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The Citizen, 2009-11-26, Page 7THE CITIZEN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2009. PAGE 7. Milestone It was a special day indeed at Huronlea on Saturday as family and friends gathered to help resident Cecil Raynard celebrate his 100th birthday. (Vicky Bremner photo) Brussels man celebrates a century of life St. Anne’s hockey teams face off A century of life was the reason tocelebrate this past weekend, asfamily and friends gathered tohonour Cecil Raynard on his 100thbirthday. Born on the fourth of Grey Nov. 21, 1909, Mr. Raynard was the son of Austin and the former Essie Hoffman He attended SS#6 Grey, then went up to Grade 10 at the Brussels school. On Nov. 10, 1951 he married the former Louella Irene Stevenson from Prince Edward Island. Throughout his life, Mr. Raynard has worked as a farmer and a contractor, and has enjoyed the pastimes of gardening and walking. He and his wife retired 10 years ago after selling their home in Ethel. They moved to Brussels and lived in the Kerr Apartments for a time, before moving this year to Seaforth Manor, then Huronlea where they still reside. Despite failing eyesight and hearing Mr. Raynard enjoys excellent health and is often seen out for a stroll in the village. The Raynards have three daughters, Linda Lou, married to Doug Davidson of Brussels, Shirley Ann Bremner of London and Irene Raynard of Port McNichol. Grandchildren are Chris Bremner,Jeremy and Jennifer Forgét, BlairDavidson and Becky Wormington.The Raynards also have two great-grandchildren, Rylin and QuinnWormington. Service time Tristin Cook was on the hot spot, serving when East Wawanosh Public School took on Turnberry Central Public School in regional volleyball at F.E. Madill Secondary School last week. (Shawn Loughlin photo) NOTICE OF THE PASSING OF A ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT BY THE CORPORATION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF HURON EAST TAKE NOTICE that the Council of the Municipality of Huron East passed By-Law No. 85 – 2009 on the 17th day of November 2009 under Section 34 of the Planning Act, R.S.O. 1990. AND TAKE NOTICE that any person or agency may appeal to the Ontario Municipal Board in respect of the By-Law by filing with the Clerk of the Municipality of Huron East, not later than the 15th day of December 2009 a notice of appeal setting out the objection to the by-law and the reasons in support of the objection, accompanied by payment of the fee prescribed Ontario Municipal Board Act. AMOUNT OF FEE for an appeal is $125 payable by Certified Cheque or Money Order in Canadian funds, made out to the Minister of Finance and accompanied by OMB Appellant Form (A1) which is available on their web site at www.omb.gov.on.ca or at the Municipal Office. Only individuals, corporations and public bodies may appeal a zoning by-law to the Ontario Municipal Board. A notice of appeal may not be filed by an unincorporated association or group. However, a notice of appeal may be filed in the name of an individual who is a member of the association or the group on its behalf. AN EXPLANATION of the purpose and effect of the by-law, describing the lands to which the by-law applies is provided below. The complete by-law is available for inspection at the Clerk’s office during regular office hours or on the Municipal web site at www.huroneast.com Dated at the Municipality of Huron East this 25th of November 2009. J. R. McLachlan, Clerk-Administrator, Corporation of the Municipality of Huron East 72 Main Street South, Seaforth, Ontario N0K 1W0 Phone 519-527-0160 Fax 519-527-2561 1-888-868-7513 Toll Free PURPOSE AND EFFECT: 1. By-law No. 85 – 2009 has the following purpose and effect: The Zoning By-law Amendment represents a housekeeping amendment for Huron East’s comprehensive Zoning By-law (By-law 52-2006). The text & map changes affect lands in Huron East. Some of these changes are as a result of the recent Official Plan Amendment #5 for Huron East; other changes are of a housekeeping nature; a few changes are site specific. Text Changes were made to the following: Definitions; General Provisions; Minimum Distance Separation, Residential Setback from Waste Disposal Sites; Extractive Resource Zoning; (R1) Residential Low Density Zone; Wellhead Protection Areas, Outdoor Furnace Provisions, (R2) Residential Medium Density Zone and Funeral Home Special (R2-10) Zones; Floodway (FW) and Flood Fringe (FF) Zone; Permitted Uses added to Agricultural Zones (AG1, AG2, AG3); Village Commercial (C1); Fringe Core Area Commercial – Seaforth (C2); Highway Commercial (C3, C3-1, C3-4); Core Commercial (C4); Vanastra Commercial (C5); Fringe Highway Commercial – Seaforth/Brussels (C6); adding permitted uses to Community Facility – Special (CF-4) Zone; Sinkhole Zone; and text corrections. Map changes include: extractive resources zoning affecting Agriculture/Natural Environment zones; Sinkhole zone; Municipal well and 2 year time of travel; several map changes and corrections in the Wards of Grey, McKillop, Tuckersmith, Seaforth and Brussels. This by-law amends Huron East Zoning By-law #52-2006. All other zone provisions apply. 20% OFF Two Locations To Serve You Better 222 Josephine St., Wingham 519-357-3466 120 Inkerman St. E., Listowel 519-291-4920 Limit: one coupon per customer * Valid until December 24th, 2009 any ONE product IN STOCK STOREWIDE • Christmas Gift Ideas • Natural Health & Beauty Products • Environmentally-Friendly Cleaning Products • Quality, Canadian-Made Supplements✃✃ By Brittany Nigh Although there has been little sign of snow heading into the last week of November, the boys and girls hockey teams at St. Anne’s have been braving the chilly Clinton arena for the past months. Both teams faceoff this week against Central Huron Seconday School. The boys played Tuesday Nov. 23 and the girls play Thursday Nov. 26 at 2 p.m. The second half of the semester is sure to be busy, especially for Grade 12 religion classes at St. Anne’s. Numerous students have been divided into groups, each with a social justice issue to tackle. From raising awareness, to raising funds, each group will try their hardest to campaign against injustices in our society.