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LaSalle Agri pleads guilty in biosolids bylaw case

A Lambton County company has plead guilty to operating a commercial operation on agricultural zoned land in Sarnia Court.

Warwick Township laid the charge against LaSalle Agri after a pile of biosolids it was storing at the corner of Nauvoo Road and Highway 402 grew beyond what the municipality expected.

Since January – after the charge was laid, the pile of pellets made from human waste which is used as farm fertilizer has stretched to about 100 meters of Nauvoo Road. In the past couple of weeks, about half of the fertilizer has been moved from the property according to Clerk-Administrator Amanda Gubbels.

During pretrial arguments Monday, LaSalle Agri plead guilty to the bylaw charge. The company will be sentenced in December. The maximum fine is $50,000.

Pedestrian dead after accident in Edys Mills

A pedestrian has been killed in an accident on Oil Heritage Road north of Edys Mills.

Lambton OPP and the EMS were called to the area around 12:30 am. The OPP West Region Technical Collision Investigators are on the scene probing the accident.

Oil Heritage Road between Edys Mills Line and Aberfeldy Line was still closed at 9 am as the investigation continued.

Police have not released the name of the pedestrian yet.

Plympton-Wyoming offering town property to get internet services

Plympton-Wyoming may give two internet companies free space on municipal property to help get internet service to the community.

Internet access has long been a problem in Plympton-Wyoming, particularly along the shores of Lake Huron where hundreds of new homes will be developed in the next few years.

It’s a problem all of rural Lambton deals with. The county has been working regionally to bring fibre optic internet to the community. Friday, SWIFT announced it was calling for contractors to install $11.3 million in infrastructure in the area.

But that won’t be enough to get internet to everyone immediately according to Plympton-Wyoming Chief Administrative Officer Carolyn Tripp.

So, she’s recommending council offer two local internet companies use of municipal properties – at no cost – to set up antennas and equipment to provide line of sight broadband to the community.

A typical broadband service is about 10 MB, allowing kids to do homework and other people in the home to use the internet at the same time. In some parts of Plympton-Wyoming, residents aren’t even able to access one megabyte.

The SWIFT project would bring ultra high speeds of 50 MBs once the homes are connected. But it could take some time.

“All this is not going to happen overnight,” Tripp says “even if they let a contract tomorrow and start servicing Plympton-Wyoming…$10 million is just a drop in the bucket to service everyone in Lambton County and Plympton-Wyoming is part of that.”

Tripp is recommending Merlink Communication and SLICC be offered access to the Wyoming Water Tower, the Cullen Drive Pumping Station, the Camlachie Sewage Treatment plant, the Hillsboro Pumping Station and municipally-owned streetlights on Cullen Drive to erect equipment as quickly as possible. Council discusses the idea Wednesday.

“This (line of sight service by local providers) is an interim measure but…for some people this may not be just the interim fix, it may be the permanent fix.

“In council’s opinion, and in my opinion, internet access is not a luxury, it is an essential services…and we want to help out providers to provide the services our residents need…Even with this and the SWIFT project, there will still be some people left out in the cold for a while.”

Mental health workers teaming up with police to help those in need

A mental health nurse from the local Canadian Mental Health Association will work at the OPP detachment in Petrolia starting .

The job is part of a new program to help police officers help people with mental health issues.

Bluewater Health, the OPP, Sarnia Police and CMHA have set up a team called M-HEART – Mental Health Engagement and Response Team. Alan Stevenson, CEO of CMHA in Lambton-Kent, says mental health nurse will be going out with OPP officers in the county to make contact with people who might have mental health problems.

“There is a lot more focus on not just responding to crisis but engaging people before crisis to hopefully prevent a crisis or at least deescalate faster,” says Stevenson.

The idea is to work with them to find the help they need before there is a problem. CMHA already helps the OPP talk to those with mental health problems in emergency situation.

The M-HEART team was announced today by the Minister of Health Christine Elliott. She was in Sarnia to talk about the new guidelines set up in Sarnia which allow police officers a clear, easy path to bring people with mental health issues into the hospital and into the care of health professionals quickly. Right now, Elliott says, officers can wait with a mental health patient eight hours before getting service.

“The police-hospital transition framework will ensure that individuals in crisis receive care faster and police to get back on the streets sooner, keeping our communities safe,” says Sylvia Jones, the province’s Solicitor General.

Read more about the program in the Aug. 14th edition of The Independent

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