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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Coal transition panel meets in Hanna

warwick
    Hanna is looking at a future without the coal industry, and last week local leaders in the community were able to voice their concern and ideas about what that may look like.
     On Tuesday, February 21 and Wednesday morning, the Advisory Panel on Coal Communities met with invited stakeholders. They spoke with municipal leaders, the Hanna Learning Centre, the Cactus Corridor Economic Development Corporation, the Rural Alberta Business Centre and the local Chamber of Commerce. They also spoke to local representatives of the coal industry.
    Mayor Chris Warwick said it was a positive meeting.
    “It was a chance for them to hear some of the impacts that are going to happen in our area and region, so they can make their report,” said Warwick.
    “The report is due in late spring and it is really dependent on the panel getting all the information.”
    Warwick said the panel started in Hanna and then headed to other affected communities including Forestburg and Parkland County.
    He said the panel made no promises, and that isn’t their role.
    “Their work is to recommend to the government how the government can help coal communities transition away from coal, that is their mandate,” he said, adding that much of the transition planning is in the community’s hands to design.
    “We are closer to the impacts and to what we want to see in the region. From here going forward, it is really in our hands to come up with a transition plan of some kind and then implement it. That is where we will get the help from the government and to possibly utilize their departments and how they can help us transition away from coal and still be viable.”
    Warwick said the panel appeared to be responsive.
    “It was good. The panel has some really good questions and it was a good opportunity to sit down and discuss and give them a tour of the town to show them everything we have to offer,” he said. “I felt it was very good, their questions were pertinent to what is happening in our area.”
    There are no firm timelines. The report from the Advisory on Coal Communities is due later this spring, and Warwick said after the report is published they can begin to look how to work with the government on the transition.
    “It felt like we were heard, we just have to see what comes out of it in the end,” said Warwick.


Women dominate in Battle of the Sexes

battle

The results are in, and sorry guys you will just have to wait until next year to take another shot at the crown.
The Battle of the Sexes has wrapped up for 2017. Over the course of February, the women logged 2,188.28 kilometres in the pool, on the track and or using cardio equipment, to the men’s 1,701.23.
The contest continues to be popular, and in fact growing, with 129 women taking part, and 68 men. Of the participants, there were 13 women and 14 men who contributed the maximum amount of kilometres.
The women who participated and completed the minimum distance will be entered into a draw for a three-month multi-facility pass, and the men who achieved the minimum mileage are eligible for a draw for a one-month pass.

2016 Census: Town’s population holds steady

house

    While many rural communities have been declining in population, Drumheller appears to be holding its own.
    On February 8, StatsCan released the population and dwelling count from the 2016 census and Drumheller’s population fell by a mere 47 when compared to the 2011 census. Between 2006 and 2011, Drumheller grew by about 100 residents.
    This represents 0.6 per cent change. Surrounding communities such as Hanna lost 4.3 per cent and Stettler grew by 3.5 percent. Starland County saw a slight increase of 9 per cent, Kneehill County saw 1.6 per cent growth and Wheatland County saw a 6.1 per cent increase. The largest decrease in Alberta for a small town was Bonnyville, which lost 12.9 per cent of its population.
    Drumheller falls in Census Division 5, which stretches from Huxley in the north to Carmangay in the south, east to Hanna and west to Lyalta. This area grew by 2,445.
    Mayor Terry Yemen says Drumheller’s numbers are positive
    “As far as small towns in Alberta we are faring a whole lot better than a lot of them,” said Yemen.
    A consistent population is important for a community says Yemen as many grants used population as a factor in its calculation. The Gas Tax Fund is one that is granted on a per capita basis.
    Alberta’s population has grown by about 11.6 per cent to 4,067,175
    This was the first release of the information from the 2016 census. On May 3 there will be a release showing age and sex as well as type of dwelling. The census of agriculture will be released on May 10. August 1 will show families, households and marital status well as languages and the numbers on income will be released September 13. On October 25, there will be a release of immigration and ethnocultural diversity, housing and aboriginal peoples, and November 29 will see the release of numbers on education, labour, journey to work, languages of work, mobility, and migration.
    2016 also saw the reintroduction of the long form census.


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