•T he IFP• H alton H ills, Thursd ay, A p ril 4, 2013 5 1 Halton Hills Dr., Halton Hills ON L7G 5G2 Tel.: 905-873-2600 • Fax: 905-873-2347 • www.haltonhills.ca NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING WARD 1 Concerning Applications for an Amendment to the Town of Halton Hills Zoning By-law (2010-0050) and for the Approval of a Plan of Subdivision For lands legally described as: Part of Lot 242, Parts 1, 2, 4 to 7, Registered Plan 1098, Former Acton Township, Ward 1, Town of Halton Hills, Regional Municipality of Halton Town of Halton Hills Files: D14ZBA12.011 and D12SUB12.001 (125 McDonald Boulevard, Acton) General Committee for the Town of Halton Hills will conduct a Public Meeting to examine and discuss proposed applications to amend the Town of Halton Hills Zoning By-law 2010-0050, as amended, and for approval of a Plan of Subdivision. The proposed zoning amendment and subdivision applications apply to the lands legally described as Part Lot 242, Parts 1, 2, 4 to 7, Registered Plan 1098, Former Acton Township, Town of Halton Hills, Regional Municipality of Halton. The subject lands are municipally known as 125 McDonald Boulevard (Acton). Below is a map showing the location of the subject property. The purpose and effect of the applications are to allow for the development of a residential subdivision with 118 street townhouse units. If you wish to be notified of the decision of the Town of Halton Hills in respect of the Zoning By-law amendment or Plan of Subdivision applications, you must make a written request to the Town of Halton Hills - PLANNING, DEVELOPMENT & SUSTAINABILITY DEPARTMENT at 1 Halton Hills Drive, Halton Hills, Ontario L7G 5G2. NOTES: If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting or make written submissions to the Town of Halton 1. Hills before the by-law is passed, the person or public body is not entitled to appeal the decision of the Town of Halton Hills to the Ontario Municipal Board. If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting, or make written submissions to the Town of Halton 2. Hills before the proposed by-law is passed, the person or public body may not be added as a party to the hearing of an appeal before the Ontario Municipal Board unless, in the opinion of the Board, there are reasonable grounds to do so. If a person or public body does not make oral submission at a public meeting, or make written submissions to the Town of Halton 3. Hills in respect of the proposed plan of subdivision before the approval authority gives or refuses to give approval to the draft plan of subdivision, the person or public body is not entitled to appeal the decision of the Town of Halton Hills to the Ontario Municipal Board. If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting or written submissions to the Town of Halton Hills in 4. respect of the proposed plan of subdivision before the approval authority gives or refuses to give approval to the draft plan of subdivision, the person or public body may not be added as a party to the hearing of an appeal before the Ontario Municipal Board unless, in the opinion of the Board, there are reasonable grounds to do so. Any written comment/objection submitted to the Town of Halton Hills regarding this application(s) which is being processed under the 5. Planning Act 1990, may be made public as part of the application process. Further information is available in the Planning, Development & Sustainability Department, Town of Halton Hills, 1 Halton Hills Drive, Halton Hills, ON, L7G 5G2, or contact the Planner assigned to the file, Jeff Markowiak at 905-873-2601, ext. 2296. A copy of the related Staff Report will be available on Friday, April 5, 2013, on the Town's website at http://www.haltonhills.ca/calendars. ALL INTERESTED CITIZENS ARE WELCOME. DATE/TIME: Monday, April 8, 2013 at 7:00PM LOCATION: Council Chambers, Civic Centre FILE NO(S): D14ZBA12.011 and D12SUB12.001 (125 McDonald Boulevard, Acton) 33 FURNACE, AIR CONDITIONING FIREPLACE & BBQ SALES and SERVICE www.asghomecomfort.com905-877-8990 SHOWROOM 118 Guelph St.(at Maple) Visit us and see why! Voted BBQ SALESSALES d #1 GEORGETOWN CANDLELIGHT TRIBUTES are held in honour of your sacrifices and achievements both at home and overseas in conflict and peacekeeping. On Thurs. May 2nd 2013 1400 children will gather to place candles in a symbolic passing of the Torch of Remembrance as an expression of THANKS for the Peace and Freedom they enjoy as Canadians. Please consider this to be your invitation to attend these ceremonies to receive the acknowledgements that you so richly deserve. To receive further details please call Barry Timleck at 905-877-6198 Keeping The Memory Alive ATTENTION ALL VETERANS ������� ��� ������������������������ "Murder Gras" ��� ����������������������������� ����������� ��������������� ������� ����� ���������� ������� �����!�""���#������� Saturday, April 6 ���$���������%�&'�� (��������������������"�� Tickets are $45 each and are available at: )���*��������!���� ���+�����,�)���*���������� +��*��-��.�����/� ���������,�)���*���������� # �����������,�&&�0 ����������������� ���������� ������ � � �� �� 1����.�*���,�234%5�343,%%�% .����� �����*�,�26'75�8��,3473 �������� � �� ��� ����� ���� ������� ���� �� ���� ��������� ������ ��� ����� ��� ���� Best Buy CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY MARCH 29 CORPORATE FLYER We would like to clarify that these titles: Marvel Universe: Avengers Assembled Ultimate Collector's Set, Shameless Season 2 and John Dies At The End (WebCode: M2199426/M2199427/ M2204734/M2204733/M2204068/M2204069) advertised on page POP 3 of the March 29 flyer have an April 2, 2013 release date. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE FUTURE SHOP MARCH 29 CORPORATE FLYER On page 7 of the March 29 flyer, the Asus Laptop Featuring Next-Gen AMD Quad-Core A10-4600M Processor (K75DE-BH01-CB) (WebCode: 10227299) was advertised with incorrect specifications. Please be advised that this product IS NOT a touchscreen device, as previously advertised. Ontario's "sunshine list" grew by 11 per cent over the previous year and there were also marked in- creases across Halton. Province-wide there were 88,412 who made more than $100,000 last year from bureaucrats to nurses, bus drivers, teachers, cops, hospital and municipal staff. That's the same percentage hike as the year be- fore, which followed a 10 per cent rise in 2010. At the Town of Halton Hills the number of em- ployees who landed on the list jumped to 29 from 21 the previous year. Some of the top earners at the Town were: • $150,824 Chief Administrative Offi cer Dennis Perlin (retired in September) • $149,494 each-- Director of Recreation and Parks Terry Alyman, Director of Corporate Services and Town Treasurer Ed DeSousa Director of Infra- structure Services and Town Engineer Chris Mills. Halton Region employees who made the list in- creased signifi cantly from 340 in 2011 to 392. Big earners at the Region included: • $308,804-- Commissioner and Medical Offi cer of Health Robert Nosal • $269,900-- Assistant Medical Offi cer of Health and Director Chronic Disease and Oral Health Monir Taha • $251,359-- Associate Medical Offi cer of Health An- drea Feller • $232,090-- Commissioner Corporate Services Jane Mac- Caskill (now CAO) • $224,677-- Commission- er, Legislative and Planning Services and Corporate Coun- sel Mark Meneray • $207,582-- Chief of Police Gary Crowell • $191,485-- Deputy Chief Andrew Fletcher • $175,659-- Deputy Chief, Community Policing Operations Robert Percy • $165,072-- Regional Chair Gary Carr There were 89 employees at Halton Healthcare Services (HHS) on the list up from 83 in 2011. Some of the top earners there were: • $474,595-- President/CEO John Oliver • $425,400--Chief of Staff Lorne Martin • $245,082-- Vice-President Lilian Scime There were several nurses on the list earning be- tween $100,000 and $145,000. At Halton District School Board (HDSB) 328 em- ployees were on the list compared to 269 in 2011, and at Halton Catholic District School Board the number rose from 130 in 2011 to 191 last year. The highest paid employee at HDSB was Direc- tor David Euale who made $228,019 followed by Associate Director Jeff Blackwell who brought in $198,705. The biggest earner at HCBSB was Director of Education Michael Pautler who made $206,191. Wellington-Halton Hills MPP Ted Arnott earned $129,254. For a complete list visit: www.fi n.gov.on.ca/en/ publications/salarydisclosure/pssd/ 'Sunshine list' keeps growing HHS CEO JOHN OLIVER