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Lost Egg Classic returns to Wayne

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Following a brief hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Lost Egg Classic disc golf tournament will return to Wayne over the August long weekend.
2020 would have marked the true 20 year anniversary of the tournament, though because of the cancellation, 2021 will mark the official anniversary.
“We had 140 entries open and they sold out in about 35 minutes,” says Craig Burrows-Johnson of the Professional Disc Golf Association. Burrows-Johnson is a disc golf course designer who has had a hand in numerous courses throughout Alberta over the last two decades, including the local course at Wayne known as the Alberta Badlands Disc Golf Course.
Participants previously came from across Canada and the United States to Wayne for the Lost Egg. However, due to ongoing travel restrictions, there will be no international participants this year.
Of the 140 participants who will compete in the Badlands, only one is local to the area.
Cameron White, owner and operator of Fire Coulee Discs, is the only local resident to gain entry to the Lost Egg. He notes he was initially put on a waiting list prior to receiving confirmation his entry was accepted.
Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, interest in the sport of disc golf has exploded. The sport is naturally socially distanced, and Burrows-Johnson adds--unlike traditional golf where there are green fees and expensive equipment--the start-up costs for disc golf are minimal, and game times are often much shorter in comparison.
As the popularity of the sport has increased over the last year, the Town of Drumheller has given the Drumheller and Area Disc Golf group permission to use the former CN Rail right of way--the greenspace across from the former Greentree Mall--as a temporary course.
Drumheller currently has two official disc golf courses, at Midland and Wayne; however, White notes a permanent third course is in the works, with Burrows-Johnson heading the design.
“The courses (at Midland and Wayne) are not beginner or mobility friendly,” White tells the Mail. He notes both courses pose unique challenges for players, which can be difficult for those new to the sport.
White adds, with a third course, Drumheller could host national disc golf tournaments, and Burrows-Johnson notes a national championship could attract upwards of 400 participants.
The Lost Egg Classic will take place at the Alberta Badlands Disc Golf Course Saturday July 31 to Sunday, August 1.


Big winner in Stampede Lottery

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A Drumheller man was able to celebrate the reopening of the Calgary Stampede, and last week he had, even more to celebrate, winning $100,000.
Jeff Paarup attends the Stampede every year and supports the charitable work of community groups by participating in the Stampede Lottery. This year his number came up.
“I always enter four different ones, anything that means something to me, like the Children’s Hospital, Foothill Hospital, STARS, and the Stampede,” he tells the Mail. “I didn’t expect that, the only thing I ever won in 35 years was a little camera.”
The winners were selected on July 21. Stampede Lotteries raises funds for Calgary Stampede, a not-for-profit organization, and our youth and agricultural programs. The lotteries also raise funds for worthwhile community projects in southern Alberta through the Stampede’s three service partners: the Kinsmen Club of Calgary, Rotary Club of Calgary at Stampede Park, and the Calgary Marching Show Band Association.
“It’s more about my contributions because you never expect to win,” said Paarup.
He chuckles and says a chunk of it will go to bills.
“I might leave a little bit for a trip with the family,” he said.

Solicitor General pushes for provincial police force

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Minister of Justice and Solicitor General Kaycee Madu was in Munson Friday evening, July 23. While the visit was billed as talking about rural crime, the discussion soon centred on establishing a provincial police service.
An audience of about 40 came out which included residents as well as municipal leaders and representation from the RCMP. While a public opinion poll by Pollara Strategic Insight taken in May of last year shows 81 per cent of Albertans support the RCMP, Madu says the support could be higher.
“If you are listening to citizens you will find broad support for it, but if you are listening to councillors and municipal leaders, you will find they are divided. The best way to explain that is there are three things: number one they are concerned about costs; number two, they have concerns about where it will achieve the results for which we are seeking to achieve and number three, obviously the campaign from the police union,” said Madu.
While the Alberta government proposed referendum questions in this upcoming municipal election, including questions on equalization, and daylight saving time. There was no question about provincial policing.
“We haven’t made a decision on whether or not we will put it to a referendum or whether we legislate it. It all depends on the outcome of this consultation and the data we have available to the time we proceed. But we haven’t made a decision. It may be a referendum, it may well be a straight-up implementation,” he said.
The National Police Federation says annually the Federal Government pays about 30 per cent of Alberta RCMP police costs, about $160 million annually. Madu says their goal is to be more efficient at no extra costs to the taxpayer.
“The province is very capable of stepping in to take care of that. Ontario, Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador all have their own provincial police fully funded by their provinces. If these provinces can do it we can do it,” he said.
“The goal here is not to see an increase in the ratepayers’ taxes because of this. The goal is not to see more increases on municipal budgets, the goal is actually to reduce taxes on ordinary Albertans.”
In 2019 the provincial government announced small counties, towns, and villages, with populations under 5,000 would have to be responsible for policing costs. Many municipal leaders have expressed the increase in cost has not improved policing. Before this, they were not responsible. For Starland taxpayers, the county forked over $61,336 in 2021 and project up to $187,137 by 2024.
Madu says this is why they need to restructure policing.
“There is a role for commissioned police officers, there is a role for peace officers, there is a place for community police officers as well. We have to ask ourselves if we have the right police model and that is what this consultation and this study is going to answer for us. I want boots on the ground. The idea we are spending so much money and still complaints about police presence is not acceptable form, hence the reason why we are looking at this problem.
Madu’s visit came just a day after his letter to Trudeau asking individuals, including vulnerable persons, be allowed to carry pepper spray, for self-defense. He says this idea came from consultation from Albertans.
“Vulnerable populations that have been in constant attack by hate-motivated attacks have been calling upon me as Justice Minister and their government to do more to protect vulnerable Albertans. There is no better way to ensure vulnerable women have the tools they need to protect themselves at that moment,” he said. There is a lot we can do as a society, but at that particular moment if you don’t have the tool to ward off an attacker, they are going to be attacked.”


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