ECA Review - 2022-01-13
ECA Review - 2022-01-13
ECA Review - 2022-01-13
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COUNTY OF PAINTEARTH COUNCIL<br />
Thursday,<br />
January <strong>13</strong>, <strong>2022</strong><br />
Volume 111<br />
No. 2<br />
<br />
www.<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
R<br />
18 pt<br />
Castor Museum granted $20,000 for elevator project<br />
Terri Huxley<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
County of Paintearth council heard<br />
from Michael Bain, president of the<br />
Castor Museum, at their latest meeting<br />
held Wed. Jan. 5.<br />
Bain shared some of the factors that<br />
were discussed included the Museum’s<br />
history of self-sufficiency, and not<br />
habitually coming to ask for money<br />
due to prudent fiscal management.<br />
After a discussion, council voted to<br />
offer the grant, as requested, for the<br />
full $20,000. The Historic Resource designation<br />
of the elevator, and the<br />
responsibilities that come along with<br />
maintaining that sort of landmark<br />
urged council to support it.<br />
The project is nearly complete, and it<br />
benefits the museum’s application to<br />
the province for funding to have<br />
county support for the project’s final<br />
phase.<br />
Damaged windshield repair<br />
Council has determined they wish<br />
to continue to not have a policy in<br />
place when vehicles are damaged by<br />
rock chips as they prefer to address<br />
each situation individually for a<br />
decision.<br />
One of these situations was<br />
brought to council’s attention at the<br />
latest meeting where it was recommended<br />
by staff that the vehicle<br />
owner be reimbursed $278.15 for<br />
their windshield replacement.<br />
Targeting<br />
East<br />
Central<br />
Alberta<br />
“On the afternoon of Oct. 29, one of<br />
our county gravel trucks met a<br />
vehicle traveling east on Hwy. 9<br />
approximately around 9:15 a.m.<br />
When the vehicle was following<br />
our truck, a rock hit the front<br />
window damaging it.<br />
GPS and our driver confirm the<br />
timelines are accurate,” stated<br />
Public Works Director Bryce Cooke’s<br />
report.<br />
The owner of the vehicle followed<br />
the county truck to find out the identity<br />
of the truck’s owner then called<br />
the county office immediately after<br />
the incident and sent me pictures followed<br />
by the cost of the repair.<br />
Council agreed to cover the cost of<br />
this incident.<br />
Grants policy revision<br />
Council previously passed a resolution<br />
at their Dec. 14 meeting<br />
requesting administration update the<br />
Grants to Local Organizations Policy<br />
AD 009 for the <strong>2022</strong> year.<br />
Administration brought forward<br />
changes to the policy as requested,<br />
with amounts changed for each organization<br />
the county supports annually.<br />
There was also an addition of four<br />
area rodeo/bullarama events.<br />
With revisions, the new amount for<br />
grant funding is a total of $33,050<br />
which is an increase of $11,755.60 with<br />
the new inclusion of rodeo events.<br />
Council passed a motion to accept<br />
the revised policy with the inclusions.<br />
They also asked this policy be<br />
brought back to the next meeting with<br />
direction to adjust the amounts to<br />
cover costs ‘in today’s world’ meaning<br />
inflation which will then be accepted<br />
again.<br />
Hussar’s outdoor rink is starting to take shape! The rink project was approved by Hussar village council as the public is using town land. The<br />
Hussar Rural Fire Association pitched in by using their equipment to flood the area. Fire Dept. member Chris Santere plowed the snow and<br />
other members who have been helping with flooding including Mike Hager, Hussar Fire Chief and 11-year-old son Cale (junior firefighter)<br />
seen here Sat. Jan. 1. “It will take some work but will be a nice option for kids in town that aren’t able to utilize the local arena,” said Hager.<br />
The rink will be ready for usage soon as volunteers continue building up the layers and levelling the surface. <strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong>/Mike Hager<br />
Budget for mower<br />
As discussed at the last Ag Service<br />
Board meeting on Dec. 22,<br />
Environmental Services Director Jeff<br />
Cosens shared that $40,000 had been<br />
budgeted in this year’s capital budget<br />
for a new mower.<br />
Since then, quotes have come in<br />
where the county will need to front an<br />
additional $5,000 to be in line.<br />
Cosens has looked at other leads but<br />
found they will need to up the<br />
payment.<br />
“I have been told that if we wait<br />
until the new year to order one, the<br />
county can expect to pay more and<br />
must wait until July to receive instead<br />
of June.<br />
“For that reason, I would like to<br />
order the mower from DionCo Sales as<br />
soon as possible,” stated Cosen’s<br />
request to council.<br />
The quote from DionCo Sales came<br />
to $44,995.95 plus tax.<br />
Council agreed to purchase the<br />
mower for this amount.<br />
INDEX<br />
Stettler town council ........... 2<br />
Youngstown council ............ 2<br />
Alix council.......................... 3<br />
Letters ............................. 3, 6<br />
Editorial .............................. 6<br />
Agriculture Real Estate ........ 7<br />
Classifieds/Careers .............. 8<br />
Special Areas ....................... 9<br />
RCMP .................................. 9<br />
Obituaries ....................10,11<br />
Kneehill<br />
County<br />
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2 J anuary <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
<br />
STETTLER TOWN COUNCIL<br />
‘Growth’ committee making gains<br />
Stu Salkeld<br />
Local Journalism Initiative reporter<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
It’s understood in the world of economic<br />
development the fruit that is<br />
taxpayer investment sometimes take a<br />
while to ripen, years in fact. But as<br />
Town of Stettler council heard at their<br />
regular meeting Jan. 4, this municipality<br />
seems to be harvesting the<br />
benefits of economic development on a<br />
quicker and more regular basis.<br />
Town Chief Administrative Officer<br />
(CAO) Greg Switenky and Assistant<br />
CAO Steven Gerlitz submitted an<br />
Economic Development Committee<br />
update to council, listing accomplishments<br />
and ongoing efforts for the body<br />
comprised of town staff, Stettler<br />
Regional Board of Trade (BOT) and<br />
other partners.<br />
Gerlitz noted as councillors<br />
skimmed the timeline the committee<br />
has been “very, very busy” since its<br />
creation.<br />
He added that the committee made<br />
the move to bring in developers one at<br />
a time for face to face meetings to discuss<br />
their issues as compared to the<br />
town’s issues, what helps developers in<br />
Stettler and what hinders them.<br />
The developers pointed out there<br />
was no quick way of determining what<br />
property was currently available in<br />
Stettler. To that end Gerlitz noted the<br />
town has a section on tis website that<br />
lists available property and the necessary<br />
contact information, which is<br />
updated every month. He noted it’s<br />
been very effective.<br />
Coun. Scott Pfeiffer stated he feels<br />
the body in question is a great committee<br />
and pointed out one detail he felt<br />
was important, the housing study.<br />
Pfeiffer stated the study showed<br />
which housing types Stettler was<br />
lacking and that developers may have<br />
Two options for an new<br />
auditor was presented to<br />
Youngstown council Wed.<br />
Jan. 5 with Brian King<br />
Professional Corp. based out<br />
of Hardisty, Alta. being<br />
selected.<br />
They quoted $9,000 per<br />
year for a four-year<br />
contract.<br />
Chief Administrative<br />
Officer (CAO) Emma<br />
Garlock shared that King<br />
‘gets small municipalities’<br />
after hearing from quite a<br />
few clients including other<br />
similar sized villages who<br />
were satisfied with his work.<br />
“I think he’d be the one to<br />
try,” said Mayor Robert<br />
Blagen.<br />
Council passed a motion<br />
to go with Brian King<br />
Professional Corp. with the<br />
condition a review takes<br />
place after two years of service<br />
to assess the situation if<br />
needed.<br />
Water bylaw<br />
Council agreed to<br />
increase and set new water<br />
and sewer rates for the <strong>2022</strong><br />
year within the village.<br />
The increase of approximately<br />
three per cent is due<br />
to increases passed on by<br />
Henry Kroeger Regional<br />
Water Services Commission<br />
been attracted by that information.<br />
Coun. Gord Lawlor stated he liked<br />
the idea of Stettler working with partners<br />
on studies and while he knows the<br />
studies are useful, they are also useful<br />
for developers when going to banks for<br />
financing.<br />
He added it appears some developers<br />
are addressing gaps illustrated in the<br />
studies.<br />
Coun. Travis Randell noted he was<br />
impressed to see so much progress in<br />
such a short time and that it’s nice to<br />
have tangible results to point to.<br />
Coun. Wayne Smith said he was<br />
astonished at how much the committee<br />
has accomplished in such a short<br />
timeline.<br />
Mayor Sean Nolls stated the committee<br />
itself is about identifying gaps<br />
and answering questions when something<br />
isn’t happening in Stettler.<br />
Gerlitz added that the purpose of the<br />
committee isn’t to recruit new<br />
Tax-based carrot: council<br />
passes tax incentive bylaw<br />
Stu Salkeld<br />
Local Journalism<br />
Initiative reporter<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
Stettler town council<br />
began <strong>2022</strong> by offering a<br />
carrot on a stick to new businesses<br />
and those existing<br />
businesses looking to<br />
upgrade: a property tax<br />
incentive to attract new<br />
businesses or encourage<br />
existing businesses to revitalize<br />
themselves.<br />
The bylaw was passed at<br />
the Jan. 4 regular meeting of<br />
council.<br />
Town Chief<br />
Administrative Officer<br />
(CAO) Greg Switenky introduced<br />
Bylaw 2147-22<br />
Non-residential new construction<br />
and/or existing<br />
business revitalization,<br />
redevelopment or expansion<br />
property tax incentive, a<br />
long name for something<br />
fairly simple in conception:<br />
new businesses, or existing<br />
ones willing to upgrade, can<br />
get a property tax break.<br />
Switenky stated the bylaw<br />
reflects changes made by<br />
the provincial government<br />
allowing municipalities to<br />
offer, in effect, tax incentives<br />
for business.<br />
While the provincial rules<br />
allow incentives up to 15<br />
years, the CAO stated<br />
Stettler’s bylaw will only<br />
include four years of incentives,<br />
generally 100 per cent<br />
property tax rebate in year<br />
one to 25 per cent rebate in<br />
year four, depending on the<br />
assessed value of the property<br />
in question.<br />
The CAO also noted several<br />
times the bylaw only<br />
applies to new businesses in<br />
Stettler and those existing<br />
businesses performing revitalization,<br />
redevelopment or<br />
expansion.<br />
He also stated that, since<br />
the bylaw only applies to<br />
commercial and industrial<br />
businesses, home-based<br />
businesses aren’t included<br />
in this bylaw.<br />
Assistant CAO Steven<br />
Gerlitz noted that the new<br />
bylaw covers some areas<br />
previously handled by<br />
repealed policies, and it<br />
makes it easier on staff to<br />
have everything included in<br />
one document.<br />
Gerlitz also stated that<br />
town staff, when drafting<br />
the bylaw, looked at similar<br />
documents in other municipalities<br />
and the Town of<br />
Stettler felt four years was a<br />
fair length of time.<br />
He also pointed out the<br />
purpose of the bylaw is to<br />
encourage growth and prosperity<br />
while eventually<br />
benefitting Stettler’s<br />
taxpayers.<br />
“There has to be an economic<br />
gain to the Town of<br />
Stettler,” said Gerlitz.<br />
Mayor Sean Nolls noted<br />
that Stettler wants to attract<br />
new businesses that plan on<br />
staying in town long-term,<br />
and this bylaw keeps that<br />
goal in mind.<br />
He added that initially,<br />
with this bylaw, businesses<br />
get a break at the beginning<br />
but their tax bill increases<br />
over time and he also felt<br />
four years was a fair length<br />
of time for the bylaw to<br />
apply.<br />
Coun. Gord Lawlor stated<br />
developing a bylaw like this<br />
was challenging, as he<br />
wanted it to be fair to<br />
everyone.<br />
Coun. Scott Pfeiffer stated<br />
that, when developing this<br />
bylaw, he and his peers<br />
looked at what is fair for<br />
both new and existing<br />
businesses.<br />
Mayor Nolls added that<br />
the town has to be fair and<br />
equitable to existing businesses,<br />
because they are the<br />
ones that got Stettler into<br />
the comfortable place it<br />
occupies now. “It has to be<br />
fair and equitable,” said<br />
Nolls.<br />
The bylaw contains many<br />
sections and conditions too<br />
numerous to list here.<br />
The CAO pointed out a<br />
section of the bylaw which<br />
notes that provincial requisitions<br />
that appear on a<br />
Town of Stettler property<br />
tax bill aren’t covered by<br />
this bylaw and must still be<br />
paid; also, he pointed out the<br />
bylaw takes effect after it’s<br />
officially approved by<br />
council and is not<br />
retroactive.<br />
Switenky added that he<br />
thought the bylaw was comprehensive,<br />
but not every<br />
situation can ever be predicted<br />
beforehand and the<br />
bylaw may need to come<br />
back before council in the<br />
future.<br />
Councillors unanimously<br />
passed all readings of the<br />
bylaw necessary to bring it<br />
into effect.<br />
YOUNGSTOWN COUNCIL<br />
Auditor selected<br />
Terri Huxley as well as increased repair<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
and maintenance costs.<br />
Residential water (minimum<br />
30 cubic metres<br />
bimonthly) is $105 with any<br />
overages coming to $3.50 per<br />
cubic metre.<br />
As for sewer rates, residences<br />
and churches will<br />
now pay $45, small business<br />
at $60 and large business<br />
and the school at $<strong>13</strong>0.<br />
Special Areas has a special<br />
bimonthly usage rate of<br />
$1,450.<br />
Interim budget passed<br />
Council passed the <strong>2022</strong><br />
interim budget.<br />
Possible projects were discussed<br />
including an update<br />
to administration’s software<br />
from MIG to Muniware at<br />
$18,000 from MSI Operating.<br />
There was also talk of<br />
replacing one of the fire<br />
hydrants in town as it was<br />
first installed in the 70s and<br />
no longer works properly.<br />
This would be covered in the<br />
water portion of the budget.<br />
For sidewalks, council is<br />
looking at expanding them<br />
from four feet to five feet in<br />
some parts of Main Street<br />
for a more cohesive look but<br />
nothing is set in stone at this<br />
time.<br />
The official <strong>2022</strong> budget<br />
will be accepted in the<br />
spring.<br />
businesses for Stettler, but to build an<br />
environment in Stettler that encourages<br />
business.<br />
Stettler<br />
Rife & Pistol<br />
Club<br />
will be holding its<br />
Annual AGM<br />
Tuesday January 18<br />
at 7:00pm at the indoor range.<br />
We will be complying with AHS<br />
regulations regarding gathering together.<br />
WANTED<br />
DEAD OR ALIVE<br />
Canadian Prairie Pickers<br />
are once again touring the area!<br />
Paying Cash For Coin Collections,<br />
Silver & Gold Coins,<br />
Royal Can. Mint Sets.<br />
Also Buying Gold Jewelry<br />
$$ $<br />
We purchase rolls, bags<br />
or boxes of silver coins<br />
PAYING HIGHEST PRICES<br />
To arrange a free, discrete in-home visit<br />
call Kellie at 1-778-257-9<strong>01</strong>9<br />
Bonded since 1967<br />
Single<br />
Offices<br />
To Rent<br />
$$ $<br />
on Main St. Stettler<br />
(4830 - 50 St.)<br />
Four available, with<br />
one larger board room available<br />
Call 403-741-9355, drop in, or<br />
rwarren@combatspraying.com<br />
Join our family of friendly co-renters<br />
and cut your overhead costs!<br />
THANK YOU<br />
We are overwhelmed by the kindness and<br />
thoughtfulness of so many and we wish to offer<br />
our sincerest gratitude for so many things. We<br />
feel extremely blessed to be surrounded by<br />
kind, caring, gracious people, especially during<br />
this most difficult time in our lives.<br />
Thank you for the many gifts. Gifts of good<br />
deeds, wonderful meals, unconditional love<br />
and support, hugs, visits, thoughts, prayers,<br />
kind words, flowers, cards, donations and our<br />
Secret Santas. Thank you so much to the U11<br />
T3/T4 hockey teams & the Town of Hanna for<br />
their very generous contributions made to local<br />
organizations in John’s name.<br />
Special thank you to everyone who was able<br />
to share in the Celebration of John’s Life. The<br />
amazing heartfelt tributes, stories and memories<br />
shared truly highlighted what a wonderful man<br />
John was. Your expression of sympathy and love<br />
will forever be remembered.<br />
The family of John David Henry<br />
Deb<br />
Joel, Ashley, Finley & Bauer<br />
Jaiden & Frazer
<strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW HANNA/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB January <strong>13</strong>'22 3<br />
<br />
ALIX COUNCIL<br />
Water commission budget, includes price hike<br />
Stu Salkeld<br />
Local Journalism Initiative<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
Village of Alix council passed a new<br />
utilities bylaw after a regional water<br />
commission notified them its original<br />
“no change to water rates” budget was<br />
being changed to a “water rates are<br />
changing” budget. The utilities bylaw<br />
passed all readings at the Jan. 5 regular<br />
meeting of council.<br />
Village Chief Administrative Officer<br />
(CAO) Michelle White presented councillors<br />
with a new utilities bylaw after<br />
notification from the Hwy. #12/21<br />
Water Commission stated their <strong>2022</strong><br />
budget sent to council a few weeks ago<br />
was no longer accurate.<br />
“At the Dec. 1 council meeting a<br />
draft <strong>2022</strong> budget from Hwy. #12/21<br />
was included on the agenda for council<br />
review and comment as is required by<br />
the water commission’s bylaws,” stated<br />
White in her report. “According to that<br />
draft budget the per cubic meter water<br />
rate was proposed to go from the<br />
Feedback wanted on business licenses<br />
Stu Salkeld<br />
Local Journalism Initiative reporter<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
Alix village council gave initial<br />
approval to a new business license<br />
bylaw for the municipality, but wants<br />
to gather public input on the new document<br />
before it’s formally approved.<br />
The decision was made at the Jan. 5<br />
regular meeting of council.<br />
Village Chief Administrative Officer<br />
(CAO) Michelle White presented councillors<br />
with the draft Business License<br />
Bylaw 469/22.<br />
“The current business license bylaw<br />
needed general updates as well as specific<br />
ones to deal with things like<br />
temporary businesses and allowing for<br />
stronger penalties,” stated White in<br />
her memo to council.<br />
“It also needed to be changed so that<br />
it could be enforced by peace officers<br />
under our contract agreement with<br />
Lacombe County for bylaw enforcement<br />
assistance.”<br />
In her summary White noted the<br />
new business license bylaw proposes<br />
two rates, $50 per year for a local business<br />
and $100 per year for a non-local<br />
business; the bylaw would define a<br />
non-local business as one that is<br />
located outside the village corporate<br />
boundaries.<br />
“This change would affect four businesses<br />
who currently hold licenses and<br />
result in a higher license fee for them,”<br />
stated the CAO.<br />
It was also stated that all general<br />
contractors would require a village<br />
business license under this bylaw.<br />
White noted the bylaw also proposes<br />
a late penalty for business licenses<br />
renewed later than Jan. 31 and also<br />
stiffened penalties as the previous<br />
bylaw had limited options for the village<br />
if a business refused to pay the fee.<br />
“The only penalty in the old bylaw<br />
Alberta Transportation<br />
agrees intersection near<br />
Alix is a concern<br />
Stu Salkeld<br />
Local Journalism Initiative reporter<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
Alix village council heard from their<br />
MLA that Alberta Transportation<br />
agrees an intersection near the village<br />
appears to have some safety problems.<br />
The letter from Minister of Culture<br />
and Lacombe-Ponoka MLA Ron Orr<br />
was read at the Jan. 5 regular meeting<br />
of council.<br />
Alix council had previously heard<br />
concerns from local resident Chelsie<br />
Giesbrecht about safety concerns with<br />
the intersection of Hwy. 12, which runs<br />
east-west, and Sec. Hwy. 6<strong>01</strong>, which<br />
runs north-south, and which is located<br />
right on the east side of the village<br />
boundary.<br />
Apparently, Alberta Transportation<br />
agreed with Giesbrecht. According to<br />
Orr’s letter, “Highway safety is a top<br />
priority for Alberta Transportation<br />
and Minister Rajan Sawhney confirmed<br />
that the department has<br />
completed a thorough review of the<br />
intersection.<br />
The review identified there is a trend<br />
in failures to stop in both the Sec. Hwy.<br />
6<strong>01</strong> northbound and southbound lanes,<br />
despite the presence of large stop signs<br />
with flashing beacons and rumble<br />
strips.<br />
“Specifically, Alberta<br />
Transportation plans to increase the<br />
size of the stop signs on Sec. Hwy. 6<strong>01</strong><br />
on either side of the intersection with<br />
Hwy. 12, mark ‘STOP’ on the pavement<br />
on 6<strong>01</strong> on either side of the intersection<br />
with Hwy. 12 and initiate the speed<br />
(limit) reduction... for the south leg of<br />
6<strong>01</strong> approaching the intersection.<br />
These changes will be completed as<br />
soon as is practical; however, because<br />
winter weather is approaching, some<br />
of this work may need to be completed<br />
in spring, <strong>2022</strong>,” added Orr.<br />
In a statement to the <strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
Jan. 10 Alberta Transportation stated<br />
driver error appears to be the major<br />
factor at that intersection.<br />
“Police investigations determined<br />
seven collisions at the intersection of<br />
Hwys. 12 and 6<strong>01</strong> between 2<strong>01</strong>5 and<br />
2021 were because a driver didn’t stop<br />
at the stop sign, or proceeded in an<br />
unsafe manner,” stated Rob Williams,<br />
press secretary, Minister of<br />
Transportation, in an email.<br />
In an interview Jan. 10 Giesbrecht<br />
stated she’d been contacted by Alberta<br />
Transportation and it was nice to hear<br />
that they agreed with her observation.<br />
“Yes, they did say they agreed there<br />
was a concern,” she said.<br />
She noted Transportation explained<br />
the upcoming changes to that intersection<br />
and added the government is<br />
going to continue to monitor that spot.<br />
Giesbrecht stated it was nice to hear<br />
the intersection is getting some<br />
changes. “I think they are positive and<br />
a step in the right direction,” said<br />
Giesbrecht.<br />
“I definitely do think it’s going to<br />
make some changes. Hopefully it does<br />
reduce the accidents we have there.”<br />
A resident of Alix for 15 years<br />
Giesbrecht says collisions and near<br />
misses are common at that intersection,<br />
and she and her children passed<br />
through there recently only minutes<br />
after a fatal collision occurred. She<br />
had to explain to her kids what<br />
happened.<br />
At the council meeting Mayor Rob<br />
Fehr stated he was impressed how<br />
quickly this was addressed by the provincial<br />
government.<br />
“I didn’t expect any response...until<br />
at least spring,” added Fehr.<br />
was a $100 fine,” stated White’s report.<br />
“Section (18) of the new bylaw outlines<br />
much stiffer penalties.” That section<br />
proposes a minimum $250 fine for an<br />
unlicensed business up to a maximum<br />
of $1,000.<br />
Coun. Tim Besuijen stated local<br />
businesses pay taxes to the village so<br />
they should get a lower rate than<br />
out-of-towners.<br />
Mayor Rob Fehr agreed that it is<br />
reasonable for out-of-town businesses<br />
that don’t pay taxes to pay a higher<br />
business license fee.<br />
Coun. Besuijen also asked about a<br />
section of the bylaw which spells out<br />
consequences for a business than<br />
engages in “offensive” behaviour.<br />
Besuijen asked how “offensive” could<br />
be defined.<br />
Coun. Cole responded that “offensive”<br />
behaviour can be defined in the<br />
Criminal Code.<br />
White answered the section is similar<br />
to the community standards<br />
bylaw’s mention of bad language and<br />
was included in the draft bylaw for<br />
“extreme cases” and she predicted<br />
peace officers would likely only use<br />
that section as a last resort.<br />
Also, the CAO stated any enforcement<br />
would require a fair bit of<br />
documentation including why the<br />
peace officer wrote a ticket.<br />
Besuijen responded he was concerned<br />
a business license could be<br />
taken away because someone else<br />
complained about being “offended.”<br />
White noted she has never heard of an<br />
instance where that has happened.<br />
Councillors decided to pass first<br />
reading of the bylaw, then put the document<br />
out for public comment and<br />
consider those comments and further<br />
readings at a Feb. council meeting.<br />
<br />
MAIL BAG<br />
current $3.055 to $3.049. Council<br />
accepted the report as information and<br />
did not forward any questions or comments<br />
to the commission.<br />
“On Dec. 3 staff received an email<br />
from the commission manager stating<br />
the following: After the construction<br />
meetings this week it became apparent<br />
that the lines will be delayed and this<br />
will result in a loss of water sales. The<br />
impact to the water rate will see it rise<br />
to $3.146 per cubic meter. I apologize<br />
for this late but unavoidable change.<br />
Long delivery of some critical equipment<br />
is the cause.”<br />
The CAO stated the council had two<br />
options: keep the utility bylaw as-is<br />
and eat the difference when the commission<br />
water bill shows up, or<br />
approve a new utility bylaw with the<br />
higher rates.<br />
Mayor Rob Fehr, who attended a<br />
water commission board meeting in<br />
Dec., stated he wasn’t happy. “I don’t<br />
feel this was really rolled out in a very<br />
professional fashion, in my opinion,”<br />
said the mayor. Fehr stated at the<br />
board meeting he found it difficult to<br />
get answers about the increase, felt “a<br />
bit ambushed” by the rate hike, didn’t<br />
get an opportunity to discuss the issue<br />
and perhaps felt there was nothing the<br />
village could do about the hike,<br />
although he was “not impressed” with<br />
the process.<br />
Coun. Tim Besuijen, who was also at<br />
the Dec. commission meeting, stated<br />
the dollar value of the hike is one<br />
thing he understands yet isn’t happy<br />
with, but he was more concerned that<br />
the council already approved the<br />
water commission’s budget then was<br />
told a new one is coming. Besuijen<br />
stated communication seems to be an<br />
issue and at the meeting he was also<br />
concerned to hear a comment to the<br />
effect the commission doesn’t have to<br />
get permission from local councils<br />
which apparently is accurate. Besuijen<br />
stated the commission has a new manager<br />
and perhaps that will help<br />
communication.<br />
Fehr stated it’s embarrassing to now<br />
tell residents their water bills will be<br />
going up after all. Coun. Barb Gilliat<br />
agreed. “It’s the principle of the thing,”<br />
she said.<br />
Councillors unanimously passed all<br />
readings of a new utility bylaw which<br />
included the increased rates.<br />
Rusty dusty old<br />
farmer concerned<br />
Dear Editor,<br />
Two quotes from a 1946 Country<br />
Guide magazine I found interesting.<br />
They are: “Soil erosion will ruin the<br />
fertility of the soil and when that goes<br />
the farmer’s capital is gone and the<br />
nation has lost a part of its most valuable<br />
asset.”<br />
Today farmers are continuing cropping<br />
and there is very little erosion.<br />
The second is: “As the expansion of<br />
Chinese industry gains momentum,<br />
China will require more Canadian<br />
Nickel. Canadian Nickel will go to<br />
China, Chinese silk will come to<br />
Canada, and each product will help<br />
pay for each other.”<br />
Today Canada is importing many<br />
items from China, about 90 per cent of<br />
Wal-Mart dry goods comes from<br />
China.<br />
Former Governor General Julie<br />
Payette served a short time, and was<br />
fired, now receives $150,000 per year<br />
plus is entitled to claim $206,000 per<br />
year to cover expenses.<br />
Men and women who served in the<br />
armed forces are only able to get a percentage<br />
of their pay on retirement.<br />
Which is right?<br />
Canadian Members of Parliament<br />
receive about $500 per day salary and<br />
the Prime Minister receives about<br />
$1000 per day plus office expenses, etc.<br />
If they sit in Parliament only half a<br />
year, should their salary be cut in<br />
half?<br />
Ottawa has earmarked $40 billion<br />
for First Nations child welfare. When<br />
and how are Canadians going to know<br />
how much money each person gets and<br />
what did the use it for? Was it for education,<br />
or?<br />
Turn to Hope, Pg 4
4 J anuary <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
Kneehill County<br />
10-year-old lands<br />
role<br />
in TV<br />
series<br />
Vivienne<br />
Guynn in the<br />
trailer for her<br />
first day on set<br />
of Joe Pickett. <br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong>/<br />
Submitted<br />
Hope for positive lessons<br />
learned and accepted<br />
Cont’d from Pg 3<br />
How much money is one billion<br />
dollars? If someone paid you $10,000<br />
per day for 274 years you would<br />
have one billion dollars (not<br />
including investments).<br />
In Canada it took approximately<br />
two months and $600 million in a<br />
pandemic to replace a deceitful and<br />
corrupt government with a deceitful<br />
and corrupt government!<br />
I don’t understand how a country<br />
has money to make bombers and fly<br />
their leadership on jets and cannot<br />
help the homeless and the medical<br />
field.<br />
The gas coming out of our cows is<br />
not near as dangerous as the bull<br />
coming out of our politicians.<br />
As I complete this letter Jan. 2,<br />
<strong>2022</strong> we have experienced a difficult<br />
year 2021. Many people had to<br />
adjust to things they never have<br />
with finances, safety and health.<br />
We have had personal challenges<br />
but still much to be grateful for.<br />
A huge thank you to doctors,<br />
nurses, law enforcement and front<br />
line workers. These people have<br />
always handled the usual major<br />
problems but now also the<br />
COVID-19 challenges.<br />
Let’s hope the leadership of governments<br />
and health departments<br />
have gained some positive insights<br />
with lessons learned and we the<br />
people accept the health and safety<br />
recommendations.<br />
Let’s hope <strong>2022</strong> brings peace,<br />
health and safety.<br />
To make a difference in someones<br />
life you do not have to be rich, beautiful,<br />
brilliant or perfect, you just<br />
need to care.<br />
Rusty Dusty Old Farmer<br />
concerned,<br />
Phil Dietz<br />
Castor, Alta.<br />
Terri Huxley<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
Vivienne Guynn, a young girl from<br />
Kneehill County near Carbon, Alta.<br />
area has followed her dreams by pursuing<br />
and landing a role for a TV<br />
series book adaptation of Joe Pickett.<br />
Guynn stars as April Keeley for<br />
nine episodes.<br />
She worked on set for approximately<br />
five hours per day during the<br />
summer, building many strong relationships<br />
with those involved with<br />
the production.<br />
“I think it went really well,” said<br />
Guynn. “I really liked the riding lessons<br />
with the horse. It was really fun<br />
because I met a bunch of cool people<br />
like Jerry Duce, Leah Gibson,<br />
Benjamin Hollingsworth and<br />
Michael Dorman and it was a great<br />
experience.”<br />
Her mother, Misty, shared with the<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong> that many of the jobs<br />
were sourced locally and across<br />
Canada to make production happen<br />
within COVID-19 guidelines.<br />
“It affects communities like ours.<br />
There are people out in Hanna, there<br />
are people out in Pine Lake and if<br />
they don’t come then those jobs don’t<br />
exist and the opportunities aren’t<br />
made available,” said Misty.<br />
The scenes took place in<br />
Kananaskis Country in the southern<br />
corner of Alberta.<br />
The Grade 5 student worked alongside<br />
some of the main actors and<br />
actresses like Julianna Guill and<br />
New Zealand native Michael<br />
Dorman.<br />
Initially in 2<strong>01</strong>8, Guynn had the<br />
opportunity to be a background<br />
person for this birthday episode of a<br />
show called The Teacher which she<br />
enjoyed, especially the food involved.<br />
“I told my mom that I wanted to do<br />
acting more because I like the food,”<br />
said Guynn.<br />
For this role, her agent at Detail<br />
Talents was able to find the role for<br />
her to audition for Joe Pickett. It took<br />
about a year of dedication to land the<br />
gig.<br />
“[Acting] makes me feel like I’ve<br />
done something good like I’m<br />
famous. It makes me feel accomplished<br />
and the paycheque.<br />
“I really liked making friends on<br />
set and I liked riding horses and petting<br />
the animals on set,” she said.<br />
The show has yet to be released in<br />
Canada so not much can be revealed<br />
at this point but eventually it will be<br />
launched and streamed on<br />
Paramount+.<br />
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<strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW HANNA/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB January <strong>13</strong>'22 5<br />
Innovation Academy: Learning for tomorrow... today<br />
by Kelly Lewis, Vice Principal<br />
J.C.Charyk Hanna School<br />
J.C.Charyk Hanna School (JCCHS)<br />
is taking a different approach to the<br />
schools of excellence concept.<br />
Instead of selecting a singular focus,<br />
students are being encouraged to make<br />
their learning relevant, develop their<br />
entrepreneurial spirit and explore cutting<br />
edge technologies.<br />
A wide variety of equipment has<br />
been acquired to help the students<br />
explore technologies that will play a<br />
role in their futures, as well as foster<br />
curiosity and entrepreneurial spirit as<br />
they look towards their futures.<br />
The equipment ranges from a computer<br />
numerical controlled plasma<br />
cutter in the shop to a laser cutter,<br />
robots, industry standard 3D printer,<br />
drones and a John Deere tractor with a<br />
complete auto-steer unit.<br />
The humanities programs are now<br />
accessing new green screens and<br />
desktop publishing equipment to represent<br />
learning in new ways.<br />
Our foods program has acquired<br />
new cooking technologies such as sous<br />
vide units, air fryers and InstaPots to<br />
introduce 21st century home cooking<br />
practices.<br />
Although we don’t have a meat cutting<br />
program, students showed<br />
interest in value added agriculture in<br />
the way of meat processing. To that<br />
end, a grinder, sausage stuffer, smoker,<br />
dehydrator have all been acquired and<br />
already put to use.<br />
A trial batch of sausage was made by<br />
a group of students, but the biggest<br />
sausage project was driven by a junior<br />
high math class. There is a lot of calculation<br />
involved when correlating a<br />
recipe to product and the meat, spices,<br />
water and casings needed to make a<br />
batch of sausage.<br />
The science department has been<br />
augmented with such equipment as a<br />
PCR cycler and gel electrophoresis<br />
unit to explore DNA replication.<br />
This equipment, along with physics<br />
and environmental monitoring equipment<br />
is going to introduce our students<br />
to university level practices and the<br />
opportunity to make their learning<br />
relevant.<br />
Perhaps the biggest and most visible<br />
acquisition to our school has been virtual<br />
reality equipment.<br />
A number of classes have been using<br />
the VR headsets since September to<br />
practice their French in Paris, learn to<br />
box, travel to the pyramids and around<br />
the world, and have many other<br />
experiences.<br />
VR is opening so many doors when it<br />
comes to connecting to learning in a<br />
new and impactful way.<br />
New programs are always being<br />
added and students are definitely<br />
seeing their learning from a new<br />
perspective.<br />
Our elementary students aren’t<br />
being left out of the technology<br />
opportunities.<br />
A robotics program has been developed<br />
using Terrapin Coding Robots<br />
which has seen students from Grade 2<br />
to 6 learn about coding and putting<br />
their knowledge to work.<br />
Coding is one of the most impactful<br />
new subjects students can learn to help<br />
them in our technological world and<br />
we want to give them a great start.<br />
There are two overarching programs<br />
which are driving a lot of the<br />
learning at JCC.<br />
The Leader in Me program has been<br />
delivered to our K-6 staff and it is<br />
becoming part of every classroom.<br />
This ties into the innovation concept<br />
through building student capacity in<br />
decision making and the value of<br />
becoming a good citizen and community<br />
member.<br />
The program is going to go a long<br />
way towards building empathy and<br />
community in our school.<br />
Project Based Learning is the<br />
approach being taken from Grades 7-12<br />
to introduce new technologies into relevant<br />
student learning.<br />
Students and staff will be introduced<br />
to the new equipment and technologies<br />
and encouraged to use them to demonstrate<br />
their learning and make<br />
learning relevant.<br />
Students in Grades 7 to 9 participated<br />
in a Skills Alberta Skills<br />
Exploration Day on Dec. 1. Teams of<br />
students took part in a design challenge<br />
and produced a prototype design<br />
to meet the challenge.<br />
Over the course of preparing for the<br />
challenge, students explored the new<br />
technologies while testing their creativity,<br />
teamwork and planning to<br />
build the end product. It was a great<br />
opportunity for students to make use<br />
of new technologies while exploring<br />
trades and skills at the same time.<br />
The Prairie Land board of trustees<br />
has seen the value of the Innovation<br />
Academy and invested hundreds of<br />
thousands of dollars in equipment and<br />
professional support to make the program<br />
work.<br />
Innovation is key to building a sustainable<br />
community and for our<br />
students to find their way in a rapidly<br />
evolving future world.<br />
At JCCHS, we want to give our students<br />
every opportunity to incorporate<br />
their interests and passions with cutting<br />
edge technologies and personally<br />
relevant learning opportunities and<br />
the Innovation Academy is going to<br />
make it happen.<br />
About three quarters of Bashaw Fire Department members were in attendance for some<br />
training on ice water rescue at the Bashaw Trout Pond in town on Sat. Jan. 8. Members<br />
learned how to walk someone through the process of self rescue, reach, throw, go and<br />
tow by an instructor. In the water was member Dennis Jones, certified in ice water rescue,<br />
who volunteered to be the ‘victim’. He was attached to a safety rope which was held to a<br />
stationary object on the ground and maintained by a safety person. The department is<br />
working towards grants to purchase four ice water rescue suits in case they are needed<br />
upon mutual aid calls such as responding to a Buffalo Lake instance or in-town responses.<br />
<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong>/Bashaw Fire Department<br />
22<strong>01</strong>1zu0
6 January <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
OPINION<br />
The opinions expressed are not necessarily<br />
the opinions of this newspaper.<br />
<br />
EDITORIAL<br />
Confronting the<br />
truth brings healing<br />
R<br />
R<br />
R<br />
R<br />
R<br />
Published by<br />
Coronation<br />
<strong>Review</strong><br />
Limited<br />
Brenda Schimke<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong><br />
“The parties must decide whether<br />
they will continue to sit beside the trail<br />
or move forward in a spirit of reconciliation”,<br />
words spoken by Justice Paul<br />
Favel of the Federal Court in 2<strong>01</strong>9. He<br />
denied the government’s request to set<br />
aside the Human Rights Tribunal 2<strong>01</strong>6<br />
judgment compensating First Nations<br />
children who<br />
experienced lifelong<br />
hardships<br />
as a result of<br />
chronic underfunding<br />
of<br />
family and child<br />
services on<br />
reserve.<br />
“Negotiations”,<br />
he said, “could<br />
help realize the<br />
goal of reconciliation<br />
and would<br />
be the preferred<br />
outcome for both Indigenous people<br />
and Canada.”<br />
We will never know if Justice Favel’s<br />
wise words had an impact on the government’s<br />
decision to cease 14 years of<br />
litigation, but on January 4, the federal<br />
government, the Assembly of First<br />
Nations, and Chiefs of Ontario came to<br />
a negotiated settlement.<br />
We do know that trust is a key component<br />
for any negotiated settlement.<br />
Former Prime Minister Stephen<br />
Harper never garnered that trust with<br />
First Nations and current Prime<br />
Minister Justin Trudeau had the talk,<br />
but proved in his first six years in<br />
office that he had no substance.<br />
Recently Trudeau did one thing<br />
right. He appointed Marc Miller<br />
Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister,<br />
and Patty Hajdu Indigenous Services<br />
Minister two of the most sincere and<br />
humble politicians of our time. Their<br />
talk and their actions have always<br />
shown genuine love and respect for our<br />
Indigenous peoples.<br />
The quality of a democracy, our<br />
society and our collective souls is displayed<br />
by how we treat each other, our<br />
ability to acknowledge wrong and our<br />
commitment to try and right the<br />
wrong.<br />
After our shameful history with residential<br />
schools, we then subjected<br />
First Nations children living on<br />
reserves and in the Yukon territory to<br />
a family services system whose two<br />
main funding mechanisms incentivized<br />
removing First Nation’s children<br />
from their families and communities.<br />
It is estimated that there are 115,000<br />
children who were separated from<br />
family and community because the<br />
previous and current federal governments<br />
wouldn’t accept the root cause<br />
was poverty—inadequate housing,<br />
food security and clothing. Not<br />
Subscriptions:<br />
$52.50 in Canada; $98.70 in US;<br />
$183.75 Overseas.<br />
“<br />
Unlike most countries,<br />
Canadians seem much<br />
more willing to<br />
acknowledge the truth and<br />
commit to reconciliation.<br />
That should give us all<br />
hope for <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
forgotten in the settlement are the parents<br />
and grandparents who had their<br />
children and grandchildren ripped<br />
away, some at the moment of birth.<br />
This settlement also covers an additional<br />
100,000 children plus, who were<br />
discriminated against because the government<br />
did not provide timely health,<br />
education and social services, better<br />
known as Jordan’s Principle.<br />
Half of the $40B settlement will go to<br />
the children, parents<br />
and<br />
grandparents, a<br />
minimum of<br />
$40,000 each with<br />
more for those<br />
who spent longer<br />
time in the<br />
system.<br />
The other half,<br />
thankfully, will<br />
go to changing<br />
the system with<br />
First Nations and<br />
government officials<br />
working together. Hopefully this<br />
initiative will end wasteful and unsatisfactory<br />
lawsuits and class<br />
actions—the only recourse until now<br />
for Indigenous peoples to get the attention<br />
of the voting public and force the<br />
government’s hand.<br />
Unlike most countries, Canadians<br />
seem much more willing to acknowledge<br />
the truth and commit to<br />
reconciliation. That should give us all<br />
hope for <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
The truth is hard to confront—murdered<br />
and missing women,<br />
over-representation of aboriginals in<br />
our justice system, decades-long boil<br />
water orders, residential schools, discovery<br />
of aboriginal children in<br />
unmarked graves, discriminatory<br />
funding for education and family and<br />
child services on reserves, the forced<br />
loss of culture and languages, industrial<br />
expansion without meaningful<br />
consultation and discriminatory<br />
policing.<br />
This negotiated settlement is an<br />
acknowledgement that our Indigenous<br />
children have always been treated differently<br />
than other Canadian children.<br />
It’s another small step forward to<br />
help cleanse our nation’s soul and<br />
restore our Indigenous peoples.<br />
<br />
72 pt<br />
East Central Alberta<br />
EVIEW<br />
60 pt<br />
48 pt<br />
36 pt<br />
Website <strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
Office Hours Mon. - Fri. 9 am - 5 pm<br />
R<br />
30 pt<br />
4921 - Victoria Avenue<br />
Tel. (403) 578-4111<br />
R<br />
24 pt<br />
Mail: Box 70, Coronation, AB Canada, T0C 1C0<br />
“<br />
LETTERS POLICY • Letters to the Editor are welcomed •<br />
Must be signed and a phone number included so the writer’s<br />
identity can be verified. • <strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong> reserves the right to edit<br />
letters for legal considerations, taste and brevity. Letters and<br />
columns submitted are not necessarily the opinion of this<br />
newspaper.<br />
MEMBER OF:<br />
<br />
MAIL BAG<br />
Local Journalism Initiative is funded<br />
by the Government of Canada.<br />
JOYCE WEBSTER<br />
Publisher/Editor<br />
publisher@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
YVONNE THULIEN<br />
Marketing/Digital 403-575-9474<br />
digital@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
MAIL BAG<br />
Demand return to democracy<br />
Dear Editor,<br />
This is an open letter for all<br />
Albertans regarding the state of public<br />
health emergency.<br />
I would like to acknowledge and<br />
thank Todd Loewen, MLA for Central<br />
Peace-Notley for bringing to light<br />
these issues and producing a very<br />
informative video on the subject.<br />
The following information is based<br />
on that video.<br />
I hope you find it helpful.<br />
In Alberta, the Public Health Act<br />
contains the authority to declare a<br />
public health emergency. Over the past<br />
two years, the Kenney government<br />
has enacted three public health emergencies<br />
by Orders in Council: the first<br />
on March 17, 2020, the second on Nov.<br />
24, 2020 and the third on Sept. 15, 2021.<br />
These orders were declared for pandemic<br />
influenza, so they lasted for 90<br />
days each.<br />
A resolution would have to be introduced<br />
into the Legislative Assembly<br />
for these orders to be extended.<br />
This has never occurred, so the<br />
emergency orders have simply lapsed<br />
after 90 days.<br />
Alberta’s most recent order<br />
declaring a public health emergency<br />
lapsed on Dec. 15, 2021. It was not<br />
extended and Alberta no longer has a<br />
public health emergency order.<br />
What happens then to the<br />
Restriction Exemption Program, and<br />
other public health orders that were<br />
introduced by the Chief Medical<br />
Officer of Health (CMOH) since<br />
September?<br />
It turns out that while Jason Kenney<br />
was telling Albertans the province<br />
would be open for summer, he was<br />
‘Sentinels of absurdity’<br />
Dear Editor,<br />
It seems one characteristic of<br />
“Woke” Cancel Culture Political<br />
Correctness run amok and the cancelling<br />
of the fossil fuel industry in North<br />
America is, as long as it fits the radical<br />
leftist narrative and there are fortunes<br />
to be gleaned, it matters not how<br />
utterly impractical and unsubstantiated<br />
the scheme.<br />
As I write (Dec. 31-0530 hrs.) in<br />
Coronation the mercury sits at -34°C,<br />
wind speed is 10 km/hr.<br />
The monuments to ignorance otherwise<br />
known as wind turbines in the<br />
Paintearth Wind Farm are producing<br />
nothing. Most life long Albertans are<br />
aware that during prolonged extreme<br />
cold spells the wind tends to fall still.<br />
Turn to Seems, Pg 7<br />
BRENDA SCHIMKE<br />
Editorial Writer<br />
JUDY WALGENBACH<br />
Marketing 403-740-2492<br />
marketing@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
also making sidebar amendments to<br />
the Public Health Act that he’d introduce<br />
at a later date.<br />
Most of these amendments were<br />
passed on June 17, 2021 by Bill 66.<br />
However, sections 29.1 (1), (2) and (3)<br />
were not passed on June 17. Rather, the<br />
government sat on those sections until<br />
Dec. 15, 2021 (the same day the emergency<br />
order lapsed) and passed them<br />
by Proclamation.<br />
Sections 29.1(1), (2) & (3) validate<br />
every CMOH order up until Dec. 15,<br />
2021.<br />
These public health orders are<br />
written and signed by Deena Hinshaw,<br />
Alberta’s CMOH. Therefore, even<br />
though Alberta is no longer in a state<br />
of public health emergency, orders<br />
that have been implemented by Deena<br />
Hinshaw up until Dec. 15 are still<br />
valid.<br />
An example of this is CMOH Order<br />
54-2021 which revises the Restriction<br />
Exemption Program.<br />
This order was signed on Dec. 10,<br />
2021 and is now declared valid through<br />
these sidebar amendments to the<br />
Public Health Act.<br />
Most importantly this Order states<br />
it will remain “in effect until<br />
rescinded by the Chief Medical Officer<br />
of Health.” In other words, there is no<br />
end to the public health restrictions<br />
until Deena Hinshaw says so.<br />
If this is not enough, Deena<br />
Hinshaw passed another order on Dec.<br />
16, 2021 (CMOH Order 55- 2021).<br />
Alberta does not have an emergency<br />
order in place. Nonetheless, this Order<br />
was passed because the CMOH is able<br />
to carry out an investigation and confirm<br />
“the existence of a public health<br />
emergency” (Public Health Act, section<br />
29(2.1)).<br />
This Order outlines the provincewide<br />
mandates for masking, physical<br />
distancing, private social gatherings,<br />
and restrictions for places of worship,<br />
businesses, restaurants, bars, gyms<br />
and schools.<br />
Order 59-2021 was signed by Deena<br />
Hinshaw on Dec. 24, 2021 and it limits<br />
event attendance to 50 per cent and<br />
cancels all food/beverage sales at<br />
events, among other things.<br />
Turn to Democracy, Pg 12<br />
TERRI HUXLEY<br />
Reporter 587-321-0030<br />
news1@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
SHEREE BAILLIE<br />
Marketing 587-990-4818<br />
contact@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
NIAOMI DYCK<br />
Circulation<br />
STU SALKELD<br />
LJI Reporter 403-741-2615<br />
reporter@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
LISA MYERS-SORTLAND<br />
Graphic Artist<br />
R<br />
18 pt
AGRICULTURAL REAL ESTATE<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW HANNA/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB January <strong>13</strong>'22 7<br />
Seems most fitting that the buck stops here<br />
Cont’d from Pg 6<br />
Same thing with hot spells. But the<br />
minds of the various Government<br />
Departmental Bureaucracies who give<br />
consent to wind projects are already<br />
made up so it’s not exactly kosher to<br />
confuse them with facts.<br />
Once the Quebec Drama Teacher<br />
succeeds in destroying the fossil fuel<br />
industry in Alberta and Saskatchewan<br />
including natural gas supposedly by<br />
2030, how will home heating systems<br />
function on such mornings as this?<br />
How will ‘taxpayer subsidized’ Tesla<br />
cars get charged up? There is not a<br />
snowball’s chance in Hades that it can<br />
happen on stored electrical juice.<br />
The socialist, Notley, has already<br />
saddled Albertans with the enormous<br />
expense of killing the coal industry<br />
(including clean coal) so, having<br />
thrown the baby out with the bath<br />
water, don’t look for that alternative to<br />
return anytime soon.<br />
The real “inconvenient truth” is the<br />
only thing these ‘Sentinels of<br />
Absurdity’ can ever succeed at is the<br />
killing of protected, threatened, vulnerable<br />
or endangered bird species<br />
such as Snowy Owls, Bald Eagles,<br />
Raptors (Hawks), Whooping Cranes<br />
and others.<br />
In Alberta, anyone who intentionally<br />
or knowingly and negligently<br />
causes the death of a Bald Eagle is<br />
guilty of a Criminal Offence punishable<br />
by a $100,000 fine and/or two<br />
years in prison.<br />
So who among all the Profiteers and<br />
Bureaucratic Officials giving the nod<br />
to wind projects<br />
will accept the<br />
rap? Bet your<br />
keister that none<br />
will be jumping<br />
over each other to<br />
put up their hand.<br />
Yes, there’s<br />
safety in numbers.<br />
But<br />
considering the<br />
broad spectrum<br />
approval process<br />
it would seem<br />
most fitting that<br />
the buck stops<br />
here.<br />
Liability and<br />
culpability<br />
should necessarily<br />
rest with<br />
the Principal<br />
CROP LAND<br />
2700 acres - south<br />
of Veteran<br />
4500 acres -<br />
Chinook area<br />
6000 acres - Cereal<br />
area<br />
2400 acres - south<br />
of Hanna<br />
Call Dallas Ellerby<br />
Your Farm & Ranch Specialist<br />
403.578.8105<br />
LAND FOR SALE BY TENDER<br />
15 miles north of Edgerton, Alberta<br />
15 miles south of Paradise Valley, Alberta<br />
N 1/2 33-45-3-W4M<br />
175 acres cultivated<br />
143 acres pasture<br />
Slough on the said lands<br />
$1,961. 00 oil & gas (pipeline) revenue<br />
Rent from Lease will not be adjusted but all surface rent paid after<br />
the closing date will be assigned to the Purchaser<br />
Seller makes no warranties or representations about the property’s size/<br />
measurement, condition or environmental status<br />
Mineral rights are not included in the sale.<br />
For further information, contact Wendy at 780-806-9377<br />
Purchaser must be a GST Registrant and shalI be responsible for GST.<br />
No offers will be considered which are subject to financing.<br />
Bids will only be considered on the total package.<br />
Benefactor of wind projects within the<br />
county, that being The County of<br />
Paintearth and The Paintearth<br />
Municipal Planning Commission.<br />
Since when does the killing of birds<br />
become justifiable so long as it occurs<br />
in the name of the Climate Cult and<br />
“clean” energy? Blood on turbine rotor<br />
blades is not clean energy.<br />
Is anyone employed to go around and<br />
collect, identify and count the numbers<br />
of dead or maimed creatures? Were<br />
the results photographed and recorded<br />
for all to see? And if not, why not?<br />
Why do the RCMP turn a blind eye<br />
and allow this to be swept under the<br />
rug? What about the Fish and Wildlife<br />
Department? Surely they are aware.<br />
But what have they actually done<br />
about it besides paying casual lip<br />
service?<br />
Does the problem somehow hearken<br />
back to Government Officials such as<br />
our Grandiose Illustrious Leader<br />
being immune and above the law for<br />
committing a Criminal Offence such<br />
as Obstruction of Justice?<br />
Always enjoyed<br />
Dear Editor,<br />
Just a note to wish you a Happy and<br />
Healthy <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
Thanks for your great weekly paper.<br />
We always enjoy it!<br />
Don & Rose Wesner<br />
Stettler, Alta.<br />
LAND FOR SALE<br />
The highest and/or any bid will not necessarily be accepted. If the successful<br />
bidder does not complete the purchase after the acceptance of the Tender the<br />
deposit shall be forfeited. Cheques of unsuccessful bidders shall be returned<br />
to them.<br />
Tenders in sealed envelopes noting the “Land Location” must be received by<br />
12:00 p.m. on January 17, <strong>2022</strong> in the office of Nickerson Roberts Holinski &<br />
Mercer at 608-10 Street, Wainwright, AB T9W 1E2 and be accompanied by<br />
a certified cheques or bank draft in the amount of 5% of the value of the bid<br />
payable in trust to Nickerson Roberts Holinski & Mercer, Barristers and Solicitors.<br />
The sale and full payment are to be completed March 30, <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
GRASS LAND<br />
24 quarters - south<br />
of Veteran<br />
16 quarters - south<br />
of Veteran<br />
90 quarters -<br />
Youngstown area<br />
117 quarters - south<br />
of Youngstown<br />
www.greaterpropertygroup.com<br />
GREATER PROPERTY GROUP<br />
cancow@<br />
xplornet.com<br />
Does this state of affairs apply to all<br />
Government Officials anywhere in<br />
Canada and at every level?<br />
Here’s a question for Potential<br />
Renewables. Are you going to renew<br />
the Bald Eagles after they go extinct?<br />
After wind turbines are finally<br />
thrown on the scrap heap of the<br />
‘History Of Man’s Folly’, I suspect that<br />
the only ones who will ultimately be<br />
made to pay the price will be the<br />
beautiful and majestic winged progeny<br />
of the dinosaurs themselves. Or at least<br />
those examples which may still<br />
remain, as God sees the Sparrow fall.<br />
That is unless others take a stand<br />
and speak up.<br />
Maybe read the back of the new vertical<br />
10 dollar bill.<br />
Lee Hudson<br />
Calgary/County of Paintearth<br />
FARM LAND FOR SALE BY TENDER<br />
NW 17-31-26-W4 (153 acres more or less)<br />
120 acres more or less of No. 3t and 3m soil under cultivation and 33<br />
acres more or less of lower wet lands along the south boundary located<br />
in MOUNTAIN VIEW COUNTY. The property has perimeter fencing<br />
and bordered to the west by a county gravel roadway. Property receives<br />
$2,676.00/yr surface lease revenue.<br />
Please contact Norman L. Tainsh Prof. Corp. at 403-443-2200 or by email<br />
(ntainsh@tainsh.ca) to obtain terms and conditions of the tender and a<br />
tender submission form. Submissions are due by 12:00 o’clock noon on<br />
Friday, the 4th day of February, A.D. <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
FARM LAND FOR SALE BY TENDER<br />
SW 17-31-26-W4 (141 acres more or less)<br />
116 acres more or less of No. 3m and No. 1 soil under cultivation and 25<br />
acres more or less of lower wet lands along the north and west boundary<br />
located in MOUNTAIN VIEW COUNTY. The property has perimeter<br />
fencing, bordered to the west by a county gravel roadway and to the south<br />
by Highway 582. Property receives $2,040.00/yr surface lease revenue.<br />
Please contact Norman L. Tainsh Prof. Corp. at 403-443-2200 or by email<br />
(ntainsh@tainsh.ca) to obtain terms and conditions of the tender and a<br />
tender submission form. Submissions are due by 12:00 o’clock noon on<br />
Friday, the 4th day of February, A.D. <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
CONSORT LAND<br />
FOR SALE BY TENDER<br />
Tenders will be received by Smith & Hersey Agribusiness Law until the deadline<br />
of 4:00 p.m. on March 16th, <strong>2022</strong>, for the sale of the following Land:<br />
7,616.14 total acres (48 1/4s)<br />
• 3,329.52 acres of Special Areas Grazing Lease<br />
• 4,289.62 acres of titled land –<br />
• 2,408.81 cultivated acres (includes 933 acres of hay and seeded grass)<br />
• Opportunity for additional acres to be converted to cultivated<br />
• Land located in one block<br />
• Annual surface lease income of $<strong>13</strong>,225.00<br />
• Home 1/4 includes:<br />
• 2 homes – 350,000 sq ft of corrals – 26,650 bu bin space – numerous<br />
outbuildings including 4 pole sheds/Quonsets – 1,600 ft of fence line<br />
feeders<br />
• Additional information available at www.magillranch.ca<br />
Land is located SW of Consort, AB, 12 miles south on Hwy 884 and 2 miles east<br />
on Township Rd 33-4.<br />
Tenders on the Land must be accompanied by a certified cheque, bank draft,<br />
or electronic transfer to “Smith & Hersey Agribusiness Law” for 1.5% of the bid<br />
amount. The deposit will be returned if the tender is not accepted. If a tender<br />
is accepted and the bidder does not proceed with the sale, the deposit of the<br />
bidder will be forfeited to the owner. The balance of the tender price will be<br />
owed upon closing on April 27, <strong>2022</strong>. The owner and the successful bidder will<br />
each be responsible for their own legal fees. Bidders must understand that a<br />
tender is an unconditional offer to purchase the Land and rely on their own<br />
research of the Lands. Any information provided is for reference sake alone.<br />
The Vendor requests bids for all or portions of the land. Any bid for the<br />
entire portion must include the home section. Should a potential purchaser<br />
have any questions regarding this tender, please contact the Vendor’s lawyer<br />
Reid Wilkie at the number below.<br />
The owner has complete discretion to accept the highest or any tender. Tenders<br />
shall be delivered via email, in person, or via mail in an envelope marked “Land<br />
Tender” to: Smith & Hersey Agribusiness Law<br />
Attention: Reid A. Wilkie<br />
Box 95 Consort, AB, T0C 1B0<br />
Phone: 403.527.5506 Email: reid@smithhersey.com<br />
In person to Reid Wilkie in Consort every Wednesday<br />
Please contact Reid Wilkie to arrange for additional information tender<br />
package, property viewing, and deposit procedure.
8 J anuary <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
Ph. 403-578-4111CLASSIFIEDS/CAREERSEmail: office@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com<br />
Classified Ad Rates<br />
$<strong>13</strong>.85 + tax for 25<br />
words or less + 20¢ a word<br />
after 25 each week or 3<br />
weeks for $38.55 + tax<br />
(based on 25 words or less).<br />
Reach 75,000 readers with<br />
your classified. This<br />
includes For Sale, For Rent,<br />
Card of Thanks, Coming<br />
Events, etc.<br />
Payment Necessary<br />
All Classified Ads are on a<br />
Cash Only basis and must<br />
be prepaid before running.<br />
There will be a $5.00<br />
service charge on every<br />
classified not paid for prior<br />
to publication.<br />
We accept cash, cheque,<br />
e-transfer, VISA or MC.<br />
It is the responsibility of<br />
the advertiser to check ad<br />
the 1st week and call us if in<br />
error. The <strong>Review</strong> is<br />
responsible for their<br />
mistakes the 1st week only.<br />
Deadline For Ads<br />
All classified ads must be<br />
received by 5 pm on<br />
Mondays preceding<br />
publication. For Too Late To<br />
Classifieds ad must be<br />
received by 10 am Tuesday.<br />
Ph. 578-4111. Mail to Box<br />
70, Coronation, AB T0C<br />
1C0.<br />
REAL ESTATE<br />
JUST Listed: 8,284<br />
acre family farm in<br />
SW Sask. Three<br />
yardsites, very good<br />
workshops & equipment<br />
storage, 418K<br />
grain storage.<br />
$35,365,000. Gerald<br />
Muller, C&C Realty,<br />
306-570-7743.<br />
MISC.<br />
INTEGRITY post<br />
frame buildings since<br />
2008 built with concrete<br />
posts. Barns,<br />
Shops, Riding<br />
Arenas, Machine<br />
Sheds and more,<br />
sales@integritybuilt.<br />
com 1-866-974-7678<br />
www.integritybuilt.<br />
com.<br />
Cat<br />
Work<br />
Brushing, Dugouts<br />
landscaping &<br />
all other cat work.<br />
Call Keith<br />
403-318-2477<br />
www.worthoilfield.com<br />
HEAVY EQUIPMENT<br />
FOR SALE<br />
BLANKET the province<br />
with a classified<br />
ad. Only $269 (based<br />
on 25 words or less).<br />
Reach almost 90<br />
weekly newspapers.<br />
Call now for details.<br />
403-578-4111.<br />
FEED AND SEED<br />
CERTIFIED Seed. -<br />
Wheat – AAC<br />
Goodwin, AAC<br />
Penhold, AC Sadash,<br />
CDC Go, Go Early,<br />
Pintail. OATS - AC<br />
Juniper, AC Morgan,<br />
AC Mustang, Derby,<br />
CDC Arborg, CDC<br />
SO1 Super Oat, ORE<br />
3542M. BARLEY –<br />
Amisk, Busby,<br />
Cerveza, CDC<br />
Austenson, CDC<br />
Maverick, Sundre.<br />
Very Early Yellow<br />
Pea, Forage Peas.<br />
Polish Canola, Spring<br />
Triticale. mastinseeds.com;<br />
403-556-<br />
2609.<br />
ALBERTA Feed<br />
Grain: Buying Oats,<br />
Barley, Wheat,<br />
Canola, Peas,<br />
Screenings, Mixed<br />
Grains. Dry, Wet,<br />
Heated, or Spring<br />
Thresh. Prompt<br />
Payment. In House<br />
Trucks, In House<br />
Excreta Cleaning.<br />
Vac Rental. 1-888-<br />
483-8789.<br />
HEATED Canola<br />
buying Green,<br />
Heated or Spring<br />
thrashed Canola.<br />
Buying: oats, barley,<br />
wheat & peas for<br />
feed. Buying damaged<br />
or offgrade<br />
grain. “On Farm<br />
Pickup” Westcan<br />
Feed & Grain,<br />
1-877-250-5252.<br />
LIVESTOCK<br />
CHAROLAIS bulls<br />
for sale. LVV Ranch.<br />
Call 780-582-2254.<br />
Forestburg, Ab.<br />
WANTED<br />
WANTED: Collector<br />
paying top prices for<br />
old service station/<br />
general store advertising/<br />
dealership<br />
signs. Electric and<br />
visible gas pumps,<br />
globes, oil cans,<br />
clocks, coke<br />
machines. Anything<br />
related to Red<br />
Indian, White Rose,<br />
North Star, Buffalo,<br />
B-A, Texaco, Good<br />
Year, Ford, Dodge,<br />
etc. 306-221-5908.<br />
HELP WANTED<br />
FREIGHTLAND<br />
Carriers, a tri-axle<br />
air ride flatdeck carrier<br />
is looking for<br />
Owner/Operators to<br />
run Alberta only or<br />
the 3 Western<br />
Provinces. Must<br />
have own plates,<br />
insurance & WCB.<br />
Truck gross revenue<br />
is an average of<br />
$20,000/month. Call<br />
1-800-917-9021 or<br />
email: dispatch@<br />
freightland.ca.<br />
Castor<br />
Dental<br />
is looking for a<br />
dedicated<br />
Registered<br />
Dental<br />
Hygienist<br />
to join our<br />
growing team for<br />
2-3 days a week<br />
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gmail.com<br />
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Development Officer Position<br />
The Summer Village of Island Lake, being Alberta’s largest Summer<br />
Village and located on the shores of Island Lake, approximately<br />
20 minutes northwest of the Town of Athabasca, is looking for an<br />
outgoing and enthusiastic individual to fulfill a part time contract<br />
position for a Development Officer services within our community.<br />
Please visit online for complete details and instructions:<br />
www.islandlake.ca<br />
Summer Village of Island Lake, Box 8, Alberta Beach, T0E 0A0<br />
svislandlake@wildwillowenterprises.com<br />
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3.75” wide version<br />
Summer Village of Island Lake<br />
Funeral Request Homefor Proposals<br />
Chery Southoff<br />
Development Officer Position<br />
The Summer Village of Island Lake, being Alberta’s largest Summer Village and<br />
located on the shores of Island Lake, approximately 20 minutes northwest of the<br />
Town of Athabasca, is looking for an outgoing and enthusiastic individual to<br />
fulfill a part time contract position for a Development Officer services within<br />
Proud to be part of Central Alberta<br />
Please visit Family online for Funeral complete Services details and Ltd. instructions:<br />
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Summer Village www.coronationfuneralhome.ca<br />
of Island Lake, Box 8, Alberta Beach, T0E 0A0<br />
svislandlake@wildwillowenterprises.com<br />
Position 403-578-2928<br />
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Welcome Back PRPS Families<br />
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On Monday, August 30, 2021, Prairie Rose Public School students will return to begin<br />
CORONATION VISION CLINIC<br />
2021-<strong>2022</strong> Dr. school Ward ZoBell year. Despite hopes for a full return to class with no restrictions this<br />
COVID-19 Tues continues & Thurs 10 - to 4 be with us for the In start Coronation of another (Located in school Coronation year. Mall) Still, we are ve<br />
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excited HANNA to welcome VISION CENTRE back our students and staff MONDAYS for another 9 a.m. year - 5 p.m. of ‘everyone learning<br />
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Dr. Dennis A. Heimdahl Dr. Ward ZoBell<br />
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Naomi Roth, CPA, CGA<br />
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yours!<br />
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principal.<br />
Tel: 403-742-3438<br />
rwallp.ca<br />
~ Roger Clarke, Superintendent of Schools<br />
County of Stettler No. 6<br />
6602 - 44 Ave., Box 1270<br />
Phone: 403-742-4441 Fax: 403-742-1277<br />
www.stettlercounty.ca<br />
PUBLIC NOTICE<br />
Join Council Tuesday, February 1 for<br />
Public Budget Consultation<br />
from 1:30-3:30 PM<br />
Join us via Stettler County ZOOM<br />
http://www.stettlercounty.ca/zoom<br />
or register to attend in person by calling 403-742-4441.<br />
Covid-19 protocols will be followed and<br />
masks are required to attend in person.<br />
OILFIELD OPERATOR<br />
CONSORT/ AMISK, AB AREA<br />
Cleo Energy Corp. has an immediate need for an<br />
experienced Battery Operator in the Consort/ Amisk<br />
area. Previous oilfield operations experience with a<br />
producing company is required. Preference will be<br />
given to candidates experienced in high volume<br />
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dynamic junior oil and gas company with extensive<br />
operations in East Central Alberta, and we offer a<br />
competitive compensation and benefits program.<br />
This posting will be open until January 18, <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
Please forward cover letters/ resumes to:<br />
careers@cleoenergy.com<br />
Professional Directory<br />
Prairie Rose Public Schools is hiring.<br />
Come join us!<br />
For full details, please visit<br />
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<strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW HANNA/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB January <strong>13</strong>'22 9<br />
Special Areas busy<br />
with <strong>2022</strong> plans<br />
Submitted<br />
“Looking back on 2021, we<br />
faced some pretty big challenges:<br />
from disruptive<br />
public health measures to<br />
supply chain issues to<br />
extreme weather conditions,”<br />
said Jordon<br />
Christianson, Special Areas<br />
Board Chair.<br />
“2021 was a year that<br />
tested us all. Although we<br />
may not know what <strong>2022</strong><br />
will bring, I believe it will be<br />
full of once-in-a-generation<br />
opportunity. I am excited to<br />
see all our hard work of the<br />
past few years turning into<br />
new possibilities for the<br />
whole region.”<br />
Although it may be early<br />
in the new year, Special<br />
Areas is already busy getting<br />
key pieces moving for<br />
<strong>2022</strong>.<br />
First up in the new year is<br />
updating appointments to<br />
the Special Areas Board.<br />
There are three locally<br />
elected Advisory Council<br />
members who serve on the<br />
Board, each representing<br />
one of the Special Areas.<br />
In <strong>2022</strong>, Board members<br />
will be remaining the same,<br />
with Brad Slorstad representing<br />
Special Area No. 2,<br />
Daryl Swenson representing<br />
Special Area No. 3, and<br />
Doug Noble representing<br />
Special Area No. 4.<br />
Another major item for<br />
administration to tackle is<br />
the <strong>2022</strong> budget and road<br />
program. The Board is planning<br />
a return to<br />
AGRICULTURE<br />
pre-pandemic operations<br />
that focuses on protecting<br />
municipal infrastructure<br />
investments while delivering<br />
critical services and<br />
programs to ratepayers.<br />
By returning to pre-pandemic<br />
spending levels in<br />
<strong>2022</strong>, administration will be<br />
completing critical capital<br />
expenditures which had<br />
been deferred over the past<br />
two years.<br />
In January, local road<br />
committees will be<br />
reviewing the proposed <strong>2022</strong><br />
road program and providing<br />
feedback for the spring<br />
meeting of Advisory<br />
Council.<br />
Finally, the proposed tax<br />
recovery land sale policy is<br />
expected to be finalized<br />
early in <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
Once this is completed,<br />
more information on the<br />
draft sale policy will be<br />
shared with Special Areas<br />
residents so they can share<br />
their thoughts on the draft<br />
policy.<br />
The proposed tax<br />
recovery land sale policy<br />
supports the stability and<br />
security of agricultural producers<br />
in the region. It<br />
would be the fourth sale<br />
policy held by the Special<br />
Areas if approved.<br />
For more information on<br />
your upcoming local road<br />
committee meeting or to<br />
learn more about Advisory<br />
Council meetings, contact<br />
your local district office.<br />
<br />
“Recycling” contest winner arrested<br />
for trafficking stolen copper wire<br />
Submitted<br />
The Southern Alberta Crime<br />
Reduction Unit (SACRU) were<br />
investigating copper wire thefts<br />
from oil lease sites in the Three<br />
Hills and Hanna, Alta. area<br />
Thurs. Dec. 16, 2021.<br />
SACRU observed a male and<br />
female both known to police,<br />
enter an oil lease site east of<br />
Three Hills around noon on<br />
Dec. 16, 2021.<br />
When a covert police vehicle<br />
approached, both subjects fled<br />
back to their vehicle and left the<br />
lease site.<br />
SACRU attended the lease site<br />
and confirmed copper wires<br />
had been cut and removed from<br />
the site, with some wire being<br />
left behind. The damage to the<br />
lease site was approximately<br />
$7,000.<br />
RCMP<br />
At approximately 2:30 p.m.,<br />
Three Hills RCMP attempted a<br />
traffic stop with the suspects<br />
who were travelling in on Hwy.<br />
9 near Beiseker, Alta. with the<br />
intention of arresting the two<br />
individuals.<br />
The female suspect who was<br />
driving pulled over, however<br />
when the officer approached,<br />
the suspect vehicle sped off.<br />
On Dec. 17, 2021, SACRU<br />
arrested Tyree Ewing (23) of<br />
Three Hills and Wanda<br />
Charlton (51) of Hanna at a wire<br />
recycling business in the area of<br />
43 Avenue S.E., and Hastings<br />
Crescent S.E., in Calgary,<br />
attempting to sell copper wire.<br />
The investigation revealed<br />
Ewing was a recent contest<br />
winner at the business where<br />
the contestant’s name would be<br />
entered in a draw for hockey<br />
tickets for bringing in 100 lbs. of<br />
insulated wire.<br />
Ewing and Charlton are<br />
jointly charged with theft not<br />
exceeding $5,000, flight from<br />
police, trafficking property<br />
obtained by crime, mischief<br />
exceeding $5,000 and possession<br />
of break in tools.<br />
Ewing is further charged<br />
with failing to comply with a<br />
release order, unlawfully possessing<br />
methamphetamine and<br />
unlawfully possessing fentanyl.<br />
Both Ewing and Charlton<br />
were released from custody and<br />
are next scheduled to appear in<br />
Drumheller Provincial Court<br />
on Feb. 18, <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
31 st Annual Special<br />
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10 J anuary <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
Family, faith important<br />
Reinhold Stang, beloved husband,<br />
father, grandpa, great-grandpa,<br />
brother, uncle and friend passed away<br />
Jan. 2, <strong>2022</strong>, at the age of 87 years in the<br />
Hanna Health Centre.<br />
Ron was born May 9, 1934, at<br />
Macklin, Sask. to John and Pauline<br />
Stang. Ron grew up in the Macklin<br />
area until he was 10-years-old when<br />
the family moved to Bawlf, Alta. for<br />
two years and then moved to the<br />
family farm at Rosalind, Alta.<br />
It was there Ron finished his<br />
education and worked on the<br />
farm and was hired out to<br />
neighbours until 1956 when he<br />
went to work for Canadian<br />
Utilities.<br />
He was a service man in<br />
Vegreville, Alta. where he met<br />
his beloved wife, Albertine of<br />
62 years. They were married<br />
on Nov. 10, 1958.<br />
Stang<br />
They were situated in<br />
numerous locations including<br />
Grande Prairie, High Level,<br />
Beaverlodge, Kinuso, Spirit River and<br />
in 1967 moved to Hanna where they<br />
resided until his passing.<br />
Reinhold and Albertine’s five children<br />
were raised and finished their<br />
schooling in Hanna. Ron was very<br />
active in their lives, spending weekends<br />
and holidays camping,<br />
swimming, skating, snowmobiling and<br />
tobogganing. He later followed the two<br />
boys in hockey.<br />
Ron was a member of the Kinsmen<br />
Club of Hanna and Knights of<br />
Columbus and also curled, played slopitch<br />
and golfed.<br />
Ron was retired for over 30 years.<br />
He enjoyed every moment whether<br />
playing slo-pitch with numerous teams<br />
that picked him up for tournaments<br />
and travelling in the motorhome with<br />
Bert to see the sights. Time was made<br />
for golf as he spent numerous hours<br />
playing this sport that gave him great<br />
pleasure.<br />
For years, Ron could be seen biking<br />
or walking to do errands around town.<br />
He did gardening as well and always<br />
had a great crop of peas, carrots and<br />
potatoes. The raspberries were great<br />
too!<br />
Reinhold’s family and faith were<br />
very important to him. Whenever<br />
there was a family event, whether it<br />
was a birthday celebration, graduation,<br />
baptism, first communion,<br />
wedding, seasonal holiday celebration<br />
or just a get-together, Ron<br />
was always there with a<br />
smile and enjoying the<br />
moment.<br />
Ron will be missed and<br />
lovingly remembered by his<br />
daughter: Kim (Ron) and<br />
children: Kelly (Regan,<br />
Carter), Tyler (Dezerae)<br />
(Rhett, Quaid, Jacob,<br />
Jaycee), Ashley (Ernest,<br />
Abigail); son Keith (Adele)<br />
and children: Merisha (Jiri)<br />
(Jasper, Isabelle), Alexandra, and<br />
Luca; daughter Shelley (Ken) and son<br />
Aaron (Katrina) and children:<br />
(Brooklynn and Grayden); daughter<br />
Valerie (Francis) and children:<br />
(Stephanie and Matthew); and son<br />
Kevin and his daughter Brandi.<br />
Also three brothers, four sisters,<br />
numerous nieces, nephews and<br />
friends.<br />
Reinhold will be re-united for all<br />
eternity with his wife Albertine, his<br />
Head<br />
parents,<br />
office: 4921 Victoria<br />
six brothers<br />
Ave, Coronation,<br />
and<br />
403-578-4111<br />
five sisters,<br />
Satellite office: 4910A-51 St, Stettler, 403-740-2492<br />
as well as numerous other family<br />
members.<br />
A funeral mass will be a private<br />
family service on Mon. Jan. 17, <strong>2022</strong>, at<br />
St. George’s Catholic Church, Hanna,<br />
Alta. If desired, donations can be<br />
made to the Knights of Columbus, Box<br />
1299 Hanna, AB, T0J 1P0.<br />
Hanna Funeral Services has been<br />
entrusted with the care and arrangements,<br />
403-854-5956, www.<br />
hannafuneral.ca.<br />
OBITUARY<br />
Local, Local, Local...<br />
Now that ‘local’ will be<br />
top of mind Berry<br />
during Picking<br />
this<br />
unprecedented time as the<br />
pandemic restrictions are<br />
relaxed, make sure your<br />
business, sites to visit, events<br />
for families... are top of mind.<br />
Camping, golfing, museums<br />
and many more destinations<br />
East Central Alberta has to<br />
offer.<br />
”Picking berries on warm summer<br />
days is one of my favorite Special Areas<br />
experiences.”<br />
For more Special Areas travel experiences visit:<br />
travelspecialareas.com<br />
- Darianne<br />
Special Areas resident<br />
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OBITUARIES<br />
<strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW HANNA/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB January <strong>13</strong>'22 11<br />
Was always available, willing to help<br />
Frank Richard Dahlgren was born<br />
in Wainwright, Alta. on Feb. 27, 1941.<br />
He was the eighth of 12 children born<br />
to Alfred and Viola Dahlgren.<br />
Frank’s early school years were at<br />
Mascot, Wainwright and Ribstone and<br />
ended in Grade 6 when he took his first<br />
job on a farm.<br />
A young boy, feeding loose hay, for a<br />
hay rack, pulled by four horses to a 100<br />
head of cattle. This was just the beginning<br />
of farming, ranching and driving<br />
horses for him.<br />
Later he moved to the Cochrane area<br />
where he worked for farmers, ranchers<br />
and rodeo stock contractors.<br />
In the early 1950’s Frank was<br />
involved in trailing bucking stock<br />
from Cochrane to Calgary for the<br />
Stampede, then trailing them back to<br />
Cochrane. Maybe that was when he got<br />
the “rodeo bug,” starting with the<br />
Bareback Riding event.<br />
In the late 1950’s Frank found himself<br />
working summers for chuckwagon<br />
driver Hank Willard and winters<br />
feeding 600 - 700 cows for Ollie Willard.<br />
This connection led Frank into more<br />
rodeo participation. Becoming a<br />
chuckwagon outrider, a Wild Horse<br />
racer, a Wild Cow milker, a Bull rider<br />
and in the late 1960’s owning and<br />
driving his own chuckwagon.<br />
On Dec. 22, 1976 Frank married<br />
Eleanor Walgenbach (Barrett). With<br />
this union Frank gained an instant<br />
family with five step-children: Elva,<br />
Neal, Brenda, Cecil and Bonnie.<br />
Now living at Gadsby, Frank was<br />
working winters in the oil and gas<br />
industry and looking forward to his<br />
own family farm. That goal was met in<br />
1978 when Frank and Eleanor moved<br />
to their present location three miles<br />
Frederick Brett Setter,<br />
beloved husband and best<br />
friend of Karin Setter,<br />
passed away on Jan. 6, <strong>2022</strong>,<br />
at the age of 67.<br />
Brett was born July 3,<br />
1954, in Drumheller, Alta,<br />
the second oldest of seven<br />
children. Brett was raised in<br />
Calgary at the Currie<br />
Barracks military base<br />
where he enjoyed skating,<br />
camping, fishing<br />
and hunting<br />
with his siblings<br />
and family.<br />
At the age of<br />
17, he joined the<br />
Royal Canadian<br />
Airforce as a<br />
radar technician<br />
before going to<br />
SAIT and getting<br />
his welding<br />
ticket.<br />
In 1982 Brett<br />
started what would become<br />
a life long career in the oil<br />
and gas industry working<br />
both internationally and<br />
domestically.<br />
Brett had a love for<br />
fishing, camping and of<br />
course bird hunting, often<br />
driving through his beloved<br />
prairies with his wife Karin<br />
and dogs.<br />
Later in life, Brett and<br />
Karin got their dream of<br />
owning a property in the<br />
country where his entire<br />
family enjoyed smoked food<br />
and campfires at the bunker.<br />
In addition to the love for<br />
his wife, Brett had an<br />
south of Gadsby; a farm that Frank<br />
lovingly called Poverty Flats.<br />
Frank had a love for horses so it<br />
wasn’t long before Frank was raising<br />
race horses as well as cattle.<br />
In 1985 Frank and<br />
Eleanor started Dahlgren’s<br />
Oil Field Operating business.<br />
Frank was now his<br />
own boss all year round.<br />
Frank had no problem<br />
working his oilfield shifts<br />
Monday to Friday and<br />
doing the farming, before<br />
the shifts, after the shifts<br />
Dahlgren<br />
and on the weekends.<br />
Frank was a very early<br />
riser. Coffee was always on by 4:00 a.m.<br />
and family, friends and neighbours<br />
were always welcome in his home to<br />
share a cup.<br />
Family, friends and neighbours were<br />
always important to Frank. He was<br />
often found attending a sporting event<br />
that his step-children, grandchildren<br />
or great-grandchildren were participating<br />
in.<br />
He loved the large family gatherings<br />
at Christmas, birthdays, weddings and<br />
other special occasions.<br />
Frank, without hesitation, was<br />
always available and willing to help a<br />
family member, friend or neighbuor.<br />
Frank will forever be remembered<br />
as a well loved and respected man, a<br />
hard worker, a great neighbour and a<br />
devoted husband, step-father, grandfather<br />
and great -grandfather.<br />
He will be lovingly missed by all<br />
who knew him and especially so, by<br />
his family.<br />
Frank is survived by his wife of 45<br />
years, Eleanor; step-children: Elva<br />
(Roger) McAllister, Neal (Lorna)<br />
Oil and gas career<br />
international, domestically<br />
Setter<br />
immense love for his family<br />
ensuring many lasting<br />
memories.<br />
Besides his loving wife<br />
Karin, Brett is survived by<br />
his seven children; Lee<br />
(Jamie), Meaghan (Greg),<br />
Rebecca, Jay (Jade), Brad<br />
(Kira), Victoria (Bruce),<br />
Leanne (Andy) as well as 12<br />
beloved grandchildren;<br />
Nash, Layne, Logan, Hunter,<br />
Emily, Mason,<br />
Joziah, Kayleigh,<br />
Cheyenne, Brynlee,<br />
Caleb, Abby, and fur<br />
grandbaby, Ambush.<br />
Brett will also be<br />
missed by his sisters<br />
Holly and Heather,<br />
brothers Chad and<br />
Clayton, as well as a<br />
wide circle of<br />
friends.<br />
Brett was predeceased<br />
by his mother<br />
Anita Joyce and father<br />
Frederick Earl, and two<br />
brothers Calvin and Todd.<br />
A celebration of life will<br />
be held at the Hanna<br />
Community Hall at 503 5th<br />
Avenue W on Sat. Jan. 15,<br />
<strong>2022</strong>, from 1 - 3 p.m. Please<br />
note Covid-19 restrictions<br />
are in place.<br />
In lieu of flowers please<br />
consider a donation to The<br />
Mental Health Foundation<br />
in Alberta at mentalhealthfoundation.ca<br />
or to the<br />
Hanna SPCA.<br />
In the spirit of Brett,<br />
casual attire welcomed.<br />
Community Enhancement Fund of<br />
Waste Connections of Canada Inc. and<br />
Paintearth Regional Waste Management Ltd.<br />
GRANTING GUIDELINES FOR <strong>2022</strong> Q1<br />
For the <strong>2022</strong> granting cycle the Community Enhancement Fund of Waste Connections<br />
and PRWML anticipates awarding grants up to $25,000 and invites applications for<br />
eligible projects from not for profit organizations, registered charities, and community<br />
groups that provide services to the Paintearth Region. The intent of this community<br />
fund is to distribute its grant funds to as many groups as possible. Larger amounts may<br />
be considered depending upon expressed need and granting capacity. Projects should<br />
contribute to the development of a healthy and diverse community. The charitable<br />
purposes of this community are to:<br />
• Foster and promote awareness and appreciation for community-based philanthropy;<br />
• Promote the growth, development, and success of community endeavours<br />
Deadline for applications is Thursday, January 27, <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
To receive the application form, granting guidelines and/or to submit the application<br />
form, please contact the following:<br />
Waste Connections/Paintearth Waste Community Fund<br />
Attention: Michael Simpson, PO Box 509, Castor, AB T0C 0X0<br />
bfigrant@countypaintearth.ca • Phone: 403.882. 3211<br />
Parents & Grandparents<br />
Brag a Little!<br />
2021 BABY REGISTER…<br />
to be published in the January 20 issue.<br />
Send information along with baby’s photo.<br />
Please write your baby’s name on the back of the photo if mailing or dropping off.<br />
Parents’ Names:<br />
Grandparents’ Names:<br />
City/Town:<br />
Postal Code:<br />
Baby’s Name:<br />
Date of Birth:<br />
Walgenbach, Brenda Laboucan, Cecil<br />
(Pat) Walgenbach and Bonnie<br />
(Dwayne) Kobi.<br />
Also <strong>13</strong> grandchildren; 23 great<br />
grandchildren; sister Julia<br />
Day; brothers: Steve (Neoma)<br />
Dahlgren and Darrell (Selena)<br />
Dahlgren; sisters-in-law: Diane<br />
Dahlgren, Alvina Johnston<br />
and Carline Cassidy; as well as<br />
numerous nieces and nephews<br />
and many dear friends.<br />
Frank was predeceased by<br />
his parents Alfred and Viola<br />
Dahlgren; siblings Bob,<br />
Delmore, Victor, Rita<br />
Abernethy, Wallace, Donald,<br />
Darlene Kowalchuk and Russell; father<br />
and mother-in-law Carl and Isabel<br />
Barrett; brothers-in-law Barry<br />
Johnston and Frank Cassidy.<br />
A private celebration of Frank’s life<br />
Name<br />
Name<br />
Born:<br />
??, 2<strong>01</strong>9<br />
Parents:<br />
??<br />
??<br />
Grandparents:<br />
??<br />
??<br />
Ph:<br />
will be held on Thurs. Jan. <strong>13</strong>, <strong>2022</strong> at 1<br />
p.m. at the Stettler Funeral Home,<br />
Stettler, Alta.<br />
Interment followed at the Omega<br />
Circle Cemetery, Gadsby, Alta.<br />
The funeral service may be viewed<br />
by visiting the Stettler Funeral Home<br />
website and clicking on Frank’s obituary<br />
and then the funeral service link<br />
on the left side of your screen.<br />
Memorial donations may be made in<br />
Frank’s name to the Omega Circle<br />
Cemetery, STARS or to a charity of<br />
your choice.<br />
Stettler Funeral Home &<br />
Crematorium are entrusted with the<br />
care and funeral arrangements. For<br />
further information please contact 403-<br />
742-3422. To send condolences to the<br />
family, please visit www.stettlerfuneralhome.com.<br />
Prov.:<br />
E-mail photo to: office@ecareview.com,<br />
or bring to the <strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong> office at 4921 Victoria<br />
Ave. or mail to Box 70, Coronation, AB T0C 1C0.<br />
Call (403) 578-4111 for more info.<br />
Include $49 (plus tax,) cheque or e-Transfer to<br />
publisher@<strong>ECA</strong>review.com or<br />
phone with Visa or Mastercard credit card.<br />
Make cheques to <strong>ECA</strong> <strong>Review</strong>.<br />
Photo & Ad Deadline:<br />
Mon., Jan. 17, <strong>2022</strong>, 4 pm
12 J anuary <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
12 J anuary <strong>13</strong>'22 Hanna/CORONATION/STETTLER, AB. WHEEL OF A DEAL <strong>ECA</strong> REVIEW<br />
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• Safety<br />
Duane’s Trucking Ltd.<br />
USED HEAVY<br />
Cont’d from Pg 6<br />
Like CMOH Order 54-2021, these<br />
additional orders will remain in effect TRUCK & TRAILER<br />
until Deena Hinshaw decides otherwise.<br />
Moreover, these orders - that PARTS<br />
20%<br />
Learn More Always Ready to Start<br />
30% OFF $21.99 32.29<br />
40% OFF<br />
mandate masks, limit private social We have what you need,<br />
NAPA PREMIUM<br />
gatherings and institute the REP program<br />
were never introduced into the • all makes and models<br />
10.19<br />
MR HEA<br />
even those hard to find items!<br />
CONVENTIONAL<br />
$5.99 $79.<br />
Legislative Assembly.<br />
OIL<br />
• transmissions, motors, wheels,<br />
TOP HE<br />
NPL 5W30CO-5L/<br />
RAIN-X<br />
Therefore, MLAs never had a<br />
HEA MH1<br />
tires and much more<br />
5W20CO-5L/<br />
WINDSHIELD<br />
chance to engage in open debate, or<br />
• acres of inventory, 500 plus units to be<br />
10W30CO-5L<br />
AEROSOL<br />
vote on their implementation.<br />
dismantled<br />
Using the CMOH to introduce these<br />
DE-ICER<br />
• check our<br />
PER 29240<br />
measures cannot be considered<br />
used trucks,<br />
democratic.<br />
40% OFF<br />
25% OFF<br />
The Public Health Act gives too<br />
gravel and<br />
$4.39 7.39<br />
much power to the CMOH to implement<br />
these measures which have large equipment<br />
KLEEN-FLO<br />
winch<br />
$7.89 10.89<br />
40% OFF GUNK ENGINE DEGREASER<br />
impacts province-wide.<br />
for sale.<br />
STARTING FLUID<br />
RAD EB1C<br />
We must demand answers from our<br />
30% OFF<br />
KFL 35% 730OFF<br />
40% OFF<br />
$15.99 30% OFF $14.99 35% OFF $4.39 7.39<br />
40% OFF<br />
representatives as to when restrictions<br />
Call us now<br />
NAPA SUPREME ANTIFREEZE<br />
NAPA RADIATOR ANTIFREEZE KLEEN-FLO STARTING FLUID 10% OFF<br />
will be lifted. Right now, they are here Mon. - Fri., 8:30 am - 5:00 p.m.<br />
RCO 49204<br />
RCO $21.99/each 49203<br />
32.29<br />
KFL $18.99/pair 730<br />
29.99 $5.99 10.19<br />
indefinitely.<br />
(403) $21.99/each 784-25<strong>01</strong> Garage 32.29 NAPA and Equipment $18.99/pair 29.99 $5.99 10.19<br />
$119.99<br />
PREMIUM CONVENTIONAL NAPA WINTER UTILITY GLOVES<br />
$229.99 40% RAIN-X OFFWINDSHIE<br />
The goal posts are no longer moving,<br />
GJO C41512/<strong>13</strong><br />
www.duanestrucking.ca<br />
NAPA PREMIUM CONVENTIONAL OIL<br />
NAPA WINTER $27.99 UTILITY GLOVES RAIN-X WINDSHIELD DE-ICER AEROSOL<br />
they have been removed.<br />
20% OFF<br />
207.19<br />
40% OFF<br />
25% OFF<br />
256.99<br />
NPL 5W30CO-5L/5W20CO-5L/10W30CO-5L<br />
GJO C41512/<strong>13</strong><br />
PER 29240<br />
OIL<br />
$15.99 ULTRAPRO CRAFTSMAN $14.99 DRIVING SET DE-ICER MR $4.39 HEATER 7.39<br />
NPL 5W30CO-5L/5W20CO-5L/10W30CO-5L<br />
$17.79 NAPA SUPREME ANTIFREEZE CTM CMAF<strong>13</strong>20 NAPA RADIATOR ANTIFREEZE<br />
PER 29240<br />
22.49<br />
BATTERY $54.99 94.09<br />
PORTABLE<br />
KLEEN-FLO STARTING<br />
PRIME-LITE POCKET WORKLIGHT RCO SET 49204<br />
COAST LED FLASHLIGHT RCO 49203 FOCUSING<br />
KFL 730<br />
PLI 24-920<br />
$7.89 TESTER 10.89<br />
CST POLY1000<br />
HUNTING<br />
GUNK USE ENGINE 95260 DEGREASER<br />
BUDDY<br />
RAD EB1C<br />
10% OFF<br />
HEATER 55% OFF<br />
HEA MH12B<br />
This is far from what Jason Kenney<br />
told Albertans in<br />
the summer.<br />
Ask: Do we<br />
want our children<br />
wearing masks<br />
indefinitely?<br />
Are vaccine<br />
passports and job<br />
losses fair to<br />
people who have<br />
made a medical<br />
decision to decline<br />
a vaccine that has<br />
no long-term<br />
safety data and<br />
Wainwright, AB<br />
thousands of<br />
20% OFF<br />
40% OFF<br />
reports of adverse<br />
events, including<br />
death?<br />
$8.89 14.89<br />
I urge you to $95.99 122.99KLEEN-FLO DIESEL FUEL<br />
contact your MLA DEWALT DRILL 3/8" CONDITIONER WITH STORAGE BAG<br />
and ask when KFL 993<br />
DWT the DWD110K<br />
restrictions are<br />
going to be lifted.<br />
Let’s demand a<br />
return to<br />
democracy.<br />
You can find<br />
Todd Loewen’s<br />
video at: https://<br />
www.facebook.<br />
com/Todd<br />
LoewenAB/<br />
videos/albertapublic-health-<br />
40% OFF<br />
emergency-<br />
expires-tell-cab-<br />
inet-to-stop-<br />
abusing-execu-<br />
tive-o/ NAPA CRC BRAKLEEN BRAKE PARTS CLEANER<br />
$4.49 7.79<br />
CRL 79590<br />
640887390434690.<br />
Lois Rodvang<br />
Coronation,<br />
Alta.<br />
403-784-0009 HWY 12, CLIVE, AB Amvic Licenced Dealer<br />
40% 40% OFF<br />
40% OFF<br />
NPL 5W30CO-5L/5W20CO-5L/10W30CO-5L<br />
128 Main St.<br />
Acme, AB<br />
403-546-2425<br />
$4.39 7.39<br />
TOR ANTIFREEZE<br />
OFF 40%<br />
$99.99 233.99<br />
ELECTRIC SNOW SH<br />
CIC 50329ICE<br />
KFL 730<br />
FLUID<br />
STARTING KLEEN-FLO<br />
$28.99<br />
MECHANIX<br />
GLOVES OR<br />
MWR M2P-OF-0<br />
-X WINDSHIELD AEROSOL<br />
10.19 .99<br />
CER<br />
29240<br />
45% OFF<br />
NAPA CRC MOTOR TREATMENT<br />
12.89 $6.99<br />
UPREME GAS LINE<br />
.59<br />
CRL 79516