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Hearing closed to public for healthcare workers accused in death of Hanna woman

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Hearing tribunals for two healthcare workers who are accused to have failed to provide adequate care to an Indigenous woman at the Hanna Health Centre in December 2020 have been closed to the public.
The disciplinary hearings, which are being overseen by the College of Registered Nurses of Alberta (CRNA), were scheduled to be held virtually between March 22 and 24; the Mail received notice the hearings would be closed to the public on Monday, March 20.
“A written decision of the Hearing Tribunal, including the reasoning for the closure, will be made public when it is complete,” CRNA Hearings Director Amy Payne stated in the notice.
The hearings are in relation to the death of Lillian Vanasse at the Hanna Health Centre in December 2020.
Ms. Vanasse, who was of Ojibway Indigenous descent, was transported to the Hanna Health Centre by ambulance on the evening of Christmas Day 2020.
It is alleged the healthcare workers “failed to demonstrate adequate judgment” and “adequate professionalism” while caring for Ms. Vanasse, and “contributed clinical bias” through discussions with the attending physician regarding a previous emergency room visit by Ms. Vanasse.
This is alleged to have resulted in a lack of adequate care for Ms. Vanasse, which ultimately led to her death in the early morning hours of December 26, 2020.
Ms. Vanasse’s widower, Cory Ashley, filed a complaint against the two healthcare workers with CRNA in the days following his wife’s death.
Hearing tribunals were originally scheduled for September 2022, but were rescheduled less than two weeks before they were to begin, and were rescheduled until March 2023.
There is no timeline on when the written decision will be issued, though this information will be available to the public and posted to the CRNA website.


Man sentenced for uttering threats

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A Drumheller man pleaded guilty to uttering threats after an altercation at a local grocery store.
Richard Wheeler, 60, appeared in provincial court in Drumheller on Friday, March 24 to make his plea. He maintained a not-guilty plea to assault with a weapon, but plead guilty to uttering threats.
The court heard how on August 24, 2022, Dale Goulder, manager at Freson Bros. confronted Wheeler at the store regarding a prior incident where it was believed Wheeler had shoplifted. When confronted, Wheeler brandished a knife and threatened Goulder.
The altercation was captured on store security cameras.
Defence for Wheeler told the court on a previous day he had misplaced his wallet and had dumped out his backpack searching for it.
When he was putting his items back into his backpack, it was perceived he was stealing.
On the day of the altercation, he said he was confronted by four other people.
Wheeler was given a suspended sentence with 12 months probation.

Delia woman publishes novel

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A Delia woman has realized a dream goal and has written a book, a romance novel set within the gritty backdrop of the Russian Mafia.
Writing under the name SJ Magnolia, Sarah Assman has self-published The Fall of Baba Yaga.
“It is very gritty, I did a lot of research on it. It is very authentic to what the Russian mob would be involved in. It is set in Las Vegas,” said Assman. “It is not the typical romance where girl meets guy and falls in love, and it’s all sunshine and rainbows. It is a lot harder and grittier.”
She undertook this project when she faced health issues. In 2020 just before the world was faced with a pandemic she faced a daunting health diagnosis.
“I used to write poetry in high school and writing was always an escape for me creatively,” she said. “I was diagnosed with lupus and inflammatory arthritis in 2020. When you get such a big diagnosis, everything in your life has to completely change. I realized that a lot of dreams and goals I had put off because I wanted to be present while raising my kids. I always assumed I had all of this extra time to do all these things. With everything I put on the back burner, I thought why not now?”
She started ticking off the goals she wished to accomplish, including learning how to hike and she hiked a mountain. Another goal was to write a book.
“Instead of spiralling down I thought why not now?”
The book took about two years to complete, and now that it is finished she has self-published the book.
“I wanted to send it out originally to see if it would be picked up, but ultimately I wanted full creative rights to my story. I didn’t want someone to come in to change it,” she said.
“I wanted my story to be very much what it is, a romance to be a choice, not a need.”
“Romances follow along the same lines. Everything is just she’ll change to be with him or she falls in love and gives up everything to chase after him with this idealistic love. I didn’t want that. I wanted it to be more realistic, and messy and needed to be a choice, not just a foregone conclusion.”
She has just published the book and has arranged her first signing at a winery in Calgary at the end of April.
She and her husband have lived in Delia for about a decade where she has been raising her children. With her first book out she has plans for more writing. She says book two of what she coined the Bratva Assassin Duo is slated to be complete this fall. She also wants to do some more personal writing about her life.
The Fall of Baba Yaga is available through the author at author_s.j_magnolia on Instagram or SJ Magnolia on Facebook. It is also available on Amazon.


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