The Indspire Awards, a celebration of Indigenous achievement will be broadcast this Sunday on CBC. We hear from one of the hosts, comedian and actor Craig Lauzon; Zi-Ann Lum.reports on federal politics at HuffPost Canada. She offers her perspective on the Conservative Party's leadership debates; Queen's University graduate student Kassandra Luciuk explains the history that informs her graphic novel on the internment of Ukrainians in Canada called 'Enemy Alien: A True Story of Life Behind Barbed Wire';, Belleville police launched a new Indigenous Cultural Awareness training program to strengthen their relationship with the city's First Nations neighbours; Mike Hill is a retired OPP and Tyendinaga officer who policed in First Nations for 16 years. He helped Belleville to facilitate the program; The CBC's Haydn Watters looks at some of the surprising inconsistencies in the province's restrictions with respect to the pandemic; The Ginger Press will launch an anthology called 20/20 Hindsight: Being Gay in Bruce and Grey; We hear from Joan Beecroft who compiled the book; Lawton Osler of the Muskoka Lakes Association talks about the reports of tension between permanent residents and visitors; Jeff Bowman ia wildlife ecologist with the Ministry of Natural Resources in Peterborough debunks the reported sighting of a Florida squirrel.