
Some bureaucrats need to lose their jobs while others need to go to trial. Sorry, not sorry, those people need to suffer real and lasting public consequences. The NIH treatment panel that still – to this day – does not recommend vitamin D, or any of the other actual safe and effective early treatments? Those who could have and “should” have known better? The doctors who failed to utilize known and proven early treatments to save lives? The public health authorities that locked people down and forced masks onto children’s faces without a shred of supporting science to back those decisions? Medical hospital administrators who took the monetary bait and forced patients onto toxic and deadly regimens of Remdesivir and ventilators (again, without any supporting evidence!). You are a solid individual who has courage and stood firm and tall when it mattered most.Īs for the people who didn’t, some can be forgiven. If you managed to maintain your integrity through this awful period of time, congratulations! You are one of the rock stars of this story.


The former Town of Ancaster purchased the building, at the insistence of Ancaster Coun. The expansion, which helped to celebrate, at the time, the centre’s 40th birthday, was the fourth since it opened in 1974 in the former Alberton Elementary School. The city provided about $500,000, along with the federal government adding $500,000, with the province chipping in with $250,000. The achievement centre’s membership is still enjoying the new addition that was built in 2014, which included a new outdoor 2,200-square-foot courtyard, 3,600 square feet of new building space, a new septic system, a new café, new appliances, a fireplace in the middle of the welcoming area, and new offices. And the centre will also approach the federal and provincial governments for funding assistance. She said the centre has yet to appear before the city to request a municipal contribution. Kaufmann said the membership, which was about 1,000 in 2014, but has since grown, has already agreed to contribute about $500,000 toward the new gym. It is expected that figure will rise after three years because of the pandemic, she said. The preliminary designs were crafted in 2019 prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, with an estimated cost of about $5.5 million, said Kaufmann. “We are considered shovel ready,” said Kaufmann. It will also have a basketball court that Kaufmann said could be put to good use for its membership. Kaufmann said right now the members have to use the washroom to change. The proposed gym would have three pickleball courts, change rooms and lockers and storage facility, and would meet a growing need for continued physical exercise for its membership, she said. They want to stay out of the nursing home.”

“Younger seniors don’t want to play cards,” said Kaufmann. The centre is not connected to the city’s water system, and it uses a septic tank.Īs the facility, located on Alberton Road, continues to attract people from the surrounding area, it needs additional amenities to accommodate its members, said Kaufmann, who is 77.

The idea would be the roof could be designed so the facility can collect water and flush its toilets, she said.
#If it please the court wow achievement install
Kaufmann, a member of the centre’s advisory board, said since the roof would have a 20-degree slope and be south facing, “it would be perfect to install solar panels” to generate energy. “We have a barn over there,” said Helmi Kaufmann, who is overseeing the project for the centre, pointing to the nearby farm structure. Now, eight years since the $1.8-million project was completed, the centre’s advisory board is looking to build another eye-opening project as plans are underway to construct a new gym on the southern portion of the building. Ancaster Seniors Achievement Centre successfully expanded its facility in 2014, creating a “wow” factor for the community.
