Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 26 Jun 2014, p. 4

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•T he IF P• H al to n H ill s •T hu rs da y, J un e 26 , 2 01 4 4 Own it from $84 bi-weeklyfor 84 months*+HST $591 down payment Smile. 2014 JETTA - LIMITED SUMMER PACKAGE**• Rear view camera • Premium 8-speaker touch screen stereo • Free SiriusXM™ Satellite Radio for 3 months** All at no extra cost. 0 84%UP TO MONTHS* Visit georgetownvw.com or call 1-866-877-5285 for more information. Volkswagen Georgetown 203 Guelph Street (Highway 7) Georgetown - 905.877.5285 *Limited time finance purchase offer available through Volkswagen Finance, OAC. Base MSRP of $16,385 for a new 2014 Jetta 2.0L base model with 5 spd. man. trans. INCLUDING $1,395 freight and PDI, financed at 0% APR for 84 months equals 182 bi-weekly payments of $84. $591 down payment or equivalent trade-in, including $29 EHF (tires), $100 air conditioning levy, if applicable, $5 OMVIC fee, $58 PPSA fee and $495 dealer admin fee, due at signing. Cost of borrowing is $58 for a total obligation of $15,876. License, insurance, registration, options and applicable taxes are extra. **Available on the last run of 2014 Jetta models manyufactured. Some 2014 Jetta models remain in stock without the standard rear view camera / Premium 8-speaker touch screen stereo / 3 months of free SirusXM radio with limited complimentary subscription. Offer ends June 30, 2014, and is subject to change or cancellation without notice. Model shown: 2014 Jetta 1.8 TSI Highline. Vehicle may not be exactly as shown. Visit Georgetown Volkswagen for full details and other great offers. After all, we're drivers too! Offer ends June 30. Continued from pg. 1 Hamilton said last year Can- ada Post delivered 1.2 billion fewer letters than it did in 2006, adding the public understands that something needs to change at Canada Post, and it costs twice as much to deliver mail to people's doors. This year the community boxes are being introduced into 11 communities including Oakville. Hamilton said in the pack- ages affected residents will re- ceive will be a survey on what concerns they have about the change, and ask their preferred box design and whether they would like smaller boxes close to home or a larger cluster of boxes further away. He said in the case of Oakville the overwhelming majority pre- ferred a "smaller group of boxes relatively close to home." He said Canada Post will take that feedback and build a plan based on the residents' criteria and working with the municipality to determine the locations of the community boxes. Once a location has been de- termined Hamilton said they will be knocking on the doors of residents who live near where they propose to install a box. The boxes go on municipal easements and they don't gen- erally place them in front of someone's home, but at the side of the property far back from an intersection. Hamilton said the affected residents can voice their con- cerns and sometimes Canada Post can make a change of lo- cation, or "there may just be no better option." "We can't change them all. We take a neighbourhood by neighbourhood approach," said Hamilton. He said Canada Post plans to report back to area residents on the survey information by mail in the fall and he didn't know yet when it would be selecting the community box locations. Canada Post to seek input with survey New community mail boxes are coming to neighbourhoods used to home delivery.

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