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Last updateThu, 02 May 2024 9am

Remembrance Day Virtual Wall goes online

    The Royal Canadian Legion Dominion Command in Ottawa, has taken the Virtual Wall of Honour it created and has posted it online for all Canadians to view.
    The Virtual Wall contains a half hour slide show of over 800 men and women who served or are serving Canada.
    “We were surprised with the quantity of photos we received,” said Bruce Poulin, manager of communications with the Royal Canadian Legion.
    However, not all the photos submitted made it into the final product. Some had to be cut due to time or quality.
    For those watching the televised broadcasts of the national Remembrance Day ceremony in Ottawa, the Virtual Wall was not shown on television. The Legion is working with broadcasters to make sure the Virtual Wall, with everyone in it, is shown nation wide.
    “The original intent was to have screens on site and so we did the Virtual Wall. The next phase was for the television crews to pick it up. The problem was, the photos were both landscape and portrait. The broadcasters said it would be difficult to work that into a tv screen, so they opted not to do it,” said Poulin. “It’s something we’re going to look at for next year.”
    Work has already begun on the next Virtual Wall of Honour. Canadians are already being asked to send in their photos.
    “We’re already accepting submissions for the next Wall of Honour,” said Poulin. “This is something we’re going to build and ask people to start sending us photos now.”
    To view the Virtual Wall, visit http://legion.ca/VirtualWall_2012/VirtualWall_2012.html

Response poured in to The Royal Canadian Legion’s Virtual Wall of Honour & Remembrance, including many men and women from Drumheller such as Michael Arthur O’Dwyer pictured here. O’Dwyer was a pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War II. He enlisted in February 1943, survived the war, and passed away in February of 2001.


Hanna RCMP urge motorist to be cautious

 

  The Hanna RCMP detachment is warning area residents to slow down and be cautious if travelling on Highway 9 between Hanna and Oyen and on many secondary Highways in the area.

  Visibility is described as poor due to dense fog and the roads are icy, making driving dangerous. RCMP members from Hanna and Oyen have responded to several motor vehicle collisions.

  Sanding crews are out on Highway 9. RCMP ask motorists to be careful, because the sanding crews may be difficult to see due to conditions.

Highway 841 receives minor repairs

    There have been some repairs to Highway 841 south of Drumheller, although area residents say it not a lasting fix.
    The Drumheller Mail reported to readers the condition of the road between Highway 9 and Dalum. Last summer the road began to slough creating what many considered a hazard.  The department of transportation is aware of the roads condition and last week made some repairs.
    “It’s a Band-aid at best,” said Jim Eskeland who lives near the damaged road. “All they did was push some gravel in to the hole, with no packer.”
    In his estimation the road is still not safe. The repairs allowed highway contractors to move the barricades over to make the driving lanes slightly wider.
    “It is still not safe, when the frost comes out of the ground in the spring, without compaction it is just going to slough away anyways. To me it is a dangerous situation,” said Eskeland.
    In many was it is too little too late for Eskeland and a source of frustration.
    “The hard part is they took two months to do a Band-aid fix. If that is all they were going to do, why didn’t they do it back when they could have used track hoe, dug aerogun and packed it?” he asked.
    Tony Chelick of Alberta Transportation told The Mail previously that the site will be studied again in the spring of 2013 and a more substantive repair will be programmed.

Highway 841, also known as the Taylor Siding Road, has seen some minor repairs recently, though residents are concerned the repairs will not be a lasting solution. The road bean to slough, which created a hazardous situation according to motorists who frequently use the road. Alberta Transportation has indicated they intend to conduct a review of the road in the spring.


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