St. John's council to move Big Pond monument to Quidi Vidi Lake

     The mystery of the missing monument at Bay Bulls Big Pond that was solved four years ago, is apparently a mystery again, though for different reasons.
     The monument to aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh and his wife Anne, who pitched down on Bay Bulls Big Pond on July 12, 1933, went missing from its site four years ago, causing residents in the area to worry about what had happened to it.
     It turned out that staff with the City of St. John’s had removed it, promising at the time it would be re-erected at a different site near the pond once some construction at the water treatment plant there was completed.
     Four years later however, with that construction long over, the monument is still under wraps – somewhere. When reached Tuesday, Ward Five councillor Wally Collins promised to look into it and was shocked to learn City officials plan to move the monument to Quidi Vidi Lake, where Lindbergh also touched down.
     “I’m not too fussy about them taking it out of the Goulds, to be truthful,” Collins said. “If they want to put another monument down at Quidi Vidi, that’s up to them. I don’t want it taken out of the Goulds.”
     Collins said he intends to discuss the matter with the staff person responsible for the decision. He said the monument was removed in the first place because nobody was maintaining it. “And there was a lot of garbage and everything being dumped down around that area,” he added.
     But Collins said he can’t see why the monument can’t be erected again and maintained better this time around. “I’m going to look into it further,” he said.
Goulds resident Don Earle, who grew up near the Big Pond and alerted the Irish Loop Post to the monument’s disappearance four years ago, was the person who brought attention to its status again this time. He called several weeks ago wondering if there was any news on the monument, as it had not been reinstalled at the pond.
     “The monument itself is thrown out on the ground behind the water treatment plant, just like an old rock,” he said. “Being from there, I’m having a problem accepting the fact that a part of our history, a part of what happened in there, is being thrown by the wayside and kind of forgotten about.”
     Earle made those comments about a month ago. When the Irish Loop Post visited the water treatment plant on Tuesday, there was no obvious sign of the monument anywhere on the grounds indicating it has since been removed to yet another location.
     Earle suspects some official decided arbitrarily to have the monument removed from the Big Pond on the pretext that visitors to it were leaving garbage.
     “That’s a load of BS,” he said. “There was never any garbage dumped in there like there is in off the pipeline or in the woods. I used to be in there every day. They’re full of baloney. They wanted an easy way out of blocking off access to that pond because it’s a water treatment area. And my problem is the powers that be told us they were getting ready to erect a (new) site at the bottom of the pond, which never, ever happened.”
     Earle said he understands the pond is a water supply and has to be protected. But he is confident that if senior officials checked with the City workers who actually clean up the area, they would learn the monument wasn’t used as a dumping ground.
     The Lindbergh visit - at the time he was one of the most famous people in the world being not only an aviation pioneer, but also a celebrity because of the infamous and tragic kidnapping of his child – is part of the area’s history, Earle said. “Is it acceptable just to throw that stuff to the wayside and forget about it?” he asked. “That was part of the pride of being a Big Pond boy… I don’t think it’s good enough.”

 

 

 

 


It doesn’t come close to the mystery of what really happened to the Lindbergh baby, but the whereabouts of a monument dedicated to his father that had gone missing from its home aside Bay Bulls Big Pond has been solved.
An official with the City of St. John’s says the monument has been taken down and is being stored for placement at a different site near the pond once some construction at the water supply plant is completed.
The monument is dedicated to aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh, who was no stranger to Newfoundland, having made history by flying over St. John’s in 1927 in his plane the Spirit of St. Louis on his way from New York to Paris in what was then the world’s first solo, non-stop transatlantic flight.
On July 12, 1933, Lindbergh and his wife Anne pitched down on Bay Bulls Big Pond drawing a crowd of onlookers from the city. It was an era of rapid aviation growth, with a fleet of Italian planes landing at Cartwright, Labrador on the same day enroute to the United States. By then, Lindbergh was even more famous, but tragically so, because of the kidnapping and murder of his 18-month old son Charles Jr., in March of 1932.
Sometime subsequent to the 1933 visit to Newfoundland, a monument was erected in Lindbergh’s honour just off the main road near the head of Bay Bulls Big Pond. A city official said when the city took over the area as part of its watershed in the 1980s, it found the monument in disrepair and fixed up the site, even adding a picnic table and garbage can for people dropping by to view it.
However, lately a trailer was parked at the site and city officials became worried that the area could get polluted. About a month ago, the monument was removed.
One local resident, who has asked to remain unnamed, isn’t happy with the decision. The resident, who grew up near the pond, said the monument pre-dates the city’s acquisition of the area.
“They (the city) took the monument out of there and there was no notification to the residents of Bay Bulls Big Pond,” said the man. “I’m sure over the years there have been thousands and thousands of people who have stopped down there and had a little picnic. I know I spent a lot of time down there over the years with my children. Now I don’t know the history of it, but he (Lindbergh) landed on Big Pond and they put up a monument all about it. There was a picnic table there and a garbage bucket and it was a nice little place to go in and relax for a little bit with your children and the City removed it.”
The man said local residents used to take pride in the fact the monument was never vandalized. “There was never any garbage thrown around there, there were no problems with loitering,” the man said. “I just want it brought to people’s attention that it’s gone, They’re talking about putting the monument at the foot of the pond down where Newfoundland Power has all the generators. Now I mean that’s not a spot where you want to be hanging out with your children.”

Posted on September 11, 2015 .

Councillors cite threats by e-mailer using fake name

     At least two councillors in Witless Bay said Tuesday they are being harassed by anonymous e-mails, letters and telephone calls.
     The issue came to light during the regular public council meeting. Councillor Ken Brinston said he is taking a lengthy missive sent to his private e-mail address on Sunday evening by a person writing under the pseudonym of Peter McCann as a threat. It warned him not to attend this week’s council meeting, at which some members of council were expected to schedule a Friendly Hearing on a conflict of interest charge against councillor Kevin Smart for voting on the Town Plan, which rezones some of his land to allow residential development.
     From the contents of the e-mail, Brinston said, it appears that ‘McCann,’ whoever he is, is watching his house and monitoring his activities. The councillor read the letter out loud in its entirety for the benefit of council and the residents in the public gallery, which included a vocal contingent of the small group of large property owners off Gallows Cove Road who are opposed to development near Ragged Beach.
     ‘McCann,’ who claims in the letter that he knew Brinston’s grandfather, said he was asked to look into council’s behaviour. He accused Brinston of “collusion” and “conspiracy,” warned him of possible legal liability if he takes any action to vote Smart off council, and suggested he could be investigated by the RCMP.
     “If you are part of a plan to ignore professional legal advice, you could be liable to reputation damages and sued personally for negligence,” McCann charged. “If found negligent, punitive damages as well as substantial litigation costs could ensue… It is certain that should either a civil or criminal action proceed, yourself and the other councillors will be individually deposed…”
     ‘McCann’ went on to warn Brinston against communicating any further with councillors who are moving to vacate Smart’s seat. ‘McCann’ further alleges that one of the other members of council who is participating in the effort to schedule a Friendly Hearing for Smart, “is erratic and has weak reasoning skills. If this is the case I would advise you to no longer collude outside the council chambers with this person for the immediate future.”
     Brinston said that judging by some of the references in the letter, the writer has knowledge of matters that were discussed at private council meetings and not yet made public. He also has knowledge of the personal e-mail address Brinston uses to communicate with the rest of council.
     “Now, I’ve got a question to the two councillors right here,” Brinston said, referring to Mayor Sébastien Després and councillor Smart. “Which one of you wrote this?”
     Brinston then detailed instances referenced by ‘McCann’ pertaining to details of private council meetings on August 12 and 25. “Either one of you two wrote this letter to me, or someone disclosed information of two meetings (to someone else),” Brinston said.
     “I don’t know how to respond to that, but I can tell you I don’t know who Peter Mccann is and I’ve had nothing to do with that letter,” Després said. “Is this person Councillor Smart’s legal counsel?”
     Brinston said whoever ‘McCann’ is, he is trying to “scare me out of here tonight… It’s after crossing a line.” He added that he is happy to debate ‘McCann’ on any issue, or deal with him “man to man,” but if he contacts him on his private e-mail address again, he will go to the police.
     Turning to Smart, Brinston asked whether he knowingly or unknowingly shared information from private council meetings which was forwarded to ‘Peter McCann.’
     “No,” Smart said.
     Brinston posed the same question, individually, to councillors René Estrada and Albert Murphy. Both denied having done so. “Private meetings are to be kept private,” Estrada pointed out.
     Murphy later asked Smart if he has someone writing letters to other councillors on his behalf. “I’m not answering any of these questions,” Smart said, arguing the allegations of conflict of interest against him are unfounded. Smart has claimed since the allegations were raised last fall that he made no request to have his land rezoned under the proposed Town Plan.
     Councillor Estrada, meanwhile, said he too has received threats.
     “This has gone too far,” he said. “There are some people here who are defaming councillors. I have received e-mails defaming specific councillors, which is not what I consider appropriate for this community nor for this type of forum. This should never have happened.”
     The Irish Loop Post has also received e-mails from ‘Peter McCann’ over the past two years opposing development at Ragged Beach and making charges against some of the people involved in the applications. However, all requests to ‘McCann’ to provide a contact address and telephone number to confirm his identity so that the letters can be published have been ignored.
     After the council meeting, Brinston telephoned the Irish Loop Post to say he had a further discussion with Mayor Després and is satisfied he isn’t responsible for the threatening letter from ‘McCann.’
     In other council developments, two attempts by the mayor to have lengthy resolutions passed that would see the reinstatement of Dena Wiseman and Ralph Carey to council were voted down 3-2 with only Smart supporting the motions. Wiseman and Carey saw their seats vacated this past summer for allegedly participating in a discussion about snow clearing on a private road leading to property they own that is getting rezoned for residential development.      In a Notice of Appeal filed with the Supreme Court, the husband and wife councillors admit participating in such a discussion, but claim it was not an official council meeting and therefore the Town had no grounds to vacate their seats.
     Meanwhile, council voted Tuesday to schedule a fourth ‘Friendly Hearing’ for councillor Smart to respond to the conflict of interest allegation against him. Smart failed to show up at the previous three hearings.
 

Posted on September 11, 2015 .

Festival of Newfoundland and Irish music set for the Shore

     The Féile Seamus Creagh festival is spreading its wings again this year and changing some of its venues with two shows set for the Southern Shore this weekend.
     On Friday night, the festival will hold an opening concert at the O’Brien’s Tours Stage Head in Bay Bulls. It will feature Jim Payne and Fergus O'Byrne, Oisin McAuley and Caoimhin O Fearghail of Ireland, Cara Butler of the United States, Jimmy Crowley of Ireland, Graham Wells, Benny McCarthy and Conor Moriarty, the latter two also from Ireland.
     On Sunday, September 13, the festival moves to the Folk Arts Council building in Ferryland where John Curran and Greg Walsh of the Masterless Men will take the stage along with the Dunne Family from Ferryland as well as Irish performers Crowley, McCarthy, Oisin McAuley, Caoimhin O Ferghail and Butler, who is American but excels in the Irish step dance.
     The festival is also staging shows in Carbonear and St. John’s. The Regina Mundi Centre in Renews was among the venues in previous years.
     Keith Mooney of the Southern Shore Folk Arts Council said he expects to see a good night of entertainment in Ferryland given the large and diverse lineup. Tickets cost $20 in advance and $25 at the door. They are available in local stores and at the Folk Arts Council’s building.
     The festival celebrates traditional music and songs from Newfoundland and Ireland. It’s named after the late Irish fiddle master Seamus Creagh, who played in Newfoundland some years ago. Creagh’s connection to Newfoundland is thanks to Graham Wells, whom he took under his wing when Wells went to Ireland to study music. The pair recorded an album of Newfoundland and Irish tunes in 2002. Wells is the founder of the festival named in Creagh’s honour.
     “Graham started this event and it features a great combination of established musicians,” Mooney said. “For Celtic music followers it’s a great opportunity… I attended the shows in Renews and it’s fabulous entertainment. And in this case it’s going to be a well-rounded show because you have the instrumentals and the singing, and you have the step dance, so it’s pretty appealing to a wide range of Irish-Newfoundland music enthusiasts.”

Posted on September 11, 2015 .

Bay Bulls council set to meet for first time in nine weeks

     It looks like Bay Bulls council will meet for the first time in nine weeks next week without having resolved any of the conflict of interest allegations levelled against three different councillors.
     The public meeting scheduled for September 14, if it goes ahead, will mark the first time council has met since July 13, when unexpected allegations of conflict of interest came to light against councillors Jason Sullivan and Joan Luby.
     Sullivan is accused of breaking conflict of interest rules by land developer Martina Aylward, who claims Sullivan voted on development applications even though he is a developer himself.
Sullivan, meanwhile, is the accuser in an earlier conflict of interest allegation levelled against Deputy Mayor Harold Mullowney. Sullivan claimed in a letter to council this past spring that Mullowney is a competing developer and should not have participated in a council discussion regarding Sullivan’s application to develop a 37 acre subdivision in Bay Bulls. Mullowney has denied the allegation and said Sullivan is misconstruing his application for a small parcel of Crown Land. Sullivan’s move against Mullowney was kept off the public agenda until this past summer when the Irish Loop Post learned of it and published details about it.
     The allegation against councillor Luby, by a developer applying to build a subdivision in the town, contends she discussed a development application belonging to her sister-in-law. Luby, who was elected in a by-election earlier this year, maintains the incident happened during her first night on council and that she didn’t know who was behind the application when the discussion started. Luby pointed out that unlike the other councillors in attendance, she was not provided with a detailed agenda and briefing book until she was sworn in at the meeting and so she had no time to prepare for any of the discussions.
     All three matters were expected to be addressed at the August 10 public meeting of council, but the meeting was cancelled at the last minute when councillors Sullivan, Rick Oxford and Gerard Mulcahy indicated they were unavailable to attend.
     Mayor Patrick O’Driscoll did not respond to a request for an interview this week.
When contacted, Deputy Mayor Mullowney said no ‘Friendly Hearings’ have been held by council to discuss any of the allegations, as is required under the Municipalities Act when conflict of interest charges are made.
     “All I’ve heard is that they’ve sent it all off to legal again and the lawyers were supposed to meet with council to give them some indication of what was on the go – that meeting was supposed to happen last month, however the lawyers went on holiday as far as I understand, and were supposed to be back around mid-August, but I haven’t heard anything regarding a meeting,” Mullowney said. “So I don’t exactly know where it is right now.”
     If the Town has obtained a another legal opinion it will be the third one requested by the mayor and council in regard to the allegation against Mullowney. In the first opinion, the lawyer reportedly sided with Sullivan’s allegation against the Deputy Mayor, but after hearing from Mullowney himself, issued a second opinion opposite to his first finding. Mullowney has contended that Sullivan’s allegation is frivolous and that council is wasting money by hiring lawyers to entertain it.
     Mullowney said he has since been contacted by a couple of councillors who are backpedalling and claiming their move against him was blown out of proportion. “I said nothing was blown out of proportion by me,” he noted.
     Mullowney said he expects at some point he will be given a Friendly Hearing and despite any legal recommendation that he is not guilty, a majority of council can still vote to vacate his seat anyway. “If people want to, they can disregard the legal opinion,” he said. “So I’m waiting to see where that goes. I’ve been told by a number of individuals that they don’t see any conflict in my case and I don’t see it there, but at the end of the day it still comes down to a vote of council.”
     The longest serving member of council added he is still working to fulfill his duties but he has a sense council itself is drifting. “There was no meeting last month and they didn’t set a date for a follow-up meeting, so I’m assuming now we’ll have one this month,” he said.
Mullowney acknowledged the Department of Municipal Affairs hasn’t done much to help the town resolve the situation. “Municipal Affairs generally wipes their hands of a lot of this saying there is a mechanism and procedure to be followed, but they don’t seem to really want to get involved too much,” he said. “But I agree there needs to be a greater role and presence (by the department). This situation is going to become more prevalent I think as development picks up in the Northeast Avalon and unless you have mechanisms to deal with it properly it is just going to continue to fester.”
     If the regular public council meeting does go ahead next week, a number of items have been added to the agenda by councillor Luby that may generate their own share of debate. Luby confirmed Tuesday she intends to question why council adjourns so often in the middle of public meetings to hold unscheduled privileged sessions, as well as seek clarification on council’s policy regarding the use of cel phones and texting devices by councillors during public meetings. Luby said she has observed some members of council texting during debates, including occasions when one councillor is outside of the chamber because of a declared conflict of interest.

Posted on September 11, 2015 .

Local heritage groups get small grants

     Admiralty House Museum in Mount Pearl served as the backdrop last month for an announcement of some $1.2 million in operational funding for 115 heritage groups throughout the province, incouding a number on the Irish Loop.
     Some $9,770 of the money is being allocated to the Admiralty House Museum and Archives.
In this area, Cape Race – Portugal Cove South Heritage Inc. is getting $15,360, the Colony of Avalon, $89,300; Ferryland Historical Society $2,210; the Fisherman's Museum - St. Vincent's $1,000; the Petty Harbour Maddox Cove Heritage Museum Association $1,000; and the Witless Bay Heritage Committee $1,000.
     Business and Tourism Minister Darrin King said the recipients of the funding are reviewed by a special Heritage Advisory Council struck in 2012 and composed of representatives of the department, the Museums Association of Newfoundland and Labrador, the Association of Newfoundland and Labrador Archives, and the Association of Heritage Industries.
Seven groups are getting funding to help with special projects, including the Newfoundland and Labrador Archeological Society which hopes to encourage owners of private collections to come forward so that their artefacts can be documented.
     “We want to gain a better understanding of collections that may not be curated,” said the president of the Newfoundland and Labrador Archaeological Society, Tim Rast.
King complimented groups such as Rast’s for the invaluable work they do in preserving the province’s heritage.
     “As the summer winds down, this announcement is a reminder of the valuable role these organizations play in our communities,” King said. “Summer time is a very important time for museum and heritage organizations across Newfoundland and Labrador. Employees and volunteers work hard to showcase our history, our culture and our heritage to Newfoundland and Labrador families on vacation, to children in summer day camps, to those who have long summer days to themselves and free time, and to tourists who come to our province to experience for themselves this very special place that we call home.”
     Mount Pearl North MHA and Health Minister Steve Kent welcomed all the press conference guests to Mount Pearl. He noted he has a special connection to Admiralty House, having worked with a number of community organizations when the museum re-opened in 1997 and having supported it later as mayor. “This has been an important part of community life for me and thousands of citizens over the last number of years,” he added. “I’ve been involved in touring many youth groups through this facility, many celebrations have happened here at Admiralty House and the beautiful grounds that surround Admiralty House. I’ve attended many arts events at this facility and cultural events. I’ve performed wedding ceremonies (as mayor) out on the grounds.”
     Kent said the heritage funding announced by King helps heritage facilities and organizations to operate.
     Later this month, Admiralty House Museum, which is mostly funded by the City of Mount Pearl, will celebrate a milestone of its own as it marks its 100th anniversary. The facility was built as a secret naval wireless station for the British navy during the first world war. It is the oldest structure in Mount Pearl.
     Museum chairman John Riche said the actual anniversary is September 16. On that day the staff and board will hold a small event at the site. The main celebration will come on Saturday, September 19. “It will be a big event,” said Riche. “The CLB band will be playing, we’ll have their Honours the Lieutenant Governor Frank Fagan and Patricia Fagan, Senator Elizabeth Marshall is bringing greetings from Ottawa, Mayor Randy Simms will be there and the provincial government will be bringing somebody.”
     The event will be hosted in the back garden. “Our grounds are spectacular in the early fall,” Riche said.
     Meanwhile, the museum’s board and staff will soon start working on a funding application to prepare for the centenary of the sinking of the S.S. Florizel in 2018. Admiralty House has an extensive display and collection of artefacts related to the famous sealing and passenger vessel, which sank off Cappahayden in a snow storm on February 25, 1918 with a loss of 138 people.

Posted on September 11, 2015 .

Municipal Affairs minister moves to finalize Witless Bay's Town Plan

     With the Witless Bay council hamstrung because it doesn’t have enough councillors who are not in a conflict of interest to adopt a new Town Plan, the process is finally being handed over to residents to decide.
     Residents will be given a chance this week to review two versions of the Town Plan and to vote by plebiscite sometime next week as to which one to accept.
     The Department of Municipal Affairs will hold public meetings at the Southern Shore Arena for residents to review the two plans though it’s unclear how much guidance they will receive as to what is in them. Both plans are fairly complicated and while similar in many respects, weigh in at over 200 pages each, plus supporting maps that outline the various zones for housing, recreation, commercial and other uses in the town.
     Municipal Affairs Minister Keith Hutchings said he has ordered the plebiscite because council is unable to deal with the plan. He mailed a letter to all households in Witless Bay on Friday, but with the main Post Office closed on Monday because of Labour day and no effort to advertise the hearings in local media, it’s unclear whether residents are being given enough notice of the three dates at which they can review the two plans before voting next week.
     Mayor Sébastien Després did not respond to a request for an interview. But he did note at Tuesday’s council meeting that all the dates outlined in Hutchings’ letter for reviewing the two plans have been changed and that a new letter is going to be issued.
     “This is an action of Municipal Affairs,” Després said. “It does come from the Town.”
     The new letter is necessary because of mistakes in the original one. Hutchings referred to the Town Plan submitted in 2013 as having been submitted in May 2014.
     That incarnation of the plan, known as Version A for the purpose of the plebiscite, is the document that was submitted by the previous council, reviewed by Municipal Affairs and sent back to the Town for ratification. It essentially allows development of many family-owned lands in the town under the regulations and guidelines that have been in use for years.
     Version B of the plan, which the current council submitted in December 2014 after taking back the original submission and making substantial changes to parts of it, prohibits development of privately-owned and Crown land in a number of areas, including near The Tolt and the area between Mullowney’s Lane and Ragged Beach by zoning the areas Recreational.
     In his letter to residents, Hutchings said that if they vote for Version A, registration of it will proceed faster than if they vote for Version B, because public hearings were held on the first plan, as required under the Urban and Rural Planning Act, but weren’t held on the rejigged version. However, he has since changed his stance on that too. Whichever plan is chosen by residents, a hearing by a Commissioner will be necessary, he said Tuesday.
Hutchings said he is reluctantly intervening in the process, which has dragged on now for about three years.
     “I called them (the councillor) in on August 31 and said, ‘We’ve gone through an extensive process in the past year, since last October when some issues arose as a result of a conflict,’” Hutchings said Tuesday. “I’ve tried to work with officials and the Town to expedite this and get it to a point where we can get a plan adopted for the Town, unfortunately through our efforts we haven’t been able to get there.”
     With two councillors having had their seats vacated because of conflict of interest allegations, a third facing a Friendly Hearing on a similar charge and a fourth councillor voluntarily declaring a conflict of interest, only three members of council are left to vote. That’s not enough for a quorum. Hutchings said council asked for permission to vote on the plan without quorum, but he rejected that request.
     It makes better sense, he said, to let the residents choose “democratically” which of the two plans they prefer. “I’ll take that plan then and move it forward, adopt it for the Town and then on a go forward basis that plan will be a working document for the Town,” said Hutchings. “In the future it could be amended in accordance with the regional Urban and Rural Planning Act and we’ll proceed from there. But it seems right now we’ve gotten to a point where we don’t see a way forward to getting a Town Plan for Witless Bay.”
     Hutchings said he has heard from many residents on the issue.
     “For this reason I am taking the steps as outlined above,” he said in his letter. “I know that you, as residents, are invested in the future of your town and this plebiscite provides you with the opportunity to move your town forward.”
     Both versions of the plan are based on the assumption that the town will grow by about 250 new houses over the next 10 years. The purpose of each proposed plan is to guide how that development takes place. In version A, lot sizes in residential zones have been set at just under a half acre and at three quarters of an acre in areas zoned Residential Rural. In Version B, lot sizes remain at just under a half acre in Residential zones, but have been increased to a full acre in Residential Rural zones.

Posted on September 11, 2015 .

Witless Bay council imbroglio heads to court

A Supreme Court Justice refused last week to consider an application from two former members of Witless Bay council who asked the court to order the Town to cover the costs of their effort to gain their seats back.

Wife and husband pair Dena Wiseman and Ralph Carey are seeking $500 to defray the legal costs of their appeal of council’s decision to vacate their seats over conflict of interest allegations. But Mr. Justice David Hurley wouldn’t consider the application because the Town had not been served notice of it. He set the matter over until such time as the Town has been notified of the application by Wiseman’s and Carey’s lawyer and has a chance to consider a response.

In an interview after the print edition of the Irish Loop Post went to press yesterday, the lawyer for Wiseman and Carey, Annette Conway of Curtis Dawe, explained the Town was not notified of the Interlocutory Application because it isn’t clear in the Municipalities Act that such notice is necessary.

“The Act requires that you make an application to the court for an order with respect to the costs of the Appeal and to have it set down,” Conway said, explaining why the two former councillors requested coverage of their legal costs before the Appeal itself was heard.

Meanwhile, Wiseman’s and Carey’s Notice of Appeal challenging their firing was registered with the court on August 3. To date, there has been no official response or Statement of Defence filed by the Town. When contacted by e-mail on Monday, Mayor Sébastien Després said council would meet on the matter this week. “Until then, I am unable to comment, since this is a matter before the courts,” he said.

Council voted to dismiss Wiseman and Carey at a special public meeting on June 23. The decision was ratified at the following regular public council meeting on July 14. It marked the apparent culmination of a nearly year-long controversy during which the Department of Municipal Affairs instructed council, on at least three different occasions, to deal quickly with allegations of conflict of interest involving the pair. However, council, led by Dépres and Wiseman, delayed for months the holding of a by-election which was required in order to have a quorum to deal with the allegations. It was only after two new councillors were elected, and after much wrangling between them, the mayor and Wiseman and Carey, that the matter was finally decided with the latter pair being evicted for allegedly contravening the conflict of interest provisions of the Municipalities Act by discussing snow clearing on a private road abutting their property.

In their appeal, Wiseman and Carey admit they did participate in a discussion involving snow clearing on Pond Path, but they maintain it was not during a formal council meeting. “The discussion was informal and took place with the intention of wording the snow clearing contract before presenting it in a public meeting,” said their lawyer, Annette Conway in the filing with the court.

Conway is claiming Wiseman and Carey were performing in their capacities as councillors representing the interests of all citizens during the discussion and not their own interests.

The pair is blaming the rest of council for failing to raise the issue of conflict of interest at the time, though Mayor Dépres did have the Town Clerk notify the Department of Municipal Affairs about his concerns the day after the September 16, 2014 meeting. “Had the issue been raised, the Appellants would have excused themselves from any discussion in relation to the issue,” Conway wrote.

Despite that, Wiseman and Carey are denying they broke the conflict of interest rules and are also claiming unfair treatment by the rest of council. They maintain they were given no documentation “explicitly setting out” the details of the allegations against them, and that they were not given enough notice to adequately prepare a defence for a Friendly Hearing on the charges held on April 21 this year.

Wiseman and Carey claim the “conduct of the Town council has been arbitrary, high-handed and capricious,” and that the matter “has been unduly delayed and subject to severe mishandling.” They also maintain some councillors have shown “antagonistic behaviour” towards them.

There is no mention in the Notice of the other conflict of interest allegation that has been levelled at Wiseman and Carey by developers and land owners in Witless Bay, that they voted on the proposed Town Plan which would rezone their property on Pond Path to allow for residential subdivision development while also moving to limit development in other parts of the town.

Posted on August 25, 2015 .

Another Petty Harbour softball player nabs national notice

     Next week, Mitch Stack of Petty Harbour will head to Memorial University for first year studies with a plan to gain entrance into the engineering faculty. The move will follow a summer full of learning, but in a different venue.
     The 18-year-old shortstop is one of 24 young softball players from across Canada invited to participate in national training camps leading up the selection of Canada’s entry in the world softball championships next summer. With exposure to high level competitors and coaching, this past month’s camp in Fredericton, New Brunswick was ripe with learning opportunities, Stack confirmed.
     The camp followed the national softball championships where Stack played for Newfoundland’s Under 18 team as did his younger brother Mark, who flew back from the Under 16 nationals in Saskatchewan to bolster Newfoundland’s lineup in Fredericton. Ferryland’s Shane Kavanagh was also on the Under 18 provincial squad.
     “We gave it a good run and made it to the playoffs,” said the elder Stack, who was voted as the All Star shortstop of the tournament.
Stack greatly enjoyed the training camp for the national team. The 24 invitees roomed together at a University of New Brunswick dormitory and were bused back and forth to the playing grounds every day.
     “There was a lot of team building and team bonding stuff,” said Stack.
The camp also featured training and instruction on defensive play, batting practice, technical instruction and games against a local senior men’s team.
     “The coaches were a great group of guys,” said Stack, citing each of the three senior hands drawn from across Nova Scotia, Quebec and Saskatchewan who will prepare Canada’s team for the world tournament next summer.
     “They really know a lot about the game,” said Stack, who noted his game in the local intermediate and senior leagues, where he plays against fellows much older than himself, will likely improve as a result of the camp. “They give you different (game) situations and scenarios that really help you when you come home. And playing at that calibre with guys from Quebec and Ontario and Saskatchewan, who are all real good ball players, you feel more confident when you come home,” he said.
     Stack and the 23 other hopefuls will gather in Kitchener, Ontario next June for another camp which will lead up to the final team selection about a month before the world championships in Michigan.
     Stack tries to be a team leader when he is at the diamond, supporting each player’s efforts and keeping their spirits up. He also has enough maturity to be aware of areas of his own game that he would like to work on. “I’d like to improve on my mechanics of playing shortstop, learning a few more things to make me quicker on my feet and move faster and get more outs,” he said. The national training camps are helping with that, he acknowledged.
The start of school in September won’t mean the end of Stack’s softball training. He said he is fortunate enough to participate in winter training with well-known local softball stars Ryan and Shane Boland, Sean Cleary and others from Newfoundland’s senior men’s team. Just listening to those guys talk about aspects of the game is also an education, he said.

Posted on August 25, 2015 .

Cape Broyle Sea Products lands research money

     Cape Broyle Sea Products Ltd. is receiving $30,157 through the provincial government’s Fisheries Technology and New Opportunities Program to help achieve efficiencies and long-term viability of its sea cucumber operation.
     “Cape Broyle Sea Productsis committed to advancing the sea cucumber business in the province and we greatly appreciate the provincial government's support,” said senior manager Edgar Coffey. “We believe this project will help us further develop our product line and improve efficiencies as we move forward.”
     The funding will allow the company to hire consultants to analyze current technologies and processes. The work will include a market analysis to determine detailed customer product specifications, physiological research and investigation of alternative sea cucumber processing methods to remove the tentacles; productivity evaluation to determine ways to streamline operations; and an investigation of new processing technologies in other jurisdictions.
“Our seafood industry is valued at approximately $1 billion per year and investments we make in improving processing operations for emerging species, such as sea cucumber, help to optimize return on investment for processors and create additional opportunities for harvesters,” said Fisheries Minister Vaughn Granter."
     “Sea cucumber is a species that holds tremendous opportunity for our seafood industry on both the harvesting and processing sides,” added Ferryland MHA Keith Hutchings, a former minister of fisheries who now serves as Minister of Municipal Affairs. “This funding will help Cape Broyle Sea Products Ltd. improve their operations and productivity and help them to better identify and meet the demands of the market.”
     Improvements to processing technology resulting from this project are expected to be beneficial to all processing operations in the province using the same technology to process sea cucumber, he added.

Posted on August 25, 2015 .

Business award a shining accomplishment for young car detailer

     He’s only 17 but Matthew Howlett of Petty Harbour – Maddox Cove already has nearly four years of experience as an entrepreneur. This past summer, he received an Outstanding Venture Award from the province’s Youth Ventures programs, which helps young people start their own businesses.
     “Matthew runs a car detailing business from his home in Petty Harbour,” said Celtic CBDC executive director Loretta Ryan. “CBDC Celtic is proud to support Mathew’s entrepreneurship though our lending program (Kick$tart loans) and our Youth Ventures Program.”
     Howlett too is pleased, if a little surprised, with the award. He started his company after attending car shows with his Dad, cleaning up the engine blocks and interiors of classic automobiles owned by eagle-eyed collectors. The business continues to grow. Howlett reckons he spends three or four days a week during the summer detailing cars. He also works at McDonald’s Home Hardware in the Goulds.
     Howlett is a big advocate of self-employment for young people. “It’s a great experience,” he said. “It helps you get involved with your community more and helps you learn about financials and how to grow a business using your money properly.”
It also helps with developing people skills, he added.
     The CBDC helped him a lot, not only with a grant, but particularly with advertising, Howlett said.
     This fall, Howlett is hoping to enter a two year nursing program, but intends to keep the car detailing business going on the side.
     The award, which was presented during a ceremony held at the Sheraton Hotel in St. John’s earlier this month, was a surprise, he admitted. “I wasn’t really expecting it,” he said. “It was all worth it in the end.”

Posted on August 25, 2015 .