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	<title>Bancroft this Week</title>
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	<pubDate>Fri May 15 1:52:36 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Compliance for campgrounds on environmental regs</title>
			<link>https://www.bancroftthisweek.com/?p=5447</link>
			<pubDate>Fri May 15 1:52:36 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<content-encoded><![CDATA[<br /><br />By Chad Ingram

<br /><br />The following are brief reports of items discussed during a Dec. 14 meeting of Highlands East council. 

<br /><br />Highlands East council is asking staff to draw up a bylaw that would ensure camprounds comply with the township's environmental regulations. 
<br /><br />That recommendation came from the township's environmental committee. 
<br /><br />“I think this is long overdue,” said Deputy-reeve Suzanne Partridge. “We have sort of put this on the back burner for years and years.” 
<br /><br />Councillors Joan Barton was concerned about creating a framework where the township was policing one particular kind of business. 
<br /><br />“I just don't want to set up a scenario that penalizes an entire group of business owners,” Barton said, adding that was especially true if the program was being created to deal with a single business owner with instances of non-compliance. 
<br /><br />Partridge stressed that it was an environmental issue. 
<br /><br />“I think all of our campgrounds and trailer parks are on waterbodies,” she said. 
<br /><br />Staff will draw up a bylaw that will come back to council. 

<br /><br /><strong>Business retention and expansion </strong>

<br /><br />Councillors are supportive of a businesses retention and expansion plan being put together by a working group containing members of the township's economic development committee, which is working with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. 
<br /><br />“A business retention and expansion program, really, is the heart blood of everything that drives us economically,” said Councillor Cec Ryall. 
<br /><br />Councillor Joan Barton said having such a plan in place will help the township attain grants. 
<br /><br />“This is going to make all of our applications stronger,” Barton said.  
<br /><br />The creation of the plan will come with a $7,500 price tag for the municipality. 

<br /><br /><strong>Re-examining wards </strong>

<br /><br />Council received a staff report on ward structure and council composition and will be discussing the issue further in January. 
<br /><br />The Municipal Act allows councils to redivide municipal wards or dissolve existing wards. 
<br /><br />Such a process is a lengthy one, requiring a public meeting, as well as a 45-day appeal period where residents can protest any changes to the Ontario Municipal Board. 
<br /><br />For the current council term, public meetings would need to take place in 2016, with the whole process, including dealing with any appeals, complete by the end of 2017. ]]></content-encoded>
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			<wp-post_id>5447</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2015-12-22 13:54:29</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2015-12-22 18:54:29</wp-post_date_gmt>
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