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Extra measures improve Drumheller water

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Flushing of water lines and a temporary increase in potassium permanganate have improved town water.

 

 

The Town of Drumheller has seen a major improvement in the water quality after taking measures to improve the  foul taste and odour.
    The Town’s Director of Infrastructure Services Allan Kendrick said the number of resident complaints has dwindled.
    “We still might have the odd pocket where its showing up on the hot water only.”
    He said that is probably due to the water sitting in the hot water tank, and also heating the water releases gases.
    Public Works has completed a number of line flushings, Kendrick said, and had to do another line flush in Huntington Hills, one of the areas that still has a pocket of concern.
    Kendrick explained due to its elevation, Huntington Hills has a booster pump to help the water pressure, and the line ends at a closed valve, which is a simulation of a dead-end line.
    In the normal water line systems through Drumheller, the water loops through the system, and the Town can open and close the valves as required. The looping system means the foul water gets flushed through more quickly than a simulated dead-end line, such as the one in Huntington Hills.
    Kendrick said the Town had also increased the level of potassium permanganate, used to treat the Town’s water, up to about 1 millgram per litre (mg/L).

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    He said the potassium permanganate has been dropped down to its current .5 mg/L.
    On a regular day for Drumheller water, the level of potassium permanganate is .3 to .4 mg/L, adds Kendrick.
    Another measure the Town is taking is to keep a closer eye on the reservoirs.
    “It’s more aggressive visual  monitoring over at the rural water storage cells.  I think one of the things that was definitely  a contributing factor was  some of our monitoring equipment froze.”
    He said there was also a water crossover chamber that froze, and pumping water with the thick ice layer, sometimes seven feet thick on top, presents other challenges.
    He said the last water complaint received was Tuesday, from a Nacmine resident describing their water as swampy.


Co-op distributes more than $16,000 to community through Till Tape Program

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On Monday, January 26, the Drumheller Co-op distributed $16,314 to area community groups through its Till Tape Program. In its 14 year history, the Co-op has given $320,000 to the community through this program.


   
    Drumheller Co-op is continuing its giving ways and on Monday, January 26, paid out over $16,000 to community groups.
    The Co-op’s Till Tape Program has been in place supporting community groups for almost 15 years.
    The program pays out twice a year and on Monday, it distributed $16,314 to 39 community groups. This brings the total for 2014 to over $32,000.
    In the history of the program, it has given more than $320,000 to the community, and supported about 100 different groups.
    The Till Tape Program is simple.  Community groups simply collect Drumheller Co-op receipts and submit them. In turn, the Drumheller Co-op donates a portion back to the community group.

Chronic wasting disease identified in Hand Hills mule deer

 

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A mule deer caught in the Handhills has tested positive for chronic wasting disease.

 

    The province has identified a mule deer caught in the Hand hills with Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), the first deer in the area to be confirmed with the disease.
    As former president of the Alberta Fish & Game Association, Drumheller’s Rod Dyck is all too familiar with the spread of CWD in Alberta wildlife, and said the Hand Hills deer is the first case to be found this far west.
    He explains CWD is a prion, which is a small infectious particle composed of abnormally folded protein that attacks the brain of the animals and, causing progressive neurodegenerative conditions in the animals.     
    Mule deer bucks are most likely to test positive for CWD, and the disease is least likely to be found in female white tail deer, according to Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development (ESRD). The animals can have the disease for four years and not show symptoms, but as soon as they show symptoms of CWD, they die within a few months.
    Dyck said origins of the disease were traced to a U.S. government research facility in Colorado in 1967, and were sheep scrapies, a fatal, degenerative disease that affects the nervous systmes of sheep and goats, transferred to deer and mutated. From there it spread up into Canada, through game farms in Saskatchewan. “Our association has been opposed to game farms for this reason,” said Dyck.
    He adds the University of Saskatchewan and the Univeristy of Michigan are both working on vaccines for CWD.
    The first reported case of CWD in Alberta was 2005, and this past hunting season, 37 positives out of 1800 heads tested brings the total CWD cases in Alberta to 211.
    All it takes is for a wild deer to touch noses with an infected deer in the game farm, Dyck explains, and it spreads from there. It’s taken hold in south-Eastern Alberta, and he said CWD is now considered endemic in Saskatchewan because the disease is found in 50 per cent of the wild deer population.
    The disease is tracked through hunters submitting frozen deer heads to the province for testing.Dyck believes the province had a window in which to get a handle on the disease, but said that time has now passed. “We don’t know if anything else can carry the disease, such as a coyote.” No elk in the wild have tested positive for CWD at this point, said Dyck, but the first moose, killed on the highway near the South Saskatchewan River valley in 2012, is the first such case identified in Canada.
    The CWD hasn’t been shown to spread to people, but ESRD recommends not using the meat of an animal that’s tested positive,and will destroy it for hunters that bring it in to them.
    Dyck notes it’s already been a tough couple years for the area’s deer population, estimating at least a third of Drumheller area mule deer and white tail deer herds have perished because of the harsh winters that made it  unable for the deer to easily feed.


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