
How a different kind of culture is reshaping the County
There was a timeโnot that long agoโwhen Prince Edward County didnโt need to announce itself.
It didnโt need branding.
It didnโt need amplification.
It didnโt need to be seen.
People came here, or stayed here, for something quieter. Something more personal.
As one recent letter to a local publication put it:
โThe County used to be a place where people could quietly practice their creativity and craft without need for celebrityโฆ Creativity for the sake of it, it was cathartic.โ
That line captures something many residents recognize immediatelyโbut rarely say out loud.
Because what has changed is not just growth.
Itโs tone.
From Quiet Craft to Performative Culture
The County has always had artists, farmers, makers, and small business owners.
But historically, much of that work existed without spectacle.
It wasnโt curated for an audience.
It wasnโt optimized for attention.
It wasnโt built to scale.
Today, increasingly, it is.
What we are seeing is not just economic developmentโbut a shift toward a louder, more performative culture:
โ Experiences designed to be photographed
โ Businesses designed to be discovered externally before they are rooted locally
โ Events designed to attract attention rather than serve community
None of this is inherently wrong.
But it changes the character of a place.
The Pressure to Be Seen
The letter continues:
โIn our new need to be โseenโ, we have lost the sincerity of what was. The purity of it.โ
This is the tension.
Visibility has become a currency.
And once visibility becomes the goal, everything begins to orient around it:
โ Design choices
โ Pricing
โ Audience targeting
โ Even the kinds of businesses that can survive
Places that were once grounded in local continuity begin to reorient toward external demand.
Not gradually.
But structurally.
A Subtle but Important Shift
Another line from the letter is worth pausing on:
โWe are just becoming another networking suburb of Toronto.โ
Whether one agrees fully or not, the underlying concern is clear:
The County is no longer just a place.
It is becoming a platform.
A place where people come not just to liveโbut to position, connect, and participate in a broader social and economic network.
Againโthis is not inherently negative.
But it carries consequences:
โ Seasonal economies become more dominant
โ Local affordability shifts
โ Year-round residents feel increasingly peripheral
โ Cultural identity becomes less organic and more constructed
Who Is the County For?
One of the most striking observations in the letter is this:
โItโs a shame that more folks in Toronto know about the new restaurant opening around the corner, than the folks who live here and will carry it through the winter months.โ
This is not just about restaurants.
Itโs about alignment.
When businesses are designed primarily for external audiences, a gap emerges:
โ Between peak season and off-season viability
โ Between visibility and sustainability
โ Between attention and community
And over time, that gap widens.
The Risk Isnโt GrowthโItโs Imbalance
Growth is not the issue.
Change is not the issue.
Even tourism is not the issue.
The risk is imbalance.
When one mode of cultureโloud, visible, externally validatedโbegins to dominate, quieter forms of life and work can get pushed out.
Not deliberately.
But inevitably.
What Gets Lost
The final line of the letter lingers:
โWhat happened to art for artโs sake alone?โ
That question isnโt just about art.
Itโs about intent.
โ Doing something because it matters to you
โ Building something without needing it to perform
โ Creating without needing an audience
These things donโt disappear overnight.
But they do get harder to sustain in an environment where everything is increasingly optimized for visibility.
A Choice, Not a Conclusion
None of this is irreversible.
The County is not โlost.โ
It is evolving.
But the direction of that evolution is not accidental.
It is shaped by:
โ Policy decisions
โ Economic incentives
โ Cultural norms
โ And what residents choose to support
The question is not whether the County will change.
It already has.
The question is:
What kind of place does it want to become?
And just as importantlyโ
What kind of place are people willing to protect?
Feature
The $12 Million Question: What Prince Edward Countyโs Sunshine List Really Shows
Prince Edward Countyโs 2025 Sunshine List isnโt just a headlineโitโs a signal. The County disclosed 92 municipal employees earning over $100,000, with total compensation exceeding $12 million annually. Thatโs a sharp increase from 64 employees in 2023, a 43% jump in just two years. Even more striking: the County employs roughly 220 staff, meaning nearly half of all employees now earn above the Sunshine List threshold. Read more.
Changing the Rules Mid-Game: Why Prince Edward Countyโs Election Sign Decision Raises Serious Concerns
In any democratic system, the rules matter as much as the outcome. Thatโs why Prince Edward County Councilโs decision to shorten the election lawn sign periodโduring an election yearโhas raised important legal and ethical questions. Under the proposed change, candidates would only be permitted to display election signs beginning August 22, despite nominations opening May 1. That significantly compresses the time available for candidates to reach voters ahead of the October 26 election. Read more.
From Crude to Crust: The Invisible War Tax on Your Grocery Bill
The average Canadian grocery trip is starting to feel like a high-stakes negotiation. Just as food inflation appeared to be coolingโdropping to 5.4% in February 2026โthe outbreak of conflict in Iran on February 28 has sent a shockwave through the global economy that is landing directly in our shopping carts. While the fighting is thousands of kilometers away, the economic tether between Middle Eastern stability and Canadian food prices is shorter than most realize. Read more.
The Quiet Shift No One Is Talking About: Are Counties Becoming Places You Canโt Afford to Live โ But Also Canโt Afford to Leave?
Thereโs a strange contradiction emerging across Ontarioโs counties. People are moving in โ but long-time residents are feeling pushed out.
Businesses are busy โ but many are barely surviving. Homes are worth more โ but fewer people can actually afford to live in them. Something has shifted. And while we talk about it in pieces โ housing, taxes, groceries, healthcare โ we rarely step back and ask the bigger question: Are counties becoming economically unlivable for the people who built them? Read more.
The County Is Changing โ But For Whom?
โWe didnโt leave because we wanted to. We left because we couldnโt afford to stay.โ That sentence appeared in the comments after CountyFirst asked a simple question: Is Prince Edward County becoming too difficult to survive in? What followed wasnโt a debate. It was a pattern. Stories of rising costs. Of wages that donโt keep up. Of families making quiet decisions to leave. Of businesses trying to hold on through another winter. Read more.
Is Prince Edward County Becoming Too Hard for Businesses to Survive?
Rumours circulating within Prince Edward Countyโs hospitality community have raised questions about the financial stability of one of the regionโs most visible tourism developments, a notable resort in Wellington. Several individuals familiar with recent staffing changes say employees were laid off. Some sources within the local hospitality sector have speculated that the resort may be facing financial pressure. Read more.
Prince Edward County Is Choking Innovation โ and the Data, the Law, and the Outcomes All Point to the Same Failure
This is no longer anecdotal. According to a recent economic snapshot presented to Council by the Countyโs own Economic Development Officer, nearly a quarter of the Countyโs wineries and vineyards are currently for sale. Three of six cideries, two distilleries, and at least nine wineries or vineyards are on the market. Read more.
Audit of the 2022โ2026 Council term
As the October 26, 2026 municipal election approaches, the residents of Prince Edward County are conducting a rigorous audit of the 2022โ2026 term. This Council has presided over a period of unprecedented fiscal volatility, marked by a $90.9 million budget and a debt trajectory that many fear has reached a point of no return. The following report card evaluates the performance of all ten wards, focusing on cost-of-living increases, infrastructure delivery, and the independence of leadership. Read more.

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