Category Archives: Davidson

STC proposes to cancel travel services to Imperial this spring

Concerned citizens of Imperial have five days left to convince the Highway Traffic Board to keep their parcel and travel services with the Saskatchewan Transportation Company (STC) before it is eliminated in mid-May.

The STC is proposing to discontinue the Regina to Lanigan bus service route via Nokomis and Watrous beginning May 18. Before the route can be discontinued the Highway Traffic Board must approve the move, but riders can make their opposition known to the board until April 17 through emails and letters stating how removing the service would hurt residents of the affected communities. The board will make the final decision on whether the bus route stays or goes in early May.

Gaylene Parry, a resident of Imperial, said removing the route would particularly hurt seniors who use the bus to get in and out of the cities for shopping, friendly visits and medical appointments. She said eliminating the service would also marginalize the town as a whole.

“Every time a small rural community loses another one of these things, it’s just one more bit of instability in the community,” said Parry. “People need to know that this is slated to happen. Really a letter writing campaign is what their option is to try and voice their opinion if they consider it a problem.”

Dean Madsen, director of business development with the STC, said they have identified the Regina to Lanigan bus service route as unjustifiable due to low ridership. He said discontinuing this route would also save the company costs as they deal with increased financial pressures.

“We were looking at routes and ridership which is very low and (the Regina to Lanigan route) has been low for the past five years with just an average of two passengers utilizing the service per trip,” said Madsen. “It is hard to justify keeping the service if it is not being utilized.”

Madsen said they have provided a mechanism for concerns of discontinuing the service to be made to the Highway Traffic Board, but it is up to the board now if the service is eliminated.

To read more please see the April 8 print edition of The Davidson Leader.

Playschool enters world of visual arts

Davidson Playschool students are entering the world of visual arts this spring thanks to a recently received $4,180 Creative Partnerships Explorations grant.

Terra Fazakas, grants representative with the Davidson Playschool Association, said they are putting the grant money towards bringing visual artist Derek Pho to the classroom in early May to help the 42 kids who attend the playschool to create a papier måché project. She said the two-, three- and four-year-old students would compile the hands-on piece into a larger-than-life local wildlife animal.

“Our focus is going to be on sustainability,” said Fazakas. “It’s got an environmental twist and it’ll be how the community interacts with your surroundings. It’ll be an animal that is local to Saskatchewan in our area that’s native in a local environment.”

Fazakas said the project is still in the development stage, but what would likely happen is the kids would create small shapes individually before combining them to make a bigger shape. She said the playschool, which is located in a room at Davidson School, would have the artist come in for two days to work with the students and give them directions on how to build the papier måché animal.

This is the first time the Davidson Playschool Association has been awarded a Creative Partnerships Explorations grant. The grant program’s mandate is to explore how the visual arts can enhance environmental stewardship within the classroom and funding partners include the Saskatchewan Arts Board, SaskCulture Inc., Saskatchewan Lotteries and the Saskatchewan Ministry of Education.

“We hope to do more (Creative Partnerships Explorations projects) in the future,” said Fazakas. “This one is actually geared towards communities. We hope to be involving local businesses and local groups and volunteers from the town for recyclable donations to help build the structure.”

Davidson Communities in Bloom enter into non-competitive judging category to grade “health” of town

Communities in Bloom has entered into a non-competitive judging category that will grade the “overall health” of the entire community of Davidson.

Erin Gust, treasurer of Communities in Bloom, said judges from the provincial organization of Communities in Bloom would head to town this summer to rate the beauty of various attractions in Davidson. She said the community as a whole and all community groups would be rated in order to give Communities in Bloom a “benchmark” of what the beautification of the town is and what they would need to improve on.

“What (the judges) do is they provide you with an evaluation report and there is eight key criteria that they look at,” said Gust. “There is tidiness, tree and urban forest management, landscaped areas, floral design, turf and ground cover, environmental awareness, community involvement and natural and cultural heritage conservation.”

Gust said items such as the new planters that are located throughout the town, the new garbage cans on Washington Avenue, the parks, playground, library, landfill and the reverse osmosis water system are some of the things the provincial Communities in Bloom judges will be grading. She said Davidson would not be competing against other towns in the judging, but Communities in Bloom will still put in the extra effort once the snow melts to make sure everything is as beautiful as can be.

“We don’t have an exact plan set out yet, but we definitely would like our town to look as good as it can look,” she said. “We’ll be talking to businesses and talking to other community groups and just make sure everybody is on side.”

To read more please see the April 1 print edition of The Davidson Leader.

Sask. Party and NDP disagree on aspects of the 2013-2014 provincial budget

The Saskatchewan Party government and the opposition New Democratic Party differ on three key issues of concern to residents of this area in the recent 2013-2014 provincial budget announced last Wednesday at the legislature in Regina.

Greg Brkich, Sask. Party MLA for Arm River-Watrous, said the government has maintained their promise to hold the line on education property tax rates, increased crop insurance coverage to record levels and improved rural physician recruitment and retention by investing more funds to boost physician numbers in this province.

Trent Wotherspoon, NDP MLA for Regina Rosemont and opposition finance critic, said the vast majority of people across this province will actually see their property tax bills increase this year, the growth in insurance coverage will be offset with cuts in other agriculture areas and initiatives announced in the budget actually do not confront the challenge presented to rural communities in physician recruitment and retention.

The government announced in their budget that to offset the 67 per cent increase in property values in the province over the past four years, they are lowering the education property tax rates on all classes of property in order to keep re-assessment revenue neutral. The new education mill rates are 2.67 mills for agricultural land, 5.03 mills for residential property and 8.28 mills for commercial property.

Brkich said holding the line on education property tax rates is a huge benefit to town and village property owners as well as farmers facing a reassessment this year.

“We’ve tried to make it revenue neutral,” said Brkich. “It may not be 100 per cent revenue neutral, because of some properties. Their assessment is way above normal. They will probably have to pay a bit more tax, but there will be some that went down with their assessment. The top of the assessment is a little below normal, but basically it’ll be revenue neutral.”

Wotherspoon said the government is just keeping their commitment with this promise, but “pretending somehow” that this represents big savings for Saskatchewan residents is not true. He said with a growing population and resources that are in demand, the government is failing to support communities where it counts.

“In fact, the property tax increase is going to be significant and in many ways it is going to be significant because this government is failing to provide the infrastructure needs required for our growing communities,” said Wotherspoon.

To read more please see the March 25 print edition of The Davidson Leader.

LCS makes it to final 10 in Majesta outdoor classroom competition

Loreburn Central School staff and students want to be free of the four walls that surround them and they need your help to escape.

The Kindergarten to Grade 12 school has advanced into the last 10 finalists of the Majesta Trees of Knowledge competition that would award them $20,000 towards building an outdoor classroom at the school if they win. They need people’s votes at majestatreesofknowledge.ca from now to April 26 to earn them that coveted outdoor learning paradise.

“It would bring a new environment to learning for us,” said LCS Grade 11 student Gillian Wankel, 17. “We’re never really learning outside. We’re always stuck in a classroom on a computer or whatever, so if we’re outside learning on a chalkboard that might bring a new type of learning to us.”

The new classroom the school proposes to build is an open concept space located in the 90-degree corner of the L-shaped school and will include shrubs, rocks, paths, trees, flowerbeds and a gazebo. The classroom would be built by LCS students and outside contractors and be ready for learning for October 2013 if they win the competition.

Judy Brown, principal of Loreburn Central School, said staff at the school has been discussing the issue of building an outdoor classroom for years as a way to get kids into a friendlier atmosphere. She said the school has already raised $7,500 towards building the space and if they win the $20,000 competition that would put them over the top.

“This is something we’d really like in our community,” said Brown. “It’s more relaxing and the students can focus. It’ll get them out of the building to enjoy the outdoors and fresh air.”

The 104 students at the school put forward an essay, written by Grade 10 student Paige Travers, and a youtube video, coordinated by Grade 12 pupil Jordyn Hauberg, along with a report on their timeline for building and maintaining the classroom, their budget and the wider involvement of the community for the project to Majesta in early January to enter the contest. They were informed they made it to the final 10 by the end of that month and have been coming up with ways to get out the vote ever since.

LCS Grade 9 student Brock Archibald, 15, said an outdoor classroom would give the students more variety in their learning, which could help them improve their grades.

“Breathing in the fresh air might clear the mind a bit,” said Brock.

As an added incentive, a voter at majestatreesofknowledge.ca for the winning classroom is eligible for a chance to win a $10,000 cash prize. People can vote once daily in the outdoor classroom competition and LCS is hoping for your support.

Local Catholics looking to acquaint themselves with new Pope

The Roman Catholic Church elected a new pontiff last Wednesday in Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 76, who took the name Pope Francis, but Reverend Joseph Gyim-Austin believes the direction of the Church will remain the same.

“I don’t think he is going to bring any new thing, but only help us to embrace in our own faith what we believe, what we have always believed, what we stand for and what the church is always ready to give,” said Gyim-Austin, pastor of Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Parish (Davidson), Holy Redeemer (Elbow), St. Andrew’s (Kenaston) and Immaculate Heart of Mary (Outlook).

Gyim-Austin said he does not know much about the man, but that would soon change through information coming through the diocese. He said the selection of the name Francis, after St. Francis of Assisi, does give insight into his position on Christ and the Church.

“Francis wants to be a humble person,” he said. “It is the Church of Christ and if you want to follow Christ then you must also be ready to live that humble life and that hopefully will resonate in his own life as well as in the entire church.”

Roman Catholic churchgoers have been praying for a new pope since Pope Benedict XVI stepped down Feb. 28 citing a lack of strength. This was the first resignation of a sitting pope in over 600 years.

Gyim-Austin said the resignation by Benedict XVI was hard to take at first, but he realized it was the right move for the Church as time went on. He said Benedict XVI was a good leader during his eight years as head of the Church and that is evident by his decision to resign when he felt he could no longer be an effective pastor.

“He did it for the sake of the Church,” he said. “When you know that you don’t have the strength anymore, and at his age also, he felt it was necessary that somebody could come up to continue the work.”

The Church is “rejoicing” now that a successor has been chosen, said Gyim-Austin, but there are no decisions made as of yet to how to mark the election of the new head of the Church.

“The diocese will give direction towards the celebration,” he said. “In our own local churches at our Eucharist celebrations we will mention (Pope Francis) and then the feeling will come naturally.”