Red Deer Advocate, June 26, 2013

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Red Deer 1913 — 2013 Create Celebrate Commemorate ALBERTA FLOODING

FRUSTRATION MOUNTS

SPEEDING TO A TRAGIC FATE/A4

Complete flood coverage on A3, A5, B1, C1

CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

BREAKING NEWS ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 2013

River of Lights cancelled COMMITTEE SEARCHING FOR ALTERNATIVE VENUE FOR HOMECOMING FESTIVAL WEEKEND EVENTS BY CRYSTAL RHYNO ADVOCATE STAFF

Contributed photo

Jamie Cumberland of Airdrie, formerly of Red Deer, (left) and Pierre Cadieux of Innisfail and were the latest team to make the cut for the Canadian version of the long-running American adventure series.

Gay cowboys saddle up for Amazing Race

The flagship finale of the Homecoming Festival Weekend celebrating the city’s centennial has been revamped. Red Deer Centennial Committee members announced on Tuesday that the River of Light: Points of View event will not go ahead as originally planned because the city has closed Bower Ponds and Great Chief Park, where the majority of the events were scheduled. The city closed the parks for safety reasons following flooding along the Red Deer River.

“In spite of the fact things could be lovely on Sunday and Monday, we have to make the decisions based on today,” said Sheila Bannerman, committee chairperson. “And today the decision is the river is closed.” The committee is scrambling to find alternate locations for the evening extravaganza events, including the community barbecue, outdoor concert and movie, interfaith celebration and a place to transform the planned light installation into an alternate production. The Centennial Chocolate Chase has been postponed and the Banners on the Bridge event is still to be deter-

mined. The free pancake breakfast at Parkland Mall and the Centennial Grove dedication on the North Hill, just below the mall, are still a go. A big part of the festivities was to involve light and water as public art installments. The centennial committee has been working with the U.K.based Creatmosphere on the project for about a year. Bannerman said the River of Light: Points of View is not just a light show but a water education initiative and the Points of View will continue to be highlighted.

Please see FESTIVAL on Page A2

BREAKING THE SPEED BARRIER

BY CRYSTAL RHYNO ADVOCATE STAFF Two gay cowboys are hoping to be the pride of Central Alberta when they compete for a big pay day in Amazing Race Canada next month. The winning team gets a ‘I CLUTCHED $250,000 in cash, MY PEARLS. two 2014 Chevrolet Corvette I GRABBED Stingrays and the MY CHEST chance to fly free in executive class AND SAID, for a year for two ‘OH MY anywhere Air Canada flies. GOD, GIRL, Pierre Cadieux WE HAVE TO of Innisfail and APPLY.’ Jamie Cumberland of Airdrie, formerly of Red — PIERRE CADIEUX ON HEARING ABOUT THE Deer, were the CANADIAN VERSION latest team to OF ‘AMAZING RACE’ make the cut for the Canadian version of the long-running American adventure series. CTV announced three more teams on Tuesday. Five teams have been announced and another four will be added for a total of nine teams competing in the race. The two men are best friends who met through an Alberta Rockies Gay Rodeo Association fundraising dance about 15 years ago. The best friends were not giving away any details to what happened during the race in May. Cadieux said viewers will just have to wait until next month to see how the team fared. The show will debut on Monday, July 15, on CTV, TSN, TSN2 and RDS. The teams raced and competed in challenges across Canada as opposed to the American version where teams raced around the world. “It was the most amazing experience of my life and I got to do it with my best friend,” said Cadieux. “I saw and did things that I never thought I could do.” Cadieux said it looks a lot easier watching on television. He said it was the most challenging things he has ever done but at the same time one of the most rewarding experiences. Cadieux said they have always dreamed about competing but couldn’t because the show was only open to United States residents. So when Cumberland called to say a Canadian version in the works, Cadieux said, “I clutched my pearls. I grabbed my chest and said Oh my god, girl we have to apply.” Cadieux, 38, is a general manager for creditor insurance sales for ATB Financial and Cumberland, 47, class of 1984 of Lindsay Thurber Comprehensive High School graduate, works in human resources in Airdrie. His parents, Barbara and Gary Cumberland, still call Red Deer home.

Please see RACE on Page A2

PLEASE RECYCLE

Photto by JEF Pho JEFFF STOK STOKOE/ OE/Ad Advoca ocate te e

Casey Lawes of Provostt had a time of 4.5 seconds wrestling thiss steer to the ground butt a broken barrier penalty y added 10 seconds to hiss score during the second d go-round of the Ponoka a Stampede on Tuesday.. T he Ponoka Stampede e r uns daily through to o July 1st with Rodeo and d Professional Chuckwagon n racing daily. Please see e r la re late ted d st stor ory y on p pag ag ge B6 B6..

Sutter tapped to coach World Juniors BY GREG MEACHEM ADVOCATE SPORTS EDITOR Hockey Canada is going back to the coach who laid golden eggs two years in a row. Red Deer Rebels general manager/head coach Brent Sutter will run the Canadian bench at the 2014 World Junior Hockey Championship in Sweden. The appointment was to be made official during Brent Sutter a press conference this morning in Toronto. “(Hockey Canada president) Bob Nicholson contacted me three weeks ago and we sat down and talked about this at length,” Sutter said on Tuesday, as he drove to Calgary to board a flight to Toronto. “Nothing was done earlier because this involves the Canadian Hockey

WEATHER

INDEX

60% showers. High 22. Low 10.

Four sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B3 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A6 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D1-D5 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C6 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B4-B8

FORECAST ON A2

League, too, and Hockey Canada was trying to restructure some things. When they got their structure kind of in place, they approached me and asked me if I wanted to coach the team.” Sutter was the Canadian team bench boss for world junior gold-medal triumphs in 2005 in Grand Forks, N.D., and the following year in Vancouver. “It’s run a little differently now. There’s a management staff involved and I’m one of five or six guys who could end up being on that staff and I’m also coaching the team,” he said. Still, Sutter and his assistant coaches — Ryan McGill and Benoit Groulx — will have the final say in player selection. “At the end of the day, after everything is discussed and there’s been a great dialogue with everybody, the coaching staff will have to decide on the final selection of the team,” said Sutter. McGill rejoined the Kootenay Ice last summer and is the reigning Western Hockey League coach of the year. He was also an assistant coach with the Calgary Flames when Sutter was the head man from 2009 to last year. “Ryan did an outstanding job with

Kootenay and he has a lot of experience at both the pro and junior level,” said Sutter. Groulx is the head coach of the QMJHL Gatineau Olympiques and along with current New Jersey Devils mentor Pete DeBoer was an assistant to Sutter during the 2007 Canada/Russia Super Series. “These guys are a great fit. It’s a good staff,” said Sutter. The success of the 2005 team started a run of five straight world junior championships for Canada, but the national squad hasn’t struck gold since 2009. Perhaps Sutter’s approach to selecting and then preparing the team will reap the ultimate reward in the 2014 championship, which starts on Boxing Day. “There’s so much heat and pressure put on these players, these kids ... on the entire team, including the staff, because Canada expects to win every year,” he said. “We know what the ultimate goal is and yet that’s not what you focus in on. You focus in on the process to get to that point.

CANADA

BUSINESS

Please see SUTTER on Page A2

OBAMA SETS KEYSTONE JUMP IN HOUSING CONDITIONS STARTS FORECAST Authorities should only approve TransCanada’s Keystone XL pipeline if they’re certain it won’t ‘significantly exacerbate’ greenhouse gas emissions, U.S. President Barack Obama said Tuesday. A6

Housing starts in Red Deer this year are expected to jump nearly 20 per cent, says Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. in its most recent forecast. B1


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