News | DrumhellerMail - Page #1476
10032024Thu
Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Local student selected for prestigious SHAD program

IMG 46981
 
    A record 801 youth from across Canada will be attending SHAD,  including St. Anthony’s grade 11 student Fatima Rehan.
    Attendees are immersed in an intense one month program focused on ‘STEAM’: science, technology, engineering, arts and math to help these students see and reach their full potential.
    Come July 2, Rehan will be flying to Waterloo, Ontario for a month of learning and experimentation.
    “I’m looking forward to it, I’m quite excited,” said Rehan.
    SHAD is a registered Canadian charity that empowers exceptional high school students – at a pivotal point in their education – to recognize their own capabilities and envision their extraordinary potential as tomorrow’s leaders and change makers.
    “They teach you stuff about economics and you live on campus,” said Rehan. “There is a lot of guest speakers and you’ll be meeting professors and new people. It’s also very focused on diversity.”                SHAD President and CEO Tim Jackson says SHAD 2017 students are in for the summer of their lives.
    “Past students rave about the program and how it transforms them,” said Jackson. “That’s why we’re trying to ensure SHAD is known and available to every eligible student across the country.”
    SHAD also offers bursaries to students with financial need and recently announced a partnership with Pathways to Education to help students from more marginalized communities attend the program. In order for a student to enter the prestigious program, you must first apply.
    “They look at your classes and your grades but they also focus on your volunteer work and those things, and on your personality as in you do sports and extracurricular activities – it’s a little bit of everything to get accepted,” said Rehan.
    Students are presented with a theme or social problem every summer which they learn at the beginning of the program. They have to devise an original product or service that addresses this real world, complex issue. In the process, they are taught how to build a business plan, marketing plan and working prototype and come away with an entrepreneurial mindset.
    Rehan was picked based on her valiant efforts in the community, specifically her school as a student council member, helping with Habitat for Humanity, and volunteering at the library. One of the most notable actions being her idea of having a multicultural day at school.
    “Well I do a lot of volunteer work and I’m really active in my school and my community and I’m just very interested in it,” said Rehan.
    Rehan is ecstatic to be attending the summer program and is proud to represent the valley in Ontario.
    “I’m very excited to go and represent our town and show people what we are about,” said Rehan.


Local student selected for prestigious SHAD program

IMG 46981
 
    A record 801 youth from across Canada will be attending SHAD,  including St. Anthony’s grade 11 student Fatima Rehan.
    Attendees are immersed in an intense one month program focused on ‘STEAM’: science, technology, engineering, arts and math to help these students see and reach their full potential.
    Come July 2, Rehan will be flying to Waterloo, Ontario for a month of learning and experimentation.
    “I’m looking forward to it, I’m quite excited,” said Rehan.
    SHAD is a registered Canadian charity that empowers exceptional high school students – at a pivotal point in their education – to recognize their own capabilities and envision their extraordinary potential as tomorrow’s leaders and change makers.
    “They teach you stuff about economics and you live on campus,” said Rehan. “There is a lot of guest speakers and you’ll be meeting professors and new people. It’s also very focused on diversity.”                SHAD President and CEO Tim Jackson says SHAD 2017 students are in for the summer of their lives.
    “Past students rave about the program and how it transforms them,” said Jackson. “That’s why we’re trying to ensure SHAD is known and available to every eligible student across the country.”
    SHAD also offers bursaries to students with financial need and recently announced a partnership with Pathways to Education to help students from more marginalized communities attend the program. In order for a student to enter the prestigious program, you must first apply.
    “They look at your classes and your grades but they also focus on your volunteer work and those things, and on your personality as in you do sports and extracurricular activities – it’s a little bit of everything to get accepted,” said Rehan.
    Students are presented with a theme or social problem every summer which they learn at the beginning of the program. They have to devise an original product or service that addresses this real world, complex issue. In the process, they are taught how to build a business plan, marketing plan and working prototype and come away with an entrepreneurial mindset.
    Rehan was picked based on her valiant efforts in the community, specifically her school as a student council member, helping with Habitat for Humanity, and volunteering at the library. One of the most notable actions being her idea of having a multicultural day at school.
    “Well I do a lot of volunteer work and I’m really active in my school and my community and I’m just very interested in it,” said Rehan.
    Rehan is ecstatic to be attending the summer program and is proud to represent the valley in Ontario.
    “I’m very excited to go and represent our town and show people what we are about,” said Rehan.

Whirling disease found in Red Deer watershed

20170602 Gordon Taylor Bridge TJH 010

 

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has declared the Red Deer River Watershed infected with whirling disease.

While not harmful to humans, whirling disease can severely affect juvenile trout and whitefish populations. The declaration covers all streams, creeks, lakes, and rivers feeding into the Red Deer River, ending at the Saskatchewan border.

The CFIA’s announcement follows declarations of infection in the Bow and Oldman River watersheds. Whirling disease was first discovered in Banff National Park in September 2016.

The province recently announced $9.3 million to fund Alberta’s three-point whirling disease action plan. As part of that plan, the Government of Alberta opened a whirling disease laboratory in Vegreville, a unique facility dedicated to determining the extent of whirling disease. Additional staff have so been hired throughout the province as part of education and mitigation efforts.

New declarations of whirling disease are not necessarily evidence, the disease is currently spreading, but reason for increasing awareness of the need to clean, drain, and dry any equipment that comes into contact with water.

Impacts to wild trout and whitefish populations are significantly reduced when prevalence of the disease in the environment is low. Maintaining low prevalence of the disease where possible reduces the threat to wild trout populations. There are no plans to change fishing regulations at this point.

Areas in Alberta outside the Bow, Oldman, and Red Deer River watersheds were previously declared as a buffer area and are not affected by today’s declaration.

Whirling disease action plan

Alberta’s whirling disease action plan is focused on three pillars:

  • Detection and Delineation: Working with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) to determine the full extent of whirling disease. A whirling disease committee has been established to address the long-term management of the disease.
  • Education: Public engagement, work with stakeholders and posting of educational materials to prevent the spread of whirling disease. This includes the province’s Clean, Drain, Dry public awareness campaign.
  • Mitigation: Actions taken to prevent the spread, such as: CFIA permits to stock fish from the infected area to locations outside of the infected zone, as well as all Class A fish farms and provincial aquaculture facilities implementing approved biosecurity protocols and testing negative for whirling disease.

For related information, visit:


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.