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Jasper evacuees forced into B.C. to flee fires told to make U-turn to Alberta for aid

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EDMONTON – Thousands of wildfire evacuees forced from Jasper National Park into British Columbia along smoke-choked mountain roads Monday night were directed Tuesday to make a wide U-turn and head home if they needed a place to stay.

Alberta fire officials said B.C. has its hands full with its own wildfires and evacuations.

“The issue is the severity of wildfire activity and evacuations in B.C. proper,” Stephen Lacroix, managing director of the Alberta Emergency Management Agency, told reporters during a video conference.

“They had no capacity to house Albertans.”

Alberta Public Safety Minister Mike Ellis said reception centres were being set up in Grande Prairie to the north and Calgary to the south.

Ellis told evacuees to take massive detours, either through Prince George, B.C., proceeding north and east to Grande Prairie, or south to Kamloops before going east to Calgary.

“One fire is approximately 12 kilometres south of Jasper on both sides of the (Athabasca) River and wind may exacerbate the situation,” Ellis told reporters.

“It’s a challenging time for all impacted.”

Everyone in Jasper National Park — tourists, hikers, campers, boaters — along with 4,700 residents of the Jasper townsite were ordered out late Monday night as wildfires pinched off escape routes to the east and south.

The result was a long, slow-moving line of cars and trucks heading west through the mountains to B.C. in darkness, swirling smoke, soot and ash.

Many evacuees sought refuge for the night in Valemount, B.C., a town of 1,000 about 120 kilometres west of Jasper.

“The community’s pretty full,” said town administrator Anne Yanciw in an interview Tuesday morning.

“Every parking lot, boulevard, side of the road, field … anything that looks like it could fit a vehicle is full.”

Some evacuees spent the night on the floor of the local arena. Others bunked down at the Legion. A local church was serving a pancake breakfast while drinks, snacks, information and a respite were on offer at Valemount’s community hall and visitors’ centre.

“It’s all hands on deck,” Yanciw said.

She said most travellers were beginning to make their way down the smoky road — slowly, but without incident.

“The hope is that most of them will find the long way back to Alberta,” Yanciw said.

Fire officials said forecast windy conditions were expected to make Tuesday a challenging day for crews.

The province has been baking and sweltering for days in 30 C-plus temperatures.

The province reported 170 wildfires burning across Alberta, 56 of which were out of control.

There was a provincewide fire ban in the forest protection area.

The province estimated 17,500 Albertans were out of their homes from the Jasper fire as well as those threatening remote northern communities.

On Monday night, photos and video shared on social media illuminated a midnight cavalcade of bumper-to-bumper cars and trucks, headlights on, red tail lights glowing, cars inching, stopping, starting, crawling through swirling tendrils of acrid smoke toward B.C.

“It’s wall-to-wall traffic,” said Edmonton resident Carolyn Campbell in a phone interview from her vehicle.

“(The smoke) is pretty thick. We’ve got masks in the car.”

Campbell said it took hours to move just seven kilometres. She said they had enough gas but worried for others who fled with little in the tank.

The Jasper townsite and the park’s main east-west artery, Highway 16, were caught in a fiery pincer. Fires threatening from the northeast cut off highway access east to Edmonton.

Another fire roaring up from the south forced the closure of the north-south Icefields Parkway. That left one route open — west to B.C.

The Municipality of Jasper and Jasper National Park said in an updated emergency alert Tuesday morning the evacuation from the townsite and the park is “progressing well” and people should continue to follow directives as the majority of traffic is being directed west on Highway 16.

“Only when roadside fire conditions permit, small groups of escorted vehicles will be directed east on Highway 16,” the town and park officials said in the alert.

Jasper National Park is the largest national park in the Canadian Rockies, home to campgrounds, scenic rivers and lakes, and extensive trail networks.

In Hinton, close to the east boundary of the park, Mayor Nicholas Nissen reported only a trickle of evacuees into the community.

Nissen said the sky was blue with less smoke than Monday.

“You would almost have no indication that there’s a disaster in the community next door, just with the way Hinton is right now,” Nissen said in an interview.

“With that highway closure, we’re not seeing the volumes of people we saw during evacuations last year.”

Nissen said the town has sent eight firefighters, two fire trucks and other equipment to assist in battling the blaze.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 23, 2024.

— with files from Bob Weber in Edmonton and Jeremy Simes in Regina

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Legault ‘shocked’ by Montreal teacher scandal, pledges to toughen secularism measures

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MONTREAL – Quebec Premier François Legault promised on Tuesday to toughen secularism measures in schools, saying he was “shocked” by revelations about a Montreal public school where a group of teachers had tried to introduce what the premier described as “Islamist” beliefs.

Legault appointed Education Minister Bernard Drainville and Jean-François Roberge, the minister responsible for secularism, to come up with solutions to prevent religion from creeping into classrooms following a government report into Montreal’s Bedford school.

“There is something very disturbing in this case. It is this attempt by a group of teachers to introduce Islamist religious concepts into a public school,” Legault wrote on social media. “In Quebec, we decided a long time ago to remove religion from public schools. We will never accept going back.”

The Centre de services scolaire de Montréal — Quebec’s largest school service centre — said Saturday that 11 teachers were suspended with pay after a government investigation found that a “dominant clan” at Bedford school imposed strict, autocratic rule over students.

The investigation revealed that the teachers — many of whom were of North African descent — were allegedly influenced by the local mosque and subjected children to physical and psychological violence. They either refused to teach — or paid little attention to — the science and sex education curriculum.

The evidence gathered suggested some teachers didn’t believe in learning disabilities and neurodevelopmental disorders and refused to let specialists in the classroom, believing instead that discipline — with the idea of “breaking” the student — would put them on the “right path.”

Witnesses told the government investigators that local religious leaders exerted a “strong influence” on several school staff and a mosque representative underscored to school officials the importance of having good relations with the place of worship.

The report mentioned that there were staff members of North African descent who were part of the opposition to the methods of the “dominant clan.”

During a news conference Tuesday in Quebec City, Drainville announced that the 11 teachers — a mix of men and women — have had their teaching licences suspended pending the outcome of disciplinary investigations.

“I’ve raised examples of religious behaviours — whether it is the teacher who starts praying before a student who collapsed in the classroom, whether the classes in science or sexual education are not being taught properly, whether girls were forbidden to play soccer, whether there were interventions by representatives of the mosque nearby to ask the school to behave in a certain way,” Drainville said.

Drainville said preliminary findings show the province’s secularism law — known as Bill 21 — was not being respected at the school.

“According to the members of the committee, there is an issue with the respect of the law on secularism and therefore we have a responsibility to look into what could be done to strengthen this law in relation to Bedford and possibly in relation to other schools in Quebec,” Drainville said.

Legault said it was unthinkable in Quebec in 2024 that teachers were avoiding subjects like science and sex education. “As a government, our first responsibility is to clean up this school to protect the children,” he wrote. “We must also think more broadly to avoid other situations that are just as shocking and, above all, so devastating for children.”

Bill 21 was passed in 2019 and declares the province is a secular state and includes a provision prohibiting public sector workers in positions of authority — including teachers, judges, and police officers — from wearing religious symbols on the job.

Neither Drainville nor Roberge was prepared to say Tuesday what specific steps they would take to address the issue.

“Sometimes you don’t have to change the law,” Roberge said. “You have to apply it, and it’s the job of the principal, it’s the job of the management team of the school centre.”

The government’s investigation was triggered by reports by Montreal’s 98.5 FM beginning in May 2023 about a toxic climate at the school. Education department employees conducted more than 102 hours of interviews with 73 people, and attended a school governing board meeting. The testimonies provided a portrait of a problem stretching back to 2016, as school principals came and went in quick succession.

Drainville has ordered audits at three other Montreal schools — two elementary schools and a high school — that allegedly had similar problems related to the school environment and governance.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 22, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Nova Scotia Liberal Fred Tilley quits to join governing Progressive Conservatives

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HALIFAX – A member of Nova Scotia’s Opposition Liberals is crossing the floor to join the governing Progressive Conservatives.

Premier Tim Houston announced today that Fred Tilley has joined his party’s caucus.

Tilley, who represents the Cape Breton riding of Northside-Westmount, was first elected to the legislature in 2021.

While on the Liberal benches, Tilley had been critical of the government in areas such as health care and economic development.

Tilley is the second member of the Liberal caucus to join the government this year.

In February, Brendan Maguire joined the Tories and was immediately named as community services minister.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 22, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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N.B. premier-designate Susan Holt knows she has to deliver on promises quickly

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FREDERICTON – Susan Holt says it hasn’t sunk in yet that she is New Brunswick’s premier-designate.

The day after her Liberal Party won a convincing majority in Monday’s provincial election, Holt says she feels grateful for the opportunity to serve, and that she recognizes the seriousness of the responsibility — and the amount of work ahead.

“There is a lot of big challenges that need to be tackled, and now it’s on me and my team to deliver and to help make lives better for New Brunswickers,” Holt said in an interview.

Winning 31 of 49 seats, the Liberals denied a third term in office for Blaine Higgs’s Progressive Conservatives, who won 16 seats. The Green Party finished with two.

Now comes the hard part.

One of the party’s central election promises is to open 30 health-care clinics across the province over the next four years. It’ll be sometime next year before the first clinic opens, she said, under the Liberal model of “collaborative care” that puts nurses, doctors, pharmacists and other health-care workers under one roof, operating from at least 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

“It’s going to be in 2025 because there are some that are on the verge of happening, or are close to happening under the old model that the previous government was using,” Holt said.

“We believe we can take some of that work and transform the model within …. Vitalité and Horizon (health networks) are really keen to advance this.”

Other promises that New Brunswickers can expect to see realized next year include cheaper electricity bills — Holt’s party pledged to remove the provincial sales tax on power, which she said will reduce bills by 10 per cent. That should happen by April, she said.

One of her first tasks will be to send a letter to the Canada Revenue Agency to remove the provincial sales tax on electricity. It takes about 120 days for the agency to make the change, which can be implemented the following quarter, in time for April 1, she said.

She said she would “like to challenge” that waiting period, however, to ensure people have lower bills during the coldest time of the year in December, January and February. “We’re going to find out whether there’s any wiggle room with Canada Revenue Agency and the 120 days and the quarterly adjustment.”

Another election promise is to implement a three per cent cap on rent increases. Holt said she is aiming for the cap to be in place by Feb. 1 but will consult with the civil service to see whether that can be done sooner. “We give landlords time to adjust to changes like this … but we want to be able to put it in place quickly.”

Jamie Gillies, a political science professor at St. Thomas University, called Holt the “change premier,” adding she can expect a honeymoon period, but not a long one.

“I think on a number of files, particularly health care, that is going to be something that is going to take some time. And so the honeymoon period will last, but then it will end quite quickly.”

One of the ways to make sure she delivers on her promise to improve health care would be to collaborate with researchers, physicians and nurses, especially in rural areas, he said.

But expectation on health care will have to be tempered because that kind of change doesn’t happen overnight, Gillies said. “Trying to diminish expectations a little bit is, I think, going to be part of that.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 22, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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