Category Archives: featured

Storage units damaged, items stolen from Craik golf course

Wanda Erlandson submitted this photo showing the recent damage to the storage units at the Craik and District Golf Course.
Wanda Erlandson submitted this photo showing the recent damage to the storage units at the Craik and District Golf Course.

By Joel van der Veen

CRAIK — Police are investigating following a break-in to the storage units at the Craik and District Golf Club.

Const. Kevin Morrissette of the Craik RCMP detachment said the incident was reported to police early last week.

Police found the storage units had been entered and damaged, and that some golf equipment was reported stolen.

Morrissette said the police are still determining the extent of the damage and thefts, and developing an inventory of the missing items. The case remains under investigation.

“We don’t have everyone’s statements yet,” he said. “There were quite a few units that were broken into.”

Rhonda Lang, a golfer who frequents the Craik course, said she learned of the break-ins on Wednesday. She said all the units were broken into, with all the doors suffering damage.

She said it appears the thief or thieves used a crowbar to rip the padlock off of her storage unit, leaving a hole in the door and breaking the clasp.

“They went through every pocket in the golf bags, as well as the cubby holes in the golf cart,” she said. “The golf GPS unit was stolen. We haven’t thoroughly checked yet to see what else is missing.”

The nine-hole, grass greens course is owned and operated by the Rural Municipality of Craik.

Batteries stolen from dealership

Police are also seeking the public’s help in solving a theft reported at the Young’s Equipment dealership in Davidson earlier in April.

According to a report from police, a male suspect driving a black Audi, believed to be an older model year, stole five batteries from the dealership at the south end of town on April 9.

Police say the man drove the car to the shop’s side door, loaded the 12-volt batteries into the trunk of the car and left the scene.

Anyone with relevant information is asked to contact the Craik RCMP detachment or Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers.

New vehicle on display at fire BBQ

Around 100 people attended a barbecue hosted by the Loreburn Volunteer Fire Department on April 20.
Around 100 people attended a barbecue hosted by the Loreburn Volunteer Fire Department on April 20.

By Joel van der Veen

LOREBURN — The latest addition to the Loreburn Volunteer Fire Department was front and centre at a recent fundraising event.

The department recently purchased and outfitted a quick response vehicle, at a cost of $37,000, with support from Enbridge and the Rural Municipality of Loreburn.

The vehicle was on display at a toonie barbecue held April 20 at the fire hall, where over 100 people from Loreburn and district stopped by to check it out and enjoy a quick bite.

Procuring the vehicle was an ongoing project, led by fire chief Steve South, village councillors Grant Abbott, Victor Dutkiewicz and Randy Urlacher, RM employees Dwayne Stamnes and Matt Hauberg, and local resident Ryan Tastad.

The area around Lake Diefenbaker was identified as an “extreme risk” zone by the Canadian Wildland Fire Information System (CWFIS) in its April 20 report.

The report also indicated extreme risk across much of southwestern Saskatchewan, while other areas across the province ranged from moderate to high risk.

The CWFIS report is updated on a daily basis with the risk level for each area fluctuating from day to day.

Both local fire chiefs indicated that their departments both have steady, dependable crews of volunteer firefighters who are accustomed to responding to wildfires.

Loreburn fire chief Steve South said his department already responded to one grass fire in late March, sparked by a burning barrel, and put it out in around an hour and a half.

“It didn’t get too bad or anything like that,” he said, adding that prior to that, it had been six months since the department was last called out. “It’s pretty quiet here, compared to some places, I suppose.”

South, who began serving as a volunteer around 2000, said the department tends to be busier in the summer and fall, noting that the recent dry weather will likely play a factor.

On average, he said, they handle a couple of wildfires each year. The department has around 25 volunteers, said South, adding, “We usually have a pretty good turnout.”

For the full story, please see the May 2 edition of The Davidson Leader.

$1.3 million: will it be enough for Davidson’s new pool?

web-town-councilBy Joel van der Veen

DAVIDSON — It’s the $1.3-million dollar question: has Davidson raised enough to pay for its new swimming pool?

Recreation director Trevor Ouellette said Thursday he expects to know within two or three weeks, once a firm cost for the project has been determined.

Ouellette, the town council and pool committee have been working with cost projections for the last five months, all of which have indicated the cost would be higher than the target set four years ago.

Initially, the gap was high — as much as $1 million, according to Ouellette — but it has narrowed considerably since then, as the plans have changed and some cost reductions found.

The recreation director said he is awaiting a breakdown for the total cost from CCR Construction, Ltd., of Regina, the general contractor for the project.

Ouellette said he didn’t want to speculate on whether the fundraising total and the project cost would line up.

“Obviously, I hope that they can meet it,” he said, adding later, “The fundraising committee has done such a phenomenal job . . . It’s been a four-year push.”

Four members of the swimming pool committee visited Davidson town council as a delegation during its regular meeting on Tuesday, to discuss the project’s status.

Crystal Johnson reported a revised total from the April 8 community auction, saying the event raised $161,000, along with a $20,000 donation presented by PotashCorp that night.

This brings the committee’s total to $1,331,000, surpassing the initial fundraising goal set in 2012.

Johnson said the committee expected the auction to be its final major fundraising push, adding that the generosity on display reflected a general desire on the part of townspeople to meet that goal.

“We have tapped out this community,” she said.

As the committee moves into the build phase of the project, she and other members wanted to make council aware of some concerns.

Johnson said the committee wishes to have clarification on the roles each stakeholder will play during this phase, including the recreation director, the town council, Walker Projects, the contractors and sub-contractors, and the committee itself.

“People view us as ‘the project’ and we’re getting a lot of questions,” said Johnson. “We’re talking in circles at some level, because we don’t know numbers yet.”

The delegates posed several questions of their own, including when firm numbers would be provided on the total cost of construction, and who would be present for the presentation.

For the full story, please see the April 25 edition of The Davidson Leader.

Loreburn students take charge in hosting Leadership Day

Classmates Brennan Kakakaway and Hayoung Ryu check out Morgan Tastad's miniature hockey rink at Loreburn Central School. Students in Shauna George's Grade 3/4 class displayed their individual Genius Hour projects to visitors during the school's Leadership Day on Wednesday morning.
Classmates Brennan Kakakaway and Hayoung Ryu check out Morgan Tastad’s miniature hockey rink at Loreburn Central School. Students in Shauna George’s Grade 3/4 class displayed their individual Genius Hour projects to visitors during the school’s Leadership Day on Wednesday morning.

By Joel van der Veen

LOREBURN — In four years, the Seven Habits have firmly taken hold at Loreburn Central School — and now, according to one mother, they’re showing up at home.

Darla Wonnick told the story Wednesday of a recent conversation she had with her daughter Annika while trying to solve a problem.

“Well, Mom, are you thinking win-win?” Annika asked her mother.

“Well, Annika, not now,” she replied.

Wonnick, a mother of two and a member of the Loreburn School Community Council, went on to describe the positive impact the Seven Habits have had on the school.

“We walk down the hallways of our school, and we see a huge difference,” she said. “There is excellence happening everywhere, and we are able to recognize it and talk about it.”

She spoke on Wednesday to Loreburn staff and students, as well as roughly 70 guests, gathered in the gymnasium for Leadership Day.

The event, now in its third year, serves as a demonstration of how the “Leader in Me” program has shaped the way Loreburn students work, play and interact together.

The program, developed by FranklinCovey Education, has been implemented at 2,000 schools across the globe. Loreburn began incorporating the program, including the Seven Habits, into its curriculum four years ago.

According to the publisher, The Leader in Me is “a whole-school transformation model, developed in partnership with educators, that empowers students with the skills they need to thrive in the 21st century.”

The program aims to transform schools in three primary areas: teaching leadership directly to students and integrating it into their lessons; empowering staff and students to have a voice in their schools; and making students active agents in their learning.

Each year, Loreburn invites guests — including community members, teachers, parents and students from other schools — to witness the effects of the program.

“We are always working on improving ourselves to become the people want to be,” said principal Jill Long, adding that the Seven Habits have “provided us with a community language that has become part of our school culture.”

While students can easily repeat the habits from memory, Long said she has also seen tangible changes in their behaviour and attitudes.

“Kids are holding themselves accountable more,” she said. “They feel that they have a voice in what happens at the school.”

The students were front and centre on Wednesday, from greeting guests with handshakes at the door to answering their questions as they ate lunch.

Long said the students did the majority of the planning for the event, which was designed with an Olympics theme, including medallion-shaped nametags.

For the full story, please see the April 25 edition of The Davidson Leader.

Shaw named top stage manager at festival

Davidson students Sarah Bublish, Logan Farrell, Ethan Schilling, Jacob Schilling and Carter Shaw display the awards they won at last weekend's regional drama festival in Warman.
Davidson students Sarah Bublish, Logan Farrell, Ethan Schilling, Jacob Schilling and Carter Shaw display the awards they won at last weekend’s regional drama festival in Warman.

By Joel van der Veen

WARMAN — Despite facing some tough competition at this year’s regional festival, Davidson’s senior drama club put on what co-director Jason Low said was their best performance this year.

“They represented our school well,” said Low. “They were a fantastic pleasure to work with and direct.”

Davidson was one of seven schools to compete at the Region 11 Drama Festival at Warman High School from April 14 to 16.

The drama club presented SOuLD, an original play written by Low, with a total of 26 students forming the cast and crew.

Grade 12 student Carter Shaw, a longtime lighting and sound technician who served as stage manager for the first time, was named the best stage manager at the festival.

Noting that Shaw won the award the only time he was eligible for it, Low said, “He went in and out with a bang.”

Cast members Jacob Schilling and Sarah Bublish received acting awards of merit, while Ethan Schilling and Logan Farrell received technical awards of merit for their work with lighting and sound, respectively.

For the full story, please see the April 25 edition of The Davidson Leader.

Police say Fertuck was victim of homicide

Juliann Sorotski (pictured here with Staff Sgt. Greg Abbott) speaks about her daughter Sheree Fertuck's disappearance during a media conference Monday at Saskatoon RCMP headquarters.
Juliann Sorotski (pictured here with Staff Sgt. Greg Abbott) speaks about her daughter Sheree Fertuck’s disappearance during a media conference Monday at Saskatoon RCMP headquarters.

SASKATOON — Wednesday, specialized investigative units began searching specific locations in the Kenaston area, looking for any evidence related to the disappearance of Sheree Fertuck.

The 51-year-old mother and grandmother has been missing for four months and police say they now believe Fertuck has been murdered.

“We believe Sheree has been the victim of a homicide. This conclusion comes after lengthy searches, analysis of all the evidence and our investigation into her disappearance at this point in time,” said Staff Sgt. Murray Chamberlin of the RCMP’s major crime unit. He said for Fertuck to have “absolutely no contact with the family, which is extremely out of the norm for Sheree, no banking activity, no activity on her hospital card — all those things add up to say that this is a homicide.”

At a news conference April 11, Chamberlin announced last week’s targeted search. He said the goal of the investigation into Sheree’s disappearance is to find her and to bring her home.

“Family was the most important thing to Sheree. Her No. 1 priority was her children and her wonderful grandchild,” her mother Juliann Sorotski said.

She hasn’t seen or heard from Sheree since early December.

On Dec. 7, 2015, Sheree took a break from hauling gravel and had lunch with her family at their farm east of Kenaston near Highway 15. She was last seen at 1:30 p.m at the wheel of her gravel truck, leaving the family farmyard. She missed an 8 p.m. appointment that evening.

The following morning, her family began looking for her. Sheree’s truck was found in a gravel pit farther east off Highway 15 with her cell phone, keys and coat inside.

Searches conducted by police, the family and the community immediately after failed to find a trace of Sheree.

“We miss her so much,” Sorotski said. “For those who knew Sheree, she loved her dog and was a strong, hardworking and a kind person. Sheree always took time to stop and talk to people. She knew everyone in the area and this is reflected in the numbers that came to search for her. I am overwhelmed by the support our family has and is still receiving.”

Chamberlin said police haven’t “discounted anybody as possible suspects or as possibly being involved in her disappearance.”

He said the investigation hasn’t found anything to indicate Sheree was involved in criminal activity.

“As far as motive, there is nothing to indicate that Sheree did anything to facilitate her disappearance or that caused her disappearance.”

Investigators were out last week searching specific spots around Kenaston and other areas of the province. Chamberlin wouldn’t disclose exact locations, but said these are areas, through their investigation, police had identified as important spots to look.

“The landscape has changed significantly since Sheree’s disappearance. Snow is gone, ice is off bodies of water.”

As of Friday, the search was still ongoing and an RCMP spokesperson said it could continue through the weekend.

Fertuck is approximately 5’4”, 250 pounds with graying brown hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing grey sweat pants, a grey sweater and white running shoes.