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Cobourg's outdoor skating rink is open

By Cecilia Nasmith


The Town of Cobourg is pleased to announce another season at its outdoor skating rink at Rotary Harbourfront.

Located at 35 Albert St., the rink became operational Dec. 15. Weather permitting it will be open daily from 8 a.m. to 10 p,m. The transit shelter adjacent to the rink – and handy as a place to lace up skates and use the washroom facilities, is also open daily from 6 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.

The town's announcement included rink rules for users:

  • Be considerate of other skaters, and put safety first.

  • Parents and guardians are responsible for the adequate care, protection and supervision of their children.

  • Keep pets off the ice,

  • The use of helmets is recommended.

  • Hockey games are prohibited.

  • Please vacate the rink during ice-maintenance operations,

The rink is always subject to weather conditions, and temporary closures may sometimes be necessary. These will be posted on the town's website (www.cobourg.ca) and the town's Facebook and Twitter social-media accounts.

Cobourg organizes post-Christmas fun

By Cecilia Nasmith


The Town of Cobourg will be hosting three days of free post-Christmas events for all ages that every citizen is invited to attend.

The Dec. 30 Mayor's Skating Party is a first for new mayor John Henderson to host. Join him at the Cobourg Community Centre (750 D'Arcy St.) for some free skating in the Bowl Arena from 1 to 2 p.m. Members of the Cobourg Cougars hockey team will be handing out hot chocolate to keep you warm. Admission is a donation of non-perishable items to the Fare Share Food Bank.

The following night, ring in the new year at First Night celebrations. This free non-alcoholic event is a family-friendly series of activities, centred around the Rotary Harbourfront Park and open to all. The location is part of the beautiful Christmas Magic set-up with more than 180,000 lights in, on and around the decorated trees and festive displays.

The rink will be open from 6 to 9 p.m., weather permitting, with a DJ providing music for the occasion. Otherwise, the space will be turned into a dancing area.

Also from 6 to 9 p.m., horse-drawn wagon rides will leave the area loaded with passengers who will be enjoying a free ride through the downtown.

Located adjacent to the rink, Millstone Bread will be onsite selling hot chocolate and treats. The evening concludes with a 9 p.m. fireworks display over the harbour.

The next day, Mayor Henderson plays host again at the Mayor's New Year's Levee. Members of council will also be present, as well Town Crier Mandy Robinson, Poet Laureate Ted Amsden and Victoria Hall Volunteers members who will serve Christmas cake donated by Weston Bakery. The Dutch Oven is providing refreshments, and the Concert Band of Cobourg will be playing festive music.

Join them from 2 to 3:30 p.m. in the Concert Hall at Victoria Hall (55 King St. W.).

NHH gets four extra beds for flu season

By Cecilia Nasmith

Because one patient left in the hallway is too many, Northumberland-Peterborough South MPP David Piccini said Monday, the provincial government has announced a quarter-million dollars in funding to add four beds to Northumberland Hills Hospital for flu season.

Hospital president and chief executive officer Linda Davis said this meant extra capacity for this seasonal surge through the end of March.

Piccini said a similar announcement is planned for Campbellford Memorial Hospital, and this initiative is part of $90-million in new funding the government has allocated to allow 1,100 additional beds throughout Ontario, Looking ahead, he added, there is also the recently announced commitment to 6,000 new long-term-care beds throughout the province, growing to 15,000 within five years.

“This will provide a very welcome support to NHH, to patients we are currently serving,” Davis responded.

“We are seeing more patients coming into our system as the flu season advances, and this will help us cover the cost of the beds we have already opened to meet this patient need.”

Davis added, however, that patient surge is not a flu-season phenomenon but a year-round reality in a community where one in five members of the catchment population is over the age of 65. And this demographic adds to the ALC phenomenon – the Alternative Level of Care patient who no longer requires acute-level care but cannot be discharged unless and until appropriate supports are in place and, in the meantime, who continues to occupy a bed and require the resources and services that might otherwise be more readily available for new acute-care patients.

“Right now, 30% of the available beds in our hospital are being used by patients who no longer require acute care – 20% are waiting for long-term care,” Davis said.

“This morning, 11 patients were sitting in our emergency department – in the hallway, unfortunately – waiting to be admitted to an inpatient bed. We do need to be able to increase the opportunity for these patients to move through our system much faster.

“This announcement is very welcome in the short term, but system-wide solutions are required to fix our system in the long term.”

“We know this is a multi-faceted problem and will require on-going communications and real innovative solutions, working with the hospital administration and staff and health-care providers – I want to stress, working with health-care providers – to ensure we are supporting them in providing for patient care,” Piccini pledged.

Cobourg calls for Civic Awards nominations

By Cecilia Nasmith

Organizers of the Town of Cobourg’s 18th annual Civic Awards ceremony have issued a call for nominations to recognize local residents who have helped to benefit the community through outstanding volunteerism and community involvement.

The deadline for nomination submissions is Feb. 15, and brochures containing criteria and a nomination form can no be found at the municipal office (Victoria Hall, 55 King St. W.), the Cobourg Community Centre (750 D'Arcy St.) and the Cobourg Public Library (200 Ontario St.). Forms can also be downloaded from the www.cobourg.ca site.

The awards ceremony – this year on April 10 at 7 p.m. – is always a big occasion in the Victoria Hall Concert Hall. Former Deputy Mayor John Henderson stated in the town's press release how much he is looking forward to attending his first such ceremony as mayor.

“Coming together to honour and validate the many volunteers within our town has always been a highlight of the year within the community,” Henderson stated.

“I encourage you to nominate a deserving volunteer today.”

The master of ceremonies at the April 10 event will be Art Gallery of Northumberland executive director Olinda Casimiro.

“I am thrilled to represent the AGN and act as MC for the annual Civic Awards,” Casimiro said.

“They are well attended by the community, and speak volumes of the civic pride that exists in Cobourg.”

There are many opportunities to nominate a deserving volunteer for a variety of different awards.

The Angus and Bernice Read Volunteer Award (named in honour of a former Cobourg mayor) is presented to an individual whose volunteerism, leadership, commitment and actions have improved the quality of life for a large spectrum of the Cobourg population (for an individual with a minimum of five years volunteer service).

A youth volunteer is recognized with the Outstanding Youth award, presented to an individual who has made an outstanding volunteer contribution to the community and their school - and who is 19 years of age or younger as of December 31 of the year of nomination.

The Outstanding Senior award is for an individual aged 65 years or older as of Dec. 31 of the year of nomination and who has made an outstanding volunteer contribution to the community.

The Bravery Award goes to an individual who has displayed courage and heroism beyond the call of duty in the face of danger in order to save others from harm.

The Arts and Culture Award is presented to an individual or group who has accomplished an outstanding achievement or achievements in the community within the arts.

The Sportsmanship Award recognizes a coach, official or sports organizer who has shown outstanding leadership in contribution to Cobourg's sports and recreational community.

The Layton Dodge Athletic Award is presented to an athlete who has contributed to Cobourg's athletic community in terms of ability, sportsmanship, participation and leadership.

The Environmental Award honours an individual or group that has made a significant contribution to conserve, protect, restore, maintain, improve, enhance or promote a healthy environment.

The Heritage Award is for an individual or group that has demonstrated an outstanding contribution to the conservation and/or promotion of the town's cultural-heritage resources.

The Lloyd C. Stinson Memorial Award for Community Service is presented to a Cobourg resident who has performed outstanding charitable works for those in need, the aged, youth or those living with disabilities.

Distinguished Civic Awards are also offered, distinct from the other awards in that they recognize specific contributions made during the past year (and may be awarded to groups as well as individuals). Nomination for this award does not exclude the recipient from being eligible for one of the other individual awards.

Longtime committee chair Karen Chalovich has announced that the theme for the 18th annual Cobourg Civic Awards is Arts & Culture.

“We would like to encourage Cobourg’s many cultural organizations to nominate dedicated individuals who selflessly volunteer their time to make our community rich and vibrant,” Chalovich said.

The Civic Awards Committee thanks the generous Gold sponsors of this event - BMO Nesbitt Burns (Karen Chalovich), RBC Wealth Management (Lynn Hardy), Rotary Club of Cobourg and the Town of Cobourg - for their continued support of this event.

For more information on the awards and categories for nomination please visit www.cobourg.ca. The committee invites citizens to help spread the word and nominate someone who is deserving of one of these great awards.

Ferguson family says don't be alone for Christmas dinner

By Cecilia Nasmith


For so many years, the Ferguson family has appreciated how the Colborne community has been there for them in good times and bad.

Starting in 2015, they resolved to show their appreciation by making sure nobody has to be alone for Christmas dinner.

Matriarch Gail Ferguson has often described how the family pitches in year-round, saving their pennies and coming up with innovative ideas to basically put on a feast for anyone who wants to enjoy it. And while people are welcome to come just to share in the festive fellowship, their deepest hope is that nobody will be alone for Christmas dinner.

Fergusons of all ages gather each Christmas in the kitchen at the Colborne Legion to handle all the tasks, from peeling the vegetables to perfecting the savoury gravy, while guests mingle in the beautifully decorated dining room at tables set up with lovely linens and attractive centrepieces. By the time they trot out the steaming bins to set up the buffet they will be dishing out, spirits are soaring.

Darryl Ferguson is the family member who deserves the credit for coming up with the idea in 2015.

“We had 28 members of the community come out and enjoy a great meal and fellowship with others,” he said.

“That number has been growing to over 50, and last year we almost had to set up more tables and chairs to accommodate the turnout.

“No one should have to eat alone on Christmas Day. And together, members of my family look forward to creating an inviting atmosphere for everyone to be together and enjoy a meal.”

Once again, the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 187 has donated the use of their hall at 92 King St. E., Colborne, for the occasion, so anyone who wants to enjoy a traditional Christmas dinner will be welcomed there at 4 p.m.

Again, there is no charge for the food – any donations received will be directed back to the Legion to further the good work they do in the community, but no donation is necessary.

All your hosts request is an RSVP to help them plan ahead. You can do this by giving Gail Ferguson a call at 905-375-7430.

Issue papers educate new council

By Cecilia Nasmith


Each year, Northumberland County councillors are presented with issue papers at budget time to spotlight concerns that will have an impact.

For the 2019 budget, the issue papers were also an educational opportunity for new councillors as they prepare to debate and vote early in the new year.

Each category was introduced with a Fast Facts page that describes the work of that department and some relevant numbers. For transportation, for example, the budget provides for road and bridge rehabilitation, winter control, road maintenance, tree and brush removal, fleet management, roadside safety and storm-water management.

The department has 70 vehicles and 45 pieces of large equipment (such as graders and loaders). On county roads, there are 5,000 traffic signs, 36 traffic signals and 63 street signs. There are 503 km. of county roads, with 12 to 15 km. paved each year. There are 175 km. of bike lanes (or at least paved shoulders), 45 bridges, 68 culverts in excess of three metres and four roads depots.

The two 2019 issues in this department are equipment replacements and a transportation funding strategy.

Four pieces of equipment should be replaced, treasurer Glenn Dees said – a tandem combination snow plow, a three-quarter-ton crew cab, a loader and a 10-ton trailer. The financial impact is estimated at $575,000.

The transportation funding strategy takes into account such plans as increasing the annual paving length to 20 km. and work on the Trent River bridge in Campbellford. Dees estimated the financial impact of these plans at $300,000.

The recycling-and-waste department provides for landfill and waste-transfer station operation, curbside collection of garbage, recycling and yard waste, recycling processing and disposal of e-waste and hazardous household waste.

It has one operational landfill site, six closed landfill sites that require perpetual care and environmental oversight, two waste-transfer stations, one material-recycling plant and 30 pieces of mobile equipment. It provides more than 39,000 curbside waste-collection stops each week. Of the waste collected in a year, 46,286 tonnes are managed, 27,383 tonnes are landfilled, 15,955 tonnes are processed at the Material Recovery Facility in Grafton, and 18,903 tonnes are diverted.

The two 2019 issues in this department are equipment replacements and changes to organizational structure.

Replacements or repair are contemplated for a skidsteer, a loader and the roof of the MRF. The estimated budget impact is $385,000.

The September shift to a two-stream recycling program plus green-bin collection of organic materials largely accounts for the second issue. Summer students will educate the public and distribute the green, gray and blue collection bins, while a three-month position for an administrative assistant will allow someone to manage the increased call-and-enquiry volumes the change will occasion. The budget impact is estimated at $55,000.

Port Hope Councillor Bob Sanderson pointed out that the budget impact of equipment replacements might well be offset – favourably – by trade-in allowances on equipment being replaced.

The facilities department provides for repairs and maintenance of county buildings, infrastructure and grounds maintenance, construction-project management and development of long-term capital plans.

It includes six paramedic bases, three replacement emergency bases to be constructed, one long-term-care facility redevelopment project, three corporate buildings, one material-recycling facility, four roads depots, one agrifood plant, 14 social-housing buildings and 344 housing units (300 apartments and 44 townhouse units). The department processes about 2,800 maintenance work orders each year.

The two 2019 issues in this department are equipment replacements and corporate-building work.

The equipment replacement is a half-ton pick-up truck, and the financial impact is estimated at $45,000.

The work needed is to the courthouse building at 860 William St., Cobourg. The financial impact of the accessibility and safety renovations is an estimated $46,000.

The community and social-services department provides for mandatory program delivery in employment, financial and homelessness supports, services for children, youth and seniors, social and affordable housing and food security,

The Golden Plough Lodge provides for resident care in accommodation, hospitality and health services in operating the municipal long-term-care facility. With 151 residents, more than 200 full- and part-time staffers in a typical year provide more than 165,000 dietary services, process 4,000 maintenance requests and do 70,000 lb. of laundry.

A major redevelopment of this facility is in the works, but this year's three challenges are all personnel-related – and all partially funded to lessen the budget impact (primarily by the Central East Local Health Integration Network).

Hours for an evening ward clerk are to be increased, providing enhanced evening reception to residents and families, with a $3,200 impact this year,

An additional full-time evening RN position is being created in recognition of existing resident-care needs, with a $14,000 impact this year. For the same reason, an additional part-time evening RN position is being created, with a $33,750 impact this year.

Northumberland Paramedics provide for land-ambulance deployment, emergency medical care, patient transportation, ambulance and equipment maintenance, medical supplies and inventory management, and patient documentation.

The 104 full- and part-time personnel in this department respond to about 12,200 annual emergency calls with patient transport, about 80% of which involve people aged 60 and older, with a fleet of 13 ambulances and four emergency-response vehicles at six bases. Their territory covers 2,000 sq. km. Of land mass and includes a significant stretch of Highway 401.

Five issues were identified in this department, starting with the lack of a generator at the Port Hope base – a $25,000 impact. As well, for the Cobourg base, a scissor lift is needed because it has an upper floor that is used for storage – a $28,815 impact, given provincial funding available.

Two personnel issue were identified, including changing from a 52-52 full-time-part-time split to 56 full-time and 48 part-time position. Initially, the budget impact is $3,400. As well, one full-time superintendent float position will be established, with an initial budget impact of $9,600.

An emergency-response vehicle trial is taking place to improve response times in the face of increasing rural-response requirements. The pilot project, running from May to October, creates a $47,220 (given government funding available).

Finance-and-procurement provides for finance, procurement, risk-management and court services, including financial reporting, budgeting asset management, investments, contract and legal-claims management, internal controls and reporting to the province.

Some $58-million in financial assets are managed, as well as more than 1,800 capital assets. The department processes more than 26,000 invoices for payment each year and issues about 50 tenders and requests-for-proposal. The department includes the provincial-offences court to handle matters not falling under the Criminal Code (like traffic tickets). About 12,000 such charges are administered each year, with 2,400 going to trial and 2,500 resolved in meetings with the county prosecutor.

Further provincial downloads to the provincial-offences system provide the department's one issue – the need for a paralegal to be hired as municipal prosecutor in addition to the one now on staff. This brings a $62,804 impact.

Economic development-planning-tourism provides for economic development, tourism, land-use planning and inspection services (including county Official Plan and plumbing and septic inspections), as well as business investment, attraction and retention through such programs as the Business and Entrepreneurship Centre and the Ontario Agri-Food Venture Centre.

The BECN alone helps more than 8,400 clients each year, provides more than 240 consultations, assists 80 business start-ups and 20 business expansions and creates 100 jobs. Its first entrepreneurship conference this year was attended by 116.

More than 2,500 on-site plumbing and septic inspections take place during a year, with permits accounting for more than $400,000 in revenue.

Their one issue this year is an employment-lands study that should take three years and, in 2019 alone, should have a $31,250 budget impact.

Corporate services provides for human-resources, emergency-planning, health-and-safety, accessibility, archives-and-records and forest-management services, including staff recruitment, payroll and benefits administration, training and development, contract negotiation, public meetings (along with minutes and records retention) and forest-and-trail management.

The forest responsibility covers 5,424 acres of multi-use forest with 113 km. of seasonal trails. As for personnel, they receive 1,500 resumes a year and handle 122 recruitments. Staffing to 586 full- and part-time county employees and 403 full-time-equivalent staff represented by six unions.

The department has seven issues to consider, including $10,000 to begin recording and streaming council meetings and $7,000 to begin a reserve to fund formal integrity-commissioner investigations. Other reserves they hope to start include one to fund extraordinary forestry-maintenance costs (a $10,000 impact) and one to fund an annual forestry-service public event ($8,000).

A summer student to help the customer-service representative staff would provide better coverage and present a $15,300 impact – the same impact as the additional summer student they would like for their forestry service.

Finally, an unsatisfactory status quo at the archives could be addressed with archival-collections software, a $15,000 impact.

Information technology provides strategic technology leadership, help-desk and technical support, tech innovation, plus IT security and infrastructure-management services.

Their eight staff (2.5 of whom are dedicated to shared-service support) administer four shared-service contracts for county IT support in 40 support locations for 650 support users. They pursued 76 IT projects last year and have 600 computing devices.

They report six issues, including plans for two technology-infrastructure reserves – one to address on-going replacement costs, and one to smooth annual budget requirements and create flexibility for future years – totaling a $70,500 impact.

Various infrastructure upgrades add up to a $105,000 impact, and a network capacity-redundancy upgrade is a $37,200 item.

Three personnel issues were reported, starting with the need for an IT service-desk analyst (a $38,343 impact), as well as two technical-support analysts – one in support of Cobourg Police Services and one in support of Port Hope services. With cost-recovery arrangements, these would create an impact of $28,564 and $15,841 respectively

County council hears 2019 budget outline

By Cecilia Nasmith


Northumberland County treasurer Glenn Dees took the floor at county council this week to paint the broad strokes of the 2019 budget, a final version of which they will pass in January or February.

Dees's presentation included special issues included in this budget, and a perennial one is asset management. It is estimated $27.4-million is needed annually in addition to maintaining reserves to allow for timeliness and flexibility in meeting maintenance and replacement issues associated with safeguarding the county's various assets, from roads to corporate buildings. Another way to attack the issue, which will be discussed this year, is the possibility of county-wide development charges.

One piece of positive news is that the county is well below the annual repayment limit set by the Ministry of Municipal Affairs to guide the borrowing practices of municipalities. It is set to remain well below the limit even in his 10-year projections.

Projections from this year's budget provide fort a 2.8% levy increase, which works out to a 2.5% base-levy increase and a 0.3% dedicated infrastructure levy. Dedicated infrastructure levies became an annual occurrence in 2016 to address an infrastructure gap. Estimates are that the 2019 levy will produce $56.5-million in revenues (making up about half the county budget) and $536,248 for the dedicated infrastructure levy.

The five largest budget allocations make up 84% of the budget – 27% for community and social services, 20% for transportation, 13% each for the Golden Plough Lodge and asset management, and 11% for the paramedics.

In terms of allocated dollars, the top three items account for 80% of the total – 43% for salaries-wages-benefits, 22% for social-service programs and expenses, and 15% for contracted services (such as waste-collection contractors, fire-dispatch services and some legal services).

The top four items in the capital budget account for 95% of the whole – 59% for roads, 14% for waste, 12% for facilities and 10% for the Golden Plough Lodge.

The estimated increase in the county portion of a Northumberland tax bill should be only $23,89 higher than last year - $1,181.44, rising from $1,157.55.

Budget documentation is now posted on the county website, Dees said, for a public-review and -consultation period prior to this approval. The version posted includes input from stakeholders following a survey whose results were reported to council and a June open house attended by senior staff members who offered discussions and answered questions.

Logel is 2019 county-council warden

By Cecilia Nasmith

A show of pageantry kicked off the 2019-2022 term of Northumberland County Wednesday, complete with a bagpipe escort and a ceremonial singing of the national anthem.

It's a fresh start in more ways than one, with only two of the seven mayors (Bob Sanderson of the Municipality of Port Hope and John Logel of the Township of Alnwick-Haldimand) having a complete term behind them, Bob Crate of Trent Hills has been at the job little more than a year, having replaced the late Hector Macmillan. The other four mayors – John Henderson of the Town of Cobourg, Bill Cane of the Township of Hamilton, Mandy Martin of the Township of Cramahe and Brian Ostrander of the Municipality of Brighton – took their seats at county council for the first time.

Sanderson made a motion to nominate Logel as warden. With no other nominations forthcoming, Logel was acclaimed.

The new warden's inaugural address began with thanks to several people no longer present – Macmillan, former Cobourg Mayor Gil Brocanier, former Hamilton Township Mayor Mark Lovshin, former Cramahe Township Mayor Marc Coombs and former Brighton Mayor Mark Walas – who preceded him in that position.

“As we begin this new term, I am truly honoured my colleagues have put their confidence in me to take on the responsibility and position of Northumberland County warden for 2019,” he said.

“It is truly a privilege to step into this particular leadership role for the first time, and I thank the members of council for their support. I am confident that, with the support of staff, we will work together as a team to resolve difficulties and advance quality programs on which the community can rely.”

Much of Logel's address listed challenges they face, such as the 2019 budget, a new strategic plan for this term of council, various infrastructure and economic-development projects, homelessness-response initiatives, creation of a digital strategy and new waste-collection innovations that he believes will get the county closer to its long-term goal of 75% waste diversion from the landfill.

“We have many priorities to address in the year ahead and, as head of council, I commit to working closely with staff and members of council, listening closely to members of the public and community stakeholders, collaborating openly with other levels of government and partner agencies, and drawing on ideas that will positively impact our future and promote a strong and vibrant Northumberland.

A later order of business was approval of the 2019 county-council calendar.

While meetings typically take place the third Wednesday of the month, January will be an exception. A Jan. 23 council-orientation session is planned, with the January council meeting to take place one week later. Otherwise, county council will meet Feb. 20, March 20, April 17, May 15, June 19, July 17, Aug. 28, Sept. 18, Oct. 16, Nov. 20 and Dec. 18.