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Your LOCAL Media since 1918! Volume 106 Issue 21
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Human waste and garbage found with thrift donations Page 2 Wednesday, January 24, 2024
Excitement builds for expansion as Tofield Golden Club celebrates 50 years Jana Semeniuk Staff Reporter
A planned $1.5 million expansion for the Tofield Golden Club could not have come at a better time. With membership numbers exploding and a 50th anniversary year, treasurer Jim Robichaud said 2024 is starting off on the right foot. “Our membership is going to quadruple, no questions about it,” said Robichaud. “We're already seeing it. When I came here a year ago, we were at 18 members, now we're at 110 or 115. Within the next 10 years, half our population are going to be seniors in a lot of areas, especially rural Alberta, so we’ve got to deal with that right now. We became an association in 1974 (and this year is our 50th anniversary year).” Since making a presentation on Nov. 14 to the Tofield Town Council, Robichaud said the Tofield Golden Club have been busy making plans for their ‘Tofield of Dreams’. He added that the Town of Tofield has agreed to support the project by selling the Golden Club their existing building for a dollar in addition to funding the blueprints and conceptual drawings for the additions which are expected to cost approximately $40,000. He said the Tofield Golden Club is in need of a complete overhaul from doubling the size of their facility to redefining the club itself. He said he has travelled across the province and spoken to other seniors’ clubs to see how they are managing. “(I wanted to find out) how are they dealing with creating enthusiasm, excitement and purpose for seniors. And they said, it's very, very difficult,” said Robichaud. “They shared a story with me that, years ago, our parents couldn't wait to be 65. And when they got to be 65, they proclaimed, ‘I'm a senior, I’m retired, I'm really going to enjoy the golden years, I'm really going to live’. Today in 2024, they don't want to associate with being ‘a senior’. There's a stigma. They don't want to be 65-year-olds, they don't want to go into a dormant state in life. They want to be excited. They want to take on the world. And in the type of facilities that we and all the other senior centres in the province have, we don't have
The junior high Ryley Rebels hosted their first home basketball game of the season against Viking on Wednesday, Jan. 17. The girls’ game was fairly close throughout, with the score tied at 18 at the end of the third quarter, but they lost to the Viking Vixens with a final score of 18-21. The boys’ team also scored 18 points, but lost to the Viking Norsemen 18-64. “The Ryley girls and boys teams have tremendously improved since the beginning of the season. (Assistant Coach) Jen (Hilsabeck) and I continue to feel so proud of everyone for the hard work and dedication that is given at every practice and every game, from both the players and their families. Our next home game is January 29 against Daysland,” said Kady McKinney, the coach for both the girls and boys junior high basketball teams. Pictured above: Ryley Rebel #9 Sasha Hilsabeck-McKinney blocks a Vixen player. KARI JANZEN PHOTO
the facilities to accommodate their mindset.” Robichaud said that seniors today are more active and healthier than in previous decades and want to belong to a club where they can try new activities. “They want to be active, they want to play pickleball, badminton, they want a gymnasium to work out. And that's what brought this all about,” he said. Additionally, since the council meeting in Nov., Robichaud said the dimensions of the new addition had to be adjusted. He said the building will not only accommodate activities for the seniors but will also act as a disaster relief centre and make use of solar energy. “It was going to be 100 feet long and 55 feet wide, but it’s too long to fit onto the lot. So I cut 20 feet off the front end of it and made a gymnasium off to the side. So what we are going to have is 80 feet wide and 88 feet long,” said Robichaud. “It's a very secure building, it's going to be a steel structure, it's going to be a disaster relief, capability building. We’re (also) going with solar panels. (This building) is not just open to seniors, its open to everyone.” Robichaud said the project will be done in phases,
and the next steps include a survey of the three-lot property. An estimated date for ground-breaking has not yet been determined.
Tofield Golden Club treasurer Jim Robichaud holds conceptual drawings (in addition to a photo of a group of happy seniors) for a planned $1.5 million expansion of the 50-year-old club which will include a JANA SEMENIUK PHOTO gymnasium.