Thursday, M ay 21, 2015 - The IFP - H alton H ills - w w w .theifp.ca Page 29 905-877-8262 Susan Hancock Sales Representative Realty Services Inc., Brokerage when experience counts office: 905-456-1000 direct: 905-866-2994 ... INTEREST FREE LOAN to Help with Home Improvement Repairs When You are Listing with Us! ... FREE Professional Staging and Virtual Tours! ... Cormpilas Team's Seller/Buyer Guarantee & Benefits www.RealEstateGeorgetown.com Angie Cormpilas Broker Chris Cormpilas Sales Representative The Cormpilas Team 905-877-3629 CHRISTINA BRAS Sales Representative (647)200-0261 cbras@rogers.com www.thebrasgroup.com BROKERAGE Pat Akers Sales Representative 905-873-6111 Call Pat Direct 905-703-4766 pakers@trebnet.com Leslie Logan Sales Representative 1-800-701-0494 Cell: 905-699-5666 info@leslielogan.com/www.leslielogan.com Lives in Georgetown...Sells in Georgetown Services Inc., Brokerage Realty Services Inc., Brokerage† Buying Or Selling? confidential consultation arranged! direct: 416-712-9415 office: 905-456-1000 Broker MarkCachia Please Visit www.markcachia.com REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY Heather Morison Broker, ASA (Accredited Seniors Agent) DIRECT: 905 873 4266 OFFICE: 519 853 9924 Did you know . . . ? You can click on . . . www.REresource.ca for all your real estate needs. Find Your Dream Home At MacDermidGroup Kenzie MacDermid & Lynda Carter Sales Representatives Sales Volume 2013 MortgageAgent Top Producer Partner Mortgage* National Top Partner Mortgage* �������� Choice Award 2010-2015 *Sales Volume 2013 www.howittlaw.com Richard T. Howitt, Q.C. Barrister & Solicitor Jeffrey A. Patterson, B.A. J.D. Barrister & Solicitor 83 Mill Street, Suite 301 Georgetown, ON L7G 5E9 F: 905-877-1155 jp@howittlaw.com COMMUNITY Inuit Outreach Project collects donations of clothes, money weekly serve as a weekly drop-off location for those who'd like to donate items, which will be accepted every Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and in the evening, 6 to 9 p.m. until June 15, when the shipment leaves. On the first collection day of the 2015 season, Karlsson said she and her volunteer team were able to sort over 100 bags and boxes of donations. "This project is all about the gifting," she said. "We only need new or gently used items. We don't want anything in poor quality because what we're send- ing them is gifts." Karlsson witnessed firsthand the hardships faced by the Inuits on a daily basis when she and another project volunteer, Dagny Langer, trav- elled to the northern Quebec village of Inukjuak last year after receiving a grant through the Anglican Diocese of Niagara. She saw mothers struggling to care for their babies and children, a grocery store full of food so expensive that many can't afford to eat properly, and a community fighting to get by as global warming continues to shrink its hunting grounds. "These people are working night and day to survive in the new world," she said. "This mission is accepting that some people are living in circum- stances that are not their fault, and we have a great potential to help them." The Inuit Outreach Project sends shipments to the Arctic twice a year in the spring and winter. First they're loaded onto a transport truck con- tributed and driven by Acton's Bethel Christian Reformed Church members, who take them to Montreal. From there, the boxes are flown to those in need for free by Air Inuit. In addition to Bethel, other local mission partners include the Aborigi- nal Youth Group of the Fergus High School and Anita Bergsma of Chance to Play, who outfitted the entire soc- cer youth group in the community of Sanikiluaq, Belcher Islands last year. Local high school students and Ward 2 Councillor Bryan Lewis have also been supporters of the project. For more information, to make a donation for the next shipment or volunteer, contact Karlsson at con- niejkarlsson@gmail.com or 905-877- 2436, or visit www.facebook.com/Inu- itOutreachProject. Continued from page 28 Inuit Outreach Project volunteers gather to sort donations from local residents that will benefit those in need in Arctic communities. Displaying some of the generous items that have already been received are (from left) Bob Keough, Bonnie Burton, project organizer Connie Karlsson, Dagny Langer, Mike Mansfield, Dianne Keough, Ward 2 Councillor Bryan Lewis and Barb Mansfield. Photo by Melanie Hennessey