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Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Early morning crash
Staff Photo by Devin Wilger
The morning of Feb. 2, 2021 started with a bit of a bang, as there was a collision at the intersection of Broadway Ave. and Gladstone St. Yorkton Fire Protective
Services and Yorkton RCMP were at the scene to assess the damage and help those involved.
City updating its cultural plan By Calvin Daniels Staff Writer The City of Yorkton will take another step in updating the community’s Municipal Cultural Plan. In 2009, the City of Yorkton became the first Saskatchewan municipality to develop a Municipal Cultural Plan, with support of the
provincial global organization for arts and culture in Saskatchewan, SaskCulture. The following year, Yorkton City Council adopted the Municipal Cultural Plan and directed administration to examine the findings and bring forward recommendations for an implementation strategy, explained Darcy McLeod, Director
of CDPR with the City at the regular meeting of Council Monday. “Now, ten years after the process began, we are revisiting and refreshing our Municipal Cultural Plan. Our community has changed over the past ten years and, in 2020, through a SaskCulture Community Cultural Engagement and Planning Grant,
Prairie Wild Consulting was engaged to conduct local research, including: information gathering, identification of cultural and community assets, mapping assets, assessment, analysis of data, and eventual publishing of these findings,� he said. The findings of Prairie Wild Consulting will soon be provided to Council,
and the greater community, in a “State of Culture Report�. McLeod said they would then move into the next phase of the process, which is community engagement. In this Community Engagement phase, Prairie Wild Consulting would be engaged to work with us to host public meetings, town hall
meetings, facilitated discussions, focus groups, building community knowledge and capacity through presentations/ guest speakers followed by discussions, etc. There is no financial commitment from, or budget impact to, the City to apply for this grant, other than our inkind staff time, added McLeod.
Business program eligibility expanding By Calvin Daniels Staff Writer The City of Yorkton is looking to expand who may be eligible for its Business Improvement Program.
Yorkton Council approved the new Business Improvement Incentive Program (BIIP) in November, with incentives taking effect in January of this year. The Program consists
of three parts: the Façade and Site Improvements Incentive, the New Construction Incentive and the Vacant Building Tax Abatement. “There has been strong interest in the
Program, especially for the Façade and Site Improvements Incentive, where six businesses have already initiated the formal application process,� explained Michael Eger Director
of Planning, Building & Development with the City at the regular meeting of Yorkton Council Monday. However, there have been concerns about eligibility.
“Though uptake has been positive, City Administration, along with our partners at YBID and Chamber of Commerce, have been receiving negative feed
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Women’s Summit set for March By Calvin Daniels Staff Writer The fourth annual Women’s Summit is slated to take place in March with the program going virtual. “We’re going to have an online platform,� offered Deb Cook, spokesperson for the
Everyday Heroes organized event. The Women’s Summit Seminar Series, starts March 8, (International Woman’s Day) and continues throughout the month of March. Everyday Heroes is a nonprofit group with an aim to promote locally owned busi-
nesses owned by female entrepreneurs in the Parkland Area of Saskatchewan. This event is a seminar series featuring local women entrepreneurs who are sharing the knowledge they have gained in their respective industries. The goal is to provide enlightenment so that we
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may all collectively grow. Cook said going online with this year’s event really opens the doors in terms of attendance. “It will open it up to whoever wants to attend,� she said, adding in the past the event has had limited seating “and we always sold out and had a
waiting list.� Being online also broadens the potential reach of the event, making it accessible by people from anywhere. This year that means men can tune in as well. Cook said while the event
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