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Last updateThu, 25 Apr 2024 8am

New home delivery for D.A.R.T.S.

 

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The Drumheller and Region Transition Society (D.A.R.T.S.) welcomes the delivery of its new home Monday on Newcastle Trail in Drumheller. The home is being placed on the lot next to the existing D.A.R.T.S. residence. The home was built in High River and transporting it to Drumheller took between six and seven hours October 27 said D.A.R.T.S. said Executive Director Lorelei Martin. She explained designing the house began in summer of 2013, but planning for it began about ten years ago, prior to the building of the first D.A.R.T.S. residence. She estimates the four-bedroom house will be ready to welcome new residents in February 2015.


Real men get tested

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John Mackenzie, left, has his PSA test administered by RN Joanne Skibsted in The Man Van, a mobile prostate cancer screening clinic last Thursday in Drumheller.   

A quick prick in the arm is all it takes for a man to get a snapshot of his risk for prostate cancer.
    The Man Van, an Alberta initiative of the Prostate Cancer Centre to facilitate men getting a PSA (prostate specific antigen) blood test was through the valley last week. It was at the Drumheller Co-op during Co-op Days, with goal of encouraging men to get checked.
    A PSA test is a simple blood test that may help in the earl detection for prostate cancer.
      Prostate Cancer is the most common cancer in Canadian men, and its also very treatable. Over 90 per cent of prostate cancer can be cured, if detected early. The PSA test is a simple tool that can help detect cancer.  
   The Prostate Cancer Centre recommends that men have baseline testing at 40 and should be tested every five years until age 50. After that, the tests should be performed annually. The results are mailed typically within 7-10 days.
     The PSA clinic in Drumheller tested 33 men.

St. Anthony’s School grounds development planned

 

 

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Christ The Redeemer school division plans to build a sports field at Drumheller's St. Anthony's school.

 

    To get from brown dirt to green grass at St. Anthony’s school will take over a half-a-million dollars.
    That’s the estimate Drumheller’s Town Council received from David Lunn of Christ the Redeemer School Division during Council’s regular meeting Monday, October 20.
    Lunn appeared with school division colleague Terri Dauter to speak with Council on the work required to improve St. Anthony’s School’s grounds for its 420 students by developing a football field, running track, and bleachers. The target date for completion is the end of 2016.
    “It’s the well being of the students and the school. They need a place to play outside, run around - they’ve been denied that to this point because of other massive projects that have been put on our plate. But we want to get this developed for the kids of Drumheller” said Lunn.
    The field and track would be located at the west end of the school, beyond the school’s parking lot.
    “There’s  some underground issues that we’ve got to deal with such as water coming off the back slope,” Lunn describes, adding he’s confident that the engineering report will have everything working.
    The school division is looking for community partnerships to help in the total development costs beyond just a green field to a provincial-class facility for school events and community use. That price tag comes in about a million and a half dollars.
    Upgrading the turf from grass to a fifteen-year synthetic adds $500,000. Upgrading the running track from shale to rubber would also be $500,000.
    Two provincial matching grants, if approved, would make $400,000 available to the project, and the school division is also investigating what other grants may be available.
    St. Anthony’s principal Joanne Ackerboom, teacher Gavin Makse, and school trustee Mark Chung also attended as part of the delegation, with Makse answering some questions posed by Council.
    Members of council requested clarification on what the school division would want from the Town, who would have ownership of the new field and track, and how would the public access it.


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