The Goderich Signal-Star, 1985-10-16, Page 22.
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KELLY—PARSONS
Cheryl Ann Parsons, daughter of Bev and
Muriel Parsons, of RR3 Exeter and Peter
Keith Shawn Kelly, son of Marg and William
Kelly, of Goderich, were married Aug. 29,
1985 in London. The couple is residing in Ex-
eter.
ORR—SOWERBY
Brenda Dawn Sowerby, daughter of
Donald and Dawn Sowerby, of RR4
Goderich and Robert Charles Orr, son of
Charlie and Beverley Orr, of RR2 Gdderich,
were married Sept. 14, 1985 at the Benmiller
United Church with Rev. Wood officiating.
Maid of honor was Sharon Sowerby, of RR4
Goderich and bridesmaids were Judy Car-
michael, of Dungannon and Connie Sower -
by, of RR4 Goderich. Flowergirl was Jen-
nifer Stoll, of RR5 Goderich. Groomsman
wasDan Willis, of RR4 Goderich and ushers
were Dan Maillet, of Goderich and Terry
Sowerby, of RR4 Goderich. Following the
wedding ceremony and a ride through Ben -
miller in a horse-drawn carriage by Bryon
and Bradley Black, a reception was held in
Saltford Valley Hall. After a wedding trip to
Toronto, the couple will reside at RR2
Goderich. (photo by Fred Bissitt)
District health councils will organize one -
day community consultations on- extra -
billing in nine Ontario cities, Health
Minister Murray Elston announced. •
Elston said the meetings, which are to be
held in Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Sud-
bury, Ottawa, Kingston, Totronto,'Hamilton,
London and Windsor, will include presenta-
tions on extra -billing by panels of represen-
tatives from consumer, health-care pro-
vider and public interest groups.
"Up to this point, I have been unable to
discuss this matter with the Ontario Medical
Association since the physicians' associa-
tion appears to have opted out of negotia-
tions," he said.
"We will therefore solicit the views and
opinions of a wide number of individuals,
organizations and agencies across the pro-
vince. We must do this in a co-ordinated and
systematic fashion and within a relatively
short time frame."
The meetings would be widely publicized
and, preferable, would be held Saturdays
during late October and early November, to
permit attendance by a maximum number
of interested people.
Elston, who was addressing Action Cen-
tre, the annual meeting of Ontario's 26
district health councils, said he has re-
quested that recommendations arising from
the community meetings be drafted and
sent to him.
"It will be understood that the recommen-
dations and.resolutions you send me will be
a consensus from the consultation exercise
and not a reflection of the views of any
district health council," he said.
He also announced several initiatives in
the area of health promotion. They include:
• compiling a provincial directory of
health promotion programs in Ontario
which relate to smoking, alcohol and drug
abuse, nutrition and fitness;
• establishing a Health Promotion Evalua-
tion Fund, to receive $1 million in fiscal year
1986-87, which will be used to evaluate the
effectiveness of health promotion pro-
grams;
• creation of an annual awards program to
recognize employer excellence in health
promotion.
Native businesses
are given advice
and support by CE SO
Whenever you look these days - east coast,
west coast, the prairies - Native -owned and
managed businesses and institutions are
showing a new spirit of achievement, a
spirit of self-determination.
Over the past few years, CESO, Canadian
Executive Service Organization. has con-
tributed to the momentum that has been
generated by the Native people themselves,
through the provision of appropriate ad-
visory services. This organization links one
of its many volunteers - one who is usually
retired - to Indian Band Council Administra-
tions, Native organizations and businesses
and aspiring Native entrepreneurs who
need advice and support with any of the
many facets involved in the business.
Since its inception in 1967, CESO
volunteers have completed close to 4,000
projects in 104 countries world-wide. In 1984-
85, CESO provided advisory services to 1.622
projects within Canada under the auspices
of the Canadian Native Program,
('ESO has become highly skilled in mat-
ching a volunteer with a particular client's
needs - making sure that both the volunteer
and the project benefit - the one from the ex-
perience, the other from the expertise. The
energy and skill of (.'ESO volunteers have
earned them the respect of both CESO
clients and the business community at
large. The Financial Post Magazine recent-
ly praised these retirees as "... one of the
country's unsung resource bases."
The projects in which ('ESO volunteers
get involved are as unique as the Native peo-
ple who originate there. in the past year or
so. ('ESO volunteers in Quebec have helped
modernize a Mingan band's fishery to bring
it up to the standard required by its major
customer - the United States. Two ('ESO
volunteers and four Natives now make up a
management team that addresses problems
and makes sure the fishery's 65 seasonal
jabs remain secure.
in Prince Edward Island. CESO
volunteers drew on Native know-how to save
hundreds of dollars for a Native -owned peat
harvesting company. In addition, sales of
peat are up. with 50,000 four -cubic -foot bales
shipped to Japanese markets in 1984, and
the company is now expanding into oyster
and blueberry harvesting.
The long -abandoned Chinikee sawmill in
Alberta once turned out 20.000 feet of lumber
per day. CESO volunteers. working with the
Band. are giving the mill a complete face
lift. hoping to reactivate production and pro-
vide much-needed jobs.
CESO volunteers recognized the amazing
skill of British Columbia Alkali Lake Native
women. and taught them how to become ex-
pert Landry hog butchers. "Those women
can handle knives better than I've seen in 40
years of experience. skillfully avoiding
bones, leaving knives as sharp in the end as
they were in the beginning," says one of two
CESO volunteers involved in the project.
CESO volunteers are available, on re -
FEATURE
REPORT
quest, to work alongside their Native
counterparts in many areas of community
life or individual Native development. Ac-
cording to Linda Chisholm, Regional
Manager for Ontario, "We expect self-
government, training, and youth activities
to become an integral part of the Canadian
Native Program. The scope for using this
Region's 1000 volunteers in worthwhile pro-
jects of all kinds, whether on or off -reserve,
has never been greater.'
Mary Wemigwans runs her own hair salon
in downtown Toronto. Mary has had three
volunteers share their expertise with her.
One, an accountant, helped her set up a
bookkeeping system and still helps her with
her taxes. Another volunteer from London,
a woman who has three hair salons of her
own, helped Mary through the ins and outs
of setting up - where to order supplies, when
to have things done, and how to do many
things herself.
"At first it was a little scary," says Mary,
a shy woman, originally from the
Wikwernikong Unceded reserve in Ontario.
She is completely at home in a hair salon.
••These people knew so much, and i felt i
knew nothing. But then we started working
together. and I realized the only way i was
going to make it was to use what they were
telling me. I realized people everywhere use
each other's knowledge to get ahead. And
the people CESO sent me were really nice -
they really wanted to help ... they really like
their work: i think they did it as much for
me as for themselves.' "
Ella Waukey echos Mary's thoughts.
When she started Waukey's General Store in
a small Ontario town, she knew it wasn't
running as smoothly as it could, and that the
location had even more potential than she
had at first realized. However, this was
Ella's first venture, and she was at a stand-
still.
A couple of calls to CESO and a volunteer
arrived who showed Ella how to realize the
store's potential. On his advice, Ella added
a crafts department to sell Native crafts to
tourists, applied new marketing techniques,
and rearranged the merchandise to make it
more appealing. Today, Waukey's General
Store & Crafts is a going concern!
There are almost as many success stories
as there are CESO clients and volunteers!
Do you have experience in a particular field
and would be willing to share this skill as a
CESO volunteer? You can become involved!
Call dr write Linda Chisholm, Ontario
Regional Office, CESO, 1867 Yonge Street,
Suite 200, Toronto, Ontario, M4S 1Y5.
Telephone (416)485-5490.
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