A play is
afoot at SCHS
You’ve most likely heard of the famous detective duo, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, but have you heard of Miss Holmes and her sidekick, Dr. Watson?
Now’s your chance to experience a casting twist, as Smithville Christian High School’s annual spring production, Miss Holmes, takes to the stage with four performances.
Director Erin Neufeld said she chose the play because of the way it challenges viewers’ assumptions about people’s contributions to society, but also because the school hasn’t staged a murder mystery in a long time.
“I fell in love with this script when I saw that the playwright (Christopher M. Walsh) wrote both these traditionally male characters as women in the 1890s,” Neufeld said.
“This was such a difficult and beautiful time for women, and this play explores the hardships and challenges historically faced by women during this time period. One of the characters in the play, Dr. Anderson, is actually a real historical figure!” Neufeld said audiences will be entertained, but they will also be challenged.
“While every character doesn’t always make good decisions when faced with difficulties, we see the strong theme of doing what is right, no matter the cost,” she said. “We watch the main characters follow their calling and their commitment to truth and justice in a world that is both as complicated and as confusing as our own at times.”
Four performances, all at 7:30 p.m., run May 15, 22, 23 and 24. Tickets are $12.50 in advance, $15 at the door, and $10 for students in high school and younger. Advance tickets can be purchased online at www.zeffy.com/ticketing/smithvillechristian-high-school-presents-miss-holmes or by calling the school - 905-957-3255.
Gillian Dykstra, left, as Dr. Watson, and Selah Huinink as Miss Holmes, on the set of Miss Holmes, Smithville Christian High School’s an-
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GRIMSBY LEGION
233 Elizabeth St., Grimsby • 905-945-8421 Facebook: Grimsby Legion
THURSDAYS, 50/50 DRAW
Recent crime heighten frustration: reader
Dear Editor,
The false narrative about the police is pushed by our politicians and people in general who are afraid
to be critical about the police’s poor crime solvency rate.
Guest Speaker
Bonnie Sitter Author, Photographer & King Charles III Coronation Medal Recipient
Thursday, May 8, 2025
“Onion Skins and Peach Fuzz: Memories of Ontario Farmerettes”
Bonnie co-authored the 2019 book, Onion Skins and Peach Fuzz: Memories of Ontario Farmerettes, which tells the storey of young women who left home to work on farms during WWII. Bonnies hobbies include photography and writing. Her love of nature and history are visible in the books she has written and her articles and photos are regularly published in “The Rural Voice.”
Bonnie is the Historial Producer of the documentary “We Lend a Hand – The Forgotten Story of Ontario Farmerettes”which premieres June 6th 2025 www.welendahand.ca
GHS members – complimentary Non-members - $10.00
Grimsby Historical Society Monthly Speaker Series
GHS Monthly Meeting
Thursday, May 8, 2025
7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
Livingston Activity Centre 18 Livingston Ave., Grimsby Everyone Welcome!
Grimsby Historical Society
25 Adelaide Street, Grimsby, Ontario 905-309-0796
grimsbyhistoricalsociety.com
Afraid for speaking out has become a problem of our declining democratic society because of concerns for reprisals or being cancelled.
I would have no problem if you would print this article with my name in big letters under this article.
Remember the wellknown police slogan “to serve and to protect”, while putting their lives at risk every day? That slogan has been obsolete for a long time.
Research has shown that more people die annually because of accidents in their workplace than police officers on the street.
The police have forgotten how to do real policework as public made statistics show
from a few years back with only a poor crime solvency rate of 30 per cent by the NRP.
Yet, the police still serve. though, but especially themselves financially with fat, overthe-top pay increases as we saw in the 2025 Niagara Region police budget, which went up almost $30 million, which did include a lot of new hires.
The slogan’s protection part is no longer there. Police officers have become entitled, spoiled and overpaid for the work they do. It is the mentality in the organization that is troubling with no accountability to the taxpayer.
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The last two years in Beamsville, many businesses were broken in to with very valuable products - valued into the hundreds of thousands of dollars - were stolen. Included in the thefts - from the Town of Lincoln - thieves stole the catalytic convertors from their pickup trucks.
All they do is write a crime report and shelve it. Now, for the third time, we see the breakin at Harmony Jewelers. It is high time we do a job performance assessment of the NRP.
The $213 million taxpayers are forced to pay for policing - just in 2025 alone and going up considerably in the coming years again - is not worth the service we’re receiving. We get little service and pay too much for what we get.
Rob Janssen, Beamsville
Grimsby Legion Supports YOUR Local Community
Town of Lincoln Council Composition & Ward Boundary Review
The Town of Lincoln is conducting a comprehensive review of its Council composition (number of Councillors) and ward boundaries – the geographic areas represented by elected officials.
As Lincoln continues to grow and change, this review will assess whether the current ward structure provides fair, effective, and democratic representation for all residents.
Have Your Say
Public Information Centres –Learn More and Share Your Input
Never Miss a Bill or Due Date
With the possibility of a Canada Post strike in late May 2025, the Town of Lincoln reminds residents and property owners that all due dates for Town bills remain in effect throughout the year, regardless of mail delivery issues, adverse weather, or unanticipated events.
To help, the Town offers several convenient options to help you make payments on time and avoid late payment fees.
Go Green and Go Easy – Switch to E-billing and Pre-Authorized Payments Today
As part of our commitment to making life easier and simpler for residents, the Town of Lincoln is encouraging residents and businesses to sign up for e-billing, on-line account access and Pre-Authorized Payments (PAP) for their property tax and Town utility bills.
Why make the switch?
Thursday, May 15
Tuesday, May 20
Wednesday, May 21
2:00 – 4:00 p.m.
Fleming Centre | 5020 Serena Drive Beamsville, (Rooms B+C+D –2nd Floor)
6:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Jordan Fire Hall | 3763 Nineteenth Street Jordan Station
6:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Virtual Session | Registration Required Visit speakuplincoln.ca/boundaryreview to register.
Community Survey – Coming Soon
An online survey will soon be available to collect resident feedback on Lincoln’s current ward structure. Your input is essential to shaping recommendations that reflect the community’s needs and growth.
Questions?
» Contact the Clerk’s Office: clerks@lincoln.ca
Payment due dates don’t change – but how you pay can. Signing up for Pre-Authorized Payments ensures your payments are made on time, every time.
• Convenience – Set it and forget it! Pre-Authorized Payments take the stress out of remembering tax or utility bill due dates and payment details.
• Reliability – Postal service disruptions will no longer impact you. With PAP, you won’t need to wait for your bill(s) in the mail. Your payments will always be made on time, giving you peace of mind.
• Efficiency – Helps the Town reduce the need for traditional mailouts, saving taxpayer dollars on printing and postage.
• Sustainability – Go paperless and help us go green! Every switch to digital saves paper, reduces waste, and supports our environmental goals.
Due Dates
Property tax instalments: due the last business day of February, April, July and September.
Utility bills: issued quarterly, and due dates depend on your billing address.
Ready to make the switch?
Questions?
»
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• Visit to Matane Farmers Market (pending availability) and Matane Gallery
• Visit the Éole Project – an experimental energy plant shut down in 1993, featuring the largest wind turbine of the time
• Cruise of the Percé Rock and Bonaventure Island
By Mike Williscraft NewsNow
At a time when police response in Grimsby has residents concerned, a traffic accident last Tuesday had motorists frustrated.
The issue for those on the scene was not the response of police or fire services, however, rather the response to a 9-1-1 call.
Witness to the accident Doug Archer placed a call when two cars collided at 1:09 p.m., spinning one vehicle into an SUV.
Two of the vehicles were incapacitated, one leaking flu-
ids. One driver had made her way to sit on the curb.
Both Archer and motorist Ilona Tremblay - whose SUV was lightly impacted by one of the spun out vehicles said they were shocked the 9-1-1 operator was not very interested in sending out emergency services.
Both vehicles appeared to be seriously damaged, traffic was backed up trying to get around the crash as the vehicles blocked the intersection and there was scattered debris.
Tremblay said she was told police do not come unless
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there are injuries and she was asked if there were any.
“I don’t know. I’m not a paramedic,” Tremblay said was her comment to the operator.
After a 15 minute wait, she called again. The operator asked if the cars could be pushed off the road, which they could not be.
Grimsby Fire was finally called more than 25 minutes after the mishap and took less than 10 minutes to arrive on the scene. Police arrived just after that.
Injuries were minor, in the end, but Tremblay said the 9-1-1 response was “appalling”.
Open to women who graduated from a Secondary School in West Niagara and are going into their second year or higher of university or college. Consideration also given to applications from mature students who have settled for the long term in West Niagara.
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The deadline for application is May 30, 2025
OBITUARIES
DANCER, William John

Passed away at McNally House Hospice, on Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in his 88th year. Beloved husband of Elsa (nee Telford) for over 62 years. Loved father of Jeff Dancer (Mary) and Leslie Dancer (Tracy). Cherished grandfather of Matthew (Sara), Jordan (Brooke) and Maddie (Josh) and great-grandfather of Jaxon. Predeceased by his several siblings. Brotherin-law of Linda Buchanan (Bill). He will also be missed by many nieces, nephews and dear friends. Bill retired from the Roads Department with the Town of Grimsby in 1998 after 25 years of service and also served proudly with the Grimsby Fire Department from 1967-1998. After retirement, Bill and Elsa settled in the Muskoka area and spent 15 very happy years there before returning back to Grimsby. Cremation has taken place with burial at Queen’s Lawn Cemetery. If desired, memorial contributions to the Heart and Stroke Foundation would be sincerely appreciated by the family. Arrangements entrusted to STONEHOUSE-WHITCOMB FUNERAL HOME, GRIMSBY, 905-945-2755. www.smithsfh.com

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small, Heather ann
OBITUARIES
It is with heavy hearts we announce the sudden passing of Heather Ann Small at Joseph Brant Hospital, on Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in her 79th year. Born in Grimsby, Ontario to the late Guy and Violet Winter. Loved mother of Jamie (Cindy) and Chris (Tracy). Cherished grandmother of Steven (Autumn), Cody (Jeena), Justin (Emma), Megan, Lucas, Cole and Jack. Very proud Great-grandmother to Jackson and Nova. Her Grandchildren and Great Grandchildren were her pride and joy. Heather and her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren were blessed to have lived together and as neighbors for the past year and a half in the village of Millgrove where many family dinners and morning, afternoon and evening visits were enjoyed with her family. Her door was always open, and she listened with an open heart. She will be so dearly missed. Cherished sister of Eleanor Borsa (Michael) and Vivianne Bourne (Mike). Very special Aunt to Midge (Art) and Great Aunt to Kenny, Alex and Madi. Heather was an avid sports fan, enjoyed a good hockey game, watching golf but most of all her favourite sport was Nascar. After retiring from many years in management at the LCBO, Heather was an integral part of her son’s fledgling business in Oakville for several years before fully retiring. The family would like to extend their sincere gratitude to the incredible staff on the 7th floor at Joseph Brant Hospital. Cremation has taken place, and a private family interment will take place at a future date as per Heather’s wishes. If desired, memorial contributions to the Lymphedema Association of Ontario would be sincerely appreciated by the family. Arrangements entrusted to STONEHOUSE-WHITCOMB FUNERAL HOME, GRIMSBY, 905-945-2755. www.smithsfh.com

van ryn, John
On Thursday, May 1, 2025, the Lord called home to Himself, His child, John Van Ryn in his 84th year. John peacefully passed away at his home in Grimsby. Beloved husband of Liz (nee Colyn) for 60 years. Loving Dad of Susan Devries (Steve), Jim Van Ryn (Sherri), Judy Van Ryn and John Van Ryn (Crystal). Cherished Grandpa of Ashley, Stephanie (Matt), Kaitlin (Mitch), Nick (Jasmin), Zachary (Jamie), Hannah, Levi, Hazel and Abel. Opa of Emberly, Jack, Mckenna, Aiden, Savannah and Sadie and new baby Van Ryn on the way.
Predeceased by his parents, Hendrik Bos and Geertje Van Rijn, his loving grandparents, who raised him, Cornelis and Johanna Van Rijn, and Uncle Bob (Ineke). Also, dear parents-in-law William and Ann Colyn and brother-in-law Bert. Survived by brothers and sisters-in-law Tini (Frank) and Bill (Alida). John is also remembered by his extended family in Canada and The Netherlands.
John loved farming, old cars, music, recounting history, and cared deeply about his family and friends. He invested in personal relationships and readily shared his faith and hope in Jesus until the very end.
Visitation at STONEHOUSE-WHITCOMB FUNERAL HOME, 11 Mountain Street, GRIMSBY (905-945-2755) on Wednesday May 7, 2025 from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Private interment at Grimsby Mountain Cemetery. Funeral service will take place at Mountainview Christian Reformed Church, 290 Main Street East on Thursday May 8, 2025 at 11 a.m. If desired, memorial contributions to The Grimsby Benevolent Fund would be sincerely appreciated by the family. www.smithsfh.com
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8 paws at 4 Paws
Beamsville 4 Paw Rescue volunteers Dean Witter and Hayden Temorshuizen hold two kittens up for adoption during the group’s penny sale and craft show at Beamsville’s Royal Canadian Legion Branch 612. Loree - Photo
Chain only as strong as weakest link
There is a lot of frustration in the community about policing right now - mainly due to high-profile incidents and perpetrators not being caught - hopefully yet. Let’s be clear, this is not a policing issue. It is a deployment issue, to some degree, as Niagara West is underserviced when it comes to officers on the street, but so has been the rest of Niagara.
Policing is expensive. And it is a task very few of usme included - would ever want to take on as a job. For my money, they earn and deserve every bit of their pay. That doesn’t mean taxpayers aren’t entitled to feel deep concern. This was exhibited during the accident at Kerman and Livingston last week. Police/fire cannot attend every mishap, but they likely should have been dispatched sooner than 25 minutes after the crash. There is no good timing for an accident, but that one fuelled an already burning fire about response times. Again, in that case, it was not the response that was poor it was the communication chain. Unfortunately, it reflects poorly on NRP and Grimsby Fire - despite their quick responses once the calls came in. M.W.
The U.S. should give us their huddled masses
“Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”
These immortal words are synonymous with the Statue of Liberty and the United States of America.
From now on, they should be synonymous with Canada.
We’ve been hearing a lot about massive, multibillion dollar programs created to support industries which will get hit hard and soon by U.S. tariffs.
Absolutely, some of the focus can and should go there but there are many ships without ports right now, refugees from massive cuts in important areas such as medical and pharmaceutical research.
These are just two areas where incentives should be put in place to reverse the last 20 years of “brain drain” Canada has experienced as researchers headed south.
Remember the early stages of COVID when Canada was a beggar not a chooser when it came to getting in line for vaccine doses. Decades of devolution in the pharmaceutical development industry had the nation susceptible to the whims of others at a moment of life and death for 10s of thousands.
Proper incentivization and strategy could reverse all that inside of a year if properly executed.
There are literally thousands of professionals flooding the job market after Team Elon took his chainsaw to foundational bone in the U.S. infrastructure. Their loss can be Canada’s gain.
Last week, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced $1.3 billion to protect manufacturing workers and expanding tax credit to attract manufacturing investments.
Good start, but a broad stroke. I get there are a lot of holes in the dike and government only has so many “fingers” - as it were - but a more pointed strategy could be more effected and have a generational effect if targeted well.
Yes, there would be private money to drive this bus on all potential industry fronts, but dollars spent by the feds and provincial officials now can come back to them via future revenue if new in-
dustrial strength is created in research - as opposed to throwing good money out to temporarily prop up impacted industries.
No doubt other countries of the world would be thinking the same thing but this is where Canada’s proximity to its bully brother to the south can come in handy.
If you were out of work in any sector and needed to relocate, but still wanted to be relatively close to family and be able to speak the same language, Canada would be looking pretty good right about now. Because of this, there is inherent competitive realities Canada enjoys which other nations simply could never have.
Much of what I have seen and heard about what people want “the government” to do about tariff impacts involves the straight forking out of cash to ensure complete collapse does not happen.
There is some place for that while reorganization unfolds but it is not sustainable. There will be job/ industry casualties if The Great Orange One follows through.
So planning something - that will still cost billions - that creates an environment for long-term growth is best to get started on right now. Then when the short-term measures expire the new industry can feed back into the system and allow for another level of growth in 10-15 years.
MIKE WILLISCRAFT
Delivered via Canada Post
Province antes up $1.3B supporting manufacturing
The provincial government is enhancing and expanding the Ontario Made Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit - providing an additional $1.3 billion over three years.
The move is expected to help lower costs for businesses that invest in buildings, machinery and equipment that are used for manufacturing or processing in Ontario.
“This is goods news for a border community like Niagara where recent generational investments have revived our manufacturing legacy,” said Sam Oosterhoff, MPP for Niagara West.
“To protect our economy, we need
to help lower business costs for Ontario made products.”
The proposed changes, part of the upcoming 2025 Ontario budget, would take the Ontario Made Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit rate for Canadian-controlled private corporations from 10 per cent to 15 per cent, as well as expanding eligibility to non-Canadian-controlled private corporations as a nonrefundable tax credit, to support their investments here in Ontario.
With these changes a qualifying corporation could receive a tax credit of up to $3 million per year.
“Today’s announce-
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ment will provide important support to the more than 830,000 men and women who work in the manufacturing sector, and who are worried about the impact of tariffs on their jobs,” said Hon. Vic Fedeli, Minister of Economic Development, Job Creation and Trade.
“In the face of heightened global economic uncertainty, we are doubling down on our plan to protect Ontario by bringing in new investments and
good-paying manufacturing jobs.”
Announced as part of the 2023 Budget, the Ontario Made Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit was created to help Ontario manufacturers lower their costs, innovate and become more competitive. Implementing this tax credit is one of the many steps the government has taken since 2018 to improve Ontario’s competitiveness by lowering costs for businesses.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The 2024 Annual Meeting of the Lot Holders & Family Plot Associates in the Old Vineland Cemetery, est. 1915 will be held on Wednesday, May 14, 2025.
Registration at 6:30 P.M. AGM at 7 P.M.
Jacob Wallace • 905-626-6436 • www.getonthelawn.ca wallace_jacob@hotmail.com @getonthelawn
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Stone work, Chimney & Porch Repairs, Fireplaces, Parging, Interlock Repairs & More. Call for FRee eStIMate &(905) 512-9565 • info@greyrockmasonry.com www.greyrockmasonry.com
First Mennonite Church 3557 Rittenhouse Road, Vineland, ON L0R 2C0
2024 Fiscal report for Vineland Cemetery Trust Other Reports and Trustee Election Community Attendance Welcome
Contacts
Les High, Adminsitrator 905-328-7099
Tom Neufeld, Trustee Chair 905-327-4878