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Big Country Victim Services disbands

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Drumheller and area is now without the service of Big Country Victim Services  Association (BCVSA) after the board disbanded late last year.
    According to Ina Lucila, Communications advisor for Justice and Solicitor General, “The Big Country Victim Services Association informed the department of their decision to discontinue the victim service unit and dissolve their society in December 2019.”
    Big Country Victim Services served residents in the Drumheller Detachment as well as the areas served by the Hanna Detachment and the Oyen Detachment.
    According to its website, BCVSA has been in operation since 1994.
    Its goal is to promote and advocate the rights and entitlements of victims of crime and trauma through information, referral, support, assistance, community liaison, and education.
    Its area covered over 20,000 square kilometres and a population of over 45,000.
    Lucila said the board has returned the grant funding it has received to the department. This funding comes from the Victims of Crime Fund, which is primarily financed by a 15 per cent  surcharge collected from all provincial statute fines and selected federal statute convictions as identified in the Victims of Crime Act.
    BCVSA was a registered society with a board of directors, a full-time coordinator, RCMP Liaisons and volunteers. It is not known the status of its employee at the time of dissolution.
      Lucila said the role of victim services would be carried out by the RCMP. As to whether a victim services organization could again operate in the areas, she said the government is conducting a review.
    The board of BCVSA at the time of dissolution could not be reached for comment.


Canalta Atom Raptors tie up series with Indus

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    The Canalta Atom Raptors are battling it out with Indus in the first round of the playoffs.
    On Saturday, February 22, the Raptors hosted Indus in Game One of the series. The Raptors played a great game, but Indus took over down the stretch winning with a score of 5-2. Jasper O’Dwyer and Carter Burnett each scored for the Raptors.
    “We have a great group of kids and we played a great game on Saturday but had a bit of a setback in the last 10 minutes of the third period,” said coach Blair Christianson.
    The Raptors were in Indus on Sunday for Game 2 of the series. Regulation ended with a tie at a goal apiece. The Raptors were able to take the win in overtime. Jasper O’Dwyer and Wylie Merrill each scored. Goalie Max Boyko stopped 29 shots.
    With the series tied, the Raptors will be hosting Indus this coming weekend to decide the three-game series.

Drumheller Resiliency and Flood Mitigation team assesses river

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    The team at the Drumheller Resiliency and Flood Mitigation Office took advantage of the mild winter conditions to assess the Red Deer River and surrounding banks as part of their planning efforts.
    On Thursday, February 20, a group from the office including Mayor Heather Colberg, geotechnical engineers, land surveyors, project managers, and water engineers toured the river. This will allow the team to plan for the mitigation projects in the short and long term.
    “We have been doing an investigation and inventory of the existing dyking and we have to look where we are going to augment it and where we are going to put new dyking,” said Darwin Durnie, Chief Resiliency and Flood Mitigation Officer for the town.
    Some of the mitigation work, he explains, will not have to be undertaken with major projects. Sometimes it has to do more with making room for the river.
    He said, for example, across the river from Newcastle Beach erosion has occurred, and because the beach has not been maintained, the willows have grown. This has slowed the water down on the beach side, but sped it up on the north side, eroding the bank. A solution could be as simple as having an inmate crew come in and cut the brush on the beach, making more room for the river to naturally flow.
    The team left from Newcastle Beach and toured from Nacmine, all the way to East Coulee. Durnie explains that assessing the terrain with a view from the river is optimal, and doing it in the winter gives them the ability to use all-terrain vehicles and snowmobiles to traverse the water.
    “Whether it is slope stability or erosion, it‘s way easier to assess it from the water and none of us like canoes,” chuckles Durnie.


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