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Town raises stink over Tyrrell sewage odour

Royal Tyrrell Museum

The Town of Drumheller is lobbying Alberta Infrastructure to take action on an odour issue emanating from the Royal Tyrrell Museum’s sewage system and affecting residents in southwest Drumheller.

In a letter to the minister, Mayor Terry Yemen said he was “disappointed” with the response received from Alberta Minister of Culture and Tourism Ricardo Miranda, in what he called “the province’s lack of action” in attempting to resolve the issue, which has been identified as the result of wastewater in piping. 

Monitoring from the province shows the level of hydrogen sulfide built up in the piping exceeds acceptable limits and has been affecting residents near 4 Avenue SW.

“The odour is very problematic for our residents in the area and they have not been able to enjoy their properties at certain times throughout the year,” Mayor Yemen said.

In the letter, the town is suggests a solution to the ongoing problem could involve converting the holding tank at the location to a lift station, or trying new equipment called a “Little John Digester” that is designed to reduce fats, oils, and grease in lift stations to reduce odours. 

The town is lobbying the province to provide the necessary resources to develop a solution. Mayor Yemen, CAO Ray Romanetz, and councillor Jay Garbutt had met with infrastructure minister Brian Mason in early March and were of the understanding that the minister would provide the required resources.

“This is clearly a provincial issue and we require government action to resolve this serious problem that has gone on for far too long and it needs to be dealt with now,” Yemen said in his letter to the minister.


School divisions welcome curriculum revamp

education

The province is taking on the ambitious project of revamping Alberta’s school curriculum. 

Over the next six years curriculum from Kindergarten to Grade 12 will be redeveloped in six subject areas in both English and French: arts, language arts, mathematics, social studies, sciences, and wellness.

“This government is committed to developing curriculum - including the fundamentals of reading, writing and math - that ensures children have the best possible start in life to prepare them for rewarding careers in a diversified economy,” said David Eggen, Minister of Education. 

“Critical subject areas have not been updated in many years, so this work is long overdue. This new process will allow us to fulfill our commitments to educate our students about the history, perspectives and contributions of our Francophone, First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples and communities.”

Bevan Daverne, superintendent of schools for Golden Hills School Division says it is still very early in the process and much needs to be hammered out.

“It is a very large-scale revamp, and it is an aggressive schedule,’ said Daverne. “We have seen the announcement, and other than that we don’t have too many details.”

The process will begin and will be developed for K-4 by late 2018, and then Grade 5-8 will be completed in late 2019, with high school following in 2020-2022. Daverne says he is looking forward to working with the province and recognizes some areas that could use renewal.

Christ the Redeemer (CTR) Catholic Schools superintendent Scott Morrison welcomes the revamp.

“It’s been some time since existing curriculums were reviewed and updated, so CTR Catholic welcomes the move,” he said. “We are pleased to see a focus on curriculum infused with literacy, numeracy, math, and cross-curricular competencies such as critical thinking and problem solving. CTR Catholic has had an intentional literacy focus for 5 years and we are embarking on a numeracy and mathematics focus next year, so we feel we’re ahead of the curve in terms of preparation.”

Morrison says it is great to see a focus on the needs of First Nations, Inuit and Métis students. One area he would like to see more attention is an international focus to help English language learners who are new to Canada. He also recognizes that online and distance programs will need to be redeveloped and will require a lot of front-end work.

“Distance education course development needs to be largely completed in its entirety before implementation,” he explains.

 While the timelines are aggressive, he feels the phased approach will allow the divisions to distribute and focus their professional development. He also welcomes division involvement.

“We are told that the experiences of the school boards that began prototyping curriculum in the last cycle of curriculum redesign will inform this new effort. In that regard, there has already been quite a bit of involvement. There are also face-to-face and online engagement sessions planned with Albertans,” he said.

Born to be freed, students release butterflies at senior lodges

greentree butterfliespeter friesen butterflies

Grade 3s from Greentree School travelled to the Sunshine and Hillview Lodges Monday to release dozens of painted lady butterflies they had raised this year. Above, Jack Lau, Kayley Lefferson, and Reese Hatch coax on an injured butterfly to spread its wings, and lodge resident Peter Friesen admires a painted lady, whose colouring imitates that of the monarch butterfly, which apparently tastes bad to predators.

 


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