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Last updateSat, 23 Nov 2024 12pm

Home Share Drumheller gains momentum

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On January 15, 2024, the Home Share Drumheller project officially launched in the Drumheller region (including Starland County).
The project is led by Community Futures Big Country, in partnership with Town of Drumheller, Travel Drumheller, and Drumheller & District Chamber of Commerce. Home Share Drumheller empowers residents to become part of a community-based solution to the local housing shortage.
As one local host, Virginia explains, “I feel like I’m being able to pay it forward to assist people beginning as well as continuing their careers, allowing them to gain valuable experience in their fields, and maintaining our economy.”
Community Futures Big Country secured grant funding from the Prairies Rural Opportunities Fund (ROF 2.0) to introduce Home Share Drumheller to the region. Working in partnership with Happipad and Canada HomeShare, an online platform was launched to facilitate the home sharing process. The platform vets both renters and hosts, provides background checks, prepares appropriate legal contracts, and works to ensure compatibility matching. Virginia, who has welcomed tenants into her home for decades is appreciative of the platform, “it makes the screening and contracts easy and removes the burden of the money talk and collection… it makes the process easy to navigate and makes home sharing successful.”
Home Share Drumheller offers a solution to homeowners with an extra room to rent, employers looking for staff accommodations, renters looking for a room, or seniors who would benefit from a helpful tenant. Funding is available to the first 50 homeowners who sign onto the home share platform and are matched with renters. Grant funding will continue to cover program fees through to March 31, 2026.
Alison Roppel, Project Coordinator with Home Share Drumheller is encouraged by what she is seeing, “We now have 33 hosts registered, along with 47 renters, and 12 completed rental contracts–the response from the community has been really positive and we’re ahead of our expectations.” Alison hopes that homeowners and their tenants will share their positive experiences and that awareness about the program will continue to grow. She adds, “I’m really impressed, homeowners are opening their doors and getting involved, it really speaks to the warmth and willingness of this community.”


Seniors Dinner tradition continues December 12

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A great Drumheller Christmas tradition that bridges the gap between area seniors and the youth of the community is returning.
The annual Rotary Seniors Dinner is slated for December 12 at the Badlands Community Facility.
This was a long tradition instigated by DCHS, but is now in the hands of the community. This is a full Christmas dinner with all the fixings for area seniors, hosted by Drumheller students.
“This is the second year at the BCF, and the second year after a four-year hiatus,” explains Tom Zariski. He says the Rotary Club is the naming sponsor but it's supported by many different community groups.
The new-look Seniors Dinner has the advantage of having students from all three local schools participate in hosting, escorting and serving. Students from Greentree School also participate by making hand-made placemats for the seniors.
“One of the hits from last year is the decorations and placemats made by Greentree School, those were just priceless. We literally had seniors folding them up and taking them home afterwards,” said Zariski
Last year students served 285 seniors at the dinner, and they are aiming to host 300.
While the facility could hold a few more, Zariski explains they also make sure the hall is presented in such a way that it is easy for seniors to navigate. Seniors are able to start registering for the dinner.
Zariski says there are sign-up sheets at Pioneer Trail Centre.
They can also contact the Town of Drumheller Seniors coordinator Karen Schneck at 403-823-1317 to sign up.

Mine at Sheerness retooled for emerging ag industry product

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What was once considered a major setback for the Town of Hanna, has turned into a new and growing agricultural industry.
In 2015 the province began its ambitious phase-out of coal for electricity generation. A couple of years later ATCO indicated it would be phasing out coal generation “sooner rather than later” and the Sheerness power plant began transitioning to natural gas and the coal work was to be disbanded and reclaimed.
Agri-product manager for WestMET, Clay Williams explained the Westmoreland Mine would supply the Sheerness plant across the road.
“Once that was regulated out of competitiveness, the coal mine was pretty much done and it went into full reclamation mode,” he said. “February 2021 was our last coal shipped to the power plant.”
He said during this time they were selling humalite to various processors.
Humalite is a unique soil amendment that is formed during the decomposition of organic materials, a humic acid granule. It is a high-value organic matter that is used in soils to make them more fertile and productive.
In terms of organic and carbon matter, it is between coal and peat.
“We would sell it to get it out of the way, but once we did some research on it we started to learn this is the highest quality humic product in the entire world,” said Williams. “It has the highest humic content and low heavy metals. It’s a unicorn of a reserve and high amounts of it. At that point, we decided to experiment with different uses of this product.”
A new company sprung from Westmoreland Coal called WestMET that will develop the humalite products as well as create an advanced skills and technology platform focused on a large-scale reclamation.
They are producing an agricultural product that can be used for general agriculture as well as a turf-grade product, and a powered grade to turn into a liquid form.
“We went one step further and started putting it in one-ton totes and exporting it all over the world, and that is kind of where we are at now, said Williams. “We took this product that is kind of a specialty here and kind of turned it into something that kept the place alive.
The reclamation on the site continues, but so does this new initiative. While it may not employ as many employees as the mine did just a few years ago, it has kept an employer in the community.
“We hope to have all of that reclamation done by next year, that is a pretty tight timeline when you compare that to other mines that are taking 20-plus years, we are doing it in under five so it is a big effort,” he said. We are creating both sides of it. We are creating this green agricultural product that we want to be known for, whilst at the same time we want to be known for how good we are at reclamation.”
They are using humic products for their reclamation well, by combining it with organics to create new topsoil that can be used. They are also crafting products that help solve ag issues such as pH issues or low mineral content.
We pretty much turned this mine around from a dying coal mine to an opportunistic agricultural products line,” he said.
One challenge they are working on is creating a new market for their product.
“It is not used in North America that much… it is kind of a new thing for farmers here, whereas if you look at other places it is a very common agricultural input,” he said.
He explains that in other places such as Europe and Asia where farming has taken place for thousands of years, organic matter has been depleted, and they are using humic on their land.
“In North America, we have only been farming for hundreds of years so it hasn’t been a problem, but now farmers are looking more on the regenerative side of trying to increase organic matter and help the biology in their soils it has now become a focus, and this the primary product to help fix this.”
In terms of sustainability, he says this is the largest depot of this project at this high of quality in the world, and there is a lifetime of supply. In terms of extracting it , it is not as complex as coal.
“It is quite a bit easier. The coal is quite a bit deeper and we used a dragline and big coal haulers to move millions of tons of coal,” he said. “Humalite is quite a bit shallower and easy to access.”
“It is a different scale because we were talking about millions of tons of coal, now we are talking about thousands of tons of humalite, but as adoption increases throughout North America maybe we'll increase to those numbers again.”


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