ille Beaver R D E D C O M M U N I T Y N E W S P A P E R w w w .o a k v ille b e a v e r.c o m S f l* o akv i 1 1 eK s s s n Nelson grounds Eagles in senior basketball action TODAY IN BEAVER SPORTS `USING COMMUNICATION TO BUILD BETTER COMMUNITIES > FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 2006 Your community law firm O 'C o n n o r M a c L e o d H a n n a itp 2375 W ve<roft (905) 842-8400 www.oakvilletoyota. A Metroland Publication Vol. 44 No. 5 mm 8 4 2 -8 0 3 0 w w w .om h.ca 48 Pages $1.00 (plus g sv Region hosts tree bylaw open houses Wondering how Halton's new tree bylaw may affect you and your proper ty? Find out at two upcoming open houses the Region is holding on the issue. The first session will take place Jan. 31 from 6-9 p.m. at the Halton Regional Centre in the north auditori um, located at 115.1 Bronte Rd., Oakville. That will be followed by an open house at the Milton Sports Centre Feb. 2, which will also run from 6-9 p.m. The informal drop-in sessions will See Learn page 14 T e re n c e ( y C o n s e rv a tiv e Inside BARRIE ERSKINE / OAKVILLE BEAVER M A K IN G A P O IN T : Oakville Conservative candidate Terence Young fields a question from MacLachlan College students during an all-candidates debate at the school on Wednesday Artscene. .... ............. 23 Sports.............. ....................... 29 Real Estate....... ....................... 32 Classified....................... ..............34 Full Delivery: Leon's, Superstore Partial Delivery: Ashley Furniture, Office Depot, Halton School Board, Natural Factors, Liiiens-N-Things, Affordable Housing, Canadian Tire, Centennial Windows, Price Chopper, Food Basics, NDP, Home Hardware, Loblaws, M&M, Sobeys, Pharma Plus, Fdrtino' s, Super Pet, Hooper's Pharmacy, MDG. Future Shop, Dominion, BestBuy, The Barn, Shop & Save, Zellers, Shoppers Drug, Marl, Sears, Coldwell Banker, Home Depot, Michaels Students pose tough questions to candidates By Krissie Rutherford OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF Most of the people at the all-candidates debate at MacLachlan College weren't old enough to vote, but that didn't stop them from asking some hard-hitting questions. `Why should young Canadians have faith in the promises your party has made to us?" Grade 10 stu dent Dave Thomson asked on behalf of his history class at Wednesday's debate. Oakville's candidates - Liberal MP Bonnie Brown, the Conservative's Terence Young, Tina Agrell of the NDP and the Green Party's Laura Domsy - had a minute to tackle Thomson's question. "That's a great question, I hear it at the doors everyday," Young told the more than 100 students in Grades 5 and 9-12 in the MacLachlan gym. The former Halton Centre MPP went on to explain Oakvillpi ELECTION that between 1995-1999, the Conservatives "did everything we said we were going to do." From creating a million jobs to balancing the budget in three and a half years, Young said his gov ernment "fulfilled every major promise." "My advice to you is to judge politicians and par ties on their actions," he added. Domsy, the 23-year-old Green Party candidate running in her first federal election, told students she also found herself wondering why she should trust politicians' promises. "I- think the only way you can restore the faith and trust that was once in your government is to vote for someone you can trust in your riding," she said. Agrell, who is also running for the first time feder ally, told students about the NDP's seven-point plan of democratic and ethical reforms. See Conservative page 4 H o m e A la r m S y s te m s u^i ( hUbtj i-ii m i 1 - 0 0 0 ( i( > 0 - 2 4 0 2 1 ©REAT FISM/ _J^on^Sat11am-9^ Oakville Town Centre I, (QEW at Dorvai) 9 0 5 -3 3 8 -0 6 0 2 W B P * * " * -" lUEfiS E A 2 0 0 6 FORD FUSIOJ FO R »O N L^ f/nfonth Purchase! lEinanciifS 9o s m s m 4s f m w w w . k e n n e d y fo rd , ca 2 80 S O U T H S E R V IC E R O A D W ES T