Letter to the Editor: Proposal submitted for additional gravel pits at Asessippi gave little information to RM and residents on long term damage to the valley
Editors Note:
The Letters to the Editor printed in this issue have been received through the online submissions to our Russell Banner website. One submission came directly to our office. Both methods are certainly acceptable.
To the Editor,
I am writing as Chair of the Cottage Cove Association. Our entire community sits directly south of the proposed gravel pit, and every home lies within the 1 kilometer buffer commonly used across Canada to separate gravel operations from residential areas. Some homes are as close as 400 meters. For a project this close to where people live, the proposal submitted to the RM was extremely thin, with almost no detail about how the operation would run, what protections would be in place, or how long the activity would continue. It is difficult to understand how a project with the potential for long term damage to the valley could be presented with so little information.
Residents have asked for basic due diligence studies that are standard in many municipalities, including a dust study, a noise study, a traffic and safety assessment, a visual impact assessment, an environmental impact review, and a cumulative effects assessment. We have also asked for clarity on where this gravel is needed, how it benefits the immediate area, and how those benefits outweigh the risks to residents, the valley, and the tourism corridor. To date, none of that information has been provided.
Another major concern is the lack of any plan for the existing pits in the area. Several have been left open with no clear reclamation or beautification strategy. Before approving a new pit, residents believe it is reasonable to expect a plan for restoring the land already disturbed.
It is also important for the public to understand that this is not just a Cottage Cove issue. Multiple provincial and regional assets lie within the impact zone, including campsites in Asessippi Provincial Park, recreation areas along Lake of the Prairies, the Shell River corridor, and the broader valley community.
One of the region’s largest tourism draws, Asessippi Ski Hill—which also serves as a major summer wedding venue—also falls within this zone. All of these areas are close enough to experience the effects of noise, dust, lighting, fumes, and visual disturbance. With prevailing northwest winds blowing directly toward Cottage Cove and the recreation corridor, these impacts will be felt daily.
The cumulative effects of multiple pits in one valley cannot be ignored. Noise does not exist in isolation. Dust does not exist in isolation. Diesel fumes, lighting, truck traffic, and visual disturbance all stack on top of one another. Without long term planning or limits, residents fear this could be the first step toward the valley being gradually torn up over time—and once that happens, the natural character that draws people here, cannot be restored.
At its core, this is a question of stewardship. In simple terms, stewardship means taking care of the land so it stays healthy for the people who live here now and for the generations who will come after us. A gravel operation in the middle of a recreation and tourism corridor does not align with that responsibility.
These concerns are not political. They are about protecting a shared provincial asset and ensuring development decisions reflect the long term interests of the region.
Thank you for providing space for community voices on an issue that will shape the future of our valley.
Sincerely,
Tim Barlow
Chair,
Cottage Cove Association
South End Auto and Ag in new hands
By Terrie Welwood
Russell Banner
Chris Radford and Don Betke have been part of the business community in Russell for their entire careers.
For most of those years, they’ve worked together, starting off at Clement Farm Supply and moving through a few other positions until the opportunity came up to take on the Napa business.
They decided to jump in and opened up in December of 2015.
After just a little over 10 years, they are now retiring, but not going anywhere.
“Neither of us are going anywhere,” Chris Radford said. “You will see us both in the community, just a little more relaxed now……maybe.”
As of March 1, Owen Orsak has assumed ownership of Southend Auto & Ag.
“After a few casual comments a year or so ago, that both Don and I would need to retire someday, Owen thought he would like to diversify from the farm he and his parents operate,” Radford explained.
Read more of this story on pages 1 and 2 of this week's Russell Banner.
Cottage Cove homeowners concerned
Residents of the Cottage Cove housing development at the Asessippi Ski Resort are raising concerns about a proposed gravel pit in their backyard.
Cottage Cove sits directly south of the pit proposed in a Conditional Use application to the RM of Riding Mountain – dated August 23, 2025 – by Russell Redi-Mix.
Want to know more? Check out this week’s paper.
City adds to tax take to keep moving forward
Not surprisingly, Dauphin residents can expect to see a slight increase in their property tax bills for 2026.
At a special meeting last night, council began the process of adopting the financial plan, which includes a five per cent increase over last year.
The 2026 mill rate of 19.021 is expected to raise just over $8.1 million compared to 2025 when 18.196 raised slightly more than $7.6 million.
When other sources of revenue are added in, the balance sheet for 2026 sets income and expenditures at $23,377,468.
Some of the other revenue sources include taxes added of $50,000; municipal service fees of $12,500, Accommodation Tax income of $440,000; business licenses of $87,500; fines totalling $100,000; sales of goods and services totalling just over $1.8 million; a provincial municipal operating grant of $1,133,307; a provincial public safety grant of $1,228,312.
“I think the budget reflects investments in our community,” mayor David Bosiak said, adding it reflects council’s commitment to moving the community forward “one step after another.”
“That’s what I like to believe and that’s what we’ve heard from the public. We’re not spending money crazily and we’re not spending money on ourselves in the sense that this is for the community. This is stuff that some people in the community would say, ‘Hey, I wanted that sooner,’ or ‘I wanted more.’ And that’s where we say ‘well, we can only do so much, but we’re doing something.’ So, here it is.
“Council was, I would say, unanimously in agreement to what we came up with in the budget.”
Read the full story in this week’s edition of the Dauphin Herald.
Sport Fish Banquet draws a large crowd
The Swan Valley Sport Fish Enhancement Inc. held their 39th Annual Fish Fry and Banquet this past Saturday (May 2), at the Swan River Community Centre. The sold out event showcased many games of chance, various auction tables and amazing food. Here, Mayor Lance Jacobson (right), and wife Coralie Gaudet-Jacobson (middle), sample various appetizers set out for all to enjoy.
Waterslide
With the weather finally warming up enough to let the meltwater loose, the Swan Lake watershed has been saturated and the river systems have been flooding their banks. While some houses in the area packed some precautionary sandbag walls, there have been no reports of major housing damage as of yet. Pictured here, Dvorak Park on Duncan Crescent is inaccessible to those without tall galoshes or hip waders as the Swan River flows faster and higher than normal.
Radford returns to Russell Binscarth council table
Chris Radford will return to the Municipality of Russell Binscarth council table after being voted in by a large
margin at last week’s municipal by election.
Chris Radford 299 votes
Leanne Bily 142 votes
Dale Sawchuk 124 votes
Nick Foisy 42 votes
This by election however brought out a dismal 30 percent voter turnout where only 608 people bothered to vote.
Bredenbury woman charged in huge drug bust
Over 60 charges have been laid, and five people have been arrested—including the rapper Decepti Kon and his girlfriend Kristen Frankow—after a massive drug trafficking investigation in Yorkton, Bredenbury, Bangor, and the RM of Orkney.
On April 24, Saskatchewan RCMP’s Yorkton Saskatchewan Trafficking Response Team executed search warrants at four residential properties in Yorkton, Bredenbury, Bangor, and the RM of Orkney, and were conducted as part of an ongoing drug trafficking investigation.
During the searches of the properties, officers located a number of illicit substances and weapons. The illicit substances seized by officers included approximately:
-340 grams of cocaine;
-1,035 grams of methamphetamine;
-251 grams of psilocybin;
-49 grams of heroin;
-25 LSD blotters;
-2,282 pharmaceutical-style opioid pills;
-23 grams of dimethyltryptamine;
-1.1 kgs of illicit cannabis;
-5000 illicit cigarettes; and
-5000 pharmaceutical-style Xanax pills.
Turn to page 3 in this weeks Russell Banner for the full story.
Build a team you can count on if disaster strikes
Join your neighbors and be part of the team your community can count on when disaster strikes.
Our Russell Binscarth Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) is a volunteer group of trained residents who help during community events, emergencies and crises. Members learn basic medical aid, fire safety, light search and rescue, and how to organize as a team alongside local responders. CERT volunteers provide immediate assistance, support recovery efforts, and help residents who need extra support—so professional responders can focus on the most urgent tasks.
If you want to make a real difference close to home, join our Community Emergency Response Team and help our community in times of disaster or crisis.
What CERT Volunteers Actually Do
CERT members turn training into action by:
• Training the public to prepare for impactful emergencies and household readiness.
• Providing immediate, basic life-saving aid at disaster scenes until professional help arrives.
• Supporting community recovery efforts after emergencies and disruptive events.
• Sharing clear, coordinated public information with residents when rumors and confusion spread.
• Identifying and assisting residents who need extra help during emergencies.
• Assisting with practical tasks such as distributing emergency supplies, food and beverages, sandbagging operations, debris management, disaster scene support, and offering Psychological First Aid.
• Offering first aid services and support to local community events.
Join us today!
We meet one Wednesday per month starting this May for team training!
Contact: Wes Anderson or Pat MacIsaac at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
An Inglis Run for You, Mom
“Our family has endured a lot, but it never defines who we are. We continue to move through life with unwavering faith, genuine smiles, and an abundance of love to share with others.” -
Elizabeth Fingas
In February of 2021 the area was shocked at the sudden passing of Karen Fingas, a mother of four young children and much loved LPN at the Russell Personal Care Home, just eight days after her diagnosis of stomach cancer.
Now, after hearing Terry Fox’s older brother Fred talk at Major Pratt, earlier this month, Craig and Karen Fingas’ eldest daughter Elizabeth, is organizing and hosting ‘A Run For You’ in her honor and in aid of the Cancer Care Unit in Russell.
“Our family has endured a lot, but it never defines who we are,” Elizabeth said.
“We continue to move through life with unwavering faith, genuine smiles, and an abundance of love to share with others.”
These traits and values, Elizabeth said, have been passed down through generations.
“It started with listening to stories from our great grandparents (Ann and Ray Davidson, and Alice and Paul Fingas) when we would visit for juice and dainties, sitting on their laps as they spoke.”
“Then to our grandparents (Gayle and Randy Fingas, Shirley Driedger and the late Mike Petryk) who provide us guidance when we feel lost, to our parents (Craig and the late Karen Fingas) who created the beautiful people we have and will become.”
Now, she says, it has come down to Craig and Karen’s children - Elizabeth, Jamie, Kennedy and Brodie Fingas.
Read the full story on pages 1 and 2 in this week's Russell Banner.