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Echoes May 2021

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IN THIS ISSUEMAY 2021VOLUME XLI, ISSUE III6488 SMITHVILLE RD.P.O. BOX 40,SMITHVILLE, ONL0R 2A0PH. 905.957.3255FAX 905.957.3431smithvillechristian.caCONTACT:MARLENE BERGSMAmbergsma@smithvillechristian.caPAGE 1 BUDGETINGPAGE 3 STUDENT COUNCILPAGE 4 GO OUTSIDE AND PLAY!PAGE 6 CHRISTIAN SCHOOL FOUNDATIONPAGE 8 HOW TO LEARN RESILIENCEPAGE 10 UNWAVERING OPTIMISMPAGE 12 CARING FOR CREATIONPAGE 14 STUDENT COUNCILBudgeting in the time of COVID-19B y T e d H a r r i s , adminisTraTorThe last year has impacted plenty of things. Every time I tune into the news, there seems to be yet another angle on the impact of this pandemic. Sometimes I am tempted to ip beyond those pages or change channels. Stay with me this time though.As we put an annual budget together for 2021-22, we too are continued on page 2 . . .facing the impact of COVID-19, and a review of our by-laws is helping us meet the challenge with more careful planning. Let me start by sharing some ways COVID is not impacting us. First, we are having a very good recruitment season for next year’s Grade 9 class. The numbers are exceeding our initial predictions. Second, we continue to receive excellent support for our bursary fund. Don’t get me wrong; we still need the support of those who are reading this right now, but we consider ourselves very blessed to be able to offer bursary support to families who will need it in the coming year. Third, we are blessed to be able to continue the plans for our outdoor facility upgrade, due to begin late this spring, an effort which lies outside the operational budget. (Read more on pages 4 and 5)

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2ECHOES MAY 2021. . . continued from page 1So where is the pinch being felt? First, we have seen a sharp decrease in international student enrolment. That number has settled from 29 in the fall of 2019 to 17 currently, and we anticipate fewer than 10 next year (though we are still working on it). These numbers may not sound as dramatic as what you might hear in the news from colleges and universities, but this challenge surfaces in various places in our budget projections. Second, there are 33 students in grade 12 who do not have a younger sibling continuing at our school next year, a much higher number than average. This will impact our family count dramatically and our revenue along with it. It’s not anyone’s fault, though perhaps some of those families could have had just one more child. Third, there are, of course, a number of expenses over which we have little control, and some of these inevitably go up.The result of all this is that we have our work cut out for us in preparing this budget. What will that work involve? The answer to this question always starts in the same way; we will look at income and expenses. On the income side, we will certainly continue working hard to enroll new families, and we are working to develop inroads with international communities for new students in both the long and short term. On the expense side, we will be having a close look at the stewardly delivery of program and what that means for stafng adjustments yet to be made.The need to be careful in planning this budget coincides with a shift the board is making in its meeting calendar. Our board has recently decided to make the transition to annual late-fall membership meetings as part of its work on by-laws and other protocols. Members are required to approve the budget work of their board and administration, but typically this is done after the year has nished. If we discontinue the practice of submitting budgets for membership approval in April, then the administration, nance committee, and board can continue ne-tuning the budget work done in the spring until late summer. This allows the budget that is nally approved by the board to be a more accurate reection of enrolment and nal stafng adjustments, which are the two biggest factors that impact the budget.In a year like this, when clarity on various budget factors will not be established until June or later, this shift will help us in appropriately stewarding the resources with which we are entrusted. Smithville Christian’s ability to help students Belong, Believe, and Succeed relies on a community of supporters, giving large gifts and small.Please consider making an annual bursary commitment this year. Your contribution will help send three out of every 10 students to school.Send a cheque to the address on the cover, eTransfer to nance@smithvillechristian.ca (Password: ABC) or donate online with a credit card at ChristianSchoolFoundation.caWHO IS MISSING FROM THIS PICTURE?Your contribution to the Smithville Christian Annual Bursary Campaign sends three out of every 10 students to school.

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3www.smithvillechristian.caWhere do student activity fees go during COVID-19?By sTudenT CounCil 2020-2021In our last Echoes article written by Student Council, we talked about our plans for a Greenspace project in what is currently the courtyard. This would be a space for students to hang out, unplug and get some sunlight, year-round. In this article, we would like to elaborate on how our budget works, our current nancial status, and how we plan to pay for the construction of the Greenspace. The Student Activity Fee is a per student fee that is collected yearly for extracurriculars. In the past the fee was collected separately. A few years ago, this student fee was integrated into tuition and then deposited to the Student Council bank account. It is our responsibility to manage these funds each year. The current activity fee is $225 per student. These fees pay for many extracurricular activities that would happen during a typical school year, such as all our sports teams, our yearbook club, and events like dances and spirit days. Last year and this year this has not happened as planned and we are working with a very healthy surplus that is designated for this project.If we continue to keep spending to a minimum this year, we hope to have around $80,000 to put towards this project. At this point we are waiting on exact numbers, but we are working with two Smithville Christian alumni for architectural drawings and construction costs to project numbers and plans. Once we get these numbers, our next step will be to ofcially present and request approval from the administration. We would love to end this Covid experience with a positive blessing of a green space that will benet the whole student body. We love working with alumni and appreciate prayers and the support from our community.For more student council accomplishments, see page 14.Owen Munnings, who handles communications for the Smithville Christian student council of 2020-2021, gets ready to deliver one of his weekly announcements from the student services offices during a recent Zoom chapel. Owen usually treats the school to a joke. For example: “Hope everyone had a great April break. I started reading a book about anti gravity last week, and I just couldn’t seem to put it down!” Or “I tried to find a joke to tell on zoom this week, but none of them were even remotely funny.”

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4ECHOES MAY 2021Go outside and play!B y m a r l e n e B e r g s m a , d i r e C T o r o f CommuniCaTions and advanCemenTThere’s nothing like a lockdown to make you want to go outside.Getting outside – to relax, to exercise, to play, or to learn – has been one of the more dramatic changes students and teachers have experienced at Smithville Christian this year. It was especially true earlier in the pandemic, when students were able to remove their masks outdoors. At lunch time and during breaks, the school elds were alive with students playing Kan-jam, spike-ball, nine-square in the air, and moreThe need to make better use of our outdoor space has inspired a massive redesign of the school grounds, scheduled to get underway this spring.With the help and support of many community partners, Smithville Christian is adding tennis, pickleball, beach volleyball, disc golf and a properly graded, full-sized soccer pitch.The plans for an improved soccer pitch have been in our strategic plan for over a decade, but the pandemic has made it obvious that now is the time. Students and teachers are involved in many aspects of the project design, including design of the disc golf course, construction of the disc golf targets, and design of some additional features such as plantings, natural areas, shade structures, seating, and outdoor classrooms.In April, we launched a fundraising campaign, and, with the support of generous and visionary donors who know how important it is to be active, we are pleased to be able to say that all additional donations

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5www.smithvillechristian.caSOCCER FIELDVOLLEYBALLTENNIS/PICKLEBALLSMITHVILLE ROAD150’72’115-120 YARDS75-85 YARDS122’184’will be matched! We have also partnered with the Kiwanis Club of West Lincoln and the Township of West Lincoln in this outdoor project, with our students designing a second nine-hole disc golf course for the Wellandport Community Centre, and the Kiwanis Club choosing our school as a signature fundraising project! Being able to create a space that will bless students and our neighbours is one of the ways that Smithville Christian and its partners are ourishing. ////// Fast Facts / / / / / / What?Where?Who?How much?How?Wh?Tennis, pickleball, beach volleyball, soccer, disc golf and moreMore info? see https://simplebooklet.com/2021sportsfieldredevelopment#page=1 How can you get involved? Donate at the Christian School Foundation www.christianschoolfoundation.ca/donate/?donate_to=smithville-christian-high or by eTransfer to finance@smitvillechristian.ca (password: Sports!), or by cheque mailed to the school. Fundraising campaign - all gifts matched!Summer 2021West and south fieldsStudents designing disc golf course, students building disc golf targets, students giving input to the design of natural spaces and outdoor classrooms. Alumni and professional contractors doing excavating, fencing, construction. Community partnerships with the West Lincoln Kiwanis Club and Township of West Lincoln.$250,000

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6ECHOES MAY 2021Planting for the futureBY TONY KAMPHUIS, PRESIDENT AND CEOCHRISTIAN SCHOOL FOUNDATIONMore than twenty years ago, my then-colleague at Smithville Christian High School, Michelle Slump-Houwer, spoke of her Dad as she led a chapel. She shared that at each property at which her family lived, her Dad would plant trees: ash, maple, birch. There was no reason to believe that her family would live there long enough to enjoy the beauty and protection those trees would provide once they were mature. But her Dad planted them anyway – knowing that someone would someday see the benet of those efforts. Even if they were people he would never know, even if they ended up having to move the trees at some point, or use them in ways he couldn’t foresee, he proceeded in the condence that he was making a positive difference on this earth, for the long term. Michelle’s Dad was a planter.Are you a “planter”? If you arrange some sort of planned gift, or if you leave a gift in your Will, you are a planter. You are showing that you recognize that God can take the blessings He has given you and, even if they are only the size of mustard seeds, God can create a harvest of blessings far larger than you might ever expect!People in a community like Smithville know that planters are forward-looking. Planters change the world for the better, even long after they have gone on. Planters have vision.If you see the value of being a planter, we want to invite you to let our Foundation know about a gift you may have already arranged to bless Smithville Christian High into the future. Or connect with our Foundation to get support for your desire to do so. When you join the Mustard Seed Society (www.mustardseedsociety.ca) – even if that is anonymously – you are saying that you are a planter, and planters are people who are deeply appreciated.Tuition Assistance Helps Us AllHelping a family with their tuition costs can have a tremendous impact on the lives of the students who are directly affected, and on their family. We get that. But this is only the rst point of impact.When the Christian School Foundation reports on the impact of its tuition assistance programs, it reports that it has helped 519 families, 941 students in 68 schools. In 2019-2020, $786,000 owed from donors to schools for this work. Yet the impact on school budgets was over $4.6M! Huh? Suppose a family needs $3,000 of tuition support. If that support isn’t available, the money they were able to contribute is lost to our school’s budget. So is the money their extended family or their church would have contributed. When our school and the Christian School Foundation cooperate to put that nal nancial piece into the tuition puzzle, we have essentially unlocked those other resources!But this nancial impact is only the start.$1,500 + $1,500 = Sam…or Pat…or AlexWhen a family is able to attend because of our robust tuition assistance programs, their children bring along

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7www.smithvillechristian.caall of their gifts, abilities, and challenges, and our whole school is a more vibrant reection of God’s Kingdom.The soccer team is better. The school has the numbers it needs to offer more programs. The school play has more skilled sound and lighting teams. The classrooms have more class clowns to keep things light and fun. And your son, daughter or grandchild has another classmate to befriend. You can’t put a price on these blessings.Would Smithville Christian be a good school if none of the recipients of tuition assistance were here? Perhaps. I suppose you could be a good runner, even if you were missing a couple of toes.But when the whole body is present (think of 1 Cor. 12 here…), when all the parts are together – the big ones and the small ones – now you will see some great running! This is why we make tuition assistance such a priority: it blesses us all, so that we can be an even greater blessing in God’s world.The tuition assistance impact on school budgets was over $4.6M! Huh?““

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8ECHOES MAY 2021How to learn resilienceBy linda Booy-KorvemaKer, direCTor of sTudenT serviCesThis year has been a challenge for many of us. As an educator and guidance counsellor, it has changed how I do my work. This school year was supposed to include our bi-annual career day – lling the school with many guests and speakers for our students to listen to and network with; opening students’ eyes to a world beyond Smithville Christian High School. Career Day 2020 did not and could not happen that way due to COVID19 and the global pandemic. Career Day did still happen at Smithville Christian. It was different and it is still happening.

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9www.smithvillechristian.caCareer Day 2020 began on December 2, as scheduled, with a special chapel led by Justin Cook, director of learning at EDVANCE Christian Schools and Jon Berends, director of Redeemer University’s Act Five. A couple of long-time friends, they shared with our students a pre-recorded Zoom on Passion, Mission, Vocation and Profession. With a backdrop of the Raptors home court, students learned the story of Jon’s own personal career journey, while Justin explained how Christians rely on the cycle of Grace in our careers as well as our personal lives. Students were challenged with a message to see their career pathways inspired by the God who created us. “For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Ephesians 2:9-10). Typically, the Career Day chapel would be followed by a full day of breakout workshops and career specic presentations. But this year, students were introduced to a virtual opportunity called Edge Factor. This online career discovery program was started by a local Christian entrepreneur, employs many Christians, and is located right next door to us in Beamsville. Students, teachers, and parents have access to this online program for one year, courtesy of Smithville Christian High School. I was so thankful to nd it and to be able to share it with students. We held a contest to encourage student engagement, and, in February, the founder and producer, Jeremy Bout, shared his story at a chapel about how he grew the company, some of the amazing stories featured, and the verse that inspires him daily: “Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance nish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything. If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without nding fault, and it will be given to you.” James 1:2-5Jeremy reminded us that resilience is built from adversity. He shared stories from his experience where he learned this truth. This truth is so valuable today as we struggle with a worldwide pandemic that has changed so many aspects of life.Career Day 2020 did happen at Smithville Christian High School despite COVID19. When you reect on this past year – what have you learned? As Christians, we are a people of hope and yet we know there will always be trouble on this side of heaven. This isn’t the rst world-wide pandemic. We must persevere despite our circumstances and because our God is bigger. By persevering we are showing the world who God is: bigger than a world-wide pandemic and bigger than our circumstances. We can trust– whatever our circumstance – that God is here with us. Edge Factor empowers communities to tackle workforce development, inspire students, reach parents, and build relationships between local companies, schools, and families. We equip K-12 and postsecondary schools, businesses, workforce development organizations, and families with e-learning tools to showcase industries and careers, teach soft skills, show how STEAM comes alive in the real world, and highlight local training and career opportunitiesJon Berends, left, director of Redeemer University’s Act Five, and Justin Cook, director of learning at EDVANCE Christian Schools, speaking via video at Smithville Christian High School’s Career Day chapel on Zoom.

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10ECHOES MAY 2021Unwavering optimismB y m a r K f l u i T , m a T H a n d musiC TeaCHerAdapted from a reflection shared by teacher Mark Fluit during a recent time of staff devotions.Over the past year, the word “hope” has consistently been in my mind. I have been reecting on its importance to the Christian faith and the need for me to develop a greater sense of hope.Just over a year ago at this time, I was headed to South Africa with several staff, my wife, and 20 students. While there, I was able to visit one of the Helping Hands sites where there was a large swing with ropes about 12 feet long, and nothing but a loop at the bottom. This was no ride for sensitive bums of us Canadians, it pinched and hurt! In my experience, the way you help a friend or child on a swing is to catch the swing in its forward momentum and then encourage the force forward as they reached for the sky. These children had a much more efcient method of getting their friends up in the sky. Two children on either side at the middle would catch the rope in their hands before the swing went to the back half and then they would throw the ropes, and child, forward again. Essentially eliminating the need for 50% of the ride. What a disruption to the ow of the swing, and yet, just as effective in getting someone back in the sky. The children on the ground had the joy of disrupting the pattern and bringing about forward momentum again. The child in the swing felt the sudden exhilaration of being pulled in a new direction.It was on the South Africa trip, when I video chatted with my Mom on her 70th birthday, that I realized her illness meant her passing would likely not be “sometime in the next year” but in the next month.

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11www.smithvillechristian.caMy Mom had a ridiculous amount of hope. She lived in many ways to bless others through acts of kindness, words of encouragement, and her simple presence. She loved her neighbours despite the fact that many were very needy, but they relied on her so much. She was a consistent baby-sitter in coffee break, a friend in the friendship program for all my life, and she took care of her Dad until he passed just 4 months before her. She had unwavering hope that by helping and blessing others that the other person would also desire to know Jesus more fully. I believe her hope was to keep the swing in motion as it was going forward and to allow God to continue to do his work in each individual she interacted with. Despite the pains she experienced physically, she had a sense of peace and hope and in her last years, her peace and hope only became more and more evident. God’s swing was always kept in motion with my Mom.My Dad experienced a major disruption in the motion of his swing when my Mom passed. Like the South African swing, the disruption in the ow has had benet to him, despite the pain. He has learned so much more about himself and grown in his independence, sense of peace, and his role as a dad and grandfather.In this staff, I see hope. You hope for better education, you celebrate successes with students, you ght through the difcult things that teaching sends you. Often times, we keep the swing in motion as God continues to do his work in the vessels of our students. Every once in a while, you disrupt the path. This week is one of those weeks. We disrupt that normal ow of school, or as VP Fred Breukelman said, we “need to take a ‘breather’ to break the spread of this virus.” This gives me hope, that we break for a purpose, with a mission, and with a drive toward a better future. I believe God is working through our efforts. I watched a TedTalk the other night about “How to shift your mindset and choose your future,” by Tom Rivett-Carnac. His message was that in order to effect change, we need unwavering optimism. I agree that we need to take a positive spin to push forward and create change, because focusing on the negative often debilitates. At the end though, I wondered, how can a group of people have “unwavering optimism?” This man and our world need the hope that only God can bring. And this is one of the blessings I feel at Smithville Christian. We can have unwavering optimism, or hope, because we have faith in a Saviour and in the work of God.May the God of hope ll you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. Romans 15:13Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory rejoices, my flesh also will rest in hope. Psalm 16:9 Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose condence is in him. Jeremiah 17:7To them God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. Colossians 1:27We must accept finite disappointment but never lose infinite hope. Martin Luther King JuniorHope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness. Desmond TutuTo live without hope is to cease to live. Fyodor DosteyevskyIt’s not what you look at that matters; it’s what you see. Henry David ThoreauWishful thinking is dependent on our own capacity for positive thinking. Hopeful living is putting our whole selves into the care of God. Danielle StricklandHope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all. Emily Dickinson

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12ECHOES MAY 2021Caring for creation: Smithville Christian students lead the wayBy marlene Bergsma, direCTor of CommuniCaTions and advanCemenTSmithville Christian science students did not let a sudden switch to remote learning or a pandemic prevent them from engaging their community in caring for creation.Students in the Grade 9 science class of teacher Scott Antonides made an Earth Day video to invite others to clean up trash and litter. Shared via the school’s YouTube channel, it earned dozens of views in its rst week, and was shared to local businesses by The West Lincoln Chamber of Commerce. Reporter Nick Fearth from Grimsby Lincoln News also interviewed Antonides and published a news story about the students’ Earth Day initiative.Antonides said normally he and his students would work with the Township of West Lincoln and be assigned a section of road to clean up, but the March lockdown meant students were learning from home.Instead, he came up with the idea for the video project and workshopped script ideas with the students.Each student recorded his or her contribution at home and Antonides edited it into a three-minute nal project Most gross item found: “Over 40 bags of dog poop thrown into the woods behind a local elementary school. Disgusting!” – Ephraim N.

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13www.smithvillechristian.ca13featuring 21 students in the class. It uses the “toss-the-object” technique to create continuity and humour in the story, and students were able to add their own personal touches. Smithville Christian Reformed Church also shared the video with its members, and some of them were inspired to join the clean-up, said Antonides. West Lincoln staff and Township Councillor William Reilly were also helpful. The clean-up is continuing, and Antonides is collecting photos from students.“I like to design projects that engage the community or address a current problem,” Antonides said. “This teaches students that they are already valuable members of society and don’t have to be adults before making contributions or setting good examples.” Project-based learning at Smithville Christian gives teachers and students an opportunity to do practical, tangible things that make a difference, both now, and, hopefully, for the rest of the students’ lives. Making the work memorable like this helps students learn. “We spent an hour over zoom going over the script, making edits, and getting ideas for how to make the video more engaging,” said Antonides. “This was a lot of fun actually.”Watch the students’ earth day video: https://youtu.be/B0RVqCKspewRead about the project in Niagara This Week online: https://www.niagarathisweek.com/news-story/10378213-grade-9-students-from-smithville-christian-high-school-hope-to-inspire-others-to-clean-up-their-neighbourhoods-with-their-earth-day-video/

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14ECHOES MAY 2021Smithville Christian student councilHard at work creating fun, inspiring creativity, celebrating accomplishments, and making it possible for students to have an impact. Food drive for Community CareSuperhero DayOwen Munnings, left, presents Mitchell Patterson with a student council prizeJacoba Hoekstra, right, presents Jeremy Talsma with a prize.Christmas gift bags for Rose City Kids

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15www.smithvillechristian.ca1.888.BAYVIEW ext 344P.O. Box 2, 3764 Jordan Road, Jordan Station, Ontario, Canada L0R 1S0phone 905.562.7321fax 905.562.7851www.Bayviewflowers.comFRANS IPEMA HOME RENOVATIONS905-931-9499Specializing in Interior Home RenovationsSERVING THE NIAGARA REGIONReferrals available • Licenced CarpenterOver 20 Years Experience Accounting Consulting Personal & Corporate Taxation Succession Planning Agri-Business Programs, Accounting & TaxT. 905-899-2424 • F. 905-899-2426dwight@tebrake.ca • www.tebrake.ca42126 Hwy #3, R.R. #3is printed on 100%post-consumer recycled paper.Toll Free 1-800-461-7374-AIN3T%'RIMSBYs(IGHWAY3TONEY#REEKsCome visit our Garden Centre in Grimsby!Flowers, plants and unique gift giving ideas for every occasion!Joseph ZantinghC: (905) 746-2644E: 16metalworks@gmail.comwww.16metalworks.comSmithville, ONC`]\ËjYi`^_k\ile[\ik_\jle!DlklXc]le[j[`jki`Ylk\[YpJleC`]\=`eXeZ`Xc@em\jkd\ekJ\im`Z\j:XeX[X @eZ%JleC`]\8jjliXeZ\:fdgXepf]:XeX[X`jXd\dY\if]k_\JleC`]\=`eXeZ`Xc^iflgf]ZfdgXe`\j%JleC`]\8jjliXeZ\:fdgXepf]:XeX[X#)'(0%DXkk;Xd!?FE%9%8%9LJ%DXkk;Xd=`eXeZ`XcJ\im`Z\j@eZ%0',$/0)$,00*Kfcc]i\\1($///$//0$+.+)dXkk%[Xd7jlec`]\%Zfdnnn%jlec`]\%ZX&dXkk[Xd]`eXeZ`Xc(-,?np)'N\jk#Jl`k\*=fek_`cc#FEC'J(<,

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We draw Christian schools and donors together toexpand the influence of Christ in our culture.www.christianschoolfoundation.caThe Echoes is a periodical published ve times a year by Smithville Christian High School. Editor: M. Bergsma11 Livingston AveGrimsby, ON L3M 1K6William & Christina Bezemer905.945.8008SHUTTERS U BLINDSDRAPERIES U SHADESvillageinteriors@cogeco.cavillageinteriorsonline.comCLARENCE’S SERVICE CENTRECLARENCESSERVICECENTRE@COGECO.NETBRIAN PRINSOWNER801 CANBORO RD.P.O. BOX 129FENWICK, ON L0S 1C0PH. 905-892-3652FAX 905-892-4828CELL 905-351-4333(',(9ifX[Jk%<%#;leem`cc\#FE0',$..+$-((,)+''?`^_nXp,-#9`eYiffb#FE0',$-0)$++(,(*/'=flik_8m\%#Jk%:Xk_Xi`e\j#FE0',$-//$,,)'Wayne SchilstraBROKERSteven SchilstraBROKERDavid Hildebrand SALES REPRESENTATIVE905.957.1188Wesley SchilstraSALES REPRESENTATIVEINSPECTIONSRoger Heeg rogerheeg@ozainspections.com80100120140601604020180Dekkers Auto S a lesService"VUPNPUJWF4BMFTŔ3FQBJSTŔ"$Ŕ5JSFTŔ"MJHONFOUTŔ%JBHOPTUJDT905.386.6253Home DesignFred & Adrian KoornneefSuppliers of Greenhouse Vegetables and Tender Fruitwww.koornneefproduce.comGrantham Plaza, 400 Scott St., St. Catharines, ON L2M 3W4Phone: 905-937-8833 • Fax 905-937-7196website: www.vandendooljewellers.com345 Argyle St. S. 214 Broad St.Caledonia, On N3W 1L8 Dunnville, On N1A 1G2(905) 765-5788 (905) 774-7576fax: (905) 765-1811 fax: (905) 774-9479cell: (905) 929-6783 email: peter_dieleman@cooperators.caPeterDieleman, CFPAgentVan Hoorn’sinspired by you...created by usVHinspired by you...created by usQuality Cabinetry & Custom Woodworkingsteve@vanhoorns.ca • www.vanhoorns.ca • P.905.562.8886STEVE & ELAINE@vanhoornscustom