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Council defers business license fees

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To support local businesses, Drumheller Town Council deferred business license fees as the community deals with the COVID-19 pandemic.
     Council made the motion at the Monday, March 30 Council meeting. The fees have been deferred for 90 days or until the Province ends the State of Emergency. Mayor Heather Colberg said this is one way to support local businesses, which are being hit hard by the current situation.
    “Next to our residents, our local businesses are the heart and soul of this community. We have established an economic recovery task force to assist them in navigating the various deferral programs offered by the federal and provincial governments,” said Colberg. “Last night council agreed to defer business license fees.”
    She said the town will continue to support businesses as well as the nonprofit sector deal with the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
     “We will also be helping charitable and non-profit organizations with grant funding applications recently announced. We are committed to helping them stay in town,” she said. “Our community has come together during these trying times and we cannot forget about our business community, charitable and non-profit sectors.”
    The best way to weather the COVID-19 pandemic is to be prepared and follow the public health orders in place.
    “COVID-19 is in communities surrounding us so we need to be ready for our first case. We need to maintain our cleaning efforts and understand unacceptable behaviour is no longer acceptable. If you see neighbours on the street who are not 2 metres apart, ask them to separate,” said Director of Emergency Management Darwin Durnie.
    “In all the reports I’m reading from around the world, the key to flattening the curve for COVID-19 is to clean, clean, clean and stay home. We are doing our best to maintain these strict protocols.”


Turkeys trot from custody

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Two daring and wily turkeys that have been evading law enforcement for some time have again made their great escape.

The pair of jail-breakers had made their debut escape from an unknown facility last year and have been on the run ever since. Witnesses reported sightings of the duo in the northwest area of Hanna but the cunning pair was always one step ahead of law enforcement.

Residents have been torn on the subject of the escapees. Some praised the feathered fiends as being modern day heroes while others smacked their lips and made innuendos to Thanksgiving.

A specialist in the apprehension of fowl creatures was brought in and the madness finally came to an end on March 23. The specialist, using complex and mind-bending techniques, was able to re-capture the pair. Something law enforcement has failed at doing for almost a year.
The pair were remanded into custody. However, while being moved to a maximum security facility, one that specializes in holding the cunning likes of these two, the pair made another daring escape by breaking out of the stock trailer they were being transported in.

The pair has not been seen since. However, sources within law enforcement doubt this will be the last of them.

New fire apparatus arrives

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The Drumheller Fire Department took delivery of its latest addition to its fleet.
The department’s 2019 Pierce Ascendants Quint Aerial Platform Ladder/Pumper Truck arrived Friday afternoon, March 27. Fire Chief Bruce Wade is happy to see the apparatus arrive, and says they will have it in service very soon.
“It just got into town, so we will get some equipment on it, and hopefully some training on it this week,” said Wade.
The new “Quint” (five-function apparatus) is destined to soon replace the 1982 Superior Simone Snorkel Truck. This new apparatus has greater capabilities and versatility. Any firefighter with a Class 5 license and air brake (Q) endorsement can drive the new truck. It is easier to maneuver and is quicker to set up and takes less manpower. It also has tank and pump capabilities.
“It is set up so it is more or less foolproof. If we try to get it to do something it isn’t designed for, it won’t allow it so there are lots of safety features built into it,” said Wade. “It is a new, more efficient technology.”
This will be a first response vehicle, called upon for structure fires.
The town had been budgeting funds for the replacement truck for about four years. The truck came in at $1,316,841.


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