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Ontario Police Memorial Foundation’s Ceremony of Remembrance, Today, Sunday, May 2, 2021, at 11 a.m. Corporate Communications 416-808-7100 Today at 11 a.m., the 22nd Annual Ceremony of Remembrance for Ontario’s fallen police officers is taking place during a 15-minute broadcast on social media. The ceremony will pay tribute to police officers in the province of Ontario who have died in the line of duty. These officers are “Heroes In Life, Not Death”. In lieu of gathering together in person to commemorate the lives of our fallen, viewers are encouraged to tune in to the Ontario Police Memorial Foundation Facebook Live at 11 a.m. Please join Ontario Police Memorial Foundation President Jason Tomlinson and Ontario Provincial Police retired officer Brenda Orr as they offer words of remembrance. Toronto Police Service Piper Constable Hector MacDonald and Wreath Layer Sergeant Kevin van Schubert will recognize those lost with Amazing Grace and the laying of wreaths. The link, once live, will be posted on the Ontario Police Memorial Foundation (OPMF) blog at CeremonyofRemembrance.ca/Live. Viewers, including retired and active members and their families, may also watch on the OPMF Facebook page using the link Facebook.com/HeroesInLife. Individuals and organizations are encouraged to post their own videos and photos to their respective social media platforms using the official hashtag for the event: #HeroesInLife. As in past years, the CN Tower will be illuminated in blue light on the evening of Sunday, May 2 to pay tribute to the officers. The Ontario Police Memorial Foundation (OPMF) Board of Directors felt it appropriate to postpone adding names to the memorial wall until such time as we can gather in person. Our “Heroes In Life, Not Death” deserve to be honoured at a time when their families can participate in the ceremony and be properly recognized, and with dignitaries present. Due to gathering limits and the stay-at-home order, we kindly request that media, officers, and the public pay tribute from the safety of their homes and not attend the Ontario Police Memorial site in person. Following the ceremony, members of the media are welcome to contact Scott Mills at 647-449-2801 to speak with OPMF President Jason Tomlinson, ret. OPP officer Brenda Orr, Sergeant Kevin van Schubert, or Constable Hector MacDonald. FACTS Ontario Police Memorial • The Memorial is located in a small park adjacent to the Ontario Legislature at the corner of Grosvenor Street and Queen’s Park Crescent. • The Memorial was built with funding from a grant provided by the Ontario Government. The official dedication Service took place on May 7, 2000. • The Memorial consists of two bronze statues (approximate 2.5 m), depicting a male officer in duty dress circa 1950-1990 and a female officer in modern duty dress. The statues are mounted atop a large granite pedestal base (weighing 30,000 lbs). At the foot of the statues are eight cascading granite walls. The four walls on either side of the main pedestal form a horseshoe shape. The names of all known fallen officers are inscribed on these walls, called the “Wall of Honour”. • Toronto-based award-winning artist Mr. Siggy Puchta is the sculptor of the bronze statues. The Ontario Police Memorial Pin • The pewter pin replicates the Memorial’s Wall of Honour, which contains the names of all fallen officers who have died in service to the people of Ontario. • The pin depicts a trillium within a badge. The badge is the symbol representing the authority of all police officers and the trillium is the official flower of Ontario. Combined they represent the Police Officers of Ontario. • The words “HEROES IN LIFE NOT DEATH” are on the Memorial’s main pedestal and on the Memorial Pin. On August 12th, 1998, Waterloo Regional Police Constable David Nicholson lost his life while trying to recover the body of a child who drowned in the Grand River at the Parkhill Dam in Cambridge, Ontario. In expressing their appreciation and gratitude to family and friends, Mrs. Wendy Nicholson and sons Mitch, Reid and Josh stated in part, “Dave’s death has been painful and devastating. He was our hero in life, not death. Our memories of him are rich and immeasurable, filling our hearts with both deep joy and profound pain.” Wendy Nicholson’s words are the inspiration for this inscription. • The Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police and the Commissioner of the OPP have endorsed the wearing of this pin on officer uniforms. Police officers, both active and retired, are asked and encouraged to wear the pin as a sign of support and respect for our fallen comrades and their families. For more news, visit TPSnews.ca. Stephanie Sayer, Corporate Communications, for the Ontario Police Memorial Foundation