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Super football Saturday in Drumheller

aisen mcinnis

Community support continues  for Drumheller’s Community Football Association (DCFA). Twelve year old Aisen McInnis collected $232.52 from his bottle collection and donated it to DCFA.

    Drumheller’s Community Football Association (DCFA) invites everybody out to a super Saturday of football at the DVSS fields.
    Starting off the day at 9 a.m., the association is holding a food drive in support of Drumheller’s Salvation Army Food Bank. People are able to drop by the football fields to make a donation of a non-perishable food item. DCFA’s Heather Zuccatto said it’s a way for the association to be giving back to the community.
    The boxes or bins to collect donations should be available until around 2:30 p.m.
    The peewee Tim Hortons Terrapins will be playing their last home game of the season with the Sylvan Lake team, game time 11:00 a.m.
    “The community has been very good to us after the break-in, we’d just like everybody to come out and enjoy the game,” said Zuccatto.
    The two peewee teams will be hosting guest coaches from the CFL’s Calgary Stampeders - for the local Terrapins, that guest coach will be Stamps quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell. As of press time, the name of the second guest coach was unavailable.
    The guest coaches, along with mascot Ralph the Dog, are expected to arrive at the football fields around 10:30 a.m. Saturday morning.
    Following the Terrapins game, the Bantam Titans take to the field for their game with Strathmore at 1:30 p.m.
    This is the Bantam Titan’s last home game until the playoffs, and team manager Robin Duncalf said the Bantams will find out Saturday where they are in the standings and when their first play-off game will be.
    Zuccatto said the DCFA has continued to receive community support this week since their buildings were vandalized in September.
    One example of that is 12 year-old local football player Aisen McInnis. McInnis donated over $200 to the Drumheller Community Football Association that he made from cashing in bottles from his own bottle drive.    
    Rocky Mountain Equipment’s visit of the Canadian Football League’s Grey Cup trophy helped out local community football.
    For the Grey Cup’s visit Monday, October 6, Rocky Mountain Manager Brock Harrington  arranged with Drumheller Community Football to have visitors pay a five dollar fee to have their photo taken with the cup, with the proceeds going to support the football association.
    DCFA reports they received $235 from visitors photos with the Grey Cup.

 


Drumheller Encana office retained in deal with Ember Resources

Encana-sign-oct-2014

Encana announced a deal with Ember Resources on Wednesday that will see much of its Clearwater assets sold, however the Drumheller Encana office will continue on.

    On Wednesday morning Encana made an announcement that it would be selling the bulk of its Clearwater Business Unit Assets to Ember Recourses.
    While Drumheller is firmly in Clearwater’s footprint, it looks as if Encana’s Drumheller office will remain intact.
    The deal is worth $605 million Canadian, and includes 6,800 producing wells spread over 1.2 million net acres. These wells produced about 180 million cubic feet equivalent per day (mmcfe/d) on average through the second quarter.
    “This divestiture continues to advance our strategy. We are unlocking additional value from non-core dry gas assets as we focus on liquids rich growth areas. Our growth portfolio now includes the top two resource plays in Canada, the Montney and the Duvernay, and the top two resource plays in the United States, the Eagle Ford and, by year-end, the Permian Basin,” says Doug Suttles, Encana president and CEO. “Through this transaction, Ember is acquiring a high-quality asset along with a tremendously talented team.”
    In the announcement, it was noted that Encana is to retina about 1.1 million net acres in Clearwater, including 480,000 net acres along the eastern Edge of the Horseshoe Canyon Fairway.
    Luigi Vescarelli, community relations advisor for Encana, based in Drumheller explains that Drumheller falls within this retained area.
    “The small strip that we are keeping is what will keep the Drumheller office open,” said Vescarelli.
    He explains the area is part of the Encana’s joint venture with Toyota Tsusho announced in the spring of 2012. This is the asset they have retained.  
    “Encana will continue to operate those existing wells,” he said.
    The heart of this area is in the Standard, Rockyford area. The Encana office in Strathmore and Pine Lake will likely become Ember Resources offices.
    “It is planned that some of our staff will be moving with the assets, Ember wants to take most the field staff on from what I understand,” said Vescarelli.
    Encana plans to retain offices in Ponoka, Drumheller and Ghost Pine.
    According to a release, Ember, together with its shareholder Brookfield Capital Partners, has recently, through several acquisitions, consolidated a significant land and production base in the Horseshoe Canyon CBM fairway in Alberta. With this acquisition, Ember will own interests in 2.2 million net acres of lands, with combined gross production of 290 mmcfe/d of natural gas. Coalbed methane production is characterized as a low-cost, long-life natural gas resource.
    “This acquisition establishes Ember as the leading producer of coalbed methane in Canada,” says Doug Dafoe, Ember President & CEO. “This is an exciting time for our company and we look forward to working with the talented team that has made Encana successful in this area for so many years.”
    Encana has remained a key contributor to the Drumheller community and has supported numerous community projects. Vescarelli said Encana would continue to contribute to the areas we operate in, and even more so where we are doing development in.
    The deal is expected to be completed within the first quarter of 2015.

Jensen officiating in WHL

jensens-in-action

    A Drumheller hockey official is rising through the ranks, and last week called his first major junior game.
    Tyler Jensen, son of Tammy and Mike, has been working his way up the officiating ladder and last week, he acted as a lineman in the WHL in a Calgary Hitmen game versus the Lethbridge Hurricanes. This was at the Scotiabank Saddledome.
    “It was an awesome experience,” Jensen told The Mail.
    The game was a blow out as the home team won 9-2.
    Jensen has been working hard to get to this point, he has been officiating since he was 14, starting at the minor hockey level and working his way up.
    “The last few years it has been really quick,” he says.
    In 2009, The Mail reported that at 19 he was refereeing Junior B and AAA Midget. Fast forward a couple years, he was right in the mix at AJHL games.  At this level, he is refereeing.
    In  few years he hopes to be actually refereeing in the WHL, a step up from lining.
    “Ultimately the dream is the big leagues, but it is a long way away still,” said Jensen.
    Jensen is still involved heavily in officiating at the local level, and has built his career with Drumheller as a home base. He says there are still many opportunities to get involved in refereeing in Drumheller.
    It is an opportunity to see the game at a different angle, get in shape, stay involved in the game and maybe earn some extra cash. He says there are still some clinics coming up that are nearby for those interested in getting involved.
    To register for a clinic go to www.czrc.ab.ca. For more information, contact Lemieux  at Lemieux.greg@gmail.com


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