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Mildmay

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Emily Bowen
Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
ebowen@midwesternnewspapers.com

TEESWATER – The Municipality of South Bruce is considering a request to support expanding its settlement boundary in Mildmay, as council reviews a report tied to Bruce County’s new long-term planning document.

Economic Development Officer Rhonda Niesen presented her report during the March 24 council meeting. The document focused on adding two properties, identified as #31 and #32 in Mildmay’s southeast, into the settlement boundary. If approved, the change would allow for future commercial and light industrial development on the lands. 

The proposed expansion comes as Bruce County prepares an updated Official Plan, which sets out how communities will grow through to 2046. The plan defines settlement boundaries and provides a framework for local municipalities.

If the Mildmay properties are not added to the settlement boundary, the report warns it could “limit future commercial and industrial growth opportunities.”

According to Niesen, the county has been working through public consultations, including open houses, where residents, municipalities and planning staff submitted requests for boundary changes. In total, about 33 requests were received across the county. Each request has been reviewed using several criteria, including the county’s land needs analysis, policies in the draft Official Plan and the Provincial Planning Statement 2024.

An analysis completed as part of the “Plan the Bruce” initiative by Watson and Associates found there is enough residential land across the county to meet future demand. However, it also noted that some communities may face shortages in land for jobs and business use. Despite that, the Mildmay properties were not included in the county’s current draft plan.

Since that time, the two properties have come under a single owner, who 

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Since June of 2024, the Mildmay Town and Country Crier has been published under the Midwestern Newspapers’ logo, along with other venerable titles such as the Walkerton Herald-Times, Wingham Advance Times, Listowel Banner, Kincardine Independent and the Independent Plus.

It was an important day for the company when Crier became a part of our publishing family and continue to proudly carry on the traditions of local coverage adhered to by the newspaper’s previous stewards. Today’s Crier includes many of the same columns and community contributions featured under former owner Susan Bross and her father, the newspaper’s founder John Hafermehl, along with a diverse selection of local news and photographs compiled by our team of reporters.

The local office on Elora Street in Mildmay has also been maintained to provide local residents with a physical link to the newspaper. However, in an increasingly digital world, the foot traffic to our downtown doorstep has decreased, as emailed correspondence takes the place of hand-delivered submissions and customers take advantage of quicker means of subscribing or bill payment via telephone or online.

As of March 27 the Town Crier’s Mildmay office will be closed and readers and customers will be served through our Walkerton Herald-Times office at 10 Victoria Street North (519-881-1600) in that nearby community. Local residents can also continue to contact us through existing email addresses: thecrier@wightman.ca; editor@midwesternnewspapers.com and jkelly@midwesternnewspapers.com.

Your weekly issue of the Crier will continue to be delivered to your mailbox or available in our usual outlets and our staff will continue to be available to serve you from our Walkerton location. 

We look forward to continuing to serve Mildmay, South Bruce and the surrounding area through publication of your community newspaper.

– Midwestern Newspapers