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Canadian road trips to U.S. plunge for seventh straight month

Canadian road trips to U.S. plunge for seventh straight month

Calgary Herald4 hours ago
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Road trips to the U.S. decreased for a seventh straight month as Canadians ramped up their American boycott.
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Canadian-resident return trips by automobile from the neighbouring U.S. slumped 36.9% in July from a year ago, Statistics Canada data showed Monday.
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The drop in U.S. travel underscores Canadians' resentment toward their southern neighbour, who is their biggest trading partner and was once their favourite vacation destination.
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While the Canadian economy has appeared to avoid the worst recessionary outcomes, industries exposed to President Donald Trump's tariffs like steel and autos are reeling.
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Concerns have also grown in Canada that visitors to the U.S. may be caught up in Trump's immigration crackdown.
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Amid the strain in the relationship, some Americans also appear to be avoiding Canada, but to a lesser extent. The number of U.S. car trips to Canada fell 7.4% in July from a year ago.
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time22 minutes ago

First Nation at centre of Oka Crisis gripped by environmental battles linked to cannabis megastores

Two women climb over felled pine trees, some branches still green with needles, following a deep trench cut into the forest floor. A little under a kilometre away, this forest connects to the old front lines of the 1990 Oka Crisis, or the siege of Kanehsatà:ke. The trench, roughly three feet deep, stretches out from the back of Big Chief's Variety, a five-storey cannabis megastore that sits along Quebec's Route 344 in Kanehsatà:ke, a Kanien'kehá:ka (Mohawk) territory about 60 kilometres southwest of Montreal. The trench and downed trees are the result of recent construction work by the owner of Big Chief's Variety, say Kawisaienhne Albany, 27, and Karihohetstha Cupples, 23. It's part of a widespread and relentless construction boom fuelled by the lucrative cannabis industry — one that the women say is reshaping the community's lands and shorelines, while aggravating long-simmering internal tensions. 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Local political leaders say organized crime has infiltrated some cannabis operations on the territory. The majority of them are very good people. It's their partners, some of them, that bring in this criminal element, said Victor Bonspille, the previous grand chief who is seeking another term. I'm not going to penalize them for wanting to get ahead.… A lot of us grew up with very little. Enlarge image (new window) Serge Simon is one of three candidates running for grand chief of Kanehsatà:ke in the recently delayed election. Photo: CBC / Brenda Witmer Environment under pressure Last month, following a march commemorating the Oka Crisis, a group of women raised a white-canvas sign with black lettering that read: Protect Our Land. It was hand-painted by Cupples, a nod to her grandmother, Louise Gagne, who painted one of the iconic signs from that summer conflict 35 years ago, asking in both French and English, Are you aware that this is Mohawk territory? Cupples and others were staking out a new front line of sorts, on a forested plot they claimed back in 2020, to protect it from growing cannabis development that has since boomed. If we're not there to protect the physical land itself, nature can't continue, she said. The plot sits between Big Chief's Variety on one side and AAAA Cannabis on the other, connecting to a swath of forest that runs behind several large cannabis operations along the eastern portion of Kanehsatà:ke. Albany said they've faced constant pressure from community members to give up the plot for development. I think a lot of them don't understand what a preservation area is — you don't touch it, you don't need to use it, she said. As they survey the first trench, Albany and Cupples find another one, appearing to run from another cannabis megastore sitting next to Big Chief's called the Green Room. It holds dark, stagnant water, with the stink of sewage. All I feel is anger because, it's like, how could you do this? said Albany. Enlarge image (new window) A ditch with stagnant water, emitting a sewage smell, cuts through a forest behind some of the cannabis megastores in Kanehsatà:ke. Photo: CBC/Brenda Witmer Green Room owner Gary Gabriel says the dark water comes from his septic system's overflow. You're allowed to do that here, he said. I got the same thing at my house. Everybody has overflow around here. Gabriel said he's installed a new septic system to stop the discharge, and he'll soon be cleaning up the existing overflow. He's also pledged to stop tree-cutting in the surrounding forest. CBC News made three in-person requests for an interview with Big Chief's owner Joshua Smith-Gabriel, but was turned down. Smith-Gabriel is not directly related to Gary Gabriel. Enlarge image (new window) Gary Gabriel, who owns the Green Room, says many families in Kanehsatà:ke are benefiting from the lucrative cannabis industry. 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I do believe that, said Albany. It happened in '90, that they were there with us. It's going to happen again, said Cupples.

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