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Oakville Beaver, 3 Jan 2019, p. 10

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in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, Ja nu ar y 3, 20 19 | 10 559 speers road, UNIT 3, oaKVILLe 905.842.0725 • www.haltontransmission.com wwwwade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourade seymourwade seymourwwade seymourwwade seymourwwade seymourw TraNsmIssIoN HaLToNHaLToN FREE ROAD TEST • FREE VISUAL INSPECTION • FRONT WHEEL DRIVES • OVERDRIVES • IMPORT • DOMESTIC • FOUR WHEELS DRIVES • CLUTCHES • STANDARD TRANSMISSION oakville.ca Armed with plows, sand and salt, our crews are ready to clear your roads and sidewalks as quickly and effectively as possible. The town also has a Salt Management Plan to manage salt use and minimize environmental impacts. Do you know when your streets are cleared? Primary and secondary roads, such as Trafalgar Road and West Oak Trails, are salted and plowed first to achieve bare pavement. This also maintains access throughout town for emergency service vehicles. Residential roads are only plowed when snow accumulations reach 7.5 centimetres. Residential roads are not plowed or salted to achieve bare pavement and periodic snow-pack conditions can be expected. Residential roads are sandedwhen conditions warrant, at hills, curves and intersections. Track your plow at oakville.ca Real-time snow clearing updates are available through the PlowOakville interactive map at oakville.ca. Using GPS technology, the map tracks the progress of the town's plows as they clear roads during a snow event. Sidewalk clearing Sidewalks on primary and secondary roads are cleared only after snow accumulates in excess of five centimetres, and only after roads are cleared. Residential sidewalks are cleared after eight centimetres of snow accumulates. For the latest snow clearing updates, follow the town on Facebook and Twitter or call the snow line at 905-815-5999. The Town of Oakville is ready for winter weather! Up to 70% off (some exclusions) Visit us @ 342 Lakeshore Rd. E. Oakville 905.338.7500 www.bytocca.com person is 25 years old. She says habitual marijuana use prior to 25 can affect that development, possibly making it harder for youth to learn, make decisions and re- member things. Lindsay said marijuana use can also cause changes to a young person's brain structure that may not be fully reversible. She noted that cannabis use can stunt the development of the emotional coping process if teens decide to deal with nega- tive situations by getting high. While this knowledge is important Lindsay cautioned parents against bom- barding youth with every conceivable tragedy that could arise. Scare tactics, she said, may only work in the short term (and often don't work at all). Ultimately, children will listen if the parent has a positive relationship with them. "That's doesn't mean being their best friend. That's not what we're talking about," said Lindsay. "There are different components of it. It's expressing that you care. It's providing support, sharing power and really trying to inspire them in the end." She said a parent's connection with their children is another important part of building a positive relationship. This can be achieved by having casual talks with them and using family dinners to discuss topics like cannabis. Lindsay said being involved in your child's life is another part of building a pos- itive relationship. This could involve knowing who your child's friends are, and sharing mutual in- terests with your kids. When the time actually comes to talk about cannabis, Lindsay offered numer- ous guidelines. "If you come to the conversation with a teen and you are closed-minded, ruling with a hard thumb, being a dictator, what kind of a response do you think you are go- ing to get? The complete opposite of what you want. They are not listening," said Lindsay. "You need to come to the table with an open mind. Does that mean you have to change your values? Absolutely not. It just means you want to have an open conversa- tion. You want to try and remember when you were a teen and how hard and difficult it was for you. You want to be clear about your goals. Whatever perspective you have on cannabis, we know we want to keep it out of the hands of our youth. We want to be calm and relaxed. If there is shouting, nobody is listening. Be positive and don't lecture." Lindsay also went over some possible cannabis chat scenarios, and questions a teen may ask their parents. What should parents do if teens ask: "Marijuana is a plant. It's natural. How harmful could it be?" Lindsay said one response could be "Not all plants are necessarily healthy or good for you - think about cocaine or heroin or even poison ivy." She said this answer helps the teen re- think their point. Another response could be, "I under- stand that, and I am not suggesting that you're going to spin out of control, or that your life as you know it is going to be over. I would just like to redirect you to the idea that when a person is high, her judgment is not what it ordinarily is and that can be harmful." Lindsay said this statement shows you are not using scare tactics and redirects the teen back toward the goal of helping CANNABIS AND YOU TEEN'S MIND MIGHT NOT BE CHANGED IN ONE CONVERSATION Continued from previous page THE ISSUE: PARENTS MUST DEAL WITH KIDS IN AGE OF LEGALIZED CANNABIS LOCAL IMPACT: KIDS NEED TO KNOW IMPACT OF CANNABIS, ESPECIALLY ON UNDER-25 BRAINS See page 11 Local journalism makes a difference. Support us by registering at insidehalton.com

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