View Full Version : Orillia welcome signs to mention Lightfoot??
charlene
05-06-2014, 11:11 PM
http://www.orilliapacket.com/2014/05/06/briefs-city-looking-into-adding-lightfoot-name-to-welcome-signs
Briefs: City looking into adding Lightfoot name to welcome signs 5
Tuesday, May 6, 2014 6:31:54 EDT PM
Orillia council members are considering adding “Home of Gordon Lightfoot” to the city’s five roadway entrance signs.
At Monday’s meeting, council committee deferred the decision until its branding and way finding project is complete.
City council members discussed adding Lightfoot’s name to the signs in closed session.
The city budgeted $60,000 to hire consultants to help with a rebranding project and to develop and install wayfinding signage.
Pass the torch to Orillia
Orillia is applying to be a potential celebration community in the Toronto 2015 Torch Relay.
Toronto is hosting the 2015 Pan American/Parapan American (Pan Am) Games and is looking for communities to host the Pan Am flame.
The relay will include more than 130 celebration communities and will begin May 29, 2015.
“If selected as a celebration community, Orillia would create a community planning committee and will have the opportunity of selecting one community torchbearer to ‘shine the light on Orillia before the flame is finally led into the opening ceremony on July 20, 2015,’” states a city staff report.
The city has set aside $7,000 for torch celebrations.
Jim Nasium
05-07-2014, 07:21 AM
Why did they take the other one down?
a museum sounds good…. i like the Opera House GL Auditorium plaque and Lightfoot Trail… birds poop on statues
charlene
05-07-2014, 09:41 AM
I remember back in 2001 talking to someone in Orillia about a museum-possibly down along the waterfront near the bottom of Mississaga St. It was an empty building if I recall..nothing came of it..
I have no idea why the old signs were removed-dated looking-old-paint wearing off/vandalism/rotting wood?? all of the above possibly..
charlene
05-13-2014, 10:03 AM
http://www.orilliapacket.com/2014/05/12/orillia-needs-more-than-lightfoot-leacock
Re: “Welcome to Gordon's city,” May 7
The article reads like a good news/bad news joke. Council is investigating rebranding Orillia — good news. It wants to add Gordon Lightfoot’s name to the Orillia brand and is paying $60,000 to consultants to do so — bad news.
Council is a generation out of date if it thinks that adding Gordon Lightfoot’s name to the city’s signage will do anything for Orillia today.
The slogan “the Sunshine City” is also outdated. Outside of Orillia, the connection between the slogan and Stephen Leacock is tenuous at best. Do people still read Leacock’s books? Do schools teach Leacock’s Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town anymore?
Meanwhile, the Downtown Orillia Management Board (DOMB) and member Ralph Cipolla are crying poor, claiming downtown merchants cannot afford to provide free parking for their customers. However, tattoo shops and bong parlours do not move into high-rent districts. Their appearance downtown is a clear sign of commercial decline. In fairness to Cipolla, he admits free parking alone is not enough to turn downtown around.
Patchwork compliance with the DOMB’s Victorian heritage sign requirement only makes the area look seedier and more dilapidated. With 40 vacant storefronts, perhaps the DOMB should promote Orillia as the largest ghost town east of the Mississippi.
Instead of paying consultants, council should hold a public contest for the best rebranding suggestions. The prize could be free parking downtown for life.
For example, since Orillia has abandoned the MURF (multi-use recreation facility) in favour of SMURFs (small, mostly useful — or user-less, if your cup is half-empty — recreational facilities), we could license the Smurfs’ images and market ourselves as the “Home of the SMURFs.”
Personally, I favour using Halloween to market Orillia. Shoppers spend more on Halloween decorations than on Christmas. We could become an all-year Halloween destination. Orillia could become “The Witches’ Village — a bewitching place to visit.” The cobwebs in the vacant storefronts would fit right in until they become tenanted.
The Halloween theme is multi-dimensional. Besides the obvious — folks looking for Halloween stuff and those chasing the occult — we could add attractions to draw fundamentalist Christians. We could install dunking stools along the waterfront where people could pay to dunk witches. Timers on the stools would protect the “witches” from being drowned by well-meaning Christians.
We could also offer full-immersion baptisms, in one’s choice of faith, in the same parks, using similar equipment. After visiting downtown to be charmed and spellbound by the witchery and assorted devilry, who wouldn’t need to be cleansed of such magical attractions? Orillia might even attract baptism conventions. Where else could you get baptized and then drown a witch to celebrate your new state of grace?
All kidding aside, downtown Orillia needs to be born again. Dump the tattered Victorian theme, pull in the local arts community, offer tax incentives to attract high-quality businesses and professionals. Lightfoot and Leacock are not enough to stave off the unsavoury businesses that follow on the heels of tattoo parlours and bong shops.
Douglas H. Brown
Orillia
charlene
05-13-2014, 10:04 AM
http://www.orilliapacket.com/2014/05/12/orillia-needs-more-than-lightfoot-leacock
Re: “Welcome to Gordon's city,” May 7
The article reads like a good news/bad news joke. Council is investigating rebranding Orillia — good news. It wants to add Gordon Lightfoot’s name to the Orillia brand and is paying $60,000 to consultants to do so — bad news.
Council is a generation out of date if it thinks that adding Gordon Lightfoot’s name to the city’s signage will do anything for Orillia today.
The slogan “the Sunshine City” is also outdated. Outside of Orillia, the connection between the slogan and Stephen Leacock is tenuous at best. Do people still read Leacock’s books? Do schools teach Leacock’s Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town anymore?
Meanwhile, the Downtown Orillia Management Board (DOMB) and member Ralph Cipolla are crying poor, claiming downtown merchants cannot afford to provide free parking for their customers. However, tattoo shops and bong parlours do not move into high-rent districts. Their appearance downtown is a clear sign of commercial decline. In fairness to Cipolla, he admits free parking alone is not enough to turn downtown around.
Patchwork compliance with the DOMB’s Victorian heritage sign requirement only makes the area look seedier and more dilapidated. With 40 vacant storefronts, perhaps the DOMB should promote Orillia as the largest ghost town east of the Mississippi.
Instead of paying consultants, council should hold a public contest for the best rebranding suggestions. The prize could be free parking downtown for life.
For example, since Orillia has abandoned the MURF (multi-use recreation facility) in favour of SMURFs (small, mostly useful — or user-less, if your cup is half-empty — recreational facilities), we could license the Smurfs’ images and market ourselves as the “Home of the SMURFs.”
Personally, I favour using Halloween to market Orillia. Shoppers spend more on Halloween decorations than on Christmas. We could become an all-year Halloween destination. Orillia could become “The Witches’ Village — a bewitching place to visit.” The cobwebs in the vacant storefronts would fit right in until they become tenanted.
The Halloween theme is multi-dimensional. Besides the obvious — folks looking for Halloween stuff and those chasing the occult — we could add attractions to draw fundamentalist Christians. We could install dunking stools along the waterfront where people could pay to dunk witches. Timers on the stools would protect the “witches” from being drowned by well-meaning Christians.
We could also offer full-immersion baptisms, in one’s choice of faith, in the same parks, using similar equipment. After visiting downtown to be charmed and spellbound by the witchery and assorted devilry, who wouldn’t need to be cleansed of such magical attractions? Orillia might even attract baptism conventions. Where else could you get baptized and then drown a witch to celebrate your new state of grace?
All kidding aside, downtown Orillia needs to be born again. Dump the tattered Victorian theme, pull in the local arts community, offer tax incentives to attract high-quality businesses and professionals. Lightfoot and Leacock are not enough to stave off the unsavoury businesses that follow on the heels of tattoo parlours and bong shops.
Douglas H. Brown
Orillia
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