CBC - North (4 hours ago)
Small communities in the Northwest Territories still aren't getting regular visits from dentists, more than five years after the service was temporarily suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic. The N.W.T.'s health minister says there is still no timeline for when visits will resume.
ReadCBC - North (11 hours ago)
Resourcing Tomorrow is billed as "Europe's largest and most influential mining event," but observers question whether the trip overseas was worth the resources, and say the government should focus more attention on creating an environment at home that's attractive to investors.
ReadCBC - North (5 days ago)
The approval of the 340-kilometre Ambler Access Road came as record rainfall in Northwest Alaska flooded villages and ripped through fish spawning habitat — the latest climate-driven blow to Indigenous communities already watching caribou and salmon numbers plummet.
ReadCBC - North (6 days ago)
Three former Liard First Nation employees say they experienced harassment — and that even after federal investigations substantiated their complaints, the workplace culture they raised concerns about remains unaddressed. Liard First Nation Chief Stephen Charlie acknowledges the Labour Board findings, and said the nation is working to implement...
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
The territorial government will ask Canada to increase funding for a program that helps Indigenous communities without land and resource agreements to navigate the resource development regime, and environmental assessment process. The fund is fully spent every year.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
In a news release Tuesday, Eleanor Olszewski, the federal minister of emergency management, said she has approved a request for assistance from the Nunavut government. That's to provide support in the logistics of transporting, distributing and pumping drinking water, as the community of Kugaaruk continues to grapple with a state of emergency.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
Tunngasugit Inc., an Inuit resource centre in Winnipeg, has been running the service since 2019 but the executive director said with staffing shortages and funding constraints it's just not sustainable. The organization is directing callers to 911 for emergencies or 211 for help accessing resources.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
Yellowknife city council adopted the city's 2026 budget Monday night, which includes a 3.7 per cent hike to the property tax. The final property tax increase is lower than the seven per cent first quoted in November, after budget readjustments and the factoring in of carbon tax revenue sharing.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
Right now, 19 types of cancers are covered for full-time, and part-time, volunteer firefighters under Yukon legislation — but wildland firefighters are not included. The premier has indicated that he'll support amending the legislation, but won't say when.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
Louisa Sakiagak is speaking up about her late sister, Alasie Tukkiapik, who was found dead in 2023 after being missing for several months. Her body was found in the apartment of 2 men who pleaded guilty to indignity of a human body. A coroner found there was no third-party involvement in Tukkiapik's death.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
The announcement that Housing N.W.T. will take over Yellowknife's day and sobering shelters brings optimism for people who work closely with unhoused people in Yellowknife. Operators who already work under Housing N.W.T. hope the change in responsibility will streamline plans for sheltering residents and getting them into transitional, and...
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
This kayak is distinctive, from the Inuvialuit region of the western Arctic, and one of only a handful of its kind still in existence. It's been held by the Vatican Museums for 100 years, but is being repatriated now as part of a historic return of 62 objects of cultural or sacred significance to Indigenous communities in Canada.
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
More than 60 people attended a vigil for the National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women, organized by the YWCA and the Status of Women Council of the N.W.T. The day honours the victims of one of the deadliest acts of gender-based violence in Canadian history. Here's what some of the event's speakers shared about what they...
ReadCBC - North (A week ago)
The Canadian Lacrosse Foundation's N60 program was designed to bring Canada's official summer sport into more northern communities. Since 2022, it has hosted clinics in Baker Lake, Nunavut, Norman Wells, N.W.T., and most recently at Ecole St. Joseph School in Yellowknife, last month.
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
Testing has found elevated levels of lead in drinking water at Mildred Hall School in Yellowknife. Now Education Minister Caitlin Cleveland says the government will support schools that want to provide alternate water sources for staff and students, even if those schools haven't been tested yet.
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
The N.W.T. government and federal government have been negotiating how to remediate the six abandoned mines around Yellowknife following the territory's devolution in 2014. Responsibility wasn't placed solely on the territory or federal government, instead it was identified as something to further negotiate. Those negotiations are still ongoing but...
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
Lynn Mike has resigned after being elected mayor in 2023. Pangnirtung administration is reviewing the Hamlet Act and Nunavut Elections Act to determine next steps for filling the vacant position and staff say they will update residents as the process moves forward.
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
The town of Faro, Yukon, has given local resident Leithe Minder until Jan. 15 to rehome 10 of her 12 fostered dogs or face fines, and seizure of the animals after denying Minder's application to keep them. The town's bylaw says residents living in town can have no more than two dogs.
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
The engine failure happened on May 7 on a flight from Chesterfield Inlet to Rankin Inlet. The aircraft performed normally until it started its descent. Then the engine emitted a series of bangs with flames appearing from the exhaust ducts at the back of the aircraft.
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
That testing is happening at airports in Fort Simpson, Fort Smith, Hay River, Inuvik, Yellowknife and Norman Wells where PFAS levels in water have already exceeded national limits. In a news release Monday, the territory said those sites have been identified for testing "due to prior results and historic use of PFAS-containing agents during fire...
ReadCBC - North (2 weeks ago)
The door doesn't have a handle and the windows are held together by duct tape, the result of a shifting ground that damages the infrastructure of the home she's lived in for over 40 years. Seven people currently live in the home and there are mattresses on the ground to accommodate them all.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
At 85 per cent, the attendance rate for students at Ulaajuk Elementary School is well above territorial averages, according to Nunavut's Department of Education. The school's principal, Sandra Rutledge, credits after-school activities and community engagement for its high attendance rate.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
The N.W.T. government has been promoting the Mackenzie Valley Highway as worthy of federal investment and fast-tracking. But the road would primarily serve a small population, and with an estimated price tag over a billion dollars, an economic case for it may be difficult to make.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
Nunavik doctors are calling on authorities to improve the region's fragile water infrastructure. In the meantime, health workers get creative to provide care in an environment plagued by water shortages, from waterless childbirths to containing the spread of illnesses.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
That program was taught in Fort Smith and was suspended indefinitely in 2018. Eight years later, the territory's education system is feeling that loss, with less opportunities for northern Indigenous to teach students from the communities they come from.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
A 2020 report by Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., which represents Inuit in Nunavut, suggested infrastructure in the territory lagged behind all other Canadian jurisdictions by a wide margin. Premier John Main has vowed to get Ottawa to narrow that infrastructure gap.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
The N.W.T. government is developing safer communities and neighbourhoods (SCAN) and civil forfeiture legislation, but the proposed laws are receiving criticism from both people concerned with civil liberties, and those worried about safety in their communities.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
Fisheries and Oceans Canada's (DFO) survey estimate for the Belcher Islands-Eastern Hudson Bay beluga population in 2024 was 2,200 animals – the lowest estimate on record. Nunavik hunters are being asked to delay their fall harvest of beluga in response.
ReadCBC - North (3 weeks ago)
Prime Minister Mark Carney recently announced the grid connection as part of his list of "nation-building” projects. While Ottawa has put up $40 million for a pre-feasibility study, the only new money announced earlier this month was $139 million for B.C. Hydro to study the North Coast Transmission Line, to which the Yukon link would...
ReadCBC - North (4 weeks ago)
The Yellowknife Chamber of Commerce says it is seeing an increase in local businesses paying for security guards. Use of force experts from across Canada say that's happening around the country, but it also comes with a growing grey area in law enforcement.
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