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Landfill usage up in Algonquin Highlands

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Landfill activity in Algonquin Highlands was up in 2023, with vehicle counts, waste collection, and recyclable drop offs all seeing an increase.

Melissa Murray, the township’s environmental manager, provided her annual landfill reports to council March 21, which included data from the Maple Lake, Pine Springs, and Oxtongue Lake locations. The highlight, she said, is that all sites have been operating in compliance with the township’s environmental targets for 2023, as established by the Ministry of Environment, Conservation, and Parks (MECP).

“I think it’s good news… there’s nothing significant that’s triggered any [negative] events as far as sampling goes and water quality. Any impacts to the environment are as expected and within allowable limits,” Murray said.

The reports were compiled by Peterborough-based consulting and engineering firm Cambium Inc, using tracking data from 2023.

The Maple Lake site added a total of 745 tonnes of waste to the landfill this year – 670 tonnes from local residential waste, and 75 tonnes diverted from the Dorset Transfer Station. Murray stated the landfill has a remaining capacity of 133,660 cubic metres, with an expected lifespan of 47 years.

Last year’s vehicle count was 30,285, up from 29,699 in 2022 and 26,904 in 2021. Murray noted recycling efforts at Maple Lake have been successful, with 227.57 tonnes of blue box materials, 8.85 tonnes of electronic waste, 119.91 tonnes of scrap metal, 1.45 tonnes of household batteries, 686 tires, and 91 household appliances (fridges, ovens, washing machines) diverted from the landfill.

The Pine Springs landfill also saw an increase in activity. The site collected 353 tonnes of waste in 2023 – 76 tonnes of local residential waste and 283 tonnes of material diverted from the Dorset Transfer Station. Murray noted the landfill has an anticipated remaining lifespan of 100 years.

Vehicle counts were up marginally, to 3,008 last year from 2,898 in 2022. Murray noted 5,229 garbage bags were collected in 2023, up from 4,476 the previous year. A further 13.95 tonnes of blue box recycling was collected at the site.

The Oxtongue Lake landfill reported the lowest numbers – with 79 tonnes of residential waste disposed of in 2023. Murray said 5,616 bags of household garbage were dropped off last year, down from 5,716 bags in 2022. She added the site has a remaining lifespan of 70 years.

Vehicle counts remained stable from the prior year, with 4,397 in 2023. This was just three more than 2022 – at 4,394.

The township also collected 28.84 tonnes of blue box recyclables, 2.92 tonnes of waste electronics, eight tonnes of scrap metal, 301 tires, and 91 appliances at the site.

Murray noted all closure-related activities at the former Hawk Lake landfill were completed last spring. The site was closed in October 2021, with capping of the landfill finished by November 2022. The MECP confirmed the closure was deemed complete by March 31, 2023.

There was no report on the Dorset Transfer Station, with those statistics compiled biannually, Murray noted. She noted there was limited activity at the McClintock Lagoon, with no septage disposed in 2023.

Hazardous waste events in Algonquin Highlands

Algonquin Highlands will host three household hazardous waste events this year – one each at the Oxtongue Lake landfill, Dorset Transfer Station, and Maple Lake landfill.

During budget deliberations, council opted to host three events this year, rather than the four initially planned, saving around $6,000. A June 8 event at Maple Lake has been scrapped.

Oxtongue Lake will accept items such as batteries, motor oil, pool chemicals, fertilizers, antifreeze, bleach, fluorescent lamps, paint, fire extinguishers and cleaning products Aug. 24, from 1 to 5 p.m. Other events are scheduled at the Dorset Transfer Station Sept. 14, from 1 to 5 p.m., and at Maple Lake Oct. 12, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

There will also be three events in each of Highlands East, Minden Hills, and Dysart.

Photo geek ready for eclipse

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Haliburton County photographer Carol Moffatt admits she’s “geeking out a bit” as she prepares to travel to Southern Ontario April 7 to photograph the next day’s total solar eclipse.

With the Highlands only having a partial eclipse, Moffatt put feelers out on Facebook to see if anyone had ideas on where she could go for her astrophotography.

She’s had a few offers but settled on a 10-acre rural property, “owned by a friend of a friend” west of Niagara Falls, where she’ll get “just under four minutes of totality.

“I am not an astronomy geek. It’s just a photographic challenge,” she said on March 30.

Moffatt said the Neowise comet in 2020 piqued her interest, as did the lunar eclipse in 2022 – both of which she successfully captured.

She recalled how her nephew was outdoors with a couple of buddies and she strolled by with her equipment, jokingly telling them “I’ll see if I can photograph that old comet, eh… and, well, didn’t I get some really super cool images, and it was like, well, it isn’t that hard.”

But it isn’t easy. “When you set out to do something, you read and study and make a million mistakes and that’s why I’m out here now with my sun finder, which I just got in the mail yesterday,” she said at her home by the lake.

There is specific camera equipment employed by astrophotographers. For a total solar eclipse, there is even more specialized gear. Moffatt’s been gathering what she needs for weeks and researching what is required to capture iconic images, such as the Diamond Ring and Baily’s beads.

The Diamond Ring Effect occurs at the beginning and end of totality. As the last bits of sunlight pass through the valleys on the moon’s limb, and the faint corona around the sun is just becoming visible, it looks like a ring with glittering diamonds on it.

With Baily’s beads, as the moon covers the sun, the rugged topography of the lunar limb allows beads of sunlight to shine through in some places. They are named for Francis Baily, who explained the effect in 1836.

Moffatt and husband, Tony Aymong, will take their RV Sunday to a location just 10 minutes, or 12 kilometres, from where she’ll attempt to snap the eclipse on Monday. They are staying somewhere where they can drive on back roads, and access the private property via a gate. Then, Moffatt will begin getting ready at about 1 p.m. for the astral phenomenon.

She’ll have a camera, tripod, sun finder and solar filter – and will do her best to have the correct settings, and prepare to remove the sun filter for the precious moment of totality.

In under four minutes, she concedes you have to get it right.

“I’m a hack at this. I’ve never shot a total eclipse before. I have this idea I’ll come out with a suite of magnificence and maybe it will be a fuzzy blob in the sky, I don’t know. That’s the chance you take. I want the diamond ring but the iconic shot should be pulling back and getting coronal flares – that look like wispy tendrils coming off of the sun.”

But it’s like the old Bits and Bites commercial, where every handful is a new ball game. She jokes, “every photographic event is a whole new ball game.”

Eclipse once in a lifetime thing for most

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Brian Mould runs the astronomy program at Haliburton Forest. While his eclipse chaser friends are headed to Mexico, he’s off to the Belleville-Kingston area.

He said while there is the possibility of two solar eclipses a year, total solar eclipses are rarer, especially the 100-kilometre-wide moon shadow racing across the planet for a short piece. “So, you want to pick your spots to be right in that moon shadow for that totality experience.”

He said the key is being mobile in case it’s cloudy in one area, but clear in another.

Mould added Highlanders are still going to get a great show, with 97 per cent partial, “that’s pretty dark.” He reminded locals they cannot look at the sun without eclipse protection. He added there are lots of things to do, like pinhole projections, poking a hole in a piece of cardboard and projecting the spot of light onto the ground, a wall, or piece of paper as, “it will project the image of the sun with the crescent shape.” Others use pasta colanders for interesting imagery.

“It’s a great opportunity to teach kids, or teach anybody about it.” He added he understands why the school board decided to make it a day off for kids since it would be difficult to ensure children did not look at the sun without protection.

Astronomer really excited

Mould said the fascination stems from the “primordial fear” reaction to the darkness, as well as the fact it’s, “the only chance you get to see the outer atmosphere of the sun.

“If you’re in the path of totality for that little minute or two, you can take your glasses off, you can take the filters off the telescope, you can look at it with binoculars, and you will see the disk of that moon blocking the sun. The atmosphere of the sun is the corona and it stretches for millions of kilometres out into space and that’s the only time you get to see it is when the sun is blocked.”

Mould said he cannot afford to chase eclipses across the globe, like some of his friends, but this one is close and within driving distance. “This may, or may not, be my only actual total eclipse that I get to see.” He’ll bring solar glasses, binoculars, two telescopes, cardboard with pinholes and the words ‘Eclipse 2024’. “I’m just going to play with the light.

“I’m getting really excited now because the weather is starting to look better. This will be my first one. Really looking forward to it. Really hoping for totality. I want to see that outer corona of the sun, then I’ll feel like an astronomer from centuries ago. For most people, this will be a once in a lifetime thing.”

No accountability

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I can only imagine the fun and games at Algonquin Highlands recently when the aviation community flooded them with concerns about a new Rogers tower near Stanhope Airport.

The aviators, some of whom also spoke with The Highlander, were concerned about the proximity of the tower to the runway and also the tower going up initially without lighting.

Consequently, AH, which has no authority over Rogers’ towers, had to figure out what was going on. Mayor Liz Danielsen consulted with the Eastern Ontario Regional Network – which is overseeing the cell gap project. Meanwhile, director of public works, Adam Thorn, was busy with Rogers, Hydro One, Transport Canada and other federal agencies trying to put out the fire.

We’ve been going down the same rabbit hole since the beginning of last week. Asking questions. Getting lots of emails from corporate and government media types assuring us they are looking into the concerns, and will get back to us, but then it’s information we already know, non-answers or no answers. Rogers, for example, missed our initial deadline before telling us everything we already knew – and not addressing the white elephant in the room.

We knew the new tower was part of the EORN cell gap project, which EORN and Rogers espouse will provide and improve coverage to 99 per cent of Eastern Ontario through the construction of 300 new sites.”

Rogers assured us they work closely with the local community to ensure their services, equipment and design meet local needs.

They said they followed all required procedures with Nav Canada and Transport Canada throughout site selection, consultation and build. They said Nav Canada was notified of, and approved, the site location and tower prior to the build.

The lights on all their towers are turned on, they told us, as soon as hydro is made available at the site.

But, hang on. The aviators told us that initially there were no lights. Algonquin Highlands mayor Liz Danielsen told The Highlander there was a time when the tower was up and there were no lights. She told County council the same thing at their March 27 meeting. She said that staff had to get in touch with Rogers to urge them to get a generator at the site asap to light the tower while awaiting hydro.

Our Rogers spokesman did not address this. We replied to his email with a follow-up. Um… what exactly had been their plan when a new tower was erected near an airport without hydro to light it. Had they planned to have a generator in place so when the tower became operational, it had lights? We are still waiting for their answer. Still waiting for replies on our generator question from all the federal authorities, too.

In the meantime, it’s our understanding it was AH staff that contacted Rogers to ensure a generator was moved on-site until hydro could be connected. We’ve also been told it was AH staff that made sure that pilots were alerted to the situation.

None of this was the job of Algonquin Highlands. Rogers and the federal government transportation authorities have let them, and the public, down. They need to do so much better.

Burn ban a win

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A lot of people aren’t happy about this new open air burning ban that came into effect County-wide April 1. And for the life of me, I can’t figure out why.

The new rules were endorsed by all four fire chiefs whose primary job it is to identify potential problems, or areas of concern, and find solutions. All to keep County residents safe.

They have decided to adopt a new bylaw that establishes consistent burning regulations across the Highlands. Some new provisions are being introduced, chiefly the elimination of daytime burning during the fire season, which runs until Oct. 31.

This should come as a surprise to no one considering how brutal things got last year.

The 2023 wildfire season in Ontario went down as the worst on record in Canada’s history. There were 741 recorded blazes, which burnt 441,474 hectares of forest and green land across the province.

Haliburton County certainly was not immune. Fire bans were put into place several times throughout the year, including following one weekend in May when our four volunteer detachments were stretched to the limit, responding to five sizeable fires within a 12-hour period.

There was a bush fire in Algonquin Highlands, which took 35 firefighters to extinguish; a small bush fire near Eagle Lake that half a dozen Dysart firefighters responded to; and three blazes in Minden – including a bush fire on Black Lake that required Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) intervention. Former Minden Hills fire chief Shain Duda said it was the craziest year he’d seen in more than two decades of firefighting.

Fast forward to this past weekend and firefighters were busy again – the quick thaw paving way for dangerously dry conditions, according to Dysart fire chief Dan Chumbley.

What started as a harmless brush fire on a property along Gelert Road suddenly caught wind around 1 p.m. Saturday, spreading quickly through the dry grass and engulfing a nearby barn. It took 30 firefighters several hours to bring the blaze under control. It scorched around 11 acres, said Minden Hills acting fire chief Rob Thibert.

Highlands East fire chief Chris Baughman said there were several other brush fires reported in the County over the weekend.

While I understand people enjoy their campfires and burns, public safety, and that of our volunteer firefighters, must take precedent. And it’s not like this is a 24-hour, seven day a week ban – people are allowed to stoke their campfires come 7 p.m.

Given the long line of evidence we’ve seen in recent years, this new bylaw is much needed. Volunteer units are being stretched to their limit keeping up with all the local fires, many of which originate from innocent, seemingly innocuous, brush burns. All it takes is a sudden gust of wind for things to go awry – as one local family, unfortunately, learned the hard way this past weekend.

It won’t be the last time property is lost in this County due to fire – but if this new bylaw helps to reduce the growing number of tragedies we’ve witnessed in recent years, it will be a major win.

No justice

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I’m just going to come right out and say it – Canada’s justice system is broken.

I spent part of last Wednesday afternoon in a Lindsay courtroom as Robert Anthony Ferguson, a 63-year-old Highlands East resident, was sentenced to life in prison for the 2019 murder of Dylan Dahlke.

Although, it isn’t really a life sentence… Ferguson will be eligible for parole in just 12 years.

Whether I’m outdated in my thinking or not, I’m a firm believer that life in prison should mean exactly that. Looking at the facts of this case, Ferguson brutally murdered Dahlke, who was 29, in cold blood. He stabbed him in the back with a kitchen knife and left him to bleed out, before retreating to his bedroom.

There has been no explanation for the violent outburst. Justice Clyde Smith, who presided over last week’s sentencing, referenced an apparent disagreement between the pair over alcohol and cigarettes on the night of the murder. Ferguson has never discussed his motivation, saying only in a statement to the court that Dahlke and his partner, who was Ferguson’s tenant, were verbally abusive towards him.

That someone could lose their life over something so trivial is mind boggling – Smith said as much while delivering his reasoning for the sentence.

I’m not so much criticizing the judge for this decision – it’s a systemic problem. He quoted at least three prior cases in his explanation. There was already precedent for such a paltry term of parole ineligibility. Add that to the fact the Crown was only seeking 15 years of ineligibility, and Smith’s hands were largely tied.

While it was recognized that Ferguson has had challenges in his past, and has a learning disability, a psychological assessment determined he was free of any serious mental diagnoses that could have explained the outburst. Smith said this suggested there may be good reason to worry about the risk of Ferguson reoffending in the future.

That doesn’t sound like someone we want to, one day, be reintegrated back into society.

There was much publicity recently about a New York, U.S. man who had been jailed in 1999 for attempted murder and robbery. Sheldon Johnson was released in May 2023 after serving his sentence. He later appeared on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast, where he spoke of wanting to help people rebuild their life following a period of incarceration. He said jail should be more about rehabilitating convicted felons, rather than punishment.

Earlier this month, Johnson was arrested and charged with second-degree murder after a mutilated corpse was discovered in a freezer of a home in the Bronx. Johnson has professed his innocence, and the charges haven’t been proven in court. He remains in police custody.

Not all criminals reoffend, and there is a chance that people turn their lives around while inside. But I don’t think people with a history of committing horrific, grotesque crimes – and murder is at the very top of that scale – should be given the opportunity to get out and, potentially, do it again.

While Ferguson has, apparently, shown remorse for his actions, Dahlke’s family, including sister Adeilah, say they have not received an apology. Or even an explanation. There’s no opportunity for rehabilitation for them, only grief and misery.

Dahlke was just 29 at the time of his death – with his whole life ahead of him. It feels wrong that he won’t have the opportunity to live it, while the man responsible for his untimely demise counts down the days until he’s free.

Small houses – big ideas

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It’s interesting – and exciting – when you see a pattern emerging.

Last week, a fellow by the name of Kevin Taylor made an appearance at a Highlands East council meeting.

He talked about the prospect of something called ‘little blue cabins’ potentially coming to Bancroft and surrounding communities in future.
The fact his presentation was during the same week a report said Bancroft had the fastest growing housing prices in Canada was not lost on me. And coming to Highlands East meant he also thought the concept could work in Wilberforce and maybe Cardiff and Harcourt.

Taylor discussed how mental illness, addiction or substance use, and unemployment all lead to homelessness.

Trent University student Ellen Buck-McFayden looked into chronically homeless people in Bancroft, finding about 20 folks, most high school dropouts, who had experienced past trauma, and lacked supports. Most were long-time residents, former classmates and neighbours, who had not had a lot of opportunities in life.

It was also found that while a small number, these people were a mighty drain on health care and OPP, and fell through that crack between the province and township.

Just like in Haliburton, they’ve hosted homelessness summits. In 2023, the province’s minister of mental health and addictions attended, along with the MPP and mayor. Perhaps more politically-motivated than their Highlands counterparts, “another” more than $6M was pledged to Hastings County to address homelessness.

That’s where the idea of 20 sleeping cabins came about. Measuring eight by 16-feet, they have two windows and a door, microwave, mini-fridge, heater, smoke and carbon dioxide detectors, a bed, desk, chair, and wardrobe. They are attached to a larger community building with kitchen, laundry, showers, washrooms, office and meeting rooms. They have access to professionals, whether medical, social, or jobs and training.

This isn’t new. The folks in Bancroft had studied models in Kingston, Kitchener, Hamilton, Calgary and throughout the U.S.

A model with 20 units could cost $1.5 M for site development and servicing, community building and cabins, and landscaping. It could cost another $400,000 a year to operate. For once, a price-tag for affordable housing like this did not floor me.

Also last week, there was a story in the Toronto Star by Joelle Kovach titled ‘Modular cabins to end homelessness: How this Ontario city’s project is succeeding.’

Peterborough council took some flack but had the guts to install 50 small modular cabins in the Rehill parking lot. It’s early days, but so far so good. They did it in an amazing six-month period, ending homelessness for 50 residents. That’s huge. It’s costly, too, naturally, at $2.4M to build and $1.9M in annual costs. But politicians reckon it’s saving costs in other areas.

On March 23, meanwhile, Sean Campbell, executive director of Union Cooperative in Kitchener-Waterloo, will serve as the U-Links celebration of research keynote speaker. He’ll discuss ways to bring innovative housing projects to small communities. It’s an important topic, with U-Links recently partnering with local residents Fay Martin, Fay Wilkinson, and Dave Wilfong, and grad students from Trent, to look into housing alternatives for Haliburton County. Results of that project will be available in the fall.

We urge County, and all other politicians to check out the Highlands East delegation, read about Peterborough’s success story, attend Places for People’s Sleeping in Cars event at Head Lake Park March 22, and attend the celebration of research. It’s time for a made-in-Haliburton solution to housing and homelessness, and the need for worker accommodation.

Go Huskies Go

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Growing up outside of Sudbury, I spent a fair bit of time at the Sudbury Arena watching the Ontario Hockey League Sudbury Wolves.
One of the highlights then – and still today – is when the Wolves score and a taxidermy wolf descends from the rafters. It is, naturally, accompanied by a wolf howl. The tradition dates back well over 50 years.

Back then, there was also a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II at one end of the old hockey barn. In the glory days before netting, the then-monarch took a lot of pucks to the face. She was pretty disfigured by the time they took her down.

Attending the Haliburton County Huskies playoff game March 12, I was delighted to see the Haliburton Highlands Sports Hall of Fame has been duplicated on the wall behind the stands at the arena. It pays tribute to 17 athletes – including hockey builders A.J. LaRue and Lenny Salvatori and players Bernie Nicholls, Cody Hodgson, ‘Joe” Iles, Glen Dart, and Marla MacNaull. The hall’s first home is upstairs at the A.J. LaRue Arena.

In between periods, I noted the township of Minden Hills has done a good job of decorating the arena and community centre. There are fine display cases in the lobby, featuring championship trophies, photos and memorabilia, all paying tribute to our Highlands sporting glory.

Inside the rink itself, there are banners marking the various team championships over the years. The Huskies logo is painted at centre ice. There is the requisite Canadian flag underneath the score clock. There were plenty of ‘Go Huskies Go’ posters in the stands.

The atmosphere is always good as a Huskies game here attracts about 500, and even more, in the playoffs. Had it been a better game – the blue and white lost 4-2 – the stands would have been a tad bit more raucous.

Susan was in the lobby flogging Huskies merch. Jess Jackson was running around the arena – as usual – making sure everything was in order. Owner Paul Wilson always presses the flesh. The bar staff and fine folks from Mulligan’s were busy upstairs. The kids, as usual, were running around and having a blast.

There was really only one thing missing – or maybe two or three.

I wondered about the prospect of getting a stuffed Husky – maybe not a taxidermy one – but a replica, stringing it up on a wire, and running it across the roof every time the Huskies score – along with a blood-curdling dog howl.

Over the years, in Sudbury, there’s also been a large inflatable wolf head that the players have skated through.

I also pondered the prospect of a portrait of King Charles II at one end of the arena. With the netting, we would be assured the monarch’s face would remain intact throughout the course of his reign.

Meanwhile, we are down two games to one in this first-round series with a pivotal match in Cobourg March 14. So, Go Huskies Go!

U18 rep team storming to OMHA championships

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The Highland Storm U18 Tom Prentice and Sons rep team are on their way to the OMHA championship in Halton Hills Easter weekend.

The series was tied one game to one when the Storm and Orono Leafs clashed at the A.J. LaRue Arena March 21 for the penultimate game. The previous two games had gone into double overtime, so this promised to be a tough, physical matchup.

The Storm came out with speed and pressured the puck, leading to Aiden Perrott scoring in the first period.

Josh Scheffee scored in the second period, assisted by Brechin Johnston.

Solid defence and hard work kept the Leafs off the board until the third.

But the Storm put the pedal down and kept the goals coming. Beckham Reynolds fired one in, with two more from Perrott, assisted by Cooper Coles and Alex Hendry. The final score was 5-1 Storm, to give the team a 2-1 series win.

Team manager Amber-Lee Johnston said “the coaching staff, parents and families are extremely proud of the U18 rep team and wish them all the best at the OMHA tournament.”

U 13 Cheryl Smith RE/MAX

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The U13 Cheryl Smith RE/MAX team had a terrific season, only losing one regular season game.

They came home with silver medals after the MPS playdowns.

This team played a lot of exhibition games and showed great improvement throughout the year.

We are looking forward to ending the year with a tournament in Caledon.