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Sault Symphony Orchestra is paying off debt and planning to share more music online as the group continues to wait to return to public performances post-COVID-19. The symphony has shed about half of the $27,000 that was owing on a line of credit in 2019, treasurer Dr. Kimlan Bell said during an annual general meeting on Tuesday evening. The line of credit was closed out in December 2019. The symphony is now paying a five-year loan of $13,000. “We made quite a significant debt in the debt in just one year,” said Bell during the online meeting. “We’ve come a long, long way. We’re doing really well.”