N.B. mental health advocates call for less police involvement in wellness checks
“When we say that we want police policy reform and government reform, our voices must be heard and responded to in a positive manner,” says Tremblay.
N.B. mental health advocates call for less police involvement in wellness checks
“When we say that we want police policy reform and government reform, our voices must be heard and responded to in a positive manner,” says Tremblay.
N.B. mental health advocates call for less police involvement in wellness checks:
Wolastoq Grand Council Chief Ron Tremblay, says more needs to be done to stop fatal police-involved tragedies from ever happening again.
“When we say that we want police policy reform and government reform, our voices must be heard and responded to in a positive manner,” says Tremblay.
N.B. mental health advocates call for less police involvement in wellness checks: Wolastoq Grand Council Chief Ron Tremblay, says more needs to be done to stop fatal police-involved tragedies from ever happening again.“When we say that we want police policy reform and government reform, our voices must be heard and responded to in a positive manner,” says Tremblay.Read More
It’s been a bad season for forest fires in N.B., and it’s not over yet
“Very, very, very dry,” said co-owner Diann Estey. “We haven’t mowed
for two weeks. We finally did it yesterday, so we’re hoping it doesn’t
burn out.”
It’s been a bad season for forest fires in N.B., and it’s not over yet:
With waterfront views of the St. John River, Heritage Country Camping
in Lower Queensbury is an oasis for New Brunswickers looking to get
away, but COVID-19 isn’t the only concern this camping season.
“Very, very, very dry,” said co-owner Diann Estey. “We haven’t mowed
for two weeks. We finally did it yesterday, so we’re hoping it doesn’t
burn out.”
It’s been a bad season for forest fires in N.B., and it’s not over yet: With waterfront views of the St. John River, Heritage Country Camping
in Lower Queensbury is an oasis for New Brunswickers looking to get
away, but COVID-19 isn’t the only concern this camping season.
“Very, very, very dry,” said co-owner Diann Estey. “We haven’t mowed
for two weeks. We finally did it yesterday, so we’re hoping it doesn’t
burn out.”Read More
BERLIN — German lawmakers have finalized the country’s long-awaited phase-out of coal as an energy source, backing a plan that environmental groups say isn’t ambitious enough and free marketeers criticize as a waste of taxpayers’ money.
Bills approved by both houses of parliament Friday envision shutting down the last coal-fired power plant by 2038 and spending some 40 billion euros ($45 billion) to help affected regions cope with the transition.
Makes one wonder what Canada is doing…
Source: Germany is first major economy to phase out coal and nuclear – ABC News