News | DrumhellerMail - Page #590
10022024Wed
Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Three Hills RCMP tackle rural crime

Copy of IMG 8886

Policing rural communities poses a number of complexities, including the demand it puts on police resources.
Three Hills RCMP is working with community stakeholders to evaluate needs and optimize resources for rural communities. As such, Three Hills RCMP developed a rural crime officer position and customized local initiatives to address the issue of rural crime.
Local priorities and crime prevention approaches are discussed regularly by community leaders and the Three Hills RCMP Detachment Commander.
The Three Hills Rural Crime member duties include the following:
Liaise with Crime reduction units
Focus on arresting prolific offenders
Liaise with crime analyst that will allow the RCMP to identify prolific offenders and target organized crime.
Protecting communities
Sharing information with other agencies
Using technology to target rural crime, including bait programs.
Public education and engagement: Educate Albertans about crime prevention.
All activities associated to this issue will be sourced from existing operational budgets.
In 2017, the Alberta RCMP implemented a comprehensive Crime Reduction Strategy as the foundational basis for the delivery of policing services to the people of Alberta.
Built on proven methodologies and using evidence and intelligence, the Strategy takes a coordinated divisional approach to focus resources in vulnerable communities while leveraging the support of provincial and federal partners to address the root causes of crime to break the cycle of crime.


Rockyford council supports arena ice chiller replacement

Copy of ROCKYFORD LIGHT

Village of Rockyford council members held a special council meeting on Thursday, September 16 to discuss a loan for repairs to the village arena.
Council received a request from the Rockyford Ag Society to replace the chiller for the ice plant at the arena in the amount of $120,000.
“The funding is being provided for an emergency replacement of the ice chiller for the ice plant at the Rockyford arena,” says Rockyford Mayor Darcy Burke.
Mayor Burke noted council approved the loan, and administration was directed to make the necessary payment arrangements with the Ag Society.

Youngest Albertan dies of COVID-19 in Central Zone

Screen Shot 2021 09 28 at 10.09.40 AM

The fifth COVID-19 death for the Town of Drumheller since the start of the pandemic was reported by the province on Wednesday, September 22; on the same day a total of 20 deaths due to COVID-19 were reported across the province and included the youngest death in the province-an 18 year old from the Central Zone.
Alberta Health Services (AHS) was unable to provide any further information regarding this case. The Central Zone encompasses a total of 30 hospitals across 95,000 square kilometres and stretches from the Rocky Mountains to the Saskatchewan border, and from north of Calgary to the southern boundaries of Edmonton.
“We need to move past short term restrictions,” says Dr. Rithesh Ram, owner and operator of Riverside Medical Clinic. “What we need are long term policies and procedures that will help us now and into the future, otherwise every subsequent wave has the potential to be deadlier and deadlier.”
He adds, despite beliefs the government has created a mess of the pandemic, government officials are not the ones rioting outside hospitals and harassing staff at restaurants and small businesses who have enacted the Restrictions Exemption Program (REP) and require proof of vaccination.
Dr. Ram also notes the politicians in charge of putting restrictions and policies in place are not medical experts and rely on expert advice to enact these decisions.
“Clearly, given how poorly Alberta has done, they are not receiving the best advice on how to move forward,” he says.
Dr. Ram says all eligible Albertans need to get their COVID-19 vaccine as soon as possible to protect the overwhelmed healthcare system, which is currently “under attack from a tsunami of unvaccinated patients.”
Some 8,073 residents of the Starland County-Drumheller region, or 78.1 per cent of residents 12 and older, have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine; 67.2 per cent of the same population, or some 6,946 people, are fully vaccinated with two doses of the vaccine.
As of Monday, September 27 there are a total of 40 active, 525 recovered cases of COVID-19 and five deaths reported for the Town of Drumheller.
In Starland County there are 11 active cases, 87 active cases in Kneehill County, and 24 active cases in Wheatland County.


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.