logo
New sign opens communication lines at Princess Margaret School

New sign opens communication lines at Princess Margaret School

The Royal Purple Elks in Prince Albert have been supporting Aria Gagne, a student at Princess Margaret School, since she was three-years-old.
The club continued that support with a new speech and hearing board for the school's playground for Speech and Hearing Month. The board was donated in 2024, and officially installed by school division staff on May 14.
Denise Taylor, a member of the Royal Purple Elks, has been along for the entire journey with Gagne. The
'She (had) just started with her cochlear implants and Lynn Brewster, who used to be with the SPARC Centre in Saskatoon (Saskatchewan Preschool Auditory Rehab Centre) for hearing speech,' Taylor said. 'We supply funds for her to get down to Saskatoon. Her mother takes her for her appointments, and we've been looking out for her since she was about three years old. She is now eight, so it's been about five years maybe a little bit more I think.'
SPARC is an early detection, assessment, and (re)habilitation program for hearing impaired children in the Province. SPARC, the Children's Hearing Centre, is located at the Jim Pattison Children's Hospital in Saskatoon. The Elks and Royal Purple Elks still are major contributors to SPARC.
Gagne contracted meningitis when she was a toddler and received cochlear implants.
The Royal Purple Elks and Elks Canada support cases like Gagne through support of early learning detection and intervention programs.
Newborn hearing screening is an essential first step in the strategy for identifying children with permanent hearing loss and should be the standard of care in Canada. Early intervention is critical for children identified with communication problems.
The Saskatchewan Elks solicit donations to help Saskatchewan residents with grants for medical needs, operate the Seniors Homes, and make significant contributions to the Sask. Paediatric Auditory Rehabilitation Centre (SPARC) in Saskatoon.
The board is designed for children with complex communication needs to be able to connect and have conversations with others while exploring the playground and is easy to use, giving all children a voice to express themselves.
Taylor said that it was great that it timed out so the sign could be installed during Speech and Hearing Month.
'That's really nice and then I also read the sign on the other side from the Princess Margaret Timberwolves (that) gives an explanation about it, so everybody coming onto the school grounds can have a look at that and all it entails,' Taylor said.
Princess Margaret Principal Jaret Nelson was pleased to have the support.
'It doesn't happen without you guys,' he said.
Nelson said the new sign and speech and hearing board is already making an impact.
'It means, number one, Aria is able to communicate a little more when she's out on the playground,' Nelson said. 'Aria's friends can communicate with her, and the other students who don't have speech difficulties, they all get that opportunity.'
Nelson said the sign will not only benefit Gagne but future students with speech and hearing challenges.
'We're noticing a lot of kindergartens already because we have five or six that have challenges speaking and communicating with the world. Now they don't,' Nelson said.
He said that the sign will help everyone communicate better on the playground
'We've had reading buddies already out there. We're pairing our older and younger classes together and we saw older kids like pointing at it and explaining it to the younger guys,' Nelson said.
At that point the sign had only been installed for a couple of days and was already having an impact.
Saskatchewan Rivers School Division Board of Education Trustee Alan Nunn was also happy to see the support for Gagne and future students at Princess Margaret.
'I just want to thank the order of Royal Purple Elks for doing this service,' Nunn said. 'It makes one girl's life this much happier, so on behalf of the trustees and the school board thank you very much.'
For more information on Speech and Hearing Month contact the Prince Albert Elks and Royal Purple Elks or call the Elks of Canada toll free at 1-888-THE-ELKS (843-3557).
michael.oleksyn@paherald.sk.ca

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Owensboro's Big Daddy's BBQ sauce hits Kroger shelves
Owensboro's Big Daddy's BBQ sauce hits Kroger shelves

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Owensboro's Big Daddy's BBQ sauce hits Kroger shelves

OWENSBORO, Ky. (WEHT) — One of Owensboro's own has a barbeque sauce hitting shelves at Kroger. Joshua Taylor created Big Daddy's BBQ sauce that is now available in 50 of this, after recovering from a major health battle. Big Daddy's BBQ sauce has won several awards and landed the opportunity through a Kroger food show in Louisville; Behind the bottle is a comeback story that may be as powerful as the flavor. The accomplishment comes after a life-threatening fight for Taylor that lasted several years. 'I've been disabled since 2008. I needed a heart transplant. I was at home [and] started watching BBQ Pitmasters on tv. Figured, I better just try it,' says Taylor entered his first competition in 2011, and he and his wife at one point opened a physical location for takeout downtown. In 2018, the very thing that had unexpectedly led him to his passion took a turn for the worse. 'I got put in the hospital. The right side of my heart started feeling really, really bad. I ended up with a device called a Left Ventricular Assisted Device (LVAD). It left me in a coma. I was in the hospital for 188 days,' says Taylor. With his wife by his side, Taylor underwent a successful heart and kidney transplant two years later. He had to relearn how to do basic things again like walk, but that didn't stop people from wondering how they could get their hands on his barbeque again. He says getting his sauce on shelves helps him continue to serve the people of Owensboro. 'The fact that I can think that somebody is going to top me, it really fuels my fire. [I get] the same thing when it comes to the barbecue sauce,' says Taylor. The pair spent months trading samples back and forth with the manufacturer until it was right. 'We were just searching. We were like a dog sniffing for like a scent. My wife found [the sauce on shelves]…so happy and we were taking pictures. We were just like doing these poses stuff,' says Taylor.'It's so exciting that we still don't know all the all the stores that they're in in Kentucky, but just being able to see our product on the shelf is unbelievable. Even if life isn't going your way, don't give up. Keep the dream alive,' says Jill Taylor, his wife. People in Owensboro can find Taylor's sauce at the Frederica Street and Parrish Avenue Kroger locations. For the Taylors, every bottle represents more than just a labor of love, but a second chance at life. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Arkansas legislative committee reviews, advances water quality standards
Arkansas legislative committee reviews, advances water quality standards

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Arkansas legislative committee reviews, advances water quality standards

DEQ Director Bailey Taylor (left) and the division's chief legal counsel, Kesia Morrison, address the Joint Public Health Committee on June 4, 2025. (Ainsley Platt/Arkansas Advocate) The Joint Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee on Wednesday reviewed amendments to Arkansas' surface water quality standards rule, which is part of the state's enforcement of the federal Clean Water Act. As part of the Clean Water Act, the state is required to review — and if necessary, revise — the standards every three years. The rule, currently called Rule 2, was pulled from last month's committee agenda to give lawmakers more time to review the changes, which include the addition of five new health-based water quality standards for benzene, methylbenzene, xylene, toluene and phenol. The rule also amends existing criteria for ammonia and cadmium, which haven't been updated in decades, to bring them in line with revisions made by the Environmental Protection Agency within the last 15 years. Rule 2 standards apply to surface waters — such as rivers, creeks, lakes and wetlands — not to drinking water, which is governed by a separate federal law, the Safe Drinking Water Act. While the Division of Environmental Quality oversees Arkansas' enforcement of the CWA, the Arkansas Department of Health enforces the SDWA in the state. 'It's not a blanket effluent limit,' DEQ Director Bailey Taylor told committee members. The standards are for the 'ambient' water quality, and permit limits for facilities like wastewater treatment plants and industrial plants that discharge waste into surface waters are backcalculated from the standards, she said. Under the revised rule, the 'primary contact season,' the period during which people are most likely to be recreating in the water by swimming, fishing or boating, would be extended by two months so it would now fall from April to October. Pressed by Greenwood Republican Rep. Lee Johnson for an explanation for the change, Taylor said standards during the primary contact season are tighter for some measures than outside of it to account for greater human contact with the water. Taylor singled out bacteria standards as one example. She said the change was made to account for water recreation that's been happening in April and October. Johnson said it was 'interesting' that the division was moving to make the change now, and asked if DEQ believed Arkansans were swimming more in 2025 than they were in 2020 or in the 1980s. 'I just wonder why we're deciding now to change the recreational season when it's been in effect for a long time,' Johnson said. Taylor said the division was trying to account for recreation that was happening outside of the traditional May to September season. Johnson countered by asking if DEQ had collected any data showing that more people were engaging in water recreation during the extended months. Taylor said the decision was based on 'anecdotal stakeholder engagement.' The rule will next be considered by the Arkansas Legislative Council's Administrative Rules Subcommittee. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Bold and the Beautiful Alum Katrina Bowden Is Pregnant—But That's Only Half the Story
Bold and the Beautiful Alum Katrina Bowden Is Pregnant—But That's Only Half the Story

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Bold and the Beautiful Alum Katrina Bowden Is Pregnant—But That's Only Half the Story

It's been four years since Katrina Bowden's departure from The Bold and the Beautiful. The actress, who played Flo, has been busy with other roles. Now, she's prepping for her most important role: mom. Bowden and her husband Adam Taylor shared her pregnancy announcement on Instagram. In a video, the couple is lounging in chairs on a beach when they pull out a tiny chair. 'We've been hiding a little something 🙃🤍 baby due this October,' the actress captioned the post. This is the first child for the couple, who married in November 2024. In an interview with People, Bowden discussed her and her husband's excitement about their upcoming bundle of joy. 'It definitely has brought us closer together,' she tells the magazine. 'In the beginning, it was a little bit scary, and it's still a little bit scary because it's something so unknown and so different. It brought us closer together talking about how we want to parent, names, just preparing for something that we've never had to think about before, so it's definitely bonded us in a way that we've never bonded before.' Bowden and Taylor had recently begun trying, however, they never expected the pregnancy to 'happen so fast.' But the news was 'surprising and exciting' for the couple. As for Bowden's pregnancy, it's going well except for some morning sickness and fatigue. Although the actress admits there some difficult days, she's enjoying her pregnancy. 'On the bad days [and] on the difficult days, it feels like forever, but I know it's going to go by in a heartbeat, so just trying to embrace it while I have it.' With four months to go until the baby's arrival, Bowden and Taylor are doing all they can to prepare. If the couple needs parenting advice, maybe some of Bowden's B&B co-stars can offer their expertise.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store