Red Deer Advocate, January 26, 2016

Page 1

RESIDENTIAL PLOWING IS UNDERWAY

NO BILL 6

1. Know your Snow Zone and Route 2. Check the schedule 3. Move your vehicle

CARBON ON TAX

LET YOUR VOICE BE HEARD

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Sign the petitions calling for plebiscites on Bill 6 and the Carbon Tax.

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The rise of an unlikely TV juggernaut

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Red Deer Advocate TUESDAY, JAN. 26, 2016

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School board to vote on boundary changes

LOOK MA, NO HANDS!

BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF

ter.� The ice doesn’t drop as the water is depleted. His advice is to stay off the lake. “I have a pretty high tolerance for risk. I’ve been through the ice before and pulled myself up.� But if someone were to fall through the ice, they may not be able to reach up high enough from the water to pull themselves out.

It would be hard to argue the Red Deer Public School District didn’t do their homework. For more than a year, they have consulted, developed scenarios, consulted, engaged online and consulted some more in the redistricting of a number of schools starting in September 2017. That’s ‘WE WANTED TO the year the new In- LOOK AT THE WHOLE glewood PICTURE. YOU S c h o o l DON’T GET MANY opens and the need for CHANCES TO GET IT new boundRIGHT AND THERE aries there opened up WAS A SENSE the door for the district THAT SOME OF THE to make a NEIGHBOURHOODS larger effort WEREN’T GOING to get its school areas TO THE CLOSEST right, said SCHOOLS AND WE superintendent Stu HAD A CHANCE TO Henry. FIX THINGS.’ “ W e wanted to — STU HENRY, SUPERINTENDENT look at the whole picture,� said Henry. “You don’t get many chances to get it right and there was a sense that some of the neighbourhoods weren’t going to the closest schools and we had a chance to fix things.� For example Vanier Woods and Vanier Woods East students were previously attending Barrie Wilson, which is located in Timberlands. Their potential new school in Inglewood will be much closer to home. The public school board will vote on Wednesday on the redistricting proposed by the board’s administration. Henry said the best feedback came from online with the meetings and open houses being poorly attended. The online process had 1,000 participants with 3,000 comments. That feedback led to the proposed solution. One of the larger adjustments is the relocation of the Spanish Bilingual program.

Please see BUBBLES on Page A2

Please see SCHOOLS on Page A2

Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff

Kylie Stockford and Donovin Langille got the chance to enjoy a little winter playtime at school Monday afternoon. The Grade 2 students in Nicole Gruntman’s class at Joseph Welsh Elementary, along with their classmates, donned their skates and took advantage of the rink on the school yard.

Abraham Lake’s frozen bubbles beautiful but deadly MARY-ANN BARR ADVOCATE STAFF A winter phenomenon that is attracting sightseers and photographers to Abraham Lake comes with a caution from an experienced outdoorsman. The artificial lake, which is a reservoir for the Bighorn Dam on the North Saskatchewan River, is located 211 km west of Red Deer on Hwy 11. It has been a popular destination in winter because of large frozen bubbles in the ice. The bubbles are caused by methane gas released by decaying organic matter in the water. The gas freezes in the ice during winter, making for some interesting photos. However, because water is drawn down from the reservoir, it can create conditions where there is air, not water, right below the ice surface. Bary Shellian, from Rocky Mountain House, recently went out to the lake, in the vicinity known as Windy Point, about 40 km west of Nordegg. He had gone out to the area to ride his fat-tire bike, made for riding in winter conditions, because he had heard about the bubbles.

Contributed photo by BARRY SHELLIAN

The ice at Abraham Lake showing frozen bubbles of methane, caused by plants releasing the gas, which then gets frozen and trapped under the ice. It’s not a lake, it’s a reservoir, which means it’s constantly being drained, said Shellian. “It’s not safe at all actually because if it was a normal lake and you fell through the ice, the water would be right there. You might have a hope of getting back up. “But boy, the reservoir, if the ice broke, you could drop several feet through space before you hit the wa-

Anonymous donation to hospital fits to a TEE BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre is getting new life-saving equipment to diagnose cardiac conditions thanks to a $750,000 anonymous donation to Red Deer Regional Health Foundation. The hospital is getting its first transesophageal echocardiography system, known as TEE. The state-of-the-art equipment, worth $500,000, allows doctors to picture the heart’s movement, check for blood health, see clots, and any harmful bodies or diseases in the circulatory system.

“Essentially it’s an ultrasound that goes down to your esophagus and gives a better look at your heart than the conventional ultrasound,� said Iaian Park, foundation executive director on Monday. The TEE will shorten diagnosis time, show the presence of arterial clots and further infections, assess valves for ruptures or leaks, and help prevent cryptogenic strokes, which are sudden and of unknown origin. It will aid echo and stress testing for patients with cardiac conditions that require more detailed analysis and tailored treatment.

Please see DONATION on Page A2

WEATHER

INDEX

Increasing cloudiness. High 2. Low -6.

Two sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business . . . . . . A9-A10 Canada . . . . . . . . A5, A7 Classified . . . . . . B6-B7 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . A8 Entertainment . . . . . . B9 Sports . . . . . . . . . B1-B5

FORECAST ON A2

Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff

Red Deer Regional Hospital Foundation executive director Iaian Park, left, speaks with cardiologist Dr. Stephen Tilley in the cardiology department at Red Deer Regional Hospital on Monday. Tilley and Park are excited about new cardiac testing equipment that will be brought online in Red Deer.

Father of shooting victim prepares his son’s grave The father of one of the victims of a mass shooting burned logs at the community cemetery where his son will be buried. Story on PAGE A5

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