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“The Story” makes teachings of the Bible more accessible

The Davidson United Church is welcoming everyone to take a journey towards shaping and sharing their own stories in relation to the ‘kin-dom’ of God through a resource used to explore and understand the Bible as a ‘novel’ format.

Mary Smillie, a member of the Davidson United Church, said they are working to help people accomplish this goal by presenting sessions on “The Story” at the United Church beginning this Sunday at 9 a.m. with the creation story. She said these sessions are a follow-up on their recently concluded rural spirit study that found, in part, people don’t really know what is in the Bible and consider the book inaccessible.

Smillie said the Bible has a tonne of “chapters and verses and verses and chapters” in different books, so what the authors of “The Story” have done is distilled these parts down to the key stories. She said it reads like a novel in 31 chapters from Genesis to Revelations and in addition to the book there are also DVDs and CDs and a few other different resources to make the teachings of the Bible easier to relate to.

“They suggest that the Bible offers us a glimpse of the upper story, what the authors call God’s plan for us on Earth, as well as the lower story, which is how people of that time either did or didn’t do what God was hoping for, so it’s fairly basic,” said Smillie. “What we have going at Davidson United these days is we’ve had the opportunity to invest in some audio/visual equipment, so we have…the whole big screen and sound system and stuff in the main part of the church, (and) it really lends itself for us to do this multi-media approach to bring together the various resources together of “The Story”.”

Smillie said it is their church’s belief that there is multiple ways to approach God and it is really an individual process. She said they have no intention of saying the Bible is the only way, so they are encouraging people to shape their own path by embarking on whatever journey they may want to be on.

“What we’re creating is an opportunity for anybody who is curious about what is in the Bible to have an easier way (of) figuring out what’s in it and what meaning they might be able to bring from it,” she said, adding “The Story” has many age-specific versions and can be accessed by people from preschoolers to adults.

To read more please see the April 28 print edition of The Davidson Leader.

New Prairie South director of education excited for change

Incoming Prairie South School Division director of education Tony Baldwin is excited to begin this new phase in his career as an educator in a time of historic change to the education sector in Saskatchewan.

Shortly after it was announced earlier this month that Baldwin would become the director of education for Prairie South effective this August, Saskatchewan Education Minister Don Morgan along with Saskatchewan School Boards Association (SSBA) president Janet Foord announced the implementation of the Education Sector Strategic Plan (ESSP). The ESSP is the first ever province-wide plan to be developed in co-operation with all education sector partners, approved by the 28 school boards in the province and accepted by the Government of Saskatchewan.

Baldwin said ESSP is a change from the Continuous Improvement and Accountability Framework that has been given from the ministry to school divisions for the past seven or eight years and names a series of things the ministry requires school divisions to be constantly improving. He said the ESSP is a new model that gets school divisions working together with the ministry to figure out what the areas are that each division has to address as they move forward to have a better education system in five years than there is now.

“School divisions are (now) in the process of developing something called a Level 2 plan, which will be sort of a school division specific response to the Education Sector Strategic Plan provincially,” said Baldwin. “It’s the first time since I’ve been an educator…that there’s ever been a single provincial improvement plan that is driven by school divisions rather than driven by the government.”

He said a good example of how education plans would be influenced by the specific context of the individual school divisions is graduation rates, which are one of the things that the education sector is trying to address provincially. Currently in Saskatchewan about 73 per cent of kids who start Grade 10 finish Grade 12 three years later, but in Prairie South that number is around 82 per cent.

Baldwin said the provincial goal is to have a province wide graduation rate of 85 per cent by 2020, so Prairie South may not need to focus on that as much as some other school divisions because they’re nearly at the goal already. That means the division could decide to invest some of the work at improving graduation rates into other areas.

The ESSP “is one of the things that is very interesting for me starting this job now (because) the school divisions are just working on their Level 2 plans that are aligned with the provincial strategic plan right now and those plans are going to extend to 2020, so really that’s the bulk of what’s left of my career,” said Baldwin. “It’s kind of neat to be able to start in a school division at the beginning of that planning process.”

Craik military heroes presented with Service Pins

Fourteen Canadian Armed Forces veterans and one current member were honoured for their sacrifices to represent our nation and to defend the principles of peace, freedom and justice last Wednesday at the Craik and District Health Centre.

Craik and area military men and women Cleve Bennett, John Duff, Wendy Elliott, Harve Fridel, Garry Gilbertson, George Hamilton, Sebastian Lang, Robert Leslie, Allan McCooeye, Lloyd Probert, Frank Taylor, Frank Watkins, Alex White, Frank Wright and Ryan Eyre each received a Lieutenant Governor’s Military Service Pin. The Pin symbolizes the gratitude of the Crown and the people of Saskatchewan for those who have served with honour and valour.

“For a long time I felt that military men and women who served the nation have not been recognized as they are in other countries and I think that it’s time within this country that we did that,” said Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan Vaughn Solomon Schofield after she presented the honour to the 11 deserving men and women who were able to attend the ceremony. “This was I think the best way that I could find to honour them, so it’s my intention to give one of these pins to absolutely everyone in the province who has served in the military at one time or another or who comes from Saskatchewan who is serving in the military somewhere else.”

Royal Canadian Air Force veteran Cleve Bennett was the first veteran presented with the Military Service Pin by the Lieutenant Governor in front of a packed crowd of family and friends who all crammed into the Health Centre common room to view the occasion. Bennett enlisted with the RCAF in 1940, deployed to England in 1941 and worked with transportation services during the Second World War until his return to Canada in 1945.

John Duff received the pin for his service as an RCAF policeman and his work in radar surveillance in both Canada and Germany with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Schofield presented Wendy Elliott with the honour for her 26-year-career with the Canadian Forces, which included postings across Canada before her retirement as a petty officer first class in 1995.

“It’s an honour,” said Elliott, who will proudly display the Edwardian Crown pin on her civilian clothing as it is meant to be worn. “It’s nice to know some people recognize what we’ve done.”

To read more please see the April 21 print edition of The Davidson Leader.

Brkich wins Sask Party nomination for Arm River riding

Arm River-Watrous MLA Greg Brkich has won the nomination to become the Saskatchewan Party candidate for the Arm River constituency in the next provincial election.

Brkich defeated contestant Clark Puckett in a vote held among party members at a nomination meeting last Tuesday at Davidson Town Hall. He will be seeking his fifth term in office as a Saskatchewan Party MLA when the next provincial election is held likely sometime in spring 2016.

“The support was overwhelming,” said Brkich after the vote. “I was really impressed with the support I got from the people in the room.”

Around 300 people filed into the Hall to cast their ballot after hearing both men speak about their previous experiences and qualifications to be the next Party candidate and what issues they would advocate for if elected.

“That humbled me,” said Brkich. “I was very impressed because there was people from all over the constituency. Some had to drive as much as an hour-and-a-half to two hours to come here to take part in this nomination.”

The new Arm River constituency encompasses much of the same territory as Brkich’s current riding except Watrous will no longer be included and Craik would.

The new riding would stretch down to past Central Butte in the southwest and run north along Lake Diefenbaker. It will then go above Hanley and move east under Watrous before hitting Big Quill Lake and then move down and west towards Last Mountain Lake. Using the lake as a natural boundary, it will head south passing just above Strasbourg on its way to Regina Beach before cutting straight across above Moose Jaw on its way back to near Central Butte.

Brkich said the support he received in the campaign for the nomination was strong from the outset, but as in every election he ran as if he was one vote behind. He said the campaign team worked hard throughout the six-week race and were able to increase their membership in the party to over 500 members, which also bodes well for the next election.

“It increases the awareness,” he said. “Also, because this constituency does change quite a bit (with) the new one, I got to make a lot of new contacts that I wouldn’t have made till close to the election. In the long run it’s going to be a very good benefit for us for the next election with the contacts I’ve made in each and every town throughout the constituency in the new part (of the riding).”

McRae trains to become branch service officer

To better help this area’s veterans and their families after the recent closure of the Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) district office in Saskatoon, Royal Canadian Legion Branch #51 president Gord McRae is entering training to become a volunteer branch service officer.

A branch service officer assists veterans by identifying those with unmet health needs and any possible benefits they could receive from VAC and then making appropriate referrals to provincial command service officers. This branch-specific function became especially important after the Department of Veterans Affairs oversaw the closing of eight district VAC offices across Canada Jan. 31, including the one in Saskatoon, which provided face-to-face services for veterans.

“A lot of veterans are entitled to certain health benefits and…that’s where the service officer would come in,” said McRae, noting he is attending a branch service officer training session at the beginning of May and would become active in the role right after that. “There are a lot of (veterans) who are still alive that are old enough that they’re entitled to a lot of benefits. When they pass on, the families are. That to me is very important. They do a lot of extra for the veterans if they know how to apply for it. That’s where I’d like to see this all happen. It’s coming up more and more.”

The transition of the person-to-person contact between a veteran and their families with a qualified individual ready to identify and respond to the challenges facing them for an online self-service program is McRae’s main concern. He said a lot of veterans have difficulty filling out the complex online applications for services correctly and denying them this access to in-person help creates lengthy delays for these people getting the services they need.

“At least with the Veterans Affairs (offices) someone there knows how to fill it out and it’s done instantly or in a (short) time frame,” he said. “That’s important to the veterans or even the people that are involved…like doctors who want to do something for them.”

To read more please see the April 21 print edition of The Davidson Leader.

Loreburn cheerleader comes back flying

Teryn Bristow is back flying with her Prairie Fire Cheerleading Senior Elite Diva team and feeling good about taking to the air again just a couple months after suffering a nasty injury while performing a stunt.

“It definitely scared me, but I got my courage back and got into it again,” said Teryn, a 13-year-old Grade 8 student at Loreburn Central School. “Now I feel comfortable. I trust my bases and I know that they’re going to catch me.”

Teryn suffered the injury during a “full out” practice with her stunt group in late January at the Prairie Fire Cheerleading gym in Saskatoon. She was flying in the air and doing a back flip into the stunt when an arm got caught and the rotation on her back flip stopped.

The young Loreburn flyer fell face first onto the mat with her feet arching over her head the wrong way. She was rushed to the emergency room at the Royal University Hospital and fitted into a neck brace.

“I was in the emergency room from 7 p.m. till 12:30 a.m.,” she said. “I took six weeks off from that injury because I had pinched nerves. I messed up my neck a bit and my back. I’ve just healed recently, so now I’m back into it.”

She made it back in time to help the Level 4 Senior team finish second at the ACE-All Star Cheer Extravaganza competition in Edmonton April 12 where she took her rightful place as the top of her stunt group.

Teryn said a top is the girl in a five-person stunt group that is thrown into the air. She said there are also two bases in a group who hold the top along with a third who stays behind the group to catch the top in case she falls and a fourth who stands in front to make sure the top doesn’t have a face fall.

“I like flying,” she said. “You get to do some cool things in the air and you get all the attention when you’re in a competition. You get to smile and sing to the music and it’s really fun.”

The All Star Cheer Extravaganza brought the 2013-2014 competitive part of the cheerleading season, which also saw the team perform at a competition in Anaheim, California, to a close for the Prairie Fire Cheerleading Senior Elite Diva team. Teryn is the youngest athlete in the 19-member club, which also includes tumbling, jumping and dancing sections in addition to the stunt group.

These four sections all take the stage in a competition to perform a two-and-a-half minute routine. To get ready for these demanding minutes on stage, the team participates in three two-and-a-half hour practices each week during the competitive season and also takes part in spring and summer training when not in competition.

To read more please see the April 21 print edition of The Davidson Leader.