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Drumheller schools top Terry Fox fundraising list

TFF TFS Badge 2021 V3 copy

Local schools stepped up to the plate despite COVID restrictions and showed great support for the annual Terry Fox School Runs.
The Annual Terry Fox School run took place in September and last week, the Terry Fox Foundation for Alberta, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut published its top fundraising schools and all three Drumheller schools were on the list.
St. Anthony’s School has made a tradition of marking Terry Fox’s legacy and this year set a goal of raising $6,500. It is a whole-school effort with some students taking on their initiatives to raise funds.
This year St. Anthony’s landed in third place in the territory for fundraising in elementary schools, raising $14,876.25. They were bested by two Calgary schools.
Similarly, Greentree School also has a great contingent of Terry Fox supporters participating in the annual School Run. About 70 students from Kindergarten to Grade 6 participated. They also set up a page to make donations online through the Terry Fox Foundation. Many students brought their own donations to donate to the cause. Greentree School was able to raise $7,540.55, the 19th-best in the territory.
DVSS also showed their support for the Terry Fox School Run, and among Secondary Schools in the territory, DVSS raised $3,190.40, the fourth-best.
In total, the three schools raised $25,607.20.


Man fined for unauthorized hunting

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A man was fined $,1500 and received a one-year hunting license suspension after pleading guilty to unauthorized hunting.
Donald Fobert appeared in provincial court in Drumheller on Friday, February 11, via telephone.
He was facing two charges under the Alberta Wildlife Act, including unauthorized hunting on occupied land without the consent of the owner and possession of wildlife. He pled guilty to the unauthorized hunting charge.
The court heard on November 11, 2020, at 4 p.m., two witnesses saw two people cutting and loading a mule deer. The witness knew the landowner and knew they did not permit hunting on their land. They obtained the license plate.
Fish and Wildlife Officer Visser investigated and learned the license plate belonged to Fobert. He also took statements from the witnesses and landowner and collected DNA from the deer at the scene.
Officer Markotic seized the vehicle, and investigators obtained a search warrant. They took blood and tissue samples and noted they matched the DNA material from the scene. The witness identified Fobert, and investigators also obtained cell phone information that showed that Fobert was in the area.
While the trial was originally scheduled for February 25, the judge took into account his timely guilty plea. He fined Fobert $1,500, and suspended his hunting license for a year. The second charge was withdrawn.
There was a forfeiture order for the exhibits taken for the investigation and Fobert also faces a $3,900 bill for storage of his truck.

Kneehill County cancels nearly $900,000 in Trident levies, penalties

Copy of Copy of Pumpjacks Hwy9

Kneehill County council approved the cancellation and expense of nearly $900,000 in levies and penalties on former Trident Exploration tax rolls within Kneehill County boundaries during the regular Tuesday, February 8 council meeting.
Trident Explorations ceased operations in Kneehill County and other areas in April 2019, which has left counties handling obligations stemming from the company’s unpaid taxes.
“Cancellation (of these tax rolls) includes penalties of $407,307 which are penalties from 2018 to 2021, $407,553 in levies for a portion of 2020 and previous to 2018,” property tax officer Caroline Siverson explained during the presentation.
Ms. Siverson explained new companies have purchased some of the former Trident assets, and a portion of the 2020 levies along with the full 2021 levies were paid; however, levies and penalties from 2018 to 2020 remained. According to the report, this amounted to $897,209.78.
Along with cancelling these penalties and levies, the county has also applied for $82,330 in Provincial Education Requisition Credit (PERC) rebates on these tax rolls.
The province enacted two programs to assist municipalities facing financial pressures due to industrial and oil and gas properties going into receivership or insolvency due to the struggling energy industry. The PERC and Designated Industrial Requisition Credit (DIRC) programs allow municipalities to apply for credit on the associated requisitions paid to the province on delinquent properties.
Funding for these programs is based on a first-come-first-served basis, though Ms. Siverson noted there is “quite a bit of money in the program.”
Kneehill County submitted its application ahead of the January 31 deadline to ensure it was in the queue to receive this funding; in total, the county has applied for $307,174.73 in credits under the two programs.
Ms. Siverson added if any arrears are collected, the education and designated industrial requisitions would need to be reimbursed.
Council approved cancelling a total of $897,209.78 in levies and penalties on the Trident tax rolls and voiding some $36,000 in penalties for 2022, and also approved the submitted PERC and DIRC application.


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