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People coming here from the cities are changing the very fabric of our area
Letters to the editor, May 27, 2021: Readers weigh in on criticism of China, our ranking of the best communities in Canada and anti-logging blockades on Vancouver Island
May 27, 2021 Charlottetown residents take part in a free outdoor fitness class; the city scored well in the community engagement category of our ranking (Courtesy of DiscoverCharlottetown.com)
The problem with prisons
Kudos to Justin Ling and
Maclean’s for the excellent writing and analysis regarding Canada’s prison system (“Houses of hate,” Analysis, May 2021). Now it is up to the federal and provincial governments to begin a full revamp of these costly and largely ineffective programs. Warehousing those in conflict with the law has long been known to be a poor way to spend money on rehabilitation. New approaches must be found.
One young journalist s experience writing obituaries for COVID-19 victims
Tess Jieun Ha: Reaching out to people who lost loved ones to COVID-19 was a daunting assignment. But having the opportunity to describe the rich lives of Asian Canadians was an honour. By Tess Jieun Ha Tess Jieun Ha (Photograph by Lucy Lu)
Tess Jieun Ha graduated from multimedia journalism at Seneca College in Toronto. As a Korean Canadian, she wants to share stories from Asian Canadian communities.
“I don’t think that’s respectful for the family members.”
This is the first thing I heard from my very traditional parents when I told them I was writing obituaries of people who had passed away from COVID-19. My journalism class at Seneca College in Toronto was participating in the
From a dancing scientist to an ICU poet, these people are making a bad time better
COVID-19 has been an exhausting onslaught of bad news. But there are slivers of optimism. Meet some of the people making it happen.
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CBC Radio ·
Posted: Apr 02, 2021 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: April 2
COVID-19 has been an exhausting onslaught of bad news. But there are slivers of optimism. COVID scientist Krishana Sankar, left, has been dancing. Dr. Laura Hawryluck, middle, writes poetry about what she sees in the ICU. Hannah Bussiere-Kim makes music in her bedroom, under her alter ego Luna Li.(Krishana Sankar/Jordana Goldman/Luna Li)
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