Medicine Hat News

Hargrave’s sterling example of community service should be admired

- Collin Gallant Medicine Hat News (Collin Gallant is a News reporter. To comment on this and other editorials, go to www.medicineha­tnews.com/opinions.)

It has been an awful year in Cypress County. The death of a volunteer firefighte­r and active young rancher last week comes after a bovine TB outbreak, a summer of drought and two major prairie fires in the last month.

James Hargrave, 34, died while responding to a wind-whipped fire that crossed the provincial boundary northeast of Medicine Hat on Oct. 17.

On a grid road south of Burstall, Hargrave and two others were preparing to mop up operations when the fire roared up again.

Bugging out quickly in heavy smoke and wind, it appears that the water truck Hargrave was driving rolled into a step ditch.

In the fray it seems impossible that anything could be done for him.

Hargrave perished and another rancher in the convoy became similarly stuck, only surviving by crawling across a burning ground.

It is an awful tale made worse by Hargrave’s circumstan­ces as a young father, conservati­onist, beef-industry delegate and community booster.

Over the years, Hargrave was a valuable source of informatio­n and comment for the on a range of issues, including a federal sage grouse protection order, land stewardshi­p, property rights and rural life.

These are topics that are dearly important to people in the region, but are rarely described with the down-to-earth eloquence that Hargrave brought to an often guarded discussion. His was a strong and important voice. And while strong in his beliefs, he was not so inflexible as to keep them from being heard by government.

He met several times to advise the agricultur­e minister of the opinions of southeast Albertans

At his passing, minister Oneil Carlier, the premier and local MLAs all expressed regret and condolence­s.

Member of Parliament Glen Motz — himself a retired policeman — announced the news last week in the House of Commons, where Hargrave’s grandfathe­r, Bert, served this region for 12 years until 1984.

A funeral planned for Friday in Medicine Hat is believed to be the first time since 1978 that a firefighte­r has been laid to rest after responding to an emergency call in the region.

The death of a firefighte­r or any emergency worker is a tragedy that should give pause to a community.

Such volunteers operate department­s throughout rural Alberta and Saskatchew­an.

They, along with profession­al department­s in the City of Medicine Hat and at the Canadian Forces Base Suffield respond to danger and have sworn a duty to limit and prevent damage, loss of life and such tragedies. Now, tragedy has befallen a community. Hargrave operated a fifth-generation ranch near Walsh.

Homes in Acadia Valley, Hilda and Schuler are destroyed. Farmland and equipment is burned throughout the region, from Medicine Hat to Gull Lake and Kindersley.

Most anyone with a highway address likely has a pit in their stomach.

A community meeting in Schuler on Wednesday was called to act as a gathering place, to calm fears, to come together.

Some hit hard by the fires are no doubt wondering about whether it is worth it to rebuild or continue on.

The people of southeaste­rn Alberta and southweste­rn Saskatchew­an owe Hargrave, his family, and those like them, a debt of gratitude.

We owe it to ourselves and our communitie­s to carry on in his example of service.

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