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The Citizen, 2002-04-10, Page 18Municipality of Huron East 2002 Tenders Construction Gravel for South Patrol Area Load, Haul and Apply "B" Gravel 15,000 T Crush and Apply "A" Gravel 11,500 T Construction Gravel for North Patrol Area Load, Haul and Apply "B" Gravel 15,000 T Crush and Apply "A" Gravel 5,000 T Asphalt Paving contract for McKillop Ward On Canada Company Road from Beechwood Line to North Line HL-4 supplied and placed 4,650 T +/- Grading and compaction as required New 2002-2003 Single Axle 5-ton Cab & Chassis for Snow Plow Application HE-11-02 New 2002-2003 Single Axle 1-ton Cab & Chassis Tenders must be submitted on Municipal Tender Forms available at the Public Works Office at 72 Main Street South, Seaforth, Ontario NOK 1WO. Sealed tenders clearly marked as to contents will be received by the under- signed until 12 Noon on Monday May 6th, 2002. John Forrest, Huron East Public Works Coordinator 72 Main Street South, Box 610 Seaforth, Ontario NOK IWO Phone (519) 527-1710 OR 1-888-868-7513 Toll Free from Brussels and Grey Only Fax (519) 527-2561 Lowest or any quotation not necessarily accepted. HE-07-02 HE-08-02 HE-09-02 HE-10-02 B & L AMAZING COMPUTERS Great deals on New Computers Upgrades & Repairs Personal & Business Website Design Check out our website for more info www.amazingeomputers.com Call or email for an estimate - 887-6964 sales@amazingcomputers.com o BAILEY REAL ESTATE LTD. Clinton Mason Bailey 482-9371 BROKER (24 Hour Service) INVESTMENT PlAtIfy: 2 apartments, 1 commercial AV on. BEAUTIFUL large well treed building lot on Drummond Street, Blyth. ST. AUGUSTINE AREA: 100 acres, no buildings, spring creek, 7 acres hardwood, BLYTH: Solid brick family home, 2 storey, 4 bedrooms, 1 1/4 lots, good heated workshop. REDUCED: Executive Ranch Style Home, large workshop, all purpose frame barn, bush area, 15 1/2 acres, all on paved road. bush. BLYTH: Investment property, 8 rental units, 2 commercial and 6 residential, showing excellent return. LISTINGS NEEDED FOR SELLER'S MARKET, FARM PROPERTIES & HOMES Prudential 519-482-3400 1 Albert St., Clinton Heartland Realty Fred Lobb, Broker/Owner See our website: www.prudentialheartland.com 54 ARTHUR LANE, AUBURN: Spacious 3 bedroom home on 1.87 ac. lot. Well maintained, many updates Incl. oil fired hot water heating system ('96), all new replacement windows, new shingles ('96). Hardwood floor and birch cupboard in eat-in kitchen, separate dining room, MF laundry. Parklike setting with great view of Maitland River Valley. $110,000. Call Richard Lobb, Sr. Sale Rep. D8845. 237 MORRIS STREET, BLYTH: Affordable 3 bedroom starter home with 1300 sq. ft. det insulated & heated garage / workshop with hot and cold running water and 2 piece washroom. House features newer carpets, large rooms. lots of windows, enclosed front porch, 2 replaced bay windows and 2 driveways. $79,900. Call Fred Lobb, Broker I Owner. D8343 482-3400 PAGE 18. THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 2002. Classified Advertisements Services Tenders Tenders Tenders Use of school, issue for parent ' to take a hik Legal notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS All claims against the estate of William MacDonald Shortreed, late of the Municipality of Huron East, in the County of Huron, who died on or about the 9th day of March, 2002, must be filed with the undersigned Estate Trustee on or before the 20th day of May, 2002; thereafter, the undersigned will distribute the assets of the said estate having regard only to the claims then filed. DATED at North Huron this 8th day of April, 2002. Valerie Edith Shortreed, Estate Trustee, by her Solicitor, GOODALL & HILLS, 216 Josephine Street, Box 730, Wingham, Ontario NOG 2W0 (519) 357-1990. 14-3 Livestock WE BUY AND SELL LIVESTOCK dairy, beef and horses, crippled and poor- doing cows PAY IMMEDIATELY LICENCED DEALER CLARENCE POORTINGA 887-9747 Mortgages NEED A MORTGAGE? First & Seconds GET THE LOWEST RATE CONSOLIDATE DEBTS Borrow $100,000. - Pay $625. per month "HARD TO APPROVE" Whatever your needs, Give Us A Try. MORTGAGE NETWORK 519-482-7675/1-866-623-0589 www.garywalden.com Wanted WANTED TO BUY: SCRAP cars and trucks. L & B Auto Wreckers, 1 /2 mile south of Brussels. Call 887-9499. tfn cif k \ Please Recycle This Newspaper Real estate PASSPORT PHOTOS AVAIL- able by Ruth Uyl, 180 North St., Blyth. Call for your appointment now, 523-9892. 14-4p INCOME TAXES PREPARED, E-file service available. Farm, business or personal. Stephen Thompson — 482-7551. Or you may drop off or pick up your information at Black Creek Clothing, Queen St., Blyth. 05-12 Wanted CASHCROP LAND WANTED to rent for either short or long term periods. Competitive bids offered. References available if required. Phone 1-519-347-2354. 10-8 WANTED TO RENT: GOOD cash cropland. 519-233-7467. 12-3 Real estate Continued from page 1 at approximately $550,000 in repairs. Cited deficiencies include the presence of asbestos in the ceiling, the lack of smoke detectors in hallways, and inadequate ventilation, heating and window sealing. Prior to the Feb. 27 vote, Avon Maitland staff provided rationale for the seemingly late-breaking decision to keep students at Seaforth Public School, arguing the facility is currently adequate and the cost of renovations at the SDHS building would be too much to absorb next year. Some trustees who supported the recommendation suggested the elementary school students could be moved at a later date, once renovations become more feasible. Of any trustee, however, it , is Wingham-area representative Colleen Schenk who is afforded the most attention in the judicial application. The documentation calls into question the actions of Schenk from both before and after November, 2001, when she was elected chair after already serving several years on both the Avon Maitland board and its predecessor Huron County board. Beavers 1st Blyth Group Committee met at the Blyth Public School on April Ito discuss plans for the last two months of the scouting year. Beavers are planning to have a hike on April 16. On other meeting nights in April they will paint Beaver Buggies, work on crafts, and continue with stories from "Friends of the Forest". Currently the Cubs are working hard on badge and award requirements. In the fall they completed the Red Star. They are ,:1,1J 1. J it :i11 ,1L71 fl J Information in the affidavits from both Burgess and SDHS school council chair Maureen Agar stretches .as far back as 1998, when Schenk served on a committee that recommended placing the newly- amalgamated, two-county board's offices within the building occupied by SDHS. Agar testifies Schenk then supported placing SDHS students into "a school within a school at CHSS," leaving the entire SDHS building for administrative purposes. "I am convinced that certain board trustees have always intended that the SDHS building be used only for the purpose of board offices," she adds. Addressing more recent events, the judicial application criticizes Schenk for stepping into a debate about possible deferral of the closure process, which took place earlier in the meeting at which the Feb. 27 vote occurred. "Prior to any (closure) motions reaching the floor cif the board meeting . . Schenk made a procedural ruling that a deferral motion was out of order," Burgess testifies. Instead, he explains, the chair issued what he calls an now finishing the requirements for the Purple Star, and making plans for District Camp. The theme this year is The Wild, Wild West for which the third-year boys are preparing a skit and song. Following a presentation by scout Terry Radford on packing a backpack, one meeting night will be devoted to teaching the Cubs what, and what not to take on a camping excursion, and how to pack a backpack efficiently. Because the tour of Volvo in Goderich had to be cancelled, the "advance ruling" that such a motion must, in effect, only come in the form of a termination for the entire process. This, Burgess says, would "eliminate the entirety" of the work done by community members during a month's-long public consultation process which began in May, 2000. "I was astonished that (Schenk's) pre-emptive ruling effectively dismissed what numerous presenters to the board had asked for," Agar's affidavit adds. At the Feb. 27 meeting, Schenk justified her rejection of the motion to defer by saying it would leave the board unable to pursue the activities it can rightfully pursue under the school closure policy. She said motions to defer are meant only for cases where it's obvious that new information may become available, and argued that trustees already had received enough information to adequately consider the closure options. But it's clear Schenk's actions — as well as various other issues about which the board has already presented its case at its meetings — will receive scrutiny from Leitch during the April 18 hearing. e, Apr. 16 Scout Troop is planning a day of rock climbing in London on April 13. Blyth Pathfinders will be joining them for the activity. The last fundraiser of the current scouting year will he on May 11. Beavers will sell baked goods at the annual bake sale in front of the Blyth Memorial Hall, 9 a.m. to noon. Cubs will offer hot dogs and pop in the community parking lot, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and Scouts will have a yard sale at the Blyth Veterinary Clinic, 8 a.m. to noon.