BLUEGRASS COMING BACK WITH A DIFFERENT LOOK

The Bluegrass Festival will see some changes for 2023 and was approved by Renfrew Town Council at their meeting February 14.

Once a four-day festival, the event will now be condensed into a two-day affair after lagging attendance started to eat into the operational budget.  Also of importance is the decision to not allow camping as part of the festival, again directly connected to municipal staffing costs.

The festival, while styled a Bluegrass Festival, will contain performers of other music genres as well as an anticipated increase in the participation of local talent.

Finally, there will be enhancements to the transportation plan, allowing for adequate event parking, traffic flow, and safe transportation alternatives for festival-attendees.

RUNNING ON BEER AND A SNOW SCRAPER

Sometimes things just elude a plausible explanation.

On Friday, the OPP were conducting a RIDE program on Grey Road 17 in the township of Georgian Bluffs.  A driver entered the checkpoint at around 5:20 PM.  He didn’t leave in his own vehicle.

Officers found “signs of impairment” at the stop, and observed open liquor “readily available,” an interesting way to describe what must have been 100 cans of beer, most empty, completely filling up the front passenger side of the vehicle.  It looked to me that the whole vehicle was held together by scotch tape and best wishes.

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RHIANNA PERFORMS ON A HIGHER STAGE

I’ll admit I’m not a big Rhianna fan.  Not that I dislike her as much as I really don’t know her.  I’m aware of her success, and aware of the buzz around having a star of this magnitude headlining the vaunted Super Bowl Half-Time Show. 

I watch the half-time show because it’s the half-time show.  I think it’s probably the most watched piece of television on any Super Bowl Sunday, and that includes the game.

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SIDNEY AVENUE LOT DESIGNATION UNDER REVIEW

So there’s this property at the end of Sidney Avenue, owned in common by the owner of 253 Mclean Street, and now being considered for the construction of a home.

On the Official Plan for the town, the property is shown as being zoned for residential.  But on another environmental plan, part of the property falls within the boundaries of an area designated as being a natural hazard zone, as there’s a ravine situated right next to the property, and the property itself contains a negative slope leading down to this ravine.  The lot, then, gets caught in a municipal Venn diagram, with overlap of two different designations.

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