tourists

Miramichi salmon group wants feds to resume sharing water temperature data

Miramichi salmon group wants feds to resume sharing water temperature data

The Miramichi Salmon Association is calling on Environment and Climate Change Canada to resume sharing water temperature information with the public. The data is integral to tourism and conservation of stocks, says Vanessa McLaughlin, the group's co-ordinator of membership and communications. 

A brief and somewhat inaccurate history of Niagara Falls

A brief and somewhat inaccurate history of Niagara Falls

No matter where I travel in this world, whenever I say I’m from Canada, the reaction is almost always “Ah Canada … Niagara Falls.” Over 25-million tourists come every year to this historic eighth wonder of the world in order to watch water fall over a cliff. Although it’s now Canada’s greatest tourist attraction with two casinos and a convention centre, Niagara Falls once served as the key battleground for the War of 1812. Here then is a brief history of Niagara Falls as told by, OK, me.

Alberta’s border communities fear water shortage after Milk River collapse in U.S.

Alberta’s border communities fear water shortage after Milk River collapse in U.S.

Following May long weekend, communities just north of the United States border will have to focus on conserving their water use. “We are very dependent on a system that was built in the 1900s in Montana to get a consistent source of water to the Milk River,” Coutts Mayor Jim Willet said on Friday. That system ultimately failed on Sunday when the final drop that funnels water from St. Mary’s River in Montana to Milk River in Alberta collapsed.

Rural N.L. towns struggling to pay mounting costs of clean drinking water

Rural N.L. towns struggling to pay mounting costs of clean drinking water

On any given day in Newfoundland and Labrador, there are about 200 boil-water advisories in place in rural communities — and it's not only a problem of public health, but of the viability of small towns themselves. Governments have known for decades the seriousness of the situation, but the problem persists, for several reasons, starting with cost.