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Last updateTue, 17 Sep 2024 3pm

Dinosaur Legacy grants support community

Munson Hall

    The Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce showed its support through the World’s Largest Dinosaur Legacy Fund for area community groups, with $6,000 in grants.
    On Wednesday morning, April 6, Chamber President Landon Bosch presented Drumheller Legion Branch President Karel Stojan with a cheque for $3,000. These funds are to replace the flooring in the basement at the Legion.
    “We are redoing the basement,” he tells inSide Drumheller. “Nothing has been done since 1966.”
    He adds that this year is the 90th anniversary of the Drumheller Legion Branch and they are in the process of planning a way to mark the occasion.
    The Chamber also awarded the Munson Community Association $3,000 for roller shutters for the bar/kitchen area in the new community hall.
    President of the Munson Community Association Becky Kowalchuck is grateful for the donation.
    The Munson Community Association has been making great strides in completing its hall project. Breaking ground last fall, they are already doing finishing work to the interior and hope to be siding the exterior soon. They are aiming for a June opening.
    Kowalchuk added they are continuing work on their fundraising efforts.
    The World’s Largest Dinosaur Legacy Fund has been a great supporter of the community and in its short history has contributed more than $585,000 to a number of valuable community projects.
    The deadline for the next round of grants is September 1, 2016.

chamber to legion


Out with the cold…

ice

It’s a sure sign of spring when the rink at the Drumheller Memorial Arena is removed for the season. The Dragons Spring Camp wrapped up Sunday afternoon, and by Monday morning, town crews had three Bobcats and the Zamboni out peeling back the ice surface.

Local jurisdictions receive Emergency Master Plan funding

evacuation centre flood

    Drumheller and surrounding counties have secured $125,000 from the provincial government to create an emergency master plan to be used in the case of regional emergencies, it was announced on April 4 at town council.
    The Emergency Master Plan would provide crisis managers in Drumheller, and the counties of Kneehill, Starland, Wheatland, and Special Areas with a comprehensive document detailing pertinent information and available resources to these administrations in the event of an emergency such as flood or fire.
    “You can’t overestimate how important it is for the crisis manager to be working with current data in the event of an emergency,” said Mayor Terry Yemen.
    “It gives decision makers the opportunity to know exactly what is available to them, not only resources coming to Drumheller but our resources and equipment going to our partners.”
    “This is a large area we are talking about, from Drumheller right up to the Saskatchewan border.”
    Protective Services Director Greg Peters, who would likely be the crisis manager in emergency situations, said these agreements are already in place but a comprehensive emergency plan document “will narrow down exact information and the collective memory of people who will retire and who will take that information and expertise with them.”
     The town was approved through the Alberta Community Partnership program to update the Emergency Services Master Plan project. The timeline for developing the plan is still in its infancy but work on the plan will be tendered out.


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