Showing posts with label Riding Mountain National Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riding Mountain National Park. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2025

News roundup, 6 June 2025

- It will come as a surprise to few that there are limits to how long two enormous egos can continue to work together. It seems those limits have been reached for Donald Trump and Elon Musk; following Musk's criticism of Trump's "one big beautiful bill", Trump hinted that he might cancel government contracts with Musk's companies, and then Musk replied favourably to someone's tweet calling for Trump's impeachment.

- Russia has responded to Ukraine's daring drone attack on their military aircraft by launching drone and missile attacks against cities; at least 4 people were killed in the attacks. 

- Mark Carney's new Minister of Northern and Arctic Affairs, Rebecca Chartrand, is coming under fire over allegations that she subjected an employee to bullying and harassment while serving as Red River College's Executive Director of Indigenous Strategy.

- A newborn infant in southwestern Ontario has died after being infected with measles in utero (the mother was unvaccinated, of course). This was in the Southwestern Public Health region, which includes Elgin and Oxford Counties. There are now over 1,700 known cases of measles in Ontario, the vast majority of them in Mennonite and Amish communities in the southwest.

- Manitoba has launched a campaign to recruit healthcare workers, including doctors, nurses, and other professionals, from the US. The campaign focuses on the Dakotas, Minnesota, and Michigan; I'm not sure why Minnesota was included except for its proximity, because I always thought it was a relatively progressive state.

- Four First Nations in the Island Lake region of Manitoba are evacuating vulnerable residents; the communities are not directly threatened but the smoke is causing serious problems for some. In related news, there are concerns that organized crime is targeting evacuees, trying to sell them drugs or worse.

- A school trustee in the Hanover School Division in southern Manitoba has been suspended without pay for six weeks. This appears to be for violation of policies requiring trustees to "support the legitimacy and authority of Board decisions" and to "treat Board colleagues, divisional and school staff, students and community members in a respectful and courteous manner". The exact nature of her violations has not been made public, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's similar to the case of Francine Champagne.

- Ispace, the Japanese company that tried to land a probe on the Moon two years ago, has tried again but appears to have failed for a second time. The company has ambitious plans to have a permanent human settlement on the Moon by 2040, but it seems they have a ways to go before they're ready for that.

- A Winnipeg man has been hit with a $1,680 fine for using a drone to harass wildlife in Riding Mountain National Park. Probably a wannabe influencer...

Thursday, January 30, 2025

News roundup, 30 Jan 2025

- A Bombardier CRJ-700 operated on behalf of American Airlines, carrying 60 passengers and 4 crew, has collided in midair with a US military UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter with a crew of 3 over the Potomac River near Washington, DC. Numerous fatalities have already been reported, and folks on Reddit who listen to scanners are saying that a few if any survivors are expected; EMS workers were apparently heard saying things like "Going to the firehouse to make sure the big refrigerator is turned on".

- Donald Trump has ordered his administration to look into the creation of a "national digital asset stockpile". This falls short of what the hardcore crypto bros were hoping for, which was the immediate creation of a strategic bitcoin reserve; nonetheless, the price of bitcoin briefly surged following the announcement before dropping again.

- The Trump administration, who had earlier ordered a temporary pause in a lot of federal funding, has now rescinded this following a court order. They still plan to review spending, however, and it's a safe bet that they will still make a lot of cuts, while telling people whose programs didn't get cut how lucky they are.

- Friedrich Merz, leader of Germany's Christian Democrats, has managed to push a motion on immigration through the country's parliament with the support of AfD. The motion is nonbinding, but has aroused great concern about the precedent set by cooperating with the far right. Chancellor Olaf Sholz called the move "an unforgivable mistake"; in any case, Sholz's Social Democrats as well as the Greens say that implementing the policy would violate German as well as EU law on refugees.

- Americans are souring somewhat on some of Donald Trump's policies, according to a new poll. Unfortunately, it's a bit late for that now.

- Parks Canada has concluded that it's probably too late to eradicate Zebra Mussels from Clear Lake in Manitoba's Riding Mountain National Park. As a result, the watercraft ban that had been placed on the lake will be lifted, albeit with under a "one boat, one lake" policy. How this policy is to be enforced is not clear.

- Former Democratic Senator Bob Menendez has been sentenced to 11 years in prison for accepting gifts from foreign governments; said gifts included a brand new Mercedes-Benz as well as cash and gold bullion. Menendez represented New Jersey, a place that makes Quebec look like Norway in comparison.

- A brawl broke out at a meeting in Thornton Township, IL on Tuesday night. One of the combatants was the mayor's boyfriend, who had recently been hired by the municipality to run a youth program but had been put on leave as a result of a motion put through by a newly elected trustee.

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

News roundup, 28 May 2024

- The IDF bombed a refugee camp in Rafah, killing at least 45 people. They then followed it up by hitting the city's hospitals. The camp was not in one of the places where civilians had been ordered to evacuate, and was full of people who had been forced out of other parts of Gaza. One has to say that when you herd people into a small part of their homeland, and then bomb that area, the optics are very bad.

- The US House of Representatives committee on energy and commerce has requested a briefing from their National Intelligence Director Avril Haines regarding the firing of two Chinese-born scientists from the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg.

- Parks Canada is sticking to their guns regarding the recreational watercraft ban at Clear Lake in the hope of nipping an outbreak of zebra mussels in the bud. I have to respectfully disagree with the provincial government here; while a unilateral decision might seem heavy handed, you need to be heavy handed when dealing with something like this if you want any chance of stopping the spread. I do agree that measures should be taken to help businesses harmed by the decision, though.

- A Canadian senator has introduced a bill, known as the Climate-Aligned Finance Act, which would force financial institutions as well as pension funds to move their investments out of emissions-intensive sectors of the economy. In addition it would require lending to fossil fuel companies to be treated as higher risk. The bill is not expected to pass; nonetheless, the mere fact that it's being discussed is sending the likes of the Canadian Bankers' Association into conniptions. Now what did Ken Livingstone say about bankers again?

- The troubles at the Food Fare on Portage Avenue seem to be escalating, as cars belonging to the store's co-owner and a relative were torched in the store parking lot. The people seen lighting the fire in the surveillance video had apparently been kicked out of the store for shoplifting the previous day.

- The Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT), the provincial police watchdog, recommended that three Lethbridge police officers involved in spying on an NDP MLA should face criminal charges, however provincial prosecutors have declined to take up the case.

- A company run by former Tory cabinet minister Kevin Klein is buying three newspapers, including the Winnipeg Sun, from Postmedia.

- The Beautiful Plains School Division in southwestern Manitoba is suing a Carberry woman for defamation after the woman made multiple allegations on social media about teachers at the schools her children attend.

- Upon seeing a distraught man walking along Highway 407 in Brampton, two drivers for Purolator put on their four-ways and drove slowly behind him to keep him from getting run over. Hopefully he'll eventually be thankful rather than angry that they foiled his apparent suicide attempt.