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Times-Advocate, 1987-10-14, Page 2Page 2 Titnes-Advocate, October 14, 1987 Public invited to attend events Alcohol/drug awareness program in five Huron schools Somethim good and positive has accident. come from -tragic, alcohol-related In the spring of County Board of Education received 198.5 the Huron a coroner's report on the death of a secondary student from a Huron County secondary school. The report recommended that the schools ,develop a plan to make students aware of the hazards of drinking and driving, and the high number of alcohol-related deaths in Huron County. As a direct result of that coroner's report, one school was selected to work with the Addiction Research Foundation and other agencies to ex- plore programs which could be models for the school system. The Huron Board decided to give moral and financial support to extend the A.D.A.P.T. program (Alcohol Drug Awareness Program for Today) to all secondary schools in the county. The A.D.A:P.T. program is design- ed to make the whole community - students and adults - more aware of the problems relating to.the abuse of LOOKING IT OVER -. Exeter Reeve Bill Mickle, Exeter-Usborne Huron Board of Education trustee Bea Dawson and SHDHS teacher and A.D.A.P.T. committee member Bonnie Becker look over the agenda of events which will take place at the Exeter school from October 26 to November 6. PINNED — SHDHS teacher and A.D.A.P.T. committee member Bonnie Becker pins a button on fellow teacher and committee member Terry O'Rourke while Exeter Police Constable Shawn Armstrong and Exeter Police Chief Larry Hardy look on during an information meeting at the Huron County Board of Education office to introduce the alcohol and drug awareness program to the media. effeatftlefAlltitargo' o r:n .'.s x'x asv'x<� �3 .... .s,, elk, alcohol and drugs, and to achieve some behaviour modification. "The commmittee's work is done and yours has started", A.D.A.P.T. coordinator Terry Johnson, a teacher at Seaforth District High School, told his audience of municipal politicians, trustees, reporters and student representatives from the five secon- dary schools in Huron at an informa- tion meeting in the Board office. "We want the whole community involved = parents, service clubs, trustees, et cetera. A.D.A.P.T. will be a failure if only the students have seen the program. " Johnston said the scope of the pro- gram far exceeds the physical boun- daries of each high school involved. The A.D.A.P.T. committee wants everyone to feel they are part of the program. All schools will be open to the public at any time during the two weeks. • The first event at SHDHS will be an assembly of the entire student body in the new gym at 1:00 p.m. to hear from Christine Nash, the mother of a son who died in an accident. She will talk about how drinking and driving affects the survivors.. Parents and students attending an education night later that day from 7:30 to 9:00 will be able to talk .to a guidance counsellor, a public health nurse, a psychologist and Exeter Police Chief Larry Hardy, who will be bringing along a video, a drug kit- and an ALERT machine. Hardy or another member of the Exeter force will be back at the high school the next day with the drug kit in the old gym between 11:45 and 12:30. Educational films on alcohol and drug abuse will be shown in the old gym Wednesday afternoon for grade 13 students from 1:00 p.m. un- til 2:00, and for the grade 12s from 2:10 to 3:15. On Thursday BACCHUS from Ryerson Community Centre in Toron- to will provide a speaker at 11:00 a.m. in the theatre room, and films throughout the morning in the old m�:'^i .w:.'t':"..:'Ate:&o<."r�:;.:•:;{'F:Es gym, both offering alternativles to the alcohol -drug lifestyle for college and university -bound students. The town police will back at lun- chtime, showing a video "Drugs and Sports Don't Mix". More films will be shown in the old gym from l AO to 2:00 p.m. The town police will return on Fri- day to demonstrate the Alert test in the old gym from 11:45 until 12:30. The following week, on Monday November 2, grades 11,12 and 13 will assemble in the new gym to see "Sur- vival Guide", a musical presentation by a Toronto group. A mock accident will be staged in front of the school at 11:45. On Wednesday Trinity Theatre will present shows and lead small -group discussions of substance abuse for grade 9 and 10 students at 1:00 and 2:00 p.m. in the theatre room. That evening at 7:00 parents are invited to hear Maeve Connell from the Addic- tion Research Foundation show a film and lead a discussion on "Drugs and Booze - Parents and Kids". Dr. Peter Knight, professor of surgery at McMaster University and staff surgeon at St. Joseph's Hospital, Hamilton, will be at the school on Wednesday to speak to grade 11, 12 and 13 students about road trauma. This will be held in the new gym, beginning at 9:00 a.m. That afternoon at 1:30 in the same location Exeter Lawyer Randy Evans will reenact an actual trial where a student was sentenced to 15 months for a first offence. All grades will be attending this event. On Thursday at 1:00 p.m. in the new gym, the grade nines will hear from John Townsend, a dynamic 80 -year- old retired R.C.M.P. officer who spent five years on drug-related duties on the force, and has made a complete study of the misuse of drugs, and their harmful effects on the human body. The program will conclude with a dance in Clinton on Friday night. DISCUSSION — SHDHS teacher Terry O'Rourke, an A.D.A.P.T: com- mittee member for Exeter, discusses some of the events planned for the two-week program with student Leigh Soldan, intramural chair- man who will head the SHDHS student committee helping to organize the program. County asks province to delegate approval authority. In a recorded vote of 27-4 at its regular October session. I luron Coun- ty Council decided to go ahead with plans to ask the provincial govern- ment to delegate approval authority for certain planning and development functions to the county. The issue was first proposed to council at its regular September ses- sion, but was deferred until this month to allow member municipalities time to get more infor- mation before their representatives were asked to vote on the planning .and development committee recom- Court Continued from front page In his defence. Gibbon said he was talking to a passenger and may have been speeding. He met a car with high beams on and flashed his lights to get it to dim. He saw a flashlight, but didn't see the officer and didn't realize he was to pull over. The• accused said he looked back and figured it could have been a spot check and panicked as he didn't want his insurance to go up because of a speeding ticket. The accused continued by saying he understands the law states something like "being pulled over by a readily regonizable officer" and he felt the officer was not readily recognizable. Many people refuse to give secrets away, but they're usually willing to trade. mendation to seek delegation of authority. in approving the recommendation, council also adopted a resolution re- questing the Ontario Minister of . Municipal Affairs to formally delegate to Huron County : approval siuthority for plans of subdivision and plans of condominium; approval authority for part lot control bylaws; approval authority for road closings; the review of zoning bylaws, including official plan conformity, minister's zoning .orders and provincial policy. M the October ,session, Exeter Reeve Bill Mickle again asked coun- cil to consider allowing more time to pass before it made any decision on the recommendation. He referred to a letter which Exeter hadsent to all members of council which lists a number of concerns the town has with -the proposal. In addition to the question of neutrality, concern was also express- ed by Mickle that county council may, as the town's letter states, not be suf- ficiently competent or interested enough in the planning mechanism to give reasoned and thoughtful con- sideration to planning matters in any one municipality. instead, county council may decide to further delegate authority in the future to the planning and Development depart- ment or even to the county planning director. "This is a very dangerous situation which could he developing here." Mi- ckle said. "iL could possible mean establishing the county planning department as the total authority." Wayne Caldwell, senior planner with the planning and development committee, agreed with Mickle's sug- gestion that the Planning Act leaves room for further delegation of authority by county council, but the "real question" is whether or not the department wants that authority. "Within -the department, there has been no discussion on further delega- tion nor, in my opinion, is there any desire for it," Caldwell said. Exeter Deputy Reeve Lossy Fuller again suggested that council defer any action until all municipalities have been briefed on the proposal by planning department represen- tatives. "i guess we could defer it un- til it goes away, but we are going to have to make a decision on it sooner or later," Warden Brian McBurney said in reply to the suggestion. Hullett Township Reeve Tom Cun- ningham said to continue deferring the recommendation could be con- sidered as an admission by council to the provincial government that it is not capable of handling more responsibility. "We keep asking the province to give us more responsibility," Mr. Cunningham reminded council. "Let's get on with it. I feel we should take that responsibility artd do it." In the recorded vote, those in favor of the recommendation were: Grey Township Reeve Leona Armstrong, Tuckersmith Township Reeve Bob Bell, Seaforth Reeve Bill Bennett, Clinton Reeve Bee Cooke. Goderich Township Deputy Reeve Laurie Cox, West Wawanosh -Township Reeve • r 4 r 1 i • OPEN ROYAL BANK FACILITY — T new Agriculture Centre of the Royal Bank in Exeter was opened Thursday afternoon. Shown cutting the ribbon from the left are Exeter manager Cliff Shewfelt, area manager Lloyd Fraser, Huron -Bruce MP Murray Cardiff and the bank's senior manager of agricultural services George Arnold. • Bank opens Agricultural Centre The Royal Bank of Canada official- ly opened its Huron County Agricultural (:entre at 305 Main Street South. The centre will provide clients with specialized account mangement for all their borrowing and operating needs including Royfarm credit and Farmcheck. it will also service secon- dary agricultural industries in the area and is expected to attract agricultural customers requiring 'specialized professional account management. "With specialized centres like this one.our agricultural customers have • access to the best of the Royal Bank's capabilities and technology -- regardless of their locations," stated Shewfelt. Account managers Chauncey Soder berg, formerly of Clinton and Jene Seller. previously in Orangeville, as well Shewfelt are specialists in bank- ing for the agricultural community. Their experience and knowledge of agricultural account management will be completed by the state -of -the -art business office providing on-line computer capabilities and the bank's Royfarm program. in light of the Centre's ideal loca- tion it will have a good working P'ela- tionship with the OMAF office in Clin- ton and the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food training school in Centralia. The Huron County Cen- tre will also serve as a centre for agriculture account management training within the Royal Bank.' While the Centre concentrates on agricultural account management, customers will continue to conduct their daily banking transactions at their regular branches in Exeter, 118 Main Street North; Clinton, 68 Vic- toria Street and Goderich, 158 The Scare. Cecil Cranston, Mr. Cunningham, Howick Township Reeve Gerald D'Arcey, ]lay Township Deputy Reeve Claire Deichert, Zurich Reeve Bob Fisher, Morris Township Reeve Doug Fraser, Ashfield Township Reeve A.J. Gibson, McKillop Township Reeve Marie Hicknell. . Bayfield Reeve Dave Johnston, Col- borne Township Reeve Russ Ker- nighan, Wingham Reeve Bruce Machan, Turnberry Township Reeve Brian McBurney, Stephen Township Deputy Reeve K.J. McCann, Usborne Township Reeve Gerry Prout, Stanley Township Reeve Clarence Rau, Hensall Reeve Jim Robinson, East Wawanosh Township Reeve Er- nie Snell. Goderich Township Reeve Grant -Stirling, Stephen Township Reeve Tom Tomes,' Blyth Reeve Albert Wasson, Hay Township Reeve Lionel Wilder, Brussels Reeve Gor- don Workman. In addition to Mrs. Fuller and Mickle's nay votes, Town of Goderith- Reeve Harry Worsell's two nays brought the total of opposing votes to four. Town of Goderich Deputy Reeve J.P. Doherty was absent from the ses- sion. The town is the only municipali- ty with three county council votes. With Rekrence Canada the answers • are as close as your phone. Questions about Government of Canada Programs and Services. Reference Canada helps Canadians find out what ,they need to know about the Government of Canada's programs +1 Department of Supply 8 Services and services. .Your local Reference Canada branch will direct you to the appropriate government office that can best answer your questions. All inquiries can be answered in • 'English and French', from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday. In Ontario call: Ottawa (613)995.7151 North Bay (705)476-4910 Toronto (416) 973-1993 Toll-free Ottawa/HuIl region I.800.267.0340 Area Codes 705.807 1-800-46 I -1664. All other Ontario residents I -800-387.0700 Mmistere des ApprovIsIonnements et Service! Canada •