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Train derails near Kathryn

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24 CN rail cars carrying grain jumped the tracks near Kathryn, around 10 a.m. Friday morning, April 10. Photos courtesy RCMP.

Beiseker RCMP are reporting a train derailment near Kathryn this morning. Around 10:00 a.m. Friday, April 10th,  24 CN train cars filled with grain left the railroad tracks.
    “The main thing is there were no injuries, and no environmental damage,” said RCMP spokesman Constable J. Curtis
There were no hazardous materials in any of the derailed cars, Curtis said.

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 Beiseker RCMP, Airdrie Rural RCMP, Rocky View Fire Services, Crossfield Fire Services and CN Rail staff are currently investigating, and working at the train derailment near the village of Kathryn and Highway 9.
 RCMP report there are no traffic delays presently due to the derailment.


Hussar man running under Alberta Party Banner in Strathmore-Brooks

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    With a provincial election looming large on the horizon, in the area, much of the talk has been about a two horse race. In Strathmore-Brooks, a candidate is looking to shake that up.  
    Hussar man, Einar Davison, has announced he will be running under the Alberta Party banner.
    “I believe every Albertan has an idea of what Alberta should be like, but the other parties haven’t bothered to ask them. I’m asking you and I hope you will take the time to tell me,” he said in a letter to constituents.
    Davison grew up on the family homestead near Hussar.  He served as member of the King’s Own  Calgary Regiment from 1984 to 1991, and he spent two years as an English educator in Poland after the communist lost power. After that, he became partner in the family farm.
    Politically he ran against Shirley McClellan in the 1997 election in the Drumheller-Chinook riding and served as the South Central Regional Chair of the party for three years.
    He wants to work toward a growing and sustainable economy that recognizes the importance of the energy industry, but is not overly reliant on resources. A key to that is education.
    “Education should be seen as an investment in the economy and not an expense,” he said. “Where we educate our young people to create the innovations and start the businesses that build prosperity for all Albertans.”
     He also believes in a living wage and a health care system that works again with an emphasis on prevention and diagnostics.
    “With a growing economy the government will always have sufficient revenue to pay for the programs we want. However taxes will still be reasonable and fair,” he said.
     In Strathmore-Brooks, the Wildrose Party has selected Former Canadian Taxpayer Federation director Derek Fildebrandt as its candidate in the upcoming provincial election and the Progressive Conservative have selected Newell County Reeve Molly Douglass.
 According to Daveberta, a provincial political blog, the NDP have selected Lynn MacWilliam as its candidate in the riding.

Mystery of Multiple Sclerosis lived by Hanna resident

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Hanna’s Shawna Johnston considers herself one of the lucky ones when it comes to living with the mystery that is Multiple Sclerosis, commonly
referred to as MS.
    “There’s no two people with MS that will have the same outcome,” Johnston explains. “Everybody is different.”
    Johston said she feels very blessed, in that a year after she was diagnosed, she took part in the Copaxone drug study for 18 months. The drug was approved in Canada after the study, and Johnston said her MS was pretty stable over the years, and she was able to continue on that medication until two years ago.
    At that time, she’d gotten blurred vision in one eye, and doctors noticed MRI activity of her brain shwoing her medication was no longer effective, and switched her to Gilenya, an immune suppressor.
    Current medical belief is that Multiple Sclerosis is an auto-immune diseas,e Johnston said.  
    An auto-immune disease is described as the body’s immune system attacking the body’s tissues and organs.
    Johnston was diagnosed with MS 18 years ago.
    “It’s” more common between 20 and 40, when you get diagnosed,” Johnston said. She was thirty years old.
    The first thing she noticed was the bottom of her right foot went numb, and then that feeling spread up to the top of her head.
    “So you could cut me in half, literally, and my whole right side was numb,” she explains. “It was a little scary.”
She said the numbness lasted about six weeks,then started to subside, from the top of her head down.
    She did some research and thought she might have Lou Gherig’s disease, formally called ALS, but was praying for MS - the two diseases present the same, she said. Her symptoms were in July, she had a MRI in September, was diagnosed in October. She said she was fortunate in being hooked into the MS society by her GP in Calgary, who was also doing some research with the MS clinic, and so was familiar with the disease.
    “They can’t really tell you where you’re going to be, having said that, the longer you go without having another attack, the better it is,” Johnston said.
    “My last attack was four years ago, for example. The longer period of times you go between attacks, the better it is. Then you get diagnosed with relapsing or remitting MS.”
    Johnston said there’s no way to prevent an attack, but preventative measures include diet, exercise, getting plenty of rest, keeping stress low.
    She said an MS attack sends no warning- those with the disease will notice its recurrance when they get an onset of a symptom, such as numbness, vision impairment, or lack of mobility. She said it gets worse “And then your hope is that it will get better. And then it will subside.”
    Johnston has been a part of the area’s MS Society for a number of years, including being on the board. “The MS Society has been really great at providing support over the years, especially after I was first diagnosed,” Johnston said. “You can phone them, there’s someone to put you in the right direction. And through our Drumheller chapter, we’ve been able to offer support and services to Drumheller and the surrounding area.”
    She said the big reward is being able to help those in the community with MS, especially giving support for those first diagnosed.
    Johnston was previously involved with the Hanna MS Society, and values the work they’ve done with clients over the years.
    “This is great that the MS Society raises money,” Johnston said “to help with research. And I fully endorse the research. Because without the research, we have no hope.”
    The Drumheller Jayman Built MS Walk is scheduled this year for May 3, and the Hanna Relay for Life in support of those with MS takes place on June 5, from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. beginning at Hector King Hunter Park.
    Those wanting more information on MS Alberta can visit http://mssociety.ca/alberta/default.htm.
    Further information on the disease can be found at  the MS Society of Canada site atmssociety.ca/en/help/clinics.htm.
    Alberta has the Multiple Sclerosis Patient Care and Research Clinic at the Kaye Edmonton Clinic on University Avenue in Edmonton. Appointments are by referral, and the number of the clinic is 780-407-5515, Monday to Friday, 8:30 am to 4:00 p.m.


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