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QuinteWest News THE
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www.insidebelleville.com
December 15, 2016 | 44 pages
Walmart donates Christmas food bank bonanza after fire clears out entire inventory
Trenton superstore to local food banks. Walmart Canada is working with Second Harvest Food Rescue, a Toronto-based organization Trenton – A fire that decimated almost $4 million in stock at Trenton’s Walmart store is a that is distributing undamaged food products boon to area food banks. that were removed from Walmart after the fire. Six tractor trailers full of food are making Lori Nikkel, director of programs and parttheir way to numerous food banks, including nerships at Second Harvest, said all donations Trenton’s Care and Share Food Bank, as a rewere directed to Toronto and from there they sult of a fire that struck Trenton’s Walmart on have dispersed the products to their channels in Nov. 15. Toronto, Manitoulin, Hamilton and Cobourg – A total of 12 palettes of food – items that including Trenton’s Care and Share Food Bank were not harmed but not permitted to be sold – and she expects donations will also go to Halin the store after the fire - are being shipped to the Food 4 All warehouse in Cobourg and diston, Windsor and Waterloo as the truckloads tributed to the Trenton Care and Share Food continue to come in. Bank and food banks throughout Northum“When we get really large donations that we berland. can’t handle in the city, there’s just too much, “We truly appreciate it,” said Al Teal, general then we give food to other organizations,” she manager of the Trenton Care and Share Food said. Bank. “I appreciate what they’ve done with the “This is an extremely large amount of food food in donating it to the food banks, we really and it’s beautiful, this stuff is gorgeous food,” she appreciate that gesture very, very much.” “There’s such a large quantity of food comsaid. “It’s everything you would see in a Walmart ing at one time we could not handle it here, we that is shelf stable and it’s just like going shopdon’t have the facility to do so,” said Teal. ping, there’s nothing wrong with this food.” “I will receive what I want and I will share Ian Gibbons, food recovery manager at Secwith other food banks, what we don’t need ond Harvest, said they didn’t know what to exand can’t use… and they can all have a Merry pect. Christmas,” he said. “I realize it’s an awful lot “Nor did Walmart really because everything of food, we care, we share, when we have excess was taken off the floor so quickly in Trenton,” we share it with other food banks that don’t Al Teal, general manager of the Trenton Care and Share Food Bank. he said. have as much or live in a place that doesn’t have Erin Stewart/Metroland “The fire was contained to the back of the so many resources.” store whereas the surplus food, there’s not a hint, Teal said he plans to share with food banks thee summer when a total of 275 households were served in Au- there’s not a scent and the best before dates are several lifetimes in need in Northumberland, including Brighton. gust, said Teal. The great donation comes at a good time as food banks have With six tractor-trailers full of food, numerous food banks down the road from what we’re used to, (in the shipment) we’re seen a decrease in donations, said Teal. and organizations in other parts of Ontario are being supported. seeing items as far as 2018 which we don’t see too often.” ...Please continue on Page 2 In November, Trenton’s Care and Share Food Bank served a The food did not, however, go directly from the now-reopened total of 346 households in the community, a steady increase since BY ERIN STEWART
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so that’s a big relief for us.” Walmart strives to build strong communities and being able to donate these products fits into that broader goal, said Roberton. “It’s a good solid donation and we’re confident that we’re donating as much as we can,” he said. “We made sure that all of the merchandise has been assessed so we’re not throwing anything out or recycling anything that could be donated to somebody that needs it.” General merchandise will be donated to the Salvation Army and distributed through the Salvation Army’s community service program. Details about the amount of general merchandise being donated have not yet been released. In other charity news, last week Walmart Canada announced it’s looking to give out 1,000 grants of $1,000 to local not-for-profit organizations that are servicing their communities. To apply, go to walmartCanada.ca.
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Alex Roberton, senior director of corporate affairs at Walmart Canada, said they are recycling the entire assortment of merchandise from the store at the time of the fire, all of the inventory, just to be safe. “Anything that wasn’t affected, that’s what we’re donating,” he said. “It’s safe to eat and because we’re replacing the inventory, if there’s products there that people can use, then we want to make sure we can get it in their hands.” Roberton said they are relieved that they are able to donate as much as they can. “It’s particularly important for the associates that work in the store, they see all this stuff and they live in the community and they know about our donation programs and the stuff they’ve been able to do to help community organizations,” he said. “They’re very keen on making sure the stuff is put to good use where it can be
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scene and found a 41-year-old man struck by a vehicle and pronounced dead at the scene. Frankford Road remained closed to several hours as the OPP Technical Traffic Collision Investigators completed its investigation. No information was released by police about the identity of the deceased man nor if charges had been laid against any motorist.
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NOTICE OF SUBMISSION TRANSPORTATION ENVIRONMENTAL STUDY REPORT Highway 401 Wooler Road Overpass Rehabilitation (WP 4064-14-01) Detail Design and Environmental Assessment Study THE STUDY The Ministry of Transportation (MTO) has retained MMM Group, a WSP company, to undertake the Detail Design and Environmental Assessment Study for the rehabilitation of the Highway 401 Wooler Road Overpass (bridge) in the City of Quinte West. The bridge was originally constructed in 1958 and was rehabilitated in 1994. The scope of rehabilitation includes: • Concrete deck repairs, paving, and waterproofing; • Maintenance of existing bearings; • Rehabilitating expansion joints; • Constructing new approach slabs; and • Concrete repairs to soffit, girders, abutment walls, and other structural components. During construction, it is anticipated there will be long-term closures (i.e. approximately 6-7 months) of the westbound and eastbound on-ramps at the Wooler Road interchange. To gain access to Highway 401 during construction, Telephone Road will be signed as the temporary detour route. It is expected that both the westbound and eastbound off-ramps will remain open during construction. The rehabilitation works are currently scheduled for 2017 and are anticipated to last one construction season from approximately May to November. MTO is seeking a request for relief from the City of Quinte West’s noise by-law for construction to occur 7-days per week to expedite construction. Construction timing is dependent on the completion of the Class Environmental Assessment Study and approvals. THE PROCESS
Quinte West Fire chief John Whelan during the special council meetong on Monday Dec. 12. Erin Stewart/Metroland
BY ERIN STEWART
Trenton – A new pumper is in the near future for Quinte West Fire Station 4, at a cost of $369,500. The decision was made by Quinte West city council during a special council meeting on Monday Dec. 12, scheduled to come to a decision on the matter. Quinte West fire Chief John Whelan said a committee was struck to look into purchasing a new truck and the number one pumper made by Pierce and distributed through Darch Fire is a demo model and comes in under budget by about $10,500. “We’re very confident with these vehicles, we’ve got four pumpers from the same company in our system and they’re a quality truck, very diversified and the service on them is very good so I’m happy council has approved my recommendation,” said Whelan. One of the biggest attributes for Darch Fire in Ayr Ontario is the service, which Whelan said is second to none. “The Darch trucks are the highest quality,” he said. “The nice thing about those trucks is all the pump handles are the same so for every major fire a firefighter from one hall can jump on that truck and the panels are all the same.” Since the new pumped is a demo the department will be able to get it much sooner than they normally would. Whelan estimated the new pumper will arrive in February. The new pumper for Station 4 is replacing an older pumper about 25 years old said Whelan. The fate of the old pumper has not yet been determined but Whelan said he would like to keep it in the system as a spare because the department does not have a spare at this time.
This project is following the approved environmental planning process for Group “B” undertakings under the Ministry of Transportation’s Class Environmental Assessment (Class EA) for Provincial Transportation Facilities (2000), with the opportunity for public input throughout the project. The purpose of this notice is to inform the public that a Transportation Environmental Study Report (TESR) has been completed and will be available for a 45-day public review period from December 15, 2016 to January 30, 2017. The TESR can be reviewed on the project website (www.hwy401woolerrdbridge.ca) and at the following locations during normal hours of operation: City of Quinte West 7 Creswell Drive, P.O. Box 490 Trenton, ON K8V 5R6 Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Frankford Municipal Office 22 North Trent Street Frankford, ON K0K 2C0 Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Quinte West Public Library – Trenton Branch 7 Creswell Drive Trenton, ON K8V 6X5 Monday to Wednesday: 9:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Thursday to Friday: 9:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Saturday: 9:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sunday: Closed
Quinte West Public Library – Frankford Branch 22 North Trent Street, Frankford, ON K0K 2C0 Monday: Closed Tuesday to Wednesday: 10:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Thursday to Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Saturday: 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Sunday: Closed
COMMENTS Interested persons are encouraged to review the TESR and provide comments by January 30, 2017. If, after consulting with the Ministry of Transportation, you have serious unresolved concerns, you have the right to request that the Minister of the Environment (11th Floor, Ferguson Block, 77 Wellesley Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M7A 2T5) issue a Part II Order (“bump-up”) for this study. A Part II Order may lead to the preparation of an individual environmental assessment. A copy of the “bump-up” request should be forwarded to the addresses below. If there are no outstanding concerns after January 30, 2017 the study will be considered to have met the requirements of the Class EA. If you have questions or comments please feel free to contact either the Consultant Project Manager or the MTO Project Engineer listed below. Mr. Sascha Schreiber, P.Eng. Consultant Project Manager MMM Group Limited 1145 Hunt Club Road, Suite 300, Ottawa, ON K1V 0Y3 tel: 613-736-7200 toll-free: 1-877-998-9912 fax: 613-736-8710 e-mail: SchreiberS@mmm.ca
Mr. Dan Brandao, P.Eng. MTO Project Engineer Ministry of Transportation – Eastern Region 1355 John Counter Blvd., Postal Bag 4000, Kingston, ON K7L 5A3 tel: 613-540-4741 toll-free: 1-800-267-0295, ext. 4741 fax: 613-540-5106 e-mail: Dan.Brandao@ontario.ca
If you have any accessibility requirements in order to participate in this project please contact one of the Project Team members listed above. Information will be collected in accordance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA). With the exception of personal information, all comments will be part of the public record. Des renseignements sont disponibles en français en composant 613 736-7200, auprès de Sascha Schreiber (courriel : schreibers@mmm.ca).
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613-966-2034 Quinte West News - Thursday, December 15, 2016 3
OPINION
The vanishing civilians of Aleppo Did it cross your mind occasionally, in the past week, to wonder where all of the “250,000 civilians trapped in eastern Aleppo” have gone? As the area of the city under rebel control Gwynne Dyer dwindled – by last Wednesday morning the Syrian regime’s troops had recaptured three-quarters of it – did you see massive columns of fleeing civilians, or mounds of civilian dead? If several hundred thousand people were on the move, you would expect to be seeing video images of it. If they were fleeing into the enclave the rebels still hold (to escape the evil Syrian army), you would expect the rebels to give us dramatic images of that. They certainly gave us footage of every civilian killed by Russian bombing in eastern Aleppo over the past three months. And if hundreds of thousands or even just tens of thousands of civilians were fleeing for safety into government-held territory, you would expect the regime’s propagandists to be making equally striking images available. “Look!” they would say. “The civilians really loved President Bashar al-Assad all along.” Or maybe the civilians are all dead. Stephen O’Brien, the UN’s UndersecretaryGeneral for Humanitarian Affairs, warned just a week ago that if Assad’s forces went on advancing, then “the besieged parts of eastern Aleppo” would become “one giant graveyard.” So where are those quartermillion bodies? Or even a few thousand bodies? That’s kind of hard to hide. Here’s a radical thought: Have most of those quarter-million people suddenly become invisible because they were never really there in the first place? Well, here’s a clue. There were no foreign journalists in eastern Aleppo. They were quite reasonably afraid of being kidnapped by one of the many rebel groups in the city and held for ransom – or accused of being spies and ritually slaughtered by one of the more extreme Islamist outfits. All the reporting out of eastern Aleppo for the past three months has been what the rebel groups wanted us to see, and nothing else. And to them, the presence of large numbers of “defenceless civilians”, the more the better, was their best protection against a full-scale onslaught by the regime.
Quinte West News
So of course they gave us video of every civilian killed by a bomb, and greatly exaggerated the number of civilians in their part of the city, and almost never showed their own fighters. There’s no crime in this. It’s the way propaganda works, and nobody fighting a war can afford to be too respectful of the truth. The real question is this: why did the international media fall for it? For months, what was obviously rebel propaganda has been shown by the world’s media as if it were the impartial truth. Was it just laziness, or was it subservience to a political agenda set by the West and its main allies in the Middle East? A bit of both, probably. The United States, Saudi Arabia and Turkey were all determined to see the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad’s regime, even if it did take six years of civil war. And even though they didn’t agree on what they wanted to replace it with. Washington pursued the dream of a democratic, secular Syria. Riyadh and Ankara wanted a decisive victory by the Sunni Arab majority (about 60-65 percent of the population) and an authoritarian Islamic state. But they all agreed on the need to overthrow Assad, and left the rest for later. Syrians from the start were much more ambivalent. Few loved the Assad regime, which was repressive and brutal. But many Syrians – including many Sunni Muslims, especially in the cities – saw the regime as their only protection against the triumph of an even nastier Islamist dictatorship. There was never a mass uprising in Aleppo against the regime. Various rebel groups from the overwhelmingly Sunni rural areas around Aleppo stormed into the city in 2012 and won control over the eastern half, but it was never clear that the local residents were glad to see them. On the other hand, it was not a good idea to look too unhappy about it, so over the next four years a great many people left the rebel-held part of the city, whose population gradually dwindled to – well, we don’t know exactly how many remained by this year, but it was certainly not a quartermillion or anywhere near it. And it would appear that when the Syrian army retook most of eastern Aleppo in the past week, most of those people just stayed in their homes and waited to be “liberated”. Some of them will be terrified of being arrested and tortured, especially if they collaborated with the rebels even under duress. And others will simply be relieved that it’s over.
Vice President & Regional Publisher Peter Bishop pbishop@metroland.com 613-283-3182 Ext. 108 General Manager Seaway Gavin Beer gbeer@perfprint.ca 613-966-2034, ext 570
250 Sidney Street Belleville, ON K8P 3Z3 Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747
Editor Chris Malette chris.malette@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 510
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Regional Managing Editor Ryland Coyne rcoyne@perfprint.ca
The new SAR bird for the RCAF: Yeah, it’s a big deal Editorial by Chris Malette You might have heard of the Air Force’s new Airbus C295W aircraft for search and rescue. It’s kind of a big deal, lest you think otherwise. Typically Canadian, though, the announcement of its selection was not that of a fearsome fighter aircraft that can fly stealth missions and capable of dropping nukes on enemies. No, the new Airbus prop-job is a state-of-theart search and rescue aircraft that ought to instill more than just a little confidence in the hearts of fishermen, sailors, hunters, outdoorsmen and anyone who ventures on the water or into rugged country. It is, as the minister who introduced it, a game-changer. The announcement was made last Thursday morning at 9 Hangar at CFB Trenton, the home of 424 (Tiger) Transport and Rescue Squadron, by a gaggle of brass, including the head of the air force, Lt.-Gen. Michael Hood and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan. The $2.4 billion contract includes the supply of the 16 aircraft for the four SAR bases in Canada at Comox, B.C., Winnipeg, Manitoba, Trenton, and Greenwood, N.S. but includes maintenance and support programs, according to Foote. The Hercules – now the primary aircraft for 424 Sqn.’s flights out of Trenton – is and has been flown out of CFB Trenton for more than four decades. With the introduction in 2019 of the new Cseries Airbus, the era of the Herc as a SAR platform will draw to a close. But, the Herc – so familiar in our skies as they traverse in and out of 8 Wing on operational missions and training flights – has served the SAR role well and the aircraft itself, in its old E-model years, was kept aloft for record-setting durations by flying hours by Canadian air force maintenance personnel. It’s not just Hercs that Canadian air frame technicians, mechanics and avionics techs are masters at preserving and kept flying. Take the venerable DC-3, or Dakota. The Dak, as it was known to generations of Canadian air force personnel, is still taking off and landing on some of the most diverse airfields around the world. Perhaps you’ve seen one in an episode of Arctic Air on television. Dakotas continued in service with the Canadian Armed Forces until 1989. Of the nearly 13,000 DC-3s built, many are still in service today, more than 75 years after the aircraft’s first flight.
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(As an aside, this writer was aboard the lastever in-service flight of a CC-109 “Cosmo” aircraft for the air force. The Canadair CL-66 was a turboprop version of the civilian Convair CV440 Metropolitan. The CC-109 Cosmopolitan or “Cosmo” in RCAF service was the standard VIP aircraft from 1960 to 1994 – it flew the likes of Prime Ministers Diefenbaker and Pearson – and, after a lengthy career, the CC-109 was replaced by the CC-142 Dash 8 and CC-144 Challenger. We were a media contingent on the first-ever Arctic search and rescue exercise staged in Alaska following the end of the Cold War and, when we landed at Uplands in Ottawa, we were informed that was it – the very last VIP flight of the Cosmo. Done, kaput, headed for a museum or for sale to date merchants, or arms smugglers in the Sahara or fly-in camps in the Arctic.) Yes, the new search and rescue aircraft was subject of yet another drawn-out process, one that began back in 2004 with the then Conservative government. But, there can be no denying the importance an urgency of placing our highly-trained, incredibly professional and effective SAR teams in the best platform in which to do their jobs and to do so sooner than later. Some may debate whether the Airbus C-295 is the more reliable or suitable aircraft or whether the competing C-27J Spartan was best. It’s moot, now, as the choice has been made. The deal, it should be noted, is a plus for jobs right here in Canada (a choice of the competition could have seem the bulk of jobs related to the contract filled in Italy, for example, or Brazil.) In working out its bid, Airbus teamed up with Newfoundland-based Provincial Aerospace Ltd., Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. – the engine-making unit of United Technologies Corp. – and Quebec flight simulator maker CAE Inc. The Canadian air force is rightfully proud of having taken delivery of a new aircraft. Lord knows its men and women in charge of keeping them flying, safely, over our heads in training and on extended missions over the ice of James Bay for a far-flung rescue of fishermen or hunters, have a record of doing so that is the envy of the military aviation world. And, we’re confident they’ll keep the as-yetnicknamed SAR bird aloft and saving lives for decades to come, long outliving the careers of most who will first fly her off the flight line at 8 Wing.
CLASSIFIEDS 1-888-Words Ads EDITORIAL Quinte West News Erin Stewart erin.stewart@metroland.com PRODUCTION 613-966-2034
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www.myheritagefurniture.ca Quinte West News - Thursday, December 15, 2016 5
Trenton’s new Urban Liquidation bustles after grand opening BY ERIN STEWART
Trenton – Brothers Shawn and Trevis Ellis have transformed the former L.A Video into their new business enterprise, Urban Liquidation. The store sells a variety of items at a minimum 50 per cent discount, including: clothes, shoes, toys, tools, household appliances, home décor and more. “Video has been slowly fading away and I own the plaza and my brother owned the L.A Video store so the two of us decided we needed to do something new and different,” said Shawn Ellis. They decided to turn the entire plaza into the new Urban Liquidation, a store that made sense for the community, said Ellis.
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“It’s something that was needed in Trenton, something that would sell, so we thought it would be perfect,” he said. The boutique style products being sold at Urban Liquidation are leftover merchandise that Ellis said they purchase and bring in for half price. “We bring it in at half price, then we have our liquidation and our liquidation can go anywhere from a minimum of 50 per cent of the retail value to up to 70 and 80 per cent off,” he said. “So when you’re buying products you’re literally getting Big Blue Products, Costco products at half price.” The response to the store has been amazing, better than expected, said Ellis. “The store was so full last week that we had no room on our shelves and if you look around the Trenton’s new Urban Liquidation has opened its doors at 33 Ontario Street in Trenton. From shelves right now we have left: Shawn Ellis, Harvey Ellis and Trevis Ellis. Erin Stewart/Metroland bare spots everywhere and we just got another 14 palThe Ellis brothers are continuing the family tradition of runlets in, I’ll have another 14 ning a business in Trenton. coming,” he said. Their parents, Harvey and Lorraine Ellis, started the business “I just can’t believe the support we’ve got from the community, it’s been amazing,” said Ellis. “Our clientele from the video back in 1983 as Ellis Video and retired in 2007 but still like to store have been totally supportive while we went through con- help out to this day, said Shawn. Urban Liquidation is located at 33 Ontario Street in Trenton struction and helping us out, the city, I can’t believe how amazing and will be open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and they’ve been to us.” Urban Liquidation will continue to rent movies and have used 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Sundays. To contact the store, call 613-394-3408. movies for sale.
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16 new Airbus C-295s to replace Buffalo, Hercules SAR aircraft BY ROSS LEES
CFB Trenton - Sixteen new Airbus C295W aircraft have been purchased to fulfill the Canadian military’s search and rescue (SAR) role. The announcement was made Thursday morning at 9 Hangar at 8 Wing/Canadian Forces Base Trenton, the home of 424 (Tiger) Transport and Rescue Squadron, by the Minister of Public Services and Procurement Judy Foote, Minister of Defence Harjit Sajjan and the Royal Canadian Air Force Commander Lieutenant-General Michael Hood. The $2.4 billion contract includes the supply of the 16 aircraft for the four SAR bases in Canada at Comox, BC, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Trenton, and Greenwood, Nova Scotia but includes maintenance and support programs, according to Foote. She called the SAR effort “an essential life-saving service for Canadians Coast-to-coast-to-coast,” tasked to cover 18 million square kilometres over one of the most diverse and challenging environments in the world. Sajjan called the new aircraft “a game changer,” noting it represents a great technological improvement of the air force’s SAR capabilities for the future. “This aircraft’s advanced integrated sensors and radar will allow crews to locate people in distress more easily, even in low-light conditions and in inclement weather. Its new mission management system will allow them to track up to 200 search objects at the same time,” he said during the announcement. “Its cutting edge communication sweep will enable SAR crews to share real-time information with other aircraft, ships, ground search crews and the Joint Rescue Coordination Centres, whether it is in mountainous terrain, the middle of the Atlantic or over the Arctic. The C295 is the modern and versatile aircraft we need to continue to conduct search and rescue missions day and night and in all weather conditions,” he noted. Lt.-Gen. Hood was effusive with his praise of this new aircraft. “I believe this new fleet with the capability to fully integrate with our search and rescue partners will fundamentally change the SAR paradigm for us. Thanks to the sensors and systems aboard this new fleet of aircraft, I believe search and rescue is going to become a lot less about search and a lot more about rescue, and that is very good news,” he said.
Delivery of the new aircraft will begin in 2019 and is scheduled to conclude in 2022 as phase one of the 11 years of the contract. At the same time, a new simulator-equipped training centre is going to be built in Comox BC, which will use state-of-the-art technology to deliver a comprehensive training program, according to Foote. A second phase of the contract covers the first five years of maintenance and support. The contract also includes options to support search and rescue aircraft and operations for an additional 15 years, which could extend the contract until 2042, and bring total value of the contract to $4.7 billion, she announced. The aircraft are equipped with Pratt and Whitney Canada engines. CAE of Montreal will provide the training and 424 Transport and Rescue Squadron Commander Lt.-Col. Leighton James, Sar simulators for the aircrew. The Airbus C295W will replace the Techs MCpl. Chris Auger and Sgt. Gord Hynes, and Chief Warrant Officer Brian Royal Canadian Air Forces’s 40-year-old Wilson gather around the model of the Airbus C295W displayed during the anBuffalo aircraft and even older C-130 H- nouncement of the purchase of the new aircraft at 9 Hangar on CFB Trenton models currently assigned to search and Thursday morning. Ross Lees/Metroland rescue duties. 424 Squadron Commander Lt.-Col. to the future,” he noted. Leighton James said he and his squadron members are looking As part of this proposal, Airbus Defence and Space commitforward to the future with the new SAR platform. ted to undertake business activities equal to the value of the con“We in the SAR community are looking forward to the many tract in Canada, maximizing the economic benefits for Canadicapabilities that come with this new platform. Canadians have ans, according to Foote. a lot to look forward to when we master this new aircraft,” he said. He acknowledged though, that with the change will come a steep learning curve. “Change can be tough and I expect no different when we get this platform, but as a SAR CO, I’m definitely looking forward
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Quinte West News - Thursday, December 15, 2016 7
Stirling meeting dates changed BY TERRY MCNAMEE
Stirling – Because of upcoming statutory holidays over Christmas and New Year’s, Stirling-Rawdon Council has rescheduled several regular meetings. The Protection to Persons and Property Committee meeting and the Finance and Personnel Committee meeting originally scheduled for Dec. 27 have been cancelled. The Environmental and Transportation Committees, which originally were scheduled to meet on Jan. 3, will meet on Jan. 10 instead. January’s Council meetings will be held on to the second and fourth Mondays, Jan. 9 and 23, rather than the usual first and third Mondays. At the Dec. 5 council meeting, members discussed the fate of two ailing roofs, one on
fire station number two and one on the municipal building. Mayor Rodney Cooney said the fire station roof has been fixed twice already, but has continued to be a problem because it was not built correctly in the first place. The contract to repair the roof properly was awarded to Gareth Bell Contracting of Stirling at an estimated cost of $30,000. As for the municipal building roof, CAO Roxanne Hearns reported that a contractor was called and came immediately to patch the leaks in the roof’s rubber membrane for just $900. She said the membrane is easily punctured when workers do maintenance on the heatings and air conditioning systems which are partly located on the roof, and that putting down “cow mats” in areas where workers need to walk will prevent that.
Downtown with Dickens characters, volunteers and members of the Trentport Historical Society, ready to spread Christmas joy and celebrate the heritage of Trenton with merchants and shoppers downtown Trenton on Saturday Dec. 3. Erin Stewart/Metroland
Entrepreneurs In Action: THE COUNTRY BUTCHER SHOP An entrepreneur determined to be a cut above
The Country Butcher Shop is not named ‘country’ because of a remote rural location – its only a few minutes north of the 401 on Hwy 62. Its name came from the values its owner Doug Goodfellow is committed to carrying on. He wanted a good old fashioned service where the butcher knew his customers, their preferred cuts of meat and stood behind the quality of the products sold. He wanted a personal experience where he could offer marinating tips or bbq secrets to ensure his customers would make the most out of their purchase. He’s achieved it.
Trenval Business Development Corporation was created in 1987 by the Federal Government to support small business and aspiring entrepreneurs. They grow our local economy by providing free business counselling, lending funds to small business, delivering entrepreneurial training and how-to workshops, as well as an expanding list of small business services and resources. Congratulations to this Trenval client and successful Entrepreneur in Action!
Doug has had time to envision his dream storefront. He started working in a butcher shop 30 years ago, where he began his apprenticeship with skilled professionals who passed down their knife and cutting techniques. “Butchering is a process that takes years to master” Doug relays. Experience and skill is required to ensure the right cuts. While Doug has full time and part time staff, they only work to their level of training whether that’s deboning, cutting meat for kabobs etc.
Over the decades, Doug has worked with live animals straight through to the final butchering so he knows what to look for and which suppliers and farmers to trust. Its important to his customers to know where their meat is coming from and Doug only selects Canadian brands. An extensive variety of beef, chicken, pork, lamb, sausages, kabobs and more fill his counter displays. There are fresh meats mixed with marinated and spiced offerings ready for the bbq, pan or oven. His customers rave about his secret sauces which he will soon be retailing as he grows in 2017 (along with plans for catering, a bakery, a lunch window, and outside eating area). Doug has been busy serving new and repeat customers since he opened in April and satisfying more people in a wider capacity is his end goal. Stand up freezers are packed with beef and chicken pies – mouths water with the thought of the bubbly gravy and tender pastry. Beef and turkey burgers, shrimp, wings, sausages with tantalizing ingredients take you from
eating to dining. His counters and shelves are filled with unique sauces and condiments that will inspire every cook. Buns, breads, pies and tarts plus potatoes and side dishes mean his customers walk out with the entire meal ready to go. It’s Doug’s ‘all in’ commitment to making the Country Butcher Shop a local landmark that moved Trenval Business Development to support his efforts. They believe in character lending and helping local entrepreneurs realize their dreams. “We invest in people. Small business makes this a great area to live in and we’re excited to add Doug to our long list of clients” says Amber Darling, Business & Investment Advisor. Serve only fresh and fabulous this holiday season and pre-order your free-range turkey from Country Butcher Shop today to guarantee delivery. The Board and Staff of Trenval congratulate Doug Goodfellow and are proud to have been a part of this success story!
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Trenton’s horse Dance club supports area hospices drawn wagon rides are back BY JACK EVANS
BY ERIN STEWART
Trenton – Trenton’s Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) isn’t horsing around this holiday season and have brought back the holiday wagon rides, but with a twist. This year, Santa is coming along for the ride. The wagon rides travel through the streets downtown to take in the lights and decorations and then goes past the Doug Whitney Fantasy of Lights display in Fraser Park. “It’s pretty spectacular,” said Lisa Kuypers-Schroedter, executive director of the Trenton DBIA. “The first night we had 75 people, it’s huge, this year Santa rides on the wagon with you, everybody just loves it.” The horse drawn wagon rides have become a tradition in Trenton, said Kuypers-Schroedter, and this year, the merchants downtown have decorated their windows and doors to add to the display. Wagon rides with Santa run every day until December 23 and begin at the Trenton Town Hall, 55 King St. From Monday to Friday the wagon rides run from 6:308:30 p.m., Saturdays from 4-7:30 p.m. and Sunday 12-3 p.m. For more information visit the Trenton Downtown Business Improvement Area on facebook or downtownTrenton.ca
Belleville - The dozens of dancers are just there to have fun. But the results of their efforts have turned into thousands of dollars of donations to charities over the 50-plus years of Club 39’s existence. An example is the club’s preChristmas dance last Friday when donations totalling $2,000 were presented to representatives of four regional hospices – Quinte, Heart of Hastings, Lennox and Addington and Prince Edward Hospice. Those don’t count $1,000 donated earlier in the year for Fort McMurray fire relief and a donation to the Red Cross. And this has been going on for years, notes Eugene Tully, reelected as president of the group. The name stems from an initiative to create a meeting place for middle- Help for hospices – Left to right, Allan Jewell for Club 39 presents a cheque to Dean aged singles. The name Club 39 was Algar of Prince Edward Hospice; Eugene Tully presents to Darcey Newell for Quinte adopted to reflect that one had to be Hospice; June Branscombe presents to Mary Baldwin for Lennox and Addiongton and 39 years of age of older to join and Murray Branscombe presents to Carrie Salsbury for Heart of Hastings, Madoc. Jack Evans/Metroland participate in bi-weekly club dances. These were held in the Belleville Ledonations to various worth while charities. gion Hall with either a disc jockey or The hospice presentations reflect the area the dances draw a live band and originally drew substantial numbers. But after some 15 years, interest waned, so the club simply started operat- from and were made toward the close of Friday’s event. Dancing a public dance. These started making enough money to make ers attend from Brighton to Kingston and Highway 7 through Prince Edward County.
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Quinte West News - Thursday, December 15, 2016 9
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The Children’s Foundation recognizes new Guardians of Hope BY STEPHEN PETRICK
Belleville – A black stone that sits prominently in a garden in front of the Highland Shores Children’s Aid Society building has some new names etched on it. The Children’s Foundation, the charitable arm of the CAS, has announced its new Guardians of Hope. Nine people or couples were recognized as new Guardians, during a touching lunch-hour ceremony at the 363 Dundas St. W. office on Thursday, Dec. 1 To be recognized as a Guardian of Hope, an individual, family or business must contribute $10,000 to the Children’s Foundation. The foundation runs several programs that help children in need, such as Playing for Keeps (a program that allows at-risk children to participate in sports), Camps of Hope (a program Volunteers and members of the Quinte West Fire and Emergency Services Station 3 col- that allows children to attend summer camps) lected food and toys for the local food bank during their Santa Tour through Kenron Es- and its Reach for Success Bursary Awards protates in Bayside on Monday, Dec. 12. gram (which funds post-secondary school for Terry McNamee/Metroland kids in CAS care). The new Guardians are: Lindene and Raymond Kaufmann, Pat and Shannon Burke, Jamie and Nancy Troke, Len Kennedy, Ann-Marie and Sam Brady, Fran and Ed Lehtinen, Julie and Ric Lange, Yvonne Smith and Aleesha Camp. Each new Guardian received a plaque and gift from Children’s Foundation Executive Di-
rector Connie Reid. The ceremony also included a touching speech by Jason Lysons, a Grade 10 student from St. Theresa Catholic Secondary School, who has benefitted from Children’s Foundation programs. Lysons was born prematurely and weighed only about a pound at birth, but he’s gone on to live a productive life and even participated in the writing of rap song through a recent “Rap Camp” program, run with support from the Children’s Foundation. “I never would have had this unique experience, if not for The Children’s Foundation,” he said. “I have received Youth Awards at their Reach for Success Awards Night and hope to receive a bursary when I go to college.” In closing, he said, “The Children’s Foundation has been great to me and I especially like the Rap Camp. Thank you for making me feel like a rock star.” The Children’s Foundation’s Guardians of Hope program was started in 2007 by past board chair Randy Knight. “To date, over $100,000 has been donated through this amazing initiative,” said Camp, whose not just a Guardian, but also the foundation’s board chair. “We would like to continue this campaign and this is a great way to recognize these amazing community leaders and to welcome new Guardians of Hope donors at the same time.”
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Quinte West News - Thursday, December 15, 2016 11
Santa goes for breakfast at Trenton’s YMCA BY ERIN STEWART
Six month old Ryan Widdifield
Trenton – The man of the smiles on Santa’s knee during season took time out of his the breakfast with Santa at busy schedule for children Trenton’s YMCA on Saturday visiting Trenton’s YMCA Dec. 10. during the annual breakErin Stewart/Metroland fast with Santa on Saturday Dec. 10. Pancakes, cereal, fruit, and get information about the juice and coffee were served programs offered at the YMCA. to community members “We like to do these events to for free and people were bring people to the Y, we do ask encouraged to bring a doif people would like to donate nation of non-perishable they are more than welcome to items for Trenton’s Care donate to our Strong Kids camand share Food Bank. paign but it is free, we like to “I think it’s amazing, it’s have people come in and see what amazing for the commuwe offer,� she said. nity to come together and Back again this year is the donate food, so it’s really Christmas ornament auction great,� said Mellanie Widdito raise money for the YMCA’s field, who brought her famStrong Kids program. ily to the event. The ornaments are made by Widdifield, who has had Sue Korver and other YMCA a family membership at the employees and are hanging on YMCA since September, display on the grand Christmas said the event was well done. tree in the YMCA’s foyer, ready “It’s been really good, we to be sold. showed up to have pancakes “All of the proceeds go to ad pictures with Santa beStrong Kids and last year we cause we haven’t done it yet, raised almost $2,000,� said Ward. “This year has been the biggest turnout so far,� she said. and it’s great.� “I’m thinking next year we’ve got to step up and have it in “There are little owls, mini wreaths, angels and different reThe annual breakfast was a hit, drawing in 100 people our gym so it’s a bigger space, we’re running our of chairs cycled items made into Christmas ornaments.� within the first hour and 250 people by 11 a.m., said Tiffany Some of the ornaments have a fixed price and others can now so next year will be a bigger event.� Ward, supervisor of child, youth, family and aquatics. Ward said events like the breakfast are a great way to bring be purchased through a donation. community members together
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Red Nose volunteers play hard, but work hard to keep community safe on the roads BY STEPHEN PETRICK
Belleville – Garnet Thompson often walks into Operation Red Nose headquarters wearing his red foam nose, a gift that’s traditionally given to the operation’s honorary chair. Coralee Lloyd, meanwhile, wears a different array of funny things on different nights. In the past she’s dressed as a snowman and a penguin. Last Saturday night she had a toque shaped like a dog wearing a Santa hat, complete with ears that flopped around. The atmosphere at 160 Catherine St. in Belleville – the CAW Local 8300 union building where volunteers gather on select Christmas season nights to co-ordinate efforts to help holiday revellers arrive home safe – is nothing short of zany. Jokes roll off tongues, laughter echoes through the building and a bountiful food spread, often donated by local businesses, all make for a fun party. The humorous wardrobes, the goodwill and camaraderie may all be a product of people knowing they’re doing a good work for the community. Operation Red Nose has become a staple in Quinte’s Christmas season, as it has run continuously since 2004. Those who call to request the service have volunteers meet them at their location to drive themselves and their car home safely. The service is aimed to prevent impaired driving accidents at a time of year where there’s greater risk they’ll occur. And it works. To the knowledge of local organizers, there’s never been a drunk driving fatal accident in the Quinte area on a night Red Nose has operated in recent history. And that’s something to celebrate – or in Lloyd’s case, to get your dog hat’s ears flapping about. “It’s important what we do as volunteers,” she said, after demonstrating how the hat works. “We’re like a family. And
Red Nose is an opportunity to not only support charities, but to support people in the community.” There’s no direct fee for Operation Red Nose services, but donations of any amount are encouraged. Donations this year will support the YMCA’s Strong Kids campaign and Camp Trillium, a camp located on an island in West Lake, Wellington, for kids fighting cancer. And with three weeks to go in this year’s campaign, organizers are expecting this year’s final numbers to be great. Operation Red Nose has already had some busy nights. On Friday, Dec. 9, 15 teams of volunteers went on 111 runs. Early into Saturday evening, they were expecting to be even busier and 20 teams of volunteers were ready. On Saturday, Dec. 3, organizers had another big night, with a total of 146 rides. On Saturday, Nov. 26, they completed 93 rides – a large number for such an early part of the campaign. As a result of the busy campaign “donations are up,” Thompson noted. “And that’s important.” Thompson was announced as this year’s honorary cochair in a ceremony in November, along with fellow city councillor Jack Miller. Thompson said it was a huge honour to get the nod. He has volunteered with Red Nose for about eight years and always enjoys being part of the fun family-like atmosphere. “I put my red nose on and enter the building, and that gets a real reaction,” he said, adding that the fun part about volunteering is “the friendship, the togetherness you have as a team. And it really is a team.”
Nick Hubel and Coralee Lloyd were among the Operation Red Nose Quinte volunteers ready to help on Saturday, Dec. 10. Lloyd often wears a funky costume when volunteering. Stephen Petrick/Metroland
While the headquarters is often a buzz with activity around 8 p.m., later in the night it will get quiet, as volunteers begin to roll out, Thompson said. The busiest hours are around 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. But volunteers are willing to work late, because they realize there’s a chance the service will save someone’s life. Thompson said there’s something beautiful about a team of volunteers who work hard around the holidays, for no personal gain. “We don’t expect anything,” he said, explaining that donating to the charities is optional. “Give us what you can and let’s keep the roads safe.” Operation Red Nose Quinte will be operating for eight more nights this season: Dec. 15-17, Dec. 22-23 and Dec. 29-31. With the demand for rides on the rise, more volunteers are needed. To learn more about volunteering or the service visit www.rednosequinte.com . To access the service call 613-9624334. The service is available as long as the trip either starts or stops in Belleville or Trenton.
Belleville city councillor Garnet Thompson is a Red Nose’s honorary co-chair this year. He often wears his red foam nose when volunteering. Stephen Petrick/Metroland
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Batawa Ski Hill opens this weekend Batawa – The 15 to 20 cm of snow the Quinte region got over the weekend came at a great time as the Batawa Ski Hill readies to open up the slopes for the season on Saturday Dec. 17. “With the hard work from our snowmaking team and all the snow and cool temperature we’ve gotten from Mother Nature, we’re ready to welcome skiers and snowboarders to the hill this weekend,” said new general manager Brian Diedenhofen. “The forecast is calling for a snowy winter and we can’t wait to get it started on Saturday.” The Hill will be open Saturday from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. If the cold weather continues through the week, the majority of the nine runs will be open, as well as the Terrain Park. The hill will be open extended hours for the holidays from December 26 through to January 7th. “Season Pass sales have been really strong this year,” said Diedenhofen. “The less expensive Night Passes are making skiing more affordable for local families and we can’t wait to see everyone here in the evenings.” Along with lots of new rental equipment, a new General Manager and new Batawa merchandise, the hill is welcoming Chef Nicholas Loshak to the team. Loshak has some new events planned for the season. “Now that the Chalet is fully licensed, we’re going to hold some really cool ‘après ski’ events,” said Loshak. “We’ll have local beer on tap, wines from Prince Edward County and we’re going to do some specialty menus and live music. I want to make the chalet ‘the place to be’ this winter.” Sales continue for Season Passes and the popular “Booter Card” loyalty cards. There is still time to take advantage of early bird pricing on Season Passes and Night Passes until December 31st. A gathering place for friends and families since 1959, Batawa Ski Hill offers adventure and discovery all year long. Skier Niko Horning hits the slopes. The Batawa Ski Hill will open the slopes for the 2016-2017 season on Saturday Dec. 17. Photo submitted In winter, ski and snowboard enthusiasts enjoy nine runs, including a terrain park, day and night with energy efficient LED lights.
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The Trenton Golden Hawks of the Ontario Junior Hockey League toured Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Trenton Monday, getting to see such base highlights at the Small Arms Trainer (SAT), the Air Mobility Training Centre (AMTC), the bird man and they were given a flight on a C-130J model Hercules. We caught up with them at the one place we were sure they would not miss, the Yukon Galley, where they had lunch. Trenton Golden Hawks General Manager John McDonald said one of the young hockey players was considering attending the Royal Military College in Kingston before the tour was over.
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MOTORCOACH TOURS 14 Quinte West News - Thursday, December 15, 2016
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Golden Hawks beat rivals Cobourg Cougars BY ERIN STEWART’
Trenton – The Trenton Golden Hawks took down their division rivals the Cobourg Cougars 4-3 on home ice, Friday Dec. 9. About 800 fans packed Trenton’s arena to watch the game, which kicked off with a high-scoring first period. Nine seconds into the period Trenton’s Michael Silveri scored the first goal of the game, assisted by co-captain Lucas Brown. Four more goals followed in the first period, another one scored by Silveri and Trenton’s Jordan Chard, while Cobourg bounced back with two goals, one scored by Josh Maguire and Hunter Atchison on the power play. With the score 3-2 for Trenton going into the second period, the Hawks’ Austin Bottrell picked up the only goal in the second period for a 4-2 lead going into the third. After many scoring opportunities for the Hawks at the beginning of the third, Cobourg pushed back and Spencer Roberts scored on the power play 10 minutes into the period. The Hawks managed to hold onto their one goal lead with good defence and came out on top 4-3. Cobourg faced 18 minutes in penalty time on five infractions while Trenton incurred 24 minutes on eight penalties. Trenton’s goalie Chris Janzen saved 42 out of the 45 shots
sent his way while Cobourg’s Matt Menna stopped 31 out of 35 shots. “We did pretty good, anytime you get a ‘w’ against a team like Cobourg you’ve got to feel pretty good about the way your guys played,” said the Hawks’ assistant coach Kevin Forrest. Although there is definitely room for improvement, he said. “There’s still areas in our game we felt that we could be stronger, the penalty kill being one of them,” he said. “All three of their goals were power play goals for them so obviously we want to focus on our power kill over the next little while.” The Hawks’ performance against their division rivals has improved since their first contest, said Forrest. The Hawks and Cobourg have now faced each other three times, Cobourg winning the first contest and the Hawks coming out on top for the next two. “It certainly feels like the newer guys who aren’t accustomed to the rivalry yet are
getting to understand it now,” said Forrest. “After two games they showed improvement tonight so that showed they’re getting in it, they know it’s always a tough game against a good team like them, they’ve adjusted and they generally step up their game now.” Silveri agreed and said the team has improved their game against Cobourg and played a full game. “We’re coming along really well,” he said. “We played really well in that game, I think we played a full 60 minutes, a good team win.” The Hawks, who now sit at 27-5-1-0, will hit the road to face the Newmarket Hurricanes on Thursday Dec. 15. The Hawks will then host the Stouffville Spirit at home on Friday Dec. 16 at 7:30 p.m.
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Lotto riches rain on Roseneath family Roseneath - A family of eight from Roseneath received an early holiday gift in the form of a $12 million lottery win. The group – members of the Bevan-McBride families - arrived at the OLG Prize Centre in Toronto in a stretch limousine, to claim a $12,371,981.20 prize from the December 3, 2016 Lotto 6/49 draw. The group members are: Carl Bevan Beverley (Bev) McBride Amber and Christopher Coupland Amy and Christopher Heales Ashley and Luke Bevan “We play LOTTO 6/49 every week and have won a few small prizes but clearly nothing even close to this amount,” shared group leader and Dad, Carl Bevan. “Our selection is made up of numbers that represent everyone’s special dates.” According to a statement from OLG, on Sunday, Dec 4, Carl and his wife, Bev followed their usual routine. “Bev and I always go for breakfast and then after, we head to the store and check our tickets. And like every other week, we walked into the store, fully expecting nothing more than a Free Play. That’s when all hell broke The family of Carl Bevan and Bev McBride celebrate their $12.3 million lotto win in Toronto this week. loose,” joked Carl in recounting Photo courtesy of Ontario Lottery Corp. the tale for OLG. “The terminal froze and I saw the words, ‘Big tailer said, ‘It’s a big win, more to call the store and confirm their saw lots of numbers with a 12 at Winner’ flash on the screen. I had than $1,000.’” win, Carl walked over to the ticket the start. It looked like $12,000. I no clue what that meant. The reAs Carl and Bev waited for OLG checker and scanned his ticket. “I quickly pulled the ticket back and
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B2 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016
New bill spells end of Community Care Access Centres – but services expected to continue BY STEPHEN PETRICK
Belleville – A new health care bill coming out of Queen’s Park is expected to signal the end of Community Care Access Centres, but the services they provide is intended to continue, only with staff under a different management system. On Wednesday, Dec. 7 the Ontario Legislature passed Bill 41, the Patients First Act. The bill allows CCAS to fall under the management of Local Health Integration Networks. There are 14 CCACs in the province, and the Quinte region is covered by the Southeast CCAC, an organization that employs about 400 people and treats more than 14,000 patients per day in a region spanning, roughly, from Quinte West to Brockville. CCAC workers deliver nursing and per-
sonal support services to patients at homes, schools and elsewhere in the community. They also handle seniors’ admissions into longterm care homes. The news of the bill’s passing was expected, said Gary Buffett, a spokesperson for the South East CCAC. But it shouldn’t cause any panic among CCAC staff or patients. “It will end the CCACs as a corporation, but the work of community care will still happen,” he said. “It’s aligning the two administrations.” He said the changes are intended to put health care management “under one roof ” to lead to better planning. “We’re confident that the changes are going to improve patient care,” he said. The changes are expected to
begin in May, he said. He expects many staff will still work out of its relatively new office at the Bayview Mall in Belleville. “Our focus remains on patients, we’re still here, providing care and coordinating care. There’s no immediate changes.” Buffett said there’s hope that the changes will allow for more funds to be directed towards patient care, as “there are potentially some savings by aligning the high level positions” when the two organizations merge. But Prince Edward-Hastings Member of Provincial Parliament Todd Smith has a different take on the bill. Smith, a member of the Opposition Progressive Conservative party, argues the Act expands the authority of both the Ministry of Health the Local Health Integra-
tion Networks in making heath care networks. The Tories have long pushed for the removal of LHINs, saying they add an unnecessary level of bureaucracy to Ontario’s already expensive health care system. “They’re doubling down on the same types of policies that got us in this mess in the first place,” Smith said during Bill 41 debate at Queen’s Park on Dec. 7. “What the government is doing with the new iteration of LHINs is creating an even larger bureaucracy.” Smith also criticized the bill, saying it’s removing the ability of the Ontario Ombudsman to oversee the healthcare system and issue independent reports. That role will now be filled by the Patient Ombudsman, an office that isn’t independent and answers directly to the Minister of Health,
Smith said. “The title of the bill shouldn’t be the Patients First Act; it should be the bureaucrats first act, because that’s what we’re actually seeing: the creation of more layers of bureaucrats, more people sitting in offices, pushing pencils and paper—people who aren’t actually providing the services that are so necessary,” Smith said in a statement. “The government hasn’t listened to those who are integral in providing health services … It hasn’t listened to those who have been trained to provide the services that we require. They were ignored when this piece of legislation was being put together, when it was being debated at committee and when it’s being debated in the Legislature. We can do so much better.”
Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B3
Educators and employers in Quinte team up for skills training Belleville -- The Ontario government is supporting the Quinte Economic Development Commission and Loyalist College on a skills training pilot intended to give jobseekers a training opportunity in the manufacturing sector that can lead to long-term employment. Lou Rinaldi, Member of Provincial Parliament for Northumberland-Quinte West, recently attended the Quinte Business Development Centre, where he highlighted that the province is investing $895,000 in Elevate Plus, a new skills training pilot for the manufacturing sector in the Quinte region. The project will train up to 120 people in industry-specific skills that employers need. Employer partners in the pilot host placements that have the potential to turn into permanent positions for job seekers with
long-term sustainability and opportunities for advancement. By early December, 11 jobseekers had graduated from the program, and all found employment upon completion of the program. Supporting skills training in the manufacturing sector is part of the government’s economic plan to build Ontario up and make life easier for the people of Ontario. “I’m thrilled that our government is making a major investment to ensure Quinte region jobseekers receive the highest standard of skills training,� said Rinaldi. “The Elevate Plus skills training pilot we announced will give up to 120 people the skills and hands-on experience they need to thrive in the manufacturing industry, and contribute to our economy.�
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B4 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016
Major change coming for Hastings County of county structures and activities, including the economic development and tourism department. While most senior county staff attended and were introduced, economic development head Andrew Redden was not present nor mentioned. (A call for a complete review of that department was made by Reeve Carl Tinney some months ago.) Cooney also referred to a “new pilot project� in collaboration with the LHIN and the Victorian Order of Nurses on assisted living care for seniors at the 245247 Bridge St. property in Belleville and promoted more such collaborations and “working together.� The former Social Services Committee will be renamed Community and Human Services Committee along with a review of programs and services and integration of more programs. There will be an emphasis on new technology and its application under a new expert staffer, hired in recent months and a complete �staff succession plan� developed in the wake of a wave of retirements affecting municipal operations across eastern Ontario. Cooney also wants a review of emergenChain of office - Judge Richard Byers places cy services to see if new equipment or more the chain of office around the neck of Rodney Cooney, Warden of Hastings County for staff is needed to tidy up response times especially in centre Hastings. 2017-18. Formal greetings came from several past Jack Evans/Metroland wardens in the audience, and congratulations in person or by mail from neighbourBY JACK EVANS The winds of change will be sweeping ing mayors, MPPs and MPs. Having commented several times on difthrough Hastings County with the official induction of Stirling-Rawdon Mayor Rodney ficulties dealing with provincial officials on key issues affecting Stirling-Rawdon, asked Cooney as county warden Thursday. After taking his oath of office from Judge if he expected to get any extra clout as warRichard Byers, Cooney launched into a speech den, Cooney responded: “I certainly hope outlining massive change and new ideas affect- so.� Following the traditional “history lesson� ing every part of the county’s operations. He also took time to present his wife, Lisa, with by Bancroft Mayor Bernice Jenkins, based a bouquet of red roses and a buss, along with on minutes of council from 100 years ago, introducing children, grandchildren, parents, Judge Byers, in administering the oath of ofand members and officials of his own council. fice, commented: “I represent a tradition of Major changes planned include amending justice under the Crown that has prevailed the procedural bylaw to allow all members of for hundreds of years, almost back to 1066. council to sit on both the Planning and Devel- It is a system that has worked well and fairly opment and Finance, Property and Personnel and one that many people in many other committees because of a new official plan and countries would die to have.� The veteran Prince Edward County jusother issues of great interest to all members. Cooney called a special meeting for Jan. 17 to tice smiled, “This is my second last job as a meet with a consultant on an overall review judge before retiring.�
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Belleville singer is example for seniors BY JACK EVANS
Belleville - Fifty years and seven careers ago, Belleville’s Elaine A. Small was an acclaimed chanteuse performing regularly in the Royal York Hotel, working with leading musicians in North America. In the past few years she has become an awardwinning author with her book “Priests in the Attic.” Then she went on for special vocal coaching by an international expert, Per Bristow. She resumed her career as a vocalist with a CD of classic ballads. More recently, she has completed recording another CD backed by some of Canada’s finest – Brian Barlow on drums, Guido Basso on flugelhorn and trumpet, Robi Botos, 2016 Juno winner, on piano, Mark Eisenman and Michael Francis. The sessions were recorded in the downtown Belleville studio of Ken Harnden at Pinnacle Music. In an interview last weekend, Small recalled how a number of the recording sesThe cover of Elaine Small’s new CD, “All or Noth- sions had to be delayed because of vibraing at All” features a recent photo of the aging tions from the continuing reconstruction singer. work on the street outside. Now on sale Photo submitted at local retail outlets and being circulated
around the world, Small’s still powerful but mature voice handles a range of classics like ”What Is This Thing Called Love,” “Mood Indigo,” “Fly Me to the Moon,” “There’ll Be Some Changes Made,” a medley of Gershwin classics and Irving Berlin’s evergreen, “Always.” While obviously wanting to promote sales of her new CD, Small says she mainly wants to recognize the musicians involved and even more as an example of what one can achieve at an advanced age. Before she embarked on her singing career, she was an X-ray technician at various Toronto hospitals. Soon she was on the stage with the likes of Lucio Agostini , Tony Bennett, Gordy Tapp, Gordon Pinsent, Mitzi Gaynor and more in a career which took her to major North American markets. In an effort to maintain her family life, she eventually worked into the fashion industry, becoming a buyer for Eaton’s, The Bay and Holt-Renfrew. The travel involved also started to impact her family life, so she went into real estate, then into the hospitality industry, getting involved in a motel and restaurant and later the historic Tara
Hall in Wellington as a bed and breakfast. Along the way, she returned to complete her Master’s degree in English at York University, picking up on a lifelong interest in writing. The book, “Priests in the Attic” resulted, a biography about how her confidence in herself kept her going and growing. “When life takes a sour turn, you can do one of two things,” she said – “give up - or meet the problem head on.” Since resuming her singing career in recent years, she credits much of her success to Brian Barlow, a consummate Canadian musician and Quinte area resident. “He has encouraged and helped me in so many ways,” she stressed. Part of that comeback was a return visit to the banquet room in the Royal York Hotel 50 years after her first appearance. She also credited Per Bristow, the Nordic vocal expert, who gave her lessons via the Internet and later used her as an international example of his vocal development ideas. In one commentary, he said of Small: “What a great role model for those who think they’re too old just because they’ve turned a certain age.”
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www.insidebelleville.com Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B5
EVENTS BELLEVILLE BEST WEIGHT Monthly Workshop: Learn non-diet ways to reach your Best Weight.Dec. 16, 10 – 11:30 am, 161 Bridge St. West, Belleville. Advance registration required. Call Belleville and Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-9620000, ext. 233. EMMAUS CANCER Support Group meet Dec 19th at 6 pm at Hastings Park Bible Church, 36 Harder Drive, Belleville. Please join us for caring and sharing at our Christmas meeting. Our group is open to anyone coping with cancer, their family members and/or caregivers. We welcome all returning and new members. Please contact Sandy at 613-922-5804 CHRISTMAS EVE and Christmas Morning Services at Bridge St. United Church – Christmas Eve at 4:30 p.m.. Christmas Morning at 10:30 a.m. Everyone welcome! Northwest corner of Bridge and Church Streets at 60 Bridge St. E., Belleville. BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic for Dec. 16 2016 has been CANCELLED. The next clinic will be Jan. 20 2017. NATIVITY FESTIVAL & Concert This is the Christ 7 p.m., Dec 18 135 Palmer Road, Belleville The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Everyone welcome FREE CONCERT Glad Tidings to All Carol Sing-Along Celebration at Bridge St. United Church, Dec. 18, 2:30 p.m. Brass, Vocal Choir & Guests, Bell Ringers, Pipe Organ. Bring your family and friends! Freewill Offering. 60 Bridge St. E., Belleville. THE MONTHLY meeting of Hastings Manor Auxiliary will be held on Dec 21 at 12: 45 p.m. in the Volunteer Education Centre on the main floor of Hastings Manor.New members and visitors are always welcome. LIONS CLUB, every 2nd and 4th Tues. dinner and meeting. 2nd Tues. catered dinner, 4th Tues. pot luck. both at 7p.m. Meeting 7:45 p.m. 119 Station Street. Please call 613 962-6559 RENTERS CURLING every Monday and Tuesday, 8:30 am. Belleville Curling Club. $8.00 /game. Teams made up daily, no experience is necessary. Info Wayne 613-966-7184 or Gerry at 613-962-0516. HAPPY HARMONY Women’s Choir sings hits from across the decades with emphasis of 50s/60s Thursdays 7-9 pm at Brittany Brant Music Centre, off Hwy #2 ten minutes east of Belleville Hospital. Phone 613-438-7664. Join us for a free trial DEC 18 @ 4:30 PM — The Choirs of St. Thomas’ Anglican Church, Belleville, will be presenting “Carols by Candlelight,” a Festival of Lessons & Carols. A reception will follow. Admission: Pay-What-You-Can MEALS ON Wheels Belleville: Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday a hot meal delivered to your door around noon. Frozen meals available for delivery. Info Joanne at 613-969-0130 QUINTE QUILTER’S Guild, 7 PM, first Wednesday of the month. St Columba Church, Bridge St. E. Everyone is welcome. QUINTE REGION Crokinole Club, evB6 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016
ery Tuesday, 6:30 p.m., Quinte Wellness Centre, Cannifton Rd., Belleville. Info: Dave Brown at 613-967-7720 or Louis Gauthier at 613-849-0690. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Belleville General Hospital Auxiliary seeks adults and students at least 16 years of age to volunteer in a variety of hospital settings, daytime Monday to Friday. Some weekend shifts available. Call BGHA Volunteer Office at 613-969-7400 ext 2297 to set up an information session QUINTE LANDLORDS Association members meet, network, share knowledge, hear a guest speaker, third Wednesday of month at 630pm. Advance registration required Fee: $10. To register, use the contact form on our website quintelandlordsassociation.ca or call (613) 707-3879 TGIF FROZEN Meal Distribution Every Friday @ Bridge St. United Church, 60 Bridge St. E. These nutritious, churchmade & frozen meals can be picked up Fridays between 2 and 4 p.m. Register on first visit by showing I.D. for each meal you pick up. No cost/no pre-ordering. MONDAY BINGO; Tuesday Cribbage; Wednesday Euchre; Thursday Carpet Bowling and Shuffleboard; Friday Darts and the 3rd Sunday of every month Cribbage. All start at 1:00 p.m. Open to all seniors 50 and over. Trillium 2000 Seniors Club, 75 St. Paul St., Belleville STROKE SUPPORT Programs: Facilitated survivor, caregiver, and couples support groups. All groups meet on a monthly basis in Belleville. Info: Lee 613-9690130 ext. 5207 MEN’S COFFEE Break, for men caring for their spouse or other loved one who has memory loss. Westminster United Church, 1199 Wallbridge Loyalist Rd, Belleville. 3rd Friday of the month, 9:30am. Free. ST. MARK’S United Church 237 Cannifton Rd. N., offers Foot Care Clinic - 4th Thursday of month. VON basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot care. For appointment call VON at 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346 PROBUS CLUB Of Belleville meets the 2nd and 4th Thursdays every month, 10 am at the Pentecostals of Quinte, 490 Dundas St. W. For retired and/or semiretired business and professional people. Social time and a guest speaker. Guests are welcome. FREE SENIORS Exercise Classes VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350. APPLE ROUTE Grannies meet the second Saturday of each month, Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church Hall, Prince Edward St, 9 a.m. Supporting the Stephen Lewis Foundation African Grannies. Info: 613-475-5260. FOOD ADDICTS in Recovery Anonymous, Wednesdays, 7 p.m., St. Columba Presbyterian Church, 520 Bridge St E, Belleville for those suffering from overeating, food obsession, under-eating, or bulimia. No dues or fees for members. Info: Susan at 613-471-0228 or Hilly at 613-354-6036 or visit foodaddicts.org. JOIN QUINTE West’s Kente Kiwanis.
Meetings held every Thursday morning. Everyone welcome. Call Secretary John Eden at 613-394-0316 for more info. FRIENDS OF the Quinte West Library Book Sale, every Tues and Thurs and the last Sat of month, 10 am-1 pm. Accepting book donations as well. 25 cents to $1.50. Quinte West Public Library. THE CANADIAN Hearing Society offers Walk In Wednesdays from 10 am-noon and 2-4pm. Speak to a Hearing Care Counsellor. No appointment necessary. Bayview Mall, 470 Dundas St. E Belleville OPEN DOOR Café - Every Wednesday from 11:30-1:00pm at Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge St. E, Belleville. There is no cost for this hot meal however donations are gratefully accepted. For more info: 613 969-5212. TUESDAYS @ 9:00AM Friends of Ferris FREE Weekly Guided Walking Group. We meet rain or shine at the Suspension Bridge in Ferris Provincial Park at 9:00am every Tuesday.
BRIGHTON TOBACCO TALKS Quit-Smoking Support Program, Dec 21, 1 pm, Brighton Health Service Centre (1st Floor, 170 Main St.). Program to answer questions/ provide support for people trying to quit smoking Drop-in or make appointment. For more information, call the Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1518. SUPPER’S READY, Trinity St Andrew¹s United Church, every Wednesday, 5 pm. A community meal for those for whom a free meal is a blessing. Donations welcome. JOYFULL NOISE Women’s Choir practices every Monday evening 7 - 9 p.m, Brighton Legion. We sing the popular music of the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s. No auditions and you DO NOT need to read music. New members welcome. Info: Cathy 613 397 3236. www.joyfull-noise.com BRIGHTON SENIORS Club looking for new members. Meeting 3rd Wednesday of month. Potluck lunch at noon followed by short business meeting,guest speakers and cards. Other social events through the year. Contact Joan Walker 613-475-4631. THE BRIGHTON All Star Concert Band rehearsing every Wednesday, 7-9pm, all summer at Trinity St Andrew¹s Church, Brighton. Open to anyone who plays a concert instrument. BRIGHTON LIONS Club is looking for new members. Meetings are 2nd and 4th Mondays of each month at the Community Centre in Brighton. Info Membership Chairperson Fran Fulford 613- 475-0475 ALZHEIMER SOCIETY, Brighton caregiver support group meets the third Monday of every month, Applefest Lodge 2-4 P.M. For family and friends of someone with a dementia. Info: Sharon 613-394-5410
CAMPBELLFORD FOOTCARE CLINIC- 1st Fri, 2nd and 3rd Thurs Each Month Royal Canadian Legion. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call the VON at 1-888-2794866 ex 5346
SOLO FRIENDSHIP Group for Solo adults aged 45 and up looking for friendship. Wednesdays 1-2:30 pm, Riverview Restaurant, Campbellford. TOBACCO TALKS Quit-Smoking Support Program, Dec 22, 1 pm, Campbellford Community Resource Centre (65 Bridge St. E.). Program to answer questions/provide support for people trying to quit smoking and/or give up tobacco. Drop-in or make appointment. For more information, call the Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1518. MEET THE Nurse, Dec 22, 10 am to Noon, Ontario Early Years Centre (Rotary Hall, 179 Saskatoon Ave.) in Campbellford. Parents with children up to age six years can meet with a Public Health Nurse. Call 1-866-888-4577 for more information. SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic, Dec 20, 10 am to Noon. The clinic provides clients with confidential access to sexual health Testing and treatment. For more information, locations or to make an appointment, call the Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205. ST. JOHN’S United Church Choir and Friends of Campbellford present Prelude to Christmas on Dec 16 at 7 PM & Dec 17 at 3 PM.Admission at the door. Cost: Adults: $15; Students over 12 : $10;Children 11 and under: Free; Family Fee $ 30. NOV 1-MID April, Indoor Walking and Exercise Program, St. John¹s United Church Auditorium, Tuesdays and Fridays, 1011am. Please bring clean, comfortable shoes. 50 Bridge St. W. Campbellford. Info 705-653-2283. CAMPBELLFORD LEGION Br 103, 34 Bridge St Campbellford, 705 653 2450. Thurs 730 pm open 8-ball, Sunday 3-7 pm open Jam Session No cover JAPANESE SWORD Classes, every Monday 7-8:30pm, Trent Hills Karate Club, Trent Hills Martial Arts, Saskatchewan Ave., Campbellford WARKWORTH SPINNERS and Weavers Guild meet the second Thurs. of every month, 10am, upstairs at the Campbellford Library. Info: warkworthguild@gmail.com. New members always welcome SUNDAY NIGHT Sing hosted by Ivanhoe Wesleyan Standard Church, 6:30 PM. Bring your instruments. Open mic. Refreshments to follow. First Sunday of each month. EVERY MONDAY, 7 p.m. Campbellford Citizen’s Choir meets at Senior Citizen’s Building. All welcome LEARN THE Art of Taoist Tai Chi classes available throughout the week, Community Resource Centre 65 Bridge St, Campbellford, Join at anytime. Info: 705 696 1841 or 705 243 5216. CAMPBELLFORD KINETTE Bingo every Thursday at 7pm. Campbellford/ Seymour Arena, 313 Front St. N. $1000 Jackpot in 54 numbers, consolation prize of $200. Wheelchair accessible.
COBOURG SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic, Dec 20, 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm. The clinic provides clients with confidential access to testing and treatment. For more information, locations or to make an appointment, call the
Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205. THE ETERNAL Hope Spiritualist Centre is now located at 284 Division St. Cobourg. Sunday service 7pm. Pot luck supper first Sunday of month at 5:30 p.m. Info: www. theeternalhopespiritualistcentre.webs.com. MEN’S GROUP, every Thursday, 1pm, Cobourg Retirement Residence, 310 Division St, Cobourg. To register: Community Care Northumberland: 905-372-7356.
CODRINGTON 2ND WEDNESDAY of the month, Codrington Women’s Institute 7:15 pm, Codrington Community Centre CODRINGTON COMMUNITY Centre, 3rd Wednesday of month, Codrington Seniors Group meets at noon for a Pot Luck lunch.
COLBORNE MEET THE Nurse, Dec 16, 10 am to Noon, Colborne Public School (8 Alfred St.). Parents with children up to age six years can meet with a Public Health Nurse. Call (905) 885-9100 or 1-866-888-4577 for more information. COLBORNE LIBRARY Storytime program for children 2-5 years. Thursdays at 11:00am This free program introduces the world of books to your children. To register call 905 357-3722 or drop by (library hours: Mon. 3-8, Tues. & Thurs. 11-8, Fri. & Sat. 11-4). FOOD ADDICTS Anonymous Meetings, Wednesdays, 11-noon, Prospect House, 1 Elgin Street (at King), Colborne, www. foodaddictsanonymous.org EVERY SATURDAY is Meat Draw, Colborne Legion. Draws at 3pm, 4pm and 5pm. $8.00 for nine chances to win. Everyone is welcome. LADIES AUXILIARY Moonshot Euchre every 3rd Sunday of month, Colborne Legion. Lunch 12:00, Cards sat 13:00. Info: Sandy Boland at 905-355-5148 or Barb Smith at 905-355-3896 FREE EXERCISE Class, Tuesdays and Thursdays 9:15 am – 9:45 am Keeler Centre. Designed for seniors or those with physical limitations. For more information, please contact Brenda at (905) 355-2989. MEN’S SOCIAL Group, Tuesdays at Community Care Northumberland, 11 King St. E. Colborne, 10-11 a.m. Info: 905-355-2989. PLAY GROUP, hosted by Northumberland Cares for Children, Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred St. Colborne, Fridays, 10 a.m. to noon. Info: Cheryl McMurray 905-885-8137 ext.209.
FOXBORO CHRISTMAS GOSPEL Sing Chapel of the Good Shepard 513 Ashley St. Foxboro Dec 17 6:30 pm Come Join Us!
Events continued on B 7
EVENTS Continued from page B6
FRANKFORD BEEF ‘N Pork Buffet at the Quinte Masonic Centre, 33 King Dr., Frankford Dec16thSocial Hour 5:15 .Dinner 6:15 Only $15 All welcome! TOPS (TAKE off Pounds Sensibly), Wednesday, Anglican Church Hall, 60 N Trent Frankford, weigh-in 3-3:30pm. meeting 3:30-4:30 p.m. OPEN MIC, first Sunday of the month, 1-4 pm, Frankford Legion. Frankford Legion: Mondays Cribbage 1pm. Tuesdays, Euchre 1pm; Line dancing 7pm. Wednesdays, Seniors Euchre 1 pm; Open Snooker 7pm. Thursdays Ladies¹ Pool and Men¹s Darts 7pm. Fridays Mixed Fun Darts 7pm. GENTLE YOGA, Suitable for everyone. Classes every Tuesday 1pm, Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Frankford. Info: Sarah 613-398-6407 MOONSHOT EUCHRE every Wednesday, 1pm. Tournaments Every 3rd Sunday of the Month, 1pm. Frankford Lions Club FREE SENIORS fitness classes, Mondays and Thursdays, 1 pm, Frankford Legion. To register: 1-888-279-4866 Ext 5350 ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS Keep It Simple Group, 8 pm every Thursday at Holy Trinity Anglican Church Hall, 60 Trent St. N. (rear), Frankford. Info: www.quintewestaa.org or 1-866-951-3711
HASTINGS TODDLER AND Preschooler Dental Screening, Dec 16, 9-11 am, Hastings Field House (97 Elgin St.). An opportunity for parents to meet privately with Health Unit Oral Health. Call 1-866-888-4577 for more information. MEET THE Nurse, Dec 16, 9-11 am, Ontario Early Years Centre (6 Albert St. E.) in Hastings. Parents with children up to age six years can meet with a Public Health Nurse. Call 1-866-888-4577 for more information. HASTINGS LEGION .... Friday December 16, Ham and Turkey Roll. All are welcome 5:30p,. Dec 17 Last Chance Christmas Bazaar 10:00 am. tables $15. For information please contact Vicky Seeney 705- 696-2363 . Lunch available TOPS (TAKE Off Pounds Sensibly) meetings Wednesdays at the Trinity United Church, Hastings. Weigh-in 5:00-5:45pm and meeting 6:00-7:00 pm. Join anytime. For info Kathy (705) 696-3359 HASTINGS LEGION: Monday night snooker, Tuesday afternoon mixed darts, Wednesday afternoon snooker, Thursday night ladies pool and mixed darts, Friday night blind draw doubles mixed winter darts. Jam Session, second Sunday of month, 2-6 pm. Bring your instrument or voice. Everyone welcome. SALVATION ARMY Lunch, 11:30AM -1:00PM on the 2nd and the 4th Friday from September to June, Civic Centre, Hastings. Soup, sandwiches, salad, dessert, coffee, tea and juice. Everyone welcome.
chre, 1pm. Tuesday: Shuffleboard, 1pm. Wednesday: Carpet Bowling, 1pm and Euchre 7pm. Thursday: Bid Euchre, 1pm. Friday: Euchre, 1pm TRADITIONAL COUNTRY Music Jam Sessionsm Ol Town Hall, Matheson and Oak Streets, Havelock, every Wednesday. Doors open at 12:00, tunes begin at 1 pm. Bring your instruments (excluding drums), your voice, your song book. Musicians, vocalists and visitors welcomed and encouraged RCL HAVELOCK, Branch 389, 8 Ottawa St. weekly events. Monday Senior Darts, 12:30 pm. Bingo 6:30 pm. Tuesday Shuffleboard, 12:30 pm. Thursday Ladies¹Darts, 1 pm. Dec 19 Turkey Bingo 6:30pm BINGO EVERY Wednesday at the Havelock Community Centre sponsored by the Havelock Lions. Doors open at 5:30pm. Early Birds at 7:00 pm. Regular start 7:30 pm. Info: Lion Joe at 705 778 3588
MADOC CROKINOLE: THIRD Friday of every month, 8 p.m. at Trinity United Church (side entrance), St. Lawrence St. East. $2.50/person. Door prizes. Light lunch. ROYAL CANADIAN Legion Br 363 Madoc: Mixed Darts every Thursday 7 pm. Random draw for teams. MADOC SENIORS Club Bid Euchre, every Tuesday, 1 pm, downstairs at the Library (elevator accessible). 2nd Tuesday Pot Luck at noon prior to Bid Euchre BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic: Dec 21. 47 Wellington St, Seniors Building Common Room from 9:30-11:30 AM. Program opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register ACTIVE LIVING Exercise: Every Wednesday at 10:30AM at Trinity United Church, 76 St Lawrence St East. Program opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register AM INDOOR Walk: Mon, Wed, and Fri from 9:45 to 10:45 AM. PM Indoor Walk: Mon, Tues, Fri from 6:45 to 7:45 PM. Centre Hastings Secondary School, 129 Elgin St. Program opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register
MARMORA
MADOC - Dec. 18 at 7:00 Christmas Carols and Lessons at St. John’s Anglican Church, 115 Durham St. N Madoc. Led by St. John’s choir and friends. Everyone Welcome. DEC 18 at 7pm there will be a Christmas Cantata at St. Andrew’s United Church Marmora with performances by Carpe Diem. On Dec 19 at 7pm they will be performing at Trinity United in Madoc. All are welcome. EUCHRE - Seniors Citizens, William Shannon Room, each Friday 1:30 p.m. $2. MARMORA LEGION: Bingo every Monday,Early Birds start at 7PM Jam SesHAVELOCK HAVELOCK SENIORS Club weekly sion every Monday Club Room 6PM-9PM. events: Monday: Cribbage and Bid Eu- Mixed darts every Friday 1PM and 7:30Pm
Euchre Club room every Tuesday 7PM BADMINTON CLUB, Tues. and Thurs. 7-9 p.m. at Centre Hastings Secondary School, Sept. to June. A low cost way to exercise and have fun. Contact Terry at 613-473-5662 or Henry at 613-395-5798 or visit www.centrehastingsbadminton.com. GOOD FOOD Box depot, Marmora Pentecostal Church, 53 Madoc St. Fresh fruit and vegetables in $10 or $15 size boxes or bag of fruit for $5. Order/Pay by the first Wednesday of the month. Pick up on the third Wednesday. Order any Wed. between 10am-2pm. Elaine 613-472-3219 GOOD BABY Box, every Wednesday, Marmora Pentecostal Church, 53 Madoc St. 10 am to 2 pm. Baby formula, diapers, baby food, and more at low prices. Elaine 613-472-3219 EUCHRE IN Deloro Hall each Friday 7 p.m. sponsored by Marmora Crowe Valley Lions Club. Bring light lunch to share.
NORWOOD PRESCHOOL DROP-IN, Westwood Public Library. Every Thursday, 10 amnoon. Enjoy play and creative areas. 705696-2744 or www.anpl.org PRESCHOOL STORYTIME, Norwood Public Library. Every Friday, 10-11 am. Story, craft and snack. 705-639-2228 or www.anpl.org NORWOOD LEGION: Wing Night Thursdays, from 4:30pm. Meat Draws Fridays from 5 p.m. TAKE OFF Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Tuesdays, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Norwood. Weigh in from 5:30, meeting at 7 pm. Elaine 705-639-5710
P.E. COUNTY MEALS ON Wheels, Picton and Deseronto: Daily noon time meal delivered to your door. Info: Prince Edward Community Care 613-476-7493 or 613-396-6591 DINER’S CLUB, 1st Wednesday, 12-2 pm. Deseronto Community Centre, $6/ member. $7/non-member. Reservations required. Call 613-396-6591 ALBURY FRIENDSHIP Group - Quilts for sale each Wed 10 am - 12 noon. Albury Church Rednersville Rd. Proceeds to local charities for women. FREE SENIORS Exercise Classes VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350. WELLINGTON DISTRICT Lions Club - New members welcome. Club meets 2nd & 4th Wednesday of month, Wellington Town Hall. Info: Membership Chairs Marilyn or Stan at 613-399-1164. PICTON SHOUT Sister Choir welcomes new members. Practices are Thursdays, 7-9 p.m., St Mary Magdalene Church, 335 Main St, Picton. www.shoutsisterchoir.ca
STIRLING STIRLING AL-ANON Family Group, every Friday, 8 p.m., St. Pauls United Church, Stirling. 866.951-3711 STIRLING CLUB 55 and Over regular euchre every Wednesday in Stirling Legion 1pm. $2.00 to play, prizes and treats. Also
monthly birthday celebrations. Info Ruth 613-395-3559 ST PAULS United Church Sunday Service with Rev Bruce Fraser,10.30 am every week. Sunday School available. Come join us in fellowship RIVER VALLEY Community bid euchre party, River Valley Centre, every Friday 7:30 pm. Cost $ 2.00. Ladies bring something for a light lunch. Info: Grace Bush 613-395-5190
TRENTON TRENTON AL-ANON Family Group, every Wednesday, 8 p.m., Trenton United Church, 85 Dundas St. E. Trenton, Tel: 866-951-3711 TRENTON KNIGHTS of Columbus, 57 Stella Cres. Sunday & Wednesday Night Bingos 7pm. Cards on sale 5.30pm. Everyone welcome BEST WEIGHT Monthly Workshop: Learn non-diet ways to reach your Best Weight. Dec. 20, 1:00 – 2:30 pm, 70 Murphy St., Trenton. Advance registration required. Call 613-962-0000, ext. 233. SEWING SOCIAL, Tuesdays, 1-4pm, Trenton Library Bring your sewing machine (with power cord and foot control), your selected project, and an extension cord. Beginners are welcome. kristar@ quintewest.ca OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS meeting every Tuesday and Friday, 9:15 a.m. Seniors Centre, Bay St., Trenton. www.oa.org TRENTON TOASTMASTERS Club meets 6:30-8:30 pm, every 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month, Quinte West/Trenton Library Meeting Room Main Floor. We are looking for new members. Guests are welcome QUINTE BAY Cloggers every Friday, 6:30 - 9 pm, Salvation Army, 244 Dundas St E, Trenton. All ages welcome, no experience necessary. First two nights free, $5/ night. Info: Eve or Ozz at 613-966-7026 TRENTON VON Monday Mornings. VON Foot Care Clinic: Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346 QUINTE WEST MS Society Support Group, every second Monday of the month, Quiet Room, Quinte West Public Library, Trenton. 6:30pm. For those affected by MS, caregivers and friends. Info: trentonmsgroup@live.ca TRENTON LIONS Club 77 Campbell Street hosts a weekly Thursday Night Bingo. Cards on sale at 6pm regular program starts at 7pm. Everyone welcome. WEEKLY MONDAY Night Bingo, Upstairs of Stirling Arena. Cards on sale at 6:15pm. Starts at 6:50pm. Proceeds to support community projects. Sponsored by Stirling & District Lions Club.
TWEED TWEED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH would like to invite you to a Christmas Candlelight Service Dec 18, @ 6 pm Refreshments to Follow TWEED LIBRARY Free Santa Photos Dec 17th 11-12 Bring your camera or we can email you your picture. Christmas Tree Ornament Making Dec 17th 12-1:30.
Free Nutritional Workshop Dec 22: 10-11. Please register: 613-478-1066 FREE SENIORS exercise classes VON Falls Prevention classes. Starts Jan 9 info: 1888-279-4866 ex 5350 TWEED LEGION: Pool, shuffleboard, darts weekly. Open to everyone. Bi-weekly Thursday Open Bingo in the Upstairs Hall, 7 pm. Euchre every other Saturday in the Clubroom, 1 pm. Info 613-478-1865 FREE CRAVING Change workshop at Gateway CHC to change your thinking to change your eating habits. Info: the Dietitian at 613-478-1211 ext. 228. FREE COMMUNITY kitchens, Gateway CHC in Tweed, third Tuesday of each month, 1:30-3:30pm. Taste new foods, learn to cook in healthy ways, and meet new people. Info or to register, call the Dietitian at 613-478-1211 ext 228. TWEED TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), Mondays, 10-11:30 am, 23 McCamon Avenue, Tweed (Hillside Apartments) Common Room. Weight loss, Support - Food and Exercise plans. $2 per week. Info: Marilyn at 613-478-9957. SENIOR MEN’S ‘Huff and Puff’ Exercise Class, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10-11 AM, Land O’ Lakes Curling Club. Light weights available, bring your own mat. 7/ class or $40 monthly. Show up or contact Larry: 613-478-5994 FIT & Fun Ladies Exercise Classes: Mondays 9am Aerobics. Tuesdays 9am. Stretch & Strength. Thursdays 9am Balls & Bands. Fridays 9am Interval Training. Land O¹Lakes Curling Club, Tweed. $25/ mth or $7/class. Info: Judy 613-478-5994 or Jan 613-478-3680. BID EUCHRE every Tuesday, 7 p.m., Actinolite Recreation Hall
TYENDINAGA FREE LUNCH Time Fitness with Active membership at the Tyendinaga Fitness Resource Centre. $20.00 for seniors (55 +) $30.00 for adults no taxes or contracts Open to the Public. Stop in classes 12:15pm Monday to Thursday. (613) 962-2822 DINERS CLUB, 3rd Thursday of month, Tyendinaga Community Centre, 12-2 pm. $7/member. $8/non-member. Reservations required. Call 613-396-6591
WARKWORTH WARKWORTH LEGION hosts Moonshot Euchre, 1:30 p.m. every Wednesday. Dart League, 7:30 p.m. every Thursday. Everyone welcome CANADIAN CANCER Society, Warkworth Branch: Euchre, 4th Tuesday every month, 7:30 pm. $3 includes coffee and sandwiches.Everyone welcome. Warkworth Legion. Info: Kathy Ellis (705) 924-9116
WOOLER WOOLER UNITED Church welcomes all to join us on Sundays at 10:30 a.m. Sunday School and Nursery is available. h TUESDAYS – 9:30AM-10:30AM AND 5:30PM-6:30PM, thursdays – 9:30AM10:45AM FUN & FITNESS 55+. St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 20 Mill St, Warkworth705-632-0824 $5/class or an 8 week session for $40 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B7
TRAVEL
Unique and exhilarating adventures in the Smokies
BY JOHN M. SMITH
Many of my readers will already have heard of the devastating fire that recently struck Gatlinburg, Tennessee and area, including sections of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Well, I wanted to let you know that if you’re planning to pass through this area in the near future, then still go. Gatlinburg’s mayor, Mike Werner, who lost his home and business in this blaze, has stated that “If you want to help Gatlinburg, come back and visit us. We’re gonna be back . . . we’re gonna be better than ever.” He realizes just how important tourism is to Sevier County, and he’s determined to get things back on track as quickly as possible. Businesses in nearby Pigeon Forge and Sevierville suffered no serious damages, so they’re operating as usual. Dollywood, the state’s most visited ticketed attraction, is open, and the Smoky Mountain Winterfest Festival continues in this entire area. Even Pigeon Forge’s main strip still has many of its structures intact, including its very popular Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies. In the park itself, several of the hiking trails remain closed at this time, as well as some of the network of roads, but the Cades Cove Loop Road and Laurel Creek Road are again open. I’ve visited the Great Smoky Mountains on several occasions, and I’ve discovered that there‘s a plethora of exciting outdoor activities available for the entire family. Here’s a list of a half doz-
en of the best: Dollywood (www.dollywood. com): This 118 acre park offers thrills and entertainment for the whole family – from children’s rides and thrill rides to food outlets, crafts, unique shops, museums, and live shows. If you happen to stay at Dollywood’s Dream More Resort (www.dollywood.com/Resort), as I did, you can even take the free shuttle to the park and avoid the bother of parking and finding your vehicle again. Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies (www.ripleyaquariums. com/gatlinburg): This awesome attraction offers underwater tunnels for the viewing of exotic sea creatures, including mammoth sharks and humungous sea turtles. I also particularly enjoyed its Tropical Rainforest, Shark Lagoon, Penguin Encounter, and Touch a Ray Bay (where I, of course, touched a stingray). ATV Mountain Climb: One of my favourite adventures was a two hour guided ATV ride with Bluff Mountain Adventures (www.bluffmountainadventures. com). This was a real workout,
for the terrain was very rocky – and steep. This ride was fun! We ascended Bluff Mountain – and were rewarded with some spectacular views of the Smokies. We then went back down on a challenging mountain trail, encountering several streams and, therefore, lots of mud! Aerial Tours: Several helicopter tour companies offer aerial views of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. I took one of these awesome tours on a previous visit to the park, and I found it to be a great way to experience this area. I sat right beside the pilot, and I was amazed at just how smooth lift-off was. I saw several houses/estates built right into the mountainside – and I flew right over Bluff Mountain, the very area where I’d been on my exciting ATV tour. Foxfire Mountain Adventure Park (www.FoxfireMountain. com): This 150 acre Adventure Park offers high rope aerial adventures, ATV tours, hiking trails, a climbing wall, a children’s obstacle course, and America’s longest swing bridge. However, even more of a draw here is its world-class
Ziplining at Foxfire Mountain Adventure Park. John M. Smith/Metroland
zip-lines, for it includes a series of lines that zip you over a waterfall and through the treetop canopies of the Smokies (this course includes seven different lines and two sky bridges). On the Goliath, the highest zip line in the Smokies, you’ll soar well over 400 feet above the ground. It’s exhilarating!
Visitors are seen petting a stingray in Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies. John M. Smith/Metroland
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Pigeon Forge’s Outdoor Gravity Park (www.OutdoorGravityPark.com): This iconic zorbing adventure takes you down a hill in what looks like an oversized rotating plastic beach ball that contains several gallons of water. However, instead of somersaulting down the course, you’ll simply slide and splash along the bottom of the apparatus. It’s like a rotating barrel waterslide – and it’s a lot of fun. You can wear a swimsuit and enjoy the watery ride, or you can choose to do it dry (protected from the water inside by a second, interior capsule). There’s even an extreme zigzag course for the more adventurous! After completing your ride, you can go inside and watch your video, for a GoPro camera is installed inside – to capture your smiles and screams. There are, of course, several other unique and exhilarating adventures available in the Smokies, but these six would be at the top of my list. Enjoy! For More Information: www. nps.gov/grsm; www.tnvacation. com [Travel and accommodations provided by Tennessee Tourism]
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Symphony’s Mozart evening a Christmas dazzler BY JACK EVANS
Even people who didn’t think they liked Mozart were pleasantly surprised at Quinte Symphony’s “Mozart’s Last Words” concert in Bridge Street Church, last Saturday evening. The tribute to the child prodigy and composer, commemorating the 225th anniversary of his death, drew one of the largest crowds for a regular concert the orchestra has seen for some years, estimated at more than 400. The highlight was a full-blown performance of his “Requiem,” an inspiring and challenging work, which remained incomplete when Mozart died. It was completed by one of Mozart’s composition students, based on extensive notes Mozart had left. People would have to attend concert halls in major cities to hear any better soloists for this work, featuring home grown talents of Elizabeth McDonald, soprano; and Kim Dafoe, alto; plus longtime orchestra friend Bruce Kelly, bass-baritone and Robert Martin, tenor. They were backed by a 50-voice choir, which drew participants from across the Quinte area as far as Campbellford and even Kingston. While originally formed by former Bridge Street musician Terry Head, the choir training was completed by Michael Goodwin, now organist and choir leader at St Mary
Magdalene Church in Picton. Their efforts drew long and hearty standing applause and shouts of “bravo!” from a thrilled audience and satisfied conductor Dan Tremblay and his orchestral forces. The concert opened with the Overture to what is Mozart’s best loved and best known opera, “Die Zauberflote,” (The Magic Flute.) Then it was piano soloist Clare Gordon’s turn. In her first public performance in Belleville, this distinguished British-born pianist, now of Kingston, demonstrated sparkling personality and talent and a special understanding of Mozart in his Concerto No, 24, backed with polish and precision by Quinte Symphony. Orchestra officials report huge satisfaction with the support by the audience for this concert and are hoping for a similar turnout when Terry Head returns to the Bridge Street console on Sunday afternoon, Feb. 26 for a concert called “Avec Plaisir,” a concert focusing on French composers, especially Camille Saint Saens and his popular Organ Symphony. Comments from the audience were unanimous in their delight at this pre-Christmas concert without carols. The master of ceremonies agreed there was no special Christmas music but promised it would “seem like Christmas.”
Quinte Symphony music director Dan Tremblay conducts a performance Saturday at Bridge Street United Church. Stephen Petrick/Metroland
Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B9
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Quinte Conservation’s Adopt an Acre program is back Quinte Conservation’s popular Adopt an Acre program is back and will help support improvements at local Conservation Areas. Communications Manager Jennifer May-Anderson says, “The money raised with Adopt An
This year, if people adopt two or more acres, they will receive a plush toy chipmunk or fox as a thank you for the donation. Submitted photo
Acre will help us to put up interpretive signage at local conservation areas. We want to share important information about the natural heritage of these valuable local green and wilderness spaces including trail maps and information about invasive species.” May-Anderson added, “each year we offer local residents the opportunity to symbolically ‘adopt’ an acre of conservation land to help protect and preserve local green spaces. For $20 do-
nors, receive a tax receipt and an adoption certificate in the name of a loved one, friend, teacher or anyone who is interested in supporting a local environmental cause. People can adopt their acre by visiting or calling the Quinte Conservation office or going online to www.quinteconservation. ca.” This year, if people adopt two or more acres, they will receive a plush toy chipmunk or fox as a thank you for the donation.
Quinte Conservation hopes to adopt out 225 acres this year. Last year the program raised just over $4,000. In the past the program has helped to pay for signage at local conservation areas, habitat enhancement projects and invasive species removal. Quinte Conservation is a community-based environmental protection agency. It serves 18 municipalities in the watersheds of the Moira, Napanee and Salmon Rivers and Prince Edward County.
Brisbois acclaimed chair for Catholic school board John Brisbois, of Carrying Place, has been acclaimed as chair of the Algonquin and Lakeshore Catholic District School Board, following the inaugural meeting of the board Dec. 6. Brisbois will serve as chair for the 2017 board year. Trustee Terry Shea has been acclaimed to serve as vice-chair, and Trustee Sean Kelly has been acclaimed to
serve as chair of the Finance and Operations Committee. “I am proud to be a Catholic trustee and I am honoured to serve as the chair of this Board; a Board that represents the traditions of our faith and one that recognizes our part in an ever changing global society,” Brisbois said in his inaugural address. “As we begin this new board year, I look forward with hope, with
confidence, and with optimism, to a future where each student and staff member, in our Catholic school system is able to grow and mature into the person God has intended them to be.” This is Brisbois’ 10th year on the board of trustees with the Algonquin and Lakeshore Catholic District School Board. He was first elected to the board in December 2006 and most
recently served as vice-chair School in Trenton. He is a member on for the board. From 1988 to 2006, Brisbois taught at ALCDSB’s Social Justice St. Paul Catholic Secondary Committee, Food for Learn-
ing, Catholic Education Week Committee, the Quinte Poverty Challenge and Quinte Children’s Water Festival.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year e Shown here following the inaugural meeting of the Catholic school board are, from left, board trustees Sean Kelly, John Brisbois and Terry Shea. Submitted photo
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NHL flavour, speaker at Pond Hockey Classic BY ROSS LEES
CFB Trenton - Ottawa Senators owner and Honorary air force colonel Eugene Melnyk will be the special guest speaker at the CFB Trenton Pond Hockey Classic “Puck Drop” dinner on Feb. 3, the launch of the tournament on Feb. 4-5. With title sponsors Scotiabank and Scotia Wealth Management back in place this year, this sixth annual edition of the pond hockey tournament in Batawa is hoping to attract 32 teams to play Canadian Pond Hockey rules on five regulation pond hockey rinks in this picturesque setting along the Trent River just north of Trenton. As in the past couple of years, the recipients of the funds raised at this annual event will by the Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation and Wounded Warriors Canada (WWC). “The CFB Trenton Pond Hockey Classic has quickly become a wonderful annual community hockey tradition in Quinte region,” said Melnyk, who also owns the newly minted Belleville Senators. “As an honorary colonel of the Royal Canadian Air Force, I am exceptionally honoured to be part of an event that brings together our military and our community to help improve the lives of local residents and injured soldiers.” Melnyk is the Hon. Col. 414 Electronic Warfare Support Squadron. A second guest speaker will be featured at the dinner this year. In addition to Melnyk, Linda Blanchette will also speak about being the spouse of a veteran with PTSD. Capt. Jeff Moorhouse of 436 Transport Squadron (TS) noted at a press conference Tuesday morning at the Batawa Recreation Centre that the event has raised $140,000 in five years. While they are aiming for 32 rinks this year, they could accommodate more with the five rinks in play if the interest was there. Moorhouse was described by 8 Wing Commander Col. Colin Keiver as “Mr. Pond Hockey” and as the “King of Batawa” during the press conference. “Six years ago, Jeff came to me (Keiver was then the Commanding Officer of 436 TS) with the idea to have this pond hockey tournament. It was a great idea and very easy to say yes to because Jeff does everything and has done every-
thing for six years,’ he said, noting it was great to have the Ottawa Senators on board this year. “To use hockey as the means by which we bring all these people together for these great causes, I think it’s classic Canadiana and it’s the right thing to do,” he added. Dave MacDonald of WWC feels the direction the event is taking in bringing in a spouse to talk about her family’s fight with PTSD meshes well with the aims of the organization. “The messaging this year is very important to us as a charity because we have been focusing a lot of our programming on not just helping the veteran’s with PTSD but also the spouses, and one of the guest speakers at the dinner is going to be the wife of a member who has PTSD, which is often the forgotten about portion of the equation,” he said. “No one really wants to talk about the stigma of PTSD, no one really wants to talk about all the impacts on the families, so having that component being involved this year is a huge thing for us.” The “Puck Drop” dinner takes place at the Batawa Community Centre beginning with coacktail hour at 5:30 p.m. and dinner at 6:30 p.m. Tickets for the evening and dinner are $100 (including a
Organizers, sponsors and community members gathered to launch the sixth annual CFB Trenton Pond Hockey Classic Tuesday morning at the Batawa Community Centre. Ross Lees/Metroland
Only 180 tickets are being sold $25 tax receipt), includes live auc- Bay. Tickets are available at www. tion and entertainment. The din- hockeyfortroops.com or www.tm- and they are expected to go fast, so buy early. ner is catered by Occasions by the hfoundation.com
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Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B13
Healthy herds mean banner year for local deer hunters BY BRETT MANN
Weather and natural feed conditions contributed to one of the most successful deer hunting seasons in recent years. Photo Submitted.
Tweed – Steve Elmy, local owner of Rack Stacker Big Game Attractants and the Feed Depot believes this has been one of the most successful deer hunting seasons in a long while. “We actually had a fantastic apple crop this year. So there’s an awful amount of natural food sources. It allowed the deer to travel more, but at the same time they didn’t lack any food.” These conditions tend to not concentrate the deer near the food sources. “They can eat basically wherever they are … therefore there’s more deer around and that makes for a healthier herd.” “Last year because it was so warm it was a very miserable hunt,” says Elmy. “This year it actually made for an easier hunt because the deer were able to travel during the colder weather, and the hunters were more
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successful.” He notes that traditionally deer season (rifle) starts on the first Monday of November. Peak rutting season starts around the 8th to 12th of November, so a later start to the season saw the hunt coincide with the rut. “They shot more bucks, some very large deer were shot.” Significant snowfall later in the hunt also made a big difference, Elmy observed. Striking the right balance between doe and buck licenses allotted helps keep the population in balance and healthy, and Elmy reports attending a “white-tail summit” last May which included Mark Rykman, Senior Biologist with the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters to discuss the issue. “I actually saw 10 does and fawns in front of me and not one buck. That tells you something’s wrong with the allocation, and a lot of hunters were expressing that to
me, so I brought that up. A lot of guys did draw doe tags this year.” Elmy is noted for having appeared on the TV program “Dragon’s Den” seeking support to expand his business into the US. “No money was exchanged but we were successful,” says the young entrepreneur, noting that his business has expanded into 200 stores in 25 states south of the border. Local abattoirs, which process wild game, also report a surge in the number of deer harvested this season. Matt Seeley operates Seeley’s Wild Game Processing, which for the past four years has been exclusively processing wild game. He reports, “It was slow last year but the moose hunt was very successful. This year moose were down 50 per cent compared to last year, but deer were up 100 per cent. We had 200 deer in the first two
Start Up Bay of Quinte celebrates holiday launch Dec. 21 Belleville -- Start Up Bay of Quinte is having an open house on Wednesday, Dec. 21 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Centennial Secondary School to celebrate its launch and the power of entrepreneurship in the region.
The community is invited to join the celebrations and encouraged to learn more about the organization and its mandate. Entrepreneurs and aspiring entrepreneurs are especially encouraged to attend. Start Up Bay of Quinte is a not-for-profit organization focused on nurturing en-
trepreneurship in the region, which extends from Napanee to Brighton, Prince Edward County to South Hastings and includes Belleville, Quinte West, and Tyendinaga. Representatives from Start Up Canada will be in attendance to share what the organization is about and to answer
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sportt the best We serve homemade Scottish pub food, o and nd spor nd city. fish and chips and steak pie in the cit ty. We We also alsso ccarry carr arry a host hos h ost st of refreshing and distinctive beers that a are rarely found at other pubs and restaurants. You mayy have experienced the Hamilton has offer, British and Irish pubs the city of Ham milton on h on ass to off a er,, but utt u Tartan Toorie is the ONLY SCOTTISH P UB in n all al of al of H Ham Hamil Hami ami ton! on! n PUB Hamilton! 10am-6pm All-day Sunday Breakfast from 10am-6 - pm m Our Products & Services include: Authentic Scottish Pub Food Unique Beers Live Music Thursday Night Open Jam night with Hank Han nk and nk d the th he Boys. B
Monday: Tuesday: Wednesday: Th Thursday: h d Friday: Saturday: Sunday:
11:30 AM-9:00 PM 11:30 AM-9:00 PM 11:30 AM-9:00 PM 11:30 AM-12:00 AM 11:30 AM-12:00 AM 11:30 AM-12:00 AM 11:30 AM-9:00 PM
Good food shared with good company is always an occasion to be savoured. Regrettably, for most the harried lifestyles of today don’t always allow for this luxury. In an ideal world all your meals would be jjoyful y events; yyour taste buds teased and spoilt for choice with an abundance of l local l iing redients, di served fresh in a warm, ingredients, inviting atmosphere. Fortunately for the minutes community commu munit un ty of Carlisle le e (j (ju (just ((jus jju usstt a ffe few ew m mi in nutes utes u utte ess Waterdown) surrounding north n orth th o th off W Waterdown r ) and d tthe h surro surround o ing area, local resident Angela Checchia, reminiscent dreamed of creating a community based, Italian inspired bistro reminis scent of old world id ideals d ls l an a nd p philoso philo h hilo hil ilosophie phi p hiies. hie h ie es. es and philosophies. Related Stories Re Rel lated ed S tor tories ries s Cascata C scata ata ta aB ist istro stro tro o Bistro an and industry, Angela Born orn o rrn n to oa n Italian Itttalia talian alian al alia a a family mily a mil nd d raised rais raise aised a ise ised ise sed ed in ed in th tthe he re rrestaurant esstaurant est esta estaurant ura urant an ntt industry iindustr ndus ndustry dustry tr try, An A Ang ngela ((mother, mother, wife, triathlet iathle athlet le ete et e and nd n de en ent nttrepreneur n repreneu epreneur preneur eneur neur neur urr) in ur) iins insti instinc instin inst nssstinc nstinc nsti nst n stin ti ttinc tin iinc ncttively nc tivel tiv ivve ive ively vely ely e lyy kn k ew w that tha th hat h ha at tthe at he e 1100 100 yye arr o a ld la andmark building triathlete entrepreneur) instinctively knew year old landmark corners Carlisle greater heights. One day, on n the he e fo fourr cco four corne corner orn or o rn rne s of of C Car Carl Ca ar arrllis arl issl isle sle le w le was wa as destin a dest destine dest destined desti de estined estin es e sstined stine tiined ttined tine iine ned ffo for orr great o g gr grea gre rea ea ate at er he height heig hei heigh e gh g tss. O ne d ay, whilst eating old watching occurred ice ice-cream iice-cre ce-crea ce-cream e-crea -cream -crea -cr ccream ream w with ith th th her h he 3 yyear ye yea e o ld da an and nd n dw wa atc tchin tch ttching cch ching chi chin hi hin h hing iing ng th ng tthe he cars rss g go b by, y,, it o ccurred tto ccur o her that the cars bistro. numbers go goi goin going oing o iing ng n gb by ccould ould ou o uld ld db be stopping stoppin stoppi to toppin topping toppi opping opping in ng n ga att her he h er er b bi bist isstro stro. ttrrro tro tro. ro. o. It o. I wasn wasn’t wa w was asn’t a sn ssn’t n t lo llong on ng g before before n befor bef number num nu um m rs were negotiated, permits wass b permit ts iissued ts sssued ssue sued su ued ued e a and Ca an Casca Cas Casc Cascata ascata a scata sca cat cata ata tta aB Biist Bistro iistro stro tro ow wa bor born bo born. orn o orn. rrn. rn n. philosophy farmers using Fol Followin FFollowing Follow Foll olllow llowing low lo ow owing wing ing in ng tthe ng th he h e farm fa farm far arm ar rm to o ta ttable tab ab ble le e phil philoso philosop ph phi hiloso h hilosop il iloso ilo iilosop losop lo loso oso osop o sop op o phy hy w which hich hich iccch h supports supp ssup su upp upports up upp pports p ppo ports port po p orts o rt rrts ttss local lloc lo occcal ocal o all ffa a far arrmers by a b u sing locally seasonal produce available, att the a award grrow grown o ow wn sea wn se easonal son o onal nal all p pr pro rro odu duce uce uce uc ce w when whe wh h hen en n availabl availab availa avai vailab vaila vai vail vvailabl aiiillable, ailabl lab ab e, e, a all llll o off the the th he me men m menu e en enu nu n u iitems item ite tem tems tte ems e ms a ms ward winning Cascata Bistro handmade, ensuring quality ingredients are C ascat asca asc catta aB istr istro strrro st sstro o are a arre re h handmad hand handmade ha handm andmad andma an andm a andmade and nd n dm ma made ade ad a de d e, ens en ensuri ensurin e ensur ensu nsurin ns nsuri nsur n nsu ssur su surin suri urin uri u ur rri rin iin ng o on onl only nly nlyy fr ffresh resh sh hq qual qua quali qu uali uali ual alli lity ty ing iingre in ng ngre n ngred grre gre g re ed dients a re used. Together and bistro’s chef continuously delicious Angela A ngela a an a nd d th the h b bi bis iisstro ttrro’s tro’s o’s o ’’ss cch che he h ef cco continu contin cont conti on ontinu o ontin nti ntinu t nuo ou ously usly sllyy str sl sly sstrive st ttrrrive iive iv ve to ve to cr ccreate re ea eate eat atte a ate te n ne new new, e ew w, d w, eliciou us and enticing combinations -often herbs vegetables bistro’s combin combi ccomb ombin mb bin binati bin ina inati nat nati ati a ttiion ons o ns ns -o --of -ofte o offfte ten using te us usi sin ing gh erbs rb rbs bss and an nd d vve veg vege e eg ege getable etab ta table ables fr ab able ffrom fro rom m th tthe he bis bi b bist iist is ssttro’s own n kitchen garden. events hosted include pairing dinners, specialty brunches Special S Specia pecial pe ecial cciia ial e vent vven vents ents ent e en nts h hos ho os oste ted ed iinclu inc incl nc nclu n clu ud de ew win wine wiin ine ne p ne airin airing a iri iring iirin rring ing gd di nners, nners nne nner nn n ners, ers, ers rs, s ssp pecialty eci ecialt ecia ecial cia cial cialty iialty alty l yb runche es and weekly live visit Cascata Bistro entertainment. For contests and more information, vis i iitt C Cascat ta B Bi Bistr istro on Facebook. ingredients mixed traditional flavours Fresh local in ngred ngred re red edi dients ients t mix m i ed dw with wit i the the e tradit ttrad raditional onal nal al ffla fl vours ours urs of urs o authe authentic a uthe c Italian cuisine are combination. Especially service a winning co ombinat binat b bi i attiion. on E on Esp ecially when paired with friendlyy ser sse ervice rvii in n an eclectic Whether are planning two lively atmosphere. Wheth h her you ar e plann plannin planni plan lanni g an lannin an inti in int iintimate t mate ate te e dinner dinn d din di err ffor fo orr tw o or a li vely group event, designed Cascata Bistro delight the wonderfully llyy d de esigned ssiiig igne gned gn g ne ed dC Ca assc scata sca ca ca atta ta Bis tro in Carlisle, is an artisanal del light just waiting to
THE
Ta Taxes are extra. One coupon per order. Valid until November 31, 2014. See store for complete details.
QuinteWest News THE
BRIGHTON
Independent CentralHastingsTrentHills NEWS
Call us at: 1-877-646-6701 or email: myupdates@metroland.com
B14 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016
weeks of the hunt. We turned away 70 customers because we were at maximum capacity.” Seeley processes moose, deer, elk, bear and caribou (from northern Quebec) as well as geese and ducks. He receives moose from as far away as New Brunswick and typically processes a total of 20 to 30 each year. People are willing to travel to him because of the quality of work he offers, says Seeley, who fishes professionally as well. “You can have your deer cut, wrapped and frozen in the traditional way or turned into gourmet products such as sausages,” he remarks. With colder weather in the evenings the weather was “perfect for this year’s hunt.” Seeley does not process domestic animals or sell retail. “It’s strictly custom cutting for the hunter,” says Seeley who adds, “I’ve never eaten wild game.”
any questions attendees may have. Local politicians and dignitaries will also be in attendance. Victoria Lennox, Co-Founder, and CEO of Start Up Canada, is the keynote speaker. She will lead off the evening with a talk about the national and international entrepreneurship movement and how Start Up Canada is inspiring and empowering startups to establish, network and grow in communities like the Bay of Quinte. A national video panel made up of several Start Up Canada communities from across the country will follow Lennox’s presentation. The panel members will share their experiences in establishing their Start Up community and how it has helped to support and grow new startups and economic expansion in their hometowns. Featured communities include Kamloops B.C., Prince George B.C., Barrie Ont., Sault St. Marie, Ont. and Fredericton, N. B. Following the panel discussion and question and answer period, the celebration will move to Dinkles in downtown Belleville, for informal networking and further discussions. Hors d’oeuvres will be served and beverages will be available at the cash bar. Registration for the event is recommended and can be done through http://buff. ly/2gaEwwi. Bay of Quinte was named as the 26th Startup Community through Startup Canada in September 2016.
Quinte’s
ONLY
boutique style
January 8th, 2017
bridal event
What makes us
nveiled Join us for our eighth boutique style bridal event that invites brides-to-be to mingle and plan an with amazing local wedding vendors in a swanky, social atmosphere! It is almost like a girl’s night ht out on a Sunday afternoon. Featuring a runway show by Lily’s Bridal, mocktails, delicious treats, ts, complimentary pampering treatments and a chance to
Win Fabulous Prizes
and upscale Bridal Event happening in Quinte?
Complimentary bottle of wine to the first 50 Brides!
including a $1000 Gift Certificate to
Come & mingle with us on Sunday, January 8th, 2017 • 10am-3pm 360 Pinnacle St., Belleville (the Former Brick Furniture building) Proudly sponsored by:
A division of Metroland Media
MAGAZINE NE
Tickets $12 at the door; $10 in advance, now available at Lily’s Bridal or online at
unveiledbridalevent.ca/tickets Like us on facebook for updates, details, and vendor information. Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B15
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Criticism was a ‘disservice’ to Kramp Dear Editor, Re: ‘The good old double-dip.’ Letter Dec. 8 This writer’s letter does a great disservice to Daryl Kramp who represented the former Prince Edward-Hastings riding in the House of Commons. He and his staff devoted many hours over and above a regular work week working on behalf of ALL the constituents in his riding. Daryl Kramp is a highly respected citizen. It is unfortunate that when a candidate puts his name forward to become a politician, neither he nor his family have a life of their own. What gives reporters the right to think they can interrupt a person in public and that the person is obliged to stop and speak to them? Put yourself in his shoes. How would you like it if you were surrounded by reporters pushing and shoving expecting that they have the right to confront you. When the current Prince Edward-
Bleeding heart Liberals ignore natural selection
Hastings riding ceased to exist Kramp remained with the Conservative party, but he was forced to start over as a new candidate and choose between bits and pieces of his former riding of Hastings County and a new and unfamiliar riding, Lennox and Addington. As Kramp put it in an interview “starting over was a real challenge”. Considering that Kramp only lost by a mere 373 votes in this new riding is a testament to Kramp’s reputation. The public can only hope that “the new MP will care for the citizens of the riding as much as he has the past eleven years.” It was Stephen Harper’s fiscal responsibility that lost the election. Now Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has gone on a compulsive spending spree and sooner or later the public and future generations are going to have to pay the piper. Mary Culloden Belleville
Dear Editor, Every day in the news we hear of what the media refers to as a very serious national emergency. Drug addicts dying of overdoses is what I’m referring to. Our government believes that the solution to this problem is public funding of safe injection drug sites, and every time that they spend more of your money on this initiative they give themselves a big pat on the back, smile grandly and take a few more selfies. Hurray! Canada is back and happy smiling people are now running the show. In my opinion, this is a non-problem and it is even fixing itself all on its own. I consider myself a reasonably compassionate person. When my neighbour’s house burned down I was on them like a dirty shirt with whatever help that I could render. Same goes when you slide into the ditch on a snowy night, out I come with the tow chains and my big Ford. However,
when someone dies when their bungee cord breaks hanging over the Grand Canyon, I don’t really lose too much sleep, same goes for freezing to death climbing Mount Everest. I really don’t care, sounds like a selfinflicted injury to me. Engaging in dangerous activities which are not required in the performance of your job are done at your own risk and are completely unnecessary. We do not need warning labels plastered to our foreheads to realize this. If you do something really dumb and you get hurt, too bad, suck it up and taking drugs falls completely into this category. I know that I sound a little bit like Ebenezer Scrooge on this one but come on folks can we use a little bit of common sense here and vote in legislators who will fix real problems for a change and stick to running the country .......period. Doug Gower Codrington
Connect with us online Follow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/InsideBelleville On Twitter @InBelleville And online at www.InsideBelleville.com
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IN MEMORIAM
BRIGHTON LEGION BR 100
(613) 475-1044 IN MEMORIAM
LAWRENCE, RICHARD (DICK)
New 100% waterproof 7 mm vinyl plank. Unbeatable deal @ 2.79 sq. ft. 12 mm laminate 7-1/2 wide @ 1.79 sq. ft. Call for best prices. Saillian flooring 905-242-3691.
ARTS/CRAFT/FLEA MRKT Craft & Bake Sale Sat. Dec. 17th. 9-4pm 269 Moira Rd. Stirling
FOR SALE
We love you and miss you. Shelby, Tammy, Kim, Todd, Tyler, Taylor, Daniel and Families.
Thank You
The family of the late Jamie Drummond wish to express our deep appreciation to our friends, neighbors, family, BMR customers & staff for the messages of sympathy, donations, flowers and food. Thank you to the Peterborough ICU nurses and doctors for the tremendous care and compassion Jamie received. A very special thank you and gratitude to McConnell Funeral Home and the McConnell Family for their comfort, concern and support...we shall be forever grateful. Our appreciation to the Marmora Royal Canadian Legion for a beautiful luncheon following the service. A big thank you to Jamie’s good friend Dan Clarkson for visiting him everyday in hospital... sometimes twice a day, for raising his spirits and a few good laughs. To his “other sister� Wendy Ziprick for her continuous love and support, for sitting with him at the hospital to give us a rest....it gave us comfort knowing he was not alone. Many thanks to his pallbearers and friends for the beautiful eulogies at the funeral. He was a wonderful son, father, brother and friend.....He will forever be missed. Jocelyn, John, Florence, Bob, Debbie, Peggy and Family.
WANTED
Havelock area,1 bedroom includes heat, hydro, satellite TV. Good for single person. No pets. No smoking. $700/month. 705-778-9866.
BRIGHTON
FOR RENT
House for Rent
Property Management
613-392-2601 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
Gorgeous raised bungalow in Jackson Woods. 4 Bedrooms (2 main & 2 lower) with 2 full bath. Spacious living, dining & rec room. Rent: $1450 + utilities per month. Contact Shirley 647-201-6878.
$
4595 $ 22900
NOW IN THREE LOCATIONS
62 Bridge Street East Campbellford (705) 653-5642 51 B King St. E. Bowmanville (905) 623-2404 182 George St. N. Peterborough (705) 742-3337 DEATH NOTICE
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 1-2 bedroom lower level unit. Laundry facilities on site and walking distance to downtown. $750/month plus Hydro. (Since 1985)
CL47585X
Janome Baby Lock Elna Bernina Sewing Machine Tune-ups from New Machines from
WANTED
Kenmau Ltd.
FOR SALE
IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR BELOVED HUSBAND, DAD & GRANDAD WHO LEFT US SIX YEARS AGO DECEMBER 17, 2010.
Success is many times measured in terms of money and fame. Dick had neither, yet he was the most successful man we knew. He met each day with a zest and a twinkle in his eye. He loved and looked after his family & friends well Your love of life and laughter surrounds us; your memory gives us strength.
GET FIT FOR NEW YEAR Zumba Fitness 1 hour classes. Mondays 5:30 pm Brighton Masonic Hall, Wednesdays 6 pm at ENSS single gym. Call Cynthia 613-847-1183.
WANTED Records, stereo equipment, music related accessories. Call 613-921-1290
FOR SALE
FOR RENT
DEATH NOTICE
BROWN, Eva Winnifred Peacefully at home surrounded by family on Saturday, December 3rd, 2016. Eva Brown of Carrying Place in her 96th year. Daughter of the late George and Ida Reddom. Beloved wife of the late Clifford Brown. Loved mother of Barbara (Paul) Hunt of Carrying Place, Joan (Bryan) Swartman of Trenton, Jean (Carl) Sobie of Bridgenorth and predeceased by son Raymond Brown (living Lynn) of Brighton. Ever remembered grandmother of Julie, Cindy, Greg, Terry, Jeff, Tom, David, Debbie, Carrie, Kathy, Dan; seventeen great-grandchildren and one greatgreat-grandchild. Also remembered by sister-in-law Lois Reddom and many nieces and nephews. Predeceased by siblings Norma, Rose, Irene, Stella, Florence, Harold, Lloyd, William, Raymond and Hugh. Arrangements entrusted to the RUSHNELL FUNERAL CENTRE, 60 Division Street, Trenton (613-392-2111). Interment Mount Evergreen Cemetery at a later date. If desired, Memorial Donations to the VON or the Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation would be appreciated by the family. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com
Kenmau Ltd.
BELLEVILLE NEW & USED APPLIANCES USED REFRIGERATORS Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, 3 months old & up. Sold with written guarantee. Fridges $100. and up.
NEW APPLIANCES At the lowest prices in the area. Trade-ins accepted on new appliances. Big selection to choose from.
PAYS CASH $$$ For good used appliances in working order or not, but no junk, please. VISA & MASTERCARD accepted. We have our own financing also. Shop at our competitors and then come see for yourself, quality at low prices. Open evenings 7 days a week. WE DELIVER.
We Sell Gas Refrigerators!
SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287
Ann Street – 1 bedroom, $750.00 + Hydro (available January) 29 Dunbar St. – 2 bedroom, $750.00 + utilities (available now) COMING SOON: 191 Lingham - 2 Bedroom 154 Albert Street - 2 Bedroom
Call
Kenmau Ltd.
613-392-2601 or visit www.kenmau.ca
Property Management (Since 1985) FOR SALE
FOR SALE
CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR FURNACES
ASK US ABOUT THE NEW
EDGE
WINTER REBATE SAVINGS UP TO $800 Call for more information Your local DEALER
WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca
FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613
GUNS WANTED WILL PURCHASE UNWANTED AND UNUSED FIREARMS INCLUDING ESTATES. LICENSED AND INSURED. CALL 613-473-0223 Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182.
WANTED
WANTED - WANTED (Scrap or unwanted) Cars, Trucks, Vans or Farm Tractors, etc. for scrap recycling. Cash Paid. Pick up from Norwood to Tweed to Belleville.
613-847-9467
CL460541
613-966-2034
For receptions, weddings, etc. Catering & bar facilities available. Wheelchair accessible.
DEBT OR CREDIT CRISIS NEED HELP? ALLEN MADIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLING .COM Visit Our New Web Site For details of our unique service Free consultation Call 613-779-8008
WANTED Looking for old bottles of Canadian whisky, must be unopened with seal intact; pls call 613-797-2563 or email chazjo@magma.ca
FOR RENT
FITNESS & HEALTH
CL442555
Book your ad
AIR COND. HALL
FOR SALE
ANNOUNCEMENT
CL447164 CL642293
Christmas Gospel Sing Chapel of the Good Shepherd 513 Ashley St. Foxboro Dec 17 6:30 pm Come join us!
ANNOUNCEMENT
CL443017 CL460544
COMING EVENTS
Book your ad 613-966-2034 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
t .VMUJ 7FOEPS 'MFB .BSLFU t %SPQ CZ HSFBU EFBMT GSJFOEMZ WFOEPST t 4JU EPXO TOBDL CBS Plus much more
ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
IN BUSINESS FOR 30 YEARS PLUS
t 5BDL 4IPQ t #BNCPP 4IFFUT 1JMMPXT t 'VSOJUVSF t 8BEF 'JHVSJOFT Fleamarket & Antiques t $MPUIJOH t $PNQVUFS (VZ $PMMFDUJCMFT t 4JHOT t 0ME 5JOT t &VSPQFBO %FMJ
Meyersburg
Cty. Rd. 30, 3 miles south of Campbellford For vendor space, call Tom or Lola Holmes )PNF t 8PSL FARM
FARM
FARM
Buckwheat Honey Available
Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products
231 Frankford-Stirling Road, Stirling
Merry Christmas
& Happy New Year From “The Twins� t -JRVJE BOE DSFBNFE IPOFZ CVML BOE QSFQBDLFE t #FFTXBY DBOEMFT TLJO DSFBN BOE MJQ CBMNT t )POFZ HJGU CBTLFUT BOE NBOZ PUIFS HSFBU HJGU JEFBT
Last day is Saturday, December 17, 10 am - 4 pm Closing Dec. 17 for the winter, re-opens spring 2017
613-827-7277 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B17
FARM
WANTED Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Quality workmanship guaranteed. 519-777-8632 .
MORTGAGES
$ MONEY $
Farm Tractor Books and DVD’s for Christmas Giving. Up to 60% savings. 100’s of titles. Various topics. Also available 1000’s of tractor parts. Including tractor seats. 16385 Telephone Road, B r i g h t o n . www.diamondfarmcanada. com or www. diamondfarm tractorparts.com 613-475-1771 or 1-800-481-1353.
CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income Bad credit OK!
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
AZ DRIVER Local Delivers/Pickups Part Time/Full Time Retired Drivers Welcome Call 905-349-2521 Drop off or email resume: Knights Appleden Fruit Ltd., 11687 Cty. Rd.2 amycook@knights-appleden.ca CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Better Option Mortgage #10969
1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com
HELP WANTED
FULL TIME & PART TIME Contract Drivers
needed for Belleville/ Trenton Courier Service. Must have own vehicle. Call Tues. To Fri. 8 am - 2 pm. 613-392-5585 or 613-967-5941
BOARD DIRECTOR OPPORTUNITY Gateway Community Health Centre (Gateway CHC) is seeking to appoint two or more individuals to serve on our Board of Directors commencing in June 2017. The next few years will be an exciting time as the health system evolves to a regional system of care AND Gateway CHC is ready to be an active contributor and leader in improving the system for better patient care. For more information, please refer to www.gatewaychc.org (Careers), or contact Lyn Linton, Executive Director, (613) 478-1211.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
RFP – For the Supply of Janitorial/Custodial Maintenance Services The Municipality of Centre Hastings is seeking RFP’s for Janitorial and Custodial Maintenance Service and Supplies for the Tri Area Medical Centre located at 52 St. Lawrence St W Madoc, Ontario Packages can be obtained at the Municipal Office, 7 Furnace Street, Madoc, ON K0K 2K0, or online at www.centrehastings.com/ municipal/tenders/ All RFP’s must be submitted according to the package and forms and must be delivered to the Municipal office by closing date: Friday, December 23rd, 2016 at 12:00 pm. A public opening will follow on Monday, January 2nd at 1:00pm. All Proponents will be contacted after proposals have been reviewed. Christine Martin CAO/Treasurer Municipality of Centre Hastings 7 Furnace Street, P.O. Box 900 Madoc ON, K0K 2K0 Phone (613) 473-4030 Fax (613) 473-5444 Email cmartin@centrehastings.com The lowest or any proposal may not necessarily be accepted. FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
KITCHEN/BATH DESIGN/SALES Cole’s Timber Mart is looking for an experienced person to compliment our Kitchen/Bath Dept. Candidate must have experience in the Design/Set-up and Selling of Kitchen/Bath Cabinetry and be able to work independently with a flair for Sales. Competitive Salary, Pension and Benefits to the successful candidate. Please send resume in confidence to: ghamilton@colestimbermart.ca 47 Ontario Street, Brighton, Ontario FOR SALE
FOR SALE
EXTEND YOUR REACH - ADVERTISE PROVINCIALLY OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY! )RU PRUH LQIRUPDWLRQ FRQWDFW \RXU ORFDO FRPPXQLW\ QHZVSDSHU RU YLVLW ZZZ QHWZRUNFODVVL¿ HG RUJ
MORTGAGES
LOWER YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS AND CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT NOW!!! 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation Refinancing, Renovations Tax Arrears, No CMHC Fees $50K YOU PAY: $208.33 / MONTH (OAC) No Income, Bad Credit Power of Sale Stopped!!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL TODAY TOLL-FREE: 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com (Licence # 10969)
DRIVERS WANTED
FOR SALE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
$$ CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT $$ HOME EQUITY LOANS FOR ANY PURPOSE!! Bank turn downs, Tax or Mortgage arrears, Self Employed, Bad Credit, Bankruptcy. Creative Mortgage Specialists! No proof of income 1st, 2nd, and 3rd’s Up to 85%
Winter Road Haul 2017 Class 1 Drivers needed for deliveries in MB & NW Ont. (800) 665-4302 ext. 251 or e-mail: orderdesk@penneroil.ca
EMPLOYMENT OPPS. MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! Indemand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
WANTED SAWMILLS from only $4,397 MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.
VACATION/TRAVEL NAPLES FLORIDA VACATION HOMES FOR RENT by the week or month. Near the Beach & The Ritz. Visit: www.naplesvacationproperty.com. For Information, Reservations or Canadian Discount CALL Kathleen Rubeck (Owner) TODAY: 812-327-8950.
FIREARMS WANTED FOR FEBRUARY 25TH, 2017 AUCTION. Rifles, Shotguns, Handguns. As Estate Specialists WE manage sale of registered / unregistered firearms. Contact Paul, Switzer’s Auction: Toll-Free 1-800694-2609, info@switzersauction.com or www.switzersauction.com.
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B18 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
APPLE PACKERS
required Immediately Knight’s Appleden Fruit Ltd. Please apply within or email amycook@knights-appleden.ca HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
FARM
HELP WANTED
Working Steam Tractors and stationary engines. Great for Christmas giving. www.yesteryeartoyscanada .com. 16385 Telephone Road, Brighton. 613-475-1771 or 1-800-481-1353.
The Station Restaurant is looking for Line Cooks (will train). Apply in person at 30 Ottawa Street East, Havelock or call 705-778-1077
HELP WANTED
REAL ESTATE SERVICES
REAL ESTATE SERVICES
BUSINESS SERVICES
IN GRAFTON
Ad deadline Mon. 3 pm HELP WANTED
Call 416-246-0060 CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Job # MFG00005235
Production associates are paid a locally competitive temporary compensation package including benefits. Shift schedules are: 7 day/12 hour, days and nights; rapid rotation; receiving an average of 42 hours/week. Requirements: t &OTVSF ZPV JODMVEF ZPVS EFUBJMFE FEVDBUJPO BOE XPSL FYQFSJFODF JO ZPVS SFTVNF t &NQMPZNFOU PQQPSUVOJUJFT XJMM CF DPOEJUJPOBM VQPO UIF SFTVMUT PG B CBDLHSPVOE DIFDL There will be rolling start dates throughout the year, so please apply today via www.pgcareers. com to job # MFG00005235 If you require a medical or disability related accommodation in order to participate in the recruitment process, please email careers.im@pg.com to provide your contact information. P&G Talent Supply staff will contact you within 1 week. CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
with a difference ! $ $ ! " " # # " # "
REGISTERED NURSES
As our successful candidate, you will be a dynamic, self-motivated nursing professional interested in providing quality-focused clinical care to older adults in a home-like atmosphere. You will be energized by the many challenges associated with an ‘aging in place’ philosophy and the varied and comprehensive levels of care required. You understand the many rewards of geriatric nursing and appreciate the opportunity it provides to enhance the lives of our senior population. You are a take-charge individual who leads by example and utilizes coaching and staff recognition to maximize staff performance. • Valid RN License from Ontario College of Nurses • Supervisory experience and prior experience in a retirement or long term care setting preferred but not necessary • Must be able to work weekends, varied shifts, call-ins, and holidays as assigned • Must have excellent communication and interpersonal skills and be able to work as part of a team Email: hrpa@aoninc.com Website: www.aoninc.com AON Inc. is committed to meet the accessibility needs of persons with disabilities in a timely manner and to comply with AODA and all of its standards. Aon Inc. offers competitive compensation packages, professional development opportunities and a high standard of care in customer-service. With operations in both Canada and the U.S. and a 45-year tradition of quality and customer service, AON is the region’s largest privately owned employer.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
613-403-0881 mrmwrichards12@gmail.com
Book your ad
613-966-2034 CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.
HELP WANTED
36 Prince Edward St. Brighton
613.475.0568
IKO Industries Ltd. is a global leader in the manufacturing of roofing and building materials. IKO is a Canadian owned and operated business with production facilities worldwide. We are currently seeking the positions below at our Madoc, ON facility where we mine and manufacture coloured granules for our shingles.
Production Supervisor
Core Responsibilities: • Lead a positive change effort to improved performance by motivating, recognizing and inspiring others to be effective and efficient in their activities • Maintain a high level of awareness on safety, environmental and process compliance • Champion hazard identification, evaluation and control through the behavior based safety and risk assessment programs • Lead and direct all production operations for the duration of your shift • Increase employee engagement and improve the labour relations climate through participation in continuous improvement (get suggestions, report problems, participate in team problem solving sessions) • Drive accountability for both results and actions of direct reports through education, motivation, documentation and behaviour based coaching • Continually improve the operational efficiency of the plant • Facilitate effective meetings and team discussions • Effectively communicate with all levels both internal and external to the organization Key Qualifications: • Post-Secondary Degree in a relevant discipline • Minimum of 3 years industrial leadership experience (Crushing or Mining experience a definite asset) • Ability to work shift work in a 24x7 environment • Highly developed interpersonal, leadership, coaching, mentoring, delegation and people management skills • Excellent facilitation, time and project management, organizational, analytical and decision making skills • Experience with process safety management and creating a culture where all accidents are preventable • Drive to influence positive change with continuous improvement activities in the areas of safety, quality and productivity • Established PC & software skills in Microsoft Office applications • Experience working in a unionized environment
Licensed Millwright • • • •
Full-Time and Part-Time Position Available (Days/Evening Rotation)
BUSINESS SERVICES
Small business bookkeeping, accounting, financial statements, tax returns and consulting.
Plant Production Associate – 2 Year Contract Belleville, Ontario Our Belleville manufacturing site is seeking highly motivated, reliable and flexible individuals with a commitment to safety and total quality to be a part of our diverse operating teams. Production associates are required to learn to operate high-speed equipment and operate fork trucks, handling many products including chemicals in a safe environment on a rotating shift schedule. These positions are on a 2 year renewable contract. Production associates must be able to work well individually and as part of a self-directed team handling multiple priorities in an ever-changing environment.
BUSINESS SERVICES
MIKE RICHARDS CPA, CMA
MECHANIC’S SHOP Located on a busy country road with high traffic volume. 3 bays, 2 car, 1 truck mechanic’s shop. Large lot for parking cars. Compressor, tire change machine, and 1 car lift included. Immediately available for a long term lease.
BUSINESS SERVICES
•
Hold a valid Certificate of Qualification Ability to work shift work in a 24x7 environment Detect and troubleshoot irregularities and malfunctions, set up, install, maintain, repair, fabricate parts, replace machinery and mechanical components Experience working with crushers and material handling equipment a definite asset Experience in assisting with troubleshooting of production processes and systems preferred
Licensed Electrician • • • •
Hold a valid Certificate of Qualification Ability to work shift work in a 24x7 environment Install, maintain, examine, test, troubleshoot, replace or repair industrial, electrical and electronic control systems, PLCs and other related devices Read and interpret manufacturer recommendations, drawings/schematics specifications, electrical code specifications
Utility • • • • • • • •
Housekeeping duties including shoveling, sweeping, and cleaning in a harsh environment Inspection and changing of crusher screens and dust collector bags Testing for and identification of colour quality Operation of hand tools, power tools and mobile equipment High exposure to standing, climbing, crawling, lifting and material handling Exposure to vibration, dust, weather extremes, confined spaces, heights and noise Ability to work shift work in a 24x7 physically demanding environment Grade 12 education required
IKO recognizes that its success is due to the strength of its employees. A primary goal of IKO is to promote individual employee’s sense of accomplishment and contribution, so that employees enjoy their association with IKO. The Company invests in its employees so they are the most knowledgeable in the industry, and undertakes great efforts, including a goal of promoting from within, to nurture loyalty to IKO. We are pleased to offer competitive compensation, a progressive and challenging workplace, and a commitment to teamwork and integrity. Please email your resume to: autumn.davidson@iko.com We thank all applicants for their interest, only those considered for an interview will be contacted.
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HELP WANTED PLUS
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www.vitosbrighton.ca
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AUCTIONS
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ANTIQUE AUCTION SALE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27/16 AT 9:30 A.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE Antique pine single door jam cupboard (painted), cherry drop leaf table, pine harvest table, antique washstand, unique liquor cabinet, loveseat, photographer’s chair, Victorian gent & lady’s chairs, 2 tall candle stands with barley twist legs, games table, child’s chrome rocking chair, gingerbread clock, large qty. of smalls including a Nippon china ice cream service.. tray & 6 plates, Shelley “Daffodil Treeâ€? dinner plate, Cast iron ink well desk set/ 3 glass wells, Fenton “dragon & lotus marigold carnival bowl, Nippon sauce dish/lid & ladle, aladdin lamps & SDUWV DUJDQG ODPS WKDW KDV EHHQ HOHFWULĂ€HG ROG SRVW FDUGV 5R\DO 'RXOWRQ Ă€JXULQHV ´'LFNHQVÂľ VHULHV /ODGUR EDOOHULQD Ă€JXULQHV 3DEVW %OXH 5LEERQ EDU OLJKW 9LQWDJH Ă€VKLQJ WDFNOH ER[ IXOO RI ROG OXUHV PDQ\ RI WKHP ZLWK WKHLU RULJLQDO ER[HV 5R\DO 'RXOWRQ Ă€JXULQHV ´0DQG\Âľ +1 ´6XPPHU 6FHQWÂľ +1 ´)UDJUDQFHÂľ +1 ´+DSS\ %LUWKGD\Âľ +1 ´)DLU /DG\Âľ +1 ´$XWXPQ %UHH]HVÂľ +1 ´(OHJDQFHÂľ +1 ´6XPPHU %UHH]HÂľ +1 ´+DSS\ $QQLYHUVDU\Âľ +1 ´-R\Âľ +1 ´7KH *UDGXDWHÂľ +1 DQWLTXH KDQJLQJ KDOO ODPS EXOEV %DUELH 'ROO FDVHV ODUJH FDVW LURQ EHOO from the Wellington train station, brass harness & sleigh bells, child’s spring horse, duck decoys, vintage prints & frames, a number of old tin toys, wooden child’s sled & many more pieces coming in daily. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL ZZZ GRXJMDUUHOODXFWLRQV FRP Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B19
B20 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016
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Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016 B21
Major milestones reached in Deloro Mine site cleanup Kara Smith, project engineer with the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, was joined by her colleague Jeff Sergeant, contracts manager as they made a presentation to Marmora and Lake Council updating them on the Deloro Mine site cleanup. Sue Dickens/Metroland
Jeff Sergeant, contracts manager with the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, provided specific details to Marmora and Lake Council in an update about the Deloro Mine site cleanup. Sue Dickens/Metroland
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Young’s Creek area cleanup has been completed including “some adaptive management best practices like the addition of a secondary containment berm around the slurry and water tanks.” Arsenic treatment plant upgrades, spill protection measures and the timeline of the cleanup project were included in their 2015 annual report. This report about the operation, development and monitoring of the site is required as part of the environmental compliance approval and has to be submitted to the ministry annually. In terms of the overall project progress IMA Phases 1 and 2 have been completed and Phase 3 is about 95 per cent done and the spring of 2017 is the completion date. Young’s creek cleanup started in March 2014 is expected to be done by December 2019. “There’s very little radiological waste left in Young’s creek,” said Smith. With 34 monitoring wells on the property, she explained, “contamination remains consistent.” Drinking water quality standards in ground and surface water monitoring are being met and it is safe for workers and staff according to readings gathered as part of A FRESH MEAL EVERY TIME** the radiation protection program. “Anyone who goes onto the property wears radiation detection equipment,” Smith noted. The ministry is also concerned with “species at risk” (SAR) and a number of SAR and non-SAR species have been relocated. “There was at one time 52 kg of arsenic per day discharged and now that is 8 kg per day,” said Smith. When asked by Mayor Terry Clemens if that would ever be reduced to zero, she said, “I don’t think we can . . . we can isolate and contain.” Get this coupon* and more at www.save.ca/coupons When asked if the land could be used for anything again, the *Coupons subject to availability. answer was a resounding “No.”
Marmora – Major milestones have been reached in the Deloro Mine Site cleanup project according to officials of the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change who made a presentation recently to Marmora and Lake Council. Jeff Sergeant, contracts manager and Kara Smith, project engineer, provided details of what has been taking place at the site during the past four and a half
years, including the environmental monitoring program of the surface water, ground water, air quality, noise, radioactivity, biological and geotechnical aspects. Their report noted that more than 95 per cent of the Industrial and Mine Area (IMA) waste has been excavated and stored in the containment area. As well the Moira River bank remediation has been completed. Approximately 30 per cent of the
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MPP reacts to Auditor General’s report BY SUE DICKENS
Queen’s Park - This year’s report by the province’s Auditor General revealed a number of areas where the government’s ability to deliver basic services had totally broken down, according to Prince Edward-Hastings MPP Todd Smith. “Over 14 years, we’ve spent $8 billion trying to develop electronic health records,” he stated.
“So, in the time that Apple has used to develop eight iPhones, a dozen iPods and the Cloud, Ontario has been unable to electronically get your health records from Belleville to Kingston. Nowhere else could you fail so spectacularly and still have your job.” The delay in developing the province’s health records is only one among a number of healthcare service delivery problems outlined in the report. More
problems included 47 per cent of patients who needed emergency surgery having to wait ten hours or more for an operating room; 10 per cent of Ontario patients in emergency rooms faced waiting times of 23 hours or more and only a third of neurosurgeries were being completed within the recommended four-week timeline. “How many times have we seen Quinte Healthcare forced to cut back on staff ? How many times
have we had to sacrifice services or beds at Trenton or Picton?” Smith continued. “We’re spending money on things that never produce results like eHealth, meanwhile one in ten people with emergencies are sitting in the ER for 23 hours. This is a complete failure on the part of this government to run a healthcare system.” The auditor’s report catalogued other issues with government ser-
vices including road and bridge construction. “We’ve spent $23 million to repair three year-old roads that were supposed to last 15, often instead of using the contractor’s warranty to get them to do the job right. We just pay them again.” Smith concluded. “This government is now failing at the most basic things that Ontarians expect us to get right.”
Dam big fine for Centre Hastings man Centre Hastings - A Centre Hastings man has been fined $99,000 for illegally constructing a dam and interfering with a watercourse. Kevin Strong was found guilty and fined $90,000 for
constructing an unauthorized dam and $9,000 for interfering with a watercourse in Centre Hastings, north of Belleville. Strong also received a court order for restoration work. Court heard evidence that be-
tween January, 2010, and May, 2013, Strong interfered with a watercourse by constructing a dam and pond on his property adjacent to Moreland Lake in Centre Hastings. Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry
conservation officers, in conjunction with Lower Trent Conservation, conducted an investigation and determined that the work was done without permits or approvals from an authorized agency.
Justice of the Peace Ernie Parsons heard the case in the Ontario Court of Justice, Belleville, from September 14, 2015, until the sentencing on November 29.
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It’s a BGH Christmas miracle!
Every gift to BGH counts And now they can count TWICE A special friend of BGH has pledged up to $10,000 to match gifts made in December by first time donors and those who haven’t made a gift in the last three years. Current donors who increase their gifts will have the difference matched too.
matters. If you care about people, just give what you can and very good things will happen at BGH.
Twenty-five, $50, or $100, whatever you can give will be doubled to make care better at BGH.
Go to bghf.ca or call 613-847-6075, we’ll even go pick your donation up. Please make a gift today and be part of the BGH Christmas miracle.
Every gift counts. Every gift
The BGH Foundation has committed to raise $500,000 as its share of the $1 million QHC needs for a new MRI.
The miracle is you!
Yes, I WANT TO MAKE
Name: ................................
DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE FOR BETTER CARE.
Address: ............................ ........................................... A donation can also be made by calling us at 613-969-7400 ext 2061 or online at www.bghf.ca/angel and receive your receipt immediately. .................................................................. A receipt for tax purposes will be issued for all gifts. .................................................................. BGH FOUNDATION does not make its donor list available for use by any other organization. Please visit our website to view our Privacy Statement.
Donate Today. BGHF.CA/ANGEL
or call 613-969-7400, ext 2061 265 Dundas St. E. Belleville ON K8N 5A9 B24 Section B - Thursday, December 15, 2016