“A tremendous amount of hard work has seen northern communities reach this critical milestone,” said Town of Churchill mayor and OneNorth co-chair Mike Spence in a March 11 press release. “Together with our partners we are taking the next important steps to realize our vision for a national Arctic trade corridor.” The transfer to local ownership takes place about four years after OmniTrax stopped operating the railway after spring flooding washed out portions ofd the rail line between the Pas and Churchill, which came a year after the then-owner laid off port staff and announced that it would not be shipping anything out of the port that summer. Trains did not run on the rail line for more than a year as OmniTrax refused to make repairs but they were completed with a few months after the new owners took over.
Up until last week there had only been 10 cases of the virus in Pukatawagan, which has about 3,000 residents, but recently there have ben 10 or 20 new cases a day, said Bighetty, who attributed the rapid rise to people socializing with each other. “They don’t seem to understand the seriousness of the COVID,” she said. “I still see a lot of people roaming about, thinking of nothing but trying to mingle.” Some of that may be because of spring weather, some due to COVID fatigue after almost a year of the pandemic and some a result of complacency among some of the 200 or so people who have received two doses of COVID-19 vaccine.
Military heads north to help Mathias Colomb Cree Nation s COVID-19 outbreak winnipegsun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from winnipegsun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.