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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

New recruit learning the ropes

Hennythepolicedog

Drumheller has a new four-legged recruit at the RCMP Detachment.

Henny, the 10-week-old German Shepherd, is in training to become a member of the RCMP’s Canine Unit.  Constable Craig Nelson also wants to join the unit and part of his training is acting as an imprinter.

 “Right now, we are getting to know each other and getting comfortable with teaching each other,” he said. Later we’ll start more of the other type of training. As she progresses we’ll go on to more detailed things.”

Henny is not the first canine through the detachment training.  Constable Rachel Pergunas raised Derby and Constable Jeremy Willis, who is now in Cold Lake, raised Fura who has graduated.

The training for Henny begins right away.  While most puppies are trained to be obedient pets, training to be a police dog is a little different.  It’s instinctive behavior is fostered and encouraged.

“I imprint in her in the skills she needs and try to develop the natural traits she has,” said Nelson. “Some things, like curiosity, I want her to be curious, I want her to check things out, meet new people and walk into dark alleys and walk down sidewalks. If there is a dark tunnel, I want her to go see what is inside.”

   Other instincts include aggression and prey drive. 

  “I want my dog to be interested in chasing because later on I am going to tap into that, so if there is a bad guy running away, I will want her to chase him,” said Nelson.

His job is also to familiarize Henny with a variety of settings. Every time she comes out of her kennel, she is learning. She has been to the school to become comfortable with children and big groups, play is used to develop skills.

In the end, she will be trained as a multipurpose dog. She will be trained for tracking, apprehension and searching for lost items.

“(When) she is fully trained, she will be able to find something as small as a button,” he said.

She will learn to detect for scent and will be trained for either a drug or an explosive profile, he explained.

Along Henny’s journey, she will be evaluated for her progress.

“If she does well, I could have her for a year and a half. If she doesn’t do well, when they decide she is not going to be a police dog, they will take her away and give me a different one,” said Nelson.

Henny could then be sold as a pet, or to another agency to perform other services. Nelson explains the RCMP has its own breeding program and this has contributed to more dogs being successful in their training. 


Alberta Solar Co-op’s first project in Starland County

Alberta Solar Co op Logo RGB 01

 

Alberta Solar Co-op was created to meet the growing demand by Albertans to accelerate the adoption of renewable energy in Alberta. They are currently developing co-operative options to enable Albertans to easily support, invest and harness Alberta’s renewable energy. 

The Alberta Solar Co-op’s “Starland Solar 1” which will be located in Starland County, will be the first community owned solar farm in Western Canada. 

“Starland County has been one of the most active regions in Alberta when it comes to promoting solar, having received the Municipal Excellence Award for Innovation and being an Emerald Award Finalist. They have built the partnerships, community awareness and support needed to make this project a success,” said Paul Cabaj, Director of Cooperative Development at the Alberta Community and Cooperatives Association in a press release. 

Starland Solar 1 will be a one – two Megawatt installation, which will feed in directly to the Alberta power grid and be sold through the Alberta Power Pool. This will be a significant first step in greening our overall grid. It is poised to be the first distributed generation solar installation in Alberta. 

The site chosen has the potential to expand to three Megawatts and the county itself has several other excellent locations for large scale installations. They hope to have Starland Solar 2 launched in the future but we also know there are hundreds of communities in Alberta that would benefit from this investment structure and technology. 

“It is exciting that we have created the framework to install community owned solar installations throughout Alberta. Solar has been a great investment for our farm and our family, we are excited that the Alberta Solar Co-op will make this opportunity available for all Albertans and especially our local communities,” Bob Sargent, Founding Board Member, Alberta Solar Coop said in a press release.

RCMP promoting safe practices behind the wheel

cruiser

This week the Drumheller RCMP is working with students in the area to focus on safe habits behind the wheel. 

 October 19-25 is National Teen Driver Safety Week (NTDSW). This is an annual public awareness campaign aimed at reducing distracted, aggressive and impaired driving, the leading cause of preventable death and injuries among teens.

Staff Sergeant Grant MacDonald said the detachment will be working with students at DVSS and St. Anthony’s to look at safe driving habits.

Morrin School’s SADD Chapter is once again supporting the project.

“Teen fatalities behind the wheel are completely preventable,” says Katie Suntjens, Staff Advisor, and Morrin School SADD Chapter. “Through NTDSW and community initiatives like our recent Youth Traffic Safety Conference and our annual Speed Awareness Campaign in May, we are working to raise awareness of the devastating effect of distracted driving and encourage young drivers to focus on the road, not their phones.”

On Tuesday, October 20 the SADD chapter was promoting the #PracticeSafeText campaign during the lunch hour, which encourages others to take selfies in a photo booth to create awareness on social media regarding the issue of texting and driving. 

Not just teens have to be reminded of safe driving practices. Over the thanksgiving weekend, the RCMP participated in Operation Impact, a coast-to-coast traffic initiative sponsored by the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police.

Law enforcement agencies across Canada were out in force from October 9-12 with a focus on detecting impaired and distracted drivers, speeders and those not wearing seatbelts. The annual campaign takes place on the Thanksgiving Weekend, a time when the risk of collisions increases due to heavier traffic.

In the Drumheller area, Staff Sergeant MacDonald said the RCMP participated in three check stops over the holiday weekend. They pulled over 105 vehicles. From that, they laid two criminal code impaired charges, one three-day suspension. They issued 34 speeding tickets, 16 for seatbelt infractions, six distracted driving tickets, three tickets for liquor, one no insurance and 31 other tickets. They also issued some written warnings.

”We are certainly aware that in and around Drumheller distractive driving is a public safety concern, and given our geographical lay of the land being relatively flat with few trees, that people are going to test the speed limits on the highway,” he said. 


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