Stittsville092415

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Adult lifestyle, bung end unit. 3 bdrm, 3 bath, hardwood, tile, fully fin bsmnt! Just lovely! NEW PRICE!!

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Stittsville News

September 24, 2015 l 68 pages

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GRAND OPENING

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Tour our 4 spectacular new Show Homes, including the Minto NET ZERO home in Arcadia Kanata.

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Take the Minto Dream Home Tour! Visit our 4 brand new Show Homes opening Saturday, Sept. 26th at

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Here comes 1,000,000th visitor! John Curry

john.curry@metroland.com

“If you build it, he will come� is the phrase that a mysterious voice whispers to Ray Kinsella a.k.a Kevin Costner at the beginning of the 1989 fantasy film “Field of Dreams.� And at the end of the film, the headlights of hundreds of cars are seen approaching the baseball field, fulfilling a belief that people will come to watch baseball at the field. It’s the ultimate realization of a dream scenario. And it’s a scenario that applies to Saunders Farm at Munster as well. It is also a case of “if you build it, they will come� as that is what has happened over the past 20 plus years. And now, this fall, probably early in October, Saunders Farm will welcome its one millionth visitor. Yes, that’s right, one million people will have visited Saunders Farm’s October Haunting Season, an event which in almost 25 years has evolved from “A Haunted Hayride� to become the area’s largest independently run festival. As Mark Saunders, Director of FUN at Saunders Farm points out, when Haunting Season started, it was more or less a case of just wanting to open up the farm and its

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haunted hayride to visitors. Yet, over the ensuing years, slow incremental progress has taken place with more and more features added. Indeed, as Mark points out, Haunting Season is still a work in progress, with new innovative ideas being added each year. And there’s always more to do. As Mark says, each year when Haunting Season opens, there are new attractions but there are also many things that the folks at Saunders Farm had thought of but regret not having implemented for that season. That’s why there’s always more to do for “next year.� Haunting Season is, as Mark says, a work in progress. And now Saunders Farm is looking forward to welcoming its one millionth visitor to the Farm sometime during this year’s Haunting Season. There’s going to be some amazing new attractions and features at this year’s 24th Haunting Season at Saunders Farm. There’s improved haunts and daytime activities. For instance, Farmer Bill’s playhouse has a new slide that will add to that attraction’s appeal and fun. There’s an expanded Cemetery Stroll Graveyard that exists by day and that is transformed into a Cemetery Scare Zone by night. There are new Ag-Arcade games such as casket ball, pumpkin toss and Skee-gourd, a Saunders Farm version of Skee ball. And don’t forget the Ghost Town Stage which will be offering an all-new original show “The Reboot’ning� And besides the haunted attractions and live performances, Saunders Farm’s Haunting Season this year will be offering a Cowboy Cookout BBQ which is a new 15 foot BBQ. See NEW ATTRACTIONS, page 3

No appointments Walk in please

Experienced Flat Tops & Shaves By: Steve

1626 Stittsville Main St. 613-720-7707

Stittsville News

September 24, 2015 l 68 pages

BARBER SHOP

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Updated thruout, 5 bedroom, split in beautiful Crystal Beach! Open conc kitch, hardwood, tile. $479,900

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LOIS ‘N’ FRIMA’S ICE CREAM On Stittsville Main Street

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OttawaCommunityNews.com

John Curry/Metroland

All Aboard! David Garskey, left, director of environmental services at the Stittsville Villa Seniors Community on Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville, and 88 year old Villa resident Monetta Ayotte, right, who are both wearing nautical captain’s hats and Hawaiian-type leis, are enjoying themselves at the cruise ship-themed open house which was held at the Villa last Sunday afternoon. See page 7.

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2 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015


New attractions at Saunders Farm The grilling will be great for ribs, burgers and chicken legs, all served with beans, corn on the cob and baked potatoes. There’s also the Tipsy Tombstone Tavern offering fresh soup, chili, stew and macaroni and

cheese, in addition to Kichesippi bears, Ontario wines and spooky cocktails. Youngsters and any others with a sweet tooth are going to enjoy the Sugar Shack and its cotton candy, candy and caramel apples, lollypops and candy. Each year Saunders Farm invests a signifi-

FLYER

cant portion of its revenue into new and innovative attractions to enhance the guest experience. Saunders Farm now features five major “Fright Sites,� a dozen food venues that feature locally sourced farm fresh foods, its annual Ghost Town Stage Show and numerous whimsical play structures and games.

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John Curry/Metroland

Mark Saunders, Director of Fun at Saunders Farm at Munster, stands beside one of the skeleton displays in the Cemetery Stroll Graveyard at Saunders Farm which is transformed into a Cemetery Scare Zone by night.

Lila M. Kelly

Jennifer Gaspar

Robert Pacan

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St. Laurent Blvd. and Queensway Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 3


Adapting gardening to alvar conditions John Curry

john.curry@metroland.com

An alvar is a stressed habitat with thin or no soil and sparse vegetation. And yet it can be a source of happiness for a gardener. Just ask Anne Gadbois of West Carleton who had adapted her gardening to the alvar conditions of her two acre property near Corkery and has found such happiness. “It’s not perfect but it’s pretty special,” she said about her garden and property after giving a one-hour presentation entitled “Building A Garden on the Edge John Curry/Metroland of the Alvar” to members of the Guest speaker Anne Gadbois, left, stands with Stittsville Goulbourn HorticulStittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society president tural Society on Tuesday, Sept. Ian Frei, right, at the Society’s monthly meeting on 15 at the Pretty Street Community Centre in Stittsville. Tuesday, Sept. 15.

Her property is within a few kilometers of the Burnt Lands Alvar, an open area of limestone that hosts some rare and endangered plants. Part of the Burnt Lands Alvar is a provincial park. Alvars are rare in Canada with other alvars found in places like Manitoulin Island and Pelee Island. Anne explained that alvars were formed some 444 million years ago, so they are ancient land formations. She readily admits that when she first moved to her home in West Carleton in 1992, she did not realize how sensitive an alvar is and, indeed, part of her transformation as a gardener in the ensuing years has been coming to the realization that she

should work with what she has on the property rather than try to transform the property into something else. After a few years of planting plants inappropriate for the soil conditions, she decided to “go with the flow,” as it were, and plant according to the natural tendencies of the garden. She noted that this meant becoming less a slave of a perfect lawn, for instance, and more of an advocate for native wildflowers and ground covers. Her gardening philosophy became, she said, to encourage what was already there and to incorporate into her garden other plants which can tolerate the conditions of little soil depth and the like. She adopted a strategy of

working with the limestone that is exposed throughout much of the property. Instead of worrying about what to do with it, she grew to view it as a desirable feature. So, she made, for instance, a two tier planting bed along the driveway, edging it with limestone rock from the property. She uses a lot of containers to provide appropriate growing conditions for flowers such as geraniums, providing colour to her garden. She also has a lot of containers with flowers at the front of the house, adding colour while the containers provide the growing conditions that the natural ground with its thin soil and dry conditions cannot provide. See PATCH, page 5

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Patch of limestone now a patio Continued from page 4

What she terms her “pride and joy” is a smooth, round patch of naturally occurring exposed limestone right in the middle of her yard that she has transformed into a patio. It is encircled with cedars and the limestone even has a large fossil imbedded in it from its days when it was covered by the Champlain Sea. Anne has let the rear of her property go natural in its alvar state. So now the area is home to what grows there naturally such as cedar, sumac, creeping juniper, burr oak and ironwood as well as lichens, mosses, succulents, grasses, wildflowers and what she calls many weeds. “But some of the weeds are very interesting,” she advises. And, of course, there’s limestone popping up through the thin soil everywhere. Her property has been beset by some invasive species such as buckthorn, dog strangling vine and prickly ash. There is a pond on the property which she and her husband lined with limestone from the property. But it is really the only water on the property.

One interesting feature of the property is a pet cemetery which her husband created for their two dogs who had died, one at age 17 and the other at age 12. Her husband not only made headstones for the pets out of cement but used the property’s limestone to create a bench in front of the headstones. Anne says that she does not obsess about the lawn any longer as she uses ground covers and other grass alternatives including weeds. She admits that the lawn is now just mostly weeds but she says that she pretends that it is grass. She has lots of thyme around, noting that it stays green and smells great. She also has lots of mosses on the property. Anne lists some of her gardening mistakes over the years as planting species on the property that are not adapted to the conditions of limestone and thin soil; as planting some invasive species that are now hard to eliminate; and as overestimating her ability to maintain such a widespread garden on her own. Anne is a member of the West Carleton Garden Club and is a former president of the organization.

City holding pre-budget consultation meetings Special to the News

The city of Ottawa is holding a series of eight pre-budget consultation meetings including one at the Mlacak Centre in Kanata on Tuesday, Sept. 29 starting at 7 p.m. This is the closest of these meetings to Stittsville and Goulbourn and it will be hosted by city of Ottawa councillors Shad Qadri of Stittsville ward and Marianne Wilkinson of the Kanata North ward. A similar pre-budget consultation meeting being hosted by Rideau-Goulbourn ward councillor Scott Moffatt along

with Osgoode ward councillor George Darouze and Gloucester-South Nepean ward councillor Michael Qaqish is being held on Wednesday, Sept. 30 at 7 p.m. at the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority Building on Rideau Valley Drive at Manotick. At these meetings, city residents will be able to share their comments about the city’s 2016 budget and will be able to provide input on budget priorities and savings. Suggestions and ideas arising from this meeting in Kanata as well as the other pre-budget consultation meetings will

be considered in developing the city’s 2016 draft budget. Besides this meeting in Kanata and the one at Manotick, other pre-budget consultation meetings are being held at the Nepean Sportsplex (last Saturday, Sept. 19), Place d”Orleans Shopping Centre (Saturday, Sept. 26), Kinburn Client Service Centre (Tuesday, Sept. 29), Jim Durrell Recreation Centre on Walkley Road (Tuesday, Oct. 6), St. Laurent Complex (Wednesday, Oct. 7) and Makerspace North on City Centre Avenue (Thursday, Oct. 8).

Haunting Season at Saunders Farm Continued from page 3

In the past year, for instance, Saunders Farm has invested over 20 percent of its revenues in new innovative attractions. Not only is Saunders Farm’s Haunting Season the only major festival in the city of Ottawa to operate without any government funding, but also Haunting Season functions not with unpaid volunteers like other festivals but with over 200 paid staff. Saunders Farm’s Haunting Season will run from this Saturday, Sept. 26 to Sunday, Nov. 1 this year. The Farm will be open weekends on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and on Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will also be open on Friday, Oct. 9 which is a school PD day and also on Thanksgiving Monday, Oct. 12. Saunders Farm will be open nightly from Tuesday, Oct. 27 to Saturday, Oct. 31 from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. and will be open on Sunday, Nov. 1 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Special events during this year’s Haunting Season at Saunders Farm will include opening weekend this Saturday, Sept. 26 and this

Sunday, Sept. 27; “Scaring is Caring,” a fundraiser for the Youth Services Bureau on Friday, Oct. 2; Spartacat’s Birthday on Sunday, Oct. 4; Thanksgiving fun events from Friday, Oct. 9 through Monday, Oct. 12; and, of course, the big day, Saturday, Oct. 31 which is Halloween. The mission of Saunders Farm is to create a space that provides fun, food and memories for all guests throughout the year. Between April and September, Saunders Farm welcomes guests to its Mazes Season as Saunders Farm has the world’s largest collection of hedge mazes and labyrinths. Saunders Farm also hosts weddings, birthday parties, farm camps, farm dinners and corporate events and team building sessions. Then, each October, Saunders Farm hosts its Haunting Season where guests are entertained with haunted attractions, live performances and delicious farm fresh foods. For more information about Saunders Farm, please check out the website at www.saundersfarm.com . Saunders Farm is located at 7893 Bleeks Road in Munster.

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Seminar on dementia, Alzheimer’s disease at Legion Hall John Curry john.curry@metroland.com

It was Dementia 101 at the Stittsville Legion Hall on Wednesday, Sept. 16. That’s when Wendy Birkhan, director of operations for Homewatch CareGivers in Ottawa and a registered social worker, accompanied by Theresa Black-Watson, a counsellor with Visavie, an organiza-

tion that provides alternative living quarters when a house no longer is safe and appropriate for a person, gave a one seminar on dementia and Alzheimer’s disease including a portion outlining tips for those caring for those with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. Dementia, she explained to the more than 45 people who attended the seminar, is a word used to describe a range

of symptoms that affect how a person thinks. A dementia will interfere with a person’s activities related to daily living, she said. However, she pointed out that there is a difference between dementia and just being forgetful, with the key being the amount that a person is able to focus on things. She said that most people over 65 years of age experience some

NOTICE OF PASSING OF A ZONING BY-LAW BY THE CITY OF OTTAWA TAKE NOTICE that the Council of the City of O awa passed By-law Number 2015-281 on September 9, 2015, under Sec on 34 of The PLANNING ACT. AND TAKE NOTICE that any person or public body who, before the by-law was passed, made oral submissions at a public mee ng or wri en submissions to City Council, may appeal to the Ontario Municipal Board with respect to the by-law, by filing with the Clerk of the City of O awa, a no ce of appeal se ng out the objec on to the by-law and the reasons in support of the objec on. An appeal must be accompanied by the Ontario Municipal Board’s prescribed fee of $125.00, which may be made in the form of a cheque payable to the Minister of Finance. A no ce of appeal can be mailed to the City Clerk at 110 Laurier Avenue West, O awa, Ontario, K1P 1J1, or by delivering the no ce in person, to O awa City Hall, at the Informa on Desk in the Rotunda on the 1st floor, 110 Laurier Avenue West. A no ce of appeal must be received no later than 4:30 p.m. on October 14, 2015. Only individuals, corpora ons and public bodies may appeal a zoning by-law to the Ontario Municipal Board. A no ce of appeal may not be filed by an unincorporated associa on or group. However, a no ce of appeal may be filed in the name of an individual who is a member of the associa on or the group on its behalf. No person or public body shall be added as a party to the hearing of the appeal unless, before the by-law is passed, the person or public body made oral submissions at a public mee ng or wri en submissions to the council or, in the opinion of the Ontario Municipal Board, there are reasonable grounds to add the person or public body as a party. Should the by-law be appealed, persons or public bodies who wish to receive no ce of the Ontario Municipal Board hearing can receive such no ce by submi ng a wri en request to the planner iden fied in the explanatory note that accompanies this No ce. An explana on of the purpose and effect of the by-law and a descrip on of the lands to which the bylaw applies are set out below.

kind of memory problem. Stress, alcohol, a concussion, poor nutrition, medication, lack of physical activity and diabetes are conditions that could interfere with memory. Wendy outlined the three stages of Alzheimer’s disease which is a progressive disease that can last anywhere from 2 to 20 years from the time of diagnosis. Each of the three stages follow a timeline. The first stage is mild Alzheimer’s which can last from two to four years and is characterized by progressive forgetfulness. Stage two, which can be the longest of the three stages, lasting anywhere from 2 to 10 years, is characterized by increasing memory loss and confusion. This is the time when consideration should be given about whether a person is safe living in his or her own home or whether moving to a retirement home is a consideration. Stage three, which lasts 1 to 3 years, is severe and is terminal, characterized by lack of recognition of others, lack of oral communication and an inability for self-care. A person is usually in a long term care facility or dependent on someone for their care in this stage. Using memory is important and it is “crucial to be out and socializing,” Wendy advised. She referred to the expression “use it or lose it,” saying that it is important to have social interaction and to keep busy as you grow older. She said that sometimes people get depressed and stop talking and

stop going on walks and this aggravates the situation. Wendy said that dementia and Alzheimer’s are chronic diseases for which there is no known cure. However, there are medications which sometimes can assist in managing the symptoms of the diseases and may slow down the progress of the disease. She said that a person with dementia experiences cognitive changes, physical changes and emotional changes and a caregiver should be aware of this. She advised caregivers to listen to a story ten times over and over again if that is what is required. She said that a caregiver should use short sentences in talking with someone with dementia because a person with dementia cannot absorb long sentences. She said that a person with advanced dementia may not be able to tell a caregiver what is bothering them. This is when a caregiver should watch the body language of the person as that may help the communication process. There is a need to make eye contact when speaking to a person with more advanced dementia. Simple instructions are also needed. For instance, if the person is going out, instructions should be given one at a time, not all at once. So, it’s “get your coat” and then after that is done, “put on your coat” and then when that is completed, “open the door.” Wendy said a caregiver should not argue with someone suffering from dementia. If the person thinks that it is Christmas, then go along with

it. “What difference does it make,” she said, noting that the aim to have keep the person calm and happy. It is not a reality check, she noted. She said that it is important that the caregiver remain calm, saying that the person with dementia who is show agitation is not angry with the caregiver but is simply frustrated. She said that a caregiver should try to enjoy situations with a person with dementia and try to find what she called “happy moments” in the relationship. Visavie is a housing counselling service for seniors that has operated in Quebec for 30 years and is now operating in Ontario as well. It is a free service that does all of the legwork and searching in finding an appropriate place to live for a senior when it has been deemed that it is not safe any more for that person to be living at home. It is all free because an Ontario network of private retirement homes which Visavie works with covers the cost of these services related to the search for a person’s new residence. Literature about both Visavie and Homewatch CareGivers was provided to those at the seminar. Visavie counsellor Theresa Black-Watson can be contacted at 613-325-7433 (cell) or via email at thwatson@ visavie.com. Wendy Birkhan of Homewatch CareGivers can be contacted at 613-730-2188 (office), 613-276-7165 (cell) or via email at wbirkhan@homewatchcaregivers.com .

Dated at the City of O awa on September 24, 2015. Clerk of the City of O awa City Hall 110 Laurier Avenue West O awa, ON K1P 1J1

EXPLANATORY NOTE TO BY-LAW No. 2015-281 By-law No. 2015-281 is a Zoning Anomaly by-law which amends the City of O awa Zoning By-law 2008-250.

The effect of By-law No. 2015-281 is to correct minor errors and anomalies in Zoning By-law 2008-250 as follows: Technical amendments within the meaning of Official Plan Policy 5.2.3.3, regarding the following zoning ma ers: rezoning 2275 Elmira Drive from R2F to R1O, and rezoning 2279 and 2281 Elmira Drive from R1O to R2F; permi ed and prohibited land uses in Excep on [2185], applying to certain lands along Somerset Street West; restoring a maximum height permission of 35m to 1251 Mari me Way; rezoning 289, 291, 293, 295 and 297 Olmstead Avenue from R4E to TM3[2282] H(16) to implement the Montreal Road District Secondary Plan; the defini on of basement; and amending Sec on 60 (Heritage Overlay) to clarify the intent of the wording; and amending Rural Excep on [74r] to restore “gas bar” as a permi ed use at 4564 Fallowfield Road. For further informa on, please contact: Tim Moerman, Planner Tel: 613-580-2424, ext.13944 E-mail: m.moerman@o awa.ca Ad # 2015-504-S_281_24092015 R0013472003-0924

6 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

JOHN CURRY/METROLAND

Ron Currie, centre, of the Stittsville Legion stands with Theresa Black-Watson, left, of Visavie and Wendy Birkhan, right, of Homewatch CareGivers at the seminar about dementia and Alzheimer’s which was held at the Stittsville Legion Hall on Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville on Wednesday, Sept. 16.


Cruise ship theme at Stittsville Villa’s open house John Curry john.curry@metroland.com

The H.M.C.S. Stittsville Villa Seniors Community set sail last Sunday afternoon. It was a cruise ship voyage that saw interested visitors greeted by staff, some wearing nautical captain’s hats and all wearing Hawaiian-style leis, and then together visiting various ports of call throughout the building, seeing in person all that the facility has to offer for those seeking a retirement home for themselves or a family member. And like on all cruise ships, there was a lot happening to make it an enjoyable voyage including entertainment. Those who filled both the main lounge area as well as the adjacent and connected meeting/ games room, both residents and visitors, got to enjoy the song stylings of Roxy Swan, accompanied by the guitar playing Don and electronic background music. And Roxy delivered an ongoing program of songs that would make any cruise ship passengers happy. So the Villa cruise ship gang got to hear, among others, “Fly Me To the Moon,” the 1954 song that has become a jazz standard over

the years including Frank Sinatra’s version in 1964; “Blueberry Hill,” a 1940 song recorded by Louis Armstrong in 1949 but best known for the 1950’s rock ‘n roll version by Fats Domino; “Georgia on my Mind,” a song written in 1930 by the duo of Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart Gorrell and famously recorded by Ray Charles in 1960, with the song become an official song of the State of Georgia in 1979; “Snowbird,” best known for Anne Murray’s recording in 1969; “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You,” which was a big hit for American singer Frankie Valli in 1967; “Quando, Quando, Quando,” a bossa nova style Italian pop song from 1962 that has been recorded by many including Pat Boone, Connie Francis, Canadian Bobby Curtola, Cliff Richard, Engelbert Humperdinck and Michael Buble; “All Shook Up,” a 1957 hit for Elvis Presley; “Route 66,” a 1946 hit for Nat King Cole that has become a rhythm and blues standard; and more. It was like all of these singing stars were right there on board the ship with you! And while listening to this ongoing musical entertainment, those in the audience were served with colourful fruit decorated drinks and tasty hors d’oeuvres. It was cruise ship service

at its finest. All those attending this cruise ship open house at the Stittsville Villa Seniors Community by Revera had the opportunity to fill out a ballot on a chance to win a getaway package for two. No, it was not a getaway on a real cruise ship but it was the next best thing for sure – Via Rail transportation for two to Montreal plus one night at the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth Hotel in downtown Montreal, a getaway valued at $1,500. Now that’s a relaxing getaway for sure!

A winner as well at this cruise ship open house at the Stittsville Villa Seniors Community was the Alzheimer’s Society as the owner Revera is donating $5 to the Alzheimer’s Society for every tour given during this open house event which ran from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. last Sunday. Revera Inc. is the second largest network of accommodation, care and services for seniors in North America with over 500 locations in Canada and the United States. Founded in 1961, Revera is headquartered in Mississauga, ON.

No ce of Filing of Addendum Glen Cairn Flood Inves ga on Environmental Study Report Morrena Road Major Drainage Improvements The City of O awa has iden fied an opportunity to upgrade the Stormwater Major Drainage Network within the Morrena Road area. Work currently iden fied as part of the project includes re-grading Morrena Road, reconstruc on of the Morrena Road roadway structure, installa on of an underground stormwater major drainage network and installa on of a stormwater management pond adjacent to the Hazeldean Library. Currently, the project is proposed to be constructed in two phases under one contract. Construc on Phase 1 is scheduled for spring 2016 with the installa on of a stormwater management pond adjacent to the Hazeldean Library. Construc on Phase 2 is scheduled for summer 2016 with the installa on of an underground stormwater major drainage network, as well as re-grading and reconstruc on of the Morrena Road roadway structure. Construc on phasing has been developed to mi gate impacts to the daily rou ne of the Glen Cairn Public School during the ac ve school year. Subject to comments received as a result of this No ce and receipt of necessary approvals, the City of O awa intends to proceed with the comple on of the detailed design, tendering and construc on of this project. In March of 2011, major drainage improvements within the Morrena Road area were approved as part of the Glen Cairn Flood Inves ga ons Environmental Study Report. Due to a change in stormwater conveyance strategy as well as re-grading works along Morrena Road, an addendum to the original Environmental Study Report has been prepared which details the planning process used to iden fy the preferred Morrena Road major drainage design. The addendum to the Environmental Study Report is available for review at the following loca on: O awa Public Library – Hazeldean Branch 50 Castlefrank Road O awa, ON K2L 2N5

JOHN CURRY/METROLAND

Singer Roxy Swan, standing, who is also playing a musical rattle, sings to residents during the open house which was held at the Stittsville Villa Seniors Community on Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville last Sunday afternoon.

Combining art and poetry Special to the News

Art and poetry. Both artistic endeavours. But do they go together? You’ll be able to see the result for yourself as part of the September exhibition at the Art Space Wall Gallery at the Stittsville branch of the Ottawa Public Library features Anne Cameron’s combination of art and poetry. A number of framed pieces combining her art and her poetry are on display in the glass display cabi-

net that is associated with the Art Space Wall Gallery. In addition to these examples of her art and poetry in combination, the Art Space Wall itself features several examples of Anne Cameron’s art, all of them large framed pieces. There are two landscapes, a floral work, one of horses and one showing children at the seaside. As an artist, Anne works with many mediums including acrylics, oil, watercolour, charcoal and coloured

pencil. Anne was the owner/ manager of a custom framing and art gallery from 1983 to 1993. She was a founding member of the Lennox & Addington Art Association. Her art has been exhibited and has been sold in both Canada and Australia. This exhibition of poetry and art by Anne Cameron will be on display at the Art Space Wall Gallery at the Stittsville branch of the Ottawa Public Library throughout September.

Interested persons may provide wri en comments to the City of O awa on the proposed works within 30 calendar days from the date of this no ce. Comments should be directed to: Max Ross, P. Eng. Senior Project Manager Design & Construc on Municipal West Infrastructure Services Department City of O awa 100 Constella on Crescent, 6th Floor O awa, ON K2G 6J8 Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 16011 Fax: 613-580-2587 Email: Max.Ross@o awa.ca

Edson Donnelly, C.E.T. Senior Project Manager Novatech 200-240 Michael Cowpland Drive O awa, ON K2M 1P6 Tel: 613-254-9643, ext. 230 Fax: 613-254-5867 Email: e.donnelly@novatech-eng.com

If concerns arise regarding this project that cannot be resolved in discussion with the City of O awa, a person or party may request that the Minister of Environment and Climate Change make an order for the project to comply with Part II of the Environmental Assessment Act (referred to as a Part II Order) which addresses individual environmental assessments. Requests must be received by the Minister within 30 calendar days of this No ce (Hon. Glen Murray, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, 11th Floor, Ferguson Block, 77 Wellesley Street W, Toronto, ON M7A 2T5). A copy of the request must also be sent to the City of O awa’s Project Manager at the address noted above. If no requests are received by Monday, October 19, 2015 the project will proceed as detailed above. This No ce issued on Thursday, September 17th & 24th, 2015. Ad # 2015-502-S_Glen Cairn_17092015

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 7


OPINION

Connected to your community

OC Transpo red ink is not surprising

O

C Transpo’s mid-year report says it is heading towards an $11.5-million deficit by the end of 2015. That large fiscal shortfall may surprise some people, but if you dig deep into some of the presumptions in the public transit organization’s budget numbers, the reasons for the shortfall becomes clear. And it certainly was predictable. For reasons that one must presume has more to do with wishful thinking than anything else, OC Transpo continues to significantly over-estimate ridership growth. The fact is that ridership has flat-lined in recent years at about 97 million annual trips, and yet OC Transpo continues to insist each year that ridership will increase. They blame the feds for public sector job cuts in recent years – a story that is getting a little old. When it comes to stagnant growth in ridership, OC Transpo staff claim they don’t know why this is happening, but as Metroland Media has reported, customer systems manager Pat Scrimgeour said they “strongly suspect� it could have something to do with cuts to the federal government. Perhaps, but is this not something that should be

considered when projecting transit ridership? There are plenty of things the feds can be blamed for, but OC Transpo’s inability to make realistic transit ridership projections is not one of them. Another thing that OC Transpo says is a factor in the budget shortfall is higher maintenance costs. The problem with blaming higher maintenance costs as a reason the transit system is, at this time, awash in red ink, is that OC Transpo should have known there were going to be higher maintenance costs this year and that should have been reflected in the budget from the start. Bus maintenance costs, for example, are projected to come in more than $6 million over budget this year – eight per cent higher than expected – because a five-year warranty on the city’s fleet of hybrid buses ran out, leaving OC Transpo on the hook for repairs. Was no one at OC Transpo aware these warranties were expiring? The inability to make reasonable ridership projections and inability to properly budget for maintenance costs when warranties are expiring can’t help but make taxpayers wonder about all the budget projections that are being made over at OC Transpo and city hall when it comes to the light rail transit project.

Please give us a wave

L

ooking for encouraging signs in this very long election campaign, one of the first things you notice is a lack of signs. This may be encouraging or not. Does it signal a lack of interest on the part of voters or a lack of getting-it-together on the part of the local party organizations? They will be along, you know that. Meanwhile, there is an encouraging sign for all but those who hate to have their doorbells rung. Door-to-door campaigning has survived. Candidates walking through neighbourhoods, knocking on doors and engaging with voters. In interviews, some say they have been doing it for many months. They also say door-to-door campaigning is valuable and that they

ottawa COMMUNITY

news

Stittsville News OttawaCommunityNews.com

#OLONNADE 2OAD 5NIT /TTAWA /. + % ,

613-224-3330 Published weekly by:

CHARLES GORDON Funny Town enjoy it. This is a pleasant surprise. We’ve been hearing for years about the campaign wizards who collect data on voters, how they use sophisticated computer analysis to learn everything there is to know about us, including whether we are going to vote and how. If you believe this stuff, we, the people, have been reduced to demographic dots, knowable and predictable. But apparently not everybody believes this stuff, and that includes the candidates. Otherwise, why

Vice President & Regional Publisher Mike Mount mmount@metroland.com 613-283-3182, ext. 104 Director of Advertising Cheryl Hammond cheryl.hammond@metroland.com Phone 613-221-6218 Editor-in-Chief Ryland Coyne rcoyne@metroland.com General Manager: Mike Tracy mike.tracy@metroland.com

would they go door to door? They say they like to hear what people are saying. Which means that there may yet be a few things that the data base doesn’t know. If you’ve had your door knocked, you will know that the candidate is not there to argue with you. There’s no time for that. The candidates just want to show you their faces, probably their smiles, get a sense of whether you are likely to support them. And they pay attention to what you say. It’s old-school politics and there’s nothing wrong with it. Some aspects of old-school politicking have gone out of style. Blaring sound trucks: we won’t miss them. On the down side, we don’t see as many all-candidates meetings as we used to, nor do we see as many rallies. Candidates now use the Internet to get their messages out. You can look at their web pages to see who they are and what they think. This DISTRIBUTION INQUIRIES 4RACI #AMERON ADMINISTRATION: $ONNA 4HERIEN DISPLAY ADVERTISING: 'ISELE 'ODIN +ANATA $AV'ISELE 'ODIN +ANATA $AVE 0ENNETT /TTAWA 7EST #INDY 'ILBERT /TTAWA 3OUTH #ARLY -C'HIE /TTAWA %AST 'EOFF (AMILTON (OME "UILDERS !CCOUNTS 3PECIALIST 6ALERIE 2OCHON "ARRHAVEN *ILL -ARTIN .EPEAN -IKE 3TOODLEY 3TITTSVILLE *ANINE +IVELL /TTAWA 7EST 2ICO #ORSI !UTOMOTIVE #ONSULTANT

has the great advantage to the candidates of being able to get their ideas out to you unfiltered by news media and with no one debating them, as at an all-candidates meeting. It’s a disadvantage to you, the voter, but you do have a chance to find out more when the candidates knock on our door. Not all the traditional methods of doing politics deserve to survive, however. This point was underlined the other day in a newspaper photograph showing Green party leader Elizabeth May and a local candidate standing on a street corner in Guelph, waving at cars. Waving at cars. From the first time I saw, maybe 20 years ago, it has always mystified me. What possible effect could it have, other than distracting drivers and causing an accident? But some smart person must have thought otherwise. Perhaps he envisioned a motorist thinking: “Oh,

EDITORIAL: MANAGING EDITOR: 4HERESA &RITZ THERESA FRITZ METROLAND COM NEWS EDITOR: *OHN #URRY JOHN CURRY METROLAND COM REPORTER/PHOTOGRAPHER: *OHN "RUMMELL JOHN BRUMMELL METROLAND COM POLITICAL REPORTER %MMA *ACKSON EMMA JACKSON METROLAND COM

nice! Elizabeth May waved at me. That does it. I’m voting Green.� So far I haven’t seen any candidates out near the airport waving at planes, but that could come next. Anything can happen in a democracy.

Editorial Policy The Stittsville News welcomes letters to the editor. Senders must include their full name, complete address and a contact phone number. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. We reserve the right to edit letters for space and content, both in print and online at ottawacommunitynews.com. To submit a letter to the editor, please email to theresa.fritz@metroland.com, fax to 613-224-2265 or mail to the Stittsville News, 80 Colonnade Rd. N., Unit 4, Ottawa, ON, K2E 7L2.

s !DVERTISING RATES AND TERMS AND CONDITIONS ARE ACCORDING TO THE RATE CARD IN EFFECT AT TIME ADVERTISING PUBLISHED s 4HE ADVERTISER AGREES THAT THE PUBLISHER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF ERRORS IN ADVERTISEMENTS BEYOND THE AMOUNT CHARGED FOR THE SPACE ACTUALLY OCCUPIED BY THAT PORTION OF THE ADVERTISEMENT IN WHICH THE ERROR OCCURRED WHETHER SUCH ERROR IS DUE TO NEGLIGENCE OF ITS SERVANTS OR OTHERWISE AND THERE SHALL BE NO LIABILITY FOR NON INSERTION OF ANY ADVERTISEMENT BEYOND THE AMOUNT CHARGED FOR SUCH ADVERTISEMENT s 4HE ADVERTISER AGREES THAT THE COPYRIGHT OF ALL ADVERTISEMENTS PREPARED BY THE 0UBLISHER BE VESTED IN THE 0UBLISHER AND THAT THOSE ADVERTISEMENTS CANNOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT THE PERMISSION OF THE 0UBLISHER s 4HE 0UBLISHER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT REVISE OR REJECT ANY ADVERTISEMENT

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8 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

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Network Facilitator needed to help Kyram Special to the News

Wanted: Someone special to help someone special. The position is formally called being a Network Facilitator but really the role is recruiting community members to lend a hand in any number of ways. But let’s go back to the start to fully explain the situation and the need. Nine year old Kyram Dear of Richmond is a bright, intelligent boy with a great sense of humour who loves meeting people. But Kyram also has high physical needs as he is non-verbal and uses a wheelchair. Kyram, though, can communicate with people through assistive devices such as the one that he controls with a tongue click. He attends school, loves slapstick comedy and is learning to read and to write. Kyram lives with his widowed father Myles who as a single parent is facing the challenges of being the

primary caregiver for a child with a disability. This takes much of his energy and time. The Dear family joined Lifetime Networks, a program run by Citizen Advocacy of Ottawa. This program works to surround those like Kyram by people who can help him achieve his goals and set him up for a rewarding and fulfilling life in his home community. Each “network” has a facilitator whose job is to bring together a group of people committed to being part of a personal network around the person with a disability. The role of a network facilitator is to guide the family through its community in creative ways with the purpose of forming connections and friendships with other members of the community. These connections result in the establishment of a formal group of friends and supporters that make up the “network.” The Dear family’s facilitator

started building these connections in Richmond. King’s Your Independent Grocer (YIG) became the first member of this community support network for Kyram. Each week King’s YIG shops for the family, chops the fresh food into bite-sized pieces and delivers the grocery order. Other network members include the volunteer cooks who prepare meals in advance for Kyram and his father Myles. Unfortunately, this facilitator for the Dear family is stepping down due to other commitments. This means that the Dear family needs a new facilitator and hence the callout for someone special to fill the position. This new facilitator will focus on recruiting network members to increase the Dear family’s social connections in both the Richmond and greater Ottawa communities and who can help support Kyram’s learning and reading skills. Ide-

No ce of Commencement of Transit Project Assessment Process Trillium Line Extension

The Project

The City of O awa is developing a plan to extend and expand the City’s exis ng diesel-powered O-Train Trillium Line service from Greenboro Sta on to Riverside South (Bowesville Road) and to the O awa Macdonald-Car er Interna onal Airport. The plan will include op ons to service the growing communi es of Riverside South and Leitrim, the Airport and adjacent lands, new sta ons at Gladstone Avenue and Walkley Road and a relocated sta on at Confedera on Heights on the exis ng Trillium Line. The plan also allows for future conversion to electric light rail transit (LRT) technology. The Process The planning efforts have been completed and the City is now formalizing the environmental assessment component in accordance with the Transit Project Assessment Process (TPAP) as prescribed in Ontario Regula on 231/08. As part of the TPAP, an Environmental Project Report (EPR) will be prepared to document the en re study process, a descrip on of the planned project, its an cipated environmental impacts, as well as the project’s consulta on program. Consulta on Members of the public are invited to review the work completed to-date, including previous consulta on efforts and reports presented to City Council on this project during the planning phase. Informa on is available on the City’s website at o awa.ca/trilliumline. Comments can be forwarded to the City between September 24, 2015 (date of first TPAP no ce) and October 31, 2015. In early 2016, the dra EPR will be made available for public review and no fica on will be issued. If you would like to be added to our project mailing list, or have ques ons or comments about this project, please contact: Frank McKinney Program Manager, Transporta on Planning Environmental Assessments Unit City of O awa 110 Laurier Avenue West, 4th Floor O awa ON K1P 1J1 613-580-2424 ext. 28540 E-mail: frank.mckinney@o awa.ca Under the Freedom of Informa on and Protec on of Privacy Act and the Environmental Assessment Act, unless otherwise stated in the submission, any personal informa on such as name, address, telephone number and property loca on included in a submission will become part of the public record files for this ma er and will be released, if requested, to any person. No ce first published on September 24, 2015 Ad # 2015-114-S_Trillium_24092015

R0013471988-0924

ally this new facilitator is someone who is a dynamic self-starter, outgoing, focused and rooted in the Richmond/Ottawa community. It is a paid position, considered casual/ part-time, involving six to eight hours a month, mostly in the evenings and on weekends. Anyone interested in knowing more about this facilitator position or anyone who is interested in the position should contact Andrea Podruski, the program manager, by phone at 613-761-9522, ext. 229 or via email at apodruski@citizenadvocacy.org . Citizen Advocacy of Ottawa is a registered charitable organization dedicated to helping people with disabilities to participate fully in community life. Established in 1974, Citizen Advocacy of Ottawa has supported over the years hundreds of people with disabilities while touching the lives of many more.

For more information about Citizen Advocacy of Ottawa, please visit the website www.citizenadvocacy.org .

Nine year old Kyram Dear of Richmond is bright and intelligent but has high physical needs.

Chapman Mills Drive Extension and Bus Rapid Transit Environmental Assessment Study Open House #2 Monday, September 28, 2015 Walter Baker Sports Centre (Barrhaven) Room 202, 100 Malvern Drive Transit Access: Route # 170 6:30 to 9 p.m (Presentation: 7 p.m.) The City of Ottawa has initiated the Chapman Mills Drive Extension (Longfields Drive to Strandherd Drive) and Bus Rapid Transit (Greenbank Road to west of Cedarview Road) Environmental Assessment Study to determine the most appropriate means to accommodate and manage increasing transportation infrastructure requirements around the Barrhaven Town Centre area. Consultation There will be ongoing public consultation activities during the course of the study. This second Open House will provide an update on study progress to-date, including the evaluation of alternative corridor alignments and an update on the preliminary functional design completed to date. Your participation in the Open House meetings is important at which you can discuss the project with the study team and provide feedback. The EA study is being undertaken in accordance with Ontario’s EA Act, fulfilling requirements as a Municipal Class EA process for a Schedule ‘C’ project. The EA process will involve developing, assessing, and evaluating alternatives. This will result in a Recommended Plan which will be presented to City Council for approval. Information on the EA Study is available on the City’s project web site at: (ottawa.ca/chapmanmillsextension) Accessibility is an important consideration for the City of Ottawa. If you require special accommodation, please call or e-mail the project lead below before the event. Interested persons can provide comments throughout the EA process. Any comments received will be collected under the Environmental Assessment Act and, with the exception of personal information, will become part of the public record. For further information or to provide comments, please contact: Jabbar Siddique, P. Eng. Sr. Project Engineer - Environmental Assessment City of Ottawa 110 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa, ON K1P1J1 Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 13914 Fax: 613-580-2578 E-mail: Jabbar.Siddique@ottawa.ca

Ad # 2015-502-S_Chapman_17092015 R0013460095-0917

Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 9


What’s up, doc, around village of Stittsville The Catholic Women’s League at Holy Spirit Parish on Shea Road is growing. The group now has 89 members including 23 recent new members. And a membership drive for the organization is continuing…Bruce Hill, senior development manager, Eastern Ontario Chapter of the Kidney Foundation of Canada, has passed on the following message regarding Stittsville’s Kidney Walk on Sunday, Sept. 13: “Thank You, Stittsville! A special thanks to the many residents of Stittsville who participated in the Sept. 13th Kidney Foundation Walk at Stittsville United Church. Not even the threat of poor weather could put a damper on the fun that was had by all. As a charity we are so very blessed to have wonderful volunteers working for the greater good of kidney patients and their families and kidney disease research. See everyone in 2016.” This year’s Kidney Walk ended up raising over $13,000……On the Friday night just after school started this fall, the kindergarten play yard at A. Lorne Cassidy Elementary School on Hobin Street was used for what would appear to have been a youth party. On the Saturday morning, the scene at the school included beer bottles thrown all over the yard, benches overturned and spray paint on a couple of buildings. A group of parents spent time on the weekend to clean up the yard. The school has now asked the entire com-

munity to keep an eye on the schoolyard and if after-dark loitering is seen, please call the police. Hopefully such monitoring by the community will help eliminate such happenings in the schoolyard…Bradley’s Insurance, which has just been dealing with commercial insurance, is now getting back into home and car insurance as Johnson Insurance, which purchased the Bradley’s home and car business several years ago, is leaving the village as it is relocating its Stittsville operations to 471 Hazeldean Road in Kanata. Bradley’s Insurance will be re-occupying its former building on the east side of Stittsville Main Street on Nov. 1 while also maintaining its current commercial division premises at the corner of Stittsville Main Street and Andrew Alexander Court….Members of the Stittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society, in partnership with the Stittsville Post Office, have looked at the landscape plantings at the front of the post office on Stittsville Main Street and have agreed to renovate these planted areas. The Post Office will then maintain the plantings….Those who enjoy curling or who would like to take up the sport should make a note that the Richmond Curling Club is holding registration for the 2015/2016 season this Friday, Sept. 25 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and again this Saturday, Sept. 26 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Curling Club

Next application deadline is October 15th.

on Perth Street at the front of the fairgrounds in Richmond. There’s social and competitive curling leagues for adults, available both during the day and during the evening. For the youth, there’s Little Rocks, Bantam and Junior curling programs. And the Richmond Curling Club is offering a ten-week Learn-To-Curl program for those who want to take up the sport. For more details, visit the website www.richmond. ovca.com …Identity theft will be the topic of a presentation by Brenda Abramson of the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada this coming Tuesday, Sept. 29 from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Stittsville branch of the Ottawa Public Library. She will provide ways that a person can protect himself or herself from becoming a victim of identity theft. She will also talk about what a person should do if a victim of identity theft. Registration online at www.biblioOttawalibrary.ca is required for this program….Inside Out Studio Barre is now located at the Shops of Main Street Plaza on Stittsville Main Street at Carp Road. This is the second Inside Out Studio Barre location in the Ottawa area. Inside Out Studio Barre is a fitness studio offering complete full body, high energy, low impact workouts….A “Yap & Yarn” session, which is an informal knitting circle, met at the Goulbourn Museum at Stanley’s Corners just south of Stittsville last Sunday afternoon. This group meets once a month on a Sunday afternoon from Sept. through May. All skill levels and ages are welcome. There is not cost, just drop in with a knitting project and enjoy the afternoon. Light refreshments are served….Holy Spirit Catholic Parish on Shea Road is sponsoring a Syrian Christian family of four. The family currently is safe in Lebanon but will soon be coming to Canada depending on how fast the paperwork and government procedures happen. It is a family of a father and mother and two young children. The church has posted a photo of the family in the church lobby. The parish will be looking after housing for the family as well as possible other things like language training when the family does arrive in Canada….Twelve year old Stittsville singer Abigail Moffitt was interviewed by John Milke on BlastTheRadio.com on Tuesday, Sept. 15, after which her song “Unstoppable” was played. It is an original song which she sang in the finals of the Rising Star Talent Competition at the recent Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto….Last July “The Works” burger

locations in Ottawa donated one dollar for every burger sold on Thursdays to Tysen Lefebvre’s “Mission To A Million” campaign to raise one million dollars to fund 100 wishes by Make-A-Wish Eastern Ontario. This ended up totalling $5,000 which was presented to Tysen at “The Works” location in Kanata last week…. The Kanata and District Breast Cancer Support Group meets monthly and women from Stittsville are most welcome to attend. For more information, please call 613-592-4793…. The garden tour of the Stittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society this past summer raised $900 for the Horticultural Society. The funds raised will go toward the Society’s program throughout the year, helping with expenses such as buying plants for projects and paying for insurance….Damage was done to the front window of the Gaia Java Coffee Company shop at the Stittsville Shopping Centre (Shoppers Drug Mart plaza) sometime overnight on Saturday/Sunday, Sept. 12/13. The damage is such that the whole front window unit has to be replaced…. It would appear that the Stittsville Food Bank donation bin at Brown’s Your Independent Grocer on Stittsville Main Street may have been deliberately vandalized last Sunday by someone putting two holes in the lid of a jar of garlic soaked in oil and then putting the jar upside down in the bin so that all of the garlic juice covered all of the items below the jar. It was first thought that the jar had broken but the holes in the jar lid are cleanly man made. There was nothing in the bin that had two prongs that could make the puncture marks in the lid. A mop and hose were used to clean up the bin which smelled of garlic. The bin was put outside to help dispense the smell. All of the items saturated with the garlic juice have to be thrown out. How sad that food has to go to waste because of what seems to be vandalism while many are in need and are relying on the Food Bank….The Western Ottawa Community Resource Centre, which serves the Stittsville area as well as Kanata and West Carleton, held an open house/service fair and free community BBQ last Monday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at its headquarters building on MacNeil Court in Kanata…..City of Ottawa Stittsville ward councillor Shad Qadri and staff were out on the streets in the vicinity of Hazeldean Road and Stittsville Main Street in the village last Monday, Sept. 21, doing their part in the Clean Up The Capital Campaign...

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More ‘What’s up, doc, in Stittsville’ Work has begun on road improvements to Fernbank Road at the new Robert Grant Avenue going into the Fernbank lands as traffic signals are going to be installed at this Fernbank Road/Robert Grant Avenue intersection…South Carleton High School students are hosting a fundraising trivia night on Saturday, Oct. 3 at The Glen Scottish Restaurant at the Jackson Trails Centre plaza. Tables are available for teams of four, six and eight people. Please contact Mel Cuthbert at 613-292-8331 or via email at melcuthbert@hotmail.com for more information…. Mattamy Homes has opened its sales centre for the new subdivision that is being called “Traditions II” on the east side of Stittsville Main Street at its intersection with West Ridge Drive. The new “Traditions II” subdivision is the development that is going to be built east of Stittsville Main Street and south of the existing Hartsmere Drive. Single family homes on 38 foot wide and 46 foot wide lots are being sold, along with townhomes. The sales centre’s hours are Monday to Thursday 1 p.m. to 8 p.m., Friday 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday, Sunday and holidays

11 a.m. to 6 p.m. The phone number is 613-435-6431. Valecraft Homes will also be selling homes in this same new subdivision which it is calling Rathwell’s Landing but the Valecraft sales centre beside the Mattamy sales centre has not yet opened….In last week’s paper, there was an article on page 13 about Cadets of the 872 Kiwanis Kanata Air Cadets attending various camps during the summer and outlining some of their achievements at these camps. A photo above the article showed a Cadet receiving an award at a summer camp but this photo did not relate to the Air Cadet story beneath it. Rather, it was associated with an article on the facing page in which an Army Cadet had received a prestigious silver coin award for being the second top overall cadet at a camp at Blackdown Cadet Training Centre at CFB Borden. While both of these articles related to Cadet activities over the summer, the photo was meant to be associated with the silver coin award story on the facing page and not with the 872 Kiwanis Kanata Air Cadets article which ran beneath it...

Public meeting about subdivision

Free fitness at Goulbourn Recreation Complex Special to the News

There’s free fitness at the Goulbourn Recreation Complex (GRC) in Stittsville this week. The GRC is one of 16 city of Ottawa fitness centres that is offering free “Try It!” passes that can be used aquafitness, cycling and group fitness classes or access to the facility’s fitness centre.

These passes became effective last Monday, Sept. 21 and will run through until this Sunday, Sept. 27. These passes provide an opportunity to check out the fitness facilities at the GRC or to try out one of the group exercise classes. For more information about these free “Try It!” passes, please check out the website www.ottawa.ca.

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submitted to the city of Ottawa for the lands at the southwest corner of Shea Road and Fernbank Road extends westward to link up with plans of subdivision already submitted for lands south of Hartsmere Drive in Stittsville. This newest proposed plan of subdivision, submitted by Tartan Homes, seeks a 731 unit residential subdivision that would consist of 329 single detached units (45 percent of the total), 108 semi-detached units (15 percent of the total), 122 townhouse units (17 percent of the total) and 172 low rise stacked and apartment units (24 percent of the total). These low rise stacked and apartment units will be located along Shea Road east of the hydro corridor which runs through the property. The other housing units will be located to the west of the hydro corridor, with the single detached housing units being adjacent to existing homes to the west. Both city of Ottawa Stittsville ward councillor Shad Qadri and Rideau-Goulbourn ward councillor Scott Moffatt will be involved in this public Mary Ellen Wood is the lead planner for the city of Ottawa regarding this proposed subdivision. She can be contacted at MaryEllen.Wood@ottawa.ca or at 613-5802424, ext. 16482.

PUBLIC MEETINGS All public meetings will be held at Ottawa City Hall, 110 Laurier Avenue West, unless otherwise noted. For a complete agenda and updates, please sign up for email alerts or visit Public Meetings and Notices on ottawa.ca, or call 3-1-1.

Monday, September 28 Ottawa Police Services Board 5 p.m., Champlain Room Thursday, October 1 Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee 10 a.m., The Chamber, Ben Franklin Place, 101 Centrepointe Drive

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On to business, the next meeting of Agriculture & Rural Affairs Committee is coming up on Thursday, October 1st. This month’s meeting will be fairly heavy on drainage items, all four of them involving existing municipal drains in Rideau-Goulbourn. Items 1 and 2 on the agenda deal with connections to the Daly and the Pratt Municipal Drains and the appointment of an engineer to prepare a report on the implications of these proposed drain connections. The other two drainage related items are an update to the Flewellyn Municipal Drain as a result of development north of Fernbank Road and also an amendment to the Dowdall Municipal Drain Engineer’s Report to reflect the enclosure of Branch 6 of the Dowdall MD as it runs through the Department of National Defence property. Other items on the October 1st ARAC agenda include: a renewal of the Septic System Service Agreement between the City of Ottawa and the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority; a report on development charges relating to the Dwyer Hill RV Park at 1229 Dwyer Hill Road; the updated Protocol for Wildlife Protection during Construction; and changes to the Manotick Area Specific Development Charge. Finally, ARAC will also receive a verbal update on the Land Evaluation and Area Review update with reference to the recent Ontario Municipal Board decision relating to the Barnsdale Lands zoning amendment. As always, ARAC meetings are held at Ben Franklin Place in the Council Chambers at 10:00am on the first Thursday of the month. Free parking is available. Budget 2016 Consultation There are two local opportunities for residents to participate in pre-budget consultations in advance of the City of Ottawa Budget 2016. Suggestions and ideas arising from these consultations will be brought forward for consideration before the development the draft budget, which will be tabled later this fall. The two local consultations are as follows: Tuesday, September 29 7 to 9 p.m. John G Mlacak Centre, Halls C & D, 2500 Campeau Drive Councillors Shad Qadri (Stittsville Ward) and Marianne Wilkinson (KanataNorth Ward) Wednesday, September 30 7 to 9 p.m. Rideau Valley Conservation Authority Building, 3889 Rideau Valley Drive, Manotick Councillors George Darouze (Osgoode Ward), Scott Moffatt (RideauGoulbourn Ward) and Michael Qaqish (Gloucester-South Nepean Ward) Residents may also offer budget input by sending an email directly to budget2016@ottawa.ca. Learn more about the City’s budget process with the resources at ottawa.ca/citybudget. Councillor for Hire: Karters’ Korner At the end of August, I had the pleasure of spending a beautiful Friday working at Karters’ Korner, just south of Stittsville. Always a busy place, they were entertaining a couple of summer camps and a corporate retreat on the day that I was there. My day began with a rundown on everything I needed to know from my boss for the day, Julie, and then I was thrown right into the thick of things, spending the morning on the Go-Kart track (working, not driving). Karters’ Korner features the largest track in Eastern Ontario and with 48 carts to keep on the go and a constant lineup and drivers set to race; it’s a busy spot to work. After my work was complete on the track, I helped out in the kitchen, preparing meals for the over 100 summer camps attendees. It was then off to Splatterville to referee paintball sessions. I had the pleasure of refereeing a corporate group from Integrated Device Technology. Karters’ Korner features several different playing fields for paintball sessions and offers paintball year round. The main thing I discovered here was that, although you may be a referee, you still get covered in paint. Good times. Karters’ Korner is not only a great place for having fun; they also do a lot to give back to the community. They were home to the inaugural Capital Karting Grand Prix this past July, which helped raise money for the Children’s Wish Foundation and Roger’s House, among other many deserving charities. They have also been actively involved in raising funds for Cystic Fibrosis Canada through many different events including the annual Great Strides Walk.

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You will be able to hear all about a proposed 731 unit residential development at the southwest corner of Fernbank Road and Shea Road on Thursday, Oct. 1 at the hall at the Johnny Leroux Stittsville Community Arena in Stittsville. That’s when a public meeting about the proposed development is being held, with an open house starting at 6:30 p.m. and a presentation about the proposal happening at 7 p.m. Both city of Ottawa Stittsville ward

councillor Shad Qadri and RideauGoulbourn ward councillor Scott Moffatt will be involved in this public meeting since the proposed subdivision affects both of their wards. The land right now is officially in the Rideau-Goulbourn ward as it has not yet been transferred into the city’s urban area and the Stittsville ward even though it has been added to the city’s serviced urban development lands. The land will eventually be part of the Stittsville ward. This proposed plan of subdivision

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Aside from a little Saturday evening rain, it was a great final weekend before the Autumnal Equinox. I had the pleasure of spending 35 hours at the Richmond Fair this past weekend manning our Rideau-Goulbourn booth. It was great to see so many people from all over the ward and thank you to those who helped out in the booth.

Many thanks to the entire team at Karters’ Korner for having me as an employee for the day, it was a real pleasure. If you would like to learn more about Karters’ Korner, located at 6336 Fallowfield Road, please visit karterskorner.com. If you have any comments, questions or concerns, or if you’d like to inquire about the Councillor for Hire program, please feel free to email me at Scott.Moffatt@ottawa.ca or contact me by phone at 613-580-2491.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 11


5970 Fernbank Road Proposed Subdivision Public Meeting The City has received a Zoning By-law Amendment and Plan of Subdivision application (Application Number D07-16-15-0008) from Tartan Homes for a proposed development on their site at 5970 Fernbank Road located on the south side of Fernbank Road with frontage on Shea Road to the east, and is within the Stittsville South Urban Expansion Area (Area 6). This site is located in Councillor Scott Moffatt’s Ward 21 but given the close proximity to the Stittsville ward I will be actively involved in the application process. Public Meeting on Proposed Development: Date: Thursday, October 1st, 2015 Time: 6:30 p.m. Open House and 7:00 p.m. Presentation Where: Johnny Leroux Stittsville Community Arena, Upper Hall, 10 Warner Colpitts Lane, Stittsville The applications are to permit the development of a 731 unit, mixeddensity residential subdivision along with the associated roads and pedestrian pathways, servicing infrastructure, stormwater management pond, parkland and open space. The applicant has proposed a residential unit share of 329 single detached units (45% of total units), 108 semi-detached units (15% of total units), 122 townhouse units (17% of total units) and 172 low rise stacked and apartment units (24% of total units). The low rise stacked and apartment units will be located along Shea Road, east of the hydro corridor, and the single detached units will about the existing residential community to the west. For more information and to view the plans please visit my website at http://shadqadri.com/stittsville-info/planning-dev/residentialdevelopment/ www.ottawa.ca/devapps . To provide comments and ensure you receive future updates on this proposed development please contact me or Mary Ellen Wood, File Lead Planner at MaryEllen.Wood@ottawa.ca or 613-580-2424 x16482. City fitness facili es offer free Try It! Passes The City of O awa is offering free Try It! passes for City fitness centres and various group exercise classes from September 21st to 27th. The free passes can be used for aquafitness, cycling and group fitness classes or access to City fitness centres. Visit the Goulbourn Recrea on Complex to set up a free membership access card. Pre-Budget Consultation Ottawa residents will have several opportunities in the coming weeks to take part in pre-budget consultations in advance of the City of Ottawa Budget 2016. These opportunities are in addition to Mayor Jim Watson’s telephone town, hall held in June. I along with my west end councillor colleague Marianne Wilkinson (Kanata-North Ward) are holding a joint consultation for our wards on Tuesday, September 29th starting at 7:00 p.m. in the John G Mlacak Centre, Halls C & D, 2500 Campeau Drive. To assist our residents in preparing for the meeting we invite you to visit ottawa.ca for background information and budget resource materials. I also welcome you to send me your comments and input regarding the draft budget in an email shad.qadri@ottawa.ca Under the Sea Gala in support of the Queensway Carleton Hospitals’ ACE As an ACE ambassador it is my pleasure to tell you about an event that is happening on October 21st , Enchantment Under the Sea Gala . This event is in support of the Queensway Carleton Hospitals’ new Acute Care of the Elderly or ACE unit. With the help of dedicated local sponsors including Algonquin College, which will act as the host location of the event, participants will receive a delicious meal served by the College followed by a dance with music performed by one of Ottawa’s own, the Star Fire Band http://www. starfireband.ca/ Silent auction proceeds, along with ticket sales and cash donations from the event, will go towards the ACE Unit. You can contact AceAmbassadorGala@gmail.com for purchase details or to make a donation. The Councillors’ campaign, as ACE Ambassadors, aims to raise $1.5 million from the community, or $30 per household towards a new 34 bed unit that specializes in the treatment and rehabilitation of frail elderly patients. The aim is to complete the new unit in 2016. You can also purchase online at: www.enchantmentundertheseagala.eventbrite.com Always listening to your concerns As your Councillor, I always welcome your keen input and ideas on how we can sustain and improve Stittsville. Please contact our office anytime by phone at 613-580-2476 or by e-mail at Shad.Qadri@ ottawa.ca If you are a S sville resident of Ward 6 and would like to be added to my weekly electronic outreach list, please contact my office to ensure you receive per nent informa on concerning our community. Further informa on about any of these ar cles can be found on my website or you can contact my office to obtain details. 12 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

John Curry john.curry@metroland.com

Last Friday evening, the Gaia Java Coffee Company shop not only was a music hall with its regular music evening but also became a dance hall as well as the evening ended with eight audience members dancing in the aisle as others in the audience rhythmic clapping along, all to the music of “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” a tune done by many artists over the years including Johnny Cash. And this performance-ending free-for-all dance which was punctuated with a giant audience cheer as the music concluded an evening of musical offerings by the Richmond-based Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band. What a performance it was by the six-member group which features a banjo, a mandolin (sometimes two mandolins), a mouth organ, three guitars and vocals as they presented not only some well-known songs but also several originals such as “Going, Going Gone,” “Risk” and “February Morning,” all written by lead singer Kevin Richard. Indeed, the final song and dance was not the only time that the music moved some to dance. A pair of dancers had also showed their moves in the aisle during an earlier song in the performance. “Amie,” a popular college campus song in the 1970’s, was one of the songs done early in the performance by the Richmond Ramblers. This ode to an on-again, off-again relationship first appeared on the second album (1972) of the American country rock band Pure Prairie League and was issued as the group’s debut single in late 1974. “Cousin May, “ a 1973 hit by the Canadian rock band Fludd, brought into the mix both banjo and mouth organ accompaniment while the banjo was also used on the Richmond Ramblers’ version of “Where Corn Don’t Grow,” a 1997 Top Ten country hit by Travis Tritt which had first been recorded by Waylon Jennings on a 1990 album. The Richmond Ramblers followed up “Where Corn Don’t Grow” with the iconic song “(Down on the) Banks of the Ohio,” a song first recorded back in 1927 and over the years recorded by a wide range of singers including Pete Seeger, Johnny Cash, Arlo Guthrie and Olivia Newton-John, with Joan Baez’s 1959 recording perhaps the most renowned. And a real show stopper in any performance, just like it was for the Richmond Ramblers last Friday, is John Den-

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ver’s signature song “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” which had the audience singing along and clapping in rhythm to the music. John Denver recorded this song on his 1971 breakout album and it became one of his most popular songs. Indeed, it is now the theme song for West Virginia University, no doubt because the song describes West Virginia as “almost heaven.” After this John Denver song, the Richmond Ramblers launched into an oldie but goodie, namely “Your Are My Sunshine,” first recorded in 1939 and since then covered by such artists as Gene Autry, Bing Crosby, Lawrence Welk, Nat King Cole, Johnny Cash and Andy Williams. It is now one of the state songs of Louisiana because it was recorded early on by Jimmie Davis, a former Louisiana state governor and country music singer. Lots of applause followed the presentation of the instrumental tune “Duelling Banjos” which featured Dale Cole on the banjo and Mike Asselin on the guitar, reprising the scene from the famous 1972 movie “Deliverance” which saw the tune “Duelling Banjos” played by a city man on guitar along with a country boy playing a banjo. The Richmond Ramblers led off the second half of their Friday music evening performance at the Gaia Java coffee shop with a rendition of “Foggy Mountain Breakdown,” a tune that has become a bluegrass standard. Written by American musician Earl Scruggs, it was first recorded back in 1949. Scruggs, of course, was the person who popularized a threefinger banjo picking style that is now known as the “Scruggs style” and that has become one of the defining characteristics of bluegrass music. Scruggs is well known for playing “The Ballad of Jed Clampett” theme on the Beverley Hillbillies TV show. “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” is well known for being background music used in the 1967 movie “Bon-

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nie & Clyde,” especially in the car chase scenes in the movie. The Richmond Ramblers performed “Wagon Wheel,” another song which generated some rhythmic clapping in the audience. This song went platinum in 2013 for the American strong band “Old Crow Medicine Show,” a group that has played a role in the current revival of banjo picking string bands playing Americana music. The Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band began in 2009 when a poster at the local grocery store announced a search for “Bluegrass Pickers.” The group was formed, jamming in Dale Cole’s kitchen twice a week. The band has seen some change in membership over the years but it still plays regularly at local events, open mics and retirement homes, playing predominantly bluegrass music with a mix of classic country and, lately, some originals. Members of the Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band who performed at the Gaia Java music evening last Friday were Kevin Richard, lead vocals and guitar; Mike Asselin, guitar; Kristin Grzegorek, bass guitar; Steve Nauss, mouth organ; John Estabrooks, mandolin; and Dale Cole, banjo and mandolin. Gaia Java coffee shop owner Paul Jay, in announcing the band before its performance last Friday, declared that the Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band was the first part of the “Stittsville Bluegrass Festival” as the Backsliders bluegrass group was going to be performing on the very next Friday music evening this coming Friday, Sept. 25. These Friday music evenings are held every Friday starting at 7 p.m. at the Gaia Java coffee shop at the Stittsville Shopping Centre (Shoppers Drug Mart plaza) on Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville. Admission is free and everyone is welcome although early arrival is recommended for the best seating. Donations to help the performers are welcomed.

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Music, dancing at Gaia Java shop

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John Curry/Metroland

Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band performs Members of the Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band who are performing at the music evening at the Gaia Java Coffee Company shop in Stittsville last Friday are, from left, Dale Cole on Banjo, John Estabrooks (behind) on mandolin, Kevin Richard on vocals and guitar, Steve Nauss (behind) on mouth organ, Mike Asselin on guitar and Kristin Grzegorek on bass guitar. The group even had some audience members up dancing in the aisle during the performance.

On Tuesday, Oct. 20 at 7:30 p.m., Donna Christie from West Carleton will be the guest speaker at the regular monthly meeting of the Stittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society at the Pretty Street Community Centre in Stittsville. She will be talking about house plants. Monthly meetings of the Stittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society are held on the third Tuesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. at the Pretty Street Community Centre in Stittsville. Everyone is welcome to attend although there is a slight charge for non-members. Memberships are always available. The Stittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society will wrap up its 2015 activities with its annual general meeting and pot luck supper on Tuesday, Nov. 17 at the Stittsville United Church on Fernbank Road in Stittsville.

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‘Horses for Heart Hunter Pace’ at Ottawa Valley Hunt Special to the News

Horse trailers filled the front field at the Ottawa Valley Hunt Farm at the corner of Abb Road and Ashton Station Road near Ashton last Sunday as riders and their horses arrived to take part in the tenth annual Ottawa Valley Hunt “Horses for Heart Hunter Pace� raising funds for the Heart and Stroke Foundation. With sunny blue skies overhead, teams of up to three riders followed a marked route over about 12 kilometers of trails and fields. Each team was timed with the group whose ride came closest to the ideal “Hunter Pace� as determined earlier that day by an experienced Ottawa Valley Hunt rider would be the winner. Riders collected pledges to support their participation in the event, with the funds going to the Heart and Stroke Foundation. A red Heart and Stroke Foundation tent was set up at the start line at the Ottawa Valley Hunt Farm. Three young riders from the Partridge Acres farm near Almonte were among those who participated in this “Horses for Heart Hunter Pace.� John Curry/Metroland Wearing red t-shirts in support of the At the tenth annual Horses for Heart Hunter Pace which was hosted by Heart and Stroke Foundation and with the Ottawa Valley Hunt at its farm near Ashton last Sunday are, from their riding hats plastered with heartleft, Rayne Dubois riding Tiguan; McKenna Jago riding Ivy; and Audrey shaped decorations, the trio were participating in the event knowing that it Laughton riding Rhythm.

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would be a fun cross-country event for their horses while also being a way to support the Heart and Stroke Foundation. All three were riding nine year old horses – Rayne Dubois was aboard Tiguan while McKenna Jago was riding Ivy and Audrey Laughton was up on Rhythm. Over the past nine years, leading up to this year’s event, this “Horses for Heart Hunter Pace� hosted by the Ottawa Valley Hunt has raised more than $35,000 for the Heart and Stroke Foundation.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 15


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Pancake breakfast at Blackstone Park

John Brummell/Metroland

Enjoying the community pancake breakfast hosted by city of Ottawa Stittsville ward councillor Shad Qadri and Enbridge Gas at Blackstone Park in the Blackstone community in the Fernbank lands in Stittsville last Saturday morning are, from left, grandfather Doug Cassidy and grandchildren Gilliam Cassidy and Aiden Cassidy.

John Brummell/Metroland

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City of Ottawa Stittsville ward councillor Shad Qadri, right, chats with Miriam Zuniea, left, Pavlo Milla, centre, at the community pancake breakfast hosted by councillor Qadri and Enbridge Gas at Blackstone Park on Tapadero Avenue in the Blackstone community in the Fernbank lands in Stittsville last Saturday morning.

Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 17


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Even the shopping experience is relaxing.

19TH ANNUAL ATLANTIC SALMON FEDERATION’S FALL RUN DINNER Engaging young minds‌. The Atlantic Salmon

ohn Curry/Metroland

Federation engages young minds in conservation, and inspires a sense of connection through hands-on experience, education, and story-telling. For our children, grandchildren and all generations to come, we work to preserve Atlantic salmon as a symbol of perseverance, natural beauty, and strength.

Harvesting tomatoes at the Community Harvest farm project of the Ottawa Food Bank at the Tom Black farm in Goulbourn on Tuesday, Sept. 15 are volunteers from Stantec Ottawa, from left, Andrew Bernius, Sue Veldkamp and Mike Thivierge.

Inspiring innovation... We invest in targeted research

and development programs that contribute to the conservation and recovery of wild Atlantic salmon and their habitat.

Even the shopping experience is relaxing.

Highlights at the Fall Run Dinner: UĂŠ "Ă›iÀÊ£ääĂŠĂƒÂˆÂ?iÂ˜ĂŒĂŠEĂŠÂ?ÂˆĂ›iĂŠ>Ă•VĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ĂŠÂˆĂŒiÂ“ĂƒĂŠÂˆÂ˜VÂ?Ă•`ˆ˜}ĂŠ ViÂ?>˜`ˆVĂŠwĂƒÂ…ÂˆÂ˜}ĂŠ trip and exotic vacation packages. UĂŠ ĂŠĂŒ>ĂƒĂŒiĂŠÂœvĂŠ-VÂœĂŒÂ?>˜`ʓ>Â?ĂŒĂŠĂƒ>“Â?ˆ˜}ĂŠÂ…ÂœĂƒĂŒi`ĂŠLÞÊ i>“Ê-Ă•Â˜ĂŒÂœĂ€Ăž° UĂŠ Â˜ĂŒiĂ€ĂŒ>ˆ˜“iÂ˜ĂŒĂŠLÞÊ >Ă›iĂŠ >Â?ˆÂ?ĂŠ>˜`ĂŠÂœĂŒÂ…iĂ€ĂŠĂŒ>Â?iÂ˜ĂŒi`ĂŠÂ“Ă•ĂƒÂˆVˆ>Â˜Ăƒ°

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Even the shopping experience is relaxing.

Furniture gives you more options than La-Z-Boy you feel more comfortable, nobody of When it comes to ways to make Wh and amazing offers on a wide selection Coupon Sale, you’ll find hot buy pricing the savings! Galleries. And now during our Bonus this limited time event and get in on sofas and more. So hurry in now during legendary recliners, sofas, reclining

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Special guests include:ĂŠ"Ă€Ă€ÂˆĂŠ6ˆ}vĂ–ĂƒĂƒÂœÂ˜ĂŠÂ‡ĂŠvÂœĂ•Â˜`iÀÊ>˜`ĂŠ Â…>ÂˆĂ€Â“>Â˜ĂŠ ÂœvĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ ÂœĂ€ĂŒÂ…ĂŠ ĂŒÂ?>Â˜ĂŒÂˆVĂŠ->Â?Â“ÂœÂ˜ĂŠ Ă•Â˜`ĂŠL>Ăƒi`ĂŠÂˆÂ˜ĂŠ ViÂ?>˜`ĂŠ>˜`ĂŠ œ˜>ĂŒÂ…>Â˜ĂŠ

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Join in ASF’s conservation efforts at the 19th Annual Fall Run Dinner. /Â…iĂŠ >˜>`ˆ>Â˜ĂŠ Ă•ĂƒiĂ•Â“ĂŠÂœvĂŠ ÂˆĂƒĂŒÂœĂ€ĂžĂŠ 7i`˜iĂƒ`>Ăž]ĂŠ"VĂŒ°ĂŠĂ‡]ĂŠĂ“ä£x°

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20 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

RE. AIRS & A WHOLE LOT MO SOFAS, SECTIONALS, CH

www.lzb.ca/emc

R0013454943-0924


Volunteers from Stantec Ottawa help at Food Bank’s farm project Special to the News

The Ottawa Food Bank’s farm in Goulbourn got a helping hand from volunteers from Stantec Ottawa on Tuesday, Sept. 15. Sunny, warm weather prevailed as about 20 volunteers from Stantec Ottawa, wearing red Stantec t-shirts, helped harvest squash, tomatoes, onions and carrots at the Food Bank farm which grows fresh, organic vegetables which are then distributed by the Food Bank to its member agencies to help those in needy circumstances. The Food Bank farm operates on land donated for this purpose

by Goulbourn farmer Tom Black. The Stantec Ottawa volunteers spent the morning at the Food Bank farm, helping harvest crops. This was part of Stantec Ottawa’s participation in the annual “Stantec in the Community Day� which is a day of volunteerism taking place worldwide involving more than 7,300 Stantec employees. These Stantec staff members volunteered at community organizations not only in Canada but also in the United States, Barbados, the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates and India. Besides volunteering at the Food

Bank farm, other Stantec Ottawa staff members volunteered at the Ottawa Food Bank warehouse. Stantec staff members in Saskatoon, Sask. Undertook a similar volunteering effort for “Stantec in the Community Day� there as Stantec staff members helped harvest vegetables at the Saskatoon Food Bank’s garden. In Denver, Colorado, 30 Stantec staff worked with Grow Local Colorado to prepare community gardens

and to gather produce for local shelters and food banks. In Camden, New Jersey, 16 Stantec staff members planted rain gardens to help that city in its revival efforts that include solving flooding and water infrastructure challenges. “Our promise at Stantec is to design with community in mind,� says Stantec president and chief executive officer Bob Gomes. “What better way to underscore that promise than to get out into our local communities

and roll up our sleeves? We’re inspired by the communities in which we live and the impact our work has on them.� Stantec employes more than 15,000 staff working in over 250 locations around the world including Ottawa. Stantec’s work includes professional consulting in planning, engineering, architecture, interior design, landscape architecture, surveying, environmental sciences, project manager and project economics.

OUR FALL COUPON EVENT

IS BACK! John Curry/Metroland

Preparing onions for shipment from the Ottawa Food Bank’s Community Harvest farm project in Goulbourn on Tuesday, Sept. 15 are Stantec Ottawa volunteers, clockwise, from left, Ganesh Sevathapandian, Natasha Trodler-Lane, Francois Lauzon, Jennie Martin and Abel Solana.

Submitted

Weekly winners at Toastmasters Monika Jain, second from left, presents the trophy to the winners of the evening’s Table Topics Challenge, Carol Ring, far left, and Sandra Gloss, second from right, as guest Frank Gatto, far right, looks on. This is an award that is presented every week at the Stittsville Toastmasters Club.

* PARTICIPATING RETAILERS SUBJECT TO CHANGE. PLEASE NOTE, PRODUCT SELECTION AND AVAILABILITY MAY VARY BY STORE. OM OFFICIAL MARK ADOPTED AND USED BY THE INDEPENDENT ELECTRICITY SYSTEM OPERATOR. USED UNDER LICENCE.

R0013469980-0924

Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 21


Ice skating: A workout for all ages Ice skating is a fun and active activity that provides exceptional cardiovascular health beneďŹ ts. Just like soccer or swimming, ice skating can offer a great work out and the opportunity to advance and specialize in different types of skating. Look no further than the City of Ottawa Recreational Skating School to learn how to skate, or to specialize in areas such as ďŹ gure skating or speed skating. Courses are offered at various times, every day of the week, for ages two years and up. If private lessons are more your style, these can be arranged too! Lesson plans are specially designed to accommodate the participant’s skill level. Call 613-580-2596 for information or register to learn, improve or master the ability to skate. All participants must wear CSA approved hockey helmets.

Want to practice your skating? Use our convenient public skating search tool found on ottawa.ca to ďŹ nd the many public skating locations and times in your area. Skater safety is a top priority at the City of Ottawa and safety starts with a properly ďŹ tted helmet. Children aged 10 and under, as well as skaters of all ages at a beginner skill level, are required to wear a Canadian Standards Association (CSA) approved helmet while attending City of Ottawa indoor public skate sessions. Some tips for choosing a helmet: Buy a helmet that ďŹ ts now, not one to grow into Never buy a used helmet Make sure your helmet has been tested for safety (Helmet will have a CSA sticker on the outside) To learn more about our helmet safety requirements, visit ottawa.ca or call the Public Skating Information Line at 613-580-2666. Remember to skate smart – all skaters, regardless of age and skill levels, are encouraged to wear a CSA approved helmet while skating.

• • •

John Brummell/Metroland

On midway ride Felix Dawson, left, and Wyatt Ralph, right, enjoy a ride on the midway at this year’s Richmond Fair.

Skating is a great way to be active and enjoy our Ottawa winters!

Register now for fall classes! Browse the Recreation eGuide online at ottawa.ca/recreation to discover affordable fall and winter programs, or visit your favourite facility. Our knowledgeable and friendly staff will help you discover your next adventure. You can also call 3-1-1 for more details.

! n u f o t k c a B

The OCDSB is looking for Parent Involvement Committee Members Are you a parent of an OCDSB student? Are you interested in public education, student achievement and well-being?

Learn to Skate

Do you want to volunteer your time to make a difference in public education?

Glide, turn, stop!

201405-205 PRCS

Please complete the application found at: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/Parent_Involvement_Committee by Thursday October 8, 2015.

Spin, jump, speed!

ottawa.ca/recreation

For more details about the committee and the responsibility of members please visit: http://www.ocdsb.ca/par/pi/pic/Pages/WhatisPIC.aspx

R0013472032-0924

Register Toda y! 613-580-2596

Apply to be a member of the OCDSB’s Parent Involvement Committee!

If you have difficulty completing the application form or need an accessible version, please contact Kelly Sullivan at kelly.sullivan@ocdsb.ca or 613-596-8211 ext. 8643.

www.ocdsb.ca R0013470120-0924

22 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015


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`BR` ^<NB PRE-OWNED Ends SEPTEMBER 30th

CLEARANCE EVENT 0% FINANCING ON ALL USED MAZDA’s Over 50 Certified Pre-owned Mazda’s on the lot to choose from...

Mazda 3’s from $9,995 30 available

John Brummell/Metroland

At Richmond Fair Reilly Lafreniere looks over some of the exhibits in the junior school section in the Homecraft Department at this year’s Richmond Fair.

Mazda 5’s from $8,995 10 available Mazda 6’s from $10,995 5 available Mazda CX-9’s from $22,995 4 available Mazda CX-5’s from $22,995 8 available

John Brummell/Metroland

Richmond Lions draw

Eastern Ontario’s #1 Mazda Certified Pre-Owned Dealer

Pulling the winner ticket in the Richmond District Lions Club shed draw at the Richmond Fair last Sunday are, from left, Dayton Winter, Erin O’Donnell, Chris Lalonde and Huntley Ryan. Winner of the draw was Charlie Wilson (ticket #188).

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Palladium Auto Park - Palladium Drive Exit @ the 417

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) 4 5 $

OAC, 0 percent financing is for the first year of the finance contract. After the first year regular bank rates apply. See dealer for full details.

Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 23


John Brummell/Metroland

HOT price

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‘You never know whom you’ll bump into at the Richmond Fair’ Liam Henderson, left, and Alexa Henderson, right, enjoy a ride in a bumper car on the midway at this year’s Richmond Fair.

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Fun at the Fair

Barb Fraser displays her calf in the special “alumni� class in the 4H Elliot Randall has fun with some toy machinery in the dairy show at this year’s Richmond Agriculture Building at this year’s Richmond Fair. Fair.

Has your car reached the end of the road?

DONATE IT TO KIDNEY CAR

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Fair veteran

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Proceeds benefit The Kidney Foundation of Canada

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or call 1.866.788.2277

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 25


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+&''3&: ."35*/ r ĹŹ ĹŹ r martinjeffrey@rogers.com Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 27


Record entries in demolition derby thew Carpenter was the winner in heat #1 while Colin McCooeye won heat #2. Winner in heat #3 was Mr. “G� who although he won the heat, he could not advance to the final because his vehicle was finished. Mr. “G�, a teacher at South Carleton High School, is always a popular entry in the demolition derby. The car that he uses is prepared for the event by stu-

dents in the school’s shop. In the four cylinder final, girl power prevailed as Robyn McGrath emerged as the winner, with Lyle Greer as the runner-up. In the six cylinder class, Robert Cloutier won heat #1 while Josh Rancourt prevailed in heat #2. John Chartrand was the winner in heat #3. In the six cylinder final, John Chartrand emerged as the winner, with Robert Cloutier as the runner-up. In heat #1 in the eight cylinder class, Jamie Stryde was the winner while Cory Moyer was the winner in heat #2. In the eight cylinder class final, Chris Boyer was the winner, with Cory Moyer as the runner-up. Randy May was the winner of the best painted/ decorated car at this year’s demolition derby. Robert Parks was the JOHN BRUMMELL/METROLAND chair of this year’s demoliJoseph Dzitars stands with his car entered in the four cylinder class in tion derby at the Richmond the annual demolition derby at the Richmond Fair last Friday. Fair. Special to the News

A record number of entries, 76, competed in the demolition derby last Friday at this year’s Richmond Fair. There were 29 vehicles in the four cylinder class, 31 entries including four mini vans in the six cylinder class and 16 entries in the eight cylinder class. In the four cylinder class, Mat-

Sixty-six horses in ring John Curry john.curry@metroland.com

Sixty-six heavy horses in the show ring at the same time. Wow! But that was the scene for six-horse hitch class in the heavy horse show at the Richmond Fair last Sunday as 11 entries competed for top honours in the class. Spectators were at least four deep around the ring while the stands were packed as well – yes, the six-horse hitch is a real crowd pleaser! Heavy horse show announcer Murray Graham praises the Richmond Fair for scheduling its popular six horse hitch class at 1 p.m. on the Sunday of the Fair, as then people know exactly when this attraction is happening. And he puts the six-horse hitch class in perspective as a spectacle by relating it to money. “Every time you see a six horse hitch, you see a half million dollars,� Murray says and he tells the crowd this as well. He explains that each horse costs anywhere from $15,000 to $50,000, that the harness costs about $8,000 and that the wagon being pulled costs anywhere from $35,000 to $80,000. Combined, this makes it close to a half million dollar experience in some cases.

The team of Belgians driven by Brian Crabb of Stittsville won this year’s sixhorse hitch class. Besides the crowd-pleasing six-horse hitch class, the heavy horse show also had great four-horse hitch and two-horse hitch classes this year. There were 13 entries in the four-horse hitch class and a similar number, 13 entries, in the twohorse hitch class. For the heavy horse show at this year’s Richmond Fair, exhibitors came from a wide area, ranging from Maniwaki to Brockville to Potsdam, NY to Copenhagen, NY. Another event at this year’s Richmond Fair last Sunday which also attracted a sizeable crowd was the inaugural edition of the Ultimate Cowboy Obstacle Race. These Ultimate Cowboy Obstacle Races are an exciting new attraction that are proving popular in local fairs. It involves a horse and rider taking on obstacles and then speeding around the ring, with music playing all the time. It’s a timed event, with the horse and rider making their way through a number of obstacles before finishing with a speedy race around the ring, bringing lots of excitement to the crowd. See ULTIMATE, page 33

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613-221-6228 28 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015


CLASSIFIED

CLS467012_0917

STORAGE

FIREWOOD

Indoor winter storage for cars, boats etc. in Stittsville, clean & secure building $300.00 small cars. Please call 613-880-8909.

Firewood- Cut, split and delivered or picked up. Dry seasoned hardwood or softwood from $60/face cord. Phone Greg Knops (613)658-3358, cell (613)340-1045.

FOR RENT

FOR RENT

Carrie Hands, CAI, CPPA, Auctioneer & Appraiser Jason Hands, Auctioneer

- AuctionAntiques & Modern Household Furnishings For Carol Ann Jackson, Brockville And others at Hands Auction Facility

Large Bright 1 & 2 bedroom apartments

Saturday, September 26 @ 9 a.m. Preview from 8 a.m. day of auction or by appointment Large auction featuring furniture leather sofa & chairs, Gibbard, collection of mantle & wall clocks, Beswick & Royal Doulton figurines much, much more. Please visit www.handsauction.com to view complete descriptive catalogue and photographs. Advance Online Bidding opens Friday, September 18th @ 9 a.m. and closes Saturday, September 26 @ 7:30 a.m. As always we are pleased to see you at the live auction, the choice is now yours.

1 & 4 Robert Street, Off of Daniel Street, Arnprior

613-623-7207 for viewing appointment

5501 County Road 15, RR #2, Brockville, ON K6V 5T2 Phone: (613) 926-2919 E-mail: auction@handsauction.com www.handsauction.com AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

FIREWOOD

FIREWOOD FOR SALE. All Hardwood. 613-839-1485

FIREWOOD

FOR SALE

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FOR RENT

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THE FURNACE BROKER Godfrey, ON | 613-539-9073

– Security building, Apts recently redecorated, ample kitchen cabinets and closets. – Close to shopping and medical services. – Elevator and Laundry on site.

AUCTIONS

Saturday October 10th. Tack 10 am. Equipment Noon. Horses Sell at 2 pm. 3340 Galetta Side Road, 1/2 hr West of Kanata. 10 min East of Arnprior. To consign call 613-622-1295

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

“Business Opportunity” Pet Grooming Shop and Boutique, See details at: www.BusinessSellCanada. com/52330004.htm

AUCTIONS

OPEN HOUSE SEPTEMBER 21-25 INCLUSIVE 1-4PM

AUCTION SALE

CS467087_0924

Saturday October 3, 2015 9:30 AM sharp To be held at our home located at 3624 Farmview Rd., Kinburn, Ontario. We will be selling items from the recently sold home of Ian and Pam Cunningham, Burnstown, as well as items from consignors in Pakenham and Arnprior. Everything is in excellent condition. Please plan to attend. Antique Style modern pine furniture – 2 flat to the wall pine cupboards; 2 cedar chests, 2 jam cupboards; Antique pump organ converted to a desk; Ornate hall accent table and mirror; 4 Rabbit ear press back chairs; Singer Treadle Sewing machine; Pie stand; Antique style cupboard; Pine bed; small pine trunk; Leather reclining swivel chair and ottoman; leather office chair; Wing back chair; Leather Chesterfield; 5 wooden easels; Sharp Aquos 52” flat screen TV – LC-52064U; Sharp Aquos BD Blue Ray player; Yamaha AV receiver; Antique Desk with tear drop pulls; Love seat; Occasional chair; Air Hockey table; Hi Boy chest; Fouton; Contemporary desk; 4 flat irons; Assorted Coca Cola collectables; Coca Cola drink dispenser; Milk cans and cream cans; 2 Antique wringers; Antique Piano Stool; 2 wooden decoys; Wooden Motorcycle; Carved ships; Selection of carved Sandpipers; 8 coal Oil lamps; 2 fur coats; Selection of cameras – Box cameras, Brownie cameras, camera attachments; Box of fishing reels, 2 fishing rods, tackle boxes; marbles; Crock jugs; crocks; Washboard; 4 large area rugs; 2 sets of snowshoes; Children’s toy and books; Miniature Christmas Village; Set of Noritake china; Glass Hen on a Nest – no eggs; Hand mixer; Snowboard; Framed prints, paintings, pictures; wall clock; Silverware and silver chest; 5 HP MTD Chipper/Shredder; Ryobi 10” table saw with attachments; wood working clamps; bar clamps; shovels; rakes; Fiskars weed puller; etc. etc. etc. Please visit our website www.oneillsauctions.ca for complete listing and pictures Terms: Cash or Cheque with ID Refreshments Auctioneer: John J. O’Neill 613-832-2503 Owners or Auctioneer not responsible in case of loss or accident day of sale

BARNS We repair, modify or demolish any size of structure. Salvaged buildings, timber and logs for sale. Various size buildings. Fully insured.

John Denton Contracting

GALETTA LIVESTOCK HORSE CONSIGNMENT SALE

1 bedroom $775 2 bedroom $875 – Please respectfully no pets / no smoking. – Free Parking

FARM

FOR SALE

CL458109

AUCTIONS

Cell (613)285-7363

TOM’S CUSTOM AIRLESS PAINTING Specializing in roof barn & aluminum/ vinyl siding painting *30 years experience. *Screw nailing and roof repairs. Insured and Bonded Free Estimates

(613)283-8475 GARAGE SALE

Almonte Antique Market, 26 Mill St. in historic BUSINESS SERVICES downtown Almonte. All Chimney Repair & 613-256-1511. 50 vendors. Open daily 10-5. Restoration- Brick & Stonework. Workmanship guaranteed. Free esti- Garage Sale, 7 Granite mates. Call Jim, Ridge Dr., Stittsville, Sat613-291-1228. urday, September 26, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Various items.

www.119townline.com Live Auction: Sept. 26th, 2015 | ESTATE Sale 10 am / HOUSE Sale 1pm

MELISSA’S FOOT Care House visits in Kanata, Stittsville are Reigistered Pratical Nurse With advanced footcare for the elderly. 613-220-9399.

Moving Sale, September 26 and 27, 2487 6th Line Road, Dunrobin. Some furniture, household items, yard articles, some antiques, etc.

FOR SALE

Cedar (white), quality lumber, most sizes, decking, T&G, channel rustic. Also huge bundles of cedar slabs ($45) and large Garage Door Installers. bags of shavings ($35). Established overhead door www.scoutenwhitecedar.ca company looking for (613)283-3629. experienced technicians Catalogue from /installers. Welding and Free Over 4000 electrical ability an asset. Halford’s!! Top wages and great products: Butcher Supplies, benefits. Send resume to: Leather & Craft Supplies, paula@alparsons.on.ca or Traps and Wildlife Control Products. 1-800-353-7864, fax 613-798-2187 email: order@halfordhide.com. Visit:www.halfordsmailorder.c COMMERCIAL RENT om.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

119 TOWN LINE E CARLETON PLACE This heritage home was built by wood craftsman Adam Dunlop in the late 1800’s. This home is hand built by one of the finest craftsman 12 inch solid oak base boards and complementing trim with hand carved brass door hinges. All doors have rosettes with solid oak trim throughout, with many upgrades over the last century this has had 3 generations living in the home and never been offered for sale since built! Some of the features include 4 bedrooms, the original oak ice box still functioning, sneak stair wells, upper and lower kitchens second floor terrace,3rd floor fully renovated. Most if not all new dry wall and stucco ceilings up graded wiring and panel new gas furnace nearly new roof. Modern kitchen and all appliances included. Hard wood floor throughout solid oak stairwells oak French door separating the dining room and formal living room to many stained glass windows to describe all original. Huge piece of property that includes large work shop built in 1878 2 car garages and large 3 tier barn. Property backs onto Christmas tree farm once owned by Dunlop family. IMPAC VALUATION $285,750. PROPERTY TAXES 2015 $ 3,545.30

613-285-7494

joyntauctioncompany.com

CLR630882

AUCTIONS

www.emcclassified.ca

CLR597804_0416

AUCTIONS

PHONE:1-888-967-3237 or 1-888-WORD ADS

Professional office space, furnished, private and semi-private offices, use of printer/scanner/copier, Staples discount card and cloud space included, at the Excelerator, 361 Queen Street in the Gallipeau Centre, Smiths Falls. Free parking, fast WiFi. Rents from $250 to $500 monthly! Call 613-205-1232 or email manager@xcelerator.ca

New & Used Tires, all sizes, stored inside, need space all must go. Carleton Place. email: allenbaird@live.com 1-863-669-6610 Teak, book wall shelving unit. 8’ sideboard, coffee table with tiles, end table, floor & table lamps. 613-592-0172 Cedar rails, pickets & posts for sale, as well as rough sawn cedar & pine lumber. Call or text 613-913-7958.

Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 29


CLASSIFIED FOR RENT

FOR RENT

Great 3 bdrm townhomes for rent in Kanata at Rankin Terrace!!! Units from $1075 a month. For families with children. Call Ron at 613-831-3445 or email aidan@arcapm.com

3 Bedroom, 1.5 bathrooms, attached double garage. Fallowfield Rd, Stittsville, non-smoker, no pets, first/last, oil heat $500 dep required. $1600/mnth + hydro/oil, available October 1. 613-836-9007

Large house to share, $700/month inclusive, Almonte area. Mature couple offering finished basement (approx 800 sq. ft.), separate fridge, bathroom. Must be employed, no pets. 613-791-1233.

AUCTIONS

REAL ESTATE PLUS ESTATE AUCTION

CARD OF THANKS

Thank You CLS467008_0917

ANTIQUE & MODERN FURNISHINGS. GOOD GLASS. SILVER & SILVERPLATE. for the late Donald M. & Martha Knox (nee McDiarmid) @ 300 Joseph St., Carleton Place, ON K7C 3N4 on Sat., Oct. 3/15 @ 9 am Property to be sold @ 11 am

~ A Timeless, Classy & Relaxed Home ~ This single owner, hallmark “solid red brick” Transverse Linear Ranch House features a carport under an extended roofline. A clean, one story, deeper-than-wider home w/ a sturdy block constructed, finished basement. The front-wing boasts an L-shaped, open-concept formal living & dining room w/ a sophisticated, eye-catching vaulted ceiling. The functional kitchen has long stretches of Corian countertops. Highlighting designer VanLeeuwen Boomkamp cabinetry. Inclusives – GE wall oven, Magic Chef cooktop, Whirlpool fridge, Kenmore built-in d/w & window coverings. Adjacent pantry. The sleeping-wing features 3 bedrooms (master w/ 2 pce ensuite). Laundry chute. 4 pce central bath has ceramic wall tile, compartmental Boomkamp cabinetry & Corian countertop. The bright entertainment room includes a Hunter natural gas free-standing stove w/ remote. Oak flooring in living, dining & bedrooms. Finished basement includes a huge family/games room, great for gatherings. Laundry closet w/ washer/dryer included. 3 pce bath. Bedroom w/ double closet. Workshop. Cold room. Office/study area. “Many” storage friendly closets. Central air. Trane gas furnace. New, rented gas hot water heater. 200 amp service. 2 yr old roof. A natural & casual backyard w/ perennials. Lot size 65’ fr. x 156’ d (+/-). Taxes $3663. (+/-). Legal Description - Plan 637 Pt Lot 166 Pt Lot 167. Immediate occupancy. For private viewing, terms & conditions please call our office at 613-267-6027. The McDiarmid’s helped shape the Carleton Place town. 4 of the 6 McDiarmid brothers enlisted in WW1 w/ only 1 brother returning home. Being a prominent family, expect some unannounced local memorabilia. This pristine property is well-located & offers a home that presents a growing interest in retro-modern architecture. Bring a lawn chair & participate in the bidding to settle the estate. A large auction sale. Terms on Chattels – Cash & Cheque Only – Catering

Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 www.jimhandsauction.com 30 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

CARD OF THANKS

The family of the late Doris (Dodie) Gourlay wishes to express their sincere appreciation and heartfelt thanks to family, friends and neighbours for their love and support over this difficult time. Many expressions of sympathy, floral tributes, meals, prayers, cards and phone calls were received and were comforting. Memorial donations made to the Alzheimer’s Society Research are gratefully acknowledged for the ongoing research to curb this disease. A special thank you is extended to Dr. Gordon, the nursing staff and Laurie Hebert at the Arnprior and District Memorial Hospital, for their expert care and compassion during her stay. Sincere thanks to Lisa and Eldon Smith of Boyce’s Funeral Home for their professionalism and their arrangements for her final dignified and peaceful journey. To Rev. S. Moore and Rev. Jack Lougheed – Thank you for the Memorial Service. The family and friends were much comforted and blessed by the messages and traditional hymns chosen. A final thank you to my dearest wife Dodie departed, family, comrades and friends. Dodie was my guide and anchor over the past sixtyfive years (almost). She was always the homemaker, Mother, and that steadying influence. In sports, travel and my career, she always was there with her love and care. My journey continues…. “A piece of her heart will always live on with those of us who loved her.” Willis & Families

The family of the late Patricia Stanton would like to express their sincere gratitude to the nurses and staff of the Arnprior District memorial Hospital and especially the enduring support of Claire and Dr. Susanna McCarthy. We felt truly blessed by the outpouring of love and assistance given by family, friends and neighbours. Forever Grateful, Gerald, Ann Marie (Carl) and Gerry (Sylvia) CLR636932

Hungerford Gate Apartments Kanata 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available for immediate occupancy; include fridge, stove, storage, parking, and ceramic flooring; security cameras, rental agent and maintenance person on site; laundry room; located near parks, buses, shopping, schools, churches, etc. To view, call 613-878-1771. www.brigil.com

www.emcclassified.ca FOR RENT Richmond, Lovely large sunny main floor, one bedroom apartment, quiet street, private, parking included, single occupancy. $900/month, available immediately. 613-808-6205 3 Bedroom bungalow, 2 bathrooms, private, propane heat, woodstove, Fallowfield Rd, Stittsville, non-smoker, no pets, first/last, $1600/mnth + hydro/propane, available October 1. 613-836-9007

HELP WANTED

LARGE 1 BEDROOM APT in Carp Ont. Fridge, stove and heat included. Village of Carp, Nonsmoker. Call 613-839-2049

House cleaning company Based out of West Carleton looking to hire for growing company. We work on teams. A car is provided during work day, so only need a way to and from work. Tuesday though Friday with some Monday. Please contact Natalie at 613-292-5189 for further information.

DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

HELP WANTED Lone Star, Kanata, Now Hiring. Full time experienced, line cooks. Apply to: 4048 Carling Avenue. Competitive Wage. Come join the great Lone Star Atmosphere.

HELP WANTED Looking for an online business? I can help! You will receive free training and after support. Go to www.123haveitall.com and check it out. Requires a computer and telephone and 5-15 hours weekly.

Do You Have 10 hrs/wk to turn into $1500/mnth using your PC and phone? Free i n f o : www.BossFree123.com

Make $1000 Weekly!! Mailing Brochures From Home. Helping home workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity. No Experience Required. Start Immediately. Full Time Caregiver in www.newmailers.com Carp. Experience caring for epileptic adult. Resume to barmarc@sympatico.ca Professionals Needed. Looking for career-minded persons willing to speak to Canadian Guide Dogs for the small groups or do oneBlind, Manotick, requires on-one Presentations lokennel assistant Wednesday cally. Part Time or Full to Saturday, 7am to 5pm Time. A car and internet starting asap. Experience access are necessary. with dogs; valid driver’s Training and ongoing suplicense. Email resume to port provided. Build finaninfo@guidedogs.ca by cial security. Paid daily. September 30, 2015. No Call Diana 1.866.306.5858 phone calls please.

DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

HELP WANTED RECEPTIONIST/ OFFICE ASSISTANT at Black Electric Ottawa, ON The receptionist is responsible for a wide variety of clerical duties in support of company administration. This includes coordinating and communicating office activities, greeting and screening visitors, answering and referring inbound telephone calls, and scheduling appointments. The Receptionist will also be responsible for administering company correspondence including incoming and outgoing mail and distribution; as well as special projects support. Apply via email to Andrew at avitale@ozzelectric.com

Real Estate Salespeople for Century21 Explorer Realty with 5 offices. Call Brenda 613-913-9915 for details on becoming an agent or transferring. Snow blowing required, private driveway & around both sides of parked van. Call M & J @ 613-836-3597. Steel Buildings/Metal Buildings, Up to 60% Off! 30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call: 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings. ca

Sheedy, Michael It is with heavy hearts and profound sadness that we announce the peaceful passing of Michael at home, surrounded with love and family by his side on Thursday, September 17, 2015, at the age of 70. Cherished son of Lawrence (Pembroke). Predeceased by his mother Claire. Beloved husband of Jo-Ann. Loved by his children Amanda (Eric), Matthew (Lisa), Adam (Julian), grandchildren Hana, Liam, Rori and Declan. Special thanks to Brenda Boyd. Michael will be remembered for his love of family, music, nature and a great sense of humour. Friends visited the family at the Alan R Barker Funeral Home 19 McArthur Ave, Carleton Place on Sunday, September 20, 2015 from 2 to 5 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Hawthorne Street, Carleton Place on Monday at 1 p.m. A reception was held at the Thirsty Moose following the service. We are forever grateful for the exceptional and compassionate care, support and kindness given by so many to Michael and us during this emotional time. In lieu of flowers donations to Canadian Cancer Society or the charity of one’s choice would be appreciated. EVER THE IRISH GENTLEMAN, MAY THE ROAD RISE UP TO MEET YOU AND THE WIND BE AT YOUR BACK. GOD SPEED.

Crawford Ervie George Retired-Ocean Wave Fire Company (Carleton Place Fire Dept.) – 30 years service. Retired-Carleton Place Hydro – many years service. Peacefully at Fairview Manor, Almonte with family by his side on Saturday, September 19, 2015, in his 94th year. Loved husband of the late Violet (nee Vandusen). Cherished step-father of Joan Whalen (late Morley) and the late Norma Kennedy (Gerald-surviving). Loving “Grampa” of Joey, Susan and John Kennedy, and Jane Carnegie and 11 great-grandchildren and 1 great-great-grandchild. Brother of the late Edward Crawford (Myrtle - surviving). Remembered by many nieces and nephews. Friends visited the family at the Alan R. Barker Funeral Home, 19 McArthur Avenue, Carleton Place on Tuesday, September 22, 2015 from 7 to 9 p.m. Funeral service was held in the Chapel on Wednesday at 11 a.m. Interment at St. James Anglican Cemetery with a reception to follow at the funeral home. Donations to the Fairview Manor Foundation would be appreciated by the family. The Fire Department honoured Ervie with a service at the funeral home on Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. www.barkerfh.com

VENDORS WANTED for Christmas, Craft, Bake, Business Show - Saturday November 28th at the Nick Smith Centre in Arnprior. Call ABMSH - Liz Wall at 613-623-7981

IN MEMORIAM

In Loving Memory of a Dear Husband, Dad and Grandpa, Kenneth Reid who passed away September 22, 2007 Every day in some small way Memories of you come our way Though gone you are always near Lovingly remembered and sadly missed Lillian Dale & Sylvia Bob & Kenitha Debbie & Cam Ken & Audrey And all your grandchildren and great grandchildren

CLR636923

AUCTIONS

FOR RENT

CLR636811

AUCTIONS

FOR RENT

PHONE:1-888-967-3237 or 1-888-WORD ADS


HUNTING SUPPLIES

HUNTING SUPPLIES

Canadian Firea r m / H u n t e r Safety Courses. Call Dave Arbour 613-257-7489 or visit www. valleysportsmanshow.com for dates and details of courses near you.

Hunter Safety/Canadian Fire-arms Courses and exams held once a month at Carp. Call Wenda Cochran 613-256-2409.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Carleton Environmental Services Is seeking Full Time DZ Vaccum Truck Operators G. License Portable Sanitation Route Drivers G License Yard Person

Immediate Openings for

GENERAL LABOURERS & FORMSETTERS

HELP WANTED

Email Resume: carletonpumping@xplornet.ca or Fax: 613-838-5682 CLR625462-0806

CLR636514/0924

s "RIDGE EXPERIENCE AN ASSET BUT NOT REQUIRED s /TTAWA 6ALLEY !REA s %MAIL INFO CORINGTON CA s &AX s 4ELEPHONE

Must be Physically Fit and Clean Drivers Abstract

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HUNTING SUPPLIES

MARINE

COMING EVENTS

Weatherby Mark V Fibermark 7 mm Remington mag, Leupold scope, Remington Fendero SFII heavy barrel, 7 mm Remington mag, Leupold scope, Weatherby Vanguard S2 30-06 Leupold scope. Also Leupold VX-3 4-1/2-14x40 scope, Leupold VX-3 6-1/2-20x40 scope, both in boxes. Everything Mint. New ammo .300 Win mag .30-06, .223 Remington. 613-264-9298.

Winter Boat Storage. Eastern Ontario’s most affordable winter storage by a proper mechanic. From $350/season including cleaning, winterizing, oil change, storage and shrink wrapping. Free oil change for first time customers. 40 years of repairing and storing boats. 6 1 3 - 2 6 7 - 3 4 7 0 . steveday13@yahoo.ca

6thAnnualToledo Ride-AThon is back! Time to saddle up for a fun day. Sat. Oct. 17, registration 10 a.m.-12:30. Toledo (watch for signs). Bring your horse and enjoy approx. 25 kms. of country scenic trails. Chili lunch provided after the ride. $50 per rider (or equivalent in pledges). Grand prize goes to the rider with the highest dollars in pledges ($200 minimum pledge amount to be eligible for the draw). Pre-register by Oct. 2 and be entered in a preregistration draw! Don’t forget our raffle table, a chance to win other amazing prizes!! For registration forms and pledge forms: www.saddleupintoledo.co m Proof of liability insurance required. Toledo Ride-A-Thon, saddling up to help our community!

LIVESTOCK

$ MONEY $

CONSOLIDATE 6thAnnualToledo Ride-AThon is back! Time to Debts Mortgages to saddle up for a fun day. Sat. Oct. 17, registration 90% No income, 10 a.m.-12:30. Toledo Bad credit OK! (watch for signs). Bring your horse and enjoy Better Option approx. 25 kms. of country scenic trails. Chili Mortgage lunch provided after the ride. $50 per rider (or #10969 equivalent in pledges). Grand prize goes to the 1-800-282-1169 rider with the highest dollars in pledges ($200 www.mortgageontario.com minimum pledge amount to be eligible for the draw). Pre-register by Oct. 2 and be entered in a pre- FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX registration draw! Don’t forget our raffle table, a STUART chance to win other BOOKKEEPING amazing prizes!! For AND TAX SERVICES registration forms and pledge forms: Full Service www.saddleupintoledo.co Personal and Busim Proof of liability ness insurance required. Toledo Ride-A-Thon, saddling up 613-832-8012 to help our community!

HELP WANTED

Carleton Place & District Memorial Hospital

HELP WANTED

Giant Pumpkin Weigh-Off & Boat Races at Hugli’s Blueberry Ranch in Pembroke (Sep 26 & 27). Corn maze, pig races, pumpkin cannon shows & more until the end of O c t o b e r . www.blueberryranch.ca

HELP WANTED

HERE COMES THE TRAIN! THE OTTAWA VALLEY RAILWAY STORY. A

Stone Fence Theatre historical musical. Renfrew and Smiths Falls shows. Schedule, information and tickets: www.stonefence.ca 1-866-310-1004

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

Casual R.N.’s, R.P.N.’s P.S.W.’s Apply in writing to : Sarah Bradshaw, DOC Fax: 613-253-2190 Email: sarah.bradshaw@reveraliving.com

CLS453846/0514

STONERIDGE MANOR NOW HIRING

Cruickshank Construction, a leading road builder and aggregate supplier located in Ontario and Alberta has immediate openings for: Cruickshank is looking for ON-CALL and SPARE combination snow plow/salter drivers with an AZ/DZ license for the following cities: ~ Vankleek Hill ~ Carlsbad Springs ~ Carleton Place ~ Haley Station ~ Renfrew ~ Arnprior ~ Brockville ~ Kemptville

~ Pembroke ~ Stonecliffe/Point Alexander ~ Camden East ~ Crosby ~ Kingston ~ Lansdowne ~ Morrisburg ~ Summerstown

We offer a competitive hourly rate, a weekly stand-by pay and guarantee hours.

VACATION/COTTAGES VACATION/COTTAGES LAKEFRONT 3 BEDROOM PET FRIENDLY COTTAGE (sleeps 6) available for weekly or weekend rental from Sept. 7th through the end of Oct. at reduced Fall rates. Situated in Haliburton Highlands, with 4 piece bath, living/dining area, well equipped kitchen and attached screened-in Muskoka room. Well looked after grassy grounds on a gentle slope down to a 400 sq ft dock on a very peaceful NO MOTOR lake. Great swimming, fishing, with 1 canoe, 3 kayaks, a peddalo, life vests, firepit and games. Available now from Sept. 7th through Oct. at Fall rates. Please call Patrick 416-564-4511 or email patrick@nemms.ca for rates and full photos.

VACATION/COTTAGES

REAL ESTATE

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

Two Storey House on County Rd 511. Near Calabogie. Recently appraised at $160,000. Best offer over $120,000. Respond by October 2. Apply: Box 0X, c/o EMC, PO Box 158, Smiths Falls, ON. K7A 4T1.

TRAVEL/VACAT/COTTG

WHITE CEDARS Criminal Record? Don’t let TOURIST your past limit your career PARK plans! Since 1989 276 WHITECEDARS RD Confidential, fast Affordable Off Highway 41 A+ BBB Rating, Around the corner from Employment & Travel Dacre Freedom, Call for Free Info QUIET PRIVATE Booklet. 1-8-NOWFAMILY PARDON (1-866-972-7366) CAMPGROUND www.RemoveYourRecord.c SEASONAL CAMPING om ONLY 4 NEW PRIME WATERFRONT/VIEW LOTS Nice,Handsome Gentleman FOR 2016 58, would like to meet an 50 Amp, potable non treatAttractive Lady for a relaed water, direct connectionship. Please Call tion to septic tanks and tile 613-296-1496 beds. 2 large water front 2 large water view only 90 site WE HAVE A FEW 30AMP/WATER/SEWER SITES AS WELL FIXED HELP WANTED FEES FROM 2016 TO 2020 CLR636486-0924 BY APPOINTMENT ONLY 613-649-2255 WWW.WHITECEDARS. CA

/&&)#% !$-).)342!4)6% 3500/24 p &ULL 4IME

Health Information Management Professional The Carleton Place & District Memorial Hospital requires a Temporary FullTime Health Information Management Professional (Maternity Leave Replacement) starting in January, 2016 for approximately six months. The HIMP is responsible for the coding and abstracting primarily of emergency room records, and may be required to provide assistance with the coding of inpatient and day surgery charts. Coding and abstracting will be done according to the requirements of the Canadian Institute of Health Information (CIHI) and the Ministry of Health. The successful candidate must be available to work 37.5 hours per week, Monday to Friday. Temporary assignments can be terminated with two weeks’ notice. QualiďŹ cations: Graduate of CHIMA (Canadian College of Health Information Management Association) recognized HIM program; successful completion of the National CertiďŹ cation Examination; member in good standing with CHIMA and a minimum of one year experience in a similar role. For further details, visit careers on our website at www.carletonplacehospital.ca QualiďŹ ed applicants should apply in writing no later than Friday, October 2nd, 2015 at 4:00 p.m. to the Carleton Place & District Memorial Hospital, Human Resources Department, 211 Lake Ave. E., Carleton Place, K7C 1J4, Fax: (613)257-3026, E-mail: jobs@carletonplacehosp.com

MORTGAGES

COMING EVENTS

WANTED Wanted - furnace oil, will remove tank if possible. Call 613-479-2870.

WORK WANTED A Load to the dump Cheap! Clean up renovations, clutter, garage sale junk or dead trees brush. 613-256-4613. A Small Job or More. Renovations/Repairs. Kitchen & Bath, Tub-toshower conversions, grab bars, painting, plumbing, flooring, tile, countertops, decks. 613-858-1390, 613-257-7082. Certified Mason. 12 years experience. Chimney repair, restoration, parging, repointing. Brick, block and stone. Small/big job specialist. Free estimates. 613-250-0290.

.OVATECH IS A MULTI DISCIPLINED CONSULTING FIRM LOCATED IN +ANATA OFFERING A WIDE RANGE OF CIVIL ENGINEERING PLANNING AND LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE SERVICES TO BOTH PRIVATE AND PUBLIC SECTOR CLIENTS 7E ARE CURRENTLY SEARCHING FOR AN %XCEL SAVVY !DMINISTRATIVE !SSISTANT TO Ă&#x; ASSIST 0ROJECT -ANAGERS WITH DAILY CORRESPONDENCE AND PROPOSAL WORK AND Ă&#x; PROVIDE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT FOR THE DAY TO DAY OPERATION OF THE COMPANY

3KILLS

Ă&#x; %XCELLENT -ICROSOFT /FFICE SKILLS INCLUDING 7ORD %XCEL 0OWER0OINT /UTLOOK AND !CCESS EXPERIENCE WITH !DOBE #REATIVE 3UITE AN ASSET Ă&#x; %XCELLENT WRITTEN AND VERBAL COMMUNICATION SKILLS Ă&#x; !BILITY TO PRIORITIZE TASKS AND WORK INDEPENDENTLY OR AS PART OF AN EXPERIENCED TEAM Ă&#x; 3TRONG SENSE OF URGENCY FOR MEETING DEADLINES Ă&#x; !BILITY TO JUGGLE MULTIPLE PROJECTS WHILE MAINTAINING ATTENTION TO DETAIL IN A FAST PACED AND DEADLINE DRIVEN ENVI RONMENT Ă&#x; !BILITY TO MAINTAIN PROFESSIONALISM AND A POSITIVE SERVICE ATTITUDE AT ALL TIMES EXHIBITING INITIATIVE TACT AND JUDGMENT Ă&#x; YEARS EXPERIENCE WORKING IN AN ADMINISTRATIVE ROLE

7E OFFER

Ă&#x; ! COMPETITIVE COMPENSATION PACKAGE AND COMPREHENSIVE BENEFIT PACKAGE Ă&#x; ! COLLABORATIVE AND TEAM ORIENTED WORK ENVIRONMENT Ă&#x; .EWLY RENOVATED OFFICE SPACE AND FREE PARKING

0LEASE SEND RESUMES BY 3EPTEMBER TH TO (UMAN 2ESOURCES SUBJECT LINE /&&)#% !$-). 3500/24 % MAIL JOBS NOVATECH ENG COM

Candidates must live within 25 minutes of one of the cities listed above. To apply please send your resume to chr11@cruickshankgroup.com or Fax to # 613-542-3034.

www.cruickshankgroup.com www.cruickshankgroup.com CL464226

Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 31


CLASSIFIED

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

Network

Your Classified Ad or Display Ad would appear in weekly newspapers each week across Ontario in urban, suburban and rural areas. For more information Call Today 647-350-2558, Email: kmagill@rogers.com or visit: www.OntarioClassifiedAds.com.

DRIVERS WANTED

WE ARE URGENTLY LOOKING FOR THE FOLLOWING AZ DRIVERS: OWNER OPERATORS **Now Offering Higher Mileage Rates**

MORTGAGES

LOWER YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS AND CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT NOW!!!

CROSS BORDER COMPANY HIGHWAY DRIVERS $.514 Cents Per Mile

1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation Refinancing, Renovations Tax Arrears, No CMHC Fees

LCV DRIVERS – MISSISSAUGA TERMINAL Premium Rate

$50K YOU PAY: $208.33 / MONTH (OAC)

APPLY TO:

No Income, Bad Credit Power of Sale Stopped!!!

recruiting@rosedale.ca OR CALL TOLL-FREE: 1-855-721-3962 For More Details

BETTER OPTION MORTGAGE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL TODAY TOLL-FREE: 1-800-282-1169

JOIN THE FAMILY DRIVE THE BUSINESS

www.mortgageontario.com

www.rosedale.ca/drivers

(Licence # 10969)

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!

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

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Ultimate cowboy obstacle race at Fair Continued from page 28

tural Service Award for an outstanding contribution to agriculture to Bob Bell, a current member of the Fair’s sheep committee and the person acknowledged as being the driving force behind the revitalization of the sheep show at the Richmond Fair and its ongoing success. The grand prize winners in the an-

nual Richmond Fair raffle draw were declared at the opening ceremony. Winner of the $2,000 grand prize was Anne Fenton while Sue Sadler won the $1,000 second prize. Kay Hodges and Jennifer MacDonald won $500 each while Gary Saunders and Jenny Craig won $250 each.

The ten winners of $100 prizes were Marg and Catharine Smith, Doug Vaughn, Marg Barkley, Dan Laframboise, John Gil, Gloria Simpson, Kenny Kirkham, Wayne Seabrooke, Rita Devenny and Dale Wannamaker. This year’s Fair enjoyed sunny, warm days on both Thursday, Sept.

17 and Friday, Sept. 18. Saturday was overcast but there was no rain until about 1:30 p.m. Onlookers lined McBean Street and Perth Street for the annual parade on Saturday morning which remained dry. Sunday proved to be a great day, with sunny blue skies overhead and lots of visitors to the fairgrounds.

This extreme cowboy racing has even been featured at the Calgary Stampede and is becoming a must-see event at local fairs. It is meant to be a balance of horsemanship and speed, all celebrating the attributes of the horse. Judging is based on the obstacles, overall horsemanship and time. This year’s 171st annual Richmond Fair was officially opened in a ceremony in the Dining Hall at the fairgrounds on Thursday evening, Sept. 17. The ribbon for the opening was cut by Tysen Lefebvre, the 15 year old from Stittsville whose “Mission To A Million” in support of Make-AWish Eastern Ontario has raised over $300,000 on its way to its million dollar goal. Tysen’s campaign was helped out at the opening as he was presented with a donation of $1,500 which was raised for his campaign by the staff at the Scotiabank in Richmond. Scotiabank also presented a $5,000 donation to the Richmond Agricultural Society at the official opening as John Brummell/Metroland well. Brian Crabb of Stittsville, accompanied by Kelsey Lorraine in the driver’s seat as she is holding the championship trophy for the Richmond Fair’s A highlight at the opening ceremo- six-horse hitch class which is sponsored by Jason’s Landscaping, drives his team of six horses in the ring after winning the class at the Richmond ny was the presentation of an Agricul- Fair in Richmond last Sunday afternoon.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 33


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Entries feature variety of colours in Richmond Fair parade John Curry

john.curry@metroland.com

Following in the steps of the television show “America’s Got Talent,� a TV show about the annual Richmond Fair parade last Saturday could go under the name “Richmond’s Got Colour.� Right from the Richmond Legion contingent that led off the parade (a “colour� party, no less) and that drew applause from onlookers all along

the route to the contingent of six red fire vehicles that brought up the rear of the parade, there was a palette of colours moving along McBean Street and then Perth Street which were both lined with onlookers of all ages. It took the parade 27 minutes to pass by the corner of Perth and McBean Streets. Adding a musical touch of colour to the parade were two pipe bands, one immediately following the parade-leading Richmond Royal

Canadian Legion colour guard and the Highland Mist Pipe Band which came later in the parade. Even the two old army jeeps that followed the Legion presence at the beginning of the parade had their own colour, perhaps not so much their khaki brown exteriors as the colourful stories of military valour and service which they could tell if they could only talk. See BLUE, RED, GREEN, page 36

John Curry/Metroland

Deb and Chuck Crickett of Richmond, dressed up in red and black costumes as they are supporters and fans of the Ottawa RedBlacks football team, stand beside Chuck’s 1961 Bel Air Chevrolet which he drove in the Richmond Fair parade last Saturday.

John Curry/Metroland

Sitting in the rumble seat of the 1931 Ford Model John Curry/Metroland ‘A’ of Jack Scollan, right, standing, are Richmond Standing with a display of mums which was part of Agricultural Society president Ian Stackhouse and the Richmond Nursery entry in this year’s Richmond Homecraft Department president Laura Robertson. Fair parade are, from left, Lucas Giekes, Jen Giekes They rode in the rumble seat in the Richmond Fair (behind), Lisa Seniuk and Peter Rofner. parade last Saturday.

John Brummell/Metroland

Sitting on the curb, waiting for the annual Richmond Fair parade to pass by last Saturday are, from left, Grayson Baker, Owen Johns, Aiden McLean, Olivia Virtue, Carly Virtue, Shane McLean, Lexi Virtue and Olivia Wallace who is holding Taylor Wallace.

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Blue, red, green and more all show up in Richmond Fair parade Continued from page 35

Jack Scollan’s 1931 Ford Model A which carried Richmond Agricultural Society president Ian Stackhouse and Homecraft president Laura Robertson in its rear rumble seat (how did they both get in there, you might wonder) portrayed a exterior that was eye-catching not for its glamour but for its classy looks.

And we like to think of our politicians as colourful and so it was not surprising to see a blue banner and a blue-shirted group of supporters walking along the parade route proclaiming for federal Carleton Conservative Party candidate Pierre Poilievre who was there among them, walking the whole route. But as he indicated at the end of the parade, walking the streets in these days of the ongoing election is a daily thing for him

as he goes door to door meeting voters. Carleton-Mississippi Mills MPP Jack MacLaren was not overshadowed as he rode along in Robert Ralph’s vintage vehicle. City of Ottawa mayor Jim Watson was not to be outdone as he moved along the parade route waving to the crowd perched atop an old red fire truck that now operates under the Bytown Brigade auspices. A following blue pickup truck carried

signage for city of Ottawa Rideau-Goulbourn ward councillor Scott Moffatt, followed by a red toy four-wheeler. And you just knew that green would be the colour of the Green Party and a supporter carried two green signs proclaiming Deborah Coyne as the Green Party candidate in the federal Carleton riding in the election. And so it went – colourful entry after colourful entry, adding a shine to what was otherwise an overcast, albeit very warm, day. Brophy Financial Planning’s entry included a pair of horses pulling a red wagon. There was plenty of colour and energy on the floats of the Goulbourn Skating Club and the Richmond Cooperative Nursery School while Tysen Lefebvre’s smile and “thumb’s up� salutes as he appeared out of the sunroof of the Make-A-Wish Eastern Ontario car added the “colour� of his “Mission To A Million� campaign to the parade. See RMMHA ENTRY, page 37

ohn Curry/Metroland

Seated around a table on the St. John’s Anglican Church float in last Saturday’s Richmond Fair parade are, from left, clockwise, Nancy Evoy-Veilleux, Jean Langman, Daniel Connors, Tamara Connors, Rev. Michel Dubord, Tara Connors, Christine Ormsby and Don Veilleux. Paul Langman, missing from the photo, drove the tractor which pulled the float which was publicizing the free Open Table community dinners which are hosted by the church once a month, with the next one coming up this Saturday, Set. 26 with the doors opening at 4:30 p.m. and the dinner served at 5 p.m. with everyone welcome to attend.

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RMMHA entry wins in ‘Organizations’ category in annual Richmond Fair parade community dinner this Saturday, Sept. 26 was another splash of colour in the parade, as was the floral-drenched Ritchie Feed & Seed float, with a number of blue-jerseyed folks aboard. The Carleton Farm Seed float following on the heels of the Ritchie Feed & Seed float added yet more colour to the parade. Harmony Gardens’ entry of a tractor with a snow blower and a truck with snow plow on it reminded us all that the snows of

winter are not so far away now. Kemptville Bowling’s entry featuring two dancing white bowling pins was an entertaining addition to this year’s parade – it made you want to dance along with them. The Richmond Munster Minor Hockey Association float with a flock of youngsters, all wearing hockey jerseys, not only added lots of activity to the parade but also added yet another colourful dimension to it.

Several antique tractors, a souped-up red car, a number of vehicles from Myers and a red vehicle all preceded the colourful green contingent from TD Canada Trust, decked out in green jerseys and green hats. Winning entries in the parade were as follows: Business – Jim Parks, Jr., antique truck, first; Richmond Nursery, second; and Fairy Princesses, third; Antiques – Barry Beach,

antique tractor, first; George Parks, antique tractor, second; and Charlie Brophy, horses and wagon, third; Novelty – Goulbourn Skating Club, first; Organizations – Richmond Munster Minor Hockey Association, first; Richmond Cooperative Nursery School, second; and St. John’s Anglican Church, third. Best of Parade – Jim Parks, Jr., antique truck.

Each week, a lawyer from the Kanata based Allan Snelling law firm will answer a reader’s question. A weekly guide in legal matters

If you have a general legal question that you would like to have addressed send it via email to Legalmatters@compellingcounsel.com

I am a practicing family physician with two young children. My accountant mentioned the idea of incorporating my practice into a professional corporation. How does this work? As a physician, you are generally permitted to create a physician corporation. The Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA) and the Regulated Health Professions Act govern physician corporations. Once incorporated, a Certificate of Authorization from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) is required for your professional corporation to practice medicine in Ontario. There may be significant benefits to incorporation arising from income splitting through the payment of dividends to adult shareholders and the deferral of tax through retention of excess cash and investing in the corporation. A professional corporation carries on the practice of medicine with you as both a shareholder and employee of your corporation. It is important to note that under the provisions of the OBCA, a professional corporation

City of Ottawa firefighter Peter Laplante, right, keeps Sparky, left, the fire safety dog, company as they walk along the Richmond Fair parade route last Saturday.

About Allan Snelling

Allan Snelling LLP is Kanata’s full-service law firm. Collaborative in approach and focused on solutions, our dedicated team of lawyers and support staff are committed to client satisfaction. We recognize that each client is unique and our firm has been structured to meet the diverse legal needs of every person and business in Kanata and the surrounding community.

About Ryan Wake

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Colour flowed from the Richmond Nursery float with its flowers and other vegetation including trees. And speaking of trees, the Fallowfield Tree Farm’s tree spade moved along with the parade with a giant tree in its grip. The Richmond Village Dental banner added more colour to the parade while an associated pickup truck was covered with images of white teeth, certainly appropriate for a dental business. A display of green corn stalks was in the rear of the pickup truck representing the Richmond 4H Club. And then both colour and action followed with the Shriners and their various entries – the Keystone Kops, airplanes, an outhouse courtesy of the Shriners’ Hillbilly Unit and a bathtub courtesy of the Hillbilly Maws’ group. Chuck Crickett’s 1961 Bel Air vehicle, the same green and white colour combination that it was when it was new, added to the parade’s colour, as did the red and black clownlike outfits which he and his wife Deb were wearing

as they drove in the vehicle. Indeed, this vehicle is a Richmond treasure through and through as it was purchased new by Irene Styles who eventually sold it to Chuck and he has treasured and preserved it ever since as it reaches 54 years old. Southpaw Property Maintenance was well represented in the parade with a big decorated tractor as well as a smaller fourwheeler. The float of St. John the Baptist Anglican Church, promoting the church’s upcoming free Open Table

R0023421444_0924

Continued from page 36

Born and raised in Ottawa, Ryan obtained his law degree from Dalhousie University’s Schulich School of Law in 2014. Ryan completed his articles with Allan Snelling and has been with the firm as an associate since. Ryan’s practice focuses primarily on corporate and commercial matters, assisting a variety of clients with the purchase or sale of a business, corporate reorganizations and incorporation.

does not shield the shareholders from professional liability as acts of a professional corporation are deemed to be acts of the shareholders. Non-voting shareholders who are not members of the CPSO are exempted from any professional liability. All voting shares of the corporation must be held by a member of the CPSO. Non-voting shares can be held by a parent, spouse or child (and minor children must have their shares held in trust). Professional corporations are only permitted to carry on the practice of the profession or activities that are related to or ancillary to the profession. Furthermore, a professional corporation is permitted to invest its surplus funds in passive investments. A lawyer with experience in incorporating professionals can help you set up your professional corporation such that your objectives may be realized.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 37


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‘Here Comes the Judge’ - To the Richmond Fair John Curry

john.curry@metroland.com

tract a beef cattle judge from afar because of a number of fairs happening at the same time in southwestern Ontario where the person might be judging or showing. In addition, there are a lot of beef sales in the month of September which further restricts the choice. Choice of a judge is critical not only because a judge is obviously needed but also because the choice of a certain judge can impact the success of a particular show. It has been known, for example, that some exhibitors will not attend a show if a certain person is the judge. The Richmond Agricultural Society tries to identify all of the judges for the various livestock shows in its prize list that is distributed to exhibitors well before the fair so that they are well aware of who the judge is going to be. As for the Homecraft Department judges, there is a list of qualified Homecraft judges that is available and selections are made from this list. The areas of expertise of each judge are

listed. At this year’s Richmond Fair, judges ranged in experience. There was Sheila Rondeau from Kinburn who judged the western horse and pony performance show last Saturday and then was back last Sunday to judge the miniature horse show. She has been judging equestrian shows for 32 years and, quite simply, she does it because, as she says, “I love it.” This year she started judging at shows and fairs in May and has been busy every weekend, something that will continue through to October. She is fully certified, either by Equine Canada or another certifying agency. Sheila herself has shown in just about every equestrian discipline and then got into coaching and teaching. Slowly, though, she moved more into judging. She now is totally involved in judging and running equestrian clinics.

Here Comes the Judge! And while this is a phrase that became popular as a result of a regular comedy feature on the Rowan & Martin “Laugh-In” TV show that ran from 1968 to 1973 and even inspired a song “Here Comes the Judge” by American soul singer Shorty Long in 1968, it is also a phrase that could be applied to a fall fair because a fair is like a convention of judges. At the annual Richmond Fair which ran from Sept. 17 to Sept. 20, there were judges for all of the livestock events (heavy horse, miniature horses, saddle and harness, western horse and pony, ultimate cowboy obstacle race, dairy cattle, beef cattle, sheep) and judges See MAKING, page 43 for various classes in the Homecraft Department (floral, wine, liqueurs and beer, fruits and vegetables, culinary arts, arts and handicrafts, quilts, junior school). And those red ribbons don’t just appear – they are awarded after a John Curry/Metroland judge makes a decision. But how are these judges engaged Sheila Rondeau of Kinburn judges a class in the miniature horse show at the Richmond Fair last and just who are these judges? Richmond Agricultural Society Sunday. She also judged the western horse and pony general manager Dale Greene explains performance show at the Fair last Saturday. that judges in the livestock shows are usually engaged from names provided to him by the committee responsible for a particular show. He noted that for the heavy horse show, he tries to rotate the judge on an annual basis through the three main heavy horse breeds – Belgian, Clydesdale and Percheron. Livestock judges are usually exhibUÊ,iVi ÛiÊÞ ÕÀÊ Ü Ê itors or former exhibitors themselves. t «>ÞÊV iµÕi The Agricultural Society pays for âià Ê*À UÊ7 Ê Ài>Ì travel for any out-of-area judges and UÊ" ViÊ>ÊÜii Ê accommodation if necessary. The `i ÛiÀÞ dairy show judge is always from the UÊ7ii i `ÃÊ"vv area while the beef cattle judge at the Richmond Fair usually hails from the John Curry/Metroland TRACI Renfrew County area which is known Walter Foster, right, of Richmond, a long time horse enthusiast, chats with Daniel Boulais, 23 .62 21 Stittsville CAMERON 613.2 for its beef farms. It is difficult to at- left, from Venise, QC who was the judge for the heavy horse show at the Richmond Fair. R0012578659

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42 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015


Making judging debut at Fair Continued from page 39

“I just really enjoy the judging aspect of it,� she says, adding that she believes that she is a fair judge, noting that fairs and shows keep hiring her year after year, bearing out this opinion. She explains that each class in a show has its own judging criteria. For example, she says, in a miniature horse country cart class, the horse should not be high stepping. However, in a show hackney class, you want to see a high stepping horse. Sheila says that she is a judge who posts the scores that she gives, saying that as a judge she has to justify every one of her placings every time. You have to know your stuff, she says, and you have to be able to say why a horse did not place well. If someone comes up to me, I have to be able to justify my placing, Sheila reiterates. Sometimes it could be the rider’s fault. Other times the horse makes a mistake. “I never miss a thing,� Sheila says, saying that in judging she often tries to stand off in a corner of the ring so that she only misses maybe a few strides by each entry. Standing in the centre of a ring can leave a lot of blind spots for the judge, she notes. Sheila comments that new judges tend to take a long time judging a class because they can’t make up their minds. She herself, with her experience, is quick with her decisions and in

fact she has to remind herself at times to slow down. She says that exhibitors like a quicker show because more time in the ring means that more things go possibly go wrong and affect a placing. Sheila says that a good ring announcer and ring steward can move a show along quickly, saving at least an hour in the length of a show. Sheila admits that each show can have different winners, that the outcome is not automatic. She said that a horse or driver/rider can have good days and bad days. In addition, she says that both heat and rain impact different horses differently and can affect their performance. A new judge who was making his career judging debut at this year’s Richmond Fair was Jonathan Rylaarsdan from Winchester where he works with his father on their farm (Delcreek Holstins) which boasts 400 acres and has 65 Holsteins. Jonathan judged the 4H dairy show last Friday. But Jonathan, although a new judge, has plenty of experience in the show ring, showing ever since he was six years old and moving up through 4H and even showing now annually at the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto. He says that ever since he started to show livestock, he had had his own opinions about the animals and has wanted the opportunity to express them which judging now allows him to do.

John Curry/Metroland

Jonathan Rylaarsdan, left, of Winchester, who was the judge for the 4H dairy show at the Richmond Fair last Friday, is with Chad Henderson, right, of Ashton who is holding the calf Hendercroft Culimant Brenna which captured the junior championship ribbon in the 4H dairy show.

See DANIEL BOULAIS, page 44

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 43


Daniel Boulais judges only couple of shows a year Continued from page 43

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But he points out that a judge has to be able to back up the reasons for his or her placings. He also realizes that providing comments helps 4H’ers learn, but he emphasizes that a judge’s comments need to be positive, presented with respect. Jonathan has attended the Holstein Ontario judging school for four years now in preparation for judging. He wants to get better at judging and is always seeking advice from veteran judges. He realizes that he is young but he hopes to develop into a great judge in the future. He is looking forward to judging championship shows in the future including even at the Royal Winter Fair. In showmanship classes, Jonathan says that as a judge he expects the showperson to be dressed properly as this reflects pride in the breed being shown. A showperson should also know the correct position in which the animal looks best, something that comes from practise, he notes. As for the confirmation classes, Jonathan has a clear opinion in his judging. “I love a nice pair of feet and legs on a heifer,” he says, adding other attributes include a nice long head and neck and what he terms lots of style. He says that a “big strong stylish heifer is my type.” Not a rookie judge and not a long time judge is Daniel Boulais from Venise, QC who judged the heavy horse show at this year’s Richmond Fair. A 20 year heavy horse exhibitor (including Percheron, Belgin and Clydesdale), Daniel started judging two or three years ago and does just a few shows a year. He does not want to do more than a couple of shows a year for much the same reason that he will not walk through a barn full of exhibitors when he arrives to judge

a show – he does not want to be accused of any favouritism whatsoever in his judging. So he limits the number of shows and tries to keep his distance from exhibitors, although after a show he will go and talk to the exhibitors and tell why he placed a horse or entry where he did. He likens a judge to a person who is buying a horse to take home, as both have to make decisions about which is the best horse to choose. He says that in his view a good horse is a good mover with a long body. But Daniel also notes that a horse is like a person in that it may feel good one day and not so good another day, affecting its performance in the ring. Daniel had been engaged to judge the heavy horse show at the Richmond Fair last year but weekend rains forced the cancellation of the show. So he was invited to return to the Fair this year. Echoing a sentiment similar to that of Daniel with regard to a horse performing differently on different days is Murray Graham of Embrun who has been the announcer for the heavy horse show as the Richmond Fair for the past decade. Horses have good days and bad days, Murray says. He says that all judges tend to be good and agrees that a judge should always be prepared to give reasons for his or her choices, especially if dealing with young exhibitors who need such advice in order to improve. Murray says that his role as an announcer is to try to keep the flow of the show going while letting the people watching know who is showing in the ring and to let them know what is coming up. He says that it is also important to inform those in the barn area as well what classes are coming up so that they can be prepared and enter the ring promptly when the class is called.

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*Coupons subject to availability 44 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

Richmond Agricultural Society heavy horse committee member Helene Rivest, left, is with Murray Graham, right, of Embrun who is the announcer for the Richmond Fair’s heavy horse show.


SPORTS

Connected to your community

Stittsville Royals lose home opener 8-3 John Curry

john.curry@metroland.com

The Stittsville Royals were riding high, undefeated and atop the Richardson Division standings in the new Central Canada Hockey League Tier 2, as they entered last Sunday’s home opener against the visiting Perth Blue Wings at the Goulbourn Recreation Complex in Stittsville. But it was the visitors who prevailed, skating away with an 8-3 win and taking over first place in the Richardson Division, one point ahead of the Renfrew Timberwolves, Westport Rideaus and Stittsville Royals. The game last Sunday started out well for the hometown Royals as the Stittsville squad took a 2-1 lead out of the first period. Ryan DiMillo had scored early at the 1:31 mark of the period and while Perth later came

back to tie up the score, Troy Hass scored on a power play at 10:51 to give the Royals a 2-1 lead which is how the period ended. But the roof fell in on the hometown Royals in the second period when the Perth Blue Wings scored four straight goals to take a 5-2 lead into the third period. The visiting Blue Wings then scored again early in the third period to make the score 6-2 before the Royals hit the scoreboard again with Ryan DiMillo scoring his second goal of the game at the 5:44 mark of the period to make it 6-3 in favour of the Perth team. This is how it stayed until the 19:16 mark of the period when Perth scored an empty net goal to make it 7-3. Perth then added yet another goal with only eight seconds left in the game to make the final score 8-3

for the visitors, handing the Royals their first loss of the season. Mike DiBello and Aaron Hickie both had two assists in the game for the Royals while single assists were earned by Jake Oliver and Matt Allan. The Perth Blue Wings had 51 shots on the Royals’ goal in this game, including 27 shots in the second period alone. The Stittsville Royals had 41 shots at the Perth net in the game. The Stittsville Royals were penalized 16 minutes on eight infractions in the game while the Perth Blue Wings were penalized 18 minutes on five infractions. This was the first loss of the season for the Stittsville Royals. On Saturday, Sept. 12, the Royals had defeated the Winchester Hawks 1-0 in overtime. The Royals followed this

up with a 10-2 victory over the CharLan Rebels on Sunday, Sept. 13. The Royals then defeated the Casselman Vikings, last year’s champions who defeated the Royals in the final series, beating the Vikings 7-6 in overtime on Thursday, Sept. 17. After four games so far this season in the new Central Canada Hockey League Tier 2, the Stittsville Royals have a record of three wins and one loss, good for six points and a tie for second place behind the Richardson Division leading Perth Blue Wings who are sporting a record of three wins and one shootout loss, good for seven points. Renfrew Timberwolves and Westport Rideaus are both tied with the Stittsville Royals in second place with six points each. The Arnprior Packers are next with four points, followed by the Brockville Tikis,

Prescott Flyers and Athens Aeros, all with two points apiece. Troy Hass and Aaron Hickie lead the Royals in scoring so far this season, both with seven points after four games. Troy Hass has six goals and one assist while Aaron Hickie has two goals and five assists. Mike DiBello and Clay Carter are next in scoring with five points each. Mike DiBello has one goal and four assists for five points while Clay Carter has five assists. The Stittsville Royals travel to Arnprior this Friday, Sept. 25 to play the hometown Packers in a 7:30 p.m. game at the Nick Smith Centre in Arnprior. The Royals next home game is this coming Sunday, Sept. 27 at 2:30 p.m. at the Goulbourn Recreation Complex on Shea Road in Stittsville when the Westport Rideaus will be the visiting team.

Skating Club offers range of programs ing Club offer a wide range of programs but it offers them at three different sites, providing flexibility and convenience for members who come from all parts of Goulbourn – Stittsville, Richmond, Munster and the rural areas.

Ladies can learn to play hockey Special to the News

Ladies no longer have to be content with cheering on their daughters, sons and others on the hockey rink. Now, thanks to the Goulbourn Girls Hockey Association (GGHA), ladies have the opportunity to learn hockey skills and to actually play the game. That’s because the GGHA is offering its Women’s Learn to Play Program again this year. This season two different type of sessions are being offered. One is a 14 week skills session while the other is a 14 week scrimmaging session geared to those looking to play games. You can register for one or both sessions. Each session will be held twice a month with ice time on the weekends at either the Goulbourn Recreation Complex or the Kanata Recreation

Centre. Cost of the program is $250 per person per session. Each session includes 14 times on the ice. This fee includes a jersey and insurance. Anyone who wishes to do both the skills and the scrimmage sessions can take advantage of a reduced rate of $450. Registration for this Women’s Learn to Play Program can be completed through the GGHA’s website at www.ggha.ca . Once registration is completed online, the registration fee can be mailed to the address on the registration form. Online registration for this Women’s Learn to Play Program is now open. More information can be found on the website www.ggha.ca . Any questions can be answered by contacting Cathy Bureau at president@ ggha.ca .

These programming sites include the Goulbourn Recreation Complex and the Johnny Leroux Stittsville Community Arena, both in Stittsville, and the Richmond Memorial Community Centre in Richmond. Programs offered by the Goulbourn Skating Club include CanSkate which is Skate Canada’s learn-to-skate program; StarSkate in which skaters develop their figure skating skills; CanPower which focuses on balance, power, agility, speed and endurance skills, all ideal for hockey and ringette players; an adult/teen skating program; a Special Olympics skating program; and synchronized skating. The Goulbourn Skating Club’s fall programs including Canpower, StarSkate and Advanced CanSkate are now underway, running for the month of September. The Goulbourn Skating Club’s winter programs will run from October through to March. Programs offered will include CanSkate, CanPower, StarSkate, Advanced CanSkate, Adult Skate, Special Olympics and snychronized skating. All of these programs are taught by nationally certified Skate Canada instructors.

AUCTION SALES

Registration is available online at http://www.goulbournskatingclub.com/fallwinter-registration.html . More information about the Goulbourn Skating Club is available at the website http://www.goulbournskatingclub. com . During the upcoming 2015-2016 season, the Goulbourn Skating Club will hold a number of special skating events for its members. These will include a club competition in December in which many skaters will perform their solo routines for friends and family; a “Skate with Santa” for CanSkate members; an ice show at the beginning of April which will showcase all of the Club’s skaters while featuring great music and fun choreographies; and the Club’s annual awards presentation which is held in conjunction with the Club’s annual general meeting.

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Commercial Property & Contents Auction

Saturday Oct 17 @ 10:00 a.m. for Dacre Industrial Minerals Inc., 245 Wentland Rd, Eganville, Ont 10 acres with a 40’X60’ garage plus contents. Full listings of auctions sales and pictures can be found at prestoncull.com Terms: Cash or Cheque with ID Lunch by Billy T

Auctioneer: Preston Cull, R.R.#1 Douglas, Ont 613-649-2378

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With the coming of fall and winter, thoughts are turing to skating. And when it comes to skating, the Goulbourn Skating Club offers a wide range of programs. Not only does the Goulbourn Skat-

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2133 Carp Rd. Stittsville Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 45


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BRIDLEWOOD BIBLE CHAPEL

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A New Testament Church 465 Eagleson Road (also entrance off Palomino) 11 am Family Bible Hour (Nursery Available) Sunday School 6:00 pm Evening Bible Hour www.bridlewoodbiblechapel.ca 613-591-8514

85 Leacock Drive, Kanata

R0013338193-0625

office@chapelridge.ca

www.chapelridge.ca

1135 March Rd., Kanata, ON. K2K 1X7 Pastor: Rev. M.M. Virgil Amirthakumar

Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday and weekday Bible studies see our website for times and locations

www.GBCottawa.com

Sunday Eucharist

+6 %+3. +6 28:+5 =;3- %=7.+A %-2885 =:;/:A

+6 ":+3;/ =;3- %=7.+A %-2885 =:;/:A *!' $! & C

www.stpaulshk.org

info.trinity.kanata@gmail.com

KANATA BAPTIST CHURCH (AZELDEAN 2D s

3UNDAY 3ERVICE AM AM

Telephone: (613) 592-1961 E-mail: ofďŹ ce@stisidorekanata.com

(9:00am Children’s program available) Pastors: Bob Davies & Doug Ward kbc@kbc.ca

www.kbc.ca

St. Thomas Woodlawn 3794 Woodkilton Road 11 am Sunday Services

St. George’s Fitzroy Harbour 192 Shirreff Street 9 am Sunday Service

Contact us 613-623-3882 or at stthomas.stgeorge@live.ca

BOOKING & COPY DEADLINES WED. 4PM CALL SHARON 613-221-6228 46 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

3760 Carp Road Carp, ON

Please join us at 110 McCurdy Drive, 836-1429, www.trinitykanata.ca 1817 Richardson Side Road. 613-836-1429 www.trinitykanata.ca

Mass: Saturday at 5:00 pm Sunday at 9:00 and 11:00 am We are a welcoming and friendly community; please come and worship with us in our new church

Preaching the Doctrines of Grace

St. Paul's Anglican Church

Sunday Sunday Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am

ST. ISIDORE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

2470 Huntley Road

Service and Sunday School 10:30 a.m.

Wheel Chair logo

Pastor Shaun Seaman Minister of Discipleship & Youth: Meghan Brown Saavedra Pastor Shaun Seaman

Grace Baptist Church of Ottawa

Rev. Neil Wallace 613-839-2155 www.stpauls-dunrobin.ca stpaulsunitedcarp@sympatico.ca

Growing, Serving, Celebrating %&&*#G%%&(%-,('*

Rev. Louis Natzke, Pastor Office 613-592-1546 www.christrisen.com

Morning Worship – Sundays, 10am

Pastors: Rev. Ken Roth, Rev.Luke Haggett 5660 Flewellyn Road, Stittsville, 613-831-1024

A vibrant mul -cultural, full gospel fellowship. Come worship and fellowship with us Sundays, 1:30PM at Calvin Reformed Church Rev. Elvis Henry, (613) 435-0420 Pastor Paul Gopal, (613) 744-7425

WELCOME to our Church St. Paul’s United Church, Carp

Toddler, Junior Church & Tweens programs running concurrently Youth Group – Thursdays, 7pm

Christ Risen Lutheran Church Friday Youth Group 7:00 pm Sunday Adult Bible Class 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday School: 10:30 am - for children age 2 to grade 6 9:15 am - for youth grade 7 to grade 10

“Becoming Whole Through the Power of Jesus�

R0012879996

www.holyspiritparish.ca

Service at St. John’s (Carp Fair)

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Sunday, September 27th

SUNDAY MASS TIMES Saturday: 5:00 pm Sunday: 9:00 am & 10:30 am Monsignor Joseph Muldoon, Pastor

SHALOM CHRISTIAN CHURCH

0828.R0012865673

1489 Shea Road, (corner of Abbott) Stittsville, Ontario K2S 0G8

PASTOR: MAROS PASEGGI 85 LEACOCK DRIVE, KANATA (THE CHRIST RISEN LUTHERAN CHURCH) 613-818-9717 R0013190251-0326

1475 Merivale Rd. O awa www.shalomchurch.ca

THE ANGLICAN PARISH OF HUNTLEY

HOLY SPIRIT CATHOLIC PARISH A Welcoming Community

Seventh-Day Adventist Church

Email us at: cbcinfo@cbcstittsville.com

SATURDAY SERVICES SABBATH SCHOOL FOR ALL AGES 9:15AM WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 AM SERVING KANATA AND STITTSVILLE

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R0013430664.0910

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Reverend Mark Redner

Friday Healing Service 7:00 p.m. Sunday Worship Service 10:00 a.m. 613-288-8120 www.cometotheoasis.ca

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KANATA

Weekday Masses Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday & 1st Saturday of the month 9:00 a.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m

THE OASIS

Sunday Services at 9:30 & 11am Children and Middle School programs at 9:30am. Nursery, Youth Programs, Small Groups Available as well. OfďŹ ce: 613-836-2606 Web: www.cbcstittsville.com

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St # Paul’s ( # # Dunrobin 1118 Thomas Dolan # # Parkway ,,,%# ! # Service 11:00am

Pastor: Rev. Pierre Champoux

Reconciliation: 1 hour before all weekday Masses and Wednesday: 7:30-9:00pm, Saturday: 4:00-4:45pm, Sunday: 6:00-6:45pm Exposition of Eucharist: 1 hour before each weekday Mass

# # # # # # ( # # # St John’s South March .-0# # )# # 325 Sandhill Road, Kanata Services 9:00am & 10:30am Sunday School & Nursery 10:30am # ( # # # St Mary’s North March -0$/#" # # )# # 2574 6th Line Road, Dunrobin Service 9:00am

613-836-1764

Email: parish@holyredeemer.ca Website: www.holyredeemer.ca

R0013438610.0903

613-836-4756 www.gcuc.ca

44 Rothesay Drive, Kanata, ON, K2L 2X1

R0112994087

10:00 am: Service of Worship and Sunday School Pastoral Care & Healing Service: 11:30am - last Sunday of each month

PASTOR STEVE STEWART

1600 Stittsville Main Street R0012870446

R0011993801

Holy Redeemer Roman Catholic Church

140 Abbeyhill Dr., Kanata Rev. Brian Copeland

R0012864532.0904

GLEN CAIRN UNITED CHURCH


Karaoke, Oktoberfest at Stittsville Legion Barb Vant’Slot

Special to the News

SPECIAL EVENTS (All these special events are open to everyone in the community unless otherwise stated) On Saturday, Sept. 26, a “Karaoke” for Cancer will be held at the Stittsville Legion Hall. There is no cover charge to attend this event but donations will be accepted. Silent auction, games and lots of music, singing and dancing. Everyone is welcome to attend and have a great time. The monthly breakfast at the Legion Hall is back to be held on the first Sunday of the month after the summer. The next breakfast will be

held on Sunday, Oct. 4 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon. Everyone in the community is welcome to attend. An Oktoberfest will be held on Saturday, Oct. 10 at the Legion Hall, with dinner at 6 p.m. followed by a fun evening of music, games and dancing, all for the low price of only $15 per person. Tickets are on sale now at the Legion Hall. The next spaghetti supper at the Legion Hall will be held on Friday, Oct. 16 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Cost is only $10 per person. Everyone in the community is welcome to attend. There’s going to be fun, dancing and costumes at the Stittsville Legion Hall on Saturday, Oct. 31 which is Halloween. There will be

Federal candidates meeting Special to the News

The Stittsville Village Association (SVA) is hosting an all candidates meeting for the federal riding of Carleton this coming Monday, Sept. 28. This meeting will take place at the Stittsville United Church on Fernbank Road just west of Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville, running from 7 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. Representatives of each

candidate will be drawing for the speaking order for the candidates’ opening remarks. There will also be a draw for those who get to ask questions of the candidates at the meeting. Each of the candidates will be given a table for display purposes. The location of the table will also be determined by a draw process. Former Goulbourn town-

ship councillor Louise Beggs will be serving as the moderator for the meeting. Candidates seeking election as MP for the new federal riding of Carleton in the upcoming election on Monday, Oct. 19 are Pierre Poilievre of the Conservatives, Deboral Coyne of the Green Party, KC Larocque of the New Democratic Party and Chris Rodgers of the Liberals.

prizes for the best, worst and scariest costume. Tickets are $10 per person with music by the “Sound Vibrations.” WEEKLY EVENTS (Everyone in the community is welcome to attend these events unless otherwise stated) Darts are being played at the Legion Hall every Thursday starting at 7 p.m. and also on Fridays at 8 p.m. Bingo is played every Wednesday starting at 6:45 p.m. in the Legion Hall. Sue McCormick is always looking for volunteers to help at these Wednesday night bingos. If interested, please call her at 613-836-8860. Please note that you must be 18 years of age or older to work at or play bingo. Euchre hosted by the Legion’s 55 Plus Club is played every Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Legion Hall on Stittsville Main Street. Everyone is welcome to participate. A “Jam Session” with Bill Martin will be held every Friday starting at 8 p.m. in the downstairs lounge at the Legion Hall. Come and enjoy some country and some rock ‘n roll music. Everyone is welcome to attend. Interested in knitting or crocheting? Anyone interested is welcome to come and join in at the Legion Hall every Monday at 6:30 p.m. Aileen started the meetings on Monday, Sept. 14 in the lounge. There are going to be classes available for anyone interested in learning to crochet and/ or knit and read patterns. There will be a sign-

up sheet available for those interested in these free lessons. The group will continue to support local hospitals by making baby bonnets and pic line covers. Everyone is welcome. For more information, please call 613-836-1632. The Book Club is taking a short break and will be meeting again on Tuesday, Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. to discuss the summer read “Big Little Lies” by Liane Moriarty. The Legion is always looking for help. This is an opportunity for students to acquire “volunteer hours.” For more information, please contact Barb Vant’Slot at 613-836-7823 or the Legion Hall at 613-836-1632. The Stittsville Legion’s website can be found at www.stittsvillelegion.com. Upcoming events at the Stittsville Legion are always posted on the billboard sign at the front of the Legion Hall, easily seen by those passing by on Stittsville Main Street. EUCHRE WINNERS Alice Saunderson had the most lone hands at the euchre at the Stittsville Legion Hall on Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville on Tuesday, Sept. 15. Jean Howell had the ladies high score with Colleen McGillvray placing second. Don Melfi had the men’s high score with Dick Ross as the runner-up. Lorraine Gillies had the low score while Cheryl Kelly had the hidden score.

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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, dreamed of creating a community based, Italian inspired bistro reminis scent of old world reminiscent 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. Re Rel lated ed S tor tories ries s Related Stories Bistro Cascata C scata ata ta aB ist istro stro tro o 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, Ang An A ngela ((mother, mother, wife, triathlete entrepreneur) instinctively knew old landmark triathlet iathle athlet le ete et e and nd n de en ent nttrepreneur n repreneu epreneur preneur eneur neur neur urr) in ur) inst iinstinc ins insti instin nssstinc nstinc nsti nst n stin ttinc tin tiiinc 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 ye yyear arr o a ld la andmark building corners Carlisle greater heights. One day, on n the he e four ffo ourr cco 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 a destin dest destine dest destined desti de estined estin es e sstined stine tiiined ttined tine ine 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 the occurred ice ice-cream iice-cre ce-crea ce-cream e-crea -cream -crea -cr ccream ream w with ith th th h her 3 yyear he 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 tth ng he cars rss g go b by, y,, it o ccurred tto ccur o her that the cars bistro. long 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 h her he er er b bi bist isstro stro. ttrrro tro tro. ro. o. IIt wasn o. wasn’t wa w was asn’t a sn ssn’t n t llo 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 an a and Ca Casc Cas Cascata Casca ascata a scata sca cat cata ata tta aB Biist Bistro iistro stro tro ow wa born bor bo born. orn o orn. rrn rn. n.

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philosophy farmers using Fol Followin FFollowing Follow Foll olllow llowing low lo ow owing wing in ing ng tthe ng th he h e fa farm farm far arm ar rm to o ta ttab table 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 ow ow wn n sea 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 en e 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 ensur ensuri ensurin e 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 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 che ch cchef he h ef cco conti continu cont contin on ontinu o ontin nti ntinu t nuo ou ously usly sllyy str sl sly sstrive st ttrrrive iive iv ve tto ve o 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 -ofte --o -of 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 from ffro rom m th tthe he bis bi b bist iist is ssttro’s own n kitchen garden.

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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 e wine w wi win ine in 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 d with wit wi 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 dinn din dinner d 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 ned ed C Ca assc scata sca ca ca atta ta Bis tro in Carlisle, is an artisanal del light just waiting to

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 47


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Anniversaries at St. Thomas Church at Stanley’s Corners on SunSt. Thomas The Apostle day, June 12, a mission trip Anglican Church in Stitts- with SchoolBOX to Nicaragua ville has a year of anniversary celebrations coming up. On Dec. 6 this year, the church will celebrate the 25th anniversary of its current building. And then, on Oct. 23, 2016, the church will celebrate the 150th anniversary of the founding of the church. The anniversary celebrations will get underway with a concert by the Stairwell Carollers on Friday, Nov. 27. This will be followed by a celebration of the 25th anniversary of the current church building on Sunday, Dec. 6, officially kicking off the anniversary celebrations at the church. Other special events planned in 2016 to mark the 150th anniversary of John Curry/Metroland the church are a children’s The current St. Thomas The Apostle Anglican Church sits at the fun day on Saturday, May corner of Stittsville Main Street and Carleton Cathcart Street 14, a memorial service and tea at St. Thomas cemetery in Stittsville. Special to the News

celebrating the 150th anniversary of the founding of the church on Sunday, Oct. 23.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 49


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Follow us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ottawasenators and on Twitter: @Senators


Little Caesars, Fresco Bistro support CIBC Run for the Cure

On Wednesday, Sept. 16, a group of staff from CIBC’s Fernbank Road branch enjoyed a dinner at the Fresco Bistro Italiano West Side Lounge on Hazeldean Road. This was the day on which the Fresco Bistro was donating a portion of its sales that day to the CIBC group. Last Saturday, the CIBC Fernbank branch at the Walmart shopping area at the corner of Fernbank Road and Terry Fox Drive held a BBQ to raise money for the branch’s participation in the upcoming CIBC Run for the Cure. These fundraising activities were all part of the “Think Pink Week” at which various CIBC branches did fundraising in support of their involvement in the upcoming CIBC Run for the Cure in Ottawa. The CIBC Run for the cure, which is happening on Sunday, Oct. 4 this year, is a 5K or 1K walk or run that raises funds for the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. It is the largest single day volunteer led event in Canada in support of the breast cancer cause. This year there are over 60 locations in Canada where such a CIBC John Curry/Metroland Run for the Cure is taking place inEnjoying a meal at the Fresco Bistro Italiano West Side Lounge at the Grant Crossing shopping area on Hazeldean Road in Stittsville as the cluding Ottawa. Special to the News

Two Stittsville food outlets have lent their support to the upcoming CIBC Run for the Cure. Both Little Caesars at the Shops of Main Street plaza on Stittsville Main Street at Carp Road and Fresco

Bistro Italiano’s West Side Lounge at the Grant Crossing shopping area on Hazeldean Road have helped out a group of staff at the CIBC branch at the Walmart shopping area at the corner of Fernbank Road and Terry Fox Drive by participating in fundraising

efforts last week. On Tuesday, Sept. 15, Little Caesars at the Shops of Main Street plaza donated a portion of its sales from that evening to the CIBC group. During the supper hour, a group of CIBC staff and family, some outfit-

ted in outlandish pink outfits to promote the CIBC Run for the Cure, was stationed at the corner of Stittsville Main Street and Carp Road, waving Little Caesars publicity signs and responding to waves and honks from motorists.

restaurant is supporting the group’s participation in the upcoming CIBC Run for the Cure are, clockwise, from left, Judy Lim, Emily Laidlaw, Lynn Laidlaw, Gillian Chatelain, Charlie Chatelain, David Laidlaw and Jennifer Holmes.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 51


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CIBC Run for the Cure started in 1992 Continued from page 51

The CIBC Run for the Cure is the signature program for the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. The Run was created in 1992, taking place in Toronto and raising awareness

and funds for the fight against breast cancer. In 2012, the CIBC Run for the Cure raised over $30 million that year. The CIBC received the Award of Distinction in the Sustained Success category from the

Sponsorship Marketing Council of Canada for its sponsorship of the Run for the Cure. CIBC also won this award in both 2006 and 2007. CIBC (Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce) is one of Canada’s largest chartered

banks, serving more than 11 million clients with over 40,000 employees. CIBC was formed in 1961 through the merger of the Canadian Bank of Commerce and the Imperial Bank of Canada which were two existing Canadian banks.

John Curry/Metroland

TAEKW

AE E. LEE KANATA

NDO

On behalf of the West Ottawa Board of Trade…

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Helping to promote Little Caesars at the Shops of Main Street plaza as they hold signs advertising its pizzas on Tuesday, Sept. 15 at the corner of Stittsville Main Street and Carp Road as Little Caesars is supporting the group’s participation in the upcoming CIBC Run for the Cure are, from left, Jennifer Holmes who works at both the CIBC branch at the Walmart shopping area at Fernbank Road and Terry Fox Drive and at the CIBC branch on Hazeldean Road, Caitlin Holmes, Ashley Holmes, Ian Holmes and Judy Lim who works at the CIBC branch at the Walmart shopping area.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 53


Mayor’s Report

Keeping Taxes Affordable By Jim Watson

My Council colleagues and I have tried to find the balance between being fiscally prudent today, while making the necessary investments for tomorrow. All while doing so in a way that is reasonable and predictable for Ottawa’s residents. We wanted to ensure that tax increases did not far outstrip the rate of inflation. We also didn’t want to promise tax cuts which while sounding great, would mean cuts to the essential services that residents deserve and expect. What I first ran for Mayor in 2010 I committed to not raising taxes by more than 2.5% in any year. This past year, I was once again elected as Mayor and I furthered my commitment to affordable living through lowering this cap to 2.0%. As you can see from the chart, since I became Mayor in 2010, this was a promise that I maintained and one which I have no plans to break any time soon. Paired with this tax cap, was a change I brought to the budgeting process whereby if an elected official wanted to add something to the budget, they had to find a corresponding offset. Previous Councils would table a budget, then add, add, and add some more, without reductions and suddenly a 4 or 5 percent tax increase was now being passed. Forcing this kind of discipline on ourselves, and on the City’s department heads, has kept this Council accountable and causes us scrutinize the City’s spending more closely. The result is lowered tax rate changes and a Council that has learned to live within its means. We have also changed our consultation process to give you, the tax-payer, a more accessible and prominent role in our budget process to ensure your priorities are heard. To that end, we hosted public consultations in the East, West, South, and Central parts of our city. We also introduced a “Tele-Town Hall” where residents were able to call-in to voice their priorities and concerns before the budget was tabled. City Council has set a solid fiscal framework when it assumed office last year and will continue on our promise of prudent financial management. We will continue to deliver a predictable tax rate that also allows us to provide high quality services and opportunities for Ottawa families to flourish. I will be encouraging my colleagues to stay the course, keeping taxes below 2% and making the necessary changes to ensure our city remains in good financial health. R0013470168.0924

Jim Watson, Mayor

110 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa ON K1P 1J1 4EL s &AX

www.JimWatsonOttawa.ca 54 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015

John Curry/Metroland

Harvesting potatoes at the Ottawa Food Bank’s Community Harvest farm project in Goulbourn last Friday are RBC staff volunteers, from left, Julia Dawkins from head office; Nancy Sutherland from the Centrepointe branch; Amy Wang from the Westboro branch; and Norm Deme from the Carlingwood branch.

RBC helps out at Food Bank farm project John Curry

john.curry@metroland.com

The Ottawa Food Bank’s Community Harvest farm project at the Tom Black farm in Goulbourn usually is a scene of brown soil and green plants as thousands of pounds of fresh vegetables are grown for distribution John Curry/Metroland to the Food Bank’s member agenRichard Langford, right, manager of the RBC branch in Stittsville, and cies and their clients. But last Friday his son Josh, left, who is nine years old, harvest potatoes at the Ottawa morning, another colour could be found throughout the rows and rows Food Bank’s Community Harvest farm project in Goulbourn. of ripening organic vegetables at the farm project, namely Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) blue. This was thanks to about 20 volunteers from RBC branches across the city who worked at the farm last conniebrophy@royallepage.ca Friday morning, helping harvest crops like potatoes and onions. It was an opportunity for these RBC employees 27 Butterfield Drive, to lend a helping hand to the Ottawa Food Bank. Munster Hamlet But RBC did more than just provide $299,900 volunteer labour to help with the ComFantastic 3 bedroom munity Harvest farm project’s harvest. 2 bath home in the quaint RBC also used the occasion to present Village of Munster Hamlet, the Ottawa Food Bank with a donation many updates, backing onto of $30,000 from the RBC Foundation greenspace to support the Ottawa Food Bank’s fresh food purchases once the ComOPEN HOUSE ~ SUNDAY OCTOBER 27th, 2-4 munity Harvest farm project wraps up 5700 Fourth Line Rd, its harvest season in late October. $499,900 In handing over a giant cheque Wonderful family home, 3 bed,3 representing the donation at the farm bath on large private lot. Mature project last Friday, RBC Regional Vice trees incredible outdoor space with President (Ottawa East) Ann Morrison above ground pool, large shed. Updates include septic, windows, roof, noted that RBC is a long time supportbathrooms,cedar deck and pergola, er of the Ottawa Food Bank, donating carpet and paint.Finished lower level, $173,000 in total. She also noted that oversized garage with workshop. besides the contingent of RBC staff Easy commute to the city. volunteers at the farm project last Friday, there was another similar group of RBC staff volunteers helping out at the Ottawa Food Bank warehouse. R0033477579-0924

See $30,000 DONATION, page 55


OSU adds Former Canadian International Gina Pacheco to Coaching Staff

John Curry/Metroland

$30,000 donation Continued from page 54

She also commented that a truckload of fresh food would be leaving the farm project that day for distribution by the Food Bank in the coming days, showing the impact that the RBC volunteers were having in helping out at the farm that day. It is a way of giving back to the community, she said. Indeed, she said that she had learned something herself while helping out at the farm that day, namely that onions have to cure for a time before being peeled and that potatoes being harvested are better if there is some soil still adhering to them. The RBC donation was accepted on behalf of the Ottawa Food Bank by its executive director Michael Maidment, noting that RBC was contributing to the Food Bank not only financially but also with volunteer labour. The Ottawa Food Bank is the Ottawa area’s central food assistance organization. Through its 140 member agencies, the Ottawa Food Bank provides food for 50,000 people a month, 37 percent of whom are children.

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OSU is pleased to announce that Gina Pacheco will be joining our coaching staff, effective September 15th, 2015. Pacheco is well known within Canadian soccer after breaking through with the Canadian National Women’s program while serving as captain of the University of South Florida where she attended for 4 years while on full scholarship. In addition to her illustrious playing background, she also holds her Pre-B provincial certification in coaching and is a certified teacher with Bachelor degrees in Teacher Education and Health Science In joining OSU, Pacheco will now have the opportunity to bring her international experience to the female athletes within our talented pathway. She will serve as an assistant coach to our Ontario Player Development League (OPDL) elite teams while also working with our Under 9-U10 Girls program. Pacheco is also an important addition in OSU solidifying its position as one of Canada’s soccer leaders in developing women in coaching positions. “Our OSU 2010 five year strategic plan specifically called for developing female coaches. We are currently well ahead of our objectives and Gina is an important component in meeting this goal” said OSU President, Bill Michalopulos.

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Ann Morrison, far left, Regional Vice-President (Ottawa East) and Mike Haley, second from left, Regional Vice-President (Ottawa West) for the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), present a giant cheque representing a $30,000 donation from the RBC Foundation to the Ottawa Food Bank at the Food Bank’s Community Harvest farm project in Goulbourn last Friday while accepting the donation on behalf of the Food Bank are Michael Maidment, second from right, who is executive director of the Ottawa Food Bank, and Jason Gray, far right, who is Community Harvest coordinator for the Food Bank.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 55


seniors & news

MARY COOK Mary Cook’s Memories Even though it was still hot as blazes, I knew summer would soon disappear. Signs were everywhere. Mother had started to set out the clothes we would be wearing when summer turned into fall and then into winter. The big trunk that sat in the upstairs hall had on it neat piles of warmer underwear, the long beige stockings I loathed, and sweaters to wear until we changed into our heavier coats. Downstairs in a corner of the kitchen, the old Singer sewing machine would stay opened up, as Mother sewed ripped seams and hemmed trousers, and turned collars on my brother’s shirts. Buttons would be checked to make sure they were secure, and by the time the cold weather set in with a vengeance, we would be ready.

Connected to your community

Preparations to get ready for winter

I knew the season was changing too because our fields were bare. The hay was in the mow in the barn, the harvesting was done, and Father had already started the fall plowing in the back fields. Bags of grain stood in the farthest corner of the cow byre, and as he did every fall or late summer, windows in the barns were made secure, and any broken panes replaced. The barns had to be “tight” as Father called it, to help keep out the cold blasts of winter. While the days were still warm, Father and my brothers got the ice house ready for the days when fresh blocks would be brought up from the frozen Bonnechere River. The sodden sawdust would be shoveled out and spread behind the little black building to dry, and then it would be hauled out of the yard down towards

Friendship Club luncheon Special to the News

The next monthly Friendship Club luncheon will take place this coming Wednesday, Sept. 30 at 12 noon at the Stittsville Legion Hall on Stittsville Main Street in Stittsville. The menu for this luncheon will

include rolls, salad, ham, scalloped potatoes and dessert. Entertainment at this luncheon will be provided by Lorna Hall. To reserve a spot at this luncheon, Friendship Club members should phone Gloria at 613-831-8819 or

the gravel pit. The ice house would be ready for new and dry sawdust brought from the saw mill after the big blocks of ice had been stacked inside. Our stock of roasts of pork, hams and sausages was just about depleted after summer eating and feeding the droves of relatives who came over the summer months, and the smoke house was being made ready for the new batches being readied as fall came about. Hickory, Father’s favourite wood for the smoke house, would be neatly piled outside the smoke house to augment the piles of cedar and maple logs that would smolder until the meats were ready for the table.   Proof that the summer would soon be gone were the rows of preserves, jams, and pickles that filled the swinging shelves in the dug-out that passed for a cellar under the house. Mother had worked, often into the night, to ‘put down’ jar upon jar to feed us over the winter months. A sure sign the summer season was coming to an end, was seeing Mother scour the sauerkraut barrel with a brush and a solution of vinegar, salt and water, and rolling it out into

Rosemary at 613-836-6354 by this Friday, Sept. 25. Friendship Club activities at the Pretty Street Community Centre in Stittsville include the following: Two exercise classes: Mondays from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. (notice the new time) – please contact Helen at 613-836-6766. And Thursdays from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.

the yard to be dried by the sun. Soon we would be shredding cabbage and the barrel had to be ready. I knew too this time of year, that we were really getting serious about the changing season when Father would come home from Scott’s Hardware with new red tubing, and whatever else he needed to make his beer. Already, a choice bag of barley was sitting in the summer kitchen waiting for the process. I looked forward eagerly to the day he would start the process. I loved the smell of the fermenting barley, and my brothers and I couldn’t wait until the bloated seeds were discarded after serving their purpose. We would gather hands full, grab a hen, feed it the fermented grain, which it gobbled up eagerly, and then we’d laugh hysterically, as the drunken fowl careened round the yard in a staggering stupor! Interested in an electronic version of Mary’s books? Go to www.smashwords.com and type MaryRCook for e-book purchase details, or if you would like a hard copy, please contact Mary at wick2@sympatico.ca.

(notice new day and new time as well) – please contact Fern at 613836-1936. Euchre on Fridays from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. – please contact Heather at 613-838-2743. Friendship Club activities at the John Leroux Stittsville Community Arena hall in Stittsville include the following:

Shuffleboard on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. (notice the new time) – please contact Shirley Healey at 613-831-2712. Carpet bowling on Wednesdays from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. – please contact Helen at 613-836-6766. Bridge on Fridays from 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. – please contact Lorraine at 613-599-3297.

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56 Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015


food & news

Connected to your community

Butternut squash, barley Turkey supper at Fallowfield United Church bake a hearty casserole Special to the News

This hearty casserole features easy peeling butternut squash. Serve with turkey, chicken, pork roast or sausages. Preparation Time: 15 minutes Cooking Time: 10 minutes Baking Time: 75 minutes Serves: 8 INGREDIENTS 4 strips bacon cut into 1/4-inch (0.5 cm) pieces 1-1/2 cups (375 mL) chopped leeks (white and light green parts) 1/2 cup (125 mL) diced celery 1 clove garlic, minced 4 cups (1 L) diced butternut squash (1/2-inch/1 cm) 1-1/2 cups (375 mL) pearl barley 5 cups (1.25 L) sodium-reduced chicken or beef broth 1 tbsp (15 mL) chopped fresh thyme leaves (or 1 tsp/5 mL dried) 1/2 tsp (2 mL) salt 1/4 cup (50 mL) chopped fresh Ontario Parsley

PREPARATION INSTRUCTIONS In large skillet, cook bacon over medium heat, stirring often, until semi-crisp. With slotted spoon, transfer bacon pieces to paper towel; set aside. Drain off all but 1 tbsp (15 mL) fat. Add leeks and celery to skillet and cook until softened, about 6 minutes. Stir in garlic, cook for 1 minute. Transfer mixture to 16 cup (4 L) baking dish. Stir in squash, barley, broth, thyme and salt. Cover and bake in 350°F (180°C) oven until barley is tender and broth is absorbed, 60 to 75 minutes. Sprinkle with parsley and reserved bacon. NUTRITIONAL INFORMATION One serving: Protein: 9 grams Fat: 5 grams Carbohydrate: 42 grams Calories: 241 Fibre: 4 grams Sodium: 295 mg

3, with continuous serving from 4:15 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. And, as an added treat, there is entertainment upstairs in the church, so if you have to wait, you will be able to do so in a fun environment. There is also takeout available for those who prefer to take this delicious meal home to enjoy there. Cost for this annual fall turkey supper is $20 for adults and $10 for

children aged 6 to 12 years. Children 5 years and under can enjoy the dinner for free. Early reservation of tickets for this annual fall turkey supper is recommended. For more information or to reserve your tickets, please call 613-838-2520. Fallowfield United Church is located at the corner of Fallowfield Road and Steeple Hill Crescent in Fallowfield.

Free dinner Fall supper Special to the News

A free community Open Table dinner at St. John’s Anglican Church hall in Richmond will be held this Saturday, Sept. 26 and again on Saturday, Oct. 17. The doors open at 4:30 p.m. with the meal served at 5 p.m. Everyone is welcome to attend. There is no cost for those enjoying the meal but donations are welcome. Volunteers to help with the preparation and serving of the meals are needed. Please contact Nancy at 613-8385032 or via email at nancy.veilleux@bell.net or Marsha at 613-838-3514 or via email at marshadeyell@hotmail. com . St. John’s Anglican Church hall is located on Fowler Street in Richmond.

Special to the News

Munster United Church in Munster is hosting its annual fall supper this Saturday, Sept. 26, running from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. The menu this year includes roast beef, mashed potatoes, vegetables, buns and homemade pies and cakes as well as tea and coffee. Everyone is welcome to attend and enjoy not only great food but also lots of good company. There will also be take out available. For more information about this annual fall supper at Munster United Church, please contact Mary at 613-8385473. Munster United Church is located on Munster Road in the heart of Munster.

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www.symphonyseniorliving.com Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 57


Harry Potter-themed craft day at Goulbourn Museum on Oct. 4 Special to the News

Harry Potter is coming to the Goulbourn Museum on Sunday, Oct. 4. Well, not Harry Potter himself but certainly the spirit of Harry Potter as a Harry Potter-themed family craft day called “Muggles, Magic & Mischief” is being held that day, Oct. 4 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. It promises to be an epic afternoon of magical crafting fun, with youngsters making three enchanted crafts during the afternoon. And, to top it all off, those attending are being encouraged to dress up as one of their favourite Harry Potter characters for this afternoon of craft making. Indeed, Museum staff and volunteers that day will be in Harry Potter costumes. Cost for this “Muggles, Magic & Mischief” family craft day is $4 per child with the activities geared to children ages 4-11. Registration is necessary to attend and parental accompaniment during the after-

noon is required. And for one child at the event, it will also be a lucky afternoon as one child is going to go home from the event with a $25 gift card for Toys R Us, courtesy of Minto Construction and its new Stittsville development “Potter’s Key.” To register for this “Muggles, Magic & Mischief” event, please call 613-831-2393 or email register@goulbournmuseum.ca . The Goulbourn Museum, a registered charity, is located at 2064 Huntley Road at Stanley’s Corners, just south of Stittsville. The Goulbourn Museum tells the story of Ottawa’s oldest military settlement centred at Richmond and founded in 1818 and offers both interactive and hands-on exhibits. The grounds at the Goulbourn Museum offer picnic tables with shad umbrellas and a large checker board. Admission to the Goulbourn Museum is free but donations are always appreciated.

Grief walk in Richmond Special to the News

A grief walk is being held at the labyrinth at the Quiet Garden at St. John the Baptist Anglican Church in Richmond on Saturday, Oct. 3. This “Grief Walking on

the Labyrinth” will be facilitated by Ian Henderson who is a certified grief educator. This grief walk on the labyrinth at the Quiet Garden will take place from 10 a.m. to 12 noon on Satur-

day, Oct. 3. Cost is $20 per person. Everyone is welcome. Those planning on attending should RSVP to Ian Henderson at 613-8583113 or via email at info@ griefsupportottawa.ca or to Rev. Michel Dubord at 613838-6075.

Around Richmond …With the annual Richmond Fair now over, thoughts now turn to installing ice and curling in the Richmond Curling Club building on Perth Street at the front of the fairgrounds. And things get underway with Richmond Curling Club registration for the upcoming 2015/2016 season this Friday, Sept. 25 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and again this Saturday, Sept. 26 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. There’s social and competitive curling leagues for adults and Little Rocks, Bantam and Junior curling programs for youth. And don’t forget, for those who would like to take up the sport, the Richmond Curling Club is again this year offering a ten-week Learn-To-Curl program. For more details, please visit the website www.richmond. ovca.com …The 4H dairy committee for this year’s Richmond Fair included Cindy Brown as chairperson, Sandra Wytenburg as vice-chairperson and John Fraser, Bruce Hill, Paul Stewart, Braden Stuyt, Curtis Stuyt and Ken Stuyt as members…..Members of the Agriculture Awareness committee for this year’s

Richmond Fair included John Gil and Susan Hughes as co-chairpersons, Carol Demjan as vicechairperson and Rolie Jackson, Louise Rosch and Jolijne Ubbink as members….St. Paul’s United Church served the meals in the Dining Hall at the fairgrounds during the Richmond Fair on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The church approached and engaged a number of businesses in the community as sponsors of the meals to help cover expenses and make it a more successful fundraiser for the church. This was an approach tried by St. Philip’s Catholic Church last year which proved successful and St. Paul’s tried it again this year. A banner listing the various sponsors who came on board to help the church with these meals were listed on a banner which was displayed on the outside rear wall of the Dining Hall, right near the rear entrance where folks entered to enjoy one of the delicious homemade meals….The Richmond Ramblers Bluegrass Band, fresh from performing last Friday at the music evening at the Gaia Java Coffee Company shop

in Stittsville, performed on the outdoor stage at the Richmond Fair last Saturday afternoon. This year the outdoor stage was protected by a large white tent which cover the stage and a lot of the seating area in front of the stage…..You can help green up Richmond on Saturday, Oct. 3. That’s when a TD Tree Day is being held at Brown Park on Maitland Street on the north side of the Jock River, with 150 trees to be planted from 9 a.m. to 12 noon. Everyone is welcome to attend and help out. For more information, please contact Linda Besharah at TD Canada Trust in Richmond (email: Linda.Besharah@td.com)....South Carleton High School students are hosting a fundraising trivia night on Saturday, Oct. 3 at The Glen Scottish Restaurant in Stittsville. Tables are available for teams of four, six and eight people. Please contact Mel Cuthbert at 613-292-8331 or via email at melcuthbert@hotmail.com for more information….Chris Lawton was the ring steward for the beef cattle show at this year’s Richmond Fair...

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SPORTS

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Registration for 2015/2016 season at Richmond Curling Club Another season is curling is starting. The Richmond Curling Club is holding registration for the 2015/2016 season this Friday, Sept. 25 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and again this Saturday, Sept. 26 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Curling Club at 6117 Perth Street at the front of the fairgrounds in Richmond. For adults, the Richmond Curling Club is offering both social and competitive curling leagues available both during the day and during the evening. The Richmond Curling Club is also offering Little Rocks, Bantam and Junior curling programs for youth. Again this year the Richmond Curling Club will be offering a ten-week Learn-To-Curl program for those who would like to take up the sport of curling. For more details about this Learn-To-Curl program, please visit the website www.richmond.ovca.com . In joining the Richmond Curling Club, a curler becomes associated with a curling organization that dates back to its beginnings in 1960, 55 years ago. It was in Dec. 1960 when curling began to be played in Richmond. This was thanks to the building of a Quonset-style building by the Richmond Agricultural Society two years earlier that became the venue for curling as well. Bruce Kinkade, Dick O’Connor, Everett Hepton and Des Stapleton worked along with Elwin Vaughan, Bert Spratt and Stewart Nelson of the Agricultural Society to bring about this introduction of curling to Richmond. They decided that the new building, which was used at Fair time for 4H activities, could become a curling rink in the winter months. With this decision in place, the newly formed Richmond Curling Club contacted everyone in the Richmond community by mail, inviting them to try out the game of curling and become a member of the Club. Membership fees were set at $50 per family, refundable if the person did not enjoy the sport. The Club’s unique crest, featuring the historic monument to the Duke of Richmond at Twin Elm, was designed by Bill Deacon, one of the early members of the club and its first draw master. From 1960 to 1979, the Club operated with two sections, with a Ladies Club President and a Men’s Club President. The two sections combined in 1979. In the inaugural season, members of the Granite Curling Club in Ottawa provided curling and ice-making instruction as only five of the original 50 Richmond Curling Club members had ever curled before. The first two seasons of the Richmond Curling Club were held on natural ice. The presence of old stumps from sheep pen fences that had housed sheep in the 4H building made for some interesting curling as these stumps would heave the ice surface during the winter months, making the curling stones take some unusual twists and turns. The first set of stones, which were used from 1960 to 1971, were acquired from the Prescott Curling Club, donated to the Club by Pat Kennedy and Gordon Nichol. These original stones were later brought out of retirement when the new four sheet building was opened in 1980.

In 1962, thanks to a grant, an ice plant was installed and curling on artificial ice began, allowing for a longer season of play. In 1963, the Richmond Curling Club became incorporated. In 1965, the dirt floor was dug up, replaced with a concrete slab, ending some of the curling twists and turns of the early years of the Club. In 1966 an addition to the building was constructed by Everett Rea Construction, housing a lounge and viewing areas while also providing a kitchen area and club rooms. In 1974, the Club obtained its first liquor license. In March 1976, a Richmond Curling Club rink advanced to the provincial finals of the intermediate curling competition which was played in Brantford. The rink was skipped by Ken McCurdy with John Tubman as third, Bruce Garland as second and Gord Steinburg as lead. In April, 1977, a feasibility report for a new curling facility in Richmond was prepared by Roger Beckley due to a growing membership. In 1978, the original building was deemed as unsafe by the Department of Labour, meaning that a new building was definitely needed if the Club was to continue. A decision was made to build a new four-sheet curling facility at a cost estimated at $325,000 to $375,000. A Wintario grant in the area of $300,000 was obtained and fundraising began, including a car raffle, bake sales, a cookbook, garage sales and craft sales. A cookbook was published in Dec. 1979 with a copy provided to then Prime Minister The Hon. Joe Clark and his wife Maureen. In April 1979, the Richmond Curling Club entered into a land lease agreement with the Richmond Agricultural Society for constructing the new curling facility on the Richmond fairgrounds. In Oct. 1979 Curling Club members helped demolish the old Agricultural Hall on the fairgrounds to allow construction of the new facility. This led to an official sod turning ceremony for the new facility in Nov. 1979, with construction following. The first rock in the new four sheet curling facility was thrown on May 4, 1980, with a Spring Spiel planned to follow. However, warmer than normal temperatures meant that the 64 team bonspiel had to be cancelled. In the fall of 1980, a grand opening dinner and dance were held with the “official” ceremonial first rock thrown by Bruce Kinkade. He had received this honour as a result of a “Chinese Auction” fundraising event in which he was the highest bidder for the honour. The raised seating area in the lower lounge of the new facility happened courtesy of the generosity of Howard Moffitt, Gord Steinburg and Ken Hartin. “Curl with a Member” was the first event held in the new facility, with 120 non-members signing up for the curling action. Grants from agencies such as the Trillium Foundation and Wintario not only helped with the initial funding for the new facility but also helped in subsequent years. In 1985, grant funding helped with the purchase of an ice scraper. Other purchases included a complete set of new rocks as well as rocks for a Little Rocks program. The Richmond Curling Club hosted its first

Fall Spiel in Oct. 1982. The first eight-ender was scored in the new facility in the 1982-83 season by the rink of Glenda Conley, Vic Hepton, Marg Paproski and Rosemary Desjardins. In 1983, the Richmond Curling Club became the site for evening meals and hospitality for exhibitors and plowmen at the International Plowing Match which was held at Richmond that year. A “50 and Over” program was started in the 1984-85 season. A big event happened in March 1987 when the Club burned its mortgage for the new facility. The parking lot at the new facility was paved for the 1991-92 season. In 1992, Richmond Curling Club curlers won the club’s first-ever provincial championship banner in the doublerink Governor General Competition. The curlers were Warren Reddick, Bill Johnson, Ron Reddick, Rick Reddick, Cliff Wilson, Dan Roy, Herb O”Heron and Al Wilson. In Feb. 1995 the Richmond curling Club hosted the Ontario Provincial Farmers Curling Championship, sponsored by John Deere Limited, with 16 rinks involved from communities across the province. In the spring of 1996, world curling champions Marilyn Bodogh and Jeff Staughton were at the Richmond Curling Club for a taping of a “Good Morning America” segment about curling. In March 1999, the Richmond Curling Club hosted the

Members of the team representing the Richmond Curling Club which won the 2015 Ontario Curling Association bantam boys provincial championship are, from left, lead Matthew Morra, third Sean Armstrong, skip Michael Morra and coach Byron Scott. Second Grant Fraser is missing.

annual Gore Mutual Ontario School Curling Provincial Championship for high school boy and girl curlers from across Eastern and Southern Ontario. John F. Ross High School from Guelph won the Gore Trophy, defeating Don Mills Collegiate Institute of Don Mills in the final. In the consolation final, Northern Collegiate of Sarnia defeated South Carleton High School of Richmond to win the Gore Shield. Members of the South Carleton rink were Nick Artichuck, skip; Tom Scharf, vice-skip; Ross Brittle, second; Nick Yeun, lead; and Scott MacDonald, spare. Coaches were Paul Raymond and Dave Artichuck. This 52nd annual Gore Mutual curling championship also marked the second year for girls to compete in the event. A.N. Myer Secondary School of Niagara Falls won the Gore Bowl, beating Chinguacousy Secondary School of Brampton in the final. In April/May 1999, the Richmond Curling Club was the site of the 23rd annual Royal Canadian Legion National Senior Curling Championship while in Jan. 2002, the Club hosted the Grey Power Seniors Provincial Curling Championship. In March 1976, a Richmond Curling Club rink advanced to the provincial finals of the intermediate competition which was played in Brantford. The rink was skipped by Ken McCurdy with John Tubman as third, Bruce Garland as second and Gord Steinburg as lead.

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 59


ALPHA course is being offered Earn Extra Money! at St. Thomas Anglican Church

Youths!

Adults!

Seniors!

Keep Your Weekends Free!

Special to the News

Looking for a fun and exciting way to explore the relevance of the Christian faith in today’s society? Well, one way is to take an ALPHA course which provides a practical introduction to the basics of Christianity with lots of opportunity for debate and discussion. The ALPHA course is designed for everyone, from non-Christians to people who may attend church but feel that they don’t quite understand the basics of Christianity. An ALPHA course takes place one evening a week for ten weeks including a Friday evening and Saturday partway through the course. Each session begins with a meal where participants get to know each other on a personal basis. After the dinner, a talk is presented on topics such as “Who is Jesus?”, “How Does God Guide Us?” and “Does Jesus Still Heal Today?” This talk is followed by small group discussions where issues raised in the talk as well as comments and questions are explored, with everyone’s opinion being heard and welcomed.

There is no cost for an ALPHA course but, where possible, participants are invited to make a small contribution towards the cost of the meal. There’s going to be an ALPHA course offered at St. Thomas Anglican Church in Stittsville. Everyone is invited to the church on Wednesday, Sept. 30 for dinner and an introduction to the ALPHA course by exploring the topic “Is Christianity Boring, Untrue and Irrelevant?” At the end of this evening session, those who choose to do so have the opportunity to sign up for the ten-week ALPHA course which begins the following Wednesday. To find out more about this ALPHA course or to reserve a place for dinner on Wednesday, Sept. 30, please call 613-831-0968. The ALPHA course is offered worldwide in 169 countries in 112 different languages. A total of 27 million people have experienced an ALPHA course, including over 646,000 in Canada alone. ALPHA is endorsed by every major Christian denomination.

Blessing of pets on Saturday, Oct. 3

ROUTES AVAILABLE! We’re looking for Carriers to deliver our newspaper!

In commemoration of the feast of St. Francis of Assisi, there will be an opportunity for people to bring their pet or pets for a blessing on Saturday, Oct. 3 between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.

to St. John the Baptist Anglican Church at 67 Fowler Street in Richmond. Everyone and their pets are welcome. For more information, please call Rev. Michel Dubord at 613-838-6075.

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Fall Bazaar and Bake Sale Day-long Summit meeting at Ashton United Church for mental illness caregivers Special to the News

Special to the News

A White Elephant Table is going to be one of the attractions at the upcoming annual Fall Bazaar and Bake Sale at the Ashton United Church in Ashton on Saturday, Oct. 3. White elephant Table is a term that is similar in meaning to the more current yard sale or garage sale terms but it has roots that go back to Thailand and the King of Siam. Yes, the same King of Siam who became so well known as a result of the 1956 musical film “The King and I” starring Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner. How does this all relate to each other, a White Elephant Table and the King of Siam, you ask? Well, the term “White Elephant Sale or Table ” refers to the Royal white elephants in Siam which is now Thailand. There were an honour bestowed by the King upon his people. However, the recipient

could not work the elephant but was still required to fee and maintain it. So, the term “white elephant” came to refer to a possession whose owner cannot get rid of but whose cost of maintenance is out of proportion to its usefulness. In modern usage, it refers to an object, business venture or facility considered without use or value by its owner. A White Elephant Sale or Table today is used to refer to a collection of used items being sold which no longer have any use to their owners but which may be desirable for others. White Elephant Tables are often useful to collectors as they provide a way sometimes to purchase older and harder to find items. Indeed, in the days before online buying and selling websites, White Elephant Sales ranked right there with thrift stores, yard sales, pawn shops and garage sales as a popular way to find collectibles and

odd items not available in regular retail stores. You can experience a White Elephant Table at the annual Fall Bazaar and Bake Sale being hosted by the Ashton United Church Women at the Ashton United Church in Ashton on Saturday, Oct. 3 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. And there’s more than just the White Elephant Table. There’s going to be a bake table and a table with lots of sewn items. And don’t forget the luncheon that is going to be served. There will be four varieties of homemade soup as well as crusty bread, muffins, cookies and tea or coffee. Everyone is welcome to drop into this annual Fall Bazaar and Bake Sale at Ashton United Church on Saturday, Oct. 3. And, who knows – you just may find an item that you will treasure, right there for sale on the White Elephant Table.

Taking care of a family member who suffers from mental illness can be draining emotionally, physically and financially. That’s why it is important to connect with others who face the same challenges. It allows a caregiver to realize that he or she is not alone and there are others who are dealing with the same challenges on a daily basis as well. One good place for caregivers to make connections and to learn from others is the third annual Mental Illness Caregivers Association (MICA) Summit which is happening on Saturday, Oct. 24 at Glen Cairn United Church on Abbeyhill Drive in Kanata. This is being hosted not only by MICA but also by The Oasis in Kanata, an organization that offers regular programs for caregivers of those with symptoms of mental illness. The theme of this MICA Summit will be “Families Building Partnerships” which will focus on caregiver collaboration and engagement with both public and private institutions to bring about long lasting solutions to the issues that affect families of those with a mental illness. This free day-long MICA Summit, running from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., is expected to attract caregivers from across Eastern Ontario. Refreshments and a light lunch will be provided. Pre-registration is required with space lim-

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ited. Those planning to attend are urged to register before Friday, Oct. 9 at www.micaontario.com . For more information about this MICA Summit, please call 613-860-7800. MICA, established in 2008, is an association of family, friends and consumers of mental health services who provide mutual support to manage the effects of serious and persistent mental illness. In recent years the organization has worked across Eastern Ontario to identify priority issues and stimulate action. This upcoming MICA Summit will provide those who attend with an opportunity to learn more about the progress being made by family members and their partner institutions and their partner institutions, for caregivers to connect with other caregivers, and for caregivers to suggest ideas that will help create a better quality of life for themselves and their loved ones. The Oasis in Kanata is an outreach program of Glen Cairn United Church that provides information and support to caregivers of people with symptoms of mental illness in Kanata, Stittsville, Goulbourn and the surrounding areas. For more information about The Oasis in Kanata, visit the website www.TheOasisKanata.ca .

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Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 61


Fall adult programming at Stittsville library brary website at www.biblioOttawalibrary.ca. Now what are some of these programs? Tuesday, Sept. 29 from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. will see Brenda Abramson of the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada at the library to explain about identity theft and to provide ways to protect yourself from becoming a victim of such identity theft. She will also deal with what to do if you are a victim of such identity theft. Registration is required for this program.

Special to the News

Identity theft, breast cancer awareness and financial budgeting are among the topics that are being featured in the fall adult programming at the Stittsville branch of the Ottawa Public Library. But there are even more, touching on topics such as public art and the 2-1-1 Helpline. So, there’s lots of programs, touching a host of subjects and topics. Registration is required for all of the programs but that can be easily done through the Ottawa Public Li-

There will be a special program for adults 50 years of age and over on Wednesday, Oct. 14 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. This program is sponsored by MASC which is an Ottawa based organization which focuses on artistic excellence and the creative process. MASC stands for Multicultural Arts in Schools and Communities. This MASC sponsored program entitled “New Eyes for Public Art” will be a presentation by visual artist c.j. fleury who will explore the “how and the why” behind the creation of large scale public art installations.

Registration is required for this program. On Tuesday, Oct. 20 from 7 p.m. to 8:15 p.m., Stittsville author Shelagh Needham will talk about breast cancer awareness and about her book “All in the Same Boat,” her book which profiles the members of Ottawa’s “Busting Out” dragon boat team, all of whom have survived breast cancer. Shelagh is a member of the team. Copies of the book will be available for purchase at this program, with a percentage of every sale be-

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ing donated to Breast Cancer Action, a community organization which offers support to women with cancer. Registration is required for this program. On Tuesday, Oct. 29 from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., travel consultant Carole Gobeil will be presenting a travelogue on Antarctica at the Stittsville library branch. Registration can be done online at www.biblioottawalibrary.ca . On Tuesday, Nov. 3, from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m., personal budgeting will be the focus for a presentation by Gary Ruskyn of the Credit Counselling Society. Called “Budgeting 101,” the program will offer a six step approach to financial budgeting, allowing a person to take control of his or her financial affairs. Registration is required for this program. On Wednesday, Nov. 4 from noon to 1 p.m., the Stittsville library will be the site of a program entitled “Newcomers: 2-1-1 Helpline – Where to turn when you don’t know where to turn.” This program is being offered in partnership with the library’s Newcomer Services and is being presented in the context of an information session for newcomers. Registration is required for this program.

John Brummell/Metroland

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Riley Parenteau has his face painted as he has fun at the community pancake breakfast hosted by city of Ottawa Stittsville ward councillor Shad Qadri and Enbridge Gas at Blackstone Park in the Blackstone community in the Fernbank lands in Stittsville last Saturday morning.


MPP Jack MacLaren is appointed as critic

tions, deer populations, landowner provincial riding includes Stittsville, C a r l e t o n - rights and Conservation Authority Richmond and Goulbourn as well as the city of Kanata, West Carleton and Mississippi Mills actions. The Carleton-Mississippi Mills Mississippi Mills. MPP Jack MacLaren will now have a special focus on the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. That’s because he has been appointed as the 7.8 Acres Adjacent Gillies Grove Nursing Home, Conservative ParProtected Forest and Existing Homes. Zoned R3 ty’s critic overseeing the Ministry of Natural Resources 2.5 Acres Adjacent Gillies Grove Nursing Home. and Forestry. Zoned R3 As the critic, he has the added role Can be sold together or separately. of scrutinizing the laws and regulaSuitable for Apartment units. tions which are R0013468559 administered by the Ministry. As an MPP, MacLaren admits to receiving a lot of public concerns about increased info@kingdonholdings.com bear populations, flaws in moose hunting regulaSpecial to the News

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Ride ‘em cowboy! Linda Sanger, riding “Rocky,” moves an obstacle as she races through the Ultimate Cowboy Obstacle Race course at the Richmond Fair last Sunday.

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The Richmond Munster Minor Hockey The Goulbourn Skating Club float is pulled Association float moves along the route in along the parade route in the annual the Richmond Fair parade last Saturday. Richmond Fair parade last Saturday.

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New Listing! 13 Pritchard Drive, Nepean Solid 4 bedroom Manordale bungalow with a 2 bedroom in-law suite complete with 2 car garage on a large pie-shaped lot. Hardwood on main level, fireplace, natural gas heat, a/c, 2 baths. Very convenient location to shopping & transit. Updated roof shingles, natural gas heat. $409,900

Waterfront! 4246 Armitage Avenue, Dunrobin New hi-efficiency propane furnace being installed. Sunsets on the Ottawa River! Great spot for the family to have fun and unwind! 70’ x 160’ beach lot, 3+1 bedrms, hardwd flrs in lvrm, dinrm, famrm, fireplace in famrm, sun room, granite kitchen, master bedrm has ensuite, fireplace & balcony overlooking the river, rec rm with bar, many decks for lounging and 2 car garage! Amazing family lifestyle here! $499,900

Huge Garage & Workshop! 645 McLachlan Road, Rural White Lake Beautiful & private 3 bedrm, 2 bath Cape Cod home on 3.5 acres on the outskirts of the village, 43’ x 34’ detached insulated garage 11’ ceilings & big workshop! Hardwood in lvrm, inviting country kitchen with new counter tops & extra cabinets, cheery dining area, huge master bedrm, finished basement with recrm & 4th bedroom. New propane furnace fall 2013. Welcome Home! $324, 900

SOLD! 101 Vancourtland St., Arnprior Wonderful 3 bedroom family home complete with front verandah, huge 30’ x 12’ back deck, hot tub, main floor family room, sunken living rm, separate dining rm, big eat-in kitchen with walk-in pantry, 2nd floor laundry, master has 3 pce ensuite & walk-in closet, rec room in basement with rough-in for extra bathroom. Brand new shingles May 2015. List price $299,900

Vydon Acres - 2 Acre Estate Lots Fifteen beautiful 2 acre building lots available in a woodsy setting on Loggers Way, Kingdon Mine Road and May Dean Drive . 2 minutes away from Morris Island Conservation Area and an easy 35 minute commute to Kanata. Priced to sell at $39, 900+ HST each or Buy any 5 lots for $150,000 + HST

Visit www.johnwroberts.com to see more pictures and full details of all my listings!! Stittsville News - Thursday, September 24, 2015 63


E-mail: john.curry@metroland.com

Local events and happenings over the coming weeks — free to non-profit organizations The Ladies Auxiliary of the Richmond Branch 625 of the Royal Canadian Legion is hosting a chicken BBQ on Friday, Sept. 25 from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Enjoy a chicken breast with assorted salads, homemade dessert and tea or coffee, all for only $12 per person. Hot dog platters at $6 per person also available. Everyone welcome. For tickets, please call Mavis Lewis at 613-838-2749.

adults available, both during the day and during the evening. The Richmond Curling Club also offers Little Rocks, Bantam and Junior curling programs for youth. The Richmond Curling Club is also offering a tenweek Learn-To-Curl program for those who would like to take up the sport of curling. For more details, visit the website www.richmond. ovca.com .

The Richmond Curling Club is holding registration for the 2015/2016 season on Friday, Sept. 25 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and again on Saturday, Sept. 26 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Curling Club at 6117 Perth Street at the front of the fairgrounds in Richmond. Social and competitive curling leagues for

Munster United Church on Munster Road in Munster is hosting its annual fall supper on Saturday, Sept. 26 from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. The menu includes roast beef, mashed potatoes, vegetables, buns, homemade pies and cakes and tea and coffee. Everyone is welcome. Come and enjoy great food and good

company. Take out will also be available. For more information, please contact Mary at 613-838-5473. A free Open Table community dinner will be held on Saturday, Sept. 26 at St. John’s Anglican Church Hall on Fowler Street in Richmond. Doors open at 4:30 p.m. Meal served at 5 p.m. There is no cost for the meal but donations are welcome. Everyone is welcome. St. Thomas Anglican Church at the corner of Stittsville Main Street and Carleton Cathcart Street in Stittsville is holding its annual roast beef dinner on Saturday, Sept. 26 with two sittings at 5 p.m. and 6 p.m.. Adults $18. Children aged 4-11 years half price ($9). Children under

4 years of age are free. Advanced purchased/reserved tickets only. For tickets, please call Nicole at 613298-6670 or email fellowshipstthomas1619@gmail.com or call the church office at 613-836-5741 on either Wednesday or Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Stittsville Royals of the Richardson Division of the Central Canada Hockey League Tier 2 are hosting the visiting Westport Rideaus on Sunday, Sept. 27 at 2:30 p.m. at the Goulbourn Recreation Complex on Shea Road in Stittsville. The Stittsville Village Association (SVA) is hosting an all candidates meeting for the riding of Carleton for the upcoming Oct. 19

federal election on Monday, Sept. 28 starting at 7 p.m. at the Stittsville United Church on Fernbank Road in Stittsville. Everyone welcome. Everyone is invited to St. Thomas Anglican Church at the corner of Stittsville Main Street and Carleton Cathcart Street in Stittsville on Wednesday, Sept. 30 for dinner and an introduction to an ALPHA course which is being offered at the church. At the end of the evening those who choose to do so will have the opportunity to sign up for the ten-week course which will begin the following Wednesday. To find out more about this ALPHA course or to reserve a place for this dinner on Wednesday, Sept. 30, please call 613-831-0968.

WOSC Girls U15 Regional team - champions Special to the news

Submitted

Members of the West Ottawa Soccer Club Girls U15 Regional team, undefeated league champions this season as well as winners of the Girls U16 East Region (ER) Cup, are, front row, kneeling and holding the championship banner, from left, Sophie Thomas, Sophie Warren, Georgia Machan, Megan Timlin-Thicke, Faith Tomaszewski, Lily Fischer and Maia Leduc; and, back row, standing, from left, manager Mike Weisskopf, trainer Robyn Leduc, Michaela Tourigny, Shreya Vaidya, Sydney Caulfeild, Amanda Smith, Alanna Jacobs, Sydney Lyndon, Kaitlyn Baker, Beth Weisskopf, Fiona Brunka and assistant coach Chris Bascelli. Missing are player Morgan Cutts and head coach Gianfranco Manto.

Winning one championship in a season. Spectacular. Capturing two championships in the same season. Exceptional. Achieving this championship success while going undefeated. Awesome and priceless! But this was the story of the 2015 season for the West Ottawa Soccer Club (WOSC) Girls U15 Regional team - a double championship season with an undefeated record. Competing against teams from across Eastern Ontario in the East Region Soccer League (ERSL) in its Girls U15 Regional Division, the WOSC Girls U15 Regional team had a perfect record of 15 wins and no losses in capturing the league championship. And the team’s perfect 15-0 record does not totally indicate the team’s success. The team scored a total of 85 goals while allowing only 16 goals against. Four of the top ten scoring leaders in the league were members of this WOSC Girls U15 Regional team, showing that the team sported a depth of talent across its entire roster. This WOSC Girls U15 Regional team also participated in the Girls U16 East Region (ER) Cup, a season long, single game knockout competition involving U15/U16 Regional and Tier 1 teams from across Eastern Ontario. Just as in the regular league play, the WOSC Girls U15 Regional team went undefeated in this ER Cup

September 26, 2015 Register Today: www.ottawacancer.ca/epicwalk More Information: 613.247.3527 MEDIA

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competition, beating the older and previously undefeated Cumberland U16 Regional team 3-1 in the finals to capture the ER Cup trophy. This was the team’s second championship of the season. And this ER Cup victory was not easy. In the semi-final match against the Kingston Clippers U16 Regional team, the WOSC squad was down by a 3-1 score at half time. But in the second half, the team rebounded to play some of its best soccer of the season, scoring two goals in the first five minutes of the second half to tie up the game 3-3. Relentless pressure led to the fourth WOSC goal late in the game, giving the team a 4-3 victory and a spot in the ER Cup finals against the Cumberland team. The WOSC U15 Regional team head coach points to the team’s work ethic as the reason for its successful double-championship season. “The girls worked incredibly hard this season, “ he says. “I’m very proud of them. It was a touch, challenging season. I’m especially proud with how we fought back against adversity, we never stopped believing in ourselves or each other.” As ERSL Regional champions this season, this team earns promotion next season to the Ontario Youth Soccer League which represents the highest level of play in the province and involves competing against teams all across the province.


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