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Plan your evacuation or you could regret your loss, says researcher | iNFOnews
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ALR housing rule changes delight landowners, confound administrators | iNFOnews
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Man claiming judicial wrongdoing fined for not filing taxes | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source
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John Boivin, Local Journalism Initiative
A black bear is seen in this undated WildSafeBC photo.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/WildSafeBC July 21, 2021 - 8:00 PM If you think temperatures above 30°C are hard to take as humans, spare a thought for animals in the forest wearing fur coats. Just like humans, they’re looking for ways to stay cool and stay safe. “WildSafeBC recognizes that wildlife are highly adaptable and many have learned to adapt to heat and fire events,” says Kaslo WildsafeBC community co-ordinator Brian Montgomery. “Having said that, these are unprecedented high and prolonged temperatures and may drive wildlife such as bears and deer to seek sources of water.
John Boivin, Local Journalism Initiative
Robert Crellin with Florence Barbour, whom he rescued during the 1914 sinking of the Empress of Ireland. Both Crellin and Florence were from Silverton.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED June 05, 2021 - 4:30 PM Historians say they found a Kootenay connection in the chance discovery of some long-lost film footage of Canada’s worst maritime disaster. Shots of two Silverton survivors of the 1914 sinking of the Empress of Ireland were found in the ancient newsreel footage by Quebec media historians Se´bastien Hudon and Louis Pelletier. The film, sold at an auction in 2020, shows images of the arrival of a ship carrying the bodies of several of the disaster’s victims, and the unloading of coffins at the dock in Quebec City.