Admins
Bruce Pit teeming with life after tornado felled forest, but it’s not all good news Social Sharing
Hundreds of poplars growing on their own, thousands of trees planted at NCC off-leash dog park The towering eastern white pines planted as a monoculture more than a century ago — the hallmark of Bruce Pit and Arlington Woods — snapped like matchsticks. Four years later those scars still show, but they’re beginning to fill in. Poplars shoot up naturally The fallen trees exposed the woodland floor at Bruce Pit to light, and hundreds of balsam poplars sprang up on their own. Four years later, they are 4.5 to six metres tall and too dense to walk through. TheRead more
N.W.T. Supreme Court gets 1st Indigenous chief justice
Supreme Court Justice Shannon Smallwood was named N.W.T. Supreme Court chief justice Thursday N.W.T. Supreme Court Justice Shannon Smallwood has been named the court’s chief justice. She replaces former chief justice Louise A. Charbonneau who retired on July 11. Smallwood’s appointment took effect Thursday. Smallwood was the first Dene (K’ashógot’įne) person to be named to the N.W.T. Supreme Court when she was appointed in 2011, and is now the first Indigenous person to serve as the court’s chief justice. Smallwood is from Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., and went to law school atRead more
On final day of inquiry, RCMP lawyer says N.S. mass shooting response ‘far from perfect’
Lori Ward told the inquiry there are a number of things ‘the RCMP wishes it could go back in time and change’ A lawyer for the RCMP and the federal government became emotional on the final day of a public inquiry into the Nova Scotia mass shooting as she acknowledged the police response to the massacre was “far from perfect.” Lori Ward, counsel for the attorney general of Canada, gave a final oral submission Friday before the Mass Casualty Commission in Truro, N.S., which has been hearing from lawyers and participantsRead more
Canadian oilsands companies yet to follow-up climate pledges despite record profits: analysis
Oilsands organization says expecting final decisions while regulatory frameworks pend is unrealistic Canadian oil and gas companies are not using their record profits to invest in decarbonization and are instead pursuing share re-purchases and dividend payments, according to a new analysis from the Pembina Institute, a renewable energy think tank. In June of last year, five of Canada’s largest oil producers — Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus Energy, Imperial, MEG Energy and Suncor Energy — announced they were forming the Oil Sands Pathway to Net Zero Alliance, with a goal to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions fromRead more
Municipal election candidates in Ontario worried voting day falls on Diwali
Date for casting ballots is Oct. 24, the main day for the religious festival of Diwali Some Hindus and Sikhs in Ontario are not pleased with the date of this year’s municipal election, especially some of the candidates, because people are set to cast ballots on the main day for the religious festival of Diwali in October. “Decision-makers have to be more concerned with inclusivity and take diversity into consideration,” said Fazle Baki, a candidate for trustee in the Greater Essex County District School Board for Wards 1, 2 andRead more
Work permit backlog keeps Pelee Island Ferry deckhand in limbo
Perfect storm of red tape to blame for IRCC delay of over a year, says immigration lawyer Daniel Torres has been in Canada since 2017, receiving his advanced diploma in marine technology and navigation from Georgian College in Owen Sound, Ont., last year. The Peruvian immigrant applied for his post-graduate work permit in May 2021 and permanent residency status in July last year, believing it would be granted well before his student visa expired in November. But he is still waiting. “So all I want is the minister of immigration can look atRead more
Border cities ‘left behind’ from pandemic recovery, say leaders seeking end to restrictions
Group of MPs, border-city mayors call on Canada, U.S. to lift requirements A group of MPs and border-city mayors is calling on the Canadian and U.S. governments to lift COVID-19 restrictions at the border. On Tuesday, they published an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Joe Biden that asks them to remove the “unnecessary” rules at the border, which they say would allow border communities to recover from the pandemic. “When COVID-19 was at its peak and border measures were effective at slowing transmission rates, we did our part toRead more
Canada’s inflation rate cools to 7%, but food prices are still climbing
Official inflation rate hit a 40-year high of 8.1% earlier this year Canada’s inflation rate cooled to seven per cent in August, Statistics Canada said Tuesday. Economists had been expecting the rate to come in at 7.3 per cent, after inflation rose to a 40-year high of 8.1 per cent earlier this summer. Instead, the rate decelerated by even more than expected, in large part because gasoline got much cheaper during the month. Gas prices fell by 9.6 per cent in August from where they were the previous month. That is theRead more
Lawyers lay out ‘failings’ in RCMP response to Nova Scotia mass shooting
Victim’s husband says he holds out ‘hope’ final report will be valuable Lawyers for most families of the 22 people killed in the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting laid out blunt assessments Tuesday of RCMP “failings” before, during and after the horrific massacre. The Mass Casualty Commission leading the inquiry into the tragic events of April 18 and 19, 2020, heard final submissions from family members of many victims during hearings in Truro, N.S., either through lawyers or speaking on their own behalf. Sandra McCulloch of Patterson Law, which represents most ofRead more
‘My mom’s a strong woman’: Daughter of Sask. stabbing survivor recounts terror, resilience in wake of attack
Calls for long-term support needed to help community heal from immense trauma WARNING: This story contains distressing details. Nicole Moostoos was jolted awake by her crying daughter sprinting into her bedroom. “She told me that my mom and Creedon had been stabbed.” It was around 6 a.m. on Sept. 4. Moostoos, 41, jumped up in a panic, threw on some clothes and headed out the door. She has walked the road to her mom Arlene’s on the James Smith Cree Nation countless times before. This time she ran. “As I was running by, there wereRead more