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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

Commit to Fit reaches personal benchmark for fitness

lori hartmanbrandon schneiderjacy BCF

 

The Commit to Fit Challenge finished January 31, and Badlands Community Facility (BCF) Coordinator of Recreation Programs Jacy Calon said, “Over 100 participants entered the challenge and  70% completed their goals." 
In the January 20 edition of The Drumheller Mail reported Valri Bickerton and her fiancé Jon Foran were competing in the challenge.  On February 2, Bickerton spoke to the Mail, “I met my goal and lost eight pounds and her fiancé Jon Foran also met his goal, running 8 kms.”
On Monday, February 1, Calon drew a name from the challengers who reached their goals and Lori Hartman won the three month multi-facility membership. Hartman’s goals were to attend the BCF three times weekly and increase her cardio and strength. Hartman said, “I started doing only five laps and exceeded my goal to 15 laps.” Using the stack machines, Hartman also increased the weight and repetitions. Hartman also  said, “I hope to keep on attending the BCF.”
Drumheller Mail Editor Ossie Sheddy shared his thoughts, “The Staff at The Drumheller Mail thought it would be a great idea to start off the new year with a fitness challenge, partnering up with the Badlands Community Facility. We will be back next year, bigger and better.  We hope the people enjoyed the challenge of reaching their personal benchmark for fitness.”


Carbon's "Stomper" Gouldie passes

archiegouldie

    A legendary professional wrestler with roots in Carbon has passed away.
    Archie Gouldie, also known in the ring as the Mongolian Stomper, the Masked Bounty Hunter and the Midnight Stallion died on January 23 at his home in Knoxville, Tn. He was 79.
    Gouldie cut his teeth in the wresting world at Stu Hart’s Stampede Wrestling promotion as “the Stomper” and held the North American Heavy Weight Championship a record of 14 times between 1968 and 1984. One of his opponents was Dave Ruhl of Hanna. While most of his tenure at Stampede Wrestling was as a villain, in 1983, he turned against Bad News Allen.
    Outside of Stampede Wrestling, he achieved most of his fame in Southeast Championship Wrestling where he held the NWA Southeast Heavyweights Championship 11 times.
    Along the way, he wrestled names such as Bret Hart, Paul Orndorf, Harley Race, Andre the Giant and even Terry Bolder (Hulk Hogan). Jerry Lawler described him as one of his all time great opponents.
    He also wrestled in Smoky Mountains Wrestling in 1992. Later in life, he served as a deputy Sherriff in Knoxville County Tennessee, and worked as a corrections officer.
     While about 10 years his junior, Reg Trempanier remembers Gouldie.
    “He used to live here and go to Stampede Wrestling,” recalled Trepanier. “There used to be a circuit. He would travel from to Saskatoon, Regina, Edmonton and Calgary.”
     “All the wrestlers used to travel together. It was pretty funny, because they would get in the ring and were mad as hell at each other. Then, when it was all done, they would go out and get in the same car to travel to the next stop!”
     Trepanier said he knew many of Gouldie's family members but none of his siblings are in the area now.
    Former local realtor, the late Reg Gouldie, was Archie's nephew.  

NDP's Royalty Review keeps status quo

Oil sands

    It appears no news is good news in the oil industry as the government of Alberta has adopted the recommendations of the Royalty Review Advisory Panel.    
    The Alberta Government has finally released the result of a review by an appointed panel and by and large, more has stayed the same than has changed.
 According to a release, the Panel determined that Alberta’s royalties are comparable to similar jurisdictions, but the industry’s costs are substantially higher. As a result, the panel recommends a modernized framework that sets a drilling cost allowance for wells according to an industry-wide average.
     “This improved royalty framework will make Alberta’s energy industry more competitive and create more good jobs. We heard the system was complex, unpredictable and too rigid to keep pace with the rapidly changing technology of our energy sector. Albertans and industry will benefit from a modernized framework that is simple, predictable, and adaptable,” said Marg McCuaig-Boyd, Minister of Energy.
    Brad Peake, who works in many facets of the oil and gas industry locally, said, “A lot of stuff is going to stay exactly how it is. There are some operational enhancements that may trigger in the future."
    "It seemed like she (Premier Notley) has been educated,” chuckles Peake.   
    He says the results are no surprises either.
    “I felt fairly confident that through the entire process there would be no royalty rate increase, as quite simply there isn’t room for it. The oil and gas bankruptcy rate is not because the royalties are too high, but if you did increase them bankruptcy rates will rise quicker,” he said. “Many a person offered negatives that the review would increase royalty rates. I was quietly optimistic that wouldn’t happen because when you look at the money, there just isn’t room to cut the profit sharing pie any differently, there is no profit to share these days.”
    Under the new framework, the effects will take effect in 2017. On wells drilled prior to 2017, the existing royalty structure will stay in place for 10 years. They will also maintain the current oil sands royalty regime.
  Drumheller-Stettler MLA Rick Strankman said the results were anticlimactic, but it did come with some worry.
    “Certainly there was a lot of angst and uncertainty caused even by the announcement of it, coupled by the decline of commodity prices,” he said.
    While he is pleased with the outcome of the review, he said it goes against a long held standpoint by members of the government who expressed Albertans were not getting enough for the province’s oil.
  “Do people trust this government? I don’t think so, but through the democratic process they are going to have to see how it plays out,” he said.
    Peake also finds it interesting the results of the review went against previous perceptions.
    “The premier admitted today that what she’s been saying for seven or more years — that Albertans are not getting their fair share— she’s come to the conclusion she’s been wrong the entire time,” he said. “I have to wonder how much else is the NDP wrong about?”
    While the review is complete, the pain in the industry has not stopped.
    In my office, I get 5+ brochures a week of companies looking to sell lock, stock and barrel or going into receivership. Properties that are asking 10 cents on a dollar spent, anything is better than nothing. To get out now is better than not getting out at all,” said Peake.




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