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Red Deer News: June 20

Red Deer News: June 20

CTV News20-06-2025
Red Deer News: June 20
Top stories for Red Deer and central Alberta on Friday, June 20.
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Second Chance Animal Rescue increases social media moderation due to breeders
Second Chance Animal Rescue increases social media moderation due to breeders

CTV News

time9 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Second Chance Animal Rescue increases social media moderation due to breeders

Second Chance Animal Rescue (SCAR) of Windsor and Essex County has increased moderation of their social media posts. The non-profit volunteer/foster-based animal rescue said that they were seeing businesses try to solicit on their posts. SCAR board member Cherie Smith said they saw an increase in backyard breeders and puppy mills advertising their services, trying to lure the public away from SCAR. 'We're constantly having to monitor our posts and block them or message them to them to stop. We're a non-profit organization, we rescue dogs from these specific places,' Smith said. SCAR posted to social media last week warning those who solicit on their posts will be banned and asked their followers not to engage when they see them. Smith said since then things have improved on their social media, but they have noticed that backyard breeding is out of control. 'We are getting multiple people that come to us and say oh we can't sell the last of the litter can you take them, or the last of the litter is a year old and we can't sell them, it's getting ridiculous people,' she said. Smith said the public should always look into adopted pets. 'Stop breeding, because these animals are suffering. It's not just the dogs, it's the cats too,' Smith said. Information on available SCAR animals for adoption can be found here . - Written by Dustin Coffman and Rob Hindi/AM800 News.

'We need that growth': Work gets underway on a sewer project that will benefit the downtown
'We need that growth': Work gets underway on a sewer project that will benefit the downtown

CTV News

time22 minutes ago

  • CTV News

'We need that growth': Work gets underway on a sewer project that will benefit the downtown

A major sewer project got underway in downtown London Thursday that will transform the city's core. A major sewer project got underway in downtown London Thursday that will transform the city's core. The $18M project involves tunneling under the Thames River at the Forks of the Thames, allowing crews to replace the original pipe constructed in 1934. The new tunnel will significantly increase sanitary sewer capacity. 'We will put three pipes inside of that one, main drill hole. And then we will have a new siphon underneath the river,' said Ashley Rammeloo, director of water, wastewater and stormwater for the City of London. Pits will be dug on either side of the river, one in Ivey Park and the other in Mitchell A Baran Park. They'll be used to create the tunnel that will about three meters in diameter. 082125 - Sewer London Sewer capacity is being expanded in the downtown opening the door to more growth. (Gerry Dewan/CTV News London) The original plan, developed a decade ago, was to simply replace the existing pipe, but Rammeloo told CTV News the demand for residential growth in the downtown necessitated the increased capacity. 'We want to accommodate growth. We need that growth. We want people living in our downtown.' Rammeloo notes that the project will also reduce the impacts of sewer system overflows on the Thames. 'We need to make sure that we're not doing it at the expense of the environment. And this is a really important point, so that the sewage leaving the downtown can get across the river here at The Forks.' Both Ivey Park and Mitchell A Baran Park will be closed to the public, including the playground and splash pad in Ivey. Portions of the Thames Valley Parkway will also be temporarily closed, with detour routes in place. 'A big part of what we do now is we build in contingencies. And, this will help to do that at,' noted Rammeloo. 'This will allow us to shift flows between two of our main trunk sewers that both go to Greenway, but allows us to manage those flows.' 082125 - Sewer London Sewer capacity is being expanded in the downtown opening the door to more growth. (Gerry Dewan/CTV News London) Work on the project is scheduled to be completed by June of next year. Later this year, the Upper Thames River Conservation Authority will also begin a separate project in the area to reconstruct part of the West London Dyke starting at Cavendish Park and working east through Riverside Park and Mitchell A Baran Park. This project will include extending the Thames Valley Parkway from the Forks to Cavendish Park.

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