Rio Tinto executive got big pay rise after review of Juukan cave blast
MonMonday 22
updated
MonMonday 22
FebFebruary 2021 at 8:53pm
Evidence of over 40,000 years of human habitation were discovered during the excavation of one of the Juukan cave sites in 2014.
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It has been revealed the man responsible for leading a review into Rio Tinto s Juukan Gorge disaster received an enormous pay rise.
Key points:
The Rio Tinto executive in charge of the review into the blasting of Juukan Gorge caves received 46 per cent on top of his annual director fees
CEO Jean-Sebastien Jacques also received a 20 per cent pay rise, according to the company s annual report
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Eskdale and mountain bike parks collide
19 Feb, 2021 04:30 PM
4 minutes to read
The Hawke s Bay Mountain Bike Club wants to build a hub at Eskdale Park.
Napier Courier
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by Brenda Vowden
brenda.vowden@nzme.co.nz
Eskdale Park is many things to many people a unique playground where generations of locals and out-of-towners have picnicked, swum and played for more than 100 years. We are now at risk of losing this wonderful area, say Friends of Eskdale Park committee members Janice and William MacFarlane.
Eskdale local Trina Bergloff-Howes founded the group, now an incorporated society, in response to the Hastings District Council s 2018 release of the Hawke s Bay Mountain Bike Club s (HBMTBC) plan. The plan includes the building of a hub , car parking for 200 and a swing bridge situated near the current site of the park s toilets.
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The Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State’s
upcoming 2021 exhibition lineup will feature Pennsylvania landscapes, women artists, a variety of periods and places around the word and more.
The museum
reopened on Feb. 10 and features a new timed-entry ticket reservation system due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It is closed to the public on Mondays and Tuesdays.
Now through Sunday, June 6, the Palmer Museum will feature “Field Language: The Painting and Poetry of Warren and Jane Rohrer.” This exhibit displays the art of a married couple, Warren and Jane Rohrer, who share a background with Mennonite farm families.
Warren’s paintings feature cultivated fields of southcentral Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, Jane’s poems feature a modern look into her experience with traditional agricultural life.