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Vibrant new Horsefair mural unveiled in Kidderminster
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Barkerville needs more gold from the Crown purse to cover costs, says heritage site s CEO
Operators of six provincially owned heritage sites, including the historic Cariboo gold rush town, are asking the B.C. government to provide more resources to cover operational and infrastructure costs.
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Historic town and park is 1 of 6 provincially owned heritage sites asking B.C. government for more resources
CBC News ·
Posted: May 30, 2021 8:00 AM PT | Last Updated: May 30
While tourists look on, Indigenous interpreter Mike Retasket, centre in red scarf, takes part in a street skit about B.C. history along with other costumed interpreters at Barkerville Historic Town and Park in B.C. s central Interior. (Betsy Trumpener/CBC )
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The bead photos come to Jean Gribbon from childhood cancer survivors across the country. They’re from women like Chloe, once a sick child, now a Minnesota bride whose bead strands drape across her wedding dress. And Allyson, a beaming high school senior in Georgia whose long hair and colored beads hang over her graduation gown. Seven years earlier, chemotherapy had left Allyson pale and bald. The beads tell the story of their trauma and triumph, and survivors share those stories with Gribbon, the woman who gave them their voice.
In 2021, roughly 10,500 children under the age of 15 will be diagnosed with cancer, and many will find solace in Jean Gribbon’s beads. Gribbon, a pediatric oncology nurse in Tucson, is the founder of Beads of Courage, a nonprofit that uses beads to help children with cancer tell their stories of resilience and pain. Nineteen different glass beads represent unique moments in a patient’s journey. Red is a blood transfusion. White is chemo. Yellow
Some descriptions at the hearing included “not fit for purpose”, “discriminatory”, “threatening” and “totally unreasonable”. Many felt that plans to tighten regulation around fundamental farm activities such as fencing, maintaining roads and clearing shrub would make farming difficult, bureaucratic and financially marginal.
Debbie Jamieson/Stuff
Three generations of Mt Nicholas Station managers, Kate Cocks, Linda Butson and Jess Cocks, 11, at an environment select committee submissions hearing on the Crown Pastoral Land Reform Bill, in Queenstown. They see it as an attempt by the Crown to slowly reclaim the land, ignoring their years of custodianship and not recognising that the high country farmers are knowledgable and proud guardians.
WHAT YOU SAID: Piers, prisons and pandemic
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