Author: robert

  • What Alberta officials announced while you were on holidays | The Narwhal

    What Alberta officials announced while you were on holidays | The Narwhal

    While most Albertans were focused on the holidays — dreaming of a mini-break or hustling through the malls — the business of government didn’t rest. The middle of December proved busy for announcements from the province, the auditor general and the Alberta Energy Regulator that could have impacts on everything from oil and gas liabilities to the cost of urban sprawl. Here’s what Albertan officials were up to while you were probably not paying attention.

    Source: What Alberta officials announced while you were on holidays | The Narwhal

  • Once-a-day pill for stubborn cancer delivers a 62.5% positive response

    Once-a-day pill for stubborn cancer delivers a 62.5% positive response

    In what has already been tagged as a “game-changer” for cancer treatment, the potent once-a-day tablet known as divarasib has continued to impress at Phase 1b trial stage, outperforming not just current therapies but its previous trial results.

    Source: Once-a-day pill for stubborn cancer delivers a 62.5% positive response

  • Opinion: It’s time for prominent alumni to condemn Quebec university scheme

    Opinion: It’s time for prominent alumni to condemn Quebec university scheme

    Opinion: It’s time for prominent alumni to condemn Quebec university scheme

    English-language institutions should stop apologizing for what they are.

    Author of the article:

    Clifford Lincoln  •  Special to Montreal Gazette

    Published Jan 03, 2024  •  Last updated 18 hours ago  •  3 minute read

    Photo shows flags of Quebec and McGill at McGill's downtown campus in Montreal.
    A Quebec flag flies over the campus of McGill University in Montreal on Thursday December 14, 2023. PHOTO BY JOHN MAHONEY /Montreal Gazette

    Article content

    The raison d’être of democratic governments is the common good, which is fair and equitable treatment for all citizens, with special concern and care for the weakest and most vulnerable in society. Governments are fallible, of course, and democratic ideals are too often overtaken by partisan policies and squabbles. All in all, though, our governments in Canada, at all levels, have been democratic institutions, and have ensured a fair quality of life and generally equitable treatment for our citizens across the land.

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    However, the current Quebec government is increasingly veering toward a model and spirit of governance that seems to set it aside from the general democratic trend. It has become intensely partisan and intransigent, rejecting fundamental charter rights and freedoms in its legislation, issuing rules and edicts without consultation and justification, and targeting the English-speaking minority relentlessly and with sustained vindictiveness.

    Article content

    The recent university diktats, coming out of the blue and taking their aim at Quebec’s three English-language universities, are not only mean and self-defeating, but an assault on educational and minority freedoms, as well as the sustainability of these worthy and historical institutions — an essential part of the contributing fabric not only of Quebec, but of Canada and lands beyond.

    What else would provoke another petty and self-defeating decision from the Quebec government if not an obsessive bias and animosity against a particular language group? Why would the government persist in its obviously misguided partisanship in the face of outright objective criticism from key sectors and leaders of opinion regardless of language and culture? Why would the government not only dig in its heels, but double down on its flighty and abusive demands by multiplying the ante on the percentage of out-of-province students who must reach an intermediate level of French by graduation, without the least shred of justification to back it?

  • Benedict would have banned same-sex blessings, aide says on anniversary

    Benedict would have banned same-sex blessings, aide says on anniversary

    Pope Francis briefly noted the anniversary in his Dec 31 blessing to crowds in St. Peter’s Square. Read more at straitstimes.com.

    Source: Benedict would have banned same-sex blessings, aide says on anniversary

    How about the church’s finances or the protection of sexual offenders….a saint?

  • Climate Analyst Urges Balanced Reporting of Canada’s Wildfire Emissions

    Canada’s annual climate emissions inventory won’t count smoke from a record year of wildfires, but it will list forests as carbon sinks—despite concerns that global heating has made them drier, more flammable, and increasingly, a source of emissions.

    “It is crucial that Canada report carbon emissions and removals from natural disturbances in a balanced way, as required by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,” Michael Polanyi, policy and campaign manager at Nature Canada, told The Energy Mix. “Since Canada doesn’t count emissions from wildfires, it must also not take credit for carbon removals from regrowth of trees after wildfires.”

    But “unfortunately, that is exactly what Canada is doing.”Polanyi was referring to the accounting in Ottawa’s annual greenhouse gas emissions update, due to be submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in 2024.This year, 18.5 million hectares of Canadian forest burned in a record year for wildfires in Canada, with estimates suggesting their emissions neared double or triple Canada’s usual industrial emissions, reports the Globe and Mail. But rather than counting them towards the country’s emissions total, the inventory will only flag them as an information item.Government officials say that’s because wildfire emissions are variable and outside human control, so including them would obscure emissions and removals that result directly from land management.“Distinguishing between human activities and natural disturbances allows us to evaluate how management activities are affecting forest emissions and removals,” Carolyn Svonkin, press secretary for Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson, told the Globe.But Polanyi said many other countries do count wildfire emissions, adding to their motivation to invest in wildfire prevention. And wildfires are partly attributable to humans—directly through accidental fires and indirectly through climate change, which is making forests drier and more flammable. Scientists are now concerned about the transformation of Canada’s boreal forests from carbon sink to carbon source, meaning that they’ll produce net emissions rather than net emission reductions—a tipping point that will generate a feedback loop within which climate change and wildfires aggravate each other into ever-worsening outcomes.“The rationale for counting emissions from wildfires in Canada’s totals includes the fact that these emissions, like emissions from burning fossil fuels, are contributing to planetary warming and require attention and action,” Polanyi said.Plus, Canada does count carbon stored by forests that risks being released when burned—a concern dating back to the 1990s.“Even back then, there were enough of us saying, between pests and fire—and we expected particularly fire to increase—that the odds were weighted very heavily that our forests would be carbon sources,” said Dr. Mike Flannigan, a Thompson Rivers University professor who studies wildfires and climate change.Flannigan pointed to a recent report that states Canada’s forests are “becoming a net source of emissions because of forest fires and disturbances caused by insect outbreaks.” Prepared by Canada’s commissioner of environment and sustainable development, Jerry DeMarco, the report urged Ottawa to be more transparent in communicating forest emissions and Canada’s progress toward forest-related climate policy goals.

    Source: Climate Analyst Urges Balanced Reporting of Canada’s Wildfire Emissions

  • Spice School: The Foundations of Flavor With Claire Cheney of Curio Spice Co. – Atlas Obscura Experiences

    Course Description In a way, your spice cabinet offers a kind of map—an aromatic portal to different corners of the planet. In this course with Claire Cheney, founder of Curio Spice Co., we’ll traverse this atlas of flavor, charting the edible plants behind an array of spices from across the world. We’ll start with some history, tracing the long relationship between humans and spices back to ancient times. We’ll explore how to fully experience these flavors, considering how ingesting different spices interacts with the brain, and why we might crave some flavors and despise others. We’ll also talk about why knowing where your spices come from can make you a better home cook, how spices are grown, and the basics of using and keeping them. By the end of our time together, you’ll not only have a more seasoned understanding of a wide variety of spices, but also a deeper appreciation for the geographies and sensory processes that bring your favorite flavors to life.

    Source: Spice School: The Foundations of Flavor With Claire Cheney of Curio Spice Co. – Atlas Obscura Experiences

  • Dental plan rollout beginning for seniors, Bibeau confirms – Sherbrooke Record

    By Ruby Pratka

    Local Journalism Initiative

    Seniors in Quebec will be able to access dental care through a new federal government plan as early as next year, Compton-Stanstead MP Marie-Claude Bibeau confirmed in an end-of-year interview.

    In the months following the policy’s rollout, there had been some speculation about Quebec opting out of the implementation of the federal dental care program to develop its own, but Bibeau said that wouldn’t happen. “The Quebec government wanted to take a cheque from the federal government and we said no — we have decided to roll out this plan coast to coast.”

    Bibeau said enrolment letters for seniors 87 and older who have filed their 2022 taxes would start landing in mailboxes before the New Year. Those aged 77 to 86 would receive letters in January. Seniors aged 72-76 should receive letters in February, and those 65-71 should receive letters in spring. Children under 18 and adults with a valid Disability Tax Credit certificate will be able to enrol as early as June 2024 and all remaining eligible adults will be able to enrol in 2025. Children under 10 who are eligible for public dental care under the existing Quebec government program will still be eligible.

    “There are some things we are still negotiating with Quebec, but we aren’t negotiating the eligibility criteria,” Bibeau said. “The program is still on track to cover all eligible people by 2025.”

    Source: Dental plan rollout beginning for seniors, Bibeau confirms – Sherbrooke Record

  • Canada Pension Plan ‘Flunks the Test’ by Cheerleading Alberta Fossils: DeRochie

    By standing before the Calgary Chamber of Commerce and pledging our national pension fund’s continued support for the Alberta oil and gas industry, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) CEO John Graham predictably told Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and her Big Oil allies exactly what they wanted to hear.

    Source: Canada Pension Plan ‘Flunks the Test’ by Cheerleading Alberta Fossils: DeRochie

  • Opinion: the ‘carbon tax’ isn’t causing inflation | The Narwhal

    Canada’s ‘carbon tax’ has been politicized and weaponized, with party leaders paying little regard to facts

    Source: Opinion: the ‘carbon tax’ isn’t causing inflation | The Narwhal

  • B.C. sees record stretch of people moving out-of-province — and many are headed to Alberta

    B.C. has recorded its largest period of interprovincial migration losses in 20 years, with more than 12,800 people moving elsewhere in Canada since July 2022, according to Statistics Canada.It’s the first time in a decade B.C. has seen 15 months in a row of more people moving out-of-province than it gains — and most are moving to Alberta in the exodus, StatsCan said Tuesday.

    Source: B.C. sees record stretch of people moving out-of-province — and many are headed to Alberta