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N S rotational workers say new border process adds to circus of hoops

Posted: May 18, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: May 18 Jennifer Hutton, a rotational worker who travels to Montreal, says the new Nova Scotia check-in process will add huge headaches for workers with rapidly-changing schedules.(CBC) Rotational workers facing new requirements for travelling back home into Nova Scotia say they feel like they re living in a circus as more and more hoops are raised for them to jump through. The new safe check-in application process put in place last Friday requires rotational workers to apply to come back to N.S. about a week before they intend to travel, with a response taking about three days.

Lower Sackville, N S restaurant owner found guilty of violating Health Protection Act

  HALIFAX A 62-year-old restaurant owner from Middle Sackville, N.S. has been ordered to pay a $1,000 fine after being charged by the RCMP in January with failing to wear a mask in public. CTV News has confirmed that John Giannakos, owner of Hellas Restaurant in Lower Sackville, N.S., appeared in court on April 22 and was found guilty of failing to wear a mask in public. The guilty ruling comes after Giannakos was involved in a series of controversial social media posts and confrontations with Health Protection Act enforcement officers. We welcome department of health to come out. We have nothing to hide, Giannakos said to CTV reporters on Jan. 8. We re having politicians and bureaucrats running our lives, telling us what s good for our health. Is that really freedom?

Pandemic continues to take toll on mental health in the Maritimes

  HALIFAX As parts of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick deal with COVID-19 outbreaks and tightened restrictions, many Maritimers say the past year has taken a toll on their mental health. Health professionals say we must continue to support each other as we navigate through the pandemic together. A new report by the HR company Morneau Shepel shows a decline in our wellbeing, with a negative mental health score among Canadians for 12th months in a row. I ve been feeling a roller coaster of emotions. There is good days and bad days. I m worried about how we re going to get through this phase of the pandemic,” says Tammy Dunlop-Caya, a resident of Hatchet Lake, N.S.

Soup kitchen that helped man living in woods find a home gets its own building

Posted: Apr 19, 2021 9:34 AM AT | Last Updated: April 19 Snake said he’s proud to have helped build Freedom Kitchen’s new building outside Knox United Church.(Elizabeth Chiu/CBC) Deep in the forest near the Hefler lumber mill in Middle Sackville, N.S., was the place Snake called home, surviving 11 months living rough in 2019. A victim of poverty and the Halifax region s affordable housing crisis, he turned to the woods instead of a men s shelter or living on the street. CBC has agreed to identify Snake, 56, by the nickname he uses with his friends. I didn t honestly think I was ever going to get out of there and get back on my feet, he said in an interview on Friday. He thought back to how hygiene was his biggest problem. He would wash in the river or at the library. 

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