Ontario Government Providing $6.2 In Funding For Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment Hub In Peterborough

The Ontario Government is providing support for those struggling with addiction and mental health issues in Peterborough by building a $6.2 million new Homelessness and Addiction Recovery Treatment (HART) Hub, announced at Showplace Performance on Monday.

Photo by David Tuan bui.

This new hub is part of the province’s plan to support safer communities by investing $529 million to create 27 HART Hubs across the province while also banning drug injection sites from operating within 200 metres of schools and licensed child-care centres.

“For the first time in Ontario’s history, we are taking a look at the entire continuum for homelessness, addictions, and recovery,” said Dave Smith, Member of Provincial Parliament for Peterborough-Kawartha. “The Hart Hub is a fantastic approach; it means that we are crossing different sectors to ensure that we are providing the service where they need it, when they need it, and at the appropriate level. People can enter at any stage into the Hub, wherever they are, and then progress through. It is the first time that any province has looked at the entire continuum for homelessness, addiction, and rehab.”

Peterborough’s HART Hubs, similar to existing hub models in Ontario that have successfully provided people with care, will reflect regional priorities by connecting people with complex needs to comprehensive treatment and preventative services.

Planning efforts to create the HART Hub in Peterborough are underway and the proposed services to be offered could include:

  • Primary and psychiatric care

  • Mental health and addictions services including case management, Rapid Access Addiction Medicine (RAAM), withdrawal management, bed-based addiction treatment, and aftercare

  • Peer recovery coaches

  • Mental health and addictions supportive housing (transitional and permanent) and dual diagnosis supportive housing with 24/7 community wrap-around services

  • Occupational therapy

  • Vocational services

“The HART Hub investments are the right concept for the right time. Our community, like others, is struggling with high rates of homelessness, chronic mental illness, substance use and addictions and poverty. For people living this crisis, housing is the solution,” said Donna Rogers, Fourcast executive director. “The Peterborough HART Hub investment will offer housing alongside many of the other essential supports that can help people re-establish their lives through housing stability, addiction and mental health recovery and good health. Our community is ready to maximize this opportunity and build on the strong foundations of housing from homelessness that has been established amongst our community partners.”

The 18 new HART hub locations, including in Peterborough, were chosen due to a provincewide call for proposals last summer. All HART Hubs will have the goal of being operational by April 1. Earlier this year, the province announced that nine drug injection sites in Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, Kitchener, Guelph and Thunder Bay that are required to close due to being located within 200 metres of a school or licensed child-care centres have been approved for transition to a HART Hub. This brings the total number of HART Hubs across the province to 27, eight more than initially planned.

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Group Sought For Distraction Theft Incident at CIBC

The Peterborough Police Service is seeking public assistance in connection with a distraction theft that occurred at a CIBC just off Lansdowne Place, reported Wednesday.

Photo courtesy of the Peterborough Police Service.

The incident occurred on Dec. A 74-year-old woman was approached by a male suspect and was told that she did not finish her transaction. The man grabbed her card and tapped it. Police believe the card was swapped with another one and the victim’s card was used for more fraudulent transactions. Just over $1800 was taken. 

The suspects are described as:

Male Suspect 1:

  • Tan complexion

  • Approximately 5ft, 5 in tall.

  • Brown winter hat

  • Wearing a medical mask

  • Tan coat

  • Black pants

  • Brown and black shoes

Male Suspect 2:

  • Tan complexion

  • Red and white winter hat with a maple leaf on it

  • Wearing a medical mask

  • Maroon sweater

  • Black pants

Female Suspect 1:

  • Tan complexion

  • Brown hair

  • Green/olive sweater

Female Suspect 2:

  • Tan complexion

  • Purple winter hat with a white pompom on the top. Lettering saying "CANADA on the front of it.

  • Grey coat

The group is also wanted in multiple jurisdictions across the province. Anyone with information is asked to call Peterborough Police at 705-876-1122 x555 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or online.

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Otonabee Conservation Launches 2025 Seedling Program Encouraging Property Enhancement With Trees For Landowners

Otonabee Conservation has launched its 2025 Seedling Program, encouraging landowners in the Otonabee Region Watershed to plant and grow trees to enhance their property and mitigate climate change.

MEREDITH CARTER, MANAGER OF WATERSHED MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS AT OTONABEE CONSERVATION, HOLDS A BARE ROOT TREE THAT WAS ONE OF 4,500 TREES PLANTED AT A WATERSHED RESIDENT’S PROPERTY IN OTONABEE SOUTH MONAGHAN TOWNSHIP in the fall of 2020. PHOTO COURTESY of OTONABEE CONSERVATION

“Trees play an important role in maintaining a healthy and resilient natural environment; planting more trees will help provide habitat and mitigate the impacts of climate change,” said Meredith Carter, Otonabee Conservation Watershed Management Program manager. “Last year, nearly 100 landowners in our watershed purchased and planted 9200 trees and shrubs through our Tree Seedling Sales Program. This will translate to approximately the production 106,000 kg of oxygen.

The Conservation offers various coniferous and deciduous trees and wildlife shrubs, including White Pine, Eastern White Cedar, Red Oak, Sugar Maple, Highbush Cranberry, Buttonbush, Serviceberry and Tamarack. The minimum order is 25 seedlings per species.

“Trees and forests also protect water quality in our rivers and streams,” said Carter, “They provide essential habitat for birds and wildlife, contribute to environmental and human health and mitigate climate change impacts in our watershed.”

Pickups are scheduled for this spring with an order deadline of Feb. 24 at 4 p.m.

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City of Peterborough to Host Live Virtual Public Information Centre For Sanitary Master Plan

The City of Peterborough is hosting a live virtual Public Information Centre to present the preliminary evaluation results of the Sanitary Master Plan, which is currently in development on Feb. 11 at 6:30 p.m.

Photo courtesy of the City of Peterborough.

This Public Information Centre focuses on alternative strategies for servicing development and growth. These strategies consider environmental and socio-cultural impacts, technical feasibility, regulatory compliance and cost.

Residents wishing to view the live broadcast are asked to complete the online registration form.

Registration is available on the project page at connectptbo.ca/sanitary-master-plan.

During the presentation, questions and comments can be submitted through a virtual chat feature.

The presentation will also be posted on the project’s webpage at connectptbo.ca/sanitary-master-plan following the broadcast. Residents can submit questions and comments through the webpage’s questions section following the broadcast.

The Sanitary Master Plan will focus on how to best provide wastewater services as the City grows. The intent is to improve service delivery, demonstrate value for costs, and increase accountability. It’s being developed in coordination with an update to the City’s Asset Management Plan focused on how to best maintain existing infrastructure. 

This project's first public consultation phase began in early last year with a survey and a public information centre. The final Sanitary Master Plan will be presented to City Council in March.

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Voice of Business: Addressing Ontario’s Family Doctor Shortage: Where Healthcare, Governance, and Business Intersect

This week on the Voice of Business, we’re tackling an issue that many in Ontario are familiar with, including right here in Peterborough: the growing shortage of family doctors.

It’s not just about healthcare—this is something that impacts local businesses, the economy, and thousands of people in our community.

Currently about 2.5 million people don’t have access to a family doctor. Locally, it’s estimated that by next year, around 63,000 people in Peterborough will be in the same boat. Municipalities everywhere are struggling to recruit doctors, often competing in what some have compared to a “Hunger Games” style race—where only the communities with the biggest budgets and best incentives can win. Physician recruiting and retaining is thus a multifaceted issue with several intersecting factors that requires focused policy attention.

With a growing number of people without family physicians we can see the effects where this can unintentionally strain local hospitals. A study by Ontario’s Auditor General found that one in five patients goes to the hospital simply because they don’t have a family doctor. This leads to pressure on emergency services, forcing patients with severe medical needs to wait longer while lower-acuity cases backlog the system. It’s a reminder of what happens when there is an unprecedented family physician shortage.

While many municipalities work to compile family physician recruit teams, it remains a challenge as family medicine can be seen as a daunting and unattractive option for medical students. The Ontario Medical Association (OMA) has shed light on this trend: as of 2024, family physicians are paying between 30% and 50% of their income on overhead expenses. For any business owner, seeing nearly half your revenue absorbed into overhead costs is uninspiring—this is no different for family doctors.

The number of family physician vacancies highlight this trend further. Family physician vacancies rose from 30 in 2020 to 108 in 2024. Out of the 560 residency positions for family medicine that year, 108 went unfilled. These vacancies highlight how family medicine is becoming less appealing, not just financially but in terms of workload.

Administrative burdens further exacerbate the issue. Family doctors spend an average of 19 hours per week on paperwork—40% of their total working time. Tasks like processing sick notes consume a large portion of a physician’s work. While the Ontario government has waived the need for sick notes for absences up to three days, many doctors continue to call for their complete removal. This reasoning lies behind the idea that every minute spent on unnecessary paperwork is a minute they could be spending with patients.

Then there’s licensing. Locally, a study from a municipality in Peterborough County found that licensing family physicians can take up to four months. For a region where over 36,000 residents lack a family doctor, streamlining these processes is crucial. Quicker licensing would mean faster access to care and less reliance on overburdened emergency departments.

Peterborough County and the city of Peterborough are doing their part by hiring physician recruitment coordinators to attract more family doctors. Yet, smaller communities like ours face a unique challenge competing with hundreds of other municipalities. Some municipalities such as Bracebridge, St. Catherines and Brockton have attributed this to a “hunger games” approach where the municipality with deeper pockets can present more attractive packages, leaving smaller areas like Peterborough at a disadvantage.

All these challenges point to a bigger issue: the need for decisive government action. While Ontario has made progress—like easing the burden of sick notes for short absences more still needs to be done. Following communication with the city of Peterborough and Peterborough County on their goals to help in recruiting family physicians, the following measures were discussed below:

· Address overhead expenses to make family medicine a more viable and attractive career choice.

· Set fair recruitment standards to create equal opportunities for municipalities to recruit family physicians.

· Streamlining administrative processes to accelerate the timeline for family physicians to receive their licensing to practice.

At the end of the day, family physicians aren’t just healthcare providers—they’re business owners too. Their well-being directly impacts our workforce, employers, and business owners. A stronger healthcare foundation means a stronger community for all of us.

Content provided by the Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce.

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Peterborough DBIA Announce Information For Event Support Grant and Application Deadlines

The Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area (DBIA) has released details for its 2025 Community Event Support Grant and application deadlines.

Photo courtesy of the Peterborough DBIA.

This funding opportunity was developed to help financially support organizers who choose to host their community-minded events in the downtown core, which in turn helps create a lively, vibrant and active urban centre.

The DBIA states that this initiative aims to help foster an inclusive and thriving downtown community by encouraging diverse events that drive economic prosperity and increased foot traffic to the downtown core and also nurture the health of Peterborough’s social fabric by fostering an increase in community engagement.

The Peterborough DBIA will provide financial and in-kind support to selected events that align with their core strategic priorities. The number and extent of grants awarded will be determined by the availability of designated funds and the number of applications that fit the criteria. 

The DBIA event priorities are as follows:

  • Reaching priority and diverse audiences

  • Engaging the DBIA member businesses including restaurants, shops and services

  • Bringing economic prosperity to the region, specifically within the BIA district 

  • Encouraging tourism, downtown exploration and increased foot traffic to BIA member businesses 

  • Building community connection to and within the downtown area

  • Celebrating the unique cultures and identities of downtown Peterborough

The goal of the DBIA event states that its support grant is to empower event organizers to create and host events that encourage repeat visitation and year-round animation in the core by helping to offset costs such as advertising, administrative fees, supply costs, permit and rental fees, for example.

"Our goal is to provide support for event organizers who work to create memorable experiences in our downtown that not only bring economic benefits by increasing foot traffic to the businesses, but also strengthen our overall sense of community and connection,” said Nour Mazloum, DBIA executive director. “We look forward to collaborating with and supporting the visionaries and event planners who also work to create spaces where people feel connected. Together, we can showcase how special and important downtown Peterborough is for the social fabric and health of our community, and also for visitors who will want to choose this region as their destination of choice for enjoying a diverse set of unique and seasonal experiences.” 

Applicants who successfully meet the DBIA funding priorities can expect to receive support funds within two weeks of their scheduled event date. If the event requires in-kind support, organizers are asked to coordinate these requests with the DBIA at least two weeks before the event date. 

The event support grants will have two deadlines throughout the calendar year for application submissions:

  • March 1: For events hosted from April 1 to Sept. 30

  • Sept. 1: For events hosted from Oct. 1 to March 31, 2026

After a submission, the DBIA board will review all applications for the March 1 or Sept. 1 deadlines and decide on funding allocations in the board meeting that directly follows the deadline. Late or incomplete applications will not be considered for funding. All applications must provide the DBIA with a detailed budget outline for their event to be considered.

The event application form can be found at ptbodbia.ca or online.

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Ontario Government Invests $2.9 Million Into PRHC For Expansive Mental Health and Addiction Care Services

The Ontario Government is investing $2.9 million into the PHRC to expand the mental health crisis unit for faster and easier connections to high-quality, comprehensive mental health and addiction care services, announced at Showplace Performance Centre on Monday afternoon.

Photo by David Tuan bui.

“This investment to enhance the PRHC Crisis Response Unit showcases our government's commitment to addressing mental health challenges,” said Dave Smith, Peterborough-Kawartha MPP. It will significantly impact the lives of patients and their families in Peterborough and nearby regions, allowing our healthcare professionals to maintain exceptional care for those in need.”

The expansion is meant to ensure that the hospital is better equipped to deliver responsive and comprehensive care to those in crisis according to Dr. Lynn Mikula, PRHC president and CEO.

“The addition of a purpose-built, expanded Crisis Response Unit at PRHC will have a profound impact on the lives of thousands of patients, improving care and alleviating overcrowding in our Emergency Department, which sees 80,000 visits a year,” she said. “The need for mental health crisis services in our region has grown substantially over the last decade, and we look forward to launching into the next phase of this project, which will ensure that our Mental Health Crisis Response Unit is equipped to provide the best possible care and support in the years and decades to come.”

Once opened, the expanded mental health crisis unit will include:

  • Additional capacity to address high volumes of acute mental health and substance abuse incidents

  • New crisis unit beds

  • Separation for adult and youth mental health patients to enhance the delivery of care, so they can receive the appropriate and high-quality care in a safe space

The ministry says they are working with PRHC to complete early planning and design for this project. A construction schedule will be confirmed once further planning is complete and the project is tendered and awarded.

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Five Counties Children’s Centre Unveils Plans For 50th Anniversary Celebration

It’s the golden anniversary for Five Counties Children’s Centre as they have released details to celebrate its 50th anniversary since opening its doors in 1975.

Five Counties Children’s Centre speech-language pathologist Diane has a little fun with one of her clients. Photo courtesy of FCCC.

The milestone is being marked throughout the year at its sites in Peterborough, Lindsay, Cobourg, Campbellford and Minden; stories of support and success are the centrepiece of the Centre’s 50th-anniversary festivities.

Five Counties will share stories from current and former clients, families, staff members, volunteers and supporters who will detail their different experiences at Five Counties. The stories will be available on the Five Counties’ 50th anniversary web page and social media. Individuals who have a memory to share can still submit their story.

“The Centre is made up of much more than bricks and mortar, as it’s really been built on the magical memories and moments of thousands of clients and families,” said Scott Pepin, Five Counties CEO. “We’ve been fortunate to collect some amazing stories from members of our Five Counties family and look forward to sharing them with our communities.”

The first story featured from Five Counties is Mike Hannah, a Kawartha Lakes resident who was born with cerebral palsy. Well-known for his athletic exploits and charity work, Hannah remembers as a child in the 1970s being bused from school twice a week to the newly-opened Five Counties in Peterborough. He was bused there to receive speech and occupational therapy, as this type of treatment was unavailable in his school and Five Counties did not yet have a location in Lindsay.

“I would probably not be where I am today. Five Counties changed my life,” says Mike, recounting the treatment and support he received at the Centre.

Since its first year serving 126 kids/clients, the Centre has expanded to support more kids and families in Peterborough, Northumberland, Kawartha Lakes, and Minden/Haliburton. That growth is reflected in the 6,103 kids/clients in the area who received services last year through the Centre.

“While the numbers have changed, our commitment to enhancing children’s independence, well-being and quality of life has remained a constant for 50 years,” said Pepin.

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City of Peterborough Seeking Residents to Join Advisory Committees

The City of Peterborough is hosting a drop-in information session to encourage residents to be involved in local government by joining a board or committee.

File Photo.

The session runs from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. at City Hall on Feb. 10 for anyone wishing to join an advisory committee.

The session takes place in the Doris Room. An option to attend virtually is available by emailing clerks@peterborough.ca or calling 705-742-7777 x1820.

Seats are available on a variety of City committees. These are volunteer positions. Terms run until November 2026.

Available seats include:

  • Accessibility Advisory Committee

  • Arenas Parks and Recreation advisory Committee

  • Arts and Culture Advisory Committee

  • Citizens’ War Memorial

  • Museum and Archives Advisory Committee

  • Peterborough Architectural Conservation Advisory Committee

  • Peterborough Public Library

  • Planning Advisory Committee

  • Property Standards Committee

  • Transit Liaison Committee (One committee member must be a user of the accessible transit service)

Residents interested in serving on a City board or committee can obtain an application form from the Clerk’s Office at City Hall. Application forms can be completed online from the City’s website.

Completed applications must be returned by Feb. 14. An interview may be required for some positions.

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Peterborough County Hosting First Municipal Job Fair For Students On Feb. 13

Peterborough County is hosting its first-ever municipal job fair for post-secondary students from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Healthy Planet Arena on Feb. 13.

Photo courtesy of the Peterborough County.

“For post-secondary students seeking meaningful and impactful careers, municipal government offers a diverse range of exciting opportunities,” said Bonnie Clark, Peterborough County Warden. “I encourage you to attend our upcoming job fair to explore the wide range of available summer student positions. By working for a municipality, students will discover fulfilling career paths after graduation and contribute their skills and talents to building strong and vibrant communities.”

The job fair brings together representatives from four local municipalities, such as Peterborough County, the City of Peterborough, Selwyn Township and the Municipality of Trent Lakes, to showcase municipal work's opportunities.

Students have an opportunity to speak directly with hiring managers about various summer positions and learn why municipal work is a valuable and fulfilling career choice.

This event offers attendees:

  • Information on available summer job opportunities.

  • Insight into the benefits of municipal employment, such as skill- building, resume development, and contributing to the community.

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