News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2164
10032024Thu
Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Council passes change to Land Use Bylaw

Hy-Grade-industrial-park-drum-jan-13-2015

A company site in Drumheller's Hy-Grade Industrial Park is now allowed to contain chemical drums/totes. Town Council adopted a by-law change allowing businesses to apply to use their light industrial land for uses other than originally pemitted, such as chemical storage.

 

 

    Drumheller’s Town Council passed a change to the Town’s Land Use Bylaw following a public hearing held prior to the start of the Monday, January 12 regular meeting of Drumheller Town Council.
    Platinum Chemical Solutions requested a change to the Town’s Land Use Bylaw to allow for the storage of chemicals on M-1 light industrial land. The Town’s M-2 medium industrial classification allows for the storage of chemicals, rather than the M-1.         “There’s environmental concerns and there’s community concerns,” said deputy mayor Lisa Hansen-Zacharuk, “but at the end of the day, you already have precedent set in that area that is already allowing that to occur, unpermitted”.
     “For my own self personally, I don’t believe that it would have been the right thing to do, to say no, one person cannot follow suit, but two others would be allowed to remain. And, if we had decided to stick with the M-1 rather than the M-2, what effect would that have had on the other two or possibly three (similar) businesses in that area?”
    “I’m not willing to say that Drumheller’s not open for business, and I think we did the right thing. “
    The deputy mayor added Council’s decision allows the Municipal Planning Commission to look at each request of this type on a case by case basis, rather than having  a blanket classification for all chemical storage.
    The Municipal Planning Commission and Palliser Regional Municipal Services both recommended that council reject the change to the land use.
    “There’s very good advice that’s given in those (reports), but we have to take everything into consideration,” said Hansen-Zacharuk.
    Two similar companies have been operating as M-2 on land for only light industrial use. The Town has no way of knowing how many other companies in Hy-Grade could be using their land for purposes other than their permit allows, as the land use hasn’t been policed and it hasn’t been enforced, Hansen-Zacharuk said.
    “I’m hoping now it will be (reviewed) on a case by case basis, and they’ll be a little more proactive now than they have been in the past,”
    She said at this point she is unclear of the review and enforcement method the Town would be taking to clear up the non-compliant cases.


When I Grow Up...

greentree-career-day-2

Coyne Walsh, at front in the goggles, may want to offer scuba diving lessons at Drumheller's Aquaplex when he grows up.

 

 

Wednesday, January 14, was Career Day for Greentree Elementary School students.
Students dressed up as their parents might when heading off to work, or suited up in an outfit for a career that caught their imagination.

greentree-school-career-day-1 rhylan-castonguay
Work outfits ranged from engineer, mountie, veterinarian to include sports with a hockey player and scuba diver represented, and artists such as painters and dancers.

Roles challenge Rosebud actor in Truscott play

 

JohnMoerschbacher cropped

 

John Moerschbacher is taking  three roles in Louis B. Hobson’s Steven-The Steven Truscot Story, which will hit the stage February 27-March 9 at Pumphouse Theatre.

 

    A Rosebud actor is going to be a part of an emotionally intense retelling of a dark chapter of Canadian justice.
 John Moerschbacher has landed three different roles for the play “Steven-The Steven Truscott Story,” written by Calgary Sun theatre and film reviewer Louis .B. Hobson.
 Truscott was sentenced to death when he was just 14 years old for the murder of 12-year-old Lynne Harper in 1959. While his sentence was commuted to life in prison, he was released in 1969. It was not until 2007 that he was acquitted.
    “I am particularly interested in plays that deal with real events and real people, so this play caught my eye. I was aware of some of the events around Steven Truscott’s ordeal, but had never studied them closely,” Moerschbacher tells The Mail. “All that has changed since being cast in this play. I am a playwright as well as an actor, and am absolutely smitten with the emotional intensity of all the characters involved. I truly believe that not one of us who are cast in this play will be the same afterward. The script is the work of Louis B. Hobson, and his passion for this story is very contagious.”
    Moerschbacher came to acting relatively later in life.  In 2011 at the age of 60, he was part of the cast of the Canadian Badlands Passion Play. Coincidentally, this was a performance that Hobson critiqued. He attended to the Rosebud School of the Arts and received his Certificate in Theatre Foundations. He has since been in performances at Rocky Mountain College, Urban Stories Theatre, and Fire Exit Theatre and at the Edmonton Fringe Festival.
    In Steven-The Steven Truscott Story, he will be playing Constable Donald Hobbs, one of the interviewing officers, Dr. David Hall Brooks, a doctor who assisted in the autopsy of Harper and Magistrate Dudley Holmes.
    “Double and triple casting is not unusual in plays that have a large number of characters and many different scenes with a large amount of narration,” he explains.
    Steven-The Steven Truscott Story is slated to run at Pumphouse Theatres in Calgary from February 27 to March 9.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.