Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 5 Dec 2013, 16 16 V1 GEO DEC05.pdf

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•Th e IF P• H al to n H ill s • Th ur sd ay , D ec em be r 5 , 2 01 3 16 S ig n U p N ow ! Little Kickers has arrived in Georgetown! FUN YEAR ROUND SOCCER CLASSES for kids 18 months to 7th birthday at a venue near you! WE OFFER CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT START ANY TIME HOLIDAY SPECIAL - Until December 31, 2013 Sign up for 12 weeks and receive 15! Sign up for 6 weeks and receive 7! For info and to register please go to www.littlekickers.ca call (416)826-9026 or email milton@littlekickers.ca Special Offer: In person registration Wednesday, Dec. 11th 6-9pm, Moldmasters Lobby. Detailed information, fees, and online registration at: In person registration Wednesday, Dec. 11th 6-9pm, Moldmasters Lobby Detailed information, fees, and online registration at: www.georgetownskatingclub.ca Learn to Skate in Halton Hills Georgetown Skating Club Now registering for Learn to Skate & Power Skate 10-week January-March Programs ACTON SKATING CLUBACTO N S KATING CLU BA CT ON SKATING CLU B CLCL CTCT In-person registration Mondays & Thursdays in December 6-8pm, Acton Arena. Detailed information, fees, and online registration at: In-person registration Mondays & Thursdays in December 6-8pm, Acton Arena. Detailed information, fees, and online registration at: www.actonskatingclub.com Learn to Skate in Halton Hills Now registering for Learn to Skate & Power Skate 10-week January-March Programs 106-99 Sinclair Ave., Georgetown 905-877-9998 "Your Health is Our Concern" Mon 9am-8pm Tues 9am-8pm Wed 9am-5pm NEW EXTENDED CLINIC HOURS Male and female Family Physicians accepting new patients Cardiologist on site Cosmetic clinic - Botox, Fillers, Laser treatment on site WALK-IN CLINIC OPENWALK-IN CLINIC OPEN Thurs 9am-8pm Fri 9am-7pm Sat 9am-2pm Dr. Seegobin Cosmetic Clinic 99 Sinclair Ave #106, Georgetown 905-702-9988 www.drseegobincosmeticclinic.com Medical Aesthetics for Men & Women by Dr. Seegobin & staff Medical AestheticsFree Consultation $100 oFF any paCkage Our services include: • Laser Hair Removal - Painless and Safe, done under doctors supervision • Botox/xeomin injections for wrinkles/lines • Botox/xeomin injections for excessive sweating • Fillers for non-surgical face lift, wrinkles/deep lines • Skin tightening using radio frequency • Photofacials for pigmented spots and rosacea • Skin care products from Vive Limited time He said cynicism is increasing, but people are "really tired" about being cynical about politics. He was encouraged by the by- elections last week. While he said nothing much changed on the surface-- the Liber- als and Conservatives each retained their two seats-- he said under- neath, the Liberals increased their vote margin in all four ridings. "Most importantly we saw thousands upon thousands of people come together to work on the ground for these campaigns in each riding," said Trudeau. "It shows that people are hopeful and open to being engaged into politics in a different way than we have in the past." Pointing to the Senate scandal, Trudeau said the Conservative gov- ernment is one "that's consistently choosing spin, obfuscation, secrecy and cover-up." We have a government that does not want to share the full story with Canadians because it doesn't trust us," he said. "We have a govern- ment that has forgotten if it ever knew, what it means to be in the service of Canadi- ans." He said the Liberals can "once again be the party that is at the service of this great coun- try." Trudeau took a few questions from the crowd, before mingling and posing for photos. One woman said she was very worried about the "attack ma- chine" of the Conservatives. "It scares me. They seem to be very successful at it," she said. Trudeau said he has heard some Liberals say it was the attack ma- chine against former party leaders Stephane Dion and Michael Ignati- eff that brought down the Liberals. "But that's not true. The Liberal party lost its way because it got more focused in on itself and its own survival than on the success of Canada." He said the party turned away from Canadians. Trudeau said the Liberals raised millions of dollars from Canadians following the release of attack ads after he became leader because they were fed up with that ap- proach. "This doesn't mean I won't re- spond strongly when the time comes, but there's a way to be strong and not negative, to be strong while uplifting." He was asked about Wellington- Halton Hills MP Michael Chong's private member's bill he introduced that would give party caucuses sig- nificant power, including the ability to vote out their leader. Trudeau said he was open to what Chong is proposing, calling him an "earnest fellow." "But he had an opportunity to stand up and express the will that I know the vast majority of con- stituents had in wanting the Prime Minister to actually come clean and talk openly and honestly about what had happened in the Senate scandal, but he chose to vote to continue the cover-up." Trudeau mingles at meet and greet Continued from pg. 1 Former Halton Lib- eral MP Julian Reed and current leader Justin Trudeau at Monday's event. Photo by Ted Brown Making it onto a top five list is often a good thing, but not this time. Georgetown has landed on Allstate Canada's list of the top five communities with the largest increase in collisions between 2009-2011 and 2011-2013-- com- ing in third place with a 10.21 per cent increase. Milton topped the list with a 21.51 per cent increase, followed by Kingston with 17.12. Hamilton took the fourth spot with an 8.77 per cent jump, followed by Kitchener that had an 8.66 per cent increase. The statistics were released last week by the insur- ance company in the results of its fifth annual Safe Driving Study, which ranks 50 Canadian communities by the frequency of collisions per 100 cars insured by Allstate. Overall, Georgetown ranked 14th in the study, down from third in 2011. As well, the study shows that nationally Thursday and Fridays had the highest collision rates (16 per cent and 17 per cent respectively) of any day of the week. Sunday drivers are the safest on the road, with only 9.8 per cent of collisions happening that day. While Thursday and Friday see the most collisions, the study found that Canadian roads have in fact be- come a little bit safer overall in the past two years. Allstate Canada customers has a 5.3 per cent fewer collisions from July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2013, than in the previous 24-month period, while Ontario's colli- sion frequency dropped by 4.1 per cent in this period. For more detailed results of the study as well as breakdowns by city and region visit: http://bit.ly/Safe- DrivingStudyENG. • For full story visit www.theifp.ca Local drivers getting worse

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