Halifax woman calling for more protections on RRSPs onenewspage.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from onenewspage.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Halifax woman calling for more protections on RRSPs after husband s sudden death
Dianne Taylor is urging others to check their listed beneficiaries routinely for things like RRSPs and life insurance policies after her husband s sudden death left her and her teenage daughter faced with losing the bulk of their family s savings.
Social Sharing There s definitely a gap in law, something like this should never be able to happen, Diane Taylor says
Posted: May 10, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: May 10
Dianne Taylor holds a photo of her with her late husband, Tim Taylor, and their daughter. Tim died suddenly of cancer in August 2018.(Dave Laughlin/CBC)
NSCAD announces it will not be moving next to the new Art Gallery of Nova Scotia The gallery’s evolving building design and related space constraints means it no longer meets the needs of NSCAD. The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia and NSCAD University aren t breaking up, but they might on a Ross and Rachel-style break: In an email newsletter sent this morning from NSCAD s interim president, Sarah McKinnon, the school gave a laundry list of updates including that NSCAD will not be co-locating on the Salter Block of the Halifax Waterfront with the AGNS. The gallery’s evolving building design and related space constraints on the site means it no longer meets the spatial and programmatic needs of NSCAD’s vision for the future.
Wayne Wood was just 5 or so when he first confronted Charles Adrian Pillars masterpiece of a sculpture, looming over him at Memorial Park on the Jacksonville riverfront.
Cast in bronze, designed to honor those from Florida who died in the horror of World War I, the sculpture portrays a nude, winged male figure. He s poised on one foot atop a stylized globe, holding an olive branch out to the sky. Below him rise the shapes of partial human figures, women and children, as if struggling to come out of the chaos of the world.
It s called Life.
Visiting his grandmother in Riverside, up from his home in Belle Glade, the young Wood was terrified by the size and scope of the sculpture. He might even have cried.