News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2278
04282024Sun
Last updateSat, 27 Apr 2024 1pm

Prentice campaign stops in Drumheller*

Leadership hopeful for the Alberta Progressive Conservative Party Jim Prentice was through Drumheller Tuesday afternoon, May 27, to meet with residents and hear about their priorities.
    The Party is searching for a leader after former Premier Alison Redford stepped down amid controversy last March. His priority is restoring trust in the government.
    “As I crisscross the province talking to Albertans, and speaking with Albertans through the media, I get really strong feedback that I am on the right track and this is what Albertans wants to see. They want strong government, leadership, they want a sense of discipline and focus around the government, and they are frustrated they have not had that,” Prentice told the Mail.
    Part of changing this culture is setting an example.
    “It starts with my own reputation and personal ethic, I think Albertans know me,” he said. “People know my commitment to honesty and integrity in government. I was a federal minister for six years and I never carried a Government of Canada credit card.
    “These entitlements that have damaged the relationship between the voters of Alberta and their government, I don’t want truck or trade with that.”
    Prentice is one of three vying for the leadership, along with Ric McIver and Thomas Lukaszuk. Of the three, Prentice is the only one who has not served as an MLA, however he has served as an MP from 2004-2010 in the Stephen Harper Government. He was Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Minister of Industry and Minister of Environment.
    Outside the party, he would like to build bridges in the legislature.
    “We need a little less vitriol and a little more focus on what is best for Albertans. I intend to lower the temperature between the Conservative Party and the Wildrose,” he said. “I heard here in Drumheller that people are tired of the bitter partisanship, what they want is a focused government that delivers on their needs. Albertans are pretty shrewd, they know what they want and they will get it.”
    Property rights play an important part of his government moving forward.
    “I think we need to be vigilant about protecting private property rights in this province,” he said. “If I’m elected I would introduce a bill in the legislature to make the primacy of property rights in our province abundantly clear,” he said. 
    The first vote of the leadership race is set for September 6, 2014.


Town entrance beautification started

 

Town crews and contractors continue work on the south entrance to Town along Highway 9 in front of Extra Foods. Now that Drumheller's Spring Clean Up program has ended, the Town plans continued work on beautifying and improving the entrances to Drumheller, and making them virtually maintenance free.

 

Submit-A-Tick program running again

 

 

Alberta Health Services (AHS) is again operating its “Submit-A-Tick” surveillance program.
    Anyone who finds a tick on themselves, someone else, or their pet, or finds a tick outside, is able to submit it to Alberta Health Services for testing.
    This is the second year for the program. A voluntary program with AHS receiving ticks from veterinarians began in 2007.

 

Alberta is continuing its Submit-a-Tick surveillance program, asking anyone who finds a tick to submit it for testing.


    AHS asks people to phone and make an appointment for the tick drop off. Locally, to the Drumheller Environmental Public Health Office at (403) 823-3341, and at the Hanna Health Centre at (403) 854-5261.
    Valley Veterinary Clinic only accepts ticks found on pets, and they ask that people call first at (403) 823-5400.
    Ticks are sent to Edmonton to find if they’re carriers of Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacteria that can cause Lyme disease in humans.
    “Results of this program will help Alberta Health better understand the risk of Lyme disease in Alberta,” AHS states.
    The AHS site displays statistics showing that between 1998 and 2013, 51 cases of Lyme disease were reported to Alberta Health. All were reported as having been acquired while travelling outside of the province.
    The website is at www.health.alberta.ca/health-info/lyme-disease.html., and has instructions on the safe removal and storage of ticks for drop off.
    A completed list of AHS Environmental Health locations participating in “Submit-A-Tick” can be found there as well.
    To protect from tick bites, AHS suggests:
 - cover as much skin as possible when going into grassy or wooded areas. Wear a hat,  long sleeved shirt, and long pants with the legs tucked into the socks.
 - wear lightly coloured clothing to more easily spot ticks.
- use a spray that contains DEET to repel ticks.
- check yourself for ticks after you’ve been outside.
     AHS analyzed 960 ticks in 2013 that they received from across Alberta.
  Of those, they found 139 adult blacklegged ticks that were likely acquired in Alberta, not while travelling outside the province. Health Services notes it is not possible to know if the blacklegged ticks are established in Alberta.
    They found one in five blacklegged ticks were positive for the Borrelia burgdorferi bacteria. Most of those were submitted from the greater Edmonton area.
    MyHealth.Alberta.ca cites western blacklegged ticks, along the pacific coast, mostly in southern British Columbia, and deer ticks, in the eastern and south-central areas of Canada, as the carriers of Borrelia burgdorferi  in Canada.
    They recommend ticks be removed as soon as they are noticed, adding infected ticks usually don’t spread Lyme disease until they’ve been attached for at least 36 hours.
    Ticks can carry other organisms that may cause diseases in humans such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Powassan virus and Tularemia.
    AHS figures there are zero to three cases of these diseases reported to Alberta Health each year, mainly locally-acquired cases.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.