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Subsidized rent arrears in Nipissing top $2M amid inflation crunch

Subsidized rent arrears in Nipissing top $2M amid inflation crunch

CTV News31-05-2025
The District of Nipissing Social Services Board faces over $2 million in unpaid rent from subsidized tenants, a $200,000 increase from 2023. Officials cited inflation and other strains on fixed-income households as the main cause.
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Odorous Wheatley well to be addressed this week
Odorous Wheatley well to be addressed this week

CTV News

time37 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Odorous Wheatley well to be addressed this week

Chatham-Kent police seen on scene of a gas odour investigation in Wheatley, Ont. on June 26, 2025. (Travis Fortnum/CTV News Windsor) Work to address an old water well that prompted an evacuation in Wheatley last month is expected to begin this week. In a virtual community meeting held on Saturday morning, Chatham-Kent municipal and fire officials provided an update to residents before fielding questions. Following odour complaints in late June, officials discovered water and gas emerging from the ground behind the local library branch. 'When that was found, after kind of all the big brouhaha ended, diversion equipment was installed behind the library to manage that flow and make it safer for people to work around it,' said Theresa Watson, president of T.L. Watson and Associates. Watson, who has served as an advisor to the municipality, told residents that crews have worked to divert the flow to the nearby monitoring well on Elm Street, where the hydrogen sulphide has been removed. Wheatley gas odour investigation July 2025 Monitoring continues at the Wheatley library where residents could smell gas. The site seen in Wheatley, Ont. on July 2, 2025. (Chris Campbell/CTV News Windsor) According to Watson, they determined there was no public safety risk during the June evacuation. 'People acted with caution to make sure everybody was safe, and now we're monitoring constantly behind the library, and we have no further detectable H2S,' she said. Through research, officials determined the site is consistent with a historic water well that caused an explosion in 1934. 'So we're quite confident that the cause of this emission is this old water well,' Watson added. Equipment will be moved onto the site and 'mobilized 'on Monday, before crews begin working to excavate and locate the well on Tuesday. 'Once we find the water well, we will extend it to surface in order to properly abandon it. Now, the monitoring well at Elm Street will continue to be used to divert flow throughout the operation,' said Watson. Because the flow will be diverted to the monitoring well, Watson noted they do not expect a strong odour. In the 'unlikely' event an emergency occurs, Watson said there are response plans in place. 'We know that the monitoring well and the library are hydraulically connected, and so when we abandoned the library well, the monitoring well will stay open now, we will not be abandoning it, and we won't be shutting it in again,' Watson said. Barring any difficulties, Watson estimated they will be working at the site for about seven to 10 days. The meeting was considered last-minute and done virtually to ensure residents were informed before work begins. A similar meeting will be held in person next week at the Wheatley Resource Centre.

Spirits high at Africville reunion as attendees celebrate 'the people that came before us'
Spirits high at Africville reunion as attendees celebrate 'the people that came before us'

CBC

time40 minutes ago

  • CBC

Spirits high at Africville reunion as attendees celebrate 'the people that came before us'

Social Sharing Kites were flying, kids were playing and burgers were being flipped at the 42nd Africville Family Reunion on Saturday. It was children's day, and event organizer Shawn Mantley was on barbecue duty. He said it's important for the community to gather and acknowledge their ancestors and the history of Africville. "For us, it's remembering the good times, but also not forgetting the injustice," he said. "It's celebrating the ancestors and the people that came before us." For more than 40 years, people have returned for a weekend festival at what is now a National Historic Site, after Africville was torn down by the city of Halifax in the 1960s. Mantley said some children might not know the story of Africville. But they had the opportunity to learn during a roundtable Friday night where descendants shared memories and talked about the injustices faced. Mantley said despite a shooting that left five people injured at least year's event, the atmosphere this year feels calm, and it's a good feeling to be here. "For our youth, we want to make sure that the spirit of Africville carries on," said Mantley. Amira Simms Oliver, 14, has soaked up the spirit of Africville at every reunion since she was a baby. She said it's great to be surrounded by family and friends. "Even though the incident last year happened, I'm not going to let that stop me from coming here," said Simms Oliver. "Even though there's not as many people as there were like the years before, I'm still going to have a good time."

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