Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Misunderstanding' Over Site Of Remembrance Day Service Causes Uproar

Darpan News Desk, 04 Nov, 2016 12:21 PM
    SYDNEY, N.S. — A Cape Breton craft association and several local legions say they have been swept up in a nasty public spat that has generated threats and ill will over the location of a Remembrance Day service — all because of a misunderstanding.
     
    Audrey Pyke of Home Crafters of Cape Breton says her 29-year-old group booked Centre 200 for its annual craft sale several years ago, and has held the three-day event there for the last decade.
     
    But, the problem this year is that Remembrance Day falls on the first day of the sale and the legions say they had gone through the mayor's office last March to book the large facility in Sydney.
     
     
    Stephen MacLennan, president of the legion in Whitney Pier, says that as a result the Remembrance Day ceremony has been moved to a smaller facility — a revelation that angered residents and resulted in dozens of emails, calls and Facebook postings criticizing the crafters.
     
    Pyke says that has caused some members to take down their social media sites because of a slew of hostile comments, including some that say they will boycott the sale because of the misperception that the group forced the veterans out of the location.
     
    But MacLennan says the mixup was due to a miscommunication between the centre and the mayor's office and is not the fault of the crafters' group.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CIBC To Repay $73 Million After Overcharging Clients For 14 Years

    CIBC To Repay $73 Million After Overcharging Clients For 14 Years
    The bank will also pay $3 million to the Ontario Securities Commission toward its mandate of protecting investors, while a further payment of $50,000 will go to cover the costs of the investigation.

    CIBC To Repay $73 Million After Overcharging Clients For 14 Years

    Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'

    Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'
    Adam Capay was in isolation for 52 months at a Thunder Bay, Ont., jail, held in a Plexiglas cell with the lights on 24 hours a day.

    Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'

    Conjugal Visits Increase Public Safety, Help Offenders Reintegrate, Experts Say

    Conjugal Visits Increase Public Safety, Help Offenders Reintegrate, Experts Say
    Lee Chapelle has fond memories of spending afternoons with his wife in the mid-1990s, barbecuing in a small yard while his young children played in the grass and mimicked the cows' moos as the animals grazed in a nearby field.

    Conjugal Visits Increase Public Safety, Help Offenders Reintegrate, Experts Say

    Adults Shamed From Speaking Indigenous Languages Hold Key To Revival, Survival

    Adults Shamed From Speaking Indigenous Languages Hold Key To Revival, Survival
    Now, people who didn't learn their mother tongue from their parents are key to saving and revitalizing the languages, British Columbia researchers say.

    Adults Shamed From Speaking Indigenous Languages Hold Key To Revival, Survival

    Mechanical Problem On PM's Plane 'Rare': RCAF Says

      An RCAF Airbus carrying Justin Trudeau turned around and returned to Ottawa Saturday night about half an hour after taking off.

    Mechanical Problem On PM's Plane 'Rare': RCAF Says

    Baby Jesus Statue To Remain Headless Until May Or June, Says Sudbury, Ont., Priest

    Baby Jesus Statue To Remain Headless Until May Or June, Says Sudbury, Ont., Priest
    A decapitated statue of baby Jesus outside a Catholic church in northern Ontario will remain headless this Christmas, as the church says it will be months before the head can be reattached.

    Baby Jesus Statue To Remain Headless Until May Or June, Says Sudbury, Ont., Priest