HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes Advocate, 1998-02-25, Page 3Page 2
Times -Advocate, February 25, 1998
Regional
wrap up
Mitchell teen
missing
MITCHELL - A I7 -year-old
Mitchell area girl has been re-
ported missing since Feb. 6, re-
ported the Mitchell Advocate.
Hannah Holfineyer, of RR 3
Mitchell. is 5'8", 165 lbs., with
blue eyes and blonde hair. A
warrant is out for her arrest,
since she breached probation,
stated Mitchell OPP Sgt. Bob
Jackson.
"Ail we want is for someone
to call home and let us know if
she's well," Jackson said.
OPP changes
names
GODERICH - The Goderich
OPP has changed names to the
Administration Centre of the,
Huron County Detachment of
.the OPP, stated the Goderich
Signal -Star.
The OPP detachment,on High-
way 21, south of Goderich has
changed names due to internal
restructuring taking place with
the OPP. The changes have re-
cently sten the Exeter OPP
linked with London, making it
difficult for the detachment to be
referred to as Huron County,
since parts of the county are no
longer included, the article re-
. ported. '
The name change effects offic-
es in Goderich, Clinton and Sea -
forth.
New service at
Clinton Public
Hospital
CLINTON - A new ophthal-
mology service was launched at
the Clinton Public Hospital Feb.
12, reported the Clinton News -
Record.
With the service, the hospital
will be 'able to_ offer cataract
clinics and surgery due to the al-
liance
with the London Health
Science Centre. •
The official opening was
launched with a ribbon -cutting
ceremony at the hospital with
the chair of the hospital board of
directors Marg Makin and a
number of dignitaries present.
More than 100
fire calls in Mount
Forest
MOUNT FOREST - The
Mount Forest Fire Department
responded to a total of 102
emergency calls during the past
year, stated the Mount Forest
Confederate.
Fifty-six of the calls were in
Mount Forest and included six
alarms at the Louis Marshall
Hospital,, four alarms at the Sau-
geen Valley Nursing Centre, 15
alarms from remote locations
and 31 alarms ranging from fires
to carbon monoxide.
There were 12 responses to
Egremont Township, 22 re-
sponses to Arthur Township
(one of which was a tornado
warning from the OPP), five re-
sponses to Normanby Township,
three responses to West Luther
Township and four responses to
Proton Township.
Blanket scam in
Huron
HURON COUNTY - The Hu-
ron detachment of the OPP have
issued an alert to all citizens of a
fraud dealing with a misrepre-
sentation of blankets being held
out to be handwoven, reported
the North Huron Citizen.
A female suspect has been at-
tempting to sell blankets that she
claims she handwove on a loom.
She asks upwards of $400 per
blanket but are worth at most
$60 from a department store.
The suspect is described as be-
ing a white female, 56 years of
age, stout, wearing glasses with
a slight Scottish or English ac-
cent.
.
•
TW THE NFWS
Biddulph council moves to straighten Adare Dr. curve
By Craig Bradford
T -A Reporter
BIDDULPH TWP. - Biddulph,
council decided to ease some of the
curve out of Adare Dr. at last
week's meeting.
Works foreman Joe Dewan filled
council in on what it would take to
straighten the curve on the road at
last week's council meeting. About
$17,000 in work would be needed
to clear brush and straighten the
curve, Dewan said, though only
$1,000 would be needed to allevi-
ate much of the problems. Council
approved up to $2,500 in work be
done.
Administrator Larry Hotson said
Adare Dr. needs the work because
of increased traffic including a
school bus route. Brush and the
curve make for poor visibility
along the road, something that
wasn't much of a problem in the
past when there wa , less traffic.
Other notes from last week's
meeting:
Insurance up
Insurance premiums for the town-
ship arc up to $22.530 for '98 from
about $22,300 in '97 as quoted
from Frank Cowan Co. Ltd.'s Jeff
Coleman. The small increase is a
normal adjustment, Hotson said.
One concern Coleman pointed
out is leaving the Biddulph-
Blanshard Fire Dept. practice car
out in the open. He said it could be
an invitation for youngsters to play
and possibly get hurt. Coleman's
company is dealing with a liability
claim similar to this in eastern On-
tario. Fire Chief John Damen was
contacted to see if the car could be
moved.
When asked about savings
through a possible amalgamation,
Coleman said Middlesex Centre's
premiums dropped by about 23 per
cent after the three previous mu-
nicipalities merged with more sav-
ings to come when excess buildings
and equipment are disposed of.
Building system down
Biddulph's 24.71 per cent share
of the North Middlesex District
Building System budget is down to
$14,762.64 in '98 from about
$15,500 in '97. Hotson said the
budget is shared by north Mid-
dlesex municipalities and is devised
from a complicated formula with
many factors including number and
cost of building permits over a
Bluewater Recycling Association
elects new board of directors
HURON COUNTY - At the first general meeting of the new year, the
Bluewater Recycling Association membership elected 12 representatives
of the 39 member municipalities to form the Board of Directors of the As-
sociation for a three -year -term. The board governs the Association's af-
fairs through the development, approval and evaluation of policy.
The following individuals, under the chairmanship of Phil Maguire from
the Village of Grand Bend, will serve as the Board of Directors of the
Bluewater Recycling Association for the coming term:
Huron County:
•Dave Jewitt; Town of Clinton •Ron Murray; Township of McKillop
•Andrew Robertson; Township of Stephen
Lambton County:
•John Walsh; Town of Bosanquet •Tom Boon; Town of Forest •Phil Ma-
guire; Village of Grand Bend -Chairman
Middlesex County:
•E. Lynne Burns; Village of Ailsa Craig •Gordon Moir; Township of
McGillivray •Ila Herrington; Township of West Williams
Perth County:
•Meredith Schneider; Town of North Perth -Vice Chairman • Louis Ma-
loney; Township of West Perth •Heather Goad; Township of St. Marys
New chairman
elected at
Ausable-Bayfield
allr Continued from front page
maintaining the municipal levy at
1997 levels. With a vote based on
assessment, the vote was 81.7 per
cent in favor of maintaining the
levy. Only Hay and Biddulph
Townships were opposed. Mark
Westbrook who represents Clinton
and Goderich Township as well as
Fred Lewis representing Middlesex
Centre were not at the meeting to
vote.
After years of drastic cutbacks,
the ABCA had a budget shortfall of
nearly $25,000 in 1997. It has bud-
geted for only a $10,105 shortfall
in '98 even though revenue is bud-
geted to decrease by nearly
$71,000. The total budget is
$1,068,975 with $344,340 coming
from the general municipal levy.
The ABCA is fortunate to have
healthy reserves including
$220,000 in the vehicle and equip-
ment reserve. The property man-
agement reserve is $144,000.
Strang said clean water will be
the focus of the future.
"The interest in clean water is
there," he explained, citing the pub-
lic demand for good•water quality
in Lake Huron and throughout the
watershed.
Committee formed
for new arena roof
STEPHEN TOWNSHIP - It's
time for a new roof on the Stephen
Township arena in Huron Park.
"It's in a deteriorated state in bad
need of repairs," said Stephen
Township administrator Larry
Brown, adding the damage was
caused by age.
A committee was formed for the
replacement of the roof and in-
cludes Brown, chief building offi-
cial Milt Dietrich, arena manager
Rob. Funston and councillor Jim
Dietrich. The committee will inves-
tigate alternatives for a replacement
of the roof. Some of the alterna-
tives include steel, a rubber mem-
brane, asphalt or tar, Brown cited
as examples.
The committee will meet with
B.M. Ross & Associates Engineers
today to discuss the alternatives.
three year average. Hotson said
Biddulph's share should be even
less in '99 due to a decrease in per-
mits in recent years.
On the beat?
London OPP detachment com-
mander Karen Moffatt visited coun-
cil to fill them in on plans for the
Lucan and Exeter offices. When
asked about what the OPP is doing
• about youth crime, Moffatt said a
task force has been set-up to look at
youth crime including a number of
break-ins and vehicle thefts. The
task force has identified some sus-
pects who are now being watched
by the OPP.
When asked about speeding on
Biddulph roads, Moffatt said a ra-
dar team will be brought in on a
random basis.
Moffatt encouraged Biddulph to
form a community policing com-
mittee and programs like Citizens
on Patrol (COPs) since similar
committees have reduced oc-
currences in communities like Del-
aware. Reeve Earl French asked
councillor George Marr to direct
the Optimist Club to look into
spearheading the project.
Hotson added the Businessman's
Association may also be of as-
sistance since they have staged suc-
cessful foot patrols in Lucan during
the past couple Halloween and
Devil's nights.
No dough yet
French, councillor Doug Ander-
son and Hotson pitched Environ-
ment Minister Norm Sterling for
funding for the Granton sewage
project at a recent meeting. French
said the meeting went well but, as
expected, Sterling didn't commit
any cash. Sterling told them his
staff have received over 400 ap-
plications for the province's clean
water grant program and are now
sorting them out and making a pri-
ority list to earmark the funds.
The wish list
Dewan filled council in on the
five-year works program. Hotson
said the items on the list are in no
particular order and projects would
be done when money becomes
available. The list includes: re-
placing the '87 roadside mower; re-
placing the grader in 2004; painting
the '92 Ford; replacing the single
axle truck in 2003; paving jobs:
part of Coursey Line north of Hwy.
7; Whalen Line east of Hwy. 23;
Saintsbury Line north of Dyke -
man's Bridger to Whalen Line and
south of Hwy. 4; Roman Line onto
Nagle Dr. when Ministry of Trans-
portation fixes Roman Line/Hwy. 4
corner; tile drains along both sides
of parts of Whalen Line; rebuild
Mooresville Dr. first block of Hwy.
23 and Roman Line by St. Patrick's
Church.
( \1 t l ,, ,tt . t SOWERBY FINANCIAL
GROUP INC.
33385 Richmond Street
Lucan, Ontario NOM 2J0
Phone (519) 227-0436 • Fax (519).227-0560
• RRSPs • Mutual & Segregated Funds from
several companies • G/Cs • Life, Disabi//ty &
Pension Quotes • RRSPLoons
•,,,,,a
•(,ROlil'01 FUNDS'
1 YEAR
3 YEAR
5 YEAR
10 YEAR
ADVANTAGE
31.3
47.5
34.7
22.1
ADVANTAGE II
29.2
N/A
N/A
N/A
CO-SPONSORED BY AIC GROUP OF FUNDS. PERFORMANCE OF FUNDS DATED JAN. 31/98
For more information on AIC and/or other funds, please give us a call.
Regular business hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Please call to arrange an evening or weekend appointment.
All retums are historical annual compounded total rates of retum as of January 31/98. These retums reflect changes in unit value and
distributions reinvested and do not take into account sales, redemption, or optional charges payable by unit holders which would have
reduced retums. Past.performance does not guarantee future results. Your unit value and investment retums will fluctuate. Important
information about any mutual fund is contained in its simplified prospectus. You can obtain one from AIC or through your financial
advisor.
AIC Advantage Fund is capped to new investors as of September 31, 1996, re -opened January 1, 1998 for a limited time. Only unit
holders of record on the date the Manager closes the Fund may continue to purchase and transfer from other Funds (except AIC
Advantage Fund II) after that date the Manager reserves the right to recommend the exceptance of purchases and transfers from
other Funds at a future date.
• Mutual Fund product provided in association with Capital Management Group. E & OE
'98 escort SE, Sedan or Wagon
others pale by comparison.
Save up leo
s7.000
towards the
purchase of . new
Ford. Mercury
or Lincoln vehicle'
COMPARE THE VALUE — SEE WHAT YOU SAVE WITH ESCORT"
FORD CHEVROLET TOYOTA HONDA
FEATURES ESCORT SE CAVALIER COROIIA VE CIVIC IX G
ssior.VOsfy
Air Conditioning No Charge S1.080
51.230 Included
Wagon Model YES
Duo! Outside Power Mirrors Stondord
Renate Driver Door Keyless Entry YES
60/40 Reor Seat YES
Engine Displacement 2.0 Litre 4 Cyl.
Tronsmission 5-Spd. Manual
NO
Optional
Optional
Not Available
2.2 litre 4 Cyl.
S-Spd. Manuol
Optional
Not Available
Optional
1.8 like 4 Cyl.
5-Spd. Monuol
NO
O{ltia,ol
Not Available
YES
1.6 litre 4 Cyl.
5•Spd. Manual
SAVE UP TO
$1,684 $2,163 $3,205
AU ADMIT
rollers
ADDITIONAL
$750
sunwn
CAswAc[•
• 2.0 litr. 16 Yoke Z.lec Engkr • Tachometer
• 60/40 Roo Sods • Paw Merron • Solo Tinl.d Glow
• Roar Hoot Duds • AM/FaSla.o wed, Four Premien Sp.oi.n
• Remote Drive Door Kayla's Entry • D.power.d Air laps
• 24 Hour Rooch4.
Aniwa.
■
FORD
Now for a Limited Time at
Your Ontario Ford Er Mercury Dealers
Or visit our web site at: www.ford.ca/offers/
\ItIt Ill \
N74g te2YW KAo nu MAL COY. 'Puntsre new is hod w Sedan or wagon Noon 2x2 Hot Pottage Mor -Sport) with S -speed menus; h•nonhdon for f I LVISI SKIM Ow 11.000 caahbact d.d,med. Toss payable .n full *mown d
purthaw Of. before tadubw4 deducted. Open eechrde lret9M (14410), Ikon., Intutvto and as applicable los'. Offen may change without notice. Dealer may see for lest Limited One offers. See dealer fa detatk Wagon group not *mewled
*KA Exon St Wpm. nave up to 5700. pier M a maalrman of 11.100 over fed ya.n.44th the MC Ford 1M. Card and up to 11,100 • year to a maximum of 17.000 over five yeah with ted Chat fad No Gold Cod tower* the podia* a tease
d a new Ford. Menury or UncoM vehicle. Some conditions and en annual fee sooty. Credit approval required. AA for MI daces on this programvisa Is a registered *dement el v1. krarnallaW Sent* ArocWlon tet and ford Moa
Cowpony of (•nada, Limited Ikakees of M.A. •Sam orations apply t. Graduate CMubect pear.. we dNler For Mak '1,1hrdet Ake All. • •ChewdN Carel* figure' based on Ms,,f.Mnn ad.erolwd price Moog Ird. Toyota Cora* K
end Hada LX -G marMAachwa Agg4ed retie prkaoptions available from menutacturen brochures Nolen msp we for law Polo order may be remrred. Ontario IMOA 10. go. 2000.0.het. Onwrb IN S[4
I
i