Red Deer Advocate, November 19, 2012

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URBAN WINE

CFL

A ‘hobby gone wind’ prospers in B.C.

Calgary, Toronto to play for the Grey Cup

C3

B1

CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

BREAKING NEWS ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM

MONDAY, NOV. 19, 2012

Amber Alward and her son Ethan, four, admire some of the light festooned heavy equipment machines in the Santa Claus parade in downtown Red Deer on Saturday. Hundreds of grown-ups and kids flocked to downtown Red Deer to see Santa Claus and experience the twinkling lights, parade floats and treats of the Festival of Trees kick-off celebration. See story on Page A3. Photo by LANA MICHELIN/Advocate staff

Road ‘connection’ returns DRAFT EAST HILL PLAN CONTAINS RIGHT-OF-WAY TO POTENTIALLY CONNECT MOLLY BANISTER DRIVE, 22ND STREET BY RANDY FIEDLER ADVOCATE STAFF

The dotted red line shows the possible path of a link between Molly Banister Drive to the west and 22nd Street to the east.

Connecting Molly Banister Drive east across Piper Creek to 22nd Street is considered in a City of Red Deer area structure plan. The East Hill Major Area Structure Plan (MASP) preserves a 43-metre-wide right of way for an arterial road through undeveloped land south of the Sunnybrook subdivision to Piper Creek. “This does not necessarily imply that Molly Banister Drive will be extended across Piper Creek, and any such decision would require council approv-

al,” states the plan. Past talk of extending the road from its end near Bower Place Shopping Centre’s northeast corner across Piper Creek has proven controversial. A 2007 municipal election issue, council rejected it due to environmental and neighbourhood opposition. On Thursday, former city councillor Lorna Watkinson-Zimmer called the extension “the most stupid thing to even think about. “I think my first council meeting (in 1995) was about Molly Banister. I worked hard to get rid of it.” Mayor Morris Flewwelling is “a little surprised it’s still on the

map, but there isn’t a plan to build it right now. “Rather than continuing to build wider, bigger and more multi-lane roads, the thinking is to provide good quality roads and alternatives,” he said, adding 19th and 32nd Streets can meet the city’s traffic needs. City major projects planner Angus Schaffenburg said the June 2011 draft East Hill MASP contains right-of-way land to potentially connect Molly Banister Drive with 22nd Street. “It’s in the current plan and continues in the proposed document.”

Please see PLANS on Page A3

MADD CANDLELIGHT VIGIL

Memories remain for families of victims of impaired driving BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF When Darlene Gabrielson heard emergency sirens in her neighbourhood she remembers thinking, “Please let it not be my son.” Even after police officers showed up at her door, she was still praying that her son, Robert, was only injured. But the reality was that her 21-year-old son was killed by a drunk driver as he was cycling back from the gym and would never make it home. The fatal crash happened on Spruce Drive hill some 28 years ago, but Gabrielson still sheds tears at the memory of those nightmarish moments. She said she relives her loss every time she hears of another

PLEASE RECYCLE

Darlene Gabrielson lights a candle at a MADD candlelight vigil at St. Luke’s church on Saturday in memory of her son, Robert, who was killed by a drunk driver.

person killed in a drunk driving collision. And there’s no shortage of them. On this 20th anniversary year of Red Deer’s MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) chapter, the pointless carnage continues, said Gabrielson, one of 80 people who attended a candlelight vigil Saturday night at St. Luke’s church in Red Deer. At least nine Central Albertans are known to have died in drunkdriving related crashes since January, said Aleta Neville, president of the local MADD chapter — “and the year’s not over yet.” Neville isn’t certain what will change people’s behavior, but is disappointed about the length of jail sentences imposed on impaired drivers who kill or injure people.

Photo by LANA MICHELIN/ Advocate staff

Please see MADD on Page A3

WEATHER

INDEX

Clear, high 2, low -12

Four sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C3,C4 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D1-D4 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C2 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C5 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B5

FORECAST ON A2

CANADA

LOCAL

CANADIAN EMBASSY CALLED VULNERABLE

PAPER BOOKS, A HAND-MADE ITEM

Canada’s diplomats in Moscow will have to work another three years in an embassy compound that’s vulnerable to terrorist attack and the prying eyes of foreign spies, The Canadian Press has learned. A5

In the age of e-books, a Ponoka-based couple have built a business making paper books by hand. C1


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