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Red Deer River water quality assessed after collision spills diesel fuel into nearby creek

County truck assisting first responders

Water quality in the Red Deer River is being assessed after a collision near the Content Bridge led to a diesel fuel being spilled into a creek that feeds into the river.  
    At approximately 3:30 p.m. on June 09, 2016, Stettler RCMP and Stettler Regional Fire Department responded to the rollover of a semi-truck and trailer combination on Highway 21 approximately one mile south of Highway 11 near Content Bridge.
    The investigation is on-going to the cause of the semi leaving the road on a curve as it was travelling north. The truck turned on its side in a small creek, along with the lead trailer. The second trailer became detached and over turned into the creek.
    The driver of the semi-truck suffered minor injuries and was transported to Red Deer Regional Hospital by Stettler EMS.
    The truck and trailer combination was carrying diesel fuel and an unknown quantity of fuel spilled into the creek. The creek eventually flows into the Red Deer River.
    Notifications were made to Stettler Emergency Management Services, Alberta Transportation’s Dangerous Goods, Stettler Water Treatment Facility, Alberta Environment and Parks, Alberta Emergency Management and Alberta One Call.
    First responders limited the flow of fuel from the trailers and the flow of water down the creek was curtailed by the use of booms and a berm was used to block off the creek. The remaining fuel in the tank was subsequently removed.
    The Town of Stettler Water Treatment Plant has switched over to storage pond water, which has approximately a ten day supply to service its area. It is not anticipated regular water treatment will be affected for any longterm duration.
    Overnight County of Stettler and Town of Stettler staff worked alongside first responders to build two berms intended to limit contamination from heading downstream. They also constructed a pad to assist vacuum trucks in reaching the tanker.
    Crews working for the fuel company involved in the incident arrived and stabilized the scene and removed the product from both fuel tankers. Today they have three recovery units on site focusing on recovering the tankers from the site of the incident.
    Waterway specialist are currently on site assisting with the clean-up. They have installed a series of booms in the creek between the site of the incident and the river. They will focus on skimming product off of the river and filtering hydrocarbons from the water.
    The fuel company involved has contracted a team to overseas the entire recovery project. Their tasks will include taking soil samples from the site of the overturned unit and water samples from the creek and the Red Deer River. They will work closely with Alberta Environment during the containment and recovery process.
    Today’s goals are to eliminate any further downstream contamination. Alberta Environment will be taking samples and expediting testing.


Farewell to Hussar School

hussar school

After 67 years, Hussar School will be closing its doors forever, and staff, students, and the community itself now prepare for the move to the new Wheatland Crossing School next September.

An official farewell gathering is planned for June 18 for the community and past staff to part with the school that has been the central hub of activity for the small farming community for years. 

The occasion is bittersweet for Hussar School staff, who say the change to Wheatland Crossing, with its newer facilities and a larger population composed of students from Standard, Rockyford, and Gleichen, will offer students more than they could be provided in Hussar while also robbing certain qualities its people have come to know.

“There’s pros and cons,” said secretary Donna Collett, who has worked at the school for the last 19 years and attended Hussar School herself until Grade 11. “Our kids will get a lot more options and be exposed to more things in a bigger school. With our class sizes you don’t have much choice who your friends are, but at the same time it’s like a family.”

“The school is the hub of Hussar. It’s a centralized space in the community.”

Judy Sproule, who taught Kindergarten there from 1976 until her retirement in 2010, said the school is a focus of a lot of attention in the community for its activities and the vested interest of parents, as well as housing the Hussar library and a private daycare.

“It is emotional for everyone… It’s been a long process over the years and it’s nice to see it close to completion,” said Sproule.

Collett said the fight to keep enrolment numbers up has been a struggle since she was a sophomore in high school. She herself was moved to a different school for her senior year in 1973 because numbers were too low. 

“I’ve known this fighting to keep the school alive and floating forever. There’s no two ways about it, of course we want to keep the school in our community. But the numbers just don’t work,” she said, adding that since starting in 1997 the numbers have fluctuated from 90 to 120 and down again. 

“It’s all about the bottomline, that’s all there is to it.”

“Education is about funding through numbers,” said Sproule. “If you have more people you have more opportunity for more staff and more programming.”

Due to declining enrolment, Hussar School lost its high school classes in 2009, and then junior high in 2011.

Sproule said it’s a situation faced by rural communities in all prairie provinces, where farms have continued to grow larger and equipment and mechanization has decreased the demand for workers to live in the country.

But there is a sense that Wheatland Crossing may connect the communities of Standard, Rockyford, and Gleichen.

“We’ve been doing that for a long time, working together to field hockey teams or 4-H. We do have a history of working together and it’s always been positive. So in some respects this is kind of the next step,” said Sproule.

“We’ve got some good people at the top and I’m sure things will work out,” said Collett.

Hussar School opened at its current location in 1949, after existing at several different locations as one room schools. The school was expanded in 1958 with three classrooms, a typing room, science room, and gymnasium. It was modernized to its current state in 1988.

The Farewell to Hussar School event is scheduled for Saturday, June 18 from 12 pm to 2 pm and will feature a lunch, tours of the school, and a short program at 1 pm. The event coincides with the Hussar Summer Daze rodeo that same weekend. Organizers are currently inviting nearly 100 former staff to attend the event.

West Wheatland 4-H Show and Sale set for this Saturday

Jaylawithcow

The 4-H show season is at its height this season as the West Whealand Show and Sale is set for this Saturday at the Rockyford Sportsplex.

Young handlers will be showing off months of hard work and care put into their animals.

Committee member Perry Ellis said the move from hosting a weekday sale last year to a weekend event on Saturday should boost attendance. 

The show will start at 10 a.m. and the sale begins at 2 p.m., Saturday, June 11.

He said 4-H show and sales are about appreciating the work youth have put into their animals.

“The main thing is the support they receive from the crowd. Even if you aren’t buying it’s good to just come and cheer them on while they show their projects,” Ellis said.

He expects 200 to 300 to attend.

This year’s sale will again see both steers and sheep put on the auction block.

Last year’s Supreme Grand Steer was raised by Jayla Kennedy and weighed in at 1390 lbs., and purchased by Western Chev Drumheller for $4.50/lb.

The Supreme Reserve Steer was raised by Jack Warrack and weighed 1441 lbs., and purchased by Drumheller Chrysler for $3.40/lb.

The Supreme Grand Sheep raised by Nicole Ellis was purchased by Strathmore Motor Products at $7.75/lb and weighed 144 lbs.

The Reserve Champion Sheep raised by Corbin Thiessen, purchased by Pro Water Strathmore netted $4.50/lb at 140 lbs.


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