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Townsman, 1991-04, Page 6Feeling the spirit The Main Street Canada programme helps put a new spirit of confidence in the Seaforth business community By Keith Roulston Seaforth's Main Street looks like a typically western Ontario town, the kind city writers invariably call "sleepy" but beneath the surface, something different is happening herc.While in many communities there is a sense of fatigue, a sense of thc inevitability of decline, people who have viewed the scene in Seaforth over the past five years mar- vel at the change here. There's a change in the spirit of thc town they say. "I feel thcrc's more interest in the town and more interest in Seaforth from out of town," says Bob Fisher, owner of the local Pizza Train restaurant and chairman of the Seaforth Business Improvement Area (BIA), the association of local busi- nesses dedicated to promoting the town and through that, promoting their own businesses. The change Fisher talks about has its roots in a 1986 decision by the Town of Seaforth, the BIA and the Local Architectural Conservancy Advisory Committee (LACAC) to apply to be part of the Main Street Canada programme of Heritage Canada. Scaforth is the kind of town that is of interest to Heritage Canada. Its Main Street is filled from one end to the other with fine Victorian -era buildings, most put up in a building boom that followed a disastrous fire in 1876 that destroyed most of the street. Heritage Canada set up the Main Street programme to try to preserve the beautiful streetscapes of small town Canada from the ravages of competition particularly from shop- ping malls. The planners at Heritage Canada, Most visible example of what has happened to Seaforth's Main Street if the Box Furniture renovation. Other changes have been more subtle. 4 TOWNSMAN/APRIL-MAY 1991