News
1. Something is seriously wrong on the east coast
There’s been a 10-20 percent increase in the number of great white sharks in Nova Scotia waters,reports the CBC. There’s not yet enough evidence to explain the increase, but it is speculated to be a result of warming sea waters. That would correlate with the recent news that there is an alarming decline in the puffin population in the Gulf of Maine, also related to increased ocean temperatures around Nova Scotia. “Life would go onwithout puffins,” explains Mother Jone’s Rowan Jacobsen in an article alarmingly headlinedSomething is Seriously Wrong on the East Coast—and It’s Killing all the Baby Puffins. “Unfortunately, these clowns of the sea seem to be the canaries in the western Atlantic coal mine. Their decline is an ominous sign in a system that supports everything from the last 400 North Atlantic right whales to the $2 billion lobster industry.” Jacobsen explains the complex ocean current system off the coast, which leads to a relatively cold but nutrient rich Gulf of Maine and Bay of Fundy, and how that system appears to be disrupted. A couple of years ago GPI Atlantic’s Ron Colman pointed out to me that the increase in the Nova Scotia lobster catch over the past decade looks a whole lot like the increase in the cod catch in the years just before the collapse of the cod fishery. Could climate change and/or overfishing destroy the lobster industry? I don’t know, but the data points are alarming.
2. Dennis building
Perhaps because Heritage Trust of Nova Scotia is dealing with being sued, a national heritage group called Heritage Canada The National Trust has stepped in to try tosave the Dennis building, which the province wants to tear down. Read thehistory of the building here. Tom Urbaniak, who sits on the board of the Heritage Trust of Nova Scotia, and so isa target of Joe Ramia’s lawsuitagainst that group, is alsoVice Chair and a board memberof Heritage Canada The National Trust.
3. New FOIPOP Review Officer appointed
The province has hired Catherine Tully as the new Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Review Officer. According toa press release, Tully was the assistant information and privacy commissioner for British Columbia before moving on to be the director of privacy and access to information for Canada Post. Here’s hoping that some outside blood will bring much needed reforms to Nova Scotia’s archaic and moribund freedom of information processes.
4. If the sharks don’t get you, the rats will
5. Don’t leave your dog (or child!) locked in a hot car
Rounding out the news about our uncertain relationship with animals, the SPCA is suggesting that cops be given the power to issue tickets with “substantial” fines to people who leave dogs in hot cars. “It sends a quick message to the public, there is a penalty to this, it is serious, and it’s a quick way…for the officer to address it on site,” Nova Scotia SPCA chief inspector David Rosstells Metro. I dunno. Obviously people shouldn’t leave dogs (or气ldren!) in hot cars, but I don’t think anyone means to purposefully harm their dog (or child!); the fine only makes sense if it is part of a larger education campaign.
Views
1. Our home but not our native land
Yesterday, 48 immigrants in Halifax became citizens.我就是其中之一.
2. Ship of Theseus
Were Nova Scotia a smart society, studying the failures of the Bluenose replication/renovation/whatever would be required of all future mucky mucks. The Chronicle Herald’s Paul Schneidereit’sexhaustive series on the boatwould be the primer. That course, alas, will be superseded by Convention Centres 101.
3. Saving the world with sticky notes
Spoken word artist and woo-wooer Tim Merry is asticky note enthusiast.
4. This old town
Stephen Archibaldgoes to Lunenburg.
Government
City
Regional Watersheds Advisory Board(5pm, Maxine Tynes Room, Alderney Library)—the city is taking the long-overdue step of creating a rational grading ordinance with consistent policies that apply across the entire municipality. This meeting will discuss aconsultant’s reportabout what that ordinance might look like.
Province
No meetings
On Campus
Dalhousie
PhD Defence—Department of Oceanography(10am, Room 3107, The Mona Campbell Building, 1459 LeMarchant Street)—PhD candidate Jeffrey Barrell is defending his thesis, “Quantification and Spatial Analysis of Seagrass Landscape Structure Through the Application of Aerial and Acoustic Remote Sensing.” This is free and open to the public.
Dalhousie-Sorbonne III Summer Film Institute(8pm, Sir James Dunn Theatre, Dalhousie Arts Centre)—A screening of “Nostalgia de la luz” by Patricio Guzman.
Daily Plug
A very exciting new media venture is about to be launched. Called Ricochet, it will bring a progressive, bilingual voice to the national conversation. The group engaged ina successful crowd-funding campaign,很快就会推出。看看他们的视频:
In the harbour
(click on vessel name for pictures and more information about the ships)
Arrivals
Valle di Castiglia, oil/chemical tanker, New York to Anchor
APL Pearl, container ship, Damietta, Egypt, to Fairview Cove West
Atlantic Huron, self-unloading bulk carrier, Quebec to National Gypsum
Kappeln,container ship, – Puerto Cabello to Pier 31
Departures
None.
Of Note:
Atlantic Huronis built to Seaway max dimensions, hence its stout appearance. Passing through tight locks also leaves her sides looking rough as seen in astop from 2012. Compare her toCSL Tacoma, here earlier in the week, which is only built for ocean travel. See also thepower of the unloading boom.
Footnotes
Hey freelancers: send those pitches in, eh?


The “exhaustive series on the boat” link is not working.
Fixed!
Jian Ghomeshi did a nice interview with Ricochet Media’s Ethan Cox on Q recently.
http://www.cbc.ca/q/blog/2014/06/13/ricochet-french-english-melange/
I wonder if Tim Merry has the right to post that story in its entirety to his site.