Thursday, D ecem ber 3, 2015 - The IFP - H alton H ills - w w w .theifp.ca Page 15 ADAMS EQUIPMENT Hours of operation: 7:30 am to 6 pm Monday to Friday; 8 am to 5 pm Saturday; Closed on Sunday SALES, SERVICE, RENT-ALL INC. 334 Guelph Street Georgetown, Ontario L7G 4B5 Tel: 905-877-0157 Fax: 905-877-0159 www.adamsequipment.ca We Service Snow Removal Equipment Rentals For EVERY need! • Tools & lawn equipment • Skidsteers, excavators & trenchers • Light construction equipment Full line of TORO Snow Removal Equipment while quantities last 905-877-8888 118 Mill Street Unit 101 Georgetown, Ontario L7G 2C5 ♦ Treatment ♦ Counseling ♦ Support "I can see changes in people very quickly after they start on the program. In two or three weeks, their faces are brighter, their mood is better, they are turning their lives around" COVERED BY OHIP COVERED Help is available. Call Today! Georgetown Pharmacy www.georgetownpharmacy.ca Angelo Dias Pharmacy Manager 905-877-8888 angelo@georgetownpharmacy.ca 118 Mill Street, Unit 101 Georgetown ON L7G 2C5 Monday to Friday 9:00am to 7:00pm Saturday 9:00am to 4:00pm Sundays and Holidays 10:00am to 2:00pm CHURCHES &TEMPLES familyhouseofworship@start.ca Services EVERY Sunday 16 Adamson Street, South Norval, Halton Hills Services starting at 10am GeorGetown Christian reformed ChurCh welcomes you! Reverend Tom van Milligen Youth Pastor: Brian DeBoer sunday worship services: 10:00 am & 6:00 pm 11611 trafalgar road (north of Maple Avenue) 905-877-4322 www.gcrc.on.ca www.knoxgeorgetown.ca Service Dial-in: 905-702-1629 God's Word for Today's World. SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES: 11:00 A.M. Rev. Steve Boose Chair-lift access available. 'Sunday's Cool' youth ministry program for ages 4 & up. 116 Main St. S., Georgetown, ON 905-877-7585 Please participate in our Active Living survey. Your input will help our community plan for a healthy and active future. To fill out the survey visitwww.haltonhills.ca/activeliving. mAKING ACTIVE CHOICES THE EASY CHOICES Attention Halton Hills! After a successful debut last year, the Halton Regional Police Service is about to renew an initiative to address types of criminal activity that have been proven to noticeably increase when the holidays roll around. Project Holiday 2.0 begins Monday in the One District region and runs until Jan. 4. The impetus for the project came after an analytical evaluation of crime statistics in the North Halton area from past holiday seasons. "During the month of December, with the Christmas stressors, there were certain trends for the police service that started to happen," said HRPS Det. Const. Barry Malciw. "We looked at those trends and formed a project team consisting of detectives with some uniformed support to target the seven components where we saw an increase and proactively tackle those areas." Malciw said several proactive strategies will be employed in the target areas, includ- ing RIDE programs, checks on persons with court-imposed conditions, targeted traffic enforcement at high-collision intersections, media awareness for domestic and mental health incidents, proactive retail theft initia- tives and increased police presence at noto- rious crime locations. HRPS brings back Project Holiday