ACHILLES 6 a a < o¢ 0 G Mi OTOR PRODUCTS in Acton | PAULSIMMONS, | SERVICE MANAGER CHECK RAD, HOSES NEW ANTIFREEZE $49.95 357 Queen Street ©9)853-0200 Halton Hills (Acton) ©°5)453-8965 1992 Grand Marquis GS pode) Rockwood ° 856-2222 5 worth tr till dogs Board Labour dispute s ] Students at Robert Lit tle school delighted audi-! ences with their Christ-| mas concert. See photo on page 3 | Rockwood annual Pa- jrade of Lights drew more than last year's 7,0 | peolple to watch this lyear's parade. See photo page 13. Harold and Doris | Townsley celebrated 50 years of married life Fri- day with an open house | at the Legion. See photo page 7. | Acton High School's | jannual commencement | last Friday honored 92 students who received their diplomas. See story | page 11. J Next week's New Tanner will be pub- lished Tuesday, Dec. Gardner re-elected | Former veteran Robert Little school teacher Ethel Gardiner has retained her position as chair of the Halton District School Board after being forced to draw lots for the job following a tie vote in last Wednesday's election by trustees. At the end of ballotting Gardiner, first elected chair at the end of 1997, was tied with the other nominee, Burlington trustee Sheila Flook whom Gardiner de- feated last year. As required by the Edu- cation Act and bylaws of the Halton board the tie vote re- sulted in drawing, which Gardiner won. Trustee Debbie Marklew was named as vice-chair of the board, again after draw- ing lots following a tie vote with trustee Lynn Roberts, In a press release Gardiner said that the com- ing year will continue to present challenges. "As stated in the Road Ahead II --the EIC document outlining roles and responsi- bilities of Boards and trustees ~ we are hear to operate within specific parameters" Gardiner said. "We are in this role not to deal with the day-to-day op- erations, but to act as vision- aries, decision-makers and policy-setters in creating an exemplary, exciting school -- system which will well serve our students. "We must continue to work co-operatively and col- laboratively," Gardner said. (hen, Z G D ANNUAL TRADITION: Wednesday evening many Acton residents were treated to Christmas carols when The Acton Citizens' Band played around the town. - Angela Tyler photo a i oe CU Town staff members of CUPE (Canadian Union of Public Employees) Local 73 will vote Tuesday on a new contract offer from the Town of Halton Hills. Union president Steve McKnight said the bargain- ing committee will recom- mend acceptance of the offer PE vot but he has no idea whether members will support their recommendation. The tentative three-year agreement was reached with the help of a conciliator in a day-long session last week. If accepted, the new agreement would apply to more than 40 employees in es on contract the Town Outside Works and Recreation and Park depart- ments. They have been without a contract since March and voted overwhelmingly in fa- vour of strike several weeks ago when negotiations bogged down. Solution eludes trustees Unhappy with the increas- ingly bitter labour dispute some parents of Catholic high school students in Halton have asked the board and union to sit down with students, school councils and local MPPs to try to end the impasse. After 11 months of talks and 29 negotiating sessions there's no settl in si; without extra-curricula tivities and after-school aca- _ demic help. Parents are concerned about how their children will make up the 30 hours of class time lost this fall when the teachers held a partial strike and refused to teach a dis- puted extra class. The Ministry of Educa- tion ordered the board to make up at least 23 of those hours before the semester ends late next month. In an effort to help the dispute sev- eral parent groups offered to review other settlements to see if they could work in Halton. Initially trustees didn't want to be part of that committee but changed their minds. Now the union refuses to participate saying the committee would only delay negotiations further and it won't participate. As the stalemate contin- ues, students vowed their protests would also continue after Christmas. ae = gi g = SCOUTING REPORT ' i : nae : ' fall cae S Nimbl Li leader *Sspeedmanual _ Lease for as low as ve ieee ade 1999 TERCEL CE -sootoiddown ' = +tax* or choose 4. 3 Z, Quality Veteran at rookie price : ial Seat $ 0 $8 AWARDS/KUDOS : Terie Bown _ fihaneing for see 1 #1 selling carin its class fase ai January-August 1998 AIMC cassette stero per month for 48 months up to 60 months $3,000 136 : ebody side mouldings FREIGHT & PDE INCLUDED P é S = Segmentation Report. 15 MOUNTAINVIEW RD. N.,GEORGETOWN 877-2296 Tor 874-4276 = 2 4 -- WEBSITE at www.haltonhills.com/toyota or E-MAIL at toyota@aztec-net.com SS $13,5890 MSRP = "Based 'on a 48-month walkaway lease. First payment and 'security deposit due on delivery, based on 96,000 kms. Additional km charge of 7¢ if applicable on the TERCEL. --<---- SSS = FSS = =