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Local hockey player signs with NHL team

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A former DV Minor Hockey Player to their roster has signed with the Washington Capitals. 

Clay Stevenson was born in Edmonton, but he spent part of his life growing up in Drayton Valley with his dad, Ian. The other portion of his life was spent in B.C. with his mother Holly, who was one of the greatest supporters of his hockey career.

After playing minor hockey in both B.C. and Alberta, some of which was spent in Drayton, Stevenson went on to play Junior B and Junior A hockey in B.C. From there he was picked up by the Dartmouth Big Green.

His save percentage of 0.900 appealed to several teams. Stevenson’s overall rating is 0.922, which ranked second in the ECAC.

While draft eligibility for the NHL starts at the age of 18 and ends at 20. Stevenson, at age 23, has been drafted as a free agent to the team. 

“I was an NCAA free agent and I think that was the best group for me.” He says it allowed him to choose where he wanted to go, and he wasn’t locked into any one team.

Stevenson says his drive for hockey started when he was young. His mother was an avid hockey player and always encouraged Stevenson to play the sport. She even stepped up to coach his team one year in B.C.

He says he learned that he loved the goaltender position from a young age, and always asked to play it when he was on the younger teams. He started playing hockey at age 7.

“My mom always told me that I should start out as a player first, and then if you still want to be a goalie you can,” she says.

The next year, Stevenson said he tried other positions, but he always preferred goaltending. When he was finally able to secure a permanent position for goaltender, he was happy to have it. “My third year of hockey, I was a full-time goalie,” he says.

“My mom always made sure I was enrolled in goalie camp whenever I could. She would get up early to take me to practice before school,” says Stevenson. “Those are times I will never forget with her.”

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Students may have a different learning experience this year after the Alberta Education Minister, Demetrios Nicolaides, made the call to ban cell phones in schools.

Brad Volkman, the superintendent of the Wild Rose School Division, says schools have until 2025 to create a policy regarding cell phone use, but they have to start implementing the ban in September.

Volkman says that for many schools, a ban on cell phones is business as usual.

“Quite frankly, many of our schools have already been doing that for years,” says Volkman. 

However, cell phone policies have been left to individual schools to plan and implement. Now, the division itself needs to have something in place.

Volkman says division staff met with school staff to review the policy before the school year. He says the major points were that cell phones could not be used during learning time with the exception of those who have learning or medical needs that require the phones.

Right now, WRSD is using the time given to create their policy to test out different ways of implementing it and enforcing the rules. Each school is putting their own policies in place for the first month. After getting feedback from school staff, parents, and students, the division will be able to put together something that is effective and practical.

He says each school has a different approach to dealing with the phones. One approach requires students to leave their phones at the front of the classroom during instruction time. In some schools, students are required to leave their phones in their backpacks, or in others, teachers will confiscate phones if they catch their students using them.

“What we realized, and there is some research on this, is that we’ve got students that are probably addicted to their phone,” says Volkman. “The minute [the phones] buzz they have to look.”

Another important part of the ban on cell phones is also a ban on social media in the schools. The Minister’s directive doesn’t establish whether all social media needs to be blocked, or if it only applies to certain sites.

“Believe it or not, it’s up to the school division to decide which sites need to be blocked. They didn’t give us a list,” says Volkman.

Another area of the Minister’s order that isn’t very clear has to do with blocking the social media school-wide. The division is able to block the sites through their wifi, but they can’t block the sites for students who have data plans on their phones.

“The Minister’s Order doesn’t address that,” says Volkman. “The Minister’s Order says they can’t use their mobile devices during instructional time and it says that the networks that they connect to must block social media. But it doesn’t address anything around kids using their own data plans during breaks to access social media.”

Volkman says the division has been doing its best to implement the order while figuring out how to handle the effects that some of those implementations have had.

Right now, students are blocked from accessing social media via the school’s network. However, the staff are also blocked. This means that staff cannot use social media to update parents or advertise for upcoming events. As it stands, the division is unable to specify who may have access to social media and which social media needs to be blocked.

He says the division is working to find a way that will allow staff to communicate with parents and students while adhering to the Minister’s ban.

Volkman says the division’s policy will outline a progressive disciplinary plan for any infractions with cell phone use. He says it’s the same way they ask all of their schools to deal with transgressions.

“This will be no different than any other school policy or school rule,” he says. “You start easy, with understanding, grace, and education… but you do have to have a progressive style approach.”

Volkman says the goal is to have a draft put together by mid-October for stakeholders to review in November. In December, they will be putting the final touches on the policy so it is ready to be rolled out in the new year.

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Judge explains Breton area manslaughter ruling

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A Court of King’s Bench Justice has outlined her reasons for convicting a woman of manslaughter in an incident that happened in the Breton area.

Bronwyn Hannah Jane Luckham was convicted in April of this year on charges relating to the death of Jonathan James Paul in 2021. Last week Justice Tamara Friesen released written reasons for her decision, which she said might be useful to the Crown and defence when preparing arguments prior to sentencing.

Shortly after 8 p.m. Monday August 30 2021 a man was dropped off at the Drayton Valley hospital suffering from serious injuries, from which he later died. The victim was able to provide some information prior to his death, saying that he had been hit by a vehicle. He was identified as Jonathan James Paul, 40, of Calgary. 

At trial Friesen heard evidence that Paul had been in a relationship with Luckham. The pair were both working at a rural acreage near Breton. The Crown alleged that Luckham was angry with Paul for a variety of reasons, both business and personal. The prosecution argued that Luckham deliberately struck Paul with a Dodge Durango intending to kill him, “or in the alternative, intending to cause him bodily harm that she knew was so serious and dangerous he would likely die of his injuries, thus committing either murder or manslaughter.”

Meanwhile Luckham said that she was under duress at the time and had been trying to escape from Paul who had subjected her to an escalating cycle of abuse.

After hearing the evidence, Friesen found Luckham not guilty of second degree murder, but guilty of manslaughter.  Under Canadian law manslaughter occurs where a person causes the death of another human being “by means of an unlawful act” or “by criminal negligence.”

At trial the court heard from several witnesses, including Luckham, who testified on her own behalf. There was also video evidence from motion activated cameras at the scene. Part of that video, as described by Justice Friesen, showed Paul rolling on the ground as the Durango drove over him.

Luckham and Paul had been involved in an altercation and the hood of the Durango was up at the time.

Defence counsel argued that it was necessary for Luckham to step on the accelerator and drive the way she did because she was trying to escape from Paul and thought her life was in danger.

Friesen noted that “a reasonable driver in the same circumstances as Luckham would not have started the SUV and then pressed down on the accelerator while the hood was up, visibility was poor, and they knew, at a minimum, that another person was in front of, or close to, the path of the SUV.”

“When she struck Paul, Luckham’s manner of driving was therefore a marked departure from the standard of care a reasonable driver would have observed in the same or similar circumstances,” wrote Friesen.

“I find Luckham’s behaviour in failing to provide adequate support and assistance to Paul while he lay in the grass screaming in agony to be morally reprehensible. The surveillance videos are extremely disturbing. However … I accept that neither Luckham nor Paul thought Paul was going to die from his injuries.”

Friesen also noted that Luckham had ultimately assisted Paul in getting into a vehicle, had driven him to the Drayton Valley Hospital and followed up with the hospital to ensure they knew he was there and would assist him.

“The facts established that Luckham’s dangerous driving …, combined with the objective foreseeability that the risk of bodily harm to Paul was neither trivial nor transitory, resulted in his death,” she concluded. “The Crown has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that … Luckham committed the offence of unlawful act of manslaughter.”

New Staff Sergeant is a familiar face

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Though he’s new to the official title, the new Staff Sergeant for the Drayton Valley detachment is a familiar face.

Ryan Hoetmer was first stationed in Drayton Valley in 2017 as a corporal overseeing the three man general investigation section (GIS) for the detachment. Prior to his transfer to Drayton Valley, Hoetmer was working in Grande Prairie as part of the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) task force, dealing with organized crime and drug trafficking.

In February of 2022, Hoetmer was promoted to Sergeant. When Staff Sergeant Erin Matthews retired, Hoetmer stepped up to be the acting Staff Sergeant. Then, when Staff Sergeant Troy Raddatz retired, Hoetmer once again filled the role.

He was officially given the title on a permanent basis at the beginning of August.

“I’ve been active in this role since April,” he says. “I’ve sat in this seat a fair amount since I became Sergeant.”

Hoetmer says he and his family like Drayton Valley, and the initial draw was that he grew up in the area.

“I grew up just outside of Rocky Mountain House,” he says.

Both his parents and his wife’s parents are still close by, and they wanted to be closer to them.

Hoetmer has five kids, and throughout the seven years they’ve been in the community, the whole family has made connections and friendships that are important to them. Their youngest child, who is seven-years-old, was born shortly before they moved to Drayton and his oldest recently graduated.

“This really has become home for them,” he says. “And it’s become home for [me and my wife], too.”

He says he and his wife are happy with the community and feel it’s a great place to raise their family. The natural landscape of the area makes it easy for them to pursue some of their favourite pastimes like fishing, hunting, camping, and other outdoor activities.

Hoetmer says another important aspect of Drayton Valley is that it’s not a violent community. He says he’s lived in other places where that was not the case and he appreciates that about the area.

Hoetmer says he has some goals that he would like to achieve in his new position. He says community engagement is a big priority for him and he wants to continue in the direction that the detachment has been for the past few years with that.

“I’m connected to the community through several facets with my kids,” says Hoetmer. “You know, hockey, school sports, dance, music, and I think that’s really important to connect to the community.”

He says he’s been encouraging the members at the detachment to go out and form those connections as well. The detachment has some soccer and basketball coaches and he wants to continue to push that mentality.

“Not just in organized events, but I want our membership to get out and get involved in the community in other ways as well,” he says.

Hoetmer says being out in the community works in two ways. Not only do residents become familiar with the officers, but it also allows them to see a side of the community that they don’t normally work with.

“Often, when you’re policing, you deal with the dark side of the community,” he says. “If you don’t connect with the community on a different level you get a very jaded look at it.”

Another priority will be to focus on prolific offenders. Hoetmer says his background with GIS and dealing with prolific offenders and drug trafficking will help in that area.

“We’re going to continue to drive that,” he says. “…We don’t really have violent crime, but we do have a property crime issue. It’s gotten a lot better since I first came here in 2017.”

He says the ultimate goal for property crime is zero incidents. While he knows they’re unlikely to hit that target, they are always aiming for it.

“The goal would be that you could get out anywhere and leave your vehicle running and it doesn’t go missing,” he says. “We’re not there and we shouldn’t be doing that, but that is the ultimate goal.”

Hoetmer says he also wants to prioritize taking care of the membership. He says with his position, he’s not out in the field, so he wants to provide them as much support as he can. 

“I have to provide the support that the guys and the gals on the floor need to do their job,” he says.

With that in mind, he’s going to continue to push for a new building as Raddatz was.

“My father-in-law worked out of this building from 1989 to 1996,” he says.

Along with his goals with the detachment, Hoetmer says the RCMP will also be working more closely with the Community Peace Officers in Drayton Valley and in Brazeau County.

Training officer arrives

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The new training officer for the Drayton Valley/Brazeau County Fire Services comes to the position with a background in the military.

Matthew Noad started with the department at the beginning of June after relocating from Cold Lake’s military base.

Noad says he started working in fire services when he was 18 in Magrath, south of Lethbridge. 

“I started fire fighting about as soon as I could,” says Noad.

He says during his time in Magrath, he worked with another man who had worked as a firefighter for the Canadian Military.

“I didn’t even know that there was firefighters in the military,” says Noad.

Noad started with the military in 2018 and completed basic training as well as some firefighter training in Borden, Ontario. Once that was done, he was stationed in Cold Lake.

Military firefighters are mostly stationed at the air force bases in Canada, says Noad, although the Edmonton Army Base also has military firefighters. The rest of the bases have firefighters under National Defence rather than the military.

The firefighters are responsible for the structures and personnel on the base, as well as the aircrafts. He says other than dealing with aircraft, most of the training that they receive is the same that an on-call volunteer would receive at a municipal fire department.

“We kind of become their insurance policy in a sense,” says Noad. “We’re the ones protecting it from fire and damage.”

He says they were basically trained in airport firefighting, which isn’t as much of an issue in Drayton. However, Noad didn’t spend a lot of time dealing with wildfires at the base, so he will also be learning some things during his time here.

After six years working mostly in Cold Lake as a training officer, Noad says he decided to go with a change of direction in his firefighting career. He says he saw the opportunity in Drayton Valley and was excited by the prospects.

Noad says working in Alberta was what he had preferred, having spent most of his life in the province. However, one of the perks of the community was that it was closer to the mountains than Cold Lake was, and his wife has some family in the area.

“I’m actually super excited to be here,” says Noad. “I’m excited to be working with such a committed group of volunteers and full-time staff.”

He says he was impressed watching the dedication the department had to looking out for the County and the Town during the wildfire season in 2023. 

“That was one of the driving forces that brought me here,” he says. “There’s such a dedicated group of individuals that sacrificed their own time to be there for people on their worst days. With the extreme conditions that they were in, they did an excellent job with what they had.”

Noad says he highly encourages anyone who is interested in giving back to their community to apply to be a volunteer firefighter. Their next training recruitment is in the fall, but they accept applications throughout.

Anyone who is interested in applying can visit the Town office for an application or call the department at 780-514-2216.

Near tragedy draws family together

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The question of whether a person should celebrate their father all year round or on one particular day has been answered for a local family.

On March 18, 2023, the Mockerman family’s lives took a drastic turn when Rob Mockerman was involved in an accident that left him with second and third degree burns to more than 85 percent of his body.

At 5:30 that evening, while his wife Trish and six-year-old son Aden were inside their house near Buck Creek cooking dinner, Mockerman went to his shop to give a tune up to a recently purchased snowmobile.

“We’d just got a new-to-us skidoo from a guy in Edmonton,” says Mockerman. Both he and Aden were excited to go try it out.

Unbeknownst to Mockerman, there was a fuel leak in the machine. When he first started the engine, it caught on fire. At first Mockerman tried to get the machine out of his shop, which held close to a million dollars worth of tools and equipment. 

When it became clear that wouldn’t work, Mockerman tried to put the fire out as best as he could. Finally, he decided to make a run for his fire extinguisher.

“I got half way across the shop when the skidoo blew up,” says Mockerman.

From that point on, Mockerman’s memory of the incident is limited. He says he remembers looking for a way out, and that he could only see a tiny little spot. 

Trish says she saw the smoke through the bedroom window and told Aden that she had to go see what his dad was doing. 

“Once it came across the floor and up the door frame it was too much for me,” says Trish.

“I made sure she dialed 911,” says Aden.

Once Mockerman made it outside, Trish tackled him to the ground, hoping the snow would help put out the flames. He got up again at that point and ran past the deck, where Aden was watching the commotion, before falling into the snow again.

Trish made all the necessary phone calls and soon the ambulance arrived. She’d also reached out to Mockerman’s parents, asking to speak to Ernie so she didn’t have to upset Alice, as well as his estranged brother Randy. Once the paramedics arrived, it became clear that STARS was needed.

Both Ernie and Alice had arrived at Mockerman’s place before he was airlifted to the hospital. 

“I don’t remember much, but I just remember that as STARS was flying away, I was blowing kisses at the helicopter and praying with tears just running down my cheeks,” says Alice.

Ernie says the person that he saw lying on the gurney did not in any way resemble his son. Mockerman asked the paramedics to keep his mom away because he didn’t want her to see him like that.

“It was a nightmare,” says Alice. “It was the worst nightmare that I’ve ever had.”

Eleven minutes after the helicopter arrived, Mockerman was in Edmonton at the burn unit in the University of Alberta hospital.

Upon arrival in Edmonton, Mockerman flatlined for the first time. Before he was stable, Mockerman died two more times in the hospital. For three months, he was in a coma.

He says he has little recollection of the time when he was in the coma other than he had vivid night terrors for the duration of it. A recent trip through Breton gave him an anxiety attack when he recognized a building that had been in one of those nightmares.

Meanwhile, doctors and nurses went to work debriding the dead tissue on his body. 

“I remember waking up once in the middle of it,” he says. “That’s not a fun experience. I realized at that point in time that I was in trouble.”

During his time in the hospital, Mockerman’s family came to see him every weekend without fail. Even Aden made the trip with them, though he didn’t always go inside to see his dad after his first experience seeing Mockerman didn’t go well.

“It was hot in there. I was cooking,” says Aden. Trish recognized that he was about to faint and quickly brought him out to the waiting room.

“That was the hardest part for me,” says Mockerman. “The first time I was seeing my son and he was so scared he couldn’t even come up to me.”

“How do you prepare him for that?” says Alice. “That was his dad, his best friend there. How do I tell him what he’ll see?”

Part of the issue was that Mockerman didn’t look like himself. His body had swollen to nearly four times its natural size. To help prevent his limbs from bursting, doctors made incisions along both arms and legs to help relieve the swelling. Because of the swelling, he also couldn’t breathe so the doctors performed a tracheotomy. 

Mockerman says the only areas of his body that they didn’t remove skin grafts from were the palms of his hands and the soles of his feet. Everything else was fair game.

On Monday they would take a skin graft from his stomach. Then on Thursday, they would take one from his back. Monday would come around again, and they would remove what skin they could from his stomach. 

 

After 48 surgeries, months of rehabilitation that involved learning how to speak, write, and walk again, Mockerman remembers the staff at the hospital fondly.

“Dr. Sean Dodd is like my best friend now,” says Mockerman of the head surgeon. “Dr. Alexis Amour, one of my plastic surgeons, she’s… I couldn’t say enough words about her. She’s phenomenal.”

He says all of the staff on the burn ward were “utterly amazing people.” One of his favourite memories was being woken up at 12:01 a.m. on his birthday as the entire staff on the floor came in to sing him Happy Birthday.

Though Mockerman tried to remain as positive as possible, there were days when his mood turned down. When that happened, he said the staff were always there for him emotionally and truly helped him to get through the experience.

“I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t talk, I couldn’t see for a while,” he says. “I had to learn all of my life skills all over again.”

When it became apparent that the flesh on his left calf wasn’t going to heal, doctors began to discuss amputating his left leg. 

He kept getting infections and they weren’t going away. The doctor told him they had tried every single medication and trial drug available in Canada, but nothing seemed to be working. Mockerman was told he likely only had a few days left to live.

However, a doctor in the United States happened to read about Mockerman and contacted his doctor. They had a new drug that hadn’t even started being tested on animals. The American doctor told Mockerman’s doctor that if he could get Canadian approval, he would ship him the drug. That drug saved his life.

“To this day, they tell me a bee sting could take me out,” says Mockerman. “I don’t have an immune system.”

Dodd fought to have Mockerman keep his leg and was successful. Rather than remove the leg, they removed all of the flesh from his calf, leaving only the bone covered by a couple layers of skin.

“They say it’s amazing that I can even walk,” he says.

Once Mockerman got it into his mind that he was going to walk he said he didn’t let anything deter him from his goal. He didn’t say anything to his family about his efforts. Instead, he surprised them by walking out to see them when they came to visit for his birthday on June 17.

Only a month ago Mockerman had to go to the U of A to have his pinkie fingers removed on both hands. He says he learned that when a body is burned, one of the first things that happens is the fingers curl up. Once that happens, it can be difficult to get them to straighten out to a point that they can be useful.

The remainder of his fingers had to be worked on. Skin grafts were needed and hardware had to be put in place. All three fingers and his thumb work on his left hand, but on his right hand, his pointer finger and middle finger are still in casts.

While Mockerman may have suffered the injuries, his close call affected everyone in his family. Ernie and Alice normally head to Arizona for the winter months, but for the winter of 2023/24, they stayed in Drayton. Ernie has been driving Mockerman in for his weekly appointments.

“There’s no words to express how much it affected all of us,” says Alice. “We just praise the Lord every day.”

 

“I couldn’t have done it without Mom and Dad and Trish,” Mockerman says.

But one of the best things to come out of the experience was Mockerman’s relationship with his brother. He said for the majority of his life, he and his brother didn’t get along. They would only tolerate each other at family events when they didn’t have a choice. Now they are closer than they ever were before.

“Randy and I are best friends now. It really brought us together,” he says. “It brought all of us together.”

Prior to the accident, Mockerman was looking forward to retiring in 2025 with plans to work out of his shop doing custom Harley paint jobs. Unfortunately, Mockerman had taken the insurance off of his vehicles for the winter as he wouldn’t be driving them. A misunderstanding of what exactly was covered by insurance left him with nothing but ash after his shop burned down.

“I’ve never been able to slow down,” he says. “I’ve always been the type of guy to grab an extra gear and keep on going. Slowing down has been one of the hardest things.”

He says one of the hardest things when he returned home was that he couldn’t return to work. Mockerman says he absolutely loved his job, but after his accident, the company had to sell his truck and eliminate his position.

Mockerman says he was shocked to see how many neighbours came out to support his family after his accident. He says he couldn’t express enough gratitude to cover how he felt about their help.

 

One family, the Hayduks, were at his house shortly after the accident and took Aden to their house while the paramedics were there to distract him from the experience.

“You tend to forget how many friends you actually have until something like this unfortunately comes along,” says Mockerman.

He says though he works to stay positive, there are times when he finds his mind drifting to what is missing.

“I just look out the window sometimes and look around to see what I lost,” he says. “But then I look around to see what I have. I feel pretty damn blessed.”

Now that he’s at home, there are still a lot of adjustments that he has to get used to. He says he will never ride a Harley again, and will have to resort to using trikes instead. He’s also lost a lot of his drive for his retirement dream and isn’t sure if it will ever come back.

To help pass the time and as part of his therapeutic process, Mockerman has been writing a book about his experience. He says the nurses on the ward were always encouraging him to write. Now, he has the rough draft of a novel written out, and is always thinking of just one more thing to add to it.

One habit Mockerman has been working on now that he’s home is gratitude. He says he and Aden do their best to start their day finding five things to be grateful for in the upcoming day. 

Prior to his accident, Mockerman says he wasn’t a religious person. But a couple of experiences that he had when he had flatlined has changed his views.

“I saw the light that everyone talks about. I’m guessing it was God standing at the end of it,” he says.

While he can’t be certain, Mockerman says it felt like God was speaking to him. He was told that he had a choice: he could either go to sleep and escape the pain, or if Mockerman could give a good reason, he could live. Mockerman says he chose to live, that he wanted to be there for his son, and then he woke up.

The next time he flatlined all he saw at the end of his tunnel was a picture of Aden. Mockerman says he’d never seen the picture before. But when he came too the next day, his mother had brought that exact same picture, frame and all, to put in his room.

Even though the weather left a lot to be desired, the Mockermans still went out camping on May Long weekend with several friends. Mockerman says he’s hoping to keep as many of his regular activities in his life as he can.

Currently, Mockerman is not able to work. While Trish does still have her job, and is able to work from home sometimes, the couple has had to go through a large chunk of their savings to get by.

Friends and family hosted a fundraiser for them in Breton last summer, and Ernie says he was pleased with the turnout. “There were about 200 people there,” he says.

For now, Mockerman says they are taking it one day at a time.

“They call me miracle man in there,” he says. “I’m not bragging, that’s just what they said. They said they’ve never seen anyone so positive going through what I did.”

Next Week’s News – Drayton Valley Events

Are you a local looking for things to do in and around Drayton Valley, or Brazeau County. Our award winning editor Graham Long, has got your covered in his weekly summary of things happening in Drayton Valley. Have a read of Next Week’s News each week to get an idea on how to plan your, week. 

Next Week's News: May 16, 2024 Column

Attention motorists, cyclists, pedestrians etc! Construction work on the eastern portion of Drayton Valley’s 50 Avenue is about to get underway. Expect some detours and traffic disruption in the area over the next several weeks. 

Shale Medical is currently trialing a Saturday same day clinic. Depending on feedback and demand they may extend this further. The following dates are slated for the trial: June 15, 9 am – 4 pm, June 22 9 am -4 pm and June 29: 9 am – 4 pm.

The booking procedure is listed on their website and walk-ins will be accepted as well. 

Drayton Valley’s Small Town Big Party is tomorrow, (that’s Friday June 14)  in Omni 3. That means live music from a couple of bands, plus beer gardens and games and all sorts of fun. This is an adult only event and admission is $7. 

Father’s Day is Sunday June 16. For the love of God, no more socks, please!

And after that, it’s time for summer! The most wonderful time of the year officially begins at 8:50 pm, Thursday June 20. 

National Indigenous Peoples Day is a day recognizing and celebrating the cultures and contributions of the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Indigenous peoples of Canada. This year it’s Friday June 21. 

The Lions Club are bringing the fair to Drayton Valley again this month. It’ll be in town June 21, 22, and 23.

The Frank Maddock High School graduation is June 22. Congratulations to everyone who’s graduating from all of our local schools this year. And if you’re heading off to college or university please call or text your parents regularly. You know how they worry. 

June 26 is the last day of school for students in Drayton Valley and Breton, so watch out for bands of feral youth roaming the streets over the next couple of months. 

Don’t forget that  your property taxes are due to be paid by the end of this month. Since June 30 is a Sunday, you probably want to be a few days early, just in case.  If you live in Brazeau County you’ll get a 30 percent rebate if you pay on time, so it’s worth the effort.

And Canada Day is fast approaching. In Drayton Valley there’s a pancake breakfast starting at 7 am at the legion. The parade begins at 10 am and follows the usual route up 50 Avenue and then north on 50 Street. The rest of the activities will be at the Omniplex from 11 am to 3 pm with fireworks at dusk, weather permitting. 

Cut out the middle man and get your Drayton Valley and District Free Press directly to your email inbox. 

Get more activity ideas in for the Drayton Valley and Brazeau County region in our Brazeau and Beyond Travel Guide. 

Head over to our travel guide page to download yours today.

Click here: Brazeau and Beyond 

At that time, Stevenson moved to B.C., where he played one year of Atom and two years of Peewee. Then he returned to Drayton Valley, where he played his two years of Bantam and one year of Midget hockey.

He finished out his Minor Hockey career in B.C., where he was drafted to play Junior B Hockey in the KIJHL for the 100 Mile House Wranglers. Shortly after that, he was drafted to play for the Coquitlam Express, a Junior A team in the BCHL.

“I actually committed to Dartmouth about six weeks into my Junior A Hockey Career,” says Stevenson. He says Dartmouth approached him before he was even playing Junior A while he was at a hockey camp. At the time he assumed it was a Junior A scout, so he was surprised to realize it was a scout for Division 1 hockey.

“So I made Junior A and next thing you know I was committed to Dartmouth College. It was the best decision of my life, and I’ve never looked back.”

Stevenson signed on with the Washington Capitals after taking a tour of their facility, where he met Alexander Ovechkin. The actual sign on date was March 27, 2022.

“I had been in touch with them for a while throughout my season,” he says. 

Though Stevenson had had several offers from other teams, he says he felt comfortable with Washington’s overall program and facility. “The people in the organization are second to none,” he says.

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A historic landmark only officially recognized in 2017 will now have a street named after it.

At the November 1 meeting, town council heard from Hans Van Klaveren, the General Manager of Community Services and Recreation, regarding a petition from a community member who asked to have 49th Street renamed as Drake Street. Council unanimously agreed to the change.

Suzanne Hommy, one of the people behind the push for the name change, says she’s happy with the decision.

Hommy’s son Brett is the current owner of the Drake house located at 5048 49 St., though he was unable to speak with the Free Press due to his work shift. Between Brett and his older brother Colton, the home has been in the hands of the Hommys for fourteen years.

Hommy and Brett were also two of the key players in getting the house recognized as one of the original homes that was built in Drayton Valley. In fact, the owners, William and Ellen (Dora) Drake, were the ones who gave the community its name.

“It took the Town a long time to recognize it and actually give us the plaque,” says Hommy.

The history of the original settlement of Drayton Valley is one that is often overshadowed by the discovery of the Pembina Oilfield, say the descendants of the Drakes who still live in the community.

“A lot of people don’t think of Drayton before the Discovery Well,” says Nicole Coleman, William and Ellen’s great-great-granddaughter, and lifetime resident of Drayton Valley.

Coleman can recall a time in elementary school when assignment was to do a family tree. “I was outright told that I was lying,” she says.

Her mother Kathy Linde and aunt Amy Newberry, say they both had similar experiences in school.

Getting the attention from the Town and County of Brazeau has been challenging for the family. For a while, it seemed the Drakes and their history had faded from the collective memory of the community.

 

That changed when Mandy and Tyler Layden purchased the home in the late 90s.

Layden says they very nearly passed on the home because it looked run down and strange. “I drove past it three or four months before [we purchased the house] and was like ‘Nope!’” says Layden.

That changed when she had a dream about the house. In her dream, she was walking around inside the house, and when she woke she told her husband they had to take a look inside.

“I fell in love with the bones of the place,” says Layden.

At first, Layden and her husband didn’t know anything about the history of the home. The home inspector had told them the house was built in the ‘50s, based on a permit to have a basement dug for the home in 1955. But Layden said the architecture of the place had her thinking differently.

Layden, who worked for the Town at the time, says one day she was in one of the back rooms and came across a booklet that showed older pictures of the community.  Layden took a moment to look through the booklet. She came across a familiar roofline in one of the photos. She was almost certain she was seeing the same house she had, but in a different location. That lunch hour, she went home and took several polaroid pictures of her house from different angles.

“I copied the picture from the booklet for an overhead projector,” says Layden.

Once she had the copy and laid it over the picture of her home, it was an exact match. That was when Layden started digging.

She started with the development file for the lot the house sits on. She found the permit to have the house moved from 50th and 50th, where the Shale Clinic now stands, to its current location in 1955. Janet and Jean (Red) Fuhr had the home moved onto a new basement that had been dug out by horses. In 1966, the Fuhrs would sell the home to the Schubergs.

But Layden didn’t drop the trail there. She began to research everything she could find about the beginnings of Drayton Valley. By looking through history books like To Trail’s End by W.S.B. Loosmore, and Trappers, Loggers, Homesteaders and Oilmen published by the Historical Society, Layden was able to piece things together.

Layden also conducted interviews with Les Tucker, the son of Jack Tucker who took over the post office after the Drakes, Fred Kynoch, the Drake’s grandson, Eleanor Pickup, and Keith Fuhr, the son of Fuhrs that bought the house.

The story that unfurled was one Layden felt the community should know about. As she and her husband worked on renos in the house, keeping as much of the original parts as they could, she began work on talking with the Town about getting the place recognized.

  But she couldn’t find anyone who wanted to recognize it. “Nobody was interested,” she says.

Layden discovered that William and Ellen Drake were amongst the first settlers in the area. At first, Ellen was alone in the area with her eight-year-old daughter, Dora (Dolly), for eighteen months. They lived in a tent while William was away working. At the time, Ellen was the only woman in the area.

When William came back, he became the Postmaster starting in 1913. He called the post office Powerhouse due to a proposed dam to be built on the North Saskatchewan River.

When William left to serve in World War I, Ellen took charge of the post in the area. But, after a call from Ottawa, Ellen learned there was already a Powerhouse in Western Canada. They asked her to come up with a new name.

Ellen chose Drayton Valley, as William had grown up in Drayton, England.

When William came back, the family eventually moved to a homestead on 50th and 50th, taking the post office with them. Some historians have said the Drake’s built the home, but the research says otherwise.

Newberry was told by her father that the ghost that is purported to haunt the house was from the man “who owned the house before the Drakes.

The home they purchased was originally built in 1928. Les Tucker, who had spoken with Layden, said he recalled the house being built “by a young man named Albert Black.” Layden also found reference in one of the books from a woman who remembers seeing the house being built in 1928 when she was going to the Eldorado School, which at the time was situated across from the house.

The Drakes purchased the home in 1930 and built a shop onto it. They operated the shop and post office until 1936. While they no longer operated the post office or the store, the Drakes lived in that house until the close of World War II. The Drakes moved to Edmonton, leaving behind their eldest daughter, Dora, who had married Gordon Kynoch.

Newberry and Linde’s father is Fred Kynoch, the son of Dora and Gordon Kynoch. They can both recall efforts that were made to try and get the home recognized.

Newberry says the original homestead was across from where Intercon Messaging now sits. She says there was a sign there at one point. But it eventually fell to the ground and though her mother tried to get the County to put it back up, it never happened.

Later, Ivy Clark, Newberry and Linde’s cousin, tried to get the Town to rename the street, but had no success.

When Layden and her husband sold the home, they were careful to choose someone who respected its history. Colton, Brett’s older brother, originally bought the home, making no changes to the house. When Brett purchased it from Colton, he decided he wanted to do some upgrades to the house, but was careful to keep as much of the original work as possible.

Hommy and her husband helped Brett with the renovations.

“We tried to keep as much as we could. We didn’t throw anything out but the old windows, but they were from the ‘80s,” says Hommy.

They restained the cupboards in the kitchen, though they were not the original cupboards, and Brett installed a dishwasher. The original threshold was kept in place, the original stairs were restained, and the old brick stove chimney that runs through the house was kept. While the Hommys changed the exterior doors, the interior doors are the same.

While Hommy’s sons lived in the house, she began speaking to the Town about having the place recognized. “I told them, ‘I’m not stopping until you give them something,’” she says.

When the plaque was put up on July 1, 2017, Hommy says she spoke to Fred Kynoch, who told her that they had tried to have the street named Drake at one point, but had no success. “So that was my next mission,” she says.

The Drakes’ family says they are very grateful for the efforts that were made on their ancestors’ behalf.

“We don’t learn about history so that it doesn’t repeat itself,” says Jodi Sandercock, Newberry’s daughter. “We learn about history because every single step that our ancestors took led us exactly to where we are standing today. Just as every step we take today impacts the steps future generations take.

“Renaming the street honours those very steps our ancestors, the Drakes, took. The Drakes created a foundation for our family to grow in this community for six generations and counting.”

Coleman agrees with Sandercock. “I would love to see some of the old settlers recognized by renaming buildings and streets,” says Coleman.

Crystal O’Malley, Newberry’s daughter, says she is excited about the change. “I think this will start a conversation and get some dialogue going.”

Linde’s daughter Melissa Linde says she’s happy there is going to be some recognition. “I think my grandpa would be really proud of all of the work that’s put into it,” she says.

“[Layden, Hommy, and Brett] did all of the legwork to make this happen, and that’s important to remember,” says Linde.

Hommy says that while she and Brett appreciate the thanks, they weren’t the only ones who made it happen. “I know they were thanking me, but there’s a whole lot of people before me. I’m just the end,” she says.

Hommy and her husband will be moving out of the country in January, and she is hoping to see the sign go up before then. Brett is also looking to sell the home in the near future, but both of them feel the Drake House’s tale is far from over.

“This story isn’t about the street, or even the family,” says Hommy. “It’s about this house and all of the people who have lived in it.”

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After giving so much to the community, Brighter Futures is hoping the community can help them out.

Jen Sinclair, the executive director of Brighter Futures Family Resource Society, says they are looking to fill some spaces on their policy board. “We currently have five board members. Ideally we are looking for five more,” she says.

Sinclair says it’s a low time commitment. The board meets once every two months for about two hours, meaning a total of 12 hours per year. Sinclair chooses a couple of policies to review each month and the board helps to decide when and where edits are needed. 

“We also go over what’s happened in the organization in the last two months,” says Sinclair. “I give them a fill-in, let them know what’s up and coming, and if I have any issues they give me guidance.”

When it comes to finances, the responsibility of the board is only to review and approve expenditures. There is no treasurer on the board, but the Chair and Vice Chair are needed to sign cheques.

Brighter Futures has been in the area since 1994, when they first started in Breton and served rural locations. Eventually, they moved their office to Drayton Valley, but they still have programs running in the Faith Covenant Church in Breton, the Alder Flats Community Hall, Easyford Hall and Miss Joanne’s School of Dance in Drayton Valley.

The programs they offer are for children aged 0-6 and their caregivers. Sinclair says these programs offer fun learning and socialization for both the children and their parents. She says there is some circle time, free play, crafts and snacks.

“It’s a good way for moms to connect with each other, and for kids to socialize if they aren’t really getting out of the house much,” says Sinclair.

Brighter Futures also offers a Nutritious Beginnings Program, that helps pregnant, at-risk moms. There is some financial support, check-ins to ensure they are getting to the doctor, and giving them guidance if it’s needed.

“We even supply them with car seats if they need them,” says Sinclair.

She says that while there is some financial support, that isn’t the goal of the program. Instead, they are focussed on educating moms that need a bit of support.

Another support they offer the community is Baby’s Essentials, which is run entirely on community donations. Sinclair says when the Food Bank gets donations of diapers, baby wipes, formula, or other necessities for babies, they forward them to Brighter Futures. She says they distribute those items to families in need.

The Essentials program will also help with a $75 gift card at a grocery store so that caregivers don’t have to choose between diapers or formula and food for the rest of the family. She says if the mom is breastfeeding, they encourage her to use the extra money to purchase healthy foods.

This year the donations have been way lower than usual, says Sinclair. She says they are hoping that monetary donations and item donations will increase, as they require community support in order to keep the programs running.

Sinclair says anyone who is interested in becoming a board member can go to their office in the Rotary House for an application. Those who wish to give to the program can drop their donations off at the office in the Rotary House, or they can attend one of the fundraiser’s the program hosts throughout the season.

“They can just give us a call and either drop it off or we can arrange a pick up,” says Sinclair.

With hot summer temperatures a day at the river is just the ticket. 

Just a 10 minute drive west of Drayton Valley is the Willey West campground and boat launch. From what I can tell no one knows how the Willey West Campground got its name, there is no mention of it in the local history books and there is also some debate among locals on how to pronounce the name. Is it  “Willey” like the caretaker from Simpsons or “Wiley” like that old coyote that keeps getting bested by the Road Runner? It was a hot debate in my grade six classroom.

The road heading down to the campsite rolls, winds and finishes with a steep downhill. For you cyclists looking to make the trip from Drayton Valley the ups and downs will not disappoint. The road meandering the campground’s treed campsites open up to a large activity field and playground at the heart of the camp. This is a fantastic place to play but in the heat of summer it can be quite hot. 

Following the boat launch signs you will find a large parking lot with a gravel beach and a rocky river bank. The current slows close at the water’s edge but get out too far you may find yourself going on a ride down the river. 

Play in the river

There is a row of Adirondack chairs on the upper bank but many locals opt to bring their own lawn chairs and sit in the shallows, cooling their heels and sipping a pop. Kids splash and play among the rocks at the boat launch. With such hard underfoot conditions, bringing along a pair of water shoes or sandals is a great idea. Sand toys such as buckets and shovels are also great. There is one picnic table at the boat launch.  

With such beautiful scenery it is important to remember that the water can be dangerous. Often the water’s surface masks the turbulent activity below. If you look to the bend just south of the boat launch below the surface there are some powerful undertows and have taken more than one life in recent years. Although the North Saskatchewan River is a class 5 river, being cautious, using life jackets, and keeping a watchful eye is always a great idea. 

As part of Canada’s broader trapper and fur trade history the North Saskatchewan River was once a vast trade route. By 1776, the North West Company had begun to travel up the North Saskatchewan to give competition to the Hudson’s Bay Company. South along the North Saskatchewan River Boggy (or Bogey) Hall is one refuge stop the famed David Thompson stopped at during his time with the North West Company. This clearing can be accessed from the Powerhouse Road near Lodgepole through a network of lease roads. Fast forward a century and industry and modernization came to the area. 

In 1913, upstream from Rocky Rapids, Edmonton Hydro-Electric Power planned to build a dam; but it was funded by a British syndicate and all funding stopped with the outbreak of WWI. The great flood of 1915 wiped out all evidence of dam building. In the 1930’s coal in the seams in the riverbanks sold for $2.50/ton.

Pan for Gold

If coal isn’t a mineral that interests you, maybe you’d like to spend your time panning for gold. 

Although gold rush fever never took hold of west central Alberta like it did the Yukon panning for gold is still a fun activity you can do at the river’s edge. I have yet to know anyone who struck it rich doing this but even just finding a few flakes here and there can feel like you won the lottery. 

Hiking the trails

Hiking from the Willey West boat launch is also an activity for the to do list.  If you head south along the river edge on a sandy hiking trail the curves along give you a view of the new Drayton Valley River Bridge. The original two-lane bridge structure was built in 1956. It replaced a ferry crossing further upstream. The ferry crossing brought its own set of challenges. Eleanor Pickup, the namesake for the local arts centre, re-lived her experience with the old ferry crossing in the Drayton Valley Historical Society book “Trappers, Loggers, Homesteaders and Oilmen.”  

“…I am first on. “What’s happening? The car made the ferry bob around like a rubber ball. The front of the ferry was higher than the back, “Oh NO!” I thought. Then the back was higher than the front.” 

Mrs. Pickup managed to navigate her car on and off the ferry but in a time before backup cams, and big car fronts the task wasn’t for the faint of heart. 

 In 2010 construction broke ground on a new two-lane bridge that you see today with completion being reached in 2016.  

Along the hike there are viewpoint benches to rest on. You can go all the way under the bridge but eventually the trail dead ends and so begins the journey back. 

Biking the trails

If you head from the north end of the boat launch parking lot there is another hiking/biking trail that connects with the Hill Top and Hillside trail systems. These trails were developed along with the construction of the new river bridge. 

Hiking and biking the trails is best to do in the morning or evening on a hot day. Although both trails are covered by a thick forest canopy, they do not have any water source. So bringing water is encouraged if you are heading out during the heat of the day. Also before you go have a look at the trail maps on www.epbrparkscouncil.org because although these are two loops they only intersect at one point and if not planned properly you can find yourself on the trail longer than you expected.

Spending a day or a weekend in the Eagle Point Provincial Park at Willey West Campground is a fantastic way to enjoy the summer heat. 

Golfing Drayton Valley

But there was lots to like. The course itself is in very good shape, in spite of our efforts to dig parts of it up with an over enthusiastic pitching wedge. And it was great to get out in some early morning sunshine.

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There are currently an estimated 69 people living completely unsheltered in Drayton Valley. According to a report to council from the Town’s community services department, that number is lower than it was earlier this year. At least 15 people have not returned to the community since the evacuation in early May due to the Buck Creek Fire. 

Related statistics show that 153 people have used the shelter pods at some point, although 23 of those have stayed there only once. There are seven people who use the pods almost every night. The Warming Hearts Centre has served 137 individuals at least once, with 21 people using the centre regularly. 

Two men have entered addictions treatment in the last month.

Race returning

The Black Gold Brute Obstacle Race will be back next year. The first ever event was held last month and drew entrants from across Alberta and as far away is Penticton BC. Next year’s date has been set as Sautiday June 8.

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Students may have a different learning experience this year after the Alberta Education Minister, Demetrios Nicolaides, made the call to ban cell phones in schools.

Brad Volkman, the superintendent of the Wild Rose School Division, says schools have until 2025 to create a policy regarding cell phone use, but they have to start implementing the ban in September.

Volkman says that for many schools, a ban on cell phones is business as usual.

“Quite frankly, many of our schools have already been doing that for years,” says Volkman. 

However, cell phone policies have been left to individual schools to plan and implement. Now, the division itself needs to have something in place.

Volkman says division staff met with school staff to review the policy before the school year. He says the major points were that cell phones could not be used during learning time with the exception of those who have learning or medical needs that require the phones.

Right now, WRSD is using the time given to create their policy to test out different ways of implementing it and enforcing the rules. Each school is putting their own policies in place for the first month. After getting feedback from school staff, parents, and students, the division will be able to put together something that is effective and practical.

He says each school has a different approach to dealing with the phones. One approach requires students to leave their phones at the front of the classroom during instruction time. In some schools, students are required to leave their phones in their backpacks, or in others, teachers will confiscate phones if they catch their students using them.

“What we realized, and there is some research on this, is that we’ve got students that are probably addicted to their phone,” says Volkman. “The minute [the phones] buzz they have to look.”

Another important part of the ban on cell phones is also a ban on social media in the schools. The Minister’s directive doesn’t establish whether all social media needs to be blocked, or if it only applies to certain sites.

“Believe it or not, it’s up to the school division to decide which sites need to be blocked. They didn’t give us a list,” says Volkman.

Another area of the Minister’s order that isn’t very clear has to do with blocking the social media school-wide. The division is able to block the sites through their wifi, but they can’t block the sites for students who have data plans on their phones.

“The Minister’s Order doesn’t address that,” says Volkman. “The Minister’s Order says they can’t use their mobile devices during instructional time and it says that the networks that they connect to must block social media. But it doesn’t address anything around kids using their own data plans during breaks to access social media.”

Volkman says the division has been doing its best to implement the order while figuring out how to handle the effects that some of those implementations have had.

Right now, students are blocked from accessing social media via the school’s network. However, the staff are also blocked. This means that staff cannot use social media to update parents or advertise for upcoming events. As it stands, the division is unable to specify who may have access to social media and which social media needs to be blocked.

He says the division is working to find a way that will allow staff to communicate with parents and students while adhering to the Minister’s ban.

Volkman says the division’s policy will outline a progressive disciplinary plan for any infractions with cell phone use. He says it’s the same way they ask all of their schools to deal with transgressions.

“This will be no different than any other school policy or school rule,” he says. “You start easy, with understanding, grace, and education… but you do have to have a progressive style approach.”

Volkman says the goal is to have a draft put together by mid-October for stakeholders to review in November. In December, they will be putting the final touches on the policy so it is ready to be rolled out in the new year.

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A Court of King’s Bench Justice has outlined her reasons for convicting a woman of manslaughter in an incident that happened in the Breton area.

Bronwyn Hannah Jane Luckham was convicted in April of this year on charges relating to the death of Jonathan James Paul in 2021. Last week Justice Tamara Friesen released written reasons for her decision, which she said might be useful to the Crown and defence when preparing arguments prior to sentencing.

Shortly after 8 p.m. Monday August 30 2021 a man was dropped off at the Drayton Valley hospital suffering from serious injuries, from which he later died. The victim was able to provide some information prior to his death, saying that he had been hit by a vehicle. He was identified as Jonathan James Paul, 40, of Calgary. 

At trial Friesen heard evidence that Paul had been in a relationship with Luckham. The pair were both working at a rural acreage near Breton. The Crown alleged that Luckham was angry with Paul for a variety of reasons, both business and personal. The prosecution argued that Luckham deliberately struck Paul with a Dodge Durango intending to kill him, “or in the alternative, intending to cause him bodily harm that she knew was so serious and dangerous he would likely die of his injuries, thus committing either murder or manslaughter.”

Meanwhile Luckham said that she was under duress at the time and had been trying to escape from Paul who had subjected her to an escalating cycle of abuse.

After hearing the evidence, Friesen found Luckham not guilty of second degree murder, but guilty of manslaughter.  Under Canadian law manslaughter occurs where a person causes the death of another human being “by means of an unlawful act” or “by criminal negligence.”

At trial the court heard from several witnesses, including Luckham, who testified on her own behalf. There was also video evidence from motion activated cameras at the scene. Part of that video, as described by Justice Friesen, showed Paul rolling on the ground as the Durango drove over him.

Luckham and Paul had been involved in an altercation and the hood of the Durango was up at the time.

Defence counsel argued that it was necessary for Luckham to step on the accelerator and drive the way she did because she was trying to escape from Paul and thought her life was in danger.

Friesen noted that “a reasonable driver in the same circumstances as Luckham would not have started the SUV and then pressed down on the accelerator while the hood was up, visibility was poor, and they knew, at a minimum, that another person was in front of, or close to, the path of the SUV.”

“When she struck Paul, Luckham’s manner of driving was therefore a marked departure from the standard of care a reasonable driver would have observed in the same or similar circumstances,” wrote Friesen.

“I find Luckham’s behaviour in failing to provide adequate support and assistance to Paul while he lay in the grass screaming in agony to be morally reprehensible. The surveillance videos are extremely disturbing. However … I accept that neither Luckham nor Paul thought Paul was going to die from his injuries.”

Friesen also noted that Luckham had ultimately assisted Paul in getting into a vehicle, had driven him to the Drayton Valley Hospital and followed up with the hospital to ensure they knew he was there and would assist him.

“The facts established that Luckham’s dangerous driving …, combined with the objective foreseeability that the risk of bodily harm to Paul was neither trivial nor transitory, resulted in his death,” she concluded. “The Crown has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that … Luckham committed the offence of unlawful act of manslaughter.”

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Though he’s new to the official title, the new Staff Sergeant for the Drayton Valley detachment is a familiar face.

Ryan Hoetmer was first stationed in Drayton Valley in 2017 as a corporal overseeing the three man general investigation section (GIS) for the detachment. Prior to his transfer to Drayton Valley, Hoetmer was working in Grande Prairie as part of the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) task force, dealing with organized crime and drug trafficking.

In February of 2022, Hoetmer was promoted to Sergeant. When Staff Sergeant Erin Matthews retired, Hoetmer stepped up to be the acting Staff Sergeant. Then, when Staff Sergeant Troy Raddatz retired, Hoetmer once again filled the role.

He was officially given the title on a permanent basis at the beginning of August.

“I’ve been active in this role since April,” he says. “I’ve sat in this seat a fair amount since I became Sergeant.”

Hoetmer says he and his family like Drayton Valley, and the initial draw was that he grew up in the area.

“I grew up just outside of Rocky Mountain House,” he says.

Both his parents and his wife’s parents are still close by, and they wanted to be closer to them.

Hoetmer has five kids, and throughout the seven years they’ve been in the community, the whole family has made connections and friendships that are important to them. Their youngest child, who is seven-years-old, was born shortly before they moved to Drayton and his oldest recently graduated.

“This really has become home for them,” he says. “And it’s become home for [me and my wife], too.”

He says he and his wife are happy with the community and feel it’s a great place to raise their family. The natural landscape of the area makes it easy for them to pursue some of their favourite pastimes like fishing, hunting, camping, and other outdoor activities.

Hoetmer says another important aspect of Drayton Valley is that it’s not a violent community. He says he’s lived in other places where that was not the case and he appreciates that about the area.

Hoetmer says he has some goals that he would like to achieve in his new position. He says community engagement is a big priority for him and he wants to continue in the direction that the detachment has been for the past few years with that.

“I’m connected to the community through several facets with my kids,” says Hoetmer. “You know, hockey, school sports, dance, music, and I think that’s really important to connect to the community.”

He says he’s been encouraging the members at the detachment to go out and form those connections as well. The detachment has some soccer and basketball coaches and he wants to continue to push that mentality.

“Not just in organized events, but I want our membership to get out and get involved in the community in other ways as well,” he says.

Hoetmer says being out in the community works in two ways. Not only do residents become familiar with the officers, but it also allows them to see a side of the community that they don’t normally work with.

“Often, when you’re policing, you deal with the dark side of the community,” he says. “If you don’t connect with the community on a different level you get a very jaded look at it.”

Another priority will be to focus on prolific offenders. Hoetmer says his background with GIS and dealing with prolific offenders and drug trafficking will help in that area.

“We’re going to continue to drive that,” he says. “…We don’t really have violent crime, but we do have a property crime issue. It’s gotten a lot better since I first came here in 2017.”

He says the ultimate goal for property crime is zero incidents. While he knows they’re unlikely to hit that target, they are always aiming for it.

“The goal would be that you could get out anywhere and leave your vehicle running and it doesn’t go missing,” he says. “We’re not there and we shouldn’t be doing that, but that is the ultimate goal.”

Hoetmer says he also wants to prioritize taking care of the membership. He says with his position, he’s not out in the field, so he wants to provide them as much support as he can. 

“I have to provide the support that the guys and the gals on the floor need to do their job,” he says.

With that in mind, he’s going to continue to push for a new building as Raddatz was.

“My father-in-law worked out of this building from 1989 to 1996,” he says.

Along with his goals with the detachment, Hoetmer says the RCMP will also be working more closely with the Community Peace Officers in Drayton Valley and in Brazeau County.

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The new training officer for the Drayton Valley/Brazeau County Fire Services comes to the position with a background in the military.

Matthew Noad started with the department at the beginning of June after relocating from Cold Lake’s military base.

Noad says he started working in fire services when he was 18 in Magrath, south of Lethbridge. 

“I started fire fighting about as soon as I could,” says Noad.

He says during his time in Magrath, he worked with another man who had worked as a firefighter for the Canadian Military.

“I didn’t even know that there was firefighters in the military,” says Noad.

Noad started with the military in 2018 and completed basic training as well as some firefighter training in Borden, Ontario. Once that was done, he was stationed in Cold Lake.

Military firefighters are mostly stationed at the air force bases in Canada, says Noad, although the Edmonton Army Base also has military firefighters. The rest of the bases have firefighters under National Defence rather than the military.

The firefighters are responsible for the structures and personnel on the base, as well as the aircrafts. He says other than dealing with aircraft, most of the training that they receive is the same that an on-call volunteer would receive at a municipal fire department.

“We kind of become their insurance policy in a sense,” says Noad. “We’re the ones protecting it from fire and damage.”

He says they were basically trained in airport firefighting, which isn’t as much of an issue in Drayton. However, Noad didn’t spend a lot of time dealing with wildfires at the base, so he will also be learning some things during his time here.

After six years working mostly in Cold Lake as a training officer, Noad says he decided to go with a change of direction in his firefighting career. He says he saw the opportunity in Drayton Valley and was excited by the prospects.

Noad says working in Alberta was what he had preferred, having spent most of his life in the province. However, one of the perks of the community was that it was closer to the mountains than Cold Lake was, and his wife has some family in the area.

“I’m actually super excited to be here,” says Noad. “I’m excited to be working with such a committed group of volunteers and full-time staff.”

He says he was impressed watching the dedication the department had to looking out for the County and the Town during the wildfire season in 2023. 

“That was one of the driving forces that brought me here,” he says. “There’s such a dedicated group of individuals that sacrificed their own time to be there for people on their worst days. With the extreme conditions that they were in, they did an excellent job with what they had.”

Noad says he highly encourages anyone who is interested in giving back to their community to apply to be a volunteer firefighter. Their next training recruitment is in the fall, but they accept applications throughout.

Anyone who is interested in applying can visit the Town office for an application or call the department at 780-514-2216.

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The question of whether a person should celebrate their father all year round or on one particular day has been answered for a local family.

On March 18, 2023, the Mockerman family’s lives took a drastic turn when Rob Mockerman was involved in an accident that left him with second and third degree burns to more than 85 percent of his body.

At 5:30 that evening, while his wife Trish and six-year-old son Aden were inside their house near Buck Creek cooking dinner, Mockerman went to his shop to give a tune up to a recently purchased snowmobile.

“We’d just got a new-to-us skidoo from a guy in Edmonton,” says Mockerman. Both he and Aden were excited to go try it out.

Unbeknownst to Mockerman, there was a fuel leak in the machine. When he first started the engine, it caught on fire. At first Mockerman tried to get the machine out of his shop, which held close to a million dollars worth of tools and equipment. 

When it became clear that wouldn’t work, Mockerman tried to put the fire out as best as he could. Finally, he decided to make a run for his fire extinguisher.

“I got half way across the shop when the skidoo blew up,” says Mockerman.

From that point on, Mockerman’s memory of the incident is limited. He says he remembers looking for a way out, and that he could only see a tiny little spot. 

Trish says she saw the smoke through the bedroom window and told Aden that she had to go see what his dad was doing. 

“Once it came across the floor and up the door frame it was too much for me,” says Trish.

“I made sure she dialed 911,” says Aden.

Once Mockerman made it outside, Trish tackled him to the ground, hoping the snow would help put out the flames. He got up again at that point and ran past the deck, where Aden was watching the commotion, before falling into the snow again.

Trish made all the necessary phone calls and soon the ambulance arrived. She’d also reached out to Mockerman’s parents, asking to speak to Ernie so she didn’t have to upset Alice, as well as his estranged brother Randy. Once the paramedics arrived, it became clear that STARS was needed.

Both Ernie and Alice had arrived at Mockerman’s place before he was airlifted to the hospital. 

“I don’t remember much, but I just remember that as STARS was flying away, I was blowing kisses at the helicopter and praying with tears just running down my cheeks,” says Alice.

Ernie says the person that he saw lying on the gurney did not in any way resemble his son. Mockerman asked the paramedics to keep his mom away because he didn’t want her to see him like that.

“It was a nightmare,” says Alice. “It was the worst nightmare that I’ve ever had.”

Eleven minutes after the helicopter arrived, Mockerman was in Edmonton at the burn unit in the University of Alberta hospital.

Upon arrival in Edmonton, Mockerman flatlined for the first time. Before he was stable, Mockerman died two more times in the hospital. For three months, he was in a coma.

He says he has little recollection of the time when he was in the coma other than he had vivid night terrors for the duration of it. A recent trip through Breton gave him an anxiety attack when he recognized a building that had been in one of those nightmares.

Meanwhile, doctors and nurses went to work debriding the dead tissue on his body. 

“I remember waking up once in the middle of it,” he says. “That’s not a fun experience. I realized at that point in time that I was in trouble.”

During his time in the hospital, Mockerman’s family came to see him every weekend without fail. Even Aden made the trip with them, though he didn’t always go inside to see his dad after his first experience seeing Mockerman didn’t go well.

“It was hot in there. I was cooking,” says Aden. Trish recognized that he was about to faint and quickly brought him out to the waiting room.

“That was the hardest part for me,” says Mockerman. “The first time I was seeing my son and he was so scared he couldn’t even come up to me.”

“How do you prepare him for that?” says Alice. “That was his dad, his best friend there. How do I tell him what he’ll see?”

Part of the issue was that Mockerman didn’t look like himself. His body had swollen to nearly four times its natural size. To help prevent his limbs from bursting, doctors made incisions along both arms and legs to help relieve the swelling. Because of the swelling, he also couldn’t breathe so the doctors performed a tracheotomy. 

Mockerman says the only areas of his body that they didn’t remove skin grafts from were the palms of his hands and the soles of his feet. Everything else was fair game.

On Monday they would take a skin graft from his stomach. Then on Thursday, they would take one from his back. Monday would come around again, and they would remove what skin they could from his stomach. 

 

After 48 surgeries, months of rehabilitation that involved learning how to speak, write, and walk again, Mockerman remembers the staff at the hospital fondly.

“Dr. Sean Dodd is like my best friend now,” says Mockerman of the head surgeon. “Dr. Alexis Amour, one of my plastic surgeons, she’s… I couldn’t say enough words about her. She’s phenomenal.”

He says all of the staff on the burn ward were “utterly amazing people.” One of his favourite memories was being woken up at 12:01 a.m. on his birthday as the entire staff on the floor came in to sing him Happy Birthday.

Though Mockerman tried to remain as positive as possible, there were days when his mood turned down. When that happened, he said the staff were always there for him emotionally and truly helped him to get through the experience.

“I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t talk, I couldn’t see for a while,” he says. “I had to learn all of my life skills all over again.”

When it became apparent that the flesh on his left calf wasn’t going to heal, doctors began to discuss amputating his left leg. 

He kept getting infections and they weren’t going away. The doctor told him they had tried every single medication and trial drug available in Canada, but nothing seemed to be working. Mockerman was told he likely only had a few days left to live.

However, a doctor in the United States happened to read about Mockerman and contacted his doctor. They had a new drug that hadn’t even started being tested on animals. The American doctor told Mockerman’s doctor that if he could get Canadian approval, he would ship him the drug. That drug saved his life.

“To this day, they tell me a bee sting could take me out,” says Mockerman. “I don’t have an immune system.”

Dodd fought to have Mockerman keep his leg and was successful. Rather than remove the leg, they removed all of the flesh from his calf, leaving only the bone covered by a couple layers of skin.

“They say it’s amazing that I can even walk,” he says.

Once Mockerman got it into his mind that he was going to walk he said he didn’t let anything deter him from his goal. He didn’t say anything to his family about his efforts. Instead, he surprised them by walking out to see them when they came to visit for his birthday on June 17.

Only a month ago Mockerman had to go to the U of A to have his pinkie fingers removed on both hands. He says he learned that when a body is burned, one of the first things that happens is the fingers curl up. Once that happens, it can be difficult to get them to straighten out to a point that they can be useful.

The remainder of his fingers had to be worked on. Skin grafts were needed and hardware had to be put in place. All three fingers and his thumb work on his left hand, but on his right hand, his pointer finger and middle finger are still in casts.

While Mockerman may have suffered the injuries, his close call affected everyone in his family. Ernie and Alice normally head to Arizona for the winter months, but for the winter of 2023/24, they stayed in Drayton. Ernie has been driving Mockerman in for his weekly appointments.

“There’s no words to express how much it affected all of us,” says Alice. “We just praise the Lord every day.”

 

“I couldn’t have done it without Mom and Dad and Trish,” Mockerman says.

But one of the best things to come out of the experience was Mockerman’s relationship with his brother. He said for the majority of his life, he and his brother didn’t get along. They would only tolerate each other at family events when they didn’t have a choice. Now they are closer than they ever were before.

“Randy and I are best friends now. It really brought us together,” he says. “It brought all of us together.”

Prior to the accident, Mockerman was looking forward to retiring in 2025 with plans to work out of his shop doing custom Harley paint jobs. Unfortunately, Mockerman had taken the insurance off of his vehicles for the winter as he wouldn’t be driving them. A misunderstanding of what exactly was covered by insurance left him with nothing but ash after his shop burned down.

“I’ve never been able to slow down,” he says. “I’ve always been the type of guy to grab an extra gear and keep on going. Slowing down has been one of the hardest things.”

He says one of the hardest things when he returned home was that he couldn’t return to work. Mockerman says he absolutely loved his job, but after his accident, the company had to sell his truck and eliminate his position.

Mockerman says he was shocked to see how many neighbours came out to support his family after his accident. He says he couldn’t express enough gratitude to cover how he felt about their help.

 

One family, the Hayduks, were at his house shortly after the accident and took Aden to their house while the paramedics were there to distract him from the experience.

“You tend to forget how many friends you actually have until something like this unfortunately comes along,” says Mockerman.

He says though he works to stay positive, there are times when he finds his mind drifting to what is missing.

“I just look out the window sometimes and look around to see what I lost,” he says. “But then I look around to see what I have. I feel pretty damn blessed.”

Now that he’s at home, there are still a lot of adjustments that he has to get used to. He says he will never ride a Harley again, and will have to resort to using trikes instead. He’s also lost a lot of his drive for his retirement dream and isn’t sure if it will ever come back.

To help pass the time and as part of his therapeutic process, Mockerman has been writing a book about his experience. He says the nurses on the ward were always encouraging him to write. Now, he has the rough draft of a novel written out, and is always thinking of just one more thing to add to it.

One habit Mockerman has been working on now that he’s home is gratitude. He says he and Aden do their best to start their day finding five things to be grateful for in the upcoming day. 

Prior to his accident, Mockerman says he wasn’t a religious person. But a couple of experiences that he had when he had flatlined has changed his views.

“I saw the light that everyone talks about. I’m guessing it was God standing at the end of it,” he says.

While he can’t be certain, Mockerman says it felt like God was speaking to him. He was told that he had a choice: he could either go to sleep and escape the pain, or if Mockerman could give a good reason, he could live. Mockerman says he chose to live, that he wanted to be there for his son, and then he woke up.

The next time he flatlined all he saw at the end of his tunnel was a picture of Aden. Mockerman says he’d never seen the picture before. But when he came too the next day, his mother had brought that exact same picture, frame and all, to put in his room.

Even though the weather left a lot to be desired, the Mockermans still went out camping on May Long weekend with several friends. Mockerman says he’s hoping to keep as many of his regular activities in his life as he can.

Currently, Mockerman is not able to work. While Trish does still have her job, and is able to work from home sometimes, the couple has had to go through a large chunk of their savings to get by.

Friends and family hosted a fundraiser for them in Breton last summer, and Ernie says he was pleased with the turnout. “There were about 200 people there,” he says.

For now, Mockerman says they are taking it one day at a time.

“They call me miracle man in there,” he says. “I’m not bragging, that’s just what they said. They said they’ve never seen anyone so positive going through what I did.”

Are you a local looking for things to do in and around Drayton Valley, or Brazeau County. Our award winning editor Graham Long, has got your covered in his weekly summary of things happening in Drayton Valley. Have a read of Next Week’s News each week to get an idea on how to plan your, week. 

Next Week's News: May 16, 2024 Column

Attention motorists, cyclists, pedestrians etc! Construction work on the eastern portion of Drayton Valley’s 50 Avenue is about to get underway. Expect some detours and traffic disruption in the area over the next several weeks. 

Shale Medical is currently trialing a Saturday same day clinic. Depending on feedback and demand they may extend this further. The following dates are slated for the trial: June 15, 9 am – 4 pm, June 22 9 am -4 pm and June 29: 9 am – 4 pm.

The booking procedure is listed on their website and walk-ins will be accepted as well. 

Drayton Valley’s Small Town Big Party is tomorrow, (that’s Friday June 14)  in Omni 3. That means live music from a couple of bands, plus beer gardens and games and all sorts of fun. This is an adult only event and admission is $7. 

Father’s Day is Sunday June 16. For the love of God, no more socks, please!

And after that, it’s time for summer! The most wonderful time of the year officially begins at 8:50 pm, Thursday June 20. 

National Indigenous Peoples Day is a day recognizing and celebrating the cultures and contributions of the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Indigenous peoples of Canada. This year it’s Friday June 21. 

The Lions Club are bringing the fair to Drayton Valley again this month. It’ll be in town June 21, 22, and 23.

The Frank Maddock High School graduation is June 22. Congratulations to everyone who’s graduating from all of our local schools this year. And if you’re heading off to college or university please call or text your parents regularly. You know how they worry. 

June 26 is the last day of school for students in Drayton Valley and Breton, so watch out for bands of feral youth roaming the streets over the next couple of months. 

Don’t forget that  your property taxes are due to be paid by the end of this month. Since June 30 is a Sunday, you probably want to be a few days early, just in case.  If you live in Brazeau County you’ll get a 30 percent rebate if you pay on time, so it’s worth the effort.

And Canada Day is fast approaching. In Drayton Valley there’s a pancake breakfast starting at 7 am at the legion. The parade begins at 10 am and follows the usual route up 50 Avenue and then north on 50 Street. The rest of the activities will be at the Omniplex from 11 am to 3 pm with fireworks at dusk, weather permitting. 

Cut out the middle man and get your Drayton Valley and District Free Press directly to your email inbox. 

Get more activity ideas in for the Drayton Valley and Brazeau County region in our Brazeau and Beyond Travel Guide. 

Head over to our travel guide page to download yours today.

Click here: Brazeau and Beyond 

Road works

Reconstruction on a stretch of 50 Avenue began earlier this week and is expected to continue until the end of October. The project will see the replacement and installation of new storm, sanitary, and water infrastructure, as well as roadway, sidewalk, and curb reconstruction. There may be road closures and detours in place between 43 Street and Becket Road and parking restrictions elsewhere. 

Meanwhile crack sealing on Drayton Valley’s roads is almost completed for this season. 30,000 linear meters of cracks were repaired on 50 Street from the derricks to the intersection by Boston Pizza. Next up is line painting, which is expected to get under way by the end of this week. Pothole filling is ongoing. 

Tax help is here

Matalski says the Income Tax Program has volunteers in the community, who have received training provided by the Canada Revenue Agency, do the tax returns. She says people drop their information off at her office, and then a volunteer comes to get the information and files it.

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School division looks a professional education

Frank Maddock High School is also partnering with Drayton Valley Ford as a focus for students in mechanics. Both Frank Maddock and Breton offer a full cosmetology course which helps students achieve apprenticeship level when they graduate. Breton also has received a grant to offer a welding program at the school.

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Review examines wildfire response

The primary objective of this wildfire after-action review is to conduct a thorough and impartial assessment of the incident response within the municipalities of Brazeau County and the Town of Drayton Valley, emphasizing a holistic approach aimed at learning, improving future responses, and fostering a culture of continuous enhancement within its firefighting and emergency management practices.

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Five teams leave league

The Alberta Junior Hockey League is now an 11 team organization. The defection of five breakaway teams to the British Columbia Hockey League was confirmed last week.
“We are disappointed – but not surprised – that the five defecting clubs now intend to drop out of the AJHL to immediately participate in an unsanctioned exhibition series,” the AJHL said in a statement.

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There was sunshine and smiles all around last Friday as residents, staff, friends and family celebrated 50 years of the Shangri La Lodge. 

Denise Chesterman, CAO of the Brazeau Foundation, said the history of the lodge actually goes back a little more than half a century.  

In 1967 the Drayton Valley Royal Purple began to look at ways to bring inexpensive lodging for senior citizens to the community. The Royal Purple and Elks joined together and formed a society known as the Purple Pansy Senior Citizens Association. 

The Purple Pansy, assisted by the newly formed Senior Citizens Club, surveyed the town and the surrounding area for all seniors who might take advantage of a lodge. A request for funding was approved by the provincial government and the Shangri-La Lodge opened in 1973, six years after the idea was first conceived. The Lodge initially had 60 rooms and was operated by a local management board under the direction of the Meridian Foundation, which is based in Stony Plain.

The first Matron was Mrs. Campbell, followed by Mrs. Inga Hawryluk. In 1975 Mr. RH (Richie) Woods became chairman of the local management board. He was assisted by Jeannette Vatter. Their main objective was to ensure that the Lodge felt like a home and not like a nursing home. 

The need for seniors housing was increasing and in 1989 there was a sod turning to begin construction on a two storey addition that would house an additional 38 units that is now known as the East Wing. 

The Brazeau Seniors Foundation became a housing management body in 1995 and replaced the Purple Pansy and the Village of Breton Senior Citizen Committee. 

Construction of another two-storey addition, known as the West Wing, was completed in 2011. Construction also included a new kitchen, dining room, activity room and more. 

The South Wing was rebuilt in 2014.

Today the Brazeau Foundation operates the Lodge, the Wishing Well and Lezure Lea apartments in Drayton Valley and the Spruce View Apartments in Breton along with four family housing units in Rocky Rapids. 

The Shangri-La Lodge also continues the Meals on Wheels program which was organized and managed by Hy Dahl for 47 years. The program provides meals for approximately 15 individuals in the community. 

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Students may have a different learning experience this year after the Alberta Education Minister, Demetrios Nicolaides, made the call to ban cell phones in schools.

Brad Volkman, the superintendent of the Wild Rose School Division, says schools have until 2025 to create a policy regarding cell phone use, but they have to start implementing the ban in September.

Volkman says that for many schools, a ban on cell phones is business as usual.

“Quite frankly, many of our schools have already been doing that for years,” says Volkman. 

However, cell phone policies have been left to individual schools to plan and implement. Now, the division itself needs to have something in place.

Volkman says division staff met with school staff to review the policy before the school year. He says the major points were that cell phones could not be used during learning time with the exception of those who have learning or medical needs that require the phones.

Right now, WRSD is using the time given to create their policy to test out different ways of implementing it and enforcing the rules. Each school is putting their own policies in place for the first month. After getting feedback from school staff, parents, and students, the division will be able to put together something that is effective and practical.

He says each school has a different approach to dealing with the phones. One approach requires students to leave their phones at the front of the classroom during instruction time. In some schools, students are required to leave their phones in their backpacks, or in others, teachers will confiscate phones if they catch their students using them.

“What we realized, and there is some research on this, is that we’ve got students that are probably addicted to their phone,” says Volkman. “The minute [the phones] buzz they have to look.”

Another important part of the ban on cell phones is also a ban on social media in the schools. The Minister’s directive doesn’t establish whether all social media needs to be blocked, or if it only applies to certain sites.

“Believe it or not, it’s up to the school division to decide which sites need to be blocked. They didn’t give us a list,” says Volkman.

Another area of the Minister’s order that isn’t very clear has to do with blocking the social media school-wide. The division is able to block the sites through their wifi, but they can’t block the sites for students who have data plans on their phones.

“The Minister’s Order doesn’t address that,” says Volkman. “The Minister’s Order says they can’t use their mobile devices during instructional time and it says that the networks that they connect to must block social media. But it doesn’t address anything around kids using their own data plans during breaks to access social media.”

Volkman says the division has been doing its best to implement the order while figuring out how to handle the effects that some of those implementations have had.

Right now, students are blocked from accessing social media via the school’s network. However, the staff are also blocked. This means that staff cannot use social media to update parents or advertise for upcoming events. As it stands, the division is unable to specify who may have access to social media and which social media needs to be blocked.

He says the division is working to find a way that will allow staff to communicate with parents and students while adhering to the Minister’s ban.

Volkman says the division’s policy will outline a progressive disciplinary plan for any infractions with cell phone use. He says it’s the same way they ask all of their schools to deal with transgressions.

“This will be no different than any other school policy or school rule,” he says. “You start easy, with understanding, grace, and education… but you do have to have a progressive style approach.”

Volkman says the goal is to have a draft put together by mid-October for stakeholders to review in November. In December, they will be putting the final touches on the policy so it is ready to be rolled out in the new year.

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A Court of King’s Bench Justice has outlined her reasons for convicting a woman of manslaughter in an incident that happened in the Breton area.

Bronwyn Hannah Jane Luckham was convicted in April of this year on charges relating to the death of Jonathan James Paul in 2021. Last week Justice Tamara Friesen released written reasons for her decision, which she said might be useful to the Crown and defence when preparing arguments prior to sentencing.

Shortly after 8 p.m. Monday August 30 2021 a man was dropped off at the Drayton Valley hospital suffering from serious injuries, from which he later died. The victim was able to provide some information prior to his death, saying that he had been hit by a vehicle. He was identified as Jonathan James Paul, 40, of Calgary. 

At trial Friesen heard evidence that Paul had been in a relationship with Luckham. The pair were both working at a rural acreage near Breton. The Crown alleged that Luckham was angry with Paul for a variety of reasons, both business and personal. The prosecution argued that Luckham deliberately struck Paul with a Dodge Durango intending to kill him, “or in the alternative, intending to cause him bodily harm that she knew was so serious and dangerous he would likely die of his injuries, thus committing either murder or manslaughter.”

Meanwhile Luckham said that she was under duress at the time and had been trying to escape from Paul who had subjected her to an escalating cycle of abuse.

After hearing the evidence, Friesen found Luckham not guilty of second degree murder, but guilty of manslaughter.  Under Canadian law manslaughter occurs where a person causes the death of another human being “by means of an unlawful act” or “by criminal negligence.”

At trial the court heard from several witnesses, including Luckham, who testified on her own behalf. There was also video evidence from motion activated cameras at the scene. Part of that video, as described by Justice Friesen, showed Paul rolling on the ground as the Durango drove over him.

Luckham and Paul had been involved in an altercation and the hood of the Durango was up at the time.

Defence counsel argued that it was necessary for Luckham to step on the accelerator and drive the way she did because she was trying to escape from Paul and thought her life was in danger.

Friesen noted that “a reasonable driver in the same circumstances as Luckham would not have started the SUV and then pressed down on the accelerator while the hood was up, visibility was poor, and they knew, at a minimum, that another person was in front of, or close to, the path of the SUV.”

“When she struck Paul, Luckham’s manner of driving was therefore a marked departure from the standard of care a reasonable driver would have observed in the same or similar circumstances,” wrote Friesen.

“I find Luckham’s behaviour in failing to provide adequate support and assistance to Paul while he lay in the grass screaming in agony to be morally reprehensible. The surveillance videos are extremely disturbing. However … I accept that neither Luckham nor Paul thought Paul was going to die from his injuries.”

Friesen also noted that Luckham had ultimately assisted Paul in getting into a vehicle, had driven him to the Drayton Valley Hospital and followed up with the hospital to ensure they knew he was there and would assist him.

“The facts established that Luckham’s dangerous driving …, combined with the objective foreseeability that the risk of bodily harm to Paul was neither trivial nor transitory, resulted in his death,” she concluded. “The Crown has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that … Luckham committed the offence of unlawful act of manslaughter.”

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Though he’s new to the official title, the new Staff Sergeant for the Drayton Valley detachment is a familiar face.

Ryan Hoetmer was first stationed in Drayton Valley in 2017 as a corporal overseeing the three man general investigation section (GIS) for the detachment. Prior to his transfer to Drayton Valley, Hoetmer was working in Grande Prairie as part of the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) task force, dealing with organized crime and drug trafficking.

In February of 2022, Hoetmer was promoted to Sergeant. When Staff Sergeant Erin Matthews retired, Hoetmer stepped up to be the acting Staff Sergeant. Then, when Staff Sergeant Troy Raddatz retired, Hoetmer once again filled the role.

He was officially given the title on a permanent basis at the beginning of August.

“I’ve been active in this role since April,” he says. “I’ve sat in this seat a fair amount since I became Sergeant.”

Hoetmer says he and his family like Drayton Valley, and the initial draw was that he grew up in the area.

“I grew up just outside of Rocky Mountain House,” he says.

Both his parents and his wife’s parents are still close by, and they wanted to be closer to them.

Hoetmer has five kids, and throughout the seven years they’ve been in the community, the whole family has made connections and friendships that are important to them. Their youngest child, who is seven-years-old, was born shortly before they moved to Drayton and his oldest recently graduated.

“This really has become home for them,” he says. “And it’s become home for [me and my wife], too.”

He says he and his wife are happy with the community and feel it’s a great place to raise their family. The natural landscape of the area makes it easy for them to pursue some of their favourite pastimes like fishing, hunting, camping, and other outdoor activities.

Hoetmer says another important aspect of Drayton Valley is that it’s not a violent community. He says he’s lived in other places where that was not the case and he appreciates that about the area.

Hoetmer says he has some goals that he would like to achieve in his new position. He says community engagement is a big priority for him and he wants to continue in the direction that the detachment has been for the past few years with that.

“I’m connected to the community through several facets with my kids,” says Hoetmer. “You know, hockey, school sports, dance, music, and I think that’s really important to connect to the community.”

He says he’s been encouraging the members at the detachment to go out and form those connections as well. The detachment has some soccer and basketball coaches and he wants to continue to push that mentality.

“Not just in organized events, but I want our membership to get out and get involved in the community in other ways as well,” he says.

Hoetmer says being out in the community works in two ways. Not only do residents become familiar with the officers, but it also allows them to see a side of the community that they don’t normally work with.

“Often, when you’re policing, you deal with the dark side of the community,” he says. “If you don’t connect with the community on a different level you get a very jaded look at it.”

Another priority will be to focus on prolific offenders. Hoetmer says his background with GIS and dealing with prolific offenders and drug trafficking will help in that area.

“We’re going to continue to drive that,” he says. “…We don’t really have violent crime, but we do have a property crime issue. It’s gotten a lot better since I first came here in 2017.”

He says the ultimate goal for property crime is zero incidents. While he knows they’re unlikely to hit that target, they are always aiming for it.

“The goal would be that you could get out anywhere and leave your vehicle running and it doesn’t go missing,” he says. “We’re not there and we shouldn’t be doing that, but that is the ultimate goal.”

Hoetmer says he also wants to prioritize taking care of the membership. He says with his position, he’s not out in the field, so he wants to provide them as much support as he can. 

“I have to provide the support that the guys and the gals on the floor need to do their job,” he says.

With that in mind, he’s going to continue to push for a new building as Raddatz was.

“My father-in-law worked out of this building from 1989 to 1996,” he says.

Along with his goals with the detachment, Hoetmer says the RCMP will also be working more closely with the Community Peace Officers in Drayton Valley and in Brazeau County.

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The new training officer for the Drayton Valley/Brazeau County Fire Services comes to the position with a background in the military.

Matthew Noad started with the department at the beginning of June after relocating from Cold Lake’s military base.

Noad says he started working in fire services when he was 18 in Magrath, south of Lethbridge. 

“I started fire fighting about as soon as I could,” says Noad.

He says during his time in Magrath, he worked with another man who had worked as a firefighter for the Canadian Military.

“I didn’t even know that there was firefighters in the military,” says Noad.

Noad started with the military in 2018 and completed basic training as well as some firefighter training in Borden, Ontario. Once that was done, he was stationed in Cold Lake.

Military firefighters are mostly stationed at the air force bases in Canada, says Noad, although the Edmonton Army Base also has military firefighters. The rest of the bases have firefighters under National Defence rather than the military.

The firefighters are responsible for the structures and personnel on the base, as well as the aircrafts. He says other than dealing with aircraft, most of the training that they receive is the same that an on-call volunteer would receive at a municipal fire department.

“We kind of become their insurance policy in a sense,” says Noad. “We’re the ones protecting it from fire and damage.”

He says they were basically trained in airport firefighting, which isn’t as much of an issue in Drayton. However, Noad didn’t spend a lot of time dealing with wildfires at the base, so he will also be learning some things during his time here.

After six years working mostly in Cold Lake as a training officer, Noad says he decided to go with a change of direction in his firefighting career. He says he saw the opportunity in Drayton Valley and was excited by the prospects.

Noad says working in Alberta was what he had preferred, having spent most of his life in the province. However, one of the perks of the community was that it was closer to the mountains than Cold Lake was, and his wife has some family in the area.

“I’m actually super excited to be here,” says Noad. “I’m excited to be working with such a committed group of volunteers and full-time staff.”

He says he was impressed watching the dedication the department had to looking out for the County and the Town during the wildfire season in 2023. 

“That was one of the driving forces that brought me here,” he says. “There’s such a dedicated group of individuals that sacrificed their own time to be there for people on their worst days. With the extreme conditions that they were in, they did an excellent job with what they had.”

Noad says he highly encourages anyone who is interested in giving back to their community to apply to be a volunteer firefighter. Their next training recruitment is in the fall, but they accept applications throughout.

Anyone who is interested in applying can visit the Town office for an application or call the department at 780-514-2216.

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The question of whether a person should celebrate their father all year round or on one particular day has been answered for a local family.

On March 18, 2023, the Mockerman family’s lives took a drastic turn when Rob Mockerman was involved in an accident that left him with second and third degree burns to more than 85 percent of his body.

At 5:30 that evening, while his wife Trish and six-year-old son Aden were inside their house near Buck Creek cooking dinner, Mockerman went to his shop to give a tune up to a recently purchased snowmobile.

“We’d just got a new-to-us skidoo from a guy in Edmonton,” says Mockerman. Both he and Aden were excited to go try it out.

Unbeknownst to Mockerman, there was a fuel leak in the machine. When he first started the engine, it caught on fire. At first Mockerman tried to get the machine out of his shop, which held close to a million dollars worth of tools and equipment. 

When it became clear that wouldn’t work, Mockerman tried to put the fire out as best as he could. Finally, he decided to make a run for his fire extinguisher.

“I got half way across the shop when the skidoo blew up,” says Mockerman.

From that point on, Mockerman’s memory of the incident is limited. He says he remembers looking for a way out, and that he could only see a tiny little spot. 

Trish says she saw the smoke through the bedroom window and told Aden that she had to go see what his dad was doing. 

“Once it came across the floor and up the door frame it was too much for me,” says Trish.

“I made sure she dialed 911,” says Aden.

Once Mockerman made it outside, Trish tackled him to the ground, hoping the snow would help put out the flames. He got up again at that point and ran past the deck, where Aden was watching the commotion, before falling into the snow again.

Trish made all the necessary phone calls and soon the ambulance arrived. She’d also reached out to Mockerman’s parents, asking to speak to Ernie so she didn’t have to upset Alice, as well as his estranged brother Randy. Once the paramedics arrived, it became clear that STARS was needed.

Both Ernie and Alice had arrived at Mockerman’s place before he was airlifted to the hospital. 

“I don’t remember much, but I just remember that as STARS was flying away, I was blowing kisses at the helicopter and praying with tears just running down my cheeks,” says Alice.

Ernie says the person that he saw lying on the gurney did not in any way resemble his son. Mockerman asked the paramedics to keep his mom away because he didn’t want her to see him like that.

“It was a nightmare,” says Alice. “It was the worst nightmare that I’ve ever had.”

Eleven minutes after the helicopter arrived, Mockerman was in Edmonton at the burn unit in the University of Alberta hospital.

Upon arrival in Edmonton, Mockerman flatlined for the first time. Before he was stable, Mockerman died two more times in the hospital. For three months, he was in a coma.

He says he has little recollection of the time when he was in the coma other than he had vivid night terrors for the duration of it. A recent trip through Breton gave him an anxiety attack when he recognized a building that had been in one of those nightmares.

Meanwhile, doctors and nurses went to work debriding the dead tissue on his body. 

“I remember waking up once in the middle of it,” he says. “That’s not a fun experience. I realized at that point in time that I was in trouble.”

During his time in the hospital, Mockerman’s family came to see him every weekend without fail. Even Aden made the trip with them, though he didn’t always go inside to see his dad after his first experience seeing Mockerman didn’t go well.

“It was hot in there. I was cooking,” says Aden. Trish recognized that he was about to faint and quickly brought him out to the waiting room.

“That was the hardest part for me,” says Mockerman. “The first time I was seeing my son and he was so scared he couldn’t even come up to me.”

“How do you prepare him for that?” says Alice. “That was his dad, his best friend there. How do I tell him what he’ll see?”

Part of the issue was that Mockerman didn’t look like himself. His body had swollen to nearly four times its natural size. To help prevent his limbs from bursting, doctors made incisions along both arms and legs to help relieve the swelling. Because of the swelling, he also couldn’t breathe so the doctors performed a tracheotomy. 

Mockerman says the only areas of his body that they didn’t remove skin grafts from were the palms of his hands and the soles of his feet. Everything else was fair game.

On Monday they would take a skin graft from his stomach. Then on Thursday, they would take one from his back. Monday would come around again, and they would remove what skin they could from his stomach. 

 

After 48 surgeries, months of rehabilitation that involved learning how to speak, write, and walk again, Mockerman remembers the staff at the hospital fondly.

“Dr. Sean Dodd is like my best friend now,” says Mockerman of the head surgeon. “Dr. Alexis Amour, one of my plastic surgeons, she’s… I couldn’t say enough words about her. She’s phenomenal.”

He says all of the staff on the burn ward were “utterly amazing people.” One of his favourite memories was being woken up at 12:01 a.m. on his birthday as the entire staff on the floor came in to sing him Happy Birthday.

Though Mockerman tried to remain as positive as possible, there were days when his mood turned down. When that happened, he said the staff were always there for him emotionally and truly helped him to get through the experience.

“I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t talk, I couldn’t see for a while,” he says. “I had to learn all of my life skills all over again.”

When it became apparent that the flesh on his left calf wasn’t going to heal, doctors began to discuss amputating his left leg. 

He kept getting infections and they weren’t going away. The doctor told him they had tried every single medication and trial drug available in Canada, but nothing seemed to be working. Mockerman was told he likely only had a few days left to live.

However, a doctor in the United States happened to read about Mockerman and contacted his doctor. They had a new drug that hadn’t even started being tested on animals. The American doctor told Mockerman’s doctor that if he could get Canadian approval, he would ship him the drug. That drug saved his life.

“To this day, they tell me a bee sting could take me out,” says Mockerman. “I don’t have an immune system.”

Dodd fought to have Mockerman keep his leg and was successful. Rather than remove the leg, they removed all of the flesh from his calf, leaving only the bone covered by a couple layers of skin.

“They say it’s amazing that I can even walk,” he says.

Once Mockerman got it into his mind that he was going to walk he said he didn’t let anything deter him from his goal. He didn’t say anything to his family about his efforts. Instead, he surprised them by walking out to see them when they came to visit for his birthday on June 17.

Only a month ago Mockerman had to go to the U of A to have his pinkie fingers removed on both hands. He says he learned that when a body is burned, one of the first things that happens is the fingers curl up. Once that happens, it can be difficult to get them to straighten out to a point that they can be useful.

The remainder of his fingers had to be worked on. Skin grafts were needed and hardware had to be put in place. All three fingers and his thumb work on his left hand, but on his right hand, his pointer finger and middle finger are still in casts.

While Mockerman may have suffered the injuries, his close call affected everyone in his family. Ernie and Alice normally head to Arizona for the winter months, but for the winter of 2023/24, they stayed in Drayton. Ernie has been driving Mockerman in for his weekly appointments.

“There’s no words to express how much it affected all of us,” says Alice. “We just praise the Lord every day.”

 

“I couldn’t have done it without Mom and Dad and Trish,” Mockerman says.

But one of the best things to come out of the experience was Mockerman’s relationship with his brother. He said for the majority of his life, he and his brother didn’t get along. They would only tolerate each other at family events when they didn’t have a choice. Now they are closer than they ever were before.

“Randy and I are best friends now. It really brought us together,” he says. “It brought all of us together.”

Prior to the accident, Mockerman was looking forward to retiring in 2025 with plans to work out of his shop doing custom Harley paint jobs. Unfortunately, Mockerman had taken the insurance off of his vehicles for the winter as he wouldn’t be driving them. A misunderstanding of what exactly was covered by insurance left him with nothing but ash after his shop burned down.

“I’ve never been able to slow down,” he says. “I’ve always been the type of guy to grab an extra gear and keep on going. Slowing down has been one of the hardest things.”

He says one of the hardest things when he returned home was that he couldn’t return to work. Mockerman says he absolutely loved his job, but after his accident, the company had to sell his truck and eliminate his position.

Mockerman says he was shocked to see how many neighbours came out to support his family after his accident. He says he couldn’t express enough gratitude to cover how he felt about their help.

 

One family, the Hayduks, were at his house shortly after the accident and took Aden to their house while the paramedics were there to distract him from the experience.

“You tend to forget how many friends you actually have until something like this unfortunately comes along,” says Mockerman.

He says though he works to stay positive, there are times when he finds his mind drifting to what is missing.

“I just look out the window sometimes and look around to see what I lost,” he says. “But then I look around to see what I have. I feel pretty damn blessed.”

Now that he’s at home, there are still a lot of adjustments that he has to get used to. He says he will never ride a Harley again, and will have to resort to using trikes instead. He’s also lost a lot of his drive for his retirement dream and isn’t sure if it will ever come back.

To help pass the time and as part of his therapeutic process, Mockerman has been writing a book about his experience. He says the nurses on the ward were always encouraging him to write. Now, he has the rough draft of a novel written out, and is always thinking of just one more thing to add to it.

One habit Mockerman has been working on now that he’s home is gratitude. He says he and Aden do their best to start their day finding five things to be grateful for in the upcoming day. 

Prior to his accident, Mockerman says he wasn’t a religious person. But a couple of experiences that he had when he had flatlined has changed his views.

“I saw the light that everyone talks about. I’m guessing it was God standing at the end of it,” he says.

While he can’t be certain, Mockerman says it felt like God was speaking to him. He was told that he had a choice: he could either go to sleep and escape the pain, or if Mockerman could give a good reason, he could live. Mockerman says he chose to live, that he wanted to be there for his son, and then he woke up.

The next time he flatlined all he saw at the end of his tunnel was a picture of Aden. Mockerman says he’d never seen the picture before. But when he came too the next day, his mother had brought that exact same picture, frame and all, to put in his room.

Even though the weather left a lot to be desired, the Mockermans still went out camping on May Long weekend with several friends. Mockerman says he’s hoping to keep as many of his regular activities in his life as he can.

Currently, Mockerman is not able to work. While Trish does still have her job, and is able to work from home sometimes, the couple has had to go through a large chunk of their savings to get by.

Friends and family hosted a fundraiser for them in Breton last summer, and Ernie says he was pleased with the turnout. “There were about 200 people there,” he says.

For now, Mockerman says they are taking it one day at a time.

“They call me miracle man in there,” he says. “I’m not bragging, that’s just what they said. They said they’ve never seen anyone so positive going through what I did.”

Are you a local looking for things to do in and around Drayton Valley, or Brazeau County. Our award winning editor Graham Long, has got your covered in his weekly summary of things happening in Drayton Valley. Have a read of Next Week’s News each week to get an idea on how to plan your, week. 

Next Week's News: May 16, 2024 Column

Attention motorists, cyclists, pedestrians etc! Construction work on the eastern portion of Drayton Valley’s 50 Avenue is about to get underway. Expect some detours and traffic disruption in the area over the next several weeks. 

Shale Medical is currently trialing a Saturday same day clinic. Depending on feedback and demand they may extend this further. The following dates are slated for the trial: June 15, 9 am – 4 pm, June 22 9 am -4 pm and June 29: 9 am – 4 pm.

The booking procedure is listed on their website and walk-ins will be accepted as well. 

Drayton Valley’s Small Town Big Party is tomorrow, (that’s Friday June 14)  in Omni 3. That means live music from a couple of bands, plus beer gardens and games and all sorts of fun. This is an adult only event and admission is $7. 

Father’s Day is Sunday June 16. For the love of God, no more socks, please!

And after that, it’s time for summer! The most wonderful time of the year officially begins at 8:50 pm, Thursday June 20. 

National Indigenous Peoples Day is a day recognizing and celebrating the cultures and contributions of the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Indigenous peoples of Canada. This year it’s Friday June 21. 

The Lions Club are bringing the fair to Drayton Valley again this month. It’ll be in town June 21, 22, and 23.

The Frank Maddock High School graduation is June 22. Congratulations to everyone who’s graduating from all of our local schools this year. And if you’re heading off to college or university please call or text your parents regularly. You know how they worry. 

June 26 is the last day of school for students in Drayton Valley and Breton, so watch out for bands of feral youth roaming the streets over the next couple of months. 

Don’t forget that  your property taxes are due to be paid by the end of this month. Since June 30 is a Sunday, you probably want to be a few days early, just in case.  If you live in Brazeau County you’ll get a 30 percent rebate if you pay on time, so it’s worth the effort.

And Canada Day is fast approaching. In Drayton Valley there’s a pancake breakfast starting at 7 am at the legion. The parade begins at 10 am and follows the usual route up 50 Avenue and then north on 50 Street. The rest of the activities will be at the Omniplex from 11 am to 3 pm with fireworks at dusk, weather permitting. 

Cut out the middle man and get your Drayton Valley and District Free Press directly to your email inbox. 

Get more activity ideas in for the Drayton Valley and Brazeau County region in our Brazeau and Beyond Travel Guide. 

Head over to our travel guide page to download yours today.

Click here: Brazeau and Beyond 

At Friday’s celebration Drayton Valley Mayor Nancy Dodds,  Deputy Reeve Kara Westerlund and Breton Mayor Glory Tornack brought greetings from their respective municipalities. Tom McGee, who is current chair of the Brazeau Foundation thanked the staff for the effort they put in to ensure the residents always felt at home. Chesterman echoed that sentiment and also thanked the numerous volunteers and community groups that had provided support over the years.

“I am truly blessed to be part of such a great organization,” she said. “I wish to thank everyone who has supported our seniors in the community. Everyone at Brazeau Foundation truly strives to provide our communities with housing that can be a place to call home.”

Tax help is here

Matalski says the Income Tax Program has volunteers in the community, who have received training provided by the Canada Revenue Agency, do the tax returns. She says people drop their information off at her office, and then a volunteer comes to get the information and files it.

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School division looks a professional education

Frank Maddock High School is also partnering with Drayton Valley Ford as a focus for students in mechanics. Both Frank Maddock and Breton offer a full cosmetology course which helps students achieve apprenticeship level when they graduate. Breton also has received a grant to offer a welding program at the school.

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Review examines wildfire response

The primary objective of this wildfire after-action review is to conduct a thorough and impartial assessment of the incident response within the municipalities of Brazeau County and the Town of Drayton Valley, emphasizing a holistic approach aimed at learning, improving future responses, and fostering a culture of continuous enhancement within its firefighting and emergency management practices.

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Five teams leave league

The Alberta Junior Hockey League is now an 11 team organization. The defection of five breakaway teams to the British Columbia Hockey League was confirmed last week.
“We are disappointed – but not surprised – that the five defecting clubs now intend to drop out of the AJHL to immediately participate in an unsanctioned exhibition series,” the AJHL said in a statement.

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Town and County residents who had concerns and questions about the Buck Creek fire got some answers on June 26 at a meeting at Buck Creek Hall.

The meeting was organized by Brazeau County and had all county councillors present, as well as members from the Drayton Valley Brazeau County Fire Services, representatives from the Alberta Emergency Management Agency (AEMA),  the Drayton Valley RCMP, Town Mayor Nancy Dodds, and some town councillors.

Kent Edney, the chief administrative officer for Brazeau County, chaired the meeting. Using a powerpoint presentation, Edney gave a breakdown of the fire relief efforts and costs. He also used the presentation as an opportunity to address common questions the County has been receiving.

To help put things into perspective, Edney showed the classification of the fire. According to the AEMA, the fire was classified as a type 1 incident, which is the most complex type of incident that can occur. It typically requires national and sometimes international aid to address.

The fire itself was classified as Level 6 Head fire based on the Head Fire Intensity Scale, which is the most dangerous fire situation on a scale of one to six.

“So, you can see that even a trained firefighter isn’t going to run in front of that fire. They’re going to have to fight it from the back and the flanks,” says Edney.

Brazeau County Reeve Bart Guyon pointed out that the incident in Brazeau County sits in the same classification as other well-known natural disasters, like Hurricane Katrina.

“The complexity of responding to this fire was that same complexity of response for Hurricane Katrina,” said Edney.

However, at the time of the fire, there were 105 other wildfires in the province, and Edney said the Buck Creek fire didn’t make the top of the list of the most urgent.

“There were times when we were asking for 200 firefighters, but we only got 30,” said Edney of the first few days of the fire. The reality was that the resources in the province were spread thin.

Edney said there is a four-inch thick emergency manual they have to follow when something like this happens. This manual includes a very detailed command structure that has to be in place to help prevent confusion and misinformation.

Everyone fighting the fire only had one person to answer to at any given time. That person they reported to only had one person to report to, and this went all the way up to the Incident Commander.

In the system, no more than seven people answered directly to the commander. And each of those people only had seven people answering to them, all the way down to the boots-on-the-ground firefighters.

This command structure included the RCMP, fire department, Town, County, and eventually other groups who came in to offer aid. All directions came from one person to ensure there was a consistent effort.

Edney also gave a breakdown of the statistics of the event. In total, there were more than 12,000 acres affected by the fire, which had a perimeter of 48.1 km. He says there were five residences lost to the fire, but there were zero casualties. There were only two known injuries during the entire firefighting effort.

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Students may have a different learning experience this year after the Alberta Education Minister, Demetrios Nicolaides, made the call to ban cell phones in schools.

Brad Volkman, the superintendent of the Wild Rose School Division, says schools have until 2025 to create a policy regarding cell phone use, but they have to start implementing the ban in September.

Volkman says that for many schools, a ban on cell phones is business as usual.

“Quite frankly, many of our schools have already been doing that for years,” says Volkman. 

However, cell phone policies have been left to individual schools to plan and implement. Now, the division itself needs to have something in place.

Volkman says division staff met with school staff to review the policy before the school year. He says the major points were that cell phones could not be used during learning time with the exception of those who have learning or medical needs that require the phones.

Right now, WRSD is using the time given to create their policy to test out different ways of implementing it and enforcing the rules. Each school is putting their own policies in place for the first month. After getting feedback from school staff, parents, and students, the division will be able to put together something that is effective and practical.

He says each school has a different approach to dealing with the phones. One approach requires students to leave their phones at the front of the classroom during instruction time. In some schools, students are required to leave their phones in their backpacks, or in others, teachers will confiscate phones if they catch their students using them.

“What we realized, and there is some research on this, is that we’ve got students that are probably addicted to their phone,” says Volkman. “The minute [the phones] buzz they have to look.”

Another important part of the ban on cell phones is also a ban on social media in the schools. The Minister’s directive doesn’t establish whether all social media needs to be blocked, or if it only applies to certain sites.

“Believe it or not, it’s up to the school division to decide which sites need to be blocked. They didn’t give us a list,” says Volkman.

Another area of the Minister’s order that isn’t very clear has to do with blocking the social media school-wide. The division is able to block the sites through their wifi, but they can’t block the sites for students who have data plans on their phones.

“The Minister’s Order doesn’t address that,” says Volkman. “The Minister’s Order says they can’t use their mobile devices during instructional time and it says that the networks that they connect to must block social media. But it doesn’t address anything around kids using their own data plans during breaks to access social media.”

Volkman says the division has been doing its best to implement the order while figuring out how to handle the effects that some of those implementations have had.

Right now, students are blocked from accessing social media via the school’s network. However, the staff are also blocked. This means that staff cannot use social media to update parents or advertise for upcoming events. As it stands, the division is unable to specify who may have access to social media and which social media needs to be blocked.

He says the division is working to find a way that will allow staff to communicate with parents and students while adhering to the Minister’s ban.

Volkman says the division’s policy will outline a progressive disciplinary plan for any infractions with cell phone use. He says it’s the same way they ask all of their schools to deal with transgressions.

“This will be no different than any other school policy or school rule,” he says. “You start easy, with understanding, grace, and education… but you do have to have a progressive style approach.”

Volkman says the goal is to have a draft put together by mid-October for stakeholders to review in November. In December, they will be putting the final touches on the policy so it is ready to be rolled out in the new year.

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A Court of King’s Bench Justice has outlined her reasons for convicting a woman of manslaughter in an incident that happened in the Breton area.

Bronwyn Hannah Jane Luckham was convicted in April of this year on charges relating to the death of Jonathan James Paul in 2021. Last week Justice Tamara Friesen released written reasons for her decision, which she said might be useful to the Crown and defence when preparing arguments prior to sentencing.

Shortly after 8 p.m. Monday August 30 2021 a man was dropped off at the Drayton Valley hospital suffering from serious injuries, from which he later died. The victim was able to provide some information prior to his death, saying that he had been hit by a vehicle. He was identified as Jonathan James Paul, 40, of Calgary. 

At trial Friesen heard evidence that Paul had been in a relationship with Luckham. The pair were both working at a rural acreage near Breton. The Crown alleged that Luckham was angry with Paul for a variety of reasons, both business and personal. The prosecution argued that Luckham deliberately struck Paul with a Dodge Durango intending to kill him, “or in the alternative, intending to cause him bodily harm that she knew was so serious and dangerous he would likely die of his injuries, thus committing either murder or manslaughter.”

Meanwhile Luckham said that she was under duress at the time and had been trying to escape from Paul who had subjected her to an escalating cycle of abuse.

After hearing the evidence, Friesen found Luckham not guilty of second degree murder, but guilty of manslaughter.  Under Canadian law manslaughter occurs where a person causes the death of another human being “by means of an unlawful act” or “by criminal negligence.”

At trial the court heard from several witnesses, including Luckham, who testified on her own behalf. There was also video evidence from motion activated cameras at the scene. Part of that video, as described by Justice Friesen, showed Paul rolling on the ground as the Durango drove over him.

Luckham and Paul had been involved in an altercation and the hood of the Durango was up at the time.

Defence counsel argued that it was necessary for Luckham to step on the accelerator and drive the way she did because she was trying to escape from Paul and thought her life was in danger.

Friesen noted that “a reasonable driver in the same circumstances as Luckham would not have started the SUV and then pressed down on the accelerator while the hood was up, visibility was poor, and they knew, at a minimum, that another person was in front of, or close to, the path of the SUV.”

“When she struck Paul, Luckham’s manner of driving was therefore a marked departure from the standard of care a reasonable driver would have observed in the same or similar circumstances,” wrote Friesen.

“I find Luckham’s behaviour in failing to provide adequate support and assistance to Paul while he lay in the grass screaming in agony to be morally reprehensible. The surveillance videos are extremely disturbing. However … I accept that neither Luckham nor Paul thought Paul was going to die from his injuries.”

Friesen also noted that Luckham had ultimately assisted Paul in getting into a vehicle, had driven him to the Drayton Valley Hospital and followed up with the hospital to ensure they knew he was there and would assist him.

“The facts established that Luckham’s dangerous driving …, combined with the objective foreseeability that the risk of bodily harm to Paul was neither trivial nor transitory, resulted in his death,” she concluded. “The Crown has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that … Luckham committed the offence of unlawful act of manslaughter.”

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Though he’s new to the official title, the new Staff Sergeant for the Drayton Valley detachment is a familiar face.

Ryan Hoetmer was first stationed in Drayton Valley in 2017 as a corporal overseeing the three man general investigation section (GIS) for the detachment. Prior to his transfer to Drayton Valley, Hoetmer was working in Grande Prairie as part of the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) task force, dealing with organized crime and drug trafficking.

In February of 2022, Hoetmer was promoted to Sergeant. When Staff Sergeant Erin Matthews retired, Hoetmer stepped up to be the acting Staff Sergeant. Then, when Staff Sergeant Troy Raddatz retired, Hoetmer once again filled the role.

He was officially given the title on a permanent basis at the beginning of August.

“I’ve been active in this role since April,” he says. “I’ve sat in this seat a fair amount since I became Sergeant.”

Hoetmer says he and his family like Drayton Valley, and the initial draw was that he grew up in the area.

“I grew up just outside of Rocky Mountain House,” he says.

Both his parents and his wife’s parents are still close by, and they wanted to be closer to them.

Hoetmer has five kids, and throughout the seven years they’ve been in the community, the whole family has made connections and friendships that are important to them. Their youngest child, who is seven-years-old, was born shortly before they moved to Drayton and his oldest recently graduated.

“This really has become home for them,” he says. “And it’s become home for [me and my wife], too.”

He says he and his wife are happy with the community and feel it’s a great place to raise their family. The natural landscape of the area makes it easy for them to pursue some of their favourite pastimes like fishing, hunting, camping, and other outdoor activities.

Hoetmer says another important aspect of Drayton Valley is that it’s not a violent community. He says he’s lived in other places where that was not the case and he appreciates that about the area.

Hoetmer says he has some goals that he would like to achieve in his new position. He says community engagement is a big priority for him and he wants to continue in the direction that the detachment has been for the past few years with that.

“I’m connected to the community through several facets with my kids,” says Hoetmer. “You know, hockey, school sports, dance, music, and I think that’s really important to connect to the community.”

He says he’s been encouraging the members at the detachment to go out and form those connections as well. The detachment has some soccer and basketball coaches and he wants to continue to push that mentality.

“Not just in organized events, but I want our membership to get out and get involved in the community in other ways as well,” he says.

Hoetmer says being out in the community works in two ways. Not only do residents become familiar with the officers, but it also allows them to see a side of the community that they don’t normally work with.

“Often, when you’re policing, you deal with the dark side of the community,” he says. “If you don’t connect with the community on a different level you get a very jaded look at it.”

Another priority will be to focus on prolific offenders. Hoetmer says his background with GIS and dealing with prolific offenders and drug trafficking will help in that area.

“We’re going to continue to drive that,” he says. “…We don’t really have violent crime, but we do have a property crime issue. It’s gotten a lot better since I first came here in 2017.”

He says the ultimate goal for property crime is zero incidents. While he knows they’re unlikely to hit that target, they are always aiming for it.

“The goal would be that you could get out anywhere and leave your vehicle running and it doesn’t go missing,” he says. “We’re not there and we shouldn’t be doing that, but that is the ultimate goal.”

Hoetmer says he also wants to prioritize taking care of the membership. He says with his position, he’s not out in the field, so he wants to provide them as much support as he can. 

“I have to provide the support that the guys and the gals on the floor need to do their job,” he says.

With that in mind, he’s going to continue to push for a new building as Raddatz was.

“My father-in-law worked out of this building from 1989 to 1996,” he says.

Along with his goals with the detachment, Hoetmer says the RCMP will also be working more closely with the Community Peace Officers in Drayton Valley and in Brazeau County.

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The new training officer for the Drayton Valley/Brazeau County Fire Services comes to the position with a background in the military.

Matthew Noad started with the department at the beginning of June after relocating from Cold Lake’s military base.

Noad says he started working in fire services when he was 18 in Magrath, south of Lethbridge. 

“I started fire fighting about as soon as I could,” says Noad.

He says during his time in Magrath, he worked with another man who had worked as a firefighter for the Canadian Military.

“I didn’t even know that there was firefighters in the military,” says Noad.

Noad started with the military in 2018 and completed basic training as well as some firefighter training in Borden, Ontario. Once that was done, he was stationed in Cold Lake.

Military firefighters are mostly stationed at the air force bases in Canada, says Noad, although the Edmonton Army Base also has military firefighters. The rest of the bases have firefighters under National Defence rather than the military.

The firefighters are responsible for the structures and personnel on the base, as well as the aircrafts. He says other than dealing with aircraft, most of the training that they receive is the same that an on-call volunteer would receive at a municipal fire department.

“We kind of become their insurance policy in a sense,” says Noad. “We’re the ones protecting it from fire and damage.”

He says they were basically trained in airport firefighting, which isn’t as much of an issue in Drayton. However, Noad didn’t spend a lot of time dealing with wildfires at the base, so he will also be learning some things during his time here.

After six years working mostly in Cold Lake as a training officer, Noad says he decided to go with a change of direction in his firefighting career. He says he saw the opportunity in Drayton Valley and was excited by the prospects.

Noad says working in Alberta was what he had preferred, having spent most of his life in the province. However, one of the perks of the community was that it was closer to the mountains than Cold Lake was, and his wife has some family in the area.

“I’m actually super excited to be here,” says Noad. “I’m excited to be working with such a committed group of volunteers and full-time staff.”

He says he was impressed watching the dedication the department had to looking out for the County and the Town during the wildfire season in 2023. 

“That was one of the driving forces that brought me here,” he says. “There’s such a dedicated group of individuals that sacrificed their own time to be there for people on their worst days. With the extreme conditions that they were in, they did an excellent job with what they had.”

Noad says he highly encourages anyone who is interested in giving back to their community to apply to be a volunteer firefighter. Their next training recruitment is in the fall, but they accept applications throughout.

Anyone who is interested in applying can visit the Town office for an application or call the department at 780-514-2216.

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The question of whether a person should celebrate their father all year round or on one particular day has been answered for a local family.

On March 18, 2023, the Mockerman family’s lives took a drastic turn when Rob Mockerman was involved in an accident that left him with second and third degree burns to more than 85 percent of his body.

At 5:30 that evening, while his wife Trish and six-year-old son Aden were inside their house near Buck Creek cooking dinner, Mockerman went to his shop to give a tune up to a recently purchased snowmobile.

“We’d just got a new-to-us skidoo from a guy in Edmonton,” says Mockerman. Both he and Aden were excited to go try it out.

Unbeknownst to Mockerman, there was a fuel leak in the machine. When he first started the engine, it caught on fire. At first Mockerman tried to get the machine out of his shop, which held close to a million dollars worth of tools and equipment. 

When it became clear that wouldn’t work, Mockerman tried to put the fire out as best as he could. Finally, he decided to make a run for his fire extinguisher.

“I got half way across the shop when the skidoo blew up,” says Mockerman.

From that point on, Mockerman’s memory of the incident is limited. He says he remembers looking for a way out, and that he could only see a tiny little spot. 

Trish says she saw the smoke through the bedroom window and told Aden that she had to go see what his dad was doing. 

“Once it came across the floor and up the door frame it was too much for me,” says Trish.

“I made sure she dialed 911,” says Aden.

Once Mockerman made it outside, Trish tackled him to the ground, hoping the snow would help put out the flames. He got up again at that point and ran past the deck, where Aden was watching the commotion, before falling into the snow again.

Trish made all the necessary phone calls and soon the ambulance arrived. She’d also reached out to Mockerman’s parents, asking to speak to Ernie so she didn’t have to upset Alice, as well as his estranged brother Randy. Once the paramedics arrived, it became clear that STARS was needed.

Both Ernie and Alice had arrived at Mockerman’s place before he was airlifted to the hospital. 

“I don’t remember much, but I just remember that as STARS was flying away, I was blowing kisses at the helicopter and praying with tears just running down my cheeks,” says Alice.

Ernie says the person that he saw lying on the gurney did not in any way resemble his son. Mockerman asked the paramedics to keep his mom away because he didn’t want her to see him like that.

“It was a nightmare,” says Alice. “It was the worst nightmare that I’ve ever had.”

Eleven minutes after the helicopter arrived, Mockerman was in Edmonton at the burn unit in the University of Alberta hospital.

Upon arrival in Edmonton, Mockerman flatlined for the first time. Before he was stable, Mockerman died two more times in the hospital. For three months, he was in a coma.

He says he has little recollection of the time when he was in the coma other than he had vivid night terrors for the duration of it. A recent trip through Breton gave him an anxiety attack when he recognized a building that had been in one of those nightmares.

Meanwhile, doctors and nurses went to work debriding the dead tissue on his body. 

“I remember waking up once in the middle of it,” he says. “That’s not a fun experience. I realized at that point in time that I was in trouble.”

During his time in the hospital, Mockerman’s family came to see him every weekend without fail. Even Aden made the trip with them, though he didn’t always go inside to see his dad after his first experience seeing Mockerman didn’t go well.

“It was hot in there. I was cooking,” says Aden. Trish recognized that he was about to faint and quickly brought him out to the waiting room.

“That was the hardest part for me,” says Mockerman. “The first time I was seeing my son and he was so scared he couldn’t even come up to me.”

“How do you prepare him for that?” says Alice. “That was his dad, his best friend there. How do I tell him what he’ll see?”

Part of the issue was that Mockerman didn’t look like himself. His body had swollen to nearly four times its natural size. To help prevent his limbs from bursting, doctors made incisions along both arms and legs to help relieve the swelling. Because of the swelling, he also couldn’t breathe so the doctors performed a tracheotomy. 

Mockerman says the only areas of his body that they didn’t remove skin grafts from were the palms of his hands and the soles of his feet. Everything else was fair game.

On Monday they would take a skin graft from his stomach. Then on Thursday, they would take one from his back. Monday would come around again, and they would remove what skin they could from his stomach. 

 

After 48 surgeries, months of rehabilitation that involved learning how to speak, write, and walk again, Mockerman remembers the staff at the hospital fondly.

“Dr. Sean Dodd is like my best friend now,” says Mockerman of the head surgeon. “Dr. Alexis Amour, one of my plastic surgeons, she’s… I couldn’t say enough words about her. She’s phenomenal.”

He says all of the staff on the burn ward were “utterly amazing people.” One of his favourite memories was being woken up at 12:01 a.m. on his birthday as the entire staff on the floor came in to sing him Happy Birthday.

Though Mockerman tried to remain as positive as possible, there were days when his mood turned down. When that happened, he said the staff were always there for him emotionally and truly helped him to get through the experience.

“I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t talk, I couldn’t see for a while,” he says. “I had to learn all of my life skills all over again.”

When it became apparent that the flesh on his left calf wasn’t going to heal, doctors began to discuss amputating his left leg. 

He kept getting infections and they weren’t going away. The doctor told him they had tried every single medication and trial drug available in Canada, but nothing seemed to be working. Mockerman was told he likely only had a few days left to live.

However, a doctor in the United States happened to read about Mockerman and contacted his doctor. They had a new drug that hadn’t even started being tested on animals. The American doctor told Mockerman’s doctor that if he could get Canadian approval, he would ship him the drug. That drug saved his life.

“To this day, they tell me a bee sting could take me out,” says Mockerman. “I don’t have an immune system.”

Dodd fought to have Mockerman keep his leg and was successful. Rather than remove the leg, they removed all of the flesh from his calf, leaving only the bone covered by a couple layers of skin.

“They say it’s amazing that I can even walk,” he says.

Once Mockerman got it into his mind that he was going to walk he said he didn’t let anything deter him from his goal. He didn’t say anything to his family about his efforts. Instead, he surprised them by walking out to see them when they came to visit for his birthday on June 17.

Only a month ago Mockerman had to go to the U of A to have his pinkie fingers removed on both hands. He says he learned that when a body is burned, one of the first things that happens is the fingers curl up. Once that happens, it can be difficult to get them to straighten out to a point that they can be useful.

The remainder of his fingers had to be worked on. Skin grafts were needed and hardware had to be put in place. All three fingers and his thumb work on his left hand, but on his right hand, his pointer finger and middle finger are still in casts.

While Mockerman may have suffered the injuries, his close call affected everyone in his family. Ernie and Alice normally head to Arizona for the winter months, but for the winter of 2023/24, they stayed in Drayton. Ernie has been driving Mockerman in for his weekly appointments.

“There’s no words to express how much it affected all of us,” says Alice. “We just praise the Lord every day.”

 

“I couldn’t have done it without Mom and Dad and Trish,” Mockerman says.

But one of the best things to come out of the experience was Mockerman’s relationship with his brother. He said for the majority of his life, he and his brother didn’t get along. They would only tolerate each other at family events when they didn’t have a choice. Now they are closer than they ever were before.

“Randy and I are best friends now. It really brought us together,” he says. “It brought all of us together.”

Prior to the accident, Mockerman was looking forward to retiring in 2025 with plans to work out of his shop doing custom Harley paint jobs. Unfortunately, Mockerman had taken the insurance off of his vehicles for the winter as he wouldn’t be driving them. A misunderstanding of what exactly was covered by insurance left him with nothing but ash after his shop burned down.

“I’ve never been able to slow down,” he says. “I’ve always been the type of guy to grab an extra gear and keep on going. Slowing down has been one of the hardest things.”

He says one of the hardest things when he returned home was that he couldn’t return to work. Mockerman says he absolutely loved his job, but after his accident, the company had to sell his truck and eliminate his position.

Mockerman says he was shocked to see how many neighbours came out to support his family after his accident. He says he couldn’t express enough gratitude to cover how he felt about their help.

 

One family, the Hayduks, were at his house shortly after the accident and took Aden to their house while the paramedics were there to distract him from the experience.

“You tend to forget how many friends you actually have until something like this unfortunately comes along,” says Mockerman.

He says though he works to stay positive, there are times when he finds his mind drifting to what is missing.

“I just look out the window sometimes and look around to see what I lost,” he says. “But then I look around to see what I have. I feel pretty damn blessed.”

Now that he’s at home, there are still a lot of adjustments that he has to get used to. He says he will never ride a Harley again, and will have to resort to using trikes instead. He’s also lost a lot of his drive for his retirement dream and isn’t sure if it will ever come back.

To help pass the time and as part of his therapeutic process, Mockerman has been writing a book about his experience. He says the nurses on the ward were always encouraging him to write. Now, he has the rough draft of a novel written out, and is always thinking of just one more thing to add to it.

One habit Mockerman has been working on now that he’s home is gratitude. He says he and Aden do their best to start their day finding five things to be grateful for in the upcoming day. 

Prior to his accident, Mockerman says he wasn’t a religious person. But a couple of experiences that he had when he had flatlined has changed his views.

“I saw the light that everyone talks about. I’m guessing it was God standing at the end of it,” he says.

While he can’t be certain, Mockerman says it felt like God was speaking to him. He was told that he had a choice: he could either go to sleep and escape the pain, or if Mockerman could give a good reason, he could live. Mockerman says he chose to live, that he wanted to be there for his son, and then he woke up.

The next time he flatlined all he saw at the end of his tunnel was a picture of Aden. Mockerman says he’d never seen the picture before. But when he came too the next day, his mother had brought that exact same picture, frame and all, to put in his room.

Even though the weather left a lot to be desired, the Mockermans still went out camping on May Long weekend with several friends. Mockerman says he’s hoping to keep as many of his regular activities in his life as he can.

Currently, Mockerman is not able to work. While Trish does still have her job, and is able to work from home sometimes, the couple has had to go through a large chunk of their savings to get by.

Friends and family hosted a fundraiser for them in Breton last summer, and Ernie says he was pleased with the turnout. “There were about 200 people there,” he says.

For now, Mockerman says they are taking it one day at a time.

“They call me miracle man in there,” he says. “I’m not bragging, that’s just what they said. They said they’ve never seen anyone so positive going through what I did.”

Are you a local looking for things to do in and around Drayton Valley, or Brazeau County. Our award winning editor Graham Long, has got your covered in his weekly summary of things happening in Drayton Valley. Have a read of Next Week’s News each week to get an idea on how to plan your, week. 

Next Week's News: May 16, 2024 Column

Attention motorists, cyclists, pedestrians etc! Construction work on the eastern portion of Drayton Valley’s 50 Avenue is about to get underway. Expect some detours and traffic disruption in the area over the next several weeks. 

Shale Medical is currently trialing a Saturday same day clinic. Depending on feedback and demand they may extend this further. The following dates are slated for the trial: June 15, 9 am – 4 pm, June 22 9 am -4 pm and June 29: 9 am – 4 pm.

The booking procedure is listed on their website and walk-ins will be accepted as well. 

Drayton Valley’s Small Town Big Party is tomorrow, (that’s Friday June 14)  in Omni 3. That means live music from a couple of bands, plus beer gardens and games and all sorts of fun. This is an adult only event and admission is $7. 

Father’s Day is Sunday June 16. For the love of God, no more socks, please!

And after that, it’s time for summer! The most wonderful time of the year officially begins at 8:50 pm, Thursday June 20. 

National Indigenous Peoples Day is a day recognizing and celebrating the cultures and contributions of the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Indigenous peoples of Canada. This year it’s Friday June 21. 

The Lions Club are bringing the fair to Drayton Valley again this month. It’ll be in town June 21, 22, and 23.

The Frank Maddock High School graduation is June 22. Congratulations to everyone who’s graduating from all of our local schools this year. And if you’re heading off to college or university please call or text your parents regularly. You know how they worry. 

June 26 is the last day of school for students in Drayton Valley and Breton, so watch out for bands of feral youth roaming the streets over the next couple of months. 

Don’t forget that  your property taxes are due to be paid by the end of this month. Since June 30 is a Sunday, you probably want to be a few days early, just in case.  If you live in Brazeau County you’ll get a 30 percent rebate if you pay on time, so it’s worth the effort.

And Canada Day is fast approaching. In Drayton Valley there’s a pancake breakfast starting at 7 am at the legion. The parade begins at 10 am and follows the usual route up 50 Avenue and then north on 50 Street. The rest of the activities will be at the Omniplex from 11 am to 3 pm with fireworks at dusk, weather permitting. 

Cut out the middle man and get your Drayton Valley and District Free Press directly to your email inbox. 

Get more activity ideas in for the Drayton Valley and Brazeau County region in our Brazeau and Beyond Travel Guide. 

Head over to our travel guide page to download yours today.

Click here: Brazeau and Beyond 

The presentation also contained an hour-by-hour breakdown of the firefighting efforts from May 3 to May 6. In 24 hours, the fire went from the North Saskatchewan River to the Rex Block subdivision on Range Road 80.

While Edney was open to receiving constructive criticism from residents, he did point out to residents one positive that the County did have. During the evacuation, the County permitted people to enter back into the area to feed cattle, pick up medication, and other important items.

“That’s not something you normally do. That’s not standard. That’s not done anywhere else,” says Edney.

In most cases, people are not allowed back into the area for any reason. But the County wanted to do its best to help people keep their day-to-day lives going as much as possible.

He says the situation devolved into people wanting to go back in for favourite articles of clothing or other unimportant matters. With the lack of resources and the danger of the fire, he said it was frustrating that people were bothering responders with those kinds of requests.

And even though they were allowing people back in if the situation was urgent, there were still other people who were aggressive and angry if they were turned away due to unreasonable requests. In one case, a truck drove through a barricade, putting those manning the post in serious danger.

During the question period, many residents expressed concern and disappointment because they felt the fire department was negligent in staying on top of the original fire.

Fire Chief Tom Thomson addressed these concerns by giving a detailed list of their daily activities surrounding the fire from April 23 to May 3. Thomson says that even though there were nine other wildland fires during that time period, and the department was responding to other emergencies like car accidents, the fire was still being checked on daily.

Thomson says there were firefighters out on the scene of that fire every day from April 23 until May 4, when the fire took off. Cherpin also explained that he was out there on May 3, flagging lines for dozer guards that were put into place that evening.

“Just so everyone is aware, we were there the whole week. We were committed, we were involved, and we were extinguishing the fire,” says Thomson.

The main problem with the fire, says Thomson, was that it was in the peat moss. Fires that go underground in peat moss don’t have smoke, there is no heat, and there is no flame.

“The fire burns underground. You cannot see it, you cannot feel it, you cannot smell it. It just pops up and away it goes,” says Thomson.

One area of concern for residents was the amount of communication received from the County. Edney explained to people that it was important to understand the difference between needing information and wanting information.

“You need to know that it’s not safe. You need to know to stay evacuated,” said Edney.

He says many people wanted to know how many firefighters were out fighting, where they were working, and which residences were in danger. However, with the limited resources available for fighting the fire, every phone call asking about those things was using those resources.

Edney admitted that the communications needed work and was open to suggestions from residents about how they could improve. He gave an example of fires that are out of control and under control, using pictures to illustrate. He says he could have clarified how those statuses worked and what they meant.

However, he says as it was, even with the recent downpour of rain, the fire was only now being labeled as under control instead of just being held.

Residents also wanted to know why they couldn’t just sign a waiver form and go in to fight the fire.

Edney explained that a waiver isn’t any good if the County or department were negligent in any way. He says if Joey Cherpin, the Director of Emergency Management, were to give someone permission to go fight the fire and that person died, it would be Cherpin who would go to jail.

He says that even though residents wanted to step in and help, no one felt comfortable taking on the personal liability of giving an untrained volunteer permission to fight the fire.

And while the County wouldn’t authorize volunteers to go in and deal with the fire, there were still some residents who took it upon themselves to help. As a result, there were some incidents where lives were in danger because someone was creating fireguards in an area where firefighters were working to put out hotspots.

Another question put forth by residents was in regard to the dozer guards and the damages they caused.

Edney, Guyon, and Cherpin said there would be remediation taking place for those areas where the firefighting efforts caused damage to property.

However, any property that received damage directly from the fire would have to go through personal insurance. That included fences that had been burned down.

Cherpin also explained that some of the dozer guards put into place were not authorized by the fire department. In fact, there is a dozer guard that runs behind Poplar Ridge and up north toward 621 for several kilometers that were completely unnecessary, and they have no idea who did it.

Guyon and Edney both explained that while the County did not create those guards, they would be covering the expenses to remediate those areas as well.

“There are a lot of things that were done by well-meaning people thinking they were helping… that’s now the County’s responsibility to fix,” said Edney.

Edney and Guyon said the County was in the process of applying for grants from the province to help pay for the remediation costs. Edney says it’s important for residents to take accurate measurements of damaged areas and lots of pictures because when they apply for the grants, they cannot have estimated numbers.

“It comes down to something as simple as you served 540 meals that day, but there were only 512 people signed in, so why were there extra meals?” says Edney.

Tax help is here

Matalski says the Income Tax Program has volunteers in the community, who have received training provided by the Canada Revenue Agency, do the tax returns. She says people drop their information off at her office, and then a volunteer comes to get the information and files it.

Read More »

School division looks a professional education

Frank Maddock High School is also partnering with Drayton Valley Ford as a focus for students in mechanics. Both Frank Maddock and Breton offer a full cosmetology course which helps students achieve apprenticeship level when they graduate. Breton also has received a grant to offer a welding program at the school.

Read More »

Review examines wildfire response

The primary objective of this wildfire after-action review is to conduct a thorough and impartial assessment of the incident response within the municipalities of Brazeau County and the Town of Drayton Valley, emphasizing a holistic approach aimed at learning, improving future responses, and fostering a culture of continuous enhancement within its firefighting and emergency management practices.

Read More »

Five teams leave league

The Alberta Junior Hockey League is now an 11 team organization. The defection of five breakaway teams to the British Columbia Hockey League was confirmed last week.
“We are disappointed – but not surprised – that the five defecting clubs now intend to drop out of the AJHL to immediately participate in an unsanctioned exhibition series,” the AJHL said in a statement.

Read More »

Stevenson says one of the perks of making it into pro hockey is being able to choose the number for his jersey. Since his birthday is March 3, 1999, Stevenson has always had an affinity for the number 33. Now that he is with the Capitals, he can wear the number.

Though he is excited at his success, he says his mother’s encouragement and his father’s steadfast support were what helped him to succeed. “She always believed in me. I would consider my mom a keystone in that. I can’t thank her enough every day.”

Tax help is here

Matalski says the Income Tax Program has volunteers in the community, who have received training provided by the Canada Revenue Agency, do the tax returns. She says people drop their information off at her office, and then a volunteer comes to get the information and files it.

Read More »

School division looks a professional education

Frank Maddock High School is also partnering with Drayton Valley Ford as a focus for students in mechanics. Both Frank Maddock and Breton offer a full cosmetology course which helps students achieve apprenticeship level when they graduate. Breton also has received a grant to offer a welding program at the school.

Read More »

Review examines wildfire response

The primary objective of this wildfire after-action review is to conduct a thorough and impartial assessment of the incident response within the municipalities of Brazeau County and the Town of Drayton Valley, emphasizing a holistic approach aimed at learning, improving future responses, and fostering a culture of continuous enhancement within its firefighting and emergency management practices.

Read More »

Five teams leave league

The Alberta Junior Hockey League is now an 11 team organization. The defection of five breakaway teams to the British Columbia Hockey League was confirmed last week.
“We are disappointed – but not surprised – that the five defecting clubs now intend to drop out of the AJHL to immediately participate in an unsanctioned exhibition series,” the AJHL said in a statement.

Read More »