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Badlands Motorsports Resort submits plans for county approval

badlands motorsports resort mockup

The Badlands Motorsports Resort has made its last lap for approval after site development plans and formal applications for subdivision were submitted by the company late last month. 

A comprehensive site development plan and formal applications for subdivision for the planned $400 million dollar roadracing and tourism resort was filed with Kneehill County on April 19, with final approvals expected over the next few months and construction hoped to begin later this year. 

Director and CFO James Zelazo tells The Mail that, while the final document submission is a welcome milestone, the road there took longer than the company expected.

“We thought we’d have been finished at this point,” Zelazo said. “There were some bumps along the way that probably shouldn’t have happened.”

Groups of landowners in Rosebud, along with Wheatland County, had opposed development of Badlands Motorsports Resort, which is on both Kneehill and Wheatland County land about 5 kilometres from Rosebud, due to concerns over noise pollution and county road usage. 

Wheatland County filed an inter-municipal dispute through the Alberta Municipal Government Board (MGB) over worries they would responsible for maintaining roadways due to increased traffic in their borders. In May 2015, the MGB ruled that upgrades to access roads to and from Highway 9 would be made at the Badland Motorsports’ expense and done to county standards. 

Zelazo said that the Badlands Motorsports Resort, a country-club style resort featuring two European-style road courses with a combined track length near 10 km for non-spectator recreational driving and instruction, will be built on Kneehill County land, with the remaining sections of land on Wheatland County planned to be preserved for recreational purposes, such as a campground. 

In total the company owns 525 acres of property in the southwest corner of Kneehill County. 

The first phase of development will be the road courses and multi-purpose building which will be the primary centre of operations and administration, including food services, retail and repair areas, as well as vehicle inspections for safety and noise controls. The hotel, clubhouse and residential properties will be developed in later phases.

The project’s estimated $400 million price tag makes it the largest tourism development currently proposed in Alberta, the company says.


False fire alarm at Telus building

imagealarm

The Drumheller Fire Department responded to an alarm call at the Telus building in downtown Drumheller at about 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night. The department cleared all four floors of the office building before they deemed it to be a false alarm. 

Remembering Drumheller’s rich mining history

Miners memorial

A small but dedicated group gathered on Sunday to remember those who worked in the dark, and those who died in the mine.

The annual May Day Miner Memorial March went on May 1.  About 50 marched from the Badlands Community Facility to the Memorial Park beside Drumheller Town Hall. They carried placards naming the mine families of the valley.

At the memorial, a short service was held to remember those who perished. Fred Orosz and Bob Moffatt, a miner and pony driver in his own right, read the honour roll of those who died in the mine.

Moffat recounted the story of one miner, George Brown, whose name appeared both on the Miner Memorial and the Drumheller Cenotaph.

“When the war (WW2) was first declared, many young men who only worked two or three days at the mine would runoff and join the services. Once the government realized they needed extra mine shifts in order to keep the electricity and furnaces going, they started to send some of these men back to the mines,” explains Moffatt. “I don’t know if this happened anywhere else in Canada, but Mr. Brown was sent back to the mines from Calgary. Within a couple weeks of returning to the mines, he was killed. He has the dubious distinction of not only being on our memorial but on the cenotaph.”

Music was part of the ceremony as Marie Russell performed for the crowd.

Following the ceremony attendees had a chance to see some rare mining artifacts. Dylan Zima brought his own personal collection. Zima has a genuine interest in mining history. His great great grandfather Phillip Zima perished in the Caledonian Collieries Mine. His collection includes items that even the Atlas Coal Mine did not contain.

 Jay Russell of the Atlas Coal Mine was impressed by Zima’s collection and was happy to see a young man carry on the memories of the mining history.

The Miners Memorial in downtown Drumheller was unveiled in November 2012, and since 2013, May Day festivities have been revived to keep the memory of the valley’s mining history.


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