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Southpoint Sun March 19, 2014

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Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Council looks at Leamington OPP station hours

By Bill Chaplin, Municipal Correspondent Under the contract Leamington has with the OPP, the Leamington Detachment is to remain open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. To achieve that level of service the contract contained a cost to staff the station with 10 administrative clerks. This contract expires at the end of December, 2015. About a year ago the OPP reorganized and some of the administrative clerks were reassigned as data entry clerks (paid by the Provincial OPP and not Leamington), resulting in a savings of about $25,000 per month to the municipality. Now, those reassigned positions are going to be centralized (elsewhere) and if Leamington still wants the station to be open 24/7 the municipality will have to increase its payments by $339,320 per year to replace the administrative clerks. The alternative to that increase is to change operations at the police station to standard OPP hours: open to the public Monday to Friday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. After office hours, anybody needing to speak to an officer would use a phone at the door to summon an officer to the station to deal with the individual’s business. What currently happens after hours is that the civilian counter person summons a police officer. Council members wanted more information about after hours utilization of the office by the public, the costs associated with various alternative scenarios, and public reaction to a possible reduction in hours before coming to a decision, and so the matter was deferred.

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Folk Festival coming to Kingsville By Bryan Jessop Folk music fans in Essex County will have another reason to look forward to summer this year. The first-ever Kingsville Folk Music Festival will make its way to the community’s Lakeside Park Friday, Aug. 8 to Sunday, Aug. 10 and will feature several live acts from across Canada and the United States. Friday night will feature a lineup of six acts on the main stage, followed by about 24 acts each day Saturday and Sunday. Daytime performers will take to four secondary stages with half a dozen main stage acts performing during the evenings of the 9th and the 10th. Workshops will also be present throughout the three-day event, as will an Artisans’ Ally and food vendors. Licensed wine and beer areas will also be on site. The festival is being organized by Rebel Cowboy Music Store (5 Main St. East, Kingsville) owners and accomplished musicians John and Michele Law, along with publicist Michelle Fortier. Originally, the Laws’ plan was to simply expand on the live music series they had organized at the Wheatley Royal Canadian Legion in order to support a program offering music lessons to the children of local underprivileged families. Upon opening a new music store in Kingsville, the duo discovered that Windsor-Essex County does not offer support programs for youths to get involved with the arts de-

Michele and John Law, along with their dog Weezy, at their store, Rebel Cowboy Music in Kingsville. The Laws are in the midst of organizing the first annual Kingsville Folk Festival, to take place August 8 to 10 at Lakeside Park. The event will feature live musical performances from a wide variety of acts. (SUN Photo)

spite the fact that such services are available in neighbouring Chatham-Kent. The Laws discussed the idea with Winnipeg-based friend and renowned festival coordinator Mitch Pololak who paid them a visit to look at locations in Wheatley, Leamington, Chatham and Kingsville.

It was decided that Lakeside Park would be the ideal setting for a full-fledged festival. “We just fell in love with it,” said Michele of the Kingsville venue. The Laws pitched the idea to Kingsville municipal council, which expressed sentiments of complete sup-

port for the event. The festival will be a first of its kind for the Windsor to London corridor and will be an all-ages, familyfriendly weekend including children’s entertainer Fred Penner. Thus far, booked musicians include David Francey, Penner, (Continued on Page 2)

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