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Business Excellence Awards close Small Business Week

    For the finale of Small Business Week, Drumheller’s top businesses and professionals were honoured by the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce.
    On Friday, October 19, the Business Excellence Awards were handed out at a luncheon and awards ceremony at the Badlands Community Facility.
    Five categories were being recognized; Business of the Year, Small Business of the Year, Downtown Business of the Year, Rookie Business of the Year, and Business Professional of the Year.
    The award for Business of the Year went to Western Chev, over the Heart Wood Inn & Spa and Hi Way 9 Express.
    For Small Business of the Year, Numberz Accounting was awarded. The other finalists for the category were Bits & Pieces Keepsake Quilting and Signature Bookkeeping.
    The Downtown Business of the Year award went to Chinook Credit Union, who were finalists alongside Reality Bytes and Sports Room Source for Sports.
    The newest businesses in Drumheller were recognized as well. Sublime Food & Wine was named the Rookie Business of the Year, beating out Country Road RV and Dry Canyon Collectables.
    Lastly, John Shoff, owner of Reality Bytes, was named the Business Professional of the Year by the Chamber of Commerce. Shoff was joined by fellow finalists Connie Tremblay and Trevor Gough.
    This was the first time in roughly six years business awards have been presented. Over 30 nominations were given by Drumheller residents.
    With the success of the awards this year, more are planned for the years to come to continue recognizing Drumheller businesses.
    “We’re pleased with the turnout and excited to celebrate Drumheller businesses. We look forward to doing it next year, bigger and better,” said Roxanne Clark, Projects Coordinator and Chamber Assistant for the Chamber of Commerce.“It’s really important to celebrate local businesses. They’re people who work really hard to make Drumheller what it is today.”

Ed Mah (left), president of the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce, presents Doug Lubinski, owner of Western Chev in Drumheller, with the Business of the Year Award.

Ed Mah (left), president of the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce, gives the award for Small Business of the Year to Hansine Kostelecky of Numberz Accounting.

Ed Mah (left), president of the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce, hands Patty Stokalko, manager of the Drumheller Chinook Credit Union branch, the award for Downtown Business of the Year.

Ed Mah (left), president of the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce,  presents the award for Rookie Business of the Year to Stasha and Dennis Standage, owners of Sublime Food & Wine.

John Shoff (left), owner of Reality Bytes, accepts the award for Business Professional of the Year from Ed Mah, president of the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commerce.


Three charged in RCMP Drug busts

On October 25, at approximately 3:10 p.m., two residences in Drumheller were searched as a result of a drug related search warrant. These searches were a result of an ongoing joint investigation involving the Drumheller RCMP Detachment and Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team ( ALERT) Combined Force Special Enforcement Unit.  The residences searched are situated at 610 - 3rd Avenue West and 471A 3rd Avenue West.
 
These searches resulted in the seizure of a small amount of drugs and $8,675 of Canadian Currency. The following persons have been charged:
 
Peter Shokal, 68, of Drumheller, has been charged with Possession of Cocaine.  Shokal was on parole, which has now been revoked. He has been readmitted into the Drumheller penitentiary. Shokal has an extensive criminal record.
 
Christopher Shapka, 35, of Drumheller, has been charged with two counts of Possession of a Controlled Substance as well as Possession of Proceeds of Crime.  Shapka has an extensive criminal record. He was released on bail and will be appearing in court in Drumheller on November 9.
 
Cyril Perry, 31, of Flin Flon, Manitoba,  has been charged with Possession of Proceeds of Crime. He made a brief appearance in the Drumheller Provincial Court on Friday, October 26, and was released on $350 bail. Perry does not have a previous criminal record.

Researchers unearth first North American feathered dinosaur

    Faint striations in the fossils of two small recent dinosaur discoveries in the Drumheller valley is making the science community buzz this week.
    On October 26, the American Association for the Advancement of Science published the findings of Royal Tyrrell Museum Palaeontologist Francois Therrien and fellow University of Calgary researcher Darla Zelisnky.
    They have discovered the first feathered dinosaurs on the continent of North America.
    “Since 1998 we have been discovering dinosaurs with feathers, so that’s no surprise, now we have good understanding of how feathers evolved from meat eating dinosaurs, leading up to birds,” he explains. “Ornithomimids were a mystery, there was a gap in our understanding. Even though good specimens had been discovered in Alberta for over 100 years, none of them had ever been found with feathers.”
    Two fossils of the aptly named Ornithomimids (Greek for “bird-mimic lizards”) were recently uncovered in the valley; one in 2009 near the Drumheller landfill, and one in 2008 near Kirkpatrick.
    This is not only the first time a feathered Dinosaur has been found on the continent, but the first Ornithomimid with feathers.
    The discovery of a juvenile specimen shows remnants of a down-like plumage, while the adult dinosaur discovered shows full large feathers and wing structures. The scientists revisited an older specimen in the museum’s collection to confirm their findings.
    In some of the fossils the feathers show up as striations, while in others there are dark carbon streaks. The distribution of the markings matched the pattern on modern wings.
    Therrien said the downy feathers were of an insulating nature, and the plumage and developed feathers on the more mature fossil could have served for reproductive purposes.”
    “Before, we thought, the wings would have been for flight or gliding, or help the animal escape predators, but now we find wings in adults and not babies. We looked at other birds and mammals, but also at dinosaurs… all those crests and horns and ornamentation only occur with sexual maturity,” said Therrien.
    “Young guys don’t need this but when they get in to the game for sexual reproduction to try to display for courtship to impress female and scare away competing males, we think this is when these structures become important.”
    Therrien explained, like most discoveries, it was sort of an accident. Because of the coarse sandstone in the area scientists simply felt feathers would be a long shot to find.
    When they were unearthing one of the finds he joked with technicians, “If we were in China, we would call these feathers,” referring to the fine details often preserved in Chinese fossils, including feathered dinosaurs.
    For so many years people haven’t been paying attention to specimen in sandstone because they suspected feathered dinosaurs would only be preserved in fine grain rocks,” he said.
    He said this is the discovery highlight the leading professional work being done at the Tyrrell Museum.
    “After 100 year of collecting in the valley, there is still lots to learn and discover right here,” he said.
    Another advantage for the museum is discoveries like this can be shared with the public right away. Rather than locking finds in a drawer, they hope to have them available for public consumption next month.

François Therrien shows a Ornithomimid discovered in the Drumheller valley. It it the first dinosaur with feathers found in North America.
inSide photo by Patrick Kolafa


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