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No changes to residential recycling collection in Northumberland and Peterborough despite shift to producer responsibility system

As of January 1, 2024, recycling collection services in Northumberland and Peterborough counties are managed by the not-for-profit organization Circular Materials as part of Ontario's transition to producer responsibility for residential recycling. Residents will see no change to their recycling collection under the new system, as Northumberland County will continue to collect recycling until 2025 and Emterra Environmental will continue to collect recycling in the City and County of Peterborough. (Photo via Circular Materials)

Changes to the way Northumberland County and the City and County of Peterborough manage recycling collection began on January 1, but the municipalities expect residents won’t have disruptions at the curbside.

The changes are part of Ontario’s plan to transition responsibility for the provincial recycling system from municipalities and First Nations to the producers that supply packaging and paper to consumers, with industry eventually assuming full responsibility for all residential recycling. Under the previous system, blue box programs were operated by municipalities that were responsible for paying about half of the costs of the program, with producers responsible for the other half.

In 2021, Ontario released its new Blue Box Regulation under the 2016 Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, which makes Canadian producers fully financially and operationally responsible for their products and packaging at the end of life. Starting in July 2023, communities across the province began transitioning to the new system, which will be fully implemented by 2026.

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In Ontario, Circular Materials operates as a producer responsibility organization and is also the administrator of the common collection system on behalf of all other producer responsibility organizations operating in Ontario. The national not-for-profit organization was founded by 17 of Canada’s leading brands, including Nestlé, Kraft Heinz, Maple Leaf, Coca-Cola Canada, MacDonald’s, Costco, Metro, and Loblaw Companies.

Effective January 1, Northumberland County has entered into an agreement with Circular Materials for the county to continue to provide recycling collection services until the end of 2025, after which services would be provided by a private contractor.

“We have secured a fee-for-service contract, ensuring that Northumberland County remains the sole provider for the collection of recyclable materials during this transition,” said Adam McCue, Northumberland County associate director of operations for public works, in a media release.

“With the county continuing to have accountability for management of waste services, county council agreed that pursuing a contract with (Circular Materials) to manage all collection during this period made the most sense for residents. With this contract in place, residents will not notice any changes to the curbside collection program for waste and recycling during this period. It will be a seamless transition to producer responsibility.”

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At the end of 2025, although Northumberland County will continue to provide collection of waste materials, responsibility for curbside collection of recyclables will shift to the private sector. For that reason, the county no longer owns or operates its recycling processing facility in Grafton, having sold the facility to Emterra Environmental.

“With this transition, Northumberland County will no longer directly offer blue/grey box recycling services,” the media release states. “This required the county to wind down its operation of the material recovery facility recycling plant in Grafton.”

With Emterra Environmental taking ownership of the material recovery facility recycling plant as of January 5, residents who previously visited the facility to exchange or purchase blue bins, bag tags, or pick up the annual waste management calendar will no longer be able to do so.

Under the terms of the contract with Circular Materials, Northumberland County will continue promoting and educating residents about recycling practices, provide accessible support via telephone and web channels, and facilitate curbside pickup of recyclable materials, as well as collect and transfer of recyclable materials at all county community recycling centres.

More information about the transition is available on the county’s website at northumberland.ca/producerresponsibility.

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Meanwhile, for both the City and County of Peterborough, Circular Materials has assumed responsibility for recycling collection and processing services as of January 1. However, there will be no change in recycling collection services for residents, either in the recycling schedule or in the materials that can be recycled.

“Residents will continue to place their blue box recyclables curbside weekly, exactly as they do now, on their same collection day, separating container items and fibre (paper) items into separate boxes for collection,” the City of Peterborough noted in a media release.

For recycling collection and processing services in the city and county, Circular Materials has hired Emterra Environmental, which is the same company that was previously hired by the city and county for recycling curbside collection and processing.

“Using the same company that currently delivers the service will help ensure a smooth transition for residents,” the City of Peterborough noted.

For more information about recycling collection in the City of Peterborough and the County of Peterborough (including individual townships), visit the Circular Materials website at www.circularmaterials.ca/resident-provinces/ontario/.

Trent Valley Archives Theatre’s inaugural production comes to Peterborough’s Market Hall in May

Lindsay Wilson (left) and Paden Gilhooley in a scene from Ed Schroeter's "Tide of Hope", the inaugural history drama production of Trent Valley Archives Theatre. A prequel to the immigration story of Peter Robinson, the play will be performed at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough for school groups on May 15, 2024 with public performances on May 15 and 16. (Photo: Suzanne Schroeter)

Trent Valley Archives has launched a new historical theatre initiative, with its inaugural production Tide of Hope coming this May to Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough, with a second public show added due to demand.

According to a media release, Trent Valley Archives Theatre’s mission is to bring regional history to life on stage, while also raising funds for the non-profit organization that promotes the preservation, identification, and care of archives in the Trent Valley region.

“This is a natural next step in its evolution, following on the heels of its ghost walks, historical tours, and cemetery pageant,” says Tide of Hope coproducer Greg Conchelos in the release.

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Conchelos is part of a committee of volunteers for the project that Trent Valley Archives has recruited from among the region’s most experienced youth history theatre producers and educators. Other members of the committee include Mary Conchelos, Suzanne Schroeter, Deirdre Chisholm, and Trent Valley Archives liaison Karen Hicks, along with Tide of Hope director Gerry McBride and playwright Ed Schroeter.

Tide of Hope is a prequel to the immigration story of Peter Robinson, the 19th-century politician in Upper Canada who administered the passage and settlement of over 2,500 poor Catholic families from Ireland to what is now eastern Ontario. Set in 1825 in the Blackwater district of Ireland at the height of the agrarian rebellion against excessive land rents and church tithes, the play tells the story of David Nagle, an Irish land agent and rent collector forced to flee to Upper Canada when Irish rebels branded him a traitor.

“The play commemorates the bicentennial of the Peter Robinson immigration while opening a dialogue about immigration, refugees, migrants, and European settler history,” states the media release.

Geared to both the general public and students in Grades 6 to 12, Tide of Hope will be performed for school groups on Wednesday, May 15th at 1 p.m., followed by a public performance — which is also a fundraiser for Trent Valley Archives — at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 16th. Due to public demand, a second public show has been added at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 15th.

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Tickets for the public performances are $40 for assigned cabaret table seating or $30 for regular assigned seating, and are available online at tickets.markethall.org/tide24. Suitable for audiences aged 12 and older, the play runs for around 95 minutes, including a 15-minute intermission.

For the May 15th school performance, teachers can book classes by emailing trentvalleyarchivestheatre@gmail.com, with admission costing $250 for a class of 25 students or more (including free admission for the teacher and up to four volunteer chaperones). More information, including educational resources, is available at sites.google.com/view/tvatheatre/.

Tide of Hope was written by award-winning playwright Ed Schroeter, a Trent Valley Archives volunteer and retired teacher who was a driving force behind the Peterborough Museum & Archives’ Heritage Pavilion Stage series in 2001, transforming it into a school tour company from 2003 to 2005. Greg and Mary Conchelos took over the Heritage Pavilion Stage series from 2005 to 2011, producing school tours and environmental theatre, while Schroeter continued to write scripts for them.

“We used to tour three productions every spring and fall, performing at more than 120 schools from Pickering in the west to Havelock in the east,” Schroeter recalls.

Schroeter was also artistic producer of Arbor Theatre and, in 2004, was inducted into the Peterborough Pathway of Fame for his contribution to the dramatic arts.

 

kawarthaNOW is proud to be a media sponsor for Tide of Hope.

East Peterborough Lions Club delivered 75 donated turkeys and hams to those in need this holiday season

Lion Makaya Dafoe with two of the 75 turkeys and hams donated by individuals, businesses, and service clubs to the East Peterborough Lions Club for delivery to families in need during the annual Great Turkey Exchange. (Photo: East Peterborough Lions Club / Facebook)

The East Peterborough Lions Club delivered 75 turkeys and hams this holiday to families who might otherwise have gone without a traditional Christmas dinner.

Individuals, businesses, and service clubs donated most of the turkeys and hams to this year’s Great Turkey Exchange, a program first organized in 2009 by Lois Tuffin. At Tuffin’s request, the East Peterborough Lions Club took over the program in 2022.

This year, the Lions Club distributed 65 turkeys and 10 hams to local families — which was a decrease in demand from 2022, although this year some families asked to be removed from the list.

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“One thing that we found incredible this year was, for the first time since we began working with this program, we had people calling and letting us know they received turkeys from another source and asked us to remove them from the list,” said Frank Hewitt, service chair for the East Peterborough Lions Club, in a media release. “That allowed us to be able to supply another family with a turkey or ham for their meal.”

The Lions Club thanked community members who made donations as well as Kawartha Food Share, Morello’s Your Independent Grocer, Giant Tiger, Sobey’s, No Frills, Metro, Lion Jacob Sharman, and the Young Adults of Peterborough Lions Club Branch.

“Their donations were a large part of making the program successful, ensuring families who could not afford a turkey or ham would not go without,” the Lions Club stated, adding that one couple made a last-minute turkey donation on Christmas Eve, “making someone’s holiday meal truly special.”

City of Kawartha Lakes calls on residents to volunteer for municipal committees by January 8

The City of Kawartha Lakes is seeking residents to volunteer for vacancies on four committees that provide advice and recommendations to council, including three citizen positions on the Lindsay Ops Landfill Public Review Committee. (Photo: City of Kawartha Lakes)

From meeting new people to sharing ideas and influencing local governance, area municipalities are seeking input, and action, from its residents in the new year.

In Kawartha Lakes, the municipality is calling on people to fill eight positions on various committees in 2024.

“Volunteering for a Kawartha Lakes board or committee is more than just a civic duty,” said Kawartha Lakes in a media release.

“It’s a chance to engage with the community (meet new people, share ideas, and talents), influence local governance (provide input into strategic direction setting and decision-making of the municipality) address community issues (support local government in effectively tackling local challenges), (and) make a meaningful impact (contribute to the betterment of Kawartha Lakes).”

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Boards and committees provide advice and recommendations to council. Most committees include members of the public and members of council.

Kawartha Lakes is currently looking to community members to fill committee seats for the duration of the current term of council until November 14, 2026. The application deadline is Monday, January 8th.

Citizens are specifically needed for the City of Kawartha Lakes committee of adjustment, the City of Kawartha Lakes environmental advisory committee, the Fenelon landfill public review committee, and the Lindsay Ops landfill public review committee.

The committee of adjustment is a planning committee that approves or denies minor variance applications to the municipality’s zoning bylaws. The committee also makes decisions on land severances.

Meanwhile, the Kawartha Lakes environmental advisory committee’s mission is to advise council and educate the public on issues that impact the environment of the City of Kawartha Lakes.

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The Fenelon landfill public review committee “serves as a point for discussion” about information regarding the operation of the Fenelon landfill site, including environmental monitoring, maintenance, complaint resolution, and new approvals or amendments to existing certificates of approval related to the operation of the landfill site, according to Kawartha Lakes.

The Lindsay Ops landfill public review committee also serves as a channel for discussion about information regarding the operation of the Lindsay Ops landfill site, including environmental monitoring, maintenance, complaint resolution and new approvals or amendments to existing certificates of approval related to the operation of the landfill site, according to the municipality.

“These are unique opportunities for residents of Kawartha Lakes to actively participate in local governance and contribute to our community’s future.”

For more information about joining a Kawartha Lakes board or committee, visit kawarthalakes.ca/committees.

The City of Peterborough is seeking feedback from residents on a new tiered membership model for community recreation that would include access to recreation facilities throughout the city that offer public swims, skates, sports, adult leisure programming, fitness classes, and more. (Photos: City of Peterborough)
The City of Peterborough is seeking feedback from residents on a new tiered membership model for community recreation that would include access to recreation facilities throughout the city that offer public swims, skates, sports, adult leisure programming, fitness classes, and more. (Photos: City of Peterborough)

The City of Peterborough is also calling on residents to participate in a civic engagement exercise.

The city is conducting a survey about its current membership model for recreation, fitness, and leisure services, and is also hosting in-person consultations during the first two to three weeks of January.

Peterborough is inviting community members to have their say about a new “tiered community membership model,” including what is working well, what requires improvement, and what residents would like to see included in a community membership.

The new model would include access to recreation facilities throughout the city that offer public swimming sessions, public skating sessions, sports, adult leisure programming, fitness classes and more, the city noted.

Locations may include the Peterborough Sport and Wellness Centre, the McDonnel Street Community Centre, the Healthy Planet Arena, and the new Miskin Law Community Complex currently under construction in Morrow Park.

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“All the information that is shared will be reviewed by staff and considered when finalizing the recommended membership model,” the city noted in a media release. “Final recommendations on the membership model will be considered by city council through a recommendation report in the spring of 2024.”

The online survey will be available until Friday, January 19th.

Staff will also be available at city recreation facilities in early January to answer questions and seek feedback from residents. Visit the city’s website at www.connectptbo.ca/community-recreation-membership for dates and times of the in-person consultation sessions.

Illuminated Forest at Ken Reid Conservation Area near Lindsay closed due to vandalism

The Illuminated Forest at Ken Reid Conservation Area near Lindsay is a nighttime family attraction during the holidays where hundreds of trees along the Cedar Forest trail are adorned with lights. (Photo: Kawartha Conservation / Facebook)

With only a few nights left to see it, the Illuminated Forest at Ken Reid Conservation Area near has been closed due to vandalism.

Kawartha Conservation made the announcement on social media on Saturday (December 30).

This was the second year for the popular nighttime family attraction, which saw hundreds of trees along the Cedar Forest trail adorned with lights.

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The Illuminated Forest was open nightly from December 2 and was scheduled to continue until Tuesday (January 2).

However, vandals broke or damaged a number of the light strings, forcing Kawartha Conservation to close the attraction four days early. According to comments on social media, the damage was done sometime before Friday night.

“Why must people ruin something kind and wonderful for others,” asked one commenter. “Thank you to the volunteers who created a beautiful space to enjoy.”

A bird encounter in Peterborough’s Jackson Park inspired Curtis Parypa to become a wildlife photographer

While he has always enjoyed the outdoors, Peterborough-based photographer Curtis Parypa did not fully immerse himself in nature until he encountered a pileated woodpecker in Peterborough's Jackson Park. Taking that photo launched his passion for nature and wildlife photography, and now videography as well. He is turning his hobby photography into a business, now selling photos through his new website, and hoping to participate in markets and fairs in the community in 2024. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)

Though now there’s no limit to the animals he will photograph, Curtis Parypa still remembers fondly the first creature that launched his passion and led him on his current journey to becoming a full-time wildlife photographer and videographer.

It was a pileated woodpecker in Peterborough’s Jackson Park.

“It was actually the first time I’d even realized there were pileated woodpeckers here,” Parypa says. “There was just this big, giant bird on the side of a tree, pecking at it, with the bright red plumage on its head. It was just this really cool experience.”

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Misidentifying the woodpecker — Parypa laughs, recalling his first thought “as silly as it is” that it must have been a tropical bird — is a far cry from where Parypa is now: both a bird enthusiast and photographer and who has spent weeks camouflaged in foliage watching and waiting for a shot of a belted kingfisher.

But at the time he saw the woodpecker in the summer of 2020, Parypa, who grew up in Bridgenorth and spent his whole life around Peterborough, hadn’t spent much time fully immersed in nature, even while at his family trailer in Lake St. Peter in Hastings Highlands.

“From my point of view, I was always outside, but not necessarily in nature,” he says. “For the most part, all I saw are robins and gulls — just your standard birds that are common and you see everywhere.”

Curtis Parypa's passion for nature and wildlife photography has helped him appreciate even the most common birds and animals, no matter where he is. Parypa is also beginning to do more videography, documenting the stories behind his photos as well as his camping trips at provincial parks across Ontario. (Photo courtesy of Curtis Parypa)
Curtis Parypa’s passion for nature and wildlife photography has helped him appreciate even the most common birds and animals, no matter where he is. Parypa is also beginning to do more videography, documenting the stories behind his photos as well as his camping trips at provincial parks across Ontario. (Photo courtesy of Curtis Parypa)

Throughout high school, Parypa was always taking pictures, though usually it didn’t go beyond cellphone camera photos of his friends skateboarding and the occasional sunsets. But during the pandemic Parypa began taking his camera to parks around the city, saw the pileated woodpecker, and knew that nature was to become the focus of his newfound hobby.

“I started going out to Jackson Park and would just explore around there to really get into the idea of nature,” he says. “Obviously, as I got into it, I started to realize how much wildlife there actually is out there, regardless of where you are.”

Since that fateful day, Parypa can often be found with his Sony a7iv mirrorless digital camera at Jackson’s Park, Beavermead Park, the parks and trails around Trent University, and — one of his favourite spots — Miller Creek Wildlife Area in Bridgenorth.

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“The birds are so friendly, so it’s fun to go over there,” Parypa says. “It’s a great place for families to hand-feed chickadees. I even had a red-breasted nuthatch land on my hand, and it was awesome.”

After spending so much time with them, Parypa jokes he has fallen into the “trap” of becoming a bird enthusiast.

“I never thought I’d be a birder, but you get stuck and fall down the rabbit hole and start discovering so many cool birds,” he says. “Even when I was up at my trailer, which is very much in nature, I wasn’t quite noticing all the different animals that are there. Now when I go, I’ll see a falcon fly by and I’m so excited, so it’s just a different appreciation I have now.”

Since becoming a wildlife photographer, Curtis Parypa has learned a lot about the many animals he photographs and often spends time researching and watching to learn the habits of his subjects. Using patience, camouflage, and determination, earlier this year he captured a photo of a belted kingfisher. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
Since becoming a wildlife photographer, Curtis Parypa has learned a lot about the many animals he photographs and often spends time researching and watching to learn the habits of his subjects. Using patience, camouflage, and determination, earlier this year he captured a photo of a belted kingfisher. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
Hand-feeding a red-breasted nuthatch at Miller Creek Wildlife Area in Bridgenorth, one of Peterborough-based photographer Curtis Parypa's favourite spots. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
Hand-feeding a red-breasted nuthatch at Miller Creek Wildlife Area in Bridgenorth, one of Peterborough-based photographer Curtis Parypa’s favourite spots. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)

In trying to snap the perfect photos, Parypa has gotten to know his subjects and their habits very well, using apps like Merlin ID to help him both identify and learn about birds. He often practices on the animals he sees more regularly, like the Great Blue Heron, which he says are easier to photograph because “they can be easy-going with people as long as you don’t push your boundaries.”

This newfound love of birds is how Parypa ended up squatted under a custom hide he created using a 3D camouflage net, for days on end earlier this year to get some shots of a belted kingfisher. The decision came after years of heading down to the river, only to hear the “iconic” call of the bird without getting close enough for photos before startling it away.

“It’s incredibly difficult to get photos of them so I decided I needed to do a little bit more research and improve my skills, and knew camouflage would be the best approach,” he recalls.

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Parypa found a spot in the trees that the bird liked to perch on and would go early in the day and wait as long as five hours to watch and learn the kingfisher’s routine.

“I kept missing the timing or the weather would be wrong, so the bird wouldn’t come by, but I figured out his habits and managed to get a really close-up photo without disturbing the bird,” says Parypa.

Parypa recently uploaded a video to his YouTube channel documenting the time-consuming efforts taken to capture the photo. Editing together footage of his photography journeys is another activity Parypa has been doing more and more throughout the past year.

VIDEO: What it takes to photograph the Kingfisher

“For a long time, I was posting photos on Instagram, but there was more to my story of each encounter or adventure that I wanted to tell,” he says, adding that, like photography, he did some video editing back in high school.

On his YouTube channel, Parypa shares narratives and stories of his photography adventures, reviews camera gear, and documents the camping trips he takes with his girlfriend Sarah Kelly.

After their first camping trip to Lake St. Peter Provincial Park last summer, the couple made it their goal to fill out every page in the Ontario Provincial Park Passport, which encourages visitors to camp at 115 of the over 300 provincial parks in Ontario.

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“I really just wanted to start seeing more places, so we thought we would start trying with this grand, ambitious goal,” Parypa says, joking that it might take as long as 15 years since they’ve only crossed a handful of parks off the list so far.

Along with seeing more of Ontario, Parypa has big goals for the future, hoping to spend more time immersed in wildlife elsewhere in Canada, with a trip to Nova Scotia during puffin season on the top of his bucket list.

He will also be spending more time using his personal printer to sell his photographs through the website he recently launched. Into 2024, Parypa hopes to participate in markets and vendor fairs around the city and county to further introduce his work to the community.

The Great Blue Heron is one of Peterborough-based photographer Curtis Parypa's favourite subjects. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
The Great Blue Heron is one of Peterborough-based photographer Curtis Parypa’s favourite subjects. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
While Curtis Parypa continues to seek rare birds to photograph, he has learned to appreciate the more common birds he overlooked prior to becoming a photographer, such as this ring-billed gull enjoying a meal. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
While Curtis Parypa continues to seek rare birds to photograph, he has learned to appreciate the more common birds he overlooked prior to becoming a photographer, such as this ring-billed gull enjoying a meal. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)

For now, Parypa continues to go in search of finding rare birds to photograph, though, in a full-circle realization, he’s also learning to appreciate those more common birds he overlooked prior to becoming a photographer. Just a few weeks ago, Parypa posted a video where he challenged himself to take a hike every day for one week and take a photo of every animal he passed just to get practice.

“You can get really wrapped up in trying to find specific animals that you forget to pay attention to all the common ones you run into,” he says, noting that he took surprising great photos of gulls that week. “The whole point of that video was to just show more appreciation for everything we have, regardless of its rarity.”

To purchase a photo from Curtis Parypa, visit curtissnapshot.com. You can also follow him on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook for more photos and videos.

A northern saw-whet owl having a nap in a tree. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
A northern saw-whet owl having a nap in a tree. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
One of Curtis Parypa's favourites, this photo of a raccoon looking down from a tree in Peterborough's Jackson Park is representative of a lot of his work, which often combines urban and natural elements as he takes many of his photos in the city's parks. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)
One of Curtis Parypa’s favourites, this photo of a raccoon looking down from a tree in Peterborough’s Jackson Park is representative of a lot of his work, which often combines urban and natural elements as he takes many of his photos in the city’s parks. (Photo: Curtis Parypa)

kawarthaNOW’s top 23 stories of 2023

Peter and Anna Bouzinelos, owners of The Pizza Factory at 1000 Lansdowne Street West in Peterborough, closed their iconic restaurant on January 29, 2023 after almost 43 years in business. Anna herself first began working at The Pizza Factory in 1981, the year after Peter opened it with his friend Tom Malakos. Anna and Peter married in 1992 and have raised four children, two of whom were working at the restaurant when it closed. (Photo courtesy of Peter Bouzinelos)

As we take a look back at our top stories of 2023, issues such as homelessness and housing, health care, economic uncertainty, and weather and climate continued to dominate local headlines.

Speaking of weather, last year at this time everyone was dealing with a so-called “bomb cyclone” over the Christmas weekend that disrupted holiday travel plans and knocked out power to thousands of Ontarians. This year, we had the polar opposite (no pun intended): a wet, warm, and foggy Christmas.

As with every year, 2023 had its share of sad or tragic and joyful or inspiring stories, with everything in-between. kawarthaNOW’s publisher Jeannine Taylor and managing editor Bruce Head have chosen a selection of our 23 most-read, most-shared, and most interesting stories from the past 12 months.

We’re presenting them below, in chronological order.

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1. The Pizza Factory owners Peter and Anna Bouzinelos thank Peterborough for over 42 years of support

Peter and Anna Bouzinelos, owners of The Pizza Factory at 1000 Lansdowne Street West in Peterborough, closed their iconic restaurant on January 29, 2023 after almost 43 years in business. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)
Peter and Anna Bouzinelos, owners of The Pizza Factory at 1000 Lansdowne Street West in Peterborough, closed their iconic restaurant on January 29, 2023 after almost 43 years in business. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

One of Peterborough’s most iconic and beloved family restaurants, The Pizza Factory closed in January when owners Peter and Anna Bouzinelos decided to retire. During the final weeks leading up to the closure, the Bouzinelos raised over $17,000 for Kawartha Food Share. In April, Peter announced he would be making his signature World Famous Caesar Dressing available at local food outlets.

A number of other businesses in the Kawarthas closed in 2023, including Peterborough pregnancy and parenting studio Lavender and Play, Lindsay’s Pane Vino Trattoria & Wine Bar, ZimArt’s Rice Lake Gallery near Bailieboro, Taso’s Restaurant & Pizzeria in downtown Peterborough, the Port Hope Drive In, the Historic Red Dog Tavern in downtown Peterborough, vegan restaurant Nateure’s Plate in downtown Peterborough, and Peterborough’s East City candy shop Flossophy.

However, as you’ll see if you read on to story #3, it wasn’t all bad news for the local economy, as far more new businesses opened or expanded rather than closed in 2023.

 

2. Peterborough’s new overnight drop-in centre for unhoused people opens

The Stop-Gap Drop-in Centre at Trinity United Church, located at 360 Reid Street in Peterborough, operated overnight from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. until the end of April 2023. The new Trinity Community Centre now offers a winter overnight drop-in space and a year-round daily daytime drop-in space. (Photo: Jeannine Taylor / kawarthaNOW)
The Stop-Gap Drop-in Centre at Trinity United Church, located at 360 Reid Street in Peterborough, operated overnight from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. until the end of April 2023. The new Trinity Community Centre now offers a winter overnight drop-in space and a year-round daily daytime drop-in space. (Photo: Jeannine Taylor / kawarthaNOW)

Early in 2023, a coalition of community agencies opened a new overnight drop-in centre at Trinity United Church in Peterborough. The centre has opened despite a December decision by Peterborough city council not to provide $100,000 for the operation of the centre, which the coalition had proposed as an emergency winter response to the city’s homelessness crisis.

That grassroots effort to address Peterborough’s homelessness crisis was the first in a series of developments in 2023. In April, Habitat for Humanity Peterborough & Kawartha Region leased the former Peterborough Humane Society property to Peterborough Action for Tiny Homes (PATH) for a transitional community of sleeping cabins for those experiencing homelessness. In December, pending the development of the sleeping cabins, PATH launched a new clothing hub and supply depot.

In May, Peterborough city council endorsed a homelessness plan to end tenting near the Wolfe Street shelter by installing temporary modular housing units and support services by the fall. The modular housing community was providing shelter for 50 people by the end of November.

In September, work began to transform the former Trinity United Church in Peterborough into a community hub for people experiencing homelessness. The Trinity Community Centre now provides a winter overnight drop-in space for up to 45 people every night from 8 p.m. to 8 p.m. until the end of March, as well as a year-round daily daytime drop-in space from 1 to 5 p.m. The Trinity Community Centre is a collaboration between the City of Peterborough, One City Peterborough, the United Way Peterborough and District, and the Peterborough Poverty Reduction Network (PPRN), with operating funding from the City of Peterborough.

 

3. Peterborough’s iconic Pig’s Ear Tavern to reopen this summer

Pig's Ear Tavern owners Steve Robertson and Ashley Holmes at the pub's entrance at 144 Brock Street in downtown Peterborough. The former Trent University students purchased the building in 2022 with help from two investors and reopened the pub in fall 2023. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)
Pig’s Ear Tavern owners Steve Robertson and Ashley Holmes at the pub’s entrance at 144 Brock Street in downtown Peterborough. The former Trent University students purchased the building in 2022 with help from two investors and reopened the pub in fall 2023. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

In January, Trent University alumni Steve Robertson and Ashley Holmes announced they had purchased the historic Pig’s Ear Tavern, which closed in 2017, with plans to reopen it by the summer. It took a little bit longer than expected, but the renovated pub reopened in September with the same look and feel as the original pub and now features live music, an open mic, trivia, and more.

As we noted above, far more businesses opened or expanded than closed in the Kawarthas in 2023. Woodville’s The Lokal acquired Kawartha Lakes Winery, a Loaded Pierogi franchise opened in East City, Indigenous electrician Brad Bourrie purchased the 44-year-old company White Electric, KitCoffee owner Helen McCarthy opened Kit’s Emporium, Havelock entrepreneur Meg Kynock launched healthy pet treat business mutmixx, husband-and-wife duo Cody Valliant and Maggie McCallum opened EastEnd Electric Records in Fenelon Falls, Chris Duff and Ashley Foreman grew their Keene hobby farm Duff Acres, Lakefield entrepreneur Beatrice Chan grew her Summer Roads Farm cut flower and raised meat business, 13-year-old Haliburton Highlands entrepreneur Olivia Irvine grew her Roasty Toasty Campfire Company, and Shay-Lynn Hutchings and Sarah Comer launched the Wellness Hub in Haliburton.

Peterborough entrepreneur Mitchell Lowes grew his Flame Spitter Hot Sauce business, Kristina and Aaron Goodwin opened Ivy Event Space in downtown Peterborough, Kelly Convery launched Sanctuary Flower Fields in Ennismore, Kara Parcells expanded Lindsay’s Evolve Dental Hygiene into its own location, brothers Andrew and Sean Fitzpatrick opened Take Cover Books in Peterborough’s East City, Peterborough’s Jordan Lyall grew her Real Life photography business, pescatarian and vegetarian restaurant The Vine opened in downtown Peterborough, Brad Katz opened The Good Baker inside the downtown Peterborough YMCA building, Millbrook’s Natalie Raponi relaunched her Heck Yes! cake business, artist Kay Gregg opened Ecco Gallery and Studios in Lakefield, Lakefield’s The Chocolate Rabbit opened a third location in Peterborough’s East City, and siblings Sloane Paul and Tom Chep launched ARC Motor Company.

A few businesses also changed hands in 2023, with Deanna Bell and Colin Hall selling Millbrook’s Pastry Peddler to Wendy and Mark Bannerman, Ray Leighton taking over Black’s Distillery in Peterborough’s East City from founder Robert Black, and Lisa Dixon selling Blackhoney in downtown Peterborough to Jennifer Miles. Last but not least, the Sayer family will soon be reopening the brand new Sayers Foods in Apsley after a fire destroyed North Kawartha’s only grocery store in December 2020.

 

4. Hastings resident and CIMRO president Mark Cameron issues urgent appeal for earthquake medical relief

A search-and-rescue team at the destroyed Galeria Business Center in Diyarbakir in southeastern Turkey, a city with a population of 1.8 million, on February 6, 2023 when a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck southern Turkey and northern Syria. One of the buildings in the background later collapsed following an aftershock. (Photo: Mahmut Bozarslan / Voice of America)
A search-and-rescue team at the destroyed Galeria Business Center in Diyarbakir in southeastern Turkey, a city with a population of 1.8 million, on February 6, 2023 when a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck southern Turkey and northern Syria. One of the buildings in the background later collapsed following an aftershock. (Photo: Mahmut Bozarslan / Voice of America)

On February 6, 2023, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake devastated southern Turkey and northern Syria, killing and injuring many tens of thousands of people. Hastings resident Mark Cameron, who cofounded the Canadian International Medical Relief Organization (CIMRO) that provides medical education and relief in disaster zones, issued an urgent appeal for earthquake relief to rescue survivors, including medical supplies.

Peterborough’s Sherbrooke Heights Animal Hospital heeded the call, raising $2,250 to purchase medical supplies to help treat injured survivors. A month later, teenage Syrian refugee and Peterborough newcomer Rashid Sheikh Hassan launched a poutine fundraiser to raise funds for CIMRO.

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5. Peterborough city council approves big changes to residential waste collection this fall

On April 17, 2023, the City of Peterborough provided a demonstration of the new collection trucks for the city's new green bin program for organic waste which launched on October 31, including the automated equipment used to pick up and empty the large green bins during curbside collection. (Photo: City of Peterborough)
On April 17, 2023, the City of Peterborough provided a demonstration of the new collection trucks for the city’s new green bin program for organic waste which launched on October 31, including the automated equipment used to pick up and empty the large green bins during curbside collection. (Photo: City of Peterborough)

In February, Peterborough city council approved the most significant changes in decades to waste collection in the city, including the introduction of a weekly ‘green bin’ service to collect household organic waste and a switch to clear garbage bags and every-other-week garbage collection beginning October 31.

In April, the city provided a preview of the green bin service. In August, the city announced some Peterborough residents would have new weekly waste collection dates to ensure waste collection services are delivered on schedule as the city grows and to improve worker safety by balancing collection routes. In September, the city began distributing the green bins to around 28,000 households across Peterborough.

On October 31, the first day of the new waste collection service went into effect with the city reporting strong uptake of the use of green bins for organic waste, as well as clear bags for garbage, although there were a few hiccups.

 

Peterborough artist David Bierk walks in front of his portrait of Queen Elizabeth II as it is prepared for installation at the Peterborough Memorial Centre on January 9, 1980. (Photo courtesy of Sebastian Bach)
Peterborough artist David Bierk walks in front of his portrait of Queen Elizabeth II as it is prepared for installation at the Peterborough Memorial Centre on January 9, 1980. (Photo courtesy of Sebastian Bach)

For over four decades, the late Peterborough artist David Bierk’s portrait of Queen Elizabeth II overlooked the ice at the Peterborough Memorial Centre. Measuring 12 by eight feet, Bierk’s painting was at one time considered the largest portrait of the Queen in North America. Following the Queen’s death on September 8, 2022, the City of Peterborough worked to determine how best to preserve Bierk’s painting, and it was decided to donate the painting to the Art Gallery of Peterborough’s permanent collection, where it will join over 100 of Bierk’s other works.

Other local artist news in 2023 included 94-year-old painter Bill McMillan having his first-ever exhibition at the Art School of Peterborough, Buckhorn-based wildlife artist Michael Dumas receiving the Simon Combes Conservation Artist Award, Peterborough’s Silver Bean Cafe celebrating 20 years with a hanging painted kayak installation created by local artist Jason Wilkins, Peterborough author Carol Koeslag publishing her short story collection at 92, and Peterborough ceramicist Kirsti Smith going viral on social media.

In 2023, kawarthaNOW also profiled local artists JoEllen Brydon, Silvia Ferreri, Kate Story, Jeffrey Macklin, and Christy Haldane.

 

7. New Peterborough Animal Care Centre is now officially open to the public

The new Peterborough Animal Care Centre at 1999 Technology Drive opened to the public for adoptions, donations, licensing, and more in March 2023 (Photo: Peterborough Humane Society)
The new Peterborough Animal Care Centre at 1999 Technology Drive opened to the public for adoptions, donations, licensing, and more in March 2023 (Photo: Peterborough Humane Society)

In March, the Peterborough Humane Society officially opened the doors of its new home at 1999 Technology Drive. The non-profit organization moved into the new building in January, closing the doors of its previous 65-year-old facility at 385 Lansdowne Street East and moving around 100 animals into the new facility.

The new state-of-the-art 24,000-square-foot animal care centre houses the Peterborough Humane Society’s shelter and adoption and education centre, the Ontario SPCA’s provincial dog rehabilitation centre, and a regional high-volume spay and neuter clinic to provide affordable spay and neuter services and prevent pet overpopulation.

Designed by Peterborough-based Lett Architects with construction led by Peak Construction, the new facility also includes an aqua therapy pool and underwater treadmill for dog rehabilitation, a family living room to help dogs acclimatize to living in a home environment, and both indoor and outdoor off-leash areas.

 

8. Former Peterborough mayor and city councillor Jack Doris has passed away

Former Peterborough mayor and city councillor Jack Doris (second from right) in the 1980s with the late Peter Adams (left) when he was MPP for Peterborough, community activist John Taylor (the late father of kawarthaNOW publisher Jeannine Taylor), and the late community activist Bruce Knapp, during a fundraiser for McKellar Hamilton Park, now known as the John Taylor Memorial Park. (Photo: Jeannine Taylor)
Former Peterborough mayor and city councillor Jack Doris (second from right) in the 1980s with the late Peter Adams (left) when he was MPP for Peterborough, community activist John Taylor (the late father of kawarthaNOW publisher Jeannine Taylor), and the late community activist Bruce Knapp, during a fundraiser for McKellar Hamilton Park, now known as the John Taylor Memorial Park. (Photo: Jeannine Taylor)

In March, former Peterborough mayor and city councillor Jack Doris passed away at the age of 91. First elected to Peterborough City Council in 1967, Doris subsequently represented his Monaghan Ward constituents for 39 years and served another six years as Mayor before stepping back from politics in 2014. Before his retirement, Doris was the city’s longest-serving municipal politician at 45 years.

In June, it was announced that Doris would be one of 11 new inductees into the Peterborough Pathway of Fame, along with the late Courtney Druce, Sean Eyre, Charlie Gregory, Stephanie and John MacDonald, David McNab, Mike Melnik, Cathy Rowland, kawarthaNOW’s own Jeannine Taylor, and Greg Wells.

 

9. Peterborough city council votes against funding The Theatre On King

The Theatre On King's artistic director Ryan Kerr addresses Peterborough City Council on March 27, 2023 to appeal the decision to deny the arts organization a community investment grant for 2023 after providing them the maximum grant in 2022. (Photo: Sebastian Johnston-Lindsay)
The Theatre On King’s artistic director Ryan Kerr addresses Peterborough City Council on March 27, 2023 to appeal the decision to deny the arts organization a community investment grant for 2023 after providing them the maximum grant in 2022. (Photo: Sebastian Johnston-Lindsay)

In March, Peterborough city council voted against providing a community investment grant to The Theatre On King, Peterborough’s black box theatre. The previous year, the organization had received the maximum grant of $15,000 under the program but received nothing in 2023, leading The Theatre On King to appeal the decision before council.

Despite eloquent and impassioned pleas from several delegations, council voted against providing any funding for The Theatre On King (as well as the Artisans Centre Peterborough), forcing the organization to appeal to the community for support — an effort that was ultimately successful.

The Theatre On King’s appeal to council did result in a request from councillors that the City of Peterborough revisit its community grants program. After seeking feedback from the public during the summer, city council approved a change in the program for 2025.

Instead of the existing two funding streams, the 2025 program will have three streams: community well-being grants, services delivery agreements, and an art investment fund to be administered by the Art Gallery of Peterborough in collaboration with Electric City Culture Council. The art investment fund would include existing funding for individual artist grants, Artsweek, and the city’s poet laureate program and, beginning in 2025 as a two-year pilot project, a new $60,000 professional arts organization grant program.

 

10. Peterborough’s Canadian Canoe Museum announces new waterfront campus thanks to a $1.8 million gift

The future home of The Canadian Canoe Museum will include a waterfront campus on the shores of Little Lake with an array of outdoor programming, as well as a gathering circle outside the museum's main entrance. For the first time in its history, the museum's entire collection of paddled watercraft will be accessible to the public at the new facility. (Rendering by Lett Architects Inc. courtesy of The Canadian Canoe Museum)
The future home of The Canadian Canoe Museum will include a waterfront campus on the shores of Little Lake with an array of outdoor programming, as well as a gathering circle outside the museum’s main entrance. For the first time in its history, the museum’s entire collection of paddled watercraft will be accessible to the public at the new facility. (Rendering by Lett Architects Inc. courtesy of The Canadian Canoe Museum)

In March, Peterborough’s Canadian Canoe Museum announced it has received a $1,775,000 gift from former CFL player and businessman Stuart “Stu” Lang and his wife Kim to support its 5.3-acre redeveloped waterfront campus featuring 1,200 feet of shoreline with docks, a boardwalk, and restored and naturalized spaces including a wetland, adjacent to the new 65,000-square-foot museum under construction at 2077 Ashburnham Drive.

In the spring, The Canadian Canoe Museum announced its “Move the Collection: The Final Portage” campaign to support the move of the museum’s entire collection of more than 600 canoes, kayaks, and paddled watercraft from its former Monaghan Road location to the new facility.

As the campaign’s official media sponsor, kawarthaNOW ran a series of stories in 2023, including a behind-the-scenes look at preparations for the move, a profile of the campaign, the economic impact of the new museum, the museum’s delayed fall 2023 opening due to nationwide construction issues including material and labour availability, and the completion of the move of the museum’s collection to the new facility this winter.

 

11. Dockside pizza drone delivery service coming to Kawartha Lakes and Peterborough County this summer

Tony Scherzo's 'Pie In The Sky - Dockside Pizza Delivery' business uses drones to deliver freshly made pizza to cottage docks in the City of Kawartha Lakes and Peterborough County. (Image courtesy of Pie In The Sky - Dockside Pizza Delivery)
Tony Scherzo’s ‘Pie In The Sky – Dockside Pizza Delivery’ business uses drones to deliver freshly made pizza to cottage docks in the City of Kawartha Lakes and Peterborough County. (Image courtesy of Pie In The Sky – Dockside Pizza Delivery)

On April 1, kawarthaNOW ran a story about a new drone delivery service called “Pie In The Sky” which delivers freshly made pizzas to cottage docks in the City of Kawartha Lakes and Peterborough County.

You’ll need to read the story to find out more.

 

12. Community backlash grows after announcement Minden’s emergency department will close June 1

Minden residents Patrick Porzuczek, Laura Porzuczek, and Richard Bradley (middle) with NDP health critic France Gélinas (left) and NDP MPP Spadina-Fort York Chris Glover (right) in front of the Legislature at Queen's Park in Toronto on April 27, 2023, where they delivered a petition requesting a moratorium of the decision to close the Minden emergency department on June 1. (Photo via France Gélinas / Facebook)
Minden residents Patrick Porzuczek, Laura Porzuczek, and Richard Bradley (middle) with NDP health critic France Gélinas (left) and NDP MPP Spadina-Fort York Chris Glover (right) in front of the Legislature at Queen’s Park in Toronto on April 27, 2023, where they delivered a petition requesting a moratorium of the decision to close the Minden emergency department on June 1. (Photo via France Gélinas / Facebook)

One of the biggest local stories of 2023 was the spring announcement by Haliburton Highlands Health Services that it would be closing Minden’s emergency department on June 1 and consolidating emergency services at the Haliburton hospital — over a 25-minute drive away at the best of times — due to an ongoing shortage of nursing and medical staff.

Made without prior community consultation, the decision to close Minden’s emergency department — just before the busy tourist season — blindsided and infuriated both Minden residents and local politicians. It led to a consolidated effort by a group of Minden residents to stop the closure, including delivering a petition to Queen’s Park and getting the NDP opposition involved, with local business owners speaking out against the planned closure.

Despite the petition and protests, the closure went ahead as planned on June 1. While it was not a replacement for the emergency department, a new urgent care clinic was opened in Minden at the end of June. Also in June, Haliburton Highlands Health Services president and CEO Carolyn Plummer, who oversaw the closure, took a medical leave of absence.

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13. Historic home built for founder of Sullivan’s Pharmacy in East City going up for sale

Located at 83 Robinson Street in Peterborough's East City, the John C. Sullivan House was built in 1886 and designed by famed Peterborough architect William Blackwell. The Sullivan family, which founded Sullivan's Pharmacy, sold the home in the Roman Catholic diocese in 1936 which used it as a convent from 1941 until 1953. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)
Located at 83 Robinson Street in Peterborough’s East City, the John C. Sullivan House was built in 1886 and designed by famed Peterborough architect William Blackwell. The Sullivan family, which founded Sullivan’s Pharmacy, sold the home in the Roman Catholic diocese in 1936 which used it as a convent from 1941 until 1953. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)

In May, one of Peterborough’s largest and most historic homes went up for sale for $1,399,800. The John C. Sullivan House was built for the founder of Sullivan’s Pharmacy in Peterborough’s East City and later served as a convent. Known as “Lakeview,” it was designed by famed Peterborough architect William Blackwell, who also designed the Academy Theatre in Lindsay in 1893, the Young Men’s Christian Association building in downtown Peterborough in 1896, and King George Public School in East City in 1913.

Located at 83 Robinson Street across from Immaculate Conception Catholic Elementary School, the 5,000-square-foot towering home has a total of eight bedrooms and four full bathrooms, including a three-bedroom apartment on the third floor. After five months on the market and at least one price reduction, the home was sold for $1,175,000.

 

14. Peterborough Petes win OHL championship and advance to Memorial Cup for first time in 17 years

The Peterborough Petes celebrate after winning the OHL championship and the J. Roberston Cup for the 10th time in the team's history on May 21, 2023. The team headed to the Memorial Cup for the first time in 17 years, although they were defeated in a semi-final game. (Photo courtesy of the Peterborough Petes)
The Peterborough Petes celebrate after winning the OHL championship and the J. Roberston Cup for the 10th time in the team’s history on May 21, 2023. The team headed to the Memorial Cup for the first time in 17 years, although they were defeated in a semi-final game. (Photo courtesy of the Peterborough Petes)

On May 21, the Peterborough Petes defeated the London Knights before a sold-out hometown crowd to advance to the Memorial Cup for the first time in 17 years.

While the Petes would ultimately be defeated by the Seattle Thunderbirds in a semi-final game, the community cheered on the team with several watch parties at Quaker Foods City Square in downtown Peterborough in May.

 

15. Peterborough woman dies after reports of multiple gun shots downtown early Friday morning

Peterborough police chief Stuart Betts addresses the media in the parking lot across from the Wolfe Street overflow shelter for people who are homeless. A woman in the Wolfe Street tent encampment was shot and later died in hospital in the early morning hours of June 2, 2023. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)
Peterborough police chief Stuart Betts addresses the media in the parking lot across from the Wolfe Street overflow shelter for people who are homeless. A woman in the Wolfe Street tent encampment was shot and later died in hospital in the early morning hours of June 2, 2023. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

Concerns about crime and the Wolfe Street homeless encampment in Peterborough converged in June when a 36-year-old Peterborough woman was shot to death there on June 2 in the city’s first homicide of 2023.

Peterborough police chief Stuart Betts pledged an ‘all hands on deck’ investigation. Betts said that the murdered woman was not a resident of the encampment.

Less than a week later, police announced they had arrested a 33-year-old Peterborough man in the shooting death, and identified the victim as Sarah King, a mother of two young children.

Along with first degree murder, Jonathan Murphy was also charged with 16 other offences, including possession of fentanyl and cocaine for the purpose of trafficking. Police said the murder was not a random incident, but did not provide any further details as the case is before the courts.

 

16. Air quality statement for smoke in effect for northern Kawarthas Sunday

Smoke from forest fires in Quebec hangs over the Township of Highlands East in Haliburton County on June 25, 2023. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)
Smoke from forest fires in Quebec hangs over the Township of Highlands East in Haliburton County on June 25, 2023. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)

The environment was another top story in 2023, especially with the many air quality statements issued during June and July because of smoke from forest fires, primarily in Quebec but also in northeastern Ontario.

The smoke, which extended across Canada and into the U.S. and lasted for weeks, created health concerns especially for those with existing health conditions. The increase in forest fires has been partly attributed to a warmer and drier climate as a result of climate change.

More local environmental concerns in 2023 included the discovery of another fuel oil spill in Jackson Creek in downtown Peterborough and the closure of two popular Peterborough city beaches for weeks during the summer due to toxic blue-green algae blooms.

 

In 2023, Peterborough's Fleming College cut 13 of its programs, including Culinary Skills, Culinary Management, and Food and Nutrition Management. Ten new programs will be introduced in 2023-24. (Photo: Fleming College Culinary / Facebook)
In 2023, Peterborough’s Fleming College cut 13 of its programs, including Culinary Skills, Culinary Management, and Food and Nutrition Management. Ten new programs will be introduced in 2023-24. (Photo: Fleming College Culinary / Facebook)

In June, kawarthaNOW broke the story of Fleming College’s decision to cut 13 of its programs, including its signature culinary skills, culinary management, and food and nutrition management programs. College president Maureen Adamson said the decision to cancel the programs was due to decline in enrolment, the impact of the pandemic, and other factors.

The decision shocked Mai Dong, co-owner of Rare Restaurant and Bar in downtown Peterborough, who was a June 2022 graduate of the culinary management program. She received the college’s 2023 Alumna of Distinction Award in recognition of her significant contributions to her field and community. The previous owner of Rare, Tyler Scott, was also a graduate of Fleming’s culinary management program and received the college’s 2022 Alumnus of Distinction Award.

While Fleming College cancelled 13 programs, it also introduced 10 new programs ranging from marketing management to forestry techniques.

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18. kawarthaNOW’s response to news ban for Facebook and Instagram users in Canada

To keep readers connected with local news and events during Meta's news block on Facebook and Instagram, kawarthaNOW now also offers a daily enews digest as well as its weekly VIP enews. (Photo: kawarthaNOW)
To keep readers connected with local news and events during Meta’s news block on Facebook and Instagram, kawarthaNOW now also offers a daily enews digest as well as its weekly VIP enews. (Photo: kawarthaNOW)

In August, kawarthaNOW — along with all other verified media companies — lost the ability to post news for Canadians on its Facebook and Instagram accounts.

The decision to block news on Facebook and Instagram was made by parent company Meta, which objected to the Canadian federal government’s legislation Bill C-18 (the Online News Act) which would require the American company to pay for links to Canadian news shared on its platforms, as well as Alphabet, the parent company of Google, to pay for links to Canadian news indexed in its search engine.

The legislation was prompted by lobbying from Canada’s traditional media industry, originally a coalition of newspaper companies later joined by broadcasters, who have been unable to compete with cheap advertising options offered by both Meta and Google.

Along with many independent online media companies, which benefit from website traffic from social media, kawarthaNOW believes the legislation is deeply flawed. Although Alphabet eventually settled with the federal government, agreeing to pay a set amount to Canadian media companies, most of this funding will go to large media corporations, and Meta continues to block news for Canadians on its platforms.

Despite the settlement with Google, the struggles facing print newspapers continue. In September, Metroland Media Group announced it was ending print editions of 70 community newspapers — including Peterborough This Week, Kawartha Lakes This Week, and Northumberland News — and its flyer delivery business, and laying off more than 600 employees including 68 journalists.

 

19. 32-year-old man dies after being struck by commercial vehicle on Highway 115 in Peterborough on Monday afternoon

32-year-old Eric Roter died tragically on September 25, 2023, 13 years after he was first diagnosed with bipolar disorder. His family and friends say they faced continued obstacles and a lack of resources when trying to get Eric the help he needed for his mental illness. (Photo courtesy of the Roter family)
32-year-old Eric Roter died tragically on September 25, 2023, 13 years after he was first diagnosed with bipolar disorder. His family and friends say they faced continued obstacles and a lack of resources when trying to get Eric the help he needed for his mental illness. (Photo courtesy of the Roter family)

On September 25, a 32-year-old man died after being struck by a commercial motor vehicle on Highway 115 in Peterborough.

As would later by publicly revealed by his family, the man who died was Eric Roter, who struggled with bipolar disorder for 13 years before taking his own life by walking in front of a transport truck on the highway.

On December 19, the day before what would have been his 33rd birthday, his sister Haley Scriver announced the launch of Roter’s Reach Mental Health Awareness, a fundraising initiative aimed at raising money for mental health services and supports. At a media event, Scriver described how the system failed her brother despite the best efforts of his family and friends to get him the help he needed.

 

20. Terry Guiel quits as executive director of the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area

Previously the executive director of the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area for 10 years, Terry Guiel began as the new executive director of the Lindsay & District Chamber of Commerce on November 13, 2023. (Photo; Lindsay Chamber / Facebook)
Previously the executive director of the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area for 10 years, Terry Guiel began as the new executive director of the Lindsay & District Chamber of Commerce on November 13, 2023. (Photo; Lindsay Chamber / Facebook)

In October, the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) announced Terry Guiel had quit as executive director of the organization that represents downtown businesses.

A long-time professional musician in Peterborough, Guiel turned to local politics in 2003, when he was elected to Peterborough city council in Ashburnham Ward. After his three-year council term ended, the late DBIA board chair Erica Cherney hired Guiel on a part-time basis for a year in 2008 to help organize events in the downtown.

After a five-year stint as a legal assistant at the Peterborough law office Farquharson Daly, in 2013 Guiel applied for and was hired as the DBIA’s executive director. He quickly became known as tireless promoter of the downtown and, under his leadership, the DBIA won several awards from the Ontario Business Improvement Area Association for the DBIA’s promotional events and projects, most recently in 2022 for Economic Development – COVID-19 Response & Recovery and for Small Special Events & Promotion for the inaugural Peterborough Mac and Cheese Festival.

Two weeks prior to his departure, Guiel had publicly expressed concerns that the Peterborough police would be leaving downtown Peterborough and moving to the former Johnson and Johnson property on Lansdowne Street West, prompting police chief Stuart Betts to call the claims “fictitious and unfounded.”

As it turns out, both Guiel and Chief Betts were correct. In December, the City of Peterborough announced it would be spending $15 million to buy the former Johnson and Johnson property for a second police station, but the current downtown station will be retained for police operations.

While Guiel has remained silent on the reason for his departure from the Peterborough DBIA, it was revealed in early November that he had accepted the position of executive director with the Lindsay & District Chamber of Commerce.

 

21. After 135 years at Morrow Park, the Peterborough Agricultural Society and Peterborough Exhibition will need to find a new home

A sign promoting the 1996 Peterborough Exhibition is one of the items the Peterborough Agricultural Society will be selling off in an online auction. According to a statement from the society on September 26, 2023, the City of Peterborough has invoked a buy-out clause in the Morrow Park agreement with the society, meaning both the society and the exhibition will have to find a new home after 135 years at Morrow Park. (Photo: Jason MacIntosh Auctions)
A sign promoting the 1996 Peterborough Exhibition is one of the items the Peterborough Agricultural Society will be selling off in an online auction. According to a statement from the society on September 26, 2023, the City of Peterborough has invoked a buy-out clause in the Morrow Park agreement with the society, meaning both the society and the exhibition will have to find a new home after 135 years at Morrow Park. (Photo: Jason MacIntosh Auctions)

For 135 years until 2019, the Peterborough Agricultural Society had run the Peterborough Exhibition at Morrow Park. The four-day agricultural exhibition was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic, while at the same time the Peterborough city council approved a decision to build a $62-million sports complex in the west portion of the park.

In 1938, the Morrow family gifted the 27-acre property to the City of Peterborough on the condition that it be available for the use of the Peterborough Agricultural Society, which was reaffirmed in the Peterborough Act of 1984.

In 2011, the society and the city began negotiating the future of Morrow Park, with the society insisting the park should always be available for the August exhibition and the city seeking the ability to develop the park. In 2015, the city and the society reached an interim agreement that would allow the city to develop 60 per cent of Morrow Park for “parks and recreation purposes,” with 40 per cent of the park remaining available for the society’s use.

In 2017, the city and the society reached a seven-year agreement that would allow for the gradual redevelopment in Morrow Park, with the city agreeing to build two new horse barns, storage space, office space, and public washrooms for the society’s use at an estimated cost of $7 million.

After the city approved construction of the sports complex, which raised controversy about the city’s interpretation of the “parks and recreation purposes” condition of the original Morrow Trust, the society and the city were at odds over the implementation of the 2017 agreement, which also included a “buy-out” clause — which city council has now invoked, leaving the Peterborough Agricultural Society looking for a new home.

 

22. Online petition to end salmon fishing in Port Hope’s Ganaraska River surpasses 10,000 signatures

Every fall, people flock to the Ganaraska River in Port Hope to watch and take photos of salmon swimming upstream to spawn, or to fish for the salmon. An increasing number of anglers using unethical and disrespectful fishing practices during the annual salmon run and leaving hooks, gutted fish, and garbage behind has prompted Port Hope resident Sean Carthew to create an online petition calling for the end of fishing in the Ganaraska River between Corbett's Dam and the CN bridge. The petition has surpassed its goal of 10,000 signatures and is now aiming for 15,000. (Photo: Lee Higginson)
Every fall, people flock to the Ganaraska River in Port Hope to watch and take photos of salmon swimming upstream to spawn, or to fish for the salmon. An increasing number of anglers using unethical and disrespectful fishing practices during the annual salmon run and leaving hooks, gutted fish, and garbage behind has prompted Port Hope resident Sean Carthew to create an online petition calling for the end of fishing in the Ganaraska River between Corbett’s Dam and the CN bridge. The petition has surpassed its goal of 10,000 signatures and is now aiming for 15,000. (Photo: Lee Higginson)

In October, Port Hope resident Sean Carthew launched an online petition calling for more regulations around fishing in the Ganaraska River in Port Hope due to an increasing number of anglers using unethical and disrespectful fishing practices during the annual salmon run.

Every fall, salmon and trout leave the cold waters of Lake Ontario and begin a journey upstream through rivers, creeks, and streams to reach their spawning grounds. The salmon run in the Ganaraska River is a popular draw for both tourists and anglers, but recently residents have noticed an increasing number of anglers overfishing, netting, and snagging.

In particular, salmon are being slaughtered for their roe (eggs), with their discarded bodies left behind. Along with dead fish, an increased number of fishing hooks are being left behind, with Carthew and other residents cleaning them up every year after trout and salmon fishing season comes to an end on September 30.

Carthew’s petition ultimately gained more than 13,000 signatures, and has come to the attention of Port Hope council.

 

23. After being closed for three years, the Bobcaygeon Swing Bridge is now open to vehicular and pedestrian traffic

The rehabilitated Bobcaygeon Swing Bridge reopened to vehicular and pedestrian traffic on October 20, 2023. Since the rehabilitation project began in October 2020, the project faced continual issues that delayed the completion of the project from May 2021. (Photo: Impact 32 / Facebook)
The rehabilitated Bobcaygeon Swing Bridge reopened to vehicular and pedestrian traffic on October 20, 2023. Since the rehabilitation project began in October 2020, the project faced continual issues that delayed the completion of the project from May 2021. (Photo: Impact 32 / Facebook)

Bobcaygeon residents rejoiced in October after the Bobcaygeon Swing Bridge finally reopened after being closed for three years.

The project to rehabilitate the bridge, which began in October 2020, was originally scheduled to be completed in May 2021. Delays with the fabrication and delivery of hydraulic and mechanical components, and the discovery that some components of the bridge were in worse condition than originally anticipated, changed the expected completion date to summer 2021.

Subsequent delays and technical issues changed the reopening date to the end of 2021, then spring 2022, then fall 2022, then the end of 2022. Work continued throughout 2023, until the bridge finally reopened on October 20.

The bridge will be temporarily closed again in the spring prior to the opening of the navigation season, so that final mechanical components required to optimize the bridge swing operations can be installed and to allow commissioning activities to be completed.

‘The new trails at the Mary West Nature Reserve are a fantastic community asset for the Campbellford area’

The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) recently unveiled new public walking trails at the Mary West Nature Reserve, located at 1186 County Road 35 in the Municipality of Trent Hills. (Photo: Chelsea Marcantonio / NCC)

If exercise and enjoying the great outdoors are among New Year’s resolutions, residents of Northumberland and Peterborough counties can carve a path forward on new trails near Campbellford.

The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) recently unveiled new public walking trails at the Mary West Nature Reserve, located at 1186 County Road 35 in the Municipality of Trent Hills.

The newly opened trail system, along with a native plant seed orchard, are part of the privately protected Mary West Nature Reserve.

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The nature reserve features 2.8 kilometres of walking trails that wind through forests, wetlands and along a creek. There are new boardwalks and interpretive signs, and the trails are open year-round to hikers during the daytime. Leashed pets are welcome.

“The new trails at the Mary West Nature Reserve are a fantastic community asset for the Campbellford area,” said Mark Stabb, NCC’s central Ontario east program program director, in a media release.

“We hope these new trails encourage people to get out and experience the unique sights, scents and sounds of nature this winter, while travelling through this beautiful forest and meadow.”

A tamarack at Mary West Nature Reserve, located at 1186 County Road 35 in the Municipality of Trent Hills near Campbellford. (Photo: Chelsea Marcantonio / NCC)
A tamarack at Mary West Nature Reserve, located at 1186 County Road 35 in the Municipality of Trent Hills near Campbellford. (Photo: Chelsea Marcantonio / NCC)

The 38-hectare Mary West Nature Reserve is home to towering white pines, spring peepers, a river, and the at-risk eastern wood pewee. Donated in 1991 to NCC through the estate of Mary West (a descendant of the Wests who originally owned the farm at Westben), the property protects wetlands and forests in the Trout Creek and Trent River watersheds.

It is home to species at risk, such as butternut, wood thrush, and snapping turtle.

“This nature reserve also provides carbon storage and flood mitigation, as well as clean drinking water for the community,” NCC noted.

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NCC said it is also working to restore old farm fields at the site into a seed orchard of dense native wildflower plantings and grassy meadows.

“This will result in a source of locally grown native seed for NCC’s tallgrass prairie and oak savannah habitat restoration projects across Northumberland County and will provide opportunities for community volunteers to help contribute to habitat restoration over the long term.”

The newly established trail system, parking lot upgrades and the establishment of the native plant seed orchard were supported by numerous partners and donors, NCC noted.

An eastern garter snake at Mary West Nature Reserve, located at 1186 County Road 35 in the Municipality of Trent Hills near Campbellford. (Photo: Chelsea Marcantonio / NCC)
An eastern garter snake at Mary West Nature Reserve, located at 1186 County Road 35 in the Municipality of Trent Hills near Campbellford. (Photo: Chelsea Marcantonio / NCC)

“Nature trails and conservation areas are important for communities and the protection of natural ecosystems,” said Filomena Tassi, minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for southern Ontario, in the media release.

“Our government is pleased to support (NCC) and its efforts to build and maintain lands that benefit the environment. NCC provides opportunities for people to explore, learn about and enjoy the beauty of southern Ontario’s natural habitats, and we are happy to support them.”

During the past two years, NCC said it has influenced the protection of more than one million hectares — almost twice the size of Prince Edward Island — coast to coast to coast.

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“In the face of rapid biodiversity loss and climate change, nature is our ally. There is no solution to either without nature conservation. When nature thrives, we all thrive.”

NCC works with people, communities, businesses and government to protect and care for our country’s most important natural areas. Since 1962, NCC has brought people together to conserve and restore more than 15 million hectares. To learn more, visit natureconservancy.ca.

For more information about the Mary West Nature Reserve, call 1-877-231-3552 or email ontario@natureconservancy.ca to inquire about the trails and access points at the nature reserve.

LOCATED – Haliburton Highlands OPP searching for missing 49-year-old man

Haliburton Highlands OPP are looking for this missing 49-year-old man, who was last seen in Coboconk on December 28, 2023. (Police-supplied photo)

Haliburton Highlands Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) are asking for the public’s help in locating a missing 49-year-old man police have identified as Jonathan.

Jonathan, who also goes by John, was last seen in Coboconk at around 2 a.m. on Thursday (December 28). He is believed to be driving a red 2015 Ford Fusion with Ontario licence plate CLJD280.

He is described as 6’3″ tall and approximately 170 lbs, with blue eyes, short brown and grey hair, and glasses.

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Jonathan was last seen wearing a blue and white oversized sweater, blue jeans, a blue and white baseball cap, and brown Sketchers.

Police are trying to locate Jonathan out of concern for his health and well-being.

Anyone with information regarding his whereabouts is asked to call Haliburton Highlands OPP at 705-286-1431 or the OPP Provincial Communications Centre at 1-888-310-1122.

Haliburton Highlands OPP missing person graphic.

nightlifeNOW – December 28 to January 3

Toronto-based music collective Doghouse Orchestra performs their unique brand of country, funk, and jazz music at Jethro's Bar + Stage in downtown Peterborough on Saturday night. (Photo: Camille Neirynck-Guerrero)

Every Thursday, we publish live music events at pubs and restaurants in Peterborough and the greater Kawarthas region based on information that venues provide to us directly or post on their website or social media channels. Here are the listings for the week of Thursday, December 28 to Wednesday, January 3, 2024.

If you’re a pub or restaurant owner and want to be included in our weekly listings, please email our nightlifeNOW editor at nightlife@kawarthanow.com. For concerts and live music events at other venues, check out our Concerts & Live Music page.

With the exception of karaoke, we only list events with performing musicians. Venues may also host other events during the week (e.g., dancing, DJs, comedy shows).

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Arthur's Pub

930 Burnham St., Cobourg
(905) 372-2105

Thursday, December 28

8-10:30pm - Open mic w/ Bruce Longman

Friday, December 29

8-11pm - Andy Earle

Saturday, December 30

8-11pm - Samara Johnson

Sunday, December 31

9pm - New Year's Eve East Coast Kitchen Party ft Madman's Window ($35)

Black Horse Pub

452 George St. N., Peterborough
(705) 742-0633

Thursday, December 28

7-10pm - Jazz & Blues Night ft. Rob Phillips

Friday, December 29

5-8pm - Jay Ezs; 9pm - Misfits in Action

Saturday, December 30

6-8pm - NYE Warm Up w/ Joslynn Burford; 8-11pm - NYE Warm Up w/ The Jugbusters

Sunday, December 31

New Year's Eve w/ Bread & Soul at 5pm and The Woodhouse Crooks ft Bridget Foley at 9pm ($20 for 9pm show, $65 for 3-course dinner & 9pm show)

Monday, January 1

Closed

Tuesday, January 2

6-10pm - Open mic w/ Johann Burkhardt

Wednesday, January 3

7-10pm - Victoria Yeh & Mike Graham

Coming Soon

Thursday, January 4
7-10pm - Jazz & Blues Night ft. Rob Phillips

Friday, January 5
7-10pm - Bread & Soul

Saturday, January 6
5-8pm - Emily Burgess; 9pm - Between The Static

Sunday, January 7
4-7pm - Po'Boy Jeffreys

Monday, January 8
7-10pm - Crash & Burn w/ Rick & Gailie

Tuesday, January 9
6-10pm - Open stage w/ Joslynn Burford

Wednesday, January 10
6-9pm - Tami J. Wilde

Boston Pizza Lindsay

435 Kent St. W., Lindsay
705-328-0008

Friday, December 29

8-11pm - Bread and Soul

Burleigh Falls Inn

4791 Highway 28, Burleigh Falls
(705) 654-3441

Saturday, December 30

6pm - Jake Dudas

Sunday, December 31

6pm - A Gatsby New Year's Eve ft Mike Graham & Band ($115 incl cocktail & appetizers, dinner, and New Year's Eve toast, in advance at https://burleighfallsinn.com/new-years-eve-dinner)

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Claymore Pub & Table

95 King St. W., Cobourg
905-372-5231

Thursday, December 28

7-10pm - Karaoke

Crook & Coffer

231 Hunter St. W., Peterborough
705-876-0505

Thursday, December 28

7-9:30pm - Dixon Park

Friday, December 29

8pm - Karaoke with Stoeten

Saturday, December 30

7:30-10:30pm - Wild Cards

Dominion Hotel

113 Main St., Minden
(705) 286-6954

Coming Soon

Thursday, January 4
4pm - Gord Kidd

Erben Eatery & Bar

189 Hunter St W,, Peterborough
705-304-1995

Thursday, December 28

8-11pm - Jay Coombes

Sunday, December 31

9pm - New Year's Eve Party ft Burning Bridges, Excuses Excuses, Merceria ($10 in advance at https://www.erbenptbo.com/event-details/erben-new-years-eve-party, $15 at door)

Monday, January 1

Closed

Tuesday, January 2

Closed

Wednesday, January 3

8-11pm - Open mic

Ganaraska Hotel

30 Ontario St., Port Hope
(905) 885-9254

Saturday, December 30

2-6pm - Cutter and Cook

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Jethro's Bar + Stage

137 Hunter St. W., Peterborough
705-931-0617

Thursday, December 28

8-10pm - Angie Hilts; 10pm - The Union

Friday, December 29

8-10pm - Mark Thackaway; 10pm - The Pangea Project

Saturday, December 30

8-10pm - Paul Reddick Band; 10pm - Doghouse Orchestra

VIDEO: Welcome to Doghouse Orchestra

Sunday, December 31

2-5pm - New Year's Eve Blues Jam w/ Al Black & The Steady Band; 7-9pm - Trent Radio From the Stage w/ Intimidators, Pays d'en Haut; 10pm - New Year's Eve Bash w/ Diamond Dave & The Smoke Eaters

Monday, January 1

Closed

Wednesday, January 3

8-10pm - Karaoke w/ Anne Shebib

Kelly's Homelike Inn

205 3rd Street, Cobourg
905-372-3234

Friday, December 29

7-10pm - Jeff Biggar

Saturday, December 30

4-8pm - The Radials

Sunday, December 31

Closed

Monday, January 1

Closed

Tuesday, January 2

Closed

The Locker at The Falls

9 Lindsay St., Fenelon Falls
705-887-6211

Thursday, December 28

7:30pm - Karaoke w/ Ross Burgoyne

The Lounge in the Hollow Valley Lodge

1326 Kawagama Lake Rd., Dorset
705-766-1980

Saturday, December 30

7pm - Dopamine Dream ($35 in advance at https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/778445640867)

McThirsty's Pint

166 Charlotte St., Peterborough
(705) 743-2220

Friday, December 29

9pm - Jacob Henley

Saturday, December 30

9pm - Ben Park

Sunday, December 31

9pm - New Year's Eve w/ Cale Crowe (no cover)

Tuesday, January 2

8pm - Live music TBA

Wednesday, January 3

9pm - Live music TBA

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Olympia Restaurant

106 Kent St. W., Lindsay
705-328-1444

Saturday, December 30

5-9pm - Live jazz music (reservations recommended)

Pig's Ear Tavern

144 Brock St., Peterborough
(705) 745-7255

Tuesday, January 2

9pm - Open mic hosted by Casey Bax

Coming Soon

Saturday, January 6
8pm - Jetson, Intimidators,Smoke and Mirrors ($5)

The Publican House

300 Charlotte St., Peterborough
(705) 874-5743

Sunday, December 31

7-9pm - New Year's Eve w/ The Wild Cards

The Rockcliffe - Moore Falls

1014 Lois Lane, Minden
705-454-9555

Sunday, December 31

8pm - Shiny Disco Ball New Year's Eve Bash ft B-Sides

Tap & Tonic Pub & Bistro

18-22 Bridge St. W., Campbellford
(705) 947-2333

Thursday, December 28

7-10pm - Phoxy Music

That Little Pub

26 Bridge St. W., Campbellford
(705) 653-0001

Tuesday, January 2

7-11pm - Karaoke

The Thirsty Goose

63 Walton St., Port Hope

Sunday, December 31

9pm - New Year's Eve Party w/ Brian Bracken ($100)

Monday, January 1

Closed

The Venue

286 George Street North, Peterborough
(705) 876-0008

Coming Soon

Saturday, January 20
8pm - Man Machine Poem Tragically Hip tribute ($20 in advance at https://www.tickettailor.com/events/allthingsmusic/1087647)

Saturday, February 24
8pm - Scaramouche: A Tribute to Queen ($30 in advance at https://www.tickettailor.com/events/timewarppromotions/1098707)

Friday, March 1
8pm - Shawn Desman w/ Sofia Camara ($32.50 in advance at https://found.ee/ShawnDesman-Ptbo)

White House Hotel

173 Charlotte St., Peterborough
(705) 741-2444

Sunday, December 31

9:30pm - New Year's Eve Party ft. Bootleg XXX ($20 at the door)

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