
'We can't not remember them': Calgary marks National Peacekeepers' Day
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The annual National Peacekeepers' Day ceremony drew veterans, politicians and families of the fallen to the southwest community of Garrison Green, where a memorial wall bears the names of Canadians killed on peacekeeping missions. Many of those names were marked with poppies.
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Since 1948, more than 150,000 Canadians have served on 69 major peacekeeping missions in some of the world's most dangerous regions. Of those, 339 were killed, and many more suffered life-altering physical and mental wounds. Those who served included soldiers, sailors and air force personnel, along with police officers, firefighters and paramedics.
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'They represented the finest our country had to offer,' Wright said. 'Their commitment, bravery and dedication in the most hostile situations often served as the brightest light in a world sometimes seemingly gone mad.
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'Canadian peacekeepers have come to represent peace for today and hope for tomorrow. But that peace and hope has come at a hefty price.'
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The program included speeches, prayers, poetry and the laying of wreaths at the monument. Among those in attendance were Mayor Jyoti Gondek and MLA Ric McIver, speaker of the province's legislative assembly.
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In the front row sat families who had lost loved ones. Murray Marshall attended to honour his son Steven, 24, an Edmonton-based combat engineer who was killed in 2009 after he stepped on an improvised explosive device while on patrol outside of Kandahar.
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'It's important that we keep remembering why we've sent our soldiers to some of the worst places on the face of the planet,' Marshall said. 'They've done their duty and . . . some have done it right to the end.
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'They've given all — we can't not remember them.'
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'As a parent, (when) your child's found their career, you've got to back them and be happy for them,' he said. 'Unfortunately, we've seen the other side of the coin.'
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Growing up in Lincoln Park, Steven spent his childhood in Calgary hockey rinks and baseball diamonds, his father said.

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Vancouver Sun
12 hours ago
- Vancouver Sun
Vancouver stopover ends in U.S. detention for New Zealand mother and son, 6
Friends and family are raising funds to support a New Zealand mother living in Washington State who was detained with her six-year-old son by U.S. immigration officials after returning from a trip to Vancouver. Sarah Shaw, 33, and her son, Isaac, ended up detained over a clerical error, even though her work visa was current and her travel immigration paperwork was still in process. They ha ve been stuck in an immigration processing centre in South Texas for nearly three weeks, sharing a room with five other families and facing strict confinement. 'We were shocked because we were sure we had done all the paperwork properly,' said Victoria Besancon, Shaw's friend, who is helping raise funds for her legal costs. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. A GoFundMe set up for Shaw has raised more than $51,000 to help cover her legal and living expenses while the single mother remains detained at Dilley Immigration Processing Center. Besancon described the conditions in the facility, based on emails from Shaw. 'It's comparable to jail,' she said. Shaw and her son share a bedroom with five other families and are locked in from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. They cannot wear their own clothes, have very limited contact with the outside world, and 'don't even have underwear.' Shaw and Isaac are the only English speakers in the facility besides the staff. 'Sarah has really been struggling with her anxiety. She's been trying to stay positive for her son, but it's been incredibly difficult for them,' Besancon added. Shaw had lived in Washington for just over three years when she crossed into Canada last month to drop her older children off at Vancouver International Airport. On July 24, the children boarded a flight to New Zealand to spend time with their grandparents. Shaw and her youngest child never made it home. When Shaw attempted to drive back into the U.S., Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers detained her and Isaac. They were transported thousands of kilometres away to the South Texas detention facility. Shaw's attorney said the detentions stem from a paperwork error compounded by increasingly strict U.S. immigration policies. 'This is a direct result of Trump's immigration policies,' said Minda Thorward, a Seattle-based immigration lawyer. 'ICE has been ramping up enforcement in such a way that innocent people who simply don't have the right documents or have made a mistake are being swept up in this dragnet. It's causing a lot of unnecessary harm.' Thorward explained that Shaw is applying for lawful permanent residency and holds a 'combo card,' a temporary immigration document that provides work authorization and allows international travel. She also has an I-360 visa, which can grant immigration status to domestic violence survivors. Shaw had recently received confirmation that her work visa was renewed, but she didn't realize that the I-360 part of her application was still pending. 'It was a simple mistake,' Thorward said. 'The detainment was unnecessary.' For Isaac, Thorward said his detention is 'entirely unlawful,' as the six-year-old holds a valid, unexpired travel visa. 'If Sarah's wishes were honoured, her son would not have been detained with her. The only facility that can detain women and children together is in South Texas, and ICE refused to allow it,' the attorney said. Because only lawyers licensed in Texas can access the facility, Shaw has already spent her savings trying to hire both a Washington attorney and a Texas-based lawyer, Besancon said. 'Sarah's other savings have been used to pay her rent and bills while she remains confined, unable to work,' she added. Shaw works for the Washington State Department of Children, Youth and Families, where she provides counselling and runs programs for youth at a maximum-security juvenile facility in Snoqualmie. 'She's the sole provider in her family, working 50 hours a week,' said Besancon. sgrochowski@

16 hours ago
In a sea of brown lawns, why some natural gardeners are bringing messy back
As abnormally dry weather sweeps across much of the country (new window) this summer, you may have found yourself staring despondently at the brown, crispy patch of fried earth you once called your front lawn, felt your fingers twitch in the direction of the hose and wondered: Should I? Am I even allowed (new window) ? But environmental and horticultural experts, as well as proponents of the no-lawn movement (new window) , say the question is actually whether it's responsible to have a full grass lawn at all anymore (new window) . The David Suzuki Foundation has previously estimated (new window) there are about 6.2 million lawns across Canada, and calculated (new window) that anywhere from 8.2 to 22.7 per cent of several large Canadian municipalities are turf grass. In 2021, two-thirds of Canadian households reported they had a lawn, according to Statistics Canada (new window) . These lawns are biodiversity deserts, according to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (new window) , supporting very few insects and wildlife. They're also notorious for their water waste (new window) and contribute to water scarcity. Maintaining them often involves harmful pesticides and fertilizers, while frequent mowing emits greenhouse gases. And with many Canadian cities experiencing prolonged dry conditions, many lawns are looking ... parched. Enter the no-lawn, anti-lawn (new window) or re-wilding movement (new window) , a sustainable approach to landscaping and an attempt to shift our perspective on what yards can look like — and their purpose. This can include a naturalized yard (new window) , a habitat garden, using yards to grow food, or even just converting a section of your lawn to dedicate to native plant species and pollinators. There's a crazy amount of lawn out there, like tens of millions of acres in Canada and the United States, dedicated to growing just turf grass, said Brendon Samuels, a postdoctoral fellow with the Ecological Design Lab (new window) at Toronto Metropolitan University. Which is an imported, non-native group of species that has no real ecological value, that is very expensive to maintain and that doesn't look so nice when you're in the middle of a heat wave in the summer. WATCH | People are rethinking lawns: 'Lawns should be area rugs' Naturalized yards have a range of benefits, Samuels said, like helping preserve the monarch butterfly species by growing milkweed, or making one's area more resilient to climate change with more green coverage. Native plants help keep areas cooler and damper during heat waves, because they have deeper root systems that can access groundwater, he said. They also help increase the resilience of landscapes during floods, he added. And yes, you don't need to water them as often as a turf grass lawn to keep them healthy, he said, making them more drought-resistant. Enlarge image (new window) Brendon Samuels, a postdoctoral fellow with the Ecological Design Lab at Toronto Metropolitan University, has a naturalized yard, pictured here in London, Ont. Photo: Brendon Samuels Last year, a study by the National Wildlife Federation (new window) found that 12 per cent of the U.S. adults surveyed said they were converting parts of their lawn to a natural or wildflower landscape. The movement is particularly popular with a younger generation seeking out alternatives to grass, and is prominent on social media, notes Home and Garden magazine (new window) . And Garden Design magazine (new window) predicted that native plants and eco-friendly gardening will be the No. 1 gardening trend of 2025, followed by less tidy gardens. On Pinterest (new window) , there are some 23,000 searches for naturalistic garden. Some videos on TikTok (new window) about growing native gardens have millions of views. We're bringing messy back, said Grant Minkhorst of Toronto, known as Gardening Grant on TikTok, in a video last month (new window) with 25,000 views where he shows off his thick vegetable beds, lunging perennial border and droopy prairie coneflowers. My measure of success is how much food did we produce? How many pollinators visited our gardens? That's about it, he added in the description. And on Reddit, there are some 283,000 members of the "no lawns" subreddit (new window) , an online community devoted to alternatives to monoculture lawns. There, people there share photos of yards filled entirely with pink coneflowers and sprawling yellow coreopsis; leafy plants that climb over fences and fields of purple bee balm. As nature intended, commented a Redditor on a video of someone's sprawling, buzzing yard. (new window) Enlarge image (new window) Samuels included his family, pictured here, while planting a rainwater garden at his home in London, Ont. Photo: Brendon Samuels The more we can stop being tidy, the more wildness we can bring into our gardens and landscapes, the better habitat we provide, said New York-based ecological horticulturist Rebecca McMackin in a 2023 Ted Talk video (new window) played more than 1.3 million times. Why not get rid of your lawn, or shrink it drastically? she said. Lawns should be area rugs, not wall-to-wall carpet. Have you ditched your grass for a naturalized lawn? Send us photos at ask@ The lawn as a status symbol Lawns are a cultural import from 17th- and 18th-century Europe, where they were symbols of wealth and status, said Samuels — back then, you needed significant resources and labour to be able to maintain one. People default to the lawn because it's very normative in our culture, Samuels said. What we're seeing increasingly is people starting to question those norms and look for alternatives. A man mows his lawn in this 1956 archive photo. Lawns are a cultural import from 17th- and 18th-century Europe, where they were symbols of wealth and status. / Three Lions That said, some people who have ditched the grass have faced hurdles. Lawn naturalization has been recognized as a constitutional right (new window) for decades in Canada, but bylaws haven't always caught up, and The Associated Press (new window) notes that many homeowners' associations still have rules about keeping yards manicured. Samuels himself came up against bylaw (new window) when he created his own naturalized backyard and rainwater garden in London, Ont. CBC News has previously covered cases in several cities across the country where people have come up against bylaw complaints about their natural yards — but also others where those bylaws have shifted to allow people to keep their yards as is (new window) . Some cities, such as Toronto (new window) , offer grants for community-led projects to create pollinator gardens or convert a lawn area into one. Others offer exemptions (new window) to mowing height bylaws for residents who create naturalized areas. And while some may assume naturalized yards would attract more pests, such as rodents or ticks, the opposite has been found to be true, according to a 2024 report (new window) by the Ecological Design Lab. And the David Suzuki Foundation explains that simplified environments, like turfgrass lawns, favour white-footed mice, a key reservoir for Lyme disease in Canada. A traditional lawn is one of the worst landscapes for wildlife — and one of the best for ticks. There's a balance to be had here, Samuels said. We're not going after anyone's lawn, he said. But I think municipalities and individual property owners should be considering, 'Do we need this much lawn?' WATCH | The problem with lawns: Corrections An earlier version of this story on the CBC News website included a photo caption that misidentified Brendon Samuels. In fact, the people in the photo are his family members. Aug 13, 2025 10:38 AM EDT Natalie Stechyson (new window) · CBC News · Senior Writer & Editor Natalie Stechyson has been a writer and editor at CBC News since 2021. She covers stories on social trends, families, gender, human interest, as well as general news. She's worked as a journalist since 2009, with stints at the Globe and Mail and Postmedia News, among others. Before joining CBC News, she was the parents editor at HuffPost Canada, where she won a silver Canadian Online Publishing Award for her work on pregnancy loss. You can reach her at X (new window) Instagram (new window)


Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Soap, wristbands and scaling the UN: People get creative during final plastic pollution treaty talks
GENEVA (AP) — A Swiss ocean protection group is handing out bars of soap to negotiators working on a global accord to end plastic pollution. The messaging on the cardboard box from the Geneva-based Gallifrey foundation reads 'no dirty tricks, vote for a clean plastics treaty.' As Thai diplomat Jutha Saovabha walked to the treaty talks Wednesday morning, Gallifrey Foundation spokesperson Laurianne Trimoulla stopped him to chat and handed him a soap. Saovabha said it was a lovely gift and he liked the plastic-free packaging. Nations are crafting the first global, legally binding treaty on plastics pollution. The meeting at the United Nations office in Geneva is supposed to be the last and people are getting creative to put the pressure on to get a deal done. Here is a look at what they're doing: A 'cheeky' stunt Trimoulla said they chose soap because Switzerland is known for its cleanliness, and democracy. She said it's a 'cheeky' way to deliver a serious message. The foundation partnered with Friends of the Earth International and the Break Free From Plastic movement to urge delegates to vote on the treaty. Currently, every nation must agree for any proposal to be included in the treaty. If consensus can't be reached on the last day, the process could become paralyzed. The talks are scheduled to conclude Thursday. On Wednesday, Trimoulla had about 10 organic soaps left to hand out out of nearly 400. She said many delegates liked the gift, including those from France, Panama, and 'even the United States.' The foundation wants the treaty to reduce plastic production, whereas the U.S. supports provisions focused on better waste management and reuse to reduce plastic pollution. Wristbands to raise awareness about hazardous chemicals The International Pollutants Elimination Network gave wristbands to UN officials, delegates and plastic waste workers before the talks to measure their exposure to chemicals used to make plastics and show the importance of protecting human health with the treaty. It's releasing a report Wednesday about the findings. IPEN cochair Pamela Miller said the treaty is 'all about oil versus our health.' Most plastic is made from fossil fuels. Camila Zepeda, of Mexico, wore one. Zepeda is now leading negotiations for Mexico on an article to address problematic plastic products, including single-use plastics and chemicals. 'I had been reading a lot of research. So I was already sort of wary that we're already exposed to so many chemicals,' she said. 'What I was surprised by, is that all over the world, because this study has been carried throughout different regions, we are all being exposed to those added chemicals in plastics. That is concerning.' A conveyor belt of plastic waste The World Wildlife Fund set up a conveyor belt of plastic waste in the plaza in front of the U.N. office Wednesday. A backdrop showed a turtle, dolphin and a person with open mouths, as if the waste was flowing in. There was a large red button that said 'EMERGENCY', plus a sign that read 'PUSH THE BUTTON, STOP THE PLASTIC FLOOD NOW.' The WWF urged delegates to the talks to push the red button and halt the belt, to represent stopping plastic pollution. Scaling the UN Activists from Greenpeace climbed to the top of the buildings at the entrance to the U.N. office in Geneva and unfurled banners shortly after the negotiations began there last week. Greenpeace said it wanted to show the 'undue influence' of the fossil fuel industry at the talks. Most plastic is made from fossil fuels. 'We need to make sure all eyes are on Geneva in this critical moment where we have this once in a generation opportunity to create a safe and healthy world for everyone,' said Graham Forbes, head of the Greenpeace delegation in Geneva. The banners read 'big oil polluting inside' and 'plastics treaty not for sale.' They painted a black strip on the road at the entrance to the U.N. office to represent oil. 'Shoe leather lobbying' by the plastics industry Much like in Washington, D.C., industry leaders and company executives are meeting with delegates to answer questions and convey their priorities for the treaty, said Chris Jahn, president and CEO of the American Chemistry Council. There was an event before the talks started to showcase a database created by industry to improve transparency about chemical additives in plastics. 'It's shoe leather lobbying and informal personal engagements, where they need an answer to a question quickly and we provide it to them,' Jahn said. 'We're happy to provide information when it's useful and we'll be here as long as we need to, to hopefully get a deal.' Using art to influence policy Benjamin Von Wong, a Canadian artist and activist, is heaping piles of plastic waste onto a large sculpture in front of the U.N. office. Delegates to the treaty talks pass by the sculpture daily in a reminder of their responsibility to solve the plastic pollution crisis. It's his take on the famous sculpture by Auguste Rodin, 'The Thinker' in Paris. There is a male figure in deep thought, like Rodin depicted. But instead of sitting atop a rock, Von Wong's figure sits atop Mother Earth while cradling a baby and clutching plastic bottles. A strand of DNA intertwines them to highlight the health impacts of plastic pollution. On Wednesday, Von Wong added more plastic waste to cover Mother Earth. ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at