Heart Of Gold: Peterborough County OPP Officer David McNab Retires After 30 Years

David McNab, a humble, giving and caring Peterborough OPP officer, has announced he is retiring after 30 years serving for the force.

McNab, the man behind the viral video of Syrian refugees toboganning for the first time, wrote a heartfelt Facebook message announcing his retirement from this profession he loved.

McNab in his viral 2016 video toboganning with Syrian refugee at Armour Hill in Peterborough

"I have more gratitude than I could ever express for what this career has taught me and for what it has allowed me to be part of," McNab wrote in the Facebook post. "The job is more about problem solving than about enforcing rules, despite what it appears to be.

I’ve met incredible people and I’ve seen true heroics and unselfish acts far more than I’ve seen the bad side of human nature. Despite the feeling to the contrary, the world is full of goodness if we can only recognize it when we see it."

McNab pictured in one of his last moments on the job (picture via his Facebook page)

"I was fortunate to work for what I believe is one of the most professional organizations anywhere and I’ll miss the people and the sense of family," adds McNab. "I’ll miss the teams I was part of and the rush that came with successful resolutions amid serious situations. I’ll miss the public that I worked for and the ability to occasionally make a real difference for somebody deserving."

You can read his entire Facebook post below...

Watch the awesome video below by McNab and his wife Kristy from January 2016 that now has nearly 400,000 views on YouTube....

Snow is a new experience but fun in any language looks the same. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L1t14vftSVo for video with real audio) These refugee children remind us how to see a Canadian winter with the innocence of a child. They have been extremely grateful for everything our country has to offer, including the warmth and generosity of a true Canadian welcome.

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Here's Info On Preparation Beginning On Urban Park Construction

Construction work on the Urban Park at Charlotte Street and Louis Street in Downtown Peterborough is commencing soon, with the demolition and removal phase starting on December 4th.

The contract for the demolition and removal of a portion of Louis Street, the entire Louis Street Municipal Parking Lot and the building at 220 King Street (the former Shish-Kabob Hut) has been awarded to Accurex Inc.

Urban Park Conceptual Plan

Completion of the demolition and removal phase will prepare the site for a Stage 2 Archaeology Investigation that is required in advance of deeper excavations needed to build the Park.

As part of the project, Louis Street will be widened to accommodate two-way traffic beside the King Street Parking Garage. Once this is complete, the section of Louis Street north of the Rivulet Apartments driveway will be permanently closed. Parking on Louis Street and in the Louis Street Municipal Parking Lot will be permanently removed.

Construction fencing will secure the site and prevent parking and pedestrian travel in the area. The King Street Parking Garage will be fully operational throughout construction.

For more information regarding the Urban Park, check out the online design brochure here.

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You Don't Want To Miss The Jungle Book At Showplace

Arbor Theatre's holiday productions are always a must-see and this year's is this no exception: The cast of The Jungle Book has been training hard for the play, which runs at Showplace in downtown Peterborough Thursday, December 7th and Friday, December 8th.

The all-star team behind the production includes Ray Henderson (writer, co-director and producer); Brianna Hill (co-director); Beau Dixon (music); Kate Bemrose, Madison Sheward and Rachael Froggatt (choreography); Jennifer Sek and Jess Payne (costumes and makeup); John Fewings (set design); Khira McFadden (stage manager); and Bev Breedon (producer).

The cast training

"It's a classic tale with the 'Arbor Twist', which means dancing, comedy, and performers of all ages," Ray Henderson tells PTBOCanada. "It will be unlike any version you've ever seen before!"

THE CAST

Asha Hall Smith, Riley Tutert, Ethan King, Matt Gilbert, Aiden Wilson, Adam Martignetti, Eloise Harvey, Bob Forsey, Alex Bemrose, Ashlee Courneya, Aiden Playford, Olivia Marshall, Mason Taylor, Brianna Hill, Noah Henderson, Carolyn McCarthy, Sophie Surerus, Kayla Leeson, Brooklyn Recker, Huxley Wilton, Saffron O’Neil, Hailee Phillips, Aurora Ash, Alissa Dykstra, Abby Davidson, Sarah Livingston, Sam Baker, Ella Smit, Lily Smit, Ethan Colling, Emily Jones, Emma Papageorge, Emma Wells, Griffyn Davis, Eve Baraball, Jenna Fillipowicz, Elsa Norton, Lily Papageorge, Dana Jordan, Peyton Davidson, Zoe Dunaway, Caoimhe McQuarrie, Kaitlyn Fawcett, Evalyn Webdale, Alleah Webdale, Naomi DuVall, Brad Brackenridge and Daniel Smith

Tickets are $15 for Adults, $12 for Students/Seniors and $8 for those under 12 years old. (Special: You can purchase 4 tickets or more for $10 each!)

Call 705.742.7469 or visit the Showplace Box Office for the special.

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Big Brothers Big Sisters To Judge Holiday Downtown Window Contest

Downtown is showing off its holiday spirit on Saturday, December 2nd with its annual Holiday Window Contest.
 
Judging will take place on Saturday from noon to 2 p.m., and this year's Downtown Business Improvement Area is hosting Big Brothers Big Sisters of Peterborough as their judges.

“It’s great to see our businesses get into the spirit of the holidays with some really creative window displays,” says Terry Guiel, Executive Director of the Downtown Business Improvement Area. “The window contest is always a lot of fun and we’re excited to bring Big Brothers Big Sisters in this year as our judges.”
 
Big Brothers Big Sisters of Peterborough promotes the growth and development of at-risk children and youth in our community through the provision of mentoring programs with positive adult role models.

“We are thrilled that the DBIA has invited children from BBBS to act as celebrity judges for the Holiday Window Contest,” says Mark Shuwera, Executive Director of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Peterborough. “This will be a wonderful learning experience for the kids and we are sure they will have a great time.”

The DBIA is offering cash prizes of $300, $150 and $75 to the top three window displays from our downtown businesses.

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Help Peterborough Police Find Person Who Has Destroyed Pride Flag At Elementary School

The Peterborough Police Service and Crime Stoppers needs your help with an ongoing Investigation into a Hate Bias/Mischief Incident at an elementary school. A pride flag flown outside King George Public school was destroyed twice in the past two weeks.

Sometime between November 11th and November 13th, 2017, the pride flag flown outside King George at the corner of Armour Road and Hunter Street East was taken down and cut into several strips. The flag was replaced, but was again taken down and cut into several strips between November 25th and November 27th. 

Photo courtesy Peterborough Police

The incidents were reported to police and are being actively investigated. The incidents have been classified as a hate/bias offence. (A hate/bias offence is that which is committed against persons or property and are motivated by the victim’s race, sexual orientation, religion, national or ethnic origin or other factors.)
 
Anyone with information regarding these incidents is asked to call the Peterborough Police Service at 705.876.1122. Tips and information can also be made anonymously to the Peterborough Northumberland Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS or stopcrimehere.ca.

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Imagining If Neil Young Rocks Omemee

There is much speculation—some of it courtesy of hints from Neil Young himself—that his December 1st acoustic concert to be broadcast on CTV, streamed online on CTV.ca and live streamed on Facebook may well be coming to us from Omemee, Ont., near Peterborough, the place Young spent some of his formative years as a child.

Toronto, Pickering, Winnipeg and Omemee—all places Young lived as a kid—are on the shortlist of where Young is expected to play from. But the small town of Omemee, with its historic Coronation Hall—the very hall Young posted a video in front of a couple months ago (more on that below)—would be the perfect choice for him to play coinciding with the release of his new album, The Visitor.

Photo by Neil Morton, PTBOCanada.com

Not only did Young spend some of his adolescent years there—below is a Grade 1 class photo at Omemee Public School (1951-52) where he is standing in the back row, third from the left—but for many years a volunteer run museum, the Youngtown Rock & Roll Museum, was based out of Omemee until 2014 that was dedicated to the rock legend.

The old Youngtown museum in Omemee

His iconic "Helpless"—with its lyrics "There is a town in North Ontario, with dream comfort, memory to spare"—was written as an ode to his Omemee childhood home.

And his Facebook post (see below) saying "I will be going to my town"—not city—further fuelled the notion that he would pick Omemee, though one could interpret him using "town" colloquially, yes.

As well, back on September 24th, Young made a stop in Omemee in front of where he's rumoured to be playing and mentioned "the Visitor" in a tweet that is now carrying extra weight...

Ryan Lalonde is a co-producer of an upcoming documentary The Radius Project that looks at the wealth of famous musicians who come from the area in and around Peterborough, such as Young, Thousand Foot Crutch, Three Days Grace, My Darkest Days, I Mother Earth, Ronnie Hawkins, The Leahys (and Natalie McMaster), producers Greg and Rob Wells, and Serena Ryder.

"For Neil Young to play a show here in town and to document it for people to watch forever, it'd be huge," Lalonde tells PTBOCanada. "And it's a testament to not forgetting where you come from."

Photo by Neil Morton, PTBOCanada.com

"If it's Omemee he chooses—and I still think it's a BIG 'if'—it really brings him full circle," adds Lalonde. "This would be a phenomenal gift to the town, even if for one night only. It gives them a legitimate claim to their favourite son. Everyone has an opinion where his home town is, and this might just put the argument to bed."

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44th Annual Peterborough Kinsmen Santa Claus Parade Is December 2nd

The Kinsmen Club of Peterborough presents the 44th Annual Peterborough Kinsmen Santa Claus Parade on Saturday, December 2nd starting at 4:45 p.m. at City Hall.

Photo from old parade in Peterborough courtesy Trent Valley Archives

The parade runs until about 6 p.m through downtown Peterborough, and includes service clubs, businesses and many community organizations who celebrate the holiday season by participating.

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World-Class Exhibition Design Firm Has Joined New Canoe Museum Project

The Canadian Canoe Museum will partner with world-class exhibition design firm GSM Project to create one-of-a-kind visitor experiences at its new building beside the Peterborough Lift Lock on the Trent-Severn Waterway.

GSM Project—with offices in Montreal, Dubai and Singapore—has an extensive CV: It was the lead designer of the new Canadian History Hall at the Canadian Museum of History (the largest exhibition about Canadian history ever developed) and has also recently completed The Alaska Gallery at the Anchorage Museum, Human at the Montreal Science Centre, and much more.

GSM Project will work with the Canoe Musuem to ensure that the world's largest collection of canoes, kayaks and paddled watercraft is not only exhibited but experienced by all those who visit the new museum at the water's edge.

Rendering of new Canoe Museum

GSM Project has been chosen to work alongside staff and the Exhibit Design Committee to create visitor experiences in two key areas of the new museum:

1. Exhibition Galleries -> Approximately 21,000 square feet of Class A (curatorial standard) exhibit space expected to feature 10 to 12 galleries.
2. Collections Centre -> Approximately 28,000 square feet of Class A (curatorial standard) open storage space, featuring more than 500 full-sized watercraft stored on individual mounts and arranged on racking systems.

For the first time, the museum's entire collection will be on site and totally accessible as part of the visitor experience.

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Portion Of Rotary Greenway Trail Now Has Lighting

Thanks to a generous grant received from the Community Foundation of Greater Peterborough, the Rotary Greenway Trail Link between Water Street and the main Rotary Greenway Trail now has lighting.

The lighting system uses energy efficient LED lamps that focus the light downward and along the trail and meets dark sky standards. The lighting system only uses the equivalent of 5 ½ 100 w bulbs, which is an impressively low amount of energy. The project donor placed environmental sustainability as a high priority, which is also why the lighting system was installed with direct mount poles to minimize impact to existing vegetation and trees.

Students from both TASSS and Trent University will benefit from the trail lighting—particularly those involved in extracurricular activities or evening lectures who use the trail outside of the eight solid hours of daylight during the darker months of the year.

As well, the lighting will open this part of the trail for more use by residents of the Whitaker Mills Condominiums and the Waverley Heights subdivision, who use the trail to get to and downtown and other parts of the City.

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Apsley Residents Still Without A Family Physician In Town

When Dr. Wagdy Rayes retired in June after an amazing 40 years run as a family physician in Apsley (which has a population of about 2,300), the township in Peterborough County was left without a doctor.

Rayes had approximately 1,140 patients rostered to his practice, and many of those were left without a GP when he closed his practice at the Apsley Medical Centre on Burleigh Street.

The commitment was made to find the town a new GP as soon as possible—and that commitment remains, according to the Peterborough Family Healthy Team (PHFT).

A North Kawartha Hub clinic with a nurse practioner opened behind Dr. Rayes' old office for those who couldn't join an established family practice. When a new doctor is found, PFHT says this Nurse Practitioner hub will be integrated into this practice to provide all patients of Apsley with a wholesome practice.

But the Nurse Practitioner Hub can only provide care to patients that are enrolled with them as they are currently at full capacity, meaning PFHT is pursuing a temporary solution to support these folks who can't use the hub. They are exploring a telemedicine approach which still needs to be planned out before being implemented.

“It is Peterborough Family Health Team’s responsibility to ensure all residents of the City & Country of Peterborough have access to adequate primary healthcare services,” says Lori Richey, Executive Director for the PFHT. “We continue to search for a permanent family doctor to take over the primary care for patients, but in the meantime we need a solution. People cannot go without access to care.”

A telemedicine service would provide a virtual family doctor to patients in the community. This temporary clinic would also enroll patients and smoothly transition them over to a new family doctor once recruited and that practice is up and running.

In the meantime, those living in Apsley who require care can access it through the following means:

-> The Lakefield VON Nurse Practitioner Clinic: Open Wednesdays and Thursdays, and located at 150 Strickland Street in Lakefield. (Residents are encouraged to book an appointment by calling 705.651.4866.)

-> Peterborough Regional Health Centre: If you urgently require health care services, you are advised to go to your local hospital at 1 Hospital Drive in Peterborough.

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