(As reported in the K-W Record, Tuesday, July 17, 2001)
"RED TAPE TIES UP UNDERAGE STREET ARTIST"
-Montreal, CP
An 11-year-old bagpiper from Huntsville who's been picking up quite a bit of cash performing in Old Montreal, has found herself in a bureaucratic tangle.
Melissa-Jane Hollands says she loves playing the bagpipes and she's delighted to have collected about $200 a day since arriving here last week to spend 10 days visiting her sister.
But now she's in a jam.
The city says she can't play on the street because she doesn't have a permit. And the city won't sell her a permit because she's under 14, the minimum age under the city by-law governing street performers.
Shortly after Melissa began performing Saturday evening, two police cadets approached to ask whether she had a permit. She didn't, so she stopped the performance and didn't play on Sunday.
Yesterday she and her mother, Christianne Hollands, went to the city permits department to buy a permit, which costs $105. That's when they were told about the age restriction.
Sylvie Lebeuf of Montreal's economic development department said the minimum-age requirement is based on the fact that children under age 14 can't be prosecuted."
"RED TAPE TIES UP UNDERAGE STREET ARTIST"
-Montreal, CP
An 11-year-old bagpiper from Huntsville who's been picking up quite a bit of cash performing in Old Montreal, has found herself in a bureaucratic tangle.
Melissa-Jane Hollands says she loves playing the bagpipes and she's delighted to have collected about $200 a day since arriving here last week to spend 10 days visiting her sister.
But now she's in a jam.
The city says she can't play on the street because she doesn't have a permit. And the city won't sell her a permit because she's under 14, the minimum age under the city by-law governing street performers.
Shortly after Melissa began performing Saturday evening, two police cadets approached to ask whether she had a permit. She didn't, so she stopped the performance and didn't play on Sunday.
Yesterday she and her mother, Christianne Hollands, went to the city permits department to buy a permit, which costs $105. That's when they were told about the age restriction.
Sylvie Lebeuf of Montreal's economic development department said the minimum-age requirement is based on the fact that children under age 14 can't be prosecuted."

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