Charles Dickson

McCann named Shawville Fair Ambassador

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

Rosie McCann of Bristol was named Shawville Fair Ambassador for 2024 at an event held in the Homecraft Pavilion at the Shawville fairgrounds last Wednesday evening.

Five well-spoken young candidates from the local farming community, each representing a different division of the fair, participated in the competition which consisted of giving a short speech before a panel of judges and the assembled audience.

Patty Egan lives in Bristol and represents the dairy division. She will be showing a Holstein calf Boss Girl from Double G Farm. She is going into grade 9 at Pontiac High School (PHS) where she is on the rugby team.

Felix Vereyken of Clarendon represents the sheep division. His hobbies are raising a Simmental steer, dirt biking and hunting. He is going into grade 8 at PHS this fall.

Mason Vereyken, also from Clarendon, chose to represent the homecraft division because he has always liked to draw and do crafts. He is going into grade 10 at PHS.

Ben Judd represents the beef division. He lives in Bristol where he has his own herd of Simmental beef cattle. Ben recently returned from the World Simmental Congress in Alberta where he won Reserve Champion Junior Showman out of 50 competitors from across the country. He is going into grade 10 at PHS.

Rosie McCann, lives in Bristol and is the ambassador for 4H. She spoke of the involvement of her family and friends in 4H and will be showing a goat at the fair. She is going into grade 7 at PHS.

The event was organized, as it has been for more than a decade, by sisters Hayley and Holly Campbell, both on the Board of Directors of the Pontiac Agricultural Society (PAS) and former ambassadors themselves.

The 2024 Shawville Fair Ambassadors are, from left, Mason Vereyken (Homecraft), Patricia Egan (Dairy), Rosie McCann (4H), Felix Vereyken (Sheep) and Ben Judd (Beef). Photo: Charles Dickson

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Mayors vote to abandon incinerator project

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

A campaign waged for more than a year by Pontiac County warden Jane Toller to win support for her energy-from-waste (EFW) project appears to have come to an end.
In a vote held at the MRC building on Wednesday evening, all 18 of Pontiac county’s mayors supported a motion tabled by Litchfield mayor Colleen Larivière calling for the complete abandonment of the project.
The motion stipulated that all procedures and/or actions by the warden and by the MRC staff be ceased immediately in regards to the energy-from-waste incinerator project, and that no funds from the MRC Pontiac budget, or any type of grant or program money be allocated for any expenses, studies, communications, etc., relating to the project.
The Litchfield motion also provided that MRC’s waste management committee and staff responsible for waste management invest all their efforts into the preparation of a zero-waste policy for MRC Pontiac.
On this last point, Allumette Island mayor Corey Spence proposed a unanimously agreed change to the wording to the effect that the committee and staff focus their efforts “to aspire to zero waste as outlined in the objectives of the 2022-2030 PGMR [residual materials management plan], and to continue working with the three MRCs and the City of Gatineau to find the best regional solution for our residual waste.”
The requirement in the Litchfield motion that the energy-from-waste incinerator project be abandoned completely remained intact in the final resolution when it received unanimous support around the MRC table of mayors.
The move follows the May 6 decision by Litchfield’s municipal council to table a motion at the May 15 meeting of MRC Pontiac’s Council of Mayors to cease all expenditure and work related to the project.
The Litchfield resolution followed the emergence of considerable anti-incinerator sentiment expressed by the public at a series of five presentations on the subject convened by the MRC throughout the Pontiac in March and April, culminating in 16 of the county’s 18 municipal councils passing resolutions opposing the project.
In the public question period prior to the vote at Wednesday’s meeting, Jennifer Quaile, speaking on behalf of a citizens’ advocacy group, Friends of the Pontiac, reported that, as of May 12, the group’s anti-incinerator petition had received 3,255 signatures, of which 73 per cent (2,376) are residents of Pontiac County.
In a radio interview with Warden Toller following the meeting, CHIP FM reporter Caleb Nickerson asked the warden whether, in light of all the opposition to the project, she still considers Pontiac to be a willing host, whether for incineration or other technologies.
“You know, we never really had a chance to test how the whole population feels,” Toller responded.
“We have 14,700 people. Tonight, we heard about the petition. Kim [Lesage, director general of MRC Pontiac] did the math – 73 per cent from the Pontiac, and that was after eight months of getting names – that’s only 16 per cent of the population,” she said.
“I have always felt it’s very important to represent what the majority of people want. The majority, in my mind, is 51 per cent. I don’t know what 51 per cent of people want but, by the time we do find the best solution, I’ll make sure that 51 per cent support it.”

Toller said the resolutions passed by multiple municipal councils in opposition to the incinerator was due to pressure from citizen activists.
“The votes that took place in each municipal council is because they had people right at the meeting, and our mayors and councils have never experienced such political pressure, public pressure.”
Later in the CHIP interview, in response to Nickerson’s question as to why the Deloitte-Ramboll analysis was based on the 400,000-ton figure, which he described as “faulty information,” the warden said that she and Kari Richardson [environmental coordinator at MRC Pontiac] had augmented the number “so that it could be the largest amount of waste, bringing it as a resource, that could create 45 megawatts of electricity, that’s why.”
“It was not Ramboll or Deloitte that started with those numbers. We provided all the numbers to them, we did, based on all the potential partners we could think of. And actually, with Ottawa we were also including the ICI [industrial, commercial and institutional waste], so it wasn’t just the residential waste,” Warden Toller explained. Voir aussi la déclaration de la préfete, page 6.
Other issues
Other issues raised in the public question period included the 370 per cent increase in the valuation of properties in the municipality of Alleyn and Cawood. Angela Giroux from Danford Lake said her municipality is already paying increased shares to the MRC this year based on the evaluations for next year. “This needs to be a collaborative discussion between all the mayors to say ‘we cannot take this increase, because the numbers are ridiculous,’” she said. The warden assured her that the mayor and director general of the municipality are working on this and that she will do whatever she can.
A delegation of former employees of the abattoir in Shawville asked the warden whether the MRC, which has purchased the assets of the business, would hire them back. For more on this, please see the story: MRC buys abattoir assets https://www.theequity.ca/246158-2/

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Alleyn and Cawood property valuations set to increase by 370 per cent next year

Municipality’s shares paid to MRC already more than doubled this year based on higher assessment

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

When Angela Giroux opened her municipal tax bill in February, she couldn’t believe what she saw. On a second page entitled “Notice of Assessment” she read that the assessed value of her property would be going up by 370 per cent in 2025.
“My property is currently evaluated at $202,000. With this increase of 370 per cent, my evaluation next year will go up to $748,000,” Giroux told THE EQUITY last week. “So, my taxes will go from $2,300 a year to like $8,545!” she said.
“I just retired. I have a pension. I’m a lot better off than some. But we have elderly ladies in this community who don’t even have a CPP. You know, they were housewives, they can’t pay money like that on their tax bill,” she said.
Giroux’s first move was to contact the MRC but was told she should take the matter up with Alleyn and Cawood’s municipal council, which she did by showing up at its April meeting accompanied by a few other concerned ratepayers.
“When we went to our council they said, ‘We don’t set those evaluations. They come from the MRC. There’s nothing we can do about it,’” Giroux said.
“We said, ‘No, the council and mayor need to be proactive and stop this before it’s implemented. We need some action, and we’re giving you one month. If you don’t come back with progress, the taxpayers will take the next steps,’” she said.
That month came to an end this Monday evening when approximately 60 residents of Alleyn and Cawood filled Bethany Hall for the May council meeting. Isabelle Cardinal, the municipality’s director general, arranged for the meeting to be moved to the larger venue in anticipation of the larger-than-usual public attendance.
“Ratepayers are clearly shocked and scared about this, which I completely understand,” Cardinal told THE EQUITY last week. “I’m a ratepayer here, and I don’t want to see this huge evaluation.”
“So, I’m happy we’re having this conversation and these discussions around the council table early so we can get ready and we can do our homework,” Cardinal said.
The director general explained that the pandemic created a lot of demand for property in the Pontiac from people wanting to relocate to the country. In Alleyn and Cawood, this expressed itself in the sale of 120 lots over the past few years.
Mayor Carl Mayer told THE EQUITY that the biggest problem is that one-acre lots with municipal valuations of $12,000 sold for $50,000 each. Cardinal agreed that the high prices paid for properties is what led the evaluator to arrive at the figure of a 370 per cent increase.
“But the evaluator suggested to [the Ministry of] Municipal Affairs that maybe we should consider lowering it because this is something that is happening in a specific timeframe, and he doesn’t know if it’s going to last, whether we’re going to continue to have all these sales all the time. So yes, he had suggested to consider lowering it, which was rejected by Municipal Affairs,” Cardinal said.
“Which is why I would like to meet with Municipal Affairs to understand why the recommendation from the evaluator was rejected. That’s my first question. I want to know why, because he has a good understanding of our real estate market and our municipality, and has been our evaluator for many years,” Cardinal said.
The director general told THE EQUITY she hopes ratepayers will have confidence that the municipality is trying to do everything possible.
“We are fighting, and this is my top priority, and we’ll see what we can do. But it’s something so much bigger than us,” Cardinal said.
“A lot of people don’t understand the evaluation process. I get ratepayers asking me if the council voted for this. No, this is not political at all. This is totally administrative. Council didn’t have a vote on it. The municipality didn’t have a say on it. It’s very like external from us.

“The evaluator does the analysis of the real estate market compared to our current evaluation, and comes up with these figures, and submits them to Municipal Affairs, which they approve or deny, but the municipality is in no way involved in this process,” she said.
At Monday evening’s council meeting, Cardinal explained that a key component of the problem seems to be that high sale prices for vacant lots has resulted in increased valuations for all property types including houses, cottages and forestry lots. She said that the evaluator now plans to analyze each property type on its own which should result in a different comparative factor for each category, not one general average for all categories combined.
Cardinal also told the meeting that she, the mayor and a councillor had met with Pontiac MNA André Fortin last week and that he was totally supportive.
“They are rightfully concerned with the recent and drastic increase in municipal evaluations,” the MNA told THE EQUITY on Friday. “This situation is out of their control. Municipal evaluations are handled by the MRC and are the furthest thing from a political process.”
“In this case, the evaluator was forced to look at the recent price of land and housing sales in the municipality, and compare it to the current municipal evaluation. This has resulted in evaluations increasing by 3.7 times the current value, which is more than twice what any other municipality in the region has experienced,” Fortin said.
“This is completely disproportionate, and will have a major impact on school taxes paid by local residents, all because one single development project has significantly higher prices.”
“The main issue here is that the drastic increase in sale prices in the area is mainly driven by a number of lots being sold in new housing developments. The municipality has reached out to Municipal Affairs to see if the overall increase can be adjusted downwards, as it is not representative of what is really happening in the municipality,” he said, adding that he would also be contacting Municipal Affairs.
Fortin also said that municipalities have the power to decrease their mill rates to ensure most residents don’t see major shifts in their municipal taxes, and that he believes Alleyn and Cawood is planning to adjust their rate significantly. At the Monday evening meeting, both Mayer and Cardinal confirmed they are looking closely at that option.
While Angela Giroux agrees that lowering the mill rate could offer temporary relief to municipal ratepayers, she said it would have to go down a long way to neutralize the effect of the higher evaluation. Regardless, she said, school taxes would still go up because they are based on the evaluation.
At Monday night’s council meeting, Giroux said she had found information on the MRC website that indicates that Alleyn and Cawood will pay municipal shares to the MRC that are more than double what it paid last year.
“We were advised that the increase of 370 per cent would be implemented in 2025, but when we look at the MRC budget for this year, Alleyn and Cawood is paying shares to the MRC based on the comparative factor of 3.7, which is 370 per cent. Our shares to MRC last year were $112,000. This year they will be $289,000, a difference of $176,000. So, we are already paying based on that inflated value of 370 per cent,” she said.
“This is much bigger than Alleyn and Cawood. This is across the Pontiac,” Giroux told THE EQUITY. “Everyone is going to be getting these increases. Five municipalities out of the 18 already got theirs in 2024. Thirteen of the municipalities don’t even know about it yet. Maybe they won’t get an increase of 370 per cent, but they’re going to be substantial.
“Pontiac is one of the poorest MRCs in Quebec. People who live here, they can afford to own their own homes because the property values aren’t inflated, their taxes aren’t as high. But, if this is implemented, it will be devastating to many people, it’s going to be devastating for the whole MRC,” she said.
At Monday evening’s meeting in Danford Lake, many in the audience expressed frustration with the situation and strongly urged Mayor Carl Mayer to step up at the MRC and fight back.
“We need you to get all the municipalities to work together to fight this,” someone in the audience shouted amid cheers and applause.

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Invasive plant species found in two local lakes

Community briefed on presence of Eurasian milfoil in Farm Lake and Petit Lac Cayamant

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

Sixty-five people attended a public forum in Otter Lake on Saturday morning to hear from the municipal council about Eurasian water milfoil, an invasive plant species that has been found in Farm Lake and Petit Lac Cayamant.
The meeting, held at the RA Centre, was opened by Otter Lake mayor Terry Lafleur who then turned it over for presentations by councillors Jennifer Quaile and Robin Zacharias.
As described in the presentations, milfoil is a perennial plant that grows profusely in summer and dies in the fall, using up oxygen as it decomposes, choking the lake and killing native plant species and fish.
Councillor Quaile described how anything that disturbs the plants such as boats, waves and people raking them can easily cause fragments to break off and move to another location where the leaves become roots that latch onto the bottom of the lake and produce new plants.
Dense mats of the plant can make swimming unpleasant and can wrap around propellors and paddles making boating difficult, if not impossible.
Economic consequences include reductions in waterfront property values, lost tourism causing local businesses to suffer, and high costs of controlling the problem which can lead to higher taxes.
Councillor Zacharias outlined a range of strategies to eradicate milfoil including laying large burlap tarps on top of the plants to suffocate them, hiring divers to pull the plants out by the root, and using a Health Canada-approved herbicide to kill the invasive species.
Methods of preventing the spread of the plant within a lake include marking milfoil patches with buoys to help boaters avoid driving through them, as well as limiting boat traffic around launch areas where the problem is at its worst, especially in July and August when the plant has grown up to the surface of the water.

“The most common way it propagates, it gets chopped up in a prop, and then it just goes and floats through until it clings somewhere and starts growing again,” Mayor Lafleur told THE EQUITY.
“We really want to try to get a handle on it, especially at the boat launch because, if you’re just docking your boat and you’re going in and you’re taking off, well you’re chopping up a whole bunch of it.”
Boat washing is a key means of preventing the spread of milfoil from one lake to another. Otter Lake set up a boat washing program in 2020.
Public education, citizens reporting sightings of milfoil patches, and shoreline management to keep nutrients that promote the plant’s growth from flowing from the land into the water all feature in the municipality’s proposed plans.
Late last year, after finding Petit Lac Cayamant and Farm Lake listed on a Ministry of Environment website as possibly containing Eurasian water milfoil, the municipality hired a biologist to inspect the lakes who confirmed the presence of the invasive species.
One of the municipality’s next steps will be to inspect six more lakes in the area: Clarke, Leslie, Otter, Hughes, Little Hughes and McCuaig.
“Doing nothing is not an option. We’ve got to do something,” Councillor Zacharias said. “The question is what do we do?”
In the lively question and answer period that followed the presentation, members of the audience brought forward many ideas that promise to help answer Councillor Zacharias’ excellent questions. Originating in Europe and Asia, Eurasian Water Milfoil was carried to North Americas in the ballast of large ships.

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Shawville and Chichester rescind incinerator support

Sixteen mayors oppose warden’s incinerator newsletter

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

The municipal councils of Shawville and Chichester have both rescinded their support for the incinerator project at their April meetings.
Shawville’s decision was rendered in a unanimous vote at its meeting last Tuesday evening, Apr. 23, and Chichester’s vote took place at its meeting on Monday Apr. 8.
“It was discussed and everybody felt that this has gone too far, we’re sick and tired of this, it’s not going anywhere, so let’s get it over with,” Shawville mayor Bill McCleary told THE EQUITY on Wednesday.
“There could possibly have been some jobs in this, but is it worth risking the environment and the health of your residents for a few jobs? Probably not,” McCleary said.
According to the mayor, the Shawville resolution includes a plan to look into the circular economy and zero waste as alternative approaches to dealing with municipal waste.
Chichester’s municipal council voted at its regular meeting on Apr. 8 to rescind its earlier resolution supporting the incinerator project.
“The council’s position was that we didn’t have enough information to justify that resolution, so we rescinded it,” Chichester mayor Donnie Gagnon told THE EQUITY last Wednesday.
“What I’m hearing, it’s all about your health and health issues, and I think that unless they can prove to me, with documentation and experts, to say that it’s okay, right now it’s a definite no,” he said.
Asked whether they would support a motion at the MRC table to stop the project, both the mayors said they would.
“Yes, right at the moment, I would say stop it, because we need more information,” Mayor Gagnon said.
“If the motion would arise that we want to put a stop to this project, I would probably vote to support that. It would depend on the circumstances and how it’s worded, but I would probably support stopping this in its tracks, because we’ve wasted enough time on it,” McCleary said. “It’s time to move on to the next project.”
At a recent MRC presentation on the incinerator project, Pontiac warden Jane Toller was asked what tipping point would need to be reached for the MRC to abandon this project.
“It would be when 10 mayors decide they don’t want to study this any further,” the warden replied. “But we also are not planning to have a vote for a while, so there’s nothing to vote on,” she said.

Shawville and Chichester were among the majority of municipalities in MRC Pontiac that passed resolutions last year expressing support for the incinerator project, and are now among the seven which have since rescinded their support. The councils of Litchfield and Otter Lake have remained opposed to the project from the beginning.
Of the 18 municipalities of MRC Pontiac, nine have now formally registered their opposition to the project: Bristol, Chichester, Clarendon, Litchfield, Otter Lake, Shawville, Sheenboro, Thorne and Waltham.
Warden’s incinerator newsletter voted down
A special meeting of MRC Pontiac mayors was held on Monday morning (Apr. 29) to consider a proposal by Warden Toller to distribute a newsletter to all residents of the Pontiac on the incinerator project.
The warden said that, despite a series of five presentations on the subject made across the Pontiac in recent weeks, most people were not adequately informed. She said the problem could be remedied with the distribution of an information sheet summarizing the findings of the initial business case developed by consulting firms Deloitte and Ramboll. Such a document was drafted by Allumette Island mayor Corey Spence and shared with fellow mayors last week.
In a meeting that lasted more than an hour, critical questions and comments were heard from members of the audience and mayors alike. The overwhelming sentiment of the room was one of opposition for myriad reasons to the newsletter idea. With the exchanges at times raucous, the warden gavelled on multiple occasions and threatened several members of the audience with expulsion from the meeting in her efforts to restore order.
When the motion to allocate $3,000 from the warden’s budget to print and distribute the proposed newsletter was finally put to a vote, Portage du Fort mayor Lynn Cameron cast the only vote in favour, with the 16 other mayors voting it down. Thorne mayor Karen Daly-Kelly was absent.

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Incinerator again dominates questions at meeting of mayors

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

At the April meeting of Pontiac County mayors, held last Wednesday at the MRC office in Campbell’s Bay, questions about the proposed garbage incinerator project were again the primary focus of the public participation section of the agenda.
Christine Armitage led off with her inquiry about the fate of a document known as the initial business case for the energy-from-waste (EFW) project. Produced by two consulting firms, Deloitte and Ramboll, it lays out their analysis and recommendations for how the project could be structured.
The MRC commissioned the study last November under a sole-source contract at a cost of approximately $120,000 and received the report in late January. Citizens engaged in the incinerator debate argued that since the document was paid for with public funds, it should be released to the public.
Regardless, the warden and mayors withheld the document through a series of public presentations of its findings that they convened over recent weeks. Their explanations for why it was not being released included that it was very technical, Pontiacers wouldn’t get much out of it, and no one would come to hear the MRC’s presentation of the report if they could read it for themselves.
They did commit, however, to publishing the document after the series of presentations had concluded. Though it was finally posted on the MRC website on the afternoon of Thursday, Apr. 11, it had disappeared by Friday morning, which led to Christine Armitage’s question at last Wednesday’s meeting of the Council of Mayors.
“Late last Thursday, the Deloitte and Ramboll EFW documents were briefly posted, then the links were subsequently removed the following morning. Can you explain why?” Armitage asked.
“The reason for that was that it came to our attention that, according to the contract with the consultants, that there was some confidential information,” Warden Toller explained.
“We just wanted to make sure that there is no possible violation of the contract,” she said. “And so, at this point, what we are doing is we are working with the consultants, and we do hope to be in a position to be able to repost it.”
“But it is very fortunate that, in the time period that it was posted, that many groups received it and posted it on their website,” the warden added.
In a statement issued on Monday of last week (Apr. 15), the MRC alluded to an apparent disagreement between MRC Pontiac and Deloitte over a detail of the contract governing publication of the document.
“We were advised Friday morning by the parties involved that releasing these documents violated a third-party confidentiality clause that was written into the contract to commission the analysis. In our opinion, these documents are in the public domain since they were paid for with taxpayers’ money. That said, we have for the time being removed the links to the documents while we carry out legal verifications concerning the publication of these documents,” the MRC statement read.
On Monday of this week (April 22), the MRC provided THE EQUITY with the text of the confidentiality clause:
Limitation on use and distribution. Except as otherwise agreed in writing, all services in connection with this engagement shall be solely for the Company’s internal purposes and use, and this engagement does not create privity between Deloitte and any person or party other than the Company (“third party”). This engagement is not intended for the express or implied benefit of any third party. No third party is entitled to rely, in any manner or for any purpose, on the advice, opinions, reports, or Services of Deloitte. The Company further agrees that the advice, opinions, reports or other materials prepared or provided by Deloitte are to be used only for the purpose contemplated by the Engagement Letter and shall not be distributed to any third party without the prior written consent of Deloitte Canada.

At last week’s meeting of mayors, Armitage also asked about plans regarding one of the recommendations of the report, the proposal to conduct a second business case that would provide information not covered in the initial report.
“Some mayors have stated to their residents at council meetings that they require more information to make a decision,” Armitage said. “You’ve said it would be borne by grants or other partners that seem to be ill-defined . . . ”
“I think we’ve said that we’re going to secure the funding, and the funding will not come from MRC Pontiac,” the warden replied.
“On what basis would this council decide on moving forward with a second business plan?” Armitage asked.
“At this point, Deloitte and Ramboll gave a list of the things that were not included in the initial business case,” the warden responded. “And we all feel that more information is important. We don’t have enough information right now. A majority of people at this table believe we don’t have enough information.”
“And we’re certainly hearing this from the public because, even with our town hall meetings, there were a total of 350 people in attendance [THE EQUITY estimates there were more than 500] . . . and we have a population of 14,700 so we need to find a way to get information to every household, and we’re working on that plan,” Toller said.
“Even with adopting zero waste – which is an excellent aspiration, we all think it’s a good idea, but it will take a long time – and we’re concerned that after the recycling and composting, we’ll have about 50 per cent of our waste that will need to go someplace other than landfills, because landfills may not stay open and we do not support landfill,” the warden said.
Asked by Armitage whether a second business case would be based on 400,000 tons of garbage or a smaller volume of 70,000 tons, the warden replied that it is too early to say.
Pat Shank, a resident of Calumet Island, picked up on the theme of obtaining more information and offered to help.
“You mentioned you need more information . . . what if I was able to, on these screens, to get real professionals that can talk to you about common sense and how zero waste and a circular economy really works, without an incinerator on the Ottawa River which you all were to protect?” he asked, suggesting the name of Dr. Paul Connett, a long-standing critic of garbage incineration who came to local notoriety through a video that has circulated on social media.
“We’ve already heard from Dr. Connett,” the warden responded. “We actually have been very fortunate over the last six months to have the global lead in the world on technologies, and this person has been directly involved with energy from waste.”
When Shank continued to speak, the warden thanked him and repeatedly asked him to sit down or she would have to ask him to leave the meeting.
“And zero waste, Pat, is a great idea and we’re going to look into it . . . but it’s not realistic, and it won’t just cause 50 per cent of our waste to disappear. And so, that’s our answer at this point, but we need more information,” she said as she moved on to the next person with a question.

Warden draws distinction between mayors’ role at municiple vs county tables

“Reading the paper every week, and I’m wondering why a few councils, especially Shawville, are not bringing this [incinerator issue] to a vote with their council members, and I’m wondering why,” an unidentified man asked.
“It’s the decision of each council, it’s not something that is decided here at the MRC,” the warden responded. “The mayors around this table are part of a regional council, and then they also have another responsibility in their own municipality. What happens in their municipality, we don’t get involved in,” she said.
Audience member Sylvie Landriault commented that it was unacceptable to see 20 plastic water bottles distributed around the council table.
“An excellent point,” the warden replied. “I agree with you. Tonight, we’ve used these; we won’t use these again, to set an example,” she said.
Sylvie Landriault also asked if it would be possible to have the meeting agenda posted online ahead of the meeting, to which the warden and several members of the staff responded, saying they would try to post it on Mondays, 72 hours ahead of the meeting.

Outspoken critic of the incinerator project, Linda Davis, challenged the warden on comments she had made at the MRC’s presentation in Campbell’s Bay the previous week. A woman in the audience at that meeting said she had been an expert involved in the operation of Ottawa’s failed Plasco project to convert municipal waste into electricity that would be sold to the public grid. The woman argued that there were features of the Plasco technology that bore certain similarities to the incinerator proposed for the Pontiac that should be of concern.
In response, the warden made reference to the person leading the Ramboll team working on the Pontiac incinerator project.
“We have the global lead from Ramboll, her name is Bettina Kamuk. She sat at the meeting that Mr. Bryden pitched Ottawa before the facility was built,” the warden said. “She stood up and she said, ‘I have to tell you right now, this technology will not work.’ And she was the only one that was correct,” Toller said.
“So, I am really sorry that that has always been described as a real fiasco to us. We would never want to have a Plasco in the Pontiac,” the warden said in the Campbell’s Bay meeting.
In her intervention at last week’s mayors’ meeting, Davis asked the warden whether she had been suggesting that Rod Bryden was prepared not to listen to an engineer who said his multi-million-dollar project wouldn’t work.
“You’re suggesting that this engineer gave advice in a room full of men, and they didn’t listen to her – are you standing by that comment or not?” Davis asked.
“I wasn’t there, but I have it on good authority that it was Bettina Kamuk, and no one else in the room that said it would not work. So, I was impressed with that story because it showed me that she knows what she is talking about,” the warden replied.
Pressed by Davis as to whether she was violating Kamuk’s confidentiality, the warden replied that she was not violating anything, with which she concluded the public question period.

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Incinerator town hall series wraps up

Stopping the project requires 10 mayors to vote against it, but there is no plan for another vote, says warden

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

The series of five town hall-styled meetings hosted by MRC Pontiac to present its “initial business case” on the proposed garbage incineration project concluded last week with the final sessions held on Tuesday evening in Campbell’s Bay and on Wednesday evening in Otter Lake.
At both events, Jane Toller, the warden of MRC Pontiac, welcomed the people gathered, estimated to be slightly more than a hundred in Campbell’s Bay and slightly fewer in Otter Lake.
Both meetings opened with the image of a 2008 issue of THE EQUITY projected on the screen, featuring a front-page story about the plan to build a garbage incinerator near Shawville. The warden described how subsequent councils explored options for an incinerator up until 2012.
“In the end, there was insufficient tonnage to move forward,” she said, explaining that there was a suggestion at the time to investigate possibilities to secure garbage in Gatineau and Ottawa.
“So, I think that this clarifies a lot about our history, and that it [the proposal for a garbage incinerator] hasn’t just started this year with the current MRC Council of Mayors,” she said.
When the warden turned things over to Corey Spence, mayor of Allumettes Island, to make the presentation, he prefaced his remarks with a description of the warden’s motivation in advancing the project.
“Over the past year, Warden Toller diligently navigated the complexities of the energy-from-waste issue, with the hope of exploring a project where the Pontiac could play a leading role in the new paradigm of the circular economy,” he said.
Spence continued with a reference to a video recording in which Dr. Paul Connett, a long-standing critic of garbage incineration, enumerates a range of his concerns about the environmental, health and economic consequences of the technology.
“Unfortunately, a video was widely circulating in social media effectively sowing fear and uncertainty with regards to waste-to-energy technologies, even before the MRC had a chance to fully contemplate the project,” Spence said.
In the ensuing exchanges at both gatherings, much of the same ground was covered as in previous presentations, both in terms of what was presented and how the audience reacted. Farmers raised their concerns about the effect that pollution from the incinerator falling on agricultural lands could have on consumer demand for their products. Some raised the issue of the potential contamination of Pontiac’s environment and the impact it would have on tourism in the area. Others expressed worries about the health implications, including cancer, and our already over-burdened health care system. Concern was raised about the impact on our highways. And, as with the previous meetings, the audience of a hundred people, plus or minus, was overwhelmingly opposed to the project.
Colleen Larivière, the mayor of Litchfield, the municipality in which the MRC intends to locate the proposed incinerator, was in the audience at the Campbell’s Bay meeting.
“The Litchfield municipal council has made very clear their stand on the incinerator. We oppose it, we adopted a motion that we’re opposed,” she said.
“We have 5,000 tons of garbage in the Pontiac. That’s what we should be talking about,” she said to loud applause. “We’ve been talking about composting and recycling at the MRC for three years now. We haven’t gotten very far. Let’s work on that,” Larivière said.
In light of the opposition at both meetings, the warden commented that it is a minority of the people who are opposed to the project who come to the meetings, while people who support it stay home. She said that the environmental assessment, when everyone is consulted, would provide a better indication of the level of support for the project.
One man asked what tipping point would need to be reached for the MRC to abandon this project.
“Or do you intend to carry on with this despite angry meetings all over the place? If you’re not getting the drift by now, I don’t know if you ever will,” he asked.

“It would be when 10 mayors decide they don’t want to study this any further,” the warden replied. “But we also are not planning to have a vote for a while, so there’s nothing to vote on,” she clarified.
MRC posts initial business
case online and then takes it down
Meanwhile, the initial business case produced by consulting firms Deloitte and Ramboll, the subject of the series of public meetings which the warden had promised would be made available to the public as of last Thursday, was initially posted on the MRC website and then pulled down.
In a statement issued on Monday of this week, the MRC alluded to an apparent disagreement between MRC Pontiac and the two firms over a detail of the contract governing publication of the document.
“We were advised Friday morning by the parties involved that releasing these documents violated a third-party confidentiality clause that was written into the contract to commission the analysis,” the statement read.
“In our opinion, these documents are in the public domain since they were paid for with taxpayers’ money. That said, we have for the time being removed the links to the documents while we carry out legal verifications concerning the publication of these documents.”

Incinerator town hall series wraps up Read More »

Clarendon revokes previous support for incinerator

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

In a unanimous vote last Tuesday evening, the council of the Municipality of Clarendon passed a resolution revoking its support for the proposed incinerator project for the Pontiac.
Last spring, the same council passed a resolution supporting the project.
“We revoked the previous one because, when the warden came and did her presentation last May, it was more for a solution to waste, and now it’s like the incinerator or bust, right?” Clarendon mayor Ed Walsh told THE EQUITY last Thursday.

“We weren’t comfortable with that, so in the fall we voted against the $120,000,” he said, referring to the resolution brought forward at last October’s meeting of the MRC Pontiac Council of Mayors to establish a single-source contract with consulting firm Deloitte to produce a business plan. In that vote, Clarendon was joined by Bristol, Chichester, Litchfield, Otter Lake and Waltham in opposition to the resolution.
“We’re definitely in support of the recycling and finding a solution for the 5,000 tons that we have,” said the mayor, referring to the 5,000 tons produced annually by the 18 municipalities in MRC Pontiac.
“But to bring in another 395,000 from somewhere else, I don’t think it’s an ideal project,” Walsh said.
“We discussed it, and in the resolution we stated that we were revoking our previous support, and it was unanimous for the whole council that we no longer support the incinerator proposal,” he said.
The Clarendon decision follows similar votes held recently by the municipalities of Waltham, Thorne and Otter Lake.

Clarendon revokes previous support for incinerator Read More »

Convoy heads to Ottawa to protest carbon tax

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

Twenty-one people in a nine-vehicle convoy left Shawville just after 9 a.m. on Monday, heading for Ottawa to register a complaint with the federal government over the carbon tax increase which came into force that same day.

“We’re hoping a whole bunch of people will come out and speak their mind about how the carbon tax is affecting their affordability in life,” said convoy organizer Ralph Lang, a farmer based in Clarendon who tills thousands of acres across the Pontiac. “Hopefully, there’s a lot on the Hill,” he said.
Lang said the convoy, which included a tractor, two transport truck cabs, four pickups and two cars, would be escorted by police and parked near the Museum of History in the Hull sector of Gatineau, where the Pontiac delegation would walk across the bridge and up to Parliament Hill.

Asked what he sees as an alternative to the carbon tax as a means of tackling the climate change problem, Lang said, “Carbon is sequestered by crops, and they’re trying to cut us back on growing better crops by controlling our nitrogen and every other step of the way. And now they’re saying cattle are the problem. But I’m just a farmer and not a politician.”
“Everything’s kind of come to a head,” said Scott Lemay. “I mean it’s tax, tax, tax, and your rights and freedoms,” he said in the parking lot next to Highway 148 before the convoy set off.
“I think, for us it’s really our kids and our future,” said Ronda Richardson, Lemay’s spouse. “Our kids can barely afford to save money to build a future. The cost of living, it’s just killing us. The gas, the groceries …”

“Something has to change. It affects everyone,” Lemay chimed in. “The only way to fix it is to change the government. That’s a start. I’m not convinced that even changing the government is really going to do a lot, but I guess it’s a start.”
One of the pickup trucks sported a sign across its tailgate bearing the “Axe the tax” slogan popularized by Pierre Poilievre.

“I don’t trust any of them,” Lang said with a laugh at the mention of the Conservative leader. “But it’s a good start, and it got people together. And that’s what today will be about, is getting like-minded people gathered and show that we’re not alone, that people are all fed up.”
“The main thing is the impact on the wallet,” said Clarendon dairy farmer Robbie Beck. “Everybody wants us to make food cheaper and cheaper, but it keeps getting harder and harder to do that. So, we’ll show our side of the story in numbers and see what happens.”
“In farming we face a lot of environmental regulations. We all want to do a good job stewarding the land, but there’s some of them that go a little bit beyond what makes sense and affects the economics of how we can provide our goods affordably.”

Convoy heads to Ottawa to protest carbon tax Read More »

Spence launches series of town hall presentations on incinerator project

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

It was close to a capacity crowd at St. Joseph’s Hall in Allumette Island on Monday evening with almost 100 people in attendance for an information meeting on the garbage incinerator project proposed for the Pontiac.

The gathering was the first of a series of town hall-styled public information sessions to be convened across the Pontiac over the coming weeks. Announced by Pontiac warden Jane Toller just five days prior at last Wednesday evening’s public meeting of mayors, the hastily-called series follows a tide of public concern over the proposed project that has been growing over recent weeks.

Allumette Island mayor Corey Spence made the presentation on behalf of MRC Pontiac. He began by showing a series of videos on the circular economy and the zero-waste concept whereby waste can be minimized through the reduction of consumption, repairing and reusing products instead of disposing of them, and recycling materials, arriving at the conclusion that, with the addition of composting, municipal waste can be reduced by up to 90 per cent.

Spence provided a favourable review of points made by Dr. Paul Connett, one of the presenters at the public information session convened by Citizens of the Pontiac in Campbell’s Bay on Mar. 2, whose video, which is highly critical of garbage incineration, has been circulating locally via social media over recent weeks. The mayor provided an overview of how landfill and energy-from-waste systems work, before turning to a presentation of what has been called the initial business case (IBC) developed by consulting firms Deloitte and Ramboll. At this point, the presentation took the form of a rapid succession of text-intensive slides, with words far too numerous and too small to read from the audience, with Spence reading passages from the screen so quickly and without benefit of a microphone that it was often impossible to discern what he was saying.

What came through was that the essential question addressed by the IBC is how the energy-from-waste (EFW) option compares to disposing of garbage in landfills, based on a volume of 400,000 tons of waste. Spence took the audience through several points of comparison between the two waste management systems, including long-run cost and carbon neutrality, among others, from which the IBC analysis concluded that the EFW option was superior to a landfill.

The IBC also considered three options regarding the design, construction, operation and maintenance of the envisioned EFW plant, with implications for the extent to which the resulting facility would be privately versus publicly owned. On this question, the report recommends that the facility should neither be completely privately owned nor completely publicly owned but rather the goldilocks option of 75 per cent public and 25 per cent private. Fundamental to this conclusion is the requirement for hundreds of millions of dollars to finance the project, making it clear that very significant public investment will be necessary for the project to be viable.

According to the IBC, total capital costs for the facility, which would include the use of technology to capture carbon dioxide it produces, would be $605 million, 25 per cent more than the $450 million price previously envisioned for the project. Spence said this would obviously be an impossible expense for Pontiac’s population of just 14,000 people without multi-million-dollar grants from the federal government and the provinces of Quebec and Ontario.

He said if we start now, the facility could be up and running by 2032.
In the question-and-answer session that followed, Spence asked whether anyone knew why so many incinerators were being shut down in Europe, and said it’s because countries have moved to zero waste and the incinerators are too big for the volume of garbage now available.

He said that the 400,000-ton target used in planning Pontiac’s incinerator project might have been wrong, in light of the significant reduction in the volume of garbage being generated in Ottawa due to the adoption of zero waste strategies. Warden Jane Toller, who attended the meeting, said she had learned that Ottawa’s waste has gone from a volume of 300,000 tons per year to probably 100,000 tons.
Asked by Judith Spence of Citizens of the Pontiac whether there was any documentation still available of an effort by Denzil Spence, a previous mayor of Allumette Island, to launch a garbage incinerator project, Warden Toller recalled that in 2012 Pontiac had expressed to Gatineau its interest in an incinerator project but that the project was stopped due to insufficient waste.

When asked why Deloitte and Ramboll, working under a contract in excess of $100,000, was not redirected by MRC Pontiac to shift its analysis to a lower tonnage figure, Spence said something to the effect that the project was too far along to change course.
Linda Davis of the group Stop the Pontiac Incinerator asked how the question of whether or not to proceed with the EFW project can be decided until an environmental assessment has been completed, which, in the case of the Durham York facility, she says cost $29 million. Spence agreed and said that such an assessment would be conducted.

A woman who identified herself as a long-time farmer described toxins coming out of incinerator smokestacks, landing on fields and being eaten by animals that we raise, and asked, “Why didn’t we start with an environmental assessment long before we began with the business case?”
Jordan Evans, farmer in Waltham, recalled Spence saying that remediation would be required as part of the project but that cleanup costs were not included in the IBC study, and asked, “How can you identify a winner without remediation costs?”

A woman from Thorne asked why the IBC basis of comparison is between incinerating 400,000 tons of garbage and landfilling the same volume, arguing that Pontiac produces only 5,000 tons of garbage each year and that it was never an option to landfill Ottawa’s 400,000 tons of garbage here.
Jennifer Quaile, a councillor in Otter Lake and member of Friends of the Pontiac, asked about the outcome of the warden’s recent meeting with the minister of environment, and whether he is receptive to bringing Ontario’s garbage into Quebec. The warden said “Waste from Ontario is not allowed if it is destined to a landfill, nor do they support incineration if it is just burned into the air, that it must be part of a circular economy.”

The turnout of some 100 people to Monday evening’s information session follows the attendance of approximately 40 people at last Wednesday’s meeting of MRC Pontiac’s Council of Mayors to voice their concerns regarding the environmental and health implications of the proposed incinerator, among other aspects of the project. In response, Warden Toller provided assurances that “MRC Pontiac will never move forward with a project that is unhealthy for our residents, animals, or environment.”
At last week’s Council of Mayors meeting, Linda Davis asked why the Deloitte/Ramboll business plan is not being released. “We’ve paid for it, why will you not allow us to have that?”
“It’s going to be available on a screen,” said Warden Toller, referring to the plan to project excerpts from the business plan on screens at the public information sessions.
“I don’t know that you’re going to be walking out with your own copy, but take good notes, you know, you can analyse it all you like,” the warden said.

In an interview aired by CHIP-FM last Thursday, reporter Caleb Nickerson asked the warden why the document was not being made publicly available.
“It’s very technical and some people are going to read it and not get much out of it,” Toller said.
“I think to have it presented and be able to have explanations and have questions answered is important,” she added.

Pressed by Nickerson on why the document could not be released, Toller asked him to turn off his recorder, which Nickerson declined to do. The warden later offered another response.
“This has been extremely challenging, with some information that has been given that has caused a lot of people to be fearful, and that is regrettable,” she said. “And we would like to reassure people with our information, and we would like the chance to have well-attended town hall meetings. If we just put it online and everybody reads it, nobody will be coming to the meetings.”
The other four town halls will be:

  • Mar. 27 – Fort Coulonge,
    Club de l’Age d’Or, 566 rue Baume
  • April 3 – Shawville,
    United Church Hall, 410 Main St.
  • April 9 – Campbell’s Bay,
    RA centre, 2 Second St.
  • April 10 – Otter Lake,
    RA centre, 394 Tessier St.

Spence launches series of town hall presentations on incinerator project Read More »

Three municipal councils call for halt to incinerator project

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

Mayor Spence to replace warden as spokesperson on EFW file

The councils of the municipalities of Otter Lake, Thorne and Waltham passed resolutions at their monthly meetings last week calling for a halt to any further development of the project to build a garbage incinerator in the Pontiac.

The plan to build an energy-from-waste (EFW) incinerator was unveiled by Pontiac County warden Jane Toller through a pair of community town hall-styled meetings she convened in June of last year. At that point, the warden reported that all 18 of the county’s mayors had already endorsed the proposal. Her efforts to convince municipalities to pass supportive resolutions, which had already been underway for months, resulted in eight having done so by the time she went public with her plan.
Thorne and Waltham were among those that passed resolutions declaring their support for the incinerator project last year. But, in unanimous votes by their councils last week, both municipalities rescinded their previous motions of support.

Otter Lake was not among the early supporters of the project. In its July meeting last year, the municipal council rejected the supportive resolution put forward by the warden. Last week, the council passed a resolution that reaffirms its earlier opposition to the incinerator and states it will not support the development of another business plan for the project.
The warden has described a document recently provided by consulting firms Deloitte and Ramboll under a single-source contract of more than $100,000 as an “initial business plan,” suggesting that a second version of the plan will be required.

Though the municipality of Litchfield passed a resolution declaring its opposition to the incinerator last August, proponents of the project continue to assert that an industrial site in Litchfield, next to the Ottawa River, just west of Portage du Fort, will be the future location of the proposed facility.

The energy-from-waste proposal being advanced by the warden and most of the mayors would see 395,000 tons of garbage from urban areas throughout the Ottawa Valley transported by some 40 trucks per day to feed the incinerator. According to the warden, the project would save $1.7 million currently spent on transporting Pontiac’s 5,000 tons of garbage to a landfill in Lachute, as well as create 50 permanent jobs and produce electricity that could be sold, among other benefits.

In response to the EFW project, local citizens’ groups formed over recent months have begun to raise public awareness of what they see as significant environmental and health hazards presented by the envisioned incinerator. Their concerns range from toxic substances in air-borne emissions and the 100,000 tons of ash they say the facility will produce, to the production of carbon dioxide from the trucking and burning of the garbage, among others.

Meanwhile, at a meeting of Pontiac County mayors last week, it was proposed that Corey Spence, mayor of Allumette Island, replace the warden as the spokesperson for the incinerator project. This follows criticism by mayors of the warden’s handling of the file. Among their concerns has been her presentation to Renfrew County mayors of what she called “key findings” of the recently-completed initial business plan, prior to Pontiac County mayors seeing the document, much less approving it for publication. An email the warden is reported to have sent to the mayors advising them not to share their views on the incinerator with the public has also rankled a number of mayors.

Three municipal councils call for halt to incinerator project Read More »

Citizens’ groups launch campaigns to oppose incinerator

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

Friends of the Pontiac issues fact sheet, Citizens of the Pontiac urges face-to-face engagement

Efforts to convince Pontiac County mayors to oppose any further development of the energy-from-waste project have been launched by two local citizens’ groups over the past few days.
On Friday, Friends of the Pontiac sent a fact sheet to MRC Pontiac’s 18 mayors outlining what it sees as the four most important reasons to stop work on the incinerator proposal, accompanied by a draft resolution that the group hopes municipalities will pass to express their opposition to the project.
“We wanted to provide a solid fact sheet based on scientific information the mayors may not have heard,” Jennifer Quaile, spokesperson for Friends of the Pontiac, said in an email to THE EQUITY.

Quaile, who is a municipal councillor in Otter Lake and member of the MRC Pontiac waste management committee, says the document cites its sources so mayors can check the credibility of the information for themselves.
“We hope there will be some mayors who will give it serious attention and start asking some hard questions,” she said.
The fact sheet presents four reasons why the group believes mayors should vote against a garbage incinerator:

  • the high cost of construction ($450 million) and the likelihood the price will only go up as it did with the Durham York incinerator,
  • that energy produced by waste incinerators emits a tonne of C02 for every tonne of garbage burned and so cannot be considered “clean energy”,
  • that even with “state of the art” pollution controls, garbage incinerators emit mercury, lead, arsenic, dioxins and furans and nanoparticles that contaminate air, water and soil and are a huge concern for farmers, and
  • that only 50 permanent jobs will be created, far fewer than the number of jobs generated by alternate waste management strategies involving reusing, recycling and composting options.
    Friends of the Pontiac, which formed last fall to oppose the incinerator project, held its first public information meeting in Ladysmith in November (see Concerns voiced over incinerator project at Friends of the Pontiac meeting, THE EQUITY, Nov. 22, 2023).

Along with its fact sheet, the group also distributed a draft resolution to the mayors for discussion and approval by their municipal councils. Building on the key points outlined in the fact sheet, the resolution culminates in the decision not to support any further work in the development of the incinerator proposal:
“THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Municipality of _ will not support going forward with a garbage incinerator nor will it support the development of another business plan for this proposal.”
“The primary reason we did this is because we believe local councillors should have a voice, that mayors should not independently continue to support this project even when there is scientific evidence being brought before them that should cause them to reconsider going forward,” Quaile said.

Citizens of the Pontiac launches
‘Face to Face’ Campaign

Meanwhile, another group, the recently-formed Citizens of the Pontiac (CoP), has launched a campaign it is calling Face to Face.
In a press release issued Monday, CoP urges Pontiac citizens to speak their mind on the incinerator at the Council of Mayors meeting held at the MRC Pontiac building in Campbell’s Bay each month.
“In this campaign, we are urging Pontiac citizens to come out to the MRC office on March 20 at 6:30 pm, and every month thereafter, until the mayors vote down the incinerator project completely,” says CoP spokesperson Judith Spence.

“Come out, bring your friends, bring your family, get your five minutes to speak to the mayors face to face. The Citizens of the Pontiac (CoP) will be there to stand by you and to support you. This may be the most critical five minutes of your life,” Spence says.
More than 100 people attended a public information session convened by Citizens of the Pontiac in Campbell’s Bay on Mar. 2 that featured speakers who shared their concerns about garbage incinerators via Zoom from Ontario and England (see Concern over incinerator fills Campbell’s Bay Rec Centre, THE EQUITY, Mar. 6, 2024).

Citizens’ groups launch campaigns to oppose incinerator Read More »

Mayors agree to discuss opening plenary meeting to the public

<strong>Questions asked about incinerator project at<br>February meeting of MRC coun</strong>cil

Charles Dickson, LJI Reporter

All 18 mayors at last week’s meeting of Pontiac county council supported a motion to discuss the possibility of opening their monthly plenary session to the public.
The motion, brought forward by Shawville mayor Bill McCleary, proposed that “discussions of this issue be conducted over the next few weeks for a final vote at the next public sitting” of the council.
In its preamble, McCleary’s resolution made reference to an informal survey of MRC Pontiac mayors conducted by “local media”. The survey, conducted by THE EQUITY in November of last year, found an approximate three-way split among the 18 mayors on the question of public attendance at the monthly plenary, with five mayors supportive, five opposed, six undecided, one open to a discussion on the matter and another undeclared (Public access to plenary discussions? THE EQUITY, Nov. 15, 2023).
Important to both supportive and undecided mayors alike was the need to retain the option to hold a portion of the meeting in-camera for discussion of such issues as human resources, proprietary matters relating to contracts, and security questions.

Garbage incinerator

Judy Spence, spokesperson for local advocacy group Citizens of the Pontiac, asked whether any of the mayors might put forward a motion to put the incinerator matter on hold “so that there can be more reflection on what options are out there, and basically hearing from the public.”
“There are so many waste management options other than burning,” Spence said, a point which Warden Toller quickly picked up on, saying, “We’re actually working in the CPO, which is the five regions of the Outaouais, on a garbage solution, because we’re all in the same boat. We’re all starting our recycling and our composting, but we’re all concerned about the residual waste which is currently going to landfill. Will it continue to go to landfill?”

As the discussion continued, the audio recording was intermittent, though it seems there was a exchange over how much of the MRC’s $1.7 million in costs associated with disposing of our 5,000 tons of garbage in landfill could be saved by removing wastes through recycling and composting.
Christine Anderson of the citizens’ group Friends of the Pontiac asked when the business plan being developed by Deloitte and Ramboll will be made public.

“The initial plan which is in draft form right now, is going to be presented to a working session of the mayors on Feb. 27 – we will be voting on it in the month of March,” responded Warden Toller.
“The next step that’s being proposed, or suggested by the consultants, would be to do a more extensive business plan which would answer many questions that still are not answered,” said the warden. She added that she expects other municipalities would help cover the costs. “We think that this plan, which would depend on waste coming from other municipalities as well, that they should put some funds into it.“
Anderson also asked about the protocol of sharing key points from the draft business plan with Renfrew County mayors before the Pontiac mayors had seen it.

As reported in THE EQUITY’s report on the warden’s presentation to Renfrew County Council (Warden Toller pitches Pontiac incinerator to Renfrew County, THE EQUITY, Feb. 14, 2024), the warden introduced what she referred to as “an initial business plan” and what she called “key findings.”

Incinerator questions at MRC meeting

In her presentation to Renfrew County Mayors in late January, Warden Toller said, “MRC Pontiac has completed an initial business plan with Deloitte and Ramboll from Denmark evaluating various technologies, looking at business models, partnerships, quantifying tonnages, travel distances, tipping fees, price of electricity production and funding. The results are in draft form and will be shared when finalized. Key findings: excellent and clean technologies are available; 25/75 private-public partnership is the best option; a 300-ton facility could suffice (with new tonnage information), DBOM, as Deloitte calls it, is the best plan, where we have a company, for example, Covanta, design, build, operate and maintain; . . . the last finding: it is very competitive with the current tipping fees that are being paid for landfill, and the distances are all reasonable for all of these regions coming to the Pontiac, the Pontiac is in the centre.”

At last Wednesday evening’s meeting, in response to Anderson’s question about sharing the draft report with Renfrew County mayors, Toller said that she didn’t know at the time that she was being recorded.
“I watched myself too, just to see what it is that I had said, because I didn’t know I was being recorded [on video] . . . and I was kind of relieved that I said only what I said.” Toller said that when she made the presentation, she hadn’t yet seen the business plan and described what she called “key findings” as points she had been including in her presentations since last summer.

“When we received the draft business plan, I had not looked at the draft business plan, and I certainly had not looked at the presentation that they had given us. I looked at that after I had been to Renfrew. So, my key findings were simply things I had already discussed with the mayors, and many of those things I had already discussed publicly, such as mass combustion is the best technology, out of the choice of pyrolysis and gasification. Another key finding that the distances all made sense. So, I wasn’t revealing anything confidential from our business plan. And when you see the business plan, which will be made public, you will see that it is very different from what I gave. My presentation was the exact presentation from July, and was my sort of ‘set’ presentation,” she said.

Mayors agree to discuss opening plenary meeting to the public Read More »

First annual ice fishing derby held in Beechgrove

Charles Dickson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

A few days of cold weather ensured the ice was thick, the sun came out, and close to 80 people showed up for the first annual Beechgrove Ice Fishing Tournament held on Saturday.
Madison Latour says that holding an ice fishing derby on the Ottawa River near her home in Beechgrove was her husband Matthew Weston’s idea.
“But he’s actually not able to be here today, he had to work. So, I’m kind of helping by association,” she said with a laugh.

Ashley Mahoney and her husband Jessey Arthurs, also of Beechgrove, helped out on Saturday, as well.
“People seem to be happy and having a good time,” said Mahoney. “We had no idea there was going to be this much of a turnout.”
“We’ve got just shy of 80 people who have registered,” said Latour. She explained that prizes were offered on the basis of the weight of the fish in three categories.
“First and second place walleye, first and second place pike, and first place for perch . . . there’s no second prize for perch because they’re so much smaller, we just wanted to include them because we do catch a lot,” she said.

“The prizes are from whatever money we raised from the registration, and we’re also selling 50/50 tickets. Half of the money from that is going to the winners, the other half is going to be donated back to the Legion here in Quyon,” said Latour.
“We also laid on a free barbecue paid for with the sponsor money, so we have hot dogs for everybody that registered,” she said.
Paula Weston chimed in, speaking about the organizers’ motivation in putting on the event.
“They wanted the community to come together because covid split up so much stuff, it was so negative, and they wanted to get the kids and families out to have fun,” she said.

First annual ice fishing derby held in Beechgrove Read More »

Warden Toller pitches Pontiac incinerator to Renfrew County

Charles Dickson, editor

Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

MRC Pontiac warden Jane Toller paid a visit to the Jan. 31 meeting of Renfrew County Council to make the case for Pontiac’s garbage incineration project and invite its mayors to consider becoming partners.
In her approximately 30-minute talk, entitled Opportunity for an Ontario-Quebec Partnership, the Pontiac warden covered many aspects of the proposed project already familiar to readers of THE EQUITY’s coverage of this issue over the past nine months, but also provided some new information.
By way of background, the warden laid out MRC Pontiac’s position on waste management.
“We’re against landfill, but we do support energy-from-waste – since 2011. We’ve had four councils vote unanimously for it, including the current 18 [mayors],” she said.
“Now, you may have noticed that six weren’t sure they wanted us to take a hundred thousand [dollars] from our surplus, but that was the only thing they were voting against,” the warden explained.
Making reference to a provincial public consultation on waste management, she said, “Not only did the people of Quebec approve incineration, it is recommended. Currently, today, there is no municipal incinerator in Quebec, so MRC Pontiac – we’ve worked on this since 2017 – will be the first.”
Warden Toller said that energy-from-waste is among the options being considered by Ottawa in dealing with its growing garbage problems.
“I think it could be difficult to locate an energy-from-waste facility within the borders of Ottawa because there’s a term NIMBY – ‘not in my back yard’ – and I was surprised, but in the article that was in The Ottawa Citizen, they called me a YIMBY – ‘yes in my back yard,’” she said with a smile.
Toller explained that household waste from Ontario had previously not been permitted for transfer to Quebec because of limited landfill capacity in Quebec. “But if it can be transformed into energy, not just burned to the air, but transformed into electricity and steam, it will be permitted,” she explained.
“In this case, 400,000 tons [of waste] will produce 450 megawatts of electricity and steam heat – we’re hoping to even heat our hospital 26 km away – the steam can be carried 53 km,” she said.
“The technology choice that we have chosen is incineration. The closest example is the Durham York Energy Center which is operated by Covanta. It was built by Covanta.”
“So, the facility could be built by Covanta, but the technology is not Covanta. The technology will be the best in the world and the cleanest,” she said.
Business plan “just completed”
Warden Toller made several references to “an initial business plan” for the venture which she described as “just completed”.
“MRC Pontiac has completed the initial business plan, with Deloitte and Ramboll from Denmark evaluating various technologies, looking at business models, partnerships, quantifying tonnages, travel distances, tipping fees, price of electricity production and funding.

According to the MRC’s communications officer, the “draft business plan” has been shared with the Pontiac mayors who sit on the MRC’s Energy-from-Waste Committee, and with staff, who have been asked to give comments on the draft report before it is finalized, with the plan to share it with the rest of the Pontiac mayors this Wednesday “if the report is by then officially finalized.”
In her January presentation to mayors of Renfrew County, Toller highlighted the key findings of the draft report:
• excellent and clean technologies are available
• a 25/75 private-public partnership is the best option
• a 300,000-ton, less-expensive facility could suffice (in light of new information on lower garbage tonnage availability)
• DBOM, as Deloitte calls it, is the best plan where we have a company, for example, Covanta, design, build, operate and maintain the facility
• it will last for 30 years, then it is renovated and can be in operation for another 30 years.
Regarding capital costs, the warden explained that “a 400,000-ton private-public partnership costs 450 million [dollars] to build, and I want you to know right now that we do not see, if you become a partner in this endeavour, you will not be asked to provide capital costs.”
She said that private investors are already in place and have given expressions of interest totaling $150 million of the $450 million cost.
“But we’ve been cautioned by the consultants that you don’t want too much private money because private companies want to be reimbursed at double-digit interest, and it will affect the operating cost and increase the tipping fee, which we don’t want,” she said.
Regarding the administration of the facility, she said an administration board would be created composed of all the users.
“So, the users would be the owners of this facility, although it’s located in Pontiac, so it could be made up of Ottawa, Pembroke, Renfrew County, Pontiac and Outaouais. The waste management is paid by a user pay based on tonnage and tipping fees.”
The warden also addressed the question of First Nations support for the project.
“We’ve spoken to Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg, who are our Algonquin people who actually own the land where this will be built, and they much prefer a technology like this to landfill which can affect the air, the soil and the water,” she said.
In enumerating various of the environmental benefits of the envisioned project, the warden said, “For every ton of waste processed by energy-from-waste, it equals one ton of greenhouse gas avoided.”
Minister to visit
The warden added that she’s excited that the Quebec environment minister will come to the Pontiac next month, saying, “He’s made an arrangement – we know what day he’s coming in March – because he wants to stand on the site, and he wants to hear all about our plans, which he supports.”
In terms of next steps, the warden said she would want to have an in-depth business plan developed, funded by interested partners and government grants.
“Public consultation will follow – that’s the environmental assessment which is done through the Ministry of Environment, and that’s where everybody can have their say,” she said.
“But, just to give you some feedback, of our 14,700 people, only less than 3 per cent have been very vocal, and they have a petition on change.org, which is for all of Canada, not just the Pontiac.
“And, actually, I’m thankful for all of their questions and concerns being raised because it’s shown me two things. One, that they are talking about a project that we’ll never build. They’re talking about the old-style incineration. Number two, it’s always important to understand what the objections and concerns are, and do our best to meet all of them and reassure people,” the warden said.
At the end of her presentation, Warden Toller played a three-minute promotional video produced by Covanta providing a virtual tour of a waste-to-energy plant.
A video recording of the warden’s presentation may be viewed on the Renfrew County website at https://www.youtube.com/watch?…

Warden Toller pitches Pontiac incinerator to Renfrew County Read More »

Giant Tiger gives $1,500 to Blessed Cupboard

Charles Dickson, Editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

Marie-Eve Lizée, grocery supervisor at Giant Tiger, and wife of store owner/manager Brandyn Gauthier, handed over a cheque for $1,500 on Monday to Jenn and Mike Rusenstrom for the Blessed Cupboard, a charity operated by the Bethel Pentecostal Church in Shawville.

The money raised goes into giving out food baskets just before Christmas, and wherever else they can help out on an as-needed basis.

“We usually help about 100 families at Christmas, from Quyon to Campbell’s Bay, families that are not eligible for support from other food banks,” explained Jenn Rusenstrom. She and her husband, Mike, have helped organize Blessed Cupboard for the past 10-plus years, raising about $10,000 per year.

“The funds are all raised locally, different service clubs and businesses, and people in the community who make donations,” said Mike.

“Say you get laid off in the wintertime, and you hit a stretch for six weeks when there’s no income, we’re able to help bridge that gap. If someone finds themself in that kind of situation, they can reach out for a hand by calling the church,” he said.

The Rusenstroms said that the cost of food has doubled since they started 10 years ago, and that the number of families they’re helping has doubled as well, from about 50 families then to 100 families now.

With a $10,000 annual budget, how significant is a $1,500 contribution?

“Huge. It’s really, really good. It goes a long way,” said Jenn. “And all the money that we raise goes back into local businesses. All the food we buy is local.”

Marie-Eve said the $1,500 was raised through donations by Giant Tiger customers made at the cash when paying for purchases.

“We’re just very glad we can help in any way we can,” she said, adding that she and her husband have raised more than $20,000 for local organizations since taking over at Giant Tiger.

Giant Tiger gives $1,500 to Blessed Cupboard Read More »

Citizens’ groups call on feds to halt nuclear waste disposal plan

Charles Dickson, Editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

“People need to wake up and realize the truth that this waste is full of deadly long-lived, man-made radioactive poisons such as plutonium that will be hazardous for many thousands of years,” says Johanna Echlin of the Old Fort William (Quebec) Cottagers’ Association.
Echlin was quoted in a press release issued Monday by a collection of citizens’ groups from both the Ontario and Quebec sides of the Ottawa River that are pressing the federal government to halt the construction of a near-surface disposal facility for radioactive waste approximately a kilometre from the Ottawa River.
“If I hear one more time that the mound will hold ‘only low-level’ radioactive waste including mops and shoe covers, I’m going to scream so loud they will hear me at the IAEA headquarters in Vienna,” Echlin is quoted as saying.
According to the joint press release, the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) says waste from research facilities such as Chalk River Laboratories generally belongs to the “Intermediate-level” waste class and must be kept underground, tens of metres or more below the surface.
A letter sent by the citizens’ groups to elected officials on Feb. 4 cites evidence that “waste destined for the mound is heavily contaminated with very long-lived radioactive materials produced in nuclear reactors, which are capable of causing cancer, birth defects and genetic mutations in exposed populations.”
The letter calls for the Government of Canada to halt the disposal project and stop all funding for construction.
“We believe Cabinet or Parliament has the power to reverse this decision and they need to do so as soon as possible,” said Lynn Jones of Concerned Citizens of Renfrew County and Area.
Canadian Nuclear Laboratories (CNL) was recently granted permission by the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) to build the proposed Near-Surface Disposal Facility (NSDF) on the Ontario shore of the Ottawa River roughly across from the Pontiac community of Sheenboro.
According to the press release, if built, the seven-storey mound “will hold one million tons of radioactive and other hazardous waste from eight decades of operations of the Chalk River Laboratories (CRL), a highly contaminated federal nuclear research facility owned by the Government of Canada.”
The signatories to the letter are Concerned Citizens of Renfrew County and Area, the Old Fort William (Quebec) Cottagers’ Association, Ralliement contre la pollution radioactive, and the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility which have been opposing the proposal to build the radioactive waste disposal facility since 2016.

Citizens’ groups call on feds to halt nuclear waste disposal plan Read More »

Pontiac Agricultural Society elects new president

Charles Dickson, Editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

Ralph Lang was elected president of the Pontiac Agricultural Society (PAS) for 2024 at the organization’s annual general meeting held in Shawville on Thursday evening.
The meeting, held at the PAS office at the Shawville fairgrounds, also saw four new members join the board – Gerald Lance, Scott Lemay, Ben Younge, Kait Meilleur-Theriault – bringing its membership to a total of 29.
“We got four brand new directors with a diverse skill set and backgrounds, and we got all of our current directors returning,” a buoyant Mavis Hanna, the PAS general manager, told THE EQUITY on Friday.
The meeting reviewed the financial statement for 2023 and, according to Hanna, it told a very positive story.
“It was a very positive year. We had a lot of projects on the go. We had summer students who did a lot of work around the grounds. We made a lot of capital improvements, painting and execution of other projects around the grounds and buildings, so that worked out really well.
As for attendance at Shawville Fair, “We had lots of people through, between 40 and 45,000 people coming through the gates. We’re back up to pre-covid times,” Hanna said.
Vaughan Bastien, who operates a Shawville-based tire business, nominated Clarendon crop farmer Ralph Lang for president at Thursday’s meeting. When someone else nominated Bastien, he declined.
After serving as president for the past three-and-a-half years, he says it just felt like it was time to go.
“I just felt it was time. Sometimes you know, new blood is good,” Bastien told THE EQUITY on Friday.
“It was time to let somebody else come in with new ideas, maybe better ideas, and take over,” he said.
Recalling his time as president, Bastien said parts of it weren’t easy.
“The second year, we came out of covid, it was tough, we lost money. And then the third year, we did well,” he said.
“You know, they worked so hard last year as a team, and we did such a great job,” he said referring to the board.
“There was not a director there that would not help another director, or go out of their way to do something for them. We achieved so much, but we also came out almost like family. I felt part of a family, I could depend on them at any time. “I’m going to miss it, truly I’m going to miss it,” Bastien said.
“It’s great to take over from Vaughan. There’s no issues,” Ralph Lang told THE EQUITY on Sunday.
“It’s kind of like a boxer stopping when he’s on top, so it makes it easier for me to come in because there’s no issues to deal with,” he said.
“So, we’re in a good position,” Lang said, looking forward.
“We want to reinvest in the fairgrounds again, and rejuvenate the arena. It’s been 30 years since it’s been revitalized. So, it’s time to form a committee in the community and hopefully revitalize it and renovate again, whatever we have to do.”
“I think it could be a great facility for daycare, camps, or lacrosse or basketball, or whatever, with people managing it all year long, but that’s only my idea,” said Lang.
“Vaughan brought up the idea of pickleball the other day, it could be our new thing,” he added.
Lang has a long history with the fair board. He has served on the board for a total of 15 years, and as one of the vice-presidents last year. His father, Elwyn was a president almost 40 years ago, and his late mother, Lynn, was president about 15 years ago. His aunts Joan and Joyce and his late uncle Jack, and their families, have long been part of the volunteer workforce that makes the fair happen every year.
“It’s always like a family homecoming for the Langs to come back and help out, and do whatever. It’s like a reunion every year. And it’s like that for a lot of families that are involved” he said.
Lang is a crop farmer. His company, RM Lang Farms grows corn, beans and wheat on about 4,000 acres of land from Luskville to Calumet Island, half of which it owns and half it leases. It also operates a commercial grain elevator, buying and selling grain, with a trucking company on the side. Last year, he added sunflowers to the mix.
Raised on his parents’ dairy and beef farm, which he took over in 2005 and switched to cropping, Lang has deep roots in agriculture.
“I learned how to run a meeting at 4H, so hopefully I’ll be able to run a meeting at the fair board,” Lang said.
“We have a good general manager in Mavis Hanna, and that’s going to make my job easy,” said Lang. “She’ll make me look good, hopefully.”

2024 Pontiac Agricultural Society
Board of Directors


Ralph Lang President
Vaughan Bastien Past President
Josey Bouchard First Vice President
Holly Campbell Vice-President
Kelly King Vice-President
Kendal Lang Vice-President
Jason Wilson Vice-President
Hayley Campbell Secretary
Heather Dale Financial Officer
Ken Bernard Director
Rayden Besharah Director
David Bobier Director
Lisa Coles Director
Ryan Currie Director
Gerald Dagg Director
Sandra Dale Director
Tanya Greer Director
Beth Knox Campbell Director
Gerald Lance Director
Elwyn Lang Director
Scott Lemay Director
Kayla McCann Director
Tyler McCann Director
Kait Meilleur-Theriault Director
Mike Rusenstrom Director
Paul Scheel Director
Lee Stanley Director
Nancy Tubman Director
Ben Younge Director
Mavis Hanna General Manager

Pontiac Agricultural Society elects new president Read More »

Mayors approve a slightly larger 2024 budget

Charles Dickson, editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

A slightly bigger budget for MRC Pontiac was approved by the county’s 18 mayors at their monthly public meeting last week.

The 2024 budget, presented to the meeting by MRC accountant Annie Vaillancourt, is for $9,858,724, an increase of $354,666 over the budget for 2023.

Forty-three per cent of the 2024 budget – $4,206,500 – will come from municipal shares.

As Vaillancourt explained to THE EQUITY, the share each municipality contributes to the MRC budget is determined essentially by total property valuations in each municipality, to which a multiplier is applied.

While the total contribution of all municipal shares to the 2024 budget represents an increase of $54,396 (1.31 per cent) over 2023, the multiplier being applied is decreasing from $0.1329 to $0.1047 per $100 of property value, indicating a general increase in property values over the past year.

Forty-five per cent of the 2024 budget – $4,437,956 – will come from grants.

The balance of the budget is made up of $1,069,375 (11 per cent) composed of revenue derived from leasing of public lands, bank interest and payment for services provided, plus $144,897 (1 per cent) in the form of surplus revenue accumulated in 2023 and carried over to the 2024 budget.

Full details of the budget can be found on the MRC Pontiac website.

Mayors approve a slightly larger 2024 budget Read More »

Concerns voiced over incinerator project at Friends of the Pontiac meeting

Charles Dickson, editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

Efforts to advance a proposed garbage incinerator project in the Pontiac “raised many red flags,” says a local elected official working on waste management.
Jennifer Quaile, a councillor in Otter Lake and that municipality’s representative on MRC Pontiac’s waste management committee, made the comments in a presentation at a public information meeting hosted by Friends of the Pontiac in Ladysmith last Thursday evening.
According to Quaile, it was clear from the beginning that the waste management committee on which she sits was not going to function in the way she thought it should.
“The committee had no specific mandate, no stated mission,” said Quaile. “For the first few meetings, it seemed this committee was a forum for the warden to convince everyone on the virtues of garbage incineration or energy from waste.”
“I believe there’s a public perception that the committee is a decision-making body, or at least one that can make recommendations to the Council of Mayors for consideration. Unfortunately, that is not the case,” she said.
Concerned that the warden’s solution to disposing of Pontiac’s 5,000 tons of garbage involved importing an additional 395,000 tons required to feed the $450 million incinerator, Quaile began to conduct her own research, an area of specialty as a former public policy researcher and advisor to the federal government.
“What I found in my research were so many red flags – I was actually appalled to see such a dramatic difference from what the warden had been portraying,” Quaile said in her Thursday evening presentation.
Quaile also recounted a number of incidents where she says she and others who attempted to raise their concerns were accused by the warden of being ‘environmentalists’ and were told she would not tolerate ‘fear mongering’.
“To our warden, valid questions and concerns are fear mongering. That is not right in a democracy,” said Quaile.
At one point, Warden Toller, one of the 25 people in the audience at the meeting, interrupted Quaile’s presentation.
“Is this meeting about me or about the incinerator project?” the warden asked.
Remo Pasteris, who moderated the event, reminded the warden and all in attendance that questions could be asked later, but that interruptions of presentations would not be tolerated.
Quaile told the audience that, in the face of her experience with the incinerator issue, she is dismayed but not discouraged, and outlined two areas where she feels change is needed.
“Our regional government – MRC Pontiac – needs to be more transparent . . . a space where mayors and councillors can speak up and members of the public can have their voices heard without being mocked.”
“We should be putting our efforts towards implementing a waste management plan that diverts waste through proven methods like recycling and composting,” she said.
“This would be good public policy, much more environmentally friendly and much less costly,” said the Otter Lake councillor.
Quaile concluded her remarks with a comment about the importance of a free press.
“The free press is, I might add, an incredibly important part of a democracy. As we have seen over the last several months with letters to the editor, the press provides a forum for the voices of the community when they cannot be heard at town halls or MRC meetings,” she said.
Quaile’s presentation was followed by Friends of the Pontiac member Linda Davis speaking on governance issues.
“This is an improper process,” she said. “We should have had a feasibility study. We should have found out what all technologies are available right now and let us have that open discussion.”
Davis recalled that at the warden’s town hall meeting in Shawville in mid-June, the warden said a business plan would be produced, that Deloitte was going to produce it and that it would cost $200,000.
“And I put up my hand and said ‘Before you tender the contract, you can’t say who the winner is going to be,’” Davis recounted.
Remo Pasteris, a Bristol resident and member of Friends of the Pontiac, drew on his science background with the federal government in his review of concerns over the environmental and human health impacts of garbage incinerators of the sort being proposed for the Pontiac.
In a conversation after the meeting, Pasteris emphasized his concern about toxic chemicals.
“Where do the toxic chemicals go? They have to go somewhere. They cannot simply disappear into thin air. Will they be in the emissions? Will they be in the bottom ash? What is the list of chemicals that this incinerator will be tested for, and what are the limits?” he asked.

Concerns voiced over incinerator project at Friends of the Pontiac meeting Read More »

Pontiac High hosts exhibition hockey games in Shawville

Charles Dickson, reporter
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

The 2023-2024 high school hockey season was launched almost two weeks ago as Pontiac High School (PHS) hosted teams from Hadley and Philemon Wright in exhibition games at Shawville arena. Teachers Darcy Findlay and Matt Greer are co-organizers of the PHS hockey program, with help from Cody Laurent and Steve Rusenstrom. According to Greer, the hockey program has been running since about 2004, with a short hiatus during the covid pandemic. This year’s lineup features 18 boys and girls on each of the junior and senior teams. Asked whether he calls it co-ed hockey, Findlay replied, “I just call it hockey.” Friday’s games were officiated by volunteer referee Jeff Ireland. The visiting teams, hailing from the Hull sector of Gatineau, both took commanding leads early in the games. Valiant effort on the part of the Pontiac teams closed the gap but, in the end, was not enough to prevail. As Cade Kuehl of the PHS senior team said, “We’re excited about the year ahead and look forward to lots of fun, learning and growing together as a team, and maybe some winning in there too.”

Pontiac High hosts exhibition hockey games in Shawville Read More »

New mayor for Rapides des Joachims

Charles Dickson, editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

The Municipality of Rapides des Joachims has named Lucie Rivet Paquette as its new mayor.

The news emanated from Pontiac’s western-most municipality last Wednesday afternoon when Rivet Paquette, the only candidate in the election to replace recently-deceased mayor Doug Rousselle, was acclaimed to the position.

Born in Shawville and raised in Fort Coulonge, Rivet Paquette moved to Rapides des Joachims in her mid-teens where she got married and has lived ever since.

A school bus driver for 28 years and an employee with the Rapides-des-Joachims ZEC (zone d’exploitation contrôlée) for 20, she has also served one term as a municipal councillor. In the 2021 municipal election, she ran for mayor in a contest won by Doug Rousselle.

Since Rousselle’s passing in September, pro-mayor Stephany Rauche has served as acting mayor. On Nov. 3., Rauche turned the job over to Rivet Paquette who will chair her first public meeting of municipal council this week.

New mayor for Rapides des Joachims Read More »

One injured, house reduced to rubble in Quyon fire

Charles Dickson, editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

A resident who escaped a fire that engulfed a house in Quyon in the very early hours of Saturday morning is believed to have suffered burns requiring hospitalization. Another resident, who was not home when the fire broke out, returned soon afterward, according to witnesses.
The house at 27 Saint John Street, at the corner of Saint George, was reduced to rubble.
Though the house was completely ablaze, quick response by neighbours living immediately next door helped save their own house from catching fire.
Kelsie Tremblay, a former firefighter with the Municipality of Pontiac, was home at his residence at 25 Saint John Street when he discovered the fire next door. He phoned his wife Katrine Laframboise who was with friends, also former firefighters, down the street at Gavan’s, who rushed back to the scene.
Within minutes, they were all working to contain the fire, using hoses from the fire truck from the Quyon fire station, the first fire truck to arrive on-scene. Together the neighbours, friends and members of the fire brigade were able to contain the blaze to the one dwelling. The subsequent arrival of more of the Pontiac and LaPeche brigades enabled the replacement of civilians with volunteer fire fighters.
RV destroyed
In a separate incident last week, fire also completely destroyed an RV-styled camper trailer parked behind a residence on Clarendon Street in the Eastern part of Quyon, which nearby residents say began with the sound of an explosion.
No information on either fire was available from the Municipality of Pontiac Fire Department by THE EQUITY’s publication deadline.

One injured, house reduced to rubble in Quyon fire Read More »

Public access to plenary discussions?

Charles Dickson, editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

A survey of MRC Pontiac mayors conducted by THE EQUITY over the past two weeks has found a roughly even three-way split among the 18 mayors on the question of whether to open their private discussions to the public.

Every month, the mayors of MRC Pontiac have a private “plenary” meeting to discuss issues of public policy. They vote on the resulting motions in the monthly public meeting held the following week.

Since the public is not allowed to attend the plenary meetings, and since the issues on which mayors are voting are typically not debated at the public meeting, it is difficult for the public to gain much insight into the issues at play on any given topic. For some, this represents a reduction in transparency in the deliberations of our elected representatives, and therefore of their accountability to the public.

This newspaper has been among the voices encouraging mayors to consider opening their meetings more fully to the public, with the understanding that they would retain the option of moving a public meeting into an in-camera discussion whenever the subject at hand required it, with issues of a personal, proprietary or security nature as examples.

While it appears that mayors have discussed this matter upon several occasions, they have done so privately in their plenary sessions, with the result that the pubic does not know where any of them stands on the question of whether the public should have greater access to their discussions.

In the hopes of shedding light on their views on this question, over the past two weeks THE EQUITY has conducted an informal survey of the mayors of MRC Pontiac.

It was launched by email in which a question was posed, anticipating it would yield either YES or NO responses. In the end, the question required more discussion than a simple YES or NO and led to a series of very interesting telephone conversations with almost all of the mayors. A summary of the responses follows, but first the question:

If the mayors were asked who believes the public should be allowed to attend the plenaries, would your hand go up?

The email explained that it would be assumed that if the public were allowed to attend the plenaries, the mayors would still be able to shift sections of the meeting in-camera for discussion of issues requiring the protection of privacy, proprietary information and information on security issues, among others.

With this understanding, five mayors – Bill McCleary (Shawville), Odette Godin (Waltham), Colleen Lariviere (Litchfield), Carl Mayer (Alleyn and Cawood) and Corey Spence (Allumettes Island) – answered the question with an unequivocal YES, providing they would retain the option of moving discussions in-camera when warranted.

Five mayors – Doris Ranger (Sheenboro), Karen Daly-Kelly (Thorne), Christine Francoeur (Fort Coulonge), Sandra Armstrong (Mansfield and Pontefract) and Lynn Judd-Cameron (Portage du Fort) – responded with a fairly clear NO, citing a variety of concerns ranging from the need for mayors to feel free to discuss matters frankly and openly to the inconvenience to mayors and the public of shifting meetings back and forth between public and private. At the same time, several in the NO camp said there were probably some things such as presentations being made to the mayors that could be opened to the public.
Between the YES’s and the NO’s were six mayors – Donald Gagnon (Chichester), Ed Walsh (Clarendon), Jean-Louis Corriveau (Calumet Island), Brent Orr (Bristol), Raymond Pilon (Campbell’s Bay) and Alain Gagnon (Bryson) – who were drawn by both sides of the argument and were undecided, would have to see exactly how it would be set up, and placed significant importance on being able to retain the ability to move discussion in-camera when warranted.

Terry Lafleur (Otter Lake), while not especially supportive of opening plenaries to the public, would support there being a discussion leading to a plan that would clarify exactly what was being voted on.
Lucie Rivet Paquette, the newly-elected mayor of Rapides des Joachims, reasonably withholds her views until she has had a chance to attend a meeting of mayors and can develop a more informed opinion on the matter.
With a fairly even split between those for and those against opening the plenary to the public, and a sizeable undecided vote, any effort by mayors to resolve the matter has the potential to go either way.

Public access to plenary discussions? Read More »

Teachers plan to strike again next week

Charles Dickson, editor
Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

Owing to a three-day strike planned by the union representing teachers and professionals next week, all classes, transportation and daycare services across the Western Quebec School Board will be canceled on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday (November 21, 22 and 23). In a letter issued Tuesday morning, WQSB Director General George Singfield says all schools, centres and the board office will be closed on those days.

Teachers plan to strike again next week Read More »

Mayors approve proposal for incinerator business plan

Charles Dickson, editor

Funded by the Local Journalism Initiative

A proposal to develop a business plan for a garbage
incinerator project in MRC Pontiac has been approved
by mayors at a special meeting held at the MRC’s
Campbell’s Bay office last Wednesday.
In a 12-to-6 vote, the Council of Mayors passed
a motion authorizing consulting firm Deloitte to
proceed with the implementation of its proposal
under a contract for $120,000.
The Deloitte proposal describes its envisioned
work as “completing an initial business case (IBC)
that is intended to review the costs of the Pontiac
EFW [energy-from-waste facility] against a base-line
landfill option, and to recommend a plan that will
outline key steps needed to confirm waste supply,
obtain approvals and funding, and to execute the
procurement of the Pontiac EFW.”
The proposal identifies Danish company Ramboll
as a subcontractor that, with Deloitte, will form
an “integrated advisory team that will deliver the
services to complete the IBC.”
Last week’s decision to proceed with the Deloitte
proposal follows a decision taken by mayors at a
special meeting in August which, also in a 12-to-6
vote, set aside $100,000 from the MRC’s accumulated
surplus for a sole-source contract with Deloitte, in a
resolution that required “that this sum be committed
only after Council has approved the proposal
submitted by Deloitte for the production of the
business plan.”
An additional $20,000, all that remains of a $50,000
budget set aside four years ago for consultation on
the energy-from-waste project, was also allocated to
the development of the business plan, bringing the
total to $120,000, just under the $121,200 maximum
allowable under provincial rules for a sole-source
contract.
In the Council’s regular public meeting on August
16, the warden explained that Council had decided
to reduce the budget from
the previously-envisioned
$200,000 down to $120,000,
and that it would be solely
for the development of a
business plan and not include
an environmental assessment.
In her remarks at the
meeting of mayors last
Wednesday, Warden Toller
thanked mayors Donnie
Gagnon and Colleen Lariviere
for bringing to the Council’s
attention the requirement for
a vote on whether to establish
a contract with Deloitte based
on the company’s proposal, as
required by the August resolution.
“It is a fact that for any contract to move forward,
there has to be a resolution, so I thank Mayor Lariviere
and Mayor Gagnon for
calling this meeting today
so that we can vote properly
on the resolution,” said the
warden.
The warden then offered
the floor to mayors Lariviere
and Gagnon but, before
either could speak, a motion
was quickly proposed,
seconded and voted on to
shift the meeting to an in-
camera session. Over the
protests of several mayors,
the warden declared that
the motion had passed, the
Council would now continue
its meeting in private and the media, members of the
public and staff were asked to leave the room. The
better part of an hour had passed before the public
was invited back into the meeting.
Prior to the vote on the resolution to engage
Deloitte, comments from mayors were invited and
were largely favourable. The only dissenting views
were expressed by Litchfield Mayor Colleen Lariviere
who registered her disagreement with the allocation
of $100,000 from the MRC’s accumulated surplus to
this purpose, which she said could have been funded
from other sources, and Chichester Mayor Donnie
Gagnon who added “any money we spend here at the
MRC has an effect on all the municipalities.”
The vote was then taken with Alleyn-Cawood,
Allumettes Island, Bryson, Calumet Island, Campbell’s
Bay, Fort Coulonge, Mansfield and Pontefract, Portage
du Fort, Rapides des Joachims, Shawville, Sheenboro
and Thorne voting in favour of the resolution, and
Bristol, Chichester, Clarendon, Litchfield, Otter Lake
and Waltham voting against.
In a media scrum following Wednesday’s meeting,
the warden explained that the contract with Deloitte
would be split 50/50 with Ramboll, with $60,000 going
to each company. Asked why Ramboll’s participation
was required, given the warden’s earlier description of
Deloitte’s expertise in the field as sufficient justification
for a sole-source contract, the warden explained that
“Deloitte’s expertise is in the financial model, more
the financial business, how it’s all going to work with
the partners, the governance. What Ramboll will
give is the environmental, the technologies available,
what technologies would build different parts of the
incinerator, what it’s going to cost.”
Pressed on why Deloitte had been given a sole-
source contract rather than creating an open bidding
process in which other companies such as Ernst and
Young, KPMG, PriceWaterhouseCooper, among others,
could conceivably have brought forward proposals,
the warden said Deloitte was chosen because it had
done the business plan for Durham-York, the one
energy-from-waste facility that she and the mayors
had toured, “And we were impressed with it,” she said.
“We feel we are in good hands with Deloitte,” she
said.
The warden explained that Deloitte “opened
our eyes” to the fact that the project would need
additional expertise, and proposed three companies
for consideration by the Council: HDR, WSP and
Ramboll. Asked why Ramboll was chosen and
whether the warden and mayors had ever met with
Ramboll, the warden said “We had a couple of virtual
meetings when we were first reviewing the business
plan, and then, for the mayors, when we had our
plenary meeting, they were on the screen,” she said,
explaining that of the three recommended companies,
only Ramboll was granted the opportunity to join the
mayors via in their private plenary meeting earlier in
October via the internet.
“So, we’re still paying $120,000 but we’re actually
getting a lot more for the money than I had expected,”
said Toller.
“I thought at first it was just going to be like a
financial business plan. Bill McCleary raised the
concern about ‘is environment going to be mentioned
enough?’ Yes, it is. When you get your own copy, you
are going to see that the environmental part is going
to be covered well by Ramboll,” she said.
Asked about the timeline for the development of
the business plan, the warder said, “There is going
to be a preliminary report given to us in November
and then we’ll have a final report later, probably into
2024.”
Remo Pasteris of Bristol and Christine Anderson of
Thorne, members of the local citizens’ group Friends
of the Pontiac, made interventions during the public
question portion of the meeting.
Pasteris asked whether the planned environmental
assessment will take into consideration the potential for
public liability, citing cases in other jurisdictions where
toxic contaminants found in the environment led to
class action lawsuits resulting in the payout of millions
of dollars and what this could mean for tax payers. In
her response, the warden said the first step is to conduct
a business study and to identify the cleanest technology
available, with an environmental assessment to come
later. She said that while this is the first time she has
heard of environmental assessment and liability “going
hand in hand”, as Pasteris had put it, she said “that will
be something we will follow up with.”
Anderson said that a petition opposing the
incinerator project had already garnered more than
500 signatures, suggesting that support for the
initiative “it’s not the 100 per cent consensus that
you might think.” The warden replied that she had
never said she expected there would be 100 per cent
support for the project.
“It’s never 100 per cent, but a majority of people I
believe today have placed their hope in an opportunity
like this to look after our waste and be a leader in
Quebec,” she said.

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