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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

Former Drumheller writer up for nonficton award

carla

Former Drumheller woman Carla Powell is making an impression on page and has been longlisted for a CBC literary award.
Powell, daughter of Doug and Jean, who now resides in Nova Scotia, has made the 2020 CBC Nonfiction Prize longlist for her work called Unrequited Love. This is the second time she has been up for this award she and was shortlisted in 2017 for her work, The Road to Machu Picchu Starts at 385 lbs.
“It is a phenomenal honour to be chosen twice, especially seeing that the selection process is done blind. So, I could be Michael Ondaatje and they wouldn't know,” Powell tells the Mail. “The first time I was selected, I was so shocked. I had submitted a piece that I wrote in under four hours, on a whim and so when I got short-listed I considered it a serious stroke of dumb luck. But to be chosen a second time has made me think that I might actually have some talent in terms of writing.”
She tells the Mail, Unrequited Love is about her mother.
“It is the story of a daughter's (me) quest to better understand her mother. I am 50 years old now and find that I am remembering my mother at this age. I would have been 16 years old when mom was 50. When we are younger, we don't necessarily think about our parents as being anything other than parents. There's a desire in me to understand mom as her own person, before she met my dad and had kids,” she said. “The story is about me tracing some of the steps in her early life to see if I can better understand her, and ultimately not coming up with the answers I was looking for, but, instead, more questions.”
Her style of writing is raw and honest.
“If I write something, I don't hold back on the feelings behind it, no matter how awkward or difficult they may be. That's the power of non-fiction - true story is evocative. People yearn to understand what the human experience is like for their friends, neighbours, family...and that creates connection,” she said
The longlist includes 35 writers from across Canada, taken from 1,700 submissions. It will soon be winnowed down to a shortlist by September 24, and the winner announced on October 1. The winner will receive $6,000 from the Canada Council of the Arts, have their work published on CBC Books, and attend a two-week writing residency at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity.


Dog days of summer end with disc competition

CDDC with inset

Calgary Disc Dog Club (CDDC) held a spectator-free competition at the local soccer fields on Saturday, September 19 in Drumheller.
To maintain social distancing regulations and keep attendance numbers low, the event was not publicly advertised.
Founder of the CDDC and Drumheller resident Marion Paulson told the Mail, “We are hoping next year will make it possible to have an audience as it is a lot of fun. I am always open to talking to people about disc or learning disc.”
Plans to host the competition were made in fall 2019.
Paulson, who has 15 years experience, participated with her three dogs and came in third place in a game with her two youngest canine companions, aged two and seven years.
She was not the only local to participate at the event.
“Lisette Magdalena, also from Drumheller, competed over the weekend with her two dogs. (She) placed second and third in two games with her dog, Rocko,” Paulson said.
A photo of Paulson and her dog, Fame, is the feature photo for the 2020-2021 Best of the Badlands.
The 2020 competition is the first one the CDDC has held in Drumheller, and just over 50 dogs and 32 humans were in attendance.
Paulson said the club is hopeful the competition will become an annual event.

County leaders meet with Minister to discuss linear assessments

 wannstrom

Reeve of Starland County Steve Wannstrom was one of 17 county representatives at a meeting with the new Minister of Municipal Affairs Tracy Allard in Stettler to discuss the linear tax assessment review.
The review has been controversial and many rural municipalities are poised to have to substantially raise taxes to make up a shortfall with the reduction of linear assessments. For Starland, this could mean losing nearly 40 per cent of its operating revenue.
“She (Allard) listened, I don’t know if she heard 100 per cent,” said Wannstorm. “I will give her the benefit of the doubt. I appreciate the fact that she actually came out to hear us.”
“It was a pretty good meeting, people made it pretty clear where we stand.”
Allard said in a Facebook post following the meeting, “I recognize the importance of this issue and will continue to travel our province, meet with our local leaders, and hear their thoughts and concerns.”
Under the review, there were four proposed scenarios that could be implemented. Wannstrom said she took the fourth possible scenario off the table, which would see Starland’s County’s revenue reduced by an estimated $3.1 million. He said scenarios 1-3 are still very damaging.
“That didn’t give us great comfort,” he said.
According to an information sheet from Starland County using a mixed-use farm with 17 quarters (some leased grazing) and a residence with a total assessment of $615,000 as an example. Under current taxation, this farmer would pay $5,843.34. Under the scenarios listed by the province, this farmer would be paying anywhere between $10,000 and $7,000 more per year.
Wannstrom said he appreciated there was support at the meeting from leaders of towns and villages.
Starland County passed its budget earlier this year with several reductions, including reductions to its full time and seasonal staff. The county also suspended its road construction and bridge repair programs. Starland has 122 bridges. Administration was able to find about $4 million in savings.
“We’re just getting by, we can’t really sustain any more cuts to those numbers because we are not moving forward, we are just idle,” he said. ”We can’t cut much more.”
One issue he says that has been overlooked in these discussions is there are no mechanisms in place that compel resource operators to pay taxes. Starland was put in a difficult situation when Trident Exploration ceased operations, failing to cover its tax bill for two years.
“We did address it with the new minister. ‘You need to make sure that these guys pay their taxes to do business in Alberta,’” he said. “We are not even a creditor in the oil and gas industry.”
He is grateful for the work of MLA Nate Horner.
“My opinion is he is trying very hard, he has been organizing meetings and has been in contact with me and council… he’s making an effort.”


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