REBELS ADD GRIT, OFFENCE IN RILEY SHEEN
A CRISP, FILLING EFFORT Dorie Greenspan’s latest cookbook reviewed
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Red Deer Advocate TUESDAY, DEC. 2, 2014
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Pipeline pep talk CANADIANS’ FUTURE ‘HANGS IN THE BALANCE’ IN DEBATE: PRENTICE BY JAMES KELLER THE CANADIAN PRESS VANCOUVER — Alberta’s premier is urging the country to get behind several controversial pipeline projects linked to the province’s oilsands, warning that all Canadians will “feel the pain” if they aren’t approved and built soon. Premier Jim Prentice told a business audience in
Vancouver that energy development such as Alberta pipelines, B.C. liquefied natural gas terminals and Quebec hydroelectric developments will be at the heart of Canada’s economic future. In particular, Prentice said the country’s existing pipelines will be full by the end of the decade. Without increased capacity, producers would be forced to sell Canadian oil at deep discounts, he said, which in turn would eat into government royalties and taxes. “So it’s realistic to look ahead and to say Canada’s
public services will feel the pain if and when we allow this to happen,” Prentice said during an event hosted by the Vancouver Board of Trade. “In fact, all Canadians will feel the pain as and when this begins to happen.” The premier pointed to the Northern Gateway, Trans Mountain, Keystone XL and Energy East pipelines, which he described as “nation-building.”
Please see PIPELINES on Page A2
AMENITIES WISH LIST
VISITING SANTA
City urged to make concert hall a reality BY CRYSTAL RHYNO ADVOCATE STAFF
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Santa has his hands full as Natalia Steenbergen, 2, and her little sister, Kaisa, nine months, of Red Deer, sit on his lap at Bower Place on Monday. Beginning each day at 11 a.m., Santa will be at Bower Place visiting with children young and old up to and including Christmas eve. Santa’s schedule is available on the Bower Place web site.
Drug runner to be sentenced early next year BY BRENDA KOSSOWAN ADVOCATE STAFF Sentencing will be held early next year for a young Red Deer man arrested for running drugs. Chris Hernberg, now 22, pleaded guilty to trafficking crack cocaine before Justice Monica Bast in Red Deer Court of Queen’s Bench on Monday. Hernberg was 19 when he and two other men were arrested on July 12, 2011, after a drug raid at a residence on Jamieson Avenue in Red Deer. Crown prosecutor David Inglis said Hernberg was the only runner over the age of 18 in a residence that had raised suspicion among neighbours. Members of the Red Deer City RCMP Street Team
30% flurries. High -12. Low -16.
FORECAST ON A2
INDEX Four sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . B5,B6 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A6 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . D1-D3 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . C5 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B4
Please see COURT on Page A2
Please see WISH LIST on Page A2
Report of abduction of soldier may be false Ottawa is working on the assumption that abduction of an Israeli-Canadian woman by militants may in fact be false.
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put the building under surveillance on July 8, 2011, after a number of neighbours complained of frequent and brief curbside meetings between people from inside the house and people in vehicles, said Inglis. Surveillance police witnessed a number of handto-hand exchanges consistent with the drug trade and also noted an increase in activity whenever two adult men were at the house, he said. Investigators determined that the two men were supplying the drugs and arranging buys. Young people inside the house, including Hernberg, were paid to run the drugs to the street and return with the money.
News that a performing arts/concert hall ranked near the top of a community’s wish list did not surprise members of Red Deer’s arts community. And now they want the city to start making the facility a reality. “It’s encouraging to think the community thinks it’s important for Red Deer to have a performing arts centre that is independent of the college,” said Chandra Kastern, the executive director of the Red Deer Symphony Orchestra. “The downside is it appears to be pushed aside by council, which it makes it very difficult for groups like ours to envision where we fit in long-term planning in the city.” In last week’s summary report of the city’s community amenity project, residents ranked a performing arts/concert hall No. 4 in the priority list, after more trails, a multi-use aquatic centre and a Bower Ponds expansion. The list, built as a result of public consultation, ranked 148 amenities. But a performing arts centre/concert hall appears not to be in the city’s plans until 2023 at the earliest — it is listed by city administration as a placeholder then, within the long-term plan. But sometime early next year, city council will sit down in a workshop to discuss the results of the consultation and potentially tweak the priority list. Coun. Paul Harris, who has been a strong advocate for the arts community, was part of a committee what worked on the city’s Cultural Master Plan in 2000 and the cultural vision update in 2008. Harris said he plans to push the amenities discussion to an open forum, possibly at a council governance and policy meeting, so the public can hear the debate, understand the rationale and so the meeting is recorded. He said the city spent a year asking the public what they wanted and in the order they wanted, and now it’s time to figure out how to make it happen. “I feel very strongly that if we can’t address the Top 10 and figure out how we are going to move them along, we’re doing something wrong,” said Harris. “I don’t know how we move the concert hall along but I would suspect we have to start by defining exactly what it is that needs to be built ... and the timing. Certainly it needs to be built within 10 years.”