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Happy Valley-Goose Bay told residents to start booking vaccines Now the mayor is apologizing

Happy Valley-Goose Bay told residents to start booking vaccines. Now the mayor is apologizing Wally Andersen says his staff made a mistake by telling the public to start signing up online for the vaccine, but he says the confusion was due to a Facebook post by an MHA. Social Sharing Posted: Mar 09, 2021 3:22 PM NT | Last Updated: March 9 The Town of Happy-Valley Goose Bay issued a correction hours after it stated anyone aged 18 or over in the area could register for a COVID-19 vaccine.(Grant Linton/CBC) Officials in Happy Valley-Goose Bay are apologizing for putting out what Mayor Wally Andersen calls misinformation that led to people in the area booking vaccine appointments when they shouldn t have done so.

To stop violence against Inuit women, we need to heal generations, says survivor

Labrador s Amy Curlew hopes to further career — and women s hockey — with leap to NWHL

Labrador s Amy Curlew hopes to further career — and women s hockey — with leap to NWHL Happy Valley-Goose Bay’s Amy Curlew is joining the big leagues this weekend, as she makes the jump from U.S. college hockey to the National Women’s Hockey League. Social Sharing CBC News · Posted: Jan 23, 2021 12:15 PM NT | Last Updated: January 23 Amy Curlew was will begin her pro hockey career Saturday when she takes to the ice for the Toronto Six.(Toronto Six/Submitted) Happy Valley-Goose Bay s Amy Curlew is joining the big leagues this weekend, as she makes the jump from U.S. college hockey to the National Women s Hockey League.

Labrador s Arctic char vulnerable to climate change, says new study

Labrador s Arctic char vulnerable to climate change, says new study Lindsay Bird © Shutterstock Arctic char are found throughout Labrador s coast. The study looked at migratory char, which move from freshwater to saltwater and back again. A new study paints a troubling portrait of potential climate change impacts on Arctic char in Labrador, amid calls for more research to better understand what the future holds for the species that occupies a place of immense value in Canada s North. The study, published recently in the journal Nature Climate Change, is the result of years of field and laboratory work by a team of Canadian scientists. The researchers spent several summers sampling migratory Arctic char  the variant of the fish that moves from fresh to saltwater and back again   in rivers across the region, from its northern reaches in the Torngat Mountains all the way south to the tip of Newfoundland s Northern Peninsula.

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