Halton Hills Images

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 20 Jun 2013, p. 5

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•The IFP• H alton H ills, Thursday, June 20, 2013 5 3 $35FORFROM or $12.99 each GEORGETOWN GARDEN CENTRE 140 GUELPH ST. 905-877-8882 (The former Georgetown Fruit Market building) OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! HANGING BASKETS 10" & 12" Hanging Baskets Huge selection of Hangers, Annuals, Perennials, Vegetable and Herb Plants & Finished Accent Planters FOR THE GARDEN $1.99 25 L bagTOPSOIL$5.99 2 cu ftMULCH Large bag! Red/Cedar/Canada Red/Black $1.29 4 Pk. Flowering & Vegetable Plants FLOWERS & PLANTS Full vibrant flowers from cuttings, not seeds! or $2.49 each Geraniums 10 $22FOR EXOTIC FLOWERS 1399 499 Rose Bushes 2 gal. pot Mini Roses 4" pot 232 Guelph St., Georgetown JOSHUA KELLY, Denturist DR. M BOSTOCK, Dentist • personalized one-on-one care • standard & precision dentures • clean, comfortable exam rooms • state of the art technology jk DENTURIST JOSHUA KELLY, DD DENTURIST 905-877-3641 877-8990 118 Guelph St.Georgetown905 ShowRoom www.asghomecomfort.com The dog days of summer are coming! Proud to call Georgetown my home! Garrey Green mortgage agent #M11000828 c: 647-454-4640 email: ggreen@ggreen.ca website: www.garreygreen.ca Key Mortgage Partners #12333 An Independently Owned & Operated Corporation Let me help you own a home, not a mortgage! The owner of an electric wiring manu- facturing business in Georgetown is still furious after the plug was pulled on his Rosetta St. operation last week. Grant Turner, whose Applied Wiring Assemblies plant employs about 40 full- time staff, had to send most of his work- ers home on Wednesday and Thursday because an obsolete hydro pole was sud- denly shut down, affecting three busi- nesses in an industrial area near the Georgetown GO Station. An inspector for the Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) arrived at around 4 p.m. on Tuesday, June 11 and ordered that power be disconnected so that the hydro pole, which belongs to the landlord of the property, could be replaced. The landlord was informed months ago by the ESA, which enforces the On- tario Electrical Safety Code, that the hydro pole needed repairs and when the notice wasn't heeded, power was shut down due to safety concerns. "It's silly how this has been handled. I've been in business in Halton since 1980 and all I've done is contribute to the local economy, and this is the way I'm treated?" said Turner, whose land- lord rented a generator Thursday to al- low some work to be done at Applied Wiring, but its molding operation didn't restart until Monday afternoon when the new pole was installed. "My landlord has some blame here, but he says the contractor didn't do what he said he would do," added Turner. "(The landlord) has been in Van- couver and didn't know this was going to happen. And (the ESA) has more or less indicated that they could care less if we're not able to operate. Their attitude is, 'Then sue your landlord.' I don't go around suing people if there's a problem. They're both at fault in this situation and I'm paying for it." In addition to the lost business to Applied Wiring, which hadn't been cal- culated as of Tuesday, Turner said the power outage also affected other local businesses that he supplies wiring com- ponents to, including CPI and Minus Forty. He added that it will require at least a day's worth of maintenance to Applied Wiring's manufacturing machinery be- cause the injected molders were dam- aged due to the abrupt shutdown. "We were told we had five minutes be- fore the hydro would be shut down and we didn't even have time to shut all the computers off," Turner said. "Because there was no power, I had to drive down here every 45 minutes or so to make sure nobody broke in, because the alarm system wasn't on. When I was sitting here, in the dark, I thought of put- ting a sign up saying 'we're closed', just auction everything off and leave. But I couldn't do that to my employees. Only three of them don't live in Georgetown." Old hydro pole, inspector leave firm in the dark By EAMONN MAHER Staff Writer An old hydro pole (left) outside the Ap- plied Wiring Assemblies plant on Rosetta Street was replaced by a new one (pictured at forefront) Monday but not before the Electrical Safety Authority disconnected the power to the firm, which lost two days of production. Photo by Eamonn Maher

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