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Celebrate Saskatchewan Parks Week July 10 to 16 | News and Media

Park Programming

Released on July 11, 2022

The Government of Saskatchewan has officially designated July 10 to 16 as Parks Week, in conjunction with Canada’s Parks Day on July 16.

“Parks Week is currently underway with a series of fun programs and live performances offered throughout the week in a number of provincial parks,” Parks, Culture and Sport Minister Laura Ross said. “Parks Week is a great lead up to Canada’s Parks Day on July 16, an annual initiative led by the Canadian Parks Council to connect people to nature through fun, educational, family-oriented events and programs all across the country.”

This year’s Parks Week and Canada’s Parks Day will feature a series of themed programs in a number of provincial parks, with activities such as treasure hunts, guided hikes, crafts, painting and more. Times and dates for guided programs and events can be found by searching “Events & Tickets” by each park at http://parks.saskatchewan.ca

Park Programming

In addition to the themed programming, Blackstrap Provincial Park’s Beach Lu’au, hosted by Little Kahuna’s Beach Café and Tiki Bar, will run from 12 p.m. to 10 p.m. on July 16. The event will include a Polynesian pulled pork bar, crafts, a treasure hunt, cornhole tournament, steel drum performance by The Steadies, an astronomy program, tiki cocktails and beer gardens. A detailed itinerary for the Lu’au can be found under “events” on Sask Parks’ Facebook page.

SaskExpress kicked off their provincial park tour on Thursday, July 7, in Moose Mountain Provincial Park with their “Going for Gold” performance, taking the world of Olympic athletes and mashing it with musical theatre for a funny, exciting and sure-to-impress live show. The remaining provincial park tour dates taking place during Parks Week are as follows: 

  • The Battlefords – July 14
  • Blackstrap – July 15
  • Saskatchewan Landing – July 16
  • Buffalo Pound – July 17

Showtimes are scheduled for 7 p.m., though locations or show times may change in the event of poor weather conditions. To receive important updates, visitors should pre-register online at parks.saskatchewan.ca or check Sask Parks’ Facebook page.

While Parks Week wraps up on July 16, the fun continues on Sunday, July 17 with a Beach, Beer & Brisket event at Duck Mountain Provincial Park. The day will include beach activities and games, brisket BBQ smoked by Yoder Smokers and beer gardens. The event is hosted by Waves Ice Cream and Mini Golf and Friends of Madge Lake, in partnership with Madge Lake Golf Resort and other local businesses.

Beach Games

For those looking for self-guided activity options, Discovery Packs are available to borrow at park visitor centres and entry gates and include everything needed to complete a craft, explore the park or conduct a science experiment. Themes include astro explorers, weather wonders, historic parks, disc golf and more.

New this year, free park activity booklets are also available for kids, full of puzzles, games, colouring sections and more. Booklets can be picked up at park visitor centres and entry gates.

To stay up to date on park programs, events and offerings, follow Sask Parks on Facebook at http://facebook.com/saskparks.

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For more information, contact:

Jalaine Thibault
Parks, Culture and Sport
Regina
Phone: 306-529-4087
Email: jalaine.thibault@gov.sk.ca

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Elk Ridge-hosted PGA Tour Canada golf event cancelled – Saskatoon | Globalnews.ca

Elk Ridge-hosted PGA Tour Canada golf event cancelled - Saskatoon | Globalnews.ca

The 2022 PGA Tour Canada golfing event was cancelled due to inclement weather.

The announcement was made early last Saturday after PGA Tour Canada felt that the course at Elk Ridge was unplayable, due to all the rain they have received over the tail end of the tournament — over four inches to be exact.

Naturally, organizers are disappointed, but it was out of their hands. Now they can only look forward to better weather in 2023.

“Kudos to the players in the whole community. Everyone rallied and did whatever we could. But at the end of the day … Mother Nature called the shots, and unfortunately, our golf course is unplayable for PGA Tour Canada standards. They have an obligation to look after the player safety,” said Ryan Danberg, Elk Ridge Resort managing partner.

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Elk Ridge Sunday shootout saves the day and the weekend


Elk Ridge Sunday shootout saves the day and the weekend – Jun 28, 2022

Elk Ridge Open Tournament Director Hugh Vassos says there was a lot of work put into the event thanks to the more than 100 volunteers working on the course, getting it prepared.

“We pick ourselves up and we start planning for next year. And what we can do besides build a dome? It was a good event leading up to it, I just feel bad for all the volunteers and organizers,” Vassos said.

“They didn’t get a chance to showcase this event. I know it would’ve been a fantastic one.”

Read more:

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But there is still golf to be played and money to be made. Thanks to the Elk Ridge Resort ownership group, they will be putting up $40,000 themselves for a one-round shoot-out on Sunday to help offset the player’s expenses.

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Attendance on Sundays is free, and they even plan to set up hospitality tents on the 18th green. As they are also putting up $3,000 for the golfer or golfers (to which it will then be split up), that can eagle the par for the 18th hole.

“Kudos to our committee. They went above and beyond in my opinion. There are a lot of players smiling today, to a cancelled event. And at the end of the day, if you’re ever going to have a cancelled event you couldn’t ask for a better plan B,” said Danberg.

“Us players we have a lot of expenses. Staying in a hotel and travel, and all that stuff. For the ownership group here at Elkridge to come out and have this Sunday shoot out with a $40,000 purse, for one day, most guys already have hotel rooms anyway so it’s really great and it’s a great gesture,” said Brad Reeves, a golfer in the tournament.


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The Travel Lady: Golfing in Portugal


The Travel Lady: Golfing in Portugal – Jun 28, 2022

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PCL Construction wins $57M bid to build new Saskatchewan events facility

PCL Construction wins $57M bid to build new Saskatchewan events facility

PCL Construction’s Saskatoon District has secured a $57 million construction management contract for a new events facility in Lloydminster, Saskatchewan. Photo courtesy PCL Construction

PCL Construction’s Saskatoon District has secured a $57 million construction management contract for a new events facility in Lloydminster, Saskatchewan.

Intended to replace the city’s existing Centennial Civic Centre, the proposed design of Lloydminster Place features a primary arena with seating for up to 2500 people, a second full-size ice surface with seating for 300 to 500 people, and a third outdoor ice surface directly adjacent to the building.

PCL Saskatoon will work alongside design firm TBD Architecture + Urban Planning and construction partner Bexson Construction Ltd.

“We are very excited to be awarded this project which will be a fantastic addition to the Lloydminster community and surrounding area,” says PCL Saskatoon’s district manager, Mike Staines. “We are also looking forward to working together with all of our local partners for this build to ensure a successful facility everyone will be proud of.”

Construction of Lloydminster Place is expected to begin in early 2023, with the grand opening planned for 2025.

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Pride strong and growing in rural Saskatchewan, community leaders say | Globalnews.ca

Pride strong and growing in rural Saskatchewan, community leaders say  | Globalnews.ca

While the province’s big city Pride events are well-known and regularly attract thousands, community leaders outside of Regina and Saskatoon say Pride is thriving in small-town Saskatchewan as well.

It’s an important trend to preserve, they say, with some explaining to Global News that feelings of isolation and loneliness can be exacerbated when living in a rural community.

“It can be harder in smaller communities, and rural communities,” said Prince Albert Pride Co-chair LJ Tyson.

“A lot of the people in the Queer community who I grew up with had to leave to bigger cities in order to find themselves and their people.”

Prince Albert Pride kicked off its Pride week activities this past weekend in part with the introduction of a new safe spaces campaign.

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Over the coming months the organization hopes to begin distributing pride window decals to local businesses which can prove they’ve made efforts to create a more inclusive and welcoming environment for the LGBTQ2 community, such as by having gender-neutral washrooms.

Tyson hopes this campaign, along with the rest of the Prince Albert Pride week events, can help people feel secure in holding onto their rural roots.

“Even just visiting bigger city centres, you know there’s that general feeling of more diversity and accepting ways of life,” they said.

“But I always encourage people to make things better for the next generation. That’s why I choose to stay and live in a smaller city like Prince Albert. It’s so important we make our presence known in these smaller centres and create a better life for the ones who come after us.”

Read more:

Inside Pride: Exploring the lesser-known part of the term 2SLGBTQQIA+

Ahtahkakoop Cree Nation is holding its first ever Pride week this month from June 13 to 17.

Events include a parade, flag-raising and two-spirit sharing circles.

Organizer Sheldon Gaetz told Global News that he too has felt the need to move to a larger city in the past.

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Gaetz hopes that embracing Pride on the reserve can help others feel like they have a choice.

“In the smaller communities, we don’t have the parades, and we don’t have the centres to go talk to people,” Gaetz said.

“Sometimes you do feel alone. And it’s nice to know in these small communities or on the reserve that there is support for you.”

Read more:

Labelling a lesbian: How stereotypes harm and help the community

Southwest Saskatchewan Pride, meanwhile, is celebrating the opening of Swift Current’s first Queer Resource Centre.

“This was a project that was really a pipe dream for many years,” said Southwest Saskatchewan Pride boardmember Shaun Hanna.

“Southwest Saskatchewan Pride has been around since 2012. We’ve been around a while and we had always talked about opening a centre. We’re just getting it off the ground now.”

Its Pride activities kick off in July, in part so that its schedule doesn’t overlap with that of other small-town Pride festivals.

Pride events are also occurring in communities like Moose Jaw, Yorkton, Weyburn, Humboldt, North Battleford and Foam Lake.

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Hanna said he’s seen Pride organizations “flourish” in smaller Saskatchewan communities over the past decade, and that the hard work put in by these communities is improving life for all.

“There was always these efforts that unfolded throughout the course of the twentieth century to try to bring rural areas and small towns under a sway of a national consensus of what middle-class life ought to look like,” Hanna said.

“I think we’ve really taken it for granted that rural areas and small towns and sort of inhospitable to queer life. Groups like ours, we really are are sort of pushing back against that narrative that queer people can only thrive in those major metropolitan spaces.”


Click to play video: 'Global’s Inside Pride explores issues inside the 2SGBTQQIA+ community'







Global’s Inside Pride explores issues inside the 2SGBTQQIA+ community


Global’s Inside Pride explores issues inside the 2SGBTQQIA+ community

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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SHAKESPEARE ON THE SASKATCHEWAN – GlobalNews Events

CYMBELINE – June 29th through August 14th.  We are extremely pleased to announce Cymbeline as the lynchpin in our 2022 season.  Never before produced by the Festival, Cymbeline takes familiar story elements from Shakespeare’s earlier plays – star-crossed lovers! mistaken identity! children lost and found! – and weaves them into something entirely unique.  We know this story of forgiveness and redemption will appeal to both long-time patrons and newcomers to Shakespeare on the Saskatchewan and have audiences discussing the play well after the final bows.

Tickets: https://shakespearesask.thundertix.com/events/198677 or call the Box Office @306-652-9100.

SHAKESPEARE’S WILL – July 13th through 31st.  Shakespeare’s Will is a fabulous one-woman show that depicts Anne Hathaway, Shakespeare’s wife, as she prepares herself to read her late husband’s last will and testament.  Through the play, the audience gets to relive the relationship of Anne and Will from her perspective.  The play has touched audiences since its original run in 2005, and we desperately have been hoping to include it in our upcoming season.

Tickets: https://shakespearesask.thundertix.com/event/198720 or call the Box Office @306-652-9100.

IAGO SPEAKS – August 6th through 21st.  We are ecstatic to announce another piece of the 2022 season, the premiere production Iago Speaks by Daniel Macdonald, one of Saskatchewan’s most prolific playwrights.  We are proud to be the first to produce this comedic, enchanting play that explores the very nature of storytelling.  At first glance, Iago Speaks appears to follow the events immediately after the curtain comes down on Shakespeare’s Othello, but Dan’s story quickly turns, introducing us to Iago’s Jailer, a bit player, as he tries to find some purpose in his repetitive task of keeping watch over Iago.

Tickets: https://shakespearesask.thundetix.com/event/198737 or call the Box Officce @306-652-9100.

SHAKESPEARE ON THE SASKATCHEWAN AMPHITHEATRE,  948 SPADINA CRESCENT EAST, SASKATOON.

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Saskatchewan Highland Gathering and Celtic Festival – GlobalNews Events

The Saskatchewan Highland Gathering and Celtic Festival, also known as the Regina Highland Games, is on May 21st in Victoria Park, downtown Regina. It consists of competitions in solo bagpiping and drumming, pipe band events, highland dancing and Scottish heavy athletics. The festival is open to the public, starting at 9:00 a.m. and running until 8:00 p.m.

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35th SASKTEL SASKATCHEWAN JAZZ FESTIVAL – GlobalNews Events

LUCINDA WILLIAMS with MEGAN NASH – June 30th, Doors open @6:00pm, Show @7:00pm, Location: TD Mainstage, Bessborough Gardens. Tickets: https://broadwaytheatre.ca/events?p=event&event=1404   “It’s all come full circle,” says Lucinda Williams about her powerful new album, Good Souls Better Angels.  After more than forty years of music making, the pioneering, Louisiana-born artist has returned to the gritty blues foundation that first inspired her as a young singer-songwriter in the late 1970s.

ARKELLS WITH HAVIAH MIGHTY and SHAWNEE KISH – July 2nd, Doors open @5:00pm, Show @6:00pm, Location: TD Mainstage, Bessborough Gardens.  Tickets: https://broadwaytheatre.ca/events?p=event&event=1405  Hailed by The Globe and Mail as “the right kind of band for this decade,” Arkells are widely considered one of the most passionate, exuberant and in-demand live bands working today.  As radio mainstays, sports-sync shoe-ins and curious students of culture, Arkells have remained ever present – building awareness and personal community experiences around their live shows and new music at every turn.  The most emblematic example of this being The Rally, Arkell’s hometown concert that was hailed as one of the biggest headline shows in the country, and is slated to return in June 2022.  Arkells continue to unleash new music and tour dates as the band and their fans return to live in-person festivities.  Their hotly anticipated new album BLINK ONCE is out now, with recently teased BLINK TWICE companion album due later this year.

KIESZA and THE HALLUCI NATION – July 3rd, Doors open @6:00pm, Show @7:00pm, Location: TD Mainstage, Bessborough Gardens.  Tickets: https://broadwaytheatre.ca/events?p=event&event=1406  Kiesza stormed onto the scene in 2014 with her impassioned hit “Hideaway,” which has since accrued over a billion streams; the accompanying one-shot video has been featured on several best-of-decade lists.  Her debut studio album Sound Of A Woman saw her top charts globally and moved over a million units.  Top-tier musicians soon rushed to work with her, and the rising Canadian talent soon counted herself as a feature on releases from the likes of Skrillex, Diplo, Duran Duran and Joey Bada$$, to name a few.  The Canadian multi-hyphenate also has a foot in the fashion world, serving as the face of campaigns for top brands like Fendi and Maison Birks.

PATTI LaBELLE with JACK SEMPLE – July 5th, Doors open @6:00pm, Show @7:00pm, Location: TD Mainstage, Bessborough Gardens.  Tickets: https://broadwaytheatre.ca/events?p=event&event=1407  Beautiful, simply does not describe the incomparable force known to the world as Patti LaBelle.  As time continues to evolve, the soulful songbird’s name has become synonymous with grace, style, elegance and class.  Belting out classic rhythm and blues renditions, pop standards and spiritual sonnets have created the unique platform of versatility that she is known and revered for.

BAHAMAS with RUBY WATERS – July 6th, Doors open @6:00pm, Show @7:00pm, Location: TD Mainstage, Bessborough Gardens. Tickets: https://broadwaytheatre.ca/events?p=event&event=1408  2018’s Grammy-Nominated Earthtones saw Bahamas joining forces with bassist Pino Palladino and drummer James Gadson (the rhythm section behind D’Angelo’s Black Messiah), and even merging them with his stable of longtime heavyweight musicians on Kimmel.

PRAIRIE RHYTHMS: 35 YEARS OF JAZZ, COMMUNITY AND FUN FT. THE SASKATOON JAZZ ORCHESTRA – July 7th, Doors open @6:00pm, Show @7:00pm, Location: TD Mainstage, Bessborough Gardens.  Tickets: https://broadwaytheatre.ca/events?p=event&event=1409  Under the direction of Dean McNeill the Saskatchewan Jazz Orchestra (SJO) is proud to help celebrate the SaskTel Jazz Festival’s 35th Anniversary through this one-time-only gala concert featuring home grown Sask talend from multiple generations!  Confirmed arts include Ted Warren (Drums), multi Juno award winner Jon Ballantyne (Piano), Al Muirhead (Trumpet), Juno award winner Mike Rud (Guitar), Ross Ulmer (Trombone), Sheldon Corbett (Sax), Barrie Redford (Trumpet), Mark DeJong (Saxaphone), plus a whole host of up and coming Sask based musical talent.  Repertoire for this concert will include excerpt from the Regina Jazz Society’s Western Canadian Music Awards-nominated CD “The Saskatchewan Suite: The Story of Us” composed by Fred Stride, and, the “Saskatchewan Suite” composed by Juno award-winning pianist/composer Oliver Jones.  This concert will also feature premiers of 2 original new works composed by Silas Friesen and Paul Suchan.

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Bicycle Safety Week in Saskatchewan – GlobalNews Events

This is the 20th year that BICYCLE SAFETY WEEK has been held in Saskatchewan.  Bicycle Safety Week is an opportunity to pay special attention to child cyclists, provide education, and hold events to promote safe cycling.  Cycling-related injuries are a leading cause of hospitalizations in children and youth.  Education and awareness are key for reducing these injuries.

The Minister of Crown Investments has designated May 15th to 21st, 2022 Bicycle Safety Week in Saskatchewan.  This designation celebrates the commitment and enthusiasm of community members and agencies that dedicate their time to educating our children on bicycle safety and in reducing bicycle-related injuries.

The theme for 2022 is READY TO RIDE with a focus on ensuring children have the proper equipment and skills to get ready to ride their bicycles.  Many communities across Saskatchewan are hosting BIKE RODEOS throughout spring and summer where children have the opportunity to have their helmuts and bicycles adjusted to ensure proper fit, as well as learn and practice bicycle safety skills.  The Saskatchewan Prevention Institute provides support in planning events, bicycly safety resources, and educational packages for children.

For more information about Bicycle Safety Week, visit https://skprevention.ca/safety/bike-and-wheel-safety/.  When children, parents, caregivers, and communities work together, serious and life-altering bicycle injuries can be prevented.

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‘That is the Saskatchewan spirit’: Despite unsuccessful world juniors bid, tourism head proud of efforts

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The joint bid by Halifax and Moncton has been awarded the 2023 event, ahead of joint bids from Ottawa/Quebec City and Saskatoon/Regina.

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The CEO of Tourism Saskatoon didn’t try to hide her disappointment, but Stephanie Clovechok was quick to share another emotion after learning the bid by Saskatoon and Regina to host the upcoming world junior hockey championship was unsuccessful.

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“I think the big headline here is how powerful it is to bring an entire province together on something like this,” Clovechok said on Thursday, shortly after receiving word that Halifax and Moncton has been awarded the 2023 event ahead of joint bids from Ottawa/Quebec City and Saskatoon/Regina.

Canada is hosting the 2023 championship after the event was pulled out of Russia because of its invasion of Ukraine. Saskatoon previously attempted, and failed, to land the 1999, 2003, 2006 and 2009 championships before succeeding in 2010 with a joint bid alongside Regina. Saskatoon also hosted the world juniors in 1991.

Tourism groups in Saskatoon and Regina spent a frantic week last month getting a bid together, with the International Ice Hockey Federation announcing they were looking to Canada to host on short notice

Chelsea Galloway, chief tourism and visitor growth officer for Economic Development Regina and Tourism Regina, was marvelling on Thursday at how the teams in both cities managed to put together a bid in just 10 days when it can sometimes take months — or even years — to coordinate bids for large events. She said the process was also unique because it played out more publicly than most.

“It was fun for people to be part of the process. Everyone’s disappointed, but I think it’s also an opportunity for us to be really excited about hosting major events again,” Galloway said.

The two cities are often competing against each other to host major events, Clovechok pointed out. The teamwork Saskatoon and Regina showed as they worked together — from city council to the tourism groups, the business community to citizens offering to volunteer — is something that gives Clovechok “enormous pride and shows we’ve got something very magical on our hands.

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“That is the Saskatchewan spirit that connects us all … We need to definitely lean into that when we want to bring hockey back to Saskatchewan.”

Tourism Saskatoon CEO Stephanie Clovechok
Tourism Saskatoon CEO Stephanie Clovechok Photo by Michelle Berg /Saskatoon StarPhoenix

The last world juniors to be held in the Maritimes was in 2003. The event has been held several times since then in the west, and the 2022 championship — which was called off in December due to the COVID-19 pandemic — is being held in August in Edmonton and Red Deer. Clovechok said she was never told directly from Hockey Canada about that being a factor, only hearing the narrative in the media. Part of Saskatchewan’s appeal, Clovechok said, was because of its openness for business and willingness to host events over the past two years.

She said there were “a lot of things likely in play” and that she hopes to learn more about the process and decision making during a follow-up call in the near future.

With the hospitality sector still feeling the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, tourism representatives from Saskatoon and Regina said they hoped to land an event the magnitude of the world juniors. Both Saskatoon and Regina’s city council approved $350,000 in funding to support the joint bid.

After two years of cancelled and postponed events, Saskatoon Mayor Charlie Clark said last month that welcoming the hockey tournament would put people in hotel beds and boost the local economy.

“Our hotels need hope. Our restaurants need hope. Our venues need that hope and optimism,” he said.

Clovechok last month before Saskatoon city council estimated the economic impact of hosting the event at $50 million. She predicted it would attract 300,000 fans, 15,000 room nights for hotels and 20,000 out of town travellers.

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Canadian fans in Saskatoon celebrate Team Canada’s second goal during the gold medal game between Canada and the U.S.A. at the IIHF World Juniors Hockey Tournament at Credit Union Centre in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan January 5, 2010. (Gord Waldner/ Saskatoon StarPhoenix)
Canadian fans in Saskatoon celebrate Team Canada’s second goal during the gold medal game between Canada and the U.S.A. at the IIHF World Juniors Hockey Tournament at Credit Union Centre in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan January 5, 2010. (Gord Waldner/ Saskatoon StarPhoenix) Photo by Gord Waldner /The Star Phoenix

As disappointing as the outcome of the bid is, Clovechok feels energized by the process.

“It’s one thing we were saying: this put us back to work in the way we love to work,” she said.

“Now that this momentum is felt by the community … we’ve got a fire in us to keep hunting for these events hosting in Saskatchewan.”

Whether it’s soccer or curling, baseball or the North American Indigenous Games, “we’ll be making sure we’re present in the world … This, again, speaks to the strength of the community and connectivity of the community.”

The next opportunities to bid to host the world junior hockey championship are for the 2026 or 2028 event.

Said Clovechok: “We will be sure that Hockey Canada hears from us.”

— With Leader-Post files from Jennifer Ackerman

The news seems to be flying at us faster all the time. From COVID-19 updates to politics and crime and everything in between, it can be hard to keep up. With that in mind, the Saskatoon StarPhoenix has created an Afternoon Headlines newsletter that can be delivered daily to your inbox to help make sure you are up to date with the most vital news of the day. Click here to subscribe.

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2022 SARM Convention and Trade Show kicks off Tuesday with in-person events | Globalnews.ca

2022 SARM Convention and Trade Show kicks off Tuesday with in-person events  | Globalnews.ca

After having to go virtual in 2021, the annual three-day Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities (SARM) Convention and Trade Show is back to being an in-person event and that alone has both organizers and delegates alike feeling excited.

“We were fortunate that we still had good virtual connectivity — that’s something we’ve been working on in rural Saskatchewan, better internet, so it’s really important to our councils, but it great to be back,” said Ray Orb, SARM president.

The convention and trade show draws roughly 2,000 delegates and guests from across the province and provides SARM members the opportunity to gather “to vote on and debate resolutions, discuss current issues, and participate in dialogue sessions with provincial and federal government officials,” according to the association.

This year’s convention and trade show will be held from March 15-17, at the Queensbury Convention Centre at Evraz Place. Masks, proof of COVID-19 vaccinations, or negative COVID tests are not required.

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Read more:

SARM: Crime Watch seeks more volunteers to reduce crime in rural municipalities

One of the most notable discussions of the day was a ‘fireside chat’ between with Russ Mirasty, Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan and a SARM member.

“When I look at Saskatchewan today, (compared to) 10, 20, 30 years ago, I’d say we’re on the right path,” Mirasty said.

“We hear more dialogue, there’s more acceptance, even with the land acknowledgements, you know those first being spoken of at different events,” he said when speaking about ongoing reconciliation efforts in the province.

Mirasty adds one of the best things about Saskatchewan is the diversity of not just the people here, but the land and work the province has to offer in terms of its different industries.

He also took time to thank the rural delegation for their hard work.

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Testing phase underway to see how new land access app works in rural Sask.

Another noteworthy presentation from the event introduced attendees to SaskLander, a recently released app designed to help landowners with trespassing issues.

“It’s a new online service with the vision to make land access management faster, more accessible and more accountable,” said Sauvelm McClean, SaskLander co-founder.

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SaskLander allows users to post the land they own on the app and then deny or give permission to those asking for access, whether that’s for recreational purposes or hunting.

The new app is intended to support changes made this year to The Trespass to Property Act, which requires members of the public to get permission from rural property owners before entering their land, provincial government officials said.

SARM and app founders are working on expanding the technology across rural areas in the province and it’s currently free to use.

SaskLander was developed through the provincial government’s Innovation Challenge program, where the local technology sector is engaged to identify and develop solutions for everyday challenges.

Day two of the event on Wednesday will be another busy one, with Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe and his cabinet in attendance for a ‘bear pit’ session.

The session gives rural municipality heads a chance to air their grievances and concerns in regards to what can be done to help improve rural life.

— with files from Global News’ Thomas Piller

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.