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Michael James called to the Bar

MikeJames called to Bar

It may have been a more subdued ceremony because of the pandemic, but on Thursday, August 20, Michael James was admitted to the Alberta Bar.

James is an associate at Kloot, Wilkins & Associates, and as a student at law, completed his articles with Colin Kloot as his principal.
“I’m really excited to work for Kloot, Wilkins & Associates in Drumheller. The lawyers, Colin Kloot, Bill Herman, and Andre Wilkins have a wealth of knowledge and experience, and I’m grateful that I’ve been able to learn so much from them over the past year,” said James. “Ever since I went to law school four years ago, I knew I wanted to work in Drumheller and at this firm. It’s important to me that people in rural communities have access to lawyers nearby, rather than having to go to one of Alberta’s cities.”
It wasn’t your typical ceremony for James, as it had to be done remotely, rather than in a typical in a courtroom. Justice J.T. McCarthy appeared via a WebEx videoconference from his office while James and Kloot appeared from the local office. Other staff and James’ family were able to watch the ceremony via the videoconference, and other local members of the bar also attended remotely.
James has been in the Valley since 2010 after completing his Bachelor of Science Degree in Palaeontology in 2006 and his Masters of Science from the University of Alberta in 2010. After working at the Royal Tyrrell Museum and The Drumheller Mail, he returned to the University of Alberta and in 2019, graduated with his Juris Doctorate in 2019.
Entering the Alberta bar means that Mr. James is a member of the Law Society of Alberta. This body regulates the legal profession in Alberta.


Mural make-over for Carbon Centennial Swimming Pool

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Carbon Centennial Swimming Pool may be closed for the 2020 season due to COVID-19 regulations and restrictions, but this has allowed the village to give the pool a bright and welcoming make-over.
Airdrie artist Clayton Dunford completed the mural with characters from Disney’s Finding Nemo and Finding Dory movies, including the title characters themselves.
The entry to the pool’s change rooms also received an update with more characters from Disney’s Finding Nemo and Finding Dory.
The change room mural includes Pearl the flapjack octopus, Squirt the sea turtle, Deb the humbug damselfish, and Destiny the whale shark.

18-2 brings free sports camp amid COVID-19

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    Despite COVID-19, 18-2 Sports Camps brought sports to many young athletes this summer, and free of charge.
     18-2 annually holds sports day and evening sports camps for youth near Delia. However this year because of COVID-19 restrictions, camps were cancelled.
    “The staff was determined to find a way to make a camp situation work so they would not miss a summer seeing their loyal 18-2 campers! With a lot of creativity and camp set up, the regular indoor sports camps became FREE outdoor, socially distanced, COVID camps ON LOCATION!” said organizers in a release.
    The daytime multisport camp was offered for two weeks, and the evening volleyball camps/training was offered all of July and is still going on indefinitely as the weather holds out.
    The camps are staffed by high school and university athletes, both local and from across Western Canada.
    The multisport camp was offered at 18-2 just outside Delia, or the staff took their camp on location and travelled to local cohorting families. They set up their camp at parks, right in back yards, or at school grass areas.
    The daytime camps were multisport and mix of technical teaching and fun and games. The cohorting kids and their parents would have a safe playing area separated from staff. After initiating the equipment and balls for the activity, the kids managed the equipment on their own, and when they were done would safely gather the equipment in a location where everything was sanitized.
    “We saw about 70% of our regulars, and we hope to visit the rest during the last half of August. We also gained a lot of new campers and are excited to continue relationships with them and their families,” said camp staffer Sonya Nielsen.
    In the evenings on the 18-2 beach and grass courts, multiple cohort groups are coming to train with the 18-2 Crew staff. They are sometimes training four different sessions in an evening, and the courts are booked every night of the week.
    With grass and beach volleyball, COVID restrictions are put in place, and the staff is unable to initiate any balls during drills. Camp staffer Kaitlyn Leischner explains that “the staff has different separate color-coded balls that allow us to demonstrate with each other and not share or be in contact with any of our campers.”
    Organizers do not know what the future holds for indoor sports and COVID restrictions, but while they can be outdoors, they are enjoying training kids in the fresh air and will continue to do so until the weather doesn’t allow it anymore.
    All the staff joined knowing it could have been strictly a volunteer role for the entire summer, as the camps were provided for free they would have to fundraise the camp expenses. They are selling frozen homemade pre-scooped cookie dough, selling 18-2 gear, and putting on a virtual volleyball SHOWDOWN tournament. Follow 18-2 and the 18-2 crew for more information... @eighteentwo and @eighteentwo_crew or contact them by email: eighteentwocamps@gmail.com


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