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Town comes to life with can-do attitude

Reading Time: 5 minutes

Published: March 7, 2002

GRAVELBOURG, Sask. – Gravelbourg’s glory has anchored the south end of

Main Street for decades.

The grand, yellow brick, twin-spired Catholic cathedral is a tourist

draw to this 96-year-old town in southern Saskatchewan.

But facing the cathedral from the other end of Main Street is a newer

face of fame for the town. Businessperson and consultant Monica Coneys

lives in the former railway station and works from an office in a

nearby caboose.

Coneys and her inspired band of entrepreneurs have revitalized the

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francophone town and brought encouragement to the province’s rural

business climate.

Gravelbourg’s appeal had been going stale, said Coneys, and when she

arrived from South Africa seven years ago to join her doctor husband,

she was horrified at her new rural life. She felt limited by the

community’s expectations of her role as the doctor’s wife, and by the

standard restaurant fare of chicken wings and fries with gravy.

But the woman who had run a chain of retail stores in Africa didn’t

stay depressed for long. She put her thoughts into a lively

presentation and started speaking for free at meetings in Legion halls

around the countryside.

Word spread of her audacious presentation in which she makes fun of

Saskatchewan’s propensity to live in the past, shambling along with

dreams of next-year country. Coneys draws some people’s dislike for

proudly proclaiming she has never cooked a turkey for a fowl supper.

Her slogan – paint is good – also stung people who won’t fix up or tear

down an old, unused building because of its history.

But mixed with her mocking is a plan to energize small prairie

communities and drop traditions she feels stifle creativity. Coneys

says rural Saskatchewanians do not have to settle for lower standards.

The myth-challenger, who now charges up to $1,500 per workshop, acts on

her ideals. She began by buying an abandoned house in Lafleche, Sask.,

for $1. Then she talked to people who were interested in starting a

business but who had no confidence or opportunity.

“I can appreciate talent,” said Coneys. “I’m not helping everybody out.

I’m just gathering people around me with different skill sets.”

Using her own money, she put them in the little house with free rent

and utilities. They had to make their own wages by making and selling

crafts, food and services such as dry cleaning. The venture paid off

and by 1995 there were 15 operations of varying size in and around

Marmalade Cottage. Coneys got out and left them to succeed or fail on

their own while she went on to other plans.

She continued speaking around the province to get the money to start

similar systems she calls hives. Two years ago in Gravelbourg, she

bought the theatre that had been closed. She recruited another group of

people willing to make a go of the business. A good cleaning and

refurbishing of the seats and the theatre is now showing movies three

nights a week, offering seating for 200 for public meetings, hosting

concerts and a music rave for area youth.

Space at the front of the theatre is occupied by a cafe that displays

pottery and paintings by local artists and, upstairs, a beauty spa is

opening this month.

The theatre also sports an exterior of bright yellow paint with

decorative wrought iron.

Not all of Coneys’ businesspeople succeed. She said sometimes they do

not work as hard or as smart as necessary to make a living wage.

Coneys said she has learned not to push people into doing something

they are reluctant to do.

Now she talks with prospective entrepreneurs and selects and encourages

those of a similar mentality and energy.

Coneys calls her system ubunto, an African word meaning working with

everyone. She is worried that people will think her efforts are a

one-woman show. It isn’t, she said, because she can’t be hand-holding

people’s businesses. She doesn’t push suggestions, preferring them to

bubble out of the individual’s passion. But she does set standards,

insisting the businesses are clean, bright and stylish and offer

quality.

“The guy who runs the theatre is 17. He’s in school, in cadets and has

signing authority over my cheques.”

Delores Boutin, who moved to Gravelbourg last summer from a French area

of New Brunswick, is another recruit to Coneys’ system. She runs Fleur

de Lys café, making light gourmet meals from scratch with an inventive

presentation featuring fruit, greens and fancy breads.

It is not for everyone, particularly a group of three that leaves this

day when they find chicken soup with egg white, Greek salad and crab

sandwiches too unfamiliar for lunch.

“When she can succeed, I’ll boot her out and she can set up her own

restaurant in town,” said Coneys. “I’m not anti-competition.”

For a woman who says she is “bad on details,” Coneys has a lot of balls

in the air.

There is La Petit Marche, a small shop across from the theatre packed

with consignment crafts, other items, a wine making shop and soon, a

bookstore. She is working with a woman in Moose Jaw to develop a bus

tour package that will draw visitors from the spa to Gravelbourg to see

the cathedral, stroll the streets, buy at the shops and eat in the

cafes.

Coneys is working on plans to bring in a drama or dance troupe to

entertain the tourists and fill the theatre stage. One of her young

entrepreneurs has a business called Parties Taylor Made that does event

planning.

Coneys has bought and is renovating

another house to become her new office because the caboose is destined

to become an ice cream parlour this summer. She hopes to entice a woman

to do aboriginal crafts in her new building. If that is successful she

wants to work with more aboriginals, because she said they are the

province’s future.

To those who think she is lending a helping hand, Coneys bluntly said

she is in it to make money. She also encourages competition, which some

in Saskatchewan, used to loyalty to one business, may find strange. She

explained her “benevolent capitalism” by using the analogy of owning a

racehorse.

“I own the horse but I don’t chop it into pieces to give everyone a

share. I give someone the job of feeding it, stabling it or being the

jockey. Everyone has to make sure that racehorse is healthy.”

Others have taken up the cause by developing a European street theme

for the town. Some on the Taste of Europe committee are talking about

an international wine and food event June 21 to be held during

Gravelbourg’s one-year-old summer solstice festival. A member of that

committee, Toos Giesen, runs a motel in town and has two sidelines. One

is selling fine Dutch chocolates, the other is making vests. She also

is on the Santa Claus parade committee that put a new spin on an old

tradition by holding the parade at night. Giesen said “people just need

a bit of motivation” to change their habits.

Another recruit to the new style is Judy Reiman, who two years ago

renovated the exterior of her accountancy office with green paint and

wrought iron so it resembles a French bistro. She jokes about “doing a

Monica” by charging ahead with a project and having faith that the

money to pay for it will come.

A Vancouver man impressed by Coneys’ ideas opened up a homeware design

store called Styles that draws customers from Moose Jaw and Saskatoon.

He is expanding into furniture this summer.

Badlands Recreation Association youth consultant Marjorie Nagel credits

Coneys’ can-do attitude for making things happen. But she also notes

the town bought in and has done things on its own from her initial push.

Town aldermen Raymond Lizée and Danny Lamarre support Coneys.

“She made us open our eyes and see if our town was to survive it needed

a vision. She started the vision. She was one of the first businesses

(to change),” said Lamarre.

Lizée said in recent years the town has added a professional go-cart

race in July, is planting trees for a community forest and moved the

museum to a more prominent spot on the Main Street.

Meanwhile Coneys finds life more satisfying than when she moved here.

She gives credit to her tolerant husband and to her circle of friends.

But another part is due to her personality and consulting business.

“I’ve put 162,000 kilometres in the last three years in my little red

car,” said Coneys. “I’ve spoken in Ottawa, Newfoundland, Edmonton,

Calgary, Winnipeg, Vancouver and Victoria. And they found me in rural

Saskatchewan. This idea you have to live in a big city is wrong.”

About the author

Diane Rogers

Saskatoon newsroom

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