Wednesday, August 10th, 2022
Commercial fishers and wild salmon advocates celebrate large returns to B.C. waters
‘This is the best season I can recall in my lifetime,’ says 40-year industry veteran The summer of 2022 is shaping up to be a bumper season for both pink and sockeye salmon in British Columbia rivers, with one veteran Indigenous fisherman reporting the biggest catches of sockeye in decades. Mitch Dudoward has worked in the salmon industry for more than 40 years, and says fishing on the Skeena River in northwest B.C. has never been better. “This is the best season I can recall in my lifetime with the numbers we are catching,”Read more
UPEI makes Indigenous Studies course mandatory in order to graduate
‘I believe that we are teaching responsible citizenship,’ assistant professor says The University of Prince Edward Island will now require all graduating students to have completed a course in Indigenous Studies. The course, part of the university’s newly established Faculty of Indigenous Knowledge, Education, Research, and Applied Studies (IKERAS), is launching this fall. Assistant professor David Varis, who is Cree and a member of the UPEI Indigenous Circle, says the Indigenous Teachings course will cover Indigenous history, cultures and practices. “We will also be getting into some very heavy topics, such as trauma, intergenerational trauma as a result of residentialRead more
Unifor membership elects Lana Payne as new leader
Unifor is the largest private-sector union in Canada, representing more than 300,000 members In its first contested election in almost 10 years, Canada’s largest private-sector union has elected Lana Payne as the new national president of Unifor. She is the first woman to hold the position. “We have to consider that economic policy should be working for workers, and not just for a few corporations in this country,” said Payne after being elected. Payne was previously national secretary-treasurer of Unifor. She defeated executive assistant to the president Scott Doherty and Unifor Local 444 presidentRead more
Canada’s Leylah Fernandez eliminated from National Bank Open with straight-sets loss to Haddad Maia
Kyrgios ousts top-ranked Medvedev, Paul upsets Alcaraz in men’s tournament Canada’s Leylah Fernandez was eliminated from the National Bank Open women’s single tournament following a 7-6 (4), 6-1 loss to Brazil’s Beatriz Haddad Maia on Wednesday. Fernandez, the 13th seed in Toronto, was playing in her first tournament following a two-month layoff to recover from a stress fracture in her right foot that she sustained at the French Open. She and her sister Bianca Fernandez then teamed up in the doubles tournament, losing to Andreja Klepa─ì of Slovenia and Alexa GuarachiRead more
Snowbirds grounded following accident in Fort St. John
Following Fort St. John accident, Snowbirds fleet under pause until fleet is assessed The Royal Canadian Air Force has ordered an “operational pause” for its Snowbird air demonstration squadron jets after a crash earlier this month. A statement from Maj.-Gen. Iain Huddleston, commander of 1 Canadian Air Division, says the CT-114 Tutor jets will not fly until an airworthiness risk assessment can be completed. The decision to ground the planes comes after a crash of one of the jets on Aug. 2 at the airport in Fort St. John, B.C. No one was hurt whenRead more