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The results are in...Liberals retain minority

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The final day for Canadians to cast their ballots in the 2021 federal election was Monday, September 20 with advanced polls open Friday, September 10 to Sunday, September 12.
Liberals retained a minority government led by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
The unofficial results show the Liberals holding 158 seats, up three from 2019. Conservatives took 119 seats, down two seats from 2019; Bloc Quebecois took 34, up from 22; NDP took an extra seat from 2019 with a total of 25 seats, and Green lost a single seat, dropping to two.
In the Battle River-Crowfoot riding which encompasses the Town of Drumheller, Starland County, and a bubble of Kneehill County which includes the towns of Three Hills and Trochu, the Member of Parliament is incumbent Conservative Damien Kurek. With 251 of 252 polls reporting, Kurek received 71 per cent of the vote. NDP candidate Tonya Ratushniak received 10 per cent of votes, while People’s Party candidate Dennis Trepanier received nine per cent of votes.
This is MP Kurek’s second term serving as Member of Parliament for the riding.
To the south, in the Bow River Riding, which includes Wheatland County and southern Kneehill County, Martin Shields was elected as the Member of Parliament. 223 of 224 polls have reported with Shields receiving 70 per cent of the vote. People’s Party candidate Jonathan Bridges received 10 per cent of votes and NDP candidate Michael MacLean received nine per cent of votes.
This is Shield’s third term representing the riding since it was recreated as an electoral district from portions of the Crowfoot, Medicine Hat, and Macleod ridings in 2015.


Kurek, Shields retain seats in federal election

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Canadians went to the polls on Monday, September 20, 2021, and it appears the needle has hardly moved. 

 When Parliament was dissolved in August, the Liberals held 155 seats, the Conservative Party of Canada held 119 sets, the Bloc Québécois held 32, the NDP 24, and the Green Party two.

 While results are still unofficial, the Liberals are projected to gain one seat, forming a minority government, the Conservatives two, the Bloc Quebecois losing one seat, the NDP gaining three, and the Green Party holding on to two seats.

In the Battle River-Crowfoot Riding, with 175 of 252  polls reporting, Damien Kurek of the Conservative Party captured 71.6 per cent of the vote. Tonya Ratushniak of the NDP captured 9.6 per cent and Dennis Trepanier of the People’s Party of Canada (PPC) received 9.3 percent of the vote.

In the Bow River Riding, with 191 of 224 polls reporting, Martin Shields captured 69 per cent of the vote, Jonathan Bridges of the PPC captured 10.3 per cent of the vote and Michael MacLean of the NDP received 9.8 per cent of the vote.

 

 

 

Social Media posts highlight ambulance problems

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Area residents are expressing more concerns over ambulance services, as the Health Sciences Association of Alberta (HSAA) has begun posting updates on ambulance staffing on social media.
These posts show the status of ambulance services throughout Alberta, and it has brought the issue to light.
“We have to expose this conversation. People need to understand what the government’s cuts to funding and failure to resource healthcare providers responsibly and effectively for this province has done,” said HSAA president Mike Parker.
The posts highlight when there is a “Red Alert” is when there are no available ambulances to respond to an emergency.
“About 20 years ago, a Red Alert would have been a rarity and it would have been a time when crews would scramble to get to a call. The Red Alert today looks a little different when they start stacking calls. We have more calls than ambulances and they keep stacking them up,” said Parker “Now we are delaying our response time because we just don’t have enough anymore.”
According to the HSAA Facebook, the “information provided in these posts comes from HSAA Members currently working in EMS within Alberta. The information is accurate to the best of our knowledge when posted, however may be delayed and therefore not accurate at the exact time of the post. Responding to 911 EMS calls is highly dynamic and the unit responding may change after the post is made.”
The posts also highlight when ambulance service has been downgraded or shut down due to staff shortages. On September 4, the service in Drumheller was downgraded from Advanced Life support to Basic Life Support.
On September 7 and 8, it posted that an ambulance was dropped from the schedule in Drumheller due to staff shortages. On September 3 and 7, there was a Red Alert where there was no EMS available in Three Hills or Linden to respond in Kneehill County.
A statement from Alberta Health Services (AHS notes, “Some EMS information is being selectively distributed through social media and represents only a single moment in time. Alberta’s EMS system is in near-constant fluctuation as ambulances respond to calls, arrive at hospitals, clear from calls, or as staff come on or go off shift. It is inaccurate to take a snapshot of one of those minutes and use it to assess an entire hour or full day.”
Parker said the service is facing many issues, and he describes it as a toxic workplace.
“People are not coming to work anymore, we have a situation where we can’t staff trucks, calls have grown 50 per cent over the last six months,” said Parker. “We have communities like yours in Drumheller where an ambulance could have a coverage zone that is massive. An hour’s drive with lights and sirens, or that ambiance is coming from an hour away to your community.”
AHS acknowledges an increase in calls.
“EMS is continuing to see an unprecedented increase in emergency calls over the last several months, due to several combined factors including the COVID-19 pandemic, opioid concerns, and emergency calls related to people returning to regular levels of activity. All call types have increased and staff illness and fatigue are also contributing to challenges in the EMS system,” it states.
He says they operate on a system where the closest ambulance responds. This means if an ambulance in one hall is on call, the next call may have to draw from the next closest community, leaving another area underserved.
“That is a systemic problem province-wide, the core of all this is these zones of Edmonton and Calgary draw down the resources in the region because of the volume of calls, and draws into rural facilities,” Parker said. “Now we have closures of facilities across the rural communities, which makes access to healthcare even more challenging.”
In a statement from AHS, “EMS monitors ambulance availability in real-time and ensure resources are always available to respond to emergencies. System adjustments are made minute by minute to make the best use of the existing resources.”


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