
Welcome to Weekend File, where you’ll find links to all the articles you might have missed last week. We didn’t have any articles on Monday, the 23rd. Jump to sections in this article:
星期日, May 22
时钟正在大规模伤亡委员会滴答作响
As the clock ticks down the number of days the Mass Casualty Commission has until it reports back to us, the public, Stephen Kimber took a look at the goals of the commission, including “the causes, context and circumstances” of the mass shooting in April 2020. Kimber wrote that he thinks the commission has done a good job so far “with the cards it has been dealt.” He continued: “My question is, do those cards need to be reshuffled?”
Tuesday, May 24
1. Morning File:约翰·里斯利(John Risley)跳上“绿色”氢补贴潮流
Tim Bousquet wrote about John “我从不拒绝公开补贴,但批评其他所有人” Risley’s latest project: a green hydrogen project on the west coast of Newfoundland. Bousquet also wrote about emergency alerts, the Yarmouth ferry, and Bodidata. And Jennifer Henderson contributed a piece on the latest on the Atlantic Loop.
2.Nova Scotia Crowns push ahead with 2023 jury trial for Randy Riley
Zane Woodford had the latest on Randy Riley’s case. In 2018, Riley was convicted of second-degree murder in the 2010 killing of Chad Smith. This week, the Crown refused Riley’s request for a trial by judge alone and pushed ahead with a jury trial in September 2023. As Woodford wrote, that trial date is well beyond the time limit prescribed by the court system.
周三, May 25
3.早晨文件:Public importance of private woodlots
自然资源与经济发展常务委员会周二开会,讨论如何在私人林上实践生态林业。Ethan Lycan-Lang报告了该会议上的讨论。他还研究了发生了什么事,因为在坎卢普斯的一所前住宅学校附近发现了215名儿童的遗体。以及在加拿大街区的一块自行车统治道路的地方。
4.受害者的家庭:“创伤告知”询问已“进一步创伤”美国
詹妮弗·亨德森(Jennifer Henderson)报道了2020年4月枪击事件的受害者家属抵制大规模伤亡委员会的诉讼。正如亨德森(Henderson对于三名正在作证的加拿大皇家骑警官员。
5.Retired Judge Corrine Sparks receives honorary degree from Mount Saint Vincent University
Retired Judge Corrine Sparks was the first Black judge in the history of Nova Scotia, and the first Black female judge in Canada. Sparks, who graduated from Mount Saint Vincent University in 1974, recently received an honorary degree from MSVU during its spring convocation. Matthew Byard reported on the ceremony and Sparks’ speech in which she told graduating students about the meaning of success.
Thursday, May 26
1.潮流:威利·斯特拉顿
创作歌手威利Stratton漫步number of genre paths, starting with raw acoustic folk as a teen phenom, moving through surf rock as Beach Bait, and landing in a Roy Orbison-style classic country on his new album Drugstore Dreamin’. Ahead of his release show at the Marquee on Friday, he stops in to explain why mixing influences makes the best art, how he approaches the guitar, and what he likes about his day job as a barber.
2.哈利法克斯委员会建议采取计划搬迁,恢复和添加到历史悠久的Elmwood的计划
On Wednesday Halifax regional council’s Heritage Advisory Committee recommended council approve a plan for the Elmwood on Barrington and South streets in Halifax. As Zane Woodford reported, the Elmwood will be moved closer to the street, will get new windows, trim, and roofing, and its wraparound porch will be restored. While the Elmwood itself is not a heritage property, it’s part of the Old South Suburb Heritage District.
3.‘Next thing I know I’m getting tased:’ Nova Scotia Police Review Board hearing into 2019 arrest on Quinpool Road underway
Zane Woodford was at the Nova Scotia Police Review Board hearing this week where the board heard testimony from a man who was tased during a traffic stop on Quinpool Road two years ago. Last July, Woodford reported that the officer who tased and arrested the man was appealing a disciplinary decision that found she was in the wrong. The officer was ordered to take de-escalation training and deducted eight hours in pay, but appealed that decision.
3.“I have to live with that, and I’ve lived with that for two-plus years”: emotional testimony about RCMP mistakes during the mass murders
Tim Bousquet, who live tweeted from the Mass Casualty Commission this week, reported on the testimony of Staff Sergeant Bruce Briers, who was the risk manager operating out of the Operational Control Centre in Truro. Briers testified about the fake police car, including the detail that it had a push bar.
4. Morning File:喂养有关母乳喂养和婴儿配方的讨论
苏珊娜租金gets into the discussion on breastfeeding and formula feeding with a segment about her own experiences feeding her daughter, plus some history on what parents fed their babies when breastfeeding didn’t work. And also a bit on the Dead in Halifax Twitter account and the stories it digs up in the city’s cemeteries.
5.Sowing seeds of sustainability in Nova Scotia
Yvette d’Entremont has this interesting story on the origins of the seeds we sow in our gardens and farms. d’Entremont spoke with Steph Hughes, with The Bauta Family Initiative on Canadian Seed Security at SeedChange, about the seed demonstrations it’ll be hosting across the country to help raise awareness about the importance of local seeds. d’Entremont also spoke with Chris Sanford, co-owner ofYonder Hill Farmin Laconia outside of Bridgewater, about the local seed varieties they use.
6.Emera拥有创纪录的利润,但希望从纳税人那里获得更多的利润
Jennifer Henderson attended the annual general meeting of Emera Inc. on Thursday. “There wasn’t a single question from shareholders about a controversial proposal to raise power rates by 10% in Nova Scotia over the next 18 months,” Henderson wrote. “That may be because only one-third of Emera’s profits derive from Nova Scotia and nearly two-thirds relate to regulated electric and gas utilities the company owns in Florida.”
7.哈利法克斯警察声称她担心自己嘲笑的人会用笔作为武器
赞恩·伍德福德(Zane Woodford)回到了新斯科舍省警察审查委员会的听证会,该委员会于2019年在奎因普尔路(Quinpool Road)被捕的一名男子。在听证会的第二天,董事会听到了康斯特的证词。妮可·格林(Nicole Green)说,她觉得自己别无选择,只能逮捕这个人,因为她担心他会用笔作为武器。
Friday, May 27
1. Morning File:How RCMP commanders’ bumbling response to Portapique allowed the killer to continue his murder spree
Tim Bousquet reported on the testimony of retired RCMP Staff Sergeant Al Carroll at the Mass Casualty Commission. “Through his questioning of Carroll, MCC lawyer Roger Burrill aptly laid out how a series of cascading policing errors built upon each other such that the killer was able to escape Portapique long before midnight,” Bousquet wrote. Plus, Joan Baxter had the latest on the “big temporary changes” at the Atlantic Gold mine.
From our archives
Evelyn C. White’s first story for the Examiner was published seven years ago. It was this one,拼写出来:非洲新星Scotian青春和the memory of MacNolia Cox. White had attended a spelling bee celebrating the diversity of students in Nova Scotia. That event reminded White of MacNolia Cox, who, in 1936, was the first black student to reach the final round of the Scripps spelling competition. “With Cox poised for an unprecedented victory, the judges asked her to spell a word that was not among those on an official list that competitors had been given, to study, in advance of the event,” White wrote. “The word? Nemesis, “the inescapable agent of someone’s or something’s downfall.” Nearly 80 years later, the choice still resonates with abject cruelty.”Read more of White’s work here.
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