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Thursday, August 18, 2011
Plane accident near Marathon
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Landmark ruling on residential schools
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Youth Council talks safety
A member of the Multicultural Youth Council is recommending a city wide curfew. Spokesperson Martin Zhang says secretly teens know it's for their own good. The youth council feels more needs to be done to help keep the city's at risk teens safe. Meanwhile, another member is starting an after school program for aboriginal boarding students who will be attending school in the city. Members are also displeased with having their centre located next to a bar. They feel it sets a bad example for their patrons.
Mayor heads to AMO on Monday
Thunder Bay has a number of meetings set up with ministers at the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference. City Manager Tim Commisso says they'll be speaking with nine different ministers. The City will continue to push for Aboriginal Affairs to set up a regional office in Thunder Bay. Mayor Keith Hobbs will attend as will Councillors Joe Virdiramo, Ken Boshcoff, and Iain Angus.
Local mental health expert lauds Rypien family
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The Environment is still important to people in Thunder Bay
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Planning for retirement isn't as easy as it used to be
Relying solely on a pension plan for your retirement isn't the way to go anymore. That's the opinion of investment expert Blake Cameron who says the baby boomer generation retiring will put a strain on pension plans and already Stats Canada predicts there will be only 3 workers for every retiree by 2030.
Afghan war vets honoured
Tornado ranked as a zero
Environment Canada has released more details on Tuesday's tornado that touched down. Spokesperson Geoff Coulson says the tornado tracked roughly 80-kilometres from Oxdrift, north of the Dryden Airport and northeast between Lac Seul and Sioux Lookout. Coulson says the tornado is being rated as a zero event, which is the weakest on the tornado ranking scale. Coulson notes the time it took for the tornado to blow through was unusually long, but notes the exact length isn't known at this time.
Goodbye to US fire crews
More out-of-province fire crews are heading home today. Fire crews from Minnesota and Michigan are being released from the fire lines, as the situation continues to ease in northwestern Ontario. There are now just 81 forest fires burning across the region.
Syrian people are still on their own
Western Powers are following the US and are calling on Syrian President Bashar Assad to resign. Lakehead University Political Science Expert Laure Paquette says this is likely as far as they will go unfortunately. Paquette says despite the calls, she doesn't think Assad will step down.
Get ready for traffic woes on Golf Links Road
Police lay charges after vehicle fires
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