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Local resident believes Drumheller air cured asthma

    A Drumheller resident is breathing easy.
    Alfred Escher, an 80-year-old resident of Drumheller and asthma sufferer, swears by the air in Drumheller. Since moving to Drumheller 16 year ago, he has been able to go without an inhaler or medication.
     “I lived most of my life in Calgary and had my own floor covering business there. In 1972, I had the London Flu, which left me with my lungs damaged. Ever since, I’ve been on asthma medication,” said Escher.
    In 1997, his work brought him to Drumheller.

Alfred Escher...
Says Drumheller cured asthma symptoms


    “I got a job at the pen doing the floor in the new administration building. I had been working there for one month and realized I didn’t need the puffer anymore. I kept taking my pills, but stopped those after two or three months. I haven’t taken any since,” said Escher.
    Over Easter, Escher had a relapse when he left Drumheller’s climate.
    “Over the Easter weekend, I went to visit my daughter in Cochrane and choked up again. I couldn’t breathe, but when I got back here, I was fine again,” said Escher. “It made me wonder if other people had the same experience.”
    Asthma also affected more than just Escher. His previous wife suffered from asthma as well.
    “She suffered greatly in Toronto and Calgary. She died of asthma when she was 44. I thought if I had known about the air in Drumheller, she might be still alive,” said Escher.
    Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways characterized by airway obstruction, which manifests as coughing, wheezing, chest tightness, and shortness of breath.
    While Escher is convinced the environment in Drumheller could help others, researchers say asthma, and its causes, are hard to pin down, so it may be premature to declare the Valley a haven for asthma sufferers.
    “People sometimes say, with pride, that a place is terrible for asthma. But, what I think happens with asthma, especially allergic asthma, there will be something that triggers it in a particular environment. When you move, and that trigger isn’t there, then you might be fine, but generally what happens over time is you become sensitive to something in your new environment and then it’ll come back,” said Dr. Bob Cowie, an asthma specialist with the University of Calgary.
    Asthma sufferers can also have different triggers. What affects one person, may not affect another. Common triggers include air quality, plants, and animals. Stress may even worsen symptoms.
    Cowie also cautions against the casual use of the term asthma.
    “There was a recent publication in the Canadian Medical Association Journal where they tried to link asthma with being overweight. What they discovered was that nearly a third of the people labelled with asthma and were on asthma treatment, had been for decades, didn’t have asthma. So, is it asthma, or something being labelled as asthma,” said Cowie.
    What Escher wants to know now, is if others in Drumheller have had the same experience.
    “People should know how good the climate is here,” said Escher. “Maybe, I’m not the only one here like that.”


More marijuana intercepted on Highway 9

    The Drumheller RCMP continued their track record of stopping drugs moving along Highway 9.
    On April 25, at approximately 10 p.m., a vehicle was stopped on Highway 9 north of Drumheller for a minor vehicle infraction.
    Indicators associated with the transportation of illicit drugs were observed by the officer conducting the stop.
    Two males were arrested and the vehicle was searched.  The search produced six pounds of marijuana, which was located hidden in two suitcases in the trunk of the vehicle.
     One of the occupants claimed ownership of the drugs and will be charged accordingly.
    The street value of these drugs is approximately $40,000.
     The name of the accused cannot be released pending formal charges. RCMP describe him as 30 years of age and a resident of Calgary.  He is to appear in Drumheller Provincial Court on June 14 to answer to the charges laid against him.  The accused has a previous criminal record.
    This amount of drugs is nowhere near the amount found in the past on Highway 9. It is thought Highway 9 is being used to take drugs east to Saskatchewan.
    “Most (of the drugs) aren’t coming through Drumheller. They’re coming out of Calgary and using various highways,” said Drumheller RCMP Staff Sergeant Art Hopkins. “A lot of it comes down to the skills of the investigator. Constable Jones seems to have a knack for it and picks up on a lot of indicators. When time and circumstance permit, he’s out there, but, that’s not his only duty.”
    The Drumheller RCMP are not the only ones out on the highways attempting to intercept drugs.
    “The RCMP have roving interdiction units. Most of the time they’re in the mountains, but we’ve had them come in and do some work on Highway 9. About eight months ago, there was a big seizure by Hanna. That was them. There are reports being submitted to district and division. They use that information with their other intelligence and try to plot the most productive times for the various highways,” said Hopkins. “There are a lot of things being done.”

Inmate receives five and half year sentence

    An inmate will have 57 months to contemplate what went wrong with a plan to smuggle morphine into the Drumheller Institution.
    Eric Pearson was in Court of Queen’s Bench on Thursday, May 2 to be sentenced for two counts of possession of drugs for the purposes of trafficking. Pearson was found guilty earlier this year  and was in possession of 190 grams of marijuana and 20 - 199 milligram morphine pills.
    The charges stem from and event on April 11, 2010, when minimum-security unit inmates Pearson and Ashley Yardley ventured into an out-of-bounds area. Pearson kept watch while Yardley retrieved the package, which contained the drugs. Officers in a mobile unit spotted them. Yardley was observed throwing the package on to the roof of a nearby building.
    Yardley was charged with possession for the purposes trafficking but was found not guilty previous to last week’s sentencing.
    Federal Prosecutor Bill Herman argued for a 5-7 year sentence, outlining aggravating factors including his previous record, the sophistication of the operation, and that it occurred in a federal institution.
    Justice C. M. Jones sentenced Pearson to a global sentence of five years and six months. He gave Pearson credit for nine months and 21 days of pretrial custody, leaving approximately 57 months to serve.


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