Red Deer
Here’s the regular season schedule for the Red Deer Rebels
News Release from The Red Deer Rebels
The Red Deer Rebels are excited to announce their full 68-game schedule for the 2021-22 Western Hockey League Regular Season.
The season begins Friday, October 1 when the Rebels visit Edmonton to battle the Oil Kings. The following night, Saturday, Oct. 2, the Rebels host the Oil Kings for their home opener at the Peavey Mart Centrium.
All Rebels home games at the newly renovated Peavey Mart Centrium begin at 7 p.m., aside from Sunday, Dec. 5 (4 p.m.).
Season Tickets are now on sale for the 2021-22 season!
The Rebels will play all 68 games this season against Eastern Conference teams, with play against Western Conference teams expected to resume in 2022-23.
All Rebels games can once again be heard live on 106.7 REWIND Radio and watched online through CHL Live.
Click here to link to the 2021-22 Schedule on the official website of the Red Deer Rebels
Date | Away | GF | Home | GF | Time | Watch Live | Venue | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fri, Oct 1 | RD | 0 | EDM | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Rogers Place – Edmonton, AB | ||||
Sat, Oct 2 | EDM | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Tue, Oct 5 | RD | 0 | SC | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Innovation Credit Union i-plex – Swift Current, SK | ||||
Fri, Oct 8 | MH | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Oct 9 | RD | 0 | LET | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Enmax Centre – Lethbridge, AB | ||||
Fri, Oct 15 | RD | 0 | CGY | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Scotiabank Saddledome – Calgary, AB | ||||
Sat, Oct 16 | CGY | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Oct 17 | RD | 0 | EDM | 0 | 4:00 pm MDT | Rogers Place – Edmonton, AB | ||||
Fri, Oct 22 | LET | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Oct 23 | BDN | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Tue, Oct 26 | WPG | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Oct 30 | EDM | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Oct 31 | RD | 0 | CGY | 0 | 2:00 pm MDT | Scotiabank Saddledome – Calgary, AB | ||||
Thu, Nov 4 | RD | 0 | WPG | 0 | 7:00 pm CDT | Wayne Fleming Arena – Winnipeg, MB | ||||
Fri, Nov 5 | RD | 0 | BDN | 0 | 7:00 pm CDT | Westoba Place – Brandon, MB | ||||
Sun, Nov 7 | RD | 0 | WPG | 0 | 2:00 pm CST | Wayne Fleming Arena – Winnipeg, MB | ||||
Tue, Nov 9 | RD | 0 | MJ | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Mosaic Place – Moose Jaw, SK | ||||
Wed, Nov 10 | RD | 0 | REG | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Brandt Centre – Regina, SK | ||||
Fri, Nov 12 | RD | 0 | PA | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Art Hauser Centre – Prince Albert, SK | ||||
Fri, Nov 19 | CGY | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Nov 20 | PA | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Wed, Nov 24 | RD | 0 | EDM | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Rogers Place – Edmonton, AB | ||||
Fri, Nov 26 | SAS | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Nov 27 | REG | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Fri, Dec 3 | MJ | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Dec 5 | CGY | 0 | RD | 0 | 4:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Fri, Dec 10 | RD | 0 | LET | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Enmax Centre – Lethbridge, AB | ||||
Sat, Dec 11 | MH | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Wed, Dec 15 | SC | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Fri, Dec 17 | CGY | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Dec 19 | RD | 0 | CGY | 0 | 2:00 pm MST | Scotiabank Saddledome – Calgary, AB | ||||
Tue, Dec 28 | RD | 0 | SAS | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | SaskTel Centre – Saskatoon, SK | ||||
Wed, Dec 29 | RD | 0 | PA | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Art Hauser Centre – Prince Albert, SK | ||||
Fri, Dec 31 | RD | 0 | MJ | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Mosaic Place – Moose Jaw, SK | ||||
Sat, Jan 1 | RD | 0 | BDN | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Westoba Place – Brandon, MB | ||||
Fri, Jan 7 | EDM | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Jan 8 | LET | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Wed, Jan 12 | PA | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Fri, Jan 14 | BDN | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Jan 16 | RD | 0 | MH | 0 | 6:00 pm MST | Co-Op Place – Medicine Hat, AB | ||||
Fri, Jan 21 | RD | 0 | LET | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Enmax Centre – Lethbridge, AB | ||||
Sat, Jan 22 | MJ | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Tue, Jan 25 | RD | 0 | SC | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Innovation Credit Union i-plex – Swift Current, SK | ||||
Fri, Jan 28 | SC | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Jan 29 | LET | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Jan 30 | RD | 0 | MH | 0 | 6:00 pm MST | Co-Op Place – Medicine Hat, AB | ||||
Fri, Feb 4 | RD | 0 | PA | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Art Hauser Centre – Prince Albert, SK | ||||
Sat, Feb 5 | RD | 0 | SAS | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | SaskTel Centre – Saskatoon, SK | ||||
Fri, Feb 11 | EDM | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Tue, Feb 15 | RD | 0 | EDM | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Rogers Place – Edmonton, AB | ||||
Fri, Feb 18 | SAS | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Feb 19 | WPG | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Fri, Feb 25 | PA | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Feb 26 | REG | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Tue, Mar 1 | RD | 0 | MH | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Co-Op Place – Medicine Hat, AB | ||||
Wed, Mar 2 | RD | 0 | SC | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Innovation Credit Union i-plex – Swift Current, SK | ||||
Fri, Mar 4 | RD | 0 | REG | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | Brandt Centre – Regina, SK | ||||
Sat, Mar 5 | RD | 0 | SAS | 0 | 7:00 pm CST | SaskTel Centre – Saskatoon, SK | ||||
Fri, Mar 11 | MH | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Mar 12 | RD | 0 | MH | 0 | 7:00 pm MST | Co-Op Place – Medicine Hat, AB | ||||
Tue, Mar 15 | SAS | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Fri, Mar 18 | RD | 0 | LET | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Enmax Centre – Lethbridge, AB | ||||
Sat, Mar 19 | LET | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Thu, Mar 24 | RD | 0 | CGY | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Scotiabank Saddledome – Calgary, AB | ||||
Fri, Mar 25 | MH | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Mar 26 | SC | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sat, Apr 2 | EDM | 0 | RD | 0 | 7:00 pm MDT | Peavey Mart Centrium – Red Deer, AB | ||||
Sun, Apr 3 | RD | 0 | EDM | 0 | 4:00 pm MDT | Rogers Place – Edmonton, AB |
Red Deer
Expelled member of Red Deer Catholic School Board will have judicial reviews heard May 1-3
News release from The Democracy Fund
TDF and James Kitchen Defend School Board Trustee Monique LaGrange
Briefs were filed in Monique LaGrange’s case on the week of April 8, 2024.
RED DEER: The Democracy Fund (TDF) has partnered with lawyer James Kitchen to represent former school board trustee Monique LaGrange as she takes The Board of Trustees of Red Deer Catholic Separate School Division to court for kicking her off the Board because they took offence to one of Ms. LaGrange’s social media posts.
Mr. Kitchen filed two applications for judicial review in December 2023, challenging the Board’s decisions to penalize Mrs. LaGrange and disqualify her from sitting on the Board. Mr. Kitchen has now filed his briefs, which lay out in detail how the Board’s decisions are procedurally unfair and unreasonable and should be overturned by the Court of King’s Bench of Alberta.
The two judicial reviews will be heard virtually by a Red Deer judge over the course of a three-day hearing on May 1-3, 2024, starting at 2:00 PM on Wednesday, May 1. Members of the public are encouraged to attend by accessing this link.
In Alberta, judicial reviews are heard on the basis of a record of documents compiled and submitted to the Court by the decision-maker, which is supposed to include everything presented to the decision-maker at the time the decision was made. In this case, Mrs. LaGrange had submitted to the Board 33 pages of emails and letters from Albertans who supported her. At first, the Board failed to provide these supportive emails and letters to the Court, but that changed when Mr. Kitchen filed an application to compel the Board to do so. Redacted versions of these emails and letters, which are also quoted at length in the briefs, can be viewed here, starting at page 113 of 169.
Mrs. LaGrange was democratically elected to the Board in 2021. Despite this, the Board expelled her because she allegedly failed to comply with sanctions imposed on her by the Board in September 2023 for posting a meme to her Facebook account that some people found offensive. The impugned meme depicted two side-by-side photographs, one of children holding swastika flags and the other of children holding pride progress flags. The meme, which drew much support but also some disapprobation from the community, included a caption stating, “Brainwashing is brainwashing.”
The Board asked Mrs. LaGrange to apologize for the meme, which she declined to do because she believed she had done nothing wrong. In speaking to the Western Standard, Mrs. LaGrange stated, “I was elected to stand up and protect our children, and that is what I am doing.” Among other things, the Board, on September 26, 2023, ordered LaGrange to undergo sensitivity training at her own expense for allegedly breaching their code of conduct by posting the meme and to refrain from making public comments about sexual minorities in her official capacity as a Trustee.
The Board subsequently alleged Mrs. LaGrange had breached some of these sanctions and voted to disqualify Mrs. LaGrange as a trustee.
TDF and lawyer James Kitchen have chosen to defend Mrs. LaGrange to defend the free speech rights of all Canadians, especially in the context of statements made by democratically elected representatives.
To support Mrs. LaGrange, please consider making a tax-deductible donation on this page.
About The Democracy Fund:
Founded in 2021, The Democracy Fund (TDF) is a Canadian charity dedicated to constitutional rights, advancing education, and relieving poverty. TDF promotes constitutional rights through litigation and public education and supports access to justice initiatives for Canadians whose civil liberties have been infringed by government lockdowns and other public policy responses to the pandemic.
Business
Red Deer District Chamber responds to Federal Budget
From the Red Deer District Chamber of Commerce
The Red Deer and District Chamber has reviewed the federal budget and despite a few bright spots,
there are no efforts to boost productivity and innovation in the country which is sorely needed for
economic growth.
Scott Robinson CEO for the Red Deer District Chamber commented, “The budget’s tagline is “Fair-
ness for every generation”; however, it is unlikely that the spending will improve conditions and continuing to increase taxes and spending will simply add to the inflation and GDP stagnation that
we are facing, as public debt reaches record highs”
Highlights include:
• Carbon tax rebates are finally being introduced for small businesses (499 or fewer employees), with approximately 600,000 firms eligible for a share of $2.5 billion. Consumers began receiving these rebates over five years ago and now small businesses will finally see the return of some of the tax dollars collected through the carbon price’s fuel charge.
• A framework for open banking will allow consumers to easily access financial data across institutions, apps, and services. Specifics will be forthcoming before the end of 2024, but this could result in business opportunities and choices for consumers.
• The targeted 3.87 million net new homes by 2031 is a step toward combatting the housing crisis experienced in Red Deer and across the country. However, our city has yet to be successful in securing funding support through the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s (CHMC) Housing Accelerator Program, despite being the 56th most populated city in the country and a vacancy rate of 0.8 percent for 2023. We are hopeful to see additional federal investment in our city and have identified recommendations to all levels of government in the Chamber’s Homelessness Task Force Report.
Areas of particular concern:
• Increasing the capital gains tax through reducing exemptions is estimated by the federal government to bring in $20 billion in additional revenue over the next five years. The Red Deer Chamber of Commerce opposes increased taxation, especially when this represents an additional tax on already taxed income. This plan will likely result in decreased investment within the country.
• Deficits of $39.8 billion are projected for 2024-2025. The government also plans to spend $54.1 billion on debt servicing, with no plans at all to decrease total public debt. This amount equates to $2 billion more than is allocated to healthcare ($52.1 billion).
• $53 billion in new spending has been identified over the next five years. This continued spending and increasing debt will negatively impact investment and will continue to increase taxes for all.
“The federal government’s 2024 budget was an opportunity to enhance economic growth and set the country on a new path, toward prosperity and investment indicated Chamber CEO Scott Robinson. “In our view the initiatives suggested by the federal government will not benefit Red Deer and district, or indeed much of the country”. The Federal Budget presented by the Government yesterday just solidify how important it is for Chambers across Canada to advocate for economic growth, innovation, and productivity policies our country needs”.
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