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Hussar requests viability study

Hussar Village Office WEBSITE Copy

The Village of Hussar has invited the Ministry of Municipal Affairs to look into the long-term future of the community. 

The review, which could take upwards of a year, had its first meeting in July. Mayor Tim Frank said the Village’s council requested the review, based on input from residents about the village’s viability and points out that this is not a dissolution study.

“What it comes down to is what do people expect, what do people want and what are they willing to pay for,” said Franks, adding that many of the questions come down to tax load.

“It is all about making things clear and giving the villagers a chance to voice what they want.”

According to a letter to residents, a viability review is part of the Ministry’s Municipal Sustainability Strategy, introduced to improve the long-term viability of all communities.

They have assembled a team made up of representatives from Municipal Affairs, The Village of Hussar, Wheatland County, and four Alberta municipal associations. They held an initial meeting in July to set out terms of reference and timelines.

Franks said the review will encompass everything from financial viability to infrastructure demands now and in the future.

 “It is the whole gamut of everything you do as a municipality,” he said.

He says one of the possible outcomes of the study is a better understanding of the village’s needs, which could help it access grant funding.

“The key part is that we could get some infrastructure stuff done, and that is huge,” he said.

“We could be found nonviable, or we could be found viable with a plan set out by the Minister which we would have to follow. It could be a long-term plan we could follow. It is about figuring out where we are.”

One important part of this is public consultations.

There is a public meeting slated for Monday, September 14 a the Hussar Community Centre, at 7 p.m. Municipal Affairs has sent out a letter to residents as well as a stakeholders engagement workbook.

This meeting allows residents and property owners to learn about the review, appear as a delegation to speak to the team and to discuses and respond to questions in the notebook.

For more information about the Municipal Sustainability Strategy, and updates on the Hussar review, go to www.muncipalaffairs.gov.ab.ca


Special weather statement in effect for Drumheller and area

weather warning rain 2
(Submitted)

Heavy rainfall is expected to hit the Drumheller area over the next 24 hours.
The rain is expected to begin tonight (Thursday) and continue into Friday.
A low-pressure system is sitting over southeastern patches this afternoon and will move eastward over the next 24 hours. This low-pressure system will bring with it rain, which will begin tonight and will be heavy at times on Friday.
Total rainfall amounts are expected to be in the 30 to 40 millimetres range by Friday evening and the main axis of heavy rain will extend from Rocky Mountain House to Olds to Drumheller to Oyen.
There is some uncertainty as to the total rainfall amounts, as some forecast guidance is indicating warning levels of rainfall. Should rainfall amount forecasts increase, a warning will be issued.
In addition to the rain, Friday afternoon will be windy, with gusts in the warned regions expected as high as 60 km/h.
Rainfall warnings are issued when 50 millimetres of rain or more is expected to fall in 24 hours or less.
Please monitor the latest forecasts and warnings from Environment Canada at www.weather.gc.ca

Police, medical personnel air fentanyl concerns

Fentanyl updated English 2 2

As the entire country begins to get a picture of how deadly the drug fentanyl can be when abused, enforcement and medical personnel are spreading awareness of the risk.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid used primary as a treatment for severe pain. In Canada, it is used on a prescription only basis, and typically administered through a slow release patch. However, reports suggest that a powdered form is falling into the hands of users. Between 2009 and 2014, reports show that as many as 665 Canadians have died as a result of fentanyl overdoses.

Corporal Rod Guthrie says while they have not seen the advent of the drug on the streets in Drumheller and area, the detachment is well aware of what it can do.

“So far we are not seeing it,” said Guthrie. “What I am seeing through the news is users not really knowing what they have, or what it can do. You are dealing with a subculture, so you are already dealing with people whose priority is making money, so you don’t know what is in the drug you are getting. With fentanyl, the biggest worry is that it is such a potent thing to begin with, so it is very easy to take too much of it.”

While it may not be rearing its head on the streets in Drumheller, it has made its was way to the Drumheller Institution. Earlier this year an inmate was sentenced for possession of the drug after he was found unresponsive in his cell.  On Christmas Eve, December 2011, inmates Nicholas Whynott and Derek Upton were found separately unresponsive in their cells and were pronounced dead at the Drumheller Health Centre. Both were found to have toxic levels of the drug in their systems.  

Corporal Guthrie says the RCMP detachment is taking steps to become familiar with the drug. He said Constable Lucas Stewart is heading to training to learn more about fentanyl.

Alberta Health Services Central Zone Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Ifeoma Achebe tells The Mail that in the Zone, from January 1 to June 30 of this year, there have been 19 deaths related to overdose of fentanyl. There has also been 59 emergency room visits related to opioid poisoning.

While she could not break down the numbers community by community, she says that no area of the province is immune.

"It can happen in the rural areas or happen in urban areas, it depends on where the fentanyl goes,” she said. 

“Fentanyl is a very strong opiate, 100 percent stronger than other opiates like morphine, heroin, oxycodone, all the ones we know of. In addition to that, the street version that is making its way around Alberta is not pure, it is mixed with so many other things… that makes it even more dangerous,” she said.

This year Alberta Health rolled out a program to provide take-home naloxone for Albertans who are at high risk of opioid overdose. Naloxone is a drug that reverses overdose symptoms of opiates including fentanyl.

The Alberta Community Council on HIV is administering the project. Each kit includes two doses of naloxone, the tools to safely use the drug and step-by-step instructions. Dr. Achebe says the closest available kits are at the Central Alberta AIDS Network office in Red Deer, or from Safeworks in Calgary.

“We know that it can reverse the effects of a fentanyl overdose. When users come in to get it, they are counseled by a nurse to detect early signs of overdose, and if they are able to administer it at the first signs, it can save their life,” she said.  


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