12 THE NEW TANNER THURSDAY, JULY 19, 2007 with The New Tanner Sports Acton Minor Ball ROCKWOODThe Miller SIX NEW CLASSES: Construction is well under way on the six-classroom addition at Rockwood Centennial Public School. The addition is intended to ease overcrowding at the school, as are the school boards boundary changes, which will see some students moving to Eramosa Public School. Rebecca Ring Photo LOOKING FOR LOST WORLDS: Wellington County Library (Rockwood) and TD Canada Trust are sponsoring a Summer Reading Club for Children, ages three to 12. Each child who registers receives a poster, activity book, and passport where they can track their reading success to earn prizes and stickers. The summer programs theme is Lost Worlds, on which many special events are based. Shown here are Nicholas Jirgens, Jordan and Savannah Letendre, who have just found Napoleons hat in a scav- enger hunt. Clues were presented in a letter from H.G. Wells, in which he asks children for help fi nding the password for his time machine. For more information, visit or call the library, or visit www.county.wellington.on.ca. Rebecca Ring Photo By Rebecca Ring Guelph/Eramosa Council unanimously agreed at their last meeting to support the in motion project, which is designed to increase the physical fi tness and health of the community. Coordinator Karen Armstrong spoke on behalf of Wellington- Dufferin-Guelph (WDG) in motion to promote and discuss the project. WDG in motion is a collaboration of several municipalities, University of Guelph, WDG Public Health, YM-YWCA, and the Heart and Stroke Founda- tion. It is a health promotion model developed by the Saskatoon Regional Health Authority and implemented there for the last eight years. It resulted in an increase of physical activity rates from 36% of the population to 50% who are active on a regular basis. The program offers spe- cifi c tools and strategies to target children, youth, older adults, workplaces, inactive adults, and those at risk for diabetes. Armstrong says no other policies or programs have made such signifi cant changes around physical activity. According to Armstrong, WDG has an inactive popu- lation typical of the province as a whole. Forty-six per cent of males and 43% of females are inactive, 54% of males and 44% of females are overweight or obese and less than half the population 15 or older gets suffi cient activity to support optimal health, she says. Health risks of inactivity and obe- sity include high cholesterol levels, type-2 diabetes, gall bladder disease, respiratory problems, heart disease and cancer. Our inactivity is a result of time spent in vehicles, in front of the computer, watching TV or playing vid- eo games. In fact, a higher than average proportion of WDG residents spends two or more hours of leisure time in these ways. There has been a decrease in the number of children active in sports, except for soccer. We wont have many Olympic athletes. We need a cultural value shift toward physical activity. Most people are willing to spend money and time on electronics, like home theatres, but not on physical activity. Change is urgently needed. An active population is healthier, uses our health system less and uses our parks, facilities and trails more. Communities that support activity thrive economically over those that do not, Armstrong asserts. Specific strategies in- clude creating walkable communities. We need to identify barriers for walk- ing to school, for example, and address them, says Armstrong. Councillor Doug Breen identifi ed provincial Hwy. 7 as a safety issue for kids. Armstrong suggests that parents could walk with their children, or the township establish a cross- ing-guard system, and put traffi c calming measures in place (sign, speed bumps, etc.). Breen also pointed out that the township is develop- ing a trails system, which could be incorporated into in motion. Funding for the program comes from the provinces Ministry of Health Pro- motions Community in Action Fund (CIAF) grants (about $100,000), as part of its Active 2010 strat- egy. The Heart and Stroke Foundation also awarded a $25,000 grant. Munici- palities have donated or set aside funding in parks and recreation budgets. Support from the township includes advice, working with staff or volunteers, or fi nancial support with the goal of engaging residents in physi- cal activity. Armstrong says Guelph/Eramosa contrib- uted about $1000 so far. WDG in motion will kick off on October 3 with an organized walk, which Armstrong hopes wil l break records. The World Breaking Record Walk will involve the greatest number of people walking at the same time. Council backs in motion project to improve fi tness Under 16 Girls: Wellington Fireplace & Leisure 1 -Acton 0 Wellington Fireplace & Leisure 1 - Heads 1 Wellington Fireplace & Leisure 2 - Bolton 1 Under 14 Girls: Yard & Pool Master 7 - Heads 0 Charleston Homes - Acton #4 Under 14 Boys: Curwins Pub 10 - Grand Valley 7 Under 12 Girls: Drexler Construction 6 - Acton 1 Under 12 Boys: Curwins Pub 3- Acton Motors 0 CK Coverings 5- Grand Valley 1 Under 10: Freedom 55 Mike Dawkins 5 - C-Plus Blue 0 RockingHorse Early Learning 3 - Village Beauty Boutique 5 Eden House 4 C-Plus Orange 1 Under 8: Freedom 55 Mike Dawkins- RM Construction Eden House - TD Canada Trust Charleston Homes - New Orleans Pizza Motts - Tylenol Under 6: Dr. Tim Peloso - Rockwood Pharmacy Charlene Vanderwal Creative Memories - TD Canada Trust Whistle Stop Caf JBs Renovations RockingHorse Early Learning - Drexler Construction Rockwood Soccer HARDBALL - BANTAM Georgetowns RBC Dominion Securities 18 Acton Home Hardware -15 RBC MVPs: Jared Whalen, James Walsh, Scott Morrison Home Hardware MVPs: Rob Laing, Aaron Weaver, Daniel Borg HARDBALL - ROOKIE Georgetowns Direct Hit Promotions 10 Actons Herbal Magic 0 Herbal Magic MVPs: Vic- toria Scott, Allison Scott, and Taylor Phillips .Direct Hit Promotions MVPs: Joey Toussaint, Chris Deligiannis and Andrew Smith Georgetowns Paul C Armstrong 22 Actons Herbal Magic 6 Herbal Magic MVPs: Con- nor Kowalik, Aron Mersereau and Mackenzie Stewart Paul Armstrong MVPs: Mat- thew Weekes, Justin Priebe and Zackary Cunningham SOFT SAFETYBALL - BLASTBALL The X-Treme Fitness Tri- ceps played the X-Treme Fitness Hamstrings 3 Stars from the Triceps, Abby Girouard, Micheal Battams, Mary-Jane Mac- Donald The X-treme Fitness Biceps played another strong game The outstanding players were Harrison Fraser, Kanyon Paradis and Nolan Cree Record Now 6 Wins and a Draw In a fi ercely contested match Acton defeated Bolton 3 - 2 last week at the high school. Striker Lauren Vermeulen regained her scoring touch with her 6th and 7th goals of the season and Ellen Hannah produced her third to keep Acton undefeated. This week is a bye week and the girls return to action Thursday July 19 at the high school. Under 18 Soccer Acton girls record now six wins, draw Sports must be at the Tanner by noon Tuesday