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Tanks but no tanks: Halifax councillors vote to cancel armoured vehicle, reallocate funding

June 9, 2020ByZane Woodford3 Comments

Halifax regional councillors voted on Tuesday to cancel the purchase of an armoured vehicle for the city’s police and reallocate the funding to diversity and inclusion, public safety, and fighting anti-Black racism. Councillors voted to redirect $53,500 to city’s office of diversity and inclusion to make up for a planned cut this year; a total […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:Coun. Shawn Cleary,Councillor Lindell Smith,councillor Shawn Cleary,councillor Steve Adams,defund police,Deputy Mayor Lisa Blackburn,El Jones,Halifax city operating budget 2020/21,Maggie-Jane Spray,Police Chief Dan Kinsella,Rebecca Thomas,Scot Wortley,tank armoured vehicle,Terradyne

Tank rethink: ‘Buyer’s remorse’ has councillors reconsidering armoured vehicle for Halifax police

June 4, 2020ByZane Woodford11 Comments

Halifax councillors who voted in favour of an armoured vehicle for police are considering cancelling the purchase in the wake of protests over the latest police violence against Black people. The purchase of an armoured vehicle was approved during the fiscal 2019-2020 budget process at a cost of $500,000. Police presented the idea to the […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:acting Chief of Police Robin McNeil,armoured vehicle,body-worn cameras,community response officer (CRO),Councillor Lindell Smith,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Tim Outhit,councillor Tony Mancini,councillor Waye Mason,COVID-19,Deputy Mayor Lisa Blackburn,Desmond Cole,Halifax city operating budget 2020/21,Halifax Regional Police (HRP),Mayor Mike Savage,militarization of police,police brutality,Police Chief Dan Kinsella,Policing,tank

Halifax is finally planning COVID-19 transportation changes

May 12, 2020ByZane Woodford3 Comments

The Halifax Examiner is providing all COVID-19 coverage for free. Halifax is belatedly moving to make changes to its transportation network to help pedestrians and cyclists better adhere to social distancing guidelines, but the plan is short on details. The city notified councillors and announced publicly on Tuesday that it’s “preparing to implement adjustments to […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:active transportation,bike lanes,Brad Anguish,coronavirus,Councillor David Hendsbee,Councillor Lindell Smith,councillor Matt Whitman,councillor Richard Zurawski,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Stephen Adams,COVID-19,Jacques Dubé,Kelly Denty,pandemic,Tanya Davis,Transportation Recovery Team (TRT)

A look at Halifax’s foot-dragging around opening up streets to cyclists and pedestrians during COVID-19

May 6, 2020ByZane Woodford6 Comments

The Halifax Examiner is providing all COVID-19 coverage for free. Kourosh Rad picked a hell of a time to get into the restaurant business. On Feb. 1, the city planner turned small business owner took over Garden Food Bar and Lounge at the corner of Clyde and Queen streets, near the Halifax Central Library in […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:active transportation,Brad Anguish,Bruce Zvaniga,Brynn Budden,CAO Jacques Dubé,Councillor Lorelei Nicoll,councillor Shawn Cleary,COVID-19,Crosswalk Safety Society of Nova Scotia,cycling,Ecology Action Centre (EAC),Halifax Cycling Coalition,HRM Safe Streets for Everyone,Kelsey Lane,Kourosh Rad,street closures,sustainable transportation,Taso Koutroulakis,Traffic,traffic authority,Walk and Roll Halifax

Strang: “We may well have had the peak”

Morning File, Wednesday, April 29, 2020

April 29, 2020ByErica Butler7 Comments

News 1. Murderer escaped Portapique within 10 minutes of police arriving Tim Bousquet provides an update on what we know about the mass murder which started in Portapique, Nova Scotia on April 18, based on new information released yesterday by RCMP Support Services Officer Darren Campbell. New information includes: • 435 witnesses have been identified, […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Brad Anguish,Brendan Elliott,coronavirus,councillor Bill Karsten,Councillor David Hendsbee,councillor Matt Whitman,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Stephen Adams,councillor Steve Streatch,COVID-19,Dr. Brendan Carr,Dr. Robert Strang,easing restrictions,hospitals,household bubbles,intensive care,Jacques Dubé,Jennifer Russell,Larry Haiven,Lean Healthcare,Mayor Bill de Blasio,murder shooting spree timeline,New Brunswick,Northwood,Nova Scotia Health Authority (NSHA),pandemic,pedestrian safety,reopening hospitals,Saskatchewan,social distancing,Sue Goyette

Port Wallace Gamble: the real estate boom meets Nova Scotia’s toxic mine legacy

Part 2: the suburb proposed to be built in the shadow of Montague Gold Mines

March 2, 2020ByJoan Baxter5 Comments

This is a story about the toxic legacy from historic gold mines in Nova Scotia, which its citizens will be paying many millions of dollars to try to clean up, and how the contamination at just one of these sites — Montague Mines in HRM — is still affecting us today. This, the second in […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Environment,Featured,Investigation,News,Province HouseTagged With:AECOM,Barry's Run,Blue Chip,Brian Palmer,CAO Jacques Dubé,Clayton Developments,councillor Shawn Cleary,councillor Tony Mancini,Doug Skinner,Frank Whebby Limited,gold mining,Lake Charles,Lake Loon,Marina Hamilton,mine tailings,Mitchell Brook,Montague Mines,Paul Morgan,Port Wallace,Richard Butts,Shaw Group,Shubenacadie Lakes,Shubie Park,toxic tailings from historic gold mines,w. Eric Whebby Limited,watersheds

Let’s play The Game of Halifax!

Morning File, Thursday, February 27, 2020

February 27, 2020BySuzanne Rent7 Comments

News 1. Indigenous students at Hants East high school say they face tougher suspensions Aly Thompson at CBC reports on Indigenous students at Hants East Rural High School who say they are being discriminated against when it comes to punishments from staff. Thompson spoke with several students, including 16-year-old Xavier Sack from the Sipekneꞌkatik First […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Airbnb,Aly Thompson,anti-Indigenous racism,bullying,Caora McKenna,Councillor James Goyetche,councillor Shawn Cleary,David Shepherd,East Hants Rural High School,Erin MacInnis,Fairbnb Coalition,Game of Halifax,Gary Adam,Kelly Cameron,Laurie Graham,Mayor Brenda Chisholm-Beaton,Metro X commuter service,Michael Zwaagstra,Miguel Greer,MLA Hugh MacKay,Pink Shirt Day,Premier Stephen McNeil,PREVNet,Richmond County Council,短期租赁,Stuart Peddle,Susan McClure,Suzette Belliveau,Thorben Wieditz,Tom Ayers,Tourism Accommodations Registration Act,Travis Price,Warden Brian Marchand,Wendy Craig,Xavier Sack

Councillors cold to cooling-off proposal, and other Halifax City Hall updates

January 15, 2020ByZane Woodford

哈利法克斯议员c肖恩·克利里的提议ooling-off period for councillors and senior officials was met with a cool reception at council. The request for a staff report looking into the policy, which would temporarily bar politicians and some staff from taking a job dealing with the city after their terms ended, came up during...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News,用户只Tagged With:accessible housing,affordable housing,Bird Construction,councillor Bill Karsten,Councillor David Hendsbee,Councillor Lindell Smith,councillor Matt Whitman,Councillor Paul Russell,councillor Richard Zurawski,Councillor Russell Walker,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Stephen Adams,Deputy Mayor Lisa Blackburn,development Barrington Street,development Bedford Highway,George’s Investments Limited,John Traves,lobbyists,Lyft,Mayor Mike Savage,Old South Suburb Heritage District Plan,Pathos Properties Inc,ride-hailing regulations,Uber in Halifax,Williamswood fire station

Council preview: Uber rules, climate plan, cooling-off period for bureaucrats

January 13, 2020ByZane Woodford

Rules for Uber, a plan for climate change, and a cooling-off period for politicians and staff are all on the agenda for Halifax regional council’s meeting this week. The meeting, starting at 10am Tuesday, also includes an appeal hearing for a design review committee decision at 1pm and a public hearing on a Bedford Highway...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News,用户只Tagged With:CAO Richard Butts,climate emergency,councillor cool-off,councillor Richard Zurawski,councillor Shawn Cleary,councillor Waye Mason,Design Review Committee,development Barrington Street,development Bedford Highway,HalifACT 2050,Halifax city council,lobbyist,Old South Suburb Heritage Conservation District Plan,Pathos Properties Inc,perivale + taylor,Police Chief Dan Kinsella,RCMP Chief Superintendent Janis Gray,review of policing,ride-hailing companies,出租车细则,Uber,vulnerable sector checks

你会建立如果哈利法克斯委员会给你美元吗20 million?

Morning File, Wednesday, December 11, 2019

December 11, 2019BySuzanne Rent9 Comments

News 1. Halifax is getting a stadium Council voted in favour of spending $20 million on a stadium, although the Atlantic Schooners will have to find a new location, Zane Woodford with The Star Halifax reports. A staff report recommended spending the $20 million, but told Schooner Sports and Entertainment (SSE) its preferred spot of […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Betty MacKenzie,Black man tasered,CFL stadium,Councillor David Hendsbee,Councillor Lindell Smith,councillor Matt Whitman,councillor Richard Zurawski,Councillor Sam Austin,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Tim Outhit,councillor Waye Mason,crane incident Sydney,doctor shortage,Eastern Shore Memorial Hospital,Edith Marshall,Elizabeth Chiu,Elwin LeRoux,ER Closures,Halifax Regional Centre for Education (HRCE) privacy breach,Halifax Regional Police (HRP),Jo-Anne Landsburg,Lucy MacDonald,MLA Lloyd Hines,MP Sean Fraser,puppy mill,Quinpool Road,Rob Currie,school closure,Sheet Harbour,Sheet Harbour and Area Chamber of Commerce and Civic Affairs,Sheila Martin,stadium financing,traffic stop,Tyler Kennedy,Zane Woodford

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PRICED OUT

A collage of various housing options in HRM, including co-ops, apartment buildings, shelters, and tents
PRICED OUT is the Examiner’s investigative reporting project focused on the housing crisis.

You can learn about the project, including how we’re asking readers to direct our reporting, our published articles, and what we’re working on, on thePRICED OUT homepage.

2020 mass murders

Nine images illustrating the locations, maps, and memorials of the mass shootings

All of the Halifax Examiner’s reporting on the mass murders of April 18/19, 2020, and recent articles on the Mass Casualty Commission and newly-released documents.

Updated regularly.

Uncover: Dead Wrong

In 1995, Brenda Way was brutally murdered behind a Dartmouth apartment building. In 1999, Glen Assoun was found guilty of the murder. He served 17 years in prison, but steadfastly maintained his innocence. In 2019, Glen Assoun was fully exonerated.

Halifax Examiner founder and investigative journalist Tim Bousquet has followed the story of Glen Assoun's wrongful conviction for over five years. Now, Bousquet tells that story as host of Season 7 of the CBC podcast series Uncover: Dead Wrong.

Click here to go to listen to the podcast, or search for CBC Uncover on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast aggregator.

The Tideline, with Tara Thorne

A collage of eight different actors, men and women, goofing around against bright coloured backgrounds

Episode 81 of The Tideline, with Tara Thorne, is published.

Five years ago, an idea was born and named after a Barenaked Ladies song about how Halifax sucks. Hello City has been delighting Halifax audiences with its open, supportive, good-natured humour—heck, last summer they were the only pandemic entertainment in town—and friendly, charismatic cast. Liam, Stevey, Gil, Peter, Colin, and Henri—with regrets from Beth and Shahin—stop by for their fourth Tideline appearance (and sole improv-free visit) ahead of this weekend’s sold-out anniversary show at the Bus Stop. Find out how they all met,
got started, and keep going.

Listen to the episode here.

Check out some of the past episodeshere.

Subscribe to the podcast to get episodes automatically downloaded to your device — there’s agreat instructional article here.Email Suzannefor help.

You canreach Tara here.

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Recent posts

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