Posted on 20 January 2010 by Gary
The Orange Lodge in Queenstown is open this winter and the parking lot is now being cleared after each snowfall. Lodge officials were finally successful in finding someone in the local area with equipment heavy enough to do the job. Many feared the only community meeting facility between Brown’s Flat and Gagetown would be inaccessible this winter after the province decided to end the practice of plowing churches and community halls. Until this year the Department of Transportation plowed the parking lot free of charge. That policy changed last spring as a cost saving measure for the province.
Lodge officials initially had trouble finding someone to plow the yard and were worried about their ability to keep the hall open this winter. When word of this predicament spread, the community banded together and a committee was formed. Petitions and protest letters were circulated and both the Minister of Transportation and the Premier were lobbied to change the policy. The Master of the Lodge, George Lacey says they finally convinced Denis Landry, the Minister of Transportation to agree to plow the hall until January 5th but word of that decision never got passed down to the DOT crews who actually do the plowing.
Lacey says they’ll be able to do the plowing for now but there is a concern down the road they won’t be able to continue paying for it. “For this winter we should survive,” he says. “But we’re kind of disappointed by their reaction to the whole thing.”

The Orange Lodge in Queenstown is open this winter and the parking lot is now being cleared after each snowfall. Lodge officials were finally successful in finding someone in the local area with equipment heavy enough to do the job. Many feared the only community meeting facility between Brown’s Flat and Gagetown would be inaccessible this winter after the province decided to end the practice of plowing churches and community halls. Until this year the Department of Transportation plowed the parking lot free of charge. That policy changed last spring as a cost saving measure for the province.
Lodge officials initially had trouble finding someone to plow the yard and were worried about their ability to keep the hall open this winter. When word of this predicament spread, the community banded together and a committee was formed. Petitions and protest letters were circulated and both the Minister of Transportation and the Premier were lobbied to change the policy. The Master of the Lodge, George Lacey says they finally convinced Denis Landry, the Minister of Transportation to agree to plow the hall until January 5th but word of that decision never got passed down to the DOT crews who actually do the plowing.
Lacey says they’ll be able to do the plowing for now but there is a concern down the road they won’t be able to continue paying for it. “For this winter we should survive,” he says. “But we’re kind of disappointed by their reaction to the whole thing.”
Posted on 22 November 2009 by Gary
As this edition of the paper prepares to go to print, news comes of an important community meeting planned for Friday, November 20 in Queenstown. The meeting is being organized by the Orange Lodge to draw attention to a situation it feels will affect all residents in the local communities of Queenstown, Hampstead, Central Hampstead, Pleasant Villa, Elm Hill, Upper Hampstead and surrounding area.
The provincial government has informed the Orange Hall that beginning this winter it will no longer be plowing community halls and designated emergency gathering locations like churches. The Orange Hall in Queenstown caters to all community gatherings including being an emergency centre and rallying place in the event of a disaster. It’s also a polling station for elections, local service district elections, community information meetings, 4-H Club meetings, meetings of organizations, a location for holding receptions after funerals, community breakfasts, suppers and fund-raisers and many more community activities. Along Route 102, it is the only community gathering place between the Village of Gagetown and Browns Flat.
Hall officials say their yard is too large to be plowed by any equipment available in the local area. If the yard isn’t plowed, people will have to park along the highway. This, they say, will create a very dangerous situation as the hall is located between a sharp turn and the top of a steep hill. Parking along the highway is courting disaster. If the government is not willing to reconsider their decision, it will be necessary to winterize the hall and end all public functions and gatherings until the spring. Orange Hall officials are looking to the community to show support and share ideas and suggestions on ways to deal with this situation.
Further upriver, as the village of Gagetown prepares for Christmas in the Village festivities on November 28th and 29th, there was concern the ferry was going to be shut down on November 27th. Apparently one of the ferry workers received a lay-off notice to be effective on that day. Some local retailers have been lobbying the Department of Transportation to leave the ferry on until after the Chistmas in the Village weekend because this event brings people to Gagetown from all over the area. As this issue of the paper goes to print, we’ve been told that Eugene McGinley, MLA for Grand Lake-Gagetown has intervened and said the ferry will be staying on as long as it reasonably can be left there and definitely until after Christmas in the Village. He says the cold weather is the factor that will dictate when the ferry is taken off its run because DOT needs to be able to have a tug boat travel up the river and haul the ferry to its winter storage location. Local residents were hoping the ferry would keep operating until freeze-up.