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July 19, 2017

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I HAVE THE POWER TO MOVE YOU! JOHN WoELK

Sales Representative

24 Fraser Rd Leamington

Cell

519-791-2868

519-322-2551 www.dtauto.ca

ERIE SHORES REALTY INC., BROKERAGE Independently Owned and Operated

Volume 8, Issue 26

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

www.southpointsun.ca

FREE

Leamington part of NEW STAINABLE hospital upgrade funding CANADIAN MADE

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8 COLOURS TO CHOOSE FROM THE BEST KEEPS GETTING BETTER

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Leamington

Home Hardware 114 Erie St. N. 519-326-9088

Funding for repairs and upgrades to area hospitals include Leamington and Chatham Ontario is continuing to strengthen and support hospitals in Erie St. Clair with repairs and upgrades to local hospitals this year, to provide patients with high-quality care in a safe and healthy environment. Funding from the province allows hospitals to make critical improvements to their facilities, including upgrades or replacements to roofs, windows, heating and air conditioning systems, fire alarms, and back-up generators. The 2017 balanced Budget includes a new $7-billion booster shot to health care, building on the commitment made in the 2016 Budget. This investment will improve access to care, expand mental health and addiction services, and enhance the experience and recovery of patients. The province is investing $175 million in repairs and upgrades to hospitals this year through the Health Infrastructure Renewal Fund (HIRF). HIRF investments at local area hospitals include: • Erie Shores HealthCare (formerly Leamington District Memorial Hospital): $428,819. • CKHA (Public General Hospital Society of Chatham): $643,722. • CKHA (Sydenham District Hospital in Wallaceburg): $1,883,930. • Hôtel-Dieu Grace Healthcare (Windsor): $755,937. • Windsor Regional Hospital: $714,137. • Bluewater Health (Sarnia): $1,209,226. HIRF was established in 1999 to assist hospitals in renewing their facilities. As part of the 2017 Budget, Ontario is also spending an additional $9 billion to support the construction of new hospital projects across the province.This brings Ontario’s total planned investment in hospital infrastructure to more than $20 billion over the next 10 years. The government’s investment of more than $190 billion over the 13-year period starting in 2014-15 is the largest infrastructure investment in the province’s history. It is helping to build new child care spaces, schools, hospitals, public transit, highways, and roads. “These investments, intended to help improve local-area hospitals’ infrastructure, are great news for our region,” said Ralph Ganter, Chief Executive Officer, Erie St. Clair LHIN. “Hospitals need to focus their attention on frontline care, but well maintained hospital facilities are also crucial for overall patient experience. These investments will help alleviate some of the ongoing pressures for our local-area hospitals.”

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Madeline Wass (right) shows her older sister Brittney Wass a lesson she learned on an iPad Friday, July 14 at St. Louis Catholic Elementary School. The Parent Engagement Session is part of the Windsor Essex Catholic District School Board’s Minds On Learning Academy Summer Learning Program. (SUN Photo)

Summer school program expands to Leamington By Bryan Jessop The two-month summer break is well underway, but that doesn’t mean all local students have put the brakes on learning. St. Louis Catholic Elementary School has become the first school beyond Windsor’s city limits to benefit from the Windsor Essex Catholic District School Board’s Summer Learning Program, a Ministry of Education-funded initiative that the local board first adopted in 2014. At St. Louis, the program has been branded the Minds on Learning Academy, where roughly two-dozen Grade 2 and 3 students are taking part in its threeweek schedule. Utilizing Leamington as its county pilot project for the Summer Learning Program, the WECDSB was hoping to see 20 students signed on for a Blended Learning Model that combines numeracy and literacy. Twenty-three St. Louis students are taking part in the program, which also features a technological component, recreational activities and occasional parent engagement sessions where participating pupils are given the opportunities to show older family members what they’ve learned in previous lessons. “It’s amazing what they can learn from their seven- and eight-year-olds,” said WECDSB executive superintendent of education Emelda Byrne. “This really enhances their skill sets for the summer. It’s a great program.” The SLP began locally four years ago as a means of offsetting the effects of what Ontario’s school boards often refer to as the “summer slide,” the two-month vacation gap where students often forget some of the contents of curriculum taught between September and June. Before school lets out for the summer, the teachers and principals of participating schools select the students whom they believe would benefit most from avoiding the summer slide and send packages to their parents for the program’s consideration. The three-week Leamington program runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day and is led by teachers Jessica Meloche and Paolo Scalzo, the former a St. Louis teacher and the latter who’ll begin teaching at St. Joseph’s Catholic Elementary School in River Canard in September of this year. The two are being assisted by Focus On Youth students Hannah Iacobelli and Danielle DiMenna, both of whom graduated from Cardinal Carter Catholic Secondary School last month. Iacobelli is serving as the program’s robotics lead while (Continued on Page 2)

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July 19, 2017 by Southpoint Sun - Issuu