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Feature Article - November 30, 2006
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Letters to the Editor
To all taxpayers: It has been more than 30 years since there has been an increase in the number of ambulances on the roads of
This all sounds good but there is a glitch to the system: The counties to the west and east of us, Lennox and Addington and
It seems
As paramedics we know that in order to provide the best possible care and outcome to our community, we need to get to the patient as expeditiously as possible. This is no longer possible if we are not even in the same county. Call Mayor Rosen and city councillors, call your Frontenac mayors and voice your concern. It’s your life they’re playing with. - Terry Baker, OPSEU Local 462 President FEWR closing This is very disappointing, not only for the people who have worked so hard to establish the Frontenac Electronic Waste Recovery but for those of us who were relieved to find a way to recycle our old computer systems. I took a number of systems up to them over the past few years, including donations from friends and co-workers who also felt better knowing that their outdated but still useful machines would be reused in the schools here in
Way back in 1961, John Steinbeck, in his wonderful book Travels with Charley, observed: "American cities are like badger holes, ringed with trash--all of them--surrounded by piles of wrecked and rusting automobiles, and almost smothered with rubbish...The mountains of things we throw away are much greater than the things we use. In this, if in no other way, we can see the wild and reckless exuberance of our production, and waste seems to be the index." Sadly, these comments from almost 50 years ago could easily apply to our country today. Our politicians, whom we elect to make the tough decisions, seem content to sit on their hands, garner their salaries and pensions, and pass on the problems to our kids. Shame on them all for their conspicuous lack of leadership, and for permitting the award-winning FEWR program to wither on the vine. And shame on us for not caring enough to demand better. - Stephen Dukoff Re: E-Waste Centre closing I am writing with regard to the letter titled “E-Waste Centre Closing” which appeared in the November 16 edition of the Frontenac News. Letter to the Editor: A copy of the letter circulated electronically by Mr. Terry Baker has come to our attention. It was addressed to all taxpayers and mentions not only the Frontenac Paramedic Services but also referred to the Emergency Medical Services provided to the west of Frontenac by the
Ambulance services are provided by our paramedics across the geographic area identified by Mr. Baker on the basis of the closest available team. The nearest available paramedics are assigned. That means the people of our communities can be assured that an ambulance will come to their assistance as quickly as possible. Geographic boundaries, that mean nothing in an emergency, are not taken into account. We are all committed to ensuring that when our residents or visitors to our areas are in need, help comes from the closest available resource. Residents from the east end of
We celebrate the level of cooperation that exists within the paramedic services across
Cooperation is the key. No matter where you are, we are committed to responding as quickly as possible. You can count on it. In service to our communities,
Tom Bedford, Manager of Emergency Services,
Paul Charbonneau, Director of Emergency & Transportation Services, Chief of Paramedic Services, County of Frontenac
Dan Chevrier,
United Counties of Leeds & Grenville Central Frontenac Railway Museum After six years of work, the Central Frontenac Railway Museum/Library Project is nearing its end. Despite the considerable effort which has gone into this endeavour, the apparently irresolvable site issue remains the chief impediment. In the past while, a feasibility study has been completed which addressed the main issues concerning this project. Environmental concerns were looked into, preliminary plans were drawn up, building costs were estimated as well as ongoing subsequent maintenance costs, and the suggested relationship between the Board and Municipality was explored. However, with no site there can be no building. As a registered charity, we have certain obligations to Revenue
What this means to Central Frontenac is the loss of a high quality, irreplaceable collection of railway artifacts and memorabilia, as well as a $1,000,000 piece of infrastructure, which would provide the area with 1) a significant tourist attraction, 2) a modern spacious (app. 4300 sq. ft.) library facility, 3) sorely needed municipal space for offices and council chambers. Our Board is effectively hamstrung by this problem, since it is not ours to resolve. No solution in the next short while, however, means the likely loss of a facility of considerable significance to the area. The Central Frontenac Railway Committee
The battle between residents of
First a brief history: The 70-year-old bridge over
Why should township taxpayers have to pay the extra costs for a bridge over a four kilometre long creek that its residents do not want and is not needed? An environmental inventory found three species at risk living in the area of the bridge that would be threatened. Many people come to
The latest position from the Ministry is that they are not imposing the bigger bridge; the township agreed to it. The township did this only after they were told they had no choice if they wanted to fix the bridge. For two years we have been trying to obtain the regulation that says the bridge has to be raised. After two years of saying they would send it to us, the Minister’s office is now telling us to contact the Access to Information office if we want the guidelines. Making us go through the Access to Information Office to confirm this truth will delay our case for another year in which they will probably have forced the township to build the bigger bridge. At best, this is an insensitive federal government downloading a bad decision onto a township without covering the cost. At worst, it is an out-of-date action to impose a 19th century economic development policy that will harm the environment, hurt the local economy and increase property taxes just to prove that the federal bureaucracy does not have to listen to local concerns. We encourage people who think that controlling costs and helping the environment are important to write to Transport Minister Mr. Cannon, in
- Ross Sutherland, for the Friends of
Re: E-Waste Centre closing It appears in the Thursday, November 23 issue of the Frontenac News that Leona Dombrowsky was rather “surprised” that the letter regarding my annoyance with the closing of the E-waste Centre was directed to her. I sent the letter to her as our current MPP. In fact, as she would have noted from my original e-mailed letter to her, a copy of the same letter was indeed sent to MP Scott Reid. The Frontenac News chose to select the salutation to Ms Dombrowsky in the copy printed in the paper. Having had communications with Ms Dombrowsky in the past, I have complete confidence in her ability to address issues of concern such as this, particularly in her role as former Minister of the Environment. As Ms Dombrowsky is well aware, the electronic waste recycling issue is one to which I am strongly committed, as are many other residents of this area. I don’t care who deals with this problem, but someone needs to deal with it now! As mentioned in my original article, it is time to quit fumbling the political football. We citizens are trying to address recycling and environmental issues to the best of our ability. We now demand strong support from all levels of government. - Doug Boulter Life in the Country Having just returned from our two week honeymoon in Bonnie Scotland (Where it hardly rained, I kid you not… apparently the rain lived in Verona while we were gone), my wife and I would like to pass on our thanks to the Verona Post Office employees who made sure our trip of a lifetime was able to go ahead. Knowing time was tight to receive my wife’s passport in our married name, I was pleased to pick up the passport on the Tuesday from our post office, albeit four days before we left. My smile must have spoken volumes when it arrived, but due to the diligence of Dianne at the post office, we had a lucky escape. On handing it over, she suggested I might want to double check the passport before I left as “they seem to have misspelt your wife’s name as ‘McGan’ not ‘McGaw’ on the envelope”. I thought “Surely not” and opened it immediately. Sure enough. The name on the passport was misspelt. Panic set in and I had to drive to
Thanks again, ladies - Gordon and Kelly McGaw Re: Leona Dombrowsky's letter in the November 23 issue of the Frontenac News. If, as Dombrowsky asserts, the
So, rather than play "hot potato" and suggest that citizens in her constituency petition her federal counterpart, perhaps she could step forward and shake the funding for this important initiative out of the provincial coffers. - Stephen Dukoff
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