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2022 Year In Review - Drumheller looks back at eventful year

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The Town of Drumheller has accomplished a lot over 2022, from taking first steps on some much-anticipated projects and clearing up long-derelict buildings, to the successful lobbying for additional funding to support additional projects, and is looking ahead to 2023.
“I’m so proud of the work the previous council started, and the wonderful work this council has taken so far to carry that work forward,” says Drumheller Mayor Heather Colberg. “I cannot thank administration, public works, and all departments for following through on all the work pushed through by council.”
Council announced in March it had struck a deal with CN Rail to lease former rail right-of-ways-from Midland to Rosedale and Wayne-to develop a walking and active pedestrian transportation trail network throughout the Drumheller Valley.
This was a deal nearly a decade in the making, and Mayor Colberg says she is grateful for the work Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) Darryl Drohomerski and Colin Kloot of Kloot and Associates put into getting the deal signed.
Since March, the Town has moved quickly on this project. Paving on the first section of this trail, between the intersections of Highway 9 and 10 and Highway 10 and 19 Street East, began in August and was completed by September, providing a safe walking path from the main highway intersection to Walmart.
At the end of September the Rails to Trails fundraising task force was formed, which includes members of council and community members passionate about the project. The task force raised over $30,000 at a fundraiser dinner and silent auction event at the beginning of December; it has also received $25,000 from the Drumheller Valley Half Marathon to sponsor one of six stations along the trail, $35,000 from Community Futures Big Country to sponsor the Main Station at the edge of downtown Drumheller, and $125,000 from the families of Darrell and Dean Kohut and Heather and Kelly Colberg to sponsor the Midland Bridge-which has been renamed Kohut Crossing.
The Town unveiled a new alternative end-of-life option in June with the development of its scatter gardens at the Drumheller Municipal Cemetery. These gardens offer a place for families to scatter the cremated remains of loved ones, a memorial wall to place a memorial plaque, and a pergola to offer a place to gather and reminisce. While this is still a new concept for the valley, Mayor Colberg says it is an economically feasible end of life alternative, which can help to expand the life of the cemetery for several years.
Another long-awaited project was the demolition of several derelict buildings within the community.
Mayor Colberg says demolition of the buildings, most of which had been uncared for and neglected for many
years, will not only help clean up the community but will also allow the Town an opportunity to increase its tax base through potential future development on these sites.
The old consortium building at the intersection of 6 Avenue East and 5 Street East was torn down in August, and the old Drumheller Hospital on Riverside Drive East soon followed in November. Other properties, including the old Nacmine Hotel and the original 500 wing of the Sunshine Lodge, were also demolished.
In May, Mayor Colberg and CAO Drohomerski lobbied the provincial government for additional funding due to rising costs on the flood mitigation and airport lighting projects.
Repaving and resurfacing of the airport runway was approved in April, and work completed over a six-week period in June and July. However, the lighting portion of the project was put on hold due to increased costs over $200,000 above the approved budget; the lighting project is expected to be completed by mid-January 2023.
Mayor Colberg says the Town has not heard back from the provincial government on the additional funding for the flood mitigation project. However, she says, as the original funding was based on a flow rate of 1,640 cubic metres per second (cm/s), and the designed flow rate was increased by the province to 1,850 cm/s--increasing the height needed for the structures--lobbying efforts will continue.
“We are committed to protecting this community,” she says, noting the Town has been fortunate to receive funding support from both the federal and provincial governments.
So far, work on four berm projects in Midland, Newcastle, North Drumheller Grove Plaza (near the Travelodge), and Willow Estates is underway. These projects are currently on hold over the winter, with work anticipated to continue in spring 2023.
The Town is also repurposing some of the trees which were removed from these berm sites to facilitate construction.
Artist Marina Cole of Chainsaw Spirit in Irvine, about 280 kilometres southeast of Drumheller near the Saskatchewan border, spent time carving a unique dinosaur shaped bench from one of these trees over the Alberta Culture Days weekend in September; the bench is currently on display at the Badlands Community Facility (BCF).
Mayor Colberg says there are plans to have another tree carving event in May 2023 with more carvers on hand to carve more benches which will be placed throughout the community.


Drumheller man recognized for service to seniors with QEII Platinum Jubilee medal

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Drumheller resident Bill Wulff has spent decades volunteering his time assisting seniors in the community file their tax returns and access benefits. On Thursday, January 19 he was presented with the Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Award medal in recognition for his many years of public service within the Drumheller community and surrounding regions. Along with helping seniors with their tax returns, Mr. Wulff has also been involved with several local organizations, has given his time to help organize the annual Town of Drumheller Canada Day fireworks, and has spent the last nearly two years assisting the Village of Delia in the role of acting interim Chief Administrative Officer (CAO). Mr. Wulff says he was “extremely surprised” to find out about his nomination for the award, and feels “very odd, and very honoured” to be a recipient. He adds with technology evolving at a rapid pace it has left many who are less computer savvy at a disadvantage trying to navigate “the maze of government forms” and says volunteerism is something he believes strongly in, and encourages anyone with a skillset or ability which can be shared to do so. Mr. Wulff estimates he completes some 400 tax returns each year for seniors and says one day he hopes to be “on the receiving end.” At the presentation were (l-r) Community Futures Big Country Chair and Drumheller Councillor Patrick Kolafa, Bill Wulff, Delia Mayor David Sisley, and Drumheller Mayor Heather Colberg.

All trails lead to Rosedale

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It only took 60 years, for Bill Gawdun, while life took him all over the world with the military, before he found his way back to the valley.
Gawdun lives in Rosedale, on the same block that he grew up on, in a community where his family goes back generations. It was never a planned out path, but nonetheless, it was the path here. Every morning he looks out on Robin Hood Hill, his stomping ground as a youth.
His mother, Georgina Van Volsem, was born in the Rosedale camp, and the family eventually bought a piece of land near Mary Roper’s establishment. While most of her family moved away, her brother George Vansen became well-known for his bike shop.
Bill’s father moved to Drumheller at the age of three and a half. His father was a miner and worked in the Star Mine. When it shut down, he went to the HyGrade Mine for a couple of seasons as it closed down.
Gawdun didn’t work in the mines, but sports took up his time. He was an avid hockey and baseball player. The closest to working with coal was helping his grandfather Bill with the deliveries. His grandfather has been in the valley since the 1920s.
“I used to help out my grandfather, he had a dump truck to deliver coal down back alleys to the coal miners in the area,” he said. “We would dump them off, if I wanted to work and had some free time, I could get a job taking the coal from the back alley and put them in the coal chutes.”
While Rosedale had a business community and even a theatre, there was no rink and they played their hockey on the river.
He attended school in Rosedale until Grade 9 and then went to high school in Drumheller. He was one of the last classes to attend the former DHS, before moving to the new vocational school until 1965.
At that time his parents, after the mines had closed, decided to take a job as the resident supervisor of the dormitory. It was either to live in the dorms with his parents and live by dorm rules, or strike out on his own.
He married a Drumheller girl, Betty Kline, daughter of Bill Kline, the owner of Columbia Cleaners, and quickly joined the military.
“I could have picked up a shovel and started shovelling coal, or I could have picked up a pitchfork and worked at some of the farms, or I could pick up a weapon and join the military, so I opted for that,” he said.
He served in all three branches of the military, starting in the army, the air force, and then the Navy. He specialized as a heavy equipment operator, a combat diver and a paratrooper.
“I didn’t become a paratrooper because I wanted the excitement. The wages were not that great, but I found out if I jumped out of a plane, I could make another dollar a day,” he laughs.
He served in Calgary, Edmonton, Ontario, and the East and West coasts. His first field station was in West Germany. He also completed two United Nations tours in Cypress.
He retired in Comox when he was 42.
After the military, he went to work for himself and established Bob’s Beef Jerky. He did this for more than two decades.
When he finally retired he put some thought into where he wanted to spend the rest of his life. He put his furniture in storage, drove from the coast back to the valley, and got a hotel room.
“I hadn’t made up my mind on where I wanted to go yet. But then I got a little homesick and met a couple of people that I went to school with,” he said.
One day he was driving into Dogtown and saw an old lady with white hair outside her home gardening. He went up and greeted her. Sophie Svartka was his babysitter when he was six years old.
This was almost six years ago. After getting tired of living in a hotel, he rented a small home in Drumheller. When he went to look at it, it seemed very familiar. It turned out to be his mother’s uncle’s former home. He eventually purchased a home in Rosedale, where he lived with his daughter Barb.
At 75, he picked the home just doors away from where the home he grew up in once stood. This was his playground and recalls affectionately about playing in the hills with his friends. Today when he wakes up he has a view from his bed of the Hills Of Home.


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