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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Drumheller RCMP increase community engagement, patrols

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The Drumheller RCMP detachment released its crime stats for the first three months of 2022 for both the Town of Drumheller and the provincial detachment area, which includes the villages of Carbon, Delia, Morrin and Munson and the hamlets of Dalum, Rosebud, and Rumsey.
Within the local municipal boundaries, the number of overall criminal offenses was down compared to the previous year, though there were some increases in the rural detachment areas.
“This is a combination of enhanced patrols and community engagement patrols, as well as calls from the public,” Drumheller RCMP Staff Sergeant Ed Bourque tells the Mail.
He shares the detachment has continued to conduct more patrols and compliance checks over the last quarter. This has resulted in an increase number of failure to comply and breach cases compared to previous years, in both the municipal and provincial detachment areas.
In the municipal detachment area, these patrols have resulted in an increase from nine total cases in 2021 to 23 in 2022-an increase of 156 per cent; the rural detachment area has also seen an increase of 800 per cent, from two cases in 2021 to a total of 18 in 2022.
Due to the relatively low number of offenses in the local detachment area this may seem like a drastic increase on paper, but S/Sgt Bourque says this does not necessarily reflect a severe increase in crimes.
He notes, compared to detachment areas with larger populations, even a single additional case in a given quarter can create an inflated increase of 100 per cent.
One area where this can be seen is in the total number of offenses against a person in the rural detachment areas.
While this has increased 200 per cent over the previous year, this increase has realistically gone from six cases in 2021 to 18 in 2022. S/Sgt Bourque says this increase is due to a combination of increased patrols, but does say the detachment also received more domestic calls in the last quarter which has contributed to this increase.


Senior's Week kicks off

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Senior’s Week in the valley kicked off on Monday morning, June 6, with a Pancake Breakfast at Pioneer Trail Centre. Community members turned out for fellowship and a hearty breakfast. This is just the tip of the iceberg, with events and activities planned for the week of June 6-10. Drumheller FCSS Seniors Coordinator, Karen Schneck, serves up breakfast for Alvin Will Monday morning.

UCP leadership candidate addresses Drumheller crowd

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While it has only been a couple weeks since Premier Kenney announced he would be stepping down and the party has not yet laid out the leadership process, the race is on as Danielle Smith passed through the valley on Sunday, June 5.
Smith, who left politics about seven years ago, has put her hat in the ring to be a leadership candidate and is running for the UCP nomination in Livingstone-Mcleod.
While she has been out of politics since 2015, after the infamous “floor crossing” where Wildrose MLAs joined the PC Caucus, she has not been out of the spotlight. She has enjoyed a career as a broadcaster and columnist, restaurateur, and President of the Alberta Enterprise Group.
Smith outlined her motivations for getting back into politics. One point was not wanting to see restrictions come in again in during the fall respiratory season, following the Alberta response to COVID -19.
“There is a way to keep our vulnerable population safe without sacrificing our kids. That is one of the main things we have to make sure we do not do in the fall. We already have kids that are falling behind because they can’t read over the last two years,” she said to a crowd of about 80 at the BCF Sunday.
“We have to make sure the public has confidence in us enough that we can take care of our vulnerable population in a different way. And that different way is how they have done it in other jurisdictions and that is focus protection.”
Her other major concern is making sure the NDP does not return to power and that takes building a united front.
“We will see the targeting of the agricultural community, we’ll see the targeting of our resource sector, we’ll see an increase in government spending, it will be unaffordable and we’ll continue to see them placate and pander to Ottawa.”
She also says she does not want to see Justin Trudeau as Prime Minister any longer and has voiced her support for Pierre Polivere for the Conservative leadership.
In looking at the breakdown of seats in the province, she infers the NDP is focusing on winning the large urban centres, which could carry the majority of the seats and ignoring rural areas.
“We need to hold strong in rural Alberta and don’t split the vote to allow for another party to win, and then we only have to win five seats in Calgary and Edmonton to win a majority government. But we can’t do it sacrificing the values of rural Alberta.”
“Rural Alberta is the heart of conservatism, and there’s a lot of reason for that… We start from a sound principle of individual responsibility, and then we build out from that saying the family is the fundamental building block of society. Beyond that we go to our neighbours, we go to our churches and we go to our Rotary Club, our Elks, and our Lions, and we have a strong network within our community where we can help each other.”
“I think we need to rebuild how we do government from the ground up and that is why we have to be mindful of what we are hearing in rural Alberta.”


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