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Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Understanding what your smoke alarm is telling you

Bruce Wade

October 3-9 is Fire Prevention week and firefighters are raising awareness on knowing and identifying the sounds your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors make and what they mean.
Drumheller Fire Chief Bruce Wade explains each alarm have their particular sound and is important to understand what these mean.
For Smoke alarms, a continued set of three loud beeps means there is a presence of smoke or fire, and you should evacuate the home. A single chirp every 30-60 seconds means either the batteries are low and need to be replaced or the alarm is not working properly and the entire mechanism needs to be replaced. The smoke detector will also emit a single chirp when the alarm has reached its end of life. Smoke alarms must be replaced after 10 years, and the date of manufacture is on the units
With a carbon monoxide detector, four loud beeps mean carbon monoxide is present in your home. The course of action is to leave the home, stay outside and call 911. Like a smoke alarm, singe chirp every 30-60 seconds means the battery is low and must be replaced. Carbon monoxide alarms have end of life sounds that vary by manufacturers.
Just as important as knowing the sound the detector makes is knowing how to maintain them. Smoke and carbon monoxide alarms need to be tested monthly.
“Even testing them every six months is better than putting them there and forgetting about them,” said Wade.
Smoke alarms offer the first line of defense for a family’s safety, and in recent years, with changes in building material and furniture, there is less time for families to get to safety.
“People need to test alarms and make sure they have a plan. It takes less than three minutes with the construction of houses now and synthetic furniture. They go up quick,” said Wade. “The BTU (British thermal units) in synthetic material, in three minutes you can be fully involved. Legacy furniture, years ago you could have 20 minutes before it got to the point of being life-threatening.”
Even house design plays a role.
“Even now with lightweight construction and how they build homes, with open space, fire spreads quicker, because it is not as compartmentalized,” he said. “With lightweight construction buildings are starting to fail in 5-10 minutes. Roof structures and trusses and that kind of stuff can start to collapse.”


Questions for Drumheller mayoral candidates - Mark Chung

mark

In the spirit of the Municipal Election, we are asking the candidates for the position of Mayor of Drumheller five questions to allow them to let voters know a little bit more about themselves, outline their platform and their positions on current issues in the community.

Mark Chung

1. What is the main reason you are running for Mayor?

I am running for Mayor because I feel Drumheller needs a choice. Residents deserve the chance to choose between candidates that they believe will lead Drumheller for the next four years.
I have sat on various boards, owned a few companies and have grown up in this valley. With this knowledge and in talking with locals I believe that I can help make Drumheller better.

2. Why do you feel you would make a strong community leader?

I have sat on various boards such as Christ The Redeemer school board, St. Mary’s University community board, and Badlands College. Working with those boards has given me an understanding of how boards and organizations work.
I have also been involved with numerous companies from being an employee, and as an owner. I understand leadership is more than a title. People need to have trust in their leaders and believe that their actions are for the best of the community.

3. Can you identify three areas where you would like to see a change in the town of Drumheller?

First, I would like to remove the negativity in the valley. I think the Town of Drumheller and the residents need to communicate better. I do not believe social media is the best place.
Secondly, I would like to see the town focus on making its operations more efficient. This is a large organization that could evolve and improve its processes and policies.
Finally, the Town of Drumheller and the businesses in the community need to work together to come up with a plan to encourage new businesses, support current businesses, and encourage growth of existing businesses.

4. Can you identify three areas where the town is doing well?

I have been told the town is attracting new home buyers. House sales have been up.
Secondly, there have been new businesses opening in the valley. It’s great to see the entrepreneurial spirit alive in the valley.
Lastly, the people in the valley have shown great resilience in the face of the pandemic.

5. In the first 100 days in office, what is your first priority as Mayor?

In the first 100 days in office, I plan to do the following:
1) Meet with local businesses to understand their needs and desires better,
2) Provide an open and welcoming line of communication between the residents of the valley and town hall,
3) I know the local residents and business would like to see the flood mitigation get back on track. I believe we need to work with admin and stakeholders to ensure this is dealt with in a timely manner.

Kneehill County forward resolution to Central RMA District

Copy of Copy of Copy of Copy of kneehill county new admin building

Kneehill County council will send a resolution to the Rural Municipalities of Alberta (RMA) Central District to advocate for more knowledge regarding cannabis production sites following a motion at the regular Tuesday, September 14 council meeting.
The proposed resolution stems from concerns regarding the limited access to information municipalities are given about Health Canada approved cannabis production sites which impededes municipalities from proactively ensuring compliance of land use regulations and enforcement at these sites.
“Within the current legislative framework there is no way for municipalities to determine from Health Canada where sites of cannabis production may have been approved within a municipality, limiting the ability to apply local land use regulations proactively,” said Town of Three Hills municipal intern Jerritt Cloney during a presentation at Tuesday’s meeting.
RMA is an independent association which is made up of 69 rural counties and municipal districts across Alberta; the Central District comprises 14 of these municipalities and includes Kneehill County, Starland County, and Wheatland County.
Wheatland County Reeve Amber Link currently sits on the RMA board of directors as the representative for the Central District.
During the meeting Kneehill County Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) Mike Haugen noted a letter of support was discussed at the Wheatland County council meeting on September 7, with their council voting in favour of sending the resolution.
The resolution will be sent to the Central RMA district for endorsement; if it receives endorsement it will be brought before RMA at the 2021 Fall Convention which is scheduled for November.


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