It was such a great day from the 9AM beginning to the 10PM ending.
I was so touched by the leadership shown by youth helpers... many who
appeared to have made a lasting connection during this summer's day camps to “their community
park.” The ball games were all a treat to watch and both the fireworks and the music were brilliant. A big thanks and
congratulations is due to all the volunteers who worked so many hours and in so many ways to make the day the big success that it certainly was. Here are a few photos
snapped at points along the way starting with the Kingston team suiting up... and ending with fireworks that everyone said were the best ever!
This blog is published and edited by Pauline Raven who was elected as a Kings County Councillor on October 20, 2012. It's purpose is to provide an on-line forum for keeping "in touch" with residents of District 3. Comments and ideas for content are welcome. Some posts from the 2012 election period have been retained... they relate to issues of ongoing importance or interest to the district.
Wednesday, 27 August 2014
Monday, 11 August 2014
Get 50% of the Property Taxes Paid in 2013 Back if you're a Senior with a Lower Income
The Property Tax Rebate Program for Seniors is administered by Service Nova Scotia. It helps eligible seniors remain in
their homes by providing an annual rebate on the municipal property
taxes paid in the previous year. The rebate is capped at $800. Here's who qualifies for the rebate. Please note a senior must meet ALL these criteria.
Property Tax Rebate for Seniors Program Service Nova Scotia PO Box 283, Halifax B3J 2N7 You can also download all the necessary documents at this Property Tax Rebate Page: These are the files available:
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Tuesday, 29 July 2014
Aviators and/or Waterville Airport-Based Businesses must accept 14-Wing Greenwood relocation, or else.
This media release produced by myself, Councillors Patricia Bishop, Emma VanRooyen and Jim Winsor was sent this morning to several media outlets in advance of today's special council meeting at 5PM. The report referred to can be found at the link below. Please do not hesitate to call or email if you have questions or wish to discuss any point in more detail.
Four
councillors of the Municipality of the County of Kings believe
recommendations to be made by their leadership on Tuesday July 29 at 5PM are
the end result of a flawed and prejudiced process. A report
circulated by CAO MacEwan on Sunday afternoon calls for the Airport
Relocation Committee chaired by Paul Easson to be disbanded
immediately and the Request For Proposals for the Business Case Study
to be pulled.
Councillors
Patricia Bishop, Pauline Raven, Emma Van Rooyen and Jim Winsor have
worked to ensure the aviation community is more fairly treated
following the surprise vote on March 10 that called for the
Waterville Airport to be closed in approximately 6-months, effective
September 30, 2014.
Recently
long after committing to the creation of the group, council populated
its Airport Relocation Committee and things started moving forward,
under Chairman Easson's direction, in early June.
“Now,
instead of pursuing legitimate motions of Council aimed at receiving
direction from the committee and considering the results of a
Business Case Study, work not sanctioned by council has become the
focus,” says Councillor Winsor.
According
to Winsor this work recommends a relocation to 14-Wing Greenwood and
closes down any examination by the public of other potentially
viable, or more viable options. Winsor has 11 years of experience as
a senior manager of airports in the North. Winsor says: “I've
watched communities across Canada fight to retain or enhance civil
aviation airports because of their value as economic engines but in
Kings County I'm
instead witnessing
a process that's clearly mired in political quagmires.” According
to Winsor the fight for good governance is about to be lost in Kings
County if council accepts the recommendations contained in the
report. “When legitimate motions passed unanimously by elected
representatives are set aside between meetings it's clear to me that
democracy is running amok,” says Winsor.
The
report circulated by CAO MacEwan on Sunday provides an ultimatum to
aviators that Raven describes as: “Agree with this analysis, ready
yourselves for 14-Wing, or get nothing.”
According
to Raven, the CAO's report "cherry picks" from the
independent CBCL report commissioned in 2012 to make an argument for
Greenwood as the only viable option. “He misses a crucial point,
arguably the most important one in the whole report” says Raven.
Raven is pointing to a statement located on page one of the executive
summary. The authors' state: “While all sites are capable of being
developed, the location of the Airport to a new site in the eastern
portion of Kings County was considered the best option due to its
proximity to Halifax as well as the ability for the airport operator
to have ownership of the land and complete control over runway
operations, which is very important for its continued success as an
economic driver for the region.”
The
concern of all four councillors grew as delay mounted and partiality
emerged for Greenwood as the only or best option. Most were somewhat
assured that the agreed upon decision-making process of both council,
and the Relocation Committee was being respected when at the last
week's Committee of the Whole Councillor Best provided verbal
assurance that he “had an open mind.”
Media
statements by Council's leadership, Warden Brothers and Deputy Warden
Hirtle, were issued last week following the Committee of the Whole.
In the July 24 Register both advocated for 14 Wing Greenwood. Neither
mentioned Council's motioned support to place recommendations in the
hands of an Airport Relocation Committee or Council’s commitment to
complete a business case study to enable an informed decision making
process.
“We
have not treated the aviation community with the respect and dignity
it deserves after decades of working with the municipality to keep a
busy airport functioning relatively smoothly,” says Councillor Van
Rooyen, adding, “The flawed process that council has followed to
date has created unnecessary angst and divisions when the our focus
should have been on building a strong partnership between ourselves,
the community, the aviators and business people, including Michelin.”
Recent
developments include litigation by several hangar owners and a
movement by residents of Saxon Street to ensure that an airport would
not spring up in their backyards, which are smack in the middle of
the County's agricultural zone.
Councillor
Patricia Bishop says the Warden, Deputy Warden and CAO may be
overstepping bounds with the release of Sunday's report: “Council
has not given any direction regarding the Greenwood option becoming
the only option, nor have they requested any report in that regard.”
Bishop asks: “Because there is no council endorsed direction to
support this effort by our CAO, who
is the CAO working for?”
Bishop,
the only Councillor to vote against the closure of the airport, has
continually stressed that Council must look to aviation experts with
proven experience in establishing successful municipal airports to
assist with council's decision making and a smooth transition to a
new location.
“I
am hoping that at our Council Meeting on July 29, this report will be
rejected and that council will confirm its commitment to the Airport
Relocation Committee as well as the business case study, that
would represent a
fairer, more transparent and more fiscally responsible process for
everyone involved,” concluded
Bishop.
Friday, 20 June 2014
Protecting the County of Kings Agricultural District
The
looming closure of the Waterville Airport and discussion of where a
new airport could be located has renewed interest in protecting
agricultural land in Kings County. That debate is not new to me and I
welcome it.
Prior
to becoming a councillor I spent several years opposing the residential
development of agricultural land in Weston, Greenwich, Port Williams
and Canard. I did this alongside Tom Cosman, a farmer who principled
stand on agricultural issues I fully support, and whose leadership
helped several of us lead a fight that saved over 500 acres of prime
agricultural land from urban sprawl.
It
is within this context, that I can appreciate Cosman's caution about
the slippery slope that exists when governments begin to look at the
use of agricultural land for non-agricultural related purposes.
The
protection of agricultural land has been included in the terms of
reference for the upcoming business case study to relocate the
airport. Whether this occurred or not protection is front and centre
for this council. Within months of our election the new council
solidly demonstrated its commitment with a February 2013
recommendation to the Province of Nova Scotia that its legislated
Statement of Interest in Agricultural Land be significantly
strengthened. Those who watched the two prior councils witnessed
repeated votes in favour of residential development of agricultural
land despite its own Municipal Planning Strategy's intent to protect.
In fact the province had to step in to stop those councils' destructive decisions.
The
best scenario possible is that Michelin and the airport's management
will be able to come to a compromise allowing Michelin to expand and
the airport to stay in Waterville. Such a compromise was never anticipated by this council but perhaps it could still occur. This would require zero additional
use of agricultural land while still allowing an airport to operate
within a reasonable distance from Halifax. A short distance between
HRM and a Kings County airport is stated as an important factor in
attracting new business to Kings County. It is mainly for this reason
that relocation to Greenwood may not be advisable. The business case
study will provide more and maybe contradictory evidence to that
submitted by the earlier and more general report by CBCL.
If
the business case is positive... if no compromise is possible with
Michelin... and if a Central or Eastern Kings site is recommended...
council will be tasked with a decision on a site. I expect council's
position, particularly regarding the A1 zone, would shed light on
just how untouchable any large contingent tract of A1 land would be.
That would mean, for example, no possibility of an airpark on Saxon Street.
In
the absence of other options, consultants may recommend a combination
of land types outside the A1 zone that could include some productive
land. If this is a compromise required to properly site an airport I
would be open to considering such a site.
At
the moment we are in a wait and see scenario. I hope this clarifies
my
comments of not being “deeply opposed” to the use of some
agricultural land. If
there is a business
case for a
new
Kings
County Airport my goal will be to minimize the impact on our
agricultural economy and
to assess
how
an airport's role
in transportation
infrastructure could
serve
us all, including the agricultural business sector.
Monday, 16 June 2014
Put egos of municipal leaders in time out
Currently
in the Annapolis Valley dissolution, annexations and
possible amalgamations are being covered in the media.
- Structure doesn’t meet the needs of the day...
- The town status no long appears to work...
- The town can’t sustain its own infrastructure...
-
We
will still be a community...
The
town has approached both Hants West and the County of Kings to see if
either municipal unit is interested in accepting Hantsport into their
municipal unit. At least one Hantsport councillor has spoken against
dissolution. Currently, "Think
Hantsport"
has formed to oppose dissolution. The Municipality of Kings County
has called a special
council meeting for June 16 at 5PM to begin its discussion.
Inter-municipal
cooperation, annexation and/or amalgamation is also fuelling a heated
debate in Hants West. This began with a perceived lack of
transparency surrounding a letter
sent to the Minister of Municipal Affairs from the Town of Windsor.
Now
we see the Village of New Minas entering the mix. Under the direction
of village commissioners it's exploring BECOMING
A TOWN.
From
where I sit as a relatively new 2012-minted Kings County councillor I see
opportunities to improve our valley region from Windsor to Bridgetown
through amalgamation. I think that may be the only way to eliminate
all the behind the scenes manoeuvring and petty power struggles
between some Wardens and Mayors and perhaps now even Chairs of
Village Commissions. They set agendas, lead debates and seem adept at plucking the strings of municipal tunes that have played over and over again for too many years. Progress may not be embraced any day soon. But inflated egos and/or protection of "tax bases" could well stop any significant change dead
in its tracks.
The
Kings Partnership Steering Committee is currently looking for more
opportunities to collaborate on service delivery. But recently, and with a
strong majority vote, it took amalgamation off the table as a method
worth immediate study. Does this mean collaboration and amalgamation are incompatible in the minds of some.
"Now
or Never" said Ivany.
Sadly,
I don't think the required, swift action Ray Ivany called for is
possible until citizens find a way to put the egos of their municipal
leaders in time out. A first step for rural and urban residents of Kings County to ask may be to ask each other: "Do we need several village commissions, three towns and a county
governing about 60,000 residents?" A second step may be finding out the stand of your town or district councillor, village commissioner, warden or
mayor on the issue of amalgamation or smarter, leaner government.
Your wallet may thank you
for paying more attention to the issue of having a municipal government versus several.
Friday, 4 April 2014
Municipalities & the 2014-2015 Provincial Budget
News/Analysis from the Union of Nova Scotia Municipalities just sent to councillors by email [adjusted here to provide a point by point format]:
- Given the Province's current deficit, there were no huge surprises for municipalities with Thursday's budget announcement.
- The establishment of a department dedicated to municipal affairs is a positive move. This new department includes the Fire Marshall's Office and the Emergency Measures Office. Within the department's budget, the Capacity Building Grant will be increased from $233,000 to $491,000. This money will be used to address governance issues and asset management.
- Given the impacts of climate change, the Province announced a $1 million program for flood mitigation and flood mapping.
- As previously announced, the Federal Gas Tax Fund for 2014-15 will be $53.2 million. There was no formal budget figure provided for the new Building Canada Fund. The Province has allocated funding for the program but no figures were provided.
- On the negative side, municipalities continue to pay significant costs for provincial services including $223.8 million for public education, an increase of $8.9 million over last year. Municipalities will also pay $13.9 million for Corrections and $7 million for Public Housing, similar to last year. RCMP costs are expected to go up by 1.5 per cent as well as DNA costs which will go from $219,000 to $512,000. The Provincial Capital Assistance Program was reduced from $3.75 million to $3.05 million.
- Other programs of interest to municipalities include:
$170,000 grant for Age Friendly Community Grants
$250,000 grant for Senior Safety Program
$1 million for public transit outside of HRM and $500,000 for community transit.
$1.5 million for fire protection, an increase of $286,000
$3. Million to support the new Housing Strategy
$2.1 million to establish Regional Enterprise Networks
Funding for public libraries will be increased by $200,000 to over $14 million. [My note... less than 1.5 percent]
Sunday, 23 March 2014
Cheap and Green Hot Water and Hot Air Heating
It began with the character who provided our entertainment for the day declaring: "I don't need the advanced course---just tell me how to do it for nothing and get hot water and heat for free." Quite a challenge! Wayne Groszko the Ecology Action Centre's Renewable Energy Coordinator met the challenge with an impressive degree of success.
The event was Shelburne's Renewable Energy Tour on March 22, 2014. A 7AM departure allowed arrival in good time for a 10:30AM start. The event was a great opportunity to see a community in action---spurred on by Women's Fishnet---and with ample help from the Ecology Action Centre.
From beginning to end the weather cooperated beautifully. I travelled with my husband Gerry Cudmore with two dogs.
Gerry and I have both had a long term interest in solar energy with two passive solar greenhouses in our history. The first was domestic, the second commercial. We are both committed to making good choices for the environment but he's the one with the practical skills and understanding needed to move forward. I'd have understood much less without him alongside! We remain fans of all things passive solar and yesterday brought new projects to the forefront. More importantly, I would like to bring a similar project to Shelburne's to a community in Kings County. This tour helped me explore that.
Blowing Hot Air---Cost---About $350 (DIY) or $3,500 (Certified for Rebate)
Certified Unit attached to Shelburne Home |
Solar hot air space heaters work by drawing cool air out of your home, flowing it through a panel that heats it using free energy from the sun, and then blowing it back into your home at a higher temperature. Installations include a fan and a thermostat that turns the fan off when the sun can't do the good required. It's notable that even on dull days the sun can warm air through the use of a solar panel.
A solar hot air system can be made with recycled materials (aluminum cans, a computer fan, black stove paint, etc.,) for a few hundred dollars. Arrangements can be made to have a community workshop to build a solar space heater. Plans are also available on the internet.
There wasn't a DIY one on our tour but Wayne has seen several successful DIY installations!
There wasn't a DIY one on our tour but Wayne has seen several successful DIY installations!
Solar Hot Water Heating---Cost---About $2,000 (DIY) or $7,500 (Certified for Rebate)
We visited this home at about 11:30 in the morning on a day that was barely above zero. We were able to remove a section of insulation from the piping indoors to assess the heat being transferred by the sun. Wow was that pipe ever hot! The homeowner did the conversion shown here for about $2,000 cash with lots of help over 4 days from several enthusiastic volunteers.
A similar ready to install unit to this recycled one would likely cost about $7,500 and would qualify for a Efficiency Nova Scotia rebate. The program also offers the option of an interest free loan. Depending on the size and cost of the solar hot water heater your project could qualify for a rebate up to $1,250. Details on the rebates and loans can be found here.
They must use hot water for these contracts. When they contracted with Wayne to come up with a plan a major issue was encountered: The centre didn't have a south facing wall or roof.
The installation was completed through the construction of a gazebo over a picnic area used by staff and volunteers.
The white pipe from the hot water solar panels works on the same principles as the domestic installation above. The white pipe between the panels and the roof line is well insulated and carries the heated antifreeze into an exchange system that preheats well water. Again, lots of plans are available on the internet. For skilled DIY types there's even one here that combines a solar space and water heater.
Realistically, I think most homeowners would see these "easy" projects as difficult and daunting. By bringing Kings County community members together it may be possible to overcome this barrier and get more homeowners started on these cost-saving DIY projects that also reduce our reliance on fossil fuels.
COMFIT Windmill---About $50,000 per year Net Revenue for Shelburne County
At the last stop on the tour we saw a small wind turbine that is part of the province's Community Feed-In Tariff (COMFIT) program. The controls are in the metal shed and available to Emily Tipton (shown here via her I-phone. Shelburne has a Sustainability Department and Emily is its Engineer and Development Coordinator
The turbine is a 50-kilowatt one. It's fully owned by Shelburne County and located in Sandy Point. It generates between $4 and 5 thousand per month in revenue for the county. Shelburne County was approved for a much bigger wind turbine but couldn't afford its share of the larger capital investment required.
Partial funding for the project came via federal gas tax funding aimed at sustainable green infrastructure. To my knowledge Kings County has yet to access the benefits of this fund.
Thank You Shelburne, Women's Fishnet, Wayne & Ecology Action Centre
I was so grateful to accept this invitation from the Ecology Action Centre. It exceeded my expectations and was an absolutely wonderful day of sharing useful information and inspiration.
There's lots I am unqualified to describe! For anyone wishing to hear more about any of these installations I know Wayne has the smarts to answer just about anything. He can also tell you more about the Ecology Action Centre's Sustainability Projects here contact details.
Phone Wayne Toll-free at 1.866.315.9201; Email Wayne at: solargain@ecologyaction.ca
Phone Wayne Toll-free at 1.866.315.9201; Email Wayne at: solargain@ecologyaction.ca
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