Last year was a busy one for the Drayton Valley Healthcare Auxiliary.
Doreen Beckett, the president and manager of the Drayton Valley Healthcare Auxiliary Thrift Store, says they raise funds for the Drayton Valley Hospital, the Serenity House, and the Breton Extended Care facility. Last year, they spent several hundred thousand to support those spaces.
The organization, which raises funds through sales at the Thrift Store and at the gift shop in the Drayton Valley Hospital, was able to donate $180,000 to the renovation of the palliative care room, $70,000 to the eSIM lab, while also purchasing an ICG machine, an ultrasound machine, replaced windows, replaced furniture, and more in the last year.
Along with practical donations, the Auxiliary also spent money on Christmas decorations to help keep spirits high.
Beckett says in the past, the facilities would provide the Auxiliary with a wish list of items they wanted, and the organization would put funds towards those projects or equipment. Today, they receive information packets about different projects and from there they choose how to spend their funds.
“We have purchased a lot of things last year,” says Beckett.
While they spent a lot of money in 2025, it isn’t always easy for them to raise the funds in the first place. The Thrift Store relies on donations from the public as well as the sales to the public. However, over the years, they’ve had to adjust the times they’ve had to make changes to what donations they will accept and what conditions those donations need to be in, as well.
“It’s been good since we put the gate on,” says Beckett. “We cannot go without having the gate closed.”
She says volunteers have to go through every donation they receive to make sure it is fit to be sold. In many cases, people have donated items they believe still have some use or use the drop-off as a place to save some money rather than going to the dump.
“It’s cheaper to dump it there than it is to take it to the dump,” says Beckett.
With the gate up, Beckett says donors have to wait until someone is present to accept the items. At that point, the volunteers can turn some of the items away. If unwanted donations are left, then the Auxiliary has to cover the cost of the dump fees to get rid of them.
After taking a break over the holidays, the thrift store opened again on January 6. Their hours for drop off are from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, with shopping hours running from 12:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. On Thursdays, the drop off starts at 7:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. with the store opening from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.





