Oakville Beaver, 1 Dec 1993, p. 4

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r Tera Pats -.. Pressure Sprayer un For more information call North Halton: (905) 878-8ll In Mil Imp POSITION 6" pot 9 9 It 'le; Misting Bottles mu xt .lf order to be eligible as $19933 ll n m nt 1| " ht/IN We? ll ll nent Ins $122 if 'F iohst httatrk 99 OB )RIHCR joltsOntario M boul All Citrus lil Baugainvilleas 0/ Great plant insurance tt $ 99 25 on] 4 what a great selection m Training participant f have exhausted you: on unemployed form aase.f..1e Irlt mn SALARY B ur m B T awe Us" d' “31mm: um": 2’ 99 HL'WJ ':yurs_r "L." transmitters from what ment near its me Abbey TIE )nsequence In Moisture Meters boun It: n has simply run out ame saw' ne 1979 CHWO " ace( HIN at tht U m M LE an dt Il an pl Garden Hooks " " n y Smith, a spokesman fo: ;tar Development Company onsultant retained by hi: Uted all CHWO's claims ere is no evidence, no spe- ;ideration should be ziven was only acting in good faith Norfolk Pines BEAUTIFUL TROPICAL PINES FOR INDOORS 13.33 to regnzwti JO reg.’29.99 99 $999 $1999 ete feede or It Kathy Gr; Taylor's int 10 years or might be 1 Oak Trails 1 thev didn't "trl!? s or so the Council chamber be filled with angry West ails residents wondering why ln't do something now. d 1's Kevin Flynn agreed, "Why would you let a prob- Ten when you can handle it ' 3raham, did pick intent and asked whe it at n me Ihtt um need ft up on ther in at n In attacking the formal position of the Board, the chair did not serve the board well in his role as major spokesperson, stated Lane. "His comments to the Burlington Spectator...questioned the validity of the board's position and may preju- dice the position of the board in these matters as they pertained to the sub- iect matter of the grievance which was discussed in an in-camera ses- sion," stated Lane in a written expla- tation or her motion to trustees. "In the heat of the battle things are said...I firmly believe it was the intention of the chairman to act in the best interests of the board...Surely we have better things to do..." said Cooper, who recommended Lane's motion be tabled. Burlington Trustee Noel Cooper felt Line's motion served no purpose other than "singling out one among US The vote was taken after a previ- ous vote by the board vetoed four out-of-town trips for staff which resulted in two grievances being filed against the board by the Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation of Halton and the Ontario Public School Teachers Federation of Halton, citing violation of contract. (Money for staff travel comes from the Professional Development fund, money already negotiated under the collective agreement and the rules by which it's administered already agreed to, according to the teachers) Coons felt if the board rescinded its original motion to 'interfere' in staff travel plans - at least outside of nego- tiations - it would have "gone a long way in solving the problem." At that meeting, a vote to rescind a 1992 motion regarding staff out-of- town travel, lost, an outcome which Coons deemed a major mistake. "The frequency doesn't belong to me. It is a limited, natural resource which ought to be viewed the same as trees or water," said Caine, who adds that his business also doubles as an emergency ser- vice. "The radio spectrum belongs to the public. I borrow it. I pay a fee to use it." If his signal does end up interfer- ing with another station, existing regulatory agencies would be per- fectly within their rights to force him to shut down. In the meantime, Caine remains adamant that his concerns are indeed a planning issue. If future problems do occur, however, Caine says he has a clear As for dismissing CHWO as a private business, again Caine begs to differ. Attempt to censure board chairman dies By KATHY YANCHUS Oakville Beaver Staff Caine agreed with Davidson's assertion that a special policy area was precedent-setting but said that this is not a bad thing. What's wrong with Oakville taking a lead- ership role, he asked. This is a growing problem across Canada, he said, so he is merely trying to take a pro-active approach to urban plan- ning. CHWO transmission towers north of hwy 5: town says there's nothing to worry about. pick up move just anywhere. Its sig- nal, he explained, must fit into a complex patchwork of those those produced by other stations. ‘nscnence. "We did everything we could r i'tiiiifii,i1 "tters:

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