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webstoneprosoils.ca Vol 23 | Issue 30 LIVING HERE
This time, school's out for more than just the summer People. Places. Pictures. Profiles. Perspectives. CONNECTING OUR COMMUNITIES. WO O LW I C H TOW N S H I P
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JUNE 25, 2020
HEAD OF THE CLASS
Woolwich looks at making it easier to keep chickens in residential areas BY STEVE KANNON skannon@woolwichobserver.com
Why did the chicken cross the road? To escape the bureaucracy involved in keeping a few laying hens in the yard, apparently. A Conestogo-area resident looking to keep a few hens in a barn on her property ran afoul of regulatory red tape appearing before Woolwich council Tuesday night. Sarah Pupols discovered it would be fine to keep some chickens in her home, but not in a barn designed for livestock. The circumstances are due to a quirk in a township zoning bylaw, which sets rules that gave councillors, seemingly willing to grant Pupols an exemption, no wiggle room. Currently, Pupols' only recourse would be to launch a lengthy and expensive (some $4,000, not chicken feed) process to change the zoning on her residential property. While councillors appeared ready to turn a blind eye to the situation if chickens did appear on the property – other residents are keeping chickens, some of them note – formal permission would require jumping through some administrative hoops. As it stands, the zoning bylaw CHICKENS | 04
EDSS valedictorian Katie Carreon says goodbye to high school as she looks towards a future in law.
[SEAN HEEGER]
A fateful year for EDSS class of 2020 Katie Carreon will have much to draw on in writing a valedictory speech for her classmates BY SEAN HEEGER sheeger@woolwichobserver.com
Naming a valedictorian is a normal part of each school year, but this one has been anything but normal at EDSS. Still, there will be a representative of the class of 2020 penning a speech to send her classmates out into the world. Katie Carreon welcomed the
honour, adding that it came as bit of a surprise to her. “I feel like there were a lot of really good people that could have been chosen to be valedictorian. And so I am honored to be able to represent my class and (to) have been accompanied by such other great nominees,” said Carreon “I have (had) the thought (it) had always kind of been in the
back of my mind, ‘who was going to be valedictorian?’ ... but I never really pictured myself.” Selecting a valedictorian was a bit of normalcy after a year in which Elmira District Secondary School students protested provincial plans for online learning, endured rotating strikes by teachers’ unions, and eventually saw the building shuttered in
mid-March due to the novel coronavirus. Carreon has been actively involved within the school community for the last few years, serving as co-president of EDSS and representing the students at events and within the community. Early in her high school career, she said she never saw herself VALEDICTORIAN | 07