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Visitor to Institution sentenced for transporting contraband

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A visitor to the Drumheller Institution was given a six months conditional sentence order after pleading guilty to bringing contraband into the Drumheller. Institution.

Kaitlyn  Caron appeared in provincial court in Drumheller on Friday, April 12  where she pleaded guilty.

The court heard how on November 15, 2018, she was a visitor at the Drumheller Institution and was observed passing an item to her fiancé during the visit. Corrections officers discovered 50 nicotine patches with an institutional value of $5,000.

The crown and defense agreed on a  sentence of six months under a conditional sentence order. The first three months she is to be placed under house arrest, and the end half she is to abide by a curfew.


Robyn Thomspon-Lake acclaimed as Delia Councillor

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Robyn Thompson Lake has been acclaimed as a new village councillor for Delia.

The seat on Delia Village Council became available when Councillor Dawn Bancroft retired in February.

Nomination day was Monday, April 1 and Thompson-Lake was the sole candidate to let her name stand.

This is the first time Thompson-Lake has been on council. She ran in the 2017 general election but was edged out. She is a part-time stylist in the village and a full-time mother.

“I would like to encourage growth in the community. We would like to get more visitors, and more visitors that might want to move here, especially with the new school being built, we are trying to get more people here to use it,” she said.

She joins Mayor Dave Sisley and Jordan Elliott on council.

Second-round of layoffs reported for bitcoin facility

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Hut 8, the cryptocurrency mining company who operates a data centre just north of Drumheller, has reportedly laid off a second round of employees this year.

CBC Calgary reported earlier this month Hut 8, a subsidiary of Bitfury, has let go more employees as the price of bitcoin, plunged over the last year after prices soared in late 2017.

The Mail reported in mid-January the company had made significant layoffs at both their data centres in Drumheller and Three Hills due to the falling price and uncertain future of bitcoin.

“As part of those efforts, we are streamlining our operations in order to help us advance strategic plans to develop innovative software and hardware solutions and focus on other emerging technologies,” Bitfury managing director Jeffery Mason had said in an email at that time. Bitfury did not provide a statement on the second round of layoffs as of publication time.

An employee who was let go in the first round of layoffs said while crews had worked to install new hardware at the site over the month of December, there was a sense layoffs were imminent due to the price of the cryptocurrency.

But the news comes as bitcoin has seemingly made a rebound in the month of April, jumping over $1,000 per bitcoin overnight from $5,500 on April 1 to over $6,500 on April 2. The price has remained strong, with values set at $6,755 per bitcoin on April 12. But it is a far cry from the upwards of $20,000 per bitcoin the currency fetched in late 2017, the same month power was switched on at the Drumheller mining facility.

In its 2018 third quarter financial report, Hut 8 reported over $17 million in revenue but posted an $11 million net operating loss.


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