Turning Miles into Memories and donating a home away from home. The children have battled illness for the last few years, and all they wanted was to go camping with their families.
Posted: May 07, 2021 8:00 AM MT | Last Updated: May 7
The Whistle Stop has been at the centre of a high-profile legal battle over enforcement and a public debate over the strains that pandemic-related health orders have placed on small business.(Whistle Stop/Facebook)
Alberta Health Services is introducing new training to help its public health inspectors handle enforcement visits that have become increasingly hostile during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Inspectors are facing threats, doxing and online bullying, often while their actions are recorded or live-streamed by the people they are attempting to work with.
Meaghan Allen, Alberta branch president of Canadian Institute of Public Health Inspectors, said inspectors have had work phone numbers and licence plate numbers posted online. Some have been followed, creating fears for personal safety.