Let your inner crafter out and go home with a cool new craft to brag about! This month: expert crocheter Lisa teaches us all the best hooks andstuff. Guess Ill have to go to learn! Please bring your own supplies! Lovers of young adult literature of all ages are invited to join us in the teen section at 6:30 pm for a fun discussion.
Plans For A Library In Bromley Began In 1977. In January Of That Year, The Bromley Township Council Called An Open Meeting To Present An Agreement Between The Township And The Renfrew County Catholic School Board. This Agreement Was The Beginning Of A What Would Become A Shared Library Between St. Michael'S Elementary School And Bromley Township. The Admaston/Bromley Publicy Library Is One Of Only Two Libraries In Ontario To Have Such A Unique Character. Our Library Continues To Grow And Change As New Technologies And Services Become Available.
Thanks to funding from the Ontario Trillium Foundation of $13,600 over 12 months, both Flinton and Denbigh Library now offer fax service. The grant has enabled the Township to purchase new print/copy/scan and fax machines for each location, a service not
Our township was incorporated on July 1st 2000, as the result of the amalgamation of the former Township of Hagarty & Richards and the former Village of Killaloe.
MembershipBenefits of membership in the Renfrew County Law Association: 24 hour access to the James W. Fraser Law Library Materials borrowing for office and courtroom use Access to Quicklaw and the LibraryCo Toolkit programs information published on the RCLA website membership list Distribution of professional notices by email and/or fax Invitations to RCLA social.LibraryThe James W. Fraser Law Library is available to approximately 100 lawyers in the Pembroke, Petawawa, Renfrew, Arnprior, Barry's Bay, Deep River, Combermere and Eganville areas. First established in the basement of the county courthouse on Pembroke Street, the library consisted of a small room of books in cartons maintained by lawyers when time was.CPDCPD, or Continuing Professional Development, is defined by the Law Society of Upper Canada (LSUC) as the maintenance and enhancement of a lawyer's professional knowledge, skills, attitudes and ethics throughout the individual's career.