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Athabasca Tribal Council calls for amending Indian Act sections on schools
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Athabasca Tribal Council calls for amending Indian Act sections on schools
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Every Child Matters rallies, marches and vigils mark 2021 Canada Day
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Share Mikisew Cree member Robert Grandjambe checks his nets on Lake Athabasca in Fort Chipewyan, Alta., located on the world s largest inland delta in Wood Buffalo National Park. The park may become listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Danger due to the impacts of the Alberta oilsands and major dams on the Peace River. Photo: Louis Bockner / Sierra Club BC
Leaks from toxic tailings ponds in the oilsands and dams on the Peace River in B.C. and Alberta are moving Canada’s largest national park closer to being placed on an international list of world heritage sites in danger, according to a report released Monday.
Canada’s largest national park at risk of losing world heritage status
dimanche, 3 janvier 2021 à 14:15 - The 44,000-square-kilometre park is home to one of the largest free-roaming wood bison herds in the world.
The chief of the Mikisew Cree First Nation wants his people to play a bigger role in managing Wood Buffalo National Park, a world heritage site that straddles the Alberta-N.W.T. border and is at risk of losing its status.
Canada s federal government submitted a progress report to UNESCO updating its conservation efforts last month, nearly three weeks after its Dec. 1 deadline. Ottawa also announced an additional $60 million in funding over three years to implement its action plan to protect the park.