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MLA’s actions lead to government contempt of Legislature ruling

 cooper mug crop

    Olds, Didsbury, Three Hills MLA Nathan Cooper has taken the Alberta Government to task over its advertising of the carbon tax.
    Wildrose House Leader Cooper was successful in eliciting an apology from the Government after his action led to the government being found in contempt of the legislature.
    He explains that way back in June, he raised a Point of Privilege in the Legislature.  At issue was the government’s spending on carbon tax ads before MLAs voted on the bill. A day after he raised the point, the spring sitting of the legislature came to an end.
    “Typically speaking on Point of Privilege, the Speaker will take some time to review the facts, so rarely does the speaker immediately review it,” he explains.
    He said over the break, there had been some discussion on the issue and some additional submissions made to the Legislature.
    “I asked that all these submissions be made in front of the Assembly, so on the first day back, they were tabled in the Assembly and he made his ruling,” said Cooper.
    Government Deputy House Leader Deron Bilous quickly apologized and Speaker Robert Wanner accepted.
    Cooper would have liked the speaker to take more action.
    “Under the usual practices of the Legislature, the matter should have been referred to the all-party Privileges and Elections, Standing Orders and Printing committee for further discussion and potential sanction,” he said.
    Bill 20, the Climate Leadership Implementation Act passed on June 7, and was given Royal Assent on June 13.
 “Once the piece of legislation was passed, they were able to start their campaign. The trouble is they misappropriated the funds prior to that election passing,” said Cooper. “They broke the rules by essentially presupposing a decision by the assembly.
    He goes on to say that almost exactly one year ago the Opposition raised a similar point of privilege relating to a news release sent out on the proposed budget, and were warned by the Speaker.
    “Almost a year to the day, he found them in contempt breaking the same rule they had been warned about respecting,” he said.
    “One of my biggest disappointment or frustration is that this is the exact same thing that when the NDP was in opposition, they would get very frustrated at the government from them not following the rules of the assembly, and in my opinion, thinking they are more important to the assembly, which translated into thinking you are more important than Albertans.”
    In the clouds of spin and propagandas flying in the legislature, a procedural misstep almost seems unglamorous, but for Cooper, it is about respect.
    “At the end of the day, the NDP promised that they would be more open, more transparent and more respectful of Albertans, and with this type of behaviour, they are beginning a track record of not doing that,” said Cooper. “Even people that didn’t support the NDP but were frustrated with the previous government were hoping the NDP would do things differently, and less than two years into their mandate they have been found in contempt.”
    “This isn’t about politicians, it is about Albertans and the need for the rules to be followed and the government to be respectful of them,” he said.


Emergency services respond to collision near Coop

Crashed

Drumheller RCMP and the Drumheller Fire Department responded to a collision on Highway 10 in front of the Drumheller Coop Monday night, November 14.

The collision occurred shortly 7 pm. It appears that an east bound pickup truck rear ended another pickup. The fire department controlled traffic while police investigated. There appears to be no injuries.  

Samuel Poxon’s service remembered

 

Samuel greyRemembrance Day is a time to take a moment to remember those who gave their lives for our country and our freedom. While this generation is grateful it has not seen conflict on the scale of the wars in Europe or the Eastern front, sadly the stories of those who sacrificed mean less and less in their daily lives.
    It is when we stumble on a story or a memento of these people, it piques our curiosity.  In this case, it is the discovery of a war hero’s medals.
    Sam Poxon was just four years in Canada when he volunteered for military service in World War 1.
    Poxon was born in 1884 in Denaby, Yorkshire and was the son of Eli and Sarah Poxon. He married Ellen Ann Dobson in 1907, and emigrated to Carbon, Alberta in 1912.

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    When Poxon came to Carbon, he went to work in the Black Diamond Coal Mine with his brother Wilfred. Shortly after, their daughter Vera was born, and the family moved to Coal Creek, near Fernie, B.C. where he continued to mine. He spent time in Calgary training. His attestation papers were signed in Vancouver, B.C. on May 13, 1916. Attestation papers are completed by enlisted officers and are a formal document certifying the recruit is fit or unfit for duty.
    He joined the Canadian Army Medical Corps in the 13th Field Ambulance Division. He was a corporal. He left Canada from Montreal on June 1, 1916, and arrived in Liverpool on July 10. He proceeded to service overseas on August 12.
    Little is known about Sam’s service overseas. He was an ambulance driver and on September 3, 1917, he was awarded the Military Medal. The Military Medal is awarded to Warrant Officers, Non-Commissioned Officers and men for individual or associated acts of bravery on the recommendation of a Commander-in-Chief in the field. A silver, laurelled bar is awarded for a subsequent act or acts of bravery and devotion under fire.
    According to a Poxon family history online, he was granted a one week leave after he was awarded the medal, and he went to Adlington, England to visit. He was killed three weeks later at Ypres, Belgium. He is buried at Brandhoek New Military Cemetery No. 3 in Belgium.
    According to  the book, Carbon, Our History, Our Heritage, his wife Ellen left Carbon with her family and moved back to England after the war, but within a year they were back in Carbon. Their eldest son Alex never married, and youngest son Sam married Vivian Duklow and they lived all over Canada and France during his career with the air force.

Adlington Lancashireagrey
    Their daughter Vera married Cyril Oliphant. They had a son Gerry and daughters, Pat and Sharon.


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