THURSDAY OCTOBER 24, 2013
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Vol. 61, Issue 207
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Thick fog has blanketed the Cranbrook area most mornings this week, and is likely to persist through Sunday — so exercise care in your weekend driving. See our foggy weather update on Page 2.
Old brick building causes heritage stir Old electrical building served as a rallying point for the revival of Heritage Association, Councillor says A RNE PE TRYS HEN Townsman Staff
The Baker Hill Heritage Association is operating again after a number of years on hiatus. At City Council’s regular meeting Monday, Coun. Angus Davis said that the association had its first meeting last week. “What I think really brought some of the interest to get the heritage association going was the topic of the preservation of the old building behind City Hall,” Davis said.
“I think the young people who were active in getting this old building behind us were in attendance at the Baker Hill inaugural meeting again.” Davis said that, initially, preservation of the old brick electrical building wasn’t high on his list of things he wanted to see done. But seeing the group get its earnestness back and the brick building become a rallying point, was something Davis seemed glad to see.
College working to improve maternity conditions in Kenya S A L LY M AC D O N A L D Townsman Staff
“Maisha” means “life” in Swahili. And in practical terms, the MAISHA partnership between the College of the Rockies and a Kenyan university hopes to bring life to the hundreds of Kenyan mothers and babies who die in childbirth each year. With $1.6 million in federal government funding, the College of the Rockies is partnering with the Dedan Kimathi University of Technology for five years in the Maternal Access and Infant Survival for Health Advancement (MAISHA) program. The program’s goal is to re-
duce the number of deaths of women and babies in Kenya’s Nyeri and Migori regions. To achieve that, the College of the Rockies and Kimathi are working together to train nursing staff and community health workers, to improve health education, and to provide basic obstetric care equipment. Since MAISHA’s launch in September 2012, three nursing instructors from Kimathi have been trained so that they can lead a five-day course, Emergency Obstetric and Neonatal Care, and they have taken 85 nurses through the course. Those three instructors, Joyce Jebet, Salome Mukui, and James Ndambuki, are in Cran-
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brook this week to gather information about how they can improve their services in Kenya. MAISHA works with eight health care facilities in two regions of Kenya: Nyeri and Migori. The areas are vastly different from each other both geographically and socially. When MAISHA began, 950 rural expectant mothers were asked to discuss care during pregnancy. “It’s amazing what a pregnant women has to go through in Kenya. There are no health benefits, there is no universal health care,” said Graham Knipfel, COTR’s manager of international business development.
See MAISHA, Page 3
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