News | DrumhellerMail - Page #781
09212024Sat
Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

East Coulee Fire Department respond to structure fire

ECFire Oct20 2

Members of the East Coulee Fire Department responded to a structure fire call around noon on Tuesday, October 20.
Smoke from the fire was visible from Highway 10 and crews blocked Second Avenue near Seventh Street as they battled the blaze.
The call came in the late morning at 11:38 a.m. and East Coulee Fire Department members quickly responded as the call was located around the corner from their fire hall. Two units from the Drumheller Fire Department also responded, with members of the Rosedale hall attending in personal vehicles to assist.
Drumheller Fire Chief Bruce Wade told the Mail, “There were no injuries and the fire was contained to a couple outside buildings.”
One of the involved buildings was a total loss and a second outbuilding sustained damage.
Crews quickly contained the fire within two hours of the call coming in, leaving the scene at 1:40 p.m.

ECFire Oct20


Boyko prepares for season with Americans

Boyko Americans

In this season of COVID-19, there is one Drumheller goalie who wishes he was with the Americans.
Talyn Boyko, 17, son of Sharla and Kelly, is one of the goalies for the Tri-City Americans of the WHL. He is entering his third season with the team, but the pandemic has put a hold on this.
“I’m still in town, we aren’t to go back until November. The season is supposed to start in December,” Boyko tells the Mail.
The Americans only had three games left in the regular season when COVID-19 hit in March. While the Americans weren’t playoff-bound it was a great season of learning for Boyko.
He worked his way into a starting position in the second half of the season and in 24 games had a save percentage of 0.892 and a 4.52 GGA.
“We improved quite a bit throughout the years as teammates and as a group, and I think coming into this year we are excited and ready to go,” he said. “Personally, I thought we had a really good year, and I want to carry over those lessons into the next season.”
This season he learned the impact he can make off the ice befriending kindergartener Carson Moore, who is a super fan. He was also born with one kidney. He has become a motivator for Boyko.
‘It is really nice to be able to chat with him and he is such a big fan. It is cool to make this kind of impact.,” said Boyko. “It is a special position you are in not only as a hockey player but as a person to make a big impact in the community.”
Despite the delayed start, he is making good use of his time.
“Obviously you want to be back with the guys, but this extra time is not going to waste. You use it to make yourself better and come to camp in better shape,” he said
“I am training in Calgary four times a week. I work out at Crash Conditioning and skate with the same group. There is a lot of pretty high-end Western Hockey League guys in the group, and lots of competitive games,” he said.
He has two more years of eligibility, but this is his NHL draft year. He is looking forward to the season, whenever it may come.
“We have a hard-working group, and they are working hard during this time. Everyone is working towards being better as individuals and as a team,” he said.

DVSS International Student Program takes precautionary measures

KateKono

Students at Drumheller Valley Secondary School (DVSS) will be joined by 26 international students participating in the Golden Hills School Division’s International Student Program.
Normally, the program hosts more than 70 international students a year, but the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has posed a number of challenges, for both the program and the students enrolled in it.
“Of the 26 international students, 14 stayed in Canada,” DVSS principal Curtis LaPierre told the Mail. “We also have two new and 24 returning students this year.”
One student will live within the community while the remaining 25 will stay in residence in the school’s dormitory.
Prior to being welcomed into DVSS, the international participants were quarantined for two weeks in Strathmore and underwent COVID-19 testing with negative results; students joined their classmates on September 10 and 14.
Despite these precautions, LaPierre says the program has received concern from parents and community members.
The biggest issue being fear of introducing COVID-19 into the community.
LaPierre says in the last 15 years the program has run there have been approximately 1,200 students enrolled, with most students averaging three years of enrollment.
He adds the program helps to stimulate the local economy and “maintain programming for local students.”
Kate Kono, a grade 12 student from Japan, is in her fourth year in the international program and will be part of the DVSS Class of 2021. After graduation, Kate hopes to attend post-secondary in North America to study paleontology and has previously volunteered with the Royal Tyrrell Museum.
When she first began school at DVSS, Kate says she struggled with English as a second language. She says the teachers were helpful and supportive of her as an international student while she learned the language and grew more comfortable with it.
Kate added the students, and the community as a whole, have been very warm and welcoming.
Since joining the program Kate has been an active member of DVSS. She has been a member of the student council and the girls’ basketball team. Kate has also played violin for DVSS students in both the talent show and the 2019 International Students’ Day celebrations.
The celebrations normally allow local students to experience various international cultures through food, fashion, and music presentations by students in the International Student Program. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, when schools closed in March, the 2020 celebrations had to be cancelled.
Kate returned home to Japan for the summer after school closures.
She says this year in the program is different, not just because of having to quarantine or because of mandatory masks and increased sanitization.
“Every year I’m excited to meet new international students from different cultures, this year we only have two new students from Asia,” she told the Mail.
Low enrollment numbers for the international program also has a “big hit for programming” for local students, meaning some programs have faced temporary cancellations for the 2020-2021 school year.
Students enrolled in the multi-language programs offered at DVSS have also lost a vital part of learning a second language organically without native speakers of a variety of foreign languages among the student population.

DVSS InternationalMural


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.