A9 HOME BUILDING PICKS UP IN JUNE
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MOSQUITO NUMBERS EXPECTED TO STAY LOW THIS SUMMER
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STANTON TOPS HOME RUN DERBY
CANADIANS EMBRACE POKÉMON GO — ONCE THEY FIGURE OUT HOW TO GET IT
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SYLVAN LAKE
Task force to weigh urgent-care options
More than cookies THOUSANDS OF GIRL GUIDES GATHER IN SYLVAN LAKE FOR WEEK-LONG CAMP
BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF A plan that will make urgent, after-hours health care a reality for Sylvan Lake and neighbouring communities will be in the hands of Minister of Health Sarah Hoffman by Sept. 30. A joint task force made up of members from Sylvan Lake and area communities and Alberta Health Services will spend the next three months working on the plan. “We’re going to look at all of the options. It may be a single location or it may be a network of services that work together to provide that same service in the community,” said Kerry Bales, chief zone officer for Alberta Health Services Central Zone, on Monday. “What we’ve looked at is making sure there is access for non-emergent conditions that have the proper support, such as lab and diagnostics, after hours to provide for people’s needs.” Sylvan Lake and area have pursued an urgent-care centre since 2011 and established an Urgent Care Committee to push for a facility that would run seven days a week, with access to a lab and X-ray. Sylvan Lake Mayor Sean McIntyre said the Urgent Care Committee, AHS and the Ministry of Health are now working in the same direction. “The messaging we’re getting from the province now is we hear you loud and clear and we’re working on a solution and they’re committed to making it happen. That’s a very encouraging message to us,” McIntyre said. “We’re really happy to move past determining the need and getting on to planning and implementing a solution,” said McIntyre who is a member of the task force.
Photo by MARK BRETHERTON/Advocate staff
Girl Guides master the art of medieval warfare: an improvised trebuchet provides the firepower for the forthcoming siege. BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF
about 40 per cent from Alberta, but there are also close to 100 girls from Peru, Trinidad, Scotland, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and elsewhere. Campers are sleeping in 13 tent villages named after mountains in the Canadian Rockies. Ranger Nicole Kundert, 16, of Red Deer, said even though it’s a massive campground, there are tents everywhere. The camp is hosting a total of 2,752 people.
Girl Guides from across Canada and around the world have gathered on the shores of Sylvan Lake for Girl Guides of Canada’s 13th international camp Guiding Mosaic 2016. Almost 2,000 guides between the ages of 12 to 18 and from 13 countries will be at Camp Woods for the weeklong camp. About 90 per cent of the Pathfinders and Rangers are Canadian, with
Guides are involved in a variety of programs from boating on the lake to computer coding. Kundert said it was her first time coding and she will be focusing on media arts like photography and videography while at camp. “It’s a fantastic experience, plus you get to meet people from all over the world. They’re all really, really lovely people,” Kundert said.
Please see GUIDES on Page A8
Please see CARE on Page A8
Crops in good shape, but outlook not ‘all sweetness and light’ BY MARY-ANN BARR ADVOCATE STAFF
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
The canola crop in Central Alberta is said to be about two weeks ahead of schedule due to a warm spring and recent wet weather. RED DEER WEATHER
INDEX NEWS A2-A3, A5-A8, B7 COMMENT A4 BUSINESS A9-A10
Early seeding followed by a lot of sunshine and rain is making for some nice growing conditions for Central Alberta crops. “They are very good, but it’s not all sweetness and light,” said Harry Brook, an Alberta Agriculture crops specialist at the Alberta Ag-Info Centre in Stettler. Brook took an extensive drive through parts of Alberta earlier in the week looking at crops, and said cereals are looking good. “There’s been a lot of
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Please see CROP on Page A8
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rain but in some areas there’s been too much rain.” In some fields that have heavy soils and not enough elevation for draining, crops have been drowned out in low areas. Farmers have responded by re-seeding, which runs the risk of frost at the end of the growing season. “The winners of the crop lottery as far as how as they look would be the cereals,” said Brook. These would include crops like wheat, barley and oats.
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