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OJHL HALL OF FAME WELCOMES NOMINATIONS FOR CLASS OF 2026

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Up to five people to be inducted during spring ceremony

September 26, 2025, Mississauga, ON – … The Ontario Junior Hockey League (OJHL) Hall of Fame is welcoming nominations for its third class of inductees, the league announced today.  Nominations will be welcome as of today until November 30, 2025.
Nominees’ names can be put forth by using a nomination form available by going to www.ojhlhalloffame.ca.


The Class of 2026 will be honoured during a ceremony next spring in early May 2026.


Nominees can be inducted from the Original Era and other leagues or the Modern Era.  A special category consists of the Central Junior B Hockey League (CJBHL) 1954 – 1993 where hockey franchises that have a lineage to current OJHL franchises will be eligible for an OJHL HOF Award of Distinction.


The OJHL Hall of Fame has three categories consisting of Player, Builder and Award of Distinction, which can be a Player, Coach, Builder, member of the Media, Trainer, Athletic Therapist or Volunteer.  Nominees can come from three distinct areas that include the Original Era and other Leagues, Modern Era or have played in the Central Jr. B Hockey League in which teams have a lineage to the current members of the OJHL.


‘The OJHL is excited to begin this year’s process of receiving nominations for our Hall of Fame”, said OJHL Commissioner Marty Savoy. “I would encourage anyone who believes there is a person who was affiliated with the OJHL who has the qualities worthy of being honoured in the OJHL Hall of Fame to go to our website and fill out a nomination form. There are so many amazing people who have made the OJHL what it is today, including the builders, coaches and players. We look forward to seeing who will be honoured in 2026.”
The virtual hall was officially opened in 2024 with the induction of former commissioner Bob Hooper, big-time scorer Josh Soares and former NHLers Paul Coffey, Steve Thomas and Adam Oates.


The class of 2025 included team and league builder Charlie Macoun, ex-NHLer Michael Cammalleri and prolific Jr. A scorers Trent Walford, Steve Novis and Darren Haydar.


The Selection Committee is composed of OJHL Board of Directors Chairman Stuart Hyman; Izak Westgate, Manager of Outreach Exhibits and Assistant Curator, Hockey Hall of Fame; Burlington Cougars Governor and former NHL player Ron Sedlbauer; retired journalist John Cudmore; Rick Morocco, Executive Director, OJHL Foundation and; OJHL Communications Director Jim Mason.


The OJHL Hall of Fame was established to honour and preserve the history of the great athletes and individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the development and advancement of the OJHL and who have performed with highest distinction in the OJHL and beyond.


The OJHL Hall of Fame highlights the history of Provincial Junior A Hockey in Ontario and all the pioneer leagues that built the OJHL into what the 24-team league is today.  


The OJHL Hall of Fame website features information about the inductees, history of the leagues, league historical records, including the listing of all-time leaders in statistical categories and award winners and the history of OJHL champions.

About the OJHL – “League of Choice”
The Ontario Junior Hockey League is the largest Junior ‘A’ league operating under the auspices of the Canadian Junior Hockey League with 24 member clubs. A proud member of the CJHL and Ontario Hockey Association, the OJHL was originally named the Ontario Provincial Junior ‘A’ Hockey League and it was formed out of the Central Junior ‘B’ Hockey League in 1993-94. With a long and storied history of developing players for the next level, including U SPORTS, the NCAA, CHL, minor pro ranks and the NHL, the OJHL had more than 135 commitments last season.

VIDEO | OPP INVESTIGATING SHOOTING IN CLEARVIEW TOWNSHIP

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Suspect Sketch and Video of Vehicle Released

(CLEARVIEW, ON) – Police are releasing a video and a sketch of a suspect seeking the public’s help in an ongoing shooting investigation in Clearview Township.

On Friday, August 15, 2025, at approximately 10:00 a.m., members of the Huronia West Detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) responded to a report of a shooting on a property on 15/16 Side Road near Highway 26. Officers located one individual with a gunshot wound, who was transported to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. 

Investigators believe that two individuals arrived at the property in a sedan. Following a verbal altercation, the passenger shot the victim before both suspects fled the scene in a dark-coloured 2011 to 2018 Volkswagen Jetta or Passat with Ontario plates.

The two suspects are described as:

Suspect #1 (passenger): 

• Male

• White with lighter complexion 

• Sandy brown hair

• May be older than the driver

Suspect #2 (driver): 

• Male 

• Possibly of Portuguese, Greek or Italian descent with darker complexion

• Beard 

• May be between 39 and 42 years old

There is no concern for public safety at this time.

A photo of the first suspect and vehicle are attached to this release. The video of the vehicle can be viewed at youtube.com/watch?v=-F5SU0G8YBA.

This investigation is being conducted by the Huronia West OPP Detachment under the direction of the OPP Criminal Investigation Branch. 

Anyone with any information is encouraged to contact the Huronia West OPP at 1-888-310-1122. Should you wish to remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or ontariocrimestoppers.ca, where you may be eligible to receive a cash reward of up to $2,000.

LAURIN Group Awarded Construction Contract for New Craigleith Fire Hall

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The Town of The Blue Mountains would like to advise residents that the LAURIN Group has been awarded the construction contract for the new Craigleith Fire Hall. The LAURIN Group specializes in institutional, commercial, industrial and multi-family residential projects, and has provided construction services throughout Ontario for companies including GO Transit, Hydro One and Canada Post. Contractors from LAURIN have arrived on site and begun preparation work.

The Town’s new Craigleith Fire Hall, located south of 796511 Grey Road 19, will be built to better serve and meet the needs of the expanding population and growth in tourism activity within the Craigleith area. It has also been designed to meet the Town’s Net Zero Emission objectives through the use of low-carbon components and finishes.

Sustainability features of the new building include:

  • Prioritization of construction materials that have lower levels of embodied carbon and higher levels of insulation performance
  • Fully electrified HVAC systems to reduce reliance on fossil fuels
  • Renewable energy generation through the installation of solar panels
  • Water conservation and efficiency through fixtures and stormwater capture

The facility will also feature administration and crew quarters including offices, meeting room, training area, dormitory spaces and amenities, an apparatus bay with space for up to six fire trucks, as well as support spaces for firefighter gear and hose reels and an outdoor training area.

“We’re extremely excited to see this project move forward,” says Town of The Blue Mountains Fire Chief Stephen Conn. “This new facility will be constructed to the latest standards, ensuring that our firefighters are prepared with everything they need to service the local community for years to come.”

Construction of the new Fire Hall was approved as part of the 2024 Town Budget, and is expected to be completed in 2027. The existing Fire Hall, located at 796338 Grey Road 19, will be retrofitted for use by the Town’s Parks & Trails and Roads & Drainage Divisions.

To learn more about the project and to subscribe for project updates, please visit the Town’s dedicated project web page.

View Project Web Page

About the LAURIN Group
The LAURIN Group is an Ontario-based construction company focused on building infrastructure that strengthens communities. Drawing on years of experience in public service projects, LAURIN takes a collaborative approach and integrates sustainable practices into every build.

Art lights up our brains and ignites action

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By David Suzuki

When we think of solutions to the climate and biodiversity crises, we often imagine technologies, government policies or new infrastructure. But sometimes the most powerful tools are far older and more human: stories, songs, images and performances. Art doesn’t just decorate our world; it shapes how we see it.

Neuroscience offers evidence for this. When we encounter art — whether it’s a painting, dance, music or story — our brains engage networks tied to emotion, memory and empathy. Studies have found that aesthetic experiences activate the brain’s reward system, much like food, exercise, hobbies, spending time in nature and social connection. Experiencing art literally lights up our neural pathways, making us more open to new ideas and more likely to activate them.

That matters when it comes to rewilding — restoring ecosystems and their processes and reconnecting people with the natural world. Too often, conservation discussions rely on numbers and warnings. But facts alone don’t always move people. Art is an effective way to bridge the gap between data and action.

That’s why the David Suzuki Foundation and Rewilding magazine launched the Rewilding Arts Prize. This national prize celebrates artists in Canada whose work reimagines our relationship with nature and community. The inaugural prize, launched in 2022, drew more than 550 applications. The winners’ work spans textiles, sculpture, installation, photography and sound. It’s on view at the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa until October 2025 and is the first major exhibition in Canada devoted entirely to rewilding-themed art.

Walking through the museum, you arrive at Amanda McCavour’s embroidered garden of 500 poppies suspended above, fragile yet immersive, transforming the gallery into a rewilded ecosystem of thread and brilliant colour. Natasha Lavdovsky’s moss and lichen–inspired work blurs the line between art and science, inviting us to see rewilding as a partnership with often overlooked organisms that stitch ecosystems together. Amber Sandy’s birchbark and hide works honour Indigenous knowledge and relationships with the land, rewilding cultural connections alongside ecological ones.

These works aren’t just beautiful; they also change how we perceive the natural world and how we imagine rewilding our communities.

Science backs up what visitors feel. An abundance of research shows that nature-themed art and place-based aesthetic experiences can strengthen ecological identity and inspire stewardship. Art grounded in environmental contexts nurtures empathy, deepens our connection with nature and motivates pro-environmental attitudes and behaviours.

In other words, art doesn’t just make us think; it makes us care, and caring leads to action.

2025 study shows that strengthening human-nature connectedness is essential to addressing climate change and biodiversity loss, and art is uniquely positioned to catalyze that bond. An earlier study, from 2024, notes that environmental professionals often point to artworks that shaped or reinforced their values. Psychologists even describe the “awesome solution” — art that ignites the strongest emotional and cognitive responses, opening people to new perspectives and action. Art doesn’t just reflect our world; it can help us reimagine it and move us to protect it.

The Rewilding Arts Prize was built on this understanding. By elevating artists who draw attention to the fragility and resilience of ecosystems, we’re helping shift culture. And culture change is at the heart of environmental progress. Laws and policies may set the framework, but people need to envision different ways of living. Art opens that door.

This fall, the David Suzuki Foundation is launching the second round of the Rewilding Arts Prize. From September 18 to November 18, artists from throughout Canada can apply. Five winners will each receive $2,000 and join the Rewilding Arts Collective — a growing network of artists advancing ecological awareness through creative practice. Alongside the prize, there will be a Toronto art show, a panel in Montreal discussing rewilding and art and a national webinar to showcase art’s role in advocacy and community building.

The science is clear: Healthy ecosystems are essential for our survival. But facts and numbers alone can’t tell the whole story. We need artists to spark wonder, shift perspectives and help us envisage a more just, biodiverse future. If we are to rewild our landscapes and communities, we must also rewild our hearts and minds. Science shows us why this matters, and art shows us how.

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Rewilding Communities Program Manager Jode Roberts.

Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.

REFERENCES:

Studies have found:

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnins.2022.738865/full

Rewilding:

https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/75/7/545/8140146

Rewilding magazine:

https://www.rewildingmag.com

Rewilding Arts Prize:

https://davidsuzuki.org/take-action/act-locally/rewilding-arts-prize

Canadian Museum of Nature:

https://nature.ca/en

An abundance of research shows:

A 2025 study:

https://www.mdpi.com/2673-4834/6/3/82

Earlier study:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1442-8903.2009.00487.x

Awesome solution:

https://psycnet.apa.org/buy/2019-36639-001

Second round of the Rewilding Arts Prize:

https://davidsuzuki.org/take-action/act-locally/rewilding-arts-prize

VIDEO | Anna Bright Lobs Ben Johns and Anna Leigh Waters 24 Times in ONE MATCH! WOW!!!

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In this video, join us as we dissect Anna Bright’s game-changing lob strategy in a dramatic PPA Semifinal match against pickleball legends Ben Johns and Anna Leigh Waters.

Discover how Anna and Federico Staksrud challenged the world’s #1 team with unexpected tactics and how you might incorporate these techniques into your own game. *Major Topics Covered:*

  • Anna Bright’s strategic use of 24 lobs
  • Insight into defending against professional-level lobs
  • Key coaching tips for underdog strategy
  • Game-by-game breakdown of lob effectiveness
  • Commentary on potential shifts in professional pickleball strategy

Unlock the secrets to executing the perfect lob in pickleball with our detailed tutorial.

Designed for players of all levels, this video offers in-depth tips and strategies on how and when to lob effectively, enhancing your game strategy. Whether you’re looking to add offensive lobs from the kitchen or defensive lobs from the back to your playbook, we’ve got you covered. Plus, discover a special type of lob that can catch your opponents by surprise and turn the tide in your favor.

🎾 What You’ll Discover: Strategic Lobbing: Learn why lobbing from different court positions can be more effective and how to leverage these shots to your advantage. Offensive Lobs from the Kitchen: Explore the most impactful way to execute lobs, including how they arise from dinking situations and serve as an excellent changeup from speedups. Defensive Lobs from the Back: Understand how to use defensive lobs as a second chance to re-enter the point, and why hitting higher can sometimes be beneficial.

The Third Shot Lob: Find out why this risky move could pay off against players with weaker overheads, and why it’s typically advised against at higher levels of play.

Technique Tips: Master the technique with a compact motion for deception, aiming tips, and how to add topspin for both forehand and backhand lobs. Enhance Pickleball

Mark Renneson – Third Shot Sports

Open Fields Farm Tour Welcomes Visitors This Saturday

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The Town of The Blue Mountains, the Municipality of Meaford and the six host locations are excited to welcome visitors for the Open Fields Farm Tour this Saturday, September 27, 2025.

This free, self-guided event is an opportunity to explore six unique local farms and businesses, each offering behind-the-scenes experiences that showcase the area’s agricultural background. Visitors can enjoy farm tours, demonstrations, live music, vendors, and more. 

This year’s participating locations are:

  • Alpine Ridge Alpacas – 728398 Side Rd 21, Clarksburg, ON
  • Apple Springs Orchard – 1KM east of 827360 Grey Road 40, Clarksburg, ON
  • Coffin Ridge Vineyard & Winery  – 599448 2nd Concession Rd N, Annan, ON
  • Grey & Gold Cider – 788171 Grey Road 13, Clarksburg, ON
  • Purple Hollow Lavender Farm  – 637295 St Vincent–Sydenham Townline, Meaford, ON
  • Valley Ridge Family Farm – 615852 3 Line, Ravenna, ON

Open Fields is a free, rain-or-shine event that is open to all members of the public. Visitors are encouraged to wear proper footwear for a day on the farm and reminded that pets should be left at home for the tour.

Now in its third year, the Open Fields Farm Tour has educated visitors and entertained families at over a dozen locations. While previous hosts are not offering tours on the day of the event, many of the locations will be open for business on Saturday, including Kimber Valley Farms, which is hosting their annual Maker’s Market, Spy Cider House and Distillery, TK Ferri Orchards, The Farmer’s Pantry and Georgian Hills Vineyards.

Practically Hip | Marsh Street Centre | Friday, Oct 3rd 

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The most sought after Tragically Hip tribute band in Canada. 

Tickets are selling fast! Only 30 spaces left! Get you tickets before we sell out.

Tickets $45; Door $50

For Tickets CLICK HERE

The Blue Mountain Watershed Trust Presents “See the Salmon Run” | Saturday, September 27th, 10:30 – 3:30

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See the Salmon Run 2025

oin us for See the Salmon 2025, an unforgettable outdoor charity event where nature, education, and community come together! Watch Chinook salmon make their annual run up the Pretty River in Nottawa and learn about the local ecosystems that support them.

This family-friendly event features:

  • A beautiful riverside hike where you can see the salmon run
  • Educational activities from local conservation and fish experts
  • Cycling & driving tours for more ways to see the salmon
  • Lots of games, crafts and fun for kids
  • Free lunch for kids 10 and under
  • Live music from Emily Power and so much more!

Watch spawning salmon on a self-guided nature hike

The centrepiece of the event is a 20-minute self-guided nature hike through the woods along Pretty River. Adults and kids can stop to watch salmon climb the river and learn more about fish spawning and riparian habitat at 3 locations where experts from the local conservation authorities, Georgian Bay Forever and other organizations will be on hand to add to your knowledge of fish migration and to stamp kids’ fish ‘passports’.

The Salmon Tours

Discover more ways to See the Salmon! Bring your bike, pick up a map, and follow a 25 km tour on a combination of roads and trails to observe the salmon run at other nearby rivers and streams.

You’ll arrive back just in time for a delicious lunch from OG Souvlaki Food Bar, and live music by Deep Tracks. Perfect for individuals or groups, so bring your friends!


Or, travel by car to sites in Thornbury, Collingwood and Nottawa where the salmon run can be observed, including the amazing fish ladder on the Beaver River. Pick up your map on site – your route will bring you back to Nottawa for food, friends and music.

Great food and TONS of activities for kids!

At See the Salmon Run you’ll find delicious food, cold drinks and FREE kids’ meals for children 10 and under.


Elephant Thoughts and the Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority will be there with a huge inflatable salmon, interactive games and crafts for children.


Live music starts at 11:30 with Deep Tracks, back by popular demand!

Some call it fun, some call it ‘edutainment’, but all call it a real good time!

Admission

  • Ages 0-5 FREE includes a kid’s meal
  • Ages 6-10 $5 admission includes a kid’s meal
  • Ages 11+ $10 admission

Hot food for purchase on site. Bring CASH

Get tickets

11 Buist St Nottawa, ON L0M 1P0 (Located just off County Road 124 in the heart of Nottawa)

Get Directions

Click To Get Your Tickets Here!

SPONSORS

Thank you for supporting the Blue Mountain Watershed Trust Foundation and the good work we do.

For more information: [email protected]

Costly geoengineering schemes could stall real solutions

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By David Suzuki

Because the fossil fuel industry and its supporters have done everything they can to stall needed solutions to the climate crisis, some people say we must now engineer our way out of the mess we created. Many are promoting schemes that block sunlight from reaching Earth, reflect more of it back into space or absorb carbon from the atmosphere.

Have we really reached that point? Would blocking sunlight by putting reflective particles such as toxic sulphur dioxide into the upper atmosphere cool the planet? Or spraying seawater into the lower atmosphere to increase reflective cloud cover? How about thickening ice with pumped seawater? Building massive machines to suck carbon from the air?

What are the risks? What would be the unintended consequences?

United Kingdom government office, the Advanced Research and Invention Agency, is spending £56.8 million (about C$106 million) to explore some of these “climate cooling approaches” or “climate interventions.”

ARIA points out that “climate tipping points — abrupt changes in the Earth system that, if crossed, could have devastating and essentially irreversible consequences” are “distinctly possible over the next century.”

It notes, however, that, “There is no substitute for decarbonisation, which is the only sustainable way to lower the chances of such tipping points and their effects from occurring.”

Many scientists worry that these geoengineering plans are an expensive distraction from the need to cut emissions and that they could have severe unforeseen and undesirable environmental consequences.

As the Guardian reports, the Arctic and Antarctic are heating much faster than the rest of the planet, which has focused attention on ways to cool the poles. Melting ice exposes more dark land and water, which absorb solar radiation rather than reflecting it. Proposals include increasing ice cover by pumping seawater onto it or scattering glass beads onto the ice to reflect more sunlight.

New research published in Frontiers in Science suggests that methods being considered for polar regions are flawed and only treat the symptoms and not the causes of global heating.

“These geoengineering proposals are unimaginably expensive and risky for fragile polar environments,” said University of Massachusetts Amherst professor Rob DeConto, one of 42 scientists behind the analysis. “They also detract attention from the root cause of the climate crisis — the unabated burning of fossil fuels, something we know how to begin addressing using established technologies.”

The researchers conclude that money and effort would be put to better use in reducing the emissions that are the primary cause of global heating.

“We’re hopeful that we can eliminate emissions by 2050,” University of Exeter professor Martin Siegert, who led the analysis, said. “Anything that drifts us away from doing that will make the world less safe and less habitable.”

The Guardian reports that, in reviewing polar geoengineering schemes, researchers examined six criteria: “effectiveness, cost, scale and time issues, environment risks, governance challenges and the risk of raising false hopes.” The plans failed on all counts.

The researchers point out that methods such as pumping seawater onto polar ice and scattering tiny glass beads onto the ice are, respectively, “technologically, logistically and financially unrealistic” and “could be toxic to wildlife.”

Some are clearly designed to allow the destructive fossil fuel industry to keep operating. In Canada, the government has just announced plans for a costly “carbon capture, utilization and storage” project in the Alberta oilsands, hyping the plan as a way to “support a strong conventional energy sector while driving down emissions and emissions intensity.” But they just count production emissions, which are only a fraction of the deadly emissions from burning the fuels.

Cost for renewable energy and storage have plummeted, making these technologies far more cost-effective than fossil fuels — and they’re more efficient.

There’s no good reason to keep the polluting, climate-altering fossil fuel industry going, other than to put more money into the pockets of oligarchs and shareholders and give governments easy ways to make the economy appear healthy over the short term, while putting everyone’s health and survival at risk.

We may well be at the point where we have to consider drastic measures to reduce greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, but it shouldn’t be at the expense of going all out on solutions that have already proven to be effective.

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Senior Writer and Editor Ian Hanington.

Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.

REFERENCES:

United Kingdom government office:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/may/07/real-world-geoengineering-experiments-revealed-by-uk-agency

ARIA points out:

https://www.aria.org.uk/opportunity-spaces/future-proofing-our-climate-and-weather/exploring-climate-cooling

Geoengineering plans are an expensive distraction:

https://davidsuzuki.org/story/the-promises-and-perils-of-geoengineering

The Guardian reports:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/sep/09/polar-geoengineering-branded-dangerous-and-unimaginably-expensive

New research:

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/science/articles/10.3389/fsci.2025.1527393/full

Martin Siegert, who led the analysis, said:

Government has just announced plans:

https://www.canada.ca/en/one-canadian-economy/news/2025/09/major-projects-office-of-canada-initial-projects-under-consideration.html

More cost-effective than fossil fuels:

https://www.irena.org/News/pressreleases/2025/Jul/91-Percent-of-New-Renewable-Projects-Now-Cheaper-Than-Fossil-Fuels-Alternatives

Polluting, climate-altering fossil fuel industry:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/sep/10/link-oil-giants-heatwaves-research-legal-liability

Town to Recognize National Day for Truth and Reconciliation on Tuesday, September 30, 2025

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This joint media release is being shared on behalf of The Blue Mountains Public Library and the Town of The Blue Mountains.

The Town of The Blue Mountains would like to advise members of the public that Tuesday, September 30, 2025, will mark the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation and Orange Shirt Day. The Town and the Blue Mountains Public Library (BMPL) invite the community to take part in a series of events and learning opportunities in honour of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Together, we reflect on the impact of residential schools, listen to Indigenous voices and explore pathways towards truth, reconciliation and healing.

To honour this day, the Town will fly the Truth and Reconciliation flag from September 23 to October 1, with a formal proclamation ceremony taking place outside Town Hall on September 30, at 9:00 a.m. to recognize the victims and survivors of Residential Schools across Canada.

“The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is a solemn reminder of the intergenerational impacts of the residential school system,” said Mayor Andrea Matrosovs. “As a Town, we remain committed to taking action, listening to Indigenous voices, creating inclusive spaces and ensuring that our plans and strategies reflect the values of equity, respect and healing. We are on a learning journey. Each year, this day is a moment to pause and reflect on that journey and, with intention, take the next steps forward on the path to Truth and Reconciliation.”

On September 30, at 3:30 p.m., the BMPL invites community members aged 8+ to attend L.E. Shore Library to make orange scrunchies in honour of Orange Shirt Day. This activity reflects on the story of Phyllis Webstad and the many Indigenous children affected by residential schools, with each scrunchie becoming a personal reminder of truth, healing and remembrance. For more information and to register, visit www.thebluemountainslibrary.ca.

On Friday, September 26, 2025, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., the BMPL will be hosting a free screening of Voices – Lighting a Pathway to Indigenous Inclusion. Produced by Muckpaloo Ipeelie, this powerful film explores how the past continues to shape the present through stories from Indigenous leaders and community members. Following the screening, Muckpaloo will share insights on Inuit culture and lead a discussion on themes of partnership, patience and common ground.

Throughout the entire month of September, the BMPL has recognized Truth and Reconciliation with a series of Indigenous programs, collections and exhibits. Members of the community are invited to continue to explore, learn and reflect by checking out:

“As memory institutions and centres of learning, libraries and museums play an important role in honouring the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation,” said Jennifer Murley, CEO and Board Secretary of BMPL. “Through these events and resources, we support and advance the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action while helping our community reflect and learn together.”

Additional Resources for Learning:

  • National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation: Free webinars available September 22 to September 26, with English, French and ASL interpretation.
  • Whose Land: Interactive mapping tool to learn about the traditional lands you live on.
  • Government of Canada Resources: Learn more about the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation and explore the rich and diverse cultures, voices, and stories of First Nations, Inuit and Metis People.

Support Services Available

  • The National Residential School Crisis Line: This national crisis line is available 24-hours a day to provide support for former students and those affected. Access support and crisis referral services by calling 1-866-925-4419.
  • The Hope for Wellness Help Line: Indigenous peoples across Canada can connect with The Hope for Wellness Help Line 24 hours a day, seven days a week for counselling and crisis intervention. Call the toll-free help line at 1-855-242-3310 or connect to the online chat.