September 2, 2021

Page 1

BeautiTone AD SPOT - NON PRINTING

Mon.-Sat. 8-6, Sunday Closed 22 Church St. W., Elmira (519) 669-5537

Fall Sale! * Off regular price. Cannot be combined with any other offer, including the Buy 6 Get 1 Free Loyalty Card. Home Store owners may limit quantities.

Find and follow us on FB and Instagram

Ontario's #1 Weekly Community Newspaper

Scotts Fall Lawn Fertilizers*

Signature Interior & Exterior Paint

SAVE

3.4L-3.7L*

20%

SAVE

25%

Filtrete Furnace Filters*

SEPTEMBER 2, 2021

This Weekend Friday

230 Saturday

240 Sunday

Elmira, Ontario, Canada | observerxtra.com | Volume 26 | Issue 35

Arts | 14

230

Many changes for students, but schools to provide a full experience EDSS principal Brad Marsh among those looking forward to the new school year Justine Fraser Observer Staff

THE START OF THE SCHOOL year will look slightly different this year for students and parents as they head back to their classrooms September 7. It will be a slow, cautious start for students, extracurricular activities will be limited and cafeteria services at secondary schools won’t be in operation for at least another month, with limited capacities for some schools. Students and staff will be required to wear masks and maintain social distancing protocols. Despite the return, some students will continue to attend virtually. It will be a staggered start for high schools such as Elmira District Secondary School, where Grades 9 and 10 will start on September 7, with students in Grades 11 and 12 arriving the following day. “The good thing is for the secondary students is that they’re going to be

seeing their peers back in the school with them this year. So, with the new constraints and parameters that we have from public health, it’s going to allow more of the peer group to be in the school at the same timeframe to bring that social aspect back to the building, which tends to bring energy. We’re really looking forward to that,” said EDSS principal Brad Marsh. “As we move through the scenario of bringing everyone back and then loosening of the public health parameters that have been supplied to us, it’ll be a staggered kind of release of students into more normal activity. So, our nutrition break is a little bit shorter. We’re going to have to work through how we allow students to have their break and their lunch.” Students and parents will be required to screen online for COVID-19 prior to their children attending school, with Waterloo Region District School → BACK TO SCHOOL 6

Woolwich fire chief Dale Martin’s journey as a firefighter began at the Elmira station in 1978.

Steve Kannon

“It’s been a good ride”

Woolwich fire chief Dale Martin has mixed emotions as he heads off into retirement Steve Kannon Observer Staff

AS OF TUESDAY, DALE MARTIN no longer has to worry about being forced to roll out of bed in the middle of the night. That’s someone else’s job now that he’s retired from his post as chief of the Woolwich Fire Department. Responding to emergencies is something he’s done for most of the last 43 years since he first joined the Elmira station in 1978. He

was named the township’s deputy chief in 2008, taking on responsibility for enhanced training requirements. He took over the top spot in 2017 following the retirement of his predecessor, Rick Pedersen. “I’m going to be 65 in October, so I always knew that was going to be the end day. You leave with mixed emotions, but I always knew that I’d know when the time is right, and that’s now,” he said on

August 31, his last day on the job. “It’s time for somebody new to take over – it’s been a good ride.” Martin says he won’t miss the pager going off at all hours, nor the sometimes painful parts of responding to emergency situations. “It’s the people that I’m going to miss,” he said, calling the job a big positive in his life. “I enjoyed every minute of it. There was days that

were bad because of what happened, but we overcame them, too,” he said. “I found that the chief’s job could be challenging, because you had to have a good balance between compassion and still doing your job. And sometimes that line was pretty blurry for me – being in a small community, you tend to know most people, so you could get emotionally involved.” This is Martin’s second →RETIREMENT 4

FALL IS THE PERFECT TIME! - Compost for Lawns, Experience the Difference

100% compost A natural soil enhancement for lawns

AD SPOT - NON PRINTING

y Toda l l a C

!

519-584-4755

webstoneprosoils.ca


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
September 2, 2021 by Woolwich Observer - Issuu