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Toronto man charged after September 30 rally in Peterborough

While the vast majority of participants at the anti-hate rally in downtown Peterborough on September 30, 2017 were local residents who protested peacefully, some of the protestors disguised their identities and some came from outside the area, including 22-year-old William October of Toronto who has been charged with assault and obstruct peace officer. (Photo: Linda McIlwain / kawarthaNOW.com)

Peterborough police have arrested and charged a Toronto man following the anti-hate rally held in downtown Peterborough on Saturday, September 30, 2017.

During the rally police attempted to remove a person from the crowd by escorting them to a police cruiser. A protester concealing his identity emerged from the crowd and struck the person being escorted in the head.

Police initially arrested the protester and then released him unconditionally. A subsequent investigation revealed the protester had given police a false name when he was initially arrested.

Through further investigation, police were able to confirm the identity of the protester and, on October 5th, attended a Toronto residence where they arrested and charged the man.

William October, 22, of Richmond Street West, Toronto, is charged with assault and obstruct peace officer.

The accused was released from custody and is scheduled to attend a Peterborough court on October 26, 2017.

Police are also asking for the public’s help in identifying the people in the photos below who were present at the rally.

Peterborough police are seeking to identify the people shown in these photos who attended the September 30, 2017 rally. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough Police Service)
Peterborough police are seeking to identify the people shown in these photos who attended the September 30, 2017 rally. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough Police Service)

Anyone with information is asked to call the Peterborough Police Service Crime Line at 705-876-1122 ext. 555 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS or www.stopcrimehere.ca.

How well do you know what can go into your blue box?

Eric the Recycle Ranger will be at the GreenUP Store (378 Aylmer St. N., Peterborough) from October 16th to 21st for Waste Reduction Week. Kids of all ages are invited to take the Waste Reduction Challenge, win prizes including a PlanetBox, stainless steel straws, books, and more, and to reduce household waste. (Photo: GreenUp)

For many people in Canada, recycling has become second nature. However, the waste sector is still responsible for six per cent of greenhouse emissions in Ontario, and the provincial government aims to reduce diversion rates by 30 per cent before 2020, through its Strategy for a Waste Free Ontario.

GreenUP is here to help you get started and there is no better time than during Waste Reduction Week from October 16 to 22 — a celebration of our power to reduce waste. This is a great opportunity to take a look at our habits and how we can change them for the better.

But first, how well do you know your blue bin?

Let’s dispel some blue bin sorting myths by investigating some common misconceptions about what is, and is not, recyclable:


Can I recycle Styrofoam?

Styrofoam can be recycled in the City of Peterborough, but with some restrictions.

Large packaging Styrofoam is recyclable but it cannot be picked up curbside. After purchasing a new TV or computer, you can take the pieces of packing Styrofoam to the Peterborough Materials Recycling Facility at 390 Pido Road. This does not include packing peanuts, which are not recyclable.

Restrictions also extend to Styrofoam egg cartons, cups, and take out containers, which are NOT recyclable. As consumers, we must consider which restaurants to frequent, and keep in mind that use of this material is oftentimes used for our takeout containers. Styrofoam has convenient properties as a great insulator, with an impermeable surface, and is inexpensive.

Unfortunately, without being able to recycle foam, the coffee cup that we spend 15 minutes with in the morning becomes the next item sitting in landfill, and with Styrofoam, that means for about 500 years!

You can reduce Styrofoam waste by using reusable containers when dining out, and by lugging a mug instead of purchasing a throw-a-way cup.

Editor’s note: If you’re confused by the fact you can take large pieces of packing Styrofoam to the Peterborough Materials Recycling Facility, you’re not alone. The City of Peterborough had originally decided to no longer accept any Styrofoam for recycling at the facility as of January 1, 2016. As noted above, that decision has been reversed for large pieces of packing Styrofoam only.

 

Can I recycle a paper coffee cup?

You can … but not the plastic lid.

Those early morning Tim Hortons coffee runs come with a hefty environmental price tag. Although the cup is recyclable in Peterborough, the lid is not. Tim Hortons serves 2 billion coffees a year. Those lids accumulate as a tremendous amount of waste.

A suggestion is to reduce the need for coffee cup production by bringing your own reusable coffee cup when you need to caffeinate. It will save you money, and the environment.

 

Can I recycle aluminum foil?

Yes, you can. Clean aluminum foil can be recycled, but be sure to remove any food residues.

Pop cans and tin cans (think tomato paste) can also be recycled, but clothes hangers cannot. You can take un-repairable metal items to a scrap metal facility.

While on the topic of foil, chip bags cannot be recycled. They are made from a variety of materials that are not easy to break down at a recycling facility, so they must be disposed of in the garbage.

 

Can I recycle glass?

Glass bottles and jars are recyclable, although you must remember to recycle the package and not the product.

Rinse your containers if they have traces of food left inside. Jars with leftover sauce stuck to the inside must be tossed out. Rinsing before recycling will ensure that glass jars will be recycled once they arrive the recycling facility.

Broken picture frames and windows cannot be recycled at curbside. They must go in the garbage.

Editor’s note: Safely place broken glass or sharp objects in a cardboard box, tape it securely and label this “Sharp Object”. This can be placed beside your regular garbage.

 

Can I recycle my straw?

No, straws cannot be recycled. Many plastics such as straws, cheese string wrappers, and plastic food wrap are not recyclable.

These “soft” plastics are a conglomerate of plastic materials that are impossible to breakdown. You can avoid these types of plastics by using reusable, stainless steel straws or beeswax wrap.

There are many environmentally friendly alternatives to the plastic items we have become reliant on; many are available at the GreenUP Store.

 

If you are unsure about how to dispose of an item, visit the City of Peterborough’s What Goes Where? page. You can type in any item and the site will tell you how to recycle or dispose of it.

GreenUP invites you to take the Waste Reduction Week Challenge from October 16th to 21st at the GreenUP Store. Visit us for daily tips and promos for products that relate to Canada’s daily waste reduction themes. Also, bring the kids and take a selfie with our very own Recycle Ranger, Eric. Win prizes, like a PlanetBox lunch system, reusable water bottles, and books.

For more information, contact Danica Jarvis at danica.jarvis@greenup.on.ca, stop in at the GreenUP Store (378 Aylmer Street North in downtown Peterborough), or give us a call at 705-745-3238.

What’s new from the Kawartha Chamber of Commerce & Tourism – October 11, 2017

Lang Mill at Lang Pioneer Village Museum in Keene, which recently won Attractions Ontario's Award for Top Small Museum. (Photo: Sherief Kamar)

Speed Networking B.O.S.S. – October 25th

Speed networking

The Chamber’s next B.O.S.S. (Business Owners Sharing Solutions) workshop will focus on effective networking and how it can benefit your business.

Join the Chamber on Wednesday, October 25th, from 5 to 7 p.m. at Westwind Inn on the Lake, where Tonya Kraan of Strexer Harrop & Associates will discuss networking techniques with fellow Chamber Members, Scott Matheson of CIBC Lakefield, and Tom LaBranche of Village Pet Food & Supply. Following the discussion, attendees will have the opportunity to put their skills into action in a speed networking format.

Invite a colleague or fellow business professional to join you! The workshop is free for Chamber members (thanks to Professional Development Sponsor Lynn Woodcroft, Sales Representative, Royal LePage Frank Real Estate) and $10 for future members. Register now.

 

Trent-Severn Waterway Trail Town Workshop – October 12th – Last Chance to Register

Cycle Forward founder Amy Camp, who helped launch America's nationally recognized Trail Town Program in 2007 (photo: Tori Stipcak)
Cycle Forward founder Amy Camp, who helped launch America’s nationally recognized Trail Town Program in 2007 (photo: Tori Stipcak)

There is still time to register for the Trent-Severn Waterway Trail Town Workshop in Lakefield on October 12th. The registration deadline is today (October 11) at 4 p.m. Email sarahp@rto8.com to register or contact the Chamber office at 705-652-6963.

Kawarthas Northumberland, in partnership with the Kawartha Chamber, is pleased to present the workshop, free of charge, on Thursday, October 12th. The workshop begins at 5:15 p.m. at the Lakefield Legion and will include a light supper.

Join trail tourism expert Amy Camp of Cycle Forward for an interactive workshop for business owners seeking to increase tourism-related spending from visitors to the Trent-Severn Waterway, Trans Canada Trail and other Lakefield area attractions. Learn more.

 

Decadent Menu for Awards Gala – November 3rd

The 18th Annual Awards of Excellence Gala takes place on Friday, November 3rd at Elmhirst's Resort.
The 18th Annual Awards of Excellence Gala takes place on Friday, November 3rd at Elmhirst’s Resort.

Tickets are on sale for the 18th Annual Awards of Excellence Gala on Friday, November 3rd at Elmhirst’s Resort. Tickets are $85 +HST. The menu for the evening is as follows:

Appetizer, choice of:

  • Salad: Arugula with buttermilk ranch, braised fennel, candied almonds, pickled carrots, parsnip chips and marinated radish,
  • Soup: Roasted butternut squash soup with rosemary creme fraische and heirloom carrot strings,

Entree, choice of:

  • Vegetarian: Butternut squash (spiralized) spaghetti with sundried tomato and cherry tomato with brown butter sauce and garnished with kale chips
  • Elmhirst’s Own Roast Beef with Gravy, yorkshire pudding, roasted potatoes and seasonal vegetables.
  • Salmon poached in white wine dill beurre blanc with rice pilaf and seasonal vegetables.

A dessert buffet will follow.

Join the Chamber’s premiere event of the year as they celebrate local business, and present the 18th Annual Awards of Excellence! Book your tickets.

A special room rate is available for those booking for the night of the Awards Gala. Call Elmhirst’s Resort at 705-295-4591 and mention you are booking for the Chamber Awards of Excellence Gala on November 3rd.

 

Submit Your Bids – Couples Getaway – $1632 Value

The Chamber’s Annual Awards Gala is fast approaching! Each year, the Chamber has many fabulous items up for bid. To get you ready, the CHamber is starting its outside bid auction early this year with an excellent item: a 2 Night Stay at Couples Resort & Algonquin Spa! The value of this package is $1,632. (Note: restrictions apply).

Submit your maximum bid by emailing generalmanager@kawarthachamber.ca with the subject line “Couples Resort Auction Bid.” The auction will close October 22nd, 2017 at midnight.

Enjoy a 5 Star Resort & Spa, All-Inclusive Boutique Algonquin Jr. Suite including private hot tub, king bed, wood burning fire place, free breakfast in bed daily, free 5-course meal for 2 daily (semi-formal attire with tie), free Algonquin Park pass for trails and museum, free limited sports equipment. Learn more.

All proceeds support the Kawartha Chamber of Commerce & Tourism, advocating for local business and promoting tourism in the Kawarthas.

 

Know Your Power Cobourg – November 15th

Know Your Power Cobourg

Navigating energy-efficiency programs for business

Chamber members are invited to a breakfast event on Wednesday, November 15th, to learn about energy cost-saving programs and incentives available to Ontario businesses.

The event is being held at the Best Western Plus Cobourg Inn & Convention Centre, 930 Burnham St., Cobourg. Registration and breakfast is at 9 a.m., and the program runs from 9:30 to 11 a.m. There is no charge to attend. Register here.

The event will bring together representatives from your local distribution company, natural gas distributor and the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO), along with businesses and community leaders from the region, to share information about available energy saving programs and how to enroll. You will also have the opportunity to network with other local job creators who are interested in giving their businesses a competitive edge through energy efficiencies and retrofits, and hear success stories from those who have already benefited.

Read the program agenda.

 

Ontario Chamber of Commerce Business Confidence Survey

The Ontario Chamber of Commerce invites you to complete their Business Confidence Survey. Data collected will provide powerful insights into the state of our province’s economy allowing the OCC to expand the Chamber Network’s influence with government.

Your participation will directly impact the direction of OCC policy work, communications strategy, and government relations. Take the survey.

 

Welcome New Chamber Members

Kawartha Local Marketplace
165 King Street, Peterborough, www.kawarthalocal.ca, 705-400-7929

Our mission is to make buying local easy. We connect consumers to local artisans, culinary producers and makers of all kinds. Our all-local retail emporium features an eclectic range of goods made exclusively in Peterborough and the Kawarthas.

Savino Human Resources Partners
info@savinohrp.ca, www.savinohrp.ca, 705-400-8350

SHRP Limited (Savino Human Resources Partners), is a consulting firm based in Peterborough which supports the human resources, recruiting, payroll, and organizational requirements of small-to-medium enterprises.

 

Lang Pioneer Village Wins Attractions Ontario Award

Congratulations to Lang Pioneer Village Museum — the winner of Attractions Ontario’s Top Small Museum/Art Gallery/Historic Site Ontario’s Choice Award.

Winners were determined by a public vote for residents of Ontario.

Celebrating their 50th season in 2017, Lang Pioneer Village is also up for Attraction of the Year award, due to the large number of votes received. The winner will be announced at the Ontario Tourism Summit Gala on November 7th.

Read more.

 

Experience Trinity College School and all it has to offer

Trinity College School

How do Trinity College School students describe their experience in three words? Complete, illuminating, energetic. TCS students appreciate that school needs to be more than just reaching their academic potential — it’s about exploring all facets of themselves and the realization of passions, talents and skills that reach far beyond the classroom walls. Realize what’s within.

To learn more about the TCS experience, Trinity College School invites you to join them on campus for an open house on Saturday, October 21st. For more information, visit www.tcs.on.ca/openhouse or contact the admissions office at 905-885-3209.

Prospective students for Grades 9 to 12 can also participate in a Spend a Day or Spend a Day/Night event on October 20th. For more information, please contact the admissions office at 905-885-3209.

 

LYU Love Lakefield Survey

The Love Lakefield survey aims to help Lakefield Youth Unlimited better understand the needs in the Lakefield (and area) community.

It will help LYU plan for the new school year and serve children and youth in our community better!

Take the two-minute survey.

 

Upcoming Events

  • North Kawartha Food Bank Loonie Auction – October 14th
  • 10th Annual Beaver Club Gala – October 14th
  • Buckhorn Pumpkinfest – October 14th, 15th, 21st, 22nd, 28th & 29th

 

For more information about the businesses and events listed above, please visit the Kawartha Chamber of Commerce & Tourism website at kawarthachamber.ca.
All photos supplied by Kawartha Chamber of Commerce except where noted.

Viamede Resort in North Kawartha featured in the Rick Mercer Report

Rick Mercer was at Viamede Resort at Stoney Lake this past September for the Golden Rescue Picnic, which was featured in the October 10, 2017 episode of CBC Televisions Rick Mercer Report. (Photo: Rick Mercer Report / Facebook)

Viamede Resort in North Kawartha was featured on last night’s episode (October 10) of the Rick Mercer Report.

The comedian was at Viamede, located on Stoney Lake near Woodview, on Saturday, September 16th to attend the 27th Annual Golden Rescue Picnic held by The Canadian Golden Retriever Adoption Service Inc. (“Golden Rescue”).

Operating out of Barrie, the volunteer-operated not-for-profit charitable organization helps to rescue and re-home displaced Golden Retrievers and educates the public about general pet ownership.

While at the Golden Rescue Picnic, Rick Mercer chatted with owners of Goldens, including this one whose name is "Mercer".  (Photo: Rick Mercer Report / Facebook)
While at the Golden Rescue Picnic, Rick Mercer chatted with owners of Goldens, including this one whose name is “Mercer”. (Photo: Rick Mercer Report / Facebook)

The Golden Rescue Picnic is a celebration for Goldens and the volunteers at Golden Rescue as well as a fundraiser, and includes a range of activities, games, and contests.

Rick and his crew his crew sampled all the picnic highlights, learned about vendors’ goods and services, chatted with Golden owners, and interviewed Viive Tamme, Chair of the Golden Rescue Board of Directors.

He also participated in the popular “Luscious Peanut Butter Lick” event — which Golden Rescue renamed the “Rick Lick” for this year in his honour — in which Golden owners cover their faces, arms, and legs in peanut butter and then unleash their dogs upon them.

Rick Mercer participating in the annual picnic's popular "Luscious Peanut Butter Lick" event, in which Golden owners cover their faces, arms, and legs in peanut butter and then unleash their dogs upon them. The event was renamed the "Rick Lick" this year in his honour.  (Photo: Rick Mercer Report / Facebook)
Rick Mercer participating in the annual picnic’s popular “Luscious Peanut Butter Lick” event, in which Golden owners cover their faces, arms, and legs in peanut butter and then unleash their dogs upon them. The event was renamed the “Rick Lick” this year in his honour. (Photo: Rick Mercer Report / Facebook)

Golden Rescue is one of the largest single-breed rescue groups in Canada. Since its inception in 1990, the organization has found homes for over 2,100 abandoned, unwanted, or displaced Golden Retrievers.

For more information about the organization, visit www.goldenrescue.ca.

The Rick Mercer Report episode featuring Golden Rescue at Viamede will be repeated on CBC Television on Friday, October 13th at 7 p.m. and then will be available for online viewing at youtube.com/mercerreport.

You can also view the segment below.

VIDEO: Rick Mercer at the 27th Annual Golden Rescue Picnic at Viamede Resort

RBC invests $61,000 in Junior Achievement Peterborough, Lakeland, Muskoka

Scott Mancini of RBC presents a cheque for $61,000 to Paul Ayotte and John McNutt of Junior Achievement of Peterborough Lakeland Muskoka. (Photo: JA-PLM)

RBC has made a $61,000 investment in Junior Achievement of Peterborough Lakeland Muskoka (JA-PLM) to help the organization deliver its day programs, World of Choices, and Business Hall of Fame events.

Scott Mancini, regional vice-president of Kawartha-Lakeshore region for RBC, presented a cheque earlier today (October 10) to JA-PLM board chair Paul Ayotte and JA-PLM President and CEO John McNutt.

Junior Achievement’s in-class programs, delivered by volunteers, provide students with knowledge on personal and business skills, such as money management, the role of business in shaping our lives, building blocks for a successful career, the impact of technology and innovation, running a business, and more.

RBC will also be the title sponsor for the 2018 Business Hall of Fame in Peterborough, as well as the title sponsor for the annual World of Choices event in Peterborough and for five pilot World of Choices events to be held in Kingston, Sault Saint Marie, Thunder Bay, Sudbury, and Cornwall, where almost 900 youth from high schools in the those communities will learn from local career mentors in a career-oriented roundable format forum.

VIDEO: RBC investment in Junior Achievement Peterborough, Lakeland, Muskoka

RBC has been a regular supporter of JA-PLM for many years, and made a $28,000 investment in JA-PLM last November.

Annual Crayola Sale for United Way of City of Kawartha Lakes returns on October 14

The 29th annual Crayola Sale for the United Way for the City of Kawartha Lakes takes place from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturday, October 14 at the LEX Fairgrounds in Lindsay. (Photo: United Way for the City of Kawartha Lakes)

The 29th annual Crayola Sale for the United Way for the City of Kawartha Lakes (UWCKL) returns on Saturday, October 14th.

The popular cash-only sale offers Crayola products — including crayons, markers, paints and kits — at discounted prices. For past sales people have camped out in advance to get the best selection.

Crayola Canada has already donated just over $950,000 to UWCKL, primarily through the employees’ workplace campaign, and aims to reach the $1 million through the annual sale.

“We are very fortunate that the annual Crayola Sale can assist children, youth, and adults in the City of Kawartha Lakes,” says Mike Soehner, Human Resources Manager at Crayola Canada. “The sale started simply as a yard sale with a few Crayola products added in. It was the beginning of a long-term relationship and, thanks to the efforts of countless volunteers from Crayola, the UWCKL, and the community, it has grown to its current form.

“This year, we are very proud to say that we have an opportunity to attain the $1 million mark in total donations. Please come out and help us achieve that goal.”

The popular cash-only sale offers Crayola products at hugely discounted prices.
The popular cash-only sale offers Crayola products at hugely discounted prices.

Proceeds from Crayola Canada donation, including the sale, will help thousands of people in the City of Kawartha Lakes who use UWCKL services.

“Crayola Canada and its employees are amazing community champions,” says YWCKL Executive Director Penny Barton Dyke “In nearly three decades, this company and its dedicated employees have helped thousands of people from across the city. Their leadership is a true testament to working with others to build commitment and healthy supportive communities. We also need to recognize the Lindsay Ex for its outstanding support as it has contributed the venue both at its old site and its new site.”

The sale takes place at the LEX Fairgrounds (354 Angeline St. S., Lindsay) from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. More than 150 volunteers will be helping at sale (cash only).

Peterborough Police Chief Murray Rodd announces retirement

Peterborough Police Service Chief Murray Rodd speaks during a press conference in November 2015 following arson at Peterborough's only mosque. (Photo: CTV)

After 35 years with the Peterborough Police Service, including 10 years at Chief, Murray Rodd is retiring.

Chief Rodd started with the Peterborough Police Service on June 20, 1983 after graduating from the law and security program at Fleming College. He quickly climbed the ranks and, on August 15, 2008, was appointed as Chief of Police by the Peterborough Lakefield Police Services Board after a national search.

Rodd’s last day as Chief will be June 30, 2018.

“Being a Police Officer is the only job I’ve ever wanted to do,” Rodd writes in a statement. “Fifty years ago I was inspired by my Uncle, the Chief of Police of Oshawa at the time, to go into policing as a helping profession. His forage cap has been in my office for my entire term as Chief.

“It has been an honour to have worked with some of the best police officers, civilians and volunteers in law enforcement. I am extremely proud of their commitment to serving the communities of Peterborough, Lakefield and Cavan Monaghan.”

Over the past decade, Ross has been very active in the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police (OACP), chairing numerous committees and hosting the annual conference. He has also volunteered with a number of local agencies over the past 35 years, including the United Way (he served as Campaign Chair in 2010), and the Board of Governors at Fleming College, serving as Board Chair from 2007-2011. He also served in the Canadian Forces Reserve for 22 years achieving the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.

Throughout his career, he’s received numerous awards and accolades. In 2011, he was awarded the Member of the Order of Merit of the Police Forces (M.O.M.) from the Governor General of Canada and in 2015 was the recipient of the OACP’s highest honour; the President’s Award.

Justin’s Jukebox pays tribute to the busiest man in Peterborough musical theatre

Musician Justin Hiscox with Lucas DeLuca of Amber Coast Theatrical, which is presenting 'Justin's Jukebox' on October 14th at the Gordon Best Theatre. The tribute to and retrospective of Justin's 20-plus years in musical theatre will feature local musical theatre favourites performing highlights from many of the musicals that Justin has worked on over the years. (Photo: Sam Tweedle / kawarthaNOW.com)

This Saturday (October 14), some of the area’s most talented musical theatre performers are coming together to pay tribute to possibly the busiest man in Peterborough theatre: musician Justin Hiscox.

"Justin's Jukebox" will be performed at the Gordon Best Theatre (216 Hunter St. W., Peterborough) on Saturday October 14th at 8 p.m.  Tickets are $15 at the door.
“Justin’s Jukebox” will be performed at the Gordon Best Theatre (216 Hunter St. W., Peterborough) on Saturday October 14th at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15 at the door.

The latest event produced by Amber Coast Theatrical, Justin’s Jukebox is a musical revue looking back at the shows that Justin has worked on in his 20-plus years in theatre, and features many of the performers who appeared in those productions.

Produced by Amber Coast co-founder Lucas DeLuca, Justin’s Jukebox is a proper celebration of the hard work and dedication that Justin, along with his family, has given to the Peterborough theatre community.

“I was blown away when the Hiscox Family got on the Peterborough Walkway of Fame,” says Lucas, referring to the distinctive honour bestowed on Justin and his brother Mark in 2016. “I was so happy when I saw that, but I didn’t feel there was enough people there to celebrate it the way it should be.

“It didn’t feel like the arts community got to thank the Hiscox family the way that they should. So I thought ‘What if we did a show and got all the performers that have done shows with Justin?”

Justin and Mark Hiscox being inducted into Peterborough's Pathway of Fame at Showplace Performance Centre in September 2016.  (Photo: Pathway of Fame)
Justin and Mark Hiscox being inducted into Peterborough’s Pathway of Fame at Showplace Performance Centre in September 2016. (Photo: Pathway of Fame)

Over the summer, Lucas reached out to a number of people who have worked with Justin and has since collected a spectacular group of local favourites for the show including Mark Hiscox, Kate Suhr, Keely Wilson, Hannah Bailey, Lyndele Gauci, Brian MacDonald, Kate Brioux, Carl Johann, Erik Feldcamp, Sophie Robinson, Ryan Hancock, Kevin Lemieux, Haley Rosenthal, Geoff Bemrose, Eddie Sweeny, and Karsten Skaries — with more performers potentially being added on the final bill.

Throughout the evening these performers will be doing highlights from many of the musicals that Justin has worked on, including Les Misérables, Cats, Spring Awakening, Heathers, Ordinary Days, My Fair Lady, Lady in the Dark, Chicago, More Than a Memory, First Date: The Musical, The Little Mermaid, Sweeney Todd, Fiddler on the Roof, and more.

“We haven’t been lucky enough to get everyone Justin’s ever worked with, but we did the best we could,” says Lucas. “But it really comes down to thanking the Hiscox Family for twenty plus years of excellent and giving and caring and just love. They are amazing human beings. They give more than anybody else I know.”

Although I have been a huge admirer of Justin over the four years I’ve been covering the theatre scene for kawarthaNOW.com, sitting down with him to discuss Justin’s Jukebox is the first time the two of us have ever really had a chance to talk because, as the people who work with him know, Justin disappears fairly quickly after performances.

So it was a huge moment for me to actually be able to talk with Justin about his career in musical theatre, and to discover the warmth of this man for myself after hearing about it from others for so long.

“When I was growing up I learned by playing classical music and I found out that I could read music really well,” Justin says “But I realized I couldn’t play by ear, so I couldn’t do rock n’ roll or jazz. I had to be able to see my music. So I was wondering if there would ever be any cool music for me to play as someone who could read. Well, it turns out that Broadway orchestration is incredibly challenging and really rewarding for someone who has to read music.

“The first show I ever did was Babes in Arms when I was in high school. I was playing piano in the pit orchestra at Crestwood, way back. I guess it was 1992. That show has some of the best jazz standards that have ever been written. My Funny Valentine is in there, and The Lady is a Tramp. It had a whole pile of amazing songs. After that I started with St. James, the Theatre Guild, Anne Shirley Theatre Company, the St. James’ kids shows … and it’s just kept going.”

It’s hard to come up with a full list of local theatre companies Justin has worked with. Beyond those mentioned above, Justin has worked with 4th Line Theatre, Art for Awareness, Cordwainer Productions, the TASS Musical Theatre Productions, Lakefield College School, Amber Coast Theatrical, and more that have slipped from memory.

Justin Hiscox rehearsing with the cast of Amber Coast Theatrical's "Fugitive Songs", one of four upcoming shows Justin is currently working on. (Photo: Sam Tweedle / kawarthaNOW.com)
Justin Hiscox rehearsing with the cast of Amber Coast Theatrical’s “Fugitive Songs”, one of four upcoming shows Justin is currently working on. (Photo: Sam Tweedle / kawarthaNOW.com)

Currently Justin is working on four upcoming shows: as musical director for Amber Coast Theatrical’s Fugitive Songs, Lakefield College’s Damn Yankees, Anne Shirley Theatre Company’s The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, and as co-musical director for TASS’s upcoming production of Cinderella.

“I’ve been in Peterborough for going on six years, and Justin Hiscox has done the music for every show I’ve ever been in,” Lucas points out. “Musically, Justin has been the root of everything I’ve done in Peterborough and, at three or four shows a year, for the last six years, we’ve done thirteen shows in that time.”

I asked Justin what some of the standout moments in his career in theatre have been, and he gave some interesting answers.

“Directing Lady in the Dark was a big thrill,” Justin recalls. “Anytime I get to do a show that is a premiere, a show that has had its rights held back for a long time, like Les Misérables, is always a big thrill. Also, in Buddy Holly when we went on at the end and did that big concert. That was amazing. I love doing most of the newer shows because they are piano heavy. Shows like First Date and Ordinary Days are really fun and push me as a piano player.

“I really enjoyed the two-piano version of My Fair Lady my brother Mark directed. We just had the two pianos and no pit orchestra, which kind of shocked everyone. They said they liked it, but it felt like they were at a rehearsal. We had this great arrangement and it was a huge show, and we were doing it without a conductor. So that was a big thrill.”

“Justin has fundamentally changed the way you get musicians for shows in this town,” Lucas adds. “You hire Justin as a music director and he has a mental rolodex that he goes through to find additional musicians. He says ‘You need a violin player? I have five violin players. You need a guitarist? I have five guitarists.’

“It’s a gift to see that Justin has networked with every single person and treats everyone so fairly, so respectfully, and so lovingly that they’ll beg to come back and work with him. Nobody ever says no to him.”

As the current musical director of 4th Line Theatre, Justin has been responsible for many of the original songs featured in the shows over the past few years, and Justin and Mark will be performing a medley of those songs at Justin’s Jukebox. But for one of his favourite projects, Justin referred back to one of 4th Line’s most experimental shows to date: The Shadow Walk of Millbrook, which thrilled audiences last Halloween.

“The Shadow Walk of Millbrook was one of my favourite things I’d ever done,” he notes. “I wrote everything in D Major. I learned that I could remember songs that way. I had to walk around with an accordion and it was a lot of fun.”

As an accomplished pianist and sight reader, Justin Hiscox finds musical theatre orchestration both incredibly challenging and rewarding. (Photo: Sam Tweedle / kawarthaNOW.com)
As an accomplished pianist and sight reader, Justin Hiscox finds musical theatre orchestration both incredibly challenging and rewarding. (Photo: Sam Tweedle / kawarthaNOW.com)

As recognizable in the theatre community as the actors on the stage, one of Justin’s trademarks is the exuberant sound of shouting he makes at the performers during the performances when they are really on fire. It’s an unusual thing for a musical director to do, but one that has become endearing to his performers.

“As an actor you can tell how well you are singing on stage by how loud Justin yells ‘YEAH’ at you,” Lucas says.

“Good music is very exciting,” Justin adds, explaining the vocalization.

Justin’s Jukebox is going to be an incredible night of Peterborough performers paying tribute to an incredible man who has touched the entire theatre community with his talent, his music, and his kindness. This is the perfect way to celebrate everything that Justin Hiscox and his family mean to our community. It’s the show to be at this coming weekend, and is a must for anybody in our community who loves musical theatre.

“What I hope for more than anything else is to give a proper thank you to Justin for an amazing twenty years of music,” Lucas explains. “I hope some of the performers will give tributes to Justin and his family when they get up to perform. And, more than anything else, that we present an anthology of the ‘best of’ Justin.”

Justin’s Jukebox will be performed at the Gordon Best Theatre (216 Hunter St. W., Peterborough) on Saturday October 14th at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15 at the door.

Five organizations in the Kawarthas competing in 2017 Aviva Community Fund

The Mount Community Centre in Peterborough is one of five organizations in the Kawarthas competing for funding this year from the Aviva Community Fund. The Mount is seeking up to $100,000 to make the heritage wooden verandahs accessible, particularly for five men with special needs who are living there. (Photo: The Mount Community Centre)

The Aviva Community Fund is back for another year and five organizations in the Kawarthas region are vying for some of the $1 million in funding: YWCA Peterborough Haliburton, The Mount Community Centre in Peterborough, Community Care City of Kawartha Lakes, The CAST Projects in Warkworth, and the Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society in Brighton.

Created by insurance group Aviva Canada, the Aviva Community Fund has awarded $7.5 million to over 250 charities and community groups across Canada since its inception in 2009.

More than 500 projects across Canada are competing for three levels of funding: small ideas of $50,000 and under, large ideas between $50,000 and $100,000, and — new this year — a single Community Legacy fund worth $150,000. There are four project categories: community development, community health, community resilience, and community legacy.

Voting is now open for the projects in the competition and continues until Thursday, October 19th. Each person who registers for the Aviva Community Fund receives 18 votes they can use at any time to vote for their favourite ideas; you can spread them around or use them all to support a single project.

The 15 ideas that receive the most votes in each of the two funding levels in the community development, community health, and community resilience categories will become finalists (as well as the five ideas that receive the most votes in the community legacy category and the idea with the highest Aviva broker partner votes). Aviva’s independent panel of judges will then evaluate the finalists to choose the grand prize winners.

Here are the five projects in the Kawarthas entered in the Aviva Community Fund competition, with descriptions of the projects as provided by their respective organizations at the Aviva Community Fund website, as well as direct voting links:


Helping Rural Women in Haliburton Flee Violence – YWCA Peterborough Haliburton (Haliburton County)

Community Development category; Funding level: Up to $50,000

Helping Rural Women in Haliburton Flee Violence - YWCA Peterborough Haliburton (Haliburton County

The Canadian statistics around domestic violence are shocking:

  • Every night 3300 women and their 3000 children sleep in shelters to escape domestic violence.
  • 360,000 children are exposed to domestic violence annually.
  • On average, 2 women are murdered by a current or former partner each week.

YWCA Peterborough Haliburton provides the only Violence Against Women services in Haliburton County. Without these services, hundreds of women would have no means to get the tools and assistance they need to help themselves and their children and escape violence.

Last year in Haliburton County, we answered 2325 calls and texts on our support line and helped 403 women and children get the shelter, safety and support they needed to escape violence. We support women and children in Peterborough and Haliburton County, yet rural areas are where we see more families in poverty. Isolation and a lack of public transportation make it very hard for women and children to get to us. In fact, just two years ago a woman walked over 10km, without shoes, to our facility in Minden to seek help. In addition to there being no homeless shelter, there are a significant number of ‘invisible homeless’ here — women who stay with abusers in exchange for shelter and food.

The shelter — or safe space as we call it — is designed to be used on an as-needed basis to help women and children flee violence without leaving their community. It’s much easier to build a new life if you don’t need to take the kids out of their school, move to a new community, find a new job and leave your support system behind. Our innovative shelter operates as-needed, offering space for up to two families at a time.

This, combined with the fact that “rural women are more likely to be assaulted by domestic partners, and when they face assaults and other forms of abuse, the realities of rural isolation make it more difficult to get help” (Stats can 2016) creates a perfect storm for women and children fleeing violence.

The year before last we were forced to close our safe space for 5 months due to a lack of funds and exhaustion of our fundraising dollars and reserves. That was the first time we had to do that, and something we hope we never have to do again. During that time, our crisis line remained open and we provided ongoing support for over 100 women. When women needed shelter, however, our only option was to refer them to another shelter.

We are currently engaged in a sustainability review for our Haliburton County services to determine how to ensure these vital services — that are seeing increasing demand over the years — can be sustained in Haliburton County.

One of the preliminary suggestions from our study is implement a technological solution to both improve our service and reduce our expenses; an approach that is rapidly being adopted by service providers to connect with their clients remotely.

Our technology solution will enhance our crisis and support line by supporting texting (an affordable option for women) as a way of reaching out to us for help. This will be implemented along with a confidential and secure system that will let us maintain our service level and protect women and children. When combined with a teleconference and video conference solution, these technological investments will help us decrease our annual operating expenses and will go a long way in helping to make our services in Haliburton sustainable.

Importantly, these technological investments will also help us improve our services by allowing us to develop a more personal connection with the women we serve by augmenting our in-person meetings. These forms of working with clients, we believe, will help to allow our team to be more readily accessible without requiring driving for hours on end all over the County of Haliburton.

Vote for this project at www.avivacommunityfund.org/voting/project/view/17-145.

 

Leveling up access to The Mount – The Mount Community Centre (Peterborough)

Community Development category; Funding level: $50,000 to $100,000

Leveling up access to The Mount - The Mount Community Centre (Peterborough)

Making it perfectly easy to get into The Mount Community Centre

In 2013, a group of anti-poverty advocates took a leap of faith and bought a 10-acre oasis in the middle of Peterborough. For years, they had been trying to truly change the lives of people living in poverty without waiting for long-promised government funding.

The Mount Community Centre found our own way to change lives and address community needs.

Over the past four years, we have raised enough money to purchase the former Mount St. Joseph convent and to convert a portion of the building into 43 apartments for people with low incomes. Today, we offer apartment units at both affordable and market rate rents, office space for not-for-profit organizations and local businesses, as well as space for performing arts and other community gatherings.

Each day, the once-empty building is alive with room rentals for music rehearsals, community meetings, cooking classes, weddings and so much more. The rebirth of the building has inspired new visitors and a flood of community support.

With all that has been done, there is a big challenge right at the front of our building.

One of the heritage features of The Mount Community Centre is a set of wooden verandahs at the main traffic circle. It is the signature part of the original building and the first thing people see when they arrive. Years of neglect before we bought the building has worn away the wood and its supports. The rot is clear by just looking up.

We have taken initial steps by enclosing the larger verandah and recently tearing the smaller one down. As we look to rebuild, we chose to have the new structures reflect the true values of The Mount – welcoming everyone in the community through our doors.

The original verandahs had stairs, which made it challenging for anyone in a wheelchair or with other mobility issues to enter building. Instead, they would have to enter through the back, muddle through a series of corridors, and take an elevator to get to our main hall.

The new design takes away that stress.

The steps have been replaced by a gentle grade from the traffic circle right up to the front door. While this is key for visitors to The Mount Community Centre, it is absolutely crucial for five men in particular.

We are proudly working with Shared Dreams for Independent Living, a group of families who are collaborating with us to develop an “intentional community” housing hub within The Mount Community Centre for their sons who have varying disabilities. Their shared home will be among other residents, with the support of around-the-clock workers to ensure their well-being and to provide them the opportunity to live self-directed lives.

This type of inclusive community is exactly what was envisioned when we purchased this incredible property. Affordable housing is needed by so many people, including those with disabilities. Rather than relegating these men to social housing ghettoes, we are offering our present and future tenants stable homes in a gorgeous greenspace with a built-in community. A secure home pays off in many ways, namely with better sleep, self-esteem and nutrition. We are offering people an address they can share with dignity.

Our new verandahs will make the building more accessible while restoring the key heritage features for which the building is known.

Rather than sit back and wait for action, we have stepped forward and taken a leap of faith for the good of the community. Please help us allow even more people to experience The Mount Community Centre and all that we offer.

Vote for this project at www.avivacommunityfund.org/voting/project/view/17-340.

 

#GrieveNotAlone – Community Care City of Kawartha Lakes (Kawartha Lakes)

Community Health category; Funding level: $50,000 to $100,000

#GrieveNotAlone - Community Care City of Kawartha Lakes (Kawartha Lakes)

We all experience the death of a loved one at some point in life. Grief is a natural journey of experiences and feelings in response to loss. The road through grief is filled with many twists and turns that are different for everyone. For most, it is a journey best not taken alone. Often, those who are grieving are at risk of feeling isolated and alone. The path through grief can be exceedingly painful and difficult to navigate. But, there is a way through grief. A way to work through the pain, end the isolation and find one’s footing again.

As the only provider of Grief Support Programs in our community, we help people find their way through grief, while helping them live with renewed hope and happiness. Annually we support over 600 families through palliative care and bereavement, roughly 1 in 30 families living in the City of Kawartha Lakes. It costs $580 to support 1 person through their grief journey.

Our highly trained Grief Guides understand grief and can help transform hurt into hope. Delivered through supportive groups, made up of people going through similar losses, we offer programs tailored to support people and their circumstances. We connect with people touched by grief in their homes, workplaces and schools, reaching caregivers, children, friends and families, colleagues and classmates. Our programs offer emotional support in a safe, non judgmental environment where people can embrace their feelings of profound loss.

The Current Need for Grief Support

  • Seniors represent 23% of our total population (16,790), 50% higher than Ontario. People aged 65+ is projected to increase by 132% in the next 20 years. The population moving towards end-of-life will increase the number of deaths, widowed persons and bereaved family members in need of grief support.
  • 1 in 20 children aged 15 and younger (approx. 600 children in our communities) will experience the death of a parent. One of the most devastating life experiences for children, it disrupts a developmental path and can have long-term negative psychological consequences. Literature notes, however, that grief support can build self efficacy and help children emerge from loss as resilient individuals.
  • Losing a spouse is ranked #1 on the stress index scale. Coping with the loss of a spouse is difficult at any age, but for seniors who have spent a lifetime together it is often devastating. Grief can be difficult for seniors whose support circles are shrinking. There are 4,740 widowed people living in the City of Kawartha Lakes.

How We Change Lives

When grief is avoided, bottled up or allowed to eclipse everything else, it can impact suffering, relationships, work and health. Grief Support promotes wellness and may reduce the need for other health services (ie., mental health or physical interventions). Getting grief support can help clients with:

  • Behavioral & emotional conduct
  • Grief & trauma-related suffering
  • Health & sleep issues
  • Performance at school, work or social situations
  • Family functioning & communication
  • Feelings of Depression

Our clients report that one of the best things about our grief support is the knowledge that they are not alone. By participating in a grief support, clients may find that other people have experiences, feelings and struggles that are similar to their own who share great insight, helpful advice and understanding. Clients feel accepted, validated and understand that grieving is a normal part of life. Group members who are doing well provide hope to those who are new to grief as well as reassurance that the program itself is a positive and helpful tool.

Your Vote Can…

  • Train new Grief Guides
  • Teach coping skills to children
  • Offer companionship to someone who has lost their partner
  • Build support systems for grieving teens
  • Provide grief education in places where grief is part of the job
  • Reach into the community to build awareness

Vote for this project at www.avivacommunityfund.org/voting/project/view/17-28.

 

CHOP TALK – The CAST Projects (Warkworth)

Community Health category; Funding level: Up to $50,000

CHOP TALK - The CAST Projects (Warkworth)

We aim to take our newly piloted after school program, CHOP TALK, which combined healthy cooking, nutrition and the family dinner model, as well as educationally based and activity driven emotional skill development for grades 7 and 8 students in the Warkworth community, and expand it to an 8 week program based on the evaluations from our pilot session as well as create a template for training and expansion so other communities can benefit directly from this program.

Youth will walk over to the community space once a week directly after school until 6:30 where they have a healthy snack and debrief their day, prepare a healthy three course meal, eat together as a ‘family’, learn about the educational theme for the session, have an enriching conversation and conduct a fun and directly related activity.

This program directly impacted the eight youth in our pilot program by improving their cooking skills and basic food and nutrition knowledge including processed foods and sugars — and then positively affected their mental health with new skills to identify, manage and cope with their emotions. This expansion will offer a new cohort of community youth the same knowledge and will allow the students a similar framework of language when talking about stress, the neurological and physiological impacts of stress.

Children in public schools are currently starting to identify and have concerns about anxiety as early as grade 4. We also know that eating together as a family improves communication, grades and connection, while emotional awareness and adeptness reduces risk of criminal activity and substance use/addiction in teens. By modelling the family dinner and engaging in challenging and crucial conversations our goal is to create a new generation of emotionally adept and compassionate youth.

By learning positive kitchen skills and nutrition we aim to combat some of today’s health epidemic of youth obesity and early diagnosis of type 2 diabetes by offering and role modelling healthy choices. To be able to run this program with new students at the 8 week target, as well as build a model of care for duplication and training for other communities to utilize the success and value of CHOP TALK, we anticipate value for every community across Canada and a future of emotionally resilient, adaptable and healthy youth! This program was designed and supported collaboratively between The CAST Projects and The Abundance Project.

Vote for this project at www.avivacommunityfund.org/voting/project/view/17-126.

 

Keep Our Light Shining – Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society (Brighton)

Community Development category; Funding level: $50,000 to $100,000

Keep Our Light Shining - Presqu'ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society (Brighton)

Our Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse is Ontaro’s 2nd old operating lighthouse … only 5 remaining on Lake Ontario. We are undertaking a $220k Pilot Project this fall, 2017 to assist in the finalizing of the full restoration and thus, preservation of this iconic lighthouse.

The Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse was built in 1840. Within a few decades, it became evident that the original grouting was dissolving having a negative impact on the limestone structure so the entire lighthouse was covered with wood cladding and added whitewashed shingles to provide some stability. Over the years, the grouting has continued to erode and it is very evident now that repairs have to be made. We also want to replace the latern house (cupola) which was removed in 1965 because of structural concerns

Mission Statement of PPLPS:

The Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society is a non-profit organization created in 2012 to repair and refurbish the Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse and to promote our Lighthouse as a historical and architectural icon for our community of Brighton and for the many thousands that visit this wonderful destination.

The objective of our society is to evaluate the condition of the lighthouse, determine the steps that are required to arrest the deterioration of the building, both internally and externally, and bring it back to the beautiful and commanding presence it once enjoyed.

Vote for this project at www.avivacommunityfund.org/voting/project/view/17-162.

The Business Beat for October 10, 2017

Three clients of Elite Paws Grooming, a full-service professional pet grooming salon specializing in dogs requiring special attention that recently opened at 382 McDonnel St in Peterborough. (Photo: Elite Paws Grooming / Facebook)

Elite Paws Grooming

Elite Paws Grooming recently opened at 382 McDonnel St. in Peterborough in the Aviemore Plaza.

Owner Kristina Furnandiz offers a full-service professional pet grooming salon that specializes in dogs requiring special attention. With over 10 years of experience with both cats and dogs of all breeds, Kristina can handle anything and everything.

Elite Paws Grooming is open Tuesday through Saturday by appointment. Call 705-875-0585 or visit them on Facebook.


Melda Roache Clark

Inspirational speaker Melda Roache Clark. (Photo: Cheryl Graul)
Inspirational speaker Melda Roache Clark. (Photo: Cheryl Graul)

Former teacher and Trent Lakes’ resident Melda Roache Clark has launched a speaking business, talking to groups about mental health, depression, child sexual abuse, and body image.

Sharing her personal journey with the audience, Melda relates how these issues have affected her life and how she has managed to carve out a new path with support from family, friends, colleagues, and health professionals.

For more information, visit www.meldaroacheclark.com or call 705-928-2992.


Michele Romanow

With the support of the Government of Ontario, "E-Connect with Michele Romanow" will be in celebration of Ontario 150 and will be a free forum open to the public to register. (Graphic: Innovation Cluster Peterborough and the Kawarthas)
With the support of the Government of Ontario, “E-Connect with Michele Romanow” will be in celebration of Ontario 150 and will be a free forum open to the public to register. (Graphic: Innovation Cluster Peterborough and the Kawarthas)

The Innovation Cluster’s upcoming e-Connect event will feature Michele Romanow, Canadian tech entrepreneur, investor. and recent dragon on the Dragons’ Den.

E-Connect is a monthly forum that connects Peterborough’s entrepreneurs and start-ups with mentors, investors, and advisors. The event runs Monday, October 30th from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at Market Hall and there is no charge.

For details, visit innovationcluster.ca.

[Editor’s note: This event is now sold out, but a waitlist is available.]


PVN Self-Compassion Coaching

Pamela Van Nest of PVN Self-Compassion Coaching.
Pamela Van Nest of PVN Self-Compassion Coaching.

Pamela Van Nest is a certified professional coach specializing in self compassion for women.

She started PVN Self-Compassion Coaching four years ago and serves women in business through retreats, workshops, and individual coaching sessions. Pamela is leading a one-day retreat on Sunday, October 29th at Golden Pathways, just south of Peterborough.

To register, call 705-917-0461 or visit pvncoaching.com.


Global Angel Charitable Organization

And congratulations to Global Angel Charitable Organization on being chosen as one of the official charities able to participate in the Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon on October 22.

For details, visit globalangelcharity.com

All photos supplied except where noted.

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