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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Drumheller RCMP seek minority voices for diversity committee

Copy of Copy of police sign building

Minority groups have raised their voices over the last year to speak out against the discrimination and systemic racism they have faced, and the Drumheller RCMP are looking to help dismantle these barriers through a new Community Diversity Advisory Committee.

The committee will work to advise the local RCMP and help provide opportunities to ensure all members of the community are served equally and not discriminated against based on ethnicity, culture, race, language, accent, or religion.

“I want it geared to policing services,” said S/Sgt Bourque in a press release. “I want to get the conversation started on what they expect of policing services, whether and where they feel we are providing excellent services, and where they feel it is lacking.”

S/Sgt Bourque has over 25 years experience in the force and has seen first-hand the struggles minority groups face when it comes to discrimination and unfair treatment.

Although cultural awareness training is available to officers, and the RCMP commissioner has acknowledged the role RCMP has played in systemic racism, S/Sgt Bourque says they can still do better.

He adds acts of discrimination are close to the community and hopes, through the committee, officers will not miss out on the harassment these visible minority groups face.

S/Sgt Bourque shares the various ceremonies held at the local RCMP detachment, including the Treaty 7 Acknowledgment and the addition of an eagle feather for Indigenous community members to swear legal documents, have been very important first steps.

“I encourage everyone, to have a good blend from all groups, so we can tap into the full demographic,” S/Sgt Bourque tells the Mail. “We have a wonderfully diverse community here.”

The Drumheller RCMP are looking for some six to eight people from visible minority groups, including the LGBTQ+ and Indigenous communities, to be part of the advisory committee; S/Sgt Bourque estimates the time commitment involved will be a one-hour meeting per month.

Those interested in being part of the committee can contact the Drumheller Policing Committee at 403-823-7590, or at kdrumhellerservices@rcmp-grc.gc.ca.


Wheatland Wind Project breaks ground

Groundbreaking

An official groundbreaking ceremony was held yesterday, Tuesday, October 19 for the new Wheatland Wind Project northeast of the Village of Hussar.

The project received approval from the Alberta Utilities Commission in September 2018 and will be built some 30 kilometres southeast of the Town of Drumheller; it will consist of 24 turbines, an underground collection system, substation, and an operations and maintenance building.

It is anticipated the project will be operational by the end of 2022 and will create some 200 jobs during the construction phase, with between five and 15 permanent jobs created once fully operational. Stakeholders of the project, including Potentia CEO Jeff Jenner, Wheatland County Reeve Amber Link, and outgoing, long-time Wheatland County Councillor Ben Armstrong attended the groundbreaking.

Driver enters guilty pleas in collision causing three deaths

Courthouse1

A man charged following an 11 vehicle collision where three people were killed, and many more injured entered guilty pleas in provincial court in Drumheller.
On Friday, October 15, Daniel Zacharias Wollmann of Mitchell, Manitoba appeared in court. He pleaded guilty to one count of dangerous driving causing death, naming the three people who died in the collision and one charge of dangerous driving operation causing bodily harm, naming those injured in the collision.
On August 20, 2019, after 3:30 p.m. Oyen RCMP responded to a collision involving 11 vehicles on Highway 9 at Range Road 72, between Chinook and Cereal. The collision involved passenger vehicles and three semi-truck units. One unit was hauling fuel and another butane. Fire engulfed the crash site.
An evacuation alert was issued for the area on the evening of the crash due to smoke.
On February 27, 2020, Oyen RCMP announced three charges of dangerous operation causing death, and 14 charges of dangerous operation causing bodily harm were against Wollmann.
Last Friday, Judge Gasher accepted Wollmann’s pleas, and the court accepted an agreed statement of facts, which was not read into the record.
Sentencing is scheduled for January 14, 2022.


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