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Recycling Tip

Submitted by Peter Clyne on behalf of Education Committee

Hello,

Here is this month's recycling tip from the education committee:
Please dispose of gloves and disposable face masks immediately after use into the garbage. They are not recyclable and if put into the recycling bins, they can jam the sorting machinery.

Propane tanks less than 30 lbs are taken at the landfill or designated fire stations (between 8 and 5). Vehicle tanks are not accepted, but alberta's recycling hotline ( https://recyclesearch.com/profile/recyclinghotline ) lists private companies that can take them at a price.

The whole list of waste items can be found at https://www.calgary.ca/uep/wrs/what-goes-where/default.html

- The Education Committee

Join the Blue Apple Kids Art Collective

Submitted by Gabriela Orban on behalf of Blue Apple Kids Art Collective and the Social Committee

Hey co-op kids aged from one to one hundred and nine (110 year old’s need not apply) there is a new art club that you can join if you’d wish. The Blue Apple Kids Art Collective has a mailbox in the V of the tree beside the bench of our little local library and if you have the time you can take the time to put your art in the mailbox. It will then be viewed and some thoughts will be shared back to you and maybe you just might get prizes too! This is only for kids who love or are interested in art class. 

Here’s how it works:

• Once or twice a month (maybe more if you kids dig it) we will post an art project on the website and the Facebook page with a start and end date. You will have until that date to drop your art project off in the blue apple mailbox.

• You don’t even have to leave your name on your art, but make sure you leave your unit number.

• After that date your art art will be returned to you with a message and perhaps a prize too in your own mailbox at your unit.

• Your masterpieces will be returned to you in the exact same way that they were when they were delivered to the mail box but your art may be used or replicated to create more art so know that other folks outside of the coop might see your masterpieces someday.

So if you like to write or draw or paint or appreciate the postal service then I think this club is for you.

Here’s your first project: 

Draw or paint or write about your favorite mammal. It might be a cat or a whale or my favorite mammal which is a “knotted back carpet shark” which is a mammal that lives in the sea and in carpeted living rooms and only eats barbecue brushes. Imagine that! 

This project starts on October 1 and the deadline for dropping your art off is October 9.

I can’t wait to find out about what you kids can imagine. So let’s have fun and art. 

The Social Justice Film and Book Club

Submitted by Rachel Rose on behalf of Social Committee

The Social Justice Film and Book club would like to invite you to participate in our first exploration into the experiences and perspectives of Indigenous peoples. No need to formally opt in or out, just a willingness to learn. 

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Please choose to explore as many (or as few) of the following sources to deepen your own learning about the experiences and perspective of Indigenous peoples. This is a bit of a different book club in that you can choose the content most interesting to you and most relevant to your learning! 

 

We will meet as a group late-October to chat and connect about our questions, learnings and insights. We will then invite a guest speaker late-November as a culminating exercise in our learning. At the end of this we intend to have a conversation about what action and steps we need to take as a co-op to bring our insights to meaningful action. 

 

A few copies of the Fiction and Nonfiction books will be purchased. Please email Rachel at rachelroseconsulting@gmail.com if you would like to access one!

 

1.     Nonfiction

·      Seven Fallen Feathers by Tanya Talaga 

 

2.     Fiction 

·      Medicine River by Thomas King 

 

3.     Film (Documentary)

·      Trick or Treaty by Alanis Obomsawin https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAGHDrSRd4k

Or available through the NFB




Covering a vast swath of northern Ontario, Treaty No. 9 reflects the often contradictory interpretations of treaties between First Nations and the Crown. To ...

 

4.    Film (Fiction)

 

·      The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open

Streaming on CBC Gem  

https://gem.cbc.ca/media/films/the-body-remembers-when-the-world-broke-open/38e815a-012d6a41ccc?cmp=sch-the%20body%20remembers%20when%20the%20world%20broke%20open

 

5.     Essay #1

·      Jagged Worldviews Collide by Leroy Little Bear 

https://www.learnalberta.ca/content/aswt/worldviews/documents/jagged_worldviews_colliding.pdf

 

6.     Essay #2 

·      All Our Relations Askîy maskihkiwiwiskwew by Tiffany Freeman 

Available in the Sunnyside School Centennial Yearbook or as the attached image here

Member Selection Update

Submitted by Jaime Muneoka, on behalf of Member Selection

Member selection is pleased to welcome several families to our community:

Jessi Taylor and her family have returned to SHC, unit 779 as of September 1

Buzz Viberg has moved into 827, leaving a vacancy in 805, which Paul Stephens and Emma Thursby have accepted (also September 1)!

With all this movement, we bid farewell to members Bruce Eason and Suzanne Desmeules (779), Karen Johnson (827)

Lots of news this month, welcome to all our new and returning members!

Updates from the Grounds Committee

Submitted by Jennifer Peters on behalf of Grounds Committee

Just a friendly reminder to please sign out and return by the end of the day anything taken from the shed. This will ensure that everyone has access the the tools when needed and keep things fair,thanks!

An update about the mural project on the garbage enclosure on 3rd Street. It was our understanding from the Sunnyside Mural project that the entire enclosure was to be painted, that is what was presented at the meeting. So we were just as surprised as everyone else to see that only 2 sides were done. This matter is being looked into and hopefully a resolution that will satisfy both parties will be reached.

The grounds committee is looking for one or two volunteers to take over the pest management position, this would mainly included helping members with minor pest problems anything big would be handed over to Andrea.

We have scheduled our Fall Clean up of the Food Forest and Common space for Sept 26, we look forward to seeing a good turn out to get our grounds ready for fall!

Lastly we have the winners from the last clean up, they are:

Heidi #26 - Regal Cat Cafe

Belle #825 - Espresso Cafe

Rachel #802 - Oolong Tea House

Buzz #827 - Higher grounds

Congratulations guys great job!!!

Sunnyhill Grounds

Outdoor Movie Night

Submitted by Tyla Cosgrove on behalf of Social Committee

Come one come all to our humble outdoor movie night held in the common area behind units 44, and 42 Sunnyhill lane. Please bring your own blankets, chairs and whatever you might need to be comfortable for the duration of the two-hour movie. We also ask that you bring your own popcorn and snacks due to the ongoing Covid concern.

The social committee is looking for someone to help with setting the projector up before we start. Please reach out to Tyla if you can help! faerae@live.com

Lets keep our fingers crossed for good weather and a nice fall evening! 

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Bulletin Board- August 2020

Submitted by Richard Harrison, on behalf of the Board

Hello fellow Co-oppers, 

I’m writing to catch up on the week since the Board meeting, and give you a couple of pieces of information regarding Saturday’s General Meeting as well.  The majority of that meeting will be taken up with discussion of Planning and Development’s presentation, as it should be, so I’ll be brief. 

Celebrating the Past: the Co-op Birthday

The recent past first: Congratulations and thanks to the Social Committee for setting up one of the most fun and memorable Co-op Birthdays in the 42-year history of our great experiment in team living. I’ve known Dan the One Man Band a long time, and I’ve rarely seen him in such fine form, chasing the laughing children in the way that only someone of whom one child could ask “Are you Santa?” can do and make them laugh even more. And of course, playing the oldies for the audience who love to smile at what we remember. Then: Hire Heels YYC, a Calgary Drag Queen trio, delightful, witty and risqué in a way that only the most clever and sensitive are with grown-up humour when they have a family audience. And no one’s going to forget this improvised number from Sunnyhill’s own (co-op member-built) playground: https://www.facebook.com/HireHeelsYYC/videos/306459357102090.

Looking to the Future: General Meeting Focused on Planning and Development 

The upcoming meeting will provide an update on the ongoing work of our Planning and Development Committee. In the past month or so, a lot has happened: the open sessions on MODA’s drawings for the proposed development as reported by the Communications Committee in their mid-August newsletter, negotiations with the city for purchase of our land, developments in our grant proposals. And a lot is still ongoing. This will be a good meeting to bring us all up to date, and to lay the groundwork for the decisions we will need to make in the coming months. I look forward to hearing from our Committee. 

Bringing the Past into the Present 1: The Motion about the Dryer Vents 

There is one other item on the agenda for this meeting. At the last Board meeting, Buildings presented us with a recommendation for work to be done based on our furnace and ductwork contractor’s assessment of our single-bedroom units. These are currently venting dryer air into the crawl space beneath them. This arrangement is not in compliance with the current buildings code, which to vent dryer air and lint out through the wall (the way it is with our two- and three-bedroom units). However, it is not compulsory that we change it to fit those codes, although rerouting the vents would be that much safer in terms of fire hazard, and less likely to lead to a build-up of mould. 

Now it’s true that this situation has been in place since the Co-op was built, so it will be up to us as a whole, since the expenditure is as stated in the motion, to assess the situation, and decide if we want to go ahead or not. 

Bringing the Past into the Present 2: Answers to the Questions about the TELUS Fibre Optic Plan. 

Last meeting left us with several questions regarding TELUS’s proposal to update our internet access by replacing the current system with a fibre optic one. The result will be more efficient and reliable internet. Here are the questions we were left with in our deliberations, the answers we have today. Let me quote from Andrea’s summary of her discussion with TELUS: 

    • Will it be more efficient?

      • Yes. There will be no issues with port capacity with the fibre upgrades.

    • Will it be more reliable?

      • yes

    • Is there a bulk usage bargain?

      • Yes, the SACHA agreement is a 40% discount on residential internet and TV services. All residents will benefit from the 40% discount with the fibre upgrades. 

    • Could TELUS provide a Fiber optics community cable that would provide Wi-Fi access to Sunnyhill grounds as well as in the homes? 

      • Yes, Ankit and team may look at the site and determine the best location to support this request.

I will attach the supporting documentation to this letter.

Telus Fibre Information

Bringing the Past into the Present 3: A Matter of Minutes 

You’ll have noticed that there is no mention of the minutes question, which has been an ongoing discussion, in the agenda for this meeting. Partly, this is because of time-dependent considerations. Planning and Development is our first priority right now, and what the Committee will be talking about should get our attention in as full and complete a way as possible. Zoom meetings have many advantages, but being less tiring than in-person conversation isn’t one of them. So as much as possible, the Board will arrange meetings to be as efficient and focused as we can.

The other reason for moving the minutes discussion to our next meeting is because, as we have seen, it is a contentious one, so we are going to need some time to work it through. This week’s meeting is about coming together to make decisions to move forward as a coop as a whole. The minutes discussion is, in part, about moving on one of the recommendations from our June 7 meeting to repair past damages to our functioning as a group. These are two very different tasks, requiring different mindsets; for now, the first cannot wait, the second can.

So I need to ask for your patience while the Board prepares a presentation on this matter – including all the minutes that require the community’s approval – at the next General Meeting. And we can return to that discussion at that time. 

Thanks, 

See you Saturday, 

for the Board, Richard Harrison, Chair

Back or Front, You Decide

Submitted by Brenda Willman

BACK OR FRONT, YOU DECIDE – for entertainment purposes only

I am re-hashing and re-editing one of my previous articles from years ago, for the benefit of those who didn’t have the chance to read it and ponder the answer to the question “where is my front door?”.

Slide back years and years to grid-style neighbourhoods, such as the one we currently live in, where

·       the front door of the house is on the street/avenue, and the living room is at the front, and the mailbox is at the front, with a fenced, shorter yard; and

·       the back door of the house is on the side of the (back) lane, and the kitchen is on that side, and a longer yard, with a garage, or at least space to park the car.  Until people in grid style neighbourhoods started commandeering their back yards for gardens, and their garages for suites, people parked in the back and didn’t militantly guard the spot in front of their houses on the street/avenue.

 (Grid plan neighbourhoods have been in existence since 2600 BC – they’re hard to beat!)

Fast forward to the post-war era, with its accompanying boom in personal ownership of automobiles, plus a post-war house-building boom.  “Curvilinear” street designs are thought to have been an early response to worrisome pedestrian/automobile encounters, which had become more frequent (and fatal).  The design pattern was like a tree, with the main road being the trunk and the sub-roads were branches of that tree, including cul-de-sacs, and semi-circles, and bays, with garages attached at the front of the house- with the result being a back lane was unnecessary.  The traffic was “quieted/subdued” and the vicinity around the house was quieter as well.  The ‘burbs were born, and in those ‘burbs you will find:

·       the front door of the house is on the cul-de-sac, mews, circle, bay (what-have-you), and the living room is on that same side, with the mailbox AND a garage???, with not much of a yard, and no back lanes; and

·       the back door of the house opens onto the main yard – no parking here, and the kitchen (and more recently the great room) are located on that side as well.

So I sit today gazing out what I fondly refer to as my back window, looking at what I would define as a ‘back lane’, all while sitting in my unit located within a housing complex which is completely based on a grid style set up.  What also happens to be located on the same side of the house I am presently sitting in are:

·       the kitchen – CHECK –it’s supposed to be right here, at the back

·       the mailbox  - ??? – it’s in the wrong place????

·       the parking spot – CHECK hmmmm – maybe?? – could be either front or back! 

Most Co-opers would argue that I was looking out of my front window and I often have confusing conversations with my neighbours as I constantly refer to the ‘yard’ side as the front, and the driveway side as the back, having simply conceded that, for whatever reason, the designers accidentally placed my mailbox by the back door.  In fact, when I first came to view my unit, I went to the balcony/garden side, assuming that was the front, and rang the doorbell, only to be met by astonished people who asked what I was doing at that door, and to please go around to the other side.  Come to think of it, the gas meter was/is on that side, and that is DEFINITELY a ‘back yard’ sort of installation.  Ooooh it’s all so confusing.

Anyway, in an attempt to truly understand where is the front and where is the back, I tried to look at the front v. back in another, more logical, way - through the actual location of streets, avenues and lanes (and where they would be if they still existed).  But looking at it that way led to only more confusion. 

For ease of following my logic, I will refer to the location of the mailbox when determining which is front or back.

Members on Third Street

For members living on the 700 block of 3rd Street there is no question as to which side is which.

·       there is a front street (3rd Street) on the side where their driveway, mailbox and kitchen are located and

·       there is a back lane on the other side, where their living rooms are located

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE FRONT DOOR (even though, much to my chagrin, so is the kitchen)

For the people living on the 800 block of 3rd Street we have a VERY mixed bag:

For 801 – 813, were 7th Avenue still continuing along its previous course, the driveway and kitchen would be at the front, and the living room would, by default, be at the back (and we would be living on 7th Avenue and not 3rd Street, but I digress…).

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE FRONT DOOR (again much to my chagrin, and I steadfastly stand by my decision that is my BACK door)

For those in 815 – 827, the balcony/living room side of the unit would have faced 7th Avenue, making the kitchen/driveway side the back.

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE BACK DOOR

For those in 837-849, following similar logic as to 4th Street continuing along its previous course (even though they have an address on 3rd Street – it rightfully would be 4th Street), their balconies and living rooms all would face 4th Street – making the kitchen/driveway side of the house the back

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE BACK DOOR

Members on Fourth Street

For members living from 734 – 748 4th Street, we find a similar situation to the 700 block of 3rd Street.

·       there is a front street (4th Street) on the side where their driveway, mailbox and kitchen are located and

·       there is a back lane on the other side (which again must be extended in one’s imagination), where their living rooms are located

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE FRONT DOOR

For those in 762-768, the balcony/living room side of the unit would have faced 7th avenue, making the kitchen/driveway side the back.

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE BACK DOOR

Members on Sunnyhill Lane

This one is tricky!!  For those in 2-28, following the logic as to 4th Street continuing along its previous course their balconies and living rooms all would face 4th Street – making the kitchen/driveway side of the house the back, where in fact there an actual back lane to support this conclusion– named though it is -(is it the only back lane named in the City of Calgary – THAT would be something to investigate)! But I fact, they wouldn’t really live on 4th Street, being slightly pushed west to align with the existing back lane (which was even given a name “Sunnyhill Lane”, so one could argue Sunnyhill Lane is a “front street”, having a name and all – but it clearly serves as a back lane to the people who live on 4A Street, and it lines right up with the back lane just to the south, so how to clearly interpret the status of Sunnyhill Lane?)

·       CONCLUSION – THE MAILBOX IS LOCATED BY THE BACK DOOR

Finally we have the members in 30-44 who have no former street nor back alley to ‘align’ with so those people get to choose which is back or front.

Summary

On a purely mathematical scale, and if one were to agree with my logic of deciding what side of the unit is facing “front” based on where 3rd Street, 4th Street and 7th Avenue would each presently be located if not gobbled up by the coop:

26 Mailboxes at the ‘front’ side of the unit

32 Mailboxes at the ‘back’ side of the unit

8 Mailboxes ????

“Back side” takes the majority……yay!  I am correct.  My mailbox is at my back door. Amirite?

To make it more confusing, we have spots in the coop where the units are balcony-facing-balcony (making it easier to concede that the balcony side is the ‘front’, as houses usually face each other – but nope, on SHL we call that space the ‘big back yard’ and not the ‘big front yard’ even though half of those units are definitely looking at someone’s back yard when they look out their “front” door).  For those on 3rd and 4th Street who share the back lane on their balcony side – well I really can’t argue that.  But we also have spots in the coop where the units are balcony-facing-driveway. 

I have to admit in all my years here only one other member agreed with me that the north side of my unit (a.k.a. the “mailbox side”) was the back door!  It’s my back door!  I know it is!  It has all the hallmarks of being at the back of the house – maybe?!?!?!

I must have way too much time on my hands, having spent hours and days and possibly years thinking about which is which.

But I leave it up to each member – back or front, you decide. 

Battery & Light Bulb Recycling

Submitted by Peter Clyne on behalf of Education Committee

We now have both lightbulb and battery recycling receptacles in the shed!

Currently, most batteries (rechargeable, non-rechargeable, cell phone, and laptop) can be disposed at one stop, so put them in there and they will be taken out monthly or when it gets full.

Please don’t put car batteries in there, those just go to the fire station hazardous household waste drop off.

-The Education Committee

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Grounds Committee Update

Submitted by Cristian Badea-Hasasian on behalf of Grounds Committee

Jumping to a solution before a meticulous analysis and based on instincts and assumptions rather than rigorous technique and lots of data it is the root of the economic and, consequently, social situation we live in today.

Named "global warming" or "consumerism" or "unhealthy diets" or "depression", etc. us, as co-op members, are part of them and have a part in addressing them. Of course, most of us consider them as a problem.

Let's see what the connection to the Grounds would be. We, the members of the committee, started a new journey. We want to make a fast, intelligent, kind, economic and ecological impact on the social group giving us a chance to express our abilities and trust with our spending funds.

Therefore, in our few meetings we discussed more about what would be a solid framework for this committee in the long run rather than jumping around "temporary" solutions. In order to find our ways, we need information and a plan.

Information - we have some, collecting more through research, brainstorming, and asking around.

Plan - for now we should be reactive in order to be able to become proactive and efficient.

We want to have only solutions that are as cheap as possible, ecological, suitable to our coop social status and social standard. Most important the attempt is to be aware of the implications and trajectory into the future.

Example: the money in today's budget is totally unrealistic in today's extreme times - can volunteers do more than talking?

Some small projects have already started.

- Initially seen as "Assets", than as "Categories", than as "Interests" List is going to be a list with things GC (Ground Committee) has to deal with on a permanent level. Watch, maintain, improve, retire.

- The Food Jungle is our "baby" and now is the time to think how it will grow and all of us along it. Any baby comes with responsibilities, problems, and the thought "will we have more babies?"

- Playground inspection: hard to find inspectors. Can we do partial and frequent inspections? Yes, we can for the safety of our kids.

- A co-op vegetation map is going to be "gold" for future developments with vertical landscaping in mind and "can we do more for our planet?" focus.

- Sunnyside Murals Project may find a spot in SHC for visual enjoyment.

- Grounds Cleanup Event - can be fun with or without refreshments. We have to remove Blue Bell Flowers as well as other plants considered weeds. Maybe become a contest? With a little prize?

- Welcome of new members GC package will become available as grounds are an important part in our community year-round.

- Responsible and future aware revision of summer and winter Ground Contracts is going to be a challenge.

- Co-op's shed is full of tools and supplies. As gardening season is slowing down, it is time to inventory and organize things. And plan for improvements.

- Communication is the most important. Please help by (re)sending your list- small or large - of ideas, suggestions, problems, or achievements related to your unit's surroundings. Please keep it simple and send it to the dedicated email: SHCGrounds@shaw.ca with "idea" in the subject line.

Please join GC meetings as observers and maybe part of our positive brainstorming as we attempt to finalize our requirements list and determine the problems and furthermore good solutions. To find out when the next meeting is, simply ask at SHCGrounds@shaw.ca with "next" in the subject line.

Education Committee's Musings on Pandemic Lessons

Submitted by Belle Auld on behalf of the Education Committee

What we are learning during our first pandemic

  • That we can still get together to eat and/or meet via Zoom

  • How to make pancakes without a recipe

  • That a person can spend approximately three hours watching videos on how to sew a mask

  • That a sewing machine repair shop is not considered an essential service

  • That it IS possible to garden yourself into exhaustion

  • That the 19 in Covid19 stands for the 19 pounds we gain

  • That wearing a mask at home prevents constant eating

  • That community is important

What we did not learn:

  • Why toilet paper??

-Cancelled- Goat herding

Submitted by Cindy Schnee

UPDATE July 6

Unfortunately, the City has requested that volunteers not participate in goat herding this season due to COVID-19 restrictions.

We will have to watch and admire the goats from a distance.

WE WANT YOU!

The Vahana goats are coming! July 13-21, 2020

You can volunteer to hang out with 265 goats on 4 different shifts/day. We can accommodate just a few volunteers/day, so if you are interested, please send in your request as soon as possible. Due to COVID 19, visitors are not allowed in camp and goats may not be touched, so this is your chance to get close to them!

Shift 1:  9:00am-12:00 pm walk from home camp by Centre Street Bridge across McHugh Bluff to grazing areas in the west. Must be able to walk/climb on uneven surfaces, stand for entire shift and tolerate sun and heat.

Shift 2: 12:00 pm - 3 pm afternoon resting camp (West side of Bluff) – will be shady, can sit if desired, bring your lunch and chew your cud with the goats!

Shift 3: 3pm - 6 pm - could be a combination of sitting, walking and climbing. Sun or shade. Must be prepared for conditions such as shift 1 and 4.  It depends on the goats! 

Shift 4:  6 pm – 9 pm - evening grazing and walk back across McHugh Bluff to home camp at Centre Street. Must be able to walk/climb on uneven surfaces, stand for entire shift and tolerate sun and heat.

Please note: Shift times are approximate. It all depends on the goats!

Age 18 and up

Suitable footwear is necessary (good tread, high top) as well as a hat and water bottle that you can store to have hands free.

You will be asked to sign a waiver and there will be a short mandatory volunteer orientation sometime in early July.

Please contact Cindy at welovegoats3@gmail.com if you are interested, with date(s) and shift(s) you prefer, how many shifts you want to do total,  as well as your t-shirt size. 

What to do with old lightbulbs

Submitted by Belle Auld on behalf of the Education Committee

1. Incandescent light bulbs (regular old fashioned bulbs) or halogen light bulbs - go in the black cart.  It is recommended that you put them in a puncture resistant, non-breakable container or wrap them in two layers of paper and tie it closed.

2. Compact fluorescent bulbs – these do not go in any bin.
To dispose of these safely, wrap each bulb in paper and tie it closed.These need to be taken to either: -a *designated fire hall  or -one of the city’s free **Throw 'n' Go landfill areas. SO, we now have a small box in the garage where we will collect these and take them to a fire hall once every 2 or 3 months. The box is right behind the door when you enter (the small part of the garage where gardening equipment is kept.)

3. Fluorescent tubes – again, these do not go in any bin.
A maximum of three (3) – no longer than 4 feet in length - can be taken to a *designated fire hall 
More than three (3) tubes and tubes longer than 4 feet in length need to go one of the city’s free **Throw 'n' Go landfill areas.

*Our closest designated fire halls are:

**Free Throw 'n' Go landfill areas:

If you would like to be part of a regular trip to our local fire station to drop off compact fluorescent lightbulbs please let us (Belle Auld, Rose Ing, Chris Taylor, Peter Clyne) know.

To find out how to recycle other things, go to What Goes Where Calgary  https://www.calgary.ca/UEP/WRS/Pages/What-goes-where/A-to-Z-Listing.aspx

*Stay tuned for information about old battery collection.

New Documents Available Online

Submitted by Mia Rushton on behalf of Communications Committee

Following on from a recent member’s submission and another member’s suggestion, we have added Sunnyhill’s Articles of Incorporation and our Shareholder’s Agreement to the website. This information can be accessed on the Documents page of the website under the heading Important Documents.

If you have an idea or suggestion for us, please let us know!

sunnyhill.communications@gmail.com

Thanks :)

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