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No “pandemic premium” for Nova Scotia health care workers

Ontario and Quebec have increased the pay for the continuing care assistants, nurses, and dietary and cleaning staff working in nursing homes during the COVID-19 crisis. It's a recognition that those workers are both needed and putting their own health at risk. But Premier Stephen McNeil has rejected calls to give this province's frontline workers similar recognition; in Nova Scotia, they'll continue on with the same low pay they've always received.

April 28, 2020 By Jennifer Henderson 9 Comments

The Halifax Examiner is providing all COVID-19 coverage for free. Over the weekend, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced that Ontario will pay “a pandemic premium” of $4 an hour to continuing care assistants (CCAs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), as well as dietary and cleaning staff who work in long-term care homes, group homes, home-care, and […]

Filed Under: Featured, News, Province House Tagged With: Continuing Care Assistants (CCA), coronavirus, COVID-19, licensed practical nurse (LPN), Linda MacNeil, Long Term Care, Marla MacInnis, Northwood, Nova Scotia Health Authority (NSHA), nursing homes, pandemic, pandemic premium, Premier Doug Ford, Premier François Legault, Premier Stephen McNeil, Unifor

The possible horrible legacy of the “coronavirus convention”

Against suggestions that it be cancelled, 23,000 people from around the world attended a mining convention in Toronto in March. Now, a government mining official from Burkina Faso who attended the convention has tested positive for COVID-19, and the disease threatens to decimate that country.

March 29, 2020 By Joan Baxter 11 Comments

The Halifax Examiner is providing all COVID-19 coverage for free When this global health crisis finally ends, as it will one day, there will be much soul-searching about what could have been done better, and how we could have prevented the spread of the virus and the pandemic. In Canada, one of the lessons learned […]

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Alex Black, Allan Woo, Andy Abraham, Bonnie Henry, Burkina Faso, coronavirus, Coronavirus Convention, COVID-19, Dr. Herveen Sachdeva, Dr. Theresa Tam, Dr. Vinita Dubey, Felix Lee, Gabriel Friedman, James West, Jerry-Jonas Mbasha, Kristy Kenny, Laurentian University, McEwen Mining, Minister Oumarou Idani, Minister Seamus O’Regan, Pacific Dental Convention, Premier Doug Ford, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC), Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), Rio2 Ltd, Rob McEwen, Scott Ansel, Shannon Kerr, Sun Peak Metals Corp, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Toronto Public Health (TPH), Troilus Gold Corp, World Health Organization (WHO)

Nova Scotia Power won’t cut off your electricity, but we’re not seeing the big cuts in rates that Ontario is ordering

March 25, 2020 By Jennifer Henderson Leave a Comment

The Halifax Examiner is providing all COVID-19 coverage for free. You know we are in the time of the Apocalypse when Nova Scotia Power is promising not to turn off the lights (or the heat) if you don’t pay your  bill. Well, at least not for the next 90 days if you are a residential […]

Filed Under: Featured, News, Province House Tagged With: Affordable Energy Coalition, Brian Gifford, Nova Scotia Power (NSP), power rates, Premier Doug Ford, Wayne O’Connor

Zombie ideas that won’t die

Morning File, Thursday, December 12, 2019

December 12, 2019 By Philip Moscovitch Leave a Comment

I’ve said this before, but when I first started writing for the Examiner, a friend asked how much Tim paid. After I’d replied, the person I was speaking with said, “Oh, so it takes [x] monthly subscriptions just to pay for you to do one Morning File.” I’d never thought of it in such bald […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Aaron MacCallum, Amanda Dodsworth, ambulance services, Andre Denny, Andrew Rankin, Anthony Romeo, Aon, Auditor General Michael Pickup, Blair Rhodes, Bobby Seal, CFL stadium, civil asset forfeiture, Constable Emmanuel Aucoin, Councillor Mitchell Tweel, Dave Stewart, Emma Smith, Gareth E. Rees, Government secrecy, income assistance, Jackie Torrens, Jean Laroche, Kate Letterick, Kendall Worth, mental illness, Michael Gorman, Minister Randy Delorey, MLA Susan Leblanc, not criminally responsible, Nova Scotia Early Psychosis Program, PC MLA Pat Dunn, Peter Lederman, Phil Tibbo, Premier Doug Ford, QE2 redevelopment, Raymond Taavel, red tape reduction, Robert Devet, Sandy Simpson, Sarah Stillman, Simon Lewsen, Stephen Archibald and parking garages, TrentonWorks

How and why electric buses will (probably) come to Halifax

January 24, 2019 By Erica Butler 17 Comments

Halifax’s first electric buses won’t hit the road as soon as planned, but don’t blame your local city councillor or the leadership at Halifax Transit for the delay. Blame Doug Ford. Among Ford’s many post-election climate change policy reversals was the cancellation of two funding contributions to electric bus pilot projects in York Region and […]

Filed Under: City Hall, Commentary, Environment, Featured, News Tagged With: ABB, Brendan Elliott, Canadian Urban Transit Research and Innovation Consortium (CUTRIC), Dave Reage, electric buses, Halifax Transit, Josipa Petrunic, New Flyer, Nova Bus, Nova Scotia Power, Premier Doug Ford, Proterra, Shawn Connell, Siemens

Dalhousie University is preparing to raise tuition, again

January 23, 2019 By Jennifer Henderson 2 Comments

For the seventh year in a row, Dalhousie University plans to raise the tuition fees it charges students. The three per cent increase is the maximum the province allows universities to charge and still receive a one per cent increase in their annual operating grant from the government. An undergraduate science student (page 7) at Dalhousie […]

Filed Under: Education, Featured, News, Province House Tagged With: Dalhousie University tuition, Premier Doug Ford, Provost Teri Balser

News from the “under-explored global petroleum province”

Morning File, Tuesday, August 21

August 21, 2018 By Erica Butler Leave a Comment

Hi there. It’s Erica Butler at the Morningfile wheel again today. News 1. Justice department asked to please release documents, three years later The Nova Scotia justice department has been asked to release documents related to the death of Clayton Cromwell, who died of a methadone overdose in 2014 in custody at the Central Nova […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: basic income pilot Ontario, Catherine L. Mah, Catherine Tully, Clayton Cromwell, Councillor Sam Austin, Devin Maxwell, Dexel Developments towers Spring Garden Road, Erica Butler, Harold and Michelle MacKay, John Gallant, Matt Higgs, Michelle Littlefield Bielaski, Morocco, motorcycle vehicle collision Main Street Dartmouth, Northern Pulp cleanup, Offshore Energy Research Association, Open Hydro, Premier Doug Ford, Saudi medical students exodus, shark video, Sherri Borden Colley, Steve Tonner, WingFest, Zane Woodford

It can happen here

Morning File, Friday, June 8, 2018

June 8, 2018 By Tim Bousquet 8 Comments

1. It can happen here President Donald Trump. Premier Doug Ford. Two years ago this would have been unthinkable. Now it’s reality. And these aren’t just some weird blips in history. There’s always been an undercurrent of nativism in North American history, and no manner of wishful thinking is going to make it go away. […]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Andrew Scheer, burning down the White House, Donald Trump, Graham Steele, Haley Ryan, Halifax-rural divide, Hate Politics, Hate Radio, John Boileau, John Lohr’s planned strategy of hate, Matt Whitman is a Trump copycat, Premier Doug Ford, Robert Ross, Rush Limbaugh, Stephen Archibald and Washington DC, the Coast

The Tideline, with Tara Thorne

Phyllis Rising — Rebecca Falvey (left) and Meg Hubley. Photo submitted

Episode #19 of The Tideline, with Tara Thorne is published.

Meg Hubley and Rebecca Falvey met as theatre kids at Neptune and have been friends ever since. As Phyllis Rising — that’s right, Mary Tyler Moore hive — they’re making films, plays, and are in production on The Crevice, a three-part sitcom streaming live from the Bus Stop in March. They stop by to talk with Tara about its development, their shared love of classic SNL and 90s sitcoms, and the power of close friendship. Plus: A new song from a new band.

This episode is available today only for premium subscribers; to become a premium subscriber, click here, and join the select group of arts and entertainment supporters for just $5/month. Everyone else will have to wait until tomorrow to listen to it.

Please subscribe to The Tideline.

Uncover: Dead Wrong

In 1995, Brenda Way was brutally murdered behind a Dartmouth apartment building. In 1999, Glen Assoun was found guilty of the murder. He served 17 years in prison, but steadfastly maintained his innocence. In 2019, Glen Assoun was fully exonerated.

Halifax Examiner founder and investigative journalist Tim Bousquet has followed the story of Glen Assoun's wrongful conviction for over five years. Now, Bousquet tells that story as host of Season 7 of the CBC podcast series Uncover: Dead Wrong.

Click here to go to listen to the podcast, or search for CBC Uncover on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast aggregator.

About the Halifax Examiner

Examiner folk The Halifax Examiner was founded by investigative reporter Tim Bousquet, and now includes a growing collection of writers, contributors, and staff. Left to right: Joan Baxter, Stephen Kimber, Linda Pannozzo, Erica Butler, Jennifer Henderson, Iris the Amazing, Tim Bousquet, Evelyn C. White, El Jones, Philip Moscovitch More about the Examiner.

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Recent posts

  • The new provincial rebate is just the first step to getting more electric vehicles on Nova Scotia roads March 3, 2021
  • The cops who shot up the Onslow Fire Hall committed no crime, rules SIRT March 3, 2021
  • Greenwashing the goldfields March 3, 2021
  • Here’s when you can expect to be vaccinated March 2, 2021
  • Public health on life support: underfunded and underappreciated March 2, 2021

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