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Volume 33, Issue 40

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Councillor Eli El-Chantiry Ward 5, West Carleton-March

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Trash talk

Inside COMMUNITY

Province to hear from stakeholders on Carp dump proposal

Teachers and parents joined kids at this year’s Terry Fox Run at Huntley Centennial. See who ran past our camera. – Page 14

Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com

sisted. Beyond that, the band tends to play from a wide range of influences – from Louis Armstrong and Fats Domino all the way over to the Ramones. It’s something of a jazz-rock fusion. They are influenced by the New Orleans sound, “the French Quarter� as Dale calls it, but have found themselves adapting to audiences. They recently opened for The Cooper Brothers, then worked the opening of a Food Basics in Stittsville. Different audiences hold different expectations, said Dale, who started out playing clarinet in a sea cadet brass band before jumping into the 1970 Toronto music scene. But what all audiences have in common is an expectation for a solid performance. He explained the need for constant practising.

EMC news – From now until Nov. 2, residents and groups will have their say on the controversial new landfill at Waste Management’s Carp Road location. The company completed an environmental assessment, posted on its website and area newspapers, and was sent to the Ontario Environment Ministry. Dubbed the West Carleton Environmental Centre, the new facility would also include a traditional recycling operation, composting and welcome construction materials. West Carleton-March Coun. Eli El-Chantiry is careful to say the trash would come from industries, institutions, and the commercial sector. “We don’t need the landfill for residential garbage,� El-Chantiry said. “We use more greenbins. The Trail Road site has another 25 years left in it.� Although the City of Ottawa won’t offer a definite yea or nay to the project, which would see the existing Carp Mountain capped, he said the city will be among those that submit comments to the ministry. “It’s a hot political topic, to be sure. No one wants a dump in their backyard,� he said. “I’d prefer it not in Carp. But where? This is our garbage so how are we going to deal with it?� He indicated that some of the possible suggestions the city is contemplating include: only trash from Ottawa and surrounding areas should be accepted; the company must create a ground water protection monitoring program.

See Musicians, page 4

See Compensation, page 2

SPORTS DEREK DUNN/METROLAND

Shungabunga is racking up gigs across the city’s west end since forming a few short months ago. Offering a unique blend of jazz-rock fusion, Dave Wong, left, Dale Jones, and Craig Irvine pride themselves on being perfectionists who easily adapt depending on a venue’s needs.

Broadening the musical palate West Carleton’s Allen McGee continues to rack up awards in golf this year. See his latest; it’s a first. – Page 21

NEWS

Mickey wouldn’t miss a visit to Walt Disney World from dozens of Ottawa area kids. See who went from Dunrobin. – Page 25

A new trio lives up to the sophisticated expectations of today’s audiences Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com

EMC entertainment – Food and music make a perfect pairing. But for some years now food has gotten way ahead of music when it comes to diversity and drama. Today’s pub food is not the predictable fare of the past. Customers expect daring recipes and carefully designed plating. The same hasn’t held true for music. Live music at a restaurant tends toward the stayed, to the tried and tired categories of classic rock and the like. Shungabunga, a trio based in Constance Bay but with members in the Glebe and on Metcalfe Street, is among a new generation of bands in the national capital working to change that perception of live music. The three - Craig Irvine on guitar and Dave Wong on guitar and vocals -- recently sat down in the backyard of

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the group’s elder statesman, horn-man Dale Jones, to provide an insider’s view of today’s music business. Most self-respecting musicians will resist attempts to define their sound, but when it comes to Shungabunga they truly struggle to find the right words. What it is not, at least, is the rehashing of well-worn songs. Dave, chuckling, said if he has to do a CCR song, it’ll be the “the last song on the third album,� meaning an obscure ditty not found on the greatest hits album. He is adamant that people in Ottawa crave innovation like never before. “People don’t want the same old stuff. They are a lot smarter than that,� he said, cooking up a foody comparison. “They have a broad palate you need to cater to.� Even when it comes to covering, say, a lesser known Stones song, the interpretation will be a re-creation of the song, not a simulation, Dave in-


HELP PROTECT CHILDREN IN OUR COMMUNITY

Abortion vote doesn’t split party: O’Connor Derek Dunn

October is Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention Month

derek.dunn@metroland.com

EMC news – Speculation on Parliament Hill is running rampant over a possible rift in the Conservative caucus, but the party whip insists the rumours are unfounded. Gordon O’Connor said the Sept. 26 abortion vote, when

More than 47% of adults in Ontario have been exposed to or know someone who is the victim of child abuse and neglect. In Ottawa alone, only 42% of residents claim to know how to report abuse directly to the CAS. These numbers suggest there are far too many vulnerable children and youth, without a voice, in our community.

Continued from front

Homes within a three-kilometre radius must be compensated; the impact on area businesses must be minimized or

“People feel it’s hard to infringe on parental rights, and they’re naturally hesitant to involve themselves,â€? says Barbara MacKinnon, Executive Director of the Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa. “When reporting to CAS, it doesn’t mean we are going to remove a child from their home. It is about assessing the situation and discovering whether the family may beneďŹ t from support services.â€?

O’Connor, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and a solid majority of the caucus voted against raising the issue. O’Connor said they were elected on a promise to not raise the issue, and that his pleased the idea was quashed. “I’m satisďŹ ed that it was defeated,â€? he said. “It’s no secret I voted against it. It’s a libertarian thing. I don’think government should be telling women what they should do with their bodies.â€? He added that he doesn’t advocate women undergo an abortion or not. It’s not something he feels is within a MP’s scope of concern. However, Immigration Minister Jason Kenney has long been touted as a possible successor to Harper, who has led the party to three consecutive wins. Kenney voted in favour of Motion 312 that would see a committee formed to examine the issue. And backbencher MP Brad Trost recently told Maclean’s magazine that pro-life troops within the party are prepared to stand by their convictions. “Some socially conserva-

GORDON O’CONNOR tive rank and ďŹ le members of the Conservative Party have not been happy with [Harper] for quite some time,â€? Trost said. O’Connor dismissed the notions of a split as mere speculation. “People always read the tea leaves,â€? he said. “It’s a matter of conscience, and when it is a matter of conscience personal opinions appear. There are no divisions. There are no splits. It was a matter of conscience.â€?

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To learn more about the warning signs of abuse, visit useyourvoice.ca. Get involved and help protect children in our community. If you suspect child abuse or neglect call 613-747-7800, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

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2 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

compensated for; among other transparency initiatives. The resident-driven group nodump.ca has renewed the call for people to write the ministry.

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Signs may not always be obvious in a child who has been abused or neglected. This is why it is our responsibility, as a community, to stay informed of the signs of abuse and learn when and who to call to help a child. “If your gut tells you that something’s wrong, then it probably is,� continues MacKinnon. Not all calls received by CAS result in an investigation, and only an extremely small percentage of investigations require that a child or youth be removed from the family home. Most often, the intervention involves simply connecting the family to services within the community. Last year, in more than 90 per cent of cases where CAS became involved, work was done with the family and the child stayed home.

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87 of 163 Conservative MPs voted to study the deďŹ nition of a human being, had nothing to do with showing party discipline. “It’s a free vote; you don’t whip a free vote,â€? said the MP for Carleton-Mississippi Mills. “If it was a level two or three vote, that’s different. But this was a free vote.â€?

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NEWS

Arbitration reform problematic: law experts Politicians who vow to cap public sector salaries might be promising the impossible that completely eviscerates the rights of employees,� MacNeil said, adding that tampering with an arbitrator’s neutrality harms two basic rights: freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining.

Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com

EMC news - City and provincial politicians are calling for arbitration reform as a way to rein in public sector wage increases. But at least two labour law experts say changes could prove difficult to achieve or possibly result in a less desirable system. Carleton-Mississippi Mills MPP Jack MacLaren and his PC party have proposed legislation to force arbitrators to factor in taxpayers’ ability to pay when it comes to settlements. MacLaren argues that a deep deficit and slow economy is proof enough that taxpayers can’t afford to keep giving pay hikes to police and others deemed essential. “It’s time to stand up for taxpayers by fixing a broken system that awards unaffordable contract settlements to government union employees,� MacLaren penned in a recent column. “All arbitrators’ decisions must consider specific economic and budgetary factors, like the taxpayers ability to pay, when making decisions.�

You should know what you can and can’t do before you start making promises. PROF. KEVIN BANKS

That would mean – in the case of police and others considered essential and not allowed to strike – the likely rise of illegal strikes and other job actions. “It is quite natural,� MacNeil said. “Should (public) workers subsidize taxpayers? That’s the counter argument.� TAX CORPORATIONS

The thing is that arbitrators are unelected; they are appointed. It’s always about increasing taxes. ELI EL-CHANTIRY

West Carleton-March Coun. Eli ElChantiry has long expressed frustration that arbitrators can force elected politicians to pay more than they want to – or campaigned on – for services. “The thing is that arbitrators are unelected; they are appointed and they don’t care. At the end of the day he can say, ‘You have the ability to pay,’� El-Chantiry said. “It’s always about increasing taxes. The ‘ability to pay’ is a joke.� However, Prof. Michael MacNeil in the faculty of law at Carleton University says politicians are not just elected representatives; they are employers. That means there are laws preventing politicians from performing certain actions – regardless of whether they made campaign promises such as an annual cap on tax increases. “If it’s all based on political decisions,

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the four causal factors in serious and fatal collisions. It’s everyone’s responsibility in keeping our highways, trails and waterways safe.

While the province appears poised to move ahead with legislation banning strikes and freezing wages on teachers, the Charter of Rights could prevent it from sticking, Banks said. On the other hand, he asks why the province can do it and municipalities can’t? The answer, he said, is that the province hasn’t conferred those powers on the municipalities. MacNeil and Banks agree that municipal politicians who vow to rein in spending on salary increases walk a fine line. “I can understand why that would be a frustrating situation; one of the tools for cost containment isn’t in your tool kit,â€? Banks said. “You should know what you can and can’t do before you start making promises.â€? Amazing deals on the coolest events, restaurants, fashion ďŹ nds, activities & adventures

Police patrol long weekend EMC news - Another long weekend is upon us. This Thanksgiving weekend, the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) is launching Operation Impact from Oct. 5 to 8. Members of the Ottawa Detachment will be out again to ensure that Ottawa’s highways are safe. During Operation Impact in 2011, the Ottawa Detachment issued several charges. The charges for the weekend were: Speeding 30 Racing 0 Seatbelts 27 Distracted Driving 20 Moving Violations 6 Other Highway Traffic 19 Liquor Licence Act 7 Impaired Operation 2 Criminal Code Driving 2 Warn Range 2 Impaired driving, aggressive driving, distracted driving and not wearing seatbelts are

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NAVIGABLE WATERS PROTECTION ACT (R.S.C. 1985, c. N-22) as amended by Part 7 of the Budget Implementation Act, 2009, S.C. 2009, c. 2 (Navigable Waters Protection Act) Quyon Ferry Inc. and Mohr’s Landing and Quyon Port Authority (MLQPA) hereby give notice that an application has been made to the Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities pursuant to the Navigable Waters Protection Act for approval of the work described herein and its site and plans. Pursuant to section 9 of the said Act, Quyon Ferry Inc. and MLQPA have deposited with the Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, and at the Consumer and Business Services, Registration Division, Title and Survey Services OfďŹ ce, 161 Elgin Street, Ottawa, Ontario under deposit number N774013, a description of the following work, its site and plans for the New Ferry Ramp Facilities and New Cable Ferry Service to cross the Ottawa River between Mohr’s Landing, Ontario, and Quyon, QuĂŠbec. Comments regarding the effect of this work on marine navigation may be directed to: The Manager, Navigable Waters Protection Program, Transport Canada, 100 Front Street South, Sarnia, ON N7T 2M4. However, comments will be considered only if they are in writing and are received not later than 30 days after the publication of the last notice. Although all comments conforming to the above will be considered, no individual response will be sent.

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The PC’s position that government can’t get money to pay for raises is difficult to accept, MacNeil said, when Ontario has the lowest corporate tax rate among members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. The province also has a corporate tax rate lower than many European jurisdictions. El-Chantiry, chairman of the police board, again in September asked the McGuinty Liberals to “exercise fiscal restraint� when negotiating with the OPP, because a settlement with the provincial force often sets the stage for increases among municipal forces. Liberals recently proposed stiffer rules for arbitrators, but the PCs and NDP rejected the plan. Even the Drummond Report contained suggestions for dealing with the process. The former TD Bank chief economist, Don Drummond, last February released a 665-page report calling for deep spending cuts. If not, he warned that the province will face a crippling $30-billion deficit by 2017-18. El-Chantiry said police settlements in remote or more dangerous areas shouldn’t affect deals made in Ottawa, but insists they do. MacNeil doubts that is the case. Arbi-

trators are capable of rejecting irrelevant evidence. “Arbitrators are not stupid,� he said. Prof. Kevin Banks in the faculty of law at Queen’s University allowed the possibility that arbitrators may infrequently accept weak comparables. But poor or novel decisions can go both ways. He describes a hypothetical situation where nurses are asking for pay equity with police officers. Arbitrators, he said, are conservative and usually base decisions solely on past precedent. That’s how they develop a desirable reputation among future negotiating teams on both sides. “They tend to have a lot of experience in labour relations,� he said. “But they don’t impose big changes.� He suspects an “ability to pay� law would be difficult to define and require a lot of evidence on behalf of governments to prove. “It’s not at all obvious how you would structure that.� Banks said the arbitration process has positives and negatives, but that it is at least a place where reasoned arguments and reasoned decisions are held. He added that arbitrators attempt to replicate market-based labour decisions, although that can be difficult because often public employees are doing work with no private sector equivalent. However, he echoed MacNeil’s point that public workers shouldn’t be left to the whim of elected politicians. “There is a strong tradition in arbitration law that taxpayers shouldn’t get public services at a discount,� Banks said.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 3


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ENTERTAINMENT

Musicians all about sex and drugs? Not anymore Continued from front

“It’s a ratio game. You have to get all the garbage out of the way before the good stuff comes,” he said. “Like nice wine, you can’t make it overnight. It’s finding the right mindset.” MUSICIANS AS SOLDIERS

Dale and Dave are influenced to some degree by the soldier’s discipline. Hence a drive to get the sound right regardless how long it takes to perfect. It’s not such a far-fetched link, the will to produce clean, tight music, and the military code to work as a unit to reach a higher standard. Both tend to treat the journey as the destination. Bono once praised Leonard Cohen – who could take years to find a song’s correct words – as a writer who throws away what lesser musicians would have treated as gold. It’s about standards set within. Even as they discussed various aspects of their business, Craig sat quietly strumming his guitar, searching for the right sound. It’s always been that way for the youngest member of the band, a former student of Dale’s. While growing up in Constance Bay he would sit with friends in someone’s basement. As the rest played video games, Craig worked on his guitar. “Maybe it’s because I sucked at video games that I became obsessed with music,” Craig said, laughing. “Any kind of music is as challenging as you want to make it. “Music is like a high,” he said.

DEREK DUNN/METROLAND

Shungabunga’s Craig Irvine and Dave Wong perform as the openning act to a Cooper Brothers concert held recently in Constance Bay. It’s a high all three have passed on to others. They’ve taught music to children and adults, to the novice and even to those better than themselves. And, like a golfer, their game is elevated when playing with those that are better than themselves. MUSICIANS AS BUSINESSMEN

However, it isn’t all about the creative act. Shungabunga is eager to line up gigs and make a few dollars. They push their product as hard as any salesman. And they make no apologies for being musical entrepreneurs. But the attitude some restaurateurs

hold toward musicians - that money shouldn’t matter because they are doing what they love - can be tiresome. Like when London Olympic organizers figured musicians would work the opening games for free, Dave grows frustrated at the view many hold of musicians. “I understand their headspace, and I understand it isn’t going to change,” he said. “But you wouldn’t say to the guy that just painted the outside of your house, ‘OK, that looks great. Now paint the inside because you like to paint.’ It just wouldn’t happen.” He said the band will sit up on the stage, maybe take a small swig of

beer, share a few laughs with the au- more, much more than a blanket of dience, but in the final analysis it is upstanding decorum smothering the a job. And they are interviewing for artists and the alienated. Beatniks and William Burroughs were putting their next job. It seems to contradict every image out some of the most original literafans have of musicians. Perfection- ture ever conceived. Rebels without ists, entrepreneurs, sober? Whatever a cause were celebrated. Rock ’n’roll happened to sex, drugs and rock ’n’ was born. With a few technological advanceroll? “That’s a myth. Anybody can get ments, the same creative explosion chicks and drugs,” said Craig, speak- could take place following these conservative times. If so, bands like ing for himself. Rock isn’t dead; far from it, they Shungabunga appear poised to capisay. White Stripes and countless talize. For bookings or lessons call indie bands are proving otherwise. Dale Jones at 613-832-3950. But a day of reckoning seems on the horizon for the large record labels and those who make a living from offering “three flavours on the radio,” as Dave calls it. He explained that the corporate world is risk averse to the point of stifling creativity. That forces a recycling of sound, which in turn leads to a downward spiral in popular music. “They’ve created their own problem,” he said. “They aren’t the big monster anymore. They are the big dinosaur.” Today might be similar to 1950s U.S.A., often misinterpreted Dale Jones’ musical career dates back to the as simply a conserva- 1960s, in sea cadets. He’s impressed by the eartive decade. It was ly acclaim the band has received.

Inspire Us 2012026014

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4 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

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Councillors want digitals signs in rural, suburban areas EMC news - The desire among city councillors to move ahead with permitting digital billboards in the city pitted rural and suburban councillors against urban representatives at a Sept. 25 meeting. In the end, despite 700 comments from the public, mostly in opposition to the idea, the urban area will be open to digital billboards – with a list of restrictions. Those rules will make Ottawa’s digital billboards the dimmest and most restricted advertising screens in the country, said Peter Giles, a project and program manager with the city’s planning and infrastructure department. Still images (not videos) on the LED lit signs will have to remain for a minimum of 10 seconds before changing, and

the signs will have to be the least bright in Canada. The locations will also be very restricted: digital signs won’t be allowed in rural or predominantly residential areas, near heritage properties or on hydro corridors and there are generous setback distances to keep them away from highway on- and offramps, parkways and villages. Giles estimates that 22 of the 393 documented conventional billboards in the city could be converted to digital billboards under the new rules. That didn’t please some councillors on the planning committee, including Barrhaven councillor and planning committee vice chairwoman Jan Harder. “You said we are going to be the most restrictive in the country. The question is, why? Why do we need to be?� Harder asked city staff during

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LAURA MUELLER/METROLAND

This digital billboard on St. Laurent Boulevard near Tremblay Road was part of a study of the lit billboards that the city is aiming to allow in more urban areas. the Sept. 25 meeting. “I just think this is way overly cautious.�

If digital billboards are more attractive and offer more timely information than stan-

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“I don’t interpret that as having access to more and better information,� Hobbs said, adding that she was disappointed with staff’s recommendation. “What is the benefit to our constituents? I think we have the time and the benefit of being cautious,� Hobbs said. “We should be considering enhancements to our public spaces instead of just a revenue stream.� Allowing digital signs will allow for the city to charge $2,500 for a digital billboard permit – that’s $700 more than a conventional billboard.

dard billboards, Harder said, why not allow them? The planning committee voted in favour of Kanata South Coun. Allan Hubley’s direction to ask staff to come back in a year to look at expanding the digital billboard program to other areas, including rural and suburban sections of Ottawa. Kitchissippi Coun. Katherine Hobbs was the only member of the committee to vote against the digital billboard proposal. One of four pilot project billboards is located in her ward, at Carling and Kirkwood avenues, and her office receives numerous complaints that it is distracting.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 5


Celebrating 30 Years

NEWS

Your Community Newspaper

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High-tech rebound welcome news for city, province Cisco ahead of schedule to hire 300 new staff in Ontario Nevil Hunt nevil.hunt@metroland.com

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EMC news - The city and province hope one high-tech company’s growth is a sign of things to come. In August 2011, Cisco and the province entered into an agreement that aimed to create 300 new jobs in Ontario over five years. Cisco checked in with the government on Sept. 25 to report 134 jobs have already been added: 96 in Ottawa and 38 in Toronto. “Cisco could be doing what they’re doing anywhere in the world,� said Ontario Economic Development Minister Brad Duguid during a press conference hosted at Cisco’s offices on Innovation Drive. Duguid and Ottawa West-Nepean MPP Bob Chiarelli were part of the Kanata-based event, appearing via a Cisco-designed videolink from Toronto. Duguid said Ontario’s low corporate tax rate and Ottawa’s skilled workforce helped Cisco choose the city for expansion. The five-year agreement to create 300 jobs also came with a $25 million investment from the province. Cisco Canada’s vice-president Ron McDougall said Ontario presented “a compelling case� for the company’s growth. The Kanata location now has about 400 employees and another company manager said the original agreement to add 300 positions in Ontario could be eclipsed if conditions remain positive. “This is excellent news for Ottawa’s families and Ottawa’s businesses,� said Chiarelli, who added that high-tech jobs are returning to the city. Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson and Kanata North Coun. Marianne Wilkinson attended in person. Watson also said there’s an “upward swing� in

tech jobs. Following a tour of two large technology labs, Watson said the city’s Invest Ottawa program has been well funded by council and can help companies that want to locate here or expand operations. He said assistance includes fast-tracking building permits and zoning applications, but the city can’t pump cash into businesses like the province does. “Under the Municipal Act ‌ we don’t have the ability to directly finance companies,â€? Watson said. “We’re more of a facilitator so they can access different government programs so jobs stay in Ottawa and grow in Ottawa. And I’m the lobbyist-in-chief.â€? Watson said Invest Ottawa has been operating for less than a year but will ask for an update at the finance committee later this year. The city’s economic development officer is tasked with measuring the effectiveness of Invest Ottawa’s operations. “So far it’s been very aggressive and very impressive,â€? Watson said of Invest Ottawa. Wilkinson said she’s happy to see high-tech growth in her ward. She said large high-tech companies want space to grow, which makes Kanata an attractive location in the city. Geography also plays a part. “A lot of people in high-tech live in the west end of the city, so that’s been a help (in having companies choose Kanata),â€? Wilkinson said. “And if they’re going to expand, it makes sense to do that where they already are.â€? She said that when National Defence staff move into the former Nortel campus at Carling Avenue and Moodie Drive, the high-tech firms there will be displaced. Wilkinson said at least two of those companies have already decided to move to Kanata. R0051613653/1004

This Sunday 2 PM 67’s vs. Sudbury 6 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012


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Jubilee honourees MP Gordon O’Connor recently presented Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medals. Andrew Tait, left photo, has been an active volunteer for over 25 years with neighborhood projects, Christmas food banks, and youth sports. He was a major influence in the local minor hockey organization and was a key player in having a new arena built. He helps disadvantaged families by providing free hockey equipment, much of which he purchases and donates personally. MP Gordon O’Connor recently presented Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medals. Karen Taylor, right photo, has worked tirelessly over 15 years as a volunteer on the board of the Fitzroy Harbour Community Association. The Association actively strives to improve life in the village through community events including Harbour Days, sports tournaments, an annual Winter Carnival, ice fishing derbies, and countless other special events. Taylor organizes several fundraisers each year in support of community betterment and is very active in her area and in the Association.

Correction R0011353306

Incorrect names were attributed to two photos in the Sept. 27 issue. In the story titled ‘Residents honoured with jubilee medals’ Hester Shackleton actually appeared in the below photo. Huguette Collins was in the above photo. The West Carleton Review EMC apologized for the confusion.

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Cars: 08 Accent, 56 kms; 08 Corolla, 152 kms; 08 Rondo, 115 kms; 08 Edge, 117 kms; 07 Altima, 92 kms, 07 5, 191 kms; 07 Charger, 191 kms; 07 Rondo, 124 kms; 07 Cobalt, 157 kms; 07 Civic, 75 kms; 07 Aura, 134 kms; 07 Versa, 102 kms; 07 Gr Prix, 141 kms; 06 Legacy, 192 kms; 06 Elantra, 85 kms; 06 G6, 119 kms; 06 Camry, 122 kms; 05 Allure, 153 kms; 05 Aveo, 133 kms; 05 Sonata, 114 kms; (4)05 3, 89-203 kms; 05 Altima, 114 kms; 05 300, 150 kms; 05 V70, 148 kms; 05 Impreza, 209 kms; 05 Impala, 124 kms; 05 Vue, 250 kms; (2)04 Gr Am, 126-138 kms; 04 Impala, 153 kms; 04 Epica, 153 kms; 04 Taurus, 134 kms; 04 3, 154 kms; 04 SRX, 169 kms; 04 Malibu, 158 kms; 04 Cr Vic, 137 kms; 04 Sonata, 69 kms; 04 CrossďŹ re, 118 kms; (2)03 ProtĂŠgĂŠ, 81-189 kms; 03 Civic, 124 kms; 03 Gr AM, 198 kms; (2)03 SunďŹ re, 57-125 kms; 03 Echo, 222 kms; 03 Focus, 236 kms; 03 TL, 196 kms; (3)03 Altima, 120-151 kms; 02 Century, 116 kms; 02 Century, 153 kms; 02 Passat, 200 kms; 02 Impala, 203 kms; 02 Outback, 266 kms; 02 Regal, 137 kms; 02 Alero, 226 kms; 02 ProtĂŠgĂŠ, 202 kms; 01 Intrigue, 139 kms; 01 Cougar, 118 kms; 01 Neon, 160 kms; 01 S40, 160 kms; 01 Lesabre, 249 kms; 01 Gr AM, 150 kms; 00 SunďŹ re, 190 kms; 00 Jetta, 311 kms; 00 LS, 169 kms; 00 300, 221 kms; 00 Gr Prix, 182 kms; (2)00 Lesabre, 95-231 kms; 00 Civic, 170 kms; 00 Focus, 181 kms; 99 Eldorado, 183 kms; 99 SunďŹ re, 165 kms; 99 Maxima, 198 kms; 99 Intrigue, 189 kms; 99 Lumina, 224 kms; 99 300, 139 kms; 98 Tercel, 259 kms; 98 626, 131 kms; 98 V70, 250 kms; 97 Escort, 131 kms; 84 928, 96 kms SUVs: 08 Torrent, 130 kms; 08 Tucson, 72 kms; 07 Expedition, 168 kms; 07 Nitro, 107 kms; 07 Patriot, 159 kms; 06 Escape, 221 kms; (2)06 Liberty, 189-203 kms; 06 Trailblazer, 200 kms; 06 Uplander, 138 kms; 06 Expedition, 203 kms; 06 Santa Fe, 91 kms; 05 Jimmy, 137 kms; 05 PaciďŹ ca, 117 kms; 05 Escape, 108 kms; 05 Xtrail, 155 kms; (3)05 Durango, 178-200 kms; 04 Rendezvous, 188 kms; 04 Murano, 185 kms; 04 XC70, 143 kms; 04 Sorento, 154 kms; 04 Escape, 68 kms; 03 Trailblazer, 205 kms; 03 PathďŹ nder, 182 kms; 03 Element, 148 kms; (2)03 Murano, 129-233 kms; 02 Durango, 194 kms; (2)02 Bravada, 158-272 kms; (2)02 Trailblazer, 174-202 kms; 01 Tribute, 178 kms; 01 Jimmy, 176 kms; 00 Xterra, 138 kms; 00 Durango, 194 kms; 99 Cherokee, 167 kms Vans: 08 Montana, 108 kms; 08 Caravan, 177 kms; 07 Express, 265 kms; (2)07 Caravan, 128-144 kms; 06 Caravan, 95 kms; 05 Sedona, 121 kms; 05 Freestar, 137 kms; (2)05 Freestyle, 90-148 kms; (5)05 Caravan, 86-257 kms; 04 Caravan, 194 kms; 04 Montana, 237 kms; 04 Venture, 142 kms; 04 Quest, 227 kms; (3)04 Freestar, 103-240 kms; 04 Silhouette, 227 kms; 03 Venture, 104 kms; 03 Econoline, 436 kms; 03 Windstar, 191 kms; (2)03 Odyssey, 141-153 kms; 03 Ram, 70 kms; (2)03 Caravan, 163-210 kms; 02 Venture, 209 kms; 02 Windstar, 156 kms; 01 Caravan, 83 kms; 01 Odyssey, 278 kms; 01 Windstar, 143 kms; 00 Safari, 186 kms; 00 Montana, 189 kms; 00 Astro, 131 kms; 99 Safari, 158 kms; 99 Astro, 64 kms Light Trucks: 07 F150, 159 kms; 05 F350, 155 kms; 04 Dakota, 231 kms; 04 Titan, 159 kms; 03 Dakota, 122 kms; 02 F150, 292 kms; 02 F250, 273 kms; 99 F150, 340 kms Emergency Vehicles: (3)07 E450 Ambulance, 172-192 kms; 05 E450 Cubevan, 380 kms Heavy Equipment/Trucks: Case 480F Backhoe, 7750 hrs; 84 GMC Brigadier boom truck, 229 kms Trailers: Forest River utility; 77 Cargo Recreational Items: Polaris Ranger, 154 kms; 90 Polaris Indy snowmobile; 05 K Zinc Coyote camper Misc: Ford 340 Tractor, 65 hrs; Trackless MTF4; Trackless MT5T, 26 kms; JD 2355 mower; Farm King mower; rotary mowers; livestock gates 4-12 ft; Trackless sander/salter; Trackless B360 snow blade; Trackless weights; Kubota B1550 tractor, 3169 hrs; pressure washer; tile ooring; blade scraper; EZ-Go Golf cart; bush hog; Ferguson Tractor; (4) Toyota Forklifts NO CHILDREN ALLOWED List is subject to change. Website will be updated as new consignments are registered Buyers Premium Applies - Terms: Cash; Visa; MasterCard; Interac for $500.00 deposit & Cash, CertiďŹ ed Cheque, Interac for balance due on vehicle Viewing: October 17, 18 & 19, 2012 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Pictures and description of items available at www.icangroup.ca Click on Ottawa West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 7


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OPINION EDITORIAL

Watson’s casino wager the right call

D

espite the ethical hand-wringing that will inevitably accompany the mayor’s announcement last week that Ottawa will entertain any proposals from the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation to build a casino in the city, it is the right way to move forward on this issue. Casinos have been a reality in Ontario since 1994, in the capital region since 1996 and there have been slot machines at the Rideau Carleton Race-

way since 2000, meaning residents of this city have had plenty of opportunity to gamble for more than a decade. Getting squeamish about gambling at this point is a little naive – gaming arrived in Ontario nearly 20 years ago. What is at issue is not if Ottawa will allow a casino, but where. Currently, gamblers travel to Gatineau or to the racetrack to place their bets. In the near future, OLG will close the slots at Rideau

Carleton, meaning any money made from gambling will leave the city, as will the jobs associated with the operation of the slots. It would be irresponsible for either Mayor Jim Watson or council to let this happen. As Watson said last week, “every Ottawa dollar spent at the Gatineau casino is a dollar lost for Ottawa taxpayers – it is time that we repatriate that money.� What is at stake is whether Ottawa will allow jobs, gambling revenue and

associated tourist dollars to stay in our city or leave for good. The mayor indicated any revenue generated for the city by a casino will be spent on infrastructure renewal, job creation and economic development, all areas that will be moving to the forefront of the city’s agenda in the coming years. But gambling revenues won’t be the only way building a casino could benefit the city. As the federal govern-

ment sheds jobs, new sources of employment will be vital to Ottawa. If one of those sources of new jobs is a casino, so be it. It wouldn’t just be a casino, however, as other hospitality businesses would benefit from a casino’s presence, as would the more established Ottawa tourism industry. In order to ensure a casino is successful, the city will need to be brave enough to approve a location that ensures its success. This would likely involve a central location close to existing hotels and transit. To place it on the outskirts of the city would only deter tourists and serve

to limit the casino’s capacity to benefit the city, making the whole exercise a waste of public time and resources. Does all this mean the city and the province would not have a responsibility to educate residents about problem gambling or support those who have an addiction? Of course not - and it would only be appropriate that some portion of gambling revenue be directed towards expanding and improving those efforts. Gambling is nothing new to the Ottawa region and by firmly putting his support behind any future OLG casino proposal Watson has placed a good bet on the city’s future.

COLUMN

Life after the record store’s demise CHARLES GORDON Funny Town

T

hese days, when you lament for the past you are not looking all that far back. Change happens so quickly that the latest thing becomes the previous thing in no time flat. DVD players came about 15 years ago. Five years after that they became dominant and people stopped renting videotapes. Now it’s next to impossible to rent a DVD. That’s fast. And don’t bet the mortgage on the next thing lasting all that long either. Think of how long radio was dominant before television took over. Think of how long phonograph records lasted before CDs came along. Decades and decades. Now within a single decade we see new systems emerge, disappear and be replaced by others which then disappear too. If you feel too lazy to try to keep up, join the club. Last week Sam Sniderman died at 92. He was the founder of the record store Sam the Record Man. Located on Yonge Street in Toronto it was the place to go for fans of all kinds of music, especially the less popular kinds. Eventually there were more than 100 Sam’s across Canada, including several here. There was a pretty good one at Carlingwood and a really good one at Bayshore, with the jazz and classical music in a special glassed-in section of the store. Anywhere in Canada, if you wanted a wide selection of classical music or jazz or folk music, Sam’s was where you went. Where do you go now? You go online. And who is there? No one, except you. Some of the comment on the death of Sam has stressed that point - that there was always someone knowl-

edgeable around the store to consult if you wanted to know about the latest Miles Davis reissue. But, actually, there is no shortage of opinion available today, expert and otherwise. If you want to buy the latest Miles reissue you can scan the web and find out what everyone thinks about it. You can probably sample a track. Even though there is no one to talk to in a store, you can find what you need to know. So it’s not the absence of expertise that makes the passing of the record (later CD) store lamentable. Nor is it that there is less music available. There is more. Those of us who grew up desperately searching for jazz in small-town record stores and on the radio find ourselves facing riches beyond belief on the Internet. So why do we miss the record store? Why, for that matter, will we miss the book store. There is no shortage of ways to get books online and no shortage of books either. Maybe it’s because we feel we are at the mercy of technology. A record (or a CD) is a tangible thing. It is always there. Music on the Internet depends on your Internet connection; music on your computer depends on your hard drive not packing it in. It feels tenuous and temporary. Not to everyone, of course. It is not unusual to find people whose entire music collection is stored on a device smaller than, say, a DVD box. Their total embrace of the new technology is what has sparked the tremendous growth in online music and the death of the record store. To be fair, the record, or CD store, still exists. They are fewer and often drastically scaled-down. But a few stores, like Compact Music and CD Warehouse in Ottawa, are still fighting the good fight. In response to Sam Sniderman’s death, there has been comment on the feeling of community in the store and the loss of that community since it closed. There is, of course, a new community – it is online and it will take some getting used to. When Marshall McLuhan talked about the “global village,� he didn’t know the villagers would be solitary people at their computer screens.

Web Poll THIS WEEK’S POLL QUESTION

Where should a new casino be located in Ottawa?

A) The downtown core, close to tourists and visitors. B) The Byward Market area is perfect, with lots of foot traffic. C) Put it in a suburb where the land is cheap. D) What’s wrong with the Rideau

Carleton raceway location?

Editorial Policy The West Carleton Review EMC welcomes letters to the editor. Senders must include their full name, complete address and a contact phone number. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. We reserve the right to edit letters for space and content, both in print and online at www.yourottawaregion.com. To submit a letter to the editor, please email to theresa.fritz@metroland.com , fax to 613-224-2265 or mail to Ottawa West EMC, 8 McGonical St. West, Arnprioor, ON, K7S 1L8.

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8 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

s !DVERTISING RATES AND TERMS AND CONDITIONS ARE ACCORDING TO THE RATE CARD IN EFFECT AT TIME ADVERTISING PUBLISHED s 4HE ADVERTISER AGREES THAT THE PUBLISHER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF ERRORS IN ADVERTISEMENTS BEYOND THE AMOUNT CHARGED FOR THE SPACE ACTUALLY OCCUPIED BY THAT PORTION OF THE ADVERTISEMENT IN WHICH THE ERROR OCCURRED WHETHER SUCH ERROR IS DUE TO NEGLIGENCE OF ITS SERVANTS OR OTHERWISE AND THERE SHALL BE NO LIABILITY FOR NON INSERTION OF ANY ADVERTISEMENT BEYOND THE AMOUNT CHARGED FOR SUCH ADVERTISEMENT s 4HE ADVERTISER AGREES THAT THE COPYRIGHT OF ALL ADVERTISEMENTS PREPARED BY THE 0UBLISHER BE VESTED IN THE 0UBLISHER AND THAT THOSE ADVERTISEMENTS CANNOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT THE PERMISSION OF THE 0UBLISHER s 4HE 0UBLISHER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT REVISE OR REJECT ANY ADVERTISEMENT

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OPINION

Fall is a favourite season to abandon writing for photography Diana Fisher The Accidental Farmwife

On Friday, all the leaves on the farm were still green, pretty much. On Saturday it was a beautiful day and the Farmer decided to take his canoe out to the creek to water-test it. I watched as he drove the ATV out over the pasture, down the tractor lane and into the cornfield, his handmade cedar-strip canoe

bouncing along behind him on the trailer. The soft, refracted light of autumn was shining on the trees, and the leaves seemed to be changing colour before my eyes. I was supposed to be spending the morning writing, but who could resist? Fall is my favourite season. I grabbed my camera, pulled on my rubber boots and headed for the creek. I followed the winding path that the ani-

mals had made down the side of the pasture, followed the tree-lined tractor lane under a canopy of branches and stopped to take some photos of the cows. Mocha came over for her close-up. The calves stopped eating and turned to stare at

Stop new landfill at Carp Road On Sept. 14, Waste Management submitted its final Environmental Assessment report to the Ontario Ministry of the Environment (MOE). The community has until Nov. 2 to voice concerns and comments to the MOE. In 2006 and 2007 we had the obvious odour problem from the old landfill that motivated the community to come together and vigorously oppose WM’s proposal for a new landfill. With the old landfill now closed and the odour problem less obvious (because the old landfill is now closed) there is concern that many people are not aware that another mega dump is in the final stages of the assessment and approval process. Now is the time to voice massive public opposition – in the form of thousands of letters of concern and comment from the people in Stittsville, Kanata and West Carleton as well as greater Ottawa. Without such community comment, WM claiming there is little opposition to their proposal. We know this is not true. By far the majority of people we speak to

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are opposed to the project. By making our voices heard now, collectively but also as individuals and families, the new dump can be stopped. Now is the time to let Ontario’s Minister of the Environment know that you oppose a new mega-dump on Carp Road. If you have written a letter or email, please take the time to write one more. If you haven’t written a letter, make this your contribution to the cause and have all your family members do the same. Tell your neighbours. The deadline to make comment is Nov. 2. Together, we can stop a new mountain of garbage from being built in our community. It has been done before. For more information on how you can make your concerns known to the Government of Ontario, go to nodump.ca. To all of those who have supported our efforts over the past six years to stop this project we are sincerely thankful for your encouragement. It’s what keeps us going. Olivia Nixon Nodump.ca

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 9


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NEWS

The unusual lives of stinging insects EMC lifestyle – When it comes to the weird and unusual, Nature is replete with examples. There are insects that look like twigs and caterpillars that resemble bird droppings. There are snakes that play dead and flies that give giftwrapped presents. Wasps are common inhabitants of our area. We know them well for several reasons. They inject powerful venom into our skin with hypodermic stingers. Some construct large paper nests that hang from trees and buildings. And in early fall they are present in annoying numbers. Bald-faced Hornets are the largest of the social wasps – wasps that live in organized colonies. Unlike most wasps that construct hives underground, hornets build theirs aboveground. Aerial Yellowjackets also hang their hives from trees and buildings, but these insects are yellow and black, not black and white.

A hive consists of a paper exterior fabricated from masticated wood. The interior houses chandelierlike layers of combs, each layer larger and containing more cells (that hold eggs and larvae) than the one above. A hive is a one-year wonder, never used again in Michael Runtz future years. Nature’s Way The hive’s use relates to the unusual life history of its makers. In spring, a mated queen that survived the winter initiates a colony. She creates a small hive that contains only a few cells. One egg, fertilized with sperm stored overwinter, is laid in each cell and the ensuing larvae are fed by the queen. When these mature, they take

over all hive responsibilities except for laying eggs, which remains the sole duty of the queen. A colony grows larger over the summer, with up to 400 workers present by early fall, which is why we see so many more wasps and hornets at this time. The hive also grows physically larger with each new generation. By the fall, the queen runs out of stored sperm and lays unfertilized eggs, which, remarkably, hatch into males. Until that time only fertilized eggs were laid and those produced females, resulting in an allfemale colony! In late summer the queen places a few fertilized eggs in larger chambers. These produce new queens, which leave the hive to mate with males from other colonies. It is those mated queens that survive the winter and start new colonies in the spring. All old queens and workers die when sub-zero temperatures turn their internal liquid into ice.

Recently, Karen Thompson from Almonte observed and photographed Bald-faced Hornets carrying large white objects out of a hive. She brought one to me and it turned out to be a larva. She showed me the hive and I also took photographs of this fascinating behaviour. Wasps and hornets perform hive maintenance and it may be that dead larvae were being removed. In fall when food becomes scarce, workers at hives are known to steal food from incoming caregivers, with larvae starving as a result. Whether that was happening in Karen’s colony or some other strange behaviour was taking place (sometimes live larvae are inexplicably removed), we will never know. Many mysteries concerning common local animals remain to be solved! The Nature Number is 613-3872503; email is mruntz@start.ca.

A perfect autumn day for a paddle at the farm wife’s place Continued from page 9

I sat down on the edge of a big old tractor tire to empty my boot just as the Farmer rounded the bend. He has a knack for showing up just as I’m doing something stupid. I took a few shots of my husband proudly paddling his canoe in the sunshine. It really is a beautiful boat. I managed to climb in without tipping us over and we paddled up the creek. Passing through a murky spot, we scattered a school of mud

pout. As the water cleared again we came across a few mounds of branches and noticed a huge beaver sunning himself. He submitted to a photo session before sliding silently into the water. The lack of rain hadn’t completely dried up the creek but it was very shallow. I acted as lookout as we navigated our way through boulders and the bedrock bridge that the deer use for crossing. It really was the perfect day for a paddle. But after about twenty minutes, my crushed legs were

OVER

pins and needles. We turned around and headed for home. Saturday evening we were invited to the Metcalfe Fair by our friends Lynda Parke and Stan Carruthers. Stan is something of a legend in the horsing community in this area. He was featured in the book “Horse of a Lifetime” and he just received the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee award for his work with 4-H and the Clydesdale Association. We were treated to a behind-the-scenes look at the work that goes into preparing

the animals for competition, the cows and horses standing stock still for a bath and grooming. As I sat in the lounge for the potential buyers of the 4-H animals, I watched the kids working the crowd. We met the little girl who became famous last year for bursting into tears as she showed her prize lamb, realizing that it was being sent to slaughter. The woman who bought her lamb last year was so touched she gave the animal back to the little girl to take home. I

wanted to buy her little black ewe lamb this year, and was prepared to pay $4 a pound for it, which was pretty much the minimum (but the most we high-rollers can afford). The 100-pound lamb was sold to the same woman again this year, for $12 a pound. It was impressive to see the kids working so comfortably and confidently with their animals. In some cases, young women were leading 1200-pound steers into the ring for auction. It was some-

what emotional to watch, seeing how they cared for these animals that would be sold for meat. But alas, that is the farming life. At the end of the evening I realized I hadn’t seen a single young person with a cell phone. They had more important things on their mind. As I looked out my window Sunday morning, I saw orange leaves covering the ground under our first naked tree. Hello fall. I love you.

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Your Community Newspaper

NEWS

HÊlène Campbell teams with Facebook for organ donor initiative steph.willems@metroland.com

EMC news - Ottawa’s HĂŠlène Campbell brought her message of organ donation awareness to a new venue on Sept. 17, but this time she was launching an even larger initiative - on Facebook. The double lung transplant recipient was joined at the Parliamentary Press Gallery

by Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq and Jordan Banks, managing director for Facebook Canada, in announcing a new initiative that allows Facebook users to state their organ donor status on their Facebook profile page. The aim of the initiative, which has already been launched in the United States and Britain, is to spread awareness of the need for donors

City to make enough money?

and encourage those who haven’t signed up to consider becoming donors. The tool not only allows users to post their donor status, it also directs Facebook users to provincial or territorial websites where they can sign up. “We believe that simply telling people you care about that you’re a donor will play an important role in encouraging others to become donors,� said Banks. “More organ donors means more lives saved.� The tool can be accessed through the “life event� category of a user’s Facebook timeline and the subcategory to click on is “health and wellness.�

Campbell, who received her new set of donor lungs during an April 6 operation, spoke about the important role social media plays in today’s society. “I’m so thrilled that we are able to announce this today,� she said. “(Facebook) is a perfect platform to let your family and friends know about the decision you’ve made.� Campbell said the tool might also encourage people to seek out the often-surprising statistics surrounding organ donation, such as the fact that a single donor can save as many as eight lives. Campbell said she still thinks every day about the donor who saved her life

and the decision made by the family who made her new lease on life possible – a life that is slowly getting back to normal. “My mom knows that I can clean again,� she said, adding she can now ride a bike again, along with other outdoor pursuits. Aglukkaq said she is always encouraged when she sees individuals and the private sector working together to “help make a difference in the health of (Canadians).� So far, 275,000 Facebook users have registered their intent to become an organ donor.

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Steph Willems

Continued from page 5

For sites that don’t qualify under the guidelines, an advertiser can apply for a minor variance to get an exemption for a digital billboard. That would also cost $2,500 on top of the permit. OrlĂŠans Coun. Bob Monette was concerned that the city won’t be making enough money from digital billboards. “My only concern is that we’re not getting enough bang for our buck,â€? Monette said. “We’re almost breaking even, we should be doing better than breaking even.â€? Until now, the only types of digital signs allowed were digital scrolling text as part of “message centreâ€? signs and video signs for drive-through restaurants. Digital signs are considered more efficient because they can display a greater number of messages, so they are more cost-effective; there is a greater supply of advertising, making it more affordable to small businesses; and they are easier and less expensive to maintain, according to a city report.

Exercise group starts in Kinburn EMC sports - If you’re looking for a starting point for your active life, “Fit-tastics� (formally called the “West Carleton Exercise Group�) and the Kinburn Indoor Walking Club may be just for you. Fit-tastics is low impact chair/standing exercise program that is held at the West Carleton Community Complex (5670 Carp Road) every Thursday from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. The first session has begun, but participants are welcomed throughout the year. Another great program, the Kinburn Indoor Walking Club, will be starting again on September 18 at the Kinburn Community Centre at 3045 Kinburn Side Road, every Tuesday from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Both programs are free. If you would like more information on either of these programs, contact Kim Ou, Public Health Nurse, at kim.ou@ottawa.ca or at 613-580-6744 ext. 26234.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 11


NEWS

Your Community Newspaper

The Distinguished Service Award at this year’s Carp Fair went to the West Carleton Platoon of the Ottawa Fire Service. The volunteer firefighters saved the fair office from fire last winter, contained brush fires in July, and participate in and around the fairgrounds.

DEREK DUNN/METROLAND

Goodbye, Fair Paul Sullivan is the 2012 winner of the Agricultural Service Diploma awarded each Carp Fair to recipients who have made a valuable contribution to one or more aspects of the agricultural life. Sullivan has spent many years judging field crops, and working with local farmers, 4H and junior farmers throughout the years.

Lauren and Sean Enright of Enright Farms in Douglas won supreme female overall breeds in the cow-calf pairing.

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Mayor Jim Watson waves to the 149th Carp Fair crowd during the ceremonial parade on Sept. 23. Get ready for next year. The 150th is promising to be the most spectacular ever.

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Your Community Newspaper

NEWS

PHOTOS BY THERESA FRITZ/ METROLAND.

Rock on Legendary 1970s rockers Cheap Trick stormed back to Ottawa with a performance at the 149th Carp Fair Sept. 21. While the concert attracted an enthusiastic crowd, the show was far from a sellout. Seen performing are (from top left) vocalist/guitarist Robin Zander, lead guitarist Rick Nielson and. bassist Tom Petersson The band performed their biggest hits including “Surrender”, “I Want You to Want Me.”

THERESA FRITZ/METROLAND

A fun ride While agriculture and homecraft took centre stage at last month’s 149th Carp Fair, Robertson Amusements also offered a number of rides for the young and the young at heart to enjoy. Here, Woodlawn native Scott Robinson and his son Shane enjoy a trip down the slide.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 13


COMMUNITY

Your Community Newspaper

Huntley’s hurray to Terry Fox Huntley Centennial had almost 100 per cent participation in last week’s Terry Fox Run, including thumb’s up little man Carlito Skaf on the stairs. Organizer Kevin Ready, a teacher at the Carp school, said participation is just as important as how much money is raised, because it is about promoting a healthy lifestyle, too. Seeming to agree with him is Weston Zander and Kate McGrath, both in Grade 5. The parent council was out, offering drinks to the runners: co-chair Jo-Anne Graham, Sarah Smith and her daughter Laura, along with Claire Atherfold, and Fran Brown. The parent council, including co-chair Dan Oliver, is keen to see more members getting involved in the school community. Details can be found at huntleycentennialps. ocdsb.ca. DEREK DUNN/METROLAND

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95 Acre hobby farm, 10 min west of Arnprior on Goshen Rd. with access to HWY 17. Log home with many upgrades. Lrg living rm, lots of room for expansion, log barns with standing stalls, open pasture & tillable, plus bush at rear. MLS 844192 $350,000

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Great family home in newer subdivision, open concept design washed oak kitchen with built in dishwasher. Large bright dining room with access to large back yard, wrap around deck, salt water above ground pool. Basement is framed and has rough in for future bath and awaits your finishing touch.

3 Bedroom hi-ranch fully ďŹ nished on both levels, hardwood oors in living room and formal dining room. Large den and games room area easily converted to a 4th bedroom. Large back yard deck and patio areas and above ground pool. Oversized paved driveway, nicely landscaped.

MLS 828294 $285,500

MLS 841209 $269,000

3 Bedroom home with attached addition was a former general store / post ofďŹ ce and has walk in cooler, ideal for in home business, 2 car detached garage work-shop, gas ďŹ replace in living room, part of basement has handy walk-out access to outside. MLS 832720 $174,900

Arnprior 5 unit apartment building in central location, good sized units has gas ďŹ replaces. Tenants pay hydro and heating, up to date gas furnace provides heat to common areas and unit #1 and two ducts in unit #2 coin laundry on lower level. MLS 830235 $475,000

3 Bedroom home in Braeside Village within 4 minutes of Arnprior and 30 minutes of Ottawa. Home in need of interior updating, great investment opportunity, good sized yard.

3 Bedroom historical charm in the “Glebe� of Arnprior, sought-after neighbourhood, walk to all schools, town park and swimming in Ottawa River, boat launch and marina, hospital, churches and downtown. Fully fenced deep lot offers privacy, large kitchen with patio doors to backyard patio area.

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MLS 834144 $234,900

MLS 844057 $129,900

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 15


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Log bungalow on 2 acres on the golf course. Only 259,900 MLS #832906

3rd level Edey St $134,900 MLS #837387

Exceptional home in the prestigious neighbourhood of Horton Heights! Call Jenn For Details asking $550,000 MLS #843934

LARGER THAN IT APPEARS!

NEW LISTING

STARTING OUT?

ATTENTION FAMILIES!

CUSTOM BUNGALOW

Mike & Donna Defalco Sales Rep/Broker 613-623-2602

4 bedrooms, 3 levels, 3 baths, c/air, gas, great home business layout, MLS# 846927, $314,900. Call the Defalcos 613 623-2602

Spacious 3+1 bedroom bungalow, 2 baths. Newer furnace, c/air, roof shingles and ooring. MLS # 844539 $234,900. Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

Single home offering numerous upgrades, 2 baths, 2 car garage, little yard work for those who are too busy. MLS#840148 $189,900 Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

Dochart estates subdivision raised ranch for the growing family. Attractive inground pool, numerous upgrades, MLS# 838193 $359,900 Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

Deceivingly spacious custom bungalow. No neighbours behind, almost new without the mess and stress! MLS#841042 $324,900 Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

CHARACTER

HOBBY FARM!

LARGE PROPERTY

WONDERING THE VALUE OF YOUR HOME OR PROPERTY? CALL DONNA & MIKE DEFALCO, WE WILL ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS AND ADDRESS YOUR CONCERNS 613-623-2602

LARGE TOWN LOT

LAND UĂŠ 1 ĂŠ "/ĂŠ ĂŠ*, -/ "1-ĂŠ SUBDIVISION IN MCNAB TOWNSHIP $125,000

329A Church Farm rd. Escape the crowds! Year round home, open concept kit/din/ liv areaw/wall-to-wall windows, overlooking lake, 195 ft frontage. Oversized garage w/workshop plus upper sleeping loft & bath. MLS #827087 $465,000

Character & charm in this 4 bedroom, 2 bath beauty. Wood and ceramic oors, main oor den, great home business set up. MLS#832345 $189,900 Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

Attractive 4 bedroom, 3 baths family home. Privacey, barn, newer septic,detached workshop/garage 5.56 acres MLS #842583 Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

Huge fenced town property, oversized single garage, 2 full levels, excellent family home. Walk to ammenities. MLS#838911 $235,000 Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

$223,000 One of the 3 largest units in the complex, 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, ďŹ nished basement, large yard with pool , gazebo and shed. Lovely ďŹ replace in family room, also room for another bedroom and a roughed in bathroom. MLS #847201

$224,900

NEW LISTING $49,900 Located in the heart of town this 2 +1 bedroom home is ready for you. Newer updates includes windows, roof and ooring. Finished lower level with ďŹ replace, bedroom and bathroom. Within walking distance to all amenities, also features a single-car garage and a decent yard. MLS #840909

16 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

Pretty village setting, amazingly large town lot, charming 3 bedroom 2 bath home, kids walk to arena, ball diamonds, school MLS#841694 $229,900. Call the Defalcos 613-623-2602

SOLD

NEW LISTING

Cheryl Richardson-Burnie Broker 613-623-9222

UĂŠĂˆĂŠ , -ĂŠ ĂŠ ĂŠ/"7 - *ĂŠ$119,900

Madawaska River at Burnstown. Lot located on Stacey Lane small subdivision of lovely newer homes, water access ; Call to start building your dream home MLS #847209

UĂŠ // / " ĂŠ 1- --ĂŠ"7 ,-tĂŠ "" ĂŠ FOR THAT LOCATION TO OPEN UP YOUR BUSINESS OR RELOCATE. 12.12 ACRES MCNAB TOWNSHIP OFFERED AT $199,900 CALL THE DEFALCOS 613-623-2602

$195,000 Lovely 2 bedroom row unit in Renfrew only 1 block away from the Dairy Queen. Comes with all appliances, and it is in move-in condition. Basement is ready to be ďŹ nished. Nice deck off the kitchen for those morning coffees. MLS #845202

Too late listed and Sold the same week MLS #845827 $329.900

$209,000

$279,900 Look no longer here is your home and shop all together. Large detached garage/ workshop is suitable for the mechanic or carpenter. Home is ready for occupancy 2 bedrooms, livingroom mainoor laundry and an adorable eat-in kitchen with a wood stove. Located in White Lake, recreation on your doorstep. MLS #844821

Hi ranch 5 bdrm home, excellent condition, wrap around deck, single-car garage, good size yard. Avail. immediately, close to all amenities. With appliances MLS #837620


R0011660783 R0011218971

REAL ESTATE

John O’Neill Sales Representative

1004.R0011660969

Tillie Bastien

BUS: 613-270-8200 RES: 613-832-2503 joneill@royallepage.ca

Sales Rep.

613.832.2079 613.612.2480

613.270.8200

tillie@the-bastiens.com

www.the-bastiens.com

558 Melbourne, Westboro $789,900

3681 Vaughan Side Rd., Carp Original log home totally renovated & updated situated on 23 acres. Eat in kitchen, formal dining room and lvg rm, fully finished basement. 8’ wrap around covered porch. 3 baths, 3 bedrms, c/air, c/vac. Vaulted ceiling in master bdrm. Separate 18 x 16 log cabin with loft, electricity and wood stove. Inground pool. MLS#847006

Front semi for sale. Beautiful open concept approx 1900 sq ft, roof top patio. 3 bedrooms. MLS#841528

4544 Woodkilton Rd., Woodlawn Open concept bungalow on 1/2 acre lot. 2 sided gas fireplace in lvg rm/family rm; hardwood thruout. No basement but lots of storage. Attached 2 car garage. Nicely landscaped lot. Move in condition!! MLS#843349

$264,900

$489,900

2781 Bellamy Rd, White Lake $344,900 Over 2 treed acres, dbl attached garage plus 24x26 ft detached garage. Several Upgrades. MLS#837346 103 Falcon Brook Rd., Carp Large 4 bdrm, 3 bath bungalow in an excellent location. Excellent family home, spacious rooms thruout, eat in kitchen, formal dng room, lge master with ensuite. Unfinished basement. Above ground pool with large private rear yard. Excellent condition and location. MLS#847461

Proudly serving your community for over 30 years For all your Residential, Recreational & Investment Real Estate

1417 Vances Side Rd., Woodlawn - Well maintained 2 bdrm bungalow on a 1.94 acre lot. Larger than it looks, this home has all laminate flooring, large family/living room, 2 large bedrooms, wrap around enclosed porch. Lots of storage buildings/barns. Paved driveway. Outdoor wood furnace with propane back up. MLS# 834648

$239,900

$469,900

Terry Stavenow Broker

613-623-4284

t.stavenow@bell.net

New Home Home Warranty New

Bungalow

New Price $239,900

3 or 4 Br. Bungalow in sought after subdivision, very upscale home $374,500 base price, customers colors and further upgrades available call Terry for more details

Retiring or starting out, this newly renovated Bungalow will appeal to you, All newer windows and doors, kitchen updated, new flooring and fresh paint, lower level family room and bedroom private back yard and very economical taxes and heating. Asking $205,900

331 Caruso St, Arnprior - Affordable 4 Br. with New Kt. Gleaming Hardwood Floors , Fireplace, large family Rm, separate Dr. and fresh paint, easy access to highway 17 Call Terry. Asking $239,900. MUST SELL!!!

Ottawa Valley Homes...Exclusive

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 809903

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 839111

New Listing

Ottawa River Access

$299,000

Good Starter or Retirement Home 2 Bedrooms, modern Kt, many upgrades and large back yard with gardens and fountain, zoned for home business located near downtown call for all the details. Asking $245,500.

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 844492

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 844492

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 825247

- 50 ACRES BEAUTIFUL BUSH LOT EXCLUSIVE $149,500

69 Woodridge Crt., Arnprior - Split level home on 2+ acre treed lot. Formal lvg rm/dng rm; eat in kitchen with access to rear deck and 16 x 32 inground pool. Family room off kitchen. 3 bedrooms, 4 pc main bath, 5 pc ensuite. Unspoiled basement with 12’ ceilings. Excellent family home in very family oriented neighborhood. MLS# 834815

$369,900

R0011660842-1004

Ottawa River beach and boating privileges only a short walk away,3 Br. upgraded home fully finished lower level,3 bathrooms, private back yard, oversized heated garage for any home business or hobby call for all the details.

Start Packing... You’re Moving!

Brokerage. Independently Owned and Operated

$264,900

62 Dewar Ave., Braeside Seasonal home close to Rhoddy’s Bay. 2 bdrm, 1 bath open concept home. Well maintained property, 2 covered porches, metal roof, holding tank, drilled well. Available immediately. Short walk to beach at Rhoddy’s Bay.

$89,900

MLS#839559

www.charlotteleitch.com

WATERFRONT OTTAWA RIVER

UNIQUE HERITAGE

EDGE OF TOWN

Bright open concept main floor. Wall of windows with beautiful river views. 2 bedrm plus den on main level. Rec rm and two additional bedrms on walk-out lower level. Quality ICF construction. with warm radiant floor heat. Easy commute...just 25 minutes to Kanata. MLS #831546 $749,900

Unique property on just over 2 acres. On the edge of town. Renovated century home with addition. Oversized double garage is heated and a/c. Good tilled acreage with small barn and chicken coop. This home is perfect for a large family with the possiblity of 5 bedrooms. Also great for an in-home business or market garden. Flex possession. MLS#827288 $319,900

Super value in this 3 bedrm hi ranch located on the edge of town (McNab-Braeside). Fully finished rec room plus office. Single garage with inside entry. New septic. MLS#837673 $229,900

WHITE LAKE

UNIQUE PROPERTY

CENTENNIAL LAKE

RHODDY’S BAY

White Lake single on an amazing private lot. Oversized double garage. Family room additoni n 1986. Eat in country kitchen. Weatherall screened porch MLS#832852 $219,900

Beautifully renovated heritage home on large lot (100 X 363). New kitchen with stainless steel appliances. Large living room with stone fireplace. Complete office, shop and many outbuildings. MLS # 840592 $599,900

Enjoy 4 seasons with baseboard heat and wood stove. Wood stove. Turn key...includes many furnishings. Move right in and enjoy the rest of the summer! MLS#823952 $274,900

Beautiful waterfront home on the Ottawa River. Walkout basement with fully finished rec room. ½ bath could be turned into full bath. Cathedral Ceilings, open concept. Everything you are looking for! MLS#837334 $559,900

Direct: 613.864.6910 EXPORER REALTY INC.

3789 Loggers Way, Kinburn All brick 3 storey on a corner lot. 4 bedroom 2 bath home with lots of upgrades - kitchen, septic, roof, windows, wiring. Large rooms, lots of storage, 3rd floor bedroom. Detached garage/workshop; storage shed. Great location. Windows 2007, Furnace 2009, Roof 2009, Electrical 2010. MLS# 846841

New Price

Excellent country home 3 Br plus Den, spacious upgraded Kt. with pleasant view, new decks and heated pool detached 2 car garage and more call for all the details.

- OTTAWA RIVER BUILDING LOT 1.2 ACRES ASKING $184,900

673 Crooked Side Rd., Ashton - Updated bungalow on 2+ acre private lot. Open concept main floor, hardwood and tile, finished basement with outside access. Nearly new metal roof, maintenance free exterior, 3 storage sheds, generator hook up. MLS#845950

Office: 613.622.7759

charlotte.leitch@century21.ca R0011633218

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 17


1004.R0011663068

REAL ESTATE OPEN HOUSE GUIDE Prime Valley

FOR SALE BY OWNER Monday Oct 8 2-4pm

31 Smolkin Street, Arnprior

Sunday Oct 14 1-3pm Matthew Macadam

Realty Ltd.

Brokerage

Saturday Oct 6 2-4pm Pat Forrest

250 Wade Ave, Renfrew For more information on how you can get your listing in this Open House feature please contact:

Leslie Osborne at 613.623.6571

62 Short Road, Arnprior

1004.R0011657300

Happy Thanks Giving!

Prime Valley Pat Forrest

Realty Ltd.

Brokerage OfďŹ ce 613-432-9123 Direct 613-433-6569 Ottawa 613-791-8123 pat@primevalleyrealty.com www.PrimeValleyRealty.com

Broker of Record

1105 Goshen Rd. Renfrew ON, K7V 3Z4

Dedicated, Professional, Experienced R0011658258

EN E OP US HO

90 ES R AC

s .EWLY #ONSTRUCTED )NVENTORY (OMES s (OMES 5NDER #ONSTRUCTION WILL lNISH TO 9OUR 3PEC S s 6ACANT ,OTS 0URCHASE 9OUR /WN 7E 7ILL -ANAGE 9OUR 0ERSONAL #ONSTRUCTION

250 WADE AVE.

1117 GOSHEN RD

October 6th, Saturday 2 - 4pm. 3+1 bed/1.5 bath, all-brick bungalow in desired neighbourhood on large lot. With eat-in kitchen, updated main floor bathroom, rec-room and a hobby room too. Wood play structure also included. MLS# 846073 $217,900

Many great locations to build, approx. 25 acres of hayďŹ elds, approx. 40 acres of good bush, approx. 10 acres of ponds/ creeks, approx. 15 acres of pasture MLS# 844924 $179,900

1105 GOSHEN RD

1457 STORYLAND RD

4 bedroom, 2 bathroom hobby farm, new kitchen & baths, stalls, paddocks, and more on 8.5 acres. Very picturesque homestead with great curb appeal. MLS#830202 $379,900

Commercial building on 1.78 aces. Propane radiant overhead heating, well & septic, air compressor, 2 bay garage, display area, bathroom & ofďŹ ce. Prime location for a boat franchise, used car lot, car wash, and many other options to use this well situated building. Located at a high trafďŹ c intersection of Chenaux and Storyland Roads. MLS # 840856 $285,000 (plus HST).

7 24 RES AC

LITTLE TIMBER TRAIL Enjoy the rest of summer on your own piece of waterfront on the Madawaska River. 155ft of waterfront and 283 ft deep. Very private - includes ďŹ repit, shed and brand new outhouse. No HST on this purchase! MLS 843118 $69,900

4O 'ET 4HERE FROM /TTAWA (IGHWAY 7EST MINUTES WEST OF 3COTIABANK 0LACE s %XIT +INBURN 3IDE 2D TO /LD (IGHWAY s ,EFT FOR MILES THEN 2IGHT ON 'ALETTA 3IDE 2D FOR MILES s ,EFT ON ,OGGERS 7AY FOR ž A MILE &ROM !RNPRIOR MINUTES s /LD (IGHWAY %AST TO 'ALETTA 3IDE 2D FOR MILES THEN FOLLOW THE ABOVE DIRECTIONS

434 GOSHEN ROAD Lots of outbuildings. Easy access to Hwy 17, good for commuters. Farm the land yourself or rent it out - includes tile-drained hayďŹ elds, trails, a creek, and loads of hardwood & softwood acres. MLS 843482 $399,900

18 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

VYDON ACRES Estate Properties

613-622-7931

More information or e-mail us: info@kingdonholdings.com www.kingdonholdings.com

R0011548360


SPORTS

Your Community Newspaper

Mixed pairs winners The Galetta team of John Bennett, skip, and Jennifer Dugal, lead, won the Sadler-Waterside Mixed Pairs Tournament at Galetta Bowls. Sadler was one of the original and founding members of Galetta Bowls and Waterside Retirement Complex is a new sponsor of this tournament held annually at Galetta Bowls.

THE KANATA SENIORS COUNCIL Presents its

RETIREMENT LIVING FAIR 2012 ON: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14TH 2:00PM to 4:00P.M AT: THE MLACAK CENTRE , 2500 CAMPEAU DRIVE IN: HALLS A,B,C&D Thirty-plus booths showcasing services and organizations helpful and of interest to: Elmdale Lawn Bowling Club hosted its annual Funtastic Bowls Tournament on Sept. 9. Mixed teams of four played six different competitions during the course of the day: mixed pairs, triples, singles, men’s pairs, women’s pairs and mixed fours. Galetta Bowls was represented on the winning team: Grant Fletcher from Galetta Bowls skipped his team of Joelle Russell from Elmdale Lawn Bowling Club (Ottawa) and Gerry Laporte and Alice Keiwan from Nepean Lawn Bowling Club (Ottawa). This is the third year in a row this powerful team has won this unique tournament.

West Ottawa’s older adult community Free refreshments: free parking: wheelchair accessible.

1004.R0011658805

Public Information Sessions: Changing the zoning for land use in your Rural Village For more than a year, City staff have been talking with rural citizens about land use and zoning in preparation for the 2013 OfďŹ cial Plan review. This work is now complete and the next step is to explain how the new land use policies will change the City of Ottawa Zoning By-law as it applies to villages. The staff presentation will begin at 7 p.m.

Green Bin Tip

#17

The answer is right under your nose! Instead of using a bag, you can use this newspaper to line your kitchen catcher and reduce odours.

Step 1:

Fitzroy Harbour, Galetta, Dunrobin, Kinburn, Carp and Constance Bay

Fold 4 or 5 newspaper pages in half horizontally and fold the bottom corners to the centre.

-ONDAY /CTOBER s TO P M West Carleton Community Complex, 5670 Carp Road

Step 2:

Participants at the 2011 meetings may be interested to see how residents’ concerns and ideas have been made part of the Village plans for the future and how the zoning by-law will be changed. The changes may affect some of the zoning designations in your village. What happens next? A zoning by-law amendment report is scheduled to go to the Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee (ARAC) in January 2013. The report will be available on ottawa.ca one week before the ARAC meeting.

Fold down the top edges.

Step 3:

Open it and slide it into your kitchen catcher.

Carol Ruddy, MCIP RPP Planning and Growth Management Department, City of Ottawa 110 Laurier Avenue West, 4th Floor, Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1 613-580-2424, ext. 28457 Fax: 613-560-2459 E-mail: plan@ottawa.ca

AD # 2012-01-8020-17421

Check out the Organic Origami video:

R0011657852-1004

Get the most out of your green bin by putting the most into your green bin. For more tips, visit ottawa.ca.

2012027023-02

If you are unable to attend the meeting, please send your comments, questions or concerns to:

R0011652946-1004

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 19


SPORTS

Your Community Newspaper

Bowlers ride out season Some of the woman from Galetta Bowls closed out their season with a super hour-long horseback ride through the picturesque spread of the Pinto Valley Ranch. Tracey Jardine and Ernie Smith of Pinto Valley Ranch expertly led the girls through their paces. The day was finished off with lunch at Step UP Ruby’s restaurant. A great way to finish off the season. From left are Elaine Patterson, Karen Wilson, Marilyn Nixon, Ernie Smith (Pinto Valley), Mona (the horse), Lorraine Wright, Tracey Jardine (Pinto Valley) and Marilyn Dillane. SUBMITTED

R0011658221

Church Services “Becoming Whole Through the Power of Jesus�

613-836-4756 www.gcuc.ca

Children's Church

St. Patrick’s FallowďŹ eld Roman Catholic Church

Pastor: Ken Roth Chapel Ridge Free Methodist Church 5660 Flewellyn Road, Stittsville 613-831-1024 email: office@chapelridge.ca www.chapelridge.ca

0LQLVWHUV 5HY 6WpSKDQH 9HUPHWWH %HY %XFNLQJKDP :H DUH ´$ &KXUFK )DPLO\ *URZLQJ ,Q )DLWK 5HDFKLQJ 2XW ,Q /RYH¾

&RPH DQG MRLQ XV ZZZ NXF FD

Saturday 5:00pm Sunday 9:00am & 11:00am

R0011622328

KANATA BAPTIST CHURCH

Sunday 10:00 A.M. Worship Service Nursery provided

BRIDLEWOOD BIBLE CHAPEL

R0011646078_1004

G%%&&(%(,.'

CHRIS BRAY CONCERT Award Winning Singer, Songwriter and Worship Leader October 12th, 2012 at 7:00pm

R0011292290

All ages and denominations welcome!

1489 Shea Road, (corner of Abbott) Stittsville, Ontario K2S 0G8

2470 Huntley Road

Preaching the Doctrines of Grace

Sunday Worship 10:30 am

Office 613-592-1546 www.christrisen.com

Sunday and weekday Bible studies see our website for times and locations

www.gracebaptistottawa.com

G%%&&*.'&%%#%.%+

Sunday Worship Service 10:30am. Sunday School 9:15am. Adult Bible Class 9:30am. Rev. Louis Natzke, Pastor Rev. Lawrence Eifert, Pastor Emeritus

Parish ofďŹ ce - 613-836-8881 Fax - 613-836-8806

ST. ISIDORE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH 1135 March Rd., Kanata, ON. K2K 1X7 Pastor: Rev. M.M. Virgil Amirthakumar

Mass: Saturday at 5:00 pm Sunday at 9:00 and 11:00 am Telephone: (613) 592-1961 E-mail: ofďŹ ce@stisidorekanata.com

R0011582525

11:00am Worship Service with Nursery & Children’s Ministry 6:15pm Evening Service Rev. Colin N. McKenzie, Sr. Pastor Rev. Carlo De Vito, Pastor of Family Ministries email: fellowshipbaptistchurch@bellnet.ca www.kanatafellowship.com

Sunday Eucharist .( 0 . # +$,-

8:00 am - Said ' $ 9:15 am - Choral Music, Sunday School & Nursery ' #)+ & .,$ .( 0 #))& .+,!+0 ' + $,! .,$ .( 0 #))& .+,!+0 11:00 am - Praise Music, Sunday School & Nursery

Come Listen to THE STORY OF JESUS

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Nursery, Children & Youth Programs, Small Groups OfďŹ ce: 613-836-2606 Web: www.cbcstittsville.com Email us at: cbcinfo@cbcstittsville.com Direction for life's crossroads

1 Goulbourn, Stittsville

Info: bible20120@hotmail.ca Or call: 613-371-2922

R0011636869

R0011292096

Sunday at 4:00pm During September & October

Sunday Services at 9:00 & 10:45 am

WELCOME to our Church St. Paul’s United Church, Carp Service and Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Rev. Karen Boivin 613-839-2155 www.stpauls-dunrobin.ca stpaulsunitedcarp@sympatico.ca

" " " " "

St. Thomas Anglican Church

" & " " " ,+." " '" "

Growing, Serving, Celebrating

Sunday Sunday 9:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery, Sunday School 11:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery Pastor Shaun Seaman Minister of Discipleship & Youth: Meghan Brown Saavedra Pastor Shaun Seaman

“Welcome to all seeking spiritual refreshment� Sunday Worship 8:30am and 10:30am

" & " " " +.#-"! " " '" "

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Nursery, Sunday School, Junior & Senior Youth Groups Open Table Dinner 3rd Saturday of the month at 5pm The Reverend Jane McCaig 1619 Stittsville Main Street 613-836-5741 email: stthoms@magma.ca www.stthomasstittsville.ca

Please join us at 110 McCurdy Drive, 836-1429, www.trinitykanata.ca

The Redeemed Christian Church of God

City of David

R0011650613-1004

R0011629174

“Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today, and forever�-Heb.13:8

R0011379445

20 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

3760 Carp Road Carp, ON

R0011619736

PASTOR STEVE STEWART

1600 Stittsville Main Street, Stittsville

" & " " ***$" " " "

R0011651387

Sunday 10:00am Bible Classes for adults and children

We are a welcoming and friendly community that invites you to come and worship with us in our new church R0011292264

1078 Klondike Road, Kanata 613-591-3246 “A Church Rooted in Christ and Fruitful�

R0011582552

R0011529879

FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH

!*,(.%+(-#-#"

Church of Ottawa

85 Leacock Drive, Kanata

SUNDAY MASS TIMES Saturday: 5:00 pm Sunday: 9:00 am & 10:30 am Monsignor Joseph Muldoon, Pastor

A New Testament Church 465 Eagleson Road (also entrance off Palomino) 11 am Family Bible Hour (Nursery Available) Sunday School 6:30 pm Evening Bible Hour www.bridlewoodbiblechapel.ca 613-591-8514

Grace Baptist

Christ Risen Lutheran Church

HOLY SPIRIT CATHOLIC PARISH A Welcoming Community

www.holyspiritparish.ca

2 Stonehaven Dr. at Eagleson Road

R0011292305

www.kbc.ca

613-591-3469

R0011292262

kbc@kbc.ca

15 Steeple Hill Cres., Nepean, ON 613-591-1135 www.stpatricks.nepean.on.ca

Pastor: Keith MacAskill

(AZELDEAN 2D s

R0011292245

/HDFRFN 'U DP :RUVKLS 6HUYLFHV DP .8& .LG¡V 3URJUDPV

Pastors: Jonathan Mills , Bob Davies & Doug Ward

10:00 am: Service of Worship and Sunday School

MORNING WORSHIP 10 AM

.$1$7$ 81,7(' &+85&+

3UNDAY 3ERVICE AM AM

140 Abbeyhill Dr., Kanata Rev. Brian Copeland

R0011342986

SATURDAY SERVICES SABBATH SCHOOL FOR ALL AGES 9:15AM WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 AM SERVING KANATA AND STITTSVILLE PASTOR: LYLE NOTICE 85 LEACOCK DRIVE, KANATA (THE CHRIST RISEN LUTHERAN CHURCH) 613-899-9793

R0011292257

Seventh-Day Adventist Church

GLEN CAIRN UNITED CHURCH

R0011557512

R0011292252

KANATA

578 Terry Fox Dr., Kanata Sunday Service at 10:10am – 12.00pm Tel: (613) 862-8652;(613) 843-0406 Email: cityofdavidkanata@yahoo.ca


SPORTS

Your Community Newspaper

West Carleton golfer captures first Flagstick EMC sports – West Carleton golfer Allen McGee came out on top of the inaugural Flagstick BCC Open Sept. 22-23. The golf tournament was held in wet weather Saturday and windy but sunny condi-

tions Sunday at the Brockville Country Club. The overall winner was not determined until the 17th hole on day two when McGee, a member of the Arnprior Golf Club, slid past Brockville Country Club’s Adam Folco,

who took the ‘A’ class honours. The ‘B’ class winner was Michael O’Reilly of the BCC, the ‘C’ class winner was Richard Pope of Arnprior and the ‘D’ class winner was Justin Bhatt of the BCC.

Some 78 players participated with two-thirds representing 23 golf clubs from as far away as Winnipeg and a third being Brockville Country Club members. The field was evenly divided into four flights with gross scores only counting. (‘A’ flight 0 to 2.9 handicaps, ‘B’ 3 to 5.9, ‘C’ 6.1 to 11.5 and ‘D’ flight 11.9 to 18). The ‘A’ flight included

eight players at zero handicaps making for some very competitive play. The Brockville Country Club is a member of the Stanley Thompson Society (Thompson being a famous Canadian golf course architect), so approached the Society to see if a trophy in his name could be made for the Flagstick BCC Open. Given the green light, local

artist and teacher Dave Sheridan created the Thompson statue, which now sits atop the unique Flagstick BCC Open Stanley Thompson Trophy. The primary sponsors of the tournament were Flagstick Magazine and NIKE. Organizers expecte it will grow in stature and already the organizing committee at the Brockville Country Club is planning for next year.

SUBMITTED

Triples winners

SCOTT MACLEOD, FLAGSTICK MAGAZINE

Galetta Bowls hosted its annual In-house Novice Triples Tournament on Sept. 6. The winners are, from left, Lorraine Wright (Vice Skip), John Stevenson (Skip) and Karen Oatman (Lead) are holding the “Step Up Ruby Restaurant” plaque which is donated to Galetta novice lawn bowlers by Tracy and Ben Jardine, owners of the Pinto Valley Ranch in Fitzroy Harbour.

Taking part in the ceremonies at the end of the first annual Flagstick BCC Open at the Brockville Country Club includes, from left, Derek MacDonald, BCC’s CPGA Club Professional; Jeff Bauder, Flagstick Magazine Publisher/ Editor-in-Chief; West Carleton’s Allen McGee, overall 2012 winner and holding the event’s Stanley Thompson Trophy; John Smith, vice president, Stanley Thompson Society; and Dave Sheridan, artist, teacher and creator of the Stanley Thompson statue.

Ready to scream? September 21 to October 31 hSELECT NIGHTSg

.com We are offering you the chance to win admission to each of these great events! PLUS $500 in WagJag Credit! Visit your local EMC Website to enter! www.emconline.ca

Ignite Your Family's Imagination October 5-31 (select nights) R0011626075

Experience the phenomenon of a hauntingly magical and stirring outdoor exhibit of thousands of hand-carved pumpkins, all set against the night-time backdrop of historic Upper Canada Village.

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 21


ENTERTAINMENT

Your Community Newspaper

Rural Root installs system for hearing impaired EMC entertainment - Hear ye! Hear ye! The Rural Root Theatre Company (RRTC) has recently acquired a hearing assist system and “This,” says Helen Weeden, Publicity Director for RRTC, “should make it easier for our hearing challenged patrons. The user doesn’t need to provide anything. It’s all there. But an advance request when booking would be appreciated.” In October, Rural Root presents a Halloweenthemed production of two one-act plays. Opening night is Oct. 17 and first up is The Morgue the Merrier directed by Ron Gardner to be followed with Grave Matters, directed by Martin Weeden. “This time around,” Helen says, “we would like to invite our patrons to arrive 10 or 15 minutes earlier so they can join in the fun and participate in the interactive pre-show event being organized by Pat Weir and the front of house crew.” Over the summer months, Rural Root Theatre attended several community events and were delighted to have had the opportunity to chat with so many people to tell them about the group. RRTC would like to thank the Dunrobin Community Association, the West Carleton Arts Society, The Constance Bay Bay Days Committee and the Kinburn Swampfest Committee for hosting these events. “Once again we will be at Carp Market on Oct.13 and we encourage visitors to drop by our booth for a chat,” says Helen. “Another RRTC innovation we have introduced - thanks to our techies Ivo Mokros and Roy Ballantine for the convenience of our patrons - is the ability to select and reserve your tickets on line.” They can also use PayPal to purchase the tickets and avoid the Box Office lineup. Simply go to the website at www.ruralroot. org and follow the links to the box office. On line booking and the usual telephone number 832 1070 both open on Sept. 26.

SUBMITTED

Heather Maranta and Lee Powell rehearse a scene from The Morgue the Merrier. The play should be humorous to all, except perhaps the person under the sheet.

Judy Puritt and Paul LeDuc act out a scene from Grave Matters. Rural Root is offers two one-act plays this fall, starting Oct. 17.

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ENTERTAINMENT

Artists host show at Carp fairgrounds Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com

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EMC events – A few new artists will join those who host the annual Expressions of Art, set for this weekend. West Carleton Arts Society spokeswoman Cheryl Poulin said there will be something for everyone at the show; everything from watercolours and oils, to photography, jewelry, pottery and more. “There’s going to be some amazing talent,� she said. “This is a juried show, so there’s a rigorous process to go through to make it.� Visitors to the successful Aug. 18 Artstravaganza will recognize many of the talented artists on hand. And those whose children helped paint Carp-et – a work dedicated to the fish and

the village – will see the finished product on display at the Carp Agricultural Hall location. This year’s art competition, where visitors vote for their favourite piece on stage, is on the theme of the farmers’ market. “Participants will express themselves and what the market means to them,� said Poulin. “And you get to vote on it.� She said the show is a relaxed family-friendly affair, but that the serious art collector will find plenty to be impressed by. “The caliber is getting better and better every year.� Friday evening is by invitation only (though no one will be turned away at the door). A folk guitarist will entertain. The show runs Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the ag hall. Admission is free. Coffee, tea and finger food will be available.

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Councillor Eli El-Chantiry

5670 Carp Rd., Kinburn 613-580-2424 ext 32246 eli.el-chantiry@ottawa.ca www.eliel-chantiry.ca

Ward 5 West Carleton-March Annual Walk in the Park – Fitzroy Provincial Park Why not get some fresh air while enjoying the beautiful fall colours at the annual Walk in the Park at Fitzroy Provincial Park on Monday, October 15, 9:30am to 11am. Participants of all ages are welcome to attend. Please remember to dress for the weather and terrain. Participants are to meet at the Kedey Street entrance to the park. Parking is available on nearby streets. For further information contact our Public Health Nurse, Kim Ou, at 613-580-6744 ext. 26234, Kim.Ou@ottawa.ca.

Community support services improved for rural transportation Earlier this year, the City of Ottawa started a partnership with three community support service agencies to provide more transportation options to seniors and adults living with a physical disability in rural Ottawa. These agencies – the Western Ottawa Community Resource Centre, Rural Ottawa South Support Services and the Eastern Ottawa Resource Centre – provide rides for persons who do not require a wheelchair to locations both within the City of Ottawa and to nearby communities. Reservations can be made in advance, and escort support is available if assistance is required with stairs or elevators or if a resident needs an escort to attend an appointment or community visit. Para Transpo is another transportation alternative for rural residents with a permanent or short-term disability who are unable to use conventional transit. The service is provided only between rural and urban destinations within the City of Ottawa. For Para Transpo customers, the Taxi Coupon Program is a travel option allowing customers to take discounted taxi service to locations within Ottawa and to neighbouring communities. For more information or to schedule a ride, please contact: s s s s s

7ESTERN /TTAWA #OMMUNITY 2ESOURCE #ENTRE 2URAL /TTAWA 3OUTH 3UPPORT 3ERVICES %ASTERN /TTAWA 2ESOURCE #ENTRE 0ARA 4RANSPO 499 /# 4RANSPO 499

As a reminder, OC Transpo currently operates a Wednesday ONLY BUS ROUTE THAT TRAVELS FROM $UNROBIN AND #ARP TO Stittsville, Kanata Centrum, Bayshore, Lincoln Fields and Carlingwood Shopping Centre. On the afternoon return trip it visits the same stops in reverse order. The route map and schedule is noted on my website at www.eli.el-chantiry.ca. 4HIS BUS IS &2%% 4/ 2)$% FOR CUSTOMERS 4HIS MEANS NO FARE will be charged and no transfer will be issued for customers using Route 203. However, if customers use Route 203 and then transfer onto another bus route, then the appropriate fare will need to be paid.

Thanksgiving Day Holiday schedule changes Residents should be aware of some schedule changes to City 3ERVICES FOR THE 4HANKSGIVING $AY HOLIDAY ON -ONDAY /CTOBER s #ITY (ALL AND THE #LIENT 3ERVICE #ENTRES WILL BE CLOSED s 4HE #ITY S 0ROVINCIAL /FFENCES #OURT WILL ALSO BE CLOSED Business resumes on Tuesday, October 9. s 4HE #ITY S #ONTACT #ENTRE WILL BE OPEN FOR URGENT MATTERS REQUIRING THE #ITY S IMMEDIATE ATTENTION s 4HERE WILL BE NO CURBSIDE GREEN BIN RECYCLING GARBAGE OR LEAF AND YARD WASTE COLLECTION -ONDAY S PICKUP WILL TAKE PLACE on Tuesday, October 9. In addition, the collection of garbage, green bin, leaf and yard waste and recycling materials will be delayed by one day for the remainder of the week. s -ANY POOLS ARENAS AND lTNESS CENTRES WILL BE OPEN FOR PUBLIC SWIMMING AQUAlTNESS SKATING AND lTNESS CLASSES WITH MODIlED SCHEDULES #HECK OTTAWA CA OR THE FACILITY OF YOUR choice for details. s -ANY REGISTERED PROGRAMS AT SWIMMING POOLS COMMUNITY centres and arenas are cancelled. Clients should check with THEIR FACILITY TO CONlRM AS SOME EXCEPTIONS WILL APPLY s 4HE /TTAWA 0UBLIC ,IBRARY WILL BE CLOSED 2EGULAR HOURS WILL resume Tuesday, October 9. I would like to wish everyone a safe and happy Thanksgiving. Enjoy your time with family and friends! R0011658623-1004

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 23


L>C

C > L C L> L>C e p i c e R

Holiday Favourites 2012

Simply e-mail or mail in your favourite summer recipe (with a picture if possible) by November 5, 2012. Be sure to send it with your name, address, and phone number. If chosen, we will publish your recipe in our

Holiday Recipe Favourites

Supplement Book on December 6, 2012

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Gourmet Gift Basket (value $150.00) 1321 Wellington St. 722-8753 www.bagelshop.ca

Watch Next week’s page for Ma Cuisine’s Ma Fabulous Prize Cuisine Package or for the chef in your life. amateur or professional.

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Contest Rules: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

SEW for IT!

Employees of participating sponsors and their immediate families and Performance Printing / EMC employees are not eligible to compete in this contest. Contestants must abide these general contests rules and all specific rules applied to contests to be eligible to win available prizes. Prize winner selection is by random draw. Winners must correctly answer a skill-testing question to win. Prize winners will be contacted by telephone. Winners must bear some form of identification in order to claim their prize. There is no cash surrender value to prizes and they must be accepted as awarded. The EMC and participating companies assume no responsibility whatsoever damages, be

they physical or monetary, injury or death, as a result of this contest or any part of it. The EMC and participating retailers reserve the right to limit the numbers of entries received from any particular contestant(s). 8. The EMC and the participating companies reserve the right to change, rearrange, and/or alter any of there contests policies at any time whatsoever without prior notice. Also these contest rules are subject if necessary to comply with the rules, regulations, and the laws of the federal, Provincial, and local government bodies. 9. Ads will be published September 20, 27, October 4, 11,18, 25, 2012. 10. One entry per household. 7.

NOTE: All recipes must be typed or neatly handwritten. All others will not be accepted. Photocopies from books and magazines will not be accepted.

E-MAIL US AT: Or mail O il tto 57 Auriga A i Dr., D Suite S it 103, 103 Ottawa, Ott Ont. O t K2E 8B2 24 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

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COMMUNITY

Classifieds

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Thursday October 4, 2012

Dreams do come true

Children enjoy whirlwind trip to Walt Disney World courtesy Dreams Take Flight Ottawa Theresa Fritz

Theresa.fritz@metroland.com

EMC events – One hundred and twenty-eight children enjoyed ice cream as they watched the sun come up aboard an Air Canada ight staffed by a pirate crew as they made their way to the “happiest place on earth.â€? And if that sounds like the start of the best day ever, it only got better as the annual Dreams Take Flight Ottawa trip to Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida touched down shortly after 9 a.m. Sept. 25. By 10:30, children who might never have had the chance to visit the theme park could barely contain their excitement – eager to experience everything Disney had to offer. The day began bright and early at 4 a.m. as parents and children arrived at Ottawa’s Canada Reception Centre, where the prime minister and other dignitaries y from, in anticipation of the 5:30 a.m. ight. Once inside the hangar, all were greeted by nearly 100 smiling Dreams Take Flight Ottawa volunteers who turned what could have been a chaotic scene into a sea of excitement and organization. Each child and volunteer received a uniform to wear on the trip. Children received white t-shirts, red hats, black shorts and Crocs. Volunteers received a white hat, white shirt, black shorts/capris and Crocs.

“This is just incredible,â€? said ďŹ rst-time Dreams trip volunteer Nida Kealey. “We are going to have such fun.â€? She recalled how her now 18-year-old autistic son went on a Disney trip with the organization nine years ago and it was the best thing he could have done. He has since travelled on a plane 10 times and she credits the Dreams trip with giving him the conďŹ dence to do whatever he set his mind to. Since October 1995, Dreams Take Flight Ottawa has given children with physical, mental or social challenges an incredible day where they can be carefree and make memories to last forever. A total of nine hours was spent at Disney including meals and shopping time. Dreams Take Flight Ottawa uses speciďŹ c criteria to select children for the trip. Among the criteria, children with special needs must represent various agencies, be between the ages of six and 12 and have never visited a Disney theme park before. MANY SPONSORS

Making special memories happen is not cheap. This year’s trip cost $195,000 and would not have been possible without assistance from organizations like Air Canada, which donated the plane for the trip, and Shell, which do-

THERESA FRITZ/METROLAND

Tracy Taffinder hugs daughter Laura just before the young Dunrobin girl boarded an Air Canada flight for Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida last Tuesday morning. The magic trip was provided by Dreams Take Flight Ottawa. nated the fuel. The Air Canada pilots and ight crew for the trip also donated their time, taking a vacation day to be part of the magical experience that not only included dressing up for the ight down but also coming to the park later in the day to enjoy the rides. Other corporate sponsors like Mark’s, Crocs and Bentley stepped up again to assist with clothing, shoes and back-

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While the water ride sends riders hurling down a 50-foot water drop and the other is a roller coaster ride in the dark, the screams heard were not of fear but excitement. As the day went on, the smiles got wider. While most of the children on the trip were English, a number of French youngsters enjoyed themselves as well. One of those was Denisha Poulain Levasseur. She had a great time driving a race car on the Speedway ride and she kept saying she could not believe she was doing it. BITTERSWEET

For some volunteers, this year’s trip likely marked their last with the organization. “It has been awesome. The kids are great. We’ve had a great group today,â€? said 2012 Dreams Take Flight Ottawa president Nicole Banville midway through the Disney trip day. Banville is stepping down as a director with the organization and the most recent trip marked her ďŹ nal one. “It is bittersweet. I will miss everybody. I will probably hang a bit, maybe volunteer,â€? she mused. “I think the kids have had a great time from what I have seen,â€? Banville concluded. Her husband Mike, the organization’s vice-president, See Dreams, page 27

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packs for volunteers and children. And even more sponsors support the trip and the charity in other ways. Dreams Take Flight is a 100 per cent voluntary run organization and various fundraising events held over the course of the year help top off coffers so everything is paid for on the trip. Children also received spending money to bring home a special Disney souvenir.

For some parents, the trip marked the ďŹ rst time their children were either away from them or travelling to the United States without them. But, the fear of having a child gone for nearly 24 hours was not greater than their desire for them to have the experience of a lifetime. Dunrobin’s Laura TafďŹ nder, 8, was recommended for the trip by the teacher at her school in Kanata. “She is very, very excited,â€? said her mom Tracy TafďŹ nder, who said she was not nervous about her daughter travelling without her. “I am so excited for her. It really is the chance of a lifetime.â€? Laura even managed to get a full night’s sleep before the ight, with mom having no trouble waking her up bright and early. This year’s trip to Disney featured a number of siblings sharing the magical experience. Among them were sisters Shaily and Feyah Turner of Orleans. “We are very excited,â€? 12-year-old Shaily said on the plane, noting the sisters couldn’t wait to ride the popular Splash Mountain ride. “We have been looking it up on the computer for quite a while. The ďŹ rst rides chosen by groups the minute they walked through Disney’s gates were either Splash Mountain or Space Mountain, and they were revisited frequently throughout the day.

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NEWS R0011294477

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Back to her roots Dental hygienist Patty McComb, president of Rural Roots Dental Hygiene Services in Carp, attended the Health & Wellness Fair on Sept. 22 at the Nick Smith Centre. Hosted by Arnprior-Braeside-McNab Seniors At Home Program 33 vendors participated in the annual event.

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Visit our facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/flyerland.ca/ 26 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012


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Dreams realized with trip to Walt Disney World Continued from page 25

has been on 14 trips to Disney and he said the experience is very gratifying. As the day wound its way to a close, and all the rides had been thoroughly ridden, children and volunteers made their way to Disney’s famous Main Street for some souvenir shopping. Each child received $30 to find that special memento of a day not to be forgotten anytime soon. The group arrived back at the hangar at Orlando International Airport and boarded the steps to the waiting plane before the 9 p.m. takeoff. While the trip down to Florida had been filled with the sounds of excited children, the return trip was much quieter and many huddled down in the first class sleeper bunks to dream about the incredible day that was their reality. Once back inside the Canada Reception Centre, each child received a donated Bentley donated backpack filled with gifts to mark their special day. From there, they were ushered into the main part of the hangar where a red carpet was rolled out and parents waited eagerly for their children. “This was the best day ever,” one child was overheard telling his parents. No doubt a sentiment shared between many other parents and children as they reunited after a thrilling day.

PHOTOS BY THERESA FRITZ/METROLAND

Splash Mountain was one of the most popular ride choices at Walt Disney World. Dreams Take Flight volunteers Mike Banville, Wendy Robblee (with mouse ears) and Tanya Bosman and trip participant Kideyn Matthias are all smiles and they move along the circuit Dylan Noel Gates Bannan has some fun posing in the before taking the 50-foot plunge. stockades at Walt Disney World.

A group of enthusiastic Dreams Take Flight Ottawa volunteers and children enjoy the Thunder Mountain roller coaster, one of several rides during the day at Disney. After nine hours at the park, the airplane ride back from Orlando to Ottawa saw many children drift off to sleep like Hannah Harlow-Maillet of Stittsville (left).

Small Business Week Events

“A Big Deal for Small Business”

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Keynote Breakfast & Seminars

“Cocktails & Commerce” Business Showcase 5:00pm - 8:00pm Brookstreet Kanata

7:30am - 10:00am Sixty Four Hundred Celebra on Centre S sville

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

MAYOR JIM WATSON Followed by your choice of Informa on Sessions

Showcase your business and the services you provide in our West O awa community at our Business A er Hours networking event combined with a mini-tradeshow.

Booths on sale now!

Registra on and details at www.KanataChamber.com or call 613-592-8343

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Celebrating Small Business Week West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 27


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CLEANING / JANITORIAL

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BUSINESS SERVICES

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FOR RENT

FOR RENT

FOR RENT

3 bedroom 2 storey home, downtown Carp, family room, detached garage, large yard, gas heat, $1,150/month net. Paul 613-839-8733 ext 300.

Available Now! Two storey condo townhome in Centrepointe, great location, 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, fireplace, rec. room, 6 appliances, two outdoor parking spaces. Fresh paint. $1600/month plus utilities. Clive Pearce, Broker of Record, Guidestar Realty Corporation, Brokerage. (613)226-3018 (office) and (613)850-5054 (cell).

Beautiful executive bungalow, walk-out basement, Kanata. 3 bedrooms, air conditioner, 6 appliances, large finished basement with kitchenette/bar, double garage, 3 fireplaces, 2 baths/large ensuite. Private yard. November 1. Reference Kijiji, search ad #409778773. $1,950/month. 613-599-3104.

Arnprior- secure luxury building with elevator. Non-smoking spacious one bedroom on second floor. $925.00 includes water, 5 appliances: fridge, stove, dishwasher, washer and dryer, walk-in closet and plenty of storage. Indoor and out-door parking available. 613-284-7927. Arnprior- secure luxury building with elevator. Non-smoking one bedroom on ground floor. $895.00 includes water, 5 appliances: fridge, stove, dishwasher, washer and dryer, atrium, walk-in closet and storage locker. Indoor and outdoor parking available. 613-284-7927.

LD SO on the News EMC

You’ll be

CLASSIFIEDS

Carp/Stittsville vicinity. 2 bedroom, 2000 sq. ft. apartment. $1,200/month plus hydro. Immediate occupancy. Perfect for rental plus small business. 613-257-6835 ext 222.

BIRTHDAY

BIRTHDAY

CARD OF THANKS

To all my family, friends and neighbours who helped me celebrate my 90th birthday, a Huge Thank You.

Lorena Delahunt CL382303-1004

FOR SALE

HAPPY 80TH BIRTHDAY to Ray Julian September 29, 2012 With love from your wife Maggie, Sons Chris (Susan) and Dale and your brother Terry (Caroline). Friends and relatives can send their congratulation via email to “ray-maggie-julian@bell.net� FOR SALE

FOR SALE

For more information contact your local newspaper.

AUTOMOTIVE

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ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY!

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Saturday, October 6, Kanata, 10 Teeswater St. (off of Eden-vale) 8-noon, household items, furniture, children’s items.

CL376008-0913

613-658-3148 Member of Turkey Farmers of Ontario NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMAS

Network

Hendrie Court Garage SALE! Saturday Oct 6. Lots for everyone, including Halloween decorations. 8am-1pm

Seniors’ Discounts

Locally Grow Gr V r n Vegetable egettable Grain F Fed

6113 859 9108 613-859-9108

Almonte Flea Market- Sun-days until October 28th, 9 am-4 pm. Almonte Fair Grounds on Water Street. Visit almontefleamarket.com Phone: 613-327-4992.

PHONE:

1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS

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Connect with Ontarians – extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org 28 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

STEEL BUILDINGS

PERSONALS $5( <28 7,5(' RI LQYHVWLQJ LQ UHODWLRQVKLSV WKDW QHYHU JR DQ\ZKHUH" 0,67< 5,9(5 ,1752'8&7,216 KDV SHRSOH LQWHUHVWHG LQ ILQGLQJ SDUWQHUV IRU OLIH 2QWDULRÂśV WUDGLWLRQDO PDWFKPDNHU &$// ZZZ PLVW\ULYHULQWURV FRP 758( $'9,&( 7UXH FODULW\ 7UXH 3V\ FKLFV RU RU PRELOH PLQXWH ZZZ WUXHSV\FKLFV FD '$7,1* 6(59,&( /RQJ WHUP VKRUW WHUP UHODWLRQVKLSV IUHH WR WU\ 7DON ZLWK VLQJOH ODGLHV &DOO RU 7DON QRZ RU 0HHW ORFDO VLQJOH ODGLHV

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CLASSIFIED

FOR RENT

FOR RENT

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

Downtown Perth, 2 bedroom, quality renovations, $1,000 plus utilities, includes 5 appliances. Call 613-390-2558 or 613-267-4979.

Short Term Rental Kanata Townhouse, 3 plus bedrooms, Finished Basement. Private rear yard backs onto open space. Short walk to Kanata Centrum $1600.00 613-851-4630

Cedar (white), quality lumber, most sizes, decking, T&G, channel rustic. Also huge bundles of cedar slabs ($45) and large bags of shavings ($35). w w w. s c o u t e n w h i t e c e d a r. c a (613)283-3629.

Stittsville Bachelor Apartment. Availability negotiable. Heat, hydro, air-conditioning, gas fireplace, fridge, stove, cable, parking included. No pets. No smoking. First and last, references required. $795/mo. Near bus, shopping, pathways. 613-831-3278/613-899-7946.

Cherry Wood Contemporary Dining set, absolutely stunning with 6 Cane back chairs, buffet, 2 leaf’s. Worth $8000.00 asking $4000. (613)592-4362.

FREE 120 PAGE CATALOGUE from Halfords. Butcher supplies, leather & craft supplies and animal control products. 1-800-353-7864 or email gisele@halfordhide.com or visit our web store www.halfordsmailorder.com

STORAGE

ELECTRIC GOLF Cart in excellent condition with back seat. Asking $ 3,000 or BO, can be seen in Renfrew area. Call 613-898-0298.

Furnished and Non Furnished rooms Bridlewood. Near buses/amenities, Would suit mature professionals. Kitchen privileges. $500.00 References required. 613-591-9991 Immediately 3 Bedroom on 1 acre 10 minutes west of Carleton Place. Open living, kitchen/dining area, 1 1/2 bath, laundry room on main. Finished lower level with larger windows, dry walled workshop. Stove, fridge, washer, dryer. Efficient woodstove, electric baseboard if necessary. $1325 plus hydro, 1st & last, references and credit check. 613 223-7802 KANATA RENTAL TOWNHOMES

3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bathrooms, 5 appliances and more, located in established area, on site management office, 323 Steeplechase Dr. (just off Stonehaven Dr) Kanata, K2M 2N6, call 613-592-0548

Winter Storage for Boats, Cars & more, also available Mini Storage Units 10x20 $120/month Richmond/North Gower Area. Call (613)880-0494.

COMING EVENTS

Disability Products. Buy and Sell stair lifts, scooters, bath lifts, patient lifts, hospital beds, etc. Call Silver Cross Ottawa (613)231-3549.

HELP WANTED

Hot tub, Hydro Pool model 575 Platinum Edition, excellent condition, $3,500. Call 613-257-8484. *HOT TUB (SPA) Covers-Best Price. Best quality. All shapes and colours. Call 1-866-652-6837. www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper Winter tires for sale. Good Year Ultra Grip Ice 225/60r/16 with rims that were on an Outback (613)253-6087.

FOR SALE, Team - Percheron mares. Heavy horse hardness, sleighs, wagons and other horse related items. 613-623-3509

Wood stoves for sale. Lakewood Steel for $300 and Cast Iron 21” stove for $100. Call 613-489-3931

COMING EVENTS

COMING EVENTS

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

EXPERIENCED CABINET MAKERS / JOURNEYMEN Premier quality commercial cabinetry & millwork facility is looking to add to our exceptional team. We are recruiting experienced, positive & energetic applicants for the immediate position/s of Experienced Cabinet Maker / Journeyman.

HELP WANTED

The ideal candidate will have 4 or more years of experience, preferably in a commercial shop, and the capacity to work in a fast-paced, highly diversified environment. We offer competitive compensation packages, flexible, friendly working environment with many unique projects and learning opportunities. To apply, please submit your resume to: info@bodescabinets.com or fax to 613-622-1219. We thank everyone for applying, however only those candidates who are qualified will be contacted for an interview.

CERTIFIED PERSONAL & HOME SUPPORT WORKERS We are in need of experienced, certified Personal and Home Support Workers in the following areas – Kanata, Stittsville, Carp, Woodlawn, Constance Bay, Richmond & Manotick. We require workers for days, evenings and weekends, for both short and long shifts. Evenings and Weekends are a priority at this time. A car is required for these areas. Bayshore offers paid orientation, competitive wages, paid travel, benefits including RSP, educational opportunities and ongoing clinical support. Please send your resume to: Pat O’Connor By fax at 613-733-8189 or by e-mail to poconnor@bayshore.ca CL381756/1004

Large 2 bdrm, ground floor, clean, includes fridge, stove, parking. October 1st. $775.00/month plus utilities. Near downtown. Mature single/couple, retirees, nonsmokers. First/last and references required. (613) 298-0363

CL379813

Large furnished room, for rent on horse farm in Carleton Place. $600/month includes covered parking, satellite TV, high-speed wireless and telephone. (613)257-1867. Room for rent $500 per month, must love dogs, birds & teenagers. Room/board can be negotiated. Willola beach area. Call 613-314-7099.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Cl382120

DEATH NOTICE

www.emcclassified.ca

CL382365

Your Community Newspaper

PHONE:

1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS

DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES The Renfrew Victoria Hospital is currently inviting applications for the following positions:

DIABETES EDUCATOR Registered Nurse (Part-Time)

DUPUIS, OLIVE Peacefully at The Grove Nursing Home, Arnprior on Thursday evening, September 27th, 2012. Mary Olive Dupuis of Arnprior at the age of 87 years. Dear daughter of the late James Tallmire and the late Ella Mae Moran. Beloved wife of the late Oscar Dupuis (January 10, 2009). Dearly loved mother of Francis, Gerard (Annette), André (Terri Lynn) and Imelda Jane Higginson (Sheldon). Cherished and proud “Grandma” of Cameron, Kyle, Tannis, Brennan, Victoria, Daniel and MacKenzie. Predeceased by her brother, John Tallmire (late Cora) and her sister Jane Hunt (late Fred). Family and friends were invited to pay their respects at the Pilon Family Funeral Home and Chapel Ltd., 50 John Street North, Arnprior on Monday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. and again on Tuesday from 9:45 a.m. until 10:20 a.m. A Funeral Mass was celebrated in St. John Chrysostom Church, Arnprior on Tuesday morning, October 2nd at 11 o’clock. Interment Malloch Road Cemetery. In memory of Olive, a donation to The Grove Nursing Home or the St. John Chrysostom Church Memorial Fund would be appreciated. Condolences/Tributes/Donations www.pilonfamily.ca

CL381901

It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Raymond Cecil Farrell; formerly of Constance Bay which took place at the Lennox and Addington County General Hospital, Napanee on Wednesday evening, September 26, 2012. Dear son of the late Cecil Farrell and the late Josephine “Joey” Cannon. Dearly loved father of James Farrell (Angela McDonald) of Barrhaven and Brendan Farrell of Constance Bay. Dear brother of Debbie Reid (Ed) of Arnprior; Brent Farrell (Jackie) of Belleville; Dale Farrell (Shelley) of Arnprior and Greg Farrell (Paula) of Stittsville. Proud “Grampa” of Kyle Farrell. Ray will be fondly remembered by his former spouse, Harriet (nee Wilson) as well as his many nieces and nephews. Family and friends were invited to pay their respects at the Pilon Family Funeral Home and Chapel Ltd., 50 John Street North, Arnprior on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. and again on Saturday from 9 a.m. until 10:10 a.m. A Funeral Mass was celebrated in St. Michael’s Church, Fitzroy Harbour on Saturday morning, September 29th at 11 o’clock. Interment Parish Cemetery. A reception followed at the Royal Canadian Legion in Constance Bay. In memory of Ray, a donation to the Lennox and Addington County General Hospital Foundation would be appreciated by his family. Condolences/Tributes/Donations www.pilonfamily.ca

CL382194

FARRELL, RAY (September 1, 1952 – September 26, 2012)

Working as an integral member of the clinical team, the Diabetes Educator provides and supports care to diabetic clients in the ambulatory care setting. He/she is accountable for all aspects of patient care within this program, including assessment, planning, implementation and evaluation of quality patient/ family health care. The ideal candidate possesses a current Certificate of Competence from the CNO, certification in Diabetes Education (CDE), I.V. certification, a minimum of two years recent experience in Medical/Surgical nursing, as well as experience with patient teaching.

PERIOPERATIVE Registered Nurses (2 positions available) Permanent Part-Time and Temporary Part-Time

The RN provides care and education to the patient and family receiving treatment and/or procedure, in the pre-operative, peri-operative, post-operative, same day admit, and surgical daycare settings. Required qualifications include: current Certificate of Competence from the CNO; recent Operating Room experience, including scrub and circulating positions; Operating Room Course; cardiac monitoring skills; and, sound knowledge of ORNAC and CSA Standards. Endoscopy, pre-op and PACU nursing experience, completion of the Critical Care Program or Coronary Care course, ACLS and/or CPN (C) are strong assets for these positions. If one of these opportunities sounds like a match with your skills and interests, please forward your complete resume and covering letter no later than October 18th, 2012 to: Julia Boudreau, V.P. Corporate Services Renfrew Victoria Hospital 499 Raglan Street North Renfrew, Ontario K7V 1P6 www.renfrewhosp.com Although we appreciate all responses, only those candidates selected for interview will be contacted. Renfrew Victoria Hospital is an equal opportunity employer; a recent criminal record check is a requirement for employment. West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 29


HELP WANTED

CLASSIFIED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

0906.CL374644

TOMLINSON ENVIRONMENTAL

HEAVY EQUIPMENT MECHANICS, AND 310 T MECHANICS.

DZ Drivers Wanted

HELP WANTED

IN MEMORIAM

Make Up To $1500 CASH/week Charity Marketing Not Door to Door Do some good, make some cash!

Require

SERVICES

HELP WANTED

www.emcclassified.ca

CL381503

Your Community Newspaper

PHONE:

1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS

CharityFundraisingEvents.com

Please fax resume to 613-253-0071 Or Email Careers@ThomasCavanagh.ca

We offer: Very Competitive Wages, 5 day Week work 4 Day Bonus week Program

YORK, Jamie In loving memory of our dear Jamie who left us so suddenly and tragically while at work, October 6, 2009. He is gone, but not forgotten, And, as it dawns another year, In our lonely hours of thinking, Thoughts of him are always near. Days of sadness will come o’er us, Many think the wound is healed, But they little know the sorrow, That lies in the heart concealed.

CL382340

Fax Resume, Personal and CVOR Abstract to:

236139/1003 CL344268

613-820-4334

Delanie and son Greyson Mom and Dad Jason and Maneau Rod CL382328

HELP WANTED

MANUAL OPERATOR AND CNC SETUP/OPERATORS

Human Resources, Lee Valley Tools Ltd., 1090 Morrison Drive, Ottawa, ON K2H 1C2; Fax: (613) 596- 3073; Email: hr@leevalley.com No telephone calls or agencies please.

CL381683/1007

You will be responsible for the set-up and operation of Manual machine tools and/or CNC machining centers as well as verification of part conformity, making process adjustments as required. An active member of a manufacturing team, you will work to continually improve the processes. The qualified candidates will have 1-5 years’ experience in a machining environment as well as experience with set-up and operating manual or CNC equipment. An ability to read drawings and use precision measuring equipment to verify results is required, as is a strong desire for quality workmanship in a production environment. All positions involve shift work. Applications will be received until October 12, 2012.

Maintenance/Handy Person (on call – Kanata and Nepean area) - for Western Ottawa CRC. $18/hr. Full job posting, see www.wocrc.ca Send resume to: Fax 613-591-2501 or e-mail info@wocrc.ca before Oct 12/12 @ 4:30 pm

Youths!

Adults!

Seniors!

Earn Extra Money!

CL381322-1004

CL391474_0927

Lanark County’s – Lanark Lodge, “People Caring for People”, is a 163 bed Long Term Care Home accredited with Accreditation Canada that strives to provide progressive resident centred care for our residents in an atmosphere of respect that fosters independence and fulfillment. We are seeking a self-motivated professional change agent for the following management position.

OFFICE MANAGER (Posting No. LL2012-165) MANDATE: Reporting to the Director of Lanark Lodge, the Office Manager will plan, organize, and direct Lanark Lodge administrative operations, including financial management, payroll, resident business files, resident trusts and billings. You will provide leadership, direction and coordination of administrative services including customer service to residents, families and staff. You will act as coordinator and champion for the Lanark Lodge suite of software applications, collaborating with the IT department on implementation, maintenance, security, troubleshooting, and training. You will oversee the development of administrative systems, business processes and procedures as well as assist with the development and implementation of department goals, objectives, policies and procedures. For further details including qualifications and application deadline, visit our website at www.lanarkcounty.ca Lanark County employees value; honesty, respect, communication, accountability, positive attitude, collaboration and teamwork. If you embrace these values and you meet the position qualifications as found on our website, we look forward to receiving your résumé.

CAS/VAW Capacity Developer – BILINGUAL F/T Perm. Western Ottawa CRC. $60-$71 annually + benefits. Full job posting, see www.wocrc.ca. Send resume to: Fax 613-591-2501 or e-mail info@wocrc.ca before Oct 5/12 @ 4.30 pm.

Keep Your Weekends Free!

Routes Available!

Responsable du renforcement de la capacité, SAE/ FVV — poste permanent BILINGUE, temps plein, CRCOO. 60 à 71 000 $/an + avantages. Affichage complet sur www.wocrc.ca. Envoyez les CV par télécopieur à 613-591-2501 ou par courriel à info@wocrc.ca d’ici le 5 octobre 2012, 16 h 30.

We’re looking for Carriers to deliver our newspaper!

• Deliver Right In Your Own Neighbourhood • Papers Are Dropped Off At Your Door • Great Family Activity • No Collections • Thursday Deliveries

Call Today 613.221.6247 613 .221.6247

CL380226-0927

Or apply on-line at YourOttawaRegion.com 308527

30 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012


EARN EXTRA INCOME! Carrier contractors needed for early am newspaper home delivery in Kanata and Stittsville, 7 days/week. Vehicle a must. $500-$950+/MONTH 613-592-9786 Environmental Services Manager required for Island View Retirement Suites. Must have working knowledge of HVAC systems, boilers, electrical and plumbing. This position is a working manager position; should be able to do small drywall repair, paint, plumbing and electrical. Good communication skills are essential. Please email your resume to iyoung@ islandviewsuites.ca Help Wanted!!! Make up to $1000 a week mailing brochures from home! FREE Sup-plies! Helping Homeworkers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.TheMailingHub.com HOMEWORKERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!!! Full & Part Time Positions Are Available - On-Line Data Entry, Typing Work, Home Assemblers, Mystery Shoppers, Online Surveys, Others. No Experience Needed! www.ontariojobsathome.com

HELP WANTED LEAD HANDS FOR PROPERTY MAINTENANCE DIVISION - LAWN AND SNOW: 20 year established company has immediate openings for experienced lead hands for various crews for lawn maintenance and snow removal. Permanent F/T positions. Salary starting at $30,000 + based on qualifications and experience. Full company benefits and bonus structure. If you are looking for a change with a great opportunity for personal growth and success in a team environment - please email your resume to jobs@thunderbolt. ca or fax to 613-831-9320. Looking for persons willing to speak to small groups, 1 on 1 presentations. A car and internet necessary. Diana (866)306-5858. PART TIME Sales Clerks Enthusiastic, Motivated, Team player, Customer Oriented. Apply within at Kanata Pharmasave, 99 Kakulu Road. or fax 613-592-7027

Landscape/Snow Clearing labourers required in West Ottawa. Fax resume to 613-8366174 or call 613-913-5834.

AUCTIONS

HELP WANTED ATTENTION EXPERIENCED LANDSCAPERS: 20 year established company has immediate openings for experienced landscape installers with extensive landscape construction experience to join our team - foreman, lead hand and la-borer positions available. Permanent F/T positions. Salary based on qualifications and experience. Full company benefits and bonus structure. If you are looking for a change with a great opportunity for personal growth and success in a team environmentplease email your resume to jobs@thunderbolt.ca or fax to 613-831-9320

Beaverbrook- Space available in home daycare. 18 yrs experience. All ages welcome. Non-smoking. First Aid/ CPR training. References. 613-591-8838. Bridlewood- Caregiver with 18 years experience has space available. All ages welcome. Plenty of TLC; nutritious meals/snacks; outdoor/indoor play; non-smoking environment. Excel-lent references. Call 613-271-1560.

AUCTIONS AUCTIONS

AUCTION SALE Saturday October 6th, 2012 - 10:00am sharp For the Estate of the late Greg Stanton to be held at his former home located at 4786 Loggers Way, Galetta Ontario corner of Loggers Way and Galetta Side Road opposite EB Saw Centre. Antique Bonnet Chest – excellent condition; Antique Secretary; 3 Steamer trunks; Antique book case with beveled glass mirror; 4 Poster antique bed; Brass bed; Chest of drawers; Wooden chairs; Wash stand sets; Dining room set – table and chairs; China cabinet; Rocking horse; Antique teaching aid; Toy guns, 6 shooters with holsters; Archie comics; Wooden Xylophone; Toy Drum; Box cameras; Eye glasses; Binoculars; Old bottles; Pint milk bottles; Jugs Figurines; Toy bull dozer; Electrified Railroad Lamp; Antique counter top radio; Motorola Handie Talkie radio; CNR Lamp; Coal oil lamp; Coca Cola memorabilia; Tub stand; Crock churn; Stilliards; assorted household items including glassware, dishes, pots and pans; linens. Block Plane; Come along; shovels; rakes; hoes; forks; pick; wood augers; scythe; buck saw; Cross cut saw; 2 horse drawn scufflers; 3 pth rotary Mower; Little Rhino 6’ scraper blade etc. etc. For the Estate: Frank Bradley 613-562-0509 Terms: Cash or Cheque with ID Refreshments Auctioneer: John J. O’Neill 613-832-2503 www.oneillsauctions.ca Estate or Auctioneer not responsible in case of loss or accident Happy Thanksgiving! CL390899_0927

Home Day Care 0-3 years, Will consider shift work Monday to Friday 5am to 5pm. 613-599-1955

HUNTING SUPPLIES Canadian Firearm/Hunter Safety Courses. Call Dave Arbour 613-257-7489 or visit www.valleysportsmanshow.com for dates and details of courses near you.

KELLY In loving memory of a dear husband, father, and poppa, Olin, who passed away October 10, 1991 Memories are treasurers no one can steal, Death is a heartache, no one can heal. Some may forget, now you are gone, But we will remember no matter how long.

Hunters- approx. 100 acres with trails for rent for the hunting season. 613-283-8387.

Sadly missed and forever loved. Lorna and Family

HUNTING SUPPLIES

IN MEMORIAM

Lyndhurst Gun & Militaria Show at the Lyndhurst Legion. Sunday October 14, 2012, 9 am-3 pm. Halfway between Kingston and Smiths Falls. Take Hwy 15 to 33, follow 33 to the Legion. Admission $5.00. Ladies and accompanied children under 16 free. Buy/sell/trade. Firearms, ammunition, knives, military antiques, hunting gear & fishing tackle. For show info and table inquiries call John (613)928-2382, siderisjp@sympatico.ca. All firearm laws are to be obeyed, trigger locks are required.

LD SO on the News EMC

You’ll be

CLASSIFIEDS AUCTIONS

AUCTION SALE

REBERTZ, Jason Dale Sept. 30, 1976 - Oct. 6, 2002

MOTORCYCLES

REAL ESTATE

Attention horse riders!!! Our Annual Toledo Ride-A-Thon is back!! It’s time to saddle up and giddee up, October 13, registration from 10-12:30. Watch for signs!! Check out our website: www.saddleupintoledo.com This year’s proceeds will benefit St. Andrew’s United Church, Toledo and St. Philip Neri Catholic Church, Toledo for Church renovations.

For Sale 150 2009 Bet & Win scooter. 2,000.00 km, like new. 1,500.00 or reasonable offer. email dhughes@magma.ca or call 613-489-3865.

Income Properties: Brand new semi-detached, leased, $199,000. 1200 sq/ft bungalow, 6 years old, leased, $229,000. Triplex, fully leased, 5 years old, $449,000. Call Jim Barnett 613-217-1862.

Horse stalls and hay steamers. HappyHorseProducts.ca 613-715-1719.

PERSONAL

Horse, Tack, Equipment Consignment Sale. Galetta Livestock. SAT. October 6th. Galetta Ontario. 1/2 hour W. of Kanata. Tack 10 am, Equip. Noon, Horses 2 pm. Consign early. 613-622-1295.

TRUE Advice! TRUE Clarity! TRUE Psychics! 1-877-3423032 or 1-900-528-6256 or Mobile #4486 (18+) 3.19/min. www.truepsychics.ca

MORTGAGES $$MONEY$$ Consolidate Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com

FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX CHRONICLE DIAMOND AWARD WINNER 2009, 2010 & 2011

Lorrie and Brooke Fred

SATURN ACCOUNTING SERVICES

LIVESTOCK Applehill Stables 6115 Prince of Wales Drive offers riding lessons (beginner-advanced), leasing, boarding with huge indoor arena. 613-489-2446 email applehillstables@rogers.com

Saturday October 13th 2012 10:00 AM sharp To be held at our home located at 3624 Farmview Rd., Kinburn, Ontario. We will be offering for sale the complete contents of the home of Catherine Watt, Arnprior as well as the contents of the home of Viola Munro, Kinburn in addition to items from a number of other consignors. Furniture, dishes, collectables, Carnival Glass; tools, scaffolding, 16’ cedar strip canoe, table saw, air compressor, drill press, washer, dryer, 2 dining room sets – tables, chairs and buffets; large area rug; Fanning Mill – Almonte, plus many, many items too numerous to mention. This is a very good offering of well cared for items. Terms: Cash or Cheque with ID Refreshments Auctioneer: John J. O’Neill 613-832-2503 www.oneillsauctions.ca Owners or Auctioneer not responsible in case of loss or accident. CL390915

LOST & FOUND

Consolidate your Debts. 1 monthly pmt, including credit cards, taxes, collection agencies, garnishments, etc. GMC Consulting 24 hrs, Toll Free 1-877-977-0304. Services Bilingues. gmyre@debtzero.ca

LOST & FOUND

DOG SITTING Experienced retired breeder providing lots of TLC. My home. Smaller dogs only. References available. $17-$20 daily Marg 613-721-1530 In-House Pet Grooming. Pet Grooming done in your home. www.inhousepetgrooming.com Call 613-485-9400 ask for Joyce or email joycevall ee@gmail.com

175 Acres off Goshen Road between Arnprior and Renfrew. Hardwood bush, good hunting. $175,000. More information call 613-623-7572 Home for sale in Constance Bay price $317,900 negotiable. Explore option rent to own. Immediate occupancy. Home listed on MLS #840784. Call Marlene (613)715-3171.

LOST & FOUND

MISSING CAT SUBSTANTIAL REWARD

LOST IN BRIDLEWOOD NEAR FOXLEIGH

LADOO Ladoo is 2 years old and requires monthly medication. Her family is heartbroken. One member of her family is ailing and is desperate to find her and bring her home. Substantial reward offered for her safe return or information leading to her return. If you are caring for her, the family is deeply grateful but is missed terribly and her medical treatment is critical. Please contact 613-592-4960 any time day or night.

AUCTIONS

REAL ESTATE PLUS

ESTATE AUCTION

CL382625

the late Liesa Gunn @ #328 Bellamy Mills Rd., Almonte, ON K0A 1A0 from Almonte travel 2.4 km on Pakenham/Arnprior/ Regional Rd #29 & turn left onto Clayton Rd. & go 4 km & turn right onto Conc. Rd 6D & left onto Bellamy Mills Rd. on Sat., Oct. 13/12 @ 10 am Property to be sold @ 11am

ANNIVERSARY

REAL ESTATE SERVICES Available Now! Roomy two storey condo townhome in Bells Corners, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, garage plus two outdoor spaces. Fresh paint, no carpets. $1,700/month plus utilities. Clive Pearce, Broker of Record, Guidestar Realty Corporation, Brokerage. (613)226-3018 (office) and (613)850-5054 (cell).

TRAILERS / RV’S Jayco Eagle 5th wheel, 1997, 9700 lbs. a/c, 1 slideout, everything is in excellent working condition. Stored inside for winter. Asking $7,000. Call 613-875-0370.

VACATION/COTTAGES Disney Vacation Rental. Luxury 2bdrm/2bath condo in Legacy Dunes Resort, close to Disney parks, available for rent. For more information visit: www.lascuatropalmas.com

REAL ESTATE

613-832-4699

LOST Gray & white cat named Sabrina Last seen Carp/Almonte area If seen contact 613-852-8854

MUSIC Professional guitar lessons $30 an hour. Beginner to advanced, all ages welcome. Taught at home in Kanata. All genres and styles welcome. Please contact Aaron at 613-599-0530 for more information or email aaronsalem@linuxmail.org

PETS

I have only slipped away, into the next room, I am I and you are you. Whatever we were to each other, That we still are, Call me by my old familiar name. Speak to me in the easy way which you always used. Play, smile, think of me. All is well,

VEHICLES 1968 Thunderbird 4 door, 70,000 miles or 120,000 km, 11 to 1 compression, high output 429 CID Thunderjet engine. Engine and C6 transmission are excellent. Black leather interior in good condition. Car needs restoration. $2,800 o.b.o. 613-282-1836, Kemptville. Call anytime! 2003 Pontiac Grand Prix SE 4 door, 195,000kms. 6 cylinder 3.1, full load. Lady Highway Driven. Has GT look. $2500.00 or OBO as is. Kevin 613-485-6680 2006 F250 Diesel Ext Cab Long Box Texas rust-free, dealer maintained, 5th wheel. Metallic green and bronze. Health forces sale. Certified and E-tested. (613)264-9554 2007 four dr. Chev Aveo LT; very clean; well maintained; safetied; e-tested; Blue; 52000km; sunroof; new tires; excellent gas mileage; $6450. 613-836-3296 Assortment of used tires, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16.5. Summers, all-season and snows. Also used car parts. Gord 613-257-2498. Must sell- 2006 Buick Allure CXL. 100,500 km. Excellent, loaded, blue ext, leather, new brakes, summers & winters on rims. Negotiable. $8400. 613-271-7513.

ANNIVERSARY

WANTED Wanted - furnace oil, will remove tank if possible. Call 613-479-2870.

WORK WANTED Certified Mason. 12 years experience. Chimney repair, restoration, parging, repointing. Brick, block and stone. Small/big job specialist. Free estimates. 613-250-0290.

CL390874/0927

AUCTION SALE

Send A Load to the dump, cheap. Clean up clutter, garage sale leftovers or leaf and yard waste. 613-256-4613.

~ Don’t Delay A Private Viewing ~ Step inside to discover a home where you will be comfortable for many years. Aluminum exterior w/ 6 yr roof (30 yr warranty). Interior is in good condition. Featuring a formal living room & central hall both having hardwood flooring, tiled kitchen w/ oak cabinetry, dining area has access to Bar B Que deck w/ retractable awning, 2 large bedrooms & a 4 pce bath. The basement houses a walkout to rear yard, a finished 3rd bedroom, laundry hookup, F/A oil furnace & a 200 amp service. On well & septic. A treat to inspect & it’s in a perfect position adjacent to an unopened road allowance. Enjoy this wonderful private location boasting a convenient 15 min. drive to Almonte. This surveyed 7 acre (+ /-) property would support horses or a kennel. Taxes: $ 1944.12 (+/-). For private viewing, terms & conditions, please call our office at 613-267-6027. Looking to upgrade your kitchen, laundry set or furnishings, this auction truly offers good clean merchandise. And, if you are looking for a neat & tidy home with expansion possibilities, keep in mind that low mortgage rates make homeownership extremely affordable these days. Bring a lawnchair & participate in the bidding to settle the estate.

Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 267-1335 Fax: (613) 267-6931 www.jimhandsauction.com

We would like to wish our parents Carman and Betty Howatt a very Happy 50th Wedding Anniversary October 6, 2012 Love from your children Cheryl, Wendy, Blair and families GARAGE SALE CL418629_TF

Monday October 8th, 2012 - 10:00 AM sharp For Elmer and Isabelle Raycroft to be held at their farm located at 502 Millridge Road, Arnprior, Ontario, between Flat Rapids Road and Russett Drive. The machinery will be offered for sale at 1pm Ford 6610 Series 2 Tractor - 72 HP – 8 spd - 2 wd with Factory Cab – AC – 2600 original hours; Case 990 with Case loader – 53 HP – 12 Spd - good rubber; Hesston 540 Round Baler – tractors and baler are in excellent condition. 1987 GMC 5000 V Eight single axle dump truck with flat deck; NH 479 Haybine; IH 130 Manure spreader; Martin 5 ton wagon with 19’ rack; 8 ton wagon with 20’ steel deck; Snow blower; IH Crop chopper; MF 33 grain drill; Post hole auger; NH 256 Rolabar rake; Cattle chute and headgate; Calf creep feeder; Salt/mineral weather vane feeder; Large assortment of steel gates; metal fence posts; 100 cedar fence posts; Troy Bilt 5 HP Rear Tyne Roto Tiller; Diamond Harrow; Ski Doo 377 Safari Snowmobile – no cowl. Dining room table and chairs; 2 dressers; assorted furniture and house hold items; reclining sofa; Wicker furniture, dishes etc. etc. Maple Syrup supplies – 2 boiling pans – 36” x 84” and 36” x 60”; stainless steel finishing pan; burner and stand; spiles; barrels; sap buckets; syrup bottles; plastic line; Maple Syrup Hydrometer; Thermometers; 45 gal barrels – steel and plastic – clean. All items are in excellent condition. Please plan to attend. Owners: Elmer & Isabelle Raycroft 613-623-5507 Terms: Cash or Cheque with ID Refreshments by White Lake Women’s Institute Auctioneer: John J. O’Neill 613-832-2503 www.oneillsauctions.ca Owners or Auctioneer not responsible in case of loss or accident Happy Thanksgiving! CL390898_0927

LIVESTOCK

IN MEMORIAM

CL382306-1004

HELP WANTED

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 31


NEWS

Your Community Newspaper

FREE WSIB SEMINAR R0011643931

If you are a: • Contractor • Tradesperson (bricklaying, carpentry, drywalling, electrical, excavating, plumbing, roofing, etc.) • • Sole proprietor • Partner • Shareholder • Then this free information session on the UPCOMING CHANGES TO WSIB will be of interest to you! Effective January 1, 2013, there is mandatory WSIB coverage for independent operators, sole proprietors, partners and executive officers, in the construction industry, who were previously exempt. Fines of up to $100,000 for non-compliance.

Guest speaker: Allen Cramm, LL.B (JD), from the Office of the Employer Advisor

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Pre-register (required) at: www.hewitt-young.com or call Karen at 613-592-1012 ext.20

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Seminar: Tuesday, October 16th • 5:00 pm Marshes Golf Club (320 Terry Fox Drive, Kanata) Deadline for registration is October 10th, 2012. Sponsored by Hewitt & Young SUBMITTED

Inc.

35th anniversary

Laser Hair Removal & S Skin ki Cli Clinic i

Coun. Eli El-Chantiry and Mayor Jim Watson were pleased to attend the 35th Anniversary celebration of the Fitzroy Habour Community Association Saturday, Sept. 29. They are pictured here with association president Karen Taylor, who received a certificate honouring her continuing efforts with the community association.

Have Fabulous Looking Skin All Year Round With The

Simple Radiance Facial Club!!!

Developments wind through city hall

Featuring PCA Facial Peels and Masks and DiamondTome Microdermabrasion Treatments

Doesn’t your skin deser ve the best!!

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Also come join us for our Fall Open House Sat, Oct. 20 10 am-1pm

613-831-4419

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R0011652750

1095 Carp Road, Stittsville

EMC news – A variety of West CarletonMarch development applications are working their way through city hall, including: * 123 Wescar Lane - The purpose of this application is to permit the development of two light industrial use buildings with associated office, parking and landscaping. The two buildings are proposed to be 595 square meters and 715 square meters in size and are to be built out over three phases. The buildings are proposed to be two stories in height for a total of 12 meters. Seventeen parking spaces are proposed. • 1614 Thomas Argue Rd. and 2405 March Rd. - To develop the site and existing buildings and proposed new buildings and additions into self-storage and climate control self storage complimenting the existing Carp Self-Storage business at 2405 March Rd. • 168 Rivington St. - Proposed storey semi detached c/w attached garage. • 2374 Donald B. Munro and 2995 John Shaw Rd. - The purpose of this application is to rezone the subject land (retained farmland) from AG2 (Agricultural, Subzone 2) to AG6 (Agricultural, Subzone 6), to prohibit future R0011642600-0927

Enjoy our: Cakes Fine French Pastries Breads Chocolates

La Provence Bakery 500 Hazeldean Road (corner Terry Fox) Kanata, Ontario Phone: 613.836.8838 Fax: 613.836.2133

www.laprovencebakery.ca

R0011657461

32 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

residential uses. In March 2012, the property owners received conditional approval from the Committee of Adjustment to sever a surplus farm dwelling from the original parcel (Consent Application D08-01-11/B-00557). As a condition of approval, the applicant was required to file a zoning by-law amendment. • 1735 Old Carp Rd. - Lot to be used for a single family dwelling. • 130 David Manchester Rd. - To construct a 16130 sq.ft. warehouse/retail building which will be occupied by Playvalue Toys, 55 per cent of the gross floor area will be used for warehouse. The remaining will be used for retail. • 137 Country Meadow Dr. - Extension of Draft approval for Phase 2 of a residential plan of subdivision. • 2215 Sixth Line Rd. - The property was subject to a site-specific zoning amendment to permit a garden suite for a ten year period which elapsed in December 2004. • 3711 Carp Rd. - The amendment is necessary to modify the Flood Plain Overlay identified in the City of Ottawa Consolidated Zoning By-law Schedule.


SENIORS

Your Community Newspaper

Plenty to be thankful for at this time of year EMC lifestyle - Every day back in the ’30s, according to Mother, was a day of thanksgiving. Looking back, there was indeed much to be thankful for. And as Thanksgiving is upon us, perhaps it is appropriate that those things we took for granted so many years ago, should be remembered. So what are some of the memories of those Depression years that have lasted through the decades, and in recalling them, have me wondering what has happened to what we took for granted so long ago? Let me turn back the clock, and let me take you back to a more gentle time, as I recall with thankfulness lessons learned and a way of life that was more safe and secure. I will be forever grateful that I lived in a time when it was perfectly safe to walk three miles of back country roads to a school without fear. Even in the cities so far away, chil-

dren felt secure, and a Mother’s warning was not to be wary of strangers, but rather to keep out of the ditches of water so that we wouldn’t catch our deaths of cold. I am thankful I lived in an era where the owner of the General Store trusted his customers. Where you filled your own bag of cookies, put it on the scale yourself, and had the cost added to your Mother’s bill, which hung on a nail behind the counter. And if you didn’t have the money to pay for your groceries, you could offer a trade. Where sometimes weeks would go by, and no money changed hands. It was a time when a young child was taught that honesty was all a part of doing business. I am thankful today that I grew up in an era where a deal was made with the simple shake of a hand. And it was binding. It didn’t take a lawyer to draw up papers to trade a

Mary Cook’s Memories BY MARY COOK

couple head of cattle for an old model T, or a load of hay, for a steer, or a few loads of gravel for your first car. Today, I am thankful I grew up in a home where there wasn’t a lot of money for frivolities. It was a time when we children made our own fun ... toys from a piece of whittled wood, playthings like empty spools of thread, a button box, and Eaton’s catalogue ... all filling hours of fun and not costing a penny! I am thankful today that because we lived in a house overflowing with aunts and uncles, cousins, and grandparents, I

learned at an early age what it meant to be tolerant. I was taught that it was more blessed to give than receive. Giving up our bed for an elderly aunt, had Mother reminding us how the aunt enriched our lives with her stories, her hand-knitted mitts, and pans

of Johnny Cake, the best I have ever tasted. Today, I am thankful we had a wonderful doctor who would drive out from Renfrew, plowing through snow and blinding rain, and whose only pay might be a dressed chicken, or a couple dozen eggs and some fresh butter. And I remember his sitting by the bed of a very sick little girl until the dawn crept into my bedroom window and my fever broke. I am thankful today that I grew up in a home where every child had a special worth. Where even the youngest was made to feel important, and

daily chores, done to a parent’s satisfaction, was all part of growing up. We were taught that it was all right to fail, and that from each failure came a lesson. This is the legacy handed down to us by a generation of people who, although never rich in material wealth, were rich in the things that mattered. This is the time to be thankful for that era that made us what we are today, and to be truly thankful for all the blessings we enjoy today living in a free and bountiful country. May each of you have a happy and blessed “Thanksgiving.�

October 5th-8th, 2012

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BSUTUSBJM DB Creative Workshops Lunch N’ Learns An Evening Gala

R0011649727

4 Days of Arts Events & Guided Bus Tours

Art & Artists in Prince Edward County

SUBMITTED

pecartrageous

Friends honour birthday Freda Caldwell is presented with the Honourary Membership certificate of the Huntley Friendship Club by president Evelyn Reid. Caldwell celebrated her 90th birthday on Aug. 21.

1.866.845.6644

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 33


FOOD

Your Community Newspaper

Retirement fair set for Oct. 14

This Chop Suey is not a regular Chinese dish

EMC lifestyle - On one of our visits to Jeff’s parents, his mother and I went shopping in the local supermarket. In the bakery section, we came across a loaf of bread called a Chop Suey Loaf. We could see that it contained fruit, not Chinese vegetables, and decided to give it a try. With a soft texture and bits of candied fruit scattered through each slice, it was delicious, plain or toasted. After some experimenting when I got home, I came up with a similar loaf that I could make in my bread machine. To make this, use the diced candied fruit that you use in Christmas baking. It’s available year round from many bulk food stores and in the supermarkets around Christmas. It’s important to rinse the candied fruit with water to remove excess sugar. This gives the bread a lighter texture. The recipe calls for skim milk powder and water. In some recipes, you can substitute milk for the dry milk powder, but not in this one. Milk makes the loaf heavy and dense, while the skim milk powder gives a much lighter texture. Chop Suey Loaf 3/4 cup water 1/4 skim milk powder

PAT TREW Food ‘n’ Stuff 1 egg 1 tsp. salt 1 tbsp. white sugar 2 tbsp. butter or margarine, at room temperature 2 1/3 cups flour 1 cup candied fruit 1/4 cup raisins 1 1/4 tsp. bread machine yeast Before you start, measure the candied fruit into a sieve, and rinse it under cold water to remove excess sugar or syrup. Spread the fruit on a double thickness of paper towel, and blot up as much of the water as you can. Set aside. If your machine has an Extras option, which adds fruit or nuts automatically, measure the raisins into the section for Extras. If it doesn’t, you will have to add the raisins later. Place the water, milk powder, egg, salt, sugar and butter in the bread machine pan in the order given. After measuring the flour,

use about 2 tablespoons of it, and lightly dust the candied fruit with it. Place the remaining flour in the bread pan, then add the floured fruit. Leave a small area free of fruit, and measure the yeast into that spot. (You don’t want the yeast sticking to the fruit and not mixing into the batter.) Set the bread machine for the Sweet Cycle, or on some machines the Fruit and Nut Cycle. If it has the automatic Extras feature, press the Extras button. Don’t use the Delay Cycle with this loaf. This recipe makes a 1 ½-lb. loaf. If your bread machine has a setting for different loaf sizes, press the one for this size. Start the machine. If your machine doesn’t have the automatic Extras feature, it will beep when it is time to add extras. Add the raisins, and let the machine continue until the bread is done. Cool one hour.

DAVID JOHNSTON

Campaign cake Project Sandhills, the plan to rebuild and refurbish the Constance and Buckham’s Bay Community Centre, was the focus of a fundraising golf tournament Sept. 22 at Copperdale Golf Club. Ward 5 Coun. Eli El-Chantiry and CBBCA President Ian Glen prepare to cut the cake to officially kick off the campaign to raise about $700,000 as the community portion of the $1.9 million addition. With the balance of funding coming from the City of Ottawa and the Ottawa District Library Board, construction is slated to begin in 2013.

EMC events - The annual Retirement Living Fair, organized by the Kanata Seniors Council, is scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 14 in halls A through D at the Mlacak Centre, 2500 Campeau Dr. Running from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. the fair showcases over 30 organizations providing a variety of services and support systems directed at the senior community. Pedorthist support, senior travel and entertainment programs, aqua fit classes, aesthetics for the older adult, along with the diverse services provided by Ottawa’s emergency response units such as fire, police and paramedics, are just a few of the support systems that may be of interest to seniors. “A number of local retirement residences will also be there to provide information on their companies along with an organization which specializes in all aspects of dealing with the always difficult challenge of downsizing,” said Renate Harder, Kanata Seniors’ Council fair organizer. With lots of free parking, free refreshments and a chance to meet, greet and get to know some of the services “that may come in really useful, I think it’s a great way to spend a Sunday afternoon,” she adds. For more information contact Renate Harder, 613- 5005298, klaus.harder@bell.net.

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Your Community Newspaper

NEWS

New chemical to be tested against ash beetles Laura Mueller laura.mueller@metroland.com

be used in the future light rail stations, perhaps for benches or wood paneling. The leftovers can be turned into chips for cogeneration energy production. Signing on with Ottawa Cedar Lumber will reduce the risk of spreading the bugs by minimizing the processing time and moving the wood directly to the processing site. The city also expects the tipping cost fees of 30 per cent to drop. Tree removal was set to resume on Sept. 24. Homeowners on streets where infected ash trees will be cut down will receive a notice one week in advance.

NO MORE ASH

Infested ash wood will no longer be shipped or stored at the city’s Trail Road landfill

R0011654670/1004

EMC news - An experimental chemical insecticide and a different way to process infected ash wood are two new ways the city is fighting the emerald ash borer. Two dozen Ottawa trees will be injected with a new insecticide called Confidor over the next couple of weeks, making the city only the second Canadian municipality to try the treatment against the beetles, which burrow under ash trees’ bark, slowly killing them. Its recent Health Canada approval means it isn’t even available for sale yet, so Ottawa is getting the insecticide for free from the company as it assesses Confidor’s effectiveness and impact. That announcement came with news that the beetles have spread farther across the city. New locations identified this year include: Barrhaven, Kanata North, Fitzroy Harbour, Stittsville, Richmond, Manotick, Metcalfe, Vernon, Vars and Navan. Environment commit-

ing. Many of those trees will be larger 50 millimetre diameter trees, which residents have said they’re rather see than the 25 millimetre diameter trees the city has been planting. The city will send a notice to residents on streets where planting will occur before planting a new tree beside a dying ash tree. If the tree is a city tree on private property, that property owner will be a second notice before the city comes to plant the new tree, and a marker will be placed on their lawn to show them where the new tree will go. In the future, McRae hinted that the city would be open to adding a new tool into its arsenal: biological pests. Wasps are being used to fight the emerald ash borer in Minnesota, and Ottawa’s forester is watching to see if it’s something worth talking about for this city.

tee chairwoman Coun. Maria McRae said it is “pretty frightening� how quickly the emerald ash borer is spreading across Ottawa. The beetle was first identified here in 2008. “It’s really quite a tragedy to see the number of trees lost,� said Mayor Jim Watson, adding he doesn’t want to see Ottawa lose its reputation as a green city. The city has already injected 2,309 trees with an insecticide called Tree Azin, including 262 new trees as part of $1 million in extra EAB funding approved by city council in July. The city expects to have 4,000 to 5,000 trees on a twoyear inoculation cycle by the end of 2013. Some trees can’t be saved by Tree Azin insecticide injections at a cost of $200 to $400 per tree, so the city has a strategy to plant a variety of species to replace them. The city will have planted just shy of 4,000 new trees in 2012 by this fall: 1,267 trees were planted along streets and in parks this spring, and another 2,700 will be planted this fall thanks to the rest of that $1 million in extra fund-

site. Ottawa Cedar Lumber, a company located just east of Ottawa, successfully bid to sort of process the city’s ash wood. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency also signed off on the bid. According to the city, the family company at 2188 Dunning Rd. in Cumberland operates a sawmill and has been producing rough-cut wood and large volumes of wood chips for the past eight years. Owner Luc Laplante said he plans to turn much of the usable wood into lumber for flooring or furniture, but the city has discussed buying back some of the wood at a reduced rate to

R0011653427_1004

Infected ash wood could be used in LRT stations

WĆŒÄžĆ?ĞŜƚĆ? ƚŚĞ ϾƚŚ ŜŜƾÄ‚ĹŻ

’¥“£¤Â™ÂŠÂŁ ÂŚÂšÂŒÂ’ÂŽÂœÂš Ĺś ÂŠÂŁÂ’Â“ÂœÂš Â’ÂœÂŞ ÂŠÂŁÂ’Â“ÂœÂš Â’ÂœÂŞ

Take The Chill Out Of Your Heating Bills.

ŜŊŽÇ‡ Ä‚ ĚĞůĹ?Ä?Ĺ?ŽƾĆ? ůƾŜÄ?Ĺš Ç ĹšĹ?ĹŻÄž Ç€Ĺ?ÄžÇ Ĺ?ĹśĹ? Ä‚ĹľÄ‚ÇŒĹ?ĹśĹ? ĨÄ‚Ć?ĹšĹ?ŽŜĆ?͘ ĨĂŜƚĂĆ?Ć&#x;Ä? ^Ĺ?ůĞŜƚ ĆľÄ?Ć&#x;ŽŜ Ć‰ĆŒĹ˝Ç€Ĺ?ĚĞĆ? Ä‚ ƾŜĹ?ƋƾĞ Ć?ŚŽƉƉĹ?ĹśĹ? Ĺ˝Ć‰Ć‰Ĺ˝ĆŒĆšƾŜĹ?ƚLJ͊ ĞĂƾĆ&#x;Ĩƾů Ĺ?Ĺ?ĹŒ Ä?Ä‚Ć?ŏĞƚĆ? ĂǀĂĹ?ĹŻÄ‚Ä?ĹŻÄž Ä‚Ćš ŽƾĆŒ >ĆľÄ?ŏLJ Ä‚ĆŒÄš ĆŒÄ‚Ç Í˜

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/ĆŒĹ?Ć?Ĺš ,Ĺ?ĹŻĹŻĆ? 'ŽůĨ Θ ŽƾŜĆšĆŒÇ‡ ĹŻĆľÄ?Í• Ä‚ĆŒĆ‰ dĹ?Ä?ŏĞƚĆ? ΨϰϏÍ• ZÄžĆ?ÄžĆŒÇ€ÄžÄš ^ĞĂĆ&#x;ĹśĹ? ŽŽĆŒĆ? ŽƉĞŜ Ä‚Ćš Ď­Ď­Í—ĎŻĎŹÄ‚Ĺľ

t 6Q UP "'6& FOFSHZ FGGJDJFODZ t 0VS NPTU FOFSHZ FGGJDJFOU NPEFMT FWFS t "EWBODFE JHOJUJPO TZTUFN GPS RVJFU SFMJBCMF TUBSU VQ t 8FME GSFF IFBU FYDIBOHFS EFTJHO GPS JODSFBTFE IFBU USBOTGFS BOE MPOH MJGF t *OTVMBUFE TUFFM DBCJOFU BOE JTPMBUFE CMPXFS NPUPS FODMPTVSF SFEVDF PQFSBUJOH TPVOE AFUE stands for Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency.

dĹ?Ä?ŏĞƚĆ? ĂǀĂĹ?ĹŻÄ‚Ä?ĹŻÄž ĆšĹšĆŒŽƾĹ?Ś͗

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Timely registration required. See warranty certificate for details.

&Ä‚Ć?ĹšĹ?ŽŜĆ? Ć‰ĆŒÄžĆ?ĞŜƚĞĚ Ä?LJ͗

DŽĚĞůĆ?Í› ŚĂĹ?ĆŒ Ä?LJ͗

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R. Moyer Mechanical Tercon & Son Heating & Cooling Harold Workman Ltd. 613-258-3356 613-838-4976 613-229-4877 Tercon & Son Heating & Cooling 613-838-4976 Gilles Renaud Heating Central Heating & Cooling 613-832-8026 613-913-4645 Š 2011 International Comfort Products, LLC

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 35


Your Community Newspaper

NEWS

Pet Adoptions

JUNIOR # 4199 HOUND MIX Neutered male 1 year old

LULU # 4390 SHEPHERD MIX Spayed Female 5 years old

ROTTWEILER MIXMIX JOEBUDDY # 4379#4315 LABRADOR RETRIEVER Neutered male 3 years old Neutered male 7 years

We would love for you to meet HONEY # 4300

**Join us for our Fill ‘em Up event at Pet Valu, Saturday October 13/12, from 10 am to 4pm

Arnprior Humane Society 490 Didak Drive 613-623-0916

SUBMITTED

1004.R0011660724

Honey was abandoned in May, she had been neglected for a very long time. She was emaciated with many wounds, but after much TLC she is now happy and healthy and ready to begin a new chapter in her life. Honey is a Shepherd/Dane mix, approx. 3 years old, she is an active, energetic dog with lots of energy to burn. Honey is a pretty big girl, she is intelligent and knows her basic obedience, she is housebroken and crate trained, she does require more training and needs to work on leash manners. She is good with some dogs if properly introduced, but no cats or children under 13 years. Honey deserves to ďŹ nd a wonderful forever home where she can happily live the rest of her life.

SUPPLIES NEEDED THIS WEEK:

The Breast Dress Project, including Dunrobin’s Renee Goulx, raised $21,000 leading up to the Sept. 30 CIBC Run For The Cure. The team has raised over $72,000 since it came together in 2009. The team’s dear friend and former leader, Jamie Johnston, lost her battle with breast cancer this past February. She left behind an incredible legacy and taught all who knew her about courage, strength and hope. To learn more log onto thebreastdressproject.ca and www.cbcf.org.

Have you read your yourottawaregion.com newspaper today? connecting your communities

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Arnprior Humane Society has many other Cat food, dry and canned companion animals available for adoption. Kitten food, dry & canned Featured animals are adopted quickly! Liquid laundry soap Website: http://www.arnpriorhumanesociety.ca %MAIL DISTRICT SPCA BELLNET CA s

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36 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012


BUSINESS DIRECTORY

R0011659574/1004

F FIN

ACCOUNTANTS

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Your Community Newspaper

Kenneth H. Clark Construction Ltd. New Home Construction Renovations Commercial Building Insulated Concrete Foundations 36 Years Experience

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TO BOOK YOUR SPACE CALL

LESLIE AT 613-623-6571 OR ZACK AT 613-623-6571 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 37


R0011659581/1004

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

F FIN

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R0011123037/0202

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ZACK AT 613-623-6571 OR LESLIE AT 613-623-6571 38 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

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BUSINESS DIRECTORY

R0011659586/1004

FIN

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 39


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40 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

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West: ROB 613-762-5577 East: CHRIS 613-276-2848


Your Community Newspaper

NEWS

PHOTOS BY SHERRY HAAIMA/METROLAND

Running for Terry St. Michael’s Fitzroy Harbour School students returned to Fitzroy Provincial Park for the annual Terry Fox Run. Runners and walkers were pleased to be greeted with the same sunny, cool weather as years past. Students reach the bridge Grade 7 student Hadyn Holbrook leads the pack during during Friday’s run. Friday’s run.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 41


Local events and happenings over the coming weeks — free to non-profit organizations Fax: 613-623-7518, E-mail: theresa.fritz@metroland.com

CARP Oct. 6

The Carp St. Paul’s United youth group are selling pumpkins they planted themselves. Located near the farmers’ market, the church is fundraising for Sleeping Children Around the World, an organization that provides bed kits for impoverished kids. The sale includes gourds, pies and more, and runs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. A second sale takes place Oct. 20.

Oct. 16

The Huntley Township Historical Society invites everyone to a Guided Tour of the Lee Valley Tools facility at Head Office at 1090 Morrison Drive (off Greenbank Rd.) Ottawa at 12:30 p.m. The 1.5 hour tour begins at 1 p.m. and includes the photography, distribution center, packaging and machine shop departments. Limited space. Transportation available. Please call Sandy Greene at 613-839-9323 to reserve a spot on the tour.

Oct. 27

The 140th Anniversary Settler’s Dinner takes place at St-Paul’s United Church, 3760 Carp Rd, Carp. Come join the community of St. Paul’s on Saturday. Enjoy the home baked pies, best

in the valley baked beans, yummy ham, mashed potatoes and heartwarming turnip. Above all, enjoy the fellowship and our sense of community. Doors open at 5 p.m. and dinner served at 5:30. Adults $15; students $8.50; pre-school free. And enjoy the live entertainment. One sitting only. Please call Sharron at 613-836-1215 ext. 1 or Rev. Karen Boivin at karen_boivin@rogers.com can also be reached to reserve your tickets.

Oct. 30

Author Reading and Discussion with Alan Cumyn at 2 p.m. (1 hr.) at the Carp branch of the Ottawa Public Library. Cumyn’s books include the Giller Prize finalist, Burridge Unbound, and the acclaimed Great War novels The Sojourn and The Famished Lover. Join him for a reading and discussion of many aspects of fiction writing. Offered in partnership with MASC for adults 50+. Carp Book Chat will be meeting at 1 p.m. to discuss Alan’s first novel, Waiting for Li Ming. For more information or to register call 613-839-5412.

Nov. 1

Thursday, 7 p.m., the Anglican Parish of Huntley invites everyone to the Annual Fall Fashion Show fundraiser on at the Carp Agricultural

Hall, 3790 Carp Rd. Doors open at 6:30pm. Desserts, coffee, tea, door prizes, fun and fellowship! Call Isabel Wilson 613-839-3455, for information and tickets. Tickets are available at the door. No reserved seating please.

CONSTANCE BAY Oct. 17-20

Constance Bay Community Centre 8 p.m. Rural Root Theatre presents “The Morgue the Merrier” and “Grave Matters”, two one act plays with a Halloween theme. Box office phone number 832 1070 OR book on line at www.ruralroot.org.

FITZROY HARBOUR Oct. 20 St. Andrew’s UCW, Fitzroy Harbour will hold their annual bazaar from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Baldwin Hall, at the Church, 184 Carleton St.. Lunch will be served from 11:30 to 1 - soup, sandwiches, squares, tea/coffee. Something for everyone - crafts, baking, preserves and attic treasures. Also their famous frozen pies, ready for baking, will be available plus a chance to order a tourtiere or two for your holiday entertainment.

Oct. 27

Don’t miss the spooktacular Fitzroy Halloween Party on Saturday from 5-9 p.m. at the community centre. A fun-filled night with games like toss the ghost, mummy archaeology, scary relay race and creepy bowling. Be grossed out by touching eyeballs, brains, tongues and much more. Enjoy terrifying crafts, snacks and spooky ghoul punch. Prizes can be won by correctly guessing the weight of a gigantic pumpkin! Will you be brave enough to make a trip through the haunted house?

KINBURN Oct. 19

The Fitzroy Township Historical Society Annual Dinner will be held on Friday at Kinburn Community Centre. Cocktails at 6:30 p.m. and Prime Roast Beef Buffet at 7 p.m. We are honoured to have as our speaker, Major John Grodzinski of Royal Military College in Kingston speaking on the War of 1812 and its impact on our area. Browse the 1812 period displays. Tickets are $25 per person and available by calling Jim at 613-839-3061, Terry 613839-3439 or Pat 613-6232002 or any member of the executive.

Oct. 20

Kinburn Community Association and Valley Heritage Radio are pleased to present a home grown “Fall Fiddle Party” with Bruce Armitage, Kyle Felhaver, Dennis Harrington, Randy Foster, Terri-Lynn Mahusky, Trish Gibson along with pianist Jim Hunter. Canteen and bar available. $10 per adult; $5 per child under 12; from 7 to 11 p.m., at 3045 Kinburn Side Rd. Annual General Meeting at the Kinburn hall general purpose room, 10 a.m. Your support is requested; 12 elected positions available on the board of directors covering October 2012 to September 2013. Coffee and doughnuts to be served. Contact: 613832-1750 for more.

Oct. 27

On Saturday from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Kinburn Community Centre Main Hall is the Family Halloween Party. Music by DJ Crash the Clown. Crash’s DJ services can include comedy, magic, unique balloon art, and so much more! Admission: children under five years of age free; ages 6-15 $3, ages 16-99 $5. Canteen & Bar Refreshments Available. Anyone wishing to donate Halloween candy for loot bags kindly contact an executive member. Please note all Children must be accompanied by an adult.

Nov. 10

Christmas Craft Fair 9:30 a.m to 3 p.m. at the Kinburn Community Centre, 3045 Kinburn Side Rd. Over 60 vendors, bake table, raffle sponsored by Kinburn Community Association www. kinburn.ca.

Dec. 9

Kinburn Community Association presents Brunch with Santa on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kinburn Community Centre Main Hall. Children $3, Adults $5.

GALETTA Oct. 20

Mark your calendar for the Galetta Community Association’s annual rummage, flea market and bake sale. Saturday to Tuesday, at the Galetta Community Hall, 119 Darwin St., Galetta.

WEST CARLETON Oct. 9

The Probus Club of Western Ottawa meets on the second Tuesday of each month at 33 Leacock Drive Kanata at 10 a.m. for coffee followed by a guest speaker. On Tuesday Karen Bell, a nutritionist, will speak on “Nutrition

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25 January Stephen Fai Carleton’s Almonte campus

19 October Robert Biddie Computer security

22 February Brian Burns Science communication

23 November Claudia Schroder-Adams The Cretaceous greenhouse planet

22 March James Wright Beethoven’s immortal beloved

26 April Sali Tagliamonte Ottawa Valley local dialects All Lectures: 7:30PM in the Almonte United Church Hall

For Informatioon: don_wiles@carleton.ca


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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012 43


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$24 FOR AN OIL CHANGE AND 12-POINT AUTO INSPECTION FROM ARNPRIOR TRUCK CENTRE (A $50 VALUE)

$24

$56 FOR A RIO UV GEL NAIL SYSTEM FROM APPLE CREEK PRODUCTS (A $112 VALUE)

$56

$89

UP TO 65% OFF REPAIR AND RENOVATION WORK FROM SQUARE 1 RENOVATIONS (TWO OPTIONS) Regular Price: $240

Discount:

63%

$30 FOR A CALORIE-COUNTING/ PULSE EXERCISE WATCH FROM CHOOSE HEALTHY TODAY (A $60 VALUE) - SHIPPING INCLUDED WITHIN CANADA

$30

PICK UP YOUR WAGJAG GROCERY ORDER AT

44 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, October 4, 2012

$62 FOR 10 X 12 OZ AAA CHOICE STRIP LOIN STEAKS (A $150 VALUE)

$62

$39 FOR A DENTAL GRADE AT-HOME TEETH WHITENING KIT FROM PEARL WHITE SOLUTIONS (A $299 VALUE)

Get deals on your phone: Do business with WagJag! Email ottawa@wagjag.com

$39

1004.R0011653417

You Save: $151


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