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Last updateSun, 06 Oct 2024 1pm

Student nurses introduced to Drumheller opportunities

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Over the weekend of September, 30, 70 student nurses got a taste of rural medicine and the Drumheller valley at a Skills Weekend.
    The weekend was hosted by the Rural Health Professionals Action Plan and the Drumheller Standing Committee on Health, along with the Drumheller and District Chamber of Commence and Alberta Health Services.
    The weekend offers participants an interactive, skills-based introduction to working in rural Alberta as a health-care professional. Students can speak with the instructors about health-related careers in the community, health-care provider job experiences, and the educational requirements for specific careers in health care.
    The participants came from Medicine Hat College (MHC), MHC Brooks Campus, and Red Deer College. Not only did they get a chance to hone their skills, but also to take a look at rural medicine, and what kind of opportunities it offers health professionals.
    They also had time to check out some of the local flavour with tours of local sites and social events.
    Organizers of the event have received positive feedback from participants with many expressing they may take a second look at practicing in a rural community.


Brotherhood of the travelling lamp

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The Drumheller Symbol Lodge is carrying on a tradition of its travelling lamp by passing it off to the Royal Arch Masons for their centennial.
     Mason Doug Wade brought an interesting lamp steeped in history to show the Mail. This lamp was created about 25 years ago for Symbol Lodge and follows a tradition. It is given to another lodge, and when they take hold of it, they place it on the altar, light a candle, read a bible verse and give a presentation. Along with the lamp is a guest book for each lodge to sign before they send it out on the road again.
    This Lamp left Symbol Lodge about 25 years ago, it travelled through Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario, before heading into the United States. They lost track of it for a couple of years before it was located at a lodge in South Dakota. In 2016 it was shipped back to Drumheller travel-weary and adored with plaques from all of the areas it visited. It made it back in time for Symbol Lodge’s centennial.
    To continue the tradition, the lamp has been refurbished and Symbol Lodge rededicated the lamp for Eheyeh Chapter of the Royal Arch Masons.
    Recently it began its journey again when it was passed on to a lodge in Strathmore. Along with the lamp is a note asking that the lantern be returned for the centennial of the Royal Arch Mason in Drumheller, scheduled for April 5, 2025.

Wheatland passes resolution calling for secession referendum

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    Wheatland County Council has passed a resolution to take to the Rural Municipalities of Alberta asking for the province to assert Alberta’s rights within the confederations and if necessary to hold a referendum for Alberta succession.
    The resolution entitled the Alberta First Resolution was presented by Wheatland Councillor Jason Wilson, asks the Provincial Government to take action on a number of issues including withdrawing from the Canadian Pension Plan, to collect personal income tax, remove equalization from the constitution, senate reform, replace the RCMP and take control of immigration.
    Further it resolves “If the federal government does not deal with these demands in good faith; if they block, hinder, or otherwise prevent Alberta from exercising its rights as outlined above, that the Government of Alberta will hold a Referendum with a “clear question”, as defined by The Clarity Act, on the secession of Alberta from the Canadian Confederation on October 18th, 2021.”
    The resolution was passed unanimously by the Wheatland County Council at its meeting on Tuesday, November 5.
    “I brought it forward identifying major concerns my residents have with how confederation is structured," said Wilson.
    “With those issues, I have outlined suggestions or recommendations that could potentially solve those problems within confederation.”
    He says while the resolution does ask for a referendum he says it is not a separatist movement.

    “This is a way to fix confederation… there is a prairie fire burning and this could be the fire retardant that saves it.”
    He adds the referendum is the final line in the sand.
    “When I was growing up my parents would ask me to do something, and there are consequences to inaction. That is all that statement is, it is the consequence of inaction on the federal government’s part. If they refuse to allow Alberta to reach its full potential within confederation, Alberta has to look at other options,” said Wilson.
    One question he is getting is whether this is within the scope of a county council.
    “Whether it is a provincial issue, federal issue of municipal issue, my residents are Albertans, and I tip my hat to Jason Kenney and his provincial government for sticking their necks out for Alberta and Alberta’s interests, but it not just solely a provincial issue, it’s my residents as well and as an elected official I must represent those concerns no matter how big or small,” said Wilson.


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