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Hussar viability review on hold for municipal election

hussar pic

A viability review for the Village of Hussar has been suspended as the municipal election looms near.

The Village requested the Minister of Municipal Affairs to complete a viability review in the summer of 2015. As defined by the Ministry, a viability review is a process where a municipality's governance, finances, infrastructure, and services are reviewed to determine whether changes are required for the community to remain viable.

Mayor Tim Frank tells The Mail, the suspension of the review is the normal course of the process when an election falls in the same timetable of a review.

“It has been put off until the end of the election, by ministerial order,” said Frank. “It is the same with every one of the viability studies in the province. It just takes a little uncertainty out of the elections.”

While a viability review typically takes about a year, Hussar has been going on now for about two.

“Our infrastructure study took a long time. We are basically waiting on the results of a few final things to finish the infrastructure report,” he said.

A viability review is not a dissolution study, but a strategy to improve long-term viability. A team was assembled with representatives from the Ministry, the Village of Hussar, Wheatland County, and municipal associations. Throughout the process, there are the consultations with the community. The village initiated the infrastructure review in early 2016.

According to the ministry, if a municipality is trending towards viability, the review will be concluded. If it is trending towards non-viability, the process moves into its second phase.

This phase includes a viability plan and typically comes down to two options. These include remaining as a municipality, but making changes into the way the municipality is governed or administered, or to be dissolved into an adjacent municipality.

It states, “If council votes in favour of dissolution, a public vote is held by ministry staff to determine the community's preference on the options presented.”

Currently, there are 10 communities in the province undergoing a viability review.

Frank expects the process will wrap up around the end of the year or early in 2018.


Camp Rock

Camp Rock

All kinds of talents were on display at Camp BCF’s week long Drumheller’s Got Talent extravaganza. Campers ended the week with a performance showcasing everything from art to dance, mime and even puppetry.

The grand finale was an air band featuring Isaac Treller, Ashton Hanczik, Zachary Jared and Josh Unland rocking out to Thunderstruck by ACDC.

(mailphoto by Patrick Kolafa)

Conservatives Unite

MLA Rick Strankman wasn't surprised that voting membership of the PC and Wildrose Party voted 95 per cent in favour pf unification

The political climate shifted Saturday afternoon as the Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta and the Wildrose voted to unite.

Each party held a referendum on whether to move forward together or apart. A clear message was sent as 95 per cent of the Wildrose members that voted and 95 per cent of the voting PC members chose unity.

While many described this as monumental, MLA for Drumheller-Stettler, Rick Strankman wasn’t surprised.

“I have been hearing that a long time in the constituency, where people are saying they are sick and tired of the NDP, and saying you guys got to get it done,” said Strankman.

President of the Drumheller-Stettler PC Constituency Association Mark Nikota said the voting went as he expected.

“I wasn’t that surprised, on the PC side, they did a lot of work for a long time on that. The number was quite high on the Wildrose side, I was a little surprised about that number,” he said. “When you look at it, the unity people were really encouraging people to buy memberships in both parties, so it’s not that surprising in the end because it was the same group of people that voted in both.”

He says while it appears to be a strong show of support, of the eligible members, about 55 per cent turned out for the vote.

“I know lots of people who were not in favour of it just didn’t bother voting, so I don’t know if it is as quite as strong as 95 per cent, but it doesn’t matter in the end, it is going forward,” said Nikota.

The next step in the process is to pick a new leader. Jason Kenney has indicated he would run for the leadership of the new party and on Monday, Brian Jean officially launched his bid. MLA for Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills Nathan Cooper has been appointed the interim leader of the United Conservative Party.

Strankman says they are still working on plans to go forward within the constituencies.

“The interim joint board is supposed to be sending out some instructions and working on some form of modeling for the constituency associations to get together and legalize their relationship for the new party.”

Strankman feels there should be a democracy path forward as they organize.

“What ever has to be done, has to be done in a democratic fashion, it is a new dawn and that is something we have to recognize even as MLAs, we are representing tentatively a new party,” he said.

Nikota also sees a democratic way forward.

“The next steps are going to be interesting, basically, you are starting from scratch. My feeling is you have to have an open competition for everything, board spots in the local CA, as well as your nominees for the next election,” he said.

“They have been touting all along that this is grassroots, open and honest. If they don’t have (open competition), that it flies in the face of everything they are putting out there.”


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