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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Three Hills riding candidates line up for provincial election

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    While no date has been set for a spring provincial election, another candidate has stepped into the ring in the Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills riding to run against incumbent MLA Nathan Cooper.
      Chase Brown, a graduate of DVSS and student at Augustana in Camrose studying management with a major in economics, has been selected to represent the Alberta Party in the Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills riding. While he is a fourth generation rancher from the Wintering Hills area, he became involved with the party by helping to form the Camrose Constituency Association.
    “We built up our constituency association, built up our membership and selected our candidate,” he explains. “We were hosting an event to keep our momentum up and the leader, Steven Mandel, was in attendance and I got to chatting with him and we started talking about Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills…he encouraged me to seek the nomination.”
    He says the centrist position of the Alberta Party appeals to him.
    “What that translates to me is being both socially and fiscally responsible. Albertans want change, but slashing funding for provincial social programs is not the way to grow our economy. Rather I believe we need to focus more on spending our taxpayers’ dollars more efficiently and effectively,” he said.
    “Just the dedication to transparency and creating an open and honest government, no more backroom deals, let’s bring the public back into it.”
    He also feels strongly about the rise in rural crime.
  “Everybody has a role to play in it, and I believe the Alberta Party is going to address it with real practical and effective solutions, not just sound off and use buzzwords, but get some effective action,” he said.

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    Nathan Cooper, candidate for the United Conservative Party (UCP) says they are getting ready for the election, whenever it may come.
        “We are in the process of continuing to work on the platform and in Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills, which runs all the way to Drumheller now, we are putting together a team of folks from all across the constituency who are excited about getting our positive united conservative vision out,” said Cooper.
   He says on the ground they are securing campaign space in Olds and Three Hills, as well as part-time offices in the southeast corner of the constituency and are getting regional captains in place.
    “We are excited about what the election holds,” he said.
    He is hearing that a change in government is top priority leading up to the election.
    “Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills never had much confidence in the NDP government and they have virtually zero confidence now. The carbon tax and how it is making life more expensive for everyone. They are frustrated with the current state of the economy and the lack of jobs in the constituency, I think those are the really big ones,” said Cooper.
    “They want a premier who will actually stand up for Albertans. They don’t feel we have a strong voice in Ottawa right now. They feel that Premier Notely has made too close of an ally in Justin Trudeau, and she has been taking us in the wrong direction.”
    As for when an election will happen, he is hedging his bets.
    “Picking when an election will be is a fool’s game. My personal speculation is it will be held in mid to late April,” said Cooper.
    While Brown is also not sure when the election will be called, it could come right in the middle of his exams
    “Some are guessing late April possibly, and that will line right up with my final exams, so I can get graded by my professors and Albertans all in one week,” laughs Brown.
    So far the Mail has no indication as to candidates in the riding for the NDP or Liberal Party.


Great Plains Short-horned Lizard in Canada featured at Speaker Series

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The January 31 session of the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology’s 2019 Speaker Series is a presentation by Dr. Larry Powell from the University of Calgary, entitled, “Phrynosoma brevirostris, the Great Plains Short-horned Lizard, in Canada.”

P. brevirostris is of considerable scientific interest, as it is one of the few lizards that displays some ability to deal with unseasonably cold weather and harsh winters. It is a rare species in Canada, and can be found in coulee and canyon edges, and exposed Bearpaw shales in Southeastern Alberta and Southwestern Saskatchewan.

Suitable hibernation sites require adequate snow cover, as hibernating lizards do not bury themselves at great depths. Their annual activity is between early April to the end of October and their diet generally consists of ants, grasshoppers, and beetles. Great Plains Short-horned lizards rely principally upon camouflage for defence and are preyed upon by snakes, hawks, and small predatory mammals in their habitat.

Dr. Powell will discuss current scientific research on Phrynosoma brevirostris and will talk about what the species needs to survive in Canada.

The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. The series is held every Thursday until April 25 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Speaker Series talks are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel at: youtube.com/c/RoyalTyrrellMuseumofPalaeontology.

Bright future for Delia

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The Mail is continuing its series of updates and a glance to the coming year with area municipalities. Last week readers were brought up to date on Special Areas and Starland County. This week there are updates from the Village of Munson and the Village of Delia. Watch for more in the coming weeks.

It has been a busy year for the Village of Delia, and the community is well positioned for the future.

The Mail caught up with Mayor David Sisley to review the progress the village has made in 2018 and what it is looking forward to in the coming year. One project Mayor Sisley is very excited about is approval of a new Delia School and the unique community hub which they have partnered. The Delia School Enhancement Society has been busy raising funds for the project. They have surpassed the $1 million mark.

“The Village was the first to put up money and they donated $100,000,” said Sisley. “It is going to include the library and a field house the public can use. There are parts of the building that can be used all of the time.”

“The committee that looked into other schools that have been built recently found none of the schools had done this sort of thing.”

Groundbreaking on the new school is expected this coming spring.

The Village was busy in 2018 expanding the water storage unit that supplies the community. This necessary renovation is well underway and is expected to be completed this spring.

“If there was a major fire or some major catastrophe where we would need water, in just a few hours we would have no water,” Sisley explained.

He says the Council has also been busy putting together a strategic plan for the community with the help of a facilitator. This will be a document to guide the future development of the  Village.

“Hopefully it will help with tourism and more economic development, and bring more businesses to town,” said Sisley.

The village has a few projects coming including a sidewalk replacement program over the next two to three years.

The future looks bright for the community, especially with recent population growth.

“We have gone from 186 up to 216,” said Sisley. “It’s people wanting to get away from the big city more than anything and have more quality of life.”

He says in 2018 they have had 12 properties for sale and all but two have been sold. There are three new houses under construction. They have also sold three commercial lots.


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