The Citizen, 2001-12-12, Page 18foundations and auxiliaries will
continue to support their own site.
• Once the new hospital is
formed, the foundations and aux-
iliaries will determine how they
will support the new facility.
Where will I see my family doc-
tor?
• Your family doctor will continue
to practice out of offices in
Clinton and Goderich.
• The Clinton Medical Centre also
offers laboratory and other diag-
nostic services.
• The board of AMGH, together
with representatives from the
medical staff, Town of Goderich
and AMGH Foundation, are sup-
portive of building a group med-
ical clinic in the Town of
Goderich as a recruitment tool for
new physicians and retention of
existing physicians. This clinic
will have laboratory and other
health care related services.
What are the next steps?
• A proposal is under develop-
ment for submission to the
Ministry of Health. •
• A proposal is being developed to
be submitted to the Municipality
of Central Huron and the Huron
County Planning Department to
allow the land to be used for a
hospital.
If I have a question, who do I
ask?
• Call the administration office at
either hospital and they will
record your question and answer
to the best of their ability.
Help protect the
environment
Reduce, reuse and recycle
wales Balza,.
r t-e's
Habitat for Humanity
For more information on
Habitat for Humanity
and to contact your nearest
affiliate, contact us at
1-800-667-5137
Email: habitat@habitat.ca
www.habitat.ca
useful
things
you can do with the newspaper
1
Wrap fish and other goop
in it
Wrapping for freezing
meat
Use to pack with when
moving
Roll into fireplace logs
Blanket for bench sleeping
Roll up to make telescope
Recycle for cash
Clean car windows
Make spit balls
Temporary curtains for
your home
Put on floor when painting
Use for wrapping gifts
Emergency toilet paper
Use as insulation
Use letters for writing
ransom notes
Rustling sound effect for
home movies 23 Start a fire with it
28 Use as a temporary cast
Use as shoehorn 29
30 Make a fan
31 Empty vacuum cleaner on it
32 Fix hole in shoe
3
3
40) Keep flowers fresh until you 10 get vase A Put on floor when you shell -. pecans 35 Spank your dog
36
37
38
39
40
41
Mike confetti
Scoop up dead bugs
Fingerpaint on it
Stuff in wet boots to help
them dry
Insulate water pipes in
winter //,
Swat flies
42 Use rolled up to beat rug
43 To line the trash can
44 Make
a kite
45
46
47
48
84 8= A wrapper for used
chewing gum
87
86
Collect the yellow from the
sun
Good for breaking windows,
screen doors, etc. 88 Exercise your grip
89 Teach dog to fetch
9,1 Backing for magic marker
art projects
92
9 1
Sit on it at raining football
games
A place mat for office coffee
pot
93 Use as dust pan
94 Give subscription as a gift
95 Temporary replacement for
broken window
96
97
98
a
Use as worm food
99
Read it: national and
local news, sports, edito-
rials, human interest,
television listings, wed-
ding announcements,
births, deaths, are all
available in the newspa-
per.
100
Advertise in it: new cars,
grand openings, fash-
ions, furniture, food, toys
— you name it. If you
want to sell something,
the newspaper can help.
8 4) Fold up a page and make
lea your wallet look impressive
Make your hat fit better
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
Absorb things: you spill
Make paper dolls
To hide in at dinner table
For table cloth at annual
picnic
A source for rubber bands
Collect as a hobby
Make yourself look
important by carrying it
Use as door-stop
Disposable plate when
eating watermelon
Use in magic tricks
Tearing strips for birthday
party streamers
Save the seat next to you
Make a Christmas wreath
Take out frustration by
tearing and throwing
To collect hair when cutting
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
Filler for Santa Claus
belly
Paper stencils
24 Make into house slippers
2C Roll up to make a i,p megaphone
26 Stand on pile to appear tall
27 Make a collage
49
50
51
52
78
79
80 Use as a coaster for cold
drinks
Use as a dart board
Practice for big-league 82
basketball
A must for silly-putty
users
Keep kitchen clean when
transferring potted plants
Use for ironing ties
Make printer's hat
Make a dummy for
Halloween
Mask your car for painting
81
Stuff in shirt to make
muscles
Feed a goat
53
54
70 Blot your lipstick
71
72
73
74
75
Pack the ice cream freezer
Test out your new
paperweight
Practice stapling
Make people think you're
not at home
Stuff pillows
76 Use under car when you
• have oil leak
77
•
Backing for wax transfers
1 Cover your head when it
rains .
2 Line your bird cage
3
Shade the sun from your 4
5 Mulch for your garden
6 Tc pottie train house pets
Make a fireman's hat
Paper your friend's yard
Clean your feet on
Use as funnel for filling
gas tank
Make patterns for sewing
nw nr: '"""""-'""•' "-
PAGE 18. THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 12, 2001.
Alternative usage for buildings premature
Continued from page 15
• The ability to upgrade existing
equipment to meet future needs.
• The ability to utilize new health
care technologies for diagnostic,
treatment and management
processes.
• The ability to combine the fund
raising efforts of both communi-
ties.
• The ability to combine the med-
ical staff in both communities to
provide a larger number of physi-
cians to provide emergency and
on-call coverage.
• The ability to merge the two
organizations and to simplify
management processes.
• The ability to obtain approval
from the Ministry of Health for
redevelopment in a timely fash-
ion.
• The ability to respond to many
of the new program initiatives set
out by the Ministry of Health in
areas such as mental health, reha-
bilitation, stroke services and the
development of rural health net-
works.
• The ability to utilize current
hospital buildings for other pur-
poses.
What will the existing buildings
be used for?
It is premature to plan for alter-
nate use of the building before
approval from the Ministry of
Health.
• At that time, we will ask for
input from the private and public
sector as to alternate uses for
these buildings.
If a combined hospital has so
many benefits, why don't you
just expand on one of the existing
sites?
• Neither of the existing sites has
the space to expand to accommo-
date the services of the two hospi-
tals and the new services we
expect to attract to this size of
hospital.
• Building on a greenfield site
will allow future expansion of
services we have yet to learn
about, allow for a helicopter pad
and medical specialist offices.
• A new building will have space
designed for the way we treat
patients today and in the future
versus a design that was built for
the way patients were treated in
the 1950s.
How much will it cost and where
will the money come from?
• The initial, high level proposal
was $40 million.
• The Ministry usually funds 50
per cent of new capital projects.
• If some of the services could be
shown to be part of restructuring
costs the Ministry might fund 70
per cent of these services.
• The community is expected to
support the balance of the project.
• Both hospitals and hospital
foundations have funds that could
be put toward these costs.
What happens to the hospital
foundations and auxiliaries?
• These are separate corporations
and will make their own deci-
sions.
• There is no pressure for these
organizations to join together;
they can decide what is best for,
them.
• While the two hospitals remain
in operation, the services require
the financial support of the local
foundations and auxiliaries to
replace equipment, keeping us up
to date and operational.
• It is likely that while the two
hospitals remain operational, the