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17/06/2025

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02/04/2024

The Orangeville Blues and Jazz Festival is pulling out all the stops for its 20th edition this year, bringing a stacked lineup of local and international talent to the downtown core over three days.

Countless JUNO Award-winning acts make up the more than 75 artists who will take over downtown Orangeville from May 31 to June 2 with their eclectic live performances.

The festival will feature Canadian artists from coast to coast – Vancouver Island to Halifax – and everywhere in between.

Everything that Orangeville Blues and Jazz Festival fans have come to love over the years will be returning for its 20th edition – only bigger and better.

Read the full article: https://orangevillebluesandjazz.ca/orangeville-citizen-2024/

11/12/2023
14/11/2023

Please take a moment to read the following article by the Orangeville Citizen, Your Community Newspaper since 1974 about a delegation by FTP’s Executive Director, Norah Kennedy, to the Town of Orangeville to declare gender-based violence and intimate partner violence an epidemic in Orangeville. This motion was passed unanimously by town council.

Domestic violence is an epidemic, says shelter director
November 2, 2023

By JAMES MATTHEWS, LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER

It’s time municipalities across Ontario declare intimate partner violence an epidemic.

That’s the message Norah Kennedy, the executive director at Orangeville’s emergency shelter for domestic violence, Family Transition Place, brought to council when it met on Oct. 30. And it had a particular gravity given the murders that had happened in Sault Ste. Marie in late October.

In what police have called a case of intimate partner violence, a 44-year-old man in Sault Ste. Marie, in October, murdered four people, including three children, before he killed himself. Another woman was injured.

“A family and lives were destroyed because of an act of violence by a man with a history of intimate partner violence,” she said.

Those deaths brought the list of femicides so far this year to 50.

“Yet again we bore witness to the horror and the devastation that gender-based violence wreaks on individuals, on families, on communities, on all of us, actually,” Kennedy said.

When the murders happened, Kennedy said she was in Thunder Bay at a conference of agencies that work against gender-based violence. One of the attendees, a 40-year veteran of the shelter movement, said she believed there would be an outcry when domestic violence is brought to light.

“And it would be done because, when people knew that this is what was going on, there would be an end to it,” the veteran colleague said to Kennedy.

But, after 40 years of seeing such abuse, Kennedy said her colleague no longer believes people care to see an end to violence against women.

An inquest into a similar previous intimate partner murders recommended that municipalities declare intimate partner violence an epidemic, she said.

The term is most familiar in a healthcare context.

“So we might wonder what this issue has to do with health care,” Kennedy said. “But violence against women is a health issue. The effects … on the social determinants of health are uncontestable.”

Homelessness, poverty, food insecurity, the deterioration of mental health and the misuse of substances, isolation, unemployment, and death are among the outcomes of domestic violence.

“Violence against women has a significant impact on an individual’s wellbeing and their health,” Kennedy said. “But it’s also a social service issue. It is a societal issue. It is a municipal issue. It is a provincial and federal government issue. It’s my issue and it needs to be yours as well.”

In 2023, Family Transition Place provided shelter to 74 women and 40 children.

“And it would’ve been higher,” she said. “Every year prior to the pandemic, it was higher than that. It’s only not higher because women with their children or women who are there singly have nowhere to go.”

What housing there is that’s available is unaffordable. Calls to their crisis line have increased by 23 per cent, which brings that number up to 4,768 calls in a year from people seeking help.

Every 48 hours in Canada, a woman or girl is killed by violence.

“So is it an epidemic?” Kennedy said.

More than 40 communities have declared intimate partner violence to be an epidemic.

City councillors in Sault Ste. Marie voted unanimously in favour of declaring intimate partner violence an epidemic.

And Kennedy said she’d be extremely proud to see Orangeville council follow suit.

“Actions like that can be seen for what they mean to be,” she said. “An avowal that others do still do believe that we can end violence against women and that it’s critical that we do that.”

Mayor Lisa Post tabled a notice of motion for the next meeting to declare domestic violence an epidemic.

(Due to the unavailability of Canadian news through this platform, we're unable to share the link. Please visit the Orangeville Citizen's website to access the original article.)

09/06/2023

The special air quality statement for the Orangeville area has been lifted. Wellington Dufferin Guelph Public Health reports the Air Quality Index for our region at a level 3, which is considered low risk.

As the wildfires continue, conditions could change. You can monitor Environment Canada for any new alerts or subscribe to notifications on your favourite weather app.

The Fire Departments of Dufferin County have issued a county-wide fire ban, prohibiting all open-air burning effective i...
08/06/2023

The Fire Departments of Dufferin County have issued a county-wide fire ban, prohibiting all open-air burning effective immediately. This county-wide ban includes properties with approved burn permits but does not include areas within the Town of Orangeville.

People failing to comply with open-air burning regulations in the Ontario Fire Code and municipal Open-air Burning Bylaws may be fined.

The decision to issue a burn ban comes after particularly dry weather conditions in the Dufferin area and limited rainfall along with air quality warnings for the region due to smoke from wildfires in Ontario and Quebec.

Dufferin residents are encouraged to help local fire prevention efforts by keeping lawns cut and well-watered and moving brush, wood, and yard waste away from structures and heat sources. Fire officials are also asking people to use extreme caution when cooking on barbecues during this time.

26/05/2023

There has been a watermain break in the north end of Orangeville, around Centennial Road and Tideman Drive resulting in low-pressure and water discolouration in the area. Repairs and hydrant flushing are underway.

An Orangeville man who touched almost every corner of Dufferin County through his work and community involvement recentl...
25/05/2023

An Orangeville man who touched almost every corner of Dufferin County through his work and community involvement recently passed away in a three-vehicle collision along Highway 9.

By Sam Odrowski An Orangeville man who touched almost every corner of Dufferin County through his work and community involvement recently passed away in a three-vehicle collision along Highway 9. J…

07/03/2023

By Sam Odrowski Creating a space where all patrons feel comfortable and welcome has become top of mind for a well-known eatery in downtown Orangeville. The Bluebird Café and Grill, located at 100 B…

04/03/2023

As of 6 a.m. this morning, the Town of Orangeville has declared a Significant Weather Event in response to last night’s storm.

⛸️ Recreation, swimming and skating programs have been cancelled.

❄️ Winter operations teams will continue working, however roads, sidewalks, and subdivisions may take longer to plow. Currently, our teams are focused on main roads only. Residential roads may not be plowed until later tonight or tomorrow.

🚗 Please stay off the roads and sidewalks. If you must go out be cautious and drive slow and according to weather conditions.

Updates will be posted to orangeville.ca/snow

Have an emergency? Here’s who to contact:

TOWN OF ORANGEVILLE – 519-941-0440 (press 3 if calling after hours)

POLICE, FIRE, AMBULANCE – 911

ORANGEVILLE HYDRO – 519-942-8000

*Please note* Updates on snowplow statuses do not constitute an emergency. Please leave phone lines open for emergencies only.

22/02/2023

Please note that due to the weather conditions we will be closing at 2pm today, and not open for our evening shift to serve clients.
Stay tuned for updates about Thursday.


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Orangeville Citizen, Your Community Newspaper since 1974
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22/02/2023

⚠️Weather Warning for Orangeville ⚠️

Please take a moment to be prepared for today’s storm:

🚗 remove parked cars off the road
🗑 bring in bins and nets off the roads
🌬 bring in anything that might blow away with high winds
🧂 get the outdoor salt ready
🔌 prepare for power outages
👍 stock up on essentials - medicine, baby supplies, food and storm snacks

When the storm hits, our teams will keep you updated at Orangeville.ca/Snow

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