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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 26 Oct 1977, p. 4

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To be fair then, sewage discharges from industries into municipal sewer sysâ€" tems are averaged over a period of time. Mr. Dutton‘s comments were made to clear up misâ€" understandings about the byâ€"law. The regulation esâ€" tablishes the maximum concentration of various types of liquid wastes which industries â€" can discharge law, he pointed out. ‘"We‘re all polluters at one time or another. We all contraâ€" vene the byâ€"law." 0_ Everyone in the Region occasionali_y breaks the byâ€" ‘‘This is not true except in an instantaneous sense," D‘Arcy Dutton told the Reâ€" gional engineering â€" comâ€" mittee last Thursday. Industries are not delib erately skirting the Reâ€" gion‘s waste control byâ€" law, says the Region‘s top engineer. P _ l _ P _T firomnd+... . broumee...... 0 tas t P =lsn ie ftti oo T e â€"â€"_..d o k inmiatis ntone Sii m AXE y t 4 eryâ€" 1 1| ommind, ... .= Bsl 3 E4. j =. ondeally omm [~T Industries not skirting waste control bylaw, says Dutton > "Never put off _ until tomeorrow... Wherever possible, reduce parking lot lighting and signsâ€" it can make a big difference. some offices are beginning to save valuable ener?‘y by making better use of daylight, using lower wattage and more efficient lampsâ€" and tt:rEing off unneeded lights. 3 _ _ o3 7‘ emmeec 4 Whether you work in an office, rent space in a business building or own a buildingâ€" it makes good business sense to turn off the lights at the end of your dar and on weekends. Saving lighting helps conserve natural resources . . . and saves money at the same time. â€" Wateriloo Chronicle, Wednesday, October 26, 1977 About 20 area industries are permitted to exceed their maximum discharge ‘*We do not have a probâ€" lem here of people deliberâ€" ately violating the byâ€"law," he said. Although Mr. Dutton adâ€" mitted there are "‘deficiencâ€" ies", the byâ€"law has been effective and industries are adhering to it. Mr. Dutton noted, howâ€" ever, that it would be "perâ€" fectly legal" to dilute sewâ€" age discharges. The comments reaffirmed Mr. Dutton‘s conclusions in a report presented to the committee which indicated, despite suggestions made earlier this year, that no industries are "‘deliberâ€" ately and consistently‘‘ dilutâ€" ing their discharge with water to conform to the byâ€"law. into a municipal sewer sysâ€" tem. ooo"hat tonightg’ou can put off Waterloo Hydro Under Antiâ€"Inflation board (AIB) regulations, the comâ€" mission could offer raises totalling $7,200 this year to its police chief and two deputies in anyway it saw fit. The raises boost the salâ€" aries of deputyâ€"chiefs Clare Kunkle and Harold Basse to $34,700. The Waterloo Regional police _ commission _ last Wednesday awarded $3,600 pay hikes to its two deputyâ€" chiefs. limit where the sewage treatment plants have exâ€" cess capacity. However, the immdustries must pay a surcharge to cover the costs of the additional treatment. Deputy chiefs get pay hike sewage The surcharge has been The commission will also launch a final appeal to an AIB decision to rollback 1976 increases to the deputyâ€" chiefs from $3,600 to $2,100. The increas\es still leave the deputyâ€"chiefs salaries considerably below those in comparable \_ Regions, according to commission member Gerald Martiniuk. By dividing the sum equalâ€" ly among the deputies, Police chief Syd Brown will not receive an increase this year. , age industries to establish their own treatment faciliâ€" ties, Mr. Dutton pointed out. set high enoug') to encour. Within the Christian comâ€" munity, there is a definite Rev. Shrier was raised in Waterloo county. He left as a young man and returnâ€" ed when he was 29. He had missionary zeal at the time and saw his work in the area as a real challenge, he said. "I felt strongly that this is what the Lord would have for my life."" minister." to me ... being received and being appreciated has been a real source of strength I feel a great debtob the community; I feel the community has been good Rev. Shrier said in an interview that not very many pastors stay in the same community for 15 years or more. He said most move on to more challengâ€" ing opportunities, or just because they need a change. St., a program appearing on Global T.V., will be Sunâ€" day night‘s speaker. Norma Jeane Mainse and Reynold Rutledge will provide music for the evening. Rev. David Mainse, foundâ€" er and host of 100 Huntley Sunday â€" morning, â€" Rev Wilkerson will give a ser mon. kerson, director of New York City‘s teen challenge, a program for problem teenagers, will speak. The Embers will again be featurâ€" is on youth kerson, din York City‘s Bend, Indi the music. Saturday be a rally 1c, a rally, and speakers this weekend to celebrate 15 years of pastoring in the community be Reverâ€" end John Schrier. ., The weekend‘s celebraâ€" tions will begin Friday night with a banquet to be held at the Waterloo Motor Inn. The Embers from South Bend, Indiana, will supply Reverend John Si ing this weekend. It‘s 15 years _ for Rev. Schrier By Susan Turansky he Waterloo Pentecostal as a man and as a youth y night there will y with the emphasâ€" ith. Rev. Don Wilâ€" director of New ind speakers to celebrate pastoring in y be Reverâ€" Shrier celebrates 15 years of pastorâ€" The Pentecostal church hel?s people who are alcoâ€" holics, drug addicts, or just plain down and out. "I don‘t want homoserâ€" uals to think we are conâ€" demning them,‘‘ he added. He said Anita Bryant is protecting rights for the moral foundations of society. It is a legitimate crusade against perversion, he said. Reverend Shrier said homosexuality goes beyond abuse of the body; "it‘s looked upon as a sin; a vioâ€" lation of the moral laws of God according to the scripâ€" tures." are not given positions of public service or leaderâ€" ship,"‘ said the Reverend. In the Pentecostal churchd ‘nobody is criticized, judgâ€" ed, or condemned because they don‘t conform, but they Rev. Shrier counsels peoâ€" ple through the power of the holy spirit, he said. ‘‘There is very little that we can do without the power of the holy spirit when it comes to preaching, doing good, healing or any form of ministry including counâ€" selling." races on the board of diâ€" rectors and in other key positions. There are no womâ€" en on the board of directors and no women preaching in this community, but they serve on key committees. "It‘s God‘s work to lead women to the ministry, not mine. If God leads them to it, they have the right," said Rev. Shrier. Praying for the sick is a big part of our ministry, said Rev. Shrier. We‘ve had many miracles. If peoâ€" pfe are sick or depressed, they can be prayed for and made better. church flowing together of all deâ€" nominations. More churches are becoming concerned with the work of the holy spirit and the work of evanâ€" gelism, said Rev. Shrier. The Reverend said his There 1$ deeply ply integratâ€" people of all board of diâ€"

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