as he slowly released the full weight of the table saw onto me. I held my breath for a minute, then my muscles started to shake, and finally I started to giggle, just as he reappeared in the doorway, tools in hand. Finally we got the thing up and out of the patio door, down the porch stairs and out to the shed, where the canoe would be built. ADVICE
I keep waiting for our Cree friends to show up. They would probably have some advice on the easiest way to go about building a canoe.
Join others in Constance Bay shoreline cleanup
DIANA FISHER Accidental Farmwife
We’ll have to wait until goose hunting season and see if they appear, unannounced, on our doorstep as one or two of them do every year. The Farmer bought three books and studied them enough to get the gist of the operation – but he still occasionally comes across some interesting obstacles. For example, after building the skeleton frame for his canoe and then steaming and bending long, thin strips of cedar over that to form the body of the canoe, he suddenly wondered how he would get the finished canoe off the frame. “Doesn’t one of your books tell you how to do that?” I asked. He shook his head, a little doubtfully. I’m not convinced he read them in their entirety. After all, how can one stick to “Canoe Craft 101” when “50 Shades of Grey” is waiting on your beside table?? YOUTUBE
I suggested he search through YouTube for a how-to video. He just stared at me. Oh yeah. The Farmer thinks computers are for work. Period. He never logs on at home. On Sunday, the kids came
over for dinner. Andrew and Anastasia wandered out to check on the progress of the canoe. Within about 5 minutes Andrew had figured out how to get the canoe off the frame without busting up the interior skeleton. Sometimes it just takes a second set of eyes. Personally, I don’t know why we need to preserve the skeleton. It isn’t like the Farmer is going into the canoe-building business. Next, he set about his search for various unique brass do-hickeys and thingies for the canoe. He didn’t have to look far. The Aylings Marina in Merrickville is a treasure trove of paraphernalia for antique boats. He even shopped local for the canvas outer covering of the canoe. Joe Sparling at Kemptville Fabrics had some hidden away in storage: it has a strong smell so his wife wouldn’t let him keep it in the store. The happy sound of sawing and hammering has been coming from the shed for weeks. The canoe is now wrapped in canvas and the Farmer is trying to figure out a way to shrink-wrap the fabric. This should be interesting.
EMC letter - Our Constance Bay Village is widely envied for its unique natural areas. Our sandy shorelines and forest trails are still pristine. We want to keep it that way. Some threats we have little control over, such as runaway development, changing water levels and polluted runoff. But together we can make a huge difference by keeping our shoreline clear of the litter that kills our river wildlife and eventually accumulates, for decades, in our oceans crippling our seafood source fisheries. Our third annual C-Bay Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup 2012 (just one of 2000 in Canada) on Sept. 16 from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Point works to intercept that litter. And we will have help, bigtime! Many organizations have
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EMC Lifestyle - When the Farmer is on holiday, he often works harder than he does at work. Physically, anyway. And his favourite thing to do when on holiday? Build something. My husband once told me that if he knew then what he knows now—that an engineer does more than just drive trains—he would have been one. He has built four houses, a barn, a deck, a sunroom, several dollhouses (one of them life-sized) and his new project is a cedar strip canoe. Step one to this project was getting the old battlehorse table saw out of the basement. It’s as wide as it is long, and very awkward to move because you can’t get your arms around it in either direction. And it’s heavy as a tank. The Farmer tipped it up and slid his dolly under it, then wrapped some lift cords around and under it to secure the thing. Next he called me to come help him lift it up the stairs. He pulled and I pushed, one step at a time, with every ounce of strength we had. It was slow going, but we made it up the stairs without tipping it over onto me. I kept picturing myself
letter
in 1988 to 650 in 2011, and to only a little more than 100 since the beginning of 2012. Polio resurgence around the world after so many years of effort would be disastrous. We would probably then lose forever the chance to eradicate the disease. R0011243339
EMC letter- Humanity is about to eradicate polio after three decades of continuous efforts to immunize the children of the world. Thanks to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), the total number of polio cases decreased from 350,000
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letter
Polio is a dying disease
signed on to help us delitter our shoreline right. Because it matters to everyone, Loblaws, Kanata Home Depot, Ocean Conservancy, the WWF, the Vancouver Aquarium, the Mississippi Valley Conservation, the Ottawa Riverkeeper, the Canada Museum of Nature, all will be doing our cleanup 2012 with us! Join our team now. Get your friends in. Families. All ages. Earn community service hours. Register free today at http://c-bayshorelinecleanup.evenbrite.ca or email acorn@treenuts.ca or call 613.832.2745. Help preserve our Village way of life. Assure our future. For the kids. It works. It matters.
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 9
OPINION
Your Community Newspaper
A feathered visitor from Mexico
Last week Bill Gilmour had EMC lifestyle – Birdwatching or, in more modern lingo, an ocean of adrenalin flow birding, is one of the most through his veins. Late Monpopular forms of outdoor rec- day evening he was biking in Presqu’ile reation. Provincial People look Park when he at birds for a vaheard an unfariety of reasons. miliar call. For some, it is the Bill folrichness of their lowed the colour and form. loud squeal to For others, it is its source and their intriguing to his amazebehaviours. ment found Still others look a bird that he at birds in the same had only ever way philatelists Michael Runtz seen before in look at stamps Nature’s Way Mexico. – they are items to It was a be collected. Thick-billed In earlier days, people quite literally collected Kingbird, a flycatcher never before recorded in eastern birds. They were shot and stuffed North America, and only seen and placed in display cases. once before in Canada; in Their eggs were also col- 1974 one turned up near Vancouver. lected. Like its name suggests, the Today, however, people “collect� birds in a more eco- Thick-billed kingbird has a friendly way. They strive to massive bill, one apparently see new birds and record their used to subdue not only large encounters by placing a tick insects but also lizards. Of course, in Presqu’ile the mark beside the bird’s name latter was not on the bird’s on a list. “Listing� can be done on a menu, but black-and-white world, country, provincial, or hornets certainly were. I heard about Bill’s discovregional basis. Regional listing can be ery later that same day. I arparticularly exciting, with the rived at Presqu’ile at 6:30 the greatest excitement arising next morning, and even though whenever a bird rare to that it was just past dawn a crowd of birders, some coming from region is encountered.
MICHAEL RUNTZ
A Thick-billed kingbird surprised birders by showing up in Ontario. as far as Leamington, was already admiring the bird. It conveniently perched atop trees, affording terrific views through binoculars and spotting scopes. The kingbird sported brown upperparts and a pale belly, which was yellow on its lower portion. When it preened, the crown feathers parted revealing a
yellow patch at their base. Our Eastern Kingbird has a similar patch but it is red. The crown patch is usually revealed whenever a kingbird is aggressively driving away a larger bird such as a hawk, a behaviour that earned the group its appropriate name. Why did the kingbird wander to Ontario? Well, it is not uncommon
Regardless of why they wander, vagrant birds such as Bill Gilmour’s Thick-billed Kingbird create a rush of endorphins that etch lifelong memories for their discoverers. The thought of that makes me want to start listing again! The Nature Number is 613387-2503; email is mruntz@ start.ca.
for a young flycatcher to migrate in the wrong direction, as if programmed incorrectly. Most years, transient flycatchers from the south make an appearance in Ontario. Lacking the correct navigational software, those individuals are usually doomed. This bird appeared to be an adult so its arrival is even more puzzling.
September 15 to October 15, 2012
Join your friends and neighbours to clean up a park, schoolyard or other public area in your community.
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10 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
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Step 2: Your cleanup project Join your friends and neighbours for a cleanup project in your neighbourhood such as a park, schoolyard, ravine or any public area that may need to be tidied up.
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Step 1: Register Register your cleanup project by visiting ottawa.ca/clean or calling 3-1-1 before October 15. We’ll provide you with a cleanup kit with everything you need to get started.
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 11
THE
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613-838-7222 )BWF 'VO BU UIF 'BJS
ATTRACTIONS
• 9:00 am - Judging Agriculture Awareness Exhibits • 9:00 am - Judging Homecraft Exhibits (buildings closed to public) • 11:00 am - Dining Hall: St. Paul’s United Church Home Cooked Meals • 6:00 pm - Toonie Night for Midway Rides • 6:00 pm - Cool Britannia (in Bavarian Garden tent) • 7:00 pm - Lawn Tractor Pull (Registration 6:00 pm - see Event Entry Rules)
12 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
PAINT/ELECTRICAL/PLUMBING & HARDWARE KITCHENS/WINDOWS/DOORS LAMINATE & HARDWOOD FLOORING INTERIOR DOORS & TRIM/LUMBER/SIDING
• $18 Advance; $20 at Door (if available)
Councillor | Rideau-Goulbourn
613-838-2800
613-838-4659
R0011600399
SATURDAY NIGHT ARENA ENTERTAINMENT:
.rentacarcanada.ca
Richmond
R0011415665
• $20 Advance; $25 at Door (if available)
Sc tt Moffatt
www 6104 Perth Street, Richmond
#BSO :BSE 4BMFT TBOEZT TBEEMFSZ DPN
3
Special 18 holes with cart only $35 plus tax. 9 holes with cart only $25 plus tax. Membership Special Join the rest of 2012 season for only $175.00 plus tax. OR New Members can start their 2013 membership effective September 9, 2012 Existing Full or Weekday Members receive $100.00 credit valid for any food, beverage, green fees and power cart rentals if purchased by December 1, 2012.
Online at www.EMCOnline.ca Contact Mike Stoodley
613.688.1675
R0011600583
• $25/bracelet (1 pm to 11 pm - purchased on the midway)
www.mycar.ca
(613) 692-4300
• 35 coupons for $40
FRIDAY ALL DAY, PAY ONE PRICE MIDWAY:
613-838-5150
5452 Mitch Owens Rd. Manotick , Ont. K4M 1B2
ADVANCE GATE TICKETS:
Advance gate tickets & midway coupons available at Fair Office 6121 Perth Street until Thursday, September 15, 2011 at 7:00 pm
6104 Perth St. Richmond
&OHMJTI r 8FTUFSO r )BSOFTT #PVMFU r "SJBU #PPUT r "QQBSFM -JWFTUPDL r 1FU 4VQQMJFT r(JGUXBSF
• 13 years & over - $10 • 6 to 12 years - $2, • 5 years & under - FREE
613-838-0222
R0011599015
SANDY’S SADDLERY
WELCOME TO OUR “FAIR� TOWN!
Celebrating 168 Years Since 1844 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Walnut MapleOak CherryPine
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 14TH AGRICULTURE AWARENESS DAY
6054 Perth Street Richmond, Ontario 613-838-5850 | Email: jackson@afterharvest.com
R0011598750
R0011598741
AS A MATTER OF FACT, OUR WINDOWS ARE THE BEST
#1 in Stittsville & Kanata
SCOTIABANK DAY
LOG CABIN ORCHARD Several varieties to choose from in season Hayrides, Apple Store, Fresh Baked Goods available Log Cabin Orchard, 6121 Cabin Rd., Osgoode, ON
8_ebc* =_^TQi d_ 6bYTQi ! Q] d_ 4ec[ CQdebTQi Ce^TQi )Q] d_ 4ec[ Summer Fruits, Apples, Pumpkin Patch, Christmas at the Cabin, Perfect setting for your Family photos
It’s Free!
SAVE UP TO 90% R0011600550
SEE YOU AT THE FAIR! R0011598727
Your Coffee Shop is proud to support the local community & the Richmond Fair.
9:00 am - Kiddyland (see Program Schedule) 9:00 am - Saddle & Harness Horse Show 9:30 am - Heavy Horse Show (Line Classes) 9:30 am - Western Horse & Pony Performance Show 10:00 am - Agriculture Awareness Presenters & Displays 10:00 am - Curling Club: Homecraft Exhibits/Trade Show 11:00 am - Dining Hall: St. Paul’s United Church Home Cooked Meals (until 7:00 pm) 11:00 am - Parade leaves South Carleton High School 11:00 am - Jr. Shorthorn & Jr. Hereford Beef Show 11:30 am - Open 4-H Beef Showmanship Show (Pre-4-H Beef Showmanship Show to follow) 12:00 pm - Family Entertainment (Outdoor Stage) 12:30 pm - Saddle & Harness Horse Show (Hitch Classes) 12:30 pm - To Be Announced (Outdoor Stage) 1:00 pm - Heavy Horse Show (Hitch Classes) 1:00 pm - Shorthorn, Angus & Hereford Beef Show 1:00 pm - Arena Entertainment Chris McCann Trio (until 5 pm) 6:00 pm - Outdoor Stage Brad Scott & Route 29 6:00 pm - Craz E Crew Stunt Team BMX Bike Show 8:30 pm - Arena Entertainment: The Blackwell Band 10:00 pm - Arena Entertainment: Shane Yellowbird 12:00 am - Arena Entertainment: The Blackwell Band
Richmond Auto Care Steve Holmes “Putting Service Back in Auto Service�
3835 McBean St. Unit 1 Richmond, ON K0A 2Z0 Phone: 613-838-4349 (4FIX) Fax: 613-838-1275
R0011598571
R0011598594
SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 16TH
Hours of Operation Mon-Thurs 9am-8pm Fri-Sat 9am-6pm
Richmond IDA Pharmacy 6179 Perth St. Richmond 613-838-5323
TOMLINSON DAY
R0011598904
0906.R0011599437
613-838-2141
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 15TH
12: 23(1
Do business with WagJag! Email ottawa@wagjag.com
6179 Perth Street, Richmond
613-838-3790
WWW.BAYVIEWWINDOWS.CA
3QcX ?^\i \i @Ud 6bYU^T cU UQ \UQcXUc `\
9:00 am - Kiddyland (see Program Schedule) 9:00 am - Agriculture Awareness School Program (buildings closed to public) 10:00 am - Curling Club: Homecraft Exhibits/Trade Show 11:00 am - Dining Hall: St. Paul’s United Church Home Cooked Meals (until 7:00 pm) 11:00 am - Open 4-H Dairy Showmanship Show (Pre 4-H Dairy Showmanship Show to follow) 1:00 pm - Jersey & Holstein Dairy Show 3:30 am - Agriculture Awareness (buildings open to public) 7:00 pm - Demolition Derby (Registration 6:00 pm - see Event Entry Rules) 8:30 pm - Arena Entertainment: Alex Ryder 10:30 pm - Arena Entertainment: Honeymoon Suite
King’s
R0011598670
since 1975
Handcrafted Furniture
R0011598581
A After H Harvest
8:30 am - Miniature Horse Show 9:00 am - Kiddyland (see Program Schedule) 9:00 am - Draft & Commercial Horse Show (Line Classes) 9:30 am - Western Horse & Pony Games Show 10:00 am - Agriculture Awareness Presenters & Displays 10:00 am - Curling Club: Homecraft Exhibits/Trade Show 10:30 am - Non-Dominational Church Service 10:30 am - Sheep Show (New Barn) 11:00 am - Dining Hall Meals - Chef-Express Catering 11:30 am - Open 4-H Beef Showmanship Show (Pre 4-H Beef Showmanship to follow) 12:00 pm - Youth Amateur Talent Contest (Outdoor Stage) 1:00 pm - Limousin & Simmental Beef Show 1:00 pm - Heavy Horse Show (Hitch Classes) 1:00 pm - Arena Enterainment: doubleBack 2:30 pm - Arena Enterainment: George Hamilton IV 4:30 pm - Arena Enterainment: doubleBack
6179 Perth Street, Richmond (Richmond Plaza)
613-838-8828 www.ThatHuntingStore.com
NOTE: Times for some events may change and some new events may be added closer to fair time.
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 13
R0011582074
Ama Lun zing c Dinnh & Spe er cial s!
Kal’s Place Restaurant & Pizzeria
1 Year Anniversary FULLY LICENSED
SPECIALS:
Thi promotion This ti cannott b be combined bi d with any other special.
25% OFF
50% OFF
ANY LARGE PIZZA
ANY PASTA DISH
KIDS EATS FREE! (12 & Under)
(Dine in only)
with the purchase of 1 at regular price
1 child’s meal with the purchase of an entree
(Dine in only)
(Dine in only)
en t u l G E FRE tion c Sele
All prices are subject to applicable taxes and prices may change without notice. Photos are for illustration purposes only and may not reflect actual served plate.
OPEN FOR
Free refills on all Fountain Drinks Offers expire Sunday, September 30th Daily Specials available BREAKFASTÊÇÊ`>ÞÃÊ>ÊÜii ÊUÊÇ> V Ãi
5517 Hazeldean Rd. Stittsville (Lowe’s Plaza)
ȣΰnΣ°nxnxÊUÊÜÜÜ° > Ã* >Vi°V> 14 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Tips to help manage your daily commute City offers tools to help motorists and transit users plan routes to avoid construction zones and traffic EMC news – As back-toschool and work traffic get rolling for another year, motorists will notice an increased number of road construction projects and a higher volume of traffic. However, the City of Ottawa and other organizations have the tools to help motorists and transit users plan their routes and manage their commute to avoid construction zones and traffic congestion. “We are making significant investments to improve our transportation network for drivers, transit users, cyclists and pedestrians,” said Mayor Jim Watson. “To help with your commute, the City offers a number of resources to get you to your destination quickly and safely.” The city’s Ottawa.ca website, which can be accessed by home computers and handheld electronic devices, features: • The City of Ottawa traffic report outlines citywide road closures, traffic restrictions and detours; • The interactive traf-
fic map shows construction areas and live traffic cams throughout the city and the Ministry of Transportation cameras along Highway 417; • Cycling maps and information – detailing bicycle pathways and lanes throughout the city. To keep you posted on traffic alerts and closures, follow the City on Twitter. Residents are also encouraged to take advantage of OC Transpo’s Service. Transit users can chart and plan routes with the Travel Planner at octranspo.com or find the closest stops and best estimated bus arrivals with the OC Transpo app, which is available for Apple iPhones and IOS users. Also check for private iPhone and Android mobile apps that are geared to help in your daily travel around Ottawa. In addition to these tools, motorists are encouraged to take advantage of teleworking options if available at their workplace or flexible hours to avoid peak traffic times and congestion. “One out of every five
roads in Ottawa is in need of renewal or reconstruction. We are solving this by focusing on rebuilding and renewing our city,” said Marianne Wilkinson, Chair of the Transportation Committee. “While this work could potentially cause delays on the roads now, the road renewal and reconstruction activity will pay off for all of Ottawa in the future.” Ottawa is now embarking on an exciting journey of transformation that will revitalize and renew our community into a modern, worldclass city. Transforming Ottawa includes construction on The New Lansdowne, Ottawa Light Rail and Ottawa on the Move, a $340-million investment in accelerated infrastructure projects to help mitigate impact on the roads during the light rail construction. The City of Ottawa is committed to helping residents manage their commute as the city undergoes a major transformative period until the implementation of Light Rail in 2018.
PROVIDING RECREATIONAL AND COMPETITIVE WATER POLO TO OTTAWA FOR OVER 25 YEARS
Academy
- age 11-14 - 2 or 3 practices and - age 7-13 1 scrimmage per week - 1 practice and 1 scrimmage per week - co-ed - in town tournaments - co-ed - out of town tournaments - in town games - provinical championships
I Love Water Polo
Start your journey in exotic India where you can experience the cinematic sensation of Bollywood dancing. From there, venture into the middle east where you can learn to Belly dance and, in a limited offering, Bellywood. Belly dance classes have been around for years. When you are ready to take your belly dance skills to the next level, learn the complexities of Egyptian style dance by combining technique with intermediate and advanced choreography. Then, further sample the continent by learning about Western African Dance. Here, you will discover the rhythm and the energy of African dance and get a great cardio workout at the same time. Cross the Atlantic to the beaches of Rio. You will be ready for Carnival after indulging in Latin Rythm, Latin Line dancing, Salsa and
If you are looking for more of a workout, try a Cardio Fit Class with Latin Spice. For a more domestic experience, there are several ballroom, hip hop, jazz, rock and jive and American tango classes. Learn the energetic and entertaining art of Step dancing. This Irish/Scottish influenced form of dance dates back to the 1800s in the Ottawa Valley. Routines will focus on footwork, rhythms, and musicality. Can’t quite decide? Maybe you want to combine a few cultures in a Dance Fusion class, or Qi Dance, a fitness class with moves built around the world’s hottest rhythms, opening your body to change, freedom and fun.
Fall Classes start soon! Browse online at ottawa.ca/ recreation to discover affordable fall and winter programs. Visit your favourite facility where knowledgeable and friendly staff will help you discover your next adventure. You can also call 3-1-1 for more details. R0011596141-0906
Register Today! t #PPU $BNQ t *OEPPS $ZDMJOH t TRX X® t ;VNCB® t 1JMBUFT t YPHBMBUFT
Competitive
Semi-Competitive - 18+ - 1 practice per week - co-ed - local tournaments
t /PSEJD WBMLJOH t TSJBUIMPO TSBJOJOH
Recreational House League Learn To Play - age 13 14-18 - 1 practice and 1 scrimmage per week - co-ed - in town games
Experience them all in the Adult Classes chapter of the Recreation eGuide, available at ottawa.ca/ recreationguide.
Merengue classes. Or, for a Latin flavour without crossing the ocean, head north to the Mediterranean to learn Spanish castanets.
Fitness and Wellness Classes
WATER POLO
- age 14-18 - 45+ practices per week - separate girls and boys teams - local league opportunities - provinical championships - national championships
You don’t have to travel the world to explore the world of dance. You only have to travel to a nearby recreation facility and take part in one of the more than 200 adult dance classes offered by the City of Ottawa.
Fa st ll c ar la t s ss oo es n!
TITANS
OUR PROGRAMS
Travel the world through the world of dance
- 18+ - 1 practice per week - co-ed - local tournaments
$IFDL PVU PVS 3FDSFBUJPO F(VJEF POMJOF GPS B MJTUJOH PG
Give it a try!
OFJHICPVSIPPE BOE BDSPTT UIF DJUZ
www.titanswaterpolo.ca
R0011600251
Email: info@titanswaterpolo.ca to ask about a free trial
ottawa.ca/recreation West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 15
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Studio tour to be a first for Arnprior area art group Wide variety of media on display at Arnprior and Beyond Arts Discovery Tour
SUBMITTED
It’s a Gas, a work by Bruce Grinstead, will be one of the many art pieces on display at the nine studios hosting a tour Sept. 29-30.
Your Community Newspaper
Fibrefest features five locations this weekend EMC events - The Mississippi Valley Textile Museum’s popular Fibrefest is returning for its 17th year this weekend (Sept. 8-9). The event runs at five Almonte-area locations from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. The cost to enter all Fibrefest sites is $5 per day. The Mississippi Valley Textile Museum, North Lanark Agricultural Hall, Almonte Old Town Hall, North Lanark Historical Museum and Mill of Kintail will feature everything from fibre art vendors and demonstrations to exhibits. Local guilds will be on hand to demonstrate the arts of knitting, lacemaking, smocking, weaving, spinning, quilting, penny rugs, button collecting and more. Judy Miller is the event’s featured textile artist. She combines fabric-painting techniques and free-motion machine embroidery to produce works rich in colour and texture. The featured group exhibit is TREES by Threadworks, a special project of the Ontario Network of Needleworkers’ 1,000-plus members. Threadworks is a juried exhibition that is mounted every three years and travels across Ontario to many museums and galleries. Fibrefest’s featured events are the Tweed Ride and Doors Open Mississippi Mills. The Tweed Ride is a gently paced ‘weave’ on bicycles through town and out into the country wearing a stylish outfit of a bygone time. It starts Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at the Almonte Fairgrounds. Tweed Rides are happening around the Globe in support of good causes. The charity supported by Almonte’s ride is ‘Bicycles for Haiti’. Doors Open is a celebration of community heritage and an opportunity for participants to visit many of the historic and architecturally significant sites in Carleton Place, Almonte and area. This year organizers are opening the doors to churches, inns, a clock tower and even a waste water treatment plant. For more information about Fibrefest, contact the museum at 613-256-3754, ext. 7 or email info@mvtm.ca or visit www. mvtm.ca.
DEREK DUNN/METROLAND
DAVID JOHNSTON
The Cooper Brothers were one of the headline acts to perform Thursday August 30 at Bay Days. Though turnout for shows was less than what organizers had hoped for, they were satisfied with the caliber of the entertainment provided.
Lobster night was a delicious success. Volunteers Anita Kamps (left) and Anne Currie enjoyed the meal and entertainment by the Keystrings.
Bay Days participation could have been higher: volunteer Continued from page 2
“The beach day was a success. While swimming did not draw a lot of interest, the boating events were a hit. Just letting the kids play with the paddle boats, kayaks, wind surf boards and canoes made the children happy. “The children also loved the treasure hunt and kept coming back to try it over and over again. We learned a lot about what to do differently and what worked and did not but were pleased to see a lot of happy, enthusiastic children. The children loved having a parent participate with them in events so we will do more events that include parent/child next year
(even though the parents were not quite as enthusiastic).” Unfortunately, Currie did not have as much success with the Talent Show, which was cancelled due to lack of contestants. “Apparently a lot of young people are shy to get up on stage and show their stuff,” she said. “Other than that, I do not know why there was so little interest. It is difficult to figure out what young people want as far as entertainment goes. Adult participation was no better so maybe people are just over this kind of entertainment and we will have to rethink what to do next year. A lot of effort went into organizing this event and
when we ended up with more volunteers than participants.” Commenting on the overall small turnout for much of the planned events, Currie said, “We tried to do too much. In my opinion, the lack of participation by the community was interesting to say the least. While there was a lot going on that drew from our events such as the Dunrobin Meat and Grocery golf tournament, the Shawville Fair, the Kinburn Festival, etc., I do think there was a concerted effort by the not so secret water-
front committee to stay away from events in protest to the whole beach issue. They did block off the beach at the Point on Beach Day so they were doing a sort of silent passive/aggressive protest.” Currie added that, “It is hard not to be disappointed in the participation level for all the events partly because of the tremendous efforts put in by the organizers and their volunteers. Some of the people I know of that have put in literally days of effort are Ian Glen,
Alf and Anne Currie, Mike Oatway, Rick Dooher, Anita Kamps, Penney and Gord Johnson, Kirk Mandy, Len Russell, Heather and Walt Lucente, Andy Wurzler, Sandi Sbardella, Dave and Jill Goodkey, Virginia Blondin, Janet Laverne, and Vera Jones.” The next Project Sandhills fundraiser is a big golf tournament Saturday Sept. 22 at Copperdale Golf Club. The noon shotgun start and will wrap up with a prime rib dinner, prizes and awards presentations at the Constance Bay Community Centre. Call 613-832-1070 to register.
0906_R0011595052
EMC events - A fledgling Arnprior area arts group is putting local artisans in the spotlight. The Arnprior and Beyond Arts Association (ABARTSA) will hold its inaugural Arnprior and Beyond Arts Discovery Tour on the Sept. 29-30 weekend. This studio tour, running 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days, will guide visitors through a scenic route as they visit nine participating studios in Arnprior, McNab-Braeside, Renfrew and Pakenham. At each studio between one and four local artists will have examples of their work on display along with information on the different art workshops offered by many of the participants. A wide variety of different artistic media will be shown, including oil, acrylic and water colour painting, byzantine icons, handmade jewelry, art photography, digital art, blown glass, mosaics, metal sculpture, wood carving, and painting on egg shells. The intent of the tour is to attract residents and visitors to the area in order to promote the skills of local artists and to put the Arnprior area on the artistic map. In total, 24 individual artists are participating in the tour. ABARTSA has created a website at http://abartsa.wordpress. com. You can download the map as well as the full addresses of the participating studios from the website or look for one of the tour brochures at participating stores and organizations. The event has received sponsorship from a number of local companies that have shown interest in the tour and would like to help attract visitors to the local region. The brochure shows the route and includes descriptions of the participating studios and artists and their various media. ABARTSA is a group of dedicated, professional artists formed earlier this year. Members are interested in promoting the arts within Arnprior and the surrounding communities through public exhibitions, affiliations with businesses and government, workshops, and supporting the community. During the recent Arnprior 150th anniversary celebrations, ABARTSA participated through its Art in the Park exhibition. ABARTSA also recently took part in the Renfrew Art in the Park exhibition.
NEWS
16 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
17
R0011591296
18 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
R0011604961/0906
REAL ESTATE
0906 R0011601375
A PART OF YOUR LIFE IN THE ARNPRIOR AREA FOR 3 GENERATIONS GREG TOWNLEY Broker of Record
Brokerage
established in 1958
613-623-3906
159 John Street North, Arnprior Business: 613-623-3939 Fax: 613-623-9336
www.arnpriorlife.com • Email: gtownley@arnpriorlife.com
Spacious 4 bed room family home on 4.52 acre private lot within 30 minutes of Ottawa, full front covered veranda, eat-in oak kitchen with built-in appliances, and ceramic floor, formal dining room, spacious living room, large front entrance foyer, full finished basement with 40x12.6 family room, games room and den 2nd level has 4 good sized bed rooms, master bed room features his and her walk-in closets
95 Acre hobby farm, 10 min west of Arnprior on Goshen Rd. with access to HWY 17. Log home with many upgrades. Lrg living rm, lots of room for expansion, log barns with standing stalls, open pasture & tillable, plus bush at rear.
and 4 piece ensuite with Jacuzzi. MLS MLS 844192 $350,000 844033 $369,000.00
3 Bed rm hi-ranch fully finished on both levels, hardwood flrs in living rm and formal dining rm. Lrg den and games rm area easily converted to a 4th bed rm. Lrg back yard deck and patio areas and above ground pool. Oversized paved driveway, nicely landscaped.
MLS 841209 $269,000
Ted Kelly Broker
Realty Solutions Ltd. Independently Owned and Operated Brokerage
104-39 Winners Circle Drive, Arnprior Office Tel 613-623-3665
Direct Line (613) 622-5817
Large 4 BR 3 bath home on Barlow Cres. Near Ottawa river. Prestigious area with high end homes.
3 Bed room home with attached addition was a former general store / post office and has walk in cooler, ideal for in home business, 2 car detached garage work-shop, gas fireplace in living room, part of basement has handy walk-out access to outside.
MLS 832720 $184,900
2 + 1 Bed rm bungalow on nice lot at edge of town. Eat-in kitchen has bar area, hardwd floors in living rm, lrg back yard dec, lrg open lower level family rm, master bed rm on lower level features lrg cedar linen closet and gas fire place. Insulated 2 car attached garage work shop.
Downtown Arnprior, retail building 1440 sq. ft. retail space, plus 340 sq. ft. office space and 500 sq. ft. of storage space at rear, employee parking at rear. 2nd storey former apartment, basement for storage, gas heating furnace 2001 and central air.
Arnprior 5 unit apartment building in central location, good sized units has gas fireplaces. Tenants pay hydro and heating, up to date gas furnace provides heat to common areas and unit #1 and two ducts in unit #2 coin laundry on lower level.
Great starter home, handy downtown location, walk to everything, family room addition with 3 pce bath can be main floor bed room, vinyl windows, 2 baths, presently home does not have a driveway.
MLS 822848 $259,900
MLS 828933 $229,900
MLS 830235 $475,000
MLS 836564 $112,500
MLS 838278
$425,000
600 acres Calabogie hunt camp or development potential. Income potential from selective cutting timber.
$660,000
MLS 828164
LAND FOR SALE Great family home in newer subdivision, open concept design washed oak kitchen with built in dishwasher. Large bright dining room with access to large back yard, wrap around deck, salt water above ground pool. Basement is framed and has rough in for future bath and awaits your finishing touch.
MLS 828294 $285,500
3 Bedroom historical home in the “Glebe” of Arnprior, soughtafter neighbourhood, walk to all schools, town park and swimming in Ottawa River, boat launch and marina, hospital, churches and down town. Fully fenced deep lot offers privacy, attached one car garage with access to house, large kitchen with patio doors to back yard patio area, formal dining room, large full bath on 2nd level and half bath on main level.
2 Storey retail building in downtown Arnprior. Lrg stock & storage area at rear and loading area at rear, 2 access for further storage in full basement, huge 2nd flr with open concept, former apartments, can be converted back to supplement income with some work / updating required.
MLS 835437 $198,500
MLS 834144 $234,900
Great 4 Bedroom 2.5 storey family home in central location, close to everything, large eat-in kitchen, pine floors in living room, 4 Piece bath recently updated, updated floor in kitchen and hallway, new roof 6 years, 4 appliances included 3 years old, full front covered front veranda, double driveway, fenced yard.
MLS 844057 $129,900
2 waterfront lots in Arnprior Ottawa river with spectacular views MLS 832420 & 832421 $425,000 each
R0021599146
Thinking of selling your home this fall? Give me a call for a free Current Market Assessment and advice on how to get your home ready for sale West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 19
R0021572699
Paula Hartwick Sales Rep. Realty Solutions Ltd. 104-39 Winners Circle Drive, Arnprior Office Tel 613-623-3665
$279,900
$389,900
$156,000 MLS#830302 ARNPRIOR
MLS# 840658
205 Allan Drive Asking $156,000, 3 bedroom, 1 162 Charles St. Spacious 3+1 bed, 3 bath bungalow in bathroom semi-detached home within walking distance sought after neighbourhood. to schools, shopping and restaurants.
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES TWO TRIPLEXES AVAILABLE
FOR PROFESSIONAL KARGUS Real Estate Inc. SERVICE CALL 613-623-7834 OUR LOCAL 143 Elgi Elgin g n St. W., Arnpri Arnprior p AGENTS
R0011605125
ARNPRIOR
20 Wolff Cres. Gorgeous 3 bed, 3 bath model home with 1991 sqft of elegant upgrades. Asking $389,900.
REAL ESTATE
Direct Line (613) 858-4851
Independently Owned and Operated Brokerage
BROKERAGE
View all our listings g at
www.mincomkargusrealestate.ca
$329,000 MLS #837451 953 Stevenson Drive
Spacious & well-maintained 3 bed, 1.5 bath brick bungalow on just under 3 acres. Wired & heated 80’ x 40’ detached garage will easily store all your toys & vehicles.
NEW PRICE
$174,900
NEW PRICE
57 John St N MLS 827006
NEW PRICE
$179,900
Liz Kargus Broker of Record
Clint Pettigrew Sales Representative
NEW PRICE
NEW PRICE
116 Elgin St W MLS 827008
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, SEPT 8TH 1-2:30PM
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, SEPT 8TH 3-4:30PM
1263 RIVER ROAD
242 HARRIET STREET
MLS# 825130 NOW ASKING $284,900
MLS 834232 NOW ASKING $189,900
6 GARDNER STREET MLS# 837444 NOW ASKING $299,900
2+ ACRE ESTATE
R0021582598
RE/MAX METRO-CITY John Roberts Broker REALTY LTD., brokerage 613- 596-5353 or 613-832-0902 2255 Carling Avenue Ottawa, ON K2B 7Z5 www.johnwroberts.com
SOLD
SOLD
MLS# 822016
MLS# 811414
45 WOODRIDGE COURT, BRAESIDE
CONDO FOR SALE
NEW PRICE
SPACIOUS
MLS# 834390 ASKING $389,900
OPEN HOUSE 2:00 – 4:00 PM SUN. SEPT. 9TH 75 Creek Drive, Fitzroy Harbour 3+1 bedrm bungalow with Tarion Warranty 35 mins from Kanata! Open concept layout, hardwd & tile flrs on main level, granite counters in kitchen & bathrms, main flr laundry, fin. basement has 3 pce bath, recrm & 4th bedrm. Veranda, large back deck, c/ air, 4 kitchen appliances & more! 123’ x 147’lot $369,900
NEW PRICE! 3297 Panmure Road, Deerwood Estates area, Kinburn Pretty 3 bedroom bungalow, private setting on a 100’ x 150’ lot, paved parking for 6 or more cars, huge 2 car garage, updated windows, roof, kitchen & bathrms with ceramic flring, pine flring in livrm & bedrms, front & rear decks, appliances, quick commute to the city! $264,900
RENOVATED! 311 Whistler Road, Constance Bay Completely renovated 2+1 bedroom bungalow with beautiful upgrades across from forest! Gourmet kitchen with stainless steel appliances, main flr laundry, gas fireplace in livrm, finished basement has 3rd bedrm, full bath & rec room, 2 car detached garage! $329,900
NEW PRICE! WATERFRONT! 696 Bayview Drive, Constance Bay Amazing spot with breathtaking views of the Ottawa River & Gatineau Hills! Comfortable three seaon cottage with 2 bedrms, large family rm can sleep more guests, 2 pce bath, fireplace, includes furnishings! A perfect retreat not far from the city for now then build your dream home! $299,900 NEW LISTING! 15 Bethune Way, Beaverbrook, Kanata Needs updating! Spacious 3 bedrm condominium townhouse in great area close to buses, shopping, library, schools and bike paths! Eat-in kitchen, fireplace in living room, inside access to the garage with garage door opener, full basement! Immediate possession available! $209,900 BUILDING LOT! Lot 15 Woods Road, Constance Bay Lovely, high & dry, 147’ x 108’ building lot only steps to the beach, forest & corner store! Natural gas & high speed internet available. Lots in this beautiful Ottawa River neighbourhood are few so buy now! This is a great community only 20 minutes from Kanata!! $59,900
Visit www.johnwroberts.com to see more pictures and full details of all my listings!!
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, SEPT 9TH 1-2:30PM
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, SEPT 9TH 3-4:30PM
69 CARSS STREET
83 SHORT ROAD
MLS#838427 ASKING $246,900
MLS # 837504 ASKING $229,900
GREAT LOCATION
190 ELGIN STREET W #308 MLS# 837702 ASKING $122,700
FAMILY HOME
SOLD 805 RIVER ROAD, BRAESIDE MLS#841364
19.69 ACRES
MLS#842145 ASKING $174,900
11 EDWARD STREET S MLS#842509 ASKING $139,900
19 HIDDEN RIVER ROAD MLS#841326 ASKING $469,900
FAMILY HOME
75 DANIEL STREET S MLS#833499 ASKING $154,900
14 TIERNEY STREET MLS#827445 ASKING $162,900
98 WILLIAM STREET W MLS#833145 ASKING $164,900
4906 RIVER ROAD, HORTON TWP
136 MACDONALD STREET S
MLS#840863 ASKING $319,900
MLS#836899 ASKING $169,900
351 CAMPBELL DRIVE MLS# 839646 ASKING $329,900
FULL SERVICE... Minimum Commission
OLYMPIA HOMES HAS ARRIVED IN ARNPRIOR - COME VISIT! Quality Home Builders since 1992
Offering Bungalows, Singles & 2 Storey Towns 35 & 42 ft. lots
Visit our Presentation Centre at 1 Vanjumar Rd., Arnprior (Off White Lake Rd.) R0011543178
Open from Monday - Thursday 1-6; Saturday & Sunday 12-5, closed Friday Presentation Centre 613.623.3636 • Toll Free 1.855.623.3636 • Head Office 613.226.2424
20 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
Open House Saturday Sept 8, 1:30-2:30 p.m.
R0011599375_0906
188 Church Street, Franktown MLS# 831880
$219,900 Duplex, side-by-side, Great investment opportunity! Completely renovated! Live on one side and rent the other side to pay your mortgage.
Brandi Mcdonald Team Sales Representative
613-451-1999
www.brandimcdonald.com Office 613-253-3300
GALE REAL ESTATE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED, BROKERAGE
24 Lansdowne Avenue, Carleton Place
100% Canadian
REAL ESTATE 0906 R0011604542
www.coldwellbankervalleywide.ca
613-623-7303 VALLEY WIDE REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE A DOLL HOUSE 2 +1 bedroom home on a freshly paved street! 2 baths, main oor laundry, gleaming wood and ceramic oors, gas heat, oak kitchen with appliances and private rear yard. A PLEASURE TO SHOW! $189900. MLS #839524
A WATERFRONT COTTAGE
ENTREPENEURS WANTED!
Donna Nych Broker of Record 613-623-7303 donna.nych @sympatico.ca
On leased land on the Ottawa River-fully furnished. Very clean and well-maintained.
Well run gas station and store with a 3 bedroom house attached in a busy village setting.
The price is right $69,900. MLS #833195
$299,000 MLS #823023
FAMILY HOME
INCOME OPPORTUNITY
WATERFRONT
s 4WO ACRE BUILDING LOTS -C,ACHLAN 2D EA
4809A Calabogie Rd. Split level w/4 bdrms, large family room, private back yard, double garage w/workshop & exercise room. Close to golf, skiing, lake, ATV/hiking trails. MLS #836225 $274,900
9 Carnegie Cres. Custom designed 5 bdrm, 2.5 baths, 2 ensuites, open concept kit/din/lv area, spectacular solarium on two sides, separate studio. Potential income ppty - B&B, art studio, hair salon, in-law suite. MLS #838317 $449,900
329A Church Farm Rd. Escape the crowds! Year round home, open concept kit/lv/din area w/wallto-wall windows overlooking lake, 195 ft frontage. Oversized garage w/work shop plus upper sleeping loft & bath. MLS #827087 $465,000
WATERFRONT
WATERFRONT
PEAKS VILLAGE
DUPLEX
74 Whipporwill Valley Lane, Calabogie Lake Fully furnished waterfront home on Calabogie Lake, screened porch, 3 bdrms, 2 baths, waterfront bunkhse, 2 cribbed docks. Close to ski hill, golf, ATV/ hiking trails. MLS #824111 $489,900
52 Whipporwill Valley Lane, Calabogie Lake Cottage with 245 feet lake frontage. Excellent swiming, boating, ďŹ shing. Close to the ski hill & golf course, ATV/hiking trails. Located on private laneway. MLS #826114 $249,900
185 Viewmount Dr. Unique 4 bdrm home close to skiing, golf, deeded access to lake. Impressive screened porch, stone faced ďŹ replace, hdwd oors. Impeccably maintained. MLS #834492 $349,900
Two apartment duplex located in the heart of Calabogie. Second apt is a two storey, both have balconies, parking, recently updated roof, furnace, interiors. MLS #817362 $199,900
LOTS s ACRES BUILDING LOT CLOSE TO !RNPRIOR s ACRES BUILDING LOT CLOSE TO !RNPRIOR s ACRES (IGHLANDS 'OLF #OURSE s ACRES 0EAKS 6ILLAGE s ACRE 7HITE ,AKE 6ILLAGE s 2ESIDENTIAL LOT UPSCALE SUB DIVISION IN !RNPRIOR
Heather Kennedy & Mike Labelle, Sales Rep 613-797-0202
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 21
REAL ESTATE
Your Community Newspaper
0906.R0011585172
Your LOCAL Royal LePage Professional
VALLEY WIDE REAL ESTATE
Tillie Bastien
THINKING OF SELLING? Not sure where to start?
Sales Rep.
613.270.8200
613.832.2079 613.612.2480
BROKERAGE
613-623-7303 | www.coldwellbankervalleywide.ca
www.the-bastiens.com tillie@the-bastiens.com
Start by calling me at: 613.816.4061
SUN SEPT 9 - 2 TO 4
I’ll take the time to explain the process, show you a great marketing plan & help you every step of the way!
OPEN HOUSE
Park like setting on 2.93 treed acres. Custom 4bdrm, 3baths, 3car gar, hardwood floors, c/air, mins to Stonecrest school & Sensplex. MLS#829357
ACREAGE ON SCHEEL DRIVE Over 28 acres of well treed land with frontage on both Scheel Drive and Carmichael Side Rd. Trails through the bush. Affords great privacy. Build your dream home here. Asking $129900 MLS#842439
Monica Scopie, Broker 613-983-5629
SUN SEPT 9 - 2 TO 4 White Lake $359,000 2781 Bellamy Rd.
Sandee Rosien
OPEN HOUSE
Sales Representative
sandee@sandeerosien.com R0011601868
Direct: 613.816.4061|Office: 613.831.9287
Over 2 treed acres, 3bdrm, att. dbl garage & Detached 24 x 26’ garage, eat-in kitchen, southern exposure & large deck. MLS#837346
R0011602427
Woodlawn $547,000 100 Plantation
0906 R0011605459
www.coldwellbankervalleywide.ca
613-623-7303 VALLEY WIDE REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE OPEN HOUSE - SUN., SEPT., 9TH 2-3:30PM
FIRST TIME BUYERS
PRETTY LOT
A DEFINITE 10!
$189,900 mls#827061 26 WELLINGTON STREET, PINEGROVE/ARNPRIOR (follow signs off Campbell drive) ALL BRICK FAMILY HOME IN GREAT LOCATION/ PLAYGROUND FOR CHILDREN ACROSS THE STREET, NATURAL GAS FURNACE AND FIREPLACE, C/AIR,WOOD FLOORING, THE LIST GOES ON. MLS # 837013 OFFERED AT $319,900. YOUR HOST MIKE DEFALCO 613-884-7303
3 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATHS, WOOD FLOORING, UPGRADING, 2 CAR GARAGE, MLS # 840148 $189,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
OUTSKIRTS OF ARNPRIOR, 3 BEDROOM 1.5 BATH BUNGALOW, HEATED GARAGE, MLS # 837682 $315,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
IMPRESSIVE 3+1 BEDROOM BUNGALOW, 3 BATHS, UPGRADES GALORE, MLS # 841042 $324,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
OPEN HOUSE - SUN., SEPT. , 9TH 2-3:30PM
4 BEDROOMS
5.56 ACRES
GARDEN SIZED YARD
$189,900 mls#827061 191 DALKEITH STREET, PAKENHAM FAMILY SIZED HOME, FAMILY SIZED PROPERTY, GARAGE, WORKSHOP, NATURAL GAS, KIDS WALK TO THE ARENA, SKI HILLS AND GOLF A SHORT DRIVE. MLS # 841694 OFFERED AT $239,900. YOUR HOST DONNA DEFALCO 613-623-7303
CHARACTER AND CHARM COMES WITH THIS ATTRACTIVE FAMILY HOME, WOOD FLOORING,PATIO, GARAGE. MLS # 832345 $189,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
SPACIOUS COUNTRY FAMILY HOME, BARN, GARAGE/ WORKSHOP, GREAT FAMILY LOCATION /RECREATION NEAR BY. MLS # 842583 $369,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
FAMILY LIVING, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 FULL BATHS, WALK TO AMMENITIES,GARAGE, MLS # 838911 $239,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
ATTENTION FAMILIES
ALMOST NEW
LAND
NEW LISTING
Beautiful lot, solid home-Downtown core only
Beautiful lot, solid home-Downtown core only
Mike & Donna Defalco Sales Rep/Broker 613-623-2602
• WALK TO THE GOLF COURSE FROM THIS IMPRESSIVE BUILDING LOT IN SOUGHT AFTER SUBDIVISION $125,000
Beautiful lot, solid home-Downtown core only $189,900 mls#827061
thedefalcos.ca
SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH, RAISED RANCH, C/AIR, ATTRACTIVE FLOORING, FORMAL DINING ROOM, LOWER FAMILY ROOM /FIREPLACE, 2 ACRE PROPERTY, WONDERFUL FAMILY LOCATION. MLS # 838193 $369,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
41 MACDONALD ST. OPEN HOUSE
Jenn Spratt Broker of Record 613-623-4846
117 BANDY’S RD. OPEN HOUSE
• 12 ACRES IN MCNAB TOWNSHIP $199,900 POLISHED 3 BEDROOM, VERY APPEALING, IMPRESSIVE BACKYARD OASIS, FEELS LIKE THE COUNTRY BUT YOU ARE IN TOWN. MLS # 828480 $335,000. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
• 6 ACRES IN MCNAB TOWNSHIP $119,900
613-623-2602
3+1 BEDROOM BUNGALOW, 2 BATHS, C/AIR, POOL, $234,900. CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO 613-623-2602
39 “A” STREET
60 CREEK DRIVE
38 “A” STREET
$459,900 MLS 829158
$499,900 MLS 838488
$399,900 MLS 829151
SUN, SEPT 9 - 2-4PM
SUN, SEPT 9 - 2-4PM
$199,900 MLS 831373
$415,000 MLS 834778
105 JOHN ST.
94 DAILLEE RD.
$59,900 MLS 842009
$349,900 MLS 841681
$249,900 MLS 841689
36 “A” STREET
148 OTTAWA ST.
190 ELGIN ST.
$650,000 MLS 829161
$399,900 MLS 835105
$119,900 MLS 833451
CALL DONNA OR MIKE DEFALCO
3157 7TH CONCESSION 5640 LOGGERSWAY RD.
$439,900 MLS 834937
36 PINE HILL RD.
$279,900 MLS 832906
3080 11TH CONCESSION 262 EQUESTRIAN-BRIDLEWOOD
homes4sale @jennspratt.com
22 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
$399,900 MLS 840770
$329,900 MLS 843027
Prime Valley
REAL ESTATE
Realty Ltd.
Pat Forrest
Brokerage OfďŹ ce 613-432-9123 Direct 613-433-6569 Ottawa 613-791-8123 pat@primevalleyrealty.com www.PrimeValleyRealty.com
Broker of Record
1105 Goshen Rd. Renfrew ON, K7V 3Z4
Dedicated, Professional, Experienced R0011599814
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205 MOORE STREET Sunday September 9th 2-4pm
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Located on the edge of Arnprior, 4 bed / 1.5 434 GOSHEN ROAD bath large family home with nat.gas fireplace; full 2 storey brick & sided house on a large lot House needs TLC but there’s lots of outbuildings. Easy access to Hwy 17, good for commuters. Farm the land yourself or rent it out - includes tile-drained hayďŹ elds, trails, a creek, and loads of hardwood & w/private covered interlock patio. $399,900 MLS # 834018 New Price $239,900 softwood acres. MLS 843482
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4 bedroom, 2 bathroom hobby farm, new kitchen & baths, stalls, paddocks, and more on 8.65 acres. Very picturesque homestead with great curb appeal. MLS#830202 $379,900
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CEDAR HAVEN RD NEW LISTING, 142 Acres, build your custom home at the front and have all the walking trails and hunting watches you need! Located for easy commute to Pembroke and Ottawa. MLS#840323 $169,900 (no HST)
Use this voucher and contact us to find out about the extra savings youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll get when you list your house with Prime Valley Realty. Full Service, Full Value, Full CommitmentTM Office: 613-432-9123 r &NBJM info@primevalleyrealty.com This offer expires September 9, 2012
WATERFRONT OTTAWA RIVER
Bright open concept main ďŹ&#x201A;oor. Wall of windows with beautiful river views. 2 bedrm plus den on main level. Rec rm and two additional bedrms on walk-out lower level. Quality ICF construction. with warm radiant ďŹ&#x201A;oor heat. Easy commute...just 25 minutes to Kanata. MLS #831546 $749,900
EDGE OF TOWN
WHITE LAKE
Super value in this 3 bedrm hi ranch located on the edge of town (McNab-Braeside). Fully ďŹ nished rec room plus ofďŹ ce. Single garage with inside entry. New septic. MLS#837673 $229,900
White Lake single on an amazing private lot. Oversized double garage. Family room additoni n 1986. Eat in country kitchen. Weatherall screened porch MLS#832852 $219,900
www.charlotteleitch.com THINKING OF LISTING? Septics, wells....even your mother-in-law can affect the sale price of your home. Call today for a FREE MARKET ANALYSIS !
UNIQUE HERITAGE
Unique property on just over 2 acres. On the edge of town. Renovated century home with addition. Oversized double garage is heated and a/c. Good tilled acreage with small barn and chicken coop. This home is perfect for a large family with the possiblity of 5 bedrooms. Also great for an in-home business or market garden. Flex possession. MLS#827288 $319,900
SOLD IN 5 DAYS 98% OF LIST
SOLD
UNIQUE PROPERTY
immaculate bungalow in sought after Riverview Estates. Bright kitchen with breakfast nook, open concept living and dining rm with gas ďŹ replace. Main ďŹ&#x201A;oor laundry, double attached garage.
Lovely immaculate condo townhouse in Barrhaven. Nice open concept living and dining room with patio door to back yard. Updated bathroom. Freshly painted. Easy, affordable living. MLS #835696
Beautifully renovated heritage home on large lot (100 X 363). New kitchen with stainless steel appliances. Large living room with stone ďŹ replace. Complete ofďŹ ce, shop and many outbuildings. MLS # 840592 $599,900
$299,900
$239,900
CENTENNIAL LAKE
SOLD
RHODDYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BAY
Cottage with oversized double garage. Enjoy 4 seasons with baseboard heat and wood stove. Well and septic. 3 gazebos included. Wood stove. Turn key...includes many furnishings. Move right in and enjoy the rest of the summer! MLS#823952 $274,900
2 bedrm end unit condo in Amberwood Village. Spacious rooms....over 1600 sq ft of livng space in this poplular Inverness model. Unspoiled bsmt. Double garage. MLS # 839548 $385,000
Beautiful waterfront home on the Ottawa River. Walkout basement with fully ďŹ nished rec room. ½ bath could be turned into full bath. Cathedral Ceilings, open concept. Everything you are looking for! MLS#837334 $579,900
Direct: 613.864.6910 Brokerage. Independently Owned and Operated
This is a great lot! 2.67 acre building lot thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s nicely treed, 30 min. to Scotiabank Place, hydro and phone at the road. Lot located to the right of #3188. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t miss out on a great building lot! MLS#840073. $59,900 (plus HST)
August 19th was our 1st Anniversary. This Is Your last week to Celebrate!
Start Packing... Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Moving!
EXPORER REALTY INC.
5TH CONCESSION RD (PAKENHAM)
1105 GOSHEN ROAD
OfďŹ ce: 613.622.7759
charlotte.leitch@century21.ca R0011601845
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 23
REAL ESTATE Proudly serving your community for over 30 years For all your Residential, Recreational & Investment Real Estate
0906.R0011605530
Terry Stavenow Broker
t.stavenow@bell.net
613-623-4284 New Price
Ottawa River View Saturday Sept 8, 1-2:30pm Liz Kargus 3 or 4 Br. Bungalow in sought after subdivision, very upscale home $349,900 base price, customers colors and further upgrades available call Terry for more details
Ottawa Valley Homes...Exclusive
2 plus 2 Br.. Bungalow backing onto Parkland, walk to the Ottawa River, many upgrades, hardwood floors, Kt and privacy fenced inground pool very well maintained. Call Terry for your private viewing. Asking $295,000
Affordable 4 Br.with New Kt.Gleaming Harwood Floors , Fireplace,large family Rm ,seperate Dr.and fresh paint,easy access to highway 17 Call Terry Asking $249,900. Offers welcome
View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 827117
View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 839111
New Listing
1263 River Rd., Braeside
Sunday Sept 9, 1-2:30pm Liz Kargus
SOLD
69 Carss St., Arnprior
Boating at your door step, this immaculate bungalow is ready for you, spacious bungalow many upgrade features, reasonable land lease terms call Terry.
Ottawa River beach and boating privileges only a short walk away,3 Br. upgraded home fully finished lower level,3 bathrooms, private back yard, oversized heated garage for any home business or hobby call for all the details.
Good Starter or Retirement Home 2 Bedrooms, modern Kt, many upgrades and large back yard with gardens and fountain, zoned for home business located near downtown call for all the details.
View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 835535
View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 809903
View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 825247
- OTTAWA RIVER BUILDING LOT 1.2 ACRES ASKING $184,900 - BRAESIDE BUNGALOW 2 + 1 BDRM. $205,900
Sunday Sept 9, 1-3pm Bernice Horne
R0011580694_0830
Sunday Sept 9, 1-2:30pm Robert Larsen
171 Second Ave., Arnprior
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Sunday Sept 9, 2-4pm John Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Neill
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1417 Vances Side Rd., Woodlawn
Sunday Sept 9, 2-3:30pm Mike Defalco
26 Wellington St., Pinegrove
Sunday Sep t9, 1-2:30pm Lori Johnson
#FDLXJUI .BMM 'SBOLUPXO 3E $BSMFUPO 1MBDF 24 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
EMC-GCP-Q-BW-W34-2012
63/65 Daniel St. S, Arnprior
t t
242 Harriet St., Arnprior
Sunday Sept 9, 3-4:30pm Liz Kargus
83 Short Rd., Arnprior
Sunday Sept 9, 2-4pm Helen Vincent
R0011604716
24 McLaclin St, Arnprior
t t
Saturday Sept 8, 3-4:30pm Liz Kargus
2791 Bellamy Rd., White Lake
Sunday Sept 9, 1-2:30pm Denis Lacroix
25 John Findlay Terrace, Arnprior
Sunday Sept 9, 2-3:30pm Donna Defalco
191 Dalkeith St., Pakenham
Sunday Sept 9, 2-4pm Jenn Spratt
117 Bandyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Rd.
Sunday Sept 9, 2-4pm Tillie Bastien
100 Plantation, Woodlawn
Prime Valley Realty Ltd.
Sunday Sept 9, 2-4pm Tillie Bastien
2781 Bellamy Rd., White Lake
Brokerage
Sunday Sep 9, 2-4pm Pat Forrest
205 Moore St., Arnprior
REAL ESTATE How to improve your home’s curb appeal
SO
LD
* Make the home accessible through the front door. Many homeowners enter their home through a side door or through their garage. If you fall into this category, keep in mind that prospective buyers will be entering through the front door, so make this area accessible. Clear any clutter, such as overgrown hedges, away from the front door, and consider upgrading the door handle to a more modern feature. In addition, make sure the lock on the front door doesn’t stick, forcing the realtor and buyers to immediately struggle before entering the home. You want buyers and their real estate agents to get in and out of the home as smoothly as possible. * Make sure all plants, including flowers, are living. Dehydrated or dead plants and flowers are eyesores, and they will give buyers the impression that you didn’t pay much attention to your property. Make sure all plants are alive and thriving and replace those that aren’t. You can replant new flowers or plants or just use potted plants instead. When purchasing new plants, choose low-maintenance varieties that appeal to buyers who want good vibrant plants but might not want to put in much work into the garden. When selling a home, homeowners can employ a number of tactics to improve their home’s curb appeal.
T NI E D UHOM N E N W TO
.09 21 RES AC
John O’Neill Sales Representative
BUS: 613-270-8200 RES: 613-832-2503 joneill@royallepage.ca
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 9TH 2-4PM 4544 Woodkilton Rd., Woodlawn Open concept bungalow on 1/2 acre lot. 2 sided gas fireplace in lvg rm/family rm; hardwood thruout. No basement but lots of storage. Attached 2 car garage. Nicely landscaped lot. Move in condition!! MLS#843349
$264,900
1417 Vances Side Rd., Woodlawn - Well maintained 2 bdrm bungalow on a 1.94 acre lot. Larger than it looks, this home has all laminate flooring, large family/living room, 2 large bedrooms, wrap around enclosed porch. Lots of storage buildings/barns. Paved driveway. Outdoor wood furnace with propane back up. MLS# 834648
$243,900
Dunrobin Shores 132 Porcupine Trail. $309,000 Amazing value with this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, on almost ½ acre private treed lot in a wonderful family sub-division. Open concept kitchen & family room with F/Place, hardwood floors in hall & kitchen, finished lower level family room. Private deck for summer barbecues!
RTE T WARON F
Ensuring a home’s primary entryway is welcoming and well-groomed is one way homeowners can improve curb appeal. R0011600498 R0011218971
and effective way to improve curb appeal. Edge driveways, sidewalks and other walkways around the property, removing or trimming anything that is hanging over the driveway or walkways. If the boundary between your driveway and lawn is not distinct, consider installing edging materials such as stone or bricks. The edging can be level with the driveway or elevated, but keep in mind that elevated driveway edging can protect the lawn, preventing kids from riding their bicycles onto the lawn or cars from driving onto it. Adding edging is not a very difficult do-it-yourself project. * Take to the trees. Many homeowners grow accustomed to overgrown trees around their property and may not notice that lowhanging, unsightly branches are hiding the home from view. Buyers want to see the house, so take to the trees and trim any branches that hang too low or obscure your home. * Clean the gutters. Leaves and sticks hanging from the gutters are a red flag to buyers, who tend to associate clogged gutters with roof damage. Clean the gutters thoroughly before putting your home up for sale and keep them clean throughout the selling process. If your property includes lots of trees, install guards to keep twigs and leaves out of the gutters.
Dunrobin Shores 3720 Armitage Ave. $799,900
0001 Lower Spruce Hedge Rd., Burnstown., 12 acres ready for your dream home. Gently sloping lot provides for many sites to build - naturally treed with lots of open spaces. Southern exposure. Solar panels on property generate power and immediate revenue for you - long term lease in place with solar company.
$99,900
1453 Blakeney Rd., Pakenham 1840’s Georgian style stone home on 17+ acres on the shores of the Mississippi River. Excellent condition and a beautiful setting - Large rooms thruout, lots of natural light. Pine and hardwood floors, some newer windows, metal roof. Detached 2 car garage; 32’ x 65’ steel clad shed. MLS#827905 $475,000
69 Woodridge Crt., Arnprior - Split level home on 2+ acre treed lot. Formal lvg rm/dng rm; eat in kitchen with access to rear deck and 16 x 32 inground pool. Family room off kitchen. 3 bedrooms, 4 pc main bath, 5 pc ensuite. Unspoiled basement with 12’ ceilings. Excellent family home in very family oriented neighborhood. MLS# 834815
2050 Peter Robinson Rd., Carp Absolutely move in condition for this totally renovated bungalow set on 6 acres with SW exposure. Maple hardwood floors on main level with ceramic tile in kitchen and baths. Custom maple kitchen with granite counter tops. Fully finished basement. Detached 3 car garage - 24 x 48;
One of the best lots on the Ottawa River! Immaculate 3 bedroom, 3 bath, brick/stucco home offers 120’of waterfront, gorgeous summer sunsets & spectacular views! Wonderful solarium/family room with hot tub. Versatile boathouse! MLS#843775
Kanata Lakes 13 Windcrest Crt. $299,900 Spacious & bright 3 bdrm, 3 bath townhome backing onto the wooded walking paths of Kanata Lakes. Two Fireplaces, 2nd floor family room w/cathedral ceilings, oversized master bdrm with en-suite. Freshly painted thru-out and ready to move in! MLS#840594
$369,900
Dunrobin Shores 3603 Greenland Road $499,900
detached log building and separate barn. MLS#842644
$479,900
Close to the city but nestled in the woods, this spacious 3 bdrm, 2 bath home with Equestrian facilities on 21.09 acres has all the extras. Barn w/3 box stalls & 2 standing, tack shed, hay storage shed, 2 run-in shelters, 2 paddocks, sand ring & round pen. MLS#841245
VIEW THE VIRTUAL TOURS AT WWW.JJPICK.COM
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Men and women who have tried to sell a home are likely familiar with the phrase “curb appeal.” Curb appeal is similar to getting ready for a big date, only you’re not dressing yourself up to make a strong first impression. Instead, improving curb appeal involves dressing your home up in the hopes it makes a strong first impression on prospective buyers, many of whom will have a strong opinion about the property before they even get out of their cars to have a look around. A home with strong curb appeal can entice buyers who are likely to believe that a home with a well-maintained exterior is likely to have an equally impressive interior. Homeowners who want the process of selling their home to go smoothly can improve the property’s curb appeal in a number of ways, many of which don’t necessitate a substantial home improvement budget. * Clean up. The most effective way to improve curb appeal is to clean up the property. Many homeowners are savvy enough to remove toys and other items from the yard before showing a home, but cleaning up goes beyond removing clutter from the property. Make sure all hedges are trimmed and remove weeds, sticks and other debris from any flower beds. Lay mulch in the flower beds and garden, as mulch prevents weed growth while helping the soil retain moisture, resulting in more attractive gardens to catch a buyer’s eye. * Get an “edge” on other sellers. Edging is another easy
1024 Blakeney Rd., Pakenham - Golden opportunity to purchase a large tract of land just outside the Ottawa City limits and within 20 minutes of Kanata. 150 acres zoned Agricultural and Rural, panoramic southern exposure, perfect for solar energy. Drilled well and electricity on site. MLS#838764
$350,000
10 Charles St., #3, Arnprior - Excellent home - lots of space in this 3 level, 2 bedroom unit. Hardwood floors in main living area, full basement, newer windows and roof, freshly painted. Great location. Available immediately. MLS#837318 $155,000
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 25
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Some schools implement costume restrictions race, gender and personal handicaps. Weapons of any kind, including fake weapons, are typically prohibited. Most schools are not interested in promoting or glorifying violence. Therefore, a pirate may have to leave his sword home. A girl dressed as a police officer may have to go sans gun or handcuffs. Parents who are unfamiliar with the guidelines should err on the side of caution. Restrictions are often imposed on: * costumes that depict gangs and horror characters or are overly scary; * weapons of any kind; * costumes that demean race, religion, nationality, handicapped condition, or gender; * costumes with obstructive masks; and * overly sexy costumes. Other schools are coming up with their own guidelines on costumes that are even more strict
than banning goblins and zombies. In 2009 a Texas school issued suggestions for â&#x20AC;&#x153;positive costumes,â&#x20AC;? which included historical characters or healthy food items. Some parents do not necessarily want schools to police Halloween costumes. There are those who believe that responsibility falls on parents and that common sense should prevail. But schools do not want to risk alienation or negative press surrounding fun events like Halloween parades. Therefore, most prefer to take extra caution on what costumes are allowed. Before spending money on elaborate Halloween costumes, parents should learn the policies on clothing and accessories implemented by their childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s school. This way they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to return that stealth ninja costume come October 30.
This spooky skeleton may be deemed too scary for some schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Halloween festivities.
Ask us about
on iPadÂŽ
quired to build their problem solving abilities and their confidence in taking on greater challenges. One new game that has caught the attention of educators and parents alike is the new Perplexus 3D game maze by Plasmart Inc. This is a 3-dimensional maze game where players manoeuvre a small marble around challenging barriers inside a large-sized transparent sphere. Unlike traditional flat-surface mazes that are composed of one path, Perplexus challenges playersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; problem solving abilities with
numerous paths to choose from and hundreds of barriers to overcome. Players can race each other or the clock. In addition to being an entertaining game, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a valuable tool for cognitive development, encouraging children to exercise their problem-solving, motor and dexterity skills, as well as improving their hand-eye coordination. Experts say the game is just as challenging for adults as it is for children and will especially keep parent solving skills sharp as well.
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Encouraging the use of creative activities and games that challenge your children to think outside the box and build their problem solving skills at an early age will help encourage them to become independent thinkers and problem solvers -- skills that will benefit them for the rest of their lives. Giving your child simple games such as building blocks that require identifying different shapes is a great way to start building problem solving skills. For older children, more challenging games may be re-
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Dressing up in a costume and participating in parties and parades at school is part of the excitement of Halloween for children. Many schools across the country have some sort of Halloween festivities where children are encouraged to don their costumes and show off for friends and family. However, before parents run out and purchase costumes, they may want to check with schools to see if there are any limitations on kidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; costumes. Many schools have implemented guidelines on Halloween costumes and could have strict rules as to what is and is not acceptable. Schools often put these rules in place for the protection of children. They want to shield younger children from very scary costumes that may lead to nightmares. Costume restrictions also include costumes that may mock
The right toys will teach problem solving skills
2%!$).' -!4( 72)4).' 345$9 3+),,3 &2%.#( 5.)6%23)49 02%0 !.$ -/2% West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 27
Les Petits Ballets offers recreational and pre-professional dance and movement classes. 11-35 Stafford Road, Nepean Ontario K2H 8V8 Phone: 613-596-5783 Fax: 613-721-6139 www.lespetitsballets.com Les Petits Ballets is a non-profit company which presents dance in association with the City of Ottawa. Now in our 35th year! #BMMFU USBJOJOH UFBDIFT DIJMESFO QPJTF BOE DPOñEFODF 'PS BEVMUT JU JT BO FYDFMMFOU XBZ UP JODSFBTF óFYJCJMJUZ BOE NVTDVMBS TUSFOHUI -FT 1FUJUT #BMMFUT JT B OPO QSPñU TDIPPM UIBU QSFTFOUT EBODF JOTUSVDUJPO JO BTTPDJBUJPO XJUI UIF $JUZ PG 0UUBXB /PX JO PVS UI ZFBS -FT 1FUJUT #BMMFUT PÃFST SFDSFBUJPOBM BOE QSF QSPGFTTJPOBM EBODF BOE NPWFNFOU DMBTTFT JO TQBDJPVT XFMM FRVJQQFE TUVEJPT BU UIF /FQFBO $SFBUJWF "SUT $FOUSF BOE BU WBSJPVT MPDBUJPOT UISPVHIPVU /FQFBO &OUSBODF UP UIF QSF QSPGFTTJPOBM QSPHSBN JT CZ BVEJUJPO POMZ .FNCFST PG PVS 1FSGPSNJOH $PNQBOZ BSF TFMFDUFE GSPN PVS QSF QSPGFTTJPOBM TUVEFOUT 7JTJU PVS XFCTJUF BU XXX MFTQFUJUTCBMMFUT DPN UP QSJOU B SFHJTUSBUJPO GPSN BOE GPS NPSF JOGPSNBUJPO BCPVU UIF TDIPPM BOE PVS VQDPNJOH QFSGPSNBODFT
RECREATIONAL PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS $MBTTFT BSF IFME BU Nepean Creative Arts Centre (NCAC) 6OJU 4UBÃPSE 3E #FMMT $PSOFST r Walter Baker Sports Complex (WBSC) .BMWFSO %S #BSSIBWFO Mary Honeywell Public School (MHPS) ,FOOFWBMF %S #BSSIBWFO r Qualicum Community Centre (QCC) /BOBJNP %SJWF 2VBMJDVN
Creative Dance - Ages 3-4 .PWFNFOU BOE QMBZ TQFDJBMMZ DIPSFPHSBQIFE UP NVTJD BOE SIZUINT BQQSPQSJBUF GPS UIF WFSZ ZPVOH NCAC .PO BN PS QN 4FQU %FD +BO +VOF
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Preballet I - Ages 4-5 *OTUSVDUJPO JO CBMMFU NVTJD NPWFNFOU BOE NJNF BMPOH XJUI SPVUJOFT EFTJHOFE UP IFMQ UIF EFWFMPQNFOU PG MJTUFOJOH TLJMMT BOE BUUFOUJPO TQBO 5IF FYFSDJTFT BSF TUSVDUVSFE UP EFWFMPQ TUSFOHUI CBMBODF óFYJCJMJUZ BOE DPPSEJOBUJPO JO UIF ZPVOH TUVEFOU NCAC Mon 9:15-10:15am or 1-2pm or 5-6pm 4FQU %FD +BO +VOF
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Preballet II - Ages 6-7 *OTUSVDUJPO JO 3VTTJBO #BMMFU TZMMBCVT CBSSF BOE DFOUSF XPSL BQQSPQSJBUF UP TUVEFOU T BCJMJUZ NCAC Mon 6-7pm 4FQU %FD +BO +VOF
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Ballet Elementary I and II - Ages 8+ *OTUSVDUJPO JO 3VTTJBO #BMMFU TZMMBCVT CBSSF BOE DFOUSF XPSL BQQSPQSJBUF UP TUVEFOU T BCJMJUZ NCAC Sat noon-1pm 4FQU %FD +BO +VOF
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ADULT PROGRAMS - Ballet Level I *OTUSVDUJPO JO 3VTTJBO CBMMFU TZMMBCVT CBSSF BOE DFOUSF XPSL JT BWBJMBCMF GPS JOUFSFTUFE JOEJWJEVBMT /P QSFWJPVT USBJOJOH SFRVJSFE NCAC Mon 7-8pm 4FQU %FD +BO +VOF %SPQ JO GFF
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Dress #BMMFU BOE $SFBUJWF %BODF r (JSMT CMBDL MFPUBSE QJOL UJHIUT BOE CBMMFU TIPFT r #PZT XIJUF U TIJSU CMBDL UJHIUT BOE CBMMFU TIPFT
LES PETITS BALLETS REGISTRATION INFORMATION Fall 2012/winter 2013 registration begins July 2012. Choose the method thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s most convenient for you! Download a form at lespetitsballets.com and mail registration form and cheque to: Les Petits Ballets 11-35 Stafford Road, Nepean Ontario K2H 8V8 Or
No classes on October 6 to 8 (Thanksgiving weekend), February 16-18 (Family Day), March 11-17 (March Break), March 29-April 1 (Easter) and May 18-20 (Victoria Day weekend).
28 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
R0011589308
Register in person at Nepean Creative Arts Centre 35 Stafford Road, Unit 11 - payments by cash or cheque. Please make cheques payable to Les Petits Ballets â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Please date cheques: Fall Session -September 10, 2012; Winter session â&#x20AC;&#x201C; January 7, 2013.
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The best time of year to find bargains Carpet and Flooring Prior to the holiday season, many homeowners are busy making home improvements so their home is welcoming and pristine for visiting guests. After the holidays end, however, such DIY projects often get placed on the back burner. To boost activity, home improvement stores usually cut prices on carpet and flooring during the month of January. Furniture Although furniture is usually updated in stores biannually, many furniture retailers also run sales close to major holidays. Independence Day and the rest of July is a popular time for sales. Boats Although there are those who argue that the best deals are had at area boat shows, others recommend visiting dealerships between January and March to get last yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s models as boat re-
tailers are making room for new inventory. Garden Tools Although many homeowners still may be cleaning up from winter storms and shoveling snow, those who want to get ready for spring can go shopping for garden tools in March. Electronics Economists urge American and Canadian consumers to purchase major electronics in the spring, notably April. This is when the Japanese fiscal year ends, and many Japanese companies coincide the release of new models at this time of year. Therefore, older models might be slashed in price. Those interested in a computer may want to wait until August, when stores cut prices to coincide with backto-school season. Shoppers interested in televisions should do their shopping in January, when products are discounted prior to the Super Bowl. Automobiles Consumers interested in purchasing previously owned cars can shop in April. For those who are waiting to purchase a new vehicle, Oc-
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tober is the best time to buy because this is when dealerships receive new inventory and are looking to clear out last yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s models.
Some stores do this as early as August, when they are already getting ready to make room for Halloween and Christmas displays.
Summer Seasonal Products Lawnmowers, air conditioners, patio furniture and pool equipment typically go on sale around September and October. Stores are switching over to their fall merchandise and are looking to clear out any remnants of summertime, even if the weather is still quite warm.
Swimsuits Swimsuits go on sale in August to make room for fall accessories. Although some people will argue there is never a good time to go bathing suit shopping, if a good price is a requirement, then August is the time to do so.
Weddings It is well-known that the summer months are peak times for weddings -- and expensive prices. Budget-conscious couples can consider a November wedding, where costs may be much less and vendors not in much demand. Try to have the wedding prior to the holiday season, when catering halls start booking rooms for Christmas parties. Knowing when to buy items during the year can add up to considerable savings.
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Appliances The new models for most appliances arrive in the autumn. Therefore, most retailers are looking to clear out older inventory over the
winter. Between October and January, expect to find deep discounts on major appliances. If shoppers can wait to replace an older unit, they will be rewarded with very good prices.
Hazeldean
Dental Group
for new students
Hazeldean Mall
Over 30 weekly classes to choose from Try a balancing HATHA or a vigorous POWER class
www.hazeldeandental.com R0011578386/0906
New to Yoga? Start with an â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction to Yogaâ&#x20AC;? workshop: Dates & details online, or call to register. Let our experienced teachers show you how to â&#x20AC;&#x153;Love the GOAT Lifeâ&#x20AC;?!
Start anytime, classes are ongoing, no pre-registration.
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150 Katimavik Road, Kanata 2nd Floor
613-271-8998
TAEKW
AE E. LEE KANATA
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The savvy shopper knows there is no reason to pay full price if you donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to. Timing is everything when bargain hunting, and with a little patience, most people can find deep discounts on items that might have broken the bank just a few weeks prior. Shopping with coupons often requires clipping the coupon and then trying to match it up with a discounted price being offered by the store to maximize your savings. All of this has to be done prior to the couponâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s expiration date. Many veteran bargain hunters prefer to shop seasonally, instead. This means waiting until stores put items on clearance or run large sales. Knowing the best times to buy certain products can save consumers hundreds or even thousands of dollars over the course of a year. The following is a list of items and the seasons during which those types of items are most likely to be sold at a discount.
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CLASSES IN KANATA @ Kanata Leisure Centre s Classes held 1,2 or 3 times per week
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*some conditions apply, up to blue belt, belt extra.** some conditions apply, limited time offer, based on 1 class/week, special rate applies to new beginners only, all fees non-refundable.
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 29
REGISTER NOW FOR DANCE CLASSES
Reason’s to Choose Pointe of Grace
How to encourage kids to be more physically active When today’s parents reflect on their childhood, many likely recall seemingly endless days spent playing outdoors. But when today’s kids become tomorrow’s parents, chances are their recollections won’t recall nearly as much time spent idling the days away under the sun. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, roughly 17 percent of American children and adolescents between the ages of 2 to 19 are obese. In Canada, where self-reporting data collection methods have made such statistics more difficult to quantify, the prevalence of overweight and obesity in children is also on the rise, according to the Canadian Community Health Survey. The rise in overweight or obese children is likely a byproduct of several factors, not the least of which is that many of today’s kids prefer to play a video game on the couch instead of going outdoors and being physically active. The potential ramifications of youngsters choosing a more sedentary lifestyle are dangerous, as it increases their risk for high blood pressure, high cholesterol, type 2 diabetes, respiratory ailments and joint problems, among other things. What’s more, numerous studies have found that obese or overweight children are more likely to become obese or overweight adults, which highlights the importance of embracing a physically active
lifestyle as a youngster. Parents know it’s not always easy to get kids to be more physically active. But the following are a few tips parents might find useful when encouraging their kids to embrace a more active lifestyle. * Give toys that encourage physical activity. Kids love toys, and their toys will often dictate how they spend their days. Instead of buying the latest video game console, give kids toys that encourage them to be active. This can include balls, bicycles, jump ropes, or even a backyard swingset. Kids who embrace these activities at a young age are more likely to continue doing so into adolescence and adulthood. * Reduce time spent in front of the television. Parents who can effectively minimize the amount of time their child spends in front of the television, whether reducing their time spent watching television or playing video games, will likely be more successful at instilling a love of physical activity as well. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends parents limit their child’s time in front of the television to one to two hours per day, and that includes the time children spend playing video games. To further reduce kids’ time watching TV, don’t allow televisions in their bedrooms, as that will only make it harder to monitor
just how much time kids are spending in front of their TVs. * Remember that physical activity should be fun. Not all kids are athletic, and some will likely bemoan participating in recreational sports leagues. But that doesn’t mean parents should give up on encouraging physical activity. Instead, find a physical activity that your child finds fun and encourage his or her participation. This might be nontraditional kids’ sports like cycling or jogging or activities like dancing, hiking or even bird watching. Once a child exhibits a healthy interest in a physical activity that you have deemed safe, encourage it. * Set a positive example. Kids, especially younger children, look up to their parents and often try to emulate what Mom and Dad are doing. Parents can make the most of that adoration by setting a positive example and being physically active themselves. Go for a nightly bike ride or a walk around the neighborhood with your youngsters in tow. Or put that elliptical machine in the basement to good use. Whatever physical activity you choose, you can bet your children will express an interest in it as well, and that’s a great way to make them more enthusiastic about having a healthy and active lifestyle.
1. Facilities: Our floating floors reduce fatigue & prevent injury. 2. Customer Service: Friendly desk staff are available during class times to assist you. 3. Hassel Free Shows: Beautiful costumes, professional theatre and every family receives a FREE recital DVD! 4. Convenient Class Times: Many of our most popular classes are offered at various times throughout the week to allow you to choose what works best for your busy schedule.
30 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
t Annual recital t Competitive team t RAD & ADAPT examinations t Highly qualified faculty t Bright, spacious studios
1 Hobin Street @ Main, Stittsville t www.allegrodanceworks.com
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Allegro Danceworks 0823.R0011554259
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Piano lessons for all ages and levels in the Kanata area.
College kids can be eco-friendly, too is plugged in, for example, is consuming energy even if itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not turned on. This is known as phantom power, which devices including televisions, box-top cable or satellite devices and video game consoles consume even when no one is using them. Instead of plugging televisions and other devices directly into a wall outlet, plug them into a surge protector power strip that can be turned off when you leave your room. This not only protects the devices should a power outage occur, but it also means they wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be consuming energy while not in use. * Freshen your room up naturally. College residences, especially dorm rooms, have a reputation for being somewhat
musty. Instead of relying on air fresheners with chemicals, choose an all-natural alternative that wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t release harmful chemicals into the air each time you spray your room. And donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t overlook houseplants as a way to freshen the air and add to your roomâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s aesthetic appeal. * Choose lights wisely. Many dorm rooms are poorly lit, and students know to bring their own lamps to help them make the most of late-night study sessions. When shopping for a lamp for your room, choose one thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s compatible with compact fluorescent light bulbs, or CFLs. CFLs consume significantly less energy, last far longer than traditional light bulbs and illuminate rooms just as effectively.
* Learn to make your own coffee instead of visiting the local coffee shop each morning and buying another coffee served up in a styrofoam cup. Purchase a reusable travel mug you can bring along to class and encourage your roommates to do the same.
Jane Arrowsmith BA(Music), ARCT, KM, RMT
613.592.4240 jane@kanatapiano.com R0021539779
Office & Studios 4048 Carling
(Metro Plaza - corner of March & Teron Rd.)
613-592-2596 www.kbsdance.com Ballet Jazz
r Modern Theatre r Tap r Hip-Hop
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Drawing and painting lessons in Kanata Lakes
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Many of todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s college-aged youngsters are socially conscious, fully aware their choices affect not only themselves, but those around them as well. One of the more popular causes among young people is the go green movement. Many of todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s college students have learned about the environment since they first entered school, and the goal of living a more eco-conscious lifestyle is a cause that resonates with students on college campuses across the country. Though itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not always easy to be eco-conscious in a dormitory, there are ways todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s college students can live greener lives on campus. * Wash clothes in cold water. Few college students enjoy doing laundry, but even this tedious task can be done in a way thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s considerate of the environment. Instead of using hot water to wash your clothes, wash them in cold water, which requires significantly less energy to clean clothes than hot water, which needs energy to heat up. * Protect your appliances and the environment at the same time. Todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s college kids have more gadgets than ever before. Cellular phones, mp3 players, tablets, laptop computers, flatscreen televisions, and video game consoles might make life more enjoyable, but they also consume a substantial amount of energy, even when not in use. An LCD or LED television that
www.kanatapiano.com
RAD and ISTD training methods and certified teachers. Classes run 6 days per week for children aged 4 and up.
Classes begin on Monday September 10th 2012
Registration for 2012
Classes for adults and children (min 7 yrs)
Thursday September 6th
www.FranceTremblay.com Call: (613) 271-9689 or write to: francetremblay900@yahoo.ca
5:00pm to 9:00pm at 4048 Carling
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Junior Kindergarten to Grade 6, Information Morning, Wednesday, October 10, 2012 Please email jvopni@counterpointacademy.com to register
COUNTERPOINT ACADEMY R0011569292
COUNTERPOINT ACADEMYâ&#x201E;˘ A Smarter Learning Community www.counterpointacademy.com 35 Beaufort Drive, Kanata 613.271.6356 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 31
Amberwood Village Golf and Country Club 54 Springbrook Drive The Hidden Treasure in the Heart of Stittsville
A full service Country Club to fit your busy lifestyle. Public Green Fee Players are welcome to enjoy the course. Join NOW and become a Full Member for 2013 and play the balance of the 2012 year complimentary!
Swimming Pool
Tennis Courts
Summer Programs for Swimming & Tennis
Bistro 54 Restaruant
Social Activities
TO BOOK YOUR TEE-OFF TIME CALL 613.836.2581 OR VISIT WWW.AMBERWOOD.CA R0011598925
32 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
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Warranty Approved Service Trailer Hitches Cars & Light Trucks - servicing all makes & models Air Conditioning / Heating Systems
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Tune-Ups & Scheduled Maintenance Wide Selection of Tires Brakes Rustproofing
r 15 Campbell Reid Court · 613-254-7390 r
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West Carleton Review
SPORTS Thursday September 6, 2012
WC Electric has Carp on ropes in fastball playoffs John Carter John.carter@metroland.com
EMC sports – West Carleton Electric is on the verge of pulling off a major upset in Greater Ottawa Fastball League playoff action. The Fitzroy Harbour-based team edged Carp 14C Victory 5-4 at home Aug. 21 to take a 2-0 lead in the best-of-five series over Carp. West Carleton Electric had upended its rivals 7-4 in Carp in the first game of the series Aug. 16. Carp had finished the regular season in second place with a 11-6-1 record, just two
points behind league champion Kars Aces, while WC Electric finished in seventh and last with a 6-11-1 record. The third game of the series is set for tonight (Thursday) at 9 p.m. in Carp, the 14C Victory needing a win to stave off elimination. If a game four is required it will be played Monday, Sept. 10 in Fitzroy Harbour. It took a late rally by WC Electric to win game two, with Trevor Barton singling in the Andy Barber for the winning run in the eighth inning. Barber had doubled in Charlie Ross to tie the game at four.
Barber, who earned the win in relief of starter Steve Cavanagh, was named player of the game. Carp had taken an early lead when Kevin McGuire smacked a two-run homer in the first and added another on a Neil Cooke dinger in the second. Down 3-0 and limited to three hits in the first six innings, WC Electric erupted for three runs in the bottom of the seventh. A single by Neil Murphy and a double by Jeff Cavanagh resulted in runs and Troy Wilson’s solo homer tied the game
and forced extra innings. After giving up a run in the top of the eighth, WC Electric scored twice to pull out the victory. Cooke took the loss. Barber pitched a complete game victory in game one. Instead of falling behind like it did in game two, Electric jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the top of the first. They stretched it to 5-0 in the fourth, but Carp replied with four runs in the bottom of the fifth. Triples by Cooke and McGuire and a homer by Matt McNish were the key blows. However, Electric did not
fold and scored two insurance runs in the sixth when Derek Barber tripled and Jeff Cavanagh homered. The two rivals played close games in the regular season with Carp winning 6-4 and 22 in Fitzroy and WC Electric winning 4-2 in Carp. In other series, the Barrhaven Broadway Blues leads the Stittsville 56ers 2-1 and the Quyon Combat Flyers lead the Ottawa Taylor’s Blitz 1-0 as the week started. Winners of each series will meet the Kars Aces in a double-knockout tournament Sept. 14-15 in Manotick to
determine the GOFL playoff champs. The final season standings are as follows: 1. Kars Aces: 12-5-1 = 25 2. Carp I4CVictory: 11-6-1 = 23 3. Quyon Combat Flyers: 9-7-2 = 20 4. Barrhaven Broadway Blues: 7-8-3 = 17 5. Stittsville 56ers: 6-10-2 = 14 6. Ottawa Taylor’s Blitz: 6-10-2 = 14 7. Fitzroy Harbour WC Electric: 6-11-1 = 13 For more on the local fastball happenings, visit http:// fitzroyfastball.blogspot.ca/.
West Carleton badminton club starts new season EMC sports - The West Carleton Adult Recreational Badminton Club invites players of all skill levels to participate in its new season, beginning September 20. Club members play each Thursday, 8 to10 p.m., at West Carleton Secondary School, Dunrobin Road. This new place and time for the fall season is due to construction at the Stonecrest Elementary School gym. It is expected that regular Wednesday evening play will resume at Stonecrest School in January 2013. The full season cost is $50
for September to May, $30 for the fall or winter season, and $5 for a single night guest fee. Play includes every skill level – from beginner to more skilled recreational participants. The club’s system of player rotation means that everyone can play at their own level as well as improve their game. “It’s a great way,” says one player, “to combine indoor fitness, fun, a friendly atmosphere – and it’s close to home.” Participation is open to those 18 years and older. The
club also accepts a limited number of junior members (15 to 17 years old as of September 1) who are children of an adult member and accompanied by an adult club member. Players bring their own racquets and wear non-marking soft-soled shoes and comfortable clothing. The club supplies nets and birds. Participants pitch in with court set-up and takedown. To register or for more information phone 613-8323705. Registration is also possible on play night.
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Membership in the West Carleton Adult Recreational Badminton Club is open to players of all skill levels. Club members, like those pictured here, play every Thursday evening at West Carleton Secondary School.
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Allen McGee wins record First national youth his sixth district title karate tournament
EMC sports – It’s becoming par for the course for West Carleton golfer Allen McGee. The Arnprior Golf Club member a record-setting sixth straight Ottawa Valley Golf Association men’s A Class championship last week. McGee staved off a late charge by Ottawa Hunt Club member Chris McCuaig to win the tournament by one stroke. BIG WIN
He shot a two-over-par 74
at Rivermead Aug. 30 on the third and final day of the tournament for a 215, just enough to win. McCuaig, who won the title in 2003 and 2004, shot a 71 on the final day, shaving McGee’s margin from four strokes to one. McGee needed a clutch putt on the final hole to avoid a playoff. Greensmere’s Lyle Alexander was third at 223 and Kurtis Barkley of Cedar Glen was fourth at 224. Two strokes back in fifth was another Arnprior Golf Club
member, James Paterson, whose final day 74 gave him a 226 total. McGee bolted into the lead with an even-par 72 last Tuesday at Greensmere. He and McCuaig, who was playing in the tournament for the first time since he won in 2004, were tied for the lead with 69s after the first round at Greensmere Aug. 27. McGee’s fifth straight citydistrict title last year had tied him with Chaudière’s Frank Corrigan who won five times in the years 1932 to 1938.
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STACEY ROY
sroy@perfprint.ca
EMC Sports – It’s an ancient art that has taught selfdiscipline and strength for thousands of years, and this year Sensei Dave McNamara of the Smiths Falls Japan Karate Association will use these skills to host the first ever national youth karate tournament. The National Capital Youth Open Karate Championships tournament is open to athletes 17 years old and under and will be held at the Smiths Falls District Collegiate Institute on Saturday, Nov. 17. The tournament is expected to attract the countries best in all karate styles. “We’re anticipating 200to-300 participating,” said Sensei McNamara. The full day of competition will begin with a morning seminar from Master M. Saeki Sensei, a seventh degree black belt and the highest ranking Japan Karate Association (JKA) instructor in Canada. Master Saeki will
be introducing those outside of the Shotokan style to the rules of engagement that will be in play for the rest of the day. Following this, a qualifying tournament will be held where every participant will receive a participation medal for their efforts and the top athletes will go on to the championship round that will take place around 2 p.m. Nathaniel McNamara, Sensei’s son will be among the participants entering the inaugural competition this year. Over the last five years or so the local eight-year old has worked his way to his purple belt and plans, after November’s competition, to work towards his brown belt. There are three brown belt levels before moving on into black belts. When athletes aren’t on the floor they will be welcome to take part in Siloki laser tag, which will be set up indoors for everyone’s enjoyment. Sensei McNamara is excited to bring the first national
youth tournament to Smiths Falls and celebrate with the karate and local community the achievements of youth in sport. “For me, a great experience is seeing a kid come and walk out of there a changed person,” Sensei McNamara said of teaching. Sensei McNamara has 41 years of Karate training. He currently trains under the guidance of Master Saeki Sensei. Shotokan Karate focuses on a linear fighting style that emphasizes speed and power, while all the while focusing on internal growth and development of character. Karate in general has many benefits, including improved focus and structure in life. More information on the upcoming tournament will be available closer to the event. Special event sponsors for the inaugural youth tournament are welcome and can contact Sensei McNamara at 613-291-7762 or via email at senseimac@hotmail.com.
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34 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
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SPORTS
ur Community Newspaper
Councillor Eli El-Chantiry
5670 Carp Rd., Kinburn 613-580-2424 ext 32246 eli.el-chantiry@ottawa.ca www.eliel-chantiry.ca
Ward 5 West Carleton-March Picnic in the Park event to honour Sheila McKee The Rural Community Association is hosting a “Picnic in the Park” at Sheila McKee Park (1620 Sixth Line Road) on Saturday September 8 from 10am to 3pm. There will be activities for children and families, including a Kinder Playground, basketball courts and fun games. In the afternoon, the West Carleton Dog Agility Club will be putting on a demonstration at 1pm as. There will also be guided nature walks along the forest trails. A free BBQ will be offered from 11:30am to 1pm. You may recall that the Riverfront Park was renamed Sheila McKee Park in June 2012 to honour the late Sheila McKee and the contributions she made to our community. Temporary Road Closure – Donald B. Munro Drive Donald B. Munro Drive is going to be closed between Robert Lee Drive and March Road from Monday, September 10 through to Thursday, November 1, 2012 in order to complete sewer and watermain installation as well as curb and road reconstruction. There will be signed detours in place to minimize the disruption to traffic. 3rd Annual Beach Shoreline Clean Up You, your family and friends are needed at Constance Bay’s 3rd annual Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup, where the shores will be cleaned up and removed of litter. This even is set for Sunday, September 16 from 1pm to 4pm. For full event details and to register your participation go to http://c-bayshorelinecleanup. eventbrite.ca/.
SUBMITTED
Second Grant Fletcher of Galetta, left, joins vice skip Rico Silvestro of Galetta, lead Gerry Laporte of Ottawa, and skip Dave Jefferies of Galetta were big winners at the annual Governor General’s Tournament recently.
Galetta bowlers contribute to interprovincial wins in Kingston EMC sports - The 84th Annual Governor General’s Tournament, a bowls competition between Ontario and Quebec was held at Kingston Lawn Bowls Club on Sept. 1. The Governor General’s Lawn Bowling Tournament was established in 1928 when then Governor General His Excellency, the Right Honourable Viscount Willingdon presented a silver trophy to the Eastern Ontario Lawn
Bowling Association (EOLBA) for annual competition between Men’s Fours teams from the EOLBA and the Québec Lawn Bowling Federation. In 1957 the EOLBA became part of Ontario Lawn Bowls Association. Competition for the Willingdon Cup enters its 84th consecutive year in 2012. Beginning in 1993 Women’s Fours teams from Ontario and
Quebec have also taken part in the Governor General’s Tournament. The women’s teams compete for the Governor General’s Rose Bowl. This trophy was donated in 1994 by His Excellency, the Right Honourable Raymond John Hnatyshyn. Since 1987 Ontario and Québec have hosted the championship tournament in alternate years; prior to that year
the tournament was always hosted by a bowling club in or near Ottawa. Galetta Bowls Club hosted the Tournament in 2006. This year, Ontario hosted the Governor General’s Tournament for the first time. Both Ontario men’s and women’s fours teams won the championship with teams composed of bowlers from Galetta and the Kingston area.
Lace up your running shoes for Kanata Race Day Have you registered yet for the 3rd Annual Kanata Race Day on September 9? Visit kanataraceday.com for registration information, event details, and fundraising pledge forms. This event features 1km and 5km races. The deadline to register is September 8. Last year’s event attracted just over 300 walkers and runners and organizers are hoping for a bigger turn out this year. Councillor Marianne Wilkinson and I will be attending and we look forward to seeing you at the starting line. Kanata Race Day raises funds to offset the costs of additions to the new Richcraft Recreation Complex in Kanata North. This facility will be located at 4101 Innovation Drive and, when completed in the fall of 2013, will fulfill a long-standing need for a major recreation complex to serve the north-western region of the City – which includes West Carleton-March! The complex will feature an eight-lane pool, a leisure and therapeutic pool, skate park and soccer field. SUBMITTED
I’d like to remind drivers to keep to the speed limit our rural roads. Not only do you have to watch out for kids at play, bikers and pedestrians, you also need to be alert to deer and other wildlife that may cross unexpectedly in front of your car. R0011600585-0906
36 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
ARNPRIOR'S HISTORIC THEATRE FRIDAY, SEPT. 7 - THURSDAY, SEPT. 13
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My office is regularly contacted by residents regarding speeding issues on our roads. If you witness speeding, please make a formal complaint to the Ottawa Police at 613-236-1222 x7300. It’s only when they are notified that the complaint can be logged, assigned an officer and action taken. The police track trends happening in our neighbourhoods, which makes them far better equipped than my office in deciding on the best course of action to take.
Second Marilyn Myers of Ottawa, joins vice skip Sandra Jefferies of Galetta, skip Joelle Russell of Ottawa, and lead Sue Smith of Galetta proudly display the Governor General’s Tournament trophy they won..
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Queensway Carleton opens new wing, dialysis centre Jennifer McIntosh jennifer.mcintosh@metroland.com
EMC news - Terry Lavergne will get back 10 days a year thanks to the new satellite dialysis centre at the Queensway Carleton Hospital on Aug. 30. Lavergne, who lives in Woodlawn, has travelled to the General Hospital to receive treatments for more than 20 years. Treatments for patients in need of dialysis are performed three times a week for three to five hours. “When you need dialysis your life changes,” Lavergne said. “You have to work your job, your family life around the treatments.” Coming to the QCH will save him more than an hour of travel time per treatment, and up to four hours per week. “It might not seem like much but it’s time I can spend with my family,” Lavergne said. The first patients were scheduled to visit the new satellite dialysis centre on Sept. 4. “It’s all about the patients,” Tom Schonberg, president and CEO of the QCH said. “When we hear from them it really hits home the importance of what we do.” The hospital’s new four-story tower on the west side of the campus is part of a $126-million expansion. James Gary Beach, the tower’s namesake, donated $5 million to the hospital’s fundraising campaign. Beach said the hospital staff saved his live. He was at a cottage in Quebec when he fell ill. “I got myself to the first hospital
Tom Schonberg, president and CEO of the Queensway Carleton Hospital, cut the ribbon of the new satellite dialysis centre in the new wing of the hospital on Aug. 30.
PHOTOS BY JENNIFER MCINTOSH/METROLAND
Terry Lavergne, a long-time dialysis patient of the Ottawa Hospital, says the satellite unite at the Queensway Carleton Hospital will save him 10 days a year in travel time. I could find on the Ontario side and went,” he said, adding the staff sent him home after being unable to determine the cause of his illness. “They said to go home and go to
the hospital if I got any worse. There wasn’t much chance of getting worse because I was as sick as I could be,” he said. Back at his home in Nepean,
Beach said he was laid up in bed when he asked his wife to get the neighbour – a doctor at the QCH – to have a look at him. The doctor immediately saw he needed to be in the hospital and called ahead to have the surgeon wait. Within minutes Beach was on the table having surgery to deal with a nasty stomach infection. He recovered in the hospital for nearly a month. Five years later when his father needed palliative care, Beach
brought him to the hospital that had saved his life. “He truly received the best care possible,” Beach said. “You can really see that patients are the priority.” The satellite dialysis centre features televisions and pristine hallways with lots of light, along with grey-cushioned chairs that have adjustment buttons to improve kidney patients’ comfort. “You feel like you’re about to take off in a rocket,” said Dr. Peter Magner, medical director of dialysis at the Ottawa Hospital.
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FALL HOME VALUES
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Mayorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Report
Parliamentary expert tapped as cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first integrity commissioner Laura Mueller laura.mueller@metroland.com
EMC news â&#x20AC;&#x201C; A veteran expert of Parliament Hill integrity issues has arrived to oversee ethics at city hall. The city announced on Aug. 29 that River Ward resident Robert Marleau, a former clerk of the House of Commons and former federal information commissioner, has been appointed as Ottawaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first integrity commissioner. Marleau said he was interested in the job because everything was not predetermined and he could have input on the development of things like the council code of conduct. The cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s level-headed approach to integrity issues impressed him, Marleau said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Many other governments and public institutions do this under duress because of a crisis of sorts,â&#x20AC;? Marleau said. As a citizen of Ottawa and someone who is well-versed in ethics and integrity issues, Marleau said he felt the role was both important and a good fit for him. A graduate of the University of Ottawa, Marleau served as the interim federal privacy commissioner after 13 years as the House clerk. He was the information commissioner
LAURA MUELLER/METROLAND
Robert Marleau, left, a former clerk of the house of commons and former federal information commissioner, is introduced as the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first integrity commissioner by city clerk Rick Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor, right, on Aug. 29. for Canada for more than two years before abruptly resigning in 2007. He was chosen from a pool of 18 candidates who applied for the job. Mayor Jim Watson said Marleau is respected both locally and nationally. â&#x20AC;&#x153;His word will carry weight,â&#x20AC;? Watson said. The new integrity commissioner said he sees his role as a resource for councillors to get advice on the sensitive situations that arise from political life. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think what councillors need is someone they can consult in confidence about issues which emerge around the vulnerabilities of public life and have the benefit of an
independent, above-the-fray, non-political advisor, and conduct themselves accordingly,â&#x20AC;? Marleau said, adding, â&#x20AC;&#x153;it would be up to councillors to resolve those issues themselves.â&#x20AC;? His greatest challenge will be getting to know the politicians and senior staff at city hall, Marleau said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m very familiar with the elected official, but this is a different environment,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I have a learning curve.â&#x20AC;? Marleauâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work will include developing a code of conduct for members of city council, as well as any related policies, such as an expense policy and gifts registry. He will also pro-
duce an annual report summarizing complaints, investigations and advice to the city and suggestions for improvements that could be made to the accountability policies he will oversee. But Marleauâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first job will be managing the new lobbyist registry that goes into effect Sept. 1. The online tool lobbyists will use to register is â&#x20AC;&#x153;excellent, simple and intuitive,â&#x20AC;? Marleau said. Now the next step will be developing materials for both city politicians and lobbyists so they know what is expected of them. While Marleau said he takes his direction from city council, he said it would be very difficult for him to accept anything less than complete independence. Ottawa is the latest city to jump on the integrity bandwagon, Marleau said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think there is a trend in government in North America right now, in all levels, to be a lot more transparent,â&#x20AC;? Marleau said. Technology makes it difficult for governments to hide anything, he said, so it makes sense to be proactive. â&#x20AC;&#x153;They may as well be clear with the citizen, and they may as well inform them,â&#x20AC;? he said.
PUBLIC VEHICLE/EQUIPMENT AUCTION
BUDGET 2013: HAVE YOUR SAY By Jim Watson
http://www.JimWatsonOttawa.ca
In our ďŹ rst two years, City Council delivered ON OUR COMMITMENT TO KEEPING TAX INCREASES below 2.5 per cent, and in the upcoming 2013 budget we will do the same. This allows us to continue to invest in our communities, our infrastructure, our transit system and our families in a ďŹ scally responsible manner. Budget 2013 will be tabled on October 24, which means that between now and then I am looking for your input. I am going to be speaking with families and businesses, and consulting with Councillors and staff, on how WE CAN CONTINUE TO KEEP TAXES UNDER CONTROL while protecting the services residents EXPECT This is a collaborative effort and I value the constructive input I receive each year during the budget consultation process.
Saturday, September 15, 2012 @ 9:00 am Civic #2250, County Road 31, Winchester, ON 613-774-7000 or 1-800-567-1797 Primary list at: www.rideauauctions.com
R0011601063/0906
Cars: 09 Rondo, 86 kms; 09 Yaris, 158 kms; 09 Sonata, 101 kms; 09 Camry, 101 kms; 08 Rondo, 115 kms; 08 Swift, 95 kms; 08 Astra, 84 kms; (2)08 Aveo, 128-134 kms; 08 Altima, 112 kms; 08 Focus, 102 kms; 08 Civic, 129 kms; 07 Rondo, 124 kms; 07 Camry, 144 kms; 07 Yaris, 151 kms; 07 Versa, 102 kms; (3)07 5, 89-191 kms; 07 Malibu, 141 kms; 07 Aura, 134 kms; 07 PT Cruiser, 96 kms; 06 6, 145 kms; 07 Jetta, 160 kms; 07 Civic, 159 kms; 06 Sentra, 151 kms; 06 Jetta, 76 kms; 06 RSX, 151 kms; 06 Impala, 93 kms; 06 B2, 50 kms; (4)05 3, 89-203 kms; 05 300, 150 kms; 05 PT Cruiser, 132 kms; 05 Impala, 197 kms; 05 Civic, 251 kms; 05 Sentra, 118 kms; 05 Cavalier, 113 kms; 05 Altima, 134 kms; 05 Optra, 120 kms; 05 Taurus, 70 kms; 05 SunďŹ re, 147 kms; 05 Neon, 122 kms; 05 Aveo, 133 kms; 05 G6, 126 kms; 05 Malibu, 222 kms; 05 Matrix, 183 kms; 04 Gr Prix, 183 kms; 04 Focus, 168 kms; 04 3, 150 kms; 04 Civic, 126 kms; 04 Echo, 257 kms; 04 Epica, 168 kms; 04 Optra, 136 kms; 04 Sebring, 153 kms; 04 Malibu, 158 kms; 04 Accord, 103 kms; 04 Sebring, 164 kms; 04 Mustang, 95 kms; 03 Altima, 154 kms; 03 Altima, 151 kms; 03 Focus, 176 kms; 03 G35, 231 kms; 03 Gr Prix, 133 kms; 03 SunďŹ re, 218 kms; 03 Aerio, 119 kms; 03 Saturn, 171 kms; 03 3, 107 kms; (2)02 ProtĂŠgĂŠ, 155-216 kms; 02 Gr Am, 181 kms; (2)02 Outback, 259-266 kms; 02 Cavalier, 203 kms; 02 Impala, 203 kms; 02 Taurus, 180 kms; 01 Cougar, 118 kms; 01 Aurora, 171 kms; 01 Maxima, 222 kms; 01 Accord, 243 kms; 01 Echo, 141 kms; (2)01 Outback, 213-230 kms; 01 Forester, 228 kms; (2)01 Malibu, 132-141 kms; 01 Intrigue, 139 kms; 00 SunďŹ re, 244 kms; 00 ProtĂŠgĂŠ, 220 kms; 00 626, 207 kms; 00 Gr AM, 133 kms; 00 Sable, 123 kms; 00 Lesabre, 231 kms; 00 Gr Prix, 182 kms; 00 Focus, 181 kms; 00 Century, 62 kms; 00 Impala, 242 kms; 99 ProtĂŠgĂŠ, 201 kms; 99 Intrigue, 189 kms; 99 Maxima, 198 kms; 98 3, 193 kms; 98 626, 131 kms; 97 Mustang, 216 kms; 97 Civic, 190 kms; 90 Camry, 170 kms; 76 Eldorado, 79 kms; 68 Roadrunner, 20 m SUVs: 08 Torrent, 130 kms; 08 Escape, 77 kms; 07 Nitro, 107 kms; 06 Escape, 221 kms; 06 Expedition, 207 kms; (2)05 Escape, 108-114 kms; (2)05 Durango, 178-195 kms; 04 Envoy, 241 kms; 04 Murano, 185 kms; 04 Santa Fe, 141 kms; 04 Jimmy, 135 kms; 04 PaciďŹ ca, 125 kms; 03 Liberty, 183 kms; 03 Cherokee, 133 kms; 03 PathďŹ nder, 176 kms; 03 Rendezvous, 196 kms; 02 Liberty, 144 kms; 02 Bravada, 272 kms; 02 Envoy, 186 kms; 01 Explorer, 157 kms; 00 Cherokee, 197 kms; 00 CRV, 243 kms Vans: (2)08 Caravan, 112-177 kms; 08 T&C, 205 kms; 08 Montana, 241 kms; 07 Quest, 99 kms; 07 Caravan, 128 kms; 06 Freestar, 341 kms; 05 Safari, 282 kms; 05 Econoline, 184 kms; 05 Freestyle, 148 kms; 05 Sedona, 121 kms; 05 Express, 252 kms; 05 Freestar, 126 kms; (3)05 Caravan, 86-161 kms; 04 Caravan, 134 kms; 04 Quest, 227 kms; 04 Freestar, 240 kms; (3)03 Caravan, 125-240 kms; (2)03 Montana, 164-208 kms; 03 Econoline, 144 kms; 03 Ram, 70 kms; (2)03 Windstar, 45126 kms; 02 Venture, 209 kms; 02 Windstar, 156 kms; 01 Windstar, 143 kms; (2)01 Caravan, 83-213 kms Light Trucks: 09 Sierra, 147 kms; 08 Silverado, 162 kms; 07 Colorado, 96 kms; 05 F150, 125 kms; 05 Frontier, 167 kms; 04 Colorado, 107 kms; 02 Dakota, 2000 kms; 00 Silverado, 222 kms Heavy Equipment/Trucks: Cat D3C Dozer, 7804 hrs; 83 IH plow truck, 83 kms; 02 E450 Cubevan, 297 kms; 07 Bobcat S220, 2033 hrs; JD Excavator 490, 5514 hrs Emergency Vehicles: 07 E450 Ambulance, 182 kms Trailers: Utility Recreational Items: 06 Keystone Everest; 06 Pertutti scooter Misc: bush hog; 80 Ford 5610 tractor, 2916 hrs; Case CX70 tractor; Ingersoll air compressor; Case 580, 8172 hrs; ďŹ nishing mower; scraper blade; Yamaha motor; (4)EZ Golf Cart; (2) Yamaha golf cart; Club Car golf cart; MF GC2300 tractor NO CHILDREN ALLOWED List is subject to change. Website will be updated as new consignments are registered Buyers Premium Applies - Terms: Cash; Visa; MasterCard; Interac for $500.00 deposit & Cash, CertiďŹ ed Cheque, Interac for balance due on vehicle Viewing: September 12, 13 & 14, 2012 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Last year, I heard consistently from residents that our roads, sidewalks and other INFRASTRUCTURE WERE NOT UP TO PAR &ROM THIS feedback came the creation of the Ottawa on the Move program. We took bold action with a $340-million investment over three years to improve our transportation network for drivers, transit users, cyclists and pedestrians. You can relay your budget ideas by e-mail to budget2013@ottawa.ca and on Twitter using the hashtag #ottbudget. There will also be in-person budget consultations held across Ottawa in late October, which I encourage you to attend. It is important that residents are engaged in this process and I will be doing all that I can to ensure that your voices are heard. It is also important that we receive speciďŹ c suggestions on how to save money. 7E DELIVERED ON OUR TAX COMMITMENT IN 2011 and 2012 and I look forward to doing it again in 2013 with the help and insight from residents. R0011589426-0906
Jim Watson, Mayor 110 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa ON K1P 1J1 4EL s &AX
www.JimWatsonOttawa.ca West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 39
Get an Early Start R0011596334
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Our oil change service includes an inspection of the safety related components of your vehicle. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll also provide a free estimate for immediate concerns as well as maintenance needed in the near future. BeneďŹ ts:
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Open Mon-Fri 7:30-5:30 Saturday 9:00-5:00 We are qualiďŹ ed to perform all required maintenance in order to maintain your new car warranty. R0011599022
AUTO SEARCHERS
2KM WEST
CEDAROW
(613) 831-7688
TERRY FOX
R0011599018
3 CEDAROW COURT, STITTSVILLE
HAZELDEAN
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6825 Fernbank Road, Stittsville (3kms West of Main Street) Hours Thursday through Sunday 11am - 5pm or by appointment
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COMMERCIAL RENT
ALL CLEANED DRY SEASONED hardwood, (Hard Maple), cut and split. Free delivery. Kindling available. Call today 613-229-7533. EARLY BIRD SPECIAL Firewood for sale. 613-839-1485
UP TO 3000 sq.ft., a/c, central heating, low maintenance, parking, common washrooms, Daniel Street, Arnprior. doug. johnston@kingdonholdings. com 613-622-7931
COMPUTER
Firewood- Cut, split and delivered or picked up. Dry seasoned hardwood or softwood from $50/face cord. Phone Greg Knops (613)658-3358, cell (613)340-1045. Firewood, dry seasoned hardwood. Call Jim 613-836-2629 or 613-558-1484.
BUSINESS SERVICES ACCOUNTING CHRONICLE DIAMOND AWARD WINNER 2009, 2010 & 2011 Saturn Accounting Services 613-832-4699
Computer, Network & Home Theater Support for your Small Business or Home. Call Short-tech Technical Services (613)297-5928. www.shorttech.ca
FARM
FARM
TOMâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S CUSTOM
BARNS We repair, modify or demolish any size of structure. Salvaged buildings, timber and logs for sale. Various size buildings. Fully insured.
AIRLESS PAINTING Specializing in roof barn & aluminum siding painting. *30 years experience. *Screw nailing and roof repairs. Insured and Bonded Free Estimates (613)283-8475
John Denton Contracting
FITNESS & HEALTH
(613)283-0949
EDUCATION & TRAINING Spirit of Math Schools- Free trial class for grades 1 to 8, Kanata Academy, 2 Beaverbrook Road, Kanata Call: 613-749-0909 or e-mail ottawa@spiritofmath.com
$$$NEED MONEY$$$ Do you have a pension plan form an ex-employer? (LIRA) or (lock in RRSP) Call NOW! 1-416-357-9585 Quality home cleaning. Independent, reliable, energetic, detail oriented. Great rates. Weekly, bi-weekly, one time clean. Call for free estimate. (613)808-9816.
Cell (613)285-7363 Custom Combining. 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Flex 6 row corn head, pick-up head for swathed crops. $45/acre. 613256-2999, ask for Wesley.
45 Plus Aquafitness, adult water exercise classes, in Kanata, warm shallow water, certified instructor, daily classes, Diannes Aquafit, Call 613-795-7453.
Firewood Processors, Canadian Made. Cuts up to 16â&#x20AC;? diameter, 13 h.p. Honda $9,950. www.blackscreek.ca (613)8893717.
LOST & FOUND
Huge garage sale, 139 Stoney Pond Court, Stittsville, Saturday, September 8, great variety, rain or shine. 8-1,
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
A silent thought, a secret tear, Keeps his memory ever dear, Time takes away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf.
REWARD if found.
Godfrey, ON 613-374-2566
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
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Apartment, Carleton Place downtown, stairs, first/ last month rent, references, no smoking, no pets. 613-8671905.
Multi-family sale, Saturday, September 8, rain or shine. 210B Equestrian Drive, Kanata.
FOR RENT
TRIPLEX APARTMENT Building for sale by owner. Excellent Starter Home, Live-in large 2 bedroom unit. Pay mortgage with rent from the other 2 units. Call 613-624-5287 No Agents
WEDDING
WEDDING
KANATA Available Immediately
EMC Classifieds Get Results!
Di% Dij% D`cc\i
3 bedroom townhouse, 1.5 baths, 2 appliances, unďŹ nished basement, one parking spot. $1038 per month plus utilities.
Secure 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Plus Building Carleton Place No Smoking No Pets $685 & up Seniorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Discounts
Call 613-720-9860 or 613-823-1694 311521
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Lauren (Russell) and Leslie Miller were married on August 18, 2012 at their home in White Lake surrounded by close family and friends. The happy couple would like to thank everyone who made their day so special. CL374530 FOR SALE
FOR SALE
For more information contact your local newspaper.
WANTED
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FOR RENT
ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY!
:$17(' 2/' 78%( $8',2 (48,3 0(17 \HDUV RU ROGHU $PSOLILHUV 6WHUHR 5HFRUGLQJ DQG 7KHDWUH 6RXQG (TXLSPHQW +DPPRQG RUJDQV $Q\ FRQGLWLRQ QR IORRU PRGHO FRQVROHV &DOO 7ROO )UHH
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FOR RENT 1 or 2 Bedroom on Rideau River for Oct 1. Starting at $880.00 plus hydro. Washer and Dryer hook up. No Pets. Parking available. 15 mins from Kanata and Barrhaven 613-489-1759
1&2 bedroom apartments
Love Mom (Joy), Linda, Don and Sue, Penny and their families.
Network
PERSONALS
GARAGE SALE
Rock Dove, Carp, inside, 613839-0743. September 1, 2, 3, 22, 23. Minelli bike, antiques, collectibles, furniture/cabinets, quilt rack, fur, etc.
Absolutely Beautiful
CL374528
E270827
Missing since Aug. 21 2012 near Equestrian and Foxleigh in Bridlewood. She is microchipped. Contact 613-592-4960.
GARAGE SALE
Huge Multi-Family, Sept. 8th (8 to 4) & 9th (8 to 2) Antiques side chairs, trunks, toys, diecast cars; costume jewellry; brewery/ liquor items; artwork; tall ship models; accordian; 3 kitchen/ dining sets; games table; canoe; many small tools; bird houses/ feeders; numerous household items. 613-258-7551.
613-831-3445 613-257-8629
In loving memory of a wonderful son, brother, uncle and great uncle, who was taken from us so suddenly and tragically ďŹ ve years ago.
CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACES
THE
Almonte Antique Market, 26 Mill St. in historic downtown Almonte. 613-256-1511. 36 vendors. Open daily 10-5.
LAUGHLIN, Mark B. Math., CA, CPA Dec. 19, 1963 - Sept. 08, 2007
FOR SALE
FURNACE BROKER
3215 Appleton Sideroad, Sept.15, 9-3. Large Sale. Antiques, collectables, furniture, household items, dishes, pictures, toys, books, craft supplies.
www.emcclassiďŹ ed.ca
www.rankinterrace.com
CLASSIFIEDS
5,990
GARAGE SALE
LOST & FOUND
LD SO on the News EMC
Delivery and maintenance package included. Limited time offer. Instant rebates up to $1,000.
For the Health conscious meat lover. Tender Grass Finished Beef raised here in Eastern Ontario. Phone Rudy Haveman (613)275-2267 cell (613)3284451 www.kitleybeef.ca
Ford 4610 FWD loader $12,750; MF 165 loader $5,150; MF 1135 cab duals $7,500; CIH 585 cab loader $14,500. 613-223-6026.
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FITNESS & HEALTH
CL374073
FIREWOOD
CLASSIFIED CL365991
Your Community Newspaper
PHONE:
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
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Connect with Ontarians â&#x20AC;&#x201C; extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 41
FOR RENT
FOR RENT Constance Bay- 2 bedroom basement apt. Private entrance and patio. Fridge, stove, washer, dryer. No smoking. No pets. First/last month rent. Senior/ mature adults only. References required. Mon.-Thurs. 9-3, 613-727-0410. COTTAGES FOR RENT on Lowney Lake. YEAR ROUND RENTAL, winterized, a/c, running water, fridge, stove, microwave, $700/ month plus utilizes. SEASONAL RENTAL May-October, 32â&#x20AC;&#x2122; trailer with Florida room. $1200/month plus utilities. 613-623-8417 or 613-850-1340 Downtown Perth, 2 bedroom, quality renovations, $1,000 plus utilities, includes 5 appliances. Available October 8. Call 613390-2558. Town home to rent with the option to buy. Glen Carin in Kanata. 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath, air condition, fireplace, 5 appli-ances, garage and walking to distance to all amenities. $1400 plus utilities. Available Oct 1st, 613878-1433
CLASSIFIED
KANATA RENTAL HOMES
TOWN-
3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bathrooms, 5 appliances and more, located in established area, on site management office, 323 Steeplechase Dr. (just off Stonehaven Dr) Kanata, K2M 2N6, call 613-592-0548 Perth 2 Bedroom Apt. Oct 1st. Spacious, freshly finished in quiet building, mature tenants. Fridge, stove, parking, laundry. $725 + hydro. No dogs or smoking. First/last/ref. (613)298-5429. Stittsville. 3 bedroom executive townhome, possible 4th bedroom, 6 appliances included. Single car garage, air, ensuite, $1,800/month. 613-836-8921.
Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll be
LD SO on the News EMC
CLASSIFIEDS
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
STORAGE
FOR SALE
Mini Storage Units 10x20 $120/ month Richmond/North Gower Area. Call (613)880-0494.
Peeled cedar posts & rails -decks & fences installed. Pressure treated cedar -vinyl. 20 years in business. Cedarwood 613-658-3081.
FOR SALE 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; length firewood. All mixed hardwood. Also buying standing timber. 613-312-9859. Cedar (white), quality lumber, most sizes, decking, T&G, channel rustic. Also huge bundles of cedar slabs ($45) and large bags of shavings ($35). w w w. s c o u t e n w h i t e c e d a r. c a (613)283-3629. Disability Products. Buy and Sell stair lifts, scooters, bath lifts, patient lifts, hospital beds, etc. Call Silver Cross Ottawa (613)231-3549. *HOT TUB (SPA) Covers-Best Price. Best quality. All shapes and colours. Call 1-866-6526837. www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper
TOP DOLLAR PAID for used guitars, amplifiers, banjos etc. No hassle - pickup MILL MUSIC RENFREW 1-877-484-8275 or 613-432-4381
HELP WANTED Canadian Guide Dogs for the Blind requires full time Kennel Co-ordinator. Applicant must be a qualified Animal Health Technician. Management skills essential with ability to work alone or in a team. Must be able to lift at least 20 kg. Must have valid driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license. Resume with covering letter by September 14, 2012. Fax to 613-692-0650 or email info@guidedogs.ca. No calls please.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
0906.CL374644
CL374515
REXALL PHARMA PLUS
Is seeking a part-time PART TIME AND FULL TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE PHARMACY ASSISTANTS AND TECHNICIANS Accepting resumes in store at 339 Raglan St., Renfrew, ON Or fax 613-432-6511
Require
HEAVY EQUIPMENT MECHANICS, AND 310 T MECHANICS.
CL336316
Superintendent Team
Please apply on-line at minto.com or fax your resumes to (613) 788-2758, attention: Jensa. $ % $# !!' %! ' ( # !! %%! #(' )( $#!- ' ! ( # ( ' + !! $#( (
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MARKETING CO-ORDINATOR (ENTRY LEVEL) LOCATION â&#x20AC;&#x201C; OTTAWA, ON STATUS â&#x20AC;&#x201C; FULL TIME Best Theratronics Ltd. is a Canadian company of TeamBestâ&#x201E;˘. We became a member of the Best family in May 2008. We manufacture external beam therapy units and self-contained blood irradiators. We have created a new product line of cyclotrons (B14p, B35p and the B70p) for radioisotope production. The team brings with it a diverse range of knowledge from around the world. TeamBestâ&#x201E;˘ is driven by one primary goal - to provide the best products and services to customers. KEY RESPONSIBILITIES: Under general directions, the incumbent will perform a wide variety of functions supporting Marketing activities. Responsibilities include: s #OORDINATES ALL TRADE SHOW ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BOOKINGS organizing, shipping show kits (brochures, demos, rollups etc.) s 2ESPONSIBLE FOR 1# AND MANAGEMENT OF -ARKETING material s 2ESPONSIBLE FOR "ROCHURE CREATION UPDATES AND MAINTEnance of all marketing material s #OORDINATION OF PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF MARKETING material s -ANAGES CUSTOMER CONTACT DATABASE AND E MAIL BLASTS TO customers s /RGANIZES PRESS CONFERENCES s 5PDATES AND MODIlES PRESENTATIONS AND CREATES SALES tools as required s #OLLECTS MARKET INFORMATION AND PREPARES REPORTS AS required s #ARRIES OUT SPECIAL PROJECTS AND OTHER RELATED DUTIES AS required SKILLS AND QUALIFICATIONS: s 5NIVERSITY DEGREE IN "USINESS OR 4ECHNICAL lELD WITH A concentration in Marketing required s n YEARS MARKETING EXPERIENCE AN ASSET s !BILITY TO WORK IN A FAST PACED ENVIRONMENT s -ULTILINGUAL SKILLS WOULD BE DESIRABLE s %XCELLENT ORGANIZATIONAL SKILLS AND ABILITY TO HANDLE multiple priorities and meet strict deadlines s -UST HAVE EXCELLENT INTERPERSONAL SKILLS AND THE ABILITY TO work effectively independently or in a team environment s -UST HAVE EFFECTIVE TIME MANAGEMENT SKILLS AND BE ABLE to be self-directed s %XCELLENT %NGLISH VERBAL WRITTEN COMMUNICATION SKILLS essential s #OMPUTER LITERATE IN -ICROSOFT APPLICATIONS REQUIRED !LL APPLICANTS SHOULD APPLY IN WRITING WITH A COVER LETTER AND resume to Human Resources: %MAIL JOBS THERATRONICS CA OR &AX ./4% /NLY SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATES SHALL BE CONTACTED FOR interviews.
CL372772
*(+!). /%*) 2%'' ! *((!).0- /! 2%/$ ,0 '%6 /%*). '! .! .!) -!.0(!. /* %''% ) ) ..* % /!. #' ) /-!!/ *0/$ *3
Lone Star, Kanata, Now Hiring. Full time experienced,
line cooks & servers. Apply to: 4048 Carling Avenue. Competitive Wage. Come join the great Lone Star Atmosphere. Looking for persons willing to speak to small groups, 1 on 1 presentations. A car and internet necessary. Diana (866)3065858. Now Hiring: Chef -This position offers regular part-time and casual shifts with our Culinary Team. Responsible for preparing outstanding cuisine in line with our V!VAlicious menus and recipes that will offer a great dining experience in our Shores Restaurant serving very active Community Members. Join our great Team and help us in Making Today Great at the Waterside Retirement Community! Please provide resume to Anne Forsythe -Executive Chef via email at annef@thewaterside. ca or drop off at 105 McNeely Avenue, Carleton Place. P/T General Handyman with varied skills required immediately for home repairs/renos requiring ladder work in Central Ottawa, Ottawa East & West. Ideal for retired/semi-retired, skilled, organized, conscientious and courteous. Basic tools and reliable vehicle required. Good compensation & flexible hours. Apply to han-dymanplus@ ourgoldenyears.ca or fax 613-836-0499.
42 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
CL374847-0906
HELP WANTED
VonSchrader Canada- Carle ton Place. Immediate full-time position available for small electric motor repair along with order entries and shipping and receiving duties (retirees welcome). Call 613-257-5200 or email: vonschradercanada@bellnet.ca
Bridlewood- Caregiver with 18 years experience has space available. All ages welcome. Plenty of TLC; nutritious meals/ snacks; outdoor/indoor play; non-smoking environment. Excellent references. Call 613852-1560. Need a helping hand? Our dedicated and mature caregivers (50 years+), thoroughly screened and insured, provide light housekeeping, companion care, dementia care, respite care, child care, shopping, transportation, handy work and other services. Call Seniors on Site at 613-422-7676 or visit www.sosonsite.com
LIVESTOCK
Attention horse riders!!! Our Annual Toledo Ride-A-Thon is back!! Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s time to saddle up and giddee up, October 13, registration from 10-12:30. Watch for signs!! Check out our website: www.saddleupintoledo.com This yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s proceeds will benefit St. Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s United Church, To-ledo and St. Philip Neri Catholic Church, Toledo for Church renovations. Horse stalls and hay steamers. HappyHorseProducts.ca 613-715-1719. Rideau Arcott Rams for sale. Ready for fall breading. Contact 613-812-2438.
MARINE Sailboat 16ft Wayfarer. Excellent cond. cover, dolly, trailer. $2800. Excellent cond. A fun, safe sail 1-4 people. Brighton 613-475-9121 Winter boat storage- Winterizing, shrink wrapping, indoor and outdoor, $335-$425. Mobile shrink wrapping available. 613-267-3470. relax@christie lakecottages.com
HUNTING SUPPLIES
MORTGAGES
Canadian Firearm/Hunter Safety Courses. Call Dave Arbour 613-257-7489 or visit www.valleysportsmanshow.com for dates and details of courses near you.
$$MONEY$$ Consolidate Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-2821169 www.mortgageontario.com
Hunter Safety Canadian Firearms Courses, Carp October 5, 6, 7. Arnprior Oct 12, 13, 14 and Carp Oct 26, 27, 28. Wenda Cochran 613-256-2409.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX CHRONICLE DIAMOND AWARD WINNER 2009, 2010 & 2011 SATURN ACCOUNTING SERVICES 613-832-4699 Consolidate your Debts. 1 monthly pmt, including credit cards, taxes, collection agencies, garnishments, etc. GMC Consulting 24 hrs, Toll Free 1-877-977-0304. Services Bilingues. gmyre@debtzero.ca
MUSIC Guitar Instruction; Professional, award-winning guitarist with over 45 years experience now accepting guitar & bass students. Beginner to advanced. Call Brian at 613-831-8990, Glen Cairn. Voice Lessons: Shawne Elizabeth Studio B.A.B.ED. Dip.Mus. N.A.T.S O.C.T. experienced, qualified, professional instruction. Beginner to Bel Canto, Repertoire, In-terpretation, Languages, Coaching, Remediation. Fun and effective. $45/$50 per hour. Shawneelizabeth@rogers.com (613)731-3991 (613)2866793 www.shawneelizabeth.ca World Class Drummer. From Five Man Electrical Band, is accepting new students for private lessons. Call Steve 613831-5029.
Moose Hunters, looking for a couple of hunters to join a dedicated group hunting in the Geraldton area. Oct 13-20. Call 613-692-3824.
Please fax resume to 613-253-0071 Or Email Careers@ThomasCavanagh.ca
As a team, you will both be responsible for customer service, cleaning, minor repairs and maintenance of the interior and exterior of a residential property in Ottawa. Related experience and good communication and computer abilities are a must. A competitive salary and beneďŹ ts package, including on-site accommodation, await you!
HELP WANTED
www.emcclassiďŹ ed.ca
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
*' '0(4'9 !+%614+# 152+6#. +5 %1//+66'& 61 241)4'55+8' .'#&'45*+2 +0 6*' &'.+8'4; 1( 474#. *'#.6* %#4' +67#6'& 10.; /+076'5 9'56 1( 66#9# 6*' 190 1( '0(4'9 1= '45 # 70+37' 12214670+6; 61 '0,1; 6*' $'0'A 65 1( # 5/#.. %1//70+6; 9+6* 6*' #/'0+6+'5 1( 66#9# %.15' #6 *#0& *' 152+6#. +5 %744'06.; +08+6+0) #22.+%#6+105 (14 6*' (1..19+0) 215+6+105 COORDINATOR, HUMAN RESOURCES (Full-Time Permanent) 5 6*' (#%' 1( 174 7/#0 '5174%'5 '2#46/'06 6*' /#+0 &76+'5 1( 6*+5 215+6+10 +0%.7&' #&/+0+56'4+0) '/2.1;'' $'0'A 6 241)4#/5 #0& 2'05+10 2.#05 /#0#)+0) 6*' *7/#0 4'5174%'5 %1/210'06 1( 6*' 2#;41.. 5;56'/ +0%.7&+0) /10+614+0) %#.%7.#6+0) 4'%1//'0&+0) #0& 241%'55+0) #.. 2#;41.. #0& &'/1)4#2*+% &#6# %*#0)'5 24'2#4+0) 4'.#6'& #0& #;41.. 4'21465 21.+%+'5 #0& 241%'&74'5 #0& 4'5210&+0) 61 +06'40#. #0& ':6'40#. 4'37'565 (14 +0(14/#6+10 '2146+0) 61 6*' !+%' 4'5+&'06 1( 14214#6' '48+%'5 6*' 57%%'55(7. %#0&+&#6' 9+.. $' # )4#&7#6' 1( #0 #22418'& :'%76+8' '%4'6#4+#. %' &/+0+564#6+10 241)4#/ #0& *#8' #6 .'#56 A 8' ;'#45 ':2'4+'0%' 914-+0) +0 6*' *7/#0 4'5174%'5 A '.& +0 # 70+10+<'& '08+410/'06 ' 5*' 9+.. *#8' 6*1417)* 914-+0) -019.'&)' 1( 2#;41.. 5;56'/5 #0& '/2.1;'' $'0'A 6 241)4#/5 #0 +0 &'26* 70&'456#0&+0) 1( 6*' 24+0%+2.'5 1( 914-+0) +0 # 70+10+<'& '08+410/'06 #0& +06'424'6+0) %1..'%6+8' #)4''/'065 ':%'..'06 #0#.;6+%#. %7561/'4 5'48+%' #0& %1//70+%#6+10 5-+..5 #&8#0%'& -019.'&)' 1( 914& 241%'55+0) 524'#&5*''6 #0& &#6#$#5' 51(69#4' #22.+%#6+105 #0& 6*' #$+.+6; 61 914- +0 # &;0#/+% >&'#&.+0' 14+'06'&? '08+410/'06 &'5+)0#6+10 9+.. $' 24'('44'& SOCIAL WORKER â&#x20AC;&#x201C; NEPHROLOGY PROGRAM (Temporary Full-Time, Up to One Year) '2146+0) 61 6*' 745' #0#)'4 1( 6*' '/1&+#.;5+5 41)4#/ 6*' '2*41.1); 1%+#. "14-'4 +5 4'52105+$.' (14 /''6+0) 6*' 25;%*151%+#. 0''&5 1( 2#6+'065 *'5' 4'52105+$+.+6+'5 +0%.7&' #55'55/'06 1( 2#6+'065@ 0''&5 #0& &'8'.12/'06 1( 2#6+'06 %'06'4'& 2.#05 61 /''6 6*15' 0''&5 2#6+'06 %1705'.+0) .+#+510 #0& %1..#$14#6+10 9+6* ':6'40#. #)'0%+'5 %114&+0#6+10 1( 6*' 24' 4'0#. +057 %+'0%; %.+0+% #0& '&7%#6+10 1( 2#6+'065 (#/+.+'5 4')#4&+0) %*410+% &+5'#5' /#0#)'/'06 #0& #551%+#6'& .+('56;.' +/2#%65 *' +&'#. %#0&+&#6' 9+.. 2155'55 # #%%#.#74'#6' 14 #56'4 +0 1%+#. "14- 14 #%%#.#74'#6' 9+6* '37+8#.'06 ':2'4+'0%' #0& $' # /'/$'4 1( 6*' " " 14 4'.#6'& 241('55+10#. 14)#0+<#6+10 :2'4+'0%' +0 6*' &+#.;5+5 &+5%+2.+0' #0& 14 4'%'06 4'.#6'& ':2'4+'0%' 9+.. $' %105+&'4'& 56410) #55'65 5 6*' 241)4#/ +5 &'5+)0#6'& 70&'4 6*' 4'0%* #0)7#)' '48+%'5 %6 $+.+0)7#.+5/ 9+.. #.51 $' %105+&'4'& #0 #55'6 " ' $ " # $ * "# $ $ & # $ , $# # ' # % $ "$% $ # * "# %$#$ # # " " $ "$% $ # * " $ $ " # % $) ' $ ## $ $ $ +# $ ) %$ # ' ) 7#.+A '& %#0&+&#6'5 #4' +08+6'& 61 57$/+6 6*'+4 4'57/'5 in writing by September 17, 2012 to: 7.+# 17&4'#7 ! 14214#6' '48+%'5 '0(4'9 !+%614+# 152+6#.
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CL373110
Your Community Newspaper
PHONE:
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
WHYTE CEMETERY FITZROY HARBOUR The annual memorial service will be held on Sunday September 9th at 2 pm. Bring a lawn chair. If rain, service will be at St. Andrew’s United Church Fitzroy Harbour
PETS DOG SITTING Experienced retired breeder providing lots of TLC. My home. Smaller dogs only. References available. $17-$20 daily Marg 613-721-1530 In-House Pet Grooming. Pet Grooming done in your home. www.inhousepetgrooming.com Call 613-485-9400 ask for Joyce or email joycevallee@gmail.com
VEHICLES
Quiet adult campground, large fully serviced lots, fishing, tennis, horseshoes and volleyball, near Merrickville on Rideau River. $1200/season. 613-2694664.
2003 Chev Ventura, 8 passenger with child restraint seats, automatic, V6, 3.4L, no rust, 172,000 km, $2,995, safety & E-test. 613-284-9886 GMD.
TRAVEL/VACAT/COTTG Retired Teachers & Friends Present the 2013 Tour Package. Wall Street United Church, Wall Street. Brockville. Sept 18th, 2-5pm. All Welcome!
VACATION/COTTAGES CONSTANCE BAY COZY 1 BEDROOM cottage renovated 2011. Winterized natural gas heat, $650 inclusive, first/last references, pets tbd. Available Sept. 1st, 613-832-2641
VEHICLES ‘03 KIA Sedona, 7 passenger, V6, automatic, with CD, DVD, TV, E-test, safety, 181,000 km, $2,995. 613-284-9886 GMD. 2002 Ford Windstar, V6, automatic, fully loaded, Special Sport Model, no rust, E-test, safety, 181,000 km, $2,995. 613-2849886 GMD.
You’ll be
SOon theLNewsDEMC
AUCTIONS
HELP WANTED
TRAILERS / RV’S
2006 Buick Allure CXL, 101,000 km. Leather, fully loaded, excellent condition. New brakes, new summers and winters all on rims. $8,900. 613-271-7513. Assortment of used tires, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16.5. Summers, all-season and snows. Also used car parts. Gord 613-257-2498.
WANTED
HELP WANTED
Full Time Satellite TV Installers Installer must supply own vehicle, valid driver’s license, tools, ladders, consumables, vehicle insurance, etc. Potential for income between $50,000.00 to $80,000.00 yearly + bonuses. Evening and weekend shifts required.
For more information please send a resume to Admin@scheelcommunications.com or fax to
Wanted 26 inch 3 wheel bike, call Glen 613-444-0017
613-623-9992
WANTED TO RENT
No experience necessary. All training will be supplied.
WORK WANTED
CLASSIFIEDS AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTION SALE AUTOMOTIVE & DIAGNOSTIC EQUIPMENT.
for National Automotive from the town of Prescott take Edward Street, north (Cty Road 18) to #4401 in the village of Domville on Saturday, September 15, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. The property has been sold. This auction is a clear choice for anyone requiring brand name automotive equipment, used but never abused and always properly maintained. Bring a lawn chair. Visit website for photos.
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 267-1335 Fax: (613) 267-6931 www.jimhandsauction.com
CL390849_0906
Terms: Cash, Cheque, Debit, Visa, M/C – Chip Wagon
VACATION/COTTAGES
2007 Jay Flight 40’ Bungalow Park model 37’ Three season sunroom with windows & screens Lot 4 Mississippi Lake RV Resort, Carleton Place, ON. This special RV home is nestled under trees on an extremely nicely landscaped premium location. Just steps from the beach, docks, restaurant, pool and visitor parking area. A Pickett fence adds to the privacy of this property. The retail investment of this spacious and well decorated summer RV home with all the comforts available is $97,300. REDUCED, REDUCED ”FIRM” $49,900.00 for a quick sale. Financing available OAC. For viewing visit Kijiji ID 371015693 or call (613)-799-5000.
HELP WANTED
Looking for group exercise/cycling instructor for Stittsville fitness studio. Established Personal Trainers also needed. Please email resume to info@sculptconditioning.com 0906.CL374534
TOMLINSON ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
DZ Drivers Wanted CL374574
Certified Mason. 12 years experience. Chimney repair, restoration, parging, repointing. Brick, block and stone. Small/ big job specialist. Free estimates. 613-250-0290.
HELP WANTED
EXERCISE / CYCLING INSTRUCTOR
Fast Growing Company Requires
Looking for an “auntie/grandma” for occasional care of my children. Must love children, speak English and have a car. Please call Sarah at 613-254-5851.
1 Bedroom available to rent in house in Carleton Place. Room recently renovated. $535/mth. bills included. 613-795-6233
HELP WANTED
www.emcclassified.ca
Up to $1500 CASH Weekly NEW Direct Sales Position NO Door to Door Sales Apply Online Today
PropertyStarsJobs.com
We offer: Very Competitive Wages, 5 day Week work 4 Day Bonus week Program
Fax Resume, Personal and CVOR Abstract to:
613-820-4334
236139/1003 CL344268
COMING EVENTS
CLASSIFIED
CL371368
Your Community Newspaper
PHONE:
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
CL369992
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 43
COMMUNITY
Your Community Newspaper
The ABCs of packing a healthy school lunch
EMC lifestyle â&#x20AC;&#x201C; The food your child eats for lunch and snacks should provide the energy and nutrients to help them get through the school day, as well as aid in their growth and development. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Teeth and gums need a wide range of essential vitamins and minerals to grow and be healthy, just like your childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s body,â&#x20AC;? says Dr. Arthur Worth, president of the Ontario Dental Association. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Nutrient-rich foods strengthen your
childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s teeth and gums, making them less susceptible to tooth decay.â&#x20AC;? When planning a childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s lunch, include foods that are nutritious and beneficial - not only for their overall health but for their oral health too, urges the dental association. Calcium and vitamin D are necessary for the growth and maintenance of strong teeth. Foods high in calcium help strengthen tooth enamel, while vitamin D allows the body to
better absorb calcium. Other essential vitamins and minerals necessary for optimal oral health include phosphorous, magnesium and vitamins A and C. Here are a few ideas, courtesy of the dental association, of what to pack in your childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s lunchbox: â&#x20AC;˘ Fruits and vegetables. Citrus fruits and kiwi fruit are good sources of vitamin C - important for healthy gums. Carrots and dried apricots
are good sources of phosphorous, which is needed for tooth development. â&#x20AC;˘ Smart snacking. Growing children and teens often need more than three meals a day. Smart snacking will ensure they have the energy they need to take them through the school day. Whole grains (in snacks like crackers and granola bars) and nuts provide protein, as well as being rich in magnesium and phosphorous.
contain vitamin A, a nutrient essential for building strong teeth. â&#x20AC;˘ Cheese, yogurt and milk all contain calcium. Cheese also stimulates saliva production, which helps clear away food particles from your teeth. Low-fat yogurt (with no added sugar), cheese slices on whole-wheat crackers and small containers of milk are great options. â&#x20AC;˘ Protein-rich foods like meat, poultry and fish. They
â&#x20AC;˘ Cut the cola. Opt for water, milk or pure fruit juices instead of carbonated drinks. Soda, sports drinks and sweetened fruit juices often contribute to tooth decay because of high sugar and acid content. â&#x20AC;&#x153;As a parent, I know it can be difficult to get your child to eat more healthy fare, but establishing healthy eating habits and good oral hygiene early on in life is one of the best things you can do for your children,â&#x20AC;? says Dr. Worth. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It sets them off on the right path to good oral and overall health.â&#x20AC;?
R0011592694
Church Services GLEN CAIRN UNITED CHURCH
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Becoming Whole Through the Power of Jesusâ&#x20AC;?
R0011292257
613-836-4756 www.gcuc.ca
Children's Church
St. Patrickâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s FallowďŹ eld Roman Catholic Church
Pastor: Ken Roth Chapel Ridge Free Methodist Church 5660 Flewellyn Road, Stittsville 613-831-1024 email: office@chapelridge.ca www.chapelridge.ca
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Saturday 5:00pm Sunday 9:00am & 11:00am
R0011582070
KANATA BAPTIST CHURCH
Holy Redeemer Roman Catholic Church
(AZELDEAN 2D s R0011292262
www.kbc.ca
613-836-1764
Email: parish@holyredeemer.ca Website: www.holyredeemer.ca
Pastor: Rev. Pierre Champoux
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Parish Mission Statement The Holy Redeemer Parish Community lives the Way, the Truth and the Life by reaching out with the Good News to Welcome, to Serve and to Care.
Sunday Mass Times: Saturday: 5:00 p.m. Sunday: 8:00 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 11:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m.
Weekday Masses Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 9:00 a.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m
BRIDLEWOOD BIBLE CHAPEL R0011292043
kbc@kbc.ca
15 Steeple Hill Cres., Nepean, ON 613-591-1135 www.stpatricks.nepean.on.ca
44 Rothesay Drive, Kanata, ON, K2L 2X1
Pastor: Keith MacAskill
613-591-3469
1489 Shea Road, (corner of Abbott) Stittsville, Ontario K2S 0G8
September 18 to November 20, 2012 7:00 pm to 8:30 pm Dessert served.
Sunday and weekday Bible studies see our website for times and locations
www.gracebaptistottawa.com ST. ISIDORE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
R0011582525
11:00am Worship Service with Nursery & Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ministry 6:15pm Evening Service Rev. Carlo De Vito, Pastor of Family Ministries email: fellowshipbaptistchurch@bellnet.ca www.kanatafellowship.com
PASTOR STEVE STEWART
R0011292096
Sunday Services at 9:00 & 10:45 am
Nursery, Children & Youth Programs, Small Groups OfďŹ ce: 613-836-2606 Web: www.cbcstittsville.com Email us at: cbcinfo@cbcstittsville.com Direction for life's crossroads
Office 613-592-1546 www.christrisen.com
R0011586903
Growing, Serving, Celebrating
Pastor Shaun Seaman Please join us at 110 McCurdy Drive, 836-1429, www.trinitykanata.ca
St. Thomas Anglican Church Nursery, Sunday School, Junior & Senior Youth Groups Open Table Dinner 3rd Saturday of the month at 5pm The Reverend Jane McCaig Rental Space Available at reasonable rates. Call for information.
Sunday Eucharist .( 0 . # +$,-
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â&#x20AC;&#x153;Welcome to all seeking spiritual refreshmentâ&#x20AC;? Sunday Worship 8:30am and 10:30am
1619 Stittsville Main Street 613-836-5741 email: stthoms@magma.ca www.stthomasstittsville.ca
8:00 am - Said ' $ 9:15 am - Choral Music, Sunday School & Nursery ' #)+ & .,$ .( 0 #))& .+,!+0 ' + $,! .,$ .( 0 #))& .+,!+0 11:00 am - Praise Music, Sunday School & Nursery
0308.R0011305525
9:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery, Sunday School 11:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery
R0011582324
Sunday Sunday
We are a welcoming and friendly community that invites you to come and worship with us in our new church
R0011292264
WELCOME to our Church St. Paulâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s United Church, Carp
3769 Carp Road Carp, ON
Mass: Saturday at 5:00 pm Sunday at 9:00 and 11:00 am Telephone: (613) 592-1961 E-mail: ofďŹ ce@stisidorekanata.com
R0011582552
Sunday Worship Service 10:30am. Sunday School 9:15am. Adult Bible Class 9:30am. Rev. Louis Natzke, Pastor Rev. Lawrence Eifert, Pastor Emeritus
1600 Stittsville Main Street, Stittsville
Rev. Karen Boivin
Christ Risen Lutheran Church 85 Leacock Drive, Kanata
Rev. Colin N. McKenzie, Sr. Pastor
Service and Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
1135 March Rd., Kanata, ON. K2K 1X7 Pastor: Rev. M.M. Virgil Amirthakumar
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Sunday 10:00am Bible Classes for adults and children
44 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
Alpha Course R0011582447
1078 Klondike Road, Kanata 613-591-3246 â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Church Rooted in Christ and Fruitfulâ&#x20AC;?
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Preaching the Doctrines of Grace
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FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH
613-839-2155
2470 Huntley Road
Sunday 10:00 A.M. Worship Service Nursery provided
Parish ofďŹ ce - 613-836-8881 Fax - 613-836-8806
A New Testament Church 465 Eagleson Road (also entrance off Palomino) 11 am Family Bible Hour (Nursery Available) Sunday School 6:30 pm Evening Bible Hour www.bridlewoodbiblechapel.ca 613-591-8514
Grace Baptist Church of Ottawa
2 Stonehaven Dr. at Eagleson Road
SUNDAY MASS TIMES Saturday: 5:00 pm Sunday: 9:00 am & 10:30 am Monsignor Joseph Muldoon, Pastor www.holyspiritparish.ca
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10:00 am: Service of Worship and Sunday School
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140 Abbeyhill Dr., Kanata Rev. Brian Copeland
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Seventh-Day Adventist Church
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SATURDAY SERVICES SABBATH SCHOOL FOR ALL AGES 9:15AM WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 AM SERVING KANATA AND STITTSVILLE PASTOR: LYLE NOTICE 85 LEACOCK DRIVE, KANATA (THE CHRIST RISEN LUTHERAN CHURCH) 613-899-9793
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The Redeemed Christian Church of God
City of David â&#x20AC;&#x153;Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today, and foreverâ&#x20AC;?-Heb.13:8
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578 Terry Fox Dr., Kanata Sunday Service at 10:10am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 12.00pm Tel: (613) 862-8652;(613) 843-0406 Email: cityofdavidkanata@yahoo.ca
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
PHOTOS BY DAVID JOHNSTON/METROLAND
This custom rifle was one of only two made with the specific wood grain. Pierre Armond Lacombe of C.T.A. Firearms in Sorel-Tracey Quebec displayed the unique weapon at Tommy Radmore, 6, of Nepean takes aim during the Valley Gun and Hunting Show last weekend at the W. Erskine John- the Valley Gun and Hunting Show last weekend at the W. ston arena in Carp. The two-day event featured thousands of weapons and accessories from more than 125 vendors. Erskine Johnston arena in Carp.
Guns and more at annual show
Making a new friend at the Valley Gun and Hunting Show last weekend at the W. Erskine Johnston arena in Carp were Lila and Neeve Allen of Calabogie. They took time to pet a Pointer puppy who will end up spending much of his adult life hunting.
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 45
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NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Youth treatment centre ready for guests Michelle Nash michelle.nash@metroland.com
MICHELLE NASH/METROLAND
Janie Papineau and Marie-Eve Cayer work the desk at the new francophone youth treatment centre in Vanier. The two ladies will be in charge of admitting patients once the centre opens on Sept. 18. The beds will be available for youth who need treatment beyond regular working hours. They will receive around the clock care for up to 60 days of treatment and Boileau said if more treatment is needed, stays could be extended even longer. Youth who will be checking in have been identified either by their own family doctors or by school counsellors. In Ot-
tawa, Maison Fraternité has counsellors in all the FrenchCatholic schools. These therapists will determine which youth would benefit from inpatient care. Each patient will have their own room with a bed, desk and closet. The kitchen and laundry rooms are shared and there are two full bathrooms. There is also a designated classroom. While staying
at the centre, school work will remain a top priority for the youth, who will work with two full-time educators weekly and a part-time educator who will be available on weekends. The school board will provide computers for the classroom at the centre. “They can’t fall behind in their school work,” Boileau said. “School will be provided throughout their stay.”
It will not be an easy ride for the youth staying at the centre, they will be expected to clean their rooms, washroom and common rooms as well as do their own laundry. They will also have to prepare their own breakfast and lunch. Dinner will be provided by the centre. Boileau said the residential treatment centre’s budget of $850,000 is based on five
R0011588801_0830
EMC news - Francophone youth in need of residential treatment for drug and alcohol abuse will have improved opportunities now that Maison Fraternité’s six-bed addition is complete. The sleek new addition to Maison Fraternité, located at 300 Olmstead Rd. will welcome its first set of youths on Sept. 18. The expansion allows for the centre to offer inpatient care for the first time, beyond the day programs currently available for francophone youth in Ontario. Executive director Denis Boileau and his staff see the expansion as a way to offer complete care for struggling francophone youth not just in Ottawa, but across the province. “Imagine being hurt and not being able to express how you feel,” Boileau said. “That is what it has been like for francophone youth in English speaking programs. This new residential centre will offer these youth complete care.” The Olmstead centre currently takes youth from the age of 12 to 18 and helps them learn to deal with drug or alcohol addiction by improving self-esteem, addressing concerns that arise in the home and the effects of peer pressure.
beds. The sixth bedroom was not included in the original funding. This bedroom was made possible by the architect and Boileau working together to save space. “We wanted the extra bed just in case, for both a potential growth in the need in the future or in the upcoming year,” Boileau said. “We were fortunate that the architect made it work.” Each bedroom is only about three by two metres, but feature large windows. “We wanted the entire space to be flooded with light,” Boileau said. Funding for the sixth bed is not secured and Boileau said he will be seeking funding from the city. The 325-square-metre expansion was made possible through Project S.T.E.P., an initiative that tackles drug and alcohol abuse issues in Ottawa. Currently, youth from Ottawa requiring treatment must travel to facilities located either in Northern Ontario, Quebec or the United States. Project S.T.E.P. is possible through support from the province, the Champlain Local Health Integration Network, Health Canada, the Sens Foundation, the Cowan Foundation, Ottawa police, Ottawa Public Health, the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre and Ottawa’s four school boards.
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 47
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48 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Breast cancer survivor organizes Rock for the Cure EMC events â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Breast cancer survivor Jackie Barr of the Pakenham area is rallying local musicians together to play for Rock for the Cure Saturday, Sept. 15. The night of live music to raise funds for breast cancer research will be held from 6 to 11 p.m. at her Love That Barr property at 2496 County Rd. 29 near Pakenham. Musicians including Woody & The CHEZ 106 Hosers, Stone Bandits, Billy Armstrong, Rockinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Ray, Back To Memphis (tribute to Elvis), The Garden of Weeds, Just 2 Guys and more will be playing from 6 to 11 p.m. Proceeds will go toward the CIBC Run for the Cure Sept. 30 in Ottawa. Stricken by breast cancer in
1997 and again in 2006, Barr is a survivor who promise she will not stop fundraising for breast cancer research until the disease has been beaten. Talking to Barr is often like having an encounter with a motivational audio book. Her favorite phrases ooze optimism and encouragement. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Take the high road.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Pay it forward.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not the destination, but the journey that counts.â&#x20AC;? Fifteen years ago, though, a 32-year old Barr could not have known that her life was about to take a sudden detour. That was the day she discovered a lump in her right breast. Less than a month later her doctors conďŹ rmed the diagnosis of breast cancer. Barr
never thought a disease could change who she was. â&#x20AC;&#x153;What sums me up is that I remember what Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been through, and I so appreciate where I am now,â&#x20AC;? Barr often explains. â&#x20AC;&#x153;My experience battling cancer has made me who I am today.â&#x20AC;? Barr is a true ďŹ ghter. After nine months of chemotherapy and radiation treatments, she was exhausted, but her gutsy spirit couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t let it rest. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t just sit around and attend my own pity party. I wanted to raise money for research to beat this disease.â&#x20AC;? So in the fall of 1998, just months after ďŹ nishing her treatments, the CIBC Run for the Cure presented her with the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Determination Awardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; for being the top fundraiser in Ot-
tawa â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the ďŹ rst of three consecutive annual awards Barr collected. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I call it FUNraising, since I enjoy meeting people, and have no problem asking them to support a great cause; Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m quite successful at it.â&#x20AC;? One of Barrâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s favorite adages at the time was â&#x20AC;&#x153;live like thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s no tomorrow.â&#x20AC;? After celebrating the pivotal ďŹ ve-year mark of being cancer free, she was also doing her best to be carefree. She was â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;spreading her sunshineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; and doing her best to â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;raise other peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s spiritsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;. She couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have known that after eight years the disease would again attack her right breast and sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d have an even bigger battle on her hands.
In 2006 Barr opted for a double-mastectomy, feeling that was her best chance of survival. This time cancer didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t stand a chance. Barr beat the odds and she believes her positive attitude and stubborn determination had a large effect on her recovery. Fifteen years after ďŹ nding the ďŹ rst lump, Barr is â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;paying it forwardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; in a big way by organizing the inaugural Rock for the Cure on the property that is partly owned by her brother Jamie. Barr has also organized Team â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Love Those Boobsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to participate in this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s CIBC Run for the Cure in Ottawa. Proceeds from both events support the Canadian Breast Cancer Society. Breast cancer statistics from the Canadian Cancer So-
ciety indicate that in 2012 on average 62 Canadian women will be diagnosed with breast cancer every day. On average 14 Canadian women will die of breast cancer every day. One in nine women is expected to develop breast cancer during her lifetime and one in 29 will die of it. Barrâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life may not have taken the path she would have chosen, but sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s overcome adversity and is willing to go the distance to help ďŹ nd a cure for the disease that dramatically impacted her life. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Most peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s lives have been impacted somehow by it, and I will not stop until we wipe it out,â&#x20AC;? Barr vows. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I will continue to raise money for research until breast cancer has been defeated.â&#x20AC;?
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 49
SENIORS
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Children preferred Father’s style of punishment EMC lifestyle - We much preferred Father over Mother when it came to meting out discipline. Father was so soft-hearted, he could never come give us a swat even if we deserved it. Mother felt a disobedient child would never amount to a hill of beans, and not only did she on occasion have a heavy hand, she was quick to dole it out too. Often Mother would say to Father, “Those children have to be dealt with. You look after it Albert.” This meant a trip to the drive shed, Father lighting his pipe, we five kids shifting from one foot to the other while awaiting our punishment. Mother was sure Father was in the shed giving us a few whacks with the strap, and to make it sound like we were really being punished Father would slap the strap against his work table, Emer-
son would yelp like a wounded puppy, and eventually we would stagger out of the drive shed pretending to be almost mortally wounded from the blows that never came. My sister Audrey blamed it on the heat. Emerson said it was because school would be going back in a couple days. Whatever the reason, there erupted on the front lawn the most glorious fight of all time. It started when Emerson threw a pail of water on Earl, most of which missed him and caught Audrey square in the face, which completely ruined the curls she got by enduring her hair being tied up in rags all night. She grabbed the pail out of Emerson’s hand and was all set to swat him with it, when Everett grabbed the handle, wrenched it from her, and caught me, the innocent bystander, square on the back-
Mary Cook’s Memories BY MARY COOK
side. It didn’t hurt in the least, but always ready to make the most of any situation getting out of hand, I nonetheless started to roar as if I had been hit with a two-by-four! It didn’t take Mother long to come out of the house to see what all the uproar was about. She always let us settle our own battles, refusing to listen to anyone who was about to tattle. But this was no ordinary disagreement. Audrey was standing on the pump stand, screaming, the three brothers were rolling on the grass, and I was wailing that I thought my back was
broken! Father, if he heard the ruckus, was ignoring it. Mother found him in the cow byre and she insisted he take us all into the drive shed and “deal with the whole lot of them,” she said. Father took his pipe out of his mouth, and pointed it towards the open doors, not saying a word. He put a stern look on his face, and followed us all through the double doors. The heat of the day was on our side. Father had been up since dawn, and even though it was early in the day, he looked wilted and tired out.
He didn’t look like he was in any mood to dole out punishment. He asked Audrey what happened to her hair, he told Everett when the discipline was over he was to fill the watering trough, Emerson was to sort the newly bought nails into the tin cans on the shelf, Earl was to feed the chickens, and with a big wink in my direction, he said, “And you young lady have to come to Briscoe’s General Store with me.” But he wasn’t finished with me yet, “You’ll have to eat the humbugs Mr. Briscoe gives you every time you go in the store.” Father knew I hated humbugs with a passion. “Or you can bring them home and give them to Queenie … that old horse sure loves humbugs.” And he gave me another big wink. Just before he let us out of the drive shed, he gave the
work table another couple good whacks with the old leather strap, Emerson let out a few roars as if he had come in direct contact with it, Earl developed the usual sniffles, and Audrey, who we all knew was too old to strap, said, “Yes I know not to get involved the next time with any fights.” Father told me to go and wait for him beside the buggy. He walked, filling his pipe at the same time, towards the kitchen door. “I have to run over to Briscoe’s,” he said through the screen. “Mary’s coming with me. And they’ve all been dealt with,” he added over his shoulder. Mother seemed satisfied. I once heard her tell Mrs. Beam that she “could always depend on Albert to discipline the children. Sometimes I just don’t have the energy to handle the five of them.” And for that, we five kids were might grateful.
Nominate an outstanding resident for the Order of Ottawa EMC lifestyle - Nominate an outstanding resident now for the city’s new Order of Ottawa award. The Order of Ottawa recognizes outstanding residents who have made significant contributions to the city through their professional ac-
complishments in any of the following areas: arts and culture, business, community service, education, public service, labour, communications and media, science, sports and entertainment, and in any other field that benefits Ottawa.
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Neither cake nor cookies for breakfast EMC lifestyle - One of my favourite Bill Cosby stories is one in which he tries to persuade his wife that it was okay for him to give their kids chocolate cake for breakfast. She doesn’t believe his defence of “They made me do it! They made me give them chocolate cake!” So he falls back on what he figures is a winning argument. “But cake is good for you. There’s all sorts of good stuff in it - there’s wheat and eggs and milk.” Needless to say, he doesn’t persuade her. When I saw this recipe for ‘Breakfast Cookies’, I immediately thought of Bill Cosby’s story. These cookies also have a lot of “good stuff” in them molasses, eggs, milk, oatmeal, flour, bran and raisins. While I don’t recommend cookies for breakfast, these make a good after-school snack, especially when eaten with an apple. And they’re not just for kids. Grown-ups like
Food ‘n Stuff PAT TREW
them too. BREAKFAST COOKIES
3/4 cup margarine (not the spreadable type, but the one sold in blocks), softened 3/4 cup brown sugar 2 eggs 3 tbsp. molasses 1/2 cup milk 1 cup flour 1 cup bran 2 cups oatmeal 3/4 tsp. baking soda 1 tsp. salt 1 1/2 cups raisins In a mixing bowl, cream
the margarine and sugar. Add the eggs and molasses, and mix well. Stir in the milk, then add the remaining ingredients. Mix thoroughly. Drop heaping tablespoons of batter 1” apart on a greased baking sheet. Flatten each cookie with a fork dipped in cold water. Bake at 350F for 8 to 10 minutes, or until the cookies begin to brown around the edges. Remove from the oven, and let cool before removing them from the baking sheet. Makes 2 to 3 dozen.
KATE GLYNN
Melon heaven Leigha and Connor Sterne choose watermelons to take home with a little help from vendor Dave Modest. The pair have attended the Melon Fest and Pepper Pow Wow at Acorn Creek Garden Farm for many years and they were looking forward to the seed spitting and watermelon eating contests.
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 51
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Dragon boaters to invade Carleton Place this weekend TARA GESNER tgesner@perfprint.ca
SUMBITTED
Kelly Killeen Phillips and her sisters Christa Killeen-Darou and Karen Killeen Leonard recently donated $9,000 in their mother Audrey Killeen’s memory. The money was raised from a memorial cookbook they created a decade ago.
Daughters honour their much-loved mom EMC news - Karen, Christa and Kelly have spent the last 10 years developing and then selling a cookbook memorial of their mom, Audry Killeen. It was almost 10 years ago, on Sept. 19, 2002, that Audry passed away at the Arnprior & District Memorial Hospital
after a brave fight with uterine cancer. The cookbook made sense to Audry’s daughters as she was known as “the hostess with the mostess. She was at ease cooking for large crowds and enjoying time spent with family and friends. This collection is based on meals
made by Audry as well as those submitted by family and friends. Over this 10-year period the cookbook has raised $9,000. These funds have been donated to Partners in Caring’s Digital Mammography Campaign. This piece of equipment provides women
(and men) in our area with one of the best early detection tools. “We wanted to do something positive out of something that wasn’t positive. If we can help one family not have to go through what we went though, it was worth it,” said Christa Killeen-Darou.
EMC Events – The 11th annual Dragon Boat Festival (DBF) returns to Carleton Place Saturday (Sept. 8). New to the sport? Dragon boats – vessels painted to look like menacing Chinese dragons – feature 20 paddlers, a steer or tiller and a drummer. The sport originated in southern central China thousands of years ago. Crowds again are expected to pack the shores of the picturesque Mississippi River around the Carleton Place Canoe Club (CPCC) for the one-day event. “We generally see between 1,500 and 2,000 spectators,” said Carleton Place DBF Committee president and spokesperson Peter Leithead. In earlier years the committee capped the number of teams involved at 40, but dragon boat racing is the fastest growing water sport in the world – recognized for the strength, endurance and team spirit participants share. “There are 48 teams this year, the demand was so great,” said Leithead, “which includes 20 women’s teams and five community teams. The DBF draws competitors of both sexes and all ages and abilities, and most come from the immediate area. “The bulk of the teams come from the local area, but we do get crews from Ottawa, Gatineau and Montreal,” said Leithead. The 2012 DBF program is the same as previous years. Races by and large begin around 9 a.m. and end just after 5 p.m. An awards ceremony is held immediately afterward. Each competing team is guaranteed three races (timed heats, four boats at a time) on the 400-metre course, explained Leithead, and groups posting the quickest times move into the final contests: Women’s Challenge (top six women’s teams); Dale Scott Community Championship (top six community teams); and Open Challenge (top six teams). The Women’s Challenge takes place at 11:15 a.m., the Dale Scott Community Championship runs at approximately 4:45 p.m., and the Open Challenge is a 5 p.m. Food, refreshments and merchandise will be sold throughout the day, and a photographer will be on site to capture team pictures (for sale). The Barley Shakers, an ever-changing pool of Celtic musicians who enjoy performing, will perform at lunchtime in the gazebo.
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NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Squares begin new year of dancing pand your social circle, say members. Come alone or in pairs. Make new friends and take your dancing skills on the road, as there are clubs all across Canada and the U.S., they add. The local club is 26 years old and members travel to other clubs near and far. In 2014 all the Ottawa area clubs will be hosting an international event, and local square dancers are looking forward to making new friends. So a new set of travel plans are being hatched. The square dance calls are always in English, be it in Singapore, France, Portugal or Quebec. Challenge your mind. It is easy to learn the new moves.
Practice while you dance to your favourite music,” says a Mississippi Squares news release. After a stressful day at work or on the golf course, come to a club session to relax, play, dance and learn a new call or two. In no time, new dancers are experts at following directions and in having a good time. A mistake is another reason to smile. Improve your health. To dance is to walk. Modern square dancing is easy and it improves your stamina. The use of large body muscles in a gentle manner is similar to walking burns calories and lubricates many joints. Respect for your aches
and pains should not stop you from having fun. Help your community. Mississippi Squares hold parties and raise money to help the local Food Bank and Interval House. “We appreciate everyone’s help to be a part of the many communities where we call home,” says the club’s director of publicity and promotion Laurette Lafleur. “Modern square dancing is based on tradition to encourage a healthy and happy future. Fun, friendship, fitness – we would love to dance with you.” Call 613-253-2960 or visit www.mississippisquares.ca for more info.
Doors Open 2012 in Carleton Place and Mississippi Mills; residents explore and enjoy local heritage TARA GESNER tgesner@perfrpint.ca
EMC Events – Discover and celebrate the rich history of Carleton Place and Mississippi Mills by way of Doors Open 2012, an experience happening in the neighbouring communities this Saturday, Sept. 8. From 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., cultural sites, heritage buildings, industrial areas, places of worship, private homes and many other fascinating locations will be open for public viewing – free of admission. This year’s Doors Open is a collaborative effort between Carleton Place and Mississippi Mills. “By joining our efforts we will see more activity and promotion,” stated Carleton Place Coun. Rob Probert, a member of the Carleton Place Heritage Advisory Committee. “The area is full of fascinating information and history. Doors Open is one way to help build upon this interest.” The event is part of Doors Open Ontario, a community-based celebration, which
in Carleton Place is located at the historic Moore House, located at 174 Bridge St. The information centre for Doors Open in Mississippi Mills is found inside the Almonte Old Town Hall (AOTH), situated at 14 Bridge St. oors Open locations in Mississippi Mills are as follows: AOTH (1885); Almonte Riverside Inn (1882); Almonte Riverwalk, along the banks of the Mississippi River (2010 official opening); Auld Kirk Cemetery in Almonte (1835); Cedar Hill Schoolhouse in Pakenham (1874); Holy Name of Mary Church in Almonte (1869); Mill of Kintail in Almonte (1830s); Brian J. Gallagher Generating Station in Almonte (2010); Mississippi Valley Textile Museum in Almonte (1867); North Lanark Museum in Appleton; Old Post Office in Almonte (1890); Pinehurst in Almonte (1898); St. Paul’s Anglican Church in Almonte (1863); St. Paul’s Rectory in Almonte (1878); St. Peter Celestine Church in Pakenham (1892); Thoburn Mill in Almonte; and Waste Water Treatment Plant in Almonte (2012).
builds pride in Ontario’s heritage for residents and visitors. Since the program was started in 2000, nearly four million visits have been made to participating heritage sites across the province. Dedicated organizers Bernie DeFrancisco of Carleton Place and Charlotte Farmer of Almonte have been working extremely hard with their volunteers to make Doors Open 2012 a sensational success. “Working with Charlotte Farmer from Almonte, and her volunteers has been rewarding,” said Probert. “Finding common interests helps each area develop and promote its’ own history.” On the banks of the picturesque Mississippi River, Carleton Place (originally known as Morphy’s Falls) offers a healthy, happy mix of small town living and the convenience of the city. Famous residents include Captain Arthur Roy Brown, the Canadian World War I flying ace, and Leslie McFarlane who wrote many of the original Hardy Boys books under the pen name Franklin W. Dixon. The information centre for Doors Open
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EMC entertainment - The Mississippi Squares are inviting the public to modern square dancing introductory events they are holding this month. The Squares are the only beginners club to service the area from Fitzroy Harbour to Kanata and Carp to Smith Falls. The club is hosting a free square dance lesson on Tuesday, Sept. 11 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. at the Brunton Hall just south of Carleton Place. The Squares are also holding a free chili supper and open house on Tuesday, Sept. 18 from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the same location. Joining the club would ex-
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Visit us online at GreelySand.com West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 53
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
O’Brien Theatre’s sequel to feature upgrades in Arnprior Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com
EMC news – It’s not a pretty picture at the O’Brien Theatre. The historic movie theatre in Arnprior’s downtown core – a supreme example of the old time movie houses, once a fixture in small towns across North America – narrowly missed shutting down recently. But thanks to owner Kevin Marshall, who remains ambivalent about the intense financial decisions he had to make, the O’Brien will continue to reel in film lovers. Except, that is, the reels and film technology that were the bones of the industry for the last century won’t be part of the theatre’s future. The 60 year-old-projectors spinning 35 mm film will hit the trash can; replaced by digital. Marshall closed shop on Monday for nine days to begin a series of upgrades at the two-screen location that, in the end, will cost him some $120,000. “I didn’t have any choice,” Marshall said, sitting in the empty main floor theatre
PHOTOS BY DEREK DUNN/METROLAND
O’Brien Theatre owner Kevin Marshall says goodbye to the old 35mm projector he’s used since taking over the Arnprior business some 13 years ago. He’s taking a financial risk, but says digital is the way of the future in his industry. Tuesday afternoon. “I’d end up going bankrupt if I didn’t.” He mortgaged the house, the theatre, got a government-
backed loan – at higher interest rates than banks offer – all in a bid to save a business that is something of a tourist at-
traction for the town. (Real estate agents promote the town to outside clients as having a historic theatre.)
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Beginning with 20th Century Fox, the major distribution companies will drop use of 35 mm film and expect to save tens of millions of dollars per movie release. “That does not trickle down to me,” Marshall said. “Within the next year or so I think you’ll find that all the major distributors will have stopped using 35 mm. You just won’t get the movies.” Along with bringing in digital equipment, the theatre will enjoy an upgrade from 5.1 to 7.1 Adobe surround sound, a fresh coat of paint and other work Marshall has looked forward to since purchasing the building in 1999. He looks forward to an automated system, which means he can afford to spend more time at the storefront and less setting up the movies. Still, the tradeoff is a risky one. With the old projectors, most problems could be solved with a wrench and elbow grease. The new computer system will require a technician from Ottawa. And then there’s the issue of lifespan. Computers last about 10 years? “That’s it. And I won’t be
doing this again 10 years from now.” That’s when he fears the second wave of small town theatre closures will hit. Right now some locations, like Smiths Falls, closed because they weren’t able to convert to digital. Others in Carleton Place, Mattawa, Pembroke and elsewhere could find themselves facing difficulty in both the near and distant future. It’s not unfolding like Marshall, who loves the movie side more than the business side, had hoped when he opened doors 13 years ago after an 11-month renovation. “I was terrified no one would show up. I was terrified anyone would show up!” Operating under the name O’Brien since at least 1920, the building may have been home to vaudeville shows as early as 1906. Marshall intends to pursue the history a little closer in the coming months. With its distinctive colours, arches in the main lobby, the little ticket booth that accepts cash only, the O’Brien is a treat for anyone who is used to giant parking lots, automated ticket dispensers, and videogames blaring along many walls. Marshall’s gotten a lot of media attention over what amounts to a decision with little tangible effect on the public. TV’s crews and multiple newspaper interviews, primarily from Ottawa, seem to hold a small obsession with Marshall’s financial difficulties. But the attention seems to fulfill something of a stereotype for the large outlets. A long-standing, independently owned and operated business in the heart of a valley town; a rural entrepreneur with a passion for his business up against the faceless suburban multiplexes; an era long past that is unearthed for city people who believed all the magic and charm of movie-going was gone. Charm doesn’t always pay the bills, but Marshall’s more confident than not that he can pull off a Hollywood ending. “I’m glad that we did it,” he said. “I still enjoy coming into this building.”
Film distributors like 20th Century Fox could save millions of dollars by switching from the film to digital. But for independent theatre owners it is proving costly.
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22 +INBURN /. + ! ( $!. (613) 839-5677 #ELLULAR 769-1115
â&#x20AC;&#x153;NO JOB TOO SMALLâ&#x20AC;? All types of minor repairs & improvements Your Kitchen & Bath Specialist
We Will Beat Any Price Call
DAN COADY
KEINDEL HOMES 613-623-9312
END OF SEASON DISCOUNT
FREE ESTIMATES- REFERENCES
"Â&#x2DC;iĂ&#x160; >Â?Â?Ă&#x160; iĂ&#x152;Ă&#x192;Ă&#x160;Ă&#x152;Â&#x2026;iĂ&#x160; /Â&#x2026;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;}Ă&#x192;Ă&#x160;9Â&#x153;Ă&#x2022;Ă&#x160;7>Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x160;
Â&#x153;Â&#x2DC;i°°°Ă&#x160; " t Fully Insured â&#x20AC;˘ Independently Owned and Operated in Ottawa since 1998 * Electrical work performed by ECRA contractors
Expert Craftsmen. Professional Service We install! SAVE Time and Money! You buy the product and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll expertly install it! s Plumbing Service We install & repair s &AUCETS s 3INKS s 4OILETS s $RAIN 5NBLOCKING s Handyman Service s Carpentry Service s Appliances Installed
43
YEARS
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Evening & Weekend Serviceâ&#x20AC;?
613-858-4949
R0011376959
HOME IMPROVEMENT
HOME IMPROVEMENT
PERKINS
Brennan Brothers Ltd.
10% Summer Discount
www.perkinsdecks.com
613-761-0671
Finish Basements, Bathrooms, Kitchens, Drywall, Painting, all Types of Flooring, Additions, Repairs, Doors & Windows, Decks, All Types of RooďŹ ng â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Build Houses
G%%&&((,++. CL24547
Free Estimates, Guaranteed Workmanship
613-733-6336
TO BOOK YOUR SPACE CALL
ZACK AT 613-623-6571 OR LESLIE AT 613-623-6571 58 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
462214
R0011315164
R0021349709
R0011291721
Locally Owned and Operated by B. Sullivan, Arnprior
s "ASEMENT %XCAVATING s "ACKlLLING s $ITCHING s 2OOT 2AKING SHOVEL & BACKHOE RENTALS
HANDYMAN
1-877-266-0022 or 613-543-2666 Email: williamsburgwoods@bell.net Website: www.wwginc.com
Free Estimates Fully Insured Workmanship Guaranteed
R0011359387
# # ! # ! # # # # $ $ # "
HANDYMAN
Fully insured ¡ Seniors Discounts FREE estimates ¡ 15 years experience Guaranteed Service Within 24 Hours
Waterways
EXCAVATING
FENCES
An Eastern Ont. Quality Fence & Deck MFGER & INSTALLER
iVÂ&#x17D;Ă&#x192;Ă&#x160;UĂ&#x160; iÂ&#x2DC;ViĂ&#x192;Ă&#x160;UĂ&#x160;-VĂ&#x20AC;iiÂ&#x2DC;i`Ă&#x160;*Â&#x153;Ă&#x20AC;VÂ&#x2026;iĂ&#x192;Ă&#x160;UĂ&#x160;,iÂ&#x2DC;Â&#x153;Ă&#x203A;>Ă&#x152;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x153;Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x192;
613-623-9973
ENGINES
KEVIN CONEY
www.equity-plus.ca
CALL SIMON 613-715-2398 glavinadrywall@gmail.com
Pick-Up and Delivery Available
623-4949
SEAMLESS EAVESTROUGHING
Call Chris (613)839-5571 or (613)724-7376
ELECTRICAL
(613)
Fax: 839-0819
EAVESTROUGHS
FRAMING DRYWALL INSTALLATION & FINISHING EVERYTHING FROM NEW BUILDS TO SMALL REPAIRS
Over 25 years Experience
Garrance Recoskie
" /Ă&#x160;, / -
DECKSCAPES DRYWALL
613-422-4510
DECORATING Slip Covers Pillows Cushions Window Seats
>Â?Â?Ă&#x160; >Ă&#x20AC;Ă&#x17E;Ă&#x160;>Ă&#x152;Ă&#x160;Ă&#x160; 613-225-9183Ă&#x160; , Ă&#x160; -/ / -
*Does not include pad.
613-220-2316
+ + + +
Single Car 12 x 20 H^c\aZ 8Vg &%m'% ALL SIZES AND STYLES AVAILABLE
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
UĂ&#x160;*Ă&#x20AC;iĂ&#x203A;iÂ&#x2DC;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x160;}Ă&#x20AC;iĂ&#x17E;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;}Ă&#x160; Â&#x153;vĂ&#x160;Â&#x2DC;iĂ&#x153;Ă&#x160;Ă&#x153;Â&#x153;Â&#x153;`Ă&#x160; Ă&#x192;Ă&#x152;>Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x160; "7
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Draperies Valances Curtains Duvet Covers
Garages Built & Installed $
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ELEGANT DRAPERY & ACCESSORIES
UĂ&#x160; Ă&#x2022;Ă&#x192;Ă&#x152;Â&#x153;Â&#x201C;Ă&#x160;-Ă&#x152;>Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;}Ă&#x160; ,iwÂ&#x2DC;Â&#x2C6;Ă&#x192;Â&#x2026;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;}Ă&#x160;EĂ&#x160; ->Â&#x2DC;`Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;}Ă&#x160;Ă&#x160; Â&#x153;vĂ&#x160;`iVÂ&#x17D;Ă&#x192;]Ă&#x160;Ă&#x160; viÂ&#x2DC;ViĂ&#x192;]Ă&#x160;Ă&#x192;Â&#x2C6;`Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;} R0011509842
SPECIALS
R0011123037/0202
SPRING SALE
all sizes & styles available 8x10 delivered & installed
DECKS
STAINING & REFINISHING
GARAGE BUILDERS
GARDEN SHEDS SPRING
613-688-1483
R0011472578
CUSTOM BUILDS
G%%&&(%',+'"%(%-
Your Community Newspaper
+ + + +
DEADLINES:
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
R0011600060/0906
BOOKING: FRIDAY 9:30AM FINAL APPROVAL: FRIDAY NOON
HOME IMPROVEMENT
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Dunbar Home Inspections
HANDYMAN PLUS
- Ron Dunbar -
(OME -AINTENANCE 2EPAIRS 2ENOVATIONS
Home â&#x20AC;˘ Radon â&#x20AC;˘ Mould â&#x20AC;˘ Vermiculite Water Testing â&#x20AC;˘ Septic â&#x20AC;˘ Air Quality
s 0LUMBING s /DD *OBS AND MORE
613-566-7077
JUNK REMOVAL
YED RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL
We Remove Almost Anything from Anywhere!
613-825-0707
LANDSCAPING
Interlock, and garden walls
R0021359076 R0011359076
Topsoil & More
~ FREE CONSULTATION ~
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Tel: 613-832-2961
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613-978-0273
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www.mccoycontracting.ca
LANDSCAPING
Richardson Side Road ACROSS FROM - #ON s www.callblueheron.com
LANDSCAPING - Lawns - Ponds & Water Gardens - Cedar Decks
613-622-5657 Rod Ellis 86 River Road McNab Braeside Ontario
SOD SPECIAL! k In Boo and ust g u A HST the Save Free s e mat Esti
â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘
GRUB DAMAGE repair soil & sod installation interlocking stone driveways retaining & garden walls interlock repair patios & steps
613-226-8858
613-838-9334 willislandscaping.com %ST s &ULLY )NSURED
Grass Cutting Flower Bed Construction Hedge Trimming Decorative Stone/ Mulch Walkway Construction Interlock Repair Celebrating 25 Years In Business
R0011544691
1-3 yds of Garden Soil, Topsoil, Stone Etc. Tim Steel Ent.
R0011470545
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;WEE LOADSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
LANDSCAPING
Everlasting Landscaping
Owner
Custom Interlock Specialist New Topsoil&Sod Installation Flower Bed Prep & Clean Up
613-880-1422 & 613-838-5344
Serving Kanata, Stittsville/ Richmond & West Carleton
Rick Peplinski
Visit us on Facebook Free Estimates rick.chris@bell.net 613-858-8437 613-623-2223 R0011344622
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
HERITAGE LAWN CARE
SMALL LOAD DELIVERIES
www.heritagelawncare.ca Â&#x201E; 7EEKLY -OWING 4RIMMING FROM PER MONTH Â&#x201E; ,AWN 3ODDING 4OP $RESSING Â&#x201E; 7HITE 'RUB 4REATMENT Â&#x201E; (EDGE 4RIMMING 4REE 0RUNING 4REE 2EMOVAL Â&#x201E; 'ARDEN "ED )NSTALLATION 2EJUVENATION Â&#x201E; )NTERLOCK 0ATIOS 7ALWAYS 3TEPS Â&#x201E; 7OOD &ENCES )NSTALLATION 2EPAIR
0614.R0011444457
LANDSCAPING
692-1478
R0011329813
R0011322502
- Property Maintenance
LANDSCAPING
GOT GRUBS?
- Garden Design & Planting
Garden and water feature maintenance
R0011351276
Top Soil
613
R0011498689/0712
Grass Cutting â&#x20AC;˘ Sodding â&#x20AC;˘ Interlock â&#x20AC;˘ Pavers â&#x20AC;˘ Concrete Overlay â&#x20AC;˘ Decks â&#x20AC;˘ Fences â&#x20AC;˘ Retaining Walls â&#x20AC;˘ Tree & Shrub Trimming
Garden Designs
www.pinkagardens.ca 613-818-9050 Custom gardens, ponds and waterfalls
LANDSCAPING
Landscape Construction
613-831-0303
PINKA
613.623.0576
Glenn Tripp
631 DAVID MANCHESTER ROAD Carp, ON
GARDENS AND PONDS
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A+ Accredited
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Shawn McLachlin -& ) "& +% # ) Sylvie Choquette *" & * $ *
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R0011380782
ARLEN GAYLORD PERTH, ONT. 613-267-0066
JUNK REMOVAL Bin Rentals Available
Toll Free 1-855-843-1592 www.insultech.ca
KITCHENS
R0011291637/0315
COMFORT ZONE INSULATION
613-843-1592
R0011596754
HOME INSULATION
UĂ&#x160;/Â&#x2026;iĂ&#x20AC;Â&#x201C;>Â?Ă&#x160; >Ă&#x20AC;Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x2C6;iĂ&#x20AC; UĂ&#x160; VÂ&#x153; >Ă&#x152;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x192;
Custom Home Specialists
OfďŹ ce: 613-432-4390 Cell: 613-633-3747 E-mail: dunbarinspections@live.ca Web: dunbarinspections.ca
s &REE %STIMATES s "EST 2ATES s 3ENIOR $ISCOUNTS
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BobCat For Hire
We will pick up and remove leftovers & ďŹ ll removal from your landscaping projects. 4/0 3/), s #/-0/34 '!2$%. 3/), s !''2%'!4%3 s -5,#( $%#/2!4)6% 34/.% s &)2%7//$ s 0/4 (/,%3
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613-838-3715 % -C)NTYRE
R0011409316
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R0011291745 1013.367796
R0011303110
Golden Years
s #ARPENTRY s +ITCHEN "ATH 4ILING s 0AINTING
613-688-1483
HOME INSULATION
R0011333042
Your Community Newspaper
- Natural Stonework - Restoration Masonry - Pavers & Blocks - Stone Walls & Fireplaces - Walkways, Patios & Retaining Walls
DEADLINES:
TO BOOK YOUR SPACE CALL ZACK AT 613-623-6571 OR LESLIE AT 613-623-6571
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 59
BUSINESS DIRECTORY MASONRY
MASONRY
R0011557527
L.A. SICOLI MASONRY & RESTORATION
Complete Service Including: Lawn: Cutting - Fertilizing - Aerating Seeding - Top Dressing - New Sod
Landscaping: Interlock Pavers - Patio Stones Retaining Walls - Decks - Sheds - Fencing etc.
25 Years
Cell: (613)978-3443
MASONRY
Brick, Block, Stone Laying & Cultured Stone
Masonry & Concrete Finishing
Wendell Coe R.R 2 Arnprior, Ont.
Brick, Block, Stonework Block Foundations ÂŹ Chimney Repairs ÂŹ Basement Floors ÂŹ Garage Floors ÂŹ Steps & Walkways ÂŹ Cultured Stone ÂŹ
613-623-7267
154 Pine Grove Road Arnprior
PAINTING
ST. MICHAEL MASONRY
ÂŹ
Free Estimates
Pat Dupuis R0011326862
MASONRY
. (! ") . !$% -) . #& ")
(613)
D.J. PAINTING INTERIOR & EXTERIOR
We also Specialize in Deck Sanding and Staining 3rd Generation Ottawa Valley Family Run Business â&#x20AC;&#x153;Get the Job Done Right The First Timeâ&#x20AC;?
. ' !( &(" . &+% *!&%) . ( !%
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Daryl St. Michael
G%%&&(&-(+.
Dupuis
COE MASONRY
Ph. (613) 623-6331 (evenings)
Wall Repairs
613-852-3445
MASONRY
- Window sills - Custom Stone Work - Parging - Interlocking Stone - New Construction - Stone Foundation
FREE Estimates Luciano Sicoli, Company Owner 613-859-4684
R0011212863
R0011561700
BRICK AND STONE HERITAGE RESTORATION â&#x20AC;&#x153;QUALITY THAT LASTSâ&#x20AC;?
Tree & Shrub: Pruning - Removal - Planting Hedge Trimming - Bed Design & Installation
(613)623-9410
- Chimney Repairs - Repointing - Flagstone
R0011476898
Lawn/Tree Landscape Maintenance Limited
623-8052
Call Now 613-728-4557
PAINTING
PAINTING
PAINTING
BECAUSE PAINTING IS PERSONALâ&#x201E;˘ West: ROB 613-762-5577 East: CHRIS 613-276-2848
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR PAINTING
s &REE 7RITTEN %STIMATES s .O #HARGE FOR -INOR 0REPARATION s &REE 5PGRADE TO @,IFEMASTER 4OP ,INE 0AINT
www.axcellpainting.com
PAINTING Specializing
20 years experience
Interior-Exterior Professional Painting
R0011472680
Over 25 Years Experience FREE ESTIMATES
PLUMBING
R0011302861-0308
All types of plastering painting interior exterior residential & commercial
Worry Free Guarantee
15% Summer Discount
Free Estimates
free estimates
2 year warranty on workmanship
613-733-6336
Complete Kitchen, Bath & Basement Renovations
/$ -2 $# . (1' -2/ *2+!(,& $ )0 ,# *-4 / (,0 Before you decide to call any plumber, make sure you know the facts. Find out what most plumbers hope you never find out! 3-(# 1'$ -01*5 (01 )$0 .$-.*$ + )$ $3$/5 # 5 4'$, "'--0(,& .*2+!$/ ** -2/ '-2/ ./$ /$"-/#$# -,02+$/ 4 /$,$00 $00 &$ 1 R0011380112
IN SYNC WITH YOUR DREAMS
Email: insinkinc@gmail.com
Licensed and Insured.
FOR ALL YOUR PAINTING AND DRYWALL NEEDS
DAN HEBERT
SCOTT: 613-612-9727 hunts-painting@rogers.com
28 Tierney St., South, Arnprior ON 613-623-5555
RENOVATIONS
RENOVATIONS
HOME ACE RENOVATIONS (No Job is too small)
Ceramic & Tile Specialists Design Assistance & Accessibility Enclosures
Rob & Sue Furniss 613-253-1777
HUNTâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S Painting
G%%&&(%'-)("%(%-
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PLUMBING
% /( *2+!(,& 1#
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Bringing Homes to life!
0426.R0011300246
Contact: John Cell: 613-913-9794 Home: 613-836-6866
PAINTING
R0021402167
Painting
Painting Contractor
UĂ&#x160; Interior and exterior painting UĂ&#x160; Drywall and Handyman Services UĂ&#x160; Free estimates and great prices UĂ&#x160; Fully insured UĂ&#x160; Winner of Kanataâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Readersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Choice Award
599-4556 abdec@rogers.com
PAINTING
POSTORINO PAINTING
Serving Kanata since 1993
1-800-462-3782
http://ottawa-west.certapro.com
R0011300267
R0011291147/0315
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,*5$)&/4 r #"5)4 r 1"*/5*/( r $&3".*$ 5*-&4 r '-0034 Call Hazen Chase Free Estimates Seniors Discounts
Cell:
613-266-5674
RONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S RENO NO JOB TOO BIG. NO JOB TOO SMALL s #ARPENTRY s !DDITIONS s $RY 7ALL s $ECKS s 2OOlNG
s (OUSE 2ENOVATION s 4REE #UTTING s 'ARBAGE #LEAN UP s &ENCING s %4#
FREE ESTIMATES
15% discount for seniors
Ronâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cell: 613-913-1830
TO BOOK YOUR SPACE CALL ZACK AT 613-623-6571 OR LESLIE AT 613-623-6571
60 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
R0011480152
LANDSCAPING
613-688-1483
0823.R0011562884
Your Community Newspaper
DEADLINES:
BOOKING: FRIDAY 9:30AM FINAL APPROVAL: FRIDAY NOON
R0011536688-0802
R0011600065/0906
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
RENOVATIONS
JDM Renovation and Repair
jdmreno@live.com
ROOFING
CUSTOM RENOVATIONS
BH ROOFING Residential Shingle Specialist
UĂ&#x160; >Ă&#x152;Â&#x2026;Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x153;Â&#x153;Â&#x201C;Ă&#x192; UĂ&#x160; >Ă&#x192;iÂ&#x201C;iÂ&#x2DC;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x192; UĂ&#x160; Â?Â&#x153;Â&#x153;Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;} UĂ&#x160; iVÂ&#x17D;Ă&#x192;
UĂ&#x160;-Â&#x2026;i`Ă&#x192; UĂ&#x160;-Ă&#x2022;Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x153;Â&#x153;Â&#x201C;Ă&#x192; UĂ&#x160; Â&#x153;Â?`Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2DC;}Ă&#x192; UĂ&#x160; Ă&#x20AC;Ă&#x17E;Ă&#x153;>Â?Â?
613-878-6144
ROOFING
JM
613-277-9713
Free Estimates
613-623-2123 cell 613-286-8496 bus
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Read atOnline R0011559878
Outdoor storage site.
Fulcherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s EST. 1975
>Â&#x2C6;Â?>
LÂ?i
Septic Systems
Two FREE Max Vents with every new Roof Contract
3TEEL 7HEEL 3TORAGE
G. Plourde, Proprietor
SEPTIC SYSTEM
-iÂ&#x2DC;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x153;Ă&#x20AC;Ă&#x160;EĂ&#x160; Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x153;Ă&#x2022;ÂŤĂ&#x160; Â&#x2C6;Ă&#x192;VÂ&#x153;Ă&#x2022;Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x192;
STORAGE
Owner and Operator
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE
20 Years experience - 10 Year Workmanship Guarantee
613-880-3788 campbell.carpenter@gmail.com
,YLE &EATHERSTONE
Dennis Schnob RooďŹ ng Ltd.
Residential Shingle Specialist UĂ&#x160;+Ă&#x2022;>Â?Â&#x2C6;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x17E;Ă&#x160;7Â&#x153;Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x17D;Â&#x201C;>Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x192;Â&#x2026;Â&#x2C6;ÂŤĂ&#x160;UĂ&#x160; Ă&#x2022;Â?Â?Ă&#x17E;Ă&#x160; Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x192;Ă&#x2022;Ă&#x20AC;i`Ă&#x160;UĂ&#x160; Ă&#x20AC;iiĂ&#x160; Ă&#x192;Ă&#x152;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x201C;>Ă&#x152;iĂ&#x192;Ă&#x160; UĂ&#x160;,iÂŤ>Â&#x2C6;Ă&#x20AC;Ă&#x192;Ă&#x160;7iÂ?VÂ&#x153;Â&#x201C;iĂ&#x160;UĂ&#x160;7Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x2C6;Ă&#x152;Ă&#x152;iÂ&#x2DC;Ă&#x160; Ă&#x2022;>Ă&#x20AC;>Â&#x2DC;Ă&#x152;ii
Duncan Campbell Licensed Carpenter, Almonte
0322 R0011322327
Established 1955
ROOFING
ROOFING
s 26 S s "OATS s 4RAILERS s #LOSE TO CITY s /THER OUTDOOR STORAGE NEEDS s ,OCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED s !VAILABLE IMMEDIATELY s 'OOD RATES
on Menti d an d A this he t e v Sa Tax!
Ă&#x153;Ă&#x153;Ă&#x153;°LĂ&#x192;Ă&#x152;>Â?Â&#x17D;Â&#x2C6;i°VÂ&#x153;Â&#x201C;
Cell 613-298-4922
Metal or Asphalt Re-RooďŹ ng, Roof & Chimney Repair, Facia, SofďŹ t & Siding Roof Inspections & Renovations
Quality Workmanship Fully Insured â&#x20AC;˘ Free Estimates Written Guarantee on 15 Years of Labour
R0011324197-0322
*discounts for seniors
â&#x20AC;&#x201C; paint â&#x20AC;&#x201C; drywall repairs â&#x20AC;&#x201C; ďŹ&#x201A;ooring and trim â&#x20AC;&#x201C; minor electrical & plumbing â&#x20AC;&#x201C; ďŹ nishing
613-688-1483
ROOFING
RENOVATIONS
R0011538426
Your Community Newspaper
DEADLINES:
BOOKING: FRIDAY 9:30AM FINAL APPROVAL: FRIDAY NOON
R0011300258
R0011600071/0906
s %XCAVATION s 2OCK 7ALLS s ,OT #LEARING s !GGREGATES
R001112197
s 2OCK (AMMER s 3CREENED 4OPSOIL s %QUIPMENT 2ENTAL s &LOATING
613-649-2716
www.emconline.ca
THIS SPACE COULD BE YOURS
Booking Deadline Friday 11:00 AM
CALL TODAY FOR DETAILS
-ANSl ELD 2OAD s 3TITTSVILLE /.
0HONE s
TO BOOK YOUR SPACE CALL ZACK AT 613-623-6571 OR LESLIE AT 613-623-6571
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 61
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
A new way to fundraise Company pays schools to send in old phones Jessica Cunha jessica.cunha@metroland.com
EMC news - A recycling company is aiming to make fundraising easier for school communities this year. CellCycle.ca is cellphone recycling company that pays non-proďŹ ts, individuals and companies money for sending in their old phones and wireless devices. The company has already helped a number of schools across the country raise money by collecting and recycling old phones. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There was one in London, Ont., just back in May, that collected 300 BlackBerrys,â&#x20AC;? said Pat Hebert, founder of CellCycle.ca. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We gave them $10,000.â&#x20AC;? He said after reading the Metroland Special Report, Fundraising Fever, published in June, he wanted to let people know there is an alternative to the traditional fundraising events. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I was reading your article and I do realize how tough it is for non proďŹ ts to raise money right now. There is deďŹ nitely donor fatigue going on,â&#x20AC;? said Hebert. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s lots of chocolate bars and cookies and all sorts of things that arenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t so good for us. There seems to be an absence of things that are totally free for a nonproďŹ t to do. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s really sad that parents are being saddled with this.â&#x20AC;? CellCycle.ca, which is based in Barrie, Ont., works by buying phones through the mail.
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY JESSICA CUNHA/METROLAND
CellCycle.ca is a cellphone recycling company that pays non-profits, individuals and companies money for sending in their old phones and wireless devices. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That phone sitting in the closet might still be worth something,â&#x20AC;? said Hebert, adding the company pays for the postage. â&#x20AC;&#x153;These are waste products really, but they have end of life value or they have reuse value.â&#x20AC;? The company also sells used phones and wireless devices.
FUNDRAISER
Tamise academy French elementary school located in London, Ont. was looking to raise funds for its Food for Kids program, which helped about 15 families in the school community every week.
One of the teachers â&#x20AC;&#x153;would have backpacks ďŹ lled up with food every Friday with non perishables and send them home with students,â&#x20AC;? said Hebert. The school contacted him about raising funds by recycling old phones.
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The school collected 300 BlackBerrys that were in good condition, raising $10,000 for the food program. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That was an inner-city school,â&#x20AC;? said Hebert. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a very poor area of London. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s good for people to realize there are alternatives.â&#x20AC;? Hebert said heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also helped schools in Nova Scotia, Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba and Saskatchewan. One school in Calgary raised $6,000 by sending in old phones. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s weird how you get known in other parts of the country before you get known at home,â&#x20AC;? said Hebert, who started CellCycle.ca in 2009 after being laid off from an electronic recycling company. He was in charge of analyzing the waste streams and realized that â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cellphones were one of those things that had a lot of residual value at the end of life.â&#x20AC;? The company generally collects around 10,000 phones a year, which they test to see how well it works and wipe all the data. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m hoping that we continue to grow this to the point that weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re helping lots of people,â&#x20AC;? said Hebert. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is good for the environment, this is good for the schools or non-proďŹ tsâ&#x20AC;Śitâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s good for students themselves to see that just because theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re done with it the item itself isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t worthless. I just hope it continues and that weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re able to help a lot of people with it.â&#x20AC;?
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Cedarview Road, between West Hunt Club and Baseline
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62 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
OPP warn of phoney bank inspectors EMC news – The Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) is receiving many reports of financial scams targeting seniors and other vulnerable people across the province. In this scam, individuals claiming to be investigators from one of Canada’s chartered banks convince victims to withdraw funds for use as evidence to assist with a bogus theft investigation involving bank personnel.
After the money is withdrawn and handed to the phoney bank inspector, the victim is told to go home and wait for a call confirming the money has been re-deposited in their account. Unfortunately, that call never comes. In several recent cases, seniors have complied and were subsequently defrauded of thousands of dollars. “This type of fraud, preying on seniors and vulnerable persons, is one
more way in the already long history of fraud-related crimes. Increasing awareness of fraud is the first step toward decreasing its devastating impact,” said Deputy Commissioner Scott TOD, OPP Investigations and Organized Crime. “If you are suspicious about a caller or the information being requested, protect yourself…hang up the phone! And then report the crime,” added Det. Insp. Paul Beesley, OPP
Anti-Rackets Branch Guard against becoming a victim BEFORE providing money or credit card information. Check with another family member or trusted friend to verify the information. Remember, neither your financial institution nor a police investigator will ever ask you to withdraw money from your account or assist with an undercover investigation.
It is also vitally important that the incident be reported if it does occur, to allow police to investigate and charge the perpetrators. If you suspect you or someone you know has been a victim of fraud, contact your local police service, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre at 1888-495-8501. Or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-2228477 (TIPS) and report the crime.
Ottawa OPP issue 222 speeding tickets B&E charges laid in EMC news – The OPP’s Ottawa Detachment issued 222 speeding tickets on the Labour Day long weekend. The detachment, which provides enforcement on Highway 417 through West Carleton., also issued four racing, 25 seatbelts, 28 distracted driving, 10 moving violations and 59 other Highway Traffic Act tickets. The OPP also charged three drivers
with impaired driving, handed out two warnings and laid two Liquor Licence Act and two drug charges. “It’s everyone’s responsibility in keeping our highways, trails and waterways safe,” said the police in a news release. Thr OPP report that Ontario two people were killed in separate motor vehicle collisions and two people died in
separate marine incidents on the Labour Day weekend. OPP officers were highly visible enforcing the law on highways, trails and waterways over the weekend, laying 15,749 driving-related charges. A total of 10,860 charges were laid for speeding, 339 for distracted driving, 1,186 for seat belt violations and 196 were alcohol-related charges.
OPP investigates Gillies Grove fires in Arnprior become out of control, warn police. “Should anyone observe a fire, please report it immediately by calling 911.” During the week of Aug. 31 to Sept. 3, the Arnprior OPP Detachment investigated 71 occurrences which included: four animal complaints, one theft, one missing person, one motor vehicle collision, two alarms, two frauds, three 911 calls, one fire, one traffic hazard and one noise complaint.
FALL 2012 GUIDE To Home, Décor and Renovations
EMC news - A 24-year-old male was arrested and charged with break and enter and dangerous operation of a motor vehicle in relation to a July incident that occurred in MacLaren’s Landing. Patrol Officers in the West Carleton and Rideau-Goulbourn area responded to 181 general calls for service from the public for the reporting period of Aug. 23 to Aug. 29. To reach the West Carleton Community Police Centre call 613-236-1222 ext.2982.
Correction A photo at the top of a North Lanark Highland Games photo spread on page 21 of the Aug. 30 West Carleton Review EMC accidentally identified the band pictured as the Cameron Highlanders. The picture is of the massed bands and not the Cameron Highlanders, who were the duty
band at the games. The drum major leading the group in the photo is member of the Cameron Highlanders but the band does not appear in any pictures from the games. The West Carleton Review EMC apologizes for any confusion the error may have caused.
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EMC news – There has been another potentially dangerous fire in the area of Gillies Grove. That makes four fires reported in the area of the Grove near Galilee in the past two months. The fires are non-accidental in nature and the Arnprior OPP is working closely with the Arnprior Fire Department and the community to identify suspects. It has been a very dry summer and these fires can quickly
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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 63
NEWS
Your Community Newspaper
Tastes buds teased, tempted at Melon Fest and Pepper Pow WOW! Kate Glynn EMC lifestyle - Temperatures at the Acorn Creek Garden Farm ranged from cool to scorching Labour Day, as the farm held its 14th Annual MelonFest and Pepper Pow. WOW! The unique combination of melons and peppers was celebrated this past weekend with taste testing and competitions. Cindy and Andy Terauds own the 100 acre farm near Carp, where the popular event takes place. The idea for the festival sprang from a televised CBC segment featuring the farm where the couple have operated since 1978, and the melons they grow. The five minute sequence aired 15 years ago on the news and then again on Ontario Today. “When we started getting calls from all over Canada saying they would be in Ottawa, could they stop in and pick-up a melon, I thought, there is more interest in melons than I thought,” he said. The farm grows 21 types140 varieties of melon. Many,
KATE GLYNN
Top Chef Canada runner-up Jonny Korechi prepares Ceviche of Halibut using four types of melons with a hint of sorrel. The chef of Sidedoor Temporary Kitchen was one of several local culinary creators demonstrating the use of melons and peppers in cuisine. like the Canary, Butterscotch, Oriental and Tropical were available for tasting at a table set up on site. “You can’t compare fully ripe melons, picked at their
prime, to those you see in the stores. Each one is different in texture and taste. You have to try them to appreciate the differences,” Terauds stated.
Many of the varieties of melon at Acorn Creek are not available at grocery stores because the rinds are thin and would be disturbed during shipping.
Terauds said the event allows the public an opportunity to sample new varieties. “And the wonderful hot sunny weather this season means sweeter and tastier melons this year,” he added. For the more adventurous appetite, a series of peppers offered in graduating levels of heat were on offer. “We grow 146 varieties of peppers from the sweet to the scorching,” Terauds pointed out. This year marked the introduction of a chile-head pepper eating contest to the popular seed spitting and watermelon eating contests offered to youth 13 and under. Brad Pye was one of three contestants brave enough to step forward for the first ever competition, that had organizers altering the contest rules beforehand to encourage participants. Pye was not be outdone by his nine-year-old son Will, who tried the Trinidad Scorpion Moruga at the pepper tasting table, and signed up first. The Trinidad pepper that measures 1.8 million on the
Scoville Heat Units (SHU) has earned the nickname, The Beast. It is said that a small sized pepper can heat up seven pots of stew before ever having its skin cut open and is listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s hottest pepper. Pye was able to go the distance and finished alongside Thomas Leboeuf after completing all five rounds of the competition. Pye and his family have attended the free annual event for most of the past eight years. “We think oh we’ll go for an hour or so and then stay most of the day. There is so much to do and the kids love it. It is a great event and it’s free,” Pye said. Approximately 700 visitors attended the event. The event featured cooking demonstrations by local chefs, wagon rides through the vegetable fields, guided tours of the melon and pepper patches, competitions and prizes. Local artisans and vendors were on hand with food, baking, preserved meats, hot sauces, preserves and crafts.
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FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE
NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE FUTURE SHOP AUGUST 31 CORPORATE FLYER We would like to clarify the Grey’s Anatomy Season 8 DVD (WebID: M2194214) on page 24 of the August 31 flyer. Please be advised that the release date for this DVD is Tuesday September 4, 2012. Customers may receive rainchecks for the effective flyer period. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.
PHOTOS BY KATE GLYNN
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Best Buy CORRECTION NOTICE
Will Pye offers his father Brad some encouragement as he competes in the Chile-head Pepper Eating Contest. Pye was able to go the distance and finished alongside Thomas Leboeuf after completing all five rounds of the competition.
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NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY AUGUST 31 CORPORATE FLYER Please be advised that this product: Bell HTC Wildfire S White Prepaid Phone (WebCode: 10215046), advertised on the August 31 flyer, page 28, is limited in quantity with no rainchecks. Stock will no longer be replenished so product is only available while supplies last. See a Product Specialist for alternative solutions. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.
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Best Buy CORRECTION NOTICE
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NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY AUGUST 31 CORPORATE FLYER On page 8 of the August 31 flyer, the “Save $100 on any Tablet When Bundled with a Sierra Wi-Fi Mobile Hotspot on a One-Year New Activation” promotion was advertised with unclear information. Please be advised that this promotion is with a Rogers one-year activation. R0011604318-0906
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Residents â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;engaged and enragedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; over Teron proposal Jessica Cunha jessica.cunha@metroland.com
DEVELOPMENT
Developer Bottriell requested the meeting to present the plans that were submitted to the city. He owns about 1.48 hectares of land at 1131 Teron Rd., where his house sits. The triangle of land also houses a hydro corridor and backs onto March Road and the Bethune condominiums.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;It is on the edge of the community,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not within the garden city concept that Mr. (Bill) Teron created.â&#x20AC;? He said that when compared to other highrises in the community, the percentage of lot coverage is about the same. The Varley apartments have about seven per cent lot coverage, the Atriums cover about 15 per cent, and the development on Teron would cover around 10 per cent. â&#x20AC;&#x153;You canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t compare to the Varley apartments,â&#x20AC;? said Dave Brown. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Atriums is also on a much larger piece of land.â&#x20AC;? Only about 0.2 to 0.3 hectares of the site is developable at 1131 Teron Rd. because of the hydro easement, said Bottriell, adding he thought about using the site for other purposes â&#x20AC;&#x201C; such as additional townhomes, office or commercial space, but decided condominiums are best for the property. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been approached by everyone of these but Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve said â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Nah, I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t think thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s good for the property,â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;? said Bottriell. â&#x20AC;&#x153;One of the reasons why Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve pushed for the condo aspect is for seniors.â&#x20AC;? He told the audience his mother is looking for low-maintenance living and with an aging demographic in the area, a highrise would bet-
ter suit the needs of the population. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The hope is that people from here will live there.â&#x20AC;? Many in the audience didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t agree that a highrise is the right choice. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t fit, it doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t enhance the community at all,â&#x20AC;? said Gail White, a resident of Bethune. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The only thing that would fit would be townhomes.â&#x20AC;? Kanata North Coun. Marianne Wilkinson said she would be submitting her comments after the meeting. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m going to stress the whole fact of following the Official Plan, of being compatible,â&#x20AC;? she said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Townhouses fit ... It has to be the right development in the right place.â&#x20AC;? She added that residentsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; concerns with the setback of the building are â&#x20AC;&#x153;legitimate concerns.â&#x20AC;? The setback of the building is being touted as 10 metres â&#x20AC;&#x201C; but thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s from the building to the curb. From the building to the property line is only three metres. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Please donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t try to pull the wool over our eyes. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not stupid,â&#x20AC;? said resident Beata Myhill. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We need transparency and we need honesty.â&#x20AC;?
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EMC news - A meeting on a proposed highrise development in Beaverbrook drew a large crowd on Monday, Aug. 27. Around 300 people turned out for the endof-summer meeting to discuss a two-tiered, 10- and 15-storey apartment building, coupled with six three-storey townhomes, that has been proposed for development at 1131 Teron Rd. by developer Phil Bottriell. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Residents from all of Beaverbrook ... came out for another meeting the last week in August. Not just six people, but nearly 300 people â&#x20AC;&#x201C; engaged and enraged,â&#x20AC;? said Eileen Howell, who lives on Reaney Court with her husband Andrew Stirling. The two have been collecting funds from the community to help pay for legal consultation regarding the rezoning application, as well as for another nine-storey building proposed for 2 The Parkway. â&#x20AC;&#x153;People are turning out in droves because theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re fed up with these types of proposals,â&#x20AC;? said Gary Sealey, president of the Kanata Beaverbrook Community Associaiton (KBCA). â&#x20AC;&#x153;The people are uniting ... People think this is bad development.â&#x20AC;? The consensus of many in the audience was that the proposed development is too high and doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t fit within the garden community, which
is comprised of mostly lowrise, single family homes and townhouses. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is just not a good piece of land for whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s being proposed,â&#x20AC;? said resident Jim Birtch. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This development is trying to shoehorn a very large development into a small piece of land.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Scale it down,â&#x20AC;? said Langley Rock, a resident of Beaverbrook. With 173 units proposed for the highrise building as well as six townhomes, Rock said that instead of trying to blend in with the surroundings, the developer is trying to make as much money as possible. â&#x20AC;&#x153;To be honest, it sounds like a cash grab,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re looking for something that fits, we want something that fits too.â&#x20AC;? The developer did say that â&#x20AC;&#x153;if it comes down to it, the number of stories is up for discussion,â&#x20AC;? adding, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not there yet.â&#x20AC;?
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NDP invite public to pub meeting EMC news - On Monday, Sept. 17 as the fall session of parliament opens, the Carleton - Mississippi Mills NDP riding association will be hosting an evening with four young MPs to discuss fresh perspectives on Canadian politics. Offering first-hand accounts of how democratic institutions are operating, the roles and challenges faced by MPs, and insights on pressing contemporary issues, the evening promises to bring politics to life through an informative and engaging conversation. Speakers for the event include Federal NDP Leadership Candidate and Critic for the Status of Women, Niki Ashton (MP Churchill); Federal Critic for Copyright and Digital Issues, Charmaine Borg (MP Terrebonne â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Blainville); Federal Critic for Sports and Associate Critic for Post-Secondary Education, Matthew DubĂŠ (Chambly-Borduas); and Federal Associate Critic on Foreign Affairs, Ă&#x2C6;ve PĂŠclet (La Pointe-de-lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Ă&#x17D;le). Many of the MPs attending the Monday night event know first-hand what it takes to make that change, having recently won over voters in similar suburban ridings previously considered safe seats for other parties around Montreal. Now they are bringing the youthful combination of intelligence, passion, conscience and engagement which led the NDP to official opposition to the people of Carleton - Mississippi Mills. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re really excited to be able to provide an opportunity for local citizens to talk first
hand with these MPs about federal politics and issues, especially those who havenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t traditionally had much access to our political institutions, such a students and youthâ&#x20AC;? said Morgan Goddard, President of the local NDP Riding Association. â&#x20AC;&#x153;For us itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not just about offering a different platform, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s about building a different approach to politics and we are thrilled to be able to showcase some of the MPs whose passion and engagement is helping Canadians to rethink how politics is done.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Under majority rule it is easy to forget the important role that the official opposition plays in keeping government accountable to the people and our democracy on course,â&#x20AC;? said John Hansen, riding association federal vice president â&#x20AC;&#x153;At the riding level there are even fewer opportunities for dissenting opinions to be heard. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We want to change that by finding ways to represent the thousands of voters here in Carleton Mississippi Mills whose opinions are not being well represented. If the current government continues to ignore Canadians they will only ensure that the opposition critics of today will become the cabinet ministers of tomorrow.â&#x20AC;? The event is at Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;arcy McGeeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, 655 Terry Fox Dr. in Kanata at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 (75 per cent tax deductable) in advance, or $5 for youth and unwaged. Available online at: www.mpnight.eventbrite.com or by phone: (613) 293-0681.
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Pet Adoptions
ADDIE #4219 D/S/H Spayed Female 1 ½ years
BONGO #4364 D/M/H Neutered male 2 years
MIA #4968 D/S/H Spayed Female 3 years
We would love for you to meet
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Arnprior Humane Society 490 Didak Drive 613-623-0916 Arnprior Humane Society has many other companion animals available for adoption. Featured animals are adopted quickly! Website: http://www.arnpriorhumanesociety.ca %MAIL DISTRICT SPCA BELLNET CA s
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ROSCOE #4270 Roscoe was found wandering down a country road, he was dehydrated and starving. He has been at the shelter since October 2011 and would love to ďŹ nd a great new home. Roscoe is a very handsome, 6 year old, neutered and declawed boy. He can be affectionate and enjoy attention when he is in the mood. He is curious and likes to explore. Roscoe would be best suited in an adult only home where he will be the only pet. His longer hair will require some grooming. The shelter would be willing to reduce Roscoeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s adoption fee for the right home. Please consider adopting this handsome guy, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s tired of living in a cage.
SUPPLIES NEEDED THIS WEEK: Whiskas meaty selections dry cat food Cat treats Bleach, paper towels
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 65
CLUES DOWN 1. N.M. National Lab: Los ____ 2. In columns 3. Inclusive 4. Underground plant part 5. Top part of an apron 6. Confederate soldier 7. Make lively 8. Metamorphic rock type 9. Thrust with a weapon 10. Russian space station 11. Rotates showing wind direction 12. As fast as can be done (abbr.) 14. Desalinate 15. Marcus Porcius 18. Perching bird order 21. Citizen rejects 26. Missing soldiers 27. Cantankerous
34. Parrot nostril membrane 35. Moves into action 37. Back talk 38. A pointed end 39. British Air Aces 41. 1st weekday 42. Sound in mind 43. Hypothetical original matter 45. Head covering 46. Classical musical dramas 49. God of war & sky (Germanic) 50. Beginnings 53. Coarse fabric used for bags 55. High legislative assembly 56. What a ghost does 57. Pats gently 58. Ceases to live
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Call Bradyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s... 3PCFSUTPO 3PBE #FMMT $PSOFST r 613-820-7556 r XXX CSBEZTQPPM DPN 66 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012
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Relax in one of Bradyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hydropool Self-Cleaning hot Tubs
Local events and happenings over the coming weeks — free to non-profit organizations Fax: 613-623-7518, E-mail: theresa.fritz@metroland.com
CARP
The Kinburn Community Association family corn roast takes place at the community centre from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Free corn, pulled pork, ar, BBQ burgers/dogs, CD music. For further Info: Jayne @ 832-1750 or www. kinburn.ca.
. Sept. 5
The Anglican Parish of Huntley cordially invites you to the Pampered Woman Fundraiser 1:30-4 p.m., featuring guest speakers at the Parish Hall, 3774 Carp Rd, delicious refreshments. Ticket information: Sue 613-836-2375.
. Sept. 5
Kinburn & District seniors are holding their meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 5 at the Kinburn Community Centre commencing at 11:30 a.m. Pot luck lunch at noon. Adam O’Rourke from the City of . . Ottawa will be the guest speaker. Everyone welcome.
. Sept. 11
The West Carleton Garden Club meets at the Memorial Hall in Carp at 7:30 p.m. Presentet Bettina Henkelman, a horticulturalist and landscaper, will speak about beautiful native edible plants for your garden. The club meets every second Tuesday of the month. There is no charge for garden club members and guests are $5. Visit wcgarden@gmail.com.
. Sept. 5
West Carleton Country Knitters. Knitting and crocheting for local charities. Check out our winning groups at the Carp Farmers Market on Saturday when we will be there to meet you! Our cheerful get togethers are held on alternate Monday afternoons in the general areas of Carp, Kinburn, and Woodlawn. All skill levels are welcome, including beginners, and there are no fees. We use only donated yarn, which is happily accepted. Look at us online at wccknitters, using Google search, or phone Paula at 613 832-2611, or Sue at 613 839-2542.
. Sept. 19
West ARTiculate - “fireside” artist talks take place on the third Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m., St Paul’s United Church, 3760 Carp Rd.; parking and entrance at the back. Speaker: Holly Dean, artist. ARTiculate is a series of talks put on by the West carleton Arts Society to give the general public, and other artists, a chance to meet some of the many active artists in the region. Along with this comes a chance to see what makes these people tick
and to hear a little about what the artists feel about their own work. Come experience a friendly chat between artist and viewer.
CONSTANCE BAY . Sept. 2
Two Bay Days’ breakfast will be served at the West Carleton Legion. . Until Sept. 4 Bay Days makes a return with events taking place in the community. Bay Days 2012 celebrates the 90 years since our beginning as the Sandhills, the 40 years since the creation of our community centre, and the launch of the Sandhills project. For more details, contact: Len Russell at 613-832-4694, or email lrussell@cbbca.ca
. Sept. 7
Square dancers wanted for The Bay Waves. Looking for good, clean fun on Friday nights? Give modern square-dancing a try. No experience necessary. We’ll teach you how to dance. Your partner won’t dance? No worries, come anyway. Try us out for free. Come to the Constance and Buckham’s Bay Community Centre Sept. 7 at 7:30 p.m. Wear comfortable and casual clothing. For information call Tammy at 613-808-1303.
. Sept. 15
St. Gabriel’s Parish roast beef dinner from 5-7 p.m. Constance Bay community centre 262 Len Percell Dr. adults $20, Youth (4-11) $8. For
tickets call 613 832 8930.
. Sept. 16
Constance Bay is about to host its second Terry Fox Run on Sunday, Sept. 16 This is the 32nd anniversary of his historic effort for Cancer. Start and finish at the Constance and Buckham’s Bay Community Centre at Len Purcell Drive. There shall be 3KM., 5KM and 10 KM routes set out. One of the routes shall be through the Thorbolton Forrest trails in the Bay. Pledge forms and registration forms shall become available in August from the various business establishments in the area. Last year we rose over $4000.00 and this year we are looking forward to doubling that amount or better. There is a requirement for volunteers for various responsibilities to make this initiative truly successful and rewarding. Please contact Bob Dupuis or Linda Cassidy at 613-8322403.
. Sept. 16
The busy beaches and shorelines around Ottawa’s Constance Bay get their fall cleanup from 1-4 p.m.. It is the ‘C-Bay Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup’, sponsored by Loblaws. Learn about your Ottawa River at the same time from our exhibitors and experts on hand. Everyone from up and down the valley is invited. Find all the details and free registration at http://c-bayshorelinecleanup. eventbrite.ca/
ONGOING
West Carleton Legion Branch 616 events: RCL Branch 616, West Carleton, is holding its annual poster and creative writing competitions. These competitions are open to all school age children through schools, home schooling or community groups e.g. scouts, guides, cadets. For further information contact Iain Scott at 616 832 3490 Every Monday: Cribbage at 2 p.m. Feel free to come down to the branch for a few fun hands. Every Wednesday: Legion Golf is held every Wednesday at the Copperdale Golf Club on Dunrobin Road., tee-off at 2:30 p.m. Every Wednesday BINGO: Kitchen opens from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. for a pre-Bingo meal. BINGO at 7:15 p.m. Support this charity BINGO & raise funds for Community and Legion projects. Join us for an evening of fun. You can win the $250 jackpot! Everyone is welcome. If you are here for the season join in. Every Thursday: Carpet bowling at 1 p.m. Every Friday: Cribbage at 2 p.m. Every Friday: T.G.I.F. Dinner at 5:30 p.m. Branch 616 Royal Canadian Legion invites you to their weekly TGIF Dinner. All welcome, community members please join us! Every Sunday Morning: Breakfast from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
KINBURN . Sept. 7
ONGOING
If you’re looking for a starting point for your active life, “Fit-tastics” (formally called the “West Carleton Exercise Group”) and the Kinburn Indoor Walking Club may be just for you! Fit-tastics is low impact chair/standing exercise program that is held at the West Carleton Community Complex (5670 Carp Road) every Thursday from 10:30am to 11:30am. The first session begins September 13, but participants are welcomed throughout the year. Another great program, the Kinburn Indoor Walking Club, will be starting again on September 18 at the
GALETTA
Galetta Bowls Club invites people to come out and try lawn bowling on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 6:15 p.m. and Friday mornings at 9:45 a.m. No equipment necessary. Instruction provided. Ages nine to 90. Wear flat-soled shoes. For more information, call 613622-1586.
WEST CARLETON . Sept. 7
Pakenham Square Dance Club Dance Friday, Sept. 7, held upstairs in the Stewart Community Centre., Dancing is from 8 to 11:30 p.m.. Local musicians, door prizes and light lunch provided. Everyone Welcome. Info 613-256-4126.
. Sept. 8
Enjoy a picnic in the park from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Sheila McKee Park, also known as The Y Camp, 1620 Sixth Line Rd. at Riddell Drive. There will be games, a barbecue, playgrounds, guided nature walks, agility exhibition. Everyone invited.
Dancing with the Squares R0011577311_0830
. Sept. 15
Mackenzie McMillan flips through one of many books for sale outside the library at the Len Purcell Community Centre in Constance Bay. She is selling used library books before the Cooper Brothers concert on Aug. 30 to help raise money for the community centre’s renovations.
Beaver Scouts (for girls and boys ages five through sevent) registration and information night Wednesday Sept. 5 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Kinburn Community Centre from 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. For more information please email kinburnbeavers@ gmail.com or call Jessica or Greg at 613-832-2660.
Pomme Party at Billings Estate!
FREE Open Houses Brunton Hall in Blacks Corners
Billings Estate National Historic Site, 2100 Cabot Street Sunday, September 9th 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Tues Sept 11, 7:30 - 10 * Tues Sept 18, 6:30 - 9
Celebrate autumn at Billings Estate! Take part in an apple relay, bob for apples, and learn how to press apple cider.
* includes Chili Supper
613-247-4830 R0011591277
Turn page on library DEREK DUNN/METROLAND
The Dunrobin Women’s Institute is hosting a Coffee Break for Alzheimers on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. An informative program followed by refreshments will be held at St. Paul’s Anglican Church at 1118 Thomas Dolan Pkwy. Everyone is welcome! It’s a topic we all need to be informed about: the signs, the treatment, the resources, the prevention and the importance of early diagnosis of Alzheimers. Please come out and support the cause and bring a friend.
Kinburn Community Centre at 3045 Kinburn Side Road, every Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Both programs are free. If you would like more information on either of these programs, contact Kim Ou, Public Health Nurse, at kim.ou@ottawa.ca or at 613580-6744 ext. 26234.
Ottawamuseumnetwork.ca
Info 613 253.2960 or 613 256.0551 or 613 623.7575 or 613 283.5593 mississippisquares.ca
West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012 67
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68 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, September 6, 2012