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Townsman, 1991-07, Page 18If the tough get going when the going gets tough, the people of Mil- verton must be among the toughest people around. When the Deilcraft plant in Mil- verton went bankrupt on July 4, 1990 throwing 110 people out of work in a town of 1600 people, some members of the community decided they weren't going to take the blow sitting down. They were going to fight back. A year later, they have scored some victories but have picked up a lot of frustrations along the way. It was almost exactly a year after the closing of the plant that MilMor Development, a community -owned company, closed the deal and took possession of the Deilcraft plant. Already the group has one tenant set- ting up in the building with more pos- sible. The community battled heavy odds to get this far— odds that turned out to be heavier than anyone had imagined. Along the way the group of hard-working volunteers of the Mil- verton-Mornington Revitalization Committee, the group behind MilMor, learned some valuable lessons about government bureaucracy and the Canadian banking system. The Milverton experience could be a model for other communities to take control of their own affairs, says Edward Bennett, chairman of MilMor and a Wilfrid Laurier University pro- fessor who farms four miles outside of town. The process would be advanced greatly, however, if government had programs designed to help. Communi- ties need help in identifying the skills available in their community, he says and if government gave support to these programs, much more could be done. The decision of local people to take their futures in their own hands is not surprising in a place like Milvcrton. Like many communities in the region - it has a long history of self-sufficien- cy. It was settled in 1848 with Ncw York boot -maker Andrew J. West as its first resident. A year later he opened a hotel and soon had a black- smith shop as a neighbour. Other businesses followed to what was called West's Corners. In 1871 the vil- lagers decided West's Corners sound - 16 TOWNSMAN/JULY-AUGUST 1991 ed too muck like a crossroads so they renamed the town Milverton after the native English village of the town's Presbyterian minister. Today the town's main street is a strange mixture of old and new. Lend- ing it a feeling of times past is the large presence of the Mennonite farm buggies from the surrounding farms. The town still retains many of the classic Victorian business blocks built in its early years. Mixed into the tradi- tional setting are the trappings of modern business. In many ways what the Revitalization Committee has tried to do is recapture the kind of commu- nity action that helped create towns like Milverton in the first place. The efforts to change the pattern of Edward Bennett Other communities could learn from the Milverton experience things in Milverton began after the people involved in the Revitalization Committee today, became worried about thc situation of the Dcilcraft workers. The plant was $22 million in debt when it closed, half of that to unsecured creditors including many small suppliers who couldn't afford to lose the money. The workers, owed $765,000 in severence and vacation pay were frustrated and angry. Thcy felt that whcn a company goes bankrupt, there should be protection for thc workers (the Ontario Federa- tion of Labour has used the Milverton cast in its argument for a change in the legislation). Angry workers pick- eted another Toronto furniture plant owned by the two brothers who had owned Deilcraft, drawing Toronto media attention. Ed Bennett sought out the workers and asked what was happening. He went into the plant and talked to the workers and he learned many felt the Milverton community didn't care about their plight. They felt all alone. An informal group began to check out how the community really felt about the situation. A group of workers addressed the Milverton Business Association and explained their situa- tion. The Milverton Town council and Mornington Township council were approached and supported the efforts of the workers. Meanwhile local ministers had stepped in to try to help the workers. Malcolm Wilson of the Anglican Church and Neil Lackey of the United Church had been counselling the workers. Ann Brailsford -Child, secre- tary of the Revitalization Committee and a relative newcomer to the town having moved there to open an antique business two years ago, says she has never seen clergy who care for the community as much as the Milver- ton ministers do. Bennett started feeling out the com- munity and came into contact with Brailsford -Child who was president of the Business Association. He talked to Jack Schiavone, one of the unem- ployed workers and asked him to reach out to the church group and that brought Neil Lackey into the group. Bennett attended a meeting of the workers to sec if they had any interest in buying the factory they used to work in. It was Schiavone who was chosen to talk to the Business Association, a frightening prospect for him. The Association, Brailsford -Child recalls, was very supportive and very interest- ed in being involved in changing the situation in the town. The revitalization group grew to include Bennett, Brailsford -Child, Rick Banks, manager of the local Bank of Commerce, Reeve Reg Kel- terbornc and councillor Mary Hon- derich, a daughter-in-law of the family that once ran the factory before it was sold to Dcilcraft, represented Milverion council. Judy Nafzigcr rep- resented Mornington Township coun- T