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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

Rotary Club puts Austin back on the road

Bike

    One of the Rotary Club’s focus has always been youth, and this year the Drumheller Club has decided to support one young man so he can go bike riding.
    On Monday, February 1, the club presented a new recumbent tricycle to Austin Kolm, son of Jacquie and Gerry. While the 13-year-old DVSS student has cerebral palsy he keeps busy in the winter playing sledge hockey, and in the summer he likes to go biking.  
    He has outgrown his current bicycle and was looking to replace it.
     A recumbent trike has a hefty price tag and the family approached the Rotary Club hoping for a little support. The Rotary took up the project and agreed to fund the trike in full.
    “For you to step forward and look after the bike really made a difference in our life,” said Gerry, thanking the Rotary.
    Austin is grateful.
    “I am speechless right now,” he tells The Mail. “In the off season I can bike around, it is going to be awesome. It is not just going to keep me fit, it is going to be really fun at the same time.”
    Because of the weather, he hasn’t been able to try out the bike, but is looking forward to better weather to try it out.


Acme Inspection Report offers remedy to council

acme town sign

    Mayor of Acme said a report from Municipal Affairs is a document that the village can use to make improvements.
      Last week the village received a Municipal Inspection Report that was ordered in January 2015.
    “To us, it has vindicated some of the things we have been doing, and it also highlighted that we made a couple mistakes and we are well on the process of cleaning those things up,” said Mayor Bruce McLeod. “They recognize that in the report, so that is a good thing.”
    The path to the Municipal Inspection was long and winding, with issues that originated from irregularities in the 2013 election process.  Some residents legally challenged the election, and while there were irregularities, the court maintained the election was valid.  
  A group of residents also challenged a tax recovery sale in June of 2014.
    As well, in June of 2014, a petition opposing the rezoning a parcel of land known as the Tire Park was presented to council.  The council deemed the petition as insufficient, and went ahead and rezoned the parcel of land. The opposing petitioners sent the petition and their letter of concerns to Municipal Affairs.
    In September of 2014, a second petition asking the Minister to “order an inquiry into the affairs of the municipality and the conduct of the CAO, administration and Mayor and Council in relation to the refusal of Council to listen to electors, pecuniary interest of councillors, treatment of residents by staff, confidentiality, minutes of meetings, and other deficiencies in the management of the municipality.”
    While this petition did not meet the requirements, the minister requested that staff conduct a preliminary review. Based on this review, council was informed an inspection was warranted.
    The findings were presented at an open house on Thursday, January 28.
    From the inspection, there were 17 recommendations. They range from improving communications with the community, to skill development for staff, to following existing procedures and reviewing bylaws and decisions.
    “When I did a quick review of the document after the meeting, I would suggest we have done well over half of the recommendations,” said McLeod. “These are things we have to respond to the Minister on how we are doing on this. On a couple, we are going to need time, but we will get done.”
    The report cites issues with staffing, in particular, the turnover of CAOs.
    “Since 2009 the Village administration has been led by several Chief Administrative Officers (CAOs). This high administrative leadership turnover, together with intermittent periods when the Assistant CAO served as Interim CAO, has had a cumulative and debilitating effect on the entire organization and community,” it states.
    Mayor McLeod also acknowledges this was an issue. “I am not blaming administration. We have been through a number of CAOs. We have been floundering a little bit but we are getting there, and I think they recognize this.”
    The report can be found here.

Drumheller Steps Up

dragons walk

Wednesday, February 3 was Winter Walk Day and Drumheller residents joined thousands of Albertans across the province heading outside and taking a nice brisk walk. Seniors in the area participated along with members of the Drumheller Dragons at the BCF, and then an inspired group headed through downtown at noon. Similarly, schools in the area got into the spirit as the entire student body of St. Anthony’s school, took 15 minutes to take a stroll around their school grounds. Greentree School kindergarten to grade two students, along with the teachers, participated in the  Provincial Winter Walk Day.  The group stopped for awhile at Participark on Riverside Drive.  The weather cooperated and several students said they were having lots of fun.

Greentrees Kindergarten gr 1 gr 2

 

stas walk


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