From L-R: Mayor George Finch, Municipality of South Huron; Francis Veilleux, President of BRA; Spencer Leefe, Manager of Policy and Research, OMWA; Darryl Arnold, Manager of Southwest Region, Operations, Enbridge Gas; Wayne Blenkhorn, Founder of Rural Green Energy; Deputy Mayor Brad Richards, Municipality of Strathroy-Caradoc (CNW Group/Enbridge Gas Inc.)

August 23, 2022

By: Chris McLeod

23/8/2022

5 Things You Need To Know

August 23rd is the 235th day of the year. There are 130 days remaining until the end of the year.


The Chatham branch of the Chatham-Kent Public Library hosts Movies @ Your Library every Tuesday.

Good way to keep the family busy over the Summer! Book your spot today to see The Kid Who Would Be King. Movies start at 2pm.

There is limited space, registration is required.


It’s the final week of the CKRecreation Summerfest.

On Thursday the Party in the Park is at Kingston Park in Chatham 5-7pm. Stop by for lots of fun activities, crafts and Play Rangers absolutely free for the who family.

The Movie in the Park will roll into Memorial Park, Blenheim on Friday. Come by to see Trolls World Tour. Movie starts at dusk.

Ever Saturday and Sunday are Beach Days in Erieau & Mitchell’s Bay 11-4pm and Play Rangers in Kingston Park.

For the full Summerfest schedule go here.


Expect some delays if you plan on using Huron Church Road in Windsor to get to the Ambassador Bridge over the next 6 weeks.

Lane restrictions will be in place while road repairs will be made on Huron Church between Dorchester Road and Tecumseh Road West until at least the end of September.


Tonight is the last chance to catch some of C-K’s best hockey players on the ice. The Athletes Fuel Cup final is tonight at Thames Campus Arena.

Local hockey players have been preparing for their upcoming seasons for the last month. Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman TJ Brodie has been on the ice with other local pros, college, and OHL players.

The semi-final game is tonight 6:30, with the final at 7:45.

Admission is free, games are held at the Thames Campus Arena.


Ontario’s first “poo-powered” recycling and garbage truck is on the road.

It’s not running on diesel, natural gas, or ethanol, it is running on the methane produced from a Middlesex County dairy farm.

Instead of using 20 litres of diesel a day, this refuse collector is burning methane, captured from the manure produced from 100 cows. Capturing and reusing that methane, instead of letting it float into the atmosphere, helps to make Bluewater Recycling Association’s manure-powered garbage truck the first carbon negative waste truck in all of Ontario.

Enbridge is already working with other garbage and recycling collectors in Ontario to get them on board and join Bluewater in their poo-power project.

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