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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Coming up for air

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Six-year-old Luna Swift takes a moment to breathe on Saturday, July 22 at Freson Bros where she was competing in a Watermelon Eating Contest. She had royalty at her side as the National Watermelon Queen Olivia Johnson of Texas was on hand to celebrate all things watermelon. Freson Bros hosted Watermelon Fest at all of its locations throughout Alberta. There were all kinds of activities, but the highlight was the contest, where dozens of residents and visitors did their messy best to devour the melons.


Horner receives mandate letter

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A month and a half following the May 29 provincial General Election, MLA for Drumheller-Stettler and President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance Nate Horner has received a mandate letter from Premier Danielle Smith.
As President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Finance, the letter focuses on the economy.
“Our government is committed to continued balanced budgets, limiting operational spending to less than inflation plus population growth, lowering the provincial debt and growing the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund to lessen the province’s reliance on resource revenues over the long term,” Smith states in the letter. “We are also committed to growing Alberta’s tax advantage for both individuals and businesses to strengthen economic activity, investment, Albertan’s quality of life and the ability to invest in core social programs and those that deliver them.”
Some of the primary objectives outlined in the letter include amending the Alberta Taxpayer Protection Act to ensure no future government can increase personal or business income tax rates, creating a new eight per cent tax bracket on income under $60,000, extending the fuel tax pause until this December and continuing to index personal income tax brackets annually.
Other issues he is to focus on are making insurance more affordable for Albertans, and looking at how ATB can be more competitive in financing businesses and home buyers. It also focuses on implementing halal financing options for Islamic communities and working with the Minister of Jobs, Economy and Trade to design a job attraction strategy to raise awareness of skilled trades and professions available and pathways to those fields.
Some major policy shifts they are exploring include the possibility of an Alberta Pension Plan and potentially creating an Alberta Revenue Agency to collect all provincial tax revenues.
“We’ve already made great strides in positioning Alberta as a pro-growth, low-tax province and we’re committed to building on that. I look forward to working closely with my colleagues in cabinet and Treasury Board as we discuss new opportunities that will encourage further growth and diversification for the benefit of Albertans today and for generations,” said Horner in a release.

Chuckwagon legend wraps up career at Calgary Stampede

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A legendary, nearly four-decade chuckwagon career was celebrated as it came to an end at this year’s Calgary Stampede.
Mark Sutherland has been driving since 1993 and was an outrider long before that, and his last name is what legends are made of in chuckwagon circles. At this year’s Calgary Stampede, he decided it was time to end his career.
“It has been a long time,” he tells the Mail. “When I was a kid, it was just what I was going to do. I played outriders the same way kids played floor hockey,” he said.
“My whole plan was to be a chuckwagon driver, and the steps to that was to be an outrider, and then as you get older, become a chuckwagon driver. It was always in my thought process.”
This has a local connection because for years, Drumheller resident Jay Dekesyer has been a trusty stable hand for Sutherland at the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth.
Sutherland says one of the hardest parts of retiring is the chuckwagon family around him that has grown over the years.
“I have fans and front that follow me very closely and support me, and I have guys like Jay that have been friends for 20 years, and a highlight of his year is coming to the Stampede with me,” he said “Whether it should or not, it sometimes factors into your decision. It is going to be a change for me and my family and friends.”
For the last three decades as a driver, he has been wrapped up in the competition. Retirement might come with some introspection on the legacy he and his family has built.
“I guess retirement allows for reflection, competition doesn’t, so it might be a little too early to look back at the legacy,” he said. “When I look at what dad has done, and he retired in 2017, I am very cognizant of what happened with him and how he evolved the sport, changed the sport, and dominated the sport. I am well aware of the legacy of the family name. I have been humbled by hundreds of thousands of fans who have reached out to me via social media or personally and have expressed their gratefulness for what I have done for the sport and what I have done for them. All the while just doing a sport that I love.”
“I race chuckwagons, and I love horses. As far as that goes, I guess I have had a blessed life.”
As for Jay, Sutherland said he has talked to his son, who races, as well as his cousin Mitch who might have a place for his service, come the next Stampede.
“I guess we’ll see if he makes his way out to Mitch’s ranch in Grande Prairie.”


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