logo
This is what a recent count of the city's homelessness reveals about people living on Windsor's streets

This is what a recent count of the city's homelessness reveals about people living on Windsor's streets

Yahoo29-07-2025
Windsor's 2024 'point-in-time count' identified 672 homeless individuals in Windsor — a major jump from the 251 homeless counted in 2021. The CBC's Dalson Chen explains.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

2 Climbers Rescued After Sudden Fall Leaves Them Hanging Overnight in Their Harnesses on Sheer 6,500-Feet Cliff Face
2 Climbers Rescued After Sudden Fall Leaves Them Hanging Overnight in Their Harnesses on Sheer 6,500-Feet Cliff Face

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

2 Climbers Rescued After Sudden Fall Leaves Them Hanging Overnight in Their Harnesses on Sheer 6,500-Feet Cliff Face

The individuals were rescued in the early hours of Wednesday, Aug. 6 after becoming stranded in "dangerous" conditions on the Yak Peak summit in CanadaNEED TO KNOW Two climbers had to be rescued from Canada's Yak Peak summit after a fall left them hanging overnight in their harnesses on a 6500-feet cliff face One of the climbers sustained a head injury in the fall The complex rescue mission was completed on Aug. 6 after multiple attempts to reach the pair failed amid "dangerous conditions"Two climbers are recovering after a fall left them stranded overnight while hanging in their harnesses on a sheer 6500-feet cliff face on the Yak Peak summit in Canada. On Wednesday, Aug. 6, North Shore Rescue confirmed in a press release on Facebook that they received an alert at 10:40 p.m. the night before about two people who were "stuck on Yak Peak," with one of the climbers also suffering from a head injury sustained in a fall, Weather in the area was also "rapidly deteriorating making climbing conditions dangerous," the release continued, adding that "the two climbers were hanging in their harnesses mid-face." Officials said the rescue operation included Talon helicopters and night visitation goggles. Multiple attempts were made to reach the climbers but the conditions were "too dangerous" and the "flight was complicated by clouds and wildfire smoke in the area." Due to the weather conditions, the rescue team were unable to to reach the climbers, resulting in the helicopter landing at Hope Airport in British Columbia. The flight crew was forced to wait until the weather improved after another failed attempt around 4:00 a.m., before a new crew was assembled at 5:30 a.m. on Aug. 6 and able to complete the rescue mission. "The fresh flight crew flew up into the area and luckily were able to get overhead,' the release continued, adding that the climber with the head injury was rescued first, followed by his partner. In photos shared by North Shore Rescue, the helicopter was seen approaching the climbers on the sheer cliff face. 'This was a complex task involving night flying, technical pick offs, mountain rescue, and complex hoists,' officials said. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. After thanking all the agencies involved, they added, 'The flight crew is currently returning to Vancouver. We wish the climber a speedy recovery." Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword

How I Built My Ruthless Summer Reading List
How I Built My Ruthless Summer Reading List

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

How I Built My Ruthless Summer Reading List

I acquire far too many books, usually under the theory that I will get to all of them someday, 'someday' being the most elastic of reading time frames. Some of my somedays have lasted decades, and many more have yet to end. The illusion of someday is sustained in part by the anticipation of summer, a magical place of reduced obligations and infinite time, when all things unread will find their moment in the sun. And so I engage in a ritual as intrinsic to the season as bug bites, flash floods and heat advisories: assembling a summer reading list. It's a stressful exercise for me, one that often spans several months. Between my job as a columnist and my forced labor on a literary prize jury, there are already many books I am required to read each year. This makes selecting a handful of additional books — ones I'll read just because I choose to — especially hard. There are few slots left, so I can't just crack open a meh book under my beach umbrella. This is not Nam, this is reading; there are rules. I avoid the best-seller lists (too obvious), the 'most anticipated' lists (too eager) and brand-new books (too soon). I skip books by my colleagues in journalism, ostensibly because it's hard to pick favorites, but really because I need a break from all that. I'm also reluctant to take any book that a friend has given me as a gift; if I don't like it, I might start questioning the friendship. And no Oprah or Reese picks for me — those books are doing just fine without my $29.95. Instead, I scan the unread portions of my own shelves obsessively, day after day, no matter if my vacation is months or days away. I've developed three categories of books to take to the beach, and each year I try to pick at least one from each. It's not as simple as selecting fiction or nonfiction, mass market or highbrow, classics or trashy. The categories reflect personal guilt, professional necessity and, finally, the quest for enjoyment untainted by obligation. Category No. 1 is made up of the I've Always Meant to Read This Book books. Perennials here include 'All the Light We Cannot See' by Anthony Doerr, 'The Bluest Eye' by Toni Morrison and 'The Omni-Americans' by Albert Murray. I want to read them. I plan to read them. I tell myself I will read them, just not right now. Someday! (I've meant to pick up 'The Bluest Eye' ever since I read Morrison's 'Beloved' as a freshman in college, and that's when George Bush was president. The first President Bush.) Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store