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Summer kicks off with busy Victoria Day Weekend

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    The summer season is here, and it was an incredibly busy weekend for the valley.
    The unofficial beginning of the tourism season is May Long Weekend. A quick drive through the valley saw attractions bursting at the seams. Roads were filled with bicyclists, motorcycles, RV’s and all kinds of family trucksters taking in all the valley has to offer.
    On Sunday afternoon the Atlas Coal Mine celebrated its centennial and the birthday cake lasted only minutes. The site was busy all day, and their overflow parking filled.
    The Royal Tyrrell Museum saw line-ups throughout the day, with visitors streaming to explore the galleries. The museum saw 16,665 visitors over the holiday weekend, up 9 per cent over last year. Sunday saw 5,738 visitors alone.
     Carrie Ann Lunde, head of marketing and public relations for the Tyrrell, says they expect a busy season, and already had a strong kick off with record numbers during the Family Day weekend.
    “We expect to be very busy. Last year was a record-breaking year at the museum, and we are about on par this year in term of numbers,” she said. “While we are down a little this year, we are still up 14 per cent over the five-year average.”
    One reason to expect the busy 2017 is the amount of press the museum has been receiving, related to its new exhibit that features the Nodosaur. While most of the Tyrrell’s visitation comes from right here in Alberta, this might spur more international visitors.
    “The sheer amount of media coverage I am still fielding from the nodosaur, I think it is going to be busy,” she said “There might be some trickle down too because a lot of the coverage we are getting is international I had a TV outlet from Bangladesh here yesterday, and another coming from Germany. So we could see some increase in international numbers over the next few years.”
    She adds that part of her role is to look at how to increase visitorship, and the Museum has been working hard meeting both, local and international operators to take another look at Drumheller.
    “The more we go to international trade shows and get more tour operators to come out here, and the more profile we can get with news internationally all contributes,” she said.


High winds topple tree

Tree Blocks Road near Drumheller Hospital

Drumheller Fire Chief Bruce Wade attended a call for a fallen tree across North Dinosaur Trail near Dinosaur RV Resort on the evening of May 24th. Crews worked in the rain to clear the tree from the road.

 

 

Uniting the right begins

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    Wildrose and Progressive Conservative leaders sign merger agreement to unite the right.
    After Jason Kenny’s rise to PC leadership in March, Wildrose leader Brian Jean and Kenny have been talking about the possibility of a unified conservative party to overthrow the current NPD government for next year’s election.
    After a press conference on May 18, 2017, the two leaders confirmed their decision to join forces as the ‘United Conservative Party’ before the upcoming election in 2019.
    Everything within the party must be done so in a democratic way by getting a gauge on members and hearing out their opinions.
    Allowing their say creates a ‘grassroots’ organization from the Wildrose perspective.
    The end goal of this merger is to reach a well-rounded conservative party for Albertans. Drumheller - Stettler MLA Rick Strankman plans to talk to constituents while attending mass functions like graduations where he will attain feedback and see where their perspectives lie.
    “Hopefully this will be a good model for them to reach out to,” said Strankman.
    For constituents of the Drumheller-Stettler riding, this means a possible change in government but must be wary of other ridings.
    “I think what people in our riding have to remember is the cities have more ridings than we do currently and they are not going to get less that’s for sure,” said Mark Nikota, President of Drumheller-Stettler constituency.
    Nikota believes that the Drumheller-Stettler constituency is ‘quite different than the rest of the province’ as it leans towards the right side of the spectrum when it comes to political matters.
    Nikota emphasized the importance of the party’s policy as a simple gesture to beat the NDP will not hold voters, especially in urban centres.
    “I think if it is handled wrong, not based on principles and policies, then people in the cities aren't going to buy into this united right idea and they are going to go back to another party where they don’t promise them things but give them something to believe in.”
    The Agreement in principle on the establishment of the new United Conservative Party outlines key policies such as rule of law, a drive for economic freedom which encourages wealth through free enterprise, low taxation rates, universal public healthcare, grassroots democracy; including measures to empower Albertans to hold the government accountable, have all been expressed.
    A party's policy can be the make or break of it’s own fate if not done so in a thoughtful way.
“I don’t know if that is going to be enough to have their dream come true and it worries me that it actually might sink the ship more than anything,” said Nikota.
    Whatever the case may be, Albertans remain on standby as to how this merger will play out.
“The next election is in 2019 sometime – that’s not as far away as people think,” said Nikota.


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