- Start playing the video
- Click CC at bottom right
- Click the gear icon to its right
- Click Subtitles/CC
- Click Auto-translate
- Select language you want
Port Hawkesbury Mayor Reacts to COVID-19 Pandemic
PORT HAWKESBURY - The COVID-19 learning curve was steep on several levels for Mayor Brenda Chisholm-Beaton.
For starters, Port Hawkesbury Town Council had to stop holding public meetings shortly after Nova Scotia declared a state of emergency in mid-March. The town also shut down all offices and facilities at the Port Hawkesbury Civic Centre, including Veterans' Memorial Arena, the J. Franklin Wright Art Gallery, and a fitness centre that had just come under the town's operations following the departure of the Cape Breton YMCA in January.
On a personal level, Chisholm-Beaton and her father Archie Chisholm made the difficult decision to shut down their private business, the Fleur-de-Lis Dining Room, following a brief experiment with reduced hours and take-out options. While Chisholm-Beaton and her father made the decision in consultation with restaurant staff, the mayor described the development as a difficult pill to swallow for herself and her fellow business owners in Port Hawkesbury.
However, the mayor is finding a number of different ways to serve her community during the pandemic period, and Chisholm-Beaton has made it a personal mission to ensure that no rumours or misinformation are spread about the presence of COVID-19 in Nova Scotia in general and within the Strait area in particular.
As an example, she noted the quick spread of commentary on social media regarding the news that an employee at Port Hawkesbury's Ultramar gas station had contracted COVID-19. Chisholm-Beaton stressed the importance of ensuring that no gossip spread about this employee or the local Ultramar operation, and she praised the company for its quick action to ensure that the employee would recover from their symptoms and that the business would remain shut down until it could be properly sanitized.
Mayor Chisholm-Beaton also expressed "nothing but gratitude" for the hard work of her town council colleagues, municipal staff, and town residents that are pulling together to make it through the COVID-19 times.
Add new comment
TV TELILE is a unique community television station in Nova Scotia. They are found on Channel 10 using an antenna, Channel 4 on the EastLink cable system in western Richmond County, and on Channel 5 on the Seaside cable system in eastern Richmond County. They are also on the Seaside cable system along Eastern Cape Breton from New Waterford and Glace Bay to Louisbourg and St Peters, and is now on the Bell Satellite system on Channel 536!
TELILE seeks the stories, achievements and scenes of our local neighborhood. We also enjoy joining with other communities in story, music and song.
Whether we are at a high school graduation, a summer festival, concerts, grand openings, municipal council meetings or just showing the beauty of our island, we celebrate our culture.
We encourage comments which further the dialogue about the stories we post. Comments will be moderated and posted if they follow these guidelines:
The Community Media Portal reserves the right to reject any comments which do not adhere to these minimum standards.