Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Hospital Asks Visitors to Take Precaution

A spike in flu-like illness in the region has the Lake of the District Hospital on alert.

Lynn Ronnebeck is the Infection Control Professional and says they are concerned about visitors who may be feeling ill.

Ronnebeck says this time of year sees a spike in visitors and that anyone feeling sick can pass that along to the patients they are visiting.

She stresses that this is only a precaution and that no limitation on visitors have been put in place.

Northwest LHIN Receives Provincial Funding

The regional health authority is getting a financial boost to help it coordinate better seniors care.  

Thunder Bay MPP Bill Mauro announced  $4.4M in support for the Northwest LHIN.

The money will be used to support home care for more seniors.

Mauro hopes it will help to ease overcrowding at local hospitals.

Fourteen different agencies will be receiving the money including 4 in the Kenora District.

High Cost of Policing Continues

The high price of policing will continue next year.

Kenora city council has voted to extend the current OPP contract until a new billing model is created in 2015.

Mayor Dave Canfield says the new model isn't perfect but it will help bridge the price gap.

He says some communities are paying less then $100 for policing while we are paying over $900.

Canfield says that council will continue to lobby the government for the changes whether or not an election takes place in 2014.

All New Band Council Elected On Rat Portage

Wholesale changes on the Rat Portage First Nation.

A new chief and council was voted in in yesterday's band elections.

Councillor Chris Skead has been promoted to chief.

He won in a landslide over the incumbent, Ken Skead and challenger
Calvin Skead.

An all new band council has also been elected.

Don Big George, Tyler Cameron and Edward Skeid were elected from
the slate of 12 candidates.

A total of 224 votes were cast in the band election.

One Person Dead Following Accident on Highway 11

One man is dead and a women in is hospital with serious injuries following an accident on Highway 11.

OPP says both were a car that collided with a transport early yesterday afternoon near the junction of Highway 633, 30 kilometres east of Atikokan.

The man was pronounced dead at the scene.

The woman was transported to Atikokan General Hospital.

The driver of the transport was not hurt.

The accident closed the road for more than seven hours and was only fully reopened just a couple of hours ago.

City Supports Veteran's Affairs Offices

The minister of veteran affairs will be hearing more calls by more Northern Ontario communities.

Kenora city council has passed a resolution to lobby the Julian Fantino to keep the nine offices around the country open.

Councillor Ron Lunny says it`s important to stand up for the Thunder Bay office.

The resolution will also be passed along to the regions MP's Greg Rickford, John Rafferty, and Bruce Hyer.

The offices are slated to close at the end of January.

Health Unit Says It Wants To Battle Obesity

Fighting the battle of the bulge.

That's one of the biggest concerns of the Northwestern Health Unit
heading into 2014.

Dr. Jim Arthurs says tackling obesity is the number one health issue in the
region.

Arthurs says even getting off the couch and walking for a half hour a day can help
keep you healthier.

Dryden Council Agrees To Close Youth Center


An 11th hour attempt to save the Dryden Youth Center has failed.

Dryden town Council has officially closed the doors on the Youth Center.

Shayne MacKinnon made a passionate plea to save the facility.

Mayor Craig Nuttall held the deciding vote and says the City can no longer afford to run the Center
.

NAN Rallies for Residential School Documents

Members of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation are in Toronto rallying in support of St. Anne's Residential School survivors.

This is the final day of a two-day hearing in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice where the federal government is being challenged to release documents from a police investigation of residential school abuse at St. Anne's in Fort Albany.

NAN Deputy Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler says the government's decision to keep evidence from survivors compromises the rights of these survivors and notes they have a legal obligation under the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement to release the documents.

Beatings, rape and the use of an electric chair were documented by a 5-year investigation by the Ontario Provincial Police which resulted in the criminal convictions of several school officials.

Fiddler stresses the survivors of St. Anne's have suffered enough.

Tories Angry Over Possible Transit Gas Tax

Progressive Conservatives says plans for a new gas tax is going to hurt northern Ontario.

A 10-cent tax is being considered to help fund rapid transit expansion in southern Ontario.

Tory Critic Vic Fedeli says it won't just tap motorists.

Fedeli says it's also a slap in the face by asking northerners to help pay transit expansion in southern Ontario, which will have no impact on this region.

Two Men Fined for Illegal Wolf Hunt

Two men have been fined a total of 45 hundred dollars for an illegal wolf kill on Lake of the Woods.

Kirk Quade of Minnesota hired a guide to help him hunt wolf last February.

Quade only had a licence to kill one deer, but ended up shooting two.

His guide, Dave Bennet attached his own tag to the wolf.

Quade was fined 15 hundred dollars for hunting without a licence, while Bennet was fined a thousand dollars for attaching a game tag on wildlife killed by another person.

Both men were also fined a thousand dollars each for making a false or misleading statement to a conservation officer.

Saints Sweep Warriors In Court Sports

A dominating performance for Thomas Aquinas against Sioux Lookout
yesterday.

The Saints senior and junior girls volleyball team blanked the Warriors
in three straight sets.

In basketball action, the T.A. junior squad got by Queen Elizabeth 47-40.

Eric Sundmark led the offense with 22 points.

In senior boys action, it was T.A. over the Warriors 42-37.

The Saints are back in action this morning with Atikokan coming to town.

Kenora Boys High School Hockey Teams Register Wins

The Thomas Aquinas boys hockey team is starting to get on a roll.

The Saints won their second in a row, defeating Dryden 3-1 last night.

Brandon Scott's shutout bid was spoiled with just two seconds left in the
game.

Meanwhile, Beaver Brae's boys doubled up Sioux Lookout 8-4 yesterday
afternoon at the Rec. Center.

Coel Forsythe, Logan Ginn and Jed Rattai each
scored two goals to lead the Bronco offense.

The Broncos and Saints will face eachother for the second time in a week
tomorrow night at the Rec. Center to wrap up the 2013 portion of the schedule.

Elsewhere, the Thomas Aquinas girls hockey team has picked up its first win of the season.

The Saints got by Queen Elizabeth High School 5-3 last night in Sioux Lookout.