Marc Fawcett-Atkinson
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News, Climate Solutions Reporting, Food Insider
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May 16th 2022
Last summer, most of the fields surrounding Joel VanderSchaaf's Prairie farm were baked and brown, withered by one of the most severe droughts in recent memory. One stood out among the rest: A plot the Saskatchewan potato farmer had planted on a whim three years earlier with an experimental grain called Kernza, similar to the wheat used to make bread and beer.
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More in today's news
As we argued before the Alberta court, the Impact Assessment Act is reasonable, justified and falls squarely within federal jurisdiction. The federal appeal has every chance of success in the Supreme Court.
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| May 16th 2022
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As Ontario Liberals geared up for a provincial election, they were faced with a unique problem — too few people had heard of their leader.
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| May 16th 2022
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First detected in Canada last year, the H5N1 virus has killed over 1.7 million of the country's domesticated fowl and wreaked havoc on poultry and egg farms.
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News, Food Insider
| May 16th 2022
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This 24-year-old Dalhousie student used her master’s thesis to explore the emotional responses of politically active youth across Mi’kma’ki (Atlantic provinces, Gaspé Peninsula and the northeastern region of Maine) to the climate crisis.
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News
| May 16th 2022
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Morgan Hughes spends all hours studying and protecting these misunderstood creatures — and she asks that her volunteers are looked after, too.
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News
| May 16th 2022
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The federal government is asking a judge to dismiss a Quebec photographer's bid for certification of a class-action lawsuit, possibly involving millions of people, over the RCMP's use of a controversial facial-recognition tool.
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News, Politics
| May 13th 2022
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The capital budget for Canada's national parks and historic sites is being slashed by more than two-thirds this year even as more than 30 per cent of the agency's assets remain in poor or very poor condition.
Mia Rabson
News, Politics
| May 13th 2022
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Some environmental safeguards built into British Columbia mine approvals are being gradually whittled away without enough public or scientific oversight, says new university research.
Bob Weber
News, Politics
| May 13th 2022
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From the archives
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Teresa Carr
News
| May 7th 2021
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