Oakville Campus | 3300 Ninth Line, Oakville, ON | 905.257.0022 Fern Hill School, an independent, co-educational school for students in Preschool to Grade 8, is regarded as one of the pre-eminent elementary schools in Canada. Visit our Open House to learn how our enriched and personalized curriculum, highly skilled teachers and resource rich learning environment can give your child the tools to excel as a competent, confident student. OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2010 10 a.m. 2 p.m. www.fernhillschool.com admissions@fernhillschool.com UNLIMITED POSSIBILITIES Imagine what Fern Hill can do for your child FERN HILL A SCHOOL LIKE NO OTHER Give your child the gift of an educational foundation that will last a lifetime! 2454 South Service Rd, Oakville 905.469.6220 minioakville.com MINI Oakvilles 2010 Halloween Sales Event Hurry in... before all 2010 models disappear. Ask about special incentives on our 5 remaining demos. Financing from 0.9%* Leasing from 2.9%* Service Includes 3 years, 50,000 on all remaining 2010, purchased by October 30*! *See in-store for details Save a Pumpkin, Carve a road w w w . o a kv ill eb ea ve r.c o m O A KV IL LE B EA V ER Fr id ay , O ct ob er 1 5, 2 01 0 4 Doug MacKenzie MacKenzie, former president of the promi- nent residents association Citizens for Clean Air (C4CA), organized thousands of Oakville resi- dents in response to the prospect of a 900- megawatt gas-fired power plant being built less than 400 metres from residential areas. Under MacKenzies leadership, the organiza- tion raised awareness of the power plant, put up countless Stop the Power Plant signs, held peti- tion drives and launched huge protests at Ford headquarters and Queens Park. Last week, the Province announced the power plant is no longer needed and will not be built. For MacKenzie, however, the power plant is still an issue that needs to be dealt with. The power plant itself is gone, but we have got to continue on with the process of getting David Balsillies report implemented to help clean the air in Oakville and Clarkson, said MacKenzie. Kevin Flynns setback bill and Town councils various motions around proper (power plant) zoning, that cant just stop, that has to move ahead. MacKenzie, who actually lives in Ward 3, said he chose to run in Ward 6 because he believed his stop the power plant message would resonate with Ward 6 voters due to its close proximity. He said his experience with C4CA has intro- duced him to Ward 6 residents, many of whom are frustrated with their local representation. While the power plant has been an important issue, it is not the only one. MacKenzie said he is concerned about the Towns growing debt. Our local government continues to spend too much, doesn't do enough to find efficiencies, property taxes continue to rise and there is no plan to create employment opportunities or grow the local economy, said MacKenzie on his website. I believe that it is irresponsible and unfair to leave a legacy of debt to our children. He also listed curbing inappropriate develop- ment, attracting business, proper management of green space and creating a more accountable council as additional priorities. A lot of things at council have been (held) in-camera and decisions, such as Edgemere, have been made without public debate, said MacKenzie. Those types of things are disturbing to me. They are not open or transparent. MacKenzie, a semi-retired international executive in the green energy sector, has lived in Oakville for 41 years with his wife and has raised three sons here. MacKenzie said he has been active in local affairs aimed at making the community better. He said these activities include serving as campaign chair for the United Way of Oakville, serving as Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospitals fundraising committee chair, working with St. John Ambulance and working with Junior Achievement locally and nationally. Former C4CA president running for Ward 6 region Continued from page 3