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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1982-11-03, Page 3dcisjon '82 Lucluiow Sentinel, We,dnesda y, November 3, 19$2 ,l. Page 2 Marybelle Cranston • Patricia Haskell Marybelle Cranston Marybelle Cranston has just completed 8 years on the West Wawanosh Township council, having served as ,chairman of the Lucknow District Fire Board, the Lucknow Arena Board and the township recreation committee. • • She believes it is time to move 'on ' and since she is not interested in running for reeve, she felt a move to school board appropriate. Cranston says the position of trustee can be effective. She believes the board must maintain a high standard of education in the county but she realizes colts cannot be cut Cranston says she wants the best educa- tion we can afford' in Huron County, and a chance toy prove she's interested and dedicated. The mother of Tenille, 5 and Terry, 2, Cranston and her husband, Cecil produce cream on their West Wawanosh farm. • Tony McQuail Pat Haskell Pat Haskell of • Ashfield Township believes her experience as a mother of a child in the special school system and a child in the regular school system, will equip her with the knowledge and ability to contribute as school trustee to the development of Bill 82 in Huron County schools. She has worked on the advisory committee Bill 82 to the Huron ' County Board of Education and believes that the costs of the. bill's implementation can be restrained. She believes in communication between the board, the school and the parents and that education is for. all. Pat has 19 years business experience -and is currently employed as a secretary with Lyle Pinkney Insurance. She and . her husband, Doug, have two children, Scott and Jane. ' • Tony McQuail • A member of the Citizens Action Group on Education, Tony McQuail of West Wawa- . Pick a -Panel and do it Buckingham Birch Also Coloured Nails And Matching Vinyl Moulding • yourself! PRICE PER 4".x 8" PANEL Overlay Panels Sj 5.49 'I I •_riip/il9%i rr tit - ^..- .4 0111 010. • J1 11111 NII A 11 1 1 III M.11 N 11.11 1 N�11 1 II II.I ry N 111111.1 �mr✓: \�\. H r 11II I II IS II i II II111 ( 11 N 11111 YYY •u NISI I n111 1111 144 Climaloc WEATHER STRIPPING DOOR -SETS . $5.10 per set and up HENDERSON J.W. HENDERSON LIMITED LUc KNOW. ONT. Suslnsas Hnurs Men. M Fri. • •.m. M S:30 p.m. %I.$a.m.MNoon CENEME nosh Township has always been interested in education and is involved with young.. people as a leader of the Huron County 441 goat club. McQuail believes school boards will have to adjust in times which will be tight financially, inorder to provide a good basic education that helps students develop abilities and 'skills to be good workers and citizens. The board will also have to be innovative in its useof time and equipment to meet the cost of the, expensive technology which will be necessary to teach the courses which students will demand in the future. , McQuail. says the board will have to make better use of its facilities in order torovide for programming courses in'. computer technology. For example the board could look at making time available to town students at night to work on computers. As well, rural students could be provided' access • to computers at elementary schools in their areas in the evening. This will free time through the day for students who are bused to school and find returning to school for computer time inconvenient in the evening. The board will have to show a firm stand on salaries. McQuail says he has spoken with teachers who want the board members to show they are interested in course development and the day to day operation of the system, as well as holding the line on salaries. Huron County has a good education system, remarks McQuail, and it is important in time of restraint to keep the best of the system and build on it as inexpensively as possible. McQuail has been active in community affairs serving as chairman of•the Foodland Hydro Committee, which co-ordinated the involvement of 14 farm groups, who presented briefs to the Consolidated Hear- ing Board investigating the Ontario Hydro transmission line proposals from the Bruce Nuclear Generating Stations. He is currently president of the Huron County Federation of Agricultureand has monitored the Ontario Waste Management Corporation's developments as chairman of the federation's Energy Committee. Recently he helped prepare the federation brief to OWMC following the completion of the corporation's initial phase of study into management of • the province's industrial hazardous wastes. McQuail and his wife, Fran farm in West Wawanosh and they have a daughter, 'Rachel, 13 months. 1 + 11 olds line on salaries... *from page 1 ship noted how employees in. his township have a lot to learn," said Reeve, Dawson. J`' came to council and offered to accept a 10 Ashfield' Township Reeve Warren Zinn per •cent reduction in salaries. Hay Township Reeve Lloyd Mousseau and Goderich Reeve Don 'Wheeler Agreed with the statements madeby their colleagues and added the county will have to keep their expenditures within guidelines. In other business, county council has changed' its meeting date from the ' last Thursday of the month to the first Thursday of the month, effective January 1, ' 1983. added ,his, comments. The Canadian deficit keeps climbing, he noted, and municipalities are doing their best, .to control their own spending. "Huron County has been a leader over the years. Somebody has to start somewhere and I hope it (restraint) starts here;" commented Reeve Zinn. 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