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Clinton News-Record, 1985-2-27, Page 10THIS O121CINAI, DOCUMENT IS 1N VERY POOR CON1)LTION CLINTON NEWS -RECORD, WEDNESDAY, P.EBR1 Lstowei man takes MVGA reins from Dave Gower A Listowl man, replaces David Gower of Goderich as chairman of the Maitland Valley Conservation Authority. Vince Judge, 41, was acclaimed as chair- man at the authority's annual meeting on Feb. 21. Mr. Gower will remain on the authority for this year. He has served on MVCA for 11 years, five of them as chair- man. Mr. Judge has served with the authority 41k, 10 years. He was Listowel's municipal resentative beginning in 1972, was off the authority for a few years, then returned in 1981 as a provincial representative. On beheld• of the authority, Mr. Judge presented Mr. Gower with a framed pain- ting of MVCA's outdoor education centre at Wawanosh Valley Conservation Area. Other executive members acclaimed at the meeting were vice-chairman Bruce Mc- Call of Brussels, conservation areas ad- visory board chairman Bill Manning of Blyth, and community relations advisory board chairman George McBride of R.R. 5, Lucknow. Carman Kaye of Minto Township is chair- man of the water management advisory board and Don Dodds of Culross Township is chairman of the land management advisory board. The members of the water management advisory board are Doug Trench of Listowel, David Gower of Goderich, Don Wheeler of Goderich, Norman Alexander of Hullett Township, Grant Farrish of Ashfield Township, William Leeming of McKillop Township and John Vander Eyk of Enna Township. The members of the land management ad- visory board are Norman Haid of Morn- ington Township, Harold Errington of West Wawanosh Township, Joe Vandenberk of Logan Township; Ross Taylor of East Wawanosh, Elmer Trick of Clinton, Herb Clark of Lucknow, Catherine Keleher of Palmerston and Clarke Ferguson of Huron Township. The members of the community relations advisory board are Pat Osborn of Goderich Township, Harold Cosens of Wallace Township, Leona Armstrong of Grey Township, Michael Brown of Arthur Township, George .Wicke of Ellice Township, Bill Crump of Wingham, Norman Fairies of Howick Township and George McBride of Kinloss Township. Serving on the conservation areas ad- visory board are Robert Grasby of Morris Township, Randy Scott of Turnberry. Township, William Dale of Seaforth, Russel Kernighan of Colborne Township, Norman Young of Harriston, Lorne Murray of Maryborough Township, Margaret Bennett of Wingham and Arnold Storey of Milverton. RX27, Vb Page Money needed �y to io to park Maitland Valley ` Conservation Authority should spend more money now to reap benefits in the future from its education cen- tre at Wawanosh Valley. Ellice Township's member of the authori- ty, George Wicke, said the outdoor educa- tion centre should provide overnight accom- modation for school children. A barn on the site has had a part of it renovated for a classroom. Also, the Huron - Perth Roman Catholic Separate School Board donated a portable but it is not being used. A teacher himself at Milverton Public School, Mr. Wicke said the Wawanosh Cen- tre, located south of Wingham is too far for his school to go on a day trip. Instead, he has taken students to Upper Thames Con- servation Authority's Wildwood and Ausable-Bayfield Conservation Authority's outdoor education centre Camp Sylvan. Camp Sylvan offers schools a three-day pro- gram. Mr. Wicke said MVCA should take the role of conservation education because many of the students in the Maitland watershed will be the farmers of tomorrow. "If we don't do it, it isn't going to get done," said Mr. Wicke. Retiring Maitland Valley Conservation Authority chairman Dave Gower of Goderich was presented with a framed painting of the outdoor education centre at Wawanosh Valley con- servation area. Here 1985 authority chairman V ince Judge makes the presentation. (nm.,,(rj. ®OUP PH111NEt %.. 1 �• (nti�i ,1 O .ALLEN'S It III \II. P:q'taaanmi v8 Prego. STOCK UP NOW! ALLENS 28 oz. SPECIAL! MACINTOSH GLASS JAR APPLESAUCE 1®39 PURE VEGETABLE V®8 JUICE 48 oz. SPECIAL! 119 CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF CHICKEN SOUP 10 oz TIN SPECIAL! 2/89 PREGO PLAIN OR 796 SPECIAL! MUSHROOM mL SPAG! SAUCE % O 9 SUPER SPECIAL KELLOGGS RICE KRISMES 725 9 PKG. SUPER SPECIAL SCHNEIDERS 6's MEAT PIES 400 g PKG 4 VARIETIES 4 VARIETIES FROZEN SAVARIN DINNERS 1.39 FLAMINGO ,_...- BUTTER ,D5 TARTS 1,39 199 312 g REGULAR OR DIET SPRITE REGULAR OR DIET COCA-COLA 750 ml BOTTLE PLUS 3a DEPOSIT HIGHLINER FROZEN HADDOCK IN BATTER OR COG FISH 350 g 99 STICKS PKG. fe HIGHIINER FROZEN BOSTON BLUEFISH FILLETS 454 g1e 99 WESTONS 2 VARIETIES BUTTER HORNS 1.29 6's 19:8% VEGETABLE CRISCO 3 lb. 3 99 GAY LEA SOUR CREAM 2m10- 79' BRUNSWICK 3 VARIETIES SARDINES 1009 49° MAXWELL HOUSE GOLD PREMIUM COFFEE 369 g TIN 3,99 SUPER SPECIAL LAUNDRY DETERGENT CHEER 2 6 LITRE 3.89 FABRIC SOFTENER BOUNCE 60 Sh. 4.99 CHRISTIES PREMIUM PLUS CRACKERS WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASES TO REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY REQUIREMENTS CAMPBELLS CHICKEN NOODLE s°UP s 10 oz. TINS FOR SUPER SPECIAL ENRICHED WHITE CRACKED WHEAT OR W. WHEAT ZEHRS BREAD _SUPER SPECIAL ASSORTED VARIETIES DUNCAN HINES CAKE MIXES ASSORTED VARIETIES PRICES IN EFFECT 9 A.M. WEDNESDAY FEB. 27 UNTIL CLOSING SATURDAY AR. 2 369 g REG. '1 .99 520 g PKG. REGULAR BAR 4's IVORY SOAP GLAD KITCHEN CATCHERS CHRISTIES OREO, CHIPS AHOY COOKIES 450 g 2,i9 BILLIE BEE LIQUID PURE HONEY 500 9 1.79 DARES 225 g PKG BRETON CRACKERS 1.49 CLUB HOUSE 106 g BLACK PEPPER 1.89 PURINA ASSORTED VARIETIES 400 g 1.49 12s 99' LAWRY'S TACO TRIO LAWRY'S TACO SHELLS las 1.29 205 g 2.69 SUPER SPECIAL KRAFT PROCESS CHEESE FOOD TENDER VITTLES 5 ° 1.79 PURINA 2 VARIETIES 1 kg CAT CHOW 1.99 VELVEETA SLICES DUNCAN HINES 2 VARIETIES MUFFIN MIXES 440 g 159 DUNCAN HINES WILD BLUEBERRY MUFFIN MIXES 360 g 1.59 GLAD BRAND 20 UNIT SIZE GARBAGE BAGS SPECIAL 3.19 1 REDEEMABLE 00110 Al 70111S (1(1 MA[RI,( 15 Save 50c Ma*well House GOLD Coffee Otter expires Sat Mar 9/85 MENNEN - SPEED PLUS REGULAR EDGE SHAVE 3 VARIETIES STICK 9 39 75 g OR SENSITIVE 200 mL r I.Jwacan, roes WHEN YOU BUY ANY 4 DUNCAN HINES ITEMS Municipalities pay 12 per cent to Maitland By Stephanie Levesque Maitland Valley Conservation Authority will be going to its 33 member municipalities for $202,705, an amount which is about 12 per cent more than the $177,830 the municipalities gave last year. MVCA approved a $1.8 million budget at its annual meeting. This is a decrease from the $1.9 million budgeted for last year. It was noted that because the authority has enlarged, municipalities actually face a six percent increase. The Wallace Avenue section of the Listowel conduit project, at $548,000, makes up the largest expense in the authority's budget. Only $12,000 of a $495,000 budget for the Listowel conduit was spent last year because no agreement was reached on how to fund the project. II "During the past year, a great deal of time and effort was spent on the Listowel conduit project in an attempt to arrive at a funding formula acceptable to the affected landowners, the town and the ministry of natural resources. "The town of Listowel is very concerned that the vitality of its downtown core area notbe jeopardized, while the ministry wants to be assured that their capital investment in the project will result -in an improved channel, that will carry the one in 100 year flows through the town," said past chair- man Dave Gower. "Presently the authority, our engineering consultant and the ministry are developing an alternative funding proposal that should prove acceptable to all parties involved." Mr. Gower added that he hopes the conduit ' reconstruction will get underway this year. t The final design and construction of the Port Albert erosion control project has been budgeted at$97,000 for 1985. Other erosion control projects include a $20,000 preliminary design for the Goderich bluffs stabilization project and $6,000 for the collecting of information and analysis in the South Maitland river basin. A $1.3 -million flood control project for Harriston will be started this year. MVCA has included $45,500 in its 1985 budget for the design engineering and environmental assessment of proposed plans to build a dyk- ing system along the river, channel im- provements, replacement of the Elora Street bridge and repairs to the existing con- duit under three downtown stores: Public meetings • and negotiations with landowners will be held this year. Now that more of the Lake Huron shoreline falls within the boundary of the Maitland Valley watershed (see MVCA enlargement story ), authority staff will con- tinue the mapping of the lake's floodlines. The cost of this has been estimated at $10,000. All these projects fall under the water and related land management program which has a total budget of $1.1 million. Of this, $954,000 will be paid through government grants with the remainder being MVCA's share. . Administration makes up the next highest portion of the budget. It is expected to cost $277,000 to run the authority with $219,000 of this coming from government grants. Conservation and recreation land management programs for 1985 total $85,600. Just under half, $41,500, will be paid for through government grants. A portion of this expenditure is offset by the operations of the conservation areas such as Falls Reserve. Operations and maintenance has been budgeted at $216,700 with no government grants, and $144,500 with $142,500 in govern- ment grants is earmarked for special pro- grams. Provincial grants for the year are ex- pected to total $1.2 million with $110,000 ex- pected in federal grants: Besides the municipal general levy of $202,705, special levies will total $113,185. The special levy is paid by a municipality benefitting from a specific project. General revenue from operations and donations is expected to reach $171,870. The levy apportionment to each municipality will be forwarded from the authority once the assessment data is received fro)rn the province. f.99 MED 508 01 10 011 MAR 915 ONLY Al /EARS /8 /089085 MARKETS THESE SPECIALS1 AVAILABLE IN: HIGHWAY NO. 8 JOSEPHINE ST. (HWY. NO. 4) G DERICH ONLY MON., TUES. - 9 TO 6 P.M. WED., THURS., FRI. 9 TO 9 P.M. SAT. 8:30 TO 6 P.M. WINGHAM INTERSECTION HWY. NO. 4 AND NO. 83 EXETER MON., TUES., WED. & SAT. 8:30 70 6 P.M. THURS. AND FRI. - 8:30 TO 9 P.M. MON., TUES., WED. - 9 TO 6 P.M. THURS., FRI.. 9 TO 9 P.M. SAT. - 8:30 TO 6 P.M. How they scored CLINTON - The Oddfellow and Rebekah card party was held on Feb. 21. Winners were: High Lady - Mabel McAdam; High Man - Walter Pepper; Low Lady - Edna Cox; Low Man - Lloyd Stewart; Lone Hands - Beatrice Walsh. Draw Winners were: Ret- ta Baird and Jean McEwan. The next euchre party will be held on March 7. A