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Omemee Curling Centre team celebrates new year with a rare eight-ender

Team Fox celebrating their rare eight-ender at Omemee Curling Centre on December 30, 2024. Pictured are Neil Rossen, Annie Stovell, Tom Bent, and Ron Fox. (Photo courtesy of Ron Fox)

A team at the Omemee Curling Centre is celebrating the new year with one of curling’s rarest feats: an eight-ender.

Team Fox (Neil Rossen, Annie Stovell, Tom Bent, and Ron Fox) curled the eight-ender at the centre on Monday morning (December 30).

Also known as a perfect end, an eight-ender is a perfect score within a single end of curling, with one team scoring the maximum possible value of eight points — one for each rock the team put in play during the end.

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Similar to perfect game in baseball, a perfect game in bowling, or a nine-dart finish in darts, an eight-ender is so rare that the Canadian Curling Association has an award to recognize any eight-ender scored in Canada.

The odds of curling an eight-ender in amateur curling are estimated at 1 in 120,000.

By comparison, the odds of a golfer hitting a hole-in-one are 1 in 12,000 and the likelihood of an amateur bowler bowling a perfect game is 1 in 11,500.

Behind the scenes of the ReFrame Film Festival with executive director Kait Dueck and creative director Eryn Lidster

ReFrame Film Festival executive director Kait Dueck on stage at the opening of the 20th annual documentary film festival in 2024. The 21st festival will present more than 50 documentary films focused on social and environmental justice in downtown Nogojiwanong/Peterborough from January 23 to 26, 2025 and virtually from January 27 to February 2, 2025. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)

Peterborough has no shortage of advocates for the arts, and two of the most passionate are Kait Dueck and Eryn Lidster, the full-time staff behind the annual ReFrame Film Festival.

The duo shows their dedication to the arts by curating a lineup of the year’s most acclaimed documentary films from around the globe, while also inviting local conversation and action to address critical contemporary issues facing the community and the world.

“ReFrame moves us from just imagining a better world to living in one, through the action that is sparked by this cultural and justice-based event,” says Dueck, the festival’s executive director. “Not only are these some of the finest films in the world, but they’re also richly complemented by all of this wonderful ancillary programming at the festival, such as live performances, filmmaker talks, workshops, and media arts exhibits.”

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The 21st annual festival is being delivered in a hybrid format for the second year, running in person from January 23 to 26, 2025 at venues in downtown Nogojiwanong/Peterborough and virtually from January 27 to February 2, 2025.

While the virtual portion of the festival began as a necessity during the pandemic, it has continued because it expands the festival’s reach, allowing people from across Canada to enjoy many of the films in the festival’s lineup.

For 2025, ReFrame is screening more than 50 thought-provoking and inspiring documentary films. The lineup was curated with the support and insight from the festival’s volunteer programming advisory committee, made up of individuals with a diverse range of perspectives and experience.

“We looked at a lot of different factors, while keeping the Peterborough audiences in mind with films that speak to issues that are of concern here or which groups here are working within,” says Lidster, the festival’s creative director.

“We also put a lot of consideration around the relationship between the filmmakers and the film subjects. Being a social justice documentary festival, we want to make sure that, more often than not, there is an aspect of folks telling stories that they have lived experience around, or who have built strong relationships with the subjects of the films.”

Eryn Lidster, creative director of the ReFrame Film Festival, speaks to the audience at the opening of the 20th annual documentary film festival in 2024. With the help of the volunteer programming advisory committee, Lidster curated the lineup of more than 50 thought-provoking and inspiring documentary films that will be screened during the 2025 ReFrame Film Festival from January 23 to February 5, 2025. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)
Eryn Lidster, creative director of the ReFrame Film Festival, speaks to the audience at the opening of the 20th annual documentary film festival in 2024. With the help of the volunteer programming advisory committee, Lidster curated the lineup of more than 50 thought-provoking and inspiring documentary films that will be screened during the 2025 ReFrame Film Festival from January 23 to February 5, 2025. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)

Lidster notes that the inclusion of international films can also elevate conversations around issues being faced locally.

“Bringing these international films to the local community can spark a moment of being inspired by an approach that we might not have thought about,” Lidster says, giving the example of The Day Iceland Stood Still, which recounts the morning in 1975 when 90 per cent of women in Iceland walked off their jobs and out of their homes, refusing to cook, clean, work, or care for the children.

“The Day Iceland Stood Still highlights an action that a group of women took that’s really unique. Bringing those stories to our community can inspire a lot of different ways of approaching the issues that we’re dealing with.”

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Lidster also points to the impact of sharing local films, noting that the short film The Wild Path Home “has this unique approach to education and environment that deserves to be heard outside of our community and inspire others as well.”

The Wild Path Home spotlights how the Peterborough-Kawarthas-Haliburton area was, in 2016, one of only 150 communities worldwide to be given the designation as a “Regional Centre of Expertise in Sustainability Education.”

Local specialists in environment, health, and educational fields, who were increasingly alarmed by the human draw to technology, made a framework of age-linked experiences to address global issues through community support, and saw young people being drawn back to the great outdoors to improve mental health, reduce stress, and improve leadership skills.

VIDEO: “The Wild Path Home” trailer

To further promote actionable steps festival-goers can take in their own community, ReFrame offers community partnerships for single films or a themed package of films. The program not only supports the festival, but aligns the stories on the screen with the social and environmental justice work of registered charities, not-for-profit organizations, and grassroots community groups.

“We get to help elevate this critical work for our audiences,” Dueck points out. “Our audiences are connected with concrete avenues toward positive action that’s related to the film content, which is something I have never seen any other film festival do.”

Businesses, for-profit groups, and individuals can also sponsor an individual screening to show their support for the festival and to highlight one or more of the issues covered in the films.

“You can sponsor a film in honour of a loved one, you can sponsor a film as a gift, or you can sponsor it yourself because the film is something that you’re passionate about,” Dueck says, also noting how businesses can benefit from such sponsorship. “It’s a great way to elevate your brand and have your brand linked to important community values and issues.”

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Other opportunities to support the festival include joining the board (the festival is currently seeking a treasurer), volunteering for a handful of shifts at the Delta Bingo & Gaming Centre in Nogojiwanong / Peterborough, or volunteering during the in-person festival.

Festival volunteer roles, which can be flexible to accommodate the volunteer’s availability, include audience services like working in the box office, merchandising, ushering, and providing technical support.

To learn more about volunteer and sponsorship opportunities, visit reframefilmfestival.ca/support/.

Volunteers Kat Tannock and Moray Post collect tickets during the 2024 ReFrame Film Festival. The festival is still seeking volunteers for the in-person portion of the 2025 festival, which takes place from January 23 to 26, 2025 in downtown Nogojiwanong/Peterborough. Flexible volunteer positions include audience services like running the box office, merchandising, ushering, and providing technical support. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)
Volunteers Kat Tannock and Moray Post collect tickets during the 2024 ReFrame Film Festival. The festival is still seeking volunteers for the in-person portion of the 2025 festival, which takes place from January 23 to 26, 2025 in downtown Nogojiwanong/Peterborough. Flexible volunteer positions include audience services like running the box office, merchandising, ushering, and providing technical support. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)

Volunteering, partnerships, sponsorships, and donations all help to support the sustainability of the festival. When ReFrame began offering the virtual portion of the festival, it did so without increased resources, continuing to operate with just two full-time staff and two contract workers.

However, as Dueck explains, there are additional costs associated with offering the virtual portion of the festival.

On top of the added administration costs for the virtual festival’s streaming platform, ReFrame must pay for the films twice — once when screening them in person and again when screening them online. Because of this as well as licensing restrictions, just over half of the films in the festival’s complete lineup are available for virtual screening.

Despite its additional costs, Dueck says the virtual option is critical to maintaining ReFrame’s accessibility, which is part of the organization’s mandate.

“Both delivery models are critical, and our audiences and stakeholders have been crystal clear in their desire for both,” says Dueck.

Including a virtual option also contributes to the festival’s revenues, with hybrid passes — which allow festival-goers to watch both in-person screenings and virtual screenings — accounting for roughly half of all ticket sales.

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Not only has ReFrame been supporting the hybrid model without any additional funding, the festival has recently lost significant funding from what Dueck calls their “two largest, most reliable” funders. This year, one funder has given less than half of what they had previously in each of the last dozen years, while the other has cut funding completely, just six weeks before the 2025 festival.

“As much as we would love to continue to bring ReFrame to our community both near and far in this way, without increased support from donors, sponsors, and grants, we may not always be able to do this,” Dueck points out.

Fortunately for ReFrame and 74 other arts and social services organizations that receive funding from the City of Peterborough, Peterborough city council recently decided against proceeding with a 25 per cent across-the-board funding cut that was proposed in the city’s 2025 draft budget. Community members rallied against the proposed cuts, and representatives from several arts organizations presented to council, describing the cultural and economic benefits that arts-related events like ReFrame bring to the city.

Spoken word artist Sarah Lewis during the Wshkiigmong Dibaajmownan/Curve Lake Storytelling panel at the 2024 ReFrame Film Festival. Along with screening more than 50 documentary films, the festival offers ancillary programming including live performances, filmmaker talks, workshops, and media arts exhibits. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)
Spoken word artist Sarah Lewis during the Wshkiigmong Dibaajmownan/Curve Lake Storytelling panel at the 2024 ReFrame Film Festival. Along with screening more than 50 documentary films, the festival offers ancillary programming including live performances, filmmaker talks, workshops, and media arts exhibits. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)

“People come here and stay here because of the culture that arts in this community creates, and it’s backed up by the number of folks who engage with the festival and the economic impact that we have here,” Lidster explains.

“We do so much work for creating space for other community organizations in the festival and there is this networking community that is built through these events. These types of spaces in the community are not something that we can lose and still be the community that we are.”

Dueck points to a recent statistic from the Ontario Arts Council that, for every dollar invested in the arts, $25 is generated in return.

“For ReFrame, it’s hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars injected directly into our downtown, which needs it the most — it’s where our independent businesses are,” Dueck says. “In the darkest time of year after the holiday season, when small businesses may be wondering how to sustain themselves for the next month, there’s a week of money coming into our community thanks to ReFrame.”

Kait Dueck, executive director of the ReFrame Film Festival, speaks to the audience at the opening of the 20th annual documentary film festival in 2024. An advocate for the arts and the cultural and economic benefits of arts-related events like ReFrame, Dueck is encouraging increased community donor and sponsor support for the festival which recently lost significant funding. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)
Kait Dueck, executive director of the ReFrame Film Festival, speaks to the audience at the opening of the 20th annual documentary film festival in 2024. An advocate for the arts and the cultural and economic benefits of arts-related events like ReFrame, Dueck is encouraging increased community donor and sponsor support for the festival which recently lost significant funding. (Photo: Esther Vincent, courtesy of ReFrame Film Festival)

Along with buying passes to enjoy the festival, community members can help ensure the ReFrame Film Festival continues into the future by making a donation at reframefilmfestival.ca/support/donate/, with charitable tax receipts available for any donation over $20.

You can make donations in January and February and still claim them on your 2024 tax return, as the federal government recently announced it is extending the deadline for claiming 2024 charitable tax donations to February 28 in recognition of the impact of the postal strike on holiday giving for charitable organizations.

As for festival passes, they are priced at $50 for a virtual pass (which includes just over half of the films in the festival’s lineup, viewable on demand from anywhere in Canada), $110 for an in-person pass (which includes access to all in-person films and events, except for the yet-to-be-announced opening night event), and $135 for a hybrid pass (which includes everything in the virtual pass and the in-person pass). Tickets will soon be on sale for individual screenings, on a pay-what-you-can sliding scale.

Passes and a guide to all the films screening at the 2025 festival are available at reframefilmfestival.ca. Follow ReFrame on Facebook and Instagram for updates and last-minute schedule changes.

 

kawarthaNOW is proud to be a media sponsor of the 2025 ReFrame Film Festival.

Police investigating sudden death in Brighton

A police investigation is underway into both the identity of a deceased person and their cause of death after a body was found on December 30, 2024 in the area of the train tracks near Ontario Street in Brighton. (Photo: Northumberland OPP)

Northumberland Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) are investigating a sudden death after a body was found in Brighton on Monday afternoon (December 30).

Shortly before 4 p.m. on Monday, Northumberland OPP received a report from CN Police about a person found in the area of the train tracks near Ontario Street.

Officers proceeded to the location along with emergency medical services, who confirmed the person was deceased. Trains were stopped in the area for some time and the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario was notified.

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An investigation into both the identity of the deceased person and their cause of death is underway by the Northumberland OPP Crime Unit and Forensic Identification Services in conjunction with the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario.

On Tuesday, members of the OPP’s Emergency Response Team and Canine Unit also attended the location to perform a coordinated search of the area.

Officers are also canvassing the area for CCTV footage and seeking possible lines of inquiry with residents and businesses in and around the location where the body was found.

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While police have not released any details about the cause of death, they believe there is no threat to public safety.

“The investigation is in its early stages and no further details can be released at this time,” states an OPP media release.

Anformation is asked to call the Northumberland OPP at 613-475-1313 or the OPP non-emergency number at 1-888-310-1122. Information can also be provided anonymously by contacting Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or stopcrimehere.ca.

Merged health units in Kawarthas region unveil new legal name

The senior leadership team of Peterborough Public Health and the Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit, including medical officers of health Dr. Thomas Piggot (front row, right) and Dr. Natalie Bocking (back row, left). The two health units have merged under the legal name Haliburton Kawartha Northumberland Peterborough Health Unit, bringing together over 300 public health professionals under a single entity. The first meeting of the new board of health for the merged health unit will be held virtually on January 2, 2025. (Photo: Haliburton Kawartha Northumberland Peterborough Health Unit)

The two recently merged health units in the Kawarthas region have a new legal name: the Haliburton Kawartha Northumberland Peterborough Health Unit (HKNP).

The boards of health for the former Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit (HKPRDHU) and Peterborough Public Health (PPH) will come together as one for a special virtual board of health meeting on Thursday (January 2), where a chair and vice chair will be elected.

The new board of health will have nine municipal representatives (including two from Northumberland County, two from the City of Kawartha Lakes, one from Haliburton County, two from Peterborough County, and two from the City of Peterborough), as well as one member each from Curve Lake First Nation and Hiawatha First Nation and provincial appointees,

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The new legal name of the merged health unit was confirmed in a letter from Ontario’s chief medical officer Dr. Kieran Moore dated December 11, a week after the boards of health for PPH and HKPRDHU each held separate virtual meetings and each voted in support of a voluntary merger, which will come with $10.1 million in new provincial funding.

According to a statement on both of the existing health unit websites, HKNP is only the legal name of the merged health unit.

“We are currently undergoing a process to develop a new brand identity that will also include a new name,” the statement reads. “This will take us several months to finalize. During this time, you will continue to see logos and other marketing material with the (Peterborough Public Health or HKPR District Health Unit) branding. You may also see some documents using our legal name Haliburton Kawartha Northumberland Peterborough Health Unit.”

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The statement indicates partners and members of the public should continue to engage with their local public health offices as they have in the past, until otherwise directed. All communication channels including emails, faxes, and office locations will remain the same until further notice.

As for the January 2 special board of health meeting, it will include various by-laws for approval that are related to the merger.

Another item on the agenda is terms of reference for the Indigenous Health Advisory Circle (IHAC). The committee’s purpose is to deepen awareness, sensitivity, and meaningful actions on issues that are of relevance and public health importance to Indigenous people living within the Haliburton Kawartha Northumberland Peterborough (HKNP) catchment area.

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According to the agenda, the IHAC will provide a forum for circle members to brainstorm, explore and propose public health-related agenda items for the board of health to consider that are of importance to Indigenous people living within the HKNP catchment area.

“In particular, this includes a review of the Calls to Action from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which redress the legacy of residential schools and advance the process of reconciliation, as well as the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.”

The IHAC is also intended to advise and support the board of health “to become a stronger and more effective ally” and advocate for local members of First Nation communities. It will also advise and provide support on matters that have an impact on the health and well-being of their residents and the environment.

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The circle will be comprised of a minimum of three board members in addition to the chair (ex-officio member). In addition, the board will seek community members representing the broader Indigenous stakeholder community as it pertains issues of Indigenous health.

IHAC met on December 13 and requested that the following community members be appointed to the group: Ashley Safar, executive director of the Peterborough Community Health Centre; David Newhouse of Trent University; the executive director or delegate of the Niijkiwendidaa Anishnaabekwewag Services Circle; the executive director or delegate of Nogojiwanong Friendship Centre; Elizabeth Stone of Fleming College; a representative of Alderville First Nation; Kristy Kennedy of the Métis Nation of Ontario and Peterborough & District Wapiti Métis Council; and Rebecca Watts of Lovesick Lake Native Women’s Association.

Cobourg postpones family New Year’s Eve event due to unseasonably warm weather and rain

The Town of Cobourg is postponing its family-oriented "First Night" celebration on December 31, 2024 to a later date in January due as warm temperatures and rain have resulted in the closure of the outdoor skating rink at the Rotary Harbourfront Park. (Photo: Experience Cobourg / Facebook)

The Town of Cobourg is postponing its planned New Year’s Eve family celebration due to the unseasonably warm weather and rainy conditions.

The town announced on Monday (December 30) that it is “regretfully” moving the First Night in Cobourg event on December 31 to a future date in January that will be determined soon.

First Night in Cobourg typically involves an evening at the Rotary Harbourfront Park that is filled with music, ice skating, “seasonal magic,” and community spirit.

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As a result of the warmer weather and rain, the outdoor skating rink at the Rotary Harbourfront Park is currently closed.

“The Town of Cobourg will update the community on a new event date as soon as temperatures stabilize, and staff are able to get the rink operational,” noted a media release.

In addition to skating to the music provided by a live DJ, First Night in Cobourg usually includes horse and wagon rides under the stars through Cobourg’s scenic streets, and a 9 p.m. fireworks display over the harbour to celebrate the new year.

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While the December 31 event is postponed, the town invites community members to join Town of Cobourg Mayor Lucas Cleveland and Cobourg council at the traditional New Year’s Levee.

The levee is on Saturday (January 4) from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Concert Hall of Victoria Hall, which is located at 55 King St. W. in Cobourg.

“New to the schedule this year are activities to be enjoyed by community members of all ages,” the town noted in a media release.

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The evening features live music by the concert band of Cobourg’s jazz group, The Bootnecks, along with a special performance by Sounds of the Next Generation (SONG).

The evening also includes family-friendly activities, festive refreshments, cotton candy, and popcorn.

There will be a proclamation by Cobourg Town Crier, Mandy Robinson, to welcome the new year.

Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha pulls out of Ribfest in downtown Peterborough

Pre-pandemic crowds at the annual Kawartha Rotary Ribfest in Millennium Park in downtown Peterborough. The Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha has announced it is pulling out of the fundraising event as of 2025, citing increased costs of hosting the event and diminishing returns due to reduced attendance. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough DBIA)

A longtime Peterborough summer staple is no longer — at least from the perspective of the Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha.

As posted on Facebook this past weekend, the organization has announced it is “reluctantly” ending its involvement with Ribfest.

While the post states that Ribfest “has severely outgrown” its home at Millennium Park in downtown Peterborough, Rotarian and Ribfest committee chair Susan Zambonin tells kawarthaNOW the main reason for Rotary pulling out of the fundraising event is rooted in it being labour-intensive and increasingly expensive to organize but with a diminished return.

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“Before the pandemic, we were making money doing Ribfest,” says Zambonin, noting all proceeds from the event went to local and international humanitarian projects supported by Rotary.

“Our first year back after the pandemic, we didn’t expect to make much money and we didn’t. We made money every year since, though we thought it would it would make more. It hasn’t. It actually went down this year (to under $10,000). We were lucky to come away having made a little bit of a profit and so, as a club, we decided that the amount of effort wasn’t worth doing it again.”

While Rotary considered moving the event to another location, it determined changing locations wouldn’t make a substantial difference.

“The idea of having to change weekends if we wanted to do it at Del Crary Park or somewhere else, we analyzed that along with the amount of work it takes throughout the year, not just on the weekend (of the event), and the return on investment,” Zambonin says.

While the cost of required insurance is substantial, it wasn’t a factor in the decision, according to Zambonin, as that cost is borne by Rotary at the district level. However, the other costs related to hosting the event are another thing entirely.

“You have to rent the stage, you have to rent the fencing, you need police and security throughout the weekend, and there’s the cost of renting the park and closing the street to rent the parking lot. That all adds up and, combined with less attendance, lessens the return.”

In a Facebook post announcing the end of the Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha's involvement in Ribfest, the organization said the event has "has severely outgrown" its home at Millennium Park in downtown Peterborough. However, Rotarian and Ribfest committee chair Susan Zambonin told kawarthaNOW the main reason for Rotary pulling out of the fundraising event is rooted in it being labour-intensive and increasinly expensive to organize but with a diminished return. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough DBIA)
In a Facebook post announcing the end of the Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha’s involvement in Ribfest, the organization said the event has “has severely outgrown” its home at Millennium Park in downtown Peterborough. However, Rotarian and Ribfest committee chair Susan Zambonin told kawarthaNOW the main reason for Rotary pulling out of the fundraising event is rooted in it being labour-intensive and increasinly expensive to organize but with a diminished return. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough DBIA)

The Facebook announcement has drawn many comments, with a number making reference to the downtown core’s homeless population and a few writing they don’t feel safe attending the event. Zambonin doesn’t dismiss such concerns, but says perception is reality for many.

“Some people just don’t want to come downtown,” she says. “I think it’s easy to say that it’s the downtown environment that’s a part of it (Rotary’s decision), but I don’t see that as being the biggest stumbling block.”

Instead, Zambonin says, the increased cost of living is a bigger factor affecting attendance.

“This year was a tough year for the economy. Yes, admission was free and the music was free, but you had to pay for alcohol or non-alcoholic beverages. Then you also had to pay for your meal. It’s not a cheap endeavour, especially for families. I think that played a bigger part. In the end, the return just isn’t there, unfortunately.”

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But Nour Mazloum, executive director of the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) executive director, says she’s aware of another group that has expressed some interest in possibly presenting Ribfest this summer.

While she’s not at liberty to identify the group, Mazloum says it is local. Zambonin is also aware of that interest.

“I’ve talked to a business — a company that does rib festivals around the area,” she says.

In the meantime, while lamenting the loss of Ribfest and its drawing of people to the downtown core, Mazloum says she and her team are planning other events for 2025, including a food-related event.

While she agrees the rising costs associated with hosting events is a major obstacle, Mazloum is hopeful that more partnerships with the city on events will be beneficial in terms of an easing of those costs to some degree.

“We’re aware of the perception by some that downtown isn’t safe, but we can change that by hosting events that are family-friendly and safe, and that’s what we’re working to do,” she says. “We’re always interested in anything that will bring more people downtown to experience all it has to offer in terms of shops, restaurants. and atmosphere.”

Terry Guiel, former executive director of the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) who was was a key player in Ribfest when it was organized and staffed by the DBIA before the Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha took over the event exclusively, laments the loss of Ribfest as a fundraiser for Rotary and as an opportunity for local musicians to perform, but feels the event is not unique to Peterborough and is not 100 per cent supportive of local businesses. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough DBIA)
Terry Guiel, former executive director of the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) who was was a key player in Ribfest when it was organized and staffed by the DBIA before the Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha took over the event exclusively, laments the loss of Ribfest as a fundraiser for Rotary and as an opportunity for local musicians to perform, but feels the event is not unique to Peterborough and is not 100 per cent supportive of local businesses. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough DBIA)

Watching all this from afar is Lindsay and District Chamber of Commerce executive director Terry Guiel who, for 10 years, guided the DBIA before leaving that role in October 2023. He was a key player in Ribfest when it was organized and staffed by the DBIA before the Rotary Club of Peterborough Kawartha took over the event exclusively.

“We (the DBIA) were doing Peterborough Pulse, Taste of Downtown, Hootenanny on Hunter, Live and Local Lunches — we were punching way above our weight on events,” he recalls of the pre-pandemic years.

“The events started getting harder and harder, costing more and more, especially because of insurance and policing, and an enormous amount of red tape from the city that made it not enjoyable to run an event. Many of us who organized events coined the insurance person at city hall ‘the fun killer’. Everything was a battle and it was no different for Ribfest, even after Rotary took it over.”

“Costs have devastated events across the province but I think Peterborough took it to a whole new level of not making things easy.”

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With many previous downtown Peterborough events having fallen by the wayside since the pandemic, Guiel admits feeling “sad” for both downtown businesses who benefit and the public who enjoy them, but adds that feeling doesn’t extend to Ribfest’s loss. He says Ribfest isn’t unique to Peterborough and doesn’t focus on local businesses.

“I’ve never been a fan of doing something that every other community does,” he says, adding “You can do something that’s 100 per cent local, like a chicken wing festival, as opposed to bringing in these out-of-town ribbers. I think we can come up with something new and more conducive to our changing demographics.”

That said, as a longtime musician, Guiel laments the loss of Ribfest in terms of it providing a stage for local musicians.

“For a young musician, other than the Del Crary Park Musicfest stage and the Peterborough Folk Festival, the Ribfest stage was the premier stage to get the call for,” he notes. “It was a chance to touch a whole new audience, a bigger audience, and play through an incredible sound system. You felt special. It was like our local ‘You made the big time.’

“But the biggest loss is the money that Rotary raised for the community and its projects,” he says.

Guiel remains well aware of the challenge of drawing people downtown in the face of perceived issues over safety, but says it’s “disingenuous” to link that with not coming to events in the core.

“It is just a chance for some to vent about how unsafe they feel in downtowns, not just here but across the province,” he says of the online reaction to the announcement of Ribfest’s cancellation.

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Moving forward, for downtown events to be revived, Guiel says “the ball is in the city’s court … and not a pickleball court.”

“The city needs to provide an easier supportive path for event organizers. They need to create somebody at city hall whose job is to expedite and support event organizers, and cut the red tape and costs. I’ve seen event organizers in tears. They’re trying to do something good. I do hope Rotary bounces back with a new idea.”

Zambonin says that may very well happen.

“A couple of years ago, we put together a committee to look at various fundraising events,” she says.

“We do have some ideas. We just have not, as a club, made a decision on what those will be. We’ve got a little bit of time. The money we raised in 2024 won’t get spent until the Rotary year of July 1, 2025 to June 30, 2026. We have a little cushion in our account for a rainy day if we need it.”

Federal government extends tax deadline for 2024 charitable donations to end of February

The Government of Canada is recognizing the negative impact of the four-week postal strike on holiday giving to charities by extending the deadline for claiming 2024 charitable donations until the end of February.

Normally, December 31 would be the last day people could donate to a registered charity this year and claim the donation on their 2024 tax return. That deadline has now been extended to February 28, allowing people to make donations in the first two months of 2025 and still claim the donations for their 2024 taxes.

The federal government will introduce legislation to amend the Income Tax Act to allow for the extension once Parliament returns in the new year.

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There are around 86,000 registered charities in Canada, many of which depend on mail-in donations during the holiday season. Many donors to charitable organizations are older Canadians who are more likely to rely on postal mail to make their donations.

When Canada Post workers went on strike from November 15 until after the Canada Industrial Relations Board ordered postal workers back to work on December 17, donation appeal letters either went undelivered or people who had received them were unable to mail donation cheques.

As well as allowing additional time for people to make their donations, the extension will give charities additional time to process donations and issue tax receipts.

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The federal government decision comes less than a week after Ontario Premier Doug Ford made an extension request in a letter sent to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Christmas Eve. Ford sent the letter as chair of the Council of the Federation, which represents all of Canada’s premiers.

“Charitable organizations across Canada depend on year-end fundraising to support their operations throughout the year,” Ford wrote in the letter. “However, this year’s efforts have been severely impacted by the Canada Post strike, which has prevented donors from making their usual holiday donations.”

“For this reason, we are joining charitable organizations from across the country in urging the federal government to extend the deadline for claiming 2024 charitable donations until the end of February 2025,” he added. “This extension would provide much needed support to both charities and the Canadians who rely on their services.”

The request from the premiers followed similar requests from groups representing Canadian charities that the period for 2024 donation receipts be extended into 2025 so that charities could recoup some of the revenues lost due to the postal strike.

Community Care Peterborough’s Meals on Wheels fundraiser exceeds goal of 600 donated meals in December

Community Care Peterborough staff members helping with the charitable organization's Meals to Go fundraiser on December 3, 2024. A total of 634 meals were donated for seniors and adults living with physical challenges throughout Peterborough and surrounding areas in December. (Photo courtesy of Community Care Peterborough)

As part of its 60th anniversary celebrations of the Meals on Wheels program in Peterborough, Community Care Peterborough has announced it exceeded the goal of its campaign to raise enough donations for 600 meals in December.

Thanks to community support and additional contributions to the charitable organization, a total of 634 meals were donated for seniors and adults living with physical challenges throughout Peterborough and surrounding areas.

“Our community’s generosity never ceases to amaze us,” says Chris LeBlanc, Community Care Peterborough’s director of donors and public relations, in a media release. “These meals ensure that our clients feel cared for and supported during the holiday season, a time that can be challenging for so many.”

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Meals on Wheels originated in the United Kingdom during the German bombing campaign in the Second World War known as the Blitz, when many people lost their homes and the ability to cook their own food. A group of volunteer women prepared and delivered food for these people using prams, carts, bikes with baskets, cars, and other wheeled vehicles.

The concept, which evolved into the modern-day program of delivering prepared meals to seniors, spread to other countries including Canada when the first Meals on Wheels program was created in Brampton in 1963.

In Peterborough, the first Meals on Wheels program began on October 22, 1964 when the former Civic Hospital (now Peterborough Regional Health Centre) prepared seven meals a day that were delivered by volunteers from the Rotary Club of Peterborough.

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Today, Meals on Wheels provides more than 50,000 meals annually to seniors and adults with physical challenges across the city and county of Peterborough.

“Community Care Peterborough extends heartfelt gratitude to everyone who participated, donated, or spread the word about the campaign,” reads the release. Together, we’ve made a meaningful difference in the lives of our clients.”

For more information on Meals on Wheels or Community Care Peterborough’s other programs, visit www.commcareptbo.org.

kawarthaNOW’s top 24 stories of 2024

Supporters of local arts and social services organizations gathered outside Peterborough City Hall on November 12, 2024 to protest a proposed 25 per cent across-the-board cut in the City of Peterborough's 2025 draft budget to grants to community organizations. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

As kawarthaNOW published over 1,300 stories in 2024, choosing the top 24 stories has been a challenge to say the least.

Perennial topics such as the economy, housing, and healthcare continued to dominate local headlines, with education and crime adding to the mix this year, although there were fewer local stories this year related to extreme weather and climate change, unlike the previous two years.

A highlight of 2024 included some controversial issues that came out of Peterborough city council, including a decision to redevelop an urban greenspace to include multiple pickleball courts and a proposal to cut city funding to arts and community organizations, both of which galvanized significant responses from the community.

The past year also had the usual mix of tragic stories, light-hearted stories, and good news stories — so many of the latter, in fact, that we simply can’t include them all.

We’ve chosen a selection of our 24 most-read, most-shared, and most interesting stories from the past 12 months, presented below in chronological order.

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1. Peterborough Community Health Centre receives provincial funding

Peterborough Family Health Team CEO Duff Sprague, Ontario Minister of Health Sylvia Jones, Alliance for Healthier Communities CEO Sarah Hobbs, and Peterborough Community Health Centre board chair Jonathan Bennett at the announcement of $110 million in funding for primary health care teams on February 1, 2024 at the Peterborough Family Health Team offices in Peterborough. (Photo: Peterborough Community Health Centre)
Peterborough Family Health Team CEO Duff Sprague, Ontario Minister of Health Sylvia Jones, Alliance for Healthier Communities CEO Sarah Hobbs, and Peterborough Community Health Centre board chair Jonathan Bennett at the announcement of $110 million in funding for primary health care teams on February 1, 2024 at the Peterborough Family Health Team offices in Peterborough. (Photo: Peterborough Community Health Centre)

In February, the Ontario government announced it was investing $3 million in the newly established Peterborough Community Health Centre, which is expected to connect up to 11,375 people to primary care and will also serve as a hub for coordinating social services, home care, and working with health care and Indigenous partners in the community.

From its temporary location in Peterborough Square, the centre was aiming to begin seeing patients by the fall once a dedicated team of health care professionals, including physicians, nurse practitioners, traditional healers, and allied health professionals, had been hired.

 

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2. Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) Foundation launches largest-ever fundraising campaign

On June 25, 2024, the Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) Foundation launched the public phase of a $60-million fundraising campaign to position the hospital to meet the challenges of a changing health care system. Pictured from left to right are PRHC vascular surgeon and PRHC Foundation board member Dr. Heather Cox, PRHC Foundation board chair Dan Moloney, patient and campaign ambassador Jennie Ireland, PRHC Foundation president and CEO Lesley Heighway, PRHC president and CEO Dr. Lynn Mikula, and donor and campaign ambassador David Morton. (Photo courtesy of PRHC Foundation)
On June 25, 2024, the Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) Foundation launched the public phase of a $60-million fundraising campaign to position the hospital to meet the challenges of a changing health care system. Pictured from left to right are PRHC vascular surgeon and PRHC Foundation board member Dr. Heather Cox, PRHC Foundation board chair Dan Moloney, patient and campaign ambassador Jennie Ireland, PRHC Foundation president and CEO Lesley Heighway, PRHC president and CEO Dr. Lynn Mikula, and donor and campaign ambassador David Morton. (Photo courtesy of PRHC Foundation)

Months after receiving a legacy donation of $2 million from Anne Keenleyside in February and shortly after receiving a $500,000 donation from long-time philanthropists Patricia and David Morton, the Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) Foundation unveiled the largest fundraising campaign in the hospital’s history.

The $60-million Campaign for PRHC, which aims to address systemic challenges by reimagining healthcare at PRHC, had already raised $45.5 million thanks to previous donations. The focus of the public portion of the campaign is to raise funds for substantial investments at the hospital in the areas of cardiac care, cancer care, minimally invasive surgeries, interventional radiology, and mental health and addictions services, as well as a physician-driven “innovation accelerator.”

 

3. Lakefield couple wins $70 million lottery jackpot

Doug and Enid Hannon of Lakefield celebrate their $70-million windfall at a special OLG winner celebration in Lakefield on April 22, 2024. (Photo courtesy of OLG)
Doug and Enid Hannon of Lakefield celebrate their $70-million windfall at a special OLG winner celebration in Lakefield on April 22, 2024. (Photo courtesy of OLG)

In February, the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation (OLG) announced that the winning ticket for a $70 million Lotto Max jackpot had been sold in Kawartha Lakes.

Two months later, OLG revealed that a Lakefield couple — Doug and Enid Hannon — were the lucky winners. Enid had purchased the ticket at Kinmount Independent Grocer and Doug discovered it was a winning ticket. The couple, who have been married for 51 years, kept the win secret from their children and grandchildren for weeks until they could get legal advice.

While it was nowhere near the Hannon’s win, Peterborough artist Lisa Martini-Dunk also got lucky with Lotto Max later in the year, winning $500,000.

 

4. Peterborough city council approves changes to citizen advisory committees

Peterborough Mayor Jeff Leal chairing a city council meeting in 2023. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of City of Peterborough video)
Peterborough Mayor Jeff Leal chairing a city council meeting in 2023. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of City of Peterborough video)

In February, Peterborough mayor Jeff Leal brought forward a proposed by-law for a new portfolio chair system for city councillors, which included giving councillors the power to dissolve citizen advisory committees. Although some members of council and the community raised concerns about the new power, Mayor Leal called the concerns “malarkey” and council passed the by-law.

Eight months later, Mayor Leal brought forward a report that included a recommendation that city councillors no longer sit on citizen advisory committees and boards. Although the recommendation resulted in more concerns from the community and from members of the committees themselves, council approved the recommendation.

 

5. Two regional health units are merging into one

Peterborough Public Health and the Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit logos.

In February, the boards of health for Peterborough Public Health and Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit voted to merge the two health units to take advantage of promised provincial funding for public health agencies that decide to voluntarily merge by January 1, 2025.

The boards of health submitted a joint voluntary merger application to the Ontario government in the spring, which was subsequently approved and, in December, the boards voted to proceed with the voluntary merger, which takes effect on January 1, 2025. As part of the agreement to merge, the new health unit will receive over $10 million in provincial funding.

 

6. Visitors flock to Northumberland County to view total solar eclipse

A view of the August 21, 2017, total solar eclipse from Madras, Oregon. (Photo: NASA / Gopalswamy)
A view of the August 21, 2017, total solar eclipse from Madras, Oregon. (Photo: NASA / Gopalswamy)

For the first time since 1979, Ontario was in the path of a total solar eclipse on April 8 and southern Northumberland County was a prime viewing area, with Brighton, Colborne, Grafton, Cobourg, and Port Hope along the path of totality.

In anticipation of an influx of thousands of people to the area to view the eclipse, officials from Northumberland County and partners held a media briefing in March to prepare local residents and to share information on how to safely view the eclipse and later, a few days before the event, asked residents to make safety and emergency preparedness a priority.

On April 1, kawarthaNOW shared a story about how a Peterborough native was going to pilot a commercial jet with a bubble canopy to chase the moon’s shadow and give passengers an unobstructed view of the eclipse.

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7. Food Not Bombs takes on Peterborough city hall

One of two security guards hired by the City of Peterborough who served a trespass notice to Foods Not Bombs volunteer Myles Conner on March 25, 2024, during the group's serving of free prepared meals to people in need, something it has done every week for almost 19 years. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of Esther Vincent video)
One of two security guards hired by the City of Peterborough who served a trespass notice to Foods Not Bombs volunteer Myles Conner on March 25, 2024, during the group’s serving of free prepared meals to people in need, something it has done every week for almost 19 years. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of Esther Vincent video)

In March, after almost 19 years of serving free community meals in Confederation Square across from Peterborough City Hall, the grass-roots volunteer organization Food Not Bombs was suddenly told by the City of Peterborough that it now needed a permit to serve meals in the public park, because of a parks and facilities by-law passed in August 2019 to help prevent homeless tent encampments in city parks.

Despite being served with a formal trespass notice, Food Not Bombs continued to serve meals in the park and, after intense community opposition, Peterborough city council approved a by-law amendment in April that allowed Food Not Bombs to operate without a permit.

 

8. North Kawartha’s only grocery store reopens

On March 25, 2024, Sayers Foods in Apsley will open for business for the first time in almost 40 months since a fire destroyed the original building and the only grocery store in North Kawartha Township. As well as being a food and social destination for the township's 2,300 year-round residents and 12,000 seasonal residents, the store was a driver of the local economy. (Photos: Sayers Foods / Facebook)
On March 25, 2024, Sayers Foods in Apsley will open for business for the first time in almost 40 months since a fire destroyed the original building and the only grocery store in North Kawartha Township. As well as being a food and social destination for the township’s 2,300 year-round residents and 12,000 seasonal residents, the store was a driver of the local economy. (Photos: Sayers Foods / Facebook)

More than three years after it was destroyed by fire, Sayers Foods in Apsley reopened in March.

The family-owned independent grocery store had been operating for more than 45 years when an electrical issue at the back of the store resulted in a fire on December 5, 2020, leaving up to 2,300 year-round residents and 12,000 seasonal residents in North Kawartha Township without a grocery store. Rebuilt from the ground up in the same location as the original building, the new Sayers Foods has increased square footage and an expansive deli.

However, some other communities in the Kawarthas were not so lucky in 2024 when it came to having their own grocery stores. The Foodland store in Little Britain in Kawartha Lakes closed permanently in March, and parent company Sobeys also announced it would not be reopening a Foodland in Colborne after that Northumberland County town lost its grocery store to fire in May 2023.

 

9. Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development dissolves after 25 years

Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development, a not-for-profit corporation that delivers regional economic development, small business support, and tourism services, has announced it will be ceasing operations by the end of the year after an earlier decision by the city and county of Peterborough not to renew a funding agreement that expires on December 31, 2024. Both the city and county have been working on plans to deliver economic development and tourism services themselves. (Photo: Venture North)
Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development, a not-for-profit corporation that delivers regional economic development, small business support, and tourism services, has announced it will be ceasing operations by the end of the year after an earlier decision by the city and county of Peterborough not to renew a funding agreement that expires on December 31, 2024. Both the city and county have been working on plans to deliver economic development and tourism services themselves. (Photo: Venture North)

In March, it became publicly known that the City of Peterborough would not be renewing its agreement with Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development (PKED), which had been providing economic development and tourism services for both the city and county of Peterborough over the past 25 years, and would instead be delivering the services in-house.

Since the city supplied the not-for-profit corporation with the majority of its core funding, Peterborough County also decided to withdraw from the tri-party agreement and, in June, PKED announced it would be dissolving at the end of 2024 to a lack of funding. A week later, Peterborough city council was presented with a proposal for a new economic development division within the city, which they unanimously approved, despite later second thoughts by some councillors.

During those discussions, the city’s CAO revealed that the provincially funded local Business Advisory Centre previously administered by PKED would be taken on by Community Futures Peterborough, and the new Business Advisory Centre was officially opened in September.

That was the same month that it was revealed that the City of Peterborough had hired only one of the 16 PKED employees who will lose their jobs in the new year, and that PKED was still “waiting” for city to initiate knowledge transfer from PKED with only three months left to go before the organization was set to dissolve.

Meanwhile, Peterborough County announced that the former post office in download Lakefield, which had reopened after a $1.6-million retrofit, would become the home of Peterborough County’s new economic development and tourism office in Lakefield, and would be shared with representatives from Peterborough and Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce and Community Futures Peterborough.

In September, a day after Sarah Budd announced she was resigning as president and CEO of Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce, Peterborough County revealed it had hired Budd along with former PKED president and CEO Rhonda Keenan to join Tracie Bertrand in leading regional economic growth and tourism for the county, which officially opened its new business information hub in downtown Lakefield in October.

 

10. City of Peterborough’s Bonnerworth Park redevelopment creates pickleball controversy

Upset residents confronted workers at Bonnerworth Park in Peterborough on November 6, 2024 as heavy machinery began preparatory work for the city's $4.4 million redevelopment of the greenspace, which would see the installation of an expanded skateboard park, a new bike pump track, and 14 pickleball courts. A legal firm representing the 'Friends of Bonnerworth Park' citizen group has served the City of Peterborough with notice of an application for an injunction to stop work in the park, with a court hearing date set for November 25. (Photo: Taras Pater)
Upset residents confronted workers at Bonnerworth Park in Peterborough on November 6, 2024 as heavy machinery began preparatory work for the city’s $4.4 million redevelopment of the greenspace, which would see the installation of an expanded skateboard park, a new bike pump track, and 14 pickleball courts. A legal firm representing the ‘Friends of Bonnerworth Park’ citizen group has served the City of Peterborough with notice of an application for an injunction to stop work in the park, with a court hearing date set for November 25. (Photo: Taras Pater)

While the City of Peterborough’s proposal to locate 16 pickleball courts in Bonnerworth Park arose from a consultant’s report in 2023, it was only in March 2024 when neighbourhood residents saw the city’s proposed design for the $4.4 million redevelopment project for the urban park off Monaghan Road south of Parkhill Road.

In April, that proposal was approved by Peterborough City Council despite efforts led by councillor Joy Lachica for further discussion and growing community opposition to the potential traffic and noise that would result from 16 pickleball courts in the park as well as the loss of greenspace. That opposition led to the creation of the Save Bonnerworth Park citizens’ group (later Friends of Bonnerworth Park) that, later in the year, was unsuccessful in its attempt to stop the city’s redevelopment of the park.

In recognition of the ongoing Bonnerworth Park redevelopment and pickleball controversy throughout 2024, kawarthaNOW selected Friends of Bonnerworth Park as its Peterborough newsmaker of 2024. For more details, including links to kawarthaNOW’s coverage throughout the year, read Paul Rellinger’s story.

 

11. Fleming College announces elimination of 29 programs

Sir Sandford Fleming College, Sutherland Campus. (Photo: NGA Architects)

In April, kawarthaNOW broke the news that Fleming College had suspended 29 programs effective for the fall, with most located at the college’s Frost campus in Lindsay. The announcement came less than a year after the college had suspended another 13 programs, including most of its culinary programs, due to declining enrolment and other factors.

According to Fleming College president Maureen Adamson, the college’s board of governors made the decision to cut the 29 programs — which included Conservation and Environmental Law Enforcement, Fish & Wildlife Technology, GIS Applications, and Heavy Equipment Techniques — largely due to revenue reductions due to the federal government’s cap on international students coming to Ontario and the elimination of educational private partnerships.

The college’s decision to cut the programs resulted in a backlash from union locals, local employers, students, and trade associations, with Kawartha Lakes city council passing a resolution encouraging the provincial and federal governments to support academic programming at the Frost campus.

 

Detective sergeant Josh McGrath and deputy police chief Jamie Hartnett speak to the media on November 13, 2024 at the site of a shooting at 850 Fairbairn Street in Peterborough, where three male suspects fired multiple shots into the townhomes and into the air the previous night. No one was injured in the incident, which police believe is connected to the illicit drug trade. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of police video)
Detective sergeant Josh McGrath and deputy police chief Jamie Hartnett speak to the media on November 13, 2024 at the site of a shooting at 850 Fairbairn Street in Peterborough, where three male suspects fired multiple shots into the townhomes and into the air the previous night. No one was injured in the incident, which police believe is connected to the illicit drug trade. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of police video)

Although police report that violent crime has decreased in the City of Peterborough since 2022, there were seven shooting incidents in 2024, many of which police say were linked to the illicit drug trade.

In April, a 32-year-old Peterborough man was shot dead at the Sunshine Homes housing complex at 572 Crystal Drive, which is owned and operated by the Peterborough Housing Corporation, with police arresting a 37-year-old Peterborough man for murder the following day.

In May, a 24-year-old Oshawa man suffered a gunshot wound after a housing unit takeover at 850 Fairbairn Street, a 36-unit townhouse operated by the Peterborough Housing Corporation. Police arrested a 22-year-old Niagara region man and two male teenagers from the GTA.

In September, a 17-year-old Scarborough male suffered multiple gunshot wounds after what police say was a drug-related shooting at 701 George Street North.

In November, police responded to a report of shots being fired at 850 Fairbairn Street, where multiple units of the townhomes were struck with bullets. Although no one was injured, police called the incident “disturbing” and related to “the drug sub-culture in the community.”

Throughout the fall, Peterborough police held a series of public meetings across the city, including in East City, to share crime statistics and to provide an update on enforcement initiatives. To the surprise of many people, police revealed that occurrences of violent crime in the city have dropped by one per cent since 2022, and that non-violent crime had dropped by more than seven per cent.

Despite those decreases, police responded to 10 per cent more calls in the first eight months of 2024 compared to the same period last year, although only 16.5 per cent of those calls were criminal in nature. However, police laid 33 per cent more criminal charges compared to the same period in 2023.

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13. The new Canadian Canoe Museum opens

Attendees give a standing ovation for executive director Carolyn Hyslop during the grand opening celebration of the new Canadian Canoe Museum on May 11, 2024. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)
Attendees give a standing ovation for executive director Carolyn Hyslop during the grand opening celebration of the new Canadian Canoe Museum on May 11, 2024. (Photo: Bruce Head / kawarthaNOW)

After two-and-a-half years of construction following a decade of planning challenges, the new Canadian Canoe Museum officially opened its doors in May with a celebration that featured dignitaries from all levels of government, including Ontario’s Lieutenant Governor Edith Dumont.

The 65,000-square-foot two-storey building is located on a five-acre property on the shores of Little Lake and was purpose-built to house the world’s largest collection of canoes, kayaks, and paddled watercraft, with exhibitions telling the story of the canoe and a lakefront campus offering on-water and outdoor education programming. The museum also features a second year-round location of the popular Silver Bean Cafe.

The opening of the world-class museum attracted national and international media attention, with National Geographic naming the Canadian Canoe Museum as one of the 20 best new cultural hot spots in the world for 2024 and hit boating lifestyle TV show Water Ways TV naming Peterborough and the Kawarthas as “destination of the year”, in part because of the new museum.

The late Professor Kirk Wipper, who donated his immense watercraft collection in 1994 to the organization that would become The Canadian Canoe Museum and open its original facility on Monaghan Road in 1997, was inducted into Peterborough’s 2024 Pathway of Fame.

 

14. Moose on the loose in Peterborough

On June 19, 2024, conservation officers with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry tranquilized and tagged a moose that had been wandering around the west end of Peterborough. (Photo: Tung Nguyen)
On June 19, 2024, conservation officers with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry tranquilized and tagged a moose that had been wandering around the west end of Peterborough. (Photo: Tung Nguyen)

In June, Peterborough residents were transfixed when a moose was spotted wandering around the west end of the city. The moose was eventually safely captured when conservation officers with the Ministry of Natural Resources tranquilized the animal, tagged it, and relocated it.

While it is rare for a moose to be seen as far south as Peterborough, early summer is when yearlings are rejected by their mothers and begin foraging on their own, which can lead them to unusual places.

kawarthaNOW publisher Jeannine Taylor had her own close encounter in June, when a young female moose wandered onto her family cottage property and stayed for four days, munching on leaves, lounging, and sleeping before eventually leaving of its own accord.

 

15. Lakefield’s Hamilton Bus Lines loses contract with Student Transportation Services

Lakefield's family-owned Hamilton Bus Lines was founded in 1969 by Ellwood Hamilton and acquired in 2020 by Burlington's family-owned Attridge Transportation Inc., which continued to use the Hamilton name on local buses and retained all the company's bus drivers and staff at the Lakefield location. On June 27, 2024, Student Transportation Services of Central Ontario (STSCO) announced that Hamilton Bus Lines was not a successful bidder during a procurement and bidding process for existing bus routes. (Photo: Hamilton Bus Lines / Facebook)
Lakefield’s family-owned Hamilton Bus Lines was founded in 1969 by Ellwood Hamilton and acquired in 2020 by Burlington’s family-owned Attridge Transportation Inc., which continued to use the Hamilton name on local buses and retained all the company’s bus drivers and staff at the Lakefield location. On June 27, 2024, Student Transportation Services of Central Ontario (STSCO) announced that Hamilton Bus Lines was not a successful bidder during a procurement and bidding process for existing bus routes. (Photo: Hamilton Bus Lines / Facebook)

In July, Lakefield’s Hamilton Bus Lines lost its contract to operate 87 bus routes for Student Transportation Services of Central Ontario, which awarded a 10-year contract instead to Concord-based company named Wheelchair Accessible Transit (W.A.T.).

Under the new contract, W.A.T. acquired 30 routes from Hamilton Bus Lines, 55 from Student Transportation Services, 15 from Century Transportation, and one from First Student.

An online petition in support of around 100 affected Hamilton Bus Lines bus drivers drew a huge response, with upset drivers and their supporters criticizing STSCO’s bidding process as well as lamenting the awarding of a portion of its bus route contract to a company that is headquartered outside of the region.

The situation left W.A.T. in the position of having two months to hire 100 bus drivers to take over the affected routes by the fall. The company opened an office in Lakefield, held an information sessions, and offered incentives to bus drivers, including those who formerly drove for Hamilton Bus Lines.

 

16. Peterborough city council approves extended timeline for modular bridge housing community project

The modular bridge housing community program at Wolfe Street in Peterborough opened in November 2023 with 50 modular homes, shared washroom facilities, and a central service hub operated by the Elizabeth Fry Society with 24/7 services and staff support on site. On September 16, 2024, city council endorsed staff recommendations to keep the site operational at Wolfe Street beyond November 2024 and to spend $75,000 to improve security at the site. (Photo: City of Peterborough)
The modular bridge housing community program at Wolfe Street in Peterborough opened in November 2023 with 50 modular homes, shared washroom facilities, and a central service hub operated by the Elizabeth Fry Society with 24/7 services and staff support on site. On September 16, 2024, city council endorsed staff recommendations to keep the site operational at Wolfe Street beyond November 2024 and to spend $75,000 to improve security at the site. (Photo: City of Peterborough)

In August, the City of Peterborough received an award from the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO) for its modular bridge housing community project, which was established in 2023 as part of a homelessness services plan to help end a controversial tent encampment near the Wolfe Street shelter.

The city had constructed 50 modular homes at Wolfe Street, along with shared washroom facilities and a central service hub, using funding through the Ontario government’s homelessness prevention program.

In September, Peterborough city council considered a staff report that recommended keeping the modular housing community at its existing location, extending it beyond its original end date of November 30, 2025, installing up to 16 additional modular homes at a cost of up to $1.12 million, and investing an additional $75,000 to enhance security at the site.

City council eventually approved keeping the site at its current location beyond November 2025 and providing $75,000 in funding to enhance security at the site, but deferred a decision on expanding the site with additional modular homes.

 

17. Peterborough city council rejects temporary use zoning by-law amendment for PATH sleeping cabin community

In 2023, Peterborough Action for Tiny Homes (PATH) leased the former location of the Peterborough Humane Society at 385 Lansdowne Street from new owners Habitat for Humanity Peterborough and Kawartha Region, with the intention of building 24 sleeping cabins on the property and providing support services for people experiencing homelessness. On August 26, 2024, Peterborough city council voted to deny an application for a temporary use by-law that would have allowed PATH to build the cabins. (Photo: Margaret Slavin / PATH)
In 2023, Peterborough Action for Tiny Homes (PATH) leased the former location of the Peterborough Humane Society at 385 Lansdowne Street from new owners Habitat for Humanity Peterborough and Kawartha Region, with the intention of building 24 sleeping cabins on the property and providing support services for people experiencing homelessness. On August 26, 2024, Peterborough city council voted to deny an application for a temporary use by-law that would have allowed PATH to build the cabins. (Photo: Margaret Slavin / PATH)

In August, Peterborough city council considered an application for a temporary use zoning by-law amendment that would allow Peterborough Action for Tiny Homes (PATH) to build 24 one-room sleeping cabins at the former location of the Peterborough Humane Society on Lansdowne Street in the east end of the city.

Although PATH’s application had the support of city staff, council voted 8-2 against approving the temporary use zoning by-law amendment after hearing from 10 delegations that included neighbouring businesses and residents who objected to the location of the proposed sleeping cabin community.

The decision was reminiscent of an earlier council decision in December 2022 to reject a temporary use by-law amendment for PATH for a different location. At that time, city council had advised PATH to work with city staff to find another location.

In March 2023, PATH entered into a three-year lease agreement with Habitat for Humanity Peterborough and Kawartha Region for the purpose of providing transitional shelter support at the Lansdowne Street site, which Habitat had purchased with the intention of later developing multi-unit affordable residential housing. PATH then began the land use planning process that would eventually result in an application for a temporary use by-law for the site, which is currently zoned as commercial.

Following city council’s second rejection of its application for a temporary use zoning by-law amendment, PATH announced in October that it was fighting back against the decision and had filed an appeal with the Ontario Land Tribunal.

 

18. New fishing rules protect salmon on the Ganaraska River in Port Hope

People flock to the Ganaraska River in Port Hope every fall 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 prompted Port Hope resident Sean Carthew to create an online petition in fall 2023 calling for the municipality to take action. For fall 2024, the Ontario government has announced changes to protect the salmon during their peak migration period. (Photo: Lee Higginson)
People flock to the Ganaraska River in Port Hope every fall 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 prompted Port Hope resident Sean Carthew to create an online petition in fall 2023 calling for the municipality to take action. For fall 2024, the Ontario government has announced changes to protect the salmon during their peak migration period. (Photo: Lee Higginson)

In July, the Ontario government launched a survey on proposed new fishing rules on the lower Ganaraska River, including a move to create a new fish sanctuary for Chinook salmon and to prohibit fishing from the CN Bridge to Jocelyn Street during the peak of the salmon run from September 1 to October 14.

Every fall, Port Hope sees an influx of both anglers and spectators during the annual salmon run, when tens of thousands of migrating Chinook salmon return to the Ganaraska River on their way to upstream spawning habitat — making it one of the largest salmon runs in Ontario.

Over the past couple of years, a group of Port Hope residents led by Sean Carthew had become increasingly concerned about the lack of regulations around fishing in the Ganaraska River in Port Hope that results in regular issues in the fall during the annual salmon run. Not only do some anglers catch and slaughter the breeding salmon for their eggs, discarding the rest of the fish, but they leave trash and fishing hooks behind, prompting Port Hope residents to organize a clean-up every fall.

In the fall of 2023, Carthew — who organizes the annual “Run Salmon Run” event for non-anglers who wish to celebrate the annual salmon migration — launched an online petition to urge changes to protect the salmon. About a month after he launched his petition, there was some response, with Carthew meeting with local politicians who formed a group to look at the issue, and with the Ministry of Natural Resources reaching out to the Port Hope mayor.

At the end of August, the Ontario government announced the new fishing rules had been approved and would take effect on September 1.

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19. Fire closes historic Doube’s Trestle Bridge between Peterborough and Omemee

A fire on the decking of Doube's Trestle Bridge along the Kawartha Trans Canada Trail between Peterborough and Omemee on September 4, 2024. (Photo: WS via Facebook)
A fire on the decking of Doube’s Trestle Bridge along the Kawartha Trans Canada Trail between Peterborough and Omemee on September 4, 2024. (Photo: WS via Facebook)

In early September, a fire closed the historic Doube’s Trestle Bridge, a popular spot along the Kawartha Trans Canada Trail between Peterborough and Omemee. About 15 metres of the bridge’s decking were destroyed, and underlying structural beams were also damaged.

The fire came five years after the original wooden decking of the bridge, which was rotting, was replaced with composite lumber at a cost of $140,000. The project was funded by the National Trans Canada Trail office, private donations, Kawartha Trans Canada Trail Association supporters, and federal grants.

The Kawartha Trans Canada Trail Association secured an engineering firm to assess the fire damage to the bridge and determine the extent of the structural damage and repair requirements. The engineering assessment report has been sent to Infrastructure Ontario, the Crown agency responsible for public infrastructure and real estate for the Ontario government. While a contractor has estimated the repair costs at between $50,000 and $100,000, there has been no word yet on when repairs will be completed.

 

20. Peterborough city council designates The Martin House as a heritage property and then changes its mind

Located at 1400 Monaghan Road at Homewood Avenue, the Martin House was built between 1930 and 1931 for local corrugated container businessman Herbert Samuel Martin by prolific contractor Henry Thomas Hickey. (Photo: City of Peterborough)
Located at 1400 Monaghan Road at Homewood Avenue, the Martin House was built between 1930 and 1931 for local corrugated container businessman Herbert Samuel Martin by prolific contractor Henry Thomas Hickey. (Photo: City of Peterborough)

In September, Peterborough city council voted to provide a heritage designation to The Martin House, a historic property at 1400 Monaghan Road.

The heritage designation prevented the current owner of the property, GTA-based J & J Developments, from tearing down the building or making modifications that would destroy heritage features of the building. The company had purchased the property in late 2023 with the intention of demolishing the building and redeveloping the property’s large lot for a six-storey residential housing complex.

The city’s Peterborough Architectural Conservation Advisory Committee (PACAC) had recommended the building be designated under the Ontario Heritage Act as being a property of cultural heritage value or interest to the City of Peterborough.

However, following council’s decision, J & J Developments hired Toronto-based law firm Overland LLP to file a notice of objection to council’s decision, as permitted under the Ontario Heritage Act. The objection included a report from Toronto-based ERA Architects Inc. that disagreed with the report from PACAC, stating that the building had no heritage value.

In light of the notice of objection, in late November council reconsidered its decision to provide The Martin House with a heritage designation, with much of the discussion focused on the state of the building and the developer’s plans to build needed housing. In the end, council voted 6-5 to withdraw the heritage designation, which means the developer can proceed with its plans to demolish The Martin House and build a six-storey residential housing complex on the property.

 

21. Peterborough Humane Society video win secures $20,000 for animals in need

An elderly gentleman bears a gift for someone named Lucy in a touching and heartfelt ad campaign for the Peterborough Humane Society created and donated by Peterborough-based creative agency Unmanned. The ad encourages community members to support the Peterborough Humane Society through adoption, donation, or volunteering, at a time when it is needed the most. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of Unmanned ad)
An elderly gentleman bears a gift for someone named Lucy in a touching and heartfelt ad campaign for the Peterborough Humane Society created and donated by Peterborough-based creative agency Unmanned. The ad encourages community members to support the Peterborough Humane Society through adoption, donation, or volunteering, at a time when it is needed the most. (kawarthaNOW screenshot of Unmanned ad)

In September, a fundraising video for the Peterborough Humane Society created and donated by Peterborough-based creative agency Unmanned was entered into the 2024 People’s Choice Wagsies Awards, presented by the Association for Animal Welfare Advancement and the Hill’s Food, Shelter & Love program.

The video, entitled “Never Too Late”, was one of five finalists for the awards and the only Canadian entry. Released for a holiday campaign in December 2023, the heartwarming video tells the story of an elderly gentleman crafting a gift for someone named Lucy, who turns out to be a dog he is adopting from the Peterborough Humane Society.

In November, the Peterborough Humane Society announced on social media that it had won both the “Best Public Service Announcement Award” and the “People’s Choice Award”, with the latter award including $20,000 for animals in need. The awards were presented at the Association for Animal Welfare Advancement’s annual conference in New Orleans.

 

22. Peterborough filmmaker’s documentary on The Monarch Ultra premieres

Rodney Fuentes (right) filming Clay Williams and Carlotta James near Tucumseh, Michigan on the seventh day of the 47-day inaugural Monarch Ultra relay run in fall 2019 that followed the 4,300-kilometre migratory path of the monarch butterfly from Peterborough to Mexico. With no budget and no crew, Fuentes relied on his creative and improvisational skills to capture footage during the run for his documentary, which also includes later interviews with pollinator advocates and experts. (Photo: Monarch Ultra / Facebook)
Rodney Fuentes (right) filming Clay Williams and Carlotta James near Tucumseh, Michigan on the seventh day of the 47-day inaugural Monarch Ultra relay run in fall 2019 that followed the 4,300-kilometre migratory path of the monarch butterfly from Peterborough to Mexico. With no budget and no crew, Fuentes relied on his creative and improvisational skills to capture footage during the run for his documentary, which also includes later interviews with pollinator advocates and experts. (Photo: Monarch Ultra / Facebook)

In October, Peterborough filmmaker Rodney Fuentes debuted his documentary The Monarch Ultra — five years in the making — to an appreciative crowd at the Market Hall Performing Arts Centre.

Weaving in the story of the monarch butterfly and interviews with pollinator advocates across North America, the documentary takes a behind-the-scenes look as a group of long-distance runners followed the 4,300-kilometre migratory path of the monarch butterfly from Peterborough to Mexico during the inaugural Monarch Ultra relay run in fall 2019.

Along with Fuentes, the other members of The Monarch Ultra team — Carlotta James, Clay Williams, and Guenther Schubert — were present at the screening to answer questions from the audience about the film, the relay run, and the monarch butterfly.

For those who missed the premiere, the film will be presented again at the Market Hall at 10 a.m. on Friday, January 24th as one of the films screening during the 2025 ReFrame Film Festival.

 

23. Autistic Havelock teen found safe after going missing for 17 days

18-year-old Logan was last seen in Havelock on October 13, 2024. Police found the autistic teen 17 days later hiding in an abandoned building in Havelock. (Family photo)
18-year-old Logan was last seen in Havelock on October 13, 2024. Police found the autistic teen 17 days later hiding in an abandoned building in Havelock. (Family photo)

On October 13, 18-year-old Logan went missing from his Havelock home. Although Logan, who has high-functioning autism and some other mental health issues, had gone missing before, it was only for a day or two and he was found close by.

His family grew increasingly concerned after two weeks went by and he had still not been found. His mother set up a Facebook group, which grew to over 11,000 members, where people posted possible sightings, organized searches, and more.

It was 17 days later when police finally found Logan safe and sound in an abandoned building in Havelock, which was one of his regular “hideouts” and had previously been searched several times.

 

24. Peterborough city council considers 25% funding cut to community organizations

Around 400 people gathered outside Peterborough City Hall on November 12, 2024 to protest a proposed 25 per cent across-the-board cut in the City of Peterborough's 2025 draft budget to grants to community organizations. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)
Around 400 people gathered outside Peterborough City Hall on November 12, 2024 to protest a proposed 25 per cent across-the-board cut in the City of Peterborough’s 2025 draft budget to grants to community organizations. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

In November, Peterborough city council considered a proposed 25 per cent across-the-board cut in city funding to 75 arts and social services organizations. The proposed cuts prompted a large rally outside of city hall, as well as presentations from 17 of the affected organizations to city council describing the impact of the cuts.

A week later, council decided against proceeding with the funding cuts but then, hours later in the same meeting, they voted to defund the Electric City Culture Council (EC3) in 2025, affecting programs and activities including the Bierk Art Bursary Program for graduating high school students, the Peterborough Arts Awards and Mayor’s Luncheon for the Arts, Artsweek, the Poet Laureate program, the Grants for Individual Artists program, and professional development workshops.

City council also decided to support some other funding cuts, including saving $120,000 through a staffing reorganization at the Peterborough Public Library that would see two staff positions eliminated and other staff paid less, saving $100,000 by not maintaining the Trent Canal rink for 2024-25 (although some Peterborough residents are still skating on the canal), and saving $40,000 by eliminating lifeguards at one of the city’s two beaches.

On the other side of the ledger, councillors decided against reneging on a $150,000 per year settlement agreement with the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) and voted to increase funding for homelessness programs and to provide Showplace Performance Centre with a $500,000 interest-free loan, among other things.

Council also decided to defer approval of the 2025 draft budget until February to give city staff additional time to come up with additional possible funding reductions that councillors will review at a meeting on January 20.

Peterborough residents continue to skate on the Trent Canal despite municipal budget cuts

Although the City of Peterborough is not maintaining the ice of the Trent Canal below the Peterborough Lift Lock this winter due to proposed budget cuts, that's not stopping Trevor Hesselink from skating on the canal. Since the canal froze over, he and his wife Victoria Yeh have spent hours using an electric snow blower to clear a rink for public skating just north of Maria Street. (Photo: Victoria Yeh)

Municipal budget cuts aren’t stopping some Peterborough residents from skating on the Trent Canal.

Community members are taking it upon themselves to clear the ice of snow so they can ensure the beloved activity remains an option for skaters and families of the region.

“It’s something that we can share with our neighbours,” says Trevor Hesselink, a Peterborough resident who, alongside his wife and local musician Victoria Yeh, has been clearing the frozen canal near their home just north of Maria Street. “We’re just getting out there so we can skate.”

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Though he lived away for two decades before moving back to Peterborough with Yeh three winters ago, skating on the canal is a special activity that connects Hesselink to his hometown.

“As a kid, I learned to skate just under the lift locks by clearing a rink on the canal, so this is coming home,” he says, noting Yeh also learned to skate on the Rideau Canal in Ottawa. “Canal skating is very important to our family.”

Peterborough city council has approved a staff recommendation in the city’s draft 2025 budget to save $100,000 by no longer monitoring ice conditions or maintaining an ice rink on the Trent Canal below the Peterborough Lift Lock.

City staff have noted that skating on the canal has been limited for the past few years due to warmer weather, with the canal not open at all for skating last winter due to poor ice conditions.

Trevor Hesselink and wife Victoria Yeh both grew up learning to ice skate on canals, making the activity important to their family. With their home backing onto the Trent Canal, they can often be found clearing the snow for themselves and others to have an outdoor skating rink. (Photo: Victoria Yeh)
Trevor Hesselink and wife Victoria Yeh both grew up learning to ice skate on canals, making the activity important to their family. With their home backing onto the Trent Canal, they can often be found clearing the snow for themselves and others to have an outdoor skating rink. (Photo: Victoria Yeh)

Hesselink, however, says their decision to create a rink themselves was not influenced by the budget cuts. In fact, they’ve done it for the past couple years whenever the weather has not allowed the city to maintain operations. Given their home backs onto the canal, Hesselink says they feel a sense of “custodianship.”

“Because we both grew up skating on a canal, it’s special for us both historically and nostalgically,” he says. “But also, being outdoors has such a unique appeal and doesn’t smell like hockey gear, unlike an indoor arena.”

He says he and Yeh spend a total of about six hours clearing a few hundred metres located south of the lift lock and north of the first rail bridge, about halfway to Maria Street.

“We have this gem and it’s so picturesque with the locks and the trees and the rail bridges,” Hesselink says. “It just has a great aesthetic, and we can see people enjoying it right from our window.”

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Since the duo began clearing the ice when the weather allowed, they have seen many community members making use of the ice and some have even expressed their gratitude in having the snow already cleared away.

Among the many groups they’ve seen using the rink were young kids playing hockey at night and young adults travelling all the way from Markham to enjoy the canal.

“They came down in the early evening from work because they’ve been looking for a nice place to skate,” he says. “We just met them quickly before they got to skating, but they came all this way for it.”

Since beginning to clear off a section of the Trent Canal, Trevor Hesselink and his wife Victoria Yeh have seen a domino effect in other community members doing the same to allow more skaters to enjoy the ice, with some travelling as far as Markham. (Photo: Victoria Yeh)
Since beginning to clear off a section of the Trent Canal, Trevor Hesselink and his wife Victoria Yeh have seen a domino effect in other community members doing the same to allow more skaters to enjoy the ice, with some travelling as far as Markham. (Photo: Victoria Yeh)

For Hesselink, these connections that are formed are a part of the reason he values outdoor rinks.

“It’s a great way to get people outdoors in the community, and people talk a lot more when they’re outside and around each other,” he says. “It’s just another cool community thing to do.”

Since they began clearing off the snow, Hesselink has noticed other neighbours and residents supporting their efforts. Beside the rink, a neighbour has added a loop for skaters to use.

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“At one point, someone else came down with a blower too, so it’s this domino effect which is great to see,” Hesselink says. “It’s coming together and maybe more people with jump in next year.”

While recent warmer temperatures and rain mean the canal may not be suitable for skating until colder weather returns in the new year, Hesselink remains hopeful the rink will stay intact for the winter.

“If the weather cooperates and the conditions are good, we’ll keep doing it,” he says. “And in the meantime, we’ll be out and using it while we can.”

 

Editor’s note: When the City of Peterborough was monitoring ice conditions on the Trent Canal, a green flag was raised if the ice was safe for skating and a red flag was raised if the ice was unsafe for skating. As the city is no longer monitoring ice conditions until a final decision is made on the city’s draft 2025 budget, the flags will no longer be flying. People skating on the canal do so at their own risk.

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