in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, O ct ob er 10 ,2 01 9 | 4 1453 North service road, West oakville, oN l6M 2W2 lexusofoakville.ca 905.847.8400 • 1.866.lexus.66 ‡Total Credits of up to $5,000 are available on the retail purchase of a new and previously unregistered 2019 Lexus ES 350 (Suffix P, L, M, F, G) from an authorized Canadian Lexus Dealer. Vehicle must be purchased, registered and delivered between October 1, 2019 and October 31, 2019. ‡Total Credits consist of: (i) $3,000 in ^Delivery Credits; and (ii) $2,000 in Cash Purchase Credits (cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates offered through Lexus Financial Services). All credits are applied after taxes have been charged on the full amount of the negotiated price. *Lease offers provided through Lexus Financial Services, on approved credit. 48,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.20/km for excess kilometres. Complete Lexus Price includes freight/PDI ($2,075), EHF Tires ($20.70), EHF Filters ($1), A/C charge ($100), and OMVIC Fee ($10).Taxes, license, registration (if applicable), dealer fees (if applicable) and insurance are extra. Lexus Dealers are free to set their own prices. Limited time offers only apply to retail customers at participating Lexus Dealers. Dealer order/trade may be required (but may not be available in certain circumstances). Offers are subject to change or cancellation without notice. Offers are effective beginning October 1st and expire on October 31st unless extended or revised. Visit Lexus of Oakville, lexusofoakville.ca, or email sales@lexusofoakville.ca for complete details. IN A LANE OF ITS OWN Make YoUr Mark iN a leXUs RX LEXUS ES 2019 es 350 $5,000^totalcreditsoF UP to Premium Package Shown AtlasCare Open 24/7 for HVAC, Plumbing and Drain Emergencies Holidays included atlascare.caFastest Emergency Service in Oakville Call The Experts at 289-205-3443 Wishing All Oakville Residents A HAPPY THANKSGIVING really understand. I'm real- ly happy to be back here with my friends again and feel kind of normal." Shefeel kind of normal." Shef went on to explain the plethora of names on her sticker, "This is everyone I know or have met that have either survived, passed away or are still fighting (cancer), and so I wanted to give them all a spot on it." With her curls just long enough to peak out from un- der her ball cap, this year Lilly cut her friend's hair to be donated to create a wig. Forest Trail Public School has been hosting their Ter- ry Fox Event, the run and hair cutting, for eight years. This year they were rec- ognized as being one of the schools that have donated the most hair to Pantene Beautiful Lengths. Continued from page 1 TERRY FOX RUN 'PARTICULARLY EMOTIONAL' THIS YEAR Lilly Coulter cuts Mieke Wright's hair during Forest Trail's Terry Fox assembly. After the Terry Fox Run, students gathered to watch classmates get their hair cut to donate to Pantene Beautiful Lengths and to join the Buzz Club. Nikki Wesley/Torstar erational perspective." In her letter, Danylchen- ko says the province is mov- ing to establish a standard- ized approach to police en- gagement across the correc- tional system. She said this will ensure a consistent and effective re- sponse to criminal matters, and improve collaboration on intelligence gathering. The assistant deputy minister said this change would have no impact on the safety and security of Maple- hurst or the Vanier Centre, and noted the same process is in place at 21 institutions across the province, which do not have PLOs onsite. Tanner said those 21 insti- tutions are small prisons, and as such having no PLOs makes sense because police are only called upon to con- duct criminal investigations every now and again. Maplehurst, Tanner pointed out, has around 1,800 inmates and is the site of one third of the assaults that take place in Halton. "What we've heard today tells me that they are con- templating a change without having worked out the de- tails first, and this has been a hallmark of the new govern- ment," said Oakville Mayor and Halton Police Board chair Rob Burton. "I think it would be appro- priate for the board to write back to the solicitor general to advise that changes are better when they are thor- oughly thought through, and consulted with the re- cipients of the change, then adapted. When it's just an- nounced you end up with scrambling. Scrambling al- ways costs more." Tanner noted he and the board plan to push back against the proposed chang- es. "This will have impacts on the correctional officers, and on the facility, and cer- tainly on the police service," said Tanner. "There's also no way the citizens of Halton should have to pay more money than any other citizen in On- tario for policing just be- cause there is a very large provincial correctional facil- ity in Halton." NEWS Continued from page 3 HALTON POLICE BOARD WILL PUSH BACK AGAINST PROPOSED CHANGES STORY BEHIND THE STORY: We attended the Oct. 3 Halton Police Board meeting where the matter was discussed. We interviewed Police Chief Stephen Tanner about the change and obtained a copy of the letter to Tanner from the Province, which announced the decommissioning.