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Plympton-Wyoming fair begins tonight

The wrestlers are always a popular attraction at the Plympton-Wyoming Fall Fair. It's been cancelled for 2021.

There are all kinds of things to do at the Plympton-Wyoming Fair, including wrestling.

 

Lesley Brumwell admits she’s not a farm girl but the president of the Plympton & Wyoming Agricultural Society says she loves the fall fair.

“It brings the town together,” says Brumwell of the annual event, which begins Friday night. “Everybody gets to socialize…when you go to London for the fair, it’s the big publicity stuff. We’re still a small town little fair where you can meet family and friends.”

The 167th Annual fair kicks off Friday night with the Ambassador Contest at 7pm and the dance with Scott Manery and the Barnburners.

The parade winds down Wyoming’s main street Saturday at noon.

There is a midway this year for the little people and even an adult ride.

There will also be a log sawing contest, trade exhibits, a jaws of life demonstration and wrestlers at the Livestock Building Saturday night. “They put on an awesome show,” says Brumwell.

And the home craft and school exhibits are always a big hit, according to Brumwell.

“I’d have to say I’m not a farm girl, enjoy browsing in the animal, but probably the exhibits to see what the kids are involved with and the creativity of what they did,” she says.

– Heather Wright

 

 

Clean up in Petrolia continues after storm

Public works crews are making good progress clearing up debris from Wednesday’s storm.

Joe Adams, director of operations for the Town of Petrolia, says they spent most of Thursday removing tree branches which fell during the wicked storm. About a half dozen trees toppled, including one onto a house on Princess Street, during the storm which knocked out power to 21,000 people.

Adams says that while there won’t be a specific brush pickup because of the storm, the gates to the composting site on the Maude Street extension, will remain open so residents can bring any fallen tree branches there in the evening hours.

Meantime Adams says work on the $1.6 million Princess Street reconstruction will go ahead as planned despite the damage from the storm. He says the only concern was hanging power lines and Bluewater Power repaired those by 3:30 am Thursday morning.

– Heather Wright

Truck troubles: McCharles wants big trucks off Petrolia Line

“It is absolutely ridiculous the number of trucks which go through Petrolia that don’t have to.”

Mayor John McCharles, like many other town councilors, is sick of transports using Petrolia Line as thoroughfare.

In July, Dave Menzies, Petrolia’s director of community services, worked with the OPP to stop transports on the outskirts of town. They were to try to determine why they were headed straight into the downtown.

“We did an education session, stopping the transport trucks on a number of different times and days on OPP assistance,” says Menzies. “We gave them a letter and a map of the county and ask the truck drivers for assistance and not travel through downtown area.”

Often the trucks are grain haulers, heading to Suncor’s ethanol plant. The town has called the company asking it to talk to truckers, but the problem persists.

Menzies says the problem appears to be the GPS systems the truckers use. It sends them through Petrolia because it is the fastest route to their destination. While they don’t have to follow the GPS, many don’t know the alternative routes.

And without a bylaw to stop the trucks from using the downtown route, the drivers just keep rolling.

“There are some trucks which absolutely have to go through Petrolia,” says McCharles noting local deliveries have to go on.

“It is absolutely ridiculous the number of trucks that go through Petrolia which don’t have to – they certainly could be going through the area by another route. You would think after the first trip (through the downtown) they’d look for something better.”

McCharles wants to talk to Warden Todd Case about ways the county can help. Several years ago, the county banned truck traffic on Lakeshore Road. It talked at the time about doing the same on Petrolia Line.

“I don’t know why they can’t restrict the trucks like they do on Lakeshore…they don’t let the trucks go in downtown Sarnia,” says McCharles. “It’s kind of a no-win situation here.”

But Jim Kutyba, general manager of infrastructure for Lambton County, says it would not be that easy.

“There were more negatives than positive with banning them,” says Kutyba. “It was the big things like the businesses and how they would be services without having the big trucks coming through town,” he says.

Kutyba says the town could ask the county to ban truck traffic, except local deliveries, but that would not solve the whole problem. “We’re not going to just be able to ban trucks; they have to make deliveries in town,” he says, “You’re not going to get rid of all of them.”

And he says getting the drivers to change their habits would still require a lot of enforcement even if a bylaw banning trucks through the downtown were passed.

But McCharles says something has to be done. He says aside from the obvious safety hazards, the heavy trucks could be causing damage.

“It is certainly harmful to the road and the base, there is a lot of infrastructure that’s quite old under Petrolia line and that causes some concerns.”

– Heather Wright

 

 

 

 

 

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