December, 2022
Province not doing enough to prevent urban flooding, Ontario auditor general finds
Percentage of urban land considered ‘green’ declined by 94% over last 20 years, audit shows Ontario is not doing enough to prevent urban flooding, a problem that is expected to worsen in the coming years, the province’s auditor general says. The findings are part of the 2022 Auditor General’s Report, which points to the province’s failure to clarify its commitments to manage urban flooding and a failure to adequately support municipalities and homeowners to effectively tackle the problem. Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk says it isn’t just a problem for the three per cent ofRead more
Love it but leave it: Foreign PhD students call for changes to let them stay in N.L.
Students say it’s frustrating to have to leave while N.L. is trying to boost immigration It took Foroogh Mohammadi a while to get used to the Newfoundland weather. Five years ago she traded the hot temperatures of Iran for cool and blustery St. John’s “I got used to it because the warmth of the people and the culture and and everything in the city warm our hearts,” she said. Mohammadi, along with her husband Pouya Morshedi, are doing their PhDs in sociology at Memorial University. They came for an education,Read more
Kelp is disappearing from parts of the West Coast. These scientists are trying to save it
Marine heat waves are a prime reason the giant underwater forests are at risk Early in Chris Neufeld’s scientific career, he studied creatures that depend on the kelp forests of the wild West Coast: native snails, invasive crabs and the barnacle’s legendary penis. The kelp itself was “really just the backdrop,” floating at the surface in photos of his fieldwork, he said. Until it started disappearing. “Since 2016, that kelp forest that’s in the background of the photo I often show is gone,” said Neufeld, a research scientist at the BamfieldRead more
Héma-Québec ends discriminatory blood donation policy for men who have sex with men
New screening approach eliminates 3-month deferral period Quebec’s blood agency has put an end to its blood donation eligibility assessment procedure that discriminates against gay and bisexual men, as well as others in the LGBTQ2+ community. As of Sunday, Héma-Québec lifted its policy that restricts people in this group from donating blood for three months after being sexually active. From now on, all potential blood donors in the province — regardless of sex, gender or sexual orientation — will undergo the same initial evaluation. The assessment of risk for sexual behaviour will therefore be based on an individual basis,Read more
Bill on cultural safety in health coming, Quebec says, following forced sterilizations study
Report is latest to scrutinize treatment of Indigenous people in Quebec health-care services Nearly a year after the Quebec government’s self-imposed deadline passed to enshrine cultural sensitivity into its health-care law, the province’s Indigenous affairs minister says it will finally introduce a bill to do so by the end of this parliamentary session. Ian Lafrenière renewed his government’s promise Friday, just days after the release of a report that found at least 22 Indigenous women in Quebec had been forced or coerced into sterilization between 1980 and 2019, a practice that has been tied to colonialism andRead more