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A couch was set on fire in the middle of this school sports field. How much is vandalism costing the Catholic board each year?
A couch was set on fire in the middle of this school sports field. How much is vandalism costing the Catholic board each year?

Hamilton Spectator

time4 days ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

A couch was set on fire in the middle of this school sports field. How much is vandalism costing the Catholic board each year?

In the early-morning hours of April 19, a sofa was placed on the Knights logo on the artificial turf field at St. Thomas More Catholic Secondary School on the Mountain and lit on fire. Repairs cost $56,121 — more than anticipated, said Hamilton-Wentworth Catholic District School Board senior facilities manager Paul Ferrie at a June 3 committee of the whole meeting. 'They dragged the sofa out to the centre field and torched it,' he told the committee. 'It took flame very quickly.' Fields are generally easy to access, which has posed a challenge, he said. Hamilton police investigated, but haven't made an arrest in this act of 'wilful evil,' Ferrie said. Police confirmed on Thursday no suspects were identified and no charges laid. St. Thomas More Catholic Secondary School near Stone Church Road and Garth Street on the Hamilton Mountain. Police are generally only contacted for significant vandalism incidents, spokesperson Const. Adam Kimber said in an email. This incident of vandalism at St. Thomas More Catholic Secondary School is one of two high-cost vandalism incidents at the board in the last six months. The board is required to report all incidents of vandalism over $2,500. 'wilful evil Damage to an automatic door at Cathedral High School around April 24 cost $3,193 in repairs. Last July, copper thefts from three rooftop HVAC units at Canadian Martyrs Catholic Elementary School cost $70,876 in repairs. Police investigated, and cameras were installed to identify suspects in any future incidents, the board said in a Dec. 3, 2024, report . It was a 'disappointing' year, Ferrie told the committee. 'Extreme' incidents in the tens of thousands are few, but costs associated with vandalism overall are 'significant' across the province, said chair Pat Daly, who is also the former president of the provincial Ontario Catholic School Trustees' Association (OCSTA). For the burning couch, the board is responsible for a $10,000 deductible, and insurance would cover the rest. Emergency work was performed to make the field usable, and permanent repairs will take place over the summer, according to a June 3 report. A couch set fire in the middle of St. Thomas More Catholic Secondary School's artificial turf football field cost more than $56,000 in damage. Automatic door repairs were also funded entirely by the facilities management budget. Smashed windows, damage to exterior doors, graffiti and broken toilets and sinks in out-of-sight bathrooms are common across the board's approximately 70 buildings, he said. At least a decade ago, about 20 large exterior windows at a Catholic school were broken in one night, Daly said. Ferrie said there was a 'rash of trespassing' during the pandemic, but Daly said there's no indication vandalism has increased significantly since schools reopened. In addition to the cost, which he estimates is in the hundreds of thousands of dollars annually, vandalism affects students, for whom schools are their 'homes' during the day, Daly said. 'It's a real concern,' he said. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

'Nothing can stop me now' - Ferrie ready for more caps
'Nothing can stop me now' - Ferrie ready for more caps

BBC News

time25-03-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

'Nothing can stop me now' - Ferrie ready for more caps

After describing her Scotland debut last weekend as "totally surreal", Adelle Ferrie says "there is nothing that could stop me now". The 27-year-old came on as a late replacement as the Scots opened their Women's Six Nations account with a 24-21 victory over Wales at Hive Stadium.A trip to play France on Saturday is next up for the national now got one cap, the Corstorphine Cougars second row is determined to make sure many more come her way."[It was] just totally surreal," Ferrie said. "A moment I have wanted for so long and you never know if it is actually going to happen, so it just felt unreal to be out there."I have worked so hard to get here, there is nothing I feel like could stop me now just to progress further. I take on everything, the coaches and players are feedbacking to me so there is no stopping me."I came to rugby quite late, I started playing when I was around 18 when I was at university so it is not like a dream I have had since I was a young girl. "Just really in the last four or five years it is something I have aspired to do but I have had coaches say 'this could be possible' so I really tried my best, worked hard to get it, to get that moment."There were times I doubted myself, even just a few months ago I didn't think it was going to happen this year."After a few conversations with coaches it came alive that it might actually happen."

Queen's Park & Davidson stand tall amid Ibrox bedlam
Queen's Park & Davidson stand tall amid Ibrox bedlam

BBC News

time09-02-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Queen's Park & Davidson stand tall amid Ibrox bedlam

Queen's Park manager Callum Davidson rocked back in his chair in the Ibrox press box, pulled his jacket hood over his face, and pulled the toggles in had just watched the big screen at Ibrox flicker with a fresh message. The officials were examining whether his heroic goalkeeper Calum Ferrie had moved off his line in saving James Tavernier's 97th-minute later, he was celebrating after his team pulled off one of the most seismic shocks in Scottish Cup went through every single emotion from the moment he woke up at 01:30 in a cold sweat at having only four fit defenders, to the referee finally blowing the full-time whistle after about eight minutes of stoppage-time bedlam. He had to do it all away from the dugout due to a touchline ban, too. Instead he was giving fevered instructions on his phone at half-time, at one point standing up and gesturing to his staff furiously, all while sitting a couple of seats along from the BBC commentary odds could hardly have been more stacked against Queen's Park given all those obstacles in their way."I couldn't believe it at the end to be honest," Davidson told BBC Scotland"Our captain [Ferrie] pulled us out of trouble. It's actually a good penalty, it's just a wonderful save. Calum performed at a top level."Davidson's suffering through the drama was the perfect reflection of his team, who emptied everything they had, but emerged still standing and triumphant. Unlikely heroes become Scottish Cup legends The names of Ferrie and match-winner Seb Drozd will now go down in the annals of the Scottish Cup, one of sport's oldest was a colossus, making eight other brilliant saves as well as the critical penalty to keep Rangers at - who has scored 69 penalties for Rangers - will have hit worse and scored. But Ferrie simply would not be and the Queen's Park coaches had analysed where the Rangers captain likes to hit them, but in the end it came down to raw gut instinct."I changed my mind at the last minute," Ferrie told BBC Scotland. "It was a good penalty and I've just got lucky that I've gone the right way. "I'm ecstatic. You'd struggle to write a script like that. The boys in there, the whole squad, boys who were even injured today, have been fantastic all week."We've prepared right, we've believed we can get a result out of this game. Nobody's invincible, we've said that all week. It's worked well for us."Ferrie's modesty matched the modest reputation of Drozd, who arrived after his release by Milwall in that he had been playing for Uxbridge in the Isthmian League. He had scored one goal all he is immortal in Scottish football history after selling a dummy to Jefte, opening his body up, and slotting into the bottom corner like prime Thierry Henry. But there were so many heroes in black and Nikola Ujdur and Will Tizzard were towering presences in the middle of the box, with six of their fellow defenders unavailable for Queen's Welsh and Louis Longridge could barely move by stoppage time after running themselves into the ground in a man, they were magnificent. All of them found their legs at the end, though, as they sprinted towards the corner of Ibrox housing the delirious Queen's Park fans. Can Davidson do it again? Davidson has already performed cup heroics in his short career as a manager. He won the Scottish Cup and League Cup in the same campaign at St Johnstone, four years ago, knocking Rangers out in the quarter-finals in the it again with Queen's Park would be of a whole other order. The Glasgow side are currently fifth in the Championship, closer to the bottom than the will want to improve on that position as well as continue their dream Scottish Cup run. With fellow second-tier side Livingston the only non top-flight side in the draw for the next round, it is a tough after becoming the first Scottish side to win at Ibrox since March, not much else should faze if he can now kick back and enjoy Monday's draw, Davidson cracked a smile."I'll be playing squash," said the hugely accomplished golfer and tennis player.

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