
Help us raise $150K by May 22 to expose dangerous pesticide policies
As the election drew to a close last month, a source drew my attention to a Liberal pledge on pesticides that could increase use of the toxic chemicals. Buried in the party's election platform was a promise that, if elected, the party will tell Canada's pesticide regulator to start considering food costs and food security when deciding whether to approve new pesticides or not.
The pledge wasn't entirely surprising: food prices have soared since 2021, exacerbating Canada's cost-of-living crisis and driving millions of Canadians to rely on food banks. Meanwhile, Trump's trade war and Canadians' renewed patriotism spooked people's faith in Canada's ability to feed itself without the US. Measures that claim to tackle both problems are an easy sell.
This is precisely why we've launched our $150,000 spring fundraiser to fund the Climate Solutions Reporting Project until May 22nd – because tracking these kinds of environmental policy shifts requires sustained, investigative journalism that looks beyond the headlines.
For me, the promise raised some major red flags. Over the past two years, I've written a series of investigations revealing major transparency and integrity problems with Canada's pesticide regulator.
My stories have exposed how the Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) helped pesticide giant Bayer keep bee-killing pesticides on the market and undermine data collected by Christy Morrissey, a University of Saskatchewan professor. They've revealed how the agency overlooked health data in approving chlorpyrifos, a pesticide related to the toxic nerve gas sarin, and made those data nearly impossible for the public to see. And they've highlighted deep transparency problems within the PMRA that experts say protect pesticide companies, not people.
All those problems arose when the PMRA could only approve pesticides if the agency determined they were safe for human health and the environment. Ask the agency to consider if restricting pesticides will increase food prices — a message industry groups commonly cite to push for looser environmental and health rules — and who knows what will happen.
The election is over. Now it's time to keep the new government accountable, including keeping a close eye on how it will impact the environment and Canadians' health. The first few months of a new government are critical: relatively protected by novelty, this is a time when the government can implement key policies and lobbyists can forge key relationships with elected officials and civil servants.
But we need your help. For a decade, Canada's National Observer has revealed what's really happening – exposing greenwashing, sparking policy change, and delivering the truth about our climate and environmental future. As climate facts are erased and disinformation flourishes, our democracy faces a critical threat. , allowing us to investigate not just problems like pesticide regulation, but also the innovative approaches that can lead us toward a healthier, more sustainable future.
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Winnipeg Free Press
an hour ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
White House budget request slashes funding for tribal colleges and universities
In President Donald Trump's budget request, he's proposing slashing funding for tribal colleges and universities, including eliminating support for the country's only federally funded college for contemporary Native American arts. If the budget is approved by Congress, beginning in October, the more than $13 million in annual appropriations for the Institute for American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, would be reduced to zero. It would be the first time in nearly 40 years that the congressionally chartered school would not receive federal support, said Robert Martin, the school's president. 'You can't wipe out 63 years of our history and what we've accomplished with one budget,' Martin said on Friday. 'I just can't understand or comprehend why they would do something like this.' The college, founded in 1962, has provided affordable education to thousands of Native artists and culture bearers, including U.S. poet laureate Joy Harjo, painter T.C. Cannon and bestselling novelist Tommy Orange. It's the only four-year degree fine arts institution in the world devoted to contemporary Native American and Alaskan Native arts, according to its website. Martin said he has spoken with members of Congress from both major political parties who have assured him they'll work to keep the institute's budget level for the next fiscal year, but he worries the morale of students and staff will be affected. Martin said he also spoke with staff in the office of U.S. Rep. Tom Cole, a member of the Chickasaw Nation and chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. Cole, a Republican and former member of IAIA's board of trustees and a longtime advocate in Congress for funding that supports tribal citizens, was unavailable for comment. Breana Brave Heart, a junior studying arts and business, said the proposal shocked her and made her wonder: 'Will I be able to continue my education at IAIA with these budget cuts?' Brave Heart said she started organizing with other students to contact members of Congress. 'IAIA is under attack,' she said, 'and I need other students to know this.' Martin said that amid the Republican Trump administration's crackdown on federal policies and funding that support diversity, equity and inclusion, trust responsibilities and treaty rights owed to tribal nations have also come under attack. 'It's a problem for us and many other organizations when you've got that DEI initiative which really is not applicable to us, because we're not a racial category, we're a political status as a result of the treaties,' he said. 'We're easily identified as what this administration might refer to as a 'woke'.' Democratic Sen. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico said the cuts are another example of the Trump administration 'turning its back on Native communities and breaking our trust responsibilities.' 'As a member of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, I remain committed to keeping IAIA fully funded and will continue working with appropriators and the New Mexico Congressional Delegation to ensure its future,' Luján said in a statement to The Associated Press. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The congressional budget bill includes roughly $3.75 trillion in tax cuts, extending the expiring 2017 individual income tax breaks and temporarily adding new ones that Trump campaigned on. The revenue loss would be partially offset by nearly $1.3 trillion in reduced federal spending elsewhere, namely through Medicaid and food assistance. A Jan. 30 order from the Interior Department titled 'Ending DEI Programs and Gender Ideology Extremism' stated that any efforts to eradicate diversity, equity and inclusion in the department's policy should exclude trust obligations to tribal nations. However, earlier this year, several staff members at the other two congressionally chartered schools in the country — the Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Haskell Indian Nations University in Kansas — were laid off as part of Trump's push to downsize the federal workforce. In a lawsuit filed in March, both institutions reported that some staff and faculty were rehired, but the Bureau of Indian Education notified those people that might be temporary and they may be laid off again. 'It shows what a president's values and priorities are, and that's been hard,' said Ahniwake Rose, president of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, an organization that represents more than 30 Tribal Colleges and Universities. 'That's been hard for our staff, our students, our faculty to see that the priority of the administration through the Department of Interior might not be on tribal colleges.' In its budget request this year, the Interior Department is proposing reducing funding to the BIE's post secondary programs by more than 80%, and that would have a devastating affect on tribal colleges and universities, or TCUs, which rely on the federal government for most of their funding, said Rose. Most TCUs offer tribal citizens a tuition-free higher education, she said, and funding them is a moral and fiduciary responsibility the federal government owes tribal nations. In the many treaties the U.S. signed with tribal nations, it outlined several rights owed to them — like land rights, health care and education through departments established later, like the BIE. Trust responsibilities are the legal and moral obligations the U.S. has to protect and uphold those rights. The Interior Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Ottawa Citizen
an hour ago
- Ottawa Citizen
Canada to meet 2 per cent NATO spending pledge this year: Carney
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National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Trump's new travel ban takes effect for citizens from 12 countries
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