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Topics on the Show:
Chapter 1:
-There has been a mudslide that is affecting traffic this morning, A missing hiker has been rescued & a story about bureaucracy and Canada’s 150.
Chapter 2:
-A missing Coquitlam dog walker and three dogs have been found alive and well almost 48 hours after they went missing. More than 60 search and rescue crew members and RCMP officers had been searching for 56-year-old Annette Poitras and three dogs since they went missing Monday afternoon. Coquitlam RCMP say Poitras was found shortly before noon Wednesday and has now been taken to hospital after being rescued by search and rescue crews.
Chapter 3:
-A Chilliwack School trustee is asking one of his colleagues to step down, after a controversial speech earlier this week. Dan Coulter says Barry Neufeld’s comments about the LGBTQ community are extremely damaging, and he’d like him to resign.
Chapter 4:
- Earlier this year, well-known local sportscaster Neil Macrae passed away after battling three separate cancers. The first of the three cancers is rarely associated with men — breast cancer. Wife Laurie Rix-Macrae remembers the day he approached her about a lump that had been growing for months.
Chapter 5:
-The kill-it-or-build-it decision is getting closer every day and with so much of the public's money on the line it’s hard not to stay focused on the site c dam. The Province newspaper's Michael Smyth is here with his take on the day's headlines.
Chapter 6:
- An Ottawa PhD candidate may have made a breakthrough in the fight against cancer. Tim Dickert has the tech report.
Chapter 7:
- You’ve heard a lot about Naloxone in the news - a life-saving medication that can reverse an opioid overdose. But if you had to use it to save a person’s life...would you know how?
Chapter 8:
-Hear the story of Point Grey resident Sandra Evans and her family. Even though she is a lawyer and her partner is a specialized physician, they know what it feels like to be renovicted and what a neighbourhood of empty home looks like.
Chapter 9:
-The new federal housing plan appears to do little for the middle class and is said to be “very old fashion” by our guest. He doesn’t think that the plan does anything to rein in home prices so younger Canadians can have a hope to buy.
Chapter 10:
- With the local mountains open early and a promise of a cold winter, most of us are ready to dust off our skis and boards. But what about the most important tool for a safe and effective run on the slopes: our bodies?
Chapter 11:
- Tim Dickert is here to update us on the progress of the Vancouver Canucks.
By CuriouscastTopics on the Show:
Chapter 1:
-There has been a mudslide that is affecting traffic this morning, A missing hiker has been rescued & a story about bureaucracy and Canada’s 150.
Chapter 2:
-A missing Coquitlam dog walker and three dogs have been found alive and well almost 48 hours after they went missing. More than 60 search and rescue crew members and RCMP officers had been searching for 56-year-old Annette Poitras and three dogs since they went missing Monday afternoon. Coquitlam RCMP say Poitras was found shortly before noon Wednesday and has now been taken to hospital after being rescued by search and rescue crews.
Chapter 3:
-A Chilliwack School trustee is asking one of his colleagues to step down, after a controversial speech earlier this week. Dan Coulter says Barry Neufeld’s comments about the LGBTQ community are extremely damaging, and he’d like him to resign.
Chapter 4:
- Earlier this year, well-known local sportscaster Neil Macrae passed away after battling three separate cancers. The first of the three cancers is rarely associated with men — breast cancer. Wife Laurie Rix-Macrae remembers the day he approached her about a lump that had been growing for months.
Chapter 5:
-The kill-it-or-build-it decision is getting closer every day and with so much of the public's money on the line it’s hard not to stay focused on the site c dam. The Province newspaper's Michael Smyth is here with his take on the day's headlines.
Chapter 6:
- An Ottawa PhD candidate may have made a breakthrough in the fight against cancer. Tim Dickert has the tech report.
Chapter 7:
- You’ve heard a lot about Naloxone in the news - a life-saving medication that can reverse an opioid overdose. But if you had to use it to save a person’s life...would you know how?
Chapter 8:
-Hear the story of Point Grey resident Sandra Evans and her family. Even though she is a lawyer and her partner is a specialized physician, they know what it feels like to be renovicted and what a neighbourhood of empty home looks like.
Chapter 9:
-The new federal housing plan appears to do little for the middle class and is said to be “very old fashion” by our guest. He doesn’t think that the plan does anything to rein in home prices so younger Canadians can have a hope to buy.
Chapter 10:
- With the local mountains open early and a promise of a cold winter, most of us are ready to dust off our skis and boards. But what about the most important tool for a safe and effective run on the slopes: our bodies?
Chapter 11:
- Tim Dickert is here to update us on the progress of the Vancouver Canucks.