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Last updateSat, 23 Nov 2024 12pm

Starland passes operating, capital budgets

StarlandCounty 2021

Starland County residents are looking at a 2 per cent increase in their taxes.
Starland County passed its operating and capital budget at its regular meeting on Wednesday, May 22. The operating budget was approved as $16,580,724 and the capital budget was approved as $3,511,705. Capital budget amount includes capital project funding, funding for the gravel crush, as well as cash required to finance capital debt.
Reeve Steve Wannstrom tells the Mail they passed a balanced budget and their tax rate bylaw with a 2 per cent increase in property tax across all assessments on the municipal portion. When adding in requisitions, the residential tax rate increased by 2.46 per cent with a tax rate of 8.5932. The commercial and linear rate, including requisitions, decreased by 1.75, and farmland increased by 2.15 percent.
He is content with the budget because they were able to keep the increase to a minimum despite pressures from inflation. He adds the county’s assessment increased substantially which helped them meet its budget needs.
He adds they were able to deliver this balanced budget without having to dip into reserves.
Corporate services director Judy Fazekas explains one of the pressures on the budget was the continuing issues with tax collections from the oil and gas sector. In 2023, one of its larger oil and gas ratepayers defaulted on their tax payment agreement, and another one is likely insolvent, requiring the County to record $1.445M in bad debt expense (which was close to $1M over budget). For 2024, $1.2 million is budgeted for bad debt expense which is a large portion of our budgeted revenues.
“However, I would like to note that the majority of our oil and gas ratepayers are very good corporate citizens who pay their taxes on time and in full,” said Fazekas.
Wannstrom says it is a business-as-usual budget with not many major projects coming up.
“We’ll be doing a little bit of road work and some gravel crushing, and we’ll be fixing up some of our recreation areas,” said Wannstrom.
Other projects the County is planning include replacing one bridge culvert this summer and to prep, strip, and mine a new county-owned gravel pit in the Hand Hills. Total budgeted costs for these two projects are $1.225 million. Some smaller projects planned include an expansion and upgrades to the Morrin cemetery and dirt work and landscaping at the old Rumsey School site.
The county is continuing to work on its business park development it announced in December of last year. A contracted engineering firm is currently working on the area structure plan for the Morrin Corner Business Park which is expected to be completed sometime in the spring of 2025. Half of the funding for this portion of the project is coming from a Northern and Regional Economic Development grant through the Government of Alberta. The remaining funding is coming from general revenue.


Rosedale Train Bridge on pathway to sponsorship

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The Rails to Trail project is ramping up again as construction season approaches, and recently received a boost from some great supporters. Western Financial in Drumheller donated $5,000 to the project. Peace Hills Insurance, which is owned by the Sampson Cree Nation has a product line that is offered through Western Financial. It donated $20,000 to sponsor the Rosedale Train Bridge, connecting the pathway through the community. At the donation are (l-r) Jason Blanke-Chair of Rails to Trails, Anthony Lim - Peace Hills Insurance Regional director Southern Alberta, Larry Erhardt - Peace Hills Insurance BD advisor, Town of Drumheller CAO Darryl Drohomerski, Katelynn MacEachern - WFG Branch Manager, Lisa Hansen-Zacharuk - WFG and Drumheller Town Councillor, Drumheller Mayor Heather Colberg, and Patrick Kolafa - Rails to Trails member and Drumheller Town Councillor.

Inmate sentence for second degree murder in jail attack

Drumheller Institution

An inmate who was serving at the Drumheller Institution was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.
Ashley Baird, 38, appeared in Court of King’s Bench on Monday, May 28 via closed circuit television. He was scheduled for a two-week trial in the murder of fellow inmate Jeffery Ryan. Baird entered a guilty plea to second-degree murder.
The court heard that on the evening of January 26, 2022, Ryan, who was 34 at the time was in Unit 9 at the Drumheller Institution, he was talking to his mother on the phone. He was sitting on a chair with his back to a cell. At 8:15 p.m. Baird is seen peering from his cell. A minute later he exited the cell and using an eight-inch jail-made weapon, stabbed Ryan in the right side of his neck. Ryan got up and correction officers gave him medical assistance. An inmate said they heard Baird say “I killed him.”
Two more corrections officers approached and ordered Baird to drop the weapon. He complied.
Officers administered medical assistance to Ryan until he was taken by EMS to the Drumheller Health Centre where he died.
The attack was captured on security video, and was turned over to the RCMP.
In January 2023 an autopsy determined he died as a result of the attack, and a report on Baird indicated that while he had mental health issues, these did not preclude him from prosecution.
Ryan’s mother and sister were in court for his guilty plea and sentencing and each provided a victim impact statement.
“My love for him has no boundaries,” said Dianna Waters in her statement. As Ryan’s sister, she was 15 years older and at times had a relationship that was more of a parent than sibling.
“My heart is broken in pieces, part of my soul is gone.”
The Crown and Defence agreed to a joint submission of life imprisonment with no chance of parole for 10 years. Mitigating factors were that he entered a guilty plea, saving the court the expense of a trial. Aggravating factors include that it happened in an institutional setting, using a jail-made weapon and that it was a seemingly random attack.
King’s Bench Justice C.D. Simard went along with the joint submission noting that it was fair, just and proportional.
Baird was sentenced to live in prison with no chance of parole for 10 years, and a lifetime ban on weapons. No contact with family members of Ryan during his custodial sentence, and to provide a DNA sample to authorities.


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