Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Brassie hosts send off for Brad Martin


The Brassie Pub hosts a public send-off party for Ancaster Olympic snowboarder Brad Martin on Thursday Feb. 4.

It begins with an autograph signing at 6 p.m. The Brassie is located in the Ancaster Town Plaza at 73 Wilson St. W.

The evening includes Autographs, Door Prizes, Silent Auction and DJ.

The Brassie also welcomes guests to watch Brad compete on Wednesday, February 17 in the Halfpipe event at 1:00 pm and 5:15, with the finals at 7:15.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Dispute with Skate Canada keeps youth skaters on the sidelines

The future of an Ancaster figure skating club may be on thin ice without formal accreditation from Skate Canada, its members say.
The Verve Academy of Skating, based at the Ancaster Business Park, is appealing for support in its bid to be recognized by Canada’s national figure skating governing body. Without accreditation, Verve skaters cannot compete in Skate Canada events. A 2007 application for status was rejected by Skate Canada, leaving more than 15 competitive skaters ineligible for future Skate Canada events.
Verve skaters train at the Mohawk 4 Pad Arena in Hamilton. The club also offers power skating and hockey skating instruction.
Kim Duchesnay has gone to great lengths to help her daughter, Kara, stay with the Verve club while continuing to compete. Last season Kara registered with a club in Amherst New York to maintain her competitive eligibility. She could have joined another Hamilton area skating club. But changing clubs would also mean finding a new coach and abandoning her local Ancaster club. This year Kara has given up her membership with Amherst. She has not skated competitively since last April.
Duchesnay said the Verve Academy’s application was rejected by Skate Canada with no explanation.
“We just want to know, what information did you use to make that decision?” Duchesnay said.
Jeff Young’s daughter Victoria is also affected by the club’s lack of accreditation. Young has launched a petition in support of Skate Canada membership. He collected more than 50 signatures in three days, starting on Jan. 15.
“We’re looking for support to get to the bottom of this issue,” Young said. “Our kids are hurt by this. They can’t compete.”
Young noted the club has already lost some skaters who have moved to other clubs to maintain their competitive eligibility. Young and other club parents appealed to MP David Sweet during Ancaster councillor Lloyd Ferguson’s new year’s levee on Jan. 17. Young has also sent e-mails to several Hamilton area politicians requesting assistance.
Barbra Draper, Skate Canada’s director of member services was not immediately available for an interview on Monday.
In an e-mail to Verve Academy parents, Draper states Skate Canada’s rules committee reviewed an application for membership in 2007.
In making its decision, the committee weighed an impact statement submitted by another Hamilton area skating school.
“Based on the information made available, the Committee believed that there already exists a sufficient number of clubs to properly support skating in this area,” Draper states in the e-mail.
The Committee also considered the impact statements and information from the two nearest Skate Canada clubs, Draper notes.
The Verve’s application for membership was reviewed by Skate Canada’s Western Ontario board of directors who voted to deny the application. The decision was upheld by Skate Canada’s rules committee.
“No further appeal for membership will be considered at this time for the Verve Academy of Skating,” Draper states in the e-mail. “Meeting minutes are not distributed to the general public and will not be made available to you.”
Young said the Verve Academy has still not received an explanation of Skate Canada’s ruling, more than two years after the initial application process.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Paid parking coming to Ancaster village core

New parking fees and the province’s Harmonized Sales Tax will hit local shoppers with a double whammy of fee increases on July 1.
In a motion approved this week by Hamilton councillors, paid parking will be implemented in Hamilton’s downtown commercial districts, including Wilson Street East in Ancaster, Hamilton’s Locke Street, King Street in Stoney Creek and downtown Waterdown. Parking rates will also be standardized at $1 per hour city-wide.
Ancaster councillor Lloyd Ferguson noted the Ancaster BIA recently passed a resolution asking the city to install parking meters on Wilson Street East. The move was requested to promote turnover of parking spaces. But Ferguson noted some residents are concerned that parking meters won’t fit the heritage theme of the Ancaster village core.
“I’m getting push-back that it will take away from the character of the community,” Ferguson noted.
Despite widespread support from the BIA, not all business owners support the plan. Trevor Graham, owner of Ancaster Cycle, said the village core needs more parking lots, not metered parking. He said he will consider reimbursing his customers for the new parking fees.
“The problem is we don’t have parking,” said Graham. “I just don’t think now is the time to put parking meters in.”
Ancaster shoppers currently enjoy free two-hour on-street parking on Wilson Street. The new parking plan is expected to generate $1.45 million in annual revenue according to a city staff report.
The HST will increase the costs of goods and services such as gasoline, veterinary and legal fees and home utilities. The new 13 per cent tax rate also takes effect on July 1.
City staff plans to use a parking control reserve to finance the initial capital cost of $205,000. Under a proposed revenue sharing arrangement, the city’s 13 business improvement areas, including the Ancaster Heritage Village BIA, are eligible to receive a percentage of profits for initiatives such as beautification of parking lots, walkways or streets with paid parking, funding for free parking events and construction of walkway connections to parking lots.
The 2010 enhancements could generate $285,000 in revenue for the city’s BIAs in 2011, according to a staff report.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Belly dancer Eshe comes home

Ancaster native Eshe performs at the Casbah Lounge in Hamilton on Jan 13 and Feb 5. Both shows will run from 7 - 10 pm and the cover charge for each is $10. Click the link below to see her appearance in a Korean music video for the indie rock band Apollo18.