OSWEGO â Mayor Billy Barlow announced the city of Oswego will host a three-day public event at Breitbeck Park featuring carnival rides, games, food concessions, childrenâs activities, retail vendors, beer and wine garden and live music.
The event, scheduled for July 29 through July 31, will act as a smaller substitute event for Harborfest, which was canceled earlier this year, for the second consecutive year due to COVID-19.
âThe city of Oswego is proud to host a âSummer Bashâ festival at Breitbeck Park to bring some excitement to our community following the cancellation of Harborfest earlier this year,â said Mayor Barlow. âThe Breitbeck Summer Bash will focus on childrenâs activities and carnival rides to give families a weekend full of excitement, while also bringing live music and a wine and beer garden available in the park for adults. While the event is certainly much smaller than our traditional Harborfest, it is important to give famil
Community thrilled as controversial Goshen Farm plans turned down eastlothiancourier.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eastlothiancourier.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A BID to see up to 300 new homes built on the outskirts of Musselburgh has been kicked into touch. Developers BDW Trading Ltd/Ashfield Commercial Properties Ltd lodged an appeal with Scottish Ministers in October last year – more than three years after applying to East Lothian Council for planning permission in principle to build the houses at Goshen Farm, on the eastern edge of the town. The move came after the local authority failed to determine the application within the statutory time period. East Lothian Council urged the Planning and Environmental Appeals Division to turn down the proposals, highlighting it would lead to “an unacceptable loss of prime agricultural land”.
CONTROVERSIAL plans for a care village on the outskirts of North Berwick have been turned down for a second time. Goldcrest Communities Ltd was refused planning permission for a site at Castleton Farm, to the east of the town, by East Lothian Council in August last year. The developers took their proposals for 152 residential accommodation and care units for people in need of care and a community hub to the Scottish Government’s Planning and Environmental Appeals Division. However, this morning (Wednesday), reporter Mike Shiel announced the appeal was dismissed and planning permission refused. Mr Shiel said there were “no material considerations which would justify granting planning permission”.