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Gerlings volunteer at Kenyan School

Gerling

    A pair of Drumheller teachers are planning to lend their skills to help students in Kenya, volunteering at an orphanage and school.
    Irv and Corrine Gerling are heading to the Our Lady of Grace Children’s Home and the Our Lady of Grace Academy in Marimba to volunteer. Corrine explains there is a local connection.
     A few years ago, the Gerlings reconnected with Rita Balachandran, nee Rovere, formerly of Drumheller. In 2002, she initiated a trust fund called Action for God’s Love (AFGL) in memory of her husband, the late Professor Balachandran, a prominent orthopedic surgeon in Singapore.
    AFGL is an all volunteer run organization, which aims to improve the material and spiritual lives of those trapped in poverty.
    “We knew she had this project going and we said to her that when we retire, we would come and volunteer for a while,” she said. “This year we said we need to reconnect, get over there and help her in some way.”
    Corrine explains the school and orphanage was built in 2006, and is built on land owned by the Catholic diocese. Over the years, Rita has taken in 175 orphaned girls. Many of these children have lost their parents due to AIDs and HIV related complications, and are living with grandparents. In Kenya, Rita has to legally adopt these girls in order to provide them shelter and education. She is affectionately known as Mama Rita.
    The Gerlings are hoping to use their skills to support the school. This could be through working with students, or sharing their skills and knowledge as educators with the teachers.
    “We are a little nervous, because when you teach here, you have everything in that school. There, we are going to have a chalkboard. I am taking some resources and some print resources, and children’s books.”
    The couple has had overseas experience. Irv taught in Tanzania in the 1970’s. The couple also taught in Columbia in the 1990’s and most recently, the couple spent three years in Montenegro teaching.
    “It is very interesting to live and work in another culture,” said Corrine.
     Irv agrees. “It will be an experience, we have enjoyed every place we have been. Between the geography, the people and food, it will be great. It is a completely different experience than when you are a tourist.”
    This is not the only project for AFGL. It has completed projects in Mongolia, Myanmar Uganda and Kenya. It also supports student volunteers who lend a hand for the charity.
    Corrine said Rita funds these other projects through the foundation, but the orphanage and school is the one project she is actively involved, spending nine months a year in Kenya.
     It won’t be all work for the couple. During their three-month excursion, they hope to take in some of the local sites while they are in East Africa.
    To learn more about their excursion or about Action For God’s Love, contact the Gerlings at igerling@telusplanet.net.


Town of Drumheller Regular Council Meeting of February 8, 2016

Town of Drumheller Crest

Council Notes
From the regular meeting of February 8, 2016

Deputy Mayor Lisa Hansen-Zacharuk's opening remarks were in regard to the statutory holiday, Monday, February 15 which will require council to hold their meeting on Tuesday, February 16, 2016.

A public hearing was held to consider Bylaw 03.16 to amend the Land Use Amendment Bylaw 10.08 (Legal description Plan 6495AB Block 1, lots 15 through 18) from R1A – Residential to R2 Residential. This means from single family homes to semi-detached homes. The density will not increase, as there is only 4 lots meaning 4 units would be built. There were no written submissions or verbal presentations by the public. Later council passed second and third readings of the Bylaw.

Council also passed second reading of Bylaw 05.16 to amend the land use Bylaw.

A public hearing was held to adopt an Area Structure Plan for the former St. Anthony’s School property and to consider for the same property to be redesignated from CS - Community Services to R1 – Residential District. There were no written submissions or verbal presentations by the public, which were in favor or against these amendments. Palliser Regional Municipal Services C.E.O. Director of Planning, Cynthia Cvik presented the area planning documents, outlining objectives, policies and spoke about the possible increase in demand for adequate senior housing and services. Later Council passed second and third readings of the Bylaw.

Director of Corporate Services Barbara Miller recommended to adopt the 2016 Service Fee Schedule as presented. The Recreational fee adjustments will be implemented effective February 15.

Director of Protective Services Greg Peters recommended that Council approve the submission of a grant application under the Alberta Community Partnership to hire a consultant to develop a formalized Emergency Services Master Plan that would provide coordinated responses to all municipal partners that are part of the plan. Council approved and copy of the motion will be submitted to Alberta Municipal Affairs. A brief discussion followed regarding the trapping of a rat. It was not a Norway Rat from Saskatchewan but a Roof Rat which are not indigenous to this area. It likely hitch hiked from coastal BC.

Director of Community Services Paul Salvatore presented a draft policy for Arts and Culture. It was recommended that Council provide direction to administration on the implementation of an Arts and Culture Policy.

 

Double feature at Royal Tyrrell Museum Speaker Series to focus on the Earth’s earliest animals and the evolution of primates

Silcox peering at teeth photo by Ken Jones small

 This week’s Royal Tyrrell Museum Speaker Series hosts two sessions. The first presentation, held on Thursday, February 11, will feature Calla Carbone, Royal Tyrrell Museum Technician, who will present “The Ediacaran Period – Glimpses of the Earth’s Earliest Animals.” The second presentation, held on Friday, February 12, will feature Dr. Mary Silcox of the University of Toronto who explores “Why So Big? Understanding the Early Evolution of the Brain in Primates and Their Relatives Using the Fossil Record.”
The Ediacaran Period of Earth’s history lasted from 635 to 541 million years ago and represents an important and exciting step in the evolution of life on Earth. The Ediacaran is of great interest to scientists because it is the period during which life transitioned from microscopic single cells, too small to see with the naked eye, into large and complex multicellular organisms, similar to those that inhabit much of the world today. The Ediacaran period was only officially accepted in 2004 and as such there are many big questions that are still being debated, such as what these organisms are most closely related to, and why they disappeared. In her talk, Carbone explores the new discoveries constantly being made, which allow us to piece together the morphologies and behaviours of these enigmatic creatures, and ultimately the earliest evolution of animals.
Dr. Silcox’s main research focus is on the earliest evolution of our own Order, the Primates. In particular, she studies fossils of some of the most primitive primates, which date to the period just after the extinction of the dinosaurs, some 65 million years ago. Her talk on February 12 will focus on one particular characteristic of primates that has garnered a lot of attention: large brain size. Humans are exceptional as mammals with the largest brains relative to our body size, and the members of our Order are also typically quite “brainy” compared to other groups. Although there has been a lot of research on living primates to try and understand the evolution of this feature, much less work has been done probing the fossil record for what it can tell us about the early evolution of the brain.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. For more information, visit tyrrellmuseum.com.


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