Emma McIntosh
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News, Politics
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April 23rd 2020
Premier Doug Ford said the province’s long-term care system is “broken,” at one point looking visibly emotional. Later, his office confirmed that his mother-in-law, who lives in a long-term care facility, has tested positive for the virus.
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More in today's news
Millions of New Yorkers may have already had COVID-19 — but are they immune from getting it again?
Caroline Orr
News
| April 23rd 2020
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Saskatchewan to start reopening from the COVID-19 pandemic on May 4
Michael Bramadat-Willcock
News, La Ronge, Saskatchewan
| April 23rd 2020
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Demand for Cameco’s $1-million COVID-19 relief fund highlights the hurt in northern Saskatchewan
Michael Bramadat-Willcock
News, La Ronge, Saskatchewan
| April 24th 2020
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Seniors are the most likely age group to be extremely worried about their health and social isolation during COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new Statistics Canada survey
But the older residents on Quadra and Cortes, rural islands located off B.C.’s west coast may be bucking that trend.
Rochelle Baker
News, Island Insider
| April 24th 2020
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While the arrival of a COVID-19 vaccine in the near future would be ideal, other solutions to the pandemic it has caused might appear first, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in announcing more than $1 billion for medical research and testing to battle the virus.
Jim Bronskill
News, Politics
| April 24th 2020
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Gangs and organized crime groups in B.C. are changing how they operate and run their illegal business due to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, police forces say.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| April 24th 2020
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Sparked in good measure by the disproportionate number of Indigenous people in B.C.'s jails and prisons, an ambitious plan to create a separate justice system for First Nations is in the works.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| April 24th 2020
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This island is watched over by the Canadian Coast Guard and the Canadian Wildlife Service. It was declared a migratory bird sanctuary in 1944 with accompanying conservation safeguards.
Zack Metcalfe
News
| April 24th 2020
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Changing Tides not only takes the reader underwater, but dives into human history as well. The book traces human development from hunter/gatherers and human settlement to the colonization and industrialization of the Anthropocene.
Anne Watson
Reviews
| April 24th 2020
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