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$1.25 GST included Serving the communities of Blyth and Brussels and northern Huron County Thursday, February 7, 2019
Volume 35 No. 6
FIRE HALL - Pg. 3
Blyth residents rise up
against fire hall locations
FINANCIAL - Pg. 10
‘The Citizen’ presents its
annual financial guide
CLINIC - Pg. 2
Local university star
hosts goaltending clinic
Publications Mail Agreement No. 40050141 Return Undeliverable Items to North Huron Publishing Company Inc., P.O. Box 152, BRUSSELS, ON N0G 1H0
INSIDE
THIS WEEK:
Private property being considered for fire hall
IPM ’17
to leave
a legacy
After a closed-to-the-public
session during its council meeting
Monday night, North Huron
Township Council announced it
would be attempting to negotiate the
purchasing of land for the
construction of the joint fire hall and
public works facility in Blyth. No
specific property was named.
Prior to the decision, North Huron
staff provided more information as
to what exactly a new Blyth fire hall
and Blyth public works shed would
cost. After reviewing all expenses,
depending on location, a combined
fire hall and public works shed is
estimated to cost between $2.3 and
$2.9 million.
Prior to going into closed session
to discuss private property options,
Reeve Bernie Bailey addressed those
in attendance, saying that he wanted
to respond to some comments
made during the special meeting
held in Blyth on Jan. 30. He
explained that council asked the fire
department to indicate the safest
location for the fire hall owned by
North Huron. “They did that,”
Bailey said. “The ballpark was the
safest place to get the fire people in
and get the fire people out.
“I want it very clear the chiefs and
deputies did what council asked of
them,” he said.
Following Bailey’s comments,
Director of Public Works and
Facilities Sean McGhee spoke to
council and to the assembled
ratepayers, filling in some of the
holes of information that frustrated
ratepayers during the Jan. 30
meeting.
McGhee outlined the priorities of
the project, reviewed the steps taken
thus far and then explained exactly
how much the fire hall and public
works project would cost. To
build the hall at the Gypsy Lane
location, also known as the Radford
Memorial Baseball Diamond, would
cost an estimated total of $2.3
million. The North Street project,
which would see the new hall and
shed located beside the water
treatment plant would cost $2.5
million.
Finally, McGhee explained that, if
council were to purchase private
land, it would cost an estimate $2.5
to $2.9 million for the project
depending on the property.
McGhee also explained that the
$2.5 million budget suggested at the
Jan. 30 meeting was not entirely
accurate. After tallying the
outstanding amount left on the loan,
penalties accrued and an early
payment penalty, the municipality
had $2.2 million left from the $3.5
million paid for the Emergency
Services Training Centre.
The final result is that, if the
project went ahead, building on
Gypsy Lane would cost $153,438
more than the $2.2 million budget,
meaning this year’s budget would
need a three per cent increase.
For a private property, the project
would cost $318,538 to $667,238
more than the $2.2 million budget,
resulting in a six to 12 per cent
increase in the budget.
Bailey explained that council
would go into a closed session at the
end of the meeting to discuss the
issue, with Deputy-Reeve Trevor
Seip adding that the session was
specifically to deal with private
property options.
Before going in camera, Seip said
that council had heard the strong
resistance to the Gypsy Lane
location during the Jan. 30 meeting
at Memorial Hall in Blyth.
Bailey also commented on the
issue before the closed session,
saying that council was following
the strategic plan laid out by the
previous council which prioritized
economic development,
communication with ratepayers,
operational costs and health and
safety, in that order.
After leaving the closed-to-the-
public session, council voted
unanimously to pursue negotiations
for land for the fire hall, with Seip
explaining that while the Gypsy
Lane site was off the table for the
immediate future, it was being held
as a “last resort” option.
“Thresher’s park and Blyth ball
diamond are currently off the table,”
he said. “That’s not where we’re
intending on building this.”
He said if all negotiations fail,
however, it could come back to that
issue. He said he wanted to make it
clear that the diamond could still be
considered as an option for a new
fire hall in Blyth if that occurred.
The impact of the 2017
International Plowing Match (IPM)
in Walton will now live on for the
next quarter-century thanks to the
creation of the new legacy fund.
IPM Chair Jacquie Bishop says
that by the time the legacy fund has
been paid out, the match will have
invested over $500,000 back into
Huron County. The hope, though, is
that the legacy fund will be
something that lives on for longer
than its planned 25 years.
With Huron County historically
hosting an IPM approximately every
20 years, Bishop said the hope is
that it can be topped up by the next
local IPM to create a lasting legacy
for Huron County youth.
The fund, Bishop explained in an
interview with The Citizen, will be
available to applicants entering their
second, third or fourth year of post-
secondary education, whether it be
college, university or a trades school
or apprenticeship. The IPM was
always focused on the youth and the
future of Ontario, Bishop said, and
this legacy fund will be a way for the
local match to invest in the county’s
young people decades after the
event was held.
While some final details are left to
be ironed out, Bishop says she
expects the fund to accept its first
applications this summer, with the
bursaries being rolled out in the fall,
A hustle play
Just before the big melt took hold throughout Ontario, the
ice was still cold at the Brussels, Morris and Grey
Community Centre on Saturday as numerous local teams
took to the ice to play some hockey before the snow and ice
around them began melting on Sunday and Monday. Here,
the Blyth Brussels Atom Rep Crusaders took on the Mount Forest
Rams in some early afternoon action. While the locals made a
game of it, it was Mount Forest that would eventually claim the win
by a score of 6-2. They’re due to take on the Rams once again,
this time in Mount Forest, on Sunday, Feb. 10. (Denny Scott photo)
By Shawn Loughlin
The Citizen
By Denny Scott
The Citizen
Continued on page 2