News | DrumhellerMail - Page #1475
05192024Sun
Last updateFri, 17 May 2024 12pm

Documentary debuts at Miners’ Memorial

inmybones

    While Drumheller continues to be popular for the film industry, one recent project set to debut in the valley could not have been shot in any other place.
     For three years, Dennis Envoldsen has been working on a documentary on the Drumheller valley and the stories of those who built the mining industry. He is finally ready to debut his film, and he has selected the annual Miner Memorial this April 30.
    “I guess it comes to a point you have to let it go, and this has become the first iteration of a larger body of work,” said Envoldsen, “this is kind of the first offering.”
    He explains that working on the film he collected a vast amount of material.
    “When I sat down to piece together everything, the stories were so connected, there is such a universality to it, but they are all very individual stories, I felt like trying to put them all together diluted it,” he said. “So this film has a sort of a tone to it and trying to get a whole picture of Drumheller off the top and then move onto the more specific stories.”
    Envoldsen has roots in the mining history of Drumheller, so the project was close to his heart. It was also a great learning process of how to make a film, the documentary process, and all of it on a shoestring budget. It was a solitary process for Envoldsen.
    “I was just really exploring how to tell this story because Drumheller is a special place. I grew up in Drumheller and my family lives there. I wanted to explore style and personal storytelling,” he said.
    He is looking forward to the screening.
“I want to share it with the community and a lot of people who were involved in the process of making the film …this is kind of full circle for them,” he said.
    He hopes to get in front of a larger audience.
    “Beyond this screening, I would like to get to some festivals to see if they would be interested in playing it or looking at other ways of distributing the film. This is the first step in a process, this is the first iteration in a larger body of work.”
    Within the last year, Drumheller has been the site of a number of film debuts with local roots including She Has a Name and the Northlander.


Fanged frogs of Southeast Asia featured at Speaker Series

Evans April20 cropped

This week’s edition of the 2017 Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series features. Dr. Ben Evans, associate professor of the Biology Department at McMaster University, who will give a presentation entitled “Ecological Opportunity and Adaptive Radiation of Fanged Frogs in Southeast Asia.”
Adaptive radiation is when a group of animals evolve into different forms to fill different roles in their environment.
In his talk, Dr. Evans will provide evidence for an example of an adaptive radiation; the fanged frogs of Southeast Asia. Different species of fanged frogs have unique characteristics, including body size and reproductive strategy that allow them to co-exist in the same habitat. Through comparison to frogs in the Philippines and other species of animals, Evans will discuss how fanged frogs underwent rapid speciation on Sulawesi, and how this fast-paced evolution led to remarkable changes.
He will also explain the broader context of fanged frog evolution for conservation and evolutionary studies.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. They are held every Thursday until April 27 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Speaker Series talks are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/user/RoyalTyrrellMuseum.

Mayor meets with minister on flood funding

flood

    Mayor Terry Yemen and CAO Ray Romanetz sat down with the provincial Minister of Infrastructure and Communities, Brian Mason, seeking an endorsement of federal funding from the government for local flood mitigation projects.
    The minister informed them the federal program did not meet the criteria for Drumheller’s project.
    His assistant shared the letter explaining the disapproval had not been mailed out yet as it needed a signature, causing the current meeting to become stagnant.
    “Both Ray and I were kind of set back because we had not received that [letter],” said Yemen.
    The  Alberta Community Resilience Program is 90 per cent funded by the province for up to $3 million in spending with 70 per cent over $3 million. The remaining is to be made up by the municipality.
    The Town was working with the federal government to support and cover the municipal government’s portion. Mayor Yemen and CAO Romanetz went to Edmonton asking for an endorsement from the Provincial government.
    Mason and Yemen bounced back and forth about the logistics behind the criteria as the federal minister had told Mayor Yemen on two separate occasions that their qualifications did reach the requirements.
    The Federal Minister of Infrastructure had called Mayor Yemen the next day and apologized for leading them astray and causing problems.
    “I brought to his attention that he should feel bad, since he is the administrator of it, and should know the criteria,” said Mayor Yemen. “The minister should be able to tell us yes or no if it does qualify, which he agreed to.”
    Two grants were approved but fell short of the million dollar mark, so with the apology out of the way, the federal minister is finding other forms of funding within the next couple of weeks.
    “We are at least on the hook for the ten per cent but we will see what happens,” said Mayor Yemen.
    “It’s certainly disappointing but at the same time if ultimately we do find some funding, we’ll take it,” said Councillor Jay Garbutt.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.