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Last updateFri, 17 May 2024 12pm

Two drug arrests made Tuesday morning

Even in the midst of the flooding in the valley, the Drumheller RCMP were able to a make a major drug arrest.

Early Tuesday morning, June 25, police observed a female attended to a residence suspected of drug activity on Newcastle Trail. She was arrested after she left and a small amount of cocaine was found on her person. She was charged and released.

A few hours later Drumheller RCMP executed a search warrant of the property and seized drugs, drug paraphernalia and $2,200 in cash.

             Keith Doner, 55, of Drumheller was charged with trafficking of cocaine, possession for the purposes of trafficking and possession of the proceeds of crime. Doner was on parole at the time of this arrest, it has been revoked, and he was returned to the Drumheller institution.

            Jennifer Fournier, 32, also of Drumheller, has been charged with simple possession of cocaine. She was released and it to appear in provincial court in Drumheller on Friday, August 9.

 

 


Arrests made following break and enter during flood watch


    Staff Sergeant Art Hopkins warns residents to be aware there are people out there who may want to take advantage when communities are facing challenges.
    Drumheller is not immune, and arrests have been made.
    In the early morning hours of Saturday, June 24 a break and enter, and theft was reported. An investigation showed a number of items had been stolen.
    Throughout that same night there were a number of reports of suspicious persons or vehicles at many spots in town. Residents observed people trying the handles of parked cars.
    In the early morning hours of Tuesday, June 25, a suspect vehicle was spotted by RCMP with a license plate that did not match the vehicle. Police stopped the car and the operator was found to be a suspended driver.
    Investigation revealed stolen property tied to the Saturday break and enter, as well as property reported missing in other jurisdictions. The items included iPhones, iPods and a laptop computer.
     Two males and a female have been arrested, charges are pending.
    Hopkins asks residents to check for similar items that may have been stolen and report it to the RCMP.

Planning, community spirit, hard work minimizes flood damage

Armies of volunteers work all weekend filling sandbags for area residents whose properties were threatened by the flood.
mailphoto by Michael James

    On Monday night, June 24, for the first time in two days, many Drumheller residents came home. Pilot lights were lit, power was turned on, basements were surveyed and damage was assessed.
    This process didn’t happen right away for some residents, and it will be days, weeks, even months before the full extent of the costs are realized, and maybe longer for all to be fixed.
    For the most part however, residents were cautiously optimistic going home, knowing the flow of water was lower than in 2005. In fact, many residents were at home around 3 p.m. on Sunday afternoon when flow rates through Drumheller were at their highest level.
    “Lehigh is still under water, but there is a lot of successes here, there are a lot of areas that were saved,” said Mayor Yemen, Monday night.
    Rewinding three days takes you through a roller coaster of optimism, fear, relief, confusion and ultimately victory.
    Eyes turned to the Red Deer River on Thursday afternoon after a high stream flow advisory was issued.  By 6 p.m., there was a flood warning. By 9:50 p.m., residents were told to brace for flooding.
    “The Town is actively preparing for a potential worst case scenario and we encourage residents to do the same,” was the message residents went to bed with Thursday night.
    Projections were tempered Friday morning and throughout the day, with an estimate of 700-1,000 cubic metres per second, far below level experienced in 2005.
    On Saturday, the level was ramped up as Mayor Yemen declared a local State of Emergency and projections began to creep higher and timelines shifted.
    Yemen was frustrated by the fluctuations on the levels and timelines he was hearing, he was endeared however by the volunteer efforts.
    “There were so many positives, the volunteers were incredible, people were showing up even from Calgary to help,” said Yemen.
    Deputy Mayor Garbutt was busy all weekend in the Emergency Operations Centre and was astounded by the efforts of residents.
    "What we can feel fantastic about is the vast majority of people out there volunteering and giving their time had absolutley nothing to gain from it," said Garbuttt.
    "To hear all the stories of individuals, the communities like the Hutterite communities and the business people  who went and extended themselves to such an amazing degree, it has to be something that inspires people to focus on the positive elements of our community."    
    On Saturday afternoon flood abatement was steoped up to prepare for the new projections of about 1,300 cubic metres/ second. About 40 per cent, the town was given evacuation notices.
    While water had already spilled the banks in Lehigh, at about 6 p.m. trucks began bringing in material to build berms. This was also the case in other areas including Midland and Newcastle. There was also feverish work in Rosedale.
    Sunday morning projections were that high water would hit the valley at midnight. There were some tense moments as water approached peak levels in the afternoon, but as night fell levels stabilized.
    Monday morning saw relief.
    While there were some breaches including a major break that saw 14 residences in Lehigh evacuated, there was a sense of accomplishment.
    • Work by the hundreds of volunteers who helped residents move valuables, relocate and protect houses with thousands of hand–filled sand bags, paid off.
    • The work of the Drumheller Fire Department and all of its halls, and dozens from outlying communities, who secured the community manned roadblocks 24 hours, distributing evacuation notices and responded to emergencies to keep residents safe, paid off.
    • The planning on behalf of administration, council and staff to fortify and react with changing projections and breaches of mitigation areas, paid off.
    • The hundreds of man hours by town employees operating equipment, erecting road blocks keeping the community safe, and staffing emergency centres, paid off.
    • The donations of labour, equipment and material from the Drumheller Institution, paid off.
    • The work of the dozens of businesses in the valley that did everything from help build dykes and haul material to help feed volunteers and provide services, paid of.
    • The work of the Drumheller RCMP detachment and 25 extra officers to keep homes secure and the streets safe, paid off.
    “You have to take in to consideration what we did here, this valley is 28 kilometres long and we pretty near saved the whole thing,” said Yemen.
    Later on Monday night the valley was toured from the air by the MLA for Vermillion-Lloydminster and Minister of Tourism, Parks and Recreation Richard Starke.  As the Minister surveyed the damages, he exclaimed, “you were lucky.”
    “I stopped him and said, ‘this is not a case of luck, this is grit, good planning and good management,’” said Yemen.


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