Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 28 Jun 2018, p. 42

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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, Ju ne 28 ,2 01 8 | 42424 461972-41972-41972- 201720172017 Best Travel AgencyAgency Suite 300, South Oakville Centre • 1515 Rebecca Street, Oakville 905.827.1100 travel@mctavish.comwww.mctavishtravel.com O nt R eg N o 14 37 98 5 CORPORATE • GROUP • LEISURE Forever Begins In Paradise Whatever your style or your budget our wedding experts can help you create the destination wedding or honeymoon of your dreams. Adventure Wedding, Cruise Wedding, Beach Wedding the possibilities are endless.... Contact our Wedding Experts for a Free Consultation: Carolyn@McTavish.com or Judy@McTavish.com Or visit McTavishTravel.com BEAVER TRAILS Vincent and Eric Gènier recently visited their big brother Nicolas (right) who is a student at the University of Ottawa. The three brothers visited the DreamWorks exhibit at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Que. The Oakville Beaver made it all the way to Madagascar, sort of. BL Gènier/photo TRAVEL Halton Catholic school board trustees have decid- ed to further deliberate on a controversial policy that bans donations to charities that don't align with Catho- lic values. On June 19, trustees passed a motion to send the issue to the board's policy committee for review sometime this summer to come up with recommen- dations that will return to the trustees board in Sep- tember. Trustees from the Hal- ton Catholic District School Board are going through feedback from hundreds offeedback from hundreds off community members about whether the board should prohibit "any finan- cial donations to any chari- ties or non-profits that pub- licly support - either direct- ly or indirectly - abortion, contraception, steriliza- tion, euthanasia or embry- onic stem cell research." The controversy has brewed for months follow- ing the school board's ap- proval of the ban in Febru- ary. In April, then-education minister Indira Naidoo- Harris wrote trustees at the board asking that they sus- pend the ban and that she had received numerous complaints from parents and students about the lack of consultation around the policy. The board then put the motion on hold until "the completion of community consultations." That has since been done, and the board was inundated with nearly 1,000 responses - 74 per cent of which were op- posed to the motion. LOCAL Halton Catholic board sanctity of life charity decision put off Find WITHIN YOUR COMMUNITY FinFind WITHINWITHIN YOUR COMMUNITY Local Events www.insidehalton.com

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