HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1987-12-16, Page 2PAGE 2—GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1987
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OPEN: 9 AM J PM
THURS, DEC. 17 to WED., DEC. °23
Saturday, Dec. 19 till6 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 24 till 6 p.m.
4 THE SQUARE
GODERICH
ph: 524®2882
-1
For PeopleMove!
Jewitt n
Board ch
John Jewitt, a lifelong resit egi oiil`lILruett
Township, has been named a the
Huron County Board of Educa i il;"fie suc-
ceeds Art Clark in this board -elected
position.
Vice-chairman is Joan VandenBroeck.
Graeme Craig becomes chairman of the
education committee; Brian Jeffrey is
chairman of the management committee;
and Bea Dawson was named chairman of
the personnel committee.
These six people now comprise the
board's executive committee.
The Education Committee includes chair-
man Craig, Tony McQuail, Audrey Triebner
and Rick Rompf.
The Management Committee has Harry
Hayter, Dr. John Goddard and Don
McDonald working with chairman Jeffray.
Sally Rathwell, Art Clark and John Elliott
form the Personnel Committee with Chair-
man Dawson.
The inaugural meeting of the board was
held after the regular board meeting on
Decmeber 7.
Attending the meeting was D.A. Kinchlea,
regional director of education, the Ontario
Ministry of Education. Kinchlea said there
are always issues in education and current-
ly, these issues include such things as the
impact of the new child care proposal from
the federal government and the perplexing
problems associated with AIDS education.
He praised the Huron County board of
education for its first-class school system
and its excellent administrative program.
The first meeting of the new board is
January 11 at the board office in Clinton at 1
p.m..
PUC requests
grant funding
The Goderich Public Utilities Commis-
sion resolved, at its Dec. 10 meeting, to re-
quest the Ministry of the Environment to
provide grant funding for a Water
Distribution System Needs Study, as ex-
plained in an application submitted by
B.M. Ross and Associates Limited. The
P.U.C. further agreed to provide its share
of the cost of the study.
Letters received from two customers
were extensively discussed at the P.U.C.
meeting. A motion on one letter, from
Steenstra Holdings, was tabled. A
representative of Steenstra Holdings will
be invited to appear at the next' P.U.C.
meeting - January 14, 19 t - to provide ad-
ditional information on the company's con-
tention that it wasn't fully informed of the
cost of the installation of a service.
Concerning a second letter, one from
customer Marcel DeWinter, the P.U.C.
manager was authorized to write to
DeWinter, outlining the options and costs
for replacement of a service. It was agreed
that if DeWmter required any further
clarificA0400400k1 be invited to appear
at the Janua meeting.
It was decided that the P.U.C. should
seek the advice of a solicitor concerning
the value of joining a worker's safety
training package, now under the auspices,
of the Electrical Utilities Safety Associa-
tion of Ontario,Inc. The safety training
program had been provided free by the
Worker's Compensation Board, op an .esf;
perimental basis for 1986-87 only." rn
The P.U.C. will send two representatives
to a Management -Labour Relation's,
seminar to be held January 13, 1988, in
Cambridge. The seminar will deal with
grievance procedures and other
management -labour issues.
The P.U.C. agreed to place a quarter
page advertisement in the Knights of Col-
umbus souvenir brochure in commemora-
tion of the Knights of Columbus' 25th
anniversary.
Also discussed at the P.U.C. meeting
was the Harris User's Group, the billing
system used by the P.U.C. The P.U.C.
membersexpressed satisfaction with the
billing system.
AIDS funds
• trom page 1
looking around, he added. .
"At this point there is a need for addi-
tional staff, but not for AIDS education
staff," said Bokhout.
The grant money will be used to pur-
chase a video cassette recorder, pay for
speakers at workshops and provide audio-
visual material.
Bokhout also said AIDS is not a big pro-
blem in Huron County.
"To the best of my knowledge there is
only one person (in Huron County) who has
been exposed to the HIV virus." There are
no (existing) cases of AIDS (although two
county residents have died from the
disease), he added.
Health Education Consultant, Sheryl
Feagan with the Huron Health Unit, said it
is impossible to compare areas. The
$35,593 given to Perth County was to pay
the salary of full-time family planner.
She said the Health Unit is involved with
the Huron County Board of Education in its
manditory AIDS school carriculum.
Arnold Mathers, superintendent of pro-
grams at the Huron County Board of
Education said the Health Unit provides
excellent assistance in service and
materials.
Under the new program, education
boards must provide AIDS education in
either grades seven or eight and in a man-
datory health credit course in secondary
school. High school students are requred
to take one physical education course and
that manditory course will provide AIDS
education, said Mathers.
CIVIC CORNER
Huron County Executive Committee will
meet at 10 a.m. on Monday, Dec. 21, in the
Court House council chambers, Goderich,
Huron County Planning and Develop-
ment Committee will meet at Masa. on
Tuesday, Dec. 22 in the Court lfo f se conn -a
cit chambers, Goderich.
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