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NDP’s Katherine Swampy on campaign trail

 

swampy

As the federal election looms closer, NDP candidate in the Crowfoot–Battle River Constituency, Katherine Swampy is campaigning full speed ahead.

Swampy visited with The Mail last Friday on a trip through the constituency to meet with voters. She says she is getting a good response.

“I find that after I talk to conservatives and they understand what we have to offer, many of them are almost afraid,” she said.  “They don’t want to sign because they are worried, they wear a blue button because they don’t want their friends to look down on them. But they tell me “I’m gong to vote for you, but I can’t put a sign in my yard.”

Swampy is a working mother and just graduated from the University of Alberta at the Augustana Campus with a Bachelor of Arts with a major in economics and a minor in political studies. She is on leave without pay to campaign.

She sees a shift in the policies of the Conservative Party.

“Progressive Conservatives were more focused on social values and economy, but now the new Harper Conservatives are just more focused on the economy. They seemed to forget they were working for the people. The people are starting to feel that now,” she said.

“Many Conservatives feel betrayed and the NDP wants to show them there is a choice out there.”

She is passionate about the issues.

“I am affected by everything that Stephen Harper is doing. For one, I am First Nations, we have been neglected for many years, and he is not helping with anything. I am also a mother of five, so as a parent I understand the concerns that young families have. I couldn’t; afford childcare if it were not for close family relatives,” she said.

“I also just graduated, so I have a student debt. So I understand students who are saddled with a crazy amount of debt. Why is it considered fair that those who paid a few thousand dollars for their degrees, tell us we have to pay tens of thousands for degrees?”

She sees the NDP’s platform as a balanced plan.

“We have stable plans for the economy, the environment, for healthcare and childcare,” she said. 

She appreciates that she is in a very conservative riding, and she is in a David and Goliath battle. 

“I am fighting to have our voice heard. Because this is a very conservative area, a lot of people are not even thinking if whether they are even going to vote. There are many people who don’t vote, and it is their voice that is not being heard. I am out there fighting for the middle class families, I am out there fighting for the students who are going to school and struggling to survive, fighting for those losing their jobs, being a voice for the voiceless,” she said. “I would really love to see them act on what I am fighting for, even if I have no chance of winning…  but if they actually address these issues, I will have been successful.”

She feels compelled to get involved in politics.

“I was living and feeling all of the hardships that Harper’s conservatives have put on the people and I needed to take a stand and fight for this. Who else was going to fight for me?”


Drumheller fire department kicks off Fire Prevention Week with open house

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The cold weather didn’t stop families from heading to the Drumheller Fire Hall for the annual open house to kick-off Fire Prevention Week (October 4-10, 2015). 

This year, the theme of fire prevention week is: “Hear the Beep Where you Sleep: Every bedroom needs a working smoke alarm.”

Drumheller Fire Chief Bruce Wade said the importance of this year’s fire prevention week is to “make sure (the public) have working smoke detectors in bedrooms or located outside bedrooms.”

“With construction of houses these days and synthetic material, fires are developing faster so people need to be alerted sooner and evacuate quicker. In today’s building construction, you only have about one to two minutes to get out of a house so that is the awareness we are trying to push,” he said. 

Wade also said it is not only important to have smoke detectors in homes, but also, “the smoke detectors that you do have, you change the batteries twice yearly when the time changes.” He continued by reminding the public that smoke detectors only last 10 years and should be checked monthly. 

“By checking a smoke detector it will give you an idea of how long it has been up,” he told The Mail

“The biggest thing is smoke detector awareness and for people to have to have an evacuation plan,” Wade said finishing by saying it is important that children understand this plan. 

Joining the members of the fire department at the event were local RCMP and EMS who brought along a police cruiser and ambulance for families to see.

“Having the RCMP members here and EMS gives people the opportunity to see them not in a real professional aspect and they can get to know them, and know their faces,” Wade said. 

Dentists from Uganda learn of Rotary hospitality

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The reach of the Rotary Club goes all around the world and back to the valley.

This was evident on Saturday, September 26 when dentists and practitioners from Uganda made their way through the valley. The connections go back years, as the contingent was hosted by a former Three Hills dentist Dr. Drew Cahoon. 

“I was in Three Hills from 1980 to 1989,” he tells The Mail.

After an automobile accident, he left the industry and rebooted his practice in Raymond Alberta.

Today he is only working in Africa. He heads overseas twice a year to Uganda and Rwanda.

His mission began as doing work in a home for handicapped children in Uganda. The Minister of Health heard of this project, and took him to meet the dean of the College Health and Wellness. This began a new project to rebuilding an archaic dental school.

“It had been built in 1970 by the government of Denmark. There were 40 dental chairs donated in 1968 and by 2005 only five worked. It was a real disaster. They asked what could we do. I said, “let’s dream.” 

They dreamed big, and had 20 new chairs installed and were able to make 15 useable chairs out of the old set. They also brought in x-ray and sterilization equipment. In all it was a $2.1 million project to rebuild the school.  

The next important component helping the people of Uganda was to work on training the practitioners.

He explains that the participants on this journey are dentists and public health dental officers from 13 regional referral hospitals. The services at these hospitals are free, and often their practice is to extract  teeth. 

“As Rotarians, we didn’t want to be known for extracting teeth, we want to be known for restoring teeth as well,” he said.

This began another project where they brought in dental chairs donated and purchased from the University of Alberta. Now each clinic has two chairs, and the dental school received nine. 

They began training the dentists and practitioners in Uganda on oral hygiene and restorative dentistry. They made it a requirement that each hospital, would provide outreach to public schools.

For two weeks, this group of dentists had the opportunity to meet, learn and train at NAIT and the University of Alberta. This trip was sponsored through a Rotary vocational training grant. 

“Literally it was six weeks training in two weeks,” said Cahoon. “Now they have the equipment, the material and the instruments, so when they go back we expect them to do restorative and preventative work.”

After they completed the training, they spent a week in native communities in southern Alberta where they were able to observe the preventative programs in action.

He said the whole experience was invaluable.

“It was very intense, very long days, “he said. “It has been so amazing.”

He will be able to observe this next evolution of the project as he continues his biannual trips.  

His vision was contagious. Many at the schools and professionals in Edmonton gave of their time sand skills voluntarily.

“Now we have people from the University of Alberta who are going to come to Uganda,” he said. “They will go there, do some training, and help us with our outreach.

The experience has an affect on the professionals and staff that supported the program.

“Rotary’s motto is Service Above Self and this told me the very act of service was so rewarding to all those people,” he said.

Last Saturday, these participants were hosted by the local Rotary Club who treated them to breakfast and then took them to the Royal Tyrrell Museum.


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