OTTAWA – Michel Ruest, a senior director of Sport Canada, says the federal organization was made aware of an alleged sexual assault involving members of Team Canada’s world junior hockey team in late June 2018, but did not follow up with Hockey Canada over the next four years. Read More
Similar Posts
Nonprofit report points to outdated Clean Water Act for the miles of polluted rivers across the U.S.
In 1972, the federal Clean Water Act proclaimed an ambitious goal – “fishable, swimmable” waters across the U.S. by 1983. Today, just over half of assessed river and stream miles across the U.S. remain too polluted for swimming and recreation, aquatic life, fish consumption, or as drinking water sources.
That assessment comes from a newly released report from the Environmental Integrity Project (EIP), a non-profit group founded in 2002 by former EPA enforcement attorneys.
Dodging the storm
Only one alert in place for the local area.
London Knights ride big guns in busy stretch
On Wednesday in Guelph, the Knights played their first line of Luke Evangelista, Antonio Stranges and Sean McGurn in the 26-minute range.
‘So random’: Western’s reversal on COVID vaccination surprises students
Western University’s sudden dropping of its vaccine mandate has left students wondering, why now?
Hockey Canada players’ lawyers back in London court as case speeds ahead
Five members of Canada’s 2018 world junior team accused of sexually assaulting a woman in a London hotel room are speeding toward a trial.
Waves of Change: Meet Milwaukee Water Commons Co-Executive Director Brenda Coley
Waves of Change is an online interview series highlighting the diverse faces and perspectives shaping the environmental justice movement throughout the Great Lakes region.
This month, we spoke with Brenda Coley, Co-Executive Director of the urban network and non-profit organization Milwaukee Water Commons.
Listen to the full interview
The group has a Water City agenda that takes an intersectional approach to laying out climate issues and proposed solutions for Wisconsin’s largest city.