In The Hills Summer 2009

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E D I T O R ’ S

D E S K

Triple Threat Performance Centre .dance. vocals. music. theatre.

.studio III dance. 35 Robb Blvd. Unit 8 Orangeville L9W 3L1 (519) 940-3840

VOLUME 16 NUMBER 2 2 0 0 9 PUBLISHER | EDITOR

Signe Ball O P E R AT I O N S M A N A G E R

Kirsten Ball

Dark skies

Accredited teachers in R.A.D. and P.A.E.C. Specialized classes Ages 2-1/2 to adult Recreational - Competitive Guitar and Piano Program

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IN THE HILLS SUMMER 2009

We usually take a summer-lite approach to the editorial strategy for our June issue. After all, we’ve survived the dark days, our world is lushly abloom, our rivers run full and the air is gloriously fresh. Who could be gloomy? Hmm, we can it seems – at least a little. As we were preparing this issue, people were donning face masks by the millions as the fear of a swine-flu pandemic went, well, viral. That was when Ken Weber’s Historic Hills column, “Suffer the Little Children,” arrived on my desk. Ken describes the horrific and sadly routine deaths of early settlers’ children to contagious disease – in the days before vaccines and antibiotics, when large families lived in small cabins, children shared beds, and the link between health and sanitation was not fully understood. This spring, fear, if not the pandemic, spread like wildfire. Perhaps that was because it found fertile ground in our collective consciousness. It has not been so very long since death capriciously stalked our children, and that deep memory even now can make our elaborate medical defences feel all too frail. Indeed, Jeff Rollings recounts one such failure of modern medicine in “Shadowland,” his damning review of regional mental health services. Here is an affliction that is all too real. A conservatively estimated 2,000 to 3,000 adults in our hills suffer from serious mental health issues. Yet, in Dufferin County in particular, treatment for the condition is woefully under-funded. In fact, Dufferin has the lowest per capita funding in the province for mental health services. Although the problem was well documented in a report last year, no one is holding out hope for a quick fi x. The estimated cost of bringing Dufferin’s services up to standard is $1.5 million annually – and the same economic downturn that is almost certainly contributing to the stress of many sufferers will also almost certainly delay the help they need. And if all that weren’t enough – we’re not even going to give you a break to bask worry-free under summer skies. With her retrospective on the great tornado of 1985, Michele Green reminds us that even those blue skies can turn black and dangerous – and that they are doing just that with more frequency as the world warms up. Okay, it’s not all bad news. You will fi nd some sunny moments in this issue, especially in the lighthearted accounts by three of our writers about their fi rst attempts at trying something new. Remember to wash your hands.

EDITORIAL

Sandra Cranston-Corradini Michele Green | Alison Hird Douglas G. Pearce Jeff Rollings | Nicola Ross Don Scallen | Tim Shuff Lynette Wallace | Ken Weber PHOTOGRAPHY

Pete Herlihy | Robert McCaw Pete Paterson | Philip Pearce Arjen and Jerrine Verkaik I L L U S T R AT I O N

Shelagh Armstrong Linda McLaren | Jim Stewart DESIGN | ART DIRECTION

Kim van Oosterom Wallflower Design ADVERTISING SALES

Kirsten Ball | Roberta Fracassi ADVERTISING PRODUCTION

Marion Hodgson Type & Images PROOFREADING

Susan Robb COVER

Storm clouds by Arjen and Jerrine Verkaik — In the Hills is published four times a year by MonoLog Communications Inc. It is distributed through controlled circulation to households in the towns of Caledon, Erin, Orangeville, Shelburne and Creemore, and Dufferin County. Subscriptions outside the distribution area are $21.oo per year (including gst). Letters to the editor are welcome. For information regarding editorial, advertising, or subscriptions: PHONE E-MAIL

519-942-84o1

info@inthehills.ca

FA X

519-942-1118

MonoLog Communications Inc. R.R.1 Orangeville ON L9W 2Y8

www.inthehills.ca — The advertising deadline for the Autumn (September) issue is August 7, 2oo9.

We acknowledge the assistance of the OMDC Magazine Fund, an initiative of Ontario Media Development Corporation


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