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It was 'time to end on a good note,' co-ordinator says, as popular Sudbury home lottery winds down

It was 'time to end on a good note,' co-ordinator says, as popular Sudbury home lottery winds down

CBC12-04-2025

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The Sudbury Kinsmen is ending its popular home lottery after 40 years, with the Kinsmen Showcase Sweepstakes co-ordinator citing mounting costs to build homes as well as aging members.
Mary Jane Drury, who has been co-ordinating the sweepstakes for the last 22 years, says the club just doesn't have enough members to keep going.
"You've got a club of seven members, aging members … costs are rising, people's disposable income is becoming less with the cost of everything going up, so it was time to end on a good note," Drury told CBC News.
"It's been a journey that the Kinsmen have enjoyed taking with the public. We can't thank the public enough for their support."
'It's significant for the charities'
The Kinsmen club has been giving people a chance to win a home in their annual Showcase Sweepstakes for the last 40 years, raising a total of $15 million for local charities.
"It's significant for the charities that are receiving the funding. All the profit raised from the home and the 50/50 [draw] go to local charities every year," Drury said.
"I was looking back [and] there's been over 50 local charities and probably more — I can only go back on my list that I have from 22 years, but I'd say probably 100 local charities have benefited greatly."
She added that it's been a joy co-ordinating the sweepstakes.
"I love to see the people's faces when they come in. I appreciate being able to interact with them. I like to hear what they like, what they don't like, you know, how we could fix what they don't like," Drury said.
In January, the club shared a description of the home that is up for grabs this year. Located on Nottingham Avenue, across from Hazelton Drive, the group says the home is "a stunning sanctuary."
"This elegant slab-on-grade home embodies the perfect blend of modern convenience and timeless comfort, complete with in-floor heating for cozy, year-round living," the group posted on social media.
The home will be opened to the public on Saturday at 11 a.m. with the draw scheduled for June 8.
Drury says every year she looks forward to calling the winner.

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Province reluctant to admit rickety N.B. bridge was slated for demolition, documents show

When the William Mitton Covered Bridge in Riverview was torn down last winter, many were heartbroken. But its demolition was not surprising. Closed to traffic since 1981, the bridge developed a dramatic sag in the middle, its abutments looked ready to pop, and several beams hung lazily from the roof they once held up. Documents obtained by CBC News after a right to information request reveal the New Brunswick government's reluctance to publicly admit the bridge was slated for demolition, despite having made plans a year and a half earlier to get rid of it. The documents also show an official with the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure called for a provincial strategy to handle aging covered bridges in a less reactive way. "We are at a point in time when a discussion has to be made to invest in the covered bridge or dismantle," Glen MacDonald, the assistant director of bridge maintenance, wrote in June 2023. "There is no funding allotted for this bridge at this time." But when CBC reported on the bridge's rough condition the next month, a department spokesperson would only say the future of the bridge was "yet to be determined." Just days after the CBC story, a department superintendent, Jean-Marc Arseneault, wrote in an email that he concluded the bridge was beyond repair. "The structure should be removed before someone gets hurt," Arsenault said. That same day, Corey White of the planning and project development division wrote: "I know I am speaking to the choir here, but we really need direction from [the province] on these bridges as we will see lots more of these last-minute issues — and we can manage these in an orderly fashion if we were to get the strategy approved." By August, DTI was drafting diagrams of how to remove the bridge. WATCH | 'The structure should be removed before someone gets hurt.' 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Throughout 2024, emails show, the spokesperson for the department was withholding telling the media about the bridge's fate. "[CTV News is] looking for a definitive answer on DTI's plans for saving this bridge, but I know we've refrained from speaking to this point in both of our previous responses," spokesperson Jacob MacDonald wrote in August 2024. In October, staff from the Town of Riverview public works department also began send photos of the bridge to department officials. "Conditions are getting worse," a Riverview official wrote. By that November, the provincial officials were also getting impatient, with one writing, "We need to strike while the iron is hot … each day that passes makes it harder to remove safely." They were also drafting "communication plans" for two scenarios: either the bridge would be removed or it would collapse. 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