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Schmale critical of ‘bloated’ 2022 budget

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MP Jamie Schmale has said the recently-released 2022 federal budget will do nothing to halt the ongoing inflation crisis in Ontario.

Unveiled April 7 by finance minister Chrystia Freeland, the document includes $452 billion in federal spending in the new fiscal year, including $85 billion in new investments across a wealth of programs focusing on housing, defence and dental care. The budget carries a projected deficit of $52.8 billion, down from $113 billion at the end of 2021/22.

Schmale believes the numbers are being propped up by higher-than-anticipated revenues in the oil and gas sector, fuelled by the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and are not sustainable.

With inflation in Ontario hitting new 30-year highs earlier this year, up to 5.7 per cent in February, Schmale pointed the finger at the federal government saying some of their decisions throughout the COVID-19 pandemic were coming home to roost.

The decision to print approximately $400 billion in new currency between Feb. 2020 and Dec. 2021, he said, has not only helped to drive inflation, but has had negative impacts on the housing crisis.

Freeland announced more than $10 billion in new spending on a slew of housing initiatives designed to increase supply, including $4 billion over five years to launch a new Housing Accelerator Fund that aims to create 100,000 new housing units. The budget also proposes spending $1.5 billion over two years to expand the Rapid Housing Initiative, creating 6,000 new affordable housing units for the homeless and those most in need.

“There’s no doubt that the housing crisis is top of mind. I don’t think there’s an area in the country that isn’t affected by this,” Schmale said. “What the government needs to do now is not only work with the provinces and territories to build affordable housing, they also need to work at reducing bureaucratic logjams that are preventing housing from being built in the first place.”

An announced two-year ban on foreign investors purchasing property in Canada is more smoke and mirrors according to Schmale.

“These kind of purchases are a small piece of the overall pie… I caution people who think this might be the magic bullet [that corrects the market],” Schmale said.

He was apprehensive when discussing a new five-year $5.3 billion investment to improve dental care services across the country. The program will be limited to families with incomes of less than $90,000 a year, but Schmale said there hasn’t been enough details over the scope of work people will be eligible to receive, or how the government plans to fund it.

“Is this the cleaning of teeth, is it more than that? It’s not clear right now what this program means,” he said.

Schmale was pleased to see an increase in military spending, up $8 billion over the next five years, and commended the Liberals for setting aside $10.6 billion to support reconciliation efforts with Indigenous communities.

He feels more should have been done to address inflation, and says the longer this crisis stretches on the more it’s going to hurt Canadian households.

“As interest rates start to rise, and they are rising, you’re going to see more and more people hurt by this, because wages are not keeping up. People’s paychecks are getting smaller because their dollar isn’t going as far as it once did,” Schmale said. “This is a top of mind issue for every Canadian right now… I think that should have been more of a focus rather than putting more things on the credit card.”

Farmers association seeking large animal vet

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For the past couple of months, whenever local farmer Godfrey Tyler has had a medical problem with one of his livestock he’s had to take matters into his own hands.

Since March 1, there has been no active large animal veterinarian operating in Haliburton County. The only vet previously offering services, Dr. Aimee Coysh, was forced to suspend operations after failing to find someone willing to take the job on. Dr. Coysh, who owns Haliburton Veterinary Services, had been pulling double duty as a mixed animal practitioner at her clinic on Peninsula Road and on-road technician serving the Highlands’ homesteads for several years, but after recently starting a family found the burden to be too much.

Given the nature of the job, Tyler admitted it can sometimes be a lot of work for little pay. Large animal vets, typically, are on call 24/7 and often have to travel long distances to diagnose issues and carry out treatment.

Over the past year, Coysh developed a schedule where she was available 12 hours a day, six days a week in order to meet demand and serve the community. That worked well according to Tyler, but was only ever a short-term solution while she searched for a permanent replacement. Eventually, she was forced to pull the plug.

The position is funded, in part, by the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines and Forestry through its veterinary assistance program. Introduced in the 1940s, the initiative reimburses eligible vets for their travel costs to and from farms up to a maximum of $40,000 per year, offers up to $2,000 for vets to participate in continuing education courses, and will pay 50 per cent of the costs up to a maximum of $3,000 annually if another vet has to be brought in to assist with, or take, a call.

“Everybody wants to soft step around the issue here, but this is about economics,” Tyler said. “It’s no longer feasible for a small business operator to do this on their own in Haliburton County. Aimee has been doing this for a long time, and she couldn’t find anyone interested or willing to take this on… The problem feeds right up to the policy level.”

Tyler said the provincial government should step up to cover an imbalance in pay between large animal vets and companion vets. Currently, he said large animal vets can expect to make in the range of $90,000 while receiving a signing bonus of between $20,000 and $30,000, while a companion vet’s starting salary is in the range of $140,000 and $150,000 and includes a signing bonus of up to $50,000.

This is an issue that stretches back to the mid 1980s, Tyler said, but Haliburton County has been fortunate to have vets in the area willing to do the work.

Shane Dykstra, president of the Haliburton County Farmers’ Association, said he’s had no luck trying to find someone to take on the role. Some clinics outside of Haliburton County are taking jobs on a case-bycase basis, but he said local farmers need someone they can depend upon.

“Obviously, we need someone for emergency situations, but it goes beyond that. I raise pigs, and I know when they’re born, I need to give them iron and whatnot. Now, I just make sure I have some of that stuff on hand. As far as others, like people that have horses, they need to be inoculated every year. This is creating a big hardship for those folk,” Dykstra said.

With nobody to call on right now, Dykstra said he’s heard of farmers being forced into selling livestock, trying to treat problems themselves, and even euthanizing animals. “We’re more than a full month into this now, and for some people it’s becoming quite desperate. We’re actively searching, and doing what we can, but there’s only so much we can do. We’re mostly small farms up here… The money just isn’t there,” Dykstra said.

‘Hundreds’ of employers looking for workers

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Melissa Valentini of Up Right Roofing Inc. plans to attend a job fair in Haliburton April 20 in hopes of finding staff for the busy summer ahead and beyond.

In their fourth year of business, co-owner Valentini said a shortage of affordable housing has impacted their workforce and they are short staff.

She said they are not looking for high school students at the fair – to be held at Haliburton Highlands Secondary School (HHSS) – but skilled workers.

“The reason I am going is a shot in the dark that we might scoop up somebody that is employed here already,” she said.

Valentini added the housing crisis is not a new thing, but her business has never felt it so acutely before.

“For us this year, it our biggest obstacle. The housing crisis is stunting the growth of my business. I could run two crews easily, but we don’t have the manpower. It’s not that I don’t have the work. I don’t have the manpower.”

Valentini said other challenges include the high cost of living, not just for housing but gas.

“People are needing a lot more money. They need their income to be higher to live. So, we’re having to be looking at our offering. Maybe we need to be offering more. What we’re offering isn’t bringing people in. We posted for general labour, no experience at $20 an hour, and I didn’t get one inquiry.”

Pushing for resumes

Haliburton County students and members of the general public are being encouraged to polish their resumes in time for the Haliburton County Home Builders Association’s (HCHBA) job fair next Wednesday.

The event was last held in 2019, pre-COVID, but is returning to the school gym.

Aggie Tose, executive officer at the HCHBA, said while the event will be similar to ones in the past, “this time, we’re really pushing for resumes. Before, our drive was careers. What careers are in the County? Right now, we want to push that there are hundreds of employers looking for people and we really need the resumes. We really need people that want to work.”

Shortage of affordable housing barrier to hiring

Tose said local grocery and hardware stores, among others, want people hired and trained before the Victoria Day long weekend, which is May 20-23 this year, so time is of the essence.

Already, she said they have had a number of businesses register, from hardware stores to an optician, to a roofing business and carpentry.

“So, it’s a really wide range of people that are looking. I’m hoping we have a lot of options for both the students and the public to come and have a look, and meet people and put a face to a name.”

High schoolers not working

Many people have commented that they are surprised that high school students are not seeking work as they have in the past.

Tose said she spoke with some high schoolers last spring and they told her it was because they had been working parttime jobs but had qualified for government COVID payments so opted to stay home instead.

She said in her 30 years working with GJ Burtch Construction, last year was the first summer the business did not get any resumes for summer work.

Tose acknowledged for those not able to live at home with their parents, the Highlands’ shortage of affordable housing is a major barrier.

She hopes the new student residence planned for Haliburton School of Art and Design may help with future summer housing for employees.

“It will be huge no matter which way we get it, or however they use it because there will be a list of people waiting to get in. Like that baseball movie, Field of Dreams, if you build it, they will come, They will. We are so desperate for housing up here.”

Back to the job fair and Tose said, “I’m really hoping it will give the employers a chance to meet people face-to-face and hopefully have a useful conversation. But I really want to push that we would like people to come expecting to talk to an employer.”

Hospitality worries about summer

Andy Oh of the Maple Ave Tap and Grill has advertised for numerous positions at his downtown Haliburton eatery.

Oh said he has had to go to five days a week, due to staff shortages, but would prefer to open six to seven days.

“Too hard. I don’t get what I expect,” Oh said of inquiries or resumes.

To register for the job fair as an employer, for free, call 705-457-6901, or email info@ hchba.ca

Gritty Huskies force game three in Trenton

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The Haliburton County Huskies overcame a 0-2 first period shut-out to win 3-2 over the Trenton Golden Hawks April 13 their second Ontario Junior Hockey League playoffs game.

The home victory means they’ll face the Hawks once more April 14 in Trenton, the winner advancing to a showdown with the Coburg Cougars.

Trenton dominated play in the first period, scoring two against an overwhelmed Huskies defense.

It was Simon Rose who sparked the Huskies’ comeback. Waiting behind a Patrick Saini, Bryce Richardson and Christian Stevens attack, he caught a loose puck and fired it low into the net.

After the goal and a successful penalty kill, the Huskies roared to life. The crowd did too, the S.G Nesbitt arena reverberating with chants and cheers.

With 33 seconds to go in the second period, Lucas Stevenson bulged the net, assisted by Cameron Kosurko and Patrick Saini.

It was Christian Stevenson who nabbed the winning goal after breaking past Trenton’s back line, assisted by Bryce Richardson and Oliver Tarr.

The game was on a knife’s edge as the clock ticked down, with Trenton pulling their goalie in a desperate attempt to level the score.

The tension on the ice spilled over into multiple fiesty confrontations between the Dogs and Hawks, with Sam Solarino being sent to the box with 4 minutes to play.

The Dogs prevailed, sending the series to a grand finale of a third match in Trenton April 14 at 7:30.

First-round woes

The first-round best-of-three series against the Golden Hawks started in the worst possible way for the Dogs April 10, as they limped to a 5-2 defeat. It was a tough pill for head coach and general manager, Ryan Ramsay, to swallow, watching his side struggle against a team they had bested throughout the regular season. 

The Huskies had previously come out on top in five of the previous eight games against the Golden Hawks. “I don’t think we had the start that we wanted. Right from the first shift, I felt the guys were a little slow. They definitely outplayed us in the first period,” Ramsay said. 

Things actually looked good for the hometown team in the early goings, with Patrick Saini opening the scoring. 

The Dogs couldn’t make the lead stick, however, giving up a pair of goals to Golden Hawks forward Jake Campbell, at 12:13 and 17:49, of the opening period. 

The Dogs battled back in the second frame, creating multiple openings only to be denied by a game William Nguyen between the pipes. Then, with the seconds ticking down, topscorer Oliver Tarr created something out of nothing, slamming home an unassisted goal at 16:17. 

The Huskies bench erupted, and while Ramsay was eager for his team to keep their composure and see out the period, they fell behind again just a minute later. Winger Kolby Poulin was sent to the penalty box at 16:38 for interference and the Golden Hawks took full advantage, with Campbell firing home his hat-trick goal just 37 seconds into the powerplay. 

“I think we outplayed them during the second, but we took a bad penalty late and they got the go-ahead goal heading into the third. Obviously, it’s a different look, a different feel going in again behind, especially after we played so well to bring ourselves back into it,” Ramsay said. The team huffed and puffed in the opening minutes of the third, but couldn’t find a way past Nguyen.

 With the clock running down, the Dogs started to get desperate and took a pair of cheap penalties late on, first Noah Van Vliet for holding and then Ryan Hall for cross-checking. Golden Hawks captain Dalton Bancroft took full advantage, scoring the Golden Hawks second powerplay marker at 16:45. Aiden MacIntosh added an empty netter at 19:29.

 “Their powerplay went 2-4, while ours went 0-3, that was probably the difference on the night,” Ramsay said. “Our special teams have to step up and be better. I think some of our top guys need to play a lot better as well. You look at the stat sheet and their top guys really performed, while ours I don’t think did.” Campbell had five points for the Golden Hawks on the night, with Bancroft and MacIntosh each putting up four points. 

The Huskies have it all to do now, as they have to win two straight to progress to the second round of the playoffs. Ramsay said he was confident his team would rebound and backed them to put Sunday’s disappointment behind them ahead of a pivotal match-up April 13 on home ice. “We were going to have to win one game there anyway. We’ve come back, had a good practice, fixed a couple of things and are ready to get back on the saddle. We’re confident that we can play and beat these guys. We’re a good team, and we’ve shown that we can do it during the regular season,” Ramsay said. 

He added, “I think Trenton was a little more ready mentally for playoffs. We’re a pretty young side, and for a lot of guys this was their first playoff game. Now, maybe they know what to expect a little bit more and we have to be ready, because there’s no more chances after this.” 

‘No better place to play’ says Kosurko

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COBOURG, ON - NOVEMBER 8: Cameron Kosurko #23 of the Haliburton County Huskies skates with the puck during the third period at the Cobourg Community Centre on November 8, 2021 in Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Shawn Muir / OJHL Images)

After scoring one of the goals of the season during the recent 4-0 routing of the Trenton Golden Hawks on home ice, Cameron Kosurko couldn’t help but get lost in the emotions pouring out of the stands.

It was a moment to remember for the 18-year-old forward, who has enjoyed a successful first season in the OJHL. With slick hands, elite skating and high hockey IQ, the teen has been backed to make a big impression in the league by coach Ryan Ramsay.

Since joining the Dogs in October, Kosurko has racked up 14 points in 43 games while playing largely on the team’s third and fourth lines. His tenacity and voracious work ethic have earned him a key role on the Huskies’ special teams during the second half of the season.

It was during a pivotal penalty kill March 27 against the Golden Hawks when Kosurko really announced himself. With the game precariously poised and the Dogs defending a 5-on-4, Kosurko took a chance, rushing out of the zone after a Golden Hawks misplay. The puck found its way to his stick, and while he missed the initial breakaway, he recovered to score an unbelievable short-handed goal.

“It was pretty special. I just stuck with the play, made a few moves and I saw an opening down low … That goal was definitely a highlight of the season for me. Just the reaction of the crowd, I got goosebumps,” Kosurko said. “That it helped to elevate us to a win over a rival team just made it all the better.”

Kosurko said he draws inspiration from Toronto Maple Leafs winger Mitch Marner, and has tried to incorporate facets of his game into his own.

As the Huskies prepare for a best-of-three playoff series with the Golden Hawks, the team’s number 23 says he’s ready to go to war on the ice. “We’re into must-win territory. Every game is so important, and you have to be totally dialled in. You can’t make any mistakes,” Kosurko said. “The thing I’m most looking forward to is the crowd. Our fans have been awesome all year, and the energy inside the building for game two is going to be off the charts. That could make all the difference for us.”

While Kosurko said he’s more of a livein-the-moment type of guy, he admitted an NCAA scholarship would be a great goal for him to work towards. He hopes to be able to do that in Haliburton, having made a special connection with his teammates and wider community.

“What’s not to love [about the Highlands]. I visited here quite a lot during my childhood, going to cottages with my friends,” Kosurko said. “It’s definitely a beautiful area, and I’m so lucky that I get to chase my dreams of playing hockey in a community like this. There’s no better place [in this league] to play.”

New book paints picture of Drag Lake’s history

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What we know today as Drag Lake may have been two separate waterbodies referred to by early Indigenous settlers as Lake Kashquashibook and Lake Kashquashibioh.

That’s just one interesting tidbit Charles and Laurie Wheeler have uncovered while researching their soon-to-be-published book The History of the Drag Lake Community.

What initially began as a pet project borne out of a desire to learn more about the history of their land on Depot Bay manifested into a year-long undertaking highlighting the history of Drag Lake, Spruce Lake and Outlet Bay.

The Wheelers have spent thousands of hours poring over historical documents, conducting interviews, compiling photos, maps and paintings and writing. The end product is a near 500-page book that will be published later this year.

“We’ve been coming to our cottage on Depot Bay for 35 years, but realized there’s a whole bunch of stuff about the history of the lake that we didn’t know about. That’s what sparked this whole thing, then as we did more digging, we decided to expand the book to cover the whole lake,” Charles said.

Much of the content was sourced from the Haliburton Highlands Museum, Archives Canada, the Province of Ontario Archives and the Toronto, Peterborough and Trent University archives. Charles estimates he completed between 70 and 75 first-person interviews to help piece things together.

Loathe to give too much away before the release, Charles delved into the historical name of the lake when asked to comment on the most interesting piece of information he learned.

He found evidence that suggested Drag Lake was, more than 100 years ago, two lakes split by a sand divider. This theory was confirmed by Wayne Roberts, grandson of Tom Roberts, for whom the locally-famous Uncle Tom’s Cabin was named.

“Before the lake was dammed, the water levels were much lower than today. On the west side of the lake, there’s an area called Sand Point. Once, people could walk across a sandspit that separated the west and east sides of the lake. Wayne told us he could do that as recently as the late 1930s,” Charles said. “I believe that sandspit is still visible today, only it’s buried by about 10 feet of water.”

The water level of Drag Lake has been a bone of contention with local cottagers for generations. As far back as the early 1900s, Charles said several property owners had trouble accessing their land as there were no roads developed yet, and when water levels were low, parts of the lake were unnavigable.

Because Drag Lake was considered a reservoir lake to supplement the Trent Severn Waterway, landowners and the townships were limited in what they could do to address the issue. Charles found letters between area residents and at least one federal representative that he described as less than savoury.

“This guy basically gave Drag Lake the middle finger for 30 years. He went out of his way to frustrate Dysart council and cottagers,” Charles said.

Laurie spent a considerable amount of time researching the history of lumbering on land surrounding Drag Lake. While many published books in circulation today indicate Mossom Boyd was the main player in the logging industry during the late 1800s, Laurie said she found evidence that suggested he had only worked in the area for three years, between 1869 and 1871.

Another company, going by the name Boyd Smith, operated between 1871 and 1884. The company was made up of four partners, including Boyd, who she said left the business in 1872, his son Gardner, Alexander Smith and James Irwin.

“The big picture here is there was a first, second and third pass of lumbering. The first pass was the 1870s, where Boyd Smith was most prevalent. Then the second pass was 1900 to 1926, when William Laking was the main name. The third pass, which was mostly hardwoods, was in the 1930s and 1940s,” Charles said. “By the end of the 40s, the lumber industry on Drag Lake and in Haliburton was basically dead.”

As the pair put the finishing touches on their baby, they are encouraging other community members to pick up where they left off.

“One of the biggest challenges we had was finding out little pieces of information and wanting to go down that rabbit hole and find out where it leads, but it turns out there’s pretty much an unlimited number of rabbit holes you could go down,” Charles said. “It’s just impossible to cover every little detail and chase every lead. At the front of the book there’s going to be a document of things that we just couldn’t get to. Hopefully somebody else can pick it up, do some more research and find a few rabbit holes of their own.”

The final version of the book will feature paintings from renowned local artists Ethel Curry and Neil Broadfoot.

While it has been a monumental effort from the Wheelers in putting The History of the Drag Lake Community together, the couple say they didn’t do it all alone.

“We’re incredibly thankful to all the people who have helped us. Steve Hill at the Haliburton Highlands Museum has been instrumental, and there’s a number of others without whom we wouldn’t have been able to do this,” Wheeler said. “We want to give a bit of a shout out to these people. It’s probably 100 people in total. We feel this is a book produced by the community, for the community. We’re not looking to profit off of this, we’ll be selling it at cost to anybody that wants one.”

The Wheelers say they will be releasing details over how to order a copy in the near future.

Anyone interested in pre-ordering can email charles.wheeler@sympatico.ca

All eyes on Walleye in nighttime river stakeout

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The Hwy. 118 bridge in Haliburton will be a surveillance hotbed this month.

The goal of the nighttime stakeouts will be to count walleye spawning among the rocks under the bridge.

“We will walk up the shore of the Drag River, above the bridge, then you shine a light down at the surface of the water and count pairs of eyes,” Haliburton Highlands Outdoors Association (HHOA) president Dan Smith said.

Counting walleye, Smith said, helps the HHOA keep tabs on the health of the Kashagawigamog chain of lakes fishery.

HHOA volunteers are currently monitoring the spawning grounds for signs of life. Once spawning starts, they’ll be out every night to record walleye numbers.

In 2021, the first year the HHOA re-started the “Walleye Watch” program, the walleye run started April 2 and lasted until April 20. Volunteers recorded 1,334 walleye.

Eighty-two per cent of anglers surveyed by the HHOA in 2021 think the health of the fishery has declined in recent years.

In the fall, the HHOA sprayed down the spawning beds under the bridge in order to make the area better for hatching with hopes of boosting walleye numbers.

“We’re going to do it again this year, because it hadn’t been done for probably 15 years,” Smith said. “That way the eggs that the walleye leave will be able to cling to the rocks of the spawning grounds better and be more successful in hatching.”

The HHOA will release walleye count results after the spawning season ends.

HHSS teacher planning trip to Costa Rica

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Haliburton Highlands Secondary School teacher Darla Searle is inviting local students to join her on an adventure of a lifetime next year, having recently booked an eight-day educational tour of Costa Rica.

Planned for April 2023, the trip includes stays in five major cities in the Central American nation, providing a unique insight into Costa Rican life and culture. Searle said she’s hoping to take dozens of students with her for an experience she believes they’d be hard-pressed to find anywhere else.

“My purpose with this is to give these kids some lasting memories, some truly life-changing experiences they can enjoy with their friends,” Searle said. “When I think about my own memories from high school 40 years ago, I still remember going to Stratford, going to the ROM to see King Tut. I think it’s important that, after the two years we’ve had, we give these kids something they can really remember.”

Searle said today’s students have had to endure much with the ongoing pandemic, missing out on field trips, dances, and most extracurriculars.

“I do not want their enduring memory of high school to be a mask, and not being able to do things because of a global pandemic,” Searle said.

The trip is being offered through EF Educational Tours Canada. A community information session providing more details, including an itinerary of events, is being held virtually April 12.

Sharing some of those details, Searle said participants will jet off on Good Friday, landing in San Jose, the Costa Rican capital. They will also visit Sarchi, Monteverde, Sarapiqui and the Arenal region. Over the course of the week there will be tours of a coffee plantation, an active volcano, Braulio Carillo National Park, the Santa Elena Cloud Forest and EARTH University.

“The idea is to give the kids a chance to learn a little bit more about the world. Broaden their horizons a little bit,” Searle said. “The trip to EARTH University in particular will be a wonderful opportunity. Their programming brings students from other countries, teaches them how to be more sustainable and then sends them back to their country armed and equipped with all this new knowledge. We’ll be spending a full day there, doing a bunch of experiments.”

Searle says there will be a chaperone for every six kids booked on the trip. She says there’s no maximum, and is hoping to take at least a full bus load with her. Originally, she had planned an eight-day excursion to Greece, but changed location due to the current instability in Europe.

“It’s a bit of a blessing, really. Greece would have been wonderful, but this trip that’s been organized for Costa Rica is one-of-a-kind. It’s one of those things that the kids will do, and then never do again,” Searle said.

For more information, or to register for the information session, visit rsvp.eftours.ca/ yvb83hs.

Getting your car road-trip ready

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Haliburton County’s roadways have emerged from the grip of snowstorms and ice. Sunny road trips and warm-weather drives are just around the corner.

Aside from a suds-and-scrub to polish off winter grime, here are some yearly maintenance tips to keep your car in tip-top shape and ready for summer fun.

• Oil changes keep your car’s engine happy. Cycling out oil every three to six months ensures any sediment mixed up in the oil is discarded. It’s a job best left for professionals, who know how much oil to add and have equipment to conduct the job safely.

• Car batteries are stronger than ever, but extremely cold temperatures can still take a toll, especially this year with frequent weather fluctuations. If your battery is more than four years old or it takes some time for your engine to turn over, it’s worth getting a mechanic to test it. That’s a quicker option than waiting for a parking lot boost.

• Highlands road crews don’t use salt, a road treatment that can corrode a car’s frame, brakes and engine parts. However, sand, which still coats Haliburton roads after the snow is gone, can clog your vehicle’s air filter. Making sure your filter is clean of dust and debris before summer helps your engine run smoother and longer. Experts recommend changing the filter once every year. You can easily do this at home: the air filter is housed in a black box with a tube sticking out of it, usually on or beside the engine block, and you can purchase air filters at Canadian Tire and other stores.

Tired tires

Rolling your snow tires back into storage is often a relief. Experts recommend waiting to do so until the temperature hits seven degrees for a consistent length of time. Haliburton County often gets snow later in the year than Ontario’s southern locales, so waiting until mid-April is usually a safe bet.

If you’re getting professional help with the switch, it’s always best to book your tire change early. Don’t forget to take a peek at the condition of your snow tires before you stow them to make sure they’re in shape for next winter. Auto experts like CAA recommend a tread depth of about 1/8 of an inch. An easy way to check involves sticking a Toonie in between the treads, bear paws down. If the words on the outer rim of the Toonie are visible, your tires are likely nearing time for a replacement. If one side of the tire is more worn down than the other, there’s a chance your car’s alignment may need a check too. Anyone who regularly drives around the County knows the most common misalignment culprits: potholes. If your suspension feels too firm or is squeaking, it’s likely time for a mechanic to give your car a post-pothole tune-up.

Finally, we’ve spent the last two years more aware than ever about germs and sanitization, so why not take some time to make sure your car is clean as well as tidy.

A study from Carrentals.com found the steering wheel was the dirtiest spot in a car, a hotspot for all the bacteria our hands pick up day-to-day.

A microfibre cloth and Lysol or disinfectant wipes are your ticket to a clean steering wheel, console and other high-touch areas.

With regular maintenance and cleaning, you’ll be ready to drive confidently into Haliburton’s summer months this year.




Animal rights advocate calls for delayed staff report

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A Minden woman is looking for answers after delivering a delegation on animal bylaws to Minden Hills council more than two years ago.

Shanna Dryburgh alleged witnessing 14 dogs outside in sub-zero conditions on a vacant property near Minden in the winter of 2020. Videos were shared online and by media province-wide.

Dryburgh urged council to strengthen laws limiting the number of dogs that can be kept, as well as disallowing their care on vacant land.

After her delegation, council requested a staff report and possible bylaw changes, which have not yet been brought before council.

Dryburgh said she’s emailed Minden Hills through CAO Trisha McKibbin multiple times and said she was assured the issue would come back before council in 2021. McKibbin did not respond to requests for comment by press time.

“There was an order made at council. How many years is it reasonable for this to be done?” Dryburgh asked. Mayor Brent Devolin said the issue has not been forgotten.

“During COVID times the processing of these kinds of longer-term objectives, we’ve been running at half-speed,” he said.

Devolin added he believes other issues such as shoreline preservation and short-term rentals are likely to take up council’s time this spring while exceptional building activity puts pressure on administrative staff.

“This isn’t a quick endeavour, it will take time.”

Dryburgh said since the province, through the 2020 Provincial Animal Welfare Services (PAWS) Act is making changes to standards of care for outdoor dogs, it is “the perfect opportunity” to get it done and keep in line with what the province is doing.

She said Minden Hills’ rules, which allow people to own up to nine dogs, are irresponsible.

In surrounding municipalities, the maximum number of dogs allowed to be kept is lower. For example, private households can only own up to four dogs in the City of Kawartha Lakes.

She also called for prohibiting the keeping of dogs on vacant land.

Colin McKnight, Minden Hills’ chief building official, said his department has compiled research but has not yet prepared a report.

Dryburgh said she was concerned if Devolin, who said he will not run for re-election, is not on council, the issue may be forgotten.

Devolin said that’s unlikely since staff maintain report files and many council members are expected to seek re-election.

“Certainly this will be a matter of concern and of conversation we’ll have at council,” he said.

Two people from the Kawartha Lakes face multiple counts of animal-related charges in a case that prompted Dryburgh’s delegation.

Those charged were initially scheduled to appear in court in October 2020. As of March 9, 2022 the case has not yet been rescheduled.

The case came in a time of transition for animal welfare in Ontario. The PAWs act came into effect Jan. 1, 2020, putting enforcement in the hands of the province instead of the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (OSPCA)