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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

Which charity will you select?

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    The Telus Fibre Optics donation to Drumheller local charities rests in your hands.  Will you respond to the email Telus sends you after signing up for Fibre Optics?
    The program just began and runs until November 15, 2016 so there is ample time for people to sign up and select their charity.
    TELUS Media Relations Liz Sauve explained that TELUS will donate $25 to local charities for every customer who signs up for Optik TV. The best part is that the power  will be in the hands of the customer.
  

 What is so special about this program is that it recognizes that different causes speak to different people. By placing the power in the hands of our customers it undoubtedly spreads the love amongst the community’s many charitable organizations.
    After signing up for Fibre Optik, you will receive an e-mail that directs you to the website where you select a charity and Telus will  donate $25.
    Anyone can view the participating charities by visiting telus.com/Drumheller, and following the Fibre for Good links. Here are the participating charities:
 
• Bedrock Playschool Society
• Big Country Victim Services Association
• Drumheller & District Humane Society
• Drumheller and District Music Festival Association
• Drumheller and District Seniors Foundation
• Drumheller Community Learning Society
• Drumheller Community Meals on Wheels
• Drumheller Pioneer Trail Society
• Drumheller Society for Recovery
• The Homestead Museum Society
• The Valley Bus Society
 
    Since 2010, TELUS has invested more than $10,000 in projects with local charities including the Drumheller Public Library and the Big Country Victim Services Association. They also gave $1,000 to the Skate Park project led by DASE in partnership with the Town of Drumheller.


Mayor gains support for beaver problem

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    Beavers are destroying trees within the Town’s park and pathway systems.
    Mayor Terry Yemen has written to the Honorable Shannon Phillips, Minister of Environment and Parks of the Alberta Provincial Government regarding the massive beaver problem, however the issue has not received an answer or response since November 18, 2015.
     The Town has contacted Fish & Wildlife, however they do not have the resources to address the problem.  As a result the Town has been trapping beavers to protect our treed areas.
    The Mayor explained, “We are spending resources municipally on community enforcement and for hiring a contractor when it’s clearly a provincial matter. We have also asked MLA Rick Strankman to lobby on our behalf.”
    “The Drumheller taxpayers are footing this bill when it is a provincial matter. They (the beavers) will literally eat themselves out of house and home. Across from the old hospital, the trees are almost all gone now. It used to be a significant tree stand.” said Yemen.
    The Red Deer River Municipal Users Groups (RDRMUG) explained:  “With the increase in the beaver population, their foraging within the Red Deer River Basin is causing severe damage to watershed’s riparian vegetation including the destruction of trees.  Infrastructure, including culverts, water treatment plant in-takes, roads and access systems, along with parks and recreation structures are suffering severe damage from beaver activities.  The dams cause flooding and can cause extensive damage and may have a definite effect of agriculture, river tributaries and wetlands within the basin.”                      The RDRMUG has also written to the Honorable Shannon Phillips, with copies also going to the Premier and MLA’s within the Red Deer River Basin. 

Champs crowned in Drumheller's video game tournament

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The Second annual Town of Drumheller Video Game Tournament went Saturday and Sunday at the Badlands Community Facility. 

For two days teens battled it out in front of the big screen for supremacy in Call of Duty, Black Opps 3.
Eric Neuman, FCSS coordinator for the Town of Drumheller said last year there were 30 participants, this time 50.
"It's a lot of fun and a great way to engage youth in the community," said Neuman. 
Saturday was all out action as all the participants battled for positioning. The top 16 were invited back Sunday morning. 
The event enjoyed considerable support from the community, including Telus, the Kinsmen and McDonald's, which all contributed to make it a success. 
In the end, Samuel Adams took spot. He was runner up last year. He won an XBox One. Griffin North took second and Levi Munn won third. 

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