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09292024Sun
Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Morrin bobsledder coaching Russian Olympic team



    A former Morrin School student–turned Olympic athlete will be heading back to the Olympics, this time as a coach of the Russian Olympic team.
    Many in the area remember Florian Linder. The amateur Alberta track star went on to begin a career in bobsledding with the Canadian team in 2002. He was a competitior on the World Cup Circuit for many years and was a member of the Canadian team that went to the 2006 Olympics in Turin.
    After retiring from the sport, he served the program as a coach and was part of the team that trained athletes for the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver.
    Following the Vancouver Olympics, Linder retired from coaching but stayed involved in the sport.
     “I hadn’t been coaching, and then in June of last year (2012) I received a call offering to be a coach with the Russian team,” Linder told The Mail, while he was in Calgary for  the World Cup Season kick off event.
    He said it was a tough decision now as a family man, factoring in the travel, but it was an offer he could not refuse.
    Linder is the technical starts coach and performance analyst.  He is one of three foreign coaches working for the Russian bobsled team leading up to the Olympics.
    He said while there is a difference in the culture of the team when comparing it to the Canadian Team, in both cases the athletes are dedicated to success and bring their best to their sports.
    Linder adds he has brought some new things to the team in regards to his knowledge and abilities, while at the same time, he has been learning as well.
    "At this level, all the teams have the knowledge, I just may bring a different way of sharing it,” he said.
    During the off-season he is able to be back in Calgary, where he makes his home, save for some training camps. During the season however, he is on the road,
    After the Calgary event, the World Cup circuit continues to events in the United States before heading overseas.
    He says the Russian bobsled team is strong going into this season and is hoping for a successful campaign leading up to Sochi.


Public Hearing for Rosebud area Racetrack today



    The subject of a racetrack  near the border of Kneehill County and Wheatland County will be hotly debated today, depending on weather conditions, in Three Hills.
    Badlands Motorsports Resort has been working away to realize its vision of a recreational resort along the Rosebud River, centered on a world-class road-racing course. Kneehill County Council passed its Area Structure Plan in June.
    The next step is to pass a bylaw to designate the parcel of land near Rosebud. A Public Hearing is being held at the Three Hills Community Centre to seek input from concerned area residents.
    The bylaw would change zoning from an Agriculture District to a Direct Control District.
    Jay Zalazo, president of Badlands Motorsports Resort, says they will have more information about the project at Wednesday’s meeting.  While it was a contentious meeting last June when the Area Structure Plan was passed, he said it appears there is support for the project from the Drumheller area.
    Benefits of the project cited include economic development, tourism, an increase in tax revenues and job creation.        Its long-term vision is a racetrack operating similarly to a country club, with the road course and a paddock. Eventually they are looking at a fully sustainable community with retail, residential and recreational properties. Much of the development would be in an area currently used for agriculture.
    Much of the opposition to the project comes from residents surrounding the property, often in Wheatland County. A group has a Facebook site called Save the Rosebud and it has been working earnestly to raise awareness to its feelings about the project.
 The group has enlisted Patricia Maloney, a B.C. based planning consultant and have held a couple meetings in advance of the Kneehill County Council meeting to organize. They are planning to have a strong presence at Wednesday’s meeting.
    “This group is very concerned about this development and tried to oppose the Area Structure Plan in June, but council went ahead and adopted the Area Structure Plan regardless of all the concerns of noise from the agricultural community,” said Maloney.
    She said they are opposed to the development, but also feel that council does not have the proper regulations and controls in place.
    “This direct control bylaw is proposing to make a huge long list of uses as permitted uses, which means the municipal council cannot refuse to permit them,” said Maloney.
    The project borders the two counties and Maloney said this could make it more difficult for the opposition, many who live outside the county where the development is situated.
    “Kneehill councillors are saying we’ll listen but you are not our ratepayers and Wheatland County is saying we are listening to our ratepayers but we don’t have any approval or disapproval of this project,” she said.

Arrest made in November 10 Mac's robbery

An arrest has been made in an armed robbery at Mac’s.

          On November 10, at approximately 1:34 am, a lone male entered the Mac's Store located at 175 Railway Ave South and brandished a knife, demanding money from the cashier. The male fled the store on foot with an undisclosed amount of cash.

Drumheller RCMP’s investigation identified a person of interest in the alleged robbery, and this has led to an arrest. 

Cassidy Green, 40, of Drumheller has been arrested and charged with robbery. He has been released and is slated to appear in provincial court in Drumheller on December 13.

 


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