Poll

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An invitation for Rosslanders

Mayor Kathy Moore has an invitation for Rosslanders who are interested in our region’s goal of 100% renewable energy.  She invites everyone to attend a public workshop in the Lily May Room at the Miners Hall, and contribute thoughts and ideas and responses to other ideas . . .  and have some pizza.  Read on, and then mark...

Province moves to do away with time changes -- at some future date

The Province has introduced the interpretation amendment act to allow for a future move to permanent daylight saving time (DST) after 93% of British Columbian respondents indicated support for the change in a record-breaking public engagement. “British Columbians have said loud and clear that they want to do away with the...

Editorial Rant: Lying in politics -- so common, so corrupt

Politics.  Election campaigns.  Lies.  Is anyone else out there infuriated by how closely those three things are linked?  Why should politicians have some sort of 007-like “License to Lie”?  I say they shouldn’t. In Canada, people are given some protection against false or misleading advertising.  There’s the voluntary “Canadian...

Trail Cadets Get a Taste of Army Life - explosions included

On Saturday, October 19, 2019, cadets from 131 Kootenay Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps and 531 City of Trail Royal Canadian Air Cadet Squadron were invited to attend Exercise Sapper Crucible II, a Demolitions Exercise, with the 44th  Engineer Squadron in Trail, and other members of the 39th  Brigade from the Lower Mainland....

Rossland’s (proposed) Mid-town Transition Project – What’s going on?

On Tuesday evening, October 29, the Miners Hall was well-populated with residents viewing the explanatory displays and seeking more details from the City staff members present. The proposed development is for affordable housing on three stories above a ground-floor space which could, if things work out, house a new City Hall,...

Opinion: What Canada can learn from New Zealand on electoral reform

By Dominic O'Sullivan  -- Associate Professor of Political Science, Charles Sturt University The results of the recent Canadian election don’t reflect the will of the people, and the situation is reigniting calls for proportional representation. Some have outlined what Canada’s House of Commons would have looked like under ...

Mushroom poisoning on the rise in B.C.

With 2019 on track to be a record year for mushroom poisoning calls, the BC Centre for Disease Control’s (BCCDC) Drug and Poison Information Centre is urging British Columbians to use extreme caution when foraging or consuming wild mushrooms. Poison Control received 201 mushroom poisoning calls as of September 30, 2019, well...

Opinion: We are heading for a New Cretaceous, not a new normal

By Peter Forbes, for Aeon A lazy buzz phrase – ‘Is this the new normal?’ – has been doing the rounds as extreme climate events have been piling up over the past year. To which the riposte should be: it’s worse than that – we’re on the road to even more frequent, more extreme events than we saw this year. We have known since...

VESTA: A play about living, loving, and letting go

              How do we deal with the loss of ability and a life-limiting illness?  The play VESTA, by Bryan Harnetiaux, addresses this subject from the perspective of elderly Vesta and her family.  The script has been adapted to bring a Canadian and regional perspective, and refers to services available locally for families...

Council Matters: Rossland City Council, October 21, 2019

Recreation Task Force’s recommendations for Rossland Arena;  RDBK board didn’t agree on climate emergency;  Terry Van Horne resigning as ED of LCIC;  property tax forecast; nominations open for community contributor award; Open House about Emcon lot development . . . and more Present:  Mayor Kathy Moore, and Councillors Janice...

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