
Reporters launch campaign to start newspaper
Reporters launch campaign to start newspaper
The closure of several newspapers last month in Metro Vancouver was a blow to local journalism. Now, some of their reporters are starting a new project.
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CTV News
22 minutes ago
- CTV News
Stop using charity collection containers as garbage bins: Quebec organizations
Quebec charities say their streetside donation bins are starting to overflow – and often with items that cannot be resold. (Joy Benyamin/Noovo Info) With spring cleaning and moving season getting into full swing, some Quebec charities say their streetside donation bins are starting to overflow – and often with items that cannot be resold, Noovo Info reports. They lament the fact that when bins are full, clothes and other items are left next to the containers, exposed to the elements and sometimes stolen. Additionally, the organizations say people use the sites to throw out anything they don't want, leaving it up to the charities to clean up at their own expense. At the Renaissance sorting centre, donations arrive continuously, but almost 50 per cent of items cannot be resold. 'The sorters assess one item at a time, visually, to check whether it's in good condition, whether the zip works, whether it's clean,' explains Marie-France Dumont, Renaissance senior director of marketing, communications and public affairs. Clothes left outside a donation bin, or even just a few centimetres from the top, are often unusable. 'Items left outside are exposed to the elements. The doors can crush clothes and damage them. You can't do anything with them,' she said. donation bins Quebec charities say their streetside donation bins are starting to overflow – and often with items that cannot be resold. (Joy Benyamin/Noovo Info) The same is true of La Collecte, another second-hand foundation in Quebec. 'We lose between 15 per cent and 20 per cent of materials,' said Benoît Tessier, the organization's marketing and communications director. 'These are irrecoverable, soiled or wet items. It costs us money to throw them away.' La Collecte recently removed a bin from a commercial car park in Brossard, on Montreal's South Shore. 'People were dropping off anything at any time. There was no supervision,' said Tessier. 'Despite our regular interventions, the owners had enough and asked us to leave.' He says La Collecte, similar to Renaissance, has also experienced theft. 'People try to get into the containers, sort things themselves, take what interests them and leave the rest,' he said. 'We've already found people trapped inside.' He says the decision to withdraw the Brossard collection bin was heartbreaking for the organization, which relies on its containers to generate the revenue that funds its missions. 'When we lose one, it means less money for programs like Big Brothers Big Sisters,' said Tessier. Additionally, the organizations note that some cities are reducing their financial support, making it even more challenging to maintain operations. donation bins Quebec charities say their streetside donation bins are starting to overflow – and often with items that cannot be resold. (Joy Benyamin/Noovo Info) The organizations are asking people to ensure that they drop their donations directly into the bins or visit a centre. Renaissance alone has 27 donation centres in Quebec. 'People can drop off their donations in the bins, but we certainly encourage people to come to our donation centres because we can really preserve the quality of the product to improve the quality of the donations,' said Dumont. In 2023, Renaissance says it diverted 30,000 tonnes of material from landfills and aims to double that figure by 2030. For its part, La Collecte says it offers a home collection service, sometimes even by bicycle, and a QR code affixed to their bins can be used to locate the nearest drop-off points.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Lobster dinner and auction
Crystal Garrett gets details on the 40th annual Lobster Dinner & Auction in support of the Dartmouth General Hospital Foundation.


CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
Fire at Yellowknife apartment that displaced public housing tenants caused by smoking
Social Sharing Improper disposal of smoking materials was found to be the cause of a fire that displaced tenants of public housing from a Yellowknife apartment building in March. Saxon Chung, a spokesperson for the City of Yellowknife, wrote in an email that an investigation by the city's fire department into the Sunridge Place apartments fire determined it was accidental. The city said after the incident in March that the fire was contained to a single unit on the first floor of the three-storey building and that no injuries were reported. Sunridge appears to still be closed, with the windows at the bottom of the building boarded up and a note on the door saying the building's owner, Northview, is working with contractors to ensure the building is "safe and restored in a timely manner." The note says that Northview changed the locks and that anyone needing to access the building could call either their public housing organization or Northview itself. A large vacuum truck was outside the building along with a large dumpster on Tuesday. Multiple units in the building were used for subsidized housing, and the organizations that ran them have been making alternate plans for their tenants. Housing First, a program run by the Yellowknife Women's Society, leased five Sunridge units, three of which had tenants. Hovannes Nazaryan, the team lead for Housing First, said the organization received three replacement units from Northview and has moved tenants to those. "The last time I was there [at Sunridge], we cleaned all of our units out, we moved all the furniture that was salvageable, and basically everything else went to the dump," he said. Shortly after the fire, before the replacement units were ready, Housing First moved its tenants into hotels for acccommodation. He said they're still waiting for two more units, one for emergencies and another to accommodate additional tenants. Nazaryan said he's not sure when, or even if, those tenants will move back into Sunridge when it reopens. Bob Bies is the CEO of the Yellowknife Housing Authority, which had five units at Sunridge. The Yellowknife Housing Authority runs the operation of public housing units that are leased by Housing N.W.T., the territory's housing agency. Bies said they have no plan to return to the building, and they've set tenants up in temporary accommodations with the plan to move them to Aspen Apartments when construction on it is complete. Julie Carter was a former tenant of Sunridge through the Yellowknife Housing Authority. She was planning to move out the day after the fire forced the evacuation. Carter said she was put up in a hotel the first night she was displaced and then was expected to move into her new apartment. But she didn't have access to any of her clothes, food, or other necessities. "I have a completely empty apartment, I have absolutely no funds. How am I supposed to feed myself, feed my dogs, change my clothes?" she said. Carter said she convinced the Yellowknife Housing Authority to put her up in a hotel and that it took weeks before she was allowed to enter her old unit to gather what was salvageable. When the Sunridge building will reopen is unclear. Each housing organization said they were unsure and redirected the question to Northview. Northview did not respond to multiple requests for an update by email, phone and in person.