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Social gatherings in Kingston capped at a maximum of five people until April 30 as COVID-19 cases rise

  KINGSTON Kingston s top doctor is extending limits on social gatherings and the number of people sitting together at bars and restaurants within the Limestone City until the end of the university school year in April. Medical officer of health Dr. Kieran Moore issued a Class Order under Section 22 of the Ontario Health Protection and Promotion Act to extend some of the measures implemented for St. Patrick s Day celebrations for another six weeks. The Kingston region is currently in the green-prevent level in Ontario s COVID-19 reopening framework, which includes private gatherings of 10 people indoors and 25 people outdoors. There are no limits on restaurant hours or the number of people sitting at a table.

Notes from Lime City: Fracking (with Summit Natural Gas) While the World Burns

Notes from Lime City: Fracking (with Summit Natural Gas) While the World Burns A station on the Maritimes & Northeast natural gas pipeline in Searsmont. The new service proposed by Summit Natural Gas for the midcoast would most likely tap into this run, which follows a power line corridor through the midcoast. (Photo: Ethan Andrews) by Nathan Kroms Davis & Becca Shaw Glaser 2/16/2021 8:53 AM select Detail from “Water Ways,” by the Beehive Design Collective (Courtesy beehivecollective.org) Nate is a Rockland city councilor, but as always, the thoughts expressed here are his own. Becca is a former member of Rockland’s Energy Advisory Committee. Notes from Lime City appears in The Free Press every other week.

Future British PM Harold Macmillan visited Kingston s Frontenac Club

Author of the article: Art Milnes Publishing date: Feb 13, 2021  •  February 13, 2021  •  4 minute read British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, left, and Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker on Broad Street outside the Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford, U.K., at the University of Oxford in 1960. Photo by University of Saskatchewan Article content In the aftermath of the bloodbath that was the First World War, a visit by Canada’s Governor General was just the tonic Kingston needed. It was June 1919, and the community’s leaders from Royal Military College, Queen’s University and Kingston city council prepared for His Excellency the Duke of Devonshire’s visit down to the last detail. Speeches of welcome for the vice-regal guest were written, rewritten and then rehearsed over and over again.

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