Category Archives: featured

Vandal adds graffiti to pro-life signs

This pair of signs, located east of Davidson on Highway 747, was recently targeted by a vandal.
This pair of signs, located east of Davidson on Highway 747, was recently targeted by a vandal.

By Joel van der Veen

DAVIDSON — Armed with blue paint, an unknown vandal apparently decided to go public with their opposition to a pair of pro-life signs east of town.

Graffiti was recently discovered on a pair of roadside signs that were installed by Mid-Lakes Pro-Life along Highway 747 in the RM of Arm River.

One side depicts an infant with a bow wrapped around its middle, surrounded by the slogan, “Life: The Greatest Gift of All!”

The other side features an older gentleman crading a newborn baby, accompanied by the words, “Respecting All Life as a Gift from God.”

The words “Pro Choice” were added in blue paint on both sides sometime in late February.

Deborah Doell, the chairperson of Mid-Lakes Pro-Life, said she was out of town when the vandalism was discovered, returning on Wednesday of last week.

She said the organization doesn’t have a meeting scheduled until mid-March so they haven’t had a chance to discuss their response yet.

Doell said the incident has not yet been reported to police, but that will likely be part of their course of action.

She said she’d like to find out who was responsible for the graffiti, adding, “I believe they’re hurting.”

The affected sign was installed by Mid-Lakes on private land with the permission of the landowner. The organization has installed roughly half a dozen similar signs around the district.

Another such sign was placed at an intersection further east on the same road.

In December, Mid-Lakes was ordered by the RM to remove the sign, on the grounds that it did not conform to the zoning bylaw and would obstruct the view of motorists.

Doell said they have complied with the order but have plans to re-install the sign further back so that it meets the RM’s requirements.

She said they’re disappointed by the vandalism, but not deterred, and they intend to keep installing signs.

Other attempts by Mid-Lakes to spread its message have met with challenges of various kinds.

Four years ago, the group sought permission to install a sign at the Davidson rink. The request was denied, on the grounds that council was opposed to religious or political messages appearing on town property.

Doell also said Mid-Lakes had inquired in the past about sponsoring a scholarship for graduates of Davidson School and was told they could do so, but would not be allowed to present the award at the graduation ceremony.

She said the group seems to be up against limits that other organizations don’t face: “Why is our freedom of speech squashed and theirs isn’t?”

Cemetery committee to draft new bylaw

Pictured is the entrance to the older section of the Davidson cemetery.
Pictured is the entrance to the older section of the Davidson cemetery.

By Joel van der Veen

DAVIDSON — After 65 years, the bylaw regulating Davidson’s cemetery is looking a little long in the teeth.

Town councillors agreed at Tuesday’s meeting to the formation of a new committee to oversee the cemetery.

Their first order of business will be to develop and draft a bylaw to replace the current one, which has been on the books longer than any of the current council members have been alive.

Bylaw No. 155, “A Bylaw to Provide for the Maintenance and Improvement of Davidson Cemetery,” had its three readings and approval on June 5, 1951.

The typewritten, one-page document bears the signature of Mayor J. A. Vopni and town clerk K. H. Ketcheson — both of them since buried in that same cemetery.

The bylaw was amended in September 1979, adding restrictions on the placement of plants and limiting the sale of burial plots to two at the time of need. Otherwise, it is unchanged.

“It sounds like we need to redo this,” said Mayor Tyler Alexander, one of four members appointed to the new committee. “It’s definitely a work in progress out there. . . This is a good first step.”

Public works foreman Doug Torrie and assistant administrator Donna Bessey were also appointed, along with Coun. Todd Lockwood, who is also the town’s only funeral director.

“I’m happy to do it,” said Lockwood. “I’m out there, I hear the questions and I feel the heat when something’s not right.”

The cemetery’s condition and maintenance have been perennial sources of concern in recent years.

In the past, visitors and residents have complained about damage to headstones, the state of the grass and roads, and even the type and volume of soil used to top up gravesites after burials.

For the full story, please see the March 6 edition of The Davidson Leader or call 306-567-2047 to subscribe today.

For those about to rock …

Michele Morrison has created around 20 pieces of rock art, starting with stones and other bits found in nature and creating scenes around them.
Michele Morrison has created around 20 pieces of rock art, starting with stones and other bits found in nature and creating scenes around them.

By Joel van der Veen

DAVIDSON — To most of us, they’re just pebbles in the park or on the road.

But for Michele Morrison, they might be the inspiration for her next piece of artwork.

Morrison, a wife and mother of two who works as an educational assistant at Davidson School, has been getting lots of attention in the last couple of months for her series of rock art pieces.

She has created roughly 20 pieces, incorporating rocks, bark and other remnants of nature into colourful, painted scenes.

“They’re all unique, one-of-a-kind,” said Morrison, who lives on a farm east of Davidson. “None of them will look the same.”

Morrison had dabbled in art in the past, including bark art and folk art pieces painted on old cream cans and school desks.

Her latest phase began with a small collection of interesting rocks and shells she brought home from Cuba. She was one of the chaperones on a cultural exchange trip with her son James and the rest of the senior basketball team in February 2016.

When she unpacked her collection, she said, “I had no idea what to do with them all.”

A star-shaped rock looked like a sunbather, and so she worked that and other objects into a beach scene, complete with birds and a fisherman sitting on the shore.

“I kind of thought it was fun,” said Morrison. “Then I kind of went out of control.”

She said she began looking for more rocks to work with, keeping an eye out around the yard or on the road for interesting specimens.

“Sometimes it takes me quite a while to find what I’m looking for,” said Morrison.

Later, she began buying aquarium rocks online and having them shipped to her.

This gives her a better selection to work with, although she added, “They’re not liking me at the post office lately.”

Each new piece begins with a theme. Morrison uses canvases or frames for most of her work, but has also created some pieces using old barn wood.

Sometimes, her inspiration comes from pictures she sees online, to which she adds her own twist.

Other pieces are inspired by suggestions from family or friends. She has also done commissioned pieces, like a recent one she did for a family that is big fans of the Saskatoon Rush.

For the first piece, she used hot glue to attach the rocks, but since then she has switched to Weldbond adhesive, finding it more effective.

Morrison has promoted her work online and also had a booth at a recent trade show in her hometown of Dundurn. As of last week, she said she has already sold three pieces.

She is making arrangements to have her work displayed at the Restless Gypsy shop on 33rd Street in Saskatoon.

“I’m running out of room in my kitchen,” she said, adding that her family has gradually warmed up to her new hobby. “They kind of thought I’d lost my marbles to begin with.”

To learn more, check out “Rock Art by Michele” on Facebook at facebook.com/morrmic7.

Growing something good

web-planting

Annabelle Tennent plants some lettuce seeds in a row while librarian Adrienne van der Veen watches during an activity at the Davidson library on Thursday. Children taking part in the weekly Read and Rhyme program started a miniature garden with lettuce and sweet basil seeds.

(Leader photo by Joel van der Veen)

Water shut off after hydrant failure in Craik

web-craik
Workers install a new hydrant near the intersection of Ferguson Street and Seventh Avenue in Craik on Thursday.

By Joel van der Veen

CRAIK — Craik town staff and residents were dealing with water woes of a different kind last week.

A hydrant failure near the corner of Ferguson Street and Seventh Avenue, across from Craik School, forced town staff to turn off the water supply to residents on Craik’s west side for a combined total of 25 hours.

Mayor David Ashdown said he was pleased with the staff’s response given the complexity of the problem: “It just was not a straightforward dig-down-and-replace (job).”

He said he understood the frustration from some residents over the extended water outage on Saturday and the limited notice given, but noted that it was an urgent situation and the town did its best to communicate with residents.

“You have to deal with an emergency as it happens,” he said. “If we didn’t shut it off then, we were going to have people’s basements flooded.”

Ashdown said proper notice was given of a second planned outage on Thursday, when the hydrant was replaced.

He also said the Craik emergency measures organization (EMO) is working on collecting contact information for local residents so that news can be delivered quickly and reliably when an emergency arises.

Part of the improvement plan, currently under development by the town, includes repairs and enhancements to infrastructure.

Once that is in place, Ashdown said, the effects of such incidents can be limited to within a block or two of the problem, rather than inconveniencing the town at large.

The leaky hydrant was reported to town staff the afternoon of Friday, Feb. 17. Water was dripping out and forming a pool in a nearby drainage ditch.

Flushing the hydrant multiple times did not resolve the issue, and an isolation valve failed after staff tried to use it, increasing the water flow markedly.

The town had posted a notice online that the water would be turned off on the west side at midnight, but the turn of events forced staff to shut it off at 10:30 p.m. on Friday instead.

Contractors arrived on Saturday morning to address the issue, but work was complicated by several factors, including the presence of power, phone and gas lines in the vicinity.

Kati Ball, who lives on a farm outside of town with husband Dan Exelby, said they received a call from Coun. Gary Gilbertson asking for their help in bringing water to town.

“They asked us and we said sure, not a problem,” said Ball. “We were more than happy to help out.”

They filled up a 1,000-gallon tank from the RM source and parked it outside the Midlakes Manor, where it was available for most of Saturday. Water was also made available directly from the town water plant via a garden hose.

Town staff determined that the faulty hydrant needed to be replaced. The hydrant was capped on Saturday and water was restored by 7 p.m. that day, ending an outage of roughly 20 hours.

A planned outage was announced for Thursday and water was turned off, again on the west side only, at 10:30 a.m.

Contractors returned that day to install the new hydrant and the process went smoothly. Water service was restored by 3:30 that afternoon.

Family, friends grieve “fun-loving kid”

 

Jesse Hoehn
Jesse Hoehn

By Joel van der Veen

DAVIDSON — As a 13-year-old, Jesse Hoehn had a vision for a project in Davidson — a skate park for kids of all ages to enjoy.

An avid skateboarder, Jesse was running out of places to enjoy his hobby in town. Locals weren’t keen having their parking lots or front steps used by skaters, so he figured a park would be the ideal solution.

“I have a lot of friends who are into it,” he said at the time. “There are no places in town to go anymore. We need stuff to do.”

The park never came to be, but the story shows a side of Jesse that held up over the years — a quiet, fun-loving kid who liked being with his friends and was passionate about the things that mattered to him.

This was the side of Jesse that came to mind last week as his parents, Mike and Carol Hoehn, grieved their son’s death.

Jesse, 25, was killed on Feb. 13 in a workplace accident along Highway 42 between Eyebrow and Keeler, where he was working in road construction.

Carol said Wednesday they were still coming to grips with the situation: “It’s like a nightmare.”

“You definitely don’t want to be making funeral arrangements for your children,” said Mike. “And here we are.”

Jesse was born in 1991 in Moose Jaw, when the family was living in Gravelbourg.

Later they moved to Assiniboia, and eventually arrived in Davidson in August of 2000, which became their permanent home.

Jesse graduated from Davidson School in 2009 and had worked for a few different employers, including the Town of Davidson and Pioneer, prior to his latest job.

He owned a house in town, and when he wasn’t working, his focus was usually on snowboarding.

“That was his best place to be,” said Carol. “When he wasn’t snowboarding, he was watching videos of snowboarding.”

For the full story, please see the Feb. 20 edition of The Davidson Leader or call 306-567-2047 to subscribe today.