Canopy Project Kawartha Lakes is seeking citizen sciencists to help the volunteer-led group map out significant trees. In February, five sycamore trees in Lindsay were given heritage status by Forests Ontario. (Photo courtesy of Canopy Project Kawartha Lakes)
The Canopy Project Kawartha Lakes is issuing a call for local residents to join them as citizen scientists.
The volunteer-led community group, whose goal is to protect and enhance the urban canopy in settlement areas of Kawartha Lakes, is launching a community project on Earth Day to develop a digital map of significant trees.
The group is holding a launch event from 3 to 4 p.m. on Friday (April 22) at the Fleming College Arboretum on the Frost Campus in Lindsay.
Advertisement - content continues below
Volunteer citizen scientists will learn how to judge whether a tree is noteworthy or significant based on its size, age, species, or historical connection. They will also learn how to add a tree and its location to an online app that also records the species and other identifiers.
“This is an easy way for people with a passion for the environment to help us identify and preserve our noteworthy or significant trees while participating in a global initiative,” says Ruth Cameron, a volunteer with Canopy Project Kawartha Lakes, in a media release.
“All it takes is a smartphone and the iNaturalist app — you share your photo observations with your fellow naturalists and the community does the rest.”
To RSVP or learn more about citizen science, email Ruth Cameron at SigTreesCKL@gmail.com.
This story has been updated to correct the email address.
The Peterborough-Kawartha riding association of the Ontario NDP has announced Jen Deck as its approved nomination candidate for the 2022 provincial election.
Deck is a teacher and the Occasional Teacher President of the Kawartha Pine Ridge Teachers’ Local of the Elementary Teachers Federation Ontario (ETFO).
“Jen is committed to campaigning on a bold and progressive agenda that responds to the climate crisis, income inequality, and increased investments in our public services,” reads an email to members of the riding association.
Advertisement - content continues below
The Peterborough-Kawartha riding association will hold a nomination meeting to elect the provincial candidate on Zoom at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 28th.
If Deck is confirmed as the NDP candidate for Peterborough-Kawartha, she will be challenging incumbent Dave Smith of the Conservatives, Greg Dempsey of the Liberals, Robert Gibson of the Greens, Tom Marazzo of the Ontario Party, and Dylan Smith of the None Of The Above Party.
This story has been updated with the name of the local candidate for the Green Party of Ontario.
At a launch event on April 14, 2022, Wes Ryan of the Peterborough Academy of Circus Arts performs "No Elevator to Success" in a stairwell of Peterborough's decommissioned King George Public School, the site of Public Energy Performing Arts' 'Erring at King George' multidisciplinary arts festival running from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
Where many saw an old building that had long outlived any future useful purpose, Bill Kimball saw an opportunity to bring that space back to life.
In 2018, the executive director of Public Energy Performing Arts in Peterborough approached the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board to enquire if the former King George Public School in East City could be made available for a performance and visual art showcase he had in mind.
Fast forward to this past Thursday (April 14), when details of ‘Erring at King George’, billed as Peterborough’s largest multidisciplinary arts festival, were revealed by Kimball at a launch attended by artists and arts supporters as well as a number of event sponsors, kawarthaNOW among them.
Bill Kimball, executive director of Public Energy Performing Arts, speaks to the media and invited guests during a launch event on April 14, 2022 for the ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival, which runs from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
Share on Bluesky
Set to take place the first two weekends in May at the former school at 220 Hunter Street East (at Armour Road), Erring at King George will see artists perform or display their work using all three floors of the building, converting former classrooms, the gymnasium and even stairwells into a stage for their combined talents.
“You’ve got to have a space that has numerous rooms — a place that you might get lost in,” said Kimball, noting the former school fits the bill perfectly. “You need an empty building and there aren’t too many of those around. I had heard that King George was being closed, so I approached the school board and asked ‘Can we do this after it’s closed?’ This has been in the works for four years.”
The festival runs Friday, May 6th to Sunday, May 8th, and again from Friday, May 13th to Sunday, May 15th, from 7 to 10 p.m. on Fridays, 3 to 6 p.m. on Saturdays, and 2 to 5 p.m. on Sundays. Tickets for each day of the festival range in price from $5 to $30 in increments of $5 and can be purchased in advance online at eventbrite.ca/e/311827001957. Tickets will also be available at the door.
All three floors of the decommissioned King George Public School at the corner of Hunter Street East and Armour Road in Peterborough’s East City, will be used for multidisciplinary art installations and performances during Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’, which runs from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15, 2022. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)
Share on Bluesky
Kimball noted this is the third Erring event held in Peterborough. The first took place in 1996 on the upper floors of the Hunter Street East building that is now home to the Gordon Best Theatre. The second, Erring on the Mount, was held in 2014 at what is now The Mount Community Centre. Kimball pointed out the success of both events, particularly the latter, made staging the event yet again a no-brainer.
“In 2014, we had more than 2,000 people file through in three days,” he said, noting that while the location has changed, the premise remains very much the same. “This event will is very much based on that experience. The artists take over an entire building, and fill every nook and cranny.”
“The idea is to give artists a challenge — something new to do — and to give audiences a new way to experience art. Something that’s not like a theatre or an art gallery. Theatre can be staged anywhere. Art can be put anywhere. That’s what this is about.”
At a launch event on April 14, 2022, artist Brian Nichols works on a puppet theatre stage at the decommissioned King George Public School in Peterborough’s East City, the site of Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival running from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
As for the word ‘erring’ in the festival’s name, Kimball explained it can be used in two ways.
“One is the modern version, which is to make a mistake — that might happen here, who knows?” he laughed. “The other definition of ‘erring’ is more old-fashioned, which is to wander or to get lost. You’re wandering … you’re getting lost in this building, getting lost amongst among the art.”
That will present no challenge for the festival, with more than 70 artists participating through the mediums of visual art, film, multimedia, dance, theatre, music and spoken work poetry. While most are based locally, some are coming from as far away as British Columbia. A complete list of installations on view during the festival and scheduled performances is available at publicenergy.ca/erring-at-king-george-festival-schedule/.
At a launch event on April 14, 2022, Thomas Vaccaro of the Peterborough Academy of Circus Arts performs “No Elevator to Success” in a stairwell of Peterborough’s decommissioned King George Public School, the site of Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival running from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
Each installation and performance takes full advantage of the former school’s rustic interior and ambience. However, one of those installations — One Day In December, a film written and produced by Rob Fortin and Susan Newman with filmmaker LA Alfonso — leans heavily on the former school’s unique physical position as an eyewitness to local history.
On Monday, December 11, 1916 at 10:20 a.m., an explosion at the Quaker Oats plant — the result of a spark from a grinder igniting grain dust — abruptly shattered the morning calm. The explosion and subsequent fire, which burned for several days, took 24 lives. At King George Public School, then only three years old, students whose classroom windows faced the south witnessed that event and its aftermath.
“We decided we would try to present that morning from the point of view of a fictional teacher in the classroom and the students, who would have been in the middle of doing whatever you do on a normal school day,” Newman said. “We called it One Day In December because it was just an ordinary day until ‘BOOM.’ It’s a look at an everyday occurrence with just everyday people and the impact that something like that can have.”
“One Day In December”, a film written and produced by Rob Fortin and Susan Newman with filmmaker LA Alfonso about the 1916 catastrophic explosion and fire at the Quaker Oats factory in Peterborough, will be screened as part of Spirit Week during Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’, which runs from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15, 2022. (Photo: Toronto Archives)
Newman and Fortin wrote five songs for One Day In December, with the original plan being to present their piece as a live performance in the classroom. When that became impossible to do because of COVID restrictions at that time, it evolved into a film project at the suggestion of Alfonso.
The film features Marsala Lukianchuk as the teacher and the choral group from the Peterborough Theatre Guild’s upcoming production of Annie as the students. Not seen on film but clearly heard is a choir from Kaawaate East City Public School.
“We made the classroom look like it did in 1916,” Fortin said. “How often do you get the chance to tell a story and recreate it in the very place that it happened? It was like ‘Wow.’ You really felt the ghosts.”
Artist Brad Brackenridge peers through the eye socket of his giant Edward Lear puppet head on April 14, 2022 at the decommissioned King George Public School in Peterborough’s East City during a launch event for Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival, which runs from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
One Day In December will be projected on multiple screens in one of those classrooms as part of Erring at King George’s Spirit Week, an immersive travelling theatre work written and directed by Kate Story where “a charming and mysterious custodian” will lead audiences throughout the building (and outside at times) where they will encounter scenarios inspired by actual events and people who worked and studied at the school.
Along with Fortin, Newman, and Alfonso’s film, Spirit Week will feature Daniel Smith, Jenn Cole, Nicole Malbeuf, Kelli Marshall, The McDonnel Street Gospel Quartet, Norah von Bieberstein and Sahira Q, and Ryan Kerr.
Spirit Week takes place for one hour at the beginning of each day of the festival (6 p.m. on Fridays, 2 p.m. on Saturdays, and 1 p.m. on Sundays) and requires a separate ticket that must be purchased in advance at eventbrite.ca/e/311791545907. Tickets, which range from $10 to $30 in increments of $5, also allow access to the entire Erring at King George festival for that day, so there’s no need to purchase an additional ticket for the festival itself.
Diane Lloyd, chair of the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board, speaks during the April 14, 2022 launch event for Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival, which runs from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. Public Energy approached the school board four years ago to see if the decommissioned King George Public School in Peterborough’s East City could be made available for a performance and visual art festival. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
Share on Bluesky
Among the many who attended Thursday’s launch was Diane Lloyd, chair of the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board. She said the former school “is a perfect venue for what they are doing here.”
“There’s a school exactly like this in New York that has become an arts centre,” she said, pointing out that would be more difficult to do with King George. “In New York, there are all sorts of people who support the arts. It would take community support to do it here. But having this open again and having people come back is wonderful.”
As to what will become of the former school property after the Erring event, Lloyd won’t commit to an answer. However, she said the board “values the heritage aspect of this building.”
Peterborough city councillor Henry Clarke (middle), who went to King George Public School as a child, was one of the guests attending the April 14, 2022 launch event for Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival, which runs from May 6 to 8 and 13 to 15. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
Also on hand Thursday were a few King George alumni, including long-time city councillor Henry Clarke as well as Peterborough real estate agent and event sponsor Jo Pillon — the latter having someone shoot a video of her in the gym doing a cartwheel where, many years ago, she did likewise as a member of the school’s gymnastics team.
In addition to the installations and scheduled performances, two panel discussions will be held during the festival.
“King George, Kaawaate” will examine the juxtaposition of two side-by-side buildings — the former King George Public School and the recently constructed Kaawaate East City Public School that replaced it — and consider how we can work toward decolonization of artists, educators, and treaty people.
“The Art of Accessibility” will celebrate the “bravery” required to disrupt the status quo and make change for diversity, equality, and accessibility, and discuss how the education system and the culture it serves create barriers and how those barriers can be overcome.
Public Energy Performing Arts’ ‘Erring at King George’ multidisciplinary arts festival will transform the decommissioned King George Public School in Peterborough’s East City into a performance and visual art space for the first two weekends of May 2022. (Image courtesy of Public Energy)
Temporary signage in the window of the new Jethro's Bar + Stage at 137 Hunter Street West in downtown Peterborough. The live music venue, in the former location of The Sapphire Room cocktail lounge, will open on April 22, 2022. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)
Downtown Peterborough will soon have another live music venue.
Peterborough musician Kayla Howran announced on Thursday (April 14) that her family is opening Jethro’s Bar + Stage at 137 Hunter Street West, between Water and George streets.
It’s the former location of The Sapphire Room cocktail lounge and is next door to The Food Forest restaurant.
Advertisement - content continues below
According to Howran, Jethro’s Bar + Stage will open Friday (April 22) with live music all weekend.
The opening weekend line-up includes Melissa Payne at 9 p.m. on Friday, Blue Hazel from 5 to 7 p.m. and Jack Marks at 9 p.m. on Saturday, and Little Fire from 5 to 7 p.m. on Sunday.
Peterborough's Blue Hazel (Cailtin O'Connor and Meisha Browne) bring their harmonies to the Black Horse in downtown Peterborough on Good Friday. (Photo: Bryan Reid)
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, April 14 to Wednesday, April 20.
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.
Saturday, April 23 (postponed from April 16) 2-4pm - PMBA presents HBH ft Chris Hiney, Al Black, JP Hovercraft ($100 for table of 4, $150 for table of 6 by e-transfer to . All proceeds help musicians in need)
Ganaraska Hotel
30 Ontario St., Port Hope
(905) 885-9254
Saturday, April 16
2pm & 8pm - Boneyard (no cover)
Coming Soon
Friday, May 6 8pm - Nickola Magnolia Band "Broken Lonesome" album release party ($20 in advance at www.eventbrite.ca/e/302379895407)
Saturday, May 14 8pm - Best in Show: Show in Best ft SJ Riley, Adam Tario, Lisa Canivet, A Dubz ($13.75/$20)
Graz Restobar
38 Bolton St., Bobcaygeon
705-738-6343
Saturday, April 16
7:30pm - Kelly Burrows
Coming Soon
Friday, April 22 7:30pm - Jam Night hosted by Margaret Weikmann
Saturday, April 30 7:30pm - Montana Sky
Advertisement - content continues below
Kelly's Homelike Inn
205 3rd Street, Cobourg
905-372-3234
Saturday, April 16
4-8pm - Wicklow
The Locker at The Falls
9 Lindsay St., Fenelon Falls
705-887-6211
Thursday, April 14
8pm - Karaoke w/ Ross Burgoyne
Mainstreet Landing Restaurant
1939 Lakehurst Road, Buckhorn
(705) 657-9094
Thursday, April 14
7-10pm - Ty WIlson
Saturday, April 16
7pm - Karaoke
Coming Soon
Thursday, April 21 7-10pm - Ty WIlson
McGillicafey's Pub & Eatery
13 Bridge St.. N., Hastings
(705) 696-3600
Thursday, April 14
7-10pm - Karaoke
McThirsty's Pint
166 Charlotte St., Peterborough
(705) 743-2220
Saturday, April 16
9pm - Live music TBA
Murphy's Lockside Pub & Patio
3 May St., Fenelon Falls
(705) 887-1100
Thursday, April 14
7pm - Open Mic w/ David Evans
Saturday, April 16
7:30pm - Joe Kelly & Jason Lynn
Advertisement - content continues below
Pie Eyed Monk Brewery
8 Cambridge St. N., Lindsay
(705) 212-2200
Coming Soon
Friday, May 27 7-11:30pm - Music At the Monk 2 ft Looking For Heather, Phil Heaslip, Cassie Noble, Nathan Truax, SJ Riley ($10 in advance at www.eventbrite.ca/e/273028785447)
Three of the 119 decorated envelopes and postcards that Peterborough writer Erica Richmond and North Carolina artist and author Shannon Fitzgerald received from 52 people from 11 different countries around the world during for their "The Mail Art Stories Project: Mail Art in the Time of Covid-19" project during the first 18 months of the pandemic. A book about the project is set to be released on April 20, 2022. (Photos: The Mail Art Stories Project @mailartstories / Instagram)
Peterborough writer Erica Richmond is about to release a book featuring mail art collected during the first 18 months of the pandemic.
Richmond collaborated with artist and author Shannon Fitzgerald of Hillsborough, North Carolina on The Mail Art Stories Project: Mail Art in the Time of Covid-19, which showcases 119 decorated envelopes and postcards received from 52 people from 11 different countries around the world.
Mail art, also known as postal art and correspondence art, began in the 1960s when artists sent postcards inscribed with poems or drawings through the mail rather than exhibiting them. It has since developed into a global movement that continues today.
Advertisement - content continues below
Richmond, founder of Open Sky Stories in Peterborough, partnered with Fitzgerald of Bold Moves Studios in April 2020 to ask people to share their stories of life during the pandemic, by mailing pieces of art with the suggested addition of three words or phrases.
“Early in the first lockdown, I sat in my house and contemplated how I might be able to help others who were feeling isolated and scared around the world,” Fitzgerald says in a media release. “That’s how the idea for this project was born.”
Over the next 18 months, Richmond and Fitzgerald mailboxes became “vessels of heartache, celebration, and much desired connection,” according to the media release.
“In all the stories that were shared, there was an overwhelming cry for connection that often felt met by this simple act of sending mail to complete strangers,” Richmond says.
Peterborough writer Erica Richmond (top right) and North Carolina artist and author Shannon Fitzgerald are releasing a book called “The Mail Art Stories Project: Mail Art in the Time of Covid-19,” which features 119 decorated envelopes and postcards received from 52 people from 11 different countries around the world during the first 18 months of the pandemic. (Supplied photos)
While some of the submissions were from people experienced with mail art, others were creating it for the first time.
Richmond and Fitzgerald received submissions from people who became pen pals during the pandemic and chose to participate together, from a family who created mail art as a team, and from a young boy and his grandmother who were missing each other.
The Mail Art Stories Project: Mail Art in the Time of Covid-19 will be released on Wednesday (April 20) and can be purchased through Amazon, openskystories.com, or boldmovesstudio.com. The book will also soon be available through any bookstore through the independent publishing platform IngramSpark.
The Ontario Provincial Police has provided previously unreleased details of the February 18, 2020 murder of 18-year-old Alex Tobin in Omemee, as well as video and photos of the suspects, including these two men captured fleeing the scene of the crime. (Photo courtesy of Tobin family / screenshot of OPP-supplied video)
Police investigating the unsolved murder of 18-year-old Alex Tobin in Omemee in the City of Kawartha Lakes have released new details about the crime and video footage of suspects.
The Ontario Provincial Police held a virtual media conference on Thursday (April 14) where they provided previously unreleased details of the murder, along with video and photos of two suspects fleeing the apartment building at the time of the murder as well as three suspects at a Scarborough park believed to be discarding evidence connected to the murder.
On February 18, 2020 at around 1:07 p.m., Tobin was shot in his girlfriend’s apartment at 36 King Street East in Omemee, a small apartment building located across from Omemee Foodland, and later died in hospital.
Advertisement - content continues below
Share on Bluesky
Detective Inspector Chris Josiah, major case manager with the OPP Criminal investigation Branch, said police have since recovered the firearm, during an unrelated investigation, they believe was used to kill Tobin.
“We are looking for the public’s help to identify the person who shot Alex,” Josiah said. “It was known that Alex was involved in the illegal sale of marijuana.”
“Through the investigation, my team and I have learned that, following Alex’s shooting, two suspects were captured on video leaving the building and fleeing the area. We believe that the suspects were from the Greater Toronto Area and attended Alex’s residence to purchase marijuana.”
VIDEO: Suspects in February 18, 2020 murder of Alex Tobin
The two suspects then left the area in a motor vehicle on Highway 7.
The first suspect is described as a black male with braided hair and of average height. He was wearing a blue, hooded sweatshirt, a ‘Moose Knuckle’ winter coat, and black Nike-brand ‘Air Force One’ running shoes.
The second suspect is described as a black male, who was wearing a blue hooded winter jacket. He wore prescription eyeglasses with uniquely shaped frames.
Advertisement - content continues below
In a March 3, 2020 video released by police, three suspects in a black Audi sedan are seen arriving at Murison Park in Scarborough. Two of the suspects get out of the car and walk into the park while carrying a blue winter jacket and a garbage bag, where they are believed to have discarded evidence connected to Tobin’s murder.
Police are seeking the public’s help to identify the owner of the black Audi sedan and the two suspects in the video. They have released photos of the three suspects obtained during the investigation.
A $50,000 reward continues to be offered for anyone with information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for Tobin’s murder.
A collage of the three suspects in the black Audi which arrived at Murison Park in Scarborough March 3, 2020 to dispose of evidence from the scene of the February 18, 2020 murder of 18-year-old Alex Tobin in Omemee, (OPP-supplied photos)
The OPP is urging anyone who may have information that would assist with the homicide investigation to call the OPP’s dedicated tip line at 1-844-677-5020.
Peterborough native Chloë Black is joining a group of volunteers in Romania that will be caring for animals rescued from Ukraine as a result of the Russian invation. A GoFundMe campaign has been set up to help Chloë cover the cost of travel and other expenses. (Photo: Breaking The Chains - Documentaries / Facebook)
Peterborough native Chloë Black is about to embark on a life-changing journey — she is travelling to Romania in eastern Europe to help animals displaced by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
The daughter of well-known Peterborough musician Alan Black, Chloë will be leaving her home in Tuscon, Arizona on Easter Sunday for Arad, Romania, where an all-volunteer group has come together to support rescued animals that have been lost or abandoned during the war in Ukraine.
“The day of the invasion, I felt so angry and helpless,” Chloë tells kawarthaNOW. “I’d been following the build up closely as I work with a man from Ukraine. He immediately lost contact with family as they are in Irpin. Alex is a wonderful man and he and his wife lost contact with family for over two weeks, not knowing if they were alive.”
Advertisement - content continues below
Share on Bluesky
As an animal lover, Chloë had already been following groups on Facebook helping animals (such as Breaking The Chains – Documentaries and WarPaws), so when they posted a plea for volunteers to help build an animal shelter and help care for animals vacated from Ukraine, she contacted them immediately.
“I needed to do something,” Chloë recalls. “Like everyone, the feelings of anger over such pointless destruction and loss of life just overwhelmed me. I love people, and wanted to help the people, but the animals were a casualty of this war that broke my heart.”
So Chloë made the difficult and brave decision to leave behind her home, her job (with the support of her employer), and her own three dogs (Jill, Catie, and Cash, who will be cared for while she’s gone) to join the group of volunteers in Arad, the third largest city in western Romania.
Peterborough native Chloë Black cuddles a couple of kittens. An animal lover, Chloë will be leaving her own three dogs behind so she can travel to Romania to join a group of volunteers who are caring for animals rescued from Ukraine. (Photo courtesy of Chloë Black)
“Because I had to leave my job, move out of my home and have people step up to care for my dogs, I knew it would be a big decision. I’m comfortable, and I like my job and where I live. But so were the victims of the war. When I really imagined myself in their shoes, I knew I had to go.”
The volunteer group has been busy building an animal shelter that will house around 800 rescued animals, and they hope to be able to reunite the animals with their humans or, if that can’t be done, to find homes for these animals in the rest of Europe.
Chloë, who will be bringing a suitcase filled with items for the veterinarians who are volunteering and for the animals when they arrive, will be in Romania for at least five weeks.
Advertisement - content continues below
Along with other volunteers, Chloë will be housed in Arad in a home that someone has donated.
However, she still needs to cover her travel costs and living expenses. One of her friends in Tuscon, Teresa Dodson, has set up a GoFundMe to support Chloë’s effort. The GoFundMe has raised over half of its $10,000 goal.
With Ukrainians fleeing their country because of the Russian invasion, many animals have been left behind. (Photo: Breaking The Chains – Documentaries / Facebook)A volunteer rescues dogs from Ukraine. (Photo: Breaking The Chains – Documentaries / Facebook)Volunteers building an animal shelter in Arad, Romania, that will house around 800 animals rescued from the war in Ukraine. (Photo: Breaking The Chains – Documentaries / Facebook)
The past two years have had a profound impact on many workplaces, activating a shift in organizational design and employee engagement. According to a recent Statistics Canada report, 80 per cent of people who worked from home due to the pandemic would like to continue with this arrangement for at least half of their work time. (Photo: Lyn Jones)
The nature of work is changing rapidly. The past two years have had a profound impact on many workplaces, activating a shift in organizational design and employee engagement. Many people see this as an exciting opportunity to create a more effective workforce.
Each week, GreenUP provides a story related to the environment. This week’s story is by the GreenUP Business Team (Ashley Burnie, Jackie Donaldson, Natalie Stephenson, and Lindsay Stroud).
The people and organizations engaged in GreenUP’s business programs reflect this big shift. As any great gardener does, employers strive to cultivate the optimal conditions for sustainable growth.
With the arrival of spring, our team is excited to showcase three opportunities that support renewal, sustainability, and wellness at the workplace.
Advertisement - content continues below
Recently, in partnership with the Peterborough + Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce and the City of Peterborough, GreenUP co-presented a webinar about the future of work and the benefits, implications, and requirements of a hybrid workplace model. You can watch this webinar by visiting greenup.on.ca/return-to-office.
The hybrid workplace model is a way of structuring operations to add flexibility where and when it benefits employees and businesses. To arrive at an effective hybrid format, workplace leadership and staff collaboratively consider how work tasks are completed and whether they can be performed remotely and/or within a varied schedule.
The webinar featured workplace experts Shane Monte and Dean Kennedy from EY Canada (formerly Ernst & Young) and Kristy Hook from Lett Architects in Peterborough. This panel discussed how to provide options for the 90 per cent of employees who now want flexibility in when and where they work.
VIDEO: Return to Office? Advantages in the New World of Remote Work
The pandemic has shed light on what this means for many employees: they want an employer who supports their work-life balance.
When asked about top priorities, Monte said that 70 pre cent of survey participants chose flexible start and finish times. Among other things, flexible schedules allow parents to walk their children to school, commuters to ride their bikes, caregivers to take loved ones to appointments, and family members to participate in extracurricular activities.
In order to transition to a hybrid work model, a workplace must examine both organizational and employee needs. The best outcomes are achieved when leadership and staff work together to build out the details.
Advertisement - content continues below
Once the initial plan is made, states Kennedy, workplaces can re-evaluate and update their policies and prepare an employee agreement. This agreement will provide details on the new organizational arrangement and while protecting both staff and managers. Toolkits on how to create new policies and sample agreement checklists can be found on GreenUP’s Shifting Gears for Employers page at greenup.on.ca/shifting-gears-for-employers.
Local business and Green Economy Peterborough member Lett Architects has implemented a carefully planned hybrid workplace strategy that supports both remote work and the collaboration required to fulfil their mission. Kristy Hook, administrative principal, shared many tips and anecdotes that they learned while implementing their new policy.
Notably, Hook spoke about the need to build in opportunities for passive learning — the critical information we share at the water cooler or over our shoulders, for example. This can be especially challenging for new employees, who often need face time to experience workplace culture.
Cambium Inc. is one of many Green Economy Peterborough member organizations that are measuring their transportation emissions and taking action to reduce organizational emissions. (Photo: Natalie Stephenson)
Lett encourages passive learning and collaboration by scheduling in-office time for project teams to work together. Here at GreenUP, we plan regular co-working Zoom sessions, where we share an online space together, working on our own projects. This informal space allows us to share information or ask quick questions of peers. Implementing strategies like these can help organizations enhance employee engagement and retention.
The webinar at greenup.on.ca/return-to-office is helpful in developing an understanding the emerging workplace shift. In addition, easy-to-use resources — including a hybrid policy development toolkit and an employee agreement checklist — are available on GreenUP’s website at greenup.on.ca/shifting-gears-for-employers.
A shift to hybrid or remote work is just one of the ways that you can get into gear this spring. Annually workplaces take part in the Shifting Gears Challenge, which prompts the community to shake up habits and add walking, biking, taking transit, carpooling, and remote working to their day through the month of May.
Advertisement - content continues below
As you and your team track your trips this spring, you’ll see your efforts add up — reduced greenhouse gas emissions and transportation costs, increased physical activity and time outdoors. Registration is now open, so visit greenup.on.ca/shifting-gears for details on how you and your workplace team can get involved. If you have questions about Shifting Gears, email Ashley Burnie at ashley.burnie@greenup.on.ca.
The Shifting Gears Challenge is open to community members too, and again this year participating individuals will be eligible for Rack ‘n’ Roll, a program that provides a bike rack and bike bag so you can commute by bike with ease and comfort.
Many businesses taking part in Shifting Gears are also members of Green Economy Peterborough. These businesses are getting in gear by setting goals to address climate change while reaping co-benefits like cost savings, risk mitigation, and brand enhancement.
Shifting Gears is an annual challenge hosted by GreenUP and partners that invites workplaces and individuals to track their emissions reductions by making sustainable commuting choices for the month of May. (Photo courtesy of GreenUP)
Green Economy Peterborough members are investigating strategies to reduce emissions from transportation sources, such as commuter travel, business travel, and fleets, as well as overall reductions in operational greenhouse gas emissions, water, and waste.
GreenUP and local partners are coming together to honour these local businesses later this month at Green Economy Peterborough’s first annual Leadership in Sustainability celebration event on Thursday, April 21st from 2 to 3 p.m. on Zoom. You can register for this free event at eventbrite.ca/e/311463083467.
If you or a business you know is interested in joining Green Economy Peterborough, please email Natalie Stephenson at natalie.stephenson@greenup.on.ca.
Whatever your goals in work and life this season, we hope you and your team make the most out of the shift into spring.
As Good Friday is a statutory holiday across Canada, all government offices and beer and liquor stores are closed, as are most grocery stores and retail businesses. On Easter Sunday, almost everything is also closed. On Easter Monday, many government offices and most liquor stores are closed, but beer stores and most retail businesses are open.
For your convenience, we provide this list of holiday hours for 271 selected businesses, services, and organizations across the Kawarthas. This information comes from their websites and social media accounts, which may or may not be up to date, so please always call them first to confirm their hours (we’ve included phone numbers), especially where you see “call” or “call to confirm” or if you are travelling any distance.
If your business or organization is listed and the hours are incorrect, please let us know by using our content feedback form. We do not list the hours for restaurants as there are far too many to include.
Bewdley Community Recycling Centre 7650 County Rd. 9, Hamilton 905-342-2514
CLOSED
CLOSED
8:30am-5:00pm
Brighton Community Recycling Centre 1112 County Rd. 26, Brighton 613-475-1946
CLOSED
CLOSED
8:30am-5:00pm
Canada Post Mail Delivery / Offices (Note: post offices operated by the private sector will be open according to the hours of service of the host business
No collection or dellivery
Not applicable
No collection or dellivery
City of Kawartha Lakes City Hall, Municipal Service Centres, and Administration Offices 26 Francis St., Lindsay 705-324-9411
CLOSED
CLOSED
Regular hours
City of Kawartha Lakes Parks, Recreation and Culture facilities, arenas, and pools Various locations, City of Kawartha Lakes 705-324-9411
CLOSED
Regular hours
Regular hours
City of Kawartha Lakes Public Libraries Various locations, City of Kawartha Lakes 705-324-9411 x1291
CLOSED (OPEN SATURDAY)
CLOSED
Regular hours
City of Kawartha Lakes Waste and Recycling Collection 26 Francis St., Lindsay 1-888-822-2225
No change
Not applicable
No change
City of Peterborough Day Cares Peterborough 705-748-8830
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
City of Peterborough Garbage Pickup Peterborough 705-745-1386
Moves to Mon Apr 18
Not applicable
No change
City of Peterborough Green Waste Pickup Peterborough 705-876-1600
Moves to Mon Apr 18
Not applicable
No change
City of Peterborough Recycling Pickup Peterborough 705-876-1600
Moves to Mon Apr 18
Not applicable
No change
City of Peterborough Social Services (for emergency shelter services call 705-926-0096) Peterborough 705-748-8830
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
Cobourg Public Library 200 Ontario St., Cobourg 905-372-9271
kawarthaNOW.com offers two enews options to help readers stay in the know. Our VIP enews is delivered weekly every Wednesday morning and includes exclusive giveaways, and our news digest is delivered daily every morning. You can subscribe to one or both.
Submit your event for FREE!
Use our event submission form to post your event on our website — for free.
To submit editorial content or ideas, please contact us.