if} 'Mr,,' ", " " , " " a rm _ , :- 2 42" , L tt ' I Fa i. LC " 2 .1 Ji, 'a , CT? igiliii' rr Tt " o', . _ - a " " any h V = ME IB. ' if"? “I: " _vN fik Tc, It" suit ‘U at 1% 2 M' . » , 7 - q wr Et' gl , " " I ir $22 T. 2. l, A r" , , 'te, , "ft L, tF ce'Lt ' ' - MEK" , al a g r v. 'Mb. " _ r . ' E tr Chroma. Staff The city should start a depart- ment of the environment, wool-d- ing to rookie Conn. Susan For. well. . “Municipalities have as much affect as far as their bylaws degrading the envimnment an the federal government does," said Forwell in a wide-ranging inter. view. _ . There should be a department Lydian retrpoeinhility it is ttwen. irifiriiii"ii"i"ii"ii'"iiiiii"ii' "iiiii'ii ""l become a _ city 1 priority: Forwell taxes as a wk. 'f.,. The majority of businesses It the Erb Centre have had enough and are demanding they be allowed to leave the BIA, It In for m. T A petition a'rculated to 29 members ofthe centre found 19 mud to withdraw from the BIA for now, while two wanted to Itâ€. _ “We've been thmqgh three year- of construction over and S"rtytdgmrirttaaidlstrBrpiaa,airGGGi.. Dressing Room in the plan. “My Main.- km 80rer can: this year. I'm not the only buds.- in than feeling the munch." The Wig d centre tenants are protection]: - dentists and doctors Ind lumen Munch - who would not benefit from BIA member-hip, she aid. 1Pruttaitihertrttai-tax-tusrtss peroentatUrthe can In: annexed Jan. 1, 1909 as part of a BIA expansion. A baa-mum» city ttaA,qirtairte BIA Win 1t'a"'t'etttrtup1ilmtiirisurGGGi'iaTii",7ili First they endured three you! of construction next to their husineeeee, They put up with reduced parking. Business went down. while rents did not. Then they were told there would be yet another year of cumming: in the area on the city neligns roads. Now they have dinovered that they have been absorbed into the 'rmeitttr_daruceiutrreo,miiiaUiiiiiUiii, ?eerty_rttfriBih)tsrtd will my much higher business Erb fiijsitiesses ’ have had enough qty. Pt Powell said the idea came to her after last week hearing a mittee. All g reports and by- laws are lMggg,tg by the committee, which is composed of all department heads, and the mayor. sure that projects and policies are environmentally friendly, she said. The department head would be a member of the city's power- ful technical coordinating com. (Continued on page 10) Phyllis Men, uncharged“ miaitigkr f.heteittat,inidtseiuGaGiiiiiiiU'ii tlteseieeritieal.r-iiiiGTi'ri 10 'yrttti.derye-ttomGiGUiG ham... in for " dam. um. - m "tmatatr-s*-tGaunuiaitiii"i Mothers and children were in for a big surprise, Saturday, when they dropped by Waterloo‘s Stuffy's , a mud-hand kids' clothing store. Owned and operated by Kitchener-Water- loo Big Sisters' Association. the store was the base for the group’s that ever free-lunch- for-hers event, aimed at honoringmothera a day before Mothers’ Day. The event, which about voltmuemraneiirmtttdiieiow,t cum flee pointing. and hot by cooking. nu also mailed to and out on upped for not. We volunteer: Volunteer shortage creatg crisis for Big Sisters Wendy Somervllle Chronicle Staff ‘gw by the government "We have two men working in the store until the end of June" Fisken said. "We are grateful for the SEED (Student Employment Experience Develop ment) grant, but once they go we'll be in a pretty desperate situation." Ideally, the store would manage well with 50 volunteers, which would allow for breaks away from the store for summer vacations and personal commitments, said Figken, To frll the available position. the association would be happy to take on volunteers with "good attitudes." The K-W t-oeiation isn't the only one with a mud-hand store as a mum fund-raising entering. The Niagara Falls and Toronto Big Side-I we and u a study m We dllllrl, was established in December u your. Men atm-d that Stutty's differs h- dnilu-m beeause it is geared towed qhiidmts's clothing. m J.1 50a