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Waimea Weekly - 18 December 2024

Page 1

Waimea Weekly Renovations and new homes Competitive prices Free quotes

PH 544 4400

Talk to Window Works on 03 544 6001 Locally Owned and Operated or stop by 11 Cargill Place, Richmond info@windowworks.co.nz Wednesday 18 December 2024 www.windowworks.co.nz

24 Champion Road, Richmond wrfs.co.nz

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Renovations and new homes Competitive prices Free quotes

St Paul’s make Xmas merrier Page 3

Talk to Window Works on 03 544 6001 or stop by 11 Cargill Place, Richmond info@windowworks.co.nz www.windowworks.co.nz

Menzshed make mark

$1.3m repair bill for quake-risk library MAX FRETHEY

Local Democracy Reporter

The earthquake-prone Richmond Library needs $1.3 million of work to make the building safe.

The total cost includes the price of repairs for the sagging roof and leaking wall cladding which will be carried out at the same time to minimise disruption for library-goers.

A design for the work still needs to be completed, and it could take 6-8 weeks to get a building consent for the works. It’s estimated the works will take about four months to complete

and will be staged to allow the library to remain open. Because the works will extend the life of the library, a community facility, the $1.3 million will be funded from Richmond’s Reserve

Financial Contributions (RFCs). RFCs are paid from a percentage of a new subdivision’s value which are then pooled and put

SEE PAGE 2

Student volunteer army sweeps through cemetery ANNE HARDIE When the Wakefield School Student Volunteer Army swept and cleaned graves beside the old St John’s Church last week, they didn’t expect to discover a long-lost grave underfoot. Beneath the tree needles, ivy and years of organic matter they were clearing from the base of one of the huge sequoia trees, they revealed the broken grave of a young woman, Mary Phillips, who died in 1877 at the age of 22. It was a history lesson as well as a good community project for the 35 students who joined the school’s student volunteer army for the morning. Teacher, Kathy Jessop, instigated student volunteer army programme at the school four years ago following an initiative led by the student volunteer army involved in the Christchurch earthquake. She then approached a member of the church and retired teacher, Ewan Crouch, to tell some of the stories behind the graves in the cemetery. Last year he talked to the students about the Baigent family history that dates back to the beginning of the village, with names and details recorded in the

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LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED

Indi Fallen, 11, left, and Estelle de Witt, 11, right, joined Wakefield School Student Volunteer Army for the day, with Ewan Crouch (centre) supplying some history and guidance. Photo: Anne Hardie.

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Waimea Weekly - 18 December 2024 by Top South Media - Issuu