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Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 10am

Town launches online budget survey

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The Town of Drumheller is inviting property owners to share their thoughts on their priorities for the upcoming 2019 budget with an online survey.

The results of the survey will be shared with town council prior to their strategic planning session ahead of work on the budget.

Town CAO Darryl Drohomerski says the survey is for taxpayers to provide input on town programs and levels of service to help inform administration’s choices.

“Each year, as part of the budget process, choices have to be made that impact the taxes you pay and the level of service the town can provide,” he said.

Communications officer Julia Fielding says the public survey process is a part of the town’s newly implemented public participation policy.

“The vast majority of people who took the participation survey requested online consultations. However, if people would like to support with completing the survey, paper copies will be available at the Badlands Community Facility, the Drumheller Public Library, and town hall.”

The link to the survey is on the town’s website at https://www.dinosaurvalley.com/announcements/budget-2019


Historic Drumheller home subject of paranormal investigation

Dr Robert James Johnston Sr

A team of paranormal investigators will be live streaming from a Drumheller home as part of the World’s Largest Ghost Hunt on September 29.

The Calgary Association of Paranormal Investigations will broadcast from a home on 3rd Avenue East after a preliminary investigation yielded evidence of paranormal activity.

The home was built in 1911 by Dr. Robert James Johnston Sr., one of Drumheller’s early dentists who operated his clinic and pharmacy at 322 Centre Street downtown. He was a prominent member of the community through his business and his role with the local Masonic lodge. Dr. Johnston’s life was cut short at the age of 45, when on October 10, 1936, while getting organized for a hunting trip with friends, Robert fired a single charge from his 16 gauge shotguninto his lower jaw, killing him while he stood in his garage. The Drumheller Mail reported on October 15, 1936 his death was ruled accidental by a coroner. His death was significant for the community – the Mail published an editorial marking his passing and reported a large, well-attended funeral procession.

Justin Bolin and his family have lived in the house since 2014 and confirms there have been “strange occurrences” happen in the home, including floorboards creaking.

  “There’s been some noises and things in the home, it’s pretty neat,” Bolin says.

    Director of the Calgary Association of Paranormal Investigators Caitlin Neilson told The Mail that the way Dr. Johnston passed is interesting.

   “We find some spirits who communicate are not aware they’ve passed on and are stuck in a kind of limbo. With him, I think it happened so suddenly but he was also attached to the home – he built that house, it was where he raised his family for many years, and he was such a prominent member of the community,” Nielson says.

    She confirmed that Dr. Johnston’s daughter also died in 1939, likely of a bloodborne pathogen. She says there are reports of sightings of the young girl in the home praying and kneeling in the master bedroom.

   Neilson and her team conducted a preliminary investigation on September 1 which yielded some evidence on an audio recorder of what they call an Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP), where they say they captured a voice warning about going downstairs, where Dr. Johnston died. They also captured photo evidence with a potential anomaly – what appears to be a flame was captured over a portion of ceiling which had existing burn marks.

“We never say ‘it’s this or it’s that,’” Neilson says. “We just show people what we’ve found with unbiased evidence for people to decide on their own.”

The stream will feature teams from around the world, including Europe and Asia, who will be streaming at www.nationalghosthuntingday.com from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. on September 29.

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Tourism guru speaks in Drumheller

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World-renowned keynote speaker Roger Brooks spoke about  travel, tourism, downtowns, and destination marketing to a crowd at the Kaleidoscope Theatre this morning.

His presentation offered strategies to improve Drumheller's brand and specifically spoke about ways to create a more viable downtown here.

 

Mayor Heather Colberg said Brooks provided a number of ways in which a strong downtown creates a better overall community.

"When people come into a community, whether they want to work, live, play, and especially if they want to live and work there, a vibrant downtown shows that the community is vibrant," she says. 

Mayor Colberg said there are a number of ways the town can promote business development downtown. Brooks showed examples where plans were put in place and within a couple years they've changed dramatically. 

"Everything is baby steps. At the end of the day you're not going to change the town overnight. It all comes down to the quality of life, where people feel like they want to be here."

The event was sponsored by Travel Drumheller and Canalta. Coffee was donated by Century 21 and McDonalds provided cookies, with Drumheller Valley Secondary School offering use of their theatre for free.


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