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Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Auditions underway for “Drumheller's Got Talent”

 

Auditions are underway for the youth talent show "Drumheller's Got Talent." Youth ages 13 to 18 wanting to take a shot at performing in a local talent show registered for a chance to go appear at auditions September 23 and 24.
 
  The auditions are focused on musical or vocal acts, such as singing or comedy, to enter for a chance to try to win the grand prize  - $2,000 of in-studio recording time.
    Auditions for the talent show are being held at the Elim Pentecostal Tabernacle, which is the old Central School.
    Acts making it through the audition stage will perform in a talent show open to the public in an evening performance to be held Friday, October 3.
    The talent show is a fundraising effort for Drumheller’s Youth Centre, which has been open for about a year now, and  serves youth in grades 7 to 12.


Close call on 4 Street West


    RCMP arrived pretty quickly to 4 Street West this morning after reports a power line may have been knocked down.
    Police say a large rig carrying equipment clipped a low hanging cable line near Everybody’s Gym after taking a wrong turn trying to get to the water tower.


    The equipment snagged on a second line, but the driver was able to free the equipment without knocking that line down.
    Police say no one was injured and Shaw is on the way to repair the line.

New Alberta licence plates scrapped

Alberta’s new Premier Jim Prentice announced this afternoon, September 18, that his government is cancelling the fifteen-million dollar program to redesign and roll out new Alberta license plates. Prentice said there will be no redesign and no slogan change. photo Government of Alberta.

 

After much fan-fare, controversy and debate, plans to redesign Alberta’s licence plates have been cancelled.
    Premier Jim Prentice announced today that the Government of Alberta is cancelling any further work on new licence plate designs for motor vehicles in Alberta.
    “Albertans want us to deal with priorities they have identified in health care, education, infrastructure and seniors. Changing the design of Alberta’s licence plates is not one of them.
    We are going to invest our time, effort and resources on the clearly identified priorities of Albertans,” Prentice said in a press release.
    The government had estimated a fifteen-million dollar price tag to bring in the new licence plates for close to five million vehicles in Alberta.


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