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Management Team
Alex Tsukernik, President & CEO, Director
Alex Tsukernik co-founded Nova Royalty in 2018. He has over 15 years of experience in metals and mining finance as an executive, investor and corporate adviser. Before Nova Royalty, he spent more than seven years as an independent principal of his own merchant banking/advisory firm, Syntella Partners, at which he focused on creating value-added investment opportunities in the mining space. Before becoming an inde
A number of local municipalities are receiving Provincial government funding to address their infrastructure.
The Ontario government has announced nearly $38 million to address local infrastructure in Northern Ontario through the 2021 Ontario Community Infrastructure Fund (OCIF).
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Try refreshing your browser. Area communities receive Provincial government funding Back to video
The funding will help 144 communities in the region build and repair roads, bridges, water and wastewater infrastructure. These investments are part of a total allocation of $200 million for 424 small, rural and Northern communities across Ontario under OCIF.
Breaking down the numbers Kirkland Lake will receive just over $600 thousand. Larder Lake, McGarry and Matachewan will receive $50 thousand. Englehart will receive just over $64 thousand and Black River-Matheson will receive just over $90 thousand.
Kilbridge says more permanent logging roads are already snaking through the Temagami wilderness he and others were fighting to protect all those years ago. I think it has been lost, he says of the battle over the Temagami forest that started in the 1970s.
Much of that was led by the Indigenous peoples of Bear Island. No one from Temagami First Nation or the nearby Matachewan First Nation was available to speak about their involvement in the new management corporation.
There is also a seat at the table for the Timiskaming First Nation, across the border in Quebec.
Chief Sacha Wabie says 60 per cent of her community s traditional territory is in what is today called Ontario.
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Wataynikaneyap Power CEO Margaret Kenequanash, pictured with Kiiwetinoong MPP Sol Mamakwa and Pikangikum Chief Dean Owen during the connection of the Pikangikum power line, was pleased that Wataynikaneyap Power was recognized with the First Nations Business Award of Excellence at the 2020 Northern Ontario Business Awards. (Photo by Rick Garrick)
The Wabun Tribal Council and Wataynikaneyap Power were recently recognized with the Entrepreneurial Community and First Nations Business Award of Excellence awards at the 2020 Northern Ontario Business Awards.
“First of all it was a great surprise, and secondly on behalf of our communities, it’s well deserved for the five First Nations who have been working so hard to advance their business interests and the tribal council playing a small role in that,” says Jason Batise, executive director at Wabun Tribal Council. ”I can’t be prouder of the work that our team and the communities have done
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A four-person mobile team offering support to human trafficking survivors is expected to start travelling to remote and rural Indigenous communities by the end of January.
The team is being created as part of Timmins and Area Women in Crisis’ (TAWC) anti-human trafficking initiative. The organization received $964,100 from the provincial government to run the project until 2025.
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TAWC is “quite excited” to get the project moving forward, said executive director Julie DeMarchi.
“I was pleasantly surprised, quite happy because this has been the project that we’ve wanted to work on quite a while,” she said. “It’s a big project and to be recognized as one of nine in the province that are providing anti-human trafficking support to Indigenous communities is quite an honour. It speaks to the work we’ve done historically and relationships we’ve managed to build.”