Oakville Beaver, 27 Oct 2011, p. 1

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www.carstaroakville.com dentistoakville.com den 547 Tr T afalgar Rd. 905-8457579 2212 Wyecroft Rd. 905-842-6030 90 AVA I L A B L E Beaver Trails Real Estate Broker 905-847 -2595 JOHN VAIL TR TRANS NSMISSION Business JohnVail.com BROKERAGE HALTON SNA NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR 2010 ONTARIO'S TOP NEWSPAPER - 2005-2008 905.842.8690 (905) 559 SPEERS R ROAD, UNIT #3 842-0725 A member of Metroland Media Group Ltd. Vol. 49 No. 128 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2011 40 Pages $1.00 (plus tax) "USING COMMUNICATION TO BUILD BETTER COMMUNITIES" T Super meter Kevin Flynn aims to be Speaker By David Lea OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF With a recent election win under his belt, Oakville MPP Kevin Flynn is running again, -- but this time for the position of Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. In his third term at Queen's Park, and yet to be named a cabinet minister, Flynn has decided to seek the post. Described as the heart of KEVIN FLYNN the parliamentary system, the Speaker's job is to preside over proceedings in the Assembly, enforce and interpret the rules of the House, decide matters of order, deliver rulings and maintain order and decorum. Flynn said there is no shortage of need to return See Always page 4 ERIC RIEHL / OAKVILLE BEAVER DOWNTOWN: New Pay-and-Display Parking kiosks have arrived on Lakeshore Road East between Navy Street and Allan Street in downtown Oakville. Here, Gulrukh Quraihi pays for her parking. For the story, see page 3. Only l half h lf our garbage b gets recycled l d By Don Campbell & Thana Dharmarahah METROLAND MEDIA GROUP A tattered basketball shoe, a Donald Duck plastic toy, VHS tapes and a championship trophy sit scattered in a sorting room at Canada's largest waste recovery plant. These are some of the more unusual items sorters have pulled off the production lines of the Material Recovery Facility (MRF) in Brampton, where Peel region's residential blue box items arrive to be separated, sorted and bundled. "If you stand around here long enough you will see all sorts of things," said Peel Waste Supervisor Kevin Mehlenbacher. Only about 45 per cent of recyclable items from households across Ontario ever make it to one of these plants. More than half of municipal garbage goes to landfills instead. Peel sells much of the material that comes to this plant in Brampton to China and the United States, where it is reused in new products like aluminum cans or plastic bottles. The See Municipalities page 8 KAZ NOVAK / METROLAND WEST MEDIA GROUP REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE: Recycling is key to solving Ontario's trash woes today and in the future.

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