Advertiser Index Contact Info Get News Updates Print Edition
Flip Edition
2009-04-01 digital edition
Login Profile
Shopping Health Care Going Out Home & Garden At Your Service Real Estate
News
Front Page
News
Community
Columns
Editorial
Letters
Sports Beat
Obituaries
All Around Schomberg
King's Corners
Nobleton Notes
Services
Advertiser Index
Classifieds
Place a Classified
Order a Subscription
Links
Contact Info
Careers
Email us
News Archive
Poll
If a federal election were held today, which party would you vote for?
View results
Copyright
2006-2009 King Sentinel All Rights Reserved
Front Page April 1, 2009  RSS feed


SMITHERMAN GETS A 'KING' WELCOME


The Newmarket — Aurora Provincial Liberal Association hosted a reception last Wednesday for Deputy Premier and Energy and Infrastructure Minister George Smitherman, and the event attracted a different kind of welcoming committee. Members of Concerned Citizens of King Township (CCKT) and others were set up across the street from Madsen's Garden Greenhouse in Newmarket, ready to remind Smitherman of what they think of plans to build a gas-fired generator on Dufferin Street in a protected countryside of the Provincial Greenbelt and immediately beside the Holland Marsh. CCKT Chair Debbie Schaefer said two members of the group were able to get inside and talk to Smitherman. "He clearly continues to believe a peaker generator is required," she said, but added he was ready to read and consider any documents the opponents to the idea might submit. "I think that's as good as we could have hoped," she said. The Newmarket — Aurora Provincial Liberal Association hosted a reception last Wednesday for Deputy Premier and Energy and Infrastructure Minister George Smitherman, and the event attracted a different kind of welcoming committee. Members of Concerned Citizens of King Township (CCKT) and others were set up across the street from Madsen's Garden Greenhouse in Newmarket, ready to remind Smitherman of what they think of plans to build a gas-fired generator on Dufferin Street in a protected countryside of the Provincial Greenbelt and immediately beside the Holland Marsh. CCKT Chair Debbie Schaefer said two members of the group were able to get inside and talk to Smitherman. "He clearly continues to believe a peaker generator is required," she said, but added he was ready to read and consider any documents the opponents to the idea might submit. "I think that's as good as we could have hoped," she said.