Celebrating country music

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The Rawlinson Centre stage will be transformed into a Grand Ol’ Opry-like atmosphere Sunday afternoon as 22 of the region’s best country music acts will stage a tribute to all things country.

The tribute to country music is being put on by the Saskatchewan Country Music Association (SCMA) – Prince Albert Country Music Association.

Young and old, individuals and groups will take the stage in two halves of about 13 songs each to perform hits from country legends old and new.

This is the third annual concert, and SCMA Prince Albert chapter vice president Gail Breiter hopes people come out to see all the talent the area has to offer.

“It’s all local talent, members of the SCMA Prince Albert branch of all ages, and we do a tribute to country music,” Breiter said.

“They’re professional players, they’ve got their own bands out thre, but we separated them all so it’s kind of like a jam for them as they get together.”

Breiter will be performing in the show herself. She is a part of the Pistol Grannies, a local group of country music-loving grandmothers who stylized their name after the American country music supergroup the Pistol Annies.

The musicians will be performing a variety of music fro a range of eras, spanning many subgenres of country music.

“It’s a mixture. There’s some Barbara Fairchild, Chris Stapleton, Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton’s new one. All performed by different people,” Breiter said.

“Members have come from as far as La Ronge, Shellbrook and Melfort.”

A lot of work has gone into putting the show together, as musicians had to be gathered from across the region.

“It’s quite a lot of work because people submit two songs, and each band has to learn about 13 songs, and getting everyone together for a set time for rehearsals is kind of tough,” said Breiter.

Planning for the event started in September. Now, it’s right around the corner.

“It’s exciting, it’s going to be good,” Breiter said.

“We have some really young singers, 13 and 15, and they’re really good. Then we’ve got older ones. Our artists range from 13 to 70-something years old.”

Tickets are $25 for adults and $15 for children 12 and under.

While the show is a celebration of country music, it’s also an opportunity for the local association to get their name out there. They’re looking to add members, especially now, as they are set to host the SCMA awards in 2018.

“It’s a lot of work,” Breiter said.

“We’re hoping to get more members, and we’re going to need volunteers for the 2018 awards too.”

The show gets going at 2 p.m. Sunday. It will be performed in two halves with an intermission. If anyone’s on the fence about whether they want to know, Breiter has a simple message.

“Just come out and hear some really great vocal talent that one day could make it out there,” she said.

“Just come out and see a great show, because it’s pretty good.”

Updated: Missing senior found

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Update: Griffith was located safe and secure. The police would like to thank the public for its assistance.

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Prince Albert RCMP are asking for the public’s assistance locating a missing 63-year-old man from Emma Lake.

Kenneth Griffith was reported missing Thursday. He was last seen in Christopher Lake on Nov. 1, 2017.

He drives a black, 2006 Ford F350.

Anyone with information is asked to contact 306-765-5500.

End of the line

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Rider Express, Forward Coach Lines cease trips between P.A. and Saskatoon due to lack of funds.

One of the private companies operating passenger van trips to Saskatoon has been forced to shut down their route because they didn’t have a business license.

Rider Express posted to their Facebook page Wednesday announcing they were ceasing operations, blaming the service disruption on city hall.

“Unfortunately he have to close our Prince Albert road effecting from today,” the Facebook update said.

“We are having issue with PA city hall. If you guys want this service to be back on again please contact the PA city. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

When reached by phone, company founder Firat Uray said the company was already struggling to sustain the Prince Albert route. Paying for a business licence to keep operating wasn’t worth it.

“We don’t have the money right now to buy it,” Uray said.

“There is no budget because this route was not making money. We were okay doing it until we heard we had to pay more for a business licence. It doesn’t make sense to buy a licence for nothing.”

Uray said he was subsidizing the P.A. route out of his own pocket. He didn’t mind, as many of the passengers using the service were heading for necessary medical appointments. He proposed a compromise to the city – allow them to operate without a licence for a year while they build up their business. The city turned them down.

Mayor Greg Dionne questioned the competency of a business that can’t pay a few hundred dollars for a business licence.

“A business license for the whole year is $500,” Dionne said. The 2017 license would have been for a reduced rate, somewhere around $200 – $300, since it wasn’t for a full year.

“They said they couldn’t afford a $200 business licence,” the mayor continued.

“I couldn’t give them a break because we have other companies supplying the same service that are licensed.”

Saskatoon and Prince Albert once STC was wound down. They began operating in the city in July.

Another passenger van company, Forward Coach Lines, was also operating in Prince Albert.

Forward Coach Lines couldn’t afford to keep operating and was forced to close down. Both their phone numbers are now out of service, and their website redirects to Rider Express.

For more on this story, please see the November 3 print or e-edition of the Daily Herald

Inmate complaint process ineffective: investigator

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Canada’s prisons don’t have a reliable conflict resolution process, the nation’s Correctional Investigator has found.

The finding was included in the Office of the Correctional Investigator’s annual report, released earlier this week.

In the report, Correctional Investigator of Canada Ivan Zinger found efforts taken to streamline the process had actually made it more cumbersome.

He said several cases which should have been handled at the local level were instead being forwarded to the national office, where wait times are increased, leaving frustrated inmates to stew in uncertainty.

“Routine and straightforward issues at the institutional level should be properly dealt with at the source, not routinely escalated to my office,” Zinger wrote.

“As I see it, the real key to improvement is better and timelier offender complaint and issue management.”

He cited a budget reduction as the issue. The previous conservative government, in an effort to save money and streamline the system, had removed the regional level designed to handle internal complaints. But instead of streamlining the process, it meant more grievances were sent to the national level.

“The time required has led to egregious delays and mounting backlogs,” Zinger wrote.

In response, the federal government issued temporary funding of $900,000 and $1,5 million to process the increased number of grievances. Correctional Services Canada (CSC) also suspended an alternative dispute resolution pilot to redirect the money to dealing with the national cases.

Zinger found the effort to deal with the influx in national cases “misdirected and unsustainable.”

Instead, he said, the process should be front-loaded, giving managers and means and capacity to resolve matters expeditiously at the source as they arise. Accountability , he said, usually rests at the site level.

“I simply fail to see the justification or rationale behind these decisions,” Zinger said.

“Pumping more resources into trying to salvage a broken and dysfunctional system seems poorly conceived and wasteful.”

Escalating tensions and growing complaints about food were one of the factors in last year’s deadly Saskatchewan Penitentiary riot. Zinger’s office still receives several complaints from the site. In fact, while it is one of the largest institutions in the country, Sask. Pen. was also the site of the highest number of complaints. The population of 676 people had 400 complaints, Zinger’s report said.

It wasn’t clear what the time frame of the complaints was. However, that number is the greatest of any federal institution.

CSC was lukewarm to Zinger’s suggestion that alternative dispute resolution projects be reinstated.

“It has become imperative that the backlog and complexity of offender grievances at the national level be addressed on a priority basis,” CSC wrote.

The agency did say it will examine lessons learned from the pilot project to develop a model “that is more efficient, effective and accessible to all inmates”

That model will be developed in 2018-19 and presented for possible consideration as part of legislative amendments.

Sask. Pen riot caused by ‘long-standing’ food grievances, investigator finds

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Investigator chastises CSC for failing to address complaints adequately prior to riot breaking out

Canada’s Correctional Investigator is laying the blame squarely at the feet of Correctional Services Canada (CSC) for last year’s deadly riot at Saskatchewan Penitentiary.

Ivan Zinger released his annual report earlier this week, and he took significant issue with food conditions and a broken dispute-resolution process that eventually escalated into the “full-scale” riot that left one inmate dead and sent eight more to the hospital.

Damage to some units was so extensive they were left “uninhabitable.”

“Current research suggests that a lot must go wrong, and for quite some time, before a prison erupts in violence,” Zinger wrote in his report.

“Prison administrators have opportunity and warning to address precipitating factors and thereby prevent a full-fledged riot from occurring in the first place. Prison riots are not random or inevitable. They are most likely to occur when a certain threshold of defiance and desperation is reached among a group of prisoners who take matters into their own hands to violently force change or express a long-standing grievance.”

According to the report, there were several demands and complaints made by inmates unhappy with the food, whether it be due to shortages, replacement items, position size or protein allotment. There was also a perceived mistreatment of inmate kitchen workers by CSC staff. Zinger found that last-minute attempts to resolve the issues failed, and tensions escalated. Demands and ultimatums were made on both sides, inmates refused to work and the warden ordered a lockdown.

When the inmates were called to work, they began to riot.

The investigator asked CSC to look into several factors, including the volume and nature of inmate complaints, timely response and resolution of systemic issues, an analysis of disciplinary actions taken and the frequency of disruptions in normal routine.

He also requested that CSC look at the degree of force used in response to events like the riot, as more than 36 kg of pepper spray was used by the guards to get inmates under control. He also questioned whether the use of firearms was necessary, proportionate and reasonable.

Immediately after the riot itself, the correctional investigator’s office sent two senior investigators to Sask. Pen. To identify causes of the riot, and monitor and assess the response.

They immediately noticed prisoners were sleeping in contaminated clothing and bedding, and there were issues with the provision of basic living necessities and access to legal council.

Right away, the office recommended that food quality meets national standards, open dialogue is maintained between management and inmates and the relationships within the kitchen are improved.

Zinger did commend measures taken to deal with outstanding disciplinary charges and recognize how quickly the prison worked to return to normal operations.

Still, he said, it’s clear much more work needs to be done.

“That said, the high number of complaints brought forward to our Office as well as continuing general unrest at this facility suggests that problems of a systemic nature persist. Incredibly, follow-up visits by this Office have noted continuing issues with food at this facility.”

He took note that Sask. Pen and Stony Mountain are two of the largest and oldest federal penitentiaries in Canada, and house large populations of Indigenous people.

He had stern words for conditions at those two facilities.

“The antiquated conditions of confinement that prevail in these two institutions are not conducive to modern and humane correctional practice, nor responsive to the unique needs of Indigenous prisoners.”

Concluding his look at the incident at Sask. Pen., Zinger recommended that lessons learned from the investigation into the incident be “widely circulated” within CSC and released to the public. He also took a deeper look at the state of food services within the national corrections system.

He detailed the efforts taken by the previous federal government to save $6.4 million in food costs in federal prisons as a part of the deficit reduction plan.

The daily cost to feed an inmate each day is $5.41. They’re given 2,600 calories a day, sufficient for a low-activity man aged 31 to 50.

“When the changes were introduced, inmate grievances related to food spiked,” Zinger said.

“This office is still receiving complaints related to food portion size, quality, selection and substitution of items. Young men up to age 30, who still make up the majority population in federal penitentiaries, require more than the average number of calorie and protein. That simply means more food.”

Zinger recommended CSC have an external audit done on their food services to resolve the complaints and, hopefully, lessen the chance of a riot in the future.

Attached to Zinger’s report was the CSC’s response to his recommendations.

Once CSC’s investigation into the riot is complete, they will send out a bulletin to share any lessons learned from the riot. A summary of the investigation will also be circulated within CSC and released to the public in December.

CSC is also planning an internal audit of food services to be published in the second half of 2018. The agency said they will take the investigator’s recommendation into consideration.

 

25-year-old charged after threat to La Ronge school

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A 25-year-old Lac La Ronge resident is facing multiple charges after police received a complaint about a person making threats with a firearm outside Senator Myles Venne School in La Ronge.

The school enacted safety rotocols and was placed on lockdown as police patrolled the area.

The RCMP tracked and located a suspect at a residence a few blocks away. A man was taken into custody without incident and a pellet gun located on the premises. No one was injured.

Tommy Lavallee, 25, has been charged with:

  • Assault with a weapon
  • Using an imitation firearm
  • Using a firearm in a careless manner
  • Carrying a weapon for a purpose dangerous to the public peace
  • Intimidation by using threats of violence to a person
  • Mischief
  • Failing to comply with an undertaking.

Lavallee has been remanded into custody and will appear in La Ronge court on Thursday.

Daxa helps take down driver who crashed through east-end residence

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An unwelcome houseguest surprised a local family living in the city’s east end on Halloween by coming crashing through their front door — literally.

A vehicle attempting to flee the police lost control on McIntosh Drive, struck a vehicle and crashed through the front of a residence. The house sustained major damage. No residents were injured.

According to a technician who was on scene helping put the house back together; the vehicle did about $10,000 of damage. It crashed through the front door and a closet, leaving debris strewn across the house and sending a couch flying about 8 ft from its original location.

By Wednesday evening, the house had been re-insulated and patched up; leaving the residents with a warm, secure living space once again.

Still, a large piece of plywood could be seen where the door once stood, and tire tracks were clearly visible on the sidewalk and gouged into the residence’s front yard.

The SUV had its first run-in with the police at about 11:30 p.m. near the Cornerstone Shopping District, where officers had flagged it for speeding. The SUV stopped briefly in the parking lot, but as the patrol vehicle approached, the vehicle sped off down 15th Street East. Officers disengaged due to high rates of speed and concern for public safety.

The vehicle was later located on McIntosh Drive, where officers saw it lose control and crash through the residence.

When officers arrived, a passenger inside the vehicle was arrested. He did not sustain any injuries.

A male driver, though, fled the vehicle and attempted to get away on foot. Police Service Dog Daxa began tracking the suspect, who was found about 5 km from the scene.

The suspect refused to cooperate with verbal commands. Daxa engaged the suspect by latching on to his body. The man was apprehended.

The suspect was arrested and taken to hospital, where he was treated and released into police custody.

Charges are pending.

KYLA show returns this weekend

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The KYLA art group and the Kiwanis Club of Prince Albert are ready to welcome hundreds of residents from near and far to their annual art show this weekend.

Sunday’s show and sale will be the 39th annual edition of the event, one of the biggest fundraisers for Kiwanis and an opportunity to see unique works by some of the city’s most celebrated artists.

KYLA is a collective made up of artists working with a variety of media, including graphite, encaustics, watercolour, acrylics and more.

Each of the more than 300 pieces entered into this show is new for this year.

“We never show work that has been shown in a previous KYLA fall show, which is a reason people come back year after year,” said KYLA member Jack Jensen.

“They now there’re not going to see something they’ve seen before. Another rule – everything in the show is for sale.”

The show is a wine and cheese format, with other delectable delights created by caterer Randy Whitter. The art will be spread through the Mann gallery and the John and Olive Diefenbaker Stage.

“They bring the lights down and we get like-gallery lighting on the stage,” Jensen said.

For several years, Karen Bell with the Kiwanis Club has been show coordinator. It’s a role she took on again this year.

Doors open at 7 p.m. and opening remarks are at 7:30. After that, Bell encourages people to mingle and enjoy the food, drink, art and company.

Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Wine is $5 per glass. Tickets are available from KYLA or Kiwanis members, at the On the Avenue Artists Gallery or by calling 306-812-9067. Between 500 and 600 people are expected to attend.

For more on this story, please see the October 27 print or e-edition of the Daily Herald.

Accused impaired driver charged with uttering threats

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A suspected impaired driver has been arrested and charged after “verbally assaulting” police officers.

At about 2:46 a.m. on Thursday, patrol officers identified a driver with a suspended license leaving the parking lot of 3500 Second Avenue West travelling northbound on Second Avenue. The vehicle was followed for a distance and stopped on 32nd Street West.

Officers approached the vehcile and observed the driver was showing signs of intoxication. When officers asked the driver to exit the vehicle, he began verbally asaulting officers. He was arrested and brought back to cells.

The suspect refused breathalyzer tests.

The 33-year-old man from P.A. is charged with failing to provide breath samples and uttering a threat to an officer to cause death or bodily harm. He is due in court today.

Sturgeon Lake youth leader awarded for mental health work

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Three years ago, Clifford Ballantyne could barely get out of bed. He had no motivation, and no self worth.

“I know how it felt,” the youth worker and mental health activist said.

“I felt like I was nothing. I couldn’t and didn’t want to get out of be. I didn’t want to talk about my mental health.”

In the three years since, Ballantyne has done more than just talk about his mental health. He has taken action, as one of the driving forces behind the ACCESS Open Minds Project and its local initiative in Sturgeon Lake. The national initiative ensures young people aged 11 to 25 have quick access to mental health support services in centres built by youth, for youth.

Now, he’s being recognized for his efforts. The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health named Ballantyne one of the 150 leading Canadians for Mental Health.

“It’s pretty crazy,” Ballantyne said.

“When I found out, it was like, what, me? To reflect on where I was three years ago and where I am today, and I didn’t think it would be something I would have had the option to be a part of.”

Ballantyne used his lived experience to drive him to make life better for youth in his community battling through mental health issues.

So far, the new youth centre has been a success.

“We have a lot of youth coming into the space now, utilizing it, and we’re having regular meetings with our core youth members,” he said.

“Since school started, we’ve had a big turnout. It’s been great. We’re getting a lot of positive feedback from the families of the youth.”

The success of the youth centre and the ability to empower youth also has gotten Ballantyne noticed in the mental health community. He’s accompanying the PAGC and another youth from James Smith First Nation to Toronto for a First Nations health conference, speaking about empowering youth to create healthier communities.

It’s Ballantyne’s hope that this award, and the speaking engagement, gets people talking about including youth when developing youth services.