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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Titans back-to-back champions

    The Drumheller Senior Titans have repeated as Provincial Champions by defeating the Ardrossan Bisons 41-21 in Edmonton at the Tier IV Alberta Bowl.
    Last year the Titans won their first championship in a dramatic fashion with late game heroics.This season they led the whole way, and punctuated the win with a 100-plus yard touchdown run from Spencer Fournier in the final seconds of the game.
    Watch for more coverage in this week’s Drumheller Mail.


Wheatland County considers implementing noise bylaw

    Due to the volume of noise related complaints that are brought to the attention of the County Office, Wheatland council is considering implementing a new bylaw targeting noise.
    Previously, the county had left noise complaints to the discretion of its bylaw officers.
    “It’s another tool for our bylaw officers to address these kinds of complaints,” said Glenn Koester, Reeve of Wheatland County.
    The noise bylaw, 2012-79, was designed to “prohibit certain activities creating noise that may disrupt others quiet enjoyment and to abate the incidence of noise and restrict the hour when certain sounds may be made within the boundaries of Wheatland County.”
    “We’ve had situations, big and small, about people having parties, mechanical equipment operating at different hours of the day for construction, agricultural, or private industry and we had no way to address it,” said Jeff Sear, the head of bylaw enforcement in Wheatland County, who was instrumental in creating the proposed bylaw.
    The proposed bylaw places restrictions on when and where noise can be generated, but generally officials are leaving the bylaw flexible.
    “It’s still going leave it pretty wide open as to what is reasonable or objectionable noise,” said Sear. “It’s meant to be open. Like any bylaw, it’ll be up to the officer’s discretion, but there in an onus on the complaintant to make sure the noise is indeed objectionable and how it can be corrected.”
    When a complaint is made, officers will seek to validate it by going out and assessing whether or not the noise is objectionable. From there, officers will contact the party creating the noise and give them an opportunity to correct it, or may find the noise is not a disturbance.
    This will be the first time Wheatland County has considered creating a bylaw.  Other municipalities in the area have implemented similar bylaws in recent years.
    “It’s maybe not as common in a rural environment, but we do have hamlets and named communities under our jurisdiction,” said Sear.
    The county has hosted two public hearings regarding the bylaw so far. For more information about the bylaw, visit www.wheatlandcounty.ca.

Food drive slated for November 29

    In an event not like any other in the valley, residents will be coming together for their neighbours at the annual food drive.
    The food drive is set to go on Thursday, November 29. This is a one night blitz where volunteers will go door-to-door collecting donations for the Salvation Army Food Bank leading up to Christmas.
    This is the Salvation Army’s major food drive and the donations that come in help supply the food bank for a good portion of the coming year.
    This week, The Salvation Army dropped hundreds of red grocery bags into the mail. These bags are for residents to pack and leave on their doorstep. This way volunteers are able to easily identify donations for the food drive, making collection that much easier.
    The blitz starts at 6 p.m. and volunteers will be combing Drumheller neighbourhoods from Nacmine to Rosedale. There will also be volunteers canvassing Morrin, Munson and Carbon.
    Organizer Heather Colberg is grateful for the support of volunteers.  It is not uncommon to see clubs, teams and organizations in the mix as they go door-to-door. Volunteers are also needed to help sort and pack the donations. Once again, the Drumheller Co-op has allowed volunteers to use the former Liquidation World in Greentree Mall as a drop-off and sorting area.        Colberg said they are still in great need of more volunteers on the evening of the food drive. Crews will muster at various locales throughout the valley before they head out.
    To learn more or to sign up as a volunteer, contact Heather Colberg at 403-823-0811, 403-823-4242 or 403-823-2369.


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