RNC, towing company chip in to make Quinn Butt playground idea reality - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:32 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

RNC, towing company chip in to make Quinn Butt playground idea reality

Officers with the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary teamed up with a Paradise towing company on Saturday to raise money for a proposed playground in memory of Quinn Butt, who allegedly murdered last month in Carbonear.
RNC police dog Gunner proudly sitting on a bag of mulch during Saturday's fundraiser. (RNC)

Officers with the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary teamed up with a Paradise towing company on Saturday to raise money for a proposed playground in memory of Quinn Butt, who was allegedly murderedlast month in Carbonear.

RNC officers spent the day in the Canadian Tire parking lot in Mount Pearl, selling bags of mulch for $7.00 each, with hopes to raise $7,000 in total for the Quinn's PlacePlayground, a project and idea launched by Paradise man Adam Stead.

Sgt. Kevin Foley told CBC that Saturday's fundraiser for the playgroundcame about when Avalon Towing owner Greg Rice suggested that there was money to be made if the RNC could help him bag mulch from his property to sell to the public.

"Basically he supplied the product and we supplied the labour," Foley said.

"He had this idea that we could sell mulch to support this cause with Quinn's Place, so this past Thursday we had officers from support services goto the Avalon Towing yard in St. John's Park, and we bagged a thousand bags of mulch."

RNC officers spent Saturday in the Canadian Tire parking lot in Mount Pearl, as part of a fundraiser for a new playground in memory of five-year-old Quinn Butt, who died last month in an alleged murder. (RNC)

Foley said business was good throughout the day, and with the help of police dog Gunner and two of the RNC police horses, there was a lot of interest from people driving by.

In addition to donations from the public, Foley said they also receiveda number of corporate donations.