Dawson Trail Dispatch June 2012

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Wear Red & White on Saturday Night!

Campground Owners Seek Peace and Quiet for Guests

Wild Oaks Campground owners, Ray and Gisele Turenne, are tired of losing customers due to gravel operations on either side of their campground.

Campers and gravel crushers are visibly within the 100 metre buffer zone required by the province to prevent the gravel company’s becoming a nuisance to campers. Photos by Marianne Curtis

By Marianne Curtis The day after an RM of Ste. Anne bylaw officer served a cease and desist order against a gravel company operating next to Wild Oaks Campground, campers were again greeted to the sounds of rocks tumbling on conveyers first thing in the morning. For over a decade, Wild Oaks Campground owners Ray and Gisele Turenne have asked the owners of Vermette Gravel to be a good neighbor and respect that campers want some peace. Instead, they have been subjected to the sounds of a fully operational gravel operation on both sides of the otherwise peaceful campground. “They were served yesterday morning but we have been told by our councilor that he has seven days to object; he’s going to try and get an injunction to stop the order even though he is operating illegally,” Turenne stated. “When we opened the campground which is located between two slots of crown land, we visualized a nice peaceful and quiet environment for our tenants. This peace and quiet came to an abrupt end when a gravel company was able to obtain a Mines and Mineral Permit and started excavating.” The issue dates back to 1999 when Vermette Backhoe Service

obtained a crown land permit to use the site to stock pile gravel, sand and stones on five acres of crown land to the north of Wild Oaks Campground. A crown land permit obtained from the province dating from 2010 gives permission to use the site to stockpile gravel, sand and stones on five acres of crown land to the north of Wild Oaks Campground. According to the Crown Land Act, the permit is limited to stock piling of material only. Minerals excavated from crown lands cannot leave the property unless by contract with the municipality or the province. However contrary to the permit, Turenne said trucks are loading and machines are operating as early as 7:00 am daily six days a week except on Sundays. “I have been telling my customers that when the gravel runs out, he will move on but the gravel ran out four years ago,” Ray continued. “Now the owners are bringing in material from other locations, along with a wash plant and crusher. These machines are only about 100 feet from our seasonal campers and we are losing business.” On the north side, Turenne feels like he’s beating his head against the wall so he has filed a lawsuit against the Department of Mines and Minerals and Vermette Backhoe. In a letter

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Wear RED & WHITE to the Dean Brody concert Saturday Night, June 9 at the Niverville Olde Tyme Country Fair for an opportunity to WIN! First prize is One All-Inclusive Night for 4 at Canad Inns Windsor Park sponsored by Cowboys Roadhouse & Canad Inns. Second prize is two Winnipeg Jets tickets sponsored by PMC Insurance. Third prize is $250 cash sponsored by Excel Graphics.

Reynolds Loses Nine Year Battle Over Ambulance Service The RM of Reynolds has lost its fight to keep the Reynolds Ambulance in operation. According to council, Northeast Health Association is no longer training new ambulance personnel nor will they hire anyone who has not taken paramedic training. As a result, the RM of Reynolds Ambulance Service, which operates out of Prawda, will no longer operate. The ambulance service not only responded to emergencies throughout the municipality serving the surrounding communities Spruce Siding, Medika, Hadashville, Prawda, McMunn, and East Braintree but was a life line for people traveling along the #1 Highway. The last two paramedic level staff at the facility ended their service to the community at the end of March. The paramedic positions will not be renewed and this result is in stark contrast to the expansion costs to the emergency medical services station in Powerview-Pine Falls which was just under $850,000. The North East Health Association that had 8 ambulance services in the region has promised the RM of Reynolds service to residents in the municipality will not suffer as response time is well within the provincial standard of 30 minutes or less. The Province has also committed to permanent Lifeflight helicopter service to quickly transport patients in serious health situations. The closest access to EMS service would be from Whitemouth or Ste. Anne or a privately owned business in Falcon Lake called, Falcon Lake Ambulance & Fire Emergency. “For less serious emergencies you might want to give thought to your own “load and go” plan and arrange to meet an ambulance enroute,” noted council.

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Dawson Trail Dispatch June 2012 by The Dawson Trail Dispatch - Issuu