Acton Vale, Quebec

Acton Vale is an industrial town in southcentral Quebec, Canada. It is the seat of the Acton Regional County Municipality and is in the Montérégie administrative region. Its population in the Canada 2011 Census was 7,664. The town covers an area of 90.96 km2 (35 sq. mi.).

Acton Vale
City
Municipal library
Coat of arms
Location within Acton RCM.
Acton Vale
Location in southern Quebec.
Coordinates: 45°39′N 72°34′W[1]
Country Canada
Province Quebec
RegionMontérégie
RCMActon
ConstitutedJanuary 26, 2000
Government
  MayorÉric Charbonneau
  Federal ridingSaint-Hyacinthe—Bagot
  Prov. ridingJohnson
Area
  Total91.20 km2 (35.21 sq mi)
  Land90.98 km2 (35.13 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[4]
  Total7,664
  Density84.2/km2 (218/sq mi)
  Pop 2006-2011
1.1%
  Dwellings
3,489
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
  Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Postal code(s)
J0H
Area code(s)450 and 579
Highways Route 116
Route 139
Websitewww.ville.actonvale.qc.ca

By road, Acton Vale is 100 km (60 mi.) from the province's largest city, Montreal, and 190 km (120 mi.) from the province's capital, Quebec City. It is also 100 km (60 mi.) from the border with the United States.[5]

History

Founded in 1862, the town was named for Acton, a suburb of London, England. The name means "oak town." The town has shoe, rubber, and woolen and once was a centre for copper mining.

Demographics

Population

Government

The mayor is Éric Charbonneau.

List of mayors

Religion

The town has several places of worship:

  • Roman Catholic Church (Priest: Joseph Lèbre)
  • Evangelist Baptist Church (Moderator: George Corriveau)
  • Anglican Church
  • Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses

Media

La Pensée de Bagot [9] is the local newspaper for Acton Vale and the region.

Communities

Besides Acton Vale is Lavoie, a community in the south of the municipality, accessible by Highway 139.

Notable people

gollark: So the general and robust fix for this would be to stop doing I/O this way for anything but performance-sensitive and fairly robust (terminal, FS) I/O and API stuff, but PotatOS has so much legacy code that that would actually be very hard.
gollark: As it turns out, you can take a perfectly safe function with out of sandbox access and make it very not safe by controlling what responses it gets from HTTP requests and whatever.
gollark: And *another* Lua quirk more particular to CC is a heavy emphasis on event-driven I/O via coroutines.
gollark: The FS layer is actually fine, probably, apart from insufficiently flexible filesystem virtualization; the issue is that since this is really easy, many other potatOS features interact this way.
gollark: I *also* had to patch over a bunch of debug stuff to make sure that unprivileged code can't read environments out of those too.

See also

References



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