Weather for Oakville, ON Thurs Fri Sat Sun 2° -4° 3° -3° 3° -4° -1° -4° Experts deal with dementia Spotlight Moonshine marks milestone Artscene www.insidehalton.com 916 Winston Churchill Blvd. t k ill www.carstaroakville.com t k iill Collision & Glass Glass Service Service Collision & 905-845-7579 905-847-2595 2212 Wyecroft Rd. dentistoakville.com 905-842-6030 Stay Connected! Thursday, February 4, 2016 | 40 pages A Publication of Metroland Media Group Connected to your community - $1.00 incl. tax End of an era Council votes to stall plans for Glen Abbey at least a year by Julia Le Oakville Beaver Staff On Saturday, Jan. 30, the Oakville Blades took on the visiting Milton IceHawks, as the Blades played their last home game at their former home arena -- Oakville Arena on Rebecca Street. The arena is set to be redeveloped, but its iconic wood truss roof, will be preserved. It is one of only four with the famed truss structure still operating in Ontario. Pictured, Team Captain No. 93 Ryan Garvey, left, and No. 9 Brendon Doherty are at the team's bench with equipment manager Craig Clayton. Arena redevelopment plans got a nod to move forward at Town council Monday (Feb. 1) night. For story, see p.4. For more photos, see Sports or visit www.insidehalton.com/oakville-on. | photo by Graham Paine Oakville Beaver (Follow on Twitter @halton_photog or facebook.com/HaltonPhotog) Plans to develop Glen Abbey Golf Club into a high-end housing development won't move forward -- at least for the next year. Oakville Town council unanimously passed an interim control bylaw for Glen Abbey Golf Course Monday night, which prohibits any development on the property over a one-year period. During that year, the golf course can continue operatThe proposed ing at its existing capacity bylaw unfairly until the bylaw is repealed targets this or lapses. one speci c Town of Oakville Planproperty. ning Services Director Mark Simeoni told councillors, staff recommends an inMark Flowers terim control bylaw because lawyer representing ClubLink it can be used as a tool for council to receive more information to make a more informed decision. In Glen Abbey's case, he said three land use planning policy studies -- Urban Structure review, Land Use Economic and Impact Analysis study and Cultural Heritage see Proponent's on p.9 Chisholm Academy offers a structured, nurturing environment for students with learning difficulties, or who require extra support to be successful. Both academic and applied courses are offered, in class sizes of three to twelve students, and every student has an Individual Education Plan. After school support is available for elementary and secondary students and bussing is available from Burlington, through to Toronto. Overcome Academic Difficulties 1484 Cornwall road | Oakville, On | 905.844.3240 | www.chisholmacademy.com A SpeCiAlizeD ApprOACh TO Full-Time eDuCATiOn FOr GrADeS 7-12