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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Strong start to Minor Hockey season

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Drumheller Minor Hockey is already at the Christmas break, but so far this season the teams are performing well and developing their skills.
The teams have completed their tiering rounds and launched into the regular season with zeal.
The U18 Mastel Transport Raptors have had a great season so far and are undefeated at home. So far, they are sporting a 4-1-2 record with wins over Innisfail, Blackfalds, and Hanna. So far, their only loss was a close 2-1 result at the hand of Olds. They tied with Sundre and Lacombe.
The U15 Boston Pizza/ Western GM Raptors are also playing stellar hockey and are undefeated with five wins and one tie. They have topped Okotoks, RMAA, and Blackfalds, and tied with Stettler.
The U13 Hi-Way 9 Raptors are progressing throughout the season and have a .500 record, with two wins and two losses, and a tie with Strathmore.
The U13 NGC Raptors have also had a good start to the season and have a 5-1-2 record. Ther wins have been over High Country, Olds, and Airdrie. Against Brooks, they tied once and lost once. They also tied with Indus.
The Yavis U11 Raptors are playing great hockey sporting a 4-1-1 record and are undefeated on the road. With wins over Chestermere, Okotoks, Carstairs, and Airdrie, they have been tested in league play. Their only loss was to Brooks, and they tied with Carstairs.
The U11 McDonald’s Raptors are playing .500 hockey with a 4-4-1 record. They topped Oyen, Castor, Coronation, and Bassano.
Teams are on the holiday break but play at the Drumheller Memorial Arena will resume on Saturday, January 8 when the U11 Yavis Atom Raptors take on Chestermere, followed by actions from the U15 Boston Pizza/Western GM Raptors and the U13 Hi-Way 9 Raptors.


Drivers look for relief at pumps

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With the price at the pump falling across the province, one Christmas wish that many Drumheller drivers may have is to see that happen in the valley.
Drivers in the valley are looking at gas station signs seeing a range of prices from $1.39.9 to $1.42.9. It is not hard to head down the highway and see much lower prices. This is concerning to John Szureck.
“It seems like pretty near every place around Drumheller has a lower gas price. All they did was drop it one penny here. When you look at some of the other places, in Stettler $1.34,” he said. Of course, Red Deer is Red Deer it is $1.34, but that is a big place, but Hanna is $1.37.”
According to Albertagasprices.com, the lowest prices in the province is in Nisku at $1.13.9, and then Lloydminster at $1.14.9. As of Monday, December 20, the average price in Alberta was $1.33.9. The highest prices in the province are in Hinton at $1.46.9.
He says frequent travellers may be able to capitalize on this disparity, but not all local drivers head out on the highway that often.
“I really can’t complain. If I go to Red Deer, I fill up there and then come back home and just top it up. But for other people, ‘why should we have to pay 10 cents more our gas here?’” he asks.
He has looked at the prices in communities and notes that the price of gas in Drumheller is comparable to Banff and Jasper.
“It’s like we’re a tourist trap, they just kind of prey on tourists,” he said.
He also talked to local stations and is told the prices aren’t set locally, and it is up to the head offices.

Private event leads to staff outbreak at Drumheller Institution

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Several staff members from the Drumheller Institution have tested positive for COVID-19 following a recent private event which has so far led to 38 cases.
Along with contact tracing of the positive staff, inmates were also offered mass asymptomatic testing on Monday, December 27, though as of Monday no positive cases had been identified among the inmate population.
“We take this situation seriously,” a spokesperson from Correctional Service Canada (CSC) tells the Mail. “This was a private event and we are looking into it further, including all other circumstances.”
Federal penitentiary employees are among the federal employees mandated to be fully vaccinated, and some 84.6 per cent of inmates at the Institution are also fully vaccinated.
While in-person visits have been temporarily suspended at the Institution, this is not due to the current staff outbreak but rather due to the rising transmission of COVID-19 within the community; no date is currently available for when in-person visits will resume.
Extensive protocols to protect staff and inmates from the spread of COVID-19 have been implemented by CSC since the start of the pandemic, including increased cleaning and sanitization of high-touch surfaces and ongoing communication about the importance of mask-wearing and social distancing to staff and inmates.
This emerging situation is being closely monitored by CSC.
Local case numbers rose dramatically following the Christmas weekend. On Thursday, December 23, there were a reported 11 active cases in the Town of Drumheller; when the Alberta COVID website was updated on Wednesday, December 29 total active cases climbed to 53--an increase of 42 cases. CSC did not update information on active cases at federal institutions over holidays and their next expected update is Thursday, December 30.
Cases in the surrounding areas also increased, though not as dramatically as in Drumheller. Kneehill County went from 10 active cases on December 23 to 17 active cases on December 29; Starland County increased from six cases to seven; and Wheatland County increased from 15 cases to 20 cases. Omicron cases in the Central Zone, which includes Drumheller and Hanna, rose from 40 on December 23 to 149 on December 29; these variant cases are only broken down by health region and not geographically.

 

UPDATE: As of the December 30 update on the Correctional Service Canada website, 12 inmates at the Drumheller Institution have tested positive for COVID-19.


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