Rocky Mountain coal mine in Alberta takes next step to expansion
In Alberta, a massive open-pit coal mine near Jasper National Park is hoping to expand...
In November, Susan Holt became New Brunswick’s first female premier. Since making history, she’s been busy with immediate concerns — like grappling with the province’s soaring electricity costs. She’s also working to make her campaign promises come true, including improving indoor and outdoor air quality in the province, and getting a handle on greenhouse gas emissions.
And, like everyone across Canada, she’s coping with the tumultuous state of cross-border relations, a big deal in a tiny province that shares a longer border with Maine than it does with Quebec.
It’s a lot, but the Fredericton-born politician still makes time to appreciate the natural beauty around her. “I love camping, kayaking, canoeing, swimming, hiking, any mix of water and forest activities, and New Brunswick is the absolute best place for it!” she says. In our Moose Questionnaire, she tells us more about her relationship to the natural world.
I’m torn between the highest tides in the world in the Bay of Fundy, watched from the top of rugged cliffs on the Fundy footpath, or the black spruce, white pine and balsam fir for as far as the eye can see from the top of Mount Carleton.
Uluru in Australia, at dawn.
Kiss: a moose before the hunting season opens.
Marry: the black-capped chickadee.
Kill: Shediac lobster, yummm.
Eastern Charlotte Waterways, or ECW, is an innovative, community-rooted non-governmental organization in New Brunswick making meaningful advancements in community well-being through environmental health.
The Atlantic, of course!
My Jeux Canada Games / Festival Saskatoon duffle bag from 1989. I still take it on work trips!
Nunavut, for board meetings with [youth science education organization] Actua, where we got to enjoy an amazing local meal with Sheila Watt-Cloutier and her daughter.
My counsellor-in-training leader from 1992, Jamie “Duncan” Hines from YMCA Camp Glenburn on Belleisle Bay, who taught us low-impact solo camping, how to walk the forest barefoot and to use all our senses to experience nature.
My kids.
YES! Backcountry!
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