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Brigden native wins provincial X Country title

Photo courtesy of OCAA

 

Brigden’s Clint Smith has successfully defended his Ontario Colleges Athletic Association (OCAA) men’s cross country championship with a victory  at Redeemer University College in Ancaster.

The LCCVI grad beat an Oshawa runner by five seconds to claim the top prize last Saturday (Oct. 26).

Smith’s medal total at the provincial championships now stands at four after he won silver medals in 2010 and 2011.

His victory also helped Fanshawe College capture the men’s team title for a record-setting fifth consecutive season.

Smith now advances to the Canadian Colleges Athletic Association Championship (CCAA) at Humber College on Nov. 9.

Last season, he captured second place in the men’s competition at the national event.

Stained glass window honours IODE member

 

Jean Windover is hopeful a new stained glass window in the Petrolia Library reflects a little of her long-time friend.

Friends, family and members of the Margaret Stokes IODE in Petrolia donated money to purchase the window to honour the life of Pat Moloney who died recently after a long battle with cancer. The flowering dogwood window is a reminder of Moloney’s love of gardening. Windover says she was a member of the local horticultural society for years.

But it was at the IODE that Windover got to know Moloney best.

Moloney was a long-time member and was the sort of person everyone enjoyed being around. “She was very warm, very caring and artistic. She was a great interior decorator,” says Windover.

“It didn’t seem to matter what you asked her to do, she was always more than willing…She was dignified; she was just a great lady – one of the women you don’t forget.”

The window was recently donated to the town and now hangs in the Shirley Banks Reading Room at the Petrolia Library.

Windover says IODE members love the new window in memory of the friend, as does Moloney’s husband, Bernie, who recently came to the library to see the memorial. “He was overwhelmed.”

 

Western students discover Oil Springs’ rich history

 

The oil history of Oil Springs is making headlines at Western University in London.

A number of students taking their masters in public history recently visited Oil Springs, touring Fairbank Oil Properties and the Oil Museum of Canada, including the oldest oil fields in North America.

Charles Fairbank gave the group a firsthand look at the jerker line system developed by his great-grandfather John Henry Fairbank, which has been used in Oil Springs since the fields were developed.

The students also took in the exhibits at the Oil Heritage Museum including a multimedia exhibit showcasing the stories of the foreign drillers who opened oil fields around the world.

The visit was outlined on the university’s website.

Oil Museum supervisor Connie Bell says the museum Fairbank Oil have a long history with Western through the a fellowship program. “The students’ research and expertise in the fellowships has been invaluable.”

 

Municipalities wait and worry about OPP contracts

Dawn-Euphemia is getting anxious about the cost of policing; and they’re not alone.

Recently, Ontario’s Auditor General told the OPP it needed a funding model which was clearer and more transparent. The OPP has now finished their work and is inviting municipalities to find out how it will work Nov. 15 in London.

Dawn-Euphemia Deputy Mayor Leslie Williams plans to attend and says she’s worried about what is coming. Before the November meeting, Dawn-Euphemia has invited local OPP representatives to talk to them about the cost of policing.

Dawn Euphemia’s OPP bill started at $229,400 in 1998, says Williams. But even with the population declining, the cost has risen dramatically to an estimated $410,140 this year.

“This is a very, very serious concern,” says Williams noting the cost will continue to climb since the OPP Association has already negotiated an eight percent pay increase for its members in 2014.

“This is just crippling municipalities,” says Williams. “Theses costs put the long-term sustainability of the municipality in question.”

The rising cost of policing comes at a time the province is reducing its funding to municipalities. Williams says small municipalities, like Dawn-Euphemia, have depended on the Ontario Municipal Partnership Fund. But the province is trimming $500 million off the grants this year. So far, Dawn-Euphemia has lost $187,000 in provincial funding. It expects to lose at least $33,000 more a year for the next three years.

Officials from Petrolia will also be attending the meeting. Town CAO Manny Baron says policing costs have risen from $764,370 in 2010 to an anticipated $881,431 this year.

And even then, Petrolia is doing well. Baron says Petrolia pays $150 per person for policing while the provincial average is $324 per person. “It (the contract cost) is high, but it is the service we need,” he says.

Plympton-Wyoming is also facing climbing bills from the OPP; in 2010 the cost was $1,034,286 and this year it is expected to be about $1,166,282.

 

 

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