Ladysmith

Dozens gather in Thorne for property reassessment info session

Sarah Pledge Dickson, LJI Journalist

The Municipality of Thorne hosted an information session Sunday morning at the Thorne Community Recreation Association to help residents understand how to request a review of their most recent property assessment. 

About 40 people gathered to learn more about the process from property assessment expert Charles Lepoutre, who gave a similar presentation in Alleyn in Cawood in March, also well attended.

Lapoutre said there’s an increase in interest in the topic because many properties across the province are seeing a significant increase in their valuation.

Thorne mayor Karen Daly Kelly said that the municipality was asked to put on this event by concerned residents.

“We have a few people who are very vocal,” Daly Kelly said. “They wanted something and heard about [Lepoutre] to get a lot of information.”

Lepoutre walked attendees through how to fill out the “Application for review in respect of the property assessment roll” form.

He outlined the five main motives residents can use to apply for an assessment review, including a belief that their building or land value is not in line with market trends, or that the first assessment didn’t consider certain factors, such as wetlands on the property.

Daly Kelly said Thorne residents have a lot of concerns about their property assessments.

“If you have just a small corner of a farm and you don’t have a fancy house, you don’t expect to have to pay so much,” Daly Kelly said. “It’s that type of thing that’s creating problems.”

She said the municipality lowered its mill rate from 0.0068 to 0.0050 per cent of the property valuation in its most recent budget to prevent municipal tax rates from seeing as dramatic an increase as property evaluations have seen in recent years.

Lepoutre explained that a lot of people have been seeing a significant increase in their property assessment due to a leftover effect from the COVID-19 property market.

The data used to generate the property assessment dates back at least 18 months, meaning that this year’s assessment could encompass sales from 2021, 2022 and 2023.

“If you go back to 2021 and 2022, those periods are still part of the ‘covid era,’” Lepoutre said. “So that’s why the assessments are, for a lot of people, still pretty high.”

He advised people to take a look at the current market to see how much properties are going for in their area, noting the number might surprise people.

“That’s the reality, a lot of rate payers hate to have high values when they have to pay taxes, but they certainly love it when they want to sell their property,” he told THE EQUITY following his presentation.

When asked if the assessments could come down in the future once COVID-19 markets were out of the picture, Lepoutre said there’s no way to know.

“It depends on the market,” Lepoutre said. “If I could predict that, I would be the richest person in the world.”

A form for reassessment can be found on the MRC Pontiac website under Residents-Assessment. Forms are to be mailed or dropped off to the MRC Pontiac. Lepoutre said that residents will have to file their reassessment form before Apr. 30 to ensure their property is reassessed before the end of the year.

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John Ward

Ladysmith writer to launch Indigenous disability studies book at Wakefield Library

By Zenith Wolfe

Ladysmith resident John Ward is hoping to change the narrative around Indigenous disability studies with his new book, launching at Wakefield Library this weekend.

The 350-page ‘Indigenous Disability Studies’ is a compilation of essays that explore how Indigenous elders, government workers, teachers, and students understand and navigate disability. The launch event for the book, whose chapters represent 38 Indigenous peoples from 20 countries, will be hosted at 3 p.m. on Feb. 1.

Ward is a federal HR Advisor, a University of Sydney professor, and the book’s editor. He says most research on Indigenous disabilities comes from Canada, the U.S., Australia and New Zealand. This encouraged him to expand out into central and southern America, Asia, Africa, and Oceania to include as diverse a range of stories as possible.

“I wanted this global perspective to have an impact so that when the readers would look at it, they would be able to link things in their own ways and through their own perspectives,” he says.

The research for this book started in 2016 with Ward’s PhD in Education at the University of Ottawa. Ward, a self-described “mixed settler” of Algonquin ancestry with ADHD and dyslexia, decided to dedicate his PhD studies to how Indigenous Elders understand learning disabilities.

Three of the Elders he interviewed for his PhD would go on to write chapters for ‘Indigenous Disability Studies’. Ward says his book will contribute to an emerging field that can help Indigenous peoples process the traumas of Canadian education systems and prevent future abuse.

“I was abused by my principal to the point that I can never walk by that school today. I’ve heard other kids who have stories far worse than I ever had. Even the Elders had residential school experiences that were traumatizing,” Ward says. “In the area of Indigenous disability healthcare, a lot of people lack services and specialized equipment.”

The writing process was also a form of reconciliation for some writers, Ward says, because publishers have habitually dismissed them.

“You can’t write people off. You have to understand them,” he says. “Many of these people who are first time writers, it helped them to connect with readers. This was a form of healing.”

Ward says some writers take a “two-eyed seeing” approach to disability. Many Indigenous peoples hesitate to identify as disabled because Western labels uphold colonial systems of oppression, he says. This approach allows Indigenous contributors like Mohawk Elder Tom Dearhouse to instead incorporate traditional teachings to address the limits of labels.

According to Ward, Dearhouse writes about how many Indigenous people consider children with Down syndrome blessings who bring families together with their happy, empathetic attitudes.

“From [Mohawk] oral history, every child that was born was a gift from the creator,” Ward says. “The spirit went into the body knowing fully what challenges would happen later on, so who are we to speak against the creator?”

Three of the book’s writers will attend the launch event. Elder Annie Smith St-Georges will discuss her chapter on how Indigenous children with learning differences are taught. Kevin Morgan will talk about the colonial implications of the label “blind,” and Lexi (Giizhigokwe) Nahwegiizhic will explore the relationship between neurodiversity and the Seven Grandfather Teachings.

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Ladysmith trivia night first event from new recreation committee

Guillaume Laflamme, LJI Reporter

Dozens of trivia enthusiasts packed into the Thorne Community Recreation Association on Wednesday evening for a trivia night fundraising event hosted by Thorne municipality’s newly formed Ladysmith Recreation Committee.

Teams of five to six players competed in two hours of questions covering 10 different topics, written and delivered by Greg Atkinson, who himself grew up in the Ladysmith area.
“I probably enjoy preparing the questions as much as the audience enjoys answering them,” Atkinson said.
The Clan Davies team, which consisted of Terry Davies, Muriel Davies, Jennifer Davies, Sharon Davies and Karen Davies, won the first place prize.

The event was the first to be organized by the volunteer committee, which was created at the request of the municipality with the mandate to organize activities for Ladysmith residents of all ages.
The committee’s goal was to raise money to be used for hosting future community events, including Thorne’s Canada Day celebrations.

One of the committee’s members, Terri-Lyn Blaskie said volunteering for the committee offered her a chance to give back to the community she grew up in.
“We grew up here as kids and our parents were on the committee back when we were little kids,” Blaskie said. “Our moms did it, and now we’re doing it.”

A handful of local businesses donated door prizes and prizes for trivia winners. The sponsors for the evening were Bretzlaff’s convenience store, Shawville’s Giant Tiger, WePC, Shawville’s UniPrix pharmacy, W.A. Hodgins Home Hardware, Stedmans V&S, Hotel Ladysmith, Renfrew No Frills and Pontiac Home Bakery.
The event was a success according to Monique Atkinson, one of the members of the newly formed recreation committee.

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