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You are here:Home / Featured /Angry People in Local Newspapers: Morning File, Thursday, August 17, 2017

Angry People in Local Newspapers: Morning File, Thursday, August 17, 2017

August 17, 2017ByTim Bousquet6 Comments

News

1. Are we going to give Annie Leibovitz millions of dollars?

Annie Leibovitz’s Blues Brothers photo will supposedly one day be displayed at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.

“新斯科舍省纳税人将不得不等待longer to find out whether they’re on the hook for $2.3 million — about half the purchase price of the Annie Leibovitz collection of photographs donated to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (AGNS),” reports Jennifer Henderson for the Halifax Examiner.

Click here to read “Leo Glavine won’t say if the province is going to buy out Annie Leibovitz.”

This article is behind the Examiner’s paywall.Click here to subscribe.

2. Yet another dead whale

A right whale. Photo: DFO

“Another dead North Atlantic right whale has been spotted off Massachusetts, bringing the total number of confirmed deaths in North America this summer to at least 13,”reports Bobbi-Jean MacKinnon for the CBC:

The U.S. Coast Guard documented and reported the latest carcass on Monday, Jennifer Goebel, public affairs officer for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Greater Atlantic region, confirmed on Wednesday.

The dead whale is currently floating in the southern Gulf of Maine, about 160 miles (about 258 kilometres) east of Cape Cod, she told CBC News.

This is the third dead North Atlantic right whale discovered in U.S. waters, said Goebel. The news comes just one week afteranotherwhalewas found floating off Martha’s Vineyard, the Massachusetts island south of Cape Cod.

[…]

Only about 500 North Atlantic right whales are left in the world, according to fisheries officials.

3. Conflicts of interest

“Danny Ellis, who hassigned a dealwith the CBRM to rent property on the Sydney waterfront for a seasonal food and drink establishment, is a director of Business Cape Breton — the municipality’s designated economic development ‘entity,” reports Mary Campbell in the Cape Breton Spectator:

According to hisLinkedIn账户,Ellis has been on the BCB board since 2010. This would be a nice place to explain how BCB board members are chosen, but since I have no idea how that happens, I’ll just have to leave it to your imaginations. Perhaps it involves pulling a sword from a stone.

That I have no idea how BCB board members are chosen tells you a lot about BCB as an organization. It’s murky, generally — entirely government funded yet unaccountable to the public — but its status as the CBRM’s economic development arm is a particularly black box.

[…]

The situation is patently untenable: the CBRM’s economic development arm is being overseen by a board of local businesspeople, any or all of whom could, at any given time, be doing business with the CBRM.

[…]

Consider this January 2017 email from BCB CEO Eileen Lannon Oldford to the councilors whose districts would be implicated in the Glace Bay revitalization plan:

Lannon Oldford is kindly informing the councilors that the deal is done — BCB apparently chose the project and secured the funding. Phalen (who took up the job in November 2016) is included as an afterthought.

My cat can see the possibility of a conflict of interest in this arrangement and she can’t figure out how to use a cat door. If BCB has this kind of freedom to choose projects and pursue funding, could not a board member/businessperson with a pet project or a keen eye for a good opportunity stand to benefit?

Click here to read “Should BCB Directors Ink Quiet Deals with CBRM?”

As with the Examiner, the Cape Breton Spectator is subscriber supported, and so this article is behind the Spectator’s paywall.Click hereto purchase a subscription to the Spectator, or click on the photo below to get a joint subscription to both the Spectator and the Examiner.
White space

4. Weird stuff at Crystal Crescent Beach

“It has been a busy week for marine experts at a popular Halifax-area beach, where both a marlin and thresher shark have washed ashore,”reports CTV:

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the Department of Natural Resources confirm they removed the marine animals from Crystal Crescent Beach Tuesday. Both had died.

Ruth Burns and her son, Jeremy, discovered the dead shark just after midnight on Monday.

“I don’t think we’d been there five minutes, my son goes, ‘Mom, I found a shark,’” says Ruth Burns.

5. Free advertising

Yet again, a giant multi-national corporation is opening a big box store and so the advertising-dependent news media is giving the giant multi-national corporation free advertising in the form of news articles (actually, re-written press releases) about the opening date, etc.

You know you can charge for that, right?

News media are in free fall because advertising revenue is drying up, and yet time and again they give away free advertising. I don’t get it.

I wonder what the local furniture stores who actually spend real money to buy ad space in local papers think about those papers giving free advertising to the competition.

6. Angry People in Local Newspapers

The world’s finest collection of news photography is found atAngry People in Local Newspapers, a U.K. blog. However, here in Canada, Zane Woodford is giving thema run for their money:

Photo: Zane Woodford


Government

City

Thursday

Active Transportation Advisory Committee(Thursday, 4pm, City Hall) — there is absolutely nothing onthe agenda.

Friday

No public meetings.

Province

No public meetings until September.


On campus

Dalhousie

Thursday

Canada Excellence Research Chairs Summit(周四、9:15am房间C170,协作的健康Education Building) — Fifteen researchers will each give five-minute presentations about their work, from developing advanced computer models of Arctic ecosystems, to breakthroughs in hepatitis prevention and therapy.

Friday

Separation and Sample Preparation: Chromatic and Electrophoretic Approaches(Friday, 1:30pm, Chemistry Room 226) — Khaldun M. Al Azzam, of Al-Ghad International Colleges for Health Sciences, Saudi Arabia, will speak.


In the harbour

5:30am:YM Movement, container ship, sails from Fairview Cove for the Suez Canal
6am:Danzigergracht, cargo ship, arrives at Pier 31 from Genova, Italy
7am:Burin Sea,supply vessel, arrives at Pier 9 from Stephenville, Quebec
7am:Nolhanava, ro-ro cargo, arrives at Pier 36 from Halifax to Saint-Pierre
7am:Veendam, cruise ship with up to 1,350 passengers, arrives at Pier 22 from Sydney
10:30am:Salarium, bulker, sails from National Gypsum for sea
11am:Lloyd Parsifal, container ship, arrives at Pier 42 from New York
11:30am:Orion Highway, car carrier, arrives at Autoport from Southampton, England
3pm:Danzigergracht, cargo ship, sails from Pier 31 for sea
3:30pm:Veendam, cruise ship, sails from Pier 22 for Bar Harbor


Footnotes

We’re recording Examineradio today.

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Angry People in Local Newspapers,free advertising in local papers,Zane Woodford

AboutTim Bousquet

Tim Bousquet is the editor and publisher of the Halifax Examiner.email:[email protected];Twitter

Comments

  1. James Shakeysays

    August 17, 2017 at 8:52 am

    Two pieces of free advertising yesterday: the Swedish assemble-it-yourself furniture place, and the clown-owned burger distributor.

    Log in to Reply
  2. Peter Greatheadsays

    August 17, 2017 at 9:02 am

    Is it just me, or is anyone else wondering what Ruth Burns and her son Jeremy were doing on Crystal Crescent Beach at midnight?

    Log in to Reply
  3. gordohfxsays

    August 17, 2017 at 9:24 am

    Ikea in town surely means we are world class. So what if we’re whoring ourselves out for Swedish meatballs.

    They are delicious.

    Log in to Reply
  4. Tony Walshsays

    August 17, 2017 at 10:06 am

    Hi Tim, FYI Oceanex Sanderling is currently at Autoport. She must have snuck over when no one was looking.

    Log in to Reply
  5. stmurphysays

    August 17, 2017 at 10:50 am

    Angry People In Local Newspapers – LOL, thank you for this.

    Log in to Reply
    • jodidelongsays

      August 17, 2017 at 9:06 pm

      Echoing the thanks…I may have pulled something laughing so hard.

      Log in to Reply

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