Vue lecture

The high cost of hosting wildfire evacuees

The High Level curling club was set up for Rainbow Lake evacuees in 2023, where municipal staff would sometimes work up to 17 hours a day to make sure everyone was fed and children were entertained.

For the past six summers, High Level, Alta., a northern town of 4,000 that straddles the only road into the province from the Northwest Territories, has converted its arena into a makeshift wildfire evacuation centre.

Municipal staff have been diverted from regular duties such as working at the pool or running summer programs to haul up to 350 cots, purchased by the town to accommodate evacuees, from a storage container into the arena. They have sometimes worked up to 17 hours a day to make sure everyone was fed and children were entertained.

Ontario takes over four school boards, citing financial concerns

The TDSB, alongside other public and Catholic school boards, will be appointed a supervisor to oversee their financial conduct.

The Ontario government has taken control of four school boards including in Toronto and Ottawa, a move the province says stems from concerns over large deficits, depleting reserves and widespread mismanagement.

Education Minister Paul Calandra announced Friday the appointment of supervisors at the Toronto District School Board, the Toronto Catholic District School Board, the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board and the Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board, following investigations earlier this year.

Amateur conductor and CEO performs with Toronto Symphony Orchestra to a packed house

The Toronto Symphony Orchestra’s performance this week of Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 in C Minor with amateur conductor Mandle Cheung.

The Toronto Symphony Orchestra’s performance this week of Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 in C Minor included a lot of what attendees might expect to see – and hear – from a concert at a packed Roy Thomson Hall: bows raised and lowered in near-perfect unison, a mezzo-soprano in a glittery gown and dramatic swells of music.

What some attendees didn’t know they were getting, however, was an amateur conductor who bankrolled the production, which was not in fact an official Toronto Symphony Orchestra production. Having come across ads for the performance on social media, some attendees said they took advantage of lower admission prices to hear a long-admired piece of music played by some of the most talented musicians in the country.

Retired University of Alberta professor identified as one of two hikers killed in Banff National Park rock slide

The rock slide occurred around 1 p.m. Thursday leaving two dead and three injured.

The death toll from Thursday’s fatal rock slide in the Canadian Rocky Mountains is expected to hold at two, with three people who were transported to hospital in stable condition, authorities said Friday.

Francois Masse, Parks Canada superintendent of the Lake Louise, Yoho and Kootenay field unit, said authorities believe they have accounted for all the hikers who were near Bow Glacier Falls at the time of the slide. Rescue teams on Thursday evacuated 13 people from the scene in Banff National Park.

Missing three-year-old Montreal girl found alive in Ontario, mother remains in custody

Crown prosecutor Lili Prévost-Gravel speaks to media following a court hearing on Wednesday for Rachel-Ella Todd, the mother of a three-year-old who was found Wednesday.

A three-year-old Montreal girl reported missing on Sunday by her mother was found alive in Eastern Ontario on Wednesday afternoon, minutes after her mother appeared in court while facing charges of child abandonment.

The Sûreté du Québec and Ontario Provincial Police confirmed in a Wednesday evening press conference that the girl was found around 3 p.m. along Highway 417, near St. Albert, Ont. She was alone but conscious and able to speak with officers, and is now doing “well” after being examined by a medical team in hospital, OPP Staff Sergeant Shaun Cameron said.

Iranians in Canada processing impact as Israel’s attacks reverberate through diaspora

People walk through debris from a building damaged in Israeli strikes in Tehran, Iran, on Friday. The Iranian Canadian Congress says the attack was devastating and diplomacy is the best way to end the conflict.

Mona Ghassemi, president of the Iranian Canadian Congress, was at home in Montreal when she first heard about the Israeli strikes in Iran early Friday. She called her mother, learning her aunt and cousin in Iran awakened to the sounds of nearby missile blasts but were unharmed.

“Residential buildings were hit, and there were children among the killed. So this, of course, is very devastating,” Ms. Ghassemi said.

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