The
THIS WEEK 4 • Editorials 10 • Sports 13 • IPM 19 • Music
Citizen
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Friday, October 11, 2024
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Volume 40 No. 41
Publications Mail Agreement No. 40050141 Return Undeliverable Items to North Huron Publishing Company Inc., P.O. Box 429, BLYTH, ON N0M 1H0
McIntosh crowned Junior Champion at IPM By Shawn Loughlin The Citizen
The thrill of victory Young people from all over Huron County are back with their hockey bags and back on the ice as summer has turned to fall and, on Sunday, the U13 A Huron Heat hosted the Mooretown Lady Flags at the Central Huron
Community Complex in Clinton. The locals shutout the visitors by a score of 3-0, improving the Heat’s record to 5-2-3 in the young season. The team’s next game is on the road against the South Huron Sabres this Saturday. (John Stephenson photo)
Dugald McIntosh from the Seaforth area was crowned the Junior Champion at last week’s International Plowing Match (IPM) held near Lindsay, punching his ticket to next year’s Canadian Plowing Championship in Ayton, Ontario. McIntosh was one of just three competitors in Class 2B, but he dominated the competition with a total of 487 points. That put him head and shoulders above Carson Little of Amaranth, who was the Reserve Junior Champion with a total of 426 points. The three young men competed over the course of three days with one another and McIntosh ended each day as the leader, so, going into the third and final day, he was in a pretty good position to win it all. When he was told he was the Junior Champion, McIntosh said he was pretty proud of himself and was happy to represent Huron County on the provincial stage. Beyond that, however, he said he was happy to get to know his fellow competitors. Since there were just Continued on page 16
County to investigate new museum storage facility By Shawn Loughlin The Citizen Huron County Council is hoping to further investigate building a new storage facility for the overflowing collection of the Huron County Museum, which has only grown in recent years. Council discussed the issue at its Oct. 2 meeting, spurred on by a report prepared and presented by Director of Cultural Services and Huron County Librarian Beth Rumble. This comes after she had reported that the county’s museum collection has been growing recently with the closure of museums in lower-tier municipalities and that proper, safe storage for artifacts was becoming more of a concern as a result. “Currently, collections are housed in main storage at the museum, archives storage at the museum, as well as two off-site storage buildings located just outside of Goderich in Ashfield-ColborneWawanosh. The items stored at the
museum benefit from heating and cooling and humidity control. The off-site storage buildings (typically used for larger artifacts) are not climate-controlled, but do shelter items from the basic elements. All of these locations are at or close to capacity. Staff will be reorganizing main storage over the coming months to best utilize the space vacated by Corporate Records. It is anticipated the incoming North Huron collections will fill much of the space,” Rumble said in her report to council. “In 2020, upgrades to one of the off-site buildings included adding a concrete floor, as well as improvements to the second-storey mezzanine. These improvements allowed artifacts to be more efficiently stored and also enhanced general conditions in the building. These upgrades did not result in increased square footage.” Rumble then presented council with a terms of reference for the issue, which included three potential options. The first option
was to do nothing and leave things status quo, while the second option was to investigate the cost associated with upgrading the current off-site storage facilities and the third option was to investigate the cost of a new off-site storage building. Ashfield-Colborne-Wawanosh Deputy-Mayor Bill Vanstone and
Central Huron Mayor Jim Ginn both immediately spoke in favour of investigating the third option further. Ginn said he had been out to tour the off-site facilities in the past and he felt that attempting to repair them would be throwing good money after bad and that a new facility was the only way to proceed. That is, he said, if
the county wanted to remain in the business of running a museum. If the county wanted to have a museum, it should be done properly, he said. Council then directed staff to prepare a report on the cost of a new facility to be considered in 2025 budget deliberations when the time comes.
County considers homes audit Huron County Council will be considering a third-party audit of its long-term care system in the county’s 2025 budget. At its Oct. 2 meeting, council approved a recommendation from Chief Administrative Officer Meighan Wark to move forward with the process of an audit for the department. This came as a followup to the county’s “Long-Term Care in Huron County: A Changing Landscape” and some closedsession discussion by council. The next steps, recommended by
Wark, would be to reach out to relevant agencies and municipalities to investigate potential costing for a long-term care study and audit. Costing will then be included in the 2025 budget for council’s consideration. The components of evaluation would include compliance of staffing levels, efficiencies in program areas, a review of the organizational structure, evaluation of staff levels and agency and overtime figures. She added that the development of a staff committee
would be needed for oversight. Huron East Mayor Bernie MacLellan spoke in favour of the audit, saying that it is such a large topic in the county and a large financial commitment and, as a result, it’s been almost impossible for council to receive all of the relevant information in one place or one sitting. Having all of this work done at once would be very helpful for council, he said. Council agreed and directed staff to begin the process of costing for an audit ahead of the 2025 budget.