The administration is very proud of the mini-computer which was installed in the business office more than a year ago and was the first mini-l computer install (1 in any hospital in the pro inee. This system is currently handling payroll. labor dis- tribution general ledger, accounts payable and inven- tory control. The aim of the reception department is to efficiently get the patient to his proper destination in the hospital and maintain an atmosphere of concern for the patient’s welfare. The patient will be made comfortable immedi- ately. rather than waiting at a desk to complete endless forms before being permitted to relax. The administration depart- ment will house Executive Director James Hepburn, his assistants Mrs. Gloria Crotin and John Flint. as well as the nursing department. MINI - COMPUTER Another area that will provide broader service is the new hospital library, which has grown over the years In future it will serve all hospital staff, including books pertaining to all areas of hospital management and administration. not just the medical side. The books will be supplemented by audio- visual materials. The present physical therapy department occupies 800 square feet. The new one will have 7.350 square feet. have more staff and offer broader services. both at the bedside and in the treatment department which serves both in-patients and out patients. The medical records de- partment will also issue identification cards for the patient to carry in pocket or purse for use in case of future visits to'the hospital: In this department physio- therapy will be augmented by occupational and speech therapy. Occupation therapy is treatment using the moti- vation of producing and creating ' as an aid to recovery. Here all patients docu- ments will be (handled. and patients“ records will be kept in a central office. One file will record each admission, treatment. test, from xâ€"rays to blood tests to emergency stitching of cuts. minor ill- ness. major operations so that staff can see the patient as a whole. providing better and quicker care. One of the new staff added to the department headed by Miss Elizabeth Flood is Mrs. Ruth Hous- man. a speech consultant who has been working with children at Hope Haven Nursery. Under her direc- tion speech therapy will be available to all people with speech problems. victims of strokes. injuries, birth de- fects. There will still be a sep- arate ambulance entrance. but all other patients. in- cluding out-patients and emergency. will go through the new patient reception department. a breakdown of the more commonly known admitting department. space, An average of 35â€"0â€"1; 390 patients pass through The new operating suite consists of seven operating rooms, recovery room, change rooms. storage area. office 7573 Yonge Street Thornhill (Continued from Page 1) baby and learn how to bath and care for the infant. This. the staff tools. will be most gratifying to mothers with their first baby. The touring public will visit a typical two-bed patient room. Each of the rooms has a large picture window and all suites have their own washrooms. Imported coffees, blend- ed and ground to your taste. Special teas, herbs and spices. 881-2889 The report was prepared in response to a resolution by council which recognized that mobile homes should be studied as a housing type to be considered as a compon- ent part of the official plan’. The staff report was dis- cussed by council‘s planning committee July 9 and plan- ning committee as a whole September 9. Comments re- ceived on those two occa- Sions have been incorporated in the present draft of the report. By MARY DAWSON Richmond Hill Council will be considering the report on mobile homes prepared by its planning staff at its meet- ing October 7 at 7:30 pm. Those wishing to speak to council on. the matter are asked to contact Clerk Mack Clement by Friday of this week. Hospital langstaff Wing Opens HERB & SPICE RACK MEDICAL RECORDS OPERATING ROOMS THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 Mobile Homes Less Costly-Report r the new staff the department 1v Miss Elizabeth Mrs. Ruth Hous- spoech consultant One of the most important services is provided by vol- unteers headed by Mrs. Joyce Studdy. These people man gift shop, gift cart, provide escort service, look after flowers, deliver mail. help to make life more pleasant for pediatric patients and those who must be hospitalized for a long time. They assist :in admitting, at the informa- tion desk, in the laboratory, in emergency and as meal- time assistants. Patients will begin moving into the new wing some time next month, and hopefully all will be accommodated there by the end of the year so that the third phase of the hospital’s development-reno- vation and conversion of the present hospital, can get under way, bringing total capacity up to 404 beds from the present 126. CONTINENTAL FIRST The new wing at York Central has another claim to fame. It is the first North American hospital to have a cart rOtation system dis- patching supplies from its central supply outlet. The department is responsible for stores, preparation. dis- patch, linen and decontamin- ation and the cart rotation will make it possible to ef- fectively dispatch supplies throughout the hospital. The pharmacy depart- ment‘s new unit dosage sys- tem will speed up‘distribu- tion of medication to pat- ients. Drugs prescribed for each patient are stored in in- dividual bins or drawers. The system has been set up by hospital Pharmacist Jane Gillespie. cated where traditional hous- ing was unobtainable. Thereâ€" fore few mobile home parks were permitted in southern central Ontario, nor was the demand for them very great. In recent years mobile homes are appealing to the average home owner in ur- iff Wing Opens the hospital's present three operating rooms each month. In the new x-ray depart- ment one‘of the features that will please patients most is the waiting area where they may enjoy a degree of privacy instead of being lin- ed up in corridors. FOOD SERVICES Staff in the food services department headed by Leon- ard Ashford will increase from 25 to 56 people who will be responsible for all meals from preparation to tray delivery to the patient.’ and menus for various diets will be color coded. The new ,laboratory is a complex unit, including the hospital's blood bank and a histology department where tissue specimens from the, operating room are prepared and examined by a patholo- gist. Cancer is often detected in this way. The pharmacy depart- DEFINITION tial area. The definition used by the, 0 Double wide mobile CMHC is “Mobile Home â€" A 1 home units may be permitted ,transportable, factory - built} on individual lots in the single family dwelling, pro- 5 rural area. vidmg space standards sub-,l 0 Mobile parks, in which stantially equal to those laid| children under 16 are pro- Ldown in the Canadian Code'hibited should be permitted Standards for 1970, designed] to develop to a limited to be transported on its ownl extent in the rural area. ' wheels and chassis to the Such parks should be no mobile home lot, and may be' larger than 80 acres or 500 suypul'leu on wheels, jacks, .posts or piers, or with a . permanent foundation, It is idesigned to be connected to ‘serVice utilities so as to be I suitable for year round long term occupancy. HOME T0~ 350.000 The report notes more than 350,000 Canadians now live in mobile homes, mostly in the northern areas. They ‘ the lower cost, smaller living park locations are attractive to young newly formed fam- ' ilies. Developments such as Sandy Cove, where only those over 16 years of age ‘ are permitted, tend to create ’ an environment of similar life cycles. Mobile 'home parks by providing facilities .geared to a particular life cycle may provide an answer to the need to bring people in similar life cycles together to enjoy common interests, it is pointed out. appeal to retired people and area and maintenance free. ‘ units and no smaller than 15 : acres 0 Qualification for NHA itinancing should be a pre- ‘requisite for mobile cost development and lower cost . financing. Region Ground Wa' ’ «Continued from Page 1) store for a year and then discharge into a stream. The spray system did not seem right. Mayor Britnell felt the British had a way. Why couldn‘t their methods be used? Mr. Reichardt said facil- ities there could take efflu- ent three times as strong, but did not completely treat sewage. Mayor Britnell said She i didn’t think that either King ITownship or the Ministry iof the Environment would go for discharging into the Humber. ‘ Mr. Bruno said the latter In the new x-ray depart- ment one 'of the features that will please patients most is the waiting area where they may enjoy a degree of privacy instead of being lin- ed un in corridors. DIFFERENT CONCEPT “With changing technol- ogy. a demand for higher standards and a changing‘ market Situation, the concept of mobile homes is chang- ing," the report states. In: the past a mobile home‘ meant a unit which was†moved from place to place on its wheels. They were, generally, located in crowd- ed, poorly kept parks in com- mercial or industrial areas. They appealed to those who moved frequently, possibly because of seasonal jobs, or those whose jobs were lo- cated where traditional hous- ing was unobtainable. Thereâ€" fore few mobile home parks were permitted in southern central Ontario, nor was the demand for them very great. In recent years rï¬obile‘ homes are appealing to thex average home owner in ur-’ Discover Canada’s m The modern mobile home is a fully equipped dwelling, usually coming completely furnished. Floor area varies from 700 to 1,250 square feet. Room sizes are smal- ler, there is less storage space when units are not placed on basements with foundations and there is less flexibility in furniture ar- rangement. The new double- wide models with sloped or ban areas as a means of ob- haining a single dwelling umt at a lower cost than a conventional house costructâ€" ed on a site. The town’s planning staff} has approached the subject? on the basis of how mobile homes differ from the con- ventional lot-built units and‘ the implications of these dim ferences. Although considg cring them primarily in‘ terms of mobile home parks} the staff has also considered them in terms of a location on a single lot and in sub- divisions as well. MARK-ET COURT HILLCREST MALL /â€"--\ 88448883 LARGE SELECTION OF LIVE LOBSTER COOKED WHILE YOU WAIT NEW CONCEPT IN MASS MERCHANDISINC At the exciting new Kipling-Queensway Mail. If you’re a mass merchandiser, there's space for you, too. Right in the heart of the main traffic flow. But hurry. For rental information, contact A.E. LePage Shopping Centre Division, Phone â€"445â€"4696 or the project managers: M.E.P.C. Canadian Properties Limited. Phoneâ€"964-8434. (Mr Ron Smythe) wouldn’t be significantly afâ€" fected, as no other plants discharged into it. The report went on to say that,‘ in the Oak Ridges Lake Wilcox area, servicing should be provided by the ‘design of the trunk sewer. ALTERNATIVES However, as an alterna- tive, a connection to the lat- ter was not required. Truck haulage and lagoon storage 1 Mr. Bruno said the latter l O Qualification for NHA financing should be a pre- requisite for mobile cost development and lower cost financing. Mayor Britnell said She didn’t think that either King Township or the Ministry of the Environment would go for discharging into the Humber. ‘ mansal‘d I‘OOfS. aluminum; 0 The municipality should siding are comparable to require that anv mobile conwnuonal bungalows. ‘homes be permanently lo- RECOMMENDATIONS cated on their site to ensure Recommendations in thei that the units can be asses- report are; sed. o Mobile home parks and mobile home subdivismns may be permitted to develop in urban areas or adjacent to urban areas as any other residential use with the same planning consider- ations Such uses should be a minimum of 15 acres in size and a maximum of 25 acres and should be buffered from any adjacent residen- tial area. 0 Double wide mobile home units may be permitted on individual lots in the rural area. 0 Mobile parks, in which Mr. Reichardt said facil- ities there could take efflu- ent three times as strong] but did not completely treat sewage. «Continued from Page 1) store for a year and then dlscharge into a stream. The Mayor Britneil felt the British had a way. Why couldn‘t their methods be used? Region Ground Water Pollution Report Towers is there! THE FAMILY FISH MONGERS ARRIVING DAILY Fresh Fish Council agreed to a recomâ€" mendation by Mayor Joe Dales of Georgina Town- ship, that the report and its recommendations be accepted as guidelines only. ln summing up, the re- port said the storage la- goon spray should bc used in Lake Wilcox, because if its treatment works were replaced by the Yongo Street connection, the sewage disposal lands and spray system could - be reclaimed for other uses. Theatment costs were about $4.60 per 1,000 gal lons. were not included in the capital debt, as they could be used for agricultural purposes when no longer needed for sewage treat- ment purposes. collection and treatment costs would drop to about $2.20 per 1,000 gallons. However, if land costs‘ uc Mun .costs have increased or de- creased in a given service over a period of years. Schiller also supports the study now under way which is looking into the feasi- bility of categorizing town expenditures by “units of service" rather than “solely by dollar amountâ€. This could mean, he explains, that the financial report could show how much it costs to clean given roads once a year, twice a year. three times a year, etc. “In this way, council and rate- u xv ullu L payers would be better able 'I'OW O The municipality should ensure that the con- struction standards which are required are both the CSA standards to insure fac- tory inSpection as well as part nine of the National Building Code. The building bylaw of the town should be amended if necessary to re- ClUiI‘e both these standards. As with any other construc- tion the local building in- spectors should be respon- sible for a site inspection. O A special zoning cate- gory should be created for mobile homes. Thus any at- tempt to introduce mobile home development would re- quire a rezoning. Site plan agreements should be re- quired for mobile home parks and subdivision agree- ments for the development of a subdivision. The muni- cipality should require that the lease used in a park is sufficient to guarantee a high. quality park and ade- with Spray irrigation, would be alternatives should the Yonge Street trunk be de layed. In summing up. the re- During discussions it was noted that number 2 of t h e s e recommendations might not be desirable. In number 3 it was noted that children under five years of age should be permitted and that an upper limit should not be required but an equi- valent number of units should be stated, It was also noted that an additional area should be provided for ser- vicing. Mayoralty Candidate Schiller Wants Simpler Spending "Info" Richmond Hill Mayoralty Candidate Dave Schiller told “The Liberal" this week that he believes municipal expenditure information has to be simplified so the ave- rage taxpayer can under- stand how his money is be- ing spent. He says statistical reports which pile figure on figure, are almost incompre- densible to all but the accountants. His suggestion is that “a chart or graph" be used to show how much costs have increased or de- creased in a given service over a period of years‘ quately protects the rights of the tenant. It has been suggested num- ber 4 be rewritten to read “Qualification for NHA fin- ancing is a desirable feature for mobile home develop- ment, which would encour- age a minimum qUality of development and lower cost financing." WHEREAS we live in a world of marvelous technological progress, where continents and oceans can be spanned in mere hours. Through modern com- munications, we can contact people anywhere in the world in minutes. Men have walked upon the moon. Yet, in all corners of the earth, poverty, sickness, loneliness and starvation are yet to be found, and millions still need understanding, compassion, love and assistance. AND WHEREAS to make all people more fully aware of the significance of the achievements of the Lions Club members at work today throughout the world, WILLIAM C. LAZENBY do hereby proclaim October 8, 1974, as World Lions Service Day. â€" that more than 27,000 Lions Clubs, comprised of more than one million members, are at work in 149 nations and geographical territories around the globe. These one million men, unified by humanitarian service, have but one ob- jective: to bring to the needy and lonely the help and assistance they need to live with grace and dignity. I urge all citizens of the Town of Richmond Hill to mark this occasion as a special ob- servance in recognition of the numerous services provided by the Richmond Hill Lions Clubs to the needy and the lonely. AND WHEREAS on October 8, 1974, the 27,000 clubs of the International Association of Lions Clubs will meet in their home communities to perform a special act of humanitarian service. This special act will symbolize the unity of purpose which is best defined by the motto of the worldwide Lions organization: “We Serveâ€. AND WHEREAS if is ’roward fhis ob- iec’rive â€"â€" service to the needy of the world SUGGESTIONS PROCLAMATION WORLD TOWN OF RICHMOND Hlll “may assist in assessing ;whether we greatly exceed ‘or are grossly deficient in ‘providing particular ser- lvices,†‘t’OBe An additional recommend- ation was proposed." 0 This type of unit should be considered when the province has approved its legislation regarding mobile homes. to determine how much ser- vice they are getting for how many dollars. Such tools are necessary to enable the pub- lic to comment on priorities in spending.†DEBT RESTRAINT The candidate for the mayor's chair also called for restraint in increasing the municipal debt. “I feel the debt as it exists and is pro- jected should be made more of a public matter than it is at present. A clear Under- standing is necessary of the effect the municipal debt is having on the mill rate. Per- haps we should look more closely at comparisons with other communities' expendi- ture figures." Among other comments noted were: That the report does not answer the question of who the municipality is trying to accommodate by this type of housing; that the report does not deal with mobile homes in comparison to govern- ment subsidized low cost housing programs or con- ventional houses built on small narrow lots; and that the recommendation that they could be located in ru- ral areas is contrary to the working goals and objectives of the official plan recently presented to council. Acknowledging that “our own community's needs and desires are not identical to others. nor should they be," he suggested a comparison The purpose of the by-law is to prohibit the erection of any building or structure unâ€" less full municipal services are available. The provisions of the by-law do not prevent the construction of an addition to any existing building and the erection of a single family dwelling. NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE ONTARIO MUNICIPAL BOARD BY THE CORPORATION OF THE TOWN OF VAUGHAN “J. 0. Gilbert†ACTING MAYOR “F. G. Jackman†CLERK SUMMARY TO B-YLAW NUMBER 106-74 This by-law applies to all of the lands in Lots 26 to 35 inclusive in Concession 1 and Lots 1 to 10 in Concession 2 excepting two small parcels of land on Steeles Avenue as de- scribed in By-law Nurnbers 1_25-7_3 and 145-73. The Ontario Municipal Board may ap- prove of the said by-law but before doing so it may appoint a time and place when any objec- tion' to the by-law will be considered. Notice- of any hearing that may be held will be given only to persons who have filed an objection or notice of support and who have left with or delivered to the Clerk undersigned, the ad- dress to which notice of hearing is_ to be sent. TAKE NOTICE that the Council of The Corporation of the Town of Vaughan intends to apply to The Ontario Municipal Board pur- suant to the provisions of Section 35 of The Planning Act for approval of By-law Number 106-74 passed on the 16th day of July, 1974. A copy of the by-law is furnishecl herewith. Any person interested may, within four- teen (14) days after the date of this notice send by registered mail or deliver to the Clerk of the Town of Vaughan notice of his objec- tion to approval of the said by-law, together with a statement of the grounds of such objection. VVJ Any person wishing to support the appli- cation for approval of the by-law may within fourteen (14) days after the date of this notice send by registered mail or deliver to the Clerk of the Town of Vaughan notice of his support of approval of the said by-law to- gether with a request for notice of any hear- ing that may be held giving also the name and address to which such notice should be given. The last date for filing objections will be October 16th, 1974. DATED at the Town of Vaughan this 25th day of September, 1974. F. G. Jackman, Clerk, Town of Vaughan, Maple, Ontario. “ "ru A note giving an explanation of the purpose and effect of the by-law and stating the lands affected thereby is also furnishedhheregvith. 10142 YONGE ST. “Fitted to your Eye Doctor’s Prescription†The Council of the Corporation of the Town of Rich- mond Hill will consider the Staff Report “Mobile Homes in Richmond Hill?“ at their October 7th meeting at 7230 RM. in the Council Chambers. Copies of the report are available at the Planning Depart- ment. Anyone wishing to speak at the Council meeting must inform the Clerk, Mr. M. Clement. Town of Richmond Hill. P.(). Box 300. Richmond Hill by FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1th. 1974 The advertisement in last week's Liberal incorrectly stated that the Clerk Mr. M. Clement must be notified by September 4th. We apologize for any inconvenience this might have caused. Gordon S. Wood “Garnet A. Williams†MAYOR “F. G. Jackman†CLERK READ a THIRD time and finally passed thls 16th day of July, 1974. GLASSES PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS RICHMOND HILL NOTICE SAVE UP TO 331/470 HRIFTY RENT-A-CAR TOWN AUTO BODY 173 Yonge Street N. Richmond Hill 884-2139 884-1955