Vol. 3 No. 7
YOUR INDEPENDENT LOCAL NEWSPAPER - LANARK, NORTH LEEDS & GRENVILLE
Ambitious rail transit plan to serve Smiths Falls by 2018
JULY 2016
Inside This Issue WEB DESIGN/CONCEPTS, MARKETING, BRANDING, LOGO DESIGN, GRAPHIC DESIGN, CONTENT CREATION/ORGANIZATION, HOSTING & DOMAIN REGISTRATION
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July 2016
the communities of Lanark & Northern Leeds Grenville
COMMUNITY HOME SUPPORT LANARK COUNTY
Perth’s homecoming weekend celebrations slated for July 22-24 Perth - Submitted
Trains like this one will be carrying passengers along 400 kilometre of rail lines in eastern Ontario and Quebec by 2018, according to plans by the Moose Consortium. “Moose” is an acronym for Mobility Ottawa-Outaouais Systems and Enterprises. Photo Credit: Moose Consortium Inc.
The Town of Perth’s Blast from the Past Homecoming Weekend will be a threeday celebration honouring our area’s 200th anniversary. It’s the big weekend we’ve all been waiting for, and it’s now coming to life. Here is a general schedule of events to help you decide how you wish to spend your time in Perth celebrating our 200th anniversary. Friday, July 22 BBQ Block Party: The celebrations will launch with the opening of the BBQ Block Party at the Perth Fairgrounds. Running all weekend, the BBQ Block Party will feature rib vendors, food vendors, live entertainment, children’s activities and car shows. The gates open at 11 a.m. and close at 10 p.m. The live entertainment starts at 6 p.m. on Friday evening. You can learn more about the BBQ Block Party at bbqblockparty.com. Nightshirt Parade: the long-standing tradition of the classic Nightshirt Parade will take place at the Perth Fairgrounds at 9:30 p.m. It’s exactly as it
sounds. You dress up in your pajamas (PG rated, please!), clutch onto your Teddy Bears, put on a nightcap and take part in a long-loved tradition. You’ll follow our Perth Town Crier through a parade route around the Fairgrounds. Fireworks Show: Following the Nightshirt parade, a fireworks show can be watched from the Fairgrounds at about 9:45 p.m. Hosted by the Perth Firefighters’ Association, the fireworks will officially launch our weekend celebrations! Saturday, July 23 Good Ol’ Days Parade: The Homecoming weekend parade will run through town beginning at 10 a.m., and its theme is the Good Ol’ Days Parade. It will run from Sunset Blvd, down Wilson Street to Foster and wrap up at Town Hall on Gore Street. We have Pipes and Drums bands, a cadet band, old fire trucks and more slated for the parade. Anyone is welcome to register for the parade, and can give more info at perth200.ca Opening Ceremonies: The opening ceremonies will
take place in Stewart Park immediately following the parade. We’ll welcome dignitaries and include speeches from our sister city representatives from Perth, Scotland and Asago City, Japan! Military Tattoo Performance: The Military Tattoo is going to be a weekend highlight. It will take place in Stewart Park following the Opening Ceremonies. We currently have three bands and highlands dancers booked for the one-hour show. It’s a public event, and free of charge. Canadian Dry Stone Festival: Throughout the weekend, the Canadian Dry Stone Festival will be located at the former outdoor pool pad in Stewart Park. The participants will be crafting a custom-made drystone bridge as part of our town’s Legacy project. Throughout the weekend, they’ll be hosting workshops and children’s activities. Learn more at drystonecanada.com BBQ Block Party: Af-
Services for Seniors, Adults with Physical Disabilities & Persons living with life-limiting illness Meals on Wheels – Transportat ion - Foot Care - Diners Home Help/Home Maintenance Club - Friendly Visiting Security/Reassurance Hospice-Palliative Care Smiths Falls 613-283-6745
Perth/Hospice-Palliative Care 613-267-6400 Carleton Place 613-253-0733
Lanark 613-259-5412
Pakenham 613-624-5647
Registered Charity No. 89788 RR0001 www.chslc.ca
Sunday, July 24 BBQ Block Party: The BBQ Block Party runs for its final day and will include live entertainment with jazz, folk and country music. You can learn about its schedule at bbqblockparty.com Ecumenical Service: Taking place in Stewart Park at 1:30 p.m., the ecumenical service will be run by the Perth Ministerial Society and will include representation from our region’s church community. The Bowes Brothers will perform the Hymns and will include a performance following the service. Canadian Stone Carving Festival Auction: The Canadian Stone Carving Festival organizers decided to host its annual event
ter the tattoo, dine at a downtown restaurant, or head over to the BBQ Block Party for lunch. Splash’N Boots Concert: a free Splash’N Boots concert will take place at the BBQ Block Party at 1 p.m. (entry by donation). The Treehouse, June-nominated Children’s Entertainment duo includes Perth-native Taes, who is thrilled to come home and help celebrate our bicentennial! Blue Rodeo Concert: The sold-out concert for Blue Rodeo happens at 8 p.m. at the Perth Fairgrounds, and gates open at 6 p.m. It’s on the other side of the Fairgrounds from the BBQ Block Party, and everyone is welcome to attend the BBQ Block Party.
in Perth this year! From Friday to Sunday, they’ll set up shop all weekend long inside the Perth Fairgrounds, where carvers will turn slabs of stone into beautiful works of art! These pieces will then be auctioned off Sunday afternoon, and proceeds will go to the Habitat for Humanity Perth Chapter. The live auction will begin Sunday at 3 p.m. at the BBQ Block Party stage. Learn more about the festival at canadianstonecarvingfestival.com To find out more about the town of Perth’s Blast from the Past Homecoming Weekend, see the full schedule and to discover volunteer opportunities, please visit perth200.ca
"A rail service for the whole National Capital Region will transform our town" Smiths Falls - Chris Must chris@pdgmedia.ca Imagine double-decker trains capable of seating 600 passengers, carrying Smiths Falls residents to and from Ottawa all day, every day. According to Joseph Potvin, director general and operations manager of the recently formed Moose Consortium Inc., this is no pipe dream but a carefully thought-out plan that should be in full operation by 2018. On Wednesday, June 29 the Moose Consortium (an acronym for Mobility Ottawa-Outaouais Systems and Enterprises) applied to the Canadian Transportation agency seeking federal government authorization to proceed with the development of a 400 kilometre passenger rail service serving Canada’s National Capital Region. The private sector consortium of 12 companies plans to operate threecoach, double-decker diesel-electric passenger trains with hourly service every day through Ottawa and Gatineau. The service extends to six rural towns, including Smiths Falls. Potvin stressed that the service will benefit not only workers commuting from Ottawa to
Smiths Falls, but also “reverse commuters” living in Ottawa but working in Smiths Falls. An economist by training, Potvin said small businesses in communities like Smiths Falls hoping to expand might be forced to move to the city if it isn’t feasible for skilled workers to travel there from Ottawa. “It’s easy if there’s a train,” he said. Work to develop the private sector consortium began in 2011 and was completed in 2015. “It’s been five years in development, but the new consortium has existed for about a year,” said Potvin. “We’re doing something here which no one has done for a very long time.” The plan to operate a privately-run rail service on existing, under-utilized railway lines may surprise people, Potvin said, because, “people have lost the ability to conceptualize the private sector running this kind of thing.” He noted that the plan was being submitted to the federal government on the 125th anniversary of the start of the Ottawa Electric Street Railway company, launched on June 29, 1891. That company was similarly initiated and financed entirely by the private sec-
tor and based on private sector investment rather than government funding. The original plan was to launch the service in 2017, but the project has encountered delays partly due to the need to deal with 15 separate municipalities within the catchment area. Because some sections of rail line are owned by municipalities rather than by railway companies, said Potvin, the owners may be unaware that the Railway Safety Act requires them to maintain the rail lines whether they are currently being used or not. Current plans call for the rail service to be launched throughout the entire 400
kilometre catchment area to coincide with the opening of Ottawa’s newly-built Light Rail transit (LRT) service in 2018, Potvin said. Rural towns to be served by the rail network include Smiths Falls, Alexandria and Arnprior, in Ontario and and Chelsea, Papineau and Bristol in Quebec. Major train maintenance will be carried out centrally at an industrial park in either Ottawa or Gatineau. The rail service will link with the Ottawa LRT system at Bayview Station in Lebreton Flats, and at the Tremblay Road Via station. In a news release issued
June 29 Smiths Falls Mayor Shawn Pankow said, “I think the news today from Moose Consortium will be met with great excitement as it moves closer to reality. A rail service for the whole National Capital Region will transform our town, and others like it, for the better.” Potvin said the new rail service will result in significant savings to the environment. “Running our system would reduce net emissions of carbon by about 20,000 tons a year,” he said. The consortium also expects a number of full and part-time jobs to be created throughout the region.
Hometown News Community Guide - July 2016
Make sure to check out our centre pull-out Community Guide for a glimpse of what is happening around the region in July! Pages 11-14
Community The Smiths Falls & District Aquatic Recreation Centre would like to invite children and families to our Public Swim on Saturday, July 16 th Page 4
business Regional economic development has a new face at Valley Heartland Page 22
Lifestyle Perth’s World Record Kilt Run 2016 appears to have smashed its previous Guinness World Record Page 9
FIND US ONLINE Facebook/DiscoverPerth Facebook/DiscoverCarletonPlace The Moose Consortium’s rail service, to be launched in 2018, will serve 400 kilometres of rail lines, crossing 15 municipalities in eastern Ontario and Gatineau. Photo Credit: Chris Must
Facebook/DiscoverSmithsFalls