Tuchel transformation has adjusted Chelsea's expectations this season
Thomas Tuchel's arrival at Chelsea has brought immediate success in the Premier League and on the European front, where the Blues are now a dark horse for Champions League glory.
Several new homeowners in Campbell River, B.C., got a shock earlier this week when the city put a freeze on issuing new occupancy permits, after staff discovered the municipal sewage system in the Maryland neighborhood was already at capacity. The city said this affects 20 properties in various states of construction in the area — including one belonging to Aleda and Chris Staffanson, who said they were planning to move into their new home this coming weekend. Instead, they were told on Tuesday that they would not be given an occupancy permit, leaving the couple with nowhere to stay but the camper van in their backyard. Chris Staffanson said they bought a lot in the neighbourhood last year and had spent upwards of three-quarters of a million dollars on the property, including building their dream home. "It's utter incompetence," he said. "Surely to god the engineers could figure out how much sewage comes out of one house and how many houses are here and would have known this before they gave a building permit out. An eight-year-old kid could do that math." Unable to move into their home, the Staffansons will be living in a camper in their backyard.(Aleda Staffanson) City officials said it's not clear how the oversight happened. Deputy city manager Ron Neufeld said the municipality regularly upgrades their infrastructure, but there is only so much work they can do every year. "This area, which is at the southern extreme of our community, services one neighbourhood and so it was placed as a lower priority," he said. 'A ton of lost opportunity' The uncertainty over when homeowners can move in is also causing problems for those working on the properties, even though the city has given the green light for construction to continue as it tries to address the sewer issue. "If we have a lot that isn't already sold, who is going to buy it if we can't promise them occupancy?" said Bruce Calendar, who runs Big Island Construction and is working on several projects in the area. They include a planned 19-lot development whose future is now unclear, Calendar said. "There is a ton of lost opportunity up here. There is a 19-lot strata that has stopped development now," he said. The city is now working with an engineering firm to come up with possible solutions. But Neufeld said they won't know until next week what their options are, or a potential timeline for people like the Staffansons to move into their homes.
A major mining company near Williams Lake, B.C., is laying off dozens of workers and blaming the move on provincial red tape. Taseko Mines Limited — a Vancouver-based firm that owns the Gibraltar Mine located about 61 kilometres north of the Cariboo city — announced this week that at least 40 Gibraltar employees, including truck drivers and drill operators, will be laid off effective next Tuesday. Brian Battison, Taseko's vice-president of corporate affairs, says Gibraltar has no option but to lay off staff because it has failed to get permission from the B.C. government to restart operation of an existing pit that could have kept workers occupied. According to Taseko's website, the copper-molybdenum mine employs about 700 people, most of whom live in Williams Lake, Quesnel and 100 Mile House in B.C.'s central Interior. The company says Gibraltar paid workers $121 million of wages in 2019. Lengthy consultation Battison says Gibraltar notified the Ministry of Energy and Mines last year of its intention to restart its East Pit and subsequently filed a Notice of Departure, a paperwork required by the province whenever a company needs to change the mining activities it has planned. The ministry required an amendment to the company's mining permit for the pit to be restarted, he says, and that in turn required consultation with local communities. But Battison says no progress has happened since the consultation process began last May. "When deadlines are set by governments, when certain things are supposed to take place, those guidelines are never adhered to by governments. They extend [deadlines], but they seem to put off making a decision," he told CBC reporter Jenifer Norwell. "As a result, working people needlessly pay the price for government inaction," he added. "It's frustrating." Engaging stakeholders In a written statement to CBC News, Energy and Mines Minister Bruce Ralston says the province is still consulting with the Tsilhqot'in Nation and other stakeholders on Gibraltar's mining permit amendment. He says the consultation process has been extended to May 7. "Our government's priority is to ensure all voices are heard during the consultation process and that projects are processed in a fair and timely manner," Ralston wrote. In 2019, members of the Tsilhqot'in Nation launched legal action and roadlock against Taseko's mining activities around Teẑtan Biny, about 183 kilometres southwest of Williams Lake, which they consider a sacred lake. Williams Lake Mayor Walt Cobb says the consultation process required by the province for amending Gibraltar Mine's permit is unnecessary.(Tina Lovgreen/CBC) Williams Lake Mayor Walt Cobb says the consultation process for Gibraltar's mine pit and the ensuing layoffs could have been prevented. "It's always the red tape and the bureaucracy that slows things down," Cobb said Thursday to Shelley Joyce, the host of CBC's Daybreak Kamloops. "The [provincial] government is spending millions of dollars trying to recover the economy, and then we turn around and let that paperwork lapse and cause layoffs." "It doesn't make sense," the mayor said.
A former London, Ont., high school student has filed a $200,000 civil suit against her ex-teacher and the Thames Valley District School Board (TVDSB), alleging he caused her psychological and emotional harm after he secretly filmed her chest at school without her knowledge or consent. Madison Woodburn was one of 27 teenagers who were filmed by Ryan Jarvis while he taught English at H.B. Beal Secondary School between 2010 and 2011. She was 14 and in Grade 9 when he used a camera hidden inside a pen to film parts of her body. "The videos focused on the plaintiff's upper body, including but not limited to her breasts," says the statement of claim filed Tuesday in a London court. "The plaintiff had no knowledge she was being videotaped, nor did she consent to the recordings being taken." The lawsuit has yet to be tested in court. 'Unusual interest' in female students The civil suit is the latest chapter in a precedent-setting Canadian legal case that saw Jarvis, whose teaching certification was revoked, become the first person in Canada to serve jail time on a voyeurism conviction. He was sentenced in August 2019 to six months in jail. Ryan Jarvis, shown in the 2011 H.B. Beal Secondary School yearbook during his time as a teacher, was sentenced to six months of jail time in 2019 for voyeurism.(Submitted) It took Woodburn eight years of legal battles that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada to get justice, and now she hopes to take Jarvis to court again, along with his former employer, to hold them both to account for what she claims was a moral injury. "I think there's a lot of unfinished business," she told CBC News in a telephone interview Wednesday. "I think everyone turned a blind eye to the school board. I'm fighting for others who have been in similar situations." In doing what he did, the lawsuit claims, Jarvis abused his power and betrayed Woodburn's trust as an authority figure and the board, the lawsuit alleges, failed to protect her. It claims teachers, staff, parents, students and others all had concerns about Jarvis's behaviour when it came to young female students. Jarvis had an "unusual interest" in them, stood too close to them and spent too much time alone with them, the court filings said. He also had "difficulties with his sexuality" and faced "allegations of improper conduct in his previous posting." It's why the lawsuit claims the board knew Jarvis "had the propensity to engage in such deviant behaviours and that he was in fact engaging in such deviant behaviours." He also had little supervision, says Woodburn. She rarely did homework or tests in Jarvis's English class and he often showed films — obscure adaptations of Shakespeare that Woodburn said contained what she felt was an uncomfortable amount of nudity. "The whole class was weirded out by them," she said. Lawsuit alleges board failed in its response When school officials found out Jarvis had secretly taped his students for a sexual purpose, the lawsuit claims, they failed to offer any emotional support or professional counselling to his victims. Woodburn, shown at age 15. Soon after, she learned her English teacher had been secretly filming her.(Submitted by Madison Woodburn) Woodburn said that, after Jarvis was suspended, she came back to a school community that acted as if what the former teacher had done never happened. "It was almost like an unspoken rule. "There was no counselling. There was no assembly held. There was absolutely no talk of it." "There was nothing done for the students." she said. "I know I wasn't the only person struggling with that." "I started hating school. I could not trust a male teacher. It was so much to handle at the age of 14. "For two years after this, if a teacher clicked a pen, I would start to have an anxiety attack in class," said Woodburn. She also fought back feelings of guilt, shame, anxiety, depression, rage — all symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder that lasted years, caused by what she saw as a betrayal by her former teacher and a school board who put him in a position of trust and responsibility while simultaneously failing to recognize his pattern of aberrant behaviour. 'Post-awareness conduct' taken into account "The board should be held responsible for that," said Woodburn. "Whether it be public school or secondary school, these kids are minors and they deal with a traumatic event, it shows the school, the people they work with and trust every day, isn't there for them." The civil suit alleges the school board failed to protect Woodburn from her ex-teacher's 'deviant behaviours' and didn't give her the appropriate counselling. (Paula Duhatschek/CBC) The case hinges on a concept of institutional accountability lawyers call "loco parentis," the idea that Jarvis and the school board had a duty of care for the then 14-year-old Woodburn akin to her own parents. Because of a ruling last year against the Trillium and Lakelands District School Board, courts no longer just look at what school boards knew before an incident; they must also look at how school officials reacted thereafter. "The law was so focused on what did you know before the acts took place," said Rob Talach, the lawyer representing Woodburn. "The courts in Ontario have now gone further and said 'we are also going to judge what you did after you found out.' "I think that's the focus of the failings here is the post-awareness conduct." CBC News reached out to Jarvis through a family member who lived at the address listed in the court filings, but he did not return the request for comment. The TVDSB was also contacted. A spokesperson said the school board doesn't comment on legal matters before the courts.
Police in West Vancouver are searching for a suspect after a stranger allegedly pushed a woman to the ground as she was walking alone at night last weekend. The 29-year-old woman was walking near the intersection of Nelson Avenue and Bay Street in Horseshoe Bay at about 8 p.m. on Sunday when an unknown man grabbed her from behind and pushed her down, according to a police press release. She broke a tooth and suffered cuts and scrapes in the fall. "This appears to have been a random assault, which we understand will be concerning to our community," Const. Kevin Goodmurphy said in the release. "Our investigators have been working diligently to identify the suspect in this incident, and to gather all available evidence." The suspect is described as about six feet tall and wearing a dark hoodie. Investigators believe that a man captured by surveillance cameras near the scene of the attack may have witnessed what happened, and they've released photos in an effort to reach him. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the West Vancouver Police Department at 604-925-7300 or leave an anonymous tip with Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477. Police have released surveillance images of a man they say might have witnessed an assault on a woman Sunday night in Horseshoe Bay, West Vancouver.(West Vancouver Police Department)
Jill Wenzel, 45, is a Regina resident who woke up Thursday morning feeling hopeful. She is now eligible to book an appointment for the COVID-19 vaccine, as the province opened up appointments to anyone aged 44 and over on Thursday. But when she logged online at 8:00 a.m. CST — when the province's booking system opened up — the City of Regina was not listed. "I thought by 8:01 I would have an appointment in Regina and everything would be wonderful," Wenzel said. "Well, there were appointments available in other communities but Regina wasn't even an option." Some people have booked appointments outside of Regina in order to get the shot. (Government of Saskatchewan) Saskatchewan's capital city, which is the province's hotspot for COVID-19 fuelled by variants of concern, did finally show up. But there were no appointments available. The Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) said the demand for appointments outweighs the current available supply. The health authority added that additional appointments are expected to open up in Regina and Saskatoon but could no say when. More clinics will be added too as more vaccines arrive. The city's drive-thru clinic also remains closed. Wenzel is not eligible for a vaccine there because the SHA cut off the age at 46. "It's a very frustrating experience. I went to bed last night hopeful…I would have my appointment and feel a little better about it all, but it was anything but," Wenzel said. "My age group lost out." Vaccine clinics accepting patients outside of Regina Wenzel ended up booking a vaccine appointment at a clinic in Weyburn, something others are contemplating. "Regina residents are being asked not to leave the city, but I can tell you, as a 44 year old, some of the smaller communities around Regina with open appointments in the next few days are looking pretty tempting right now. I doubt I'm the only one," Twitter user Greg Bamford said Thursday. With a travel advisory in place for the Regina area, Wenzel doesn't think driving to Weyburn for a vaccine makes the most sense. Plus she would have to take time off work to drive over an hour. "The crappy part is I can't go back and look for appointment times [in Regina] because I already have one booked," Wenzel said. She said she doesn't know if she should cancel her appointment and try her luck again Wednesday, or if she should keep her appointment in Weyburn. Regina's mass drive-thru clinic located at Evraz Place remains closed due to a shortage of COVID-19 vaccines. The drive-thru had cut off eligible age groups at 46. (Submitted by Saskatchewan Health Authority) Calls to improve user experience "I'm concerned with it all because it's not working," Wenzel said, who is calling for better communication and a better booking system. "They need to monitor their system. I think sometimes they think the systems are foolproof. But you're not doing any of your beta testing with the average person, so it's a very frustrating experience." Aaron Genest, a manager with Siemens Digital Industries in Saskatoon, agreed the province needs a better system. "Public-facing health systems are some of the most critical pieces of software we build as a province. It's vital that usability be front and centre when considering how they will be deployed," Genest said in a statement. "It's frustrating that our online vaccine booking system has the challenges that it does and I hope that [the SHA] is working actively to improve the user experience as an increasing proportion of Saskatchewan becomes eligible for vaccination."
A B.C. Parks manager is frustrated he needlessly cancelled upwards of 80 campsite reservations after the provincial government's confusing rollout of travel restrictions. On Tuesday, Premier John Horgan announced non-essential travel between health regions was off limits until the end of May to help curtail the spread of COVID-19. Tyson Solmonson, who manages the 35-campsite Kilby Provincial Park near Agassiz in the Fraser Health region, said after hearing the news he acted. All but one of the cancellations he processed were for campers living in the Vancouver coastal region. Then on Wednesday, Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth announced for the purposes of the travel ban, Vancouver Coastal Health and Fraser Health would be considered a single region, meaning all those campsite cancellations were in vain. "The big problem is this comes at the expense of the public. They are the ones bearing the burden of this fiasco," said Solmonson. As a B.C. Parks contractor, Solmonson said he was just trying to do the right thing and abide by orders announced by Horgan and Dr. Bonnie Henry. He said other campsite managers have also been caught in the crosshairs of changing information. "We all just sort of fell in line and started cancelling reservations from outside of the health area region," he said. "It was pretty clear what Horgan and Henry said: don't leave your health region, there will be checkpoints, there will be things in place to stop you." In a statement, the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy, which oversees B.C. Parks, said it did not direct reservation cancellations. "The details on restricted travel are to be announced this week, at which time B.C. Parks will be in touch with reservation holders," it read. Solmonson said he's been trying to reinstate as many of the cancelled bookings as possible, but openings on the website were quickly snatched up leaving scorned campers livid. He believes the government needs to be more deliberate in the way it communicates with the public. "Be clear and don't walk something back," he said. "It's not the end of the day for me ... but it affects the public the most."
EDMONTON — Alberta revoked a long-standing policy that protected its mountains and foothills from open-pit coal mines without considering how that might affect its most popular tourist attraction, a government official has acknowledged. "There was no analysis around the implications of the coal policy on the 10-year tourism strategy," Kate White, deputy minister of jobs, economy and innovation, told a legislature committee this week in response to a question from NDP environment critic Marlin Schmidt. Alberta's 10-year tourism plan, announced in October 2019 by then-minister Tanya Fir, was to double the industry's revenue to $20 billion by 2030. A letter from Fir dated about the same time suggests the government was already planning to expand the province's coal industry. "I look to hearing from you on the progress of your project," Fir wrote to the head of Valory Resources, which plans an open-pit mine in the Rockies west of Red Deer, Alta. "Do not hesitate to contact me if there is anything I can do to help in the completion of your mining project." In May 2020, the United Conservative government quietly revoked a 44-year-old policy that had protected the eastern slopes and summits of the Rocky Mountains from coal mines. The change led to a rush of exploration leases. At least six companies secured dibs on tens of thousands of hectares along the mountains. The government reinstated the policy earlier this year and stopped new lease sales. But drilling and road-building on leases already sold is expected to continue this summer. Alberta's national parks are top tourism draws and are not threatened by mining. But parks officials are already concerned about the number of visitors to popular sites such as Lake Louise in Banff National Park. Tourism operators have been hoping to expand into areas such as Bighorn Country west of Rocky Mountain House. Municipal officials there have already expressed concern about how coal-mining could affect their tourism plans. "We have given no policy advice in (2019-20) with reference to coal policy," White told the committee. "The issue of coal development was not a prominent file for the department." In an interview Thursday, Schmidt pointed out Fir's ministry — then called Economic Development, Trade and Tourism — was in charge of the industry. "It seems to me a significant oversight," he said. "I would think developing coal mines in our most popular tourist areas might have some impacts. The fact the department didn't give that potential any serious thought is extremely concerning." Justin Brattinga, spokesman for current minister Doug Schweitzer, said the tourism strategy is being completely revised due to the COVID-19 pandemic. "The development of the strategy will require extensive consultation with the tourism industry, that will cover a range of topics, including Alberta’s world-leading resource extraction industries.” This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 22, 2021. — Follow @row1960 on Twitter Bob Weber, The Canadian Press
The mother of Bailey McKinney, 20, who was gunned down in Town Centre Park in Coquitlam is urging young people to think of the consequences of their actions on other people's lives. At least 40 people including children and their parents were in the busy park when McKinney was shot around 6:30 p.m. on Monday during a game of pickup basketball and pronounced dead at the scene. The shooting is one of three fatal gun incidents in public places across the Lower Mainland in the last week. Lianne McKinney issued a desperate plea to police to catch whoever killed her son. "Find out who did this to Bailey and let them get put away for awhile." WATCH: Lianne McKinney who describes how her son had a great life and was turning his life around when he died Sgt. Frank Jang with the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team said police are looking for anyone with information to come forward. "We believe this was a case of an individual being targeted for murder and not the park itself," said Jang on the day after the murder. Just days earlier, Harpreet Singh Dhaliwal who was known to police and linked to gangs was shot and killed on Saturday outside Cardero's restaurant on Vancouver's Coal Harbour at sunset. On Thursday morning, Todd Gouwenberg who had ties to the UN gang was shot dead outside the Langley Sports complex. There is a growing memorial of flowers, balloons, and messages for Bailey McKinney at Town Centre Park. "It's very cowardly. He was here unarmed playing basketball. For someone to come gun him down, it's not right." Not a 'cold-hearted' person McKinney said her son wasn't a cold-hearted person and described his descent into what she calls the wrong lifestyle about five years ago. "This kind of started at 15. You don't want to be 15. You want to be a man. You want to have some with power. Guess he found a group of people who made him feel powerful." McKinney said her son didn't get a chance to live his life and warned other young men going down the same road they are throwing their lives away whether they end up dead or in jail. She said he had started working with his father in construction recently and had been reconnecting with family before his death. McKinney said as a mother who lost a child, she has a simple message for others. "Come on kids, your parents love you. Don't do this to them. It is heartbreaking." She said she'd sought counselling to better deal with her son's situation, but added it's ultimately up the young person to make better choices. B.C.'s court registry indicates Bailey McKinney was to appear in court April 20 on charges related to assault, drug possession for the purposes of trafficking and firearms offences dating to September 2019.
The Oscars are finally being handed out this weekend after being delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and public health restrictions against gathering and travel.
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Family and friends of a 13-year-old who was fatally stabbed by a stranger in 2016 gathered in a B.C. Supreme Court room to hear a judge reject an argument from her killer that he be found not criminally responsible for the attack. Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes ruled against Gabriel Klein's argument that he suffered a mental disorder that made him unable to appreciate the nature of his actions or that they were wrong. Klein's testimony was "wholly unreliable," she said Thursday, and psychosis is not the only explanation for the attack. He was convicted last year for the second-degree murder of 13-year-old Letisha Reimer and the aggravated assault of her friend in the rotunda of Abbotsford Senior Secondary in 2016. "Most of the inconsistencies do not seem attributable to the normal frailties of memory or the distinctive features of Mr. Klein's mental health history or status," Holmes said as she read part of her judgment out loud. "Rather, they show a selective abandoning or denying of details that do not support" a ruling in Klein's favour, she said. Klein will remain in custody at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital until the sentencing hearing June 22 and 23 to determine parole eligibility. Klein was convicted in March 2020 and applied for the hearing over criminal responsibility a week before sentencing was set to begin in September. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia and other mental disorders while in custody, not long after his arrest. During the hearing to determine if he was not criminally responsible for the crimes, Klein said he saw monsters, not girls, in the rotunda and that voices in his head ordered him to kill them. He had no prior connection to Reimer or her friend. There is ample evidence that Klein was angry in the days leading up to the attack and he often blamed others for what he perceived as a failure to help him the way he wanted them to, Holmes said. Klein threatened to kill himself, including suicide by police, and stole a knife with that in mind before heading to the library connected to the school, Holmes said. He may have exaggerated his suicidal thoughts and depression, but he was certainly upset and may have been mentally unstable, the judge said. A personality disorder may have contributed to his actions, involving factors such as impulsivity, aggression, difficulty controlling his anger and disregard of his own safety and the safety of others, she said. Alcohol may have added a "disinhibiting effect." "Nothing can provide a reason for Mr. Klein's action in the sense of a rational basis, however the factors I've just outlined indicate that psychosis is not the only plausible explanation for this unprovoked attack on two girls he did not know in a school with which he had no association." Supporters of the victims placed small rocks painted red on the steps leading to the courthouse. They were decorated in black writing with words like "Abbystrong" and with hearts drawn around Reimer's initials. Dave Teixeira, who identified himself as a spokesperson for the family, said the family is pleased with the ruling but it's still not a happy day. "I don't think they'll ever have closure. Every day is a reminder that Letisha's not there," he said. The hope now is that Klein won't be released soon, he said. A second-degree murder conviction comes with an automatic life sentence with no possibility for parole for at least 10 years. Klein's lawyer, Martin Peters, said his client wasn't blindsided by the ruling. "Frankly he expected this result, it's not a surprise," Peters said. There were several inconsistencies with what Klein told psychiatrists and what he told the court over the course of his testimony, Peters said, which left the court in a "quandary" when it came to fact finding. Peters said he felt it was important for the court to explore the role Klein's mental disorders may have played in the attack, before sentencing occurred. He said he has not yet determined if the decision will be appealed. This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 22, 2021. Amy Smart, The Canadian Press
As the federal government moves to ban flights from India and Pakistan amid surging rates of COVID-19 and the threat of additional variants of concern, there are worries about what the measure will mean for Canadians already abroad. On Thursday, Canada announced it will ban direct flights from the two countries for a period of 30 days. The ban will apply to both private and commercial air passenger flights. Passengers departing from either country to Canada via an indirect flight will need to test negative for the virus at their last point of departure. "I want to say that our hearts are with the citizens of India and Pakistan, and indeed the whole region during these incredible difficult times," Health Minister Patty Hajdu said. Earlier in the day, as anticipation about possible travel restrictions simmered, Jaskaran Sandhu, director of administration with the World Sikh Organization of Canada, told CBC News he hoped any limits on travel would include measures to bring home Canadians as quickly and safely as possible. The last time Canada moved to limit travel, he said, the process was "less than straightforward." Simran Bal, the daughter of a Indian store grocer in Toronto's Parkdale neighbourhood, expressed similar fears after an emergency required her father to travel to India. "Now we're afraid that he might be stranded there ... because he's in the more remote area. We already have family that's already stranded there. They live in England and all of their flights have already been cancelled," Bal said. "The situation's just getting so dire." Simran Bal, the daughter of a Indian store grocer in Toronto's Parkdale neighbourhood, is worried her father might be stranded after an emergency that recently required him to travel to India. (Colin Cote-Paulette) 'We're tremendously worried' It's not yet clear what the ban will mean for Canadians currently abroad in either country. The move comes a day after Quebec reported its first known case of the variant first identified in India, the B1617 strain of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. The variant of concern was identified in a patient who had received a first dose of vaccine in January, but nevertheless became infected months later. British Columbia has also identified 39 instances of the variant. Late Wednesday, India reported 314,644 new COVID-19 cases over the previous 24 hours, according to Johns Hopkins University — the highest number of infections recorded in a single day in any country since the start of the pandemic. Meanwhile, several hospitals are reporting acute shortages of beds and medicine and are running on dangerously low levels of oxygen. The New Delhi High Court on Wednesday ordered India to divert oxygen from industrial use to hospitals to save lives. "You can't have people die because there is no oxygen. Beg, borrow or steal, it is a national emergency," the judges said. "People are selling counterfeit packs and going door-to-door with intravenous medications," said Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious disease physician and associate professor at McMaster University. "We're tremendously worried," Sandhu told CBC News. The Indian government under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, he said, "quite frankly has not stepped up to the plate to support locals, has not been taking this seriously. And the incompetence has been quite glaring as they continue to hold large political rallies in states that are holding state elections." 'Whole families are getting infected by one traveller' Meanwhile, the situation in Ontario hospitals is growing increasingly dire. Intensive care units across the province are dealing with a record number of patients, with doctors warning whole families are ending up in hospital while they themselves are at a breaking point. WATCH | Emergency care doctor describes North York hospital overwhelmed by COVID-19: "The next few weeks are going to be terrible," said Dr. Kashif Pirzada, an emergency care physician in North York, one of Toronto's COVID-19 hot spots. "Our system is going to be pushed far beyond what it was designed for." Pirzada spoke to CBC News a day after what he said was the toughest shift in his entire career, a day on which he saw approximately 20 patients in the span of just a few hours. "Whole families are getting infected by one traveller," he said. "It's just the endless queue of them coming in." All the while, Pirzada has had the heart-wrenching task of trying to answer the question his patients are asking: "Am I going to be OK?" "And I can't honestly answer them honestly that they'll be fine. Because I have no idea. I tell them, 'We're going to do everything we can for you. We're gonna give you every medication we have. But we don't know.' " Cutting travel, beefing up quarantines buys time Shutting down travel will buy Canada time, says Pirzada. But right now, he says the process for travellers returning to Canada during the pandemic is rife with loopholes, for example, people who avoid the mandatory three-day hotel quarantine by paying a fine. As well, Pirzada says there's no enforced quarantine for those travelling on private planes or those who arrive at the land border, and the list of exceptions for essential travellers is a long one. "The fear is ... we're going to run into a variant that might even evade vaccines. So we need to slow down the spread of these things as much as possible," he said. "Otherwise, we start this pandemic all over again." Earlier Thursday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Quebec Premier François Legault sent a joint letter to the prime minister requesting stricter measures around travel, including reducing incoming international flights and more protective actions at the Canada-U.S. land border. Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown, whose city has been hit hard by the pandemic's third wave, issued an even more blunt call on Twitter: "Close the airport," he tweeted in reference to Pearson International — Canada's biggest and busiest airport. Peel's regional council echoed that sentiment in a unanimous request to Trudeau to suspend inter-provincial and international leisure travel to the airport — something Thursday's measure did not address. Chagla told CBC News Thursday he believes beefing up Canada's quarantine measures for travellers might be a better approach than "playing whack-a-mole" in trying to decide what specific flights to ban. Regardless, both doctors say the situation in India is a grim reminder of just how crucial it is that people be vaccinated, not only in Canada, but globally. "We can't assume that when we're protected, we're safe. Because until the whole world is safe, this will keep happening," said Pirzada. Chagla agreed. "This is not going to end until the world gets vaccinated."
CHARLOTTETOWN — Prince Edward Island says it will receive double the number it expected of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccines in May and June. Chief medical officer of health Dr. Heather Morrison says the extra 47,430 doses will mean more people will get their first doses sooner and others won't have to wait as long for booster shots. She says health officials expect to be able to offer everyone a booster shot no later than 12 weeks after their first dose. Starting next week, people in their 40s can begin booking vaccination appointments on the Island. Morrison is reporting one new case of COVID-19 today, involving a person who arrived in the province from outside Atlantic Canada. There are now 12 active reported cases in the province. This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 22, 2021. The Canadian Press
VIDRA, Romania — In the trash-strewn slums of Sintesti, less than 10 miles from Romania’s capital, Mihai Bratu scrapes a dangerous living for his Roma family amid the foul reek of burning plastic that cloys the air day and night. Like many in this community, for him illegally setting fire to whatever he can find that contains metal — from computers to tires to electrical cables — seems like his only means of survival. “We’re selling it to people who buy metal, we are poor people … we have to work hard for a week or two to get one kilogram of metal,” 34-year-old Bratu, perched on an old wooden cart, told The Associated Press. “We are struggling to feed our kids ... The rich people have the villas, look at the rich people’s palaces.” You don't have to look far. The main road that runs through Sintesti, a largely Roma village in the Vidra commune, is lined with ornate, semi-constructed villas and dotted with shiny SUVs. Behind lurk the parts where Bratu and his young children live, a social black hole with no sanitation or running water. The two worlds are strongly connected. For Octavian Berceanu, the new head of Romania’s National Environmental Guard, the government environmental protection agency, the pollution from the fires that burn here almost ceaselessly, in breach of environmental laws, was so bad that he started regular raids in the community — where he says “mafia structures” lord it over “modern slaves.” “This is a kind of slavery, because the people living here have no opportunity for school, to get a job in the city, which is very close, they don’t have infrastructure like an official power grid, water, roads — and that is destroying their perspective on life,” Berceanu told The Associated Press during a police-escorted tour in April. The slums of Sintesti, like Roma communities elsewhere, have long been ignored by authorities. They're made up of makeshift homes, where unofficially rigged electricity cables hug the ground and run over a sea of trash. “For too many years, they were allowed in some way to do this dirty job," Berceanu said. "Nobody came here in the past ... to see what's happening.” But on top of the considerable social ills, according to the environment chief, the fires can significantly hike pollution in Bucharest, potentially by as much as 20-30%, at times pushing air quality to dangerous levels. “The smoke particulates are taken by the wind 10 miles, it’s like rain over Bucharest and it’s destroying the quality of the air in the capital. It’s one hundred times more dangerous than wood-fire particles — there are a lot of toxic components,” Berceanu said. “If the local authorities are not applying the law, of course people — whatever their ethnic origin — are encouraged to continue doing what they are doing,” said Gelu Duminica, a sociologist and executive director of the Impreuna Agency, a Roma-focused non-governmental organization. Focusing on pollution from the Roma community, Duminica says, instead of on big industry or the more than 1 million cars in the densely populated capital of 2 million, is “scapegoating” and part of a political “branding campaign.” “Everywhere in the world, the poorest are exploiting the marginal resources in order to survive. We have a chain of causes: low education, low infrastructure, low development … a lot of things are low,” Duminica said “The rich Roma are controlling the poor Roma, but the rich Roma are controlled by others. If you look at who is leading and who is controlling things, it’s more than likely you'll have huge surprises. Let’s not treat it as an ethnic issue," he said. The Council of Europe estimates that 1.85 million Roma live in the country of more than 19 million, and face many challenges. A 2016 human rights report published by the European Commission, said that “systematic societal discrimination against Roma" affected their access to adequate education, housing, health care, and employment. In January this year, Romanian President Klaus Iohannis promulgated a law making anti-Roma hate crimes — verbal or physical — punishable by up to 10 years in prison. In the future, Berceanu the environment chief hopes surveillance drones with pollution sensors and infrared cameras can help paint a clearer picture of how the networks operate. “We’re working against organized crime and it’s very hard,” he said. “If we solve this problem here, very close to Bucharest, we can solve any kind of problem similar to this all around the country.” For local resident Floria, who refused to give a surname but said she was 40-something, a lack of official documents, education, and options leave her and her community with no alternatives. “We don’t want to do this. Why don’t they give us jobs like (communist dictator Nicolae) Ceausescu used to, they would come with buses, with cars, and take us to town to work,” she told The Associated Press. “Gypsies are seen as the worst people no matter where we go or what we do.” Mihai Bratu blames local authorities for the plight of his community, for the lack of roads, the lack of action. “The mayor doesn’t help us!” he exclaims, as a small boy shifts building materials from Bratu's horse cart to the muddy yard next door. “What do we have? What can we have? Some little house? — whatever God granted us.” Stephen McGrath, The Associated Press
Doctors at Toronto’s SickKids Hospital performed a seven-hour surgery on six-month old Felix to remove a basketball-size cancerous tumour from the baby’s stomach. Against all odds, Felix appears to be on the road to recovery.
Politicians, organizers and athletes in St. John's on Thursday celebrated the city's successful bid to host the 2025 Canada Summer Games, and the thousands of competitors and visitors expected to descend and pump in cash to the economy. The event, a marquee competition for young amateur athletes from every province and territory, is set for Aug. 2-24, 2025. It will welcome about 2,000 athletes and bring in 20,000 people, say organizers, numbers that seem unimaginable in light of Newfoundland and Labrador's current travel restrictions. "It's hard to believe when you think about where we are right now," said Premier Andrew Furey at the event inside the Newfoundland and Labrador Sports Centre, with attendees physically distanced and masked, while others appeared virtually. One of those virtual participants — Lynn Blouin, the chair of the 2025 bid evaluation committee — commended the city's "remarkable" bid that found success despite the challenges of COVID-19. "In an unprecedented bid evaluation process, you have went above and beyond to showcase the wonders of your community," Blouin said in a pre-taped video message. In a nod to the city's unpredictable summer weather — a place where tuques never go astray, no matter the month — Blouin held up her mittened hands and said, "Je suis prêt" — I am ready. Multimillion-dollar event St. John's Mayor Danny Breen said it has an operating budget of $31.8 million, with a $13.4 capital budget. He couched those numbers with the city's estimated economic return of $100 million, far more than what came in during the city's hosting of the 2017 Tim Hortons Brier. "To put that in perspective, that's 10 Briers in two weeks. So that's a significant impact," Breen said. To pull off the games, funding from all three levels of government has been committed, including $16.25 million from the federal government. Without that cash, Furey said the event "would not be possible." The City of St. John's is pumping in more than $5 million, more than half that set aside for capital investments, including in venues like the King George V soccer field or St. Pat's Ball Park. Both those venues date back to the last time the city hosted the Canada Summer Games, in 1977, and Breen said they'll be used again this time around, along with others. A Newfoundland and Labrador-hosted Canada Games has been in the works for years; in 2015, the province swapped dates with Ontario, in order to buy more time to get the needed infrastructure up to speed. The St. John's bid — there were no other entrants — has had its share of criticism, including the concern that the infrastructure won't be ready in time. Breen focused on optimism Thursday, and said Canada Games facilities encourage athleticism. "These investments will create incredible economic activity, but they also leave important legacies," he said. Jennifer Boland, who competed on the track for Team Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2017 Canada Summer Games, says the experience was a memorable one.(Josee Basque/Radio Canada) Furey urged people to look beyond the pandemic circumstances toward a hope for "a new normal" at the Games's athletic offerings. "Particularly to our athletes, if the pandemic has dampened your spirit, let this be what reignites your spirit and passion for your sport," he said. "We will get through this, and you will have an amazing opportunity to shine in your chosen sport, as your province and country cheers you on." Canada Games alumni formed part of the city's successful bid, and spoke Thursday of their past fond memories and formative experiences. "It was in Winnipeg where I broke the 100-metre provincial record that i had been chasing after for four years. That was quite possibly the highlight of my athletic career," said Jennifer Boland, a member of Team Newfoundland and Labrador in 2017. "Those Games were critical in my development as not only an athlete but better yet as a person." Along with the 1977 Games, Newfoundland and Labrador has also hosted one winter Canada Games, in 1999 in Corner Brook. Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador
OTTAWA — Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says the 2021 federal budget marks a historic level of investment in Indigenous communities, but he acknowledges much of this spending addresses systemic funding gaps and that longer-term, sustained spending will need to continue.The Liberal government plans to spend more than $18 billion over the next five years to narrow the socio-economic gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people and to help these communities fight the COVID-19 pandemic.Additional amounts have also been earmarked in other departments that will go toward helping Indigenous communities, including $2.5 billion over five years for distinctions-based early learning and child care and $108.6 million over five years for First Nations policing. The budget also promises a three-year investment of $74.8 million to improve access to justice for First Nations people through the development of an Indigenous justice strategy, aimed at tackling systemic discrimination and over-representation in the criminal justice system.While the total spending earmarked for Canada's First Peoples in Budget 2021 may be an eye-popping number compared to previous budgets, Miller says it's important to remember this reflects long-standing funding shortfalls in First Nations, Inuit and Metis communities for basic things like clean water, access to local health care and First Nations policing.“The size of the investments, they didn't come without reflection,” Miller said in an interview with The Canadian Press.“My team put a tremendous amount of effort in trying to quantify the investments in infrastructure, for example, that we need to start closing the gap in the relatively short-term as part of the general effort of stimulus and touching on the themes in the budget, fighting COVID and getting out of it in a strong way.”Investments of $6 billion over five years are included in the budget are meant to be investments for "shovel-ready projects" over the next three to five years flagged as critical infrastructure by local chiefs and communities, Miller said.This includes $1.7 billion earmarked for operations and maintenance costs of community infrastructure in communities on reserve. Maintenance spending may not be “a headline grabber,” Miller said, but is important for communities to know the federal government will support the upkeep and preservation of critical assets in their communities, including equal pay for equal work. "A very important thing I kept hearing back from Indigenous communities was, 'Where will you be after March 2021?' knowing these assets need proper planning and support over the course of their lifespan," Miller said, pointing specifically to the decades-long battle to lift First Nations boil-water advisories.Meanwhile, Indigenous Services Canada will soon launch a strategy with Indigenous communities to get a clearer sense of their long-term plans and individual needs.This will be used to quantify and put a reliable dollar figure on the of longer-term federal investments needed to help lift Indigenous communities into a more equal standard of living as non-Indigenous ones, Miller said.In his mandate letter penned in December 2019, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tasked Miller with co-developing distinctions-based community infrastructure plans for Indigenous communities and to move forward with addressing critical needs including housing, all-weather roads, high-speed internet, health facilities, treatment centres and schools in First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities by 2030. “That will require sustained investments in infrastructure over the long term,” Miller said, adding that he firmly believes Trudeau is willing to invest both the political and financial capital into turning these spending promises into a reality.Many national Indigenous organizations and groups that represent First Nations, Inuit and Metis people voiced cautious optimism about the large sums dedicated toward their unique needs in Budget 2021 after its release on Monday.Miller said he hopes all Canadians will understand the large sums secured for Indigenous communities are not "discretionary in nature," but rather should be viewed through a lens of Canada making reparations for past wrongs and righting historic funding shortfalls."That's an educational element that escapes even most of us when we see very, very large (budget) numbers. A lot of them are meant to close gaps that are unacceptable," he said."These investments are continuous and will need to be continuous as we work with Indigenous communities to right historical wrongs and to invest in the future of Indigenous Peoples."This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 23, 2021. Teresa Wright, The Canadian Press
SAN FRANCISCO — California public schools have experienced a sharp decline in enrolment this year as the pandemic forced millions into online school, according to data made public Thursday. The drop came as the state's school districts dawdled in bringing children back to the classroom, making California one of the slowest in the country to reopen schools. The California Department of Education data shows that the number of students at K-12 schools dropped by more than 160,000 this academic year, most of them at the K-6 level, to a total of 6 million. The drop is by far the biggest decline in years and represents the clearest picture yet of the pandemic’s devastating toll on California public schools. “The annual snapshot of fall enrolment shows a sharp one-year decline as the state and nation grappled with a deadly pandemic that disrupted all aspects of public education,” the education department said in a statement. The exodus was led by white students who account for just 22% of California’s public school population but represent about half of the departing students for the 2020-21 school year, which could increase disparities in California’s public education system. California has the most students of all states in the U.S. and the overall student body has hovered at about 6.2 million in recent years. In previous years, the number of students fell by about 20,000 to 30,000 annually, led by declining birth rates, and that rate was expected to continue. When the pandemic hit and Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered public schools to close in March 2020, no one expected the closures would last as long as they did. Most of California’s public schools started this academic year with distance learning and many continued that method into the spring. In-person classes started resuming this month in the state’s largest urban school districts. Among the concerned parents who switched to private school was Aurora Guel, a San Diego County mother who said distance learning sent her high school senior into a downward spiral. “She became really depressed with all the isolation that started when school closed,” said Guel. Her 18-year-old daughter’s grades had dropped to the point she was failing three classes; she lost motivation to apply for college and wouldn’t leave her room, even for dinner with the family. “We needed to do something to get her out of this deep hole she had fallen into," Guel said. After transferring to a private Catholic school in October, the teen's spirits and her grades are up. She has a college acceptance and is looking forward to her prom, a milestone that many public schools have scrapped. “She's doing so much better now," her mother said. Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond called the numbers concerning but said officials are optimistic that enrolment will rebound as more schools reopen to in-person learning. He said officials are working with schools and families to understand why so many families left and how to bring them back. The public school exodus happened nationwide. There is no national data available on the 2020-2021 enrolment decline but an analysis from 33 states by the Chalkbeat non-profit news organization covering education and The Associated Press published in December showed that public K-12 enrolment in the fall had dropped by about 500,000 students compared to the previous school year. California’s 2020-2021 enrolment declined 2.6% from the previous school year, driven by a combination of factors. Fewer California parents enrolled their children in kindergarten, which accounts for a decline of 61,000 students and the largest drop in enrolment. That could indicate that parents either held off sending their children to kindergarten or enrolled them in private schools, which saw an overall enrolment increase of 20,000, or 4%, from the previous year. The data also indicate that homeschooling surged in the fall, the CDE said. Some of California's biggest urban districts had the largest declines. Los Angeles Unified School District, the largest in the state, experienced an enrolment decline of almost 22,000, or 4%, to 575,000, the CDE said. The data released Thursday was collected from all of the state's school districts in October, and education officials say it is too soon to know if the trend has continued since then. Year-end figures won’t be known for months but the data help illustrate how the pandemic upended public schools and has prompted concerns about funding for California’s 1,000 school districts, which is tied to headcounts. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's budget proposal calls for schools not to be penalized for enrolment declines, but education advocates are seeking extra money for low-income students, English learners and foster kids. “Any changes in enrolment will have impacts on funding and equity,” said Christopher Nellum, interim executive director for The Education Trust-West, an education equity advocacy group. “It’s just going to exacerbate the problems that already existed.” Nellum said schools will need to think strategically about how to engage Black and brown students, who were more likely to spend the year in distance learning than their white peers who moved to private schools or other learning options. Those families, who were disproportionately hit by the virus, have also been more hesitant to return their children to classrooms as they reopen. Schools will also need to find ways to convince private school defectors to return, he said. For parents like Jonathan Alloy of San Francisco, that will be a lost cause. Alloy kept his 8- and 10-year-old children in a distance learning “pod” as classrooms stayed closed but recently decided to abandon the school district and the city. Alloy said he lost faith in the city's school district, which has been embroiled in scandals, infighting and lawsuits, including one launched by the city attorney for the district's failure to reopen schools more quickly. San Francisco still no timetable for returning middle and high school students to classrooms. Because of that combined with San Francisco’s high cost of living and more expensive private school tuition, Alloy is moving to Connecticut, closer to his wife's family. “To leave is just crushing,” he said. Jocelyn Gecker, The Associated Press
MADISON, Wis. — Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, of Wisconsin, questioned the need for widespread COVID-19 vaccinations, saying in a radio interview “what do you care if your neighbour has one or not?” Johnson, who has no medical expertise or background, made the comments Thursday during an interview with conservative talk radio host Vicki McKenna. Contrary to what medical experts advise, Johnson has said he doesn't need to be vaccinated because he had COVID-19 in the fall. On Thursday, he went further, questioning why anyone would get vaccinated or worry about why others have not. “For the very young, I see no reason to be pushing vaccines on people.” Johnson said. “I certainly am going to vigorously resist any kind of government use or imposing of vaccine passports. ... That could be a very freedom-robbing step and people need to understand these things.” Johnson's comments come as health officials in the U.S. and around the world urge people to get vaccinated for COVID-19 as soon as possible, saying that reaching herd immunity is the best shot at stopping the uncontrolled spread of the virus. Herd immunity occurs when enough people have been vaccinated or have immunity from natural infection that the virus can’t easily spread and the pandemic fizzles out. Nobody knows for sure what the herd immunity threshold is for the coronavirus, but many experts say it’s 70% or higher. And the emergence of variants is further complicating the picture. In Wisconsin, more than 41% of the population has received at least one shot of vaccine and roughly 30% has been fully vaccinated. But demand for vaccinations has slowed in parts of the U.S. in a worrisome sign. Johnson, a former plastics manufacturer with a bachelor’s degree in business and accounting, said he doesn't think people should feel pressured to get vaccinated. “The science tells us the vaccines are 95% effective, so if you have a vaccine quite honestly what do you care if your neighbour has one or not?” Johnson said. “What is it to you? You’ve got a vaccine and science is telling you it's very, very effective. So why is this big push to make sure everybody gets a vaccine? And it's to the point where you're going to shame people, you're going to force them to carry a card to prove that they've been vaccinated so they can still stay in society. I'm getting highly suspicious of what's happening here.” The interview ended before Johnson explained what he was suspicious of. On Friday, Johnson issued a statement doubling down on his earlier comments. “Everyone should have the right to gather information, consult with their doctor and decide for themselves whether to get vaccinated,” Johnson said, noting his support for former President Donald Trump's Operation Warp Speed program to quickly develop a vaccine. “Now I believe government’s role (and therefore my role) is to help ensure transparency so that people have as much information as possible to make an informed decision for themselves.” Johnson said it was legitimate to question whether people with a low risk of suffering a serious illness from COVID-19 should get vaccinated. He promised to “vigorously oppose” vaccine passports. Republicans have portrayed vaccine passports as a heavy-handed intrusion into personal freedom and private health choices. They currently exist in only one state — a limited government partnership in New York with a private company — but that hasn’t stopped GOP lawmakers in a handful of states from rushing out legislative proposals to ban their use. Johnson has not said yet whether he will seek a third term in 2022. A number of Democrats have already announced they are running, including Milwaukee Bucks executive Alex Lasry, state Treasurer Sarah Godlewski and Outagamie County Executive Tom Nelson. Nelson tweeted that Johnson’s “scientifically illiterate beliefs are deadly and will only prolong the Covid crisis. Time for a new Senator.” Godlewski also blasted Johnson, saying he “is literally campaigning against widespread vaccines. His denial of science isn’t just irresponsible, it’s downright dangerous, and Wisconsinites deserve so much better.” Scott Bauer, The Associated Press
OTTAWA — The woman at the heart of sexual misconduct allegations against Canada's former top military commander says retired Gen. Jonathan Vance believes he owns the military police that are investigating him. Maj. Kellie Brennan told a House of Commons committee Thursday that the former chief of the defence staff believes he is "untouchable." During bombshell testimony to the status of women committee, Brennan revealed that Vance fathered two children with her but has taken no responsibility for them. She also said she has provided physical evidence of Vance's inappropriate relationship with her to the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service (CFNIS). That includes, she said, audio recordings of Vance allegedly instructing her to lie about their relationship and threatening consequences if she didn't. Despite that, she said she doesn't expect justice to be done in her case. "I asked bluntly the CFNIS if they had the mandate to investigate and did they have the powers to lay charges and they would not answer me," Brennan testified. "The answer was no because, as (Vance) told me, he was untouchable, he owned the CFNIS." Brennan added: "I definitely feel that there will not be justice for me and, in all honesty, that's OK because if my speaking out can change everything for other women to come forward and change our policies, that's OK with me." Brennan said she was questioned by the military police service for two days, six hours at a time, in February about her relationship with Vance. She has told Global News that she had a sexual relationship with Vance starting in 2001 that continued after he became her superior officer, including after he was named defence chief in 2015. Vance has not responded to repeated requests for comment from The Canadian Press. He has acknowledged to Global News that he dated Brennan some 20 years ago but has denied any intimate relationship with her while she was under his command. He is also being investigated for allegedly sending a lewd email to a junior officer before becoming chief of the defence staff. Military police are also investigating Admiral Art McDonald, who temporarily stepped aside in February about a month after taking over from Vance as chief of the defence staff. The specifics of that allegation have not been revealed, and McDonald has not commented publicly. Brennan told the committee Thursday that Vance directed her "what to say, what not to say, how to say it, what to exclude, to purge (sic) myself, to lie" to the CFNIS investigators. Asked if he'd threatened her, she said: "A threat, meaning bodily harm? No ... Definitely he gave me very many consequences if I was not following his orders." As an example, she said he told her she would be questioned by his wife, a lawyer, "that somehow she was going to come and see me and question me." "The consequences were always the same, that I had to stay silent." Brennan said she "didn't have the ability to say no. They were orders." It was not clear why she would have taken orders from Vance after he was no longer the top military commander. He officially retired from the military in April. Brennan said Vance has good reason to believe he's above the law. "In my experience, in many different areas, the law does not apply to him," she said. "On a personal note, he fathered two children with me. He's not responsible to pay or to have those children under his responsibility. It's all up to me ... So, I think that it's just become a habit with him." "Oh my goodness," Conservative MP Leona Alleslev responded. "That must be very tough on you." Brennan also suggested that Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is under Vance's control. She alleged that Sajjan was a special projects officer at Canadian Forces Base Downsview in Toronto, under Vance's command, while she was there between January 2006 and the spring of 2008. "Gen. Vance told me he always had him under control," Brennan said of Sajjan. However, Sajjan has testified that he was never posted in Toronto — a fact repeated by a spokesman after Brennan's testimony. "As the Minister stated in committee, he did not serve in Toronto," said Todd Lane. Liberal MP Anita Vandenbeld, Sajjan's parliamentary secretary, pointed out the discrepancy between Brennan's testimony and Sajjan's but did not ask her to explain it. Sajjan has been under fire for not having done more after then-military ombudsman Gary Walbourne first told him of an allegation of sexual misconduct involving Vance in March 2018. Sajjan has said he referred the matter to the Privy Council Office, which was stymied in launching an investigation because Walbourne would not reveal the identity of the complainant. This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 22, 2021. Joan Bryden, The Canadian Press
A project to map a Northwest Territories highway between Inuvik and Tuktoyaktuk is nearly wrapped up. The Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada began the project through Transport Canada's drone project testing technology in the Arctic and through partnerships with the Government of the Northwest Territories and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Using the SeaHunter, an Unmanned Aircraft System [UAS], or more commonly referred to as a drone, the team took thousands of images of the highway over two weeks in late July to early August of 2019. Then, a team at the University of Alaska Fairbanks spent the next two years processing around 60,000 photographs. "We did this project as a proof of concept. We wanted to understand what the specifications were for mapping the highway and documenting best practices for the future," said Carolyn Bakelaar, geographic information systems coordinator for the Ontario and prairies region for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans [DFO] and the project lead. "Because this had not taken place before, it took a lot of visionary, leadership and commitment to carry out this mission," said Bakelaar. "There were so many people involved and so many organizations to get the bird in the air and that was really exciting to be a part of." A photo of the crew in Inuvik with the SeaHunter. They spent two weeks taking photos of the Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk Highway and portions of the Dempster Highway.(Department of Fisheries and Oceans) It started almost five years ago, in 2017, Bakelaar said, with their first steps being getting approval to fly the drone. They also visited Inuvik in advance to make sure the residents were informed of the project. "We presented it at community meetings, we even went to the high school and gave some presentations to Grade 9's and 10's [students] and really we wanted to make sure that when we got there, everyone was aware of what we were doing." Andrew Wentworth works with the university's Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration and was chief pilot and deputy program manager for the mission. He said that though they are used to working in the North and doing mapping, they have never undertaken a project this big before. "All of our previous mapping missions had been smaller stuff with a smaller unmanned aircraft," Wentworth said. "We ran into an enviable problem of how do we manage all of this data. We before processed smaller amounts of data and there was a challenge of figuring out how to eat the elephant so to speak." Crew members from the Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration examine the inside of the SeaHunter. This is during the two weeks they were taking the photos of the Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk Highway and portions of the Dempster Highway.(Department of Fisheries and Oceans) Wentworth hoped this project helped prove that using the drone to conduct surveillance in remote locations is safe and effective. "There's a lot of nothing out there and manned aircrafts, if you have a problem … you've got a rescue effort and potentially … human lives at risk," Wentworth said. "But, with an unmanned aircraft, I mean, we still want to get the equipment if it goes down out there, but there's no rush because no one's going to expire out there on the tundra." He added that by using the drone, they benefited from a fuel consumption and environmental impact perspective — they were burning less than 1 per cent of the fuel of a manned aircraft to cover the same amount of highway. Now, the team is in the final stages of preparing the data into an orthomosaic, a collection of all the photos taken into one picture, and a digital elevation model. Bakelaar is hoping to have it all made available to the public this summer. "I think the data itself is really important because it'll help us to understand in the future possible impact of climate change and impacts of human use in areas that are normally hard to get to, at least by road," said Bakelaar. "It shows that we can achieve what had not been done before in terms of a research and development type of project and what we really showed is that we can use beyond visual line of sight technology and integrate with the local air space and gather data in the Arctic."