HomeMy WebLinkAboutNA2013_03_20P ICKER I NG
News Adver tiser
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PICKERING -- Fifteen-year-old Pickering resident Kyle Faller submitted a car design to Vencer’s design contest and is currently in second place.
JASON LIEBREGTS / METROLAND
Pickering teen taking aim at supercar dreams
Kyle Faller, 15, second in
worldwide design contest
MOYA DILLON
mdillon@durhamregion.com
PICKERING – While most teens are dreaming of the
car they might one day own, Kyle Faller went ahead and
designed his own.
The Pickering resident, 15, is currently hovering at second
place in an international contest hosted by Dutch company
Vencer to find the design for its next supercar.
“It’s my dream come true to go to Europe and start design-
ing supercars, so I thought this could be my big break,” Kyle
says of the contest, which he entered last June.
Kyle’s Jetstream design echoes the look and feel of fight-
er jets, with unique features including a carbon fibre pass
through along the side and a trapezoid-shaped carbon fibre
front.
See PICKERING Page 5
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
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AP Shock was the response from most people, includ-
ing Mr. Pope and 11-year-old big brother Shayne
Bungay, who said he didn’t believe the news at first.
The triplets have two other older brothers, 19-year-
old Brandon Bungay and seven-year-old Brett
Pope.
The babies were born about a week after Ms. Bun-
gay’s water started to break.
Generally speaking, it’s not unusual for multiples
to be born early, said Tasha Osborne, director of
women’s and children’s health care at Lakeridge.
“There’s not enough room so they come out ear-
lier and at lower weights so they’re prone to more
complications.”
In the past, Durham parents having higher order
multiples such as triplets have had to travel to a
Toronto hospital. However in recent years, services
at the Oshawa hospital have increased so that more
complicated pregnancies can be accommodated.
This keeps mothers and babies closer to their fami-
lies.
Ms. Bungay praised the staff at the hospital.
“The staff have been great, the NICU staff, they
explain everything in great detail.”
‘‘I went for the
dating scan to
confirm how
many weeks
pregnant I was
and there they
were, three of
them.’
Amy Bungay
Rare set
of triplets
born at
Lakeridge
Only the third set of
triplets in a decade at
Oshawa hospital
REKA SZEKELY
rszekely@durhamregion.com
OSHAWA -- An Oshawa couple has instant-
ly doubled the size of their family with the
birth of triplets.
The three boys born to Amy Bungay and
Randy Pope are just the third set of triplets
delivered at the Oshawa hospital in the last
decade, but the second set in the last six
months.
Ms. Bungay gave birth to the triplets on
March 5 via caesarean section at 8 a.m., 8:01
a.m. and 8:02 a.m. Arriving early at 34 weeks
and two days, the babies are in incubators
in the neo-natal intensive care unit (NICU),
but doing well. They ranged in weight from
four pounds, 11 ounces to five pounds, two
ounces.
“Their sizes are great,” said Ms. Bun-
gay. “It’s just pretty much monitoring their
growth, their breathing, their eating.”
Since the boys were called Baby A, B, and
C during the pregnancy, the couple was
considering giving them names that began
with each of those letters. The family is still
not sure whether they’re identical or frater-
nal, but the babies look very similar.
Ms. Bungay found out she was carrying
triplets when she went for a routine scan
that indicates how far along a pregnancy is.
“I went for the dating scan to confirm how
many weeks pregnant I was and there they
were, three of them,” she said.
Twins
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Pickering celebrating
sustainability
to the tune of
$10,000
New program aims to
encourage sustainable
communities
Moya Dillon
mdillon@durhamregion.com
PICKERING -- From community cleanups to tree plant-
ing to improving residents’ mental health, the City of
Pickering is reminding residents there are many ways
to foster sustainability in their own neighbourhoods --
which could be rewarded with $10,000.
The City is launching a new Celebrating Sustainable
Neighbourhoods program to encourage residents to
contribute to sustainability within their communities.
“It’s always difficult engaging residents in sustainabil-
ity initiatives,” said Shauna Muir, acting co-ordinator of
sustainability for the City.
“This program is the perfect opportunity to engage
residents and promote sustainability activities big or
small throughout our communities. We wanted to make
it easy and fun for people to be involved.”
To participate in the program, residents can choose
one of 55 indicators of sustainability from the City’s
Measuring Sustainability Report and implement an
activity that works toward it. Participants can define
their own neighbourhood groups by connecting with at least four
other individuals who either live or work in Pickering to run their
activity.
The winning neighbourhood group will be awarded $10,000
towards a project to enhance their community.
“We are asking our residents to join in our journey to become
the most sustainable municipality in Ontario,” said Pickering
Mayor Dave Ryan. “This is an excellent program that will engage
residents, and encourage them to make a real and meaningful
difference right in their own community.”
Indicators are split into groups including healthy environment,
responsible economy, healthy society, responsible development
and responsible consumption, and range from housing afford-
ability to education and libraries to air and surface water quality.
Ms. Muir notes that groups can go as big or small as they want,
given the wide range of indicators to choose from.
“Many people think change can only happen on a big scale,”
she said. “We want to show that transforming Pickering into a
sustainable city can start in people’s own homes.”
Participating groups can register their activities online at www.
pickering.ca until November. A wrap party where participants
can share their stories and successes will be held in early 2014,
and participants will vote for the winning group.
The program launches Saturday, March 23 during Sustainable
Pickering Day at the Pickering Town Centre from 9:30 a.m. to 6
p.m.
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Durham police seeking
information
after
Pickering
man stabbed
Witnesses, victim not
cooperating with police
OSHAWA -- Police are asking the public
for help after a Pickering man was stabbed
at an Oshawa residence.
Police were called to a home in the Bloor
Street West and Park Road South area
around 1 p.m. on March 15, where they
found a 19-year-old man suf- fering from
a stab wound to his left
side.
He was taken to hos-
pital and treated for a
collapsed lung.
Witnesses and
the victim are
not cooperat-
ing with police,
and investiga-
tors are appeal-
ing to the pub-
lic to learn more
about the incident.
Anyone with information is asked
to call 1-888-579-1520 ext. 5100. Anony-
mous tips can also be made to Durham
Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-
8477 or online at www.durhamregional-
crimestoppers.ca
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“I designed it to look really sleek like a fighter
jet,” Kyle says of his design.
“I was trying to do something differ-
ent, I wanted to do something no one has
done before but nothing so futuristic that it
couldn’t actually be made.”
Kyle’s creativity is something that has
always fuelled his hobbies. When he’s not
creating new car designs or redesigning exist-
ing cars, he is finding other ways to express
his passion, including carving cars out of
sand, which has earned him several awards
at the annual Cobourg Sandcastle Festival.
“I’ve always liked cars and always been fasci-
nated by them,” he said.
“I don’t really understand it; I have a real
attraction to design. Some people with cars
they say it gets you from A to B, but there’s a
feeling that you get from cars. I think the Jet-
stream creates a lot of excitement.”
Kyle’s drive to make his dreams a reality
does not surprise his parents, who say his
creative streak began early, with a series of
impressive Lego towers when he was a tod-
dler.
“The thing I’m always impressed by is his
passion that drives him to seek things out
and learn things himself,” said his father Tim
Faller, recalling finding Kyle at the age of 12
finishing up a detailed drawing of a working
combustion engine, which he assumed was
for a science project.
“It turns out he was just curious how it
worked. I mean, what kind of 12-year-old
spends his free time learning about combus-
tion engines?”
Currently in Grade 10 at Pickering High
School, Kyle plans to study transportation
design and engineering at university.
To view the jetstream and vote for Kyle visit
www.vencer.nl. Voting ends in December.
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PICKERING from page 1
Pickering teen a contender in
international car design competition
‘‘I don’t really understand
it; I have a real attraction
to design.’ Kyle Faller, 15
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AP
Living with urban wildlife in Durham
Spring officially
arrives in Durham
Region today with its
promise of warmer
days, shorter nights and
seasonal renewal.
But spring also brings, for some, the
arrival of uninvited house guests who take
up residence in house attics, garages and
roof eaves in preparation for the season.
Raccoons, those ubiquitous urban crea-
tures with the bandit-mask eyes, could be
casing your house, right now, to see if it
provides suitable accommodations.
Those who have struggled with the inva-
sion of females looking to build dens and
birth litters know well the damage to struc-
tures, the smelly mess of their dens and the
difficulty of removing newborn litters, all
of which is made worse by the rummaging
through green bins and trash cans as the
wily creatures treat your property like a no-
fee condominium with a 24-hour buffet.
But the truth is that humans and raccoons
share their habitats. As such we must take
steps to protect properties and ensure
we minimize health risks -- raccoons are
known to carry rabies and their solid waste
contains ringworm -- to family members
and pets.
To that end, take a few minutes to assess
your exterior living space this spring to
secure your home and make it an unwel-
coming place for these urban denizens.
• Home owners or tenants should block
off potential access points to attics, garages
and other buildings.
• Secure the perimeter of decks, sheds
and crawl spaces.
• Keep indoor pet food and any other
food away from a pet door. Lock the pet
door at night.
• Install a chimney cap.
• Trim branches near buildings to pre-
vent easy access.
• Complete home repairs in the autumn,
so mother and young won’t be trapped
inside.
• Use flashing lights, motion sensors and
noise makers to deter raccoons.
The vast majority of Durham Region resi-
dents only see the mess left behind when
raccoons tip over garbage bins or break
into green bins in search of a feast. But
they populate just about every neighbour-
hood in Durham and never range too far in
urban settings.
We don’t have to eliminate them, and in
fact it is illegal to move them too far out of
their existing territories. But rather than
claim dominion over entire neighbour-
hoods, we can take steps to prevent dam-
age, secure our homes and waste contain-
ers and at least give raccoons room to exist,
if not flourish.
On F-Bombs and
clear language
I’m 30 years old and I can’t say the f-word
or the b-word.
Call me old-fashioned, but those two
words still make me uncomfortable even if
I’m not the one saying them. Most likely this
could be due to my upbringing. Growing up,
uttering those two words in my house would
ensure a swift reprimand and automatic loss
of privileges. It was just something we kids
never dared do, because we didn’t want to
face the consequences. I know many par-
ents nowadays who don’t like their kids curs-
ing. In fact, a child could still get in trouble at
school if a teacher heard them saying such
words. Similarly as an adult, you could spoil
your chances at a prospective job if you let
those words slip from your mouth during an
interview. So if it’s still taboo, why are these
words so rampant in today’s media?
You can’t go a day without hearing either
of those two words on prime time TV (The
Big Bang Theory), in the movies (Silver Lin-
ings Playbook) or in songs (Scream and
Shout by will.i.am featuring Britney Spears).
It’s so commonplace nowadays that it
doesn’t even seem to faze people anymore.
We’ve become desensitized to it.
Looking back, I’m glad my parents
frowned upon us using swear words. It meant
that such words never became part of my
or my siblings’ vocabulary. It meant that we
learned to find other ways to express our-
selves -- to express our frustration or anger
-- without resorting to cursing.
Someday when my husband and I have
children of our own, I would like to instill
these values in them too. And I would like
to be able to watch TV, movies and listen to
songs with them that don’t encourage the
opposite. Call me a stuffed shirt if you will,
but I’m pretty sure I’m not alone in thinking
this way.
-- Wendy Chiavalon is a freelance writer. She writes
about relationships, dating, marriage, education,
pop-culture and more. Follow her marriage blog
Things You Realize After You Get Married at www.
thingsyourealizeafteryougetmarried.com
Wendy Chiavalon
Guest column
@*%#*#!
EI changes not
helping unemployed
To the editor:
The changes to the EI program are not
helping the unemployed but only mak-
ing it more difficult. Looking for a job is
a full-time job in itself. It is very stressful,
discouraging and depressing. The majority
of job applications have to be sent online.
Well, you can send out dozens and dozens
of applications without receiving a reply.
If you are receiving EI you must provide
proof that you are looking for a job. But if
you are on a temporary lay-off such as, for
example, construction workers are for the
winter, why would Service Canada want
you to be looking for another job? That is
what is happening. You must attend an
information session, provide them with
your list or else you can be cut off your EI.
It is ridiculous. A waste of taxpayers’ money
again. Money going into the EI fund is from
the employee and the employer, so why
does the government have so much con-
trol? Anyone on EI knows it is a struggle
to survive on the benefits. Some don’t and
that is why they wind up on the streets.
Instead of investigating EI recipients, why
don’t they use their resources to investigate
those that are ripping off the system?
Marjorie Seymour
Pickering
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AP
Key to vitality is
staying in life’s race
Kids come in very handy sometimes.
For starters they’re an excellent excuse to
always have cookies, ice cream and sug-
ary cereals in the house. It’s not for me, it’s
the boys ...they love the stuff. They’re also a
fantastic smoke screen for goofing off. I did
not waste a day playing video games in the
basement with the kids, I was supervising
content.
Even though they are both young adults
now, my children are and always have been
a kind of precious and magical youth tonic
for me. At every stage of their wonderful
lives they have freely rekindled my imagi-
nation and my senses of play and wonder.
They do this effortlessly. It is like breathing
to them. When they are very little they are
virtually incendiary with life energy. I well
remember shuffling into my boys’ rooms
when they were scarcely more than a year
old and finding them, as early as 5 or 6 in
the morning, standing in their cribs, fully
awake and beaming at me, completely
delighted with being alive. Things change
as they grow older, of course. Nowadays it’s
more likely they’re coming into the house
at five or six in the morning. Still beaming,
mind you, just in a slightly different way.
But that wonderful life force is still there,
that vitality, that energy. And they’ll happi-
ly share it. All that is required is a little time
spent. Attend to your kids, play with them,
engage them in discussion, ask them about
what they’re listening to, reading, watch-
ing.
At 52 I’m discovering an interesting truth.
On the racetrack of life, my kids are about
to lap me. And that’s OK. In fact, I believe
it’s natural and right. I took the baton from
my parents somewhere in my late teens or
early 20s and eagerly raced past them, just
as mine are about to fly by me. Each gen-
eration should outpace its predecessor.
The trick, however, is to stay in the race
even when they’ve passed you. Keep run-
ning, stay on the track. Because every time
that kid zips by, he or she will have an arm-
load of interesting stuff to share. Stuff that
will jazz you and energize you and slow
down that aging process a little bit. Stuff
that will keep you current and plugged in
and, incidentally, alive.
My kids taunt me mercilessly about the
abhorrent lack of breadth and depth on my
iPod. Admittedly, a brief glance at my song
collection would convince you that I had
thought the music industry had ceased to
exist after 1979. And while it’s important to
know what you like, an open mind will do
wonders for your health.
So, as I say, it’s handy to have these kids in
my life. Their ribbing and badgering, sigh-
ing and rolling of eyes are all welcomed
nudges back into the race, the stream of
life.
I was working at the computer, in silence,
the other morning when my youngest son
walked in and said, simply, “You want to
hear something really beautiful?” A couple
of clicks on his computer and we were lis-
tening to a song that was absolutely breath-
taking. I mean really, really life-changing.
Something that made my world a whole lot
better. Something I would’ve missed had
this kid not taken the time to share a little
as he raced on by.
-- Durham resident Neil Crone, actor, comic, writer,
saves some of his best lines for this column.
Vote weekly at durhamregion.comPoll
I wish! Sigh.
Yes, we are. Woo-hoo!
84%
14%
2%
Question: A recent BMO poll indicates that 80 per cent of
Canadians are planning a spring getaway. Are you one of
them?
10 Jazz bassists
307 votes cast
Enter Laughing
Neil Crone
Actor, comic, writer,
Let’s Talk
Barbara Parrott: You real-
ly don’t want to know what
I think.
Join in the conversation every
week. Visit us today at
www.facebook.com/newsdurham
Cindy Cummins Meghu:
Wow ugly and over
priced...you’d think they
would put money where
it is needed...oh but wait
that 40,000 + included
installation. Perfect sense!
Kim Diedrich: Over $41,000
for this? So if it looked “slim-
mer” would it have been
cheaper?
Lindsay Linklater: Not
something I would stop and
look at, does it have a mean-
ing behind it?
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AP
1. Jaco Pistorius
2. Stanley Clarke
3. Victor Wooten
4. Marcus Miller
5. Dave Holland
6. John Patitucci
7. Jimmy Johnson
8. Bunny Brunel
9. Billy Sheehan
10. Stuart Hamm
Source: rateyourmusic.com
We’re talking about it, no firm plans yet.
So, you think you know Canada? Here are
some neat statistics from Canadian Geo-
graphic about the True North, Strong and
Free.
Capital: Ottawa
National Icon:
Beaver
Motto: From Sea
to Sea
Tree: Sugar Maple
Statistics:
Confederated: 1867
Population: 32,057.701
Land Area (sq.km): 9,984,670
CanaFacts Tidbits:
• Hockey and lacrosse are Canada’s national
sports.
• John Cabot was the first explor-
er to reach Canada in 1497.
• Canadians consume more
macaroni and cheese than
any other nation on earth.
• There haven’t been mail
deliveries on Saturday in
Canada for the past
35 years.
• The oldest person in
Canada was Marie-Lou
ise Meilleur. She was
born in Kamouraska, Quebec on Aug. 29,
1880 and died April 16, 1998 at age 117 .
Source: canadiangeographic.ca
I am annoyed by drivers who think they
own not only the roads but also the sidewalks!
Why do drivers park over sidewalks, even for
a minute? What about the people who need
to use those sidewalks? What if pedestrians
walked down the middle of busy streets while
drivers drove along these routes? Would that
make any sense? But that’s what drivers are
forcing people to do when they park over the
sidewalks that belong to pedestrians. Driv-
ers, remember this: People, who drive, drive
on the streets. People, who walk, walk on the
sidewalks. So drivers, STAY OFF THE SIDE-
WALKS. Simple!
Margo Bath
Oshawa
Our Facebook friends had plenty to say
about a public art installation planned for
Ajax. Here’s what they had to say...
Dan Walters: Every publicly
funded building should have
at least one giant rock mon-
ster.
Therisita Carter: It’s actu-
ally kinda cute but Would
think the funds for that would
go to the community i.e ice
rinks or equipment or new
sports etc.
Hilary Price: Money would
be better spent on involving
children in activities that oth-
erwise couldn’t afford them
:(
Talking
public
art in
Ajax
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P
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9
P
Direct Access 905.420.4660
General Enquiries 905.683.2760
Service Disruption 1.866.278.9993 Experience the new pickering.ca
Alternate versions available upon request, call 905.683.7575
Amberlea Creek Erosion
Control Project Class
Environmental Assessment
Thisnotice firstissuedMarch6,2013
The City of Pickering’s StormwaterManagementMasterPlan for
Frenchman’s Bay(MasterPlan),was finalizedin2010,after receiving
City of Pickering Councilapproval.TheMasterPlanprovidedaseries
of recommendationsandprojects to addresspublicsafetyissuesand
degraded waterqualitywithin Frenchman’s Bayandits fourmain
tributary watersheds.TheMasterPlanproposedaphasedapproach
fordealingwith keyprioritysites overthe first fiveyearsofthe
implementationoftheplan.Oneofthe keyprojectsidentified for
completionwithinPhase1oftheMasterPlanistheundertakingofthe
Amberlea Creek Erosion Control Environmental Assessment.
On June18,2012,City of Pickering Councilauthorized To rontoand
Region Conservation to assumealeadership roleinpartnership
withthe City of Pickering to undertakethis workunderthe Class
Environmental Assessment forRemedial Floodand Erosion Control
Projects (January2002,asamendedin September2009).Theproject
willprovidelong-termprotectionagainstslopeinstabilityandchannel
erosion,whichwill reducetherisk to publicsafety,andpreventfuture
property damage
Thisnoticeis to advisethata PublicInformation Centre willbeheldon
Thursday,March21,2013 at the City of Pickering Civic Complexlocated
at One TheEsplanade,Pickering.Themeetingwillbeheldinthe Council
Chambersfrom 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm.
Forfurtherinformationonthisprojectpleasevisitpickering.caor
contact:
Ms. Lindsay Prihoda,PMP Mr.Nick Lorrain
ProjectManager Coordinator,WaterResources
To rontoandRegion Conservation City of Pickering
5Shoreham Drive One TheEsplanade
Downsview,Ontario,M3N1S4 Pickering,ON,L1V6K7
tel:416.661.6600,ext.5787 tel:905.420.4660 ext.2210
fax:416.667.6278 fax:905.420.4650
lprihoda@trca.on.ca nlorrain@pickering.ca
Date Meeting/Location Time
March20 Committeeof AdjustmentCivicComplex–Main CommitteeRoom 7:00pm
March21 HeritagePickering Advisory Committee
Civic Complex –Main CommitteeRoom 7:00pm
March25 CouncilMeeting
Civic Complex –Council Chambers 5:45pm
March27 Accessibility Advisory CommitteeCivicComplex–Main CommitteeRoom 7:00pm
March28 PickeringLibraryBoardCentralBranch 7:00pm
Allmeetingsareopen to thepublic.Fordetails call905.420.2222orvisit
the City website.For Service Disruptionnotification call1.866.278.9993.
Upcoming Public Meetings
Additionalinformationis availableonline,or by contactingLindaRoberts
at 905.420.4660,ext.2928orlroberts@pickering.ca.
Va cancies on Boards and Committees
The City of Pickeringencouragescitizens to participate intheir
community by volunteering foroneofourboardsor committees.
We currentlyhave vacanciesonthe HeritagePickering Advisory
Committee,the Accessibility Advisory Committeeandthe
PickeringMuseum Village Advisory Committee.
If youareinterestedinbeing considered forappointment to fillthe
vacanciesononeofthese Committees,pleasesubmitanapplication
formwhichis availableonthe City’s website to theundersignedsetting
outabriefdescriptionofanyjobor community-related experience.The
deadline for Submitting yourapplicationisMarch21,2013.
Formoreinformationabout HomeEscapePlanning contact Pickering Fire
Services at 905.839.9968oremail fire@pickering.ca.
A Message From Fire Services
Pickering Fire Services reminds youoftheimportanceofdeveloping
ahomeescapeplanandpracticingitwiththeentirefamily.In caseof
fire,don’t try to save possessions –godirectly to yourpredetermined
meetingplacelocatedinfrontof yourhome.If caughtinsmoke,get
lowandgounderthesmoke to thenearestsafe exit.Call Pickering Fire
Servicesfromoutside yourhome –usea cellphoneorneighboursphone.
Once out,stayout.Never re -enteraburningbuilding.
Ne llie!
How the Women
Won the Vo te
Ne llie!
How the Women
Won the Vo te
April 20 & 27 - 7:00 pm
April 21 & 28 - 2:00 pm
Brougham Hall
Admission: $18
Ticketsonsale March22.
Pay by credit card viapickering.ca/estoreor
purchaseinperson at the PickeringMuseum
VillageGift Shop.Contact:905.683.8401
Easter Holiday Hours of Operation
Civic Complex (CityHall)905.420.2222
Dunbarton Pool 905.831.1260
March29,31 Closed
April1 6am –5pm
March29,31and April1 Closed
PickeringPublicLibraries 905.831.6265
March29,31and April1 Closed
Recreation Complex,Pool&Arena 905.683.6582
March29and April1 Closed
Event Listing
Date Event/Location Time
Saturday,
March23
SustainablePickering Day
Pickering To wn Centre,Centre Court
9:30am
to 6:00pm
Sunday,
March24
Sunday AfternoonBigBand55+
PickeringRecreation Complex
2:00pm
to 4:00pm
Tu esday,
March26
Lush Lawns
OPGInformation Centre,Mongomery ParkRd
7:00pm
to 9:00pm
Saturday,
March30
Easter Parade
Starting at Annland St at LiverpoolRd South
10:00am
Joinus foranindoorfarmersmarket,gardeningdemonstrations,family
activities,giveaways,andmore!
Tickets$6.00onsalenow at PickeringRecreation Complexand East
Shore Community Centre.Details call905.420.6588.
Learnhow to keep yourlawnlookinggood,eventhroughthedriestdays
ofsummer.Free workshop,registrationis required.Call905.683.7575.
Decorate youbike,wagonordoll carriageandjointheparade!
Details call905.839.2990.
Seefulleventlisting at pickering.ca/greatevents,or finduson CityApp,facebook
and twitter by linking to oursocialmediapage at pickering.ca/rightnow
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10
AP Pickering Scouts
water cleanup
efforts get boost
9th Pickering Troop
get new grant
Moya Dillon
mdillon@durhamregion.com
PICKERING -- Residents enjoying the clean
waters of Frenchman’s Bay and Duffins
Creek can thank the 9th Pickering Scouts
for their ongoing efforts to keep the water-
ways free of garbage.
During training for a 2008 canoe trip,
members of the troop noticed large
amounts of garbage floating in Duffins
Creek and decided to do something about
it, using their canoes to collect refuse and
then sorting it for recycling or landfill when
they got back to dry land.
Since then the cleanup has become an
annual event encompassing the creek and
Frenchman’s Bay.
“The kids think it’s fun, they get to learn
canoeing and they feel like they’re accom-
plishing something by collecting all that,”
said Terry Fielder, 9th Pickering Scouts
registrar, noting the group has collected as
much as seven tonnes of garbage over the
course of one summer.
The Scouts will be expanding the pro-
gram to the Rouge River this year thanks to
a Great Lakes Guardian Community Fund
grant of $1,027, which will be used to buy
equipment such as gloves and bags.
“We’ve removed couches, tires, applianc-
es, hockey nets, anything you can think of,”
Mr. Fielder continued, noting their efforts
have resulted in significantly less garbage
to remove in Duffins Creek and French-
man’s Bay.
“What’s innovative about it isn’t that
we’re collecting garbage, it’s that we can
get to garbage no one else can because it’s
in the middle of the bay or in a wetland.”
For Scout Ryan Anderson, 17, who has
been with 9th Pickering for six years, the
garbage cleanup is an eye-opener.
“I was amazed, I had no idea that much
garbage could be in one place,” he said,
recalling the time he and fellow Scouts
removed an entire row of movie theatre
seats.
“People don’t care, they just throw stuff
in the water and it piles up and interferes
with the environment,” Ryan continued,
noting the Scouts have found fish caught in
fishing line and birds caught in plastic dur-
ing their cleanups.
“It’s not hard to hold on to garbage
instead of throwing it on the ground or in
the water; just put it in your bag or in your
pocket and put it in a garbage when you
see one.”
This year’s annual cleanup efforts begin
in July. For more information or to volun-
teer contact scouterterryfielder@yahoo.ca.
What is the Great Lakes
Guardian Community Fund?
• Launched in 2012, the Great Lakes
Guardian Community Fund is a provincial
government program that provides grants
to community groups for grassroots activi-
ties such as cleaning up a beach or shore-
line or restoring a wetland.
• Applicants are eligible for up to $25,000
per project.
• Not-for-profit groups such as service
clubs, environmental groups, Aboriginal
groups, and Scouts Canada troops are
eligible.
• In 2012, 80 applicants worked on proj-
ects to protect, improve and restore coast-
al areas of the Great Lakes.
• Applications for 2013 will be accepted
until April 26.
For more information visit www.ene.
gov.on.ca.
NO DIPLOMA?
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IN JUST 9 WEEKS
COMPLETE YO UR GRADE 12 OR BE READY FOR A NEW JOB
Yo u’recloserthanyou think!
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• Our courses have no tuition fees.
Registration and certification fees may
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• Ask about our co-operative education
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• Use your job to earn your last few high
school credits.
See how we can help you.
WHY DURHAM CONTINUING EDUCATION?
Come to a free information session at the
E.A. Lovell Centre, 120 Centre St. S., Oshawa
Limited parking on-site.
Municipal parking adjacent to E.A. Lovell.
Please bring previous transcript, proof of Canadian
citizenship/residency and photo identification.
No appointment necessary.
TO REGISTER
TUESDAY MARCH 26 AT 10 AM or
WEDNESDAY APRIL 3 AT 10 AM
PICKERING -- Darren Romani, left, got
help from Calvin Varga, Ben Goodchild
and Matthew Goodchild to haul a hock-
ey net out of the water during a cleanup
of Duffins Creek.
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THIS WEEK
Sex worker beaten,
robbed
in Ajax
Durham police still
searching for suspect
AJAX -- Durham police are searching for
a suspect after a female sex-trade worker
was beaten and robbed in her Ajax home.
Around 4:20 a.m. On March 15 a man
came to the woman’s home purporting to
be a client, then hit her in the head with
a handgun and stole some cash, police
said.
The victim was taken to an area hospital
to be treated for a laceration on her face
and released shortly afterward.
The suspect is described
as a black male, aged
20 to 25, six feet
tall and about 150
pounds. He was
wearing a black
toque and
black cloth-
ing.
Anyone
with infor-
mation is
asked to call
1-888-579-1520
ext. 2521. Anony-
mous tips can also me
made to Durham Regional Crime Stop-
pers by calling 1-800-222-8477 or online
at www.durhamregionalcrimestoppers.
ca.
Ve ndors Wanted-To reserve your booth or for more information call or email
Michelle Rogers at 905 579 4400 ext 2303 mrogers@durhamregion.com
• Summer Camps • Sports •Tu toring • Equestrian
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• Martial Arts and so much more
PICKERING TOWN CENTRE
ON SATURDAY MAY 11TH FROM 9:30AM- 6:00PM
KEEP YOUR KIDS BUSY THIS SUMMER! COME BY THE SHOW AND REGISTER FOR FUN!
SUMMERREGISTRATIONSHOW2013
(LOWER LEVEL BY THE FOOD COURT)
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withoutnotice.Allpricingincludesdeliveryanddestination feesup to$1,650,$34tirerecycling/filtercharges,$5 OMVIC fee,environmental feeand $100A/C charge (where applicable)and excludeslicensing,registration,insurance,othertaxes,variabledealeradministration fees(up to $399)anddownpayment (ifapplicableandunless otherwise
specified).Otherleaseand financingoptionsalso available.**0%purchase financingis availableonselect new 2013Kiamodels O.A.C.Terms vary by modelandtrim,seedealer for complete details.Representativefinancing examplebasedon2013SorentoLX+AT(SR75BD)with a sellingprice of$29,078,financed at 0%APR for60months.130
bi-weeklypaymentsequal$224 perpayment with a downpayment/equivalent tradeof$0.∞“Don’t PayFor90Days”offer (90-day payment deferral)applies to purchase financingonselect new 2012/2013models.Nointerest willaccrueduringthe first 60days ofthe financecontract.After90days,interest accruesandthepurchaserwill repay both
theprincipalandinterest monthly overthe contract’s term.Ω“6Bi-Weekly PaymentsOnUs”offeris availableonapprovedcredit to eligible retailcustomers who finance orleaseany new 2013Riofrom a participatingdealerbetweenMarch1–April1,2013.Customers will receivea chequeintheamount ofsixpayments (excludingtaxes)toa maximum
of$300permonthorcanchooseup to$900 reductionsfromtheselling/leaseprice aftertaxes.See yourdealer for complete details.OfferendsApril1,2013.Cannot be combinedwith“Don’t PayFor90Days”offer.†New andpre-existingKia RewardsMembersreceivea$500maintenance creditwiththepurchaseofany new 2013Optima.Cash
purchasepricefor2013Optima LX MT (OP541D)is $19,983andincludes a cashsavingsof$4,000 (whichisdeductedfromthenegotiatedsellingprice before taxesandcannot be combinedwithspecialleaseand finance offers).Retailermay sell forless.‡$4,000cashsavingsonthecashpurchaseofaneligiblenew2013OptimaLXMT(OP541D)
fromaparticipatingdealerbetweenMarch1–April1,2013,isdeductedfromthesellingpricebeforetaxesandcannotbecombinedwithspecialleaseandfinanceoffers.Someconditionsapply.≠Bi-weeklyfinancepaymentO.A.C.fornew2013Rio4LX+MT(RO542D)/2013ForteSedanLX+AT(FO74PD)basedonaselling
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forless.Seedealerforfulldetails.Availableatparticipatingdealers.Highway/cityfuelconsumptionisbasedonthe2013Optima2.4LGDI4-cyl(A/T)/2013 Rio41.6LGDI4-cyl(M/T)/2013 Forte Sedan2.0LMPI4-cyl (A/T).Theseupdatedestimatesare basedontheGovernment ofCanada’sapprovedcriteriaand testingmethods.Refer
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OWN IT FROM
Pickering
resident
preserving
history
at home
Dillingham-Lamorie
residence reflects 160 years
of township history
Moya Dillon
mdillon@durhamregion.com
PICKERING -- The thick stone walls are enough
to withstand any storm, but that’s not what keeps
Pickering resident Sharon Weller attached to the
Dillingham-Lamorie residence.
Ms. Weller, 72, moved into the heritage stone
farmhouse on Pickering’s Arathorn Court when
she married Bruce Lamorie, who lived in the
home for 37 years before he died last year.
“I walked in and just fell in love with it,” she said
of the home, built circa the 1850s.
“It feels so good to know so many generations
and so many families have lived here and grown
up.”
Some of those residents still return, as Ms.
Weller has twice had strangers knock on her door
hoping to see the house that belonged to their
ancestors.
“They walk in and say ‘just to think our ances-
tors built this before Confederation and I can still
walk their floors’,” she recalled.
The historic house is located just off the busy
thoroughfare of Brock Road and surrounded by
subdivisions and commercial plazas, but Ms.
PICKERING -- Sharon Weller lives in the old
Dillingham farm house, a heritage building cur-
rently up for sale. Sabrina byrneS / MetrolanD
Weller says the modern trappings of the area only make
the home’s heritage that much more important.
“It’s like a secret, hidden garden,” she said.
“The world has changed so much and places change so
much but this stays the same, it gives a feeling of conti-
nuity. This was how life was, and it remains here, hidden
and untouched.”
Ms. Weller and Mr. Lamorie approached the city in
1999 to have a heritage designation placed on the home
in order to protect it for future generations. A heritage
report conducted on the home that year listed it as “an
important example of an early to mid-nineteenth century
rural residential building.”
“It’s important to us that the house not be torn down,
that it remains as is for the people of Pickering to enjoy as
we have,” she said.
“It’s a great history and a great piece of Canadiana and
it will hopefully be here for another 160 years.”
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AP
YOUR CASINOTOUR SPECIALISTS!
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Readers,
send us your
stories about
mothers
Mother’s Day
contest launches
at durhamregion.com
DURHAM -- Readers, we want to
hear your thoughts on mothers and
motherhood.
Metroland Media Group’s Dur-
ham Region Division is gearing up
to produce a special Mother’s Day
ebook, and we want our Durham
Region readers to be contributing
authors. Send us your heartwarm-
ing stories about mothers or moth-
erhood. Do you have a special mem-
ory you’d like to share? What does
having a mother, or being a moth-
er, mean to you? Send us your per-
sonal stories and recollections and
you could win the prize of a $50 gift
certificate for the Oshawa Centre.
Your contributions will help shape
a special ebook available for down-
loading at durhamregion.com, and
a selection of entries will appear in
the newspaper near Mother’s Day
in May. Tell us your stories in 350
words or less, and e-mail to co-ordi-
nating editor Judi Bobbitt at jbob-
bitt@durhamregion.com, with the
subject line, “Mother’s Day”. Please
copy and paste your entry into the
body of your e-mail, do not send
attachments. Don’t forget to include
your full name, community of resi-
dence and daytime phone number.
Deadline for sending your submis-
sions is Thursday, March 21.
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AP
Easter Dinner
Delicious home-made family dinner ready to
heat and serve in the comfort of your own home
info@heritagehousecatering.ca
www.heritagehousecatering.ca
479 Kingston Ro ad W.Ajax (289)314-9870
$30/person
minimum 4 people
Pi ck-up
Thursday March 28th, 4 - 7 or
Saturday March 30th, 10 - 5
Bread,Rolls and Butter
Cranberry Spinach Salad
Scallop or Mashed Potatoes (choose 1)
Ro ast Tu rkey,Stuffing and Gravy or
Baked Ham and Pi neapple (choose 1)
Carrots, Green Beans, Butternut
Squash or Corn (choose 2)
Tr iple Berry Crisp, Bread Pudding or
Strawberry Shortcake (choose 1)
Split or custom orders will be assessed 20% service charge
Seven charged
in Durham
St. Paddy’s
RIDE blitz
DURHAM -- Cops made good
on their vow to keep tabs on rev-
ellers this past St. Patrick’s Day
weekend, arresting seven peo-
ple for drunk driving offences.
Durham police teamed up
with Toronto officers to conduct
a weekend RIDE blitz, stopping
1,625 vehicles and administer-
ing 36 roadside breath tests.
In addition to the seven
impaired and exceed charges,
officers issued six three-day
licence suspensions for drivers
who registered warning levels
on their breath tests.
Among those charged was a
partier who meant well when
he gave three inebriated pals
a ride home: the problem was
that he had no driver’s licence
and was himself impaired, Dur-
ham police said.
Prior to the weekend police
warned they’d be out in force to
combat drunk driving.
Easter holidays bring curbside
collection changes in Durham
DURHAM -- There will be changes to garbage and
recycling collections due to the Easter holidays.
Collection that would be normally done on Friday,
March 29 will be moved to Saturday, March 30.
In Oshawa and Whitby, garbage and blue box col-
lections on Monday, April 1 will be shifted to Tuesday.
The shift continues throughout the week, with the Fri-
day, April 5 collection to be done on Saturday, April 6.
DURHAM -- The next battery
recycling effort is being held
the week of March 18.
The pickup will be on
your blue box collec-
tion days and it’s for
used, undamaged,
single-use, dry-cell
batteries. Place dead
batteries in the sealed
bag on top of the blue
box.
The bags were delivered
in early March and were affixed to
blue boxes with a white sticker.
Additional bags
can be picked up
at local munici-
pal offices or
participating
fire halls during
regular hours of
operation.
For more infor-
mation, visit www.
durham.ca/battery.
Region
Battery recycling in Durham next week
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AP
AJAX/PICKERINGSUMMER MINORHOCKEY LEAGUE
A J A X C O M M U NITY CENTRE
Boys & GirlsWelcome
Ages 4-18years old
Summer HockeyRegistration...
Ajax Community Centre Rink #4
Saturday, March 23
rd, 2013
at 9:30 am - 10:30 am
For more information visit www.ajaxpickeringsummerhockey.com
or call 905-649-6803
House League/AE Division - 5 on 5 format
REP Division - 3 on 3 format
Non-Contact, Once a Week/Weeknights Only
Ages 4-18 years old
May to August Season
12 Week Schedule
• Primetime Games(weeknight games only)
• Jerseys
•Awards
Sports Brian McNair Sports Editor / bkelly@durhamregion.com / 905-579-4400 #2254
Major Series
Lacrosse club
moving to Oakville
Brad Kelly
bkelly@durhamregion.com
AJAX -- The Ajax Rock are leaving.
The Major Series Lacrosse club
has obtained permission from
the league, and is now awaiting
approval from the Ontario Lacrosse
Association before packing up
and heading down the highway to
Oakville.
“It just made sense all the way
around,” says owner Rob Roche of
transferring his franchise to anoth-
er city. “We’ve been struggling for a
couple years in our area with satu-
ration. How much bang is there for
your dollar? No matter what we
seemed to do, our home night was
Friday and it always conflicted with
a game somewhere else, so our fan
base was always restricted.
“It didn’t look like it was going to
get any better.”
Roche says the process of moving
first came up a month ago when he
had discussions with Toronto Rock
owner Jamie Dawick, who also
owns the Toronto Rock Athletic
Centre lacrosse facility in Oakville.
Once the two came to an agree-
ment, Roche approached the MSL
league for approval, and in a 4-1
vote, cleared the first hurdle. The
OLA wanted more information on
the move, and Roche was planning
to have that to them by the end of
last week.
“We looked at ways to get bet-
ter and the different obstacles we
were facing,” says Roche. “With the
Toronto Rock building this new
facility in Oakville, it fit the criteria
for what our league wanted.”
The Rock started as a Sr. B team
and enjoyed some success. How-
ever, when they moved up to the
Sr. A level in 2010, the franchise
struggled. In three years they won
just seven of 50 games, posting reg-
ular season records of 3-17, 3-13
and 1-13. Players who were drafted
often didn’t report and their rights
were traded. The franchise also
couldn’t afford to keep some of its
top talent, and had to move them.
The Durham Region is also
a competitive market, with the
Brooklin Redmen, Whitby War-
riors, Clarington Green Gaels and
Brooklin Merchants competing for
fans and players during the sum-
mer.
Roche says in addition to the tre-
mendous facility, Oakville’s minor
lacrosse system is growing, and the
Rock will be able to affiliate with
the Jr. B Oakville Buzz, Jr. A Burling-
ton Chiefs and Sr. B Oakville Titans.
As well, a number of players on the
team’s roster are from the west end,
which will make the commute for
home games much easier.
While optimistic and excited
about the move, Roche says leaving
Ajax is pulling at his heart strings,
having been born and raised in the
area.
“It’s the toughest thing ever to
move out of Ajax,” he says. “But for
the survival of this team, it’s what’s
best.
“It made sense to get things going
in the right direction and save it. I
don’t want the team to go away.
I’d rather try and be successful in
another venue instead of folding. I
don’t want that at all. I want it to be
successful and I want it to move on.
I just want it to succeed.”
To help build the franchise, the
Rock have named Terry Sanderson
as the general manager.
Ajax Rock leaving town
AJAX -- The Ajax Rock of the Major Series Lacrosse league will be leaving town for Oakville for the 2013
season. Shown here last season is Rock player Aaron Brown protecting the ball against Peterborough
Lakers player Jordan MacIntosh during a game at the Ajax Community Centre. Metroland file photo
Generals
end OHL
season on
high note
Brian Mcnair
bmcnair@durhamregion.com
OSHAWA -- It didn’t mean a darn
thing in the standings, but the
Oshawa Generals’ season-closing
win over the Sudbury Wolves Sun-
day was significant in at least two
ways.
First, it sends the Gen-
erals into an OHL play-
off clash with the
Niagara IceDogs on a
high note, winners of
nine of the past 10 games,
including the final two with a line-
up bereft of resting stars.
But, likely more important, the
game sent the most powerful sig-
nal yet that winger Lucas Lessio is
back to form and playoff-ready.
Lessio, who missed three months
of the season after suffering cut
tendons in his hand in October,
completed a hat trick on a bril-
liant passing play with Michael
Dal Colle in the dying moments
of overtime, lifting the Generals to
a 3-2 win before 6,029 fans at the
General Motors Centre.
“I play every game to win, no
matter what, whether it’s the play-
ground, road hockey or the Memo-
rial Cup finals,” said Lessio, shortly
after being named the obvious first
star. “I play every game the same
way, I play to win.”
With six key players out of the
Generals’ lineup, including the top
five point leaders, Lessio stepped
up and delivered in a big way. He
was dominant all night long and
also tied the game on a nice feed
from Dal Colle 7:09 into the third
period.
Lessio admitted it has taken
some time for his hand to fully
heal, but his first hat trick of the
season is an indication he’s closing
in on where he wants to be.
“It’s been tough. The first 10
games back it was still pretty sore,
I was battling through it for the
team, but every day
it’s getting stronger
and stronger and I’m
feeling pretty much
back to normal now,
maybe 80 per cent,” said
Lessio, who has scored eight goals
in seven games this month and
finished with 19-15-34 stats in 35
games. “Each game I’m starting to
build momentum and I’ll be ready
for the playoffs.”
The Generals finished the sea-
son with a record of 42-22-1-3 and,
more importantly, are healthy after
battling injuries for the majority of
the season. The series against the
IceDogs (30-34-2-2) gets under-
way with two games in Oshawa
this weekend, 7:05 p.m. Friday
and 6:05 p.m. Sunday at the GM
Centre, and continues nest week
with games in St. Catharines on
March 26 and 28.
24/7
LocaL
breaking
news,
sports,
photos,
video
and
weather:
aLL
daY,
everY
daY
when
YoU
want
it.
>>
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AP Put your listing where people will see it!
Contact your Representative today at 905-579-4473,To ronto Line: 416-798-7259
Check out our Open House Guide every Thursday
...toSee Whatmaybe yourNextHome!
Each Thursday’s
Edition
Winter
OPEN HOUSE
GUIDE
Checkoutthebeautifullocal
homes,openfor yourviewing
thisweekend.
THE TRUSTED
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NEIGHBOURHOOD
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Ajax/Pickering News Advertiser
Oshawa/Whitby/Clarington This Week
Knock, Knock & Come on In...
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WHITBY - Kim Vogel, left, of Tag, held a Tag bag as Nikki Ratz reached deep for her complimentary
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Congratulations
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To day’s Carriers of the
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To enter your babyinthis contest,sendanemail to sfleming@durhamregion.com
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AP
ALLNEW2013RAM1500QUADCAB4x4
+HST
$23,999 +HST
96MO,4.49%
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