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City still ridin’ the stadium train

Morning File, Wednesday, October 23, 2019

October 23, 2019BySuzanne Rent4 Comments

News 1. Stadium This item is written by Tim Bousquet. Halifax council yesterday rejected Sam Austin’s bid to immediately end a staff review of the Schooners’ stadium proposal. Had Austin been successful, the stadium proposal would have effectively been rejected. In October 2018, council passed a motion outlining how it would deal with the stadium […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Bill 203,blue barge Bedford Basin,CAO Jacques Dubé,CFL stadium proposal,Christine Saulnier,councillor Bill Karsten,Councillor David Hendsbee,Councillor Lindell Smith,Councillor Lorelei Nicoll,councillor Matt Whitman,Councillor Paul Russell,councillor Richard Zurawski,Councillor Russell Walker,Councillor Sam Austin,councillor Shawn Cleary,councillor Steve Adams,councillor Steve Streatch,Councillor Tim Outhit,councillor Tony Mancini,councillor Waye Mason,crown attorneys,Cst. John MacLeod,Danny Chedrawe,Defence Research and Development Canada (DRDC),Discover Halifax,Duggers building,early childhood educators (ECE),Education Minister Zach Churchill,Jenica Atwin,莱斯利·弗兰克,Lisa Blackburn,Margot Nickerson,Mayor Mike Savage,Micco,Michael Gorman,Michele McKenzie,Mickey MacDonald,Paul Hollingsworth,Perry Borden,Ross Jefferson,Ross McNeil,Schooners Sports and Entertainment (SSE),Spring Garden Road Business Association,Sue Uteck,Westwood Developments,Willow Street homicide,Yvette d'Entremont

Shawn Cleary wants to ban bull riding in Halifax

Morning File, Monday, October 21, 2019

October 21, 2019ByTim Bousquet1 Comment

News 1. Street checks “On Friday, Justice Minister Mark Furey announced that street checks would be permanently banned following a legal opinion written by former Nova Scotia Chief Justice Michael MacDonald and researcher Jennifer Taylor that concluded street checks are illegal,” writes El Jones: We should, of course, not have needed this opinion to ban […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Aida Cruises,AIDAdiva,Albro Lake,Alon Friedman,Brain Repair Centre,Brenton Place,bull riding,Canadian embassy in Havana,collapsed crane lawsuit,Corb Lund,councillor Shawn Cleary,Cuba sonic weapons,Cuban Revolution at 60,illness on cruise ships,insecticides,Lead Structural Formwork Ltd,Manitowoc Company Inc,norovirus,organophosphates,pesticides,Professional Bull Riders (PBR),Ray Wagner,Thornbloom Boutique,WM Fares Architects,yellow floating heart,Zika virus

Licensing bicycles won’t help

Morning File, Wednesday, August 14, 2019

August 14, 2019ByPhilip Moscovitch7 Comments

News 1. John Perkins sues “Sixty-eight-year-old John Perkins of Earltown is striking a blow for democracy after he says he was forcibly hauled out of a public meeting by an RCMP officer last May,” reports Jennifer Henderson: Perkins held a news conference in Halifax yesterday to explain why he is filing a lawsuit against Atlantic […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Alexa MacLean,Bee Wilson,bike licences,Canadian Women's Wellness Initiative,Consider the Fork,Councillor David Hendsbee,councillor Shawn Cleary,councillor Waye Mason,cycling,ExxonMobil,Helen Creighton,John Perkins,Mental Health Foundation of Nova Scotia,Pat Berman,Peter Kelly CAO Charlottetown,Richard Windsor,Transcendental Meditation,transit fares,Victoria Walton

Northwest Arm ferry to launch on Tuesday

May 30, 2019ByErica Butler

UPDATED to include actual launch times: Tuesday, June 4, 7am After a month of waiting with boat ready to go, a new ferry service across the Northwest Arm is set to begin service on Tuesday, June 4th, at 7am. David Backman will be running his new 22-foot saltwater pontoon boat from the dock near the...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News,Subscribers onlyTagged With:CAO Jacques Dubé,councillor Shawn Cleary,David Backman,Integrated Mobility Plan (IMP),Northwest Arm ferry

“Paving the streets with gold”: Why Halifax council turned down a look into raising standards for sidewalk snow-clearing

February 14, 2019ByErica Butler6 Comments

One of the more telling moments of budget season in Halifax was not even a part of city council’s official budget discussion. At a regular council meeting on January 29, Councillor Shawn Cleary asked for a report assessing the costs and benefits of tightening up the standards for snow-clearing in Halifax. His fellow councillors, seemingly […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,FeaturedTagged With:Brad Anguish,CAO Jaques Dubé,councillor Bill Karsten,Councillor Mancini,councillor Richard Zurawski,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Tim Outhit,councillor Waye Mason,Integrated Mobility Plan (IMP),sidewalk snow clearing

Halifax council and the Martha Mitchell effect

Morning File, Wednesday, October 17, 2018

October 17, 2018ByTim Bousquet10 Comments

News 1. Pardons “The federal government will announce on Wednesday morning that it intends to proceed with a plan to grant pardons to Canadians who have past simple possession charges,” reports CTV: Sources have confirmed to CTV News that the government intends to issue pardons, and not record expungements or amnesty, for cases of possession […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:Councillor Lindell Smith,councillor Lisa Blackburn,councillor Richard Zurawski,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Stephen Adams,councillor Waye Mason,Detective Constable Josh McNeil,侦缉帕特奥尼尔,Detective Sergeant William Morris,dispensary complaint,dispensary raids,Elamin Abdelmahmoud,Ian Fairclough,Leon Neyfakh,Macdonald Bridge Bikeway,Maritime Vapors dispensary bust,Martha Mitchell,offshore drilling,pardons,RCMP Cpl. Jennifer Clarke

有其他的东西发生除了大麻的腿alization, but also cannabis legalization is happening

Morning File, Tuesday, October 16, 2018

October 16, 2018ByTim Bousquet7 Comments

News 1. Kasian Report on VG Redevelopment “Finally, the province has released a massive amount of information from a consulting firm hired to draw up a Master Plan to replace the Victoria General Hospital,” reports Jennifer Henderson: You can read what Kasian Architecture has recommended the proposed new facilities should look like and what services they […]

Filed Under:FeaturedTagged With:cannabis pricing,Councillor David Hendsbee,councillor Richard Zurawski,councillor Shawn Cleary,Councillor Stephen Adams,councillor Waye Mason,Dennis building,designated smoking areas,Halifax city council,Irving Oil refinery explosion,Kasian Architecture,Meghan Groff,Paul Armstrong,St. Paul's Church,VG replacement report

Vision Nothing Much: Halifax’s new road safety plan ignores the experts and embraces more of the same

On average, 14 people die on HRM streets every year; if the city meets its lacklustre goals, that number will be reduced to .... 11 in five years.

July 3, 2018ByErica Butler5 Comments

There are on average 1,400 personal injuries and 14 fatalities per year due to vehicle collisions in HRM, according to the new Strategic Road Safety Plan (SRSP), recently approved by city council’s transportation committee and now on its way to full council for debate and approval. If all goes according to the new SRSP, by […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:Bruce Zvaniga,councillor Shawn Cleary,councillor Waye Mason,Erica Butler,Matts-Ake Belin,Sarah Goodyear,Strategic Road Safety Plan (SRSP),Taso Koutrolakis,Towards Zero,Vision Zero

Schooling Shawn Cleary on journalism education

Journalism is a generalist’s game. If you have curiosity, a determination to discover the facts, even the ones that don’t match your pre-conceived notions, and a passion for telling stories, there are — and should always be — many ways to learn journalism’s specific, ever evolving skills as well as its ethics and standards. It isn’t about where you learned, but how well you learned.

July 2, 2018ByStephen Kimber3 Comments

My Examiner column last week seemed to set off a modest Twitter tempest, mostly because its subject, Coun. Shawn Cleary, chose to respond to what I wrote and didn’t write (even when he didn’t seem to realize I’d written it); and then to respond in scattershot kind to various readers and constituents, who had taken umbrage at […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,FeaturedTagged With:councillor Shawn Cleary,journalism,Willow Tree development

The contradiction of being Councillor Cleary

Shawn Cleary is the chief flag-waver for the city's most unpopular high-rise proposal — and its developer. But he refuses to accept campaign donations from developers, and is promoting municipal campaign finance reform. He dismisses the significance of the fact the developer's chief lobbyist is a good friend, yet he is spearheading a proposal for a municipal lobbyist registry. Only in Halifax you say...

June 23, 2018ByStephen Kimber13 Comments

“We don’t build buildings because of public opinion. We build them for good planning… And so I think this is a good thing for us… In terms of the design, I think we’ve mitigated most of the concerns…” —Councillor Shawn Cleary June 19, 2018 Shawn Cleary’s suitcase of sophistry requires a little unpacking. Councillor Cleary […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:Armco Capital,Bill Karsten,Brendan Elliott,Centre Plan,councillor Shawn Cleary,David Hensebee,Joachim Stroink,lobbyist registry,Matt Whitman,Mayor Mike Savage,Richard Zurawski,Russell Walker,Stephen Kimber,Steve Adams,Steve Craig,Steve Streatch,Tony Mancini,Willow Tree Tower

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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

所有的哈利法克斯审查员mas的报道s 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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