Engagement key to reducing negative effects of shelters, say 2 South facilities
Communicating with neighbouring businesses and residents is key to reducing the negative impacts of shelters, say experienced southern shelter workers.
Social Sharing We do work with neighbours to build what we call a good neighbour agreement, says Calgary shelter worker
Posted: May 04, 2021 4:00 AM CT | Last Updated: May 4
Calgary s Alpha House includes a day centre for people experiencing homelessness, detox, outreach and housing programs. It s been in operation for 40 years.(Calgary Alpha House Society/Facebook)
Communicating with neighbouring businesses and residents is key to reducing the negative impacts of shelters, say experienced southern shelter workers.
Engagement key to reducing negative effects of shelters, say 2 South facilities
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And the feds keep leaving the ball in the province’s court, saying it’s up to Saskatchewan to regulate, while seemingly not touching the on-reserve pot shop issues. Yet the issue is black and white for two chiefs who spoke about their communities’ recently opened stores: As signatories to Treaty 4, Pheasant Rump Nakota Nation and Zagime (Sakimay) Anishinabeck have the sovereign right to do as they wish with business on their own lands. Now that they’re hearing interest from other First Nations about opening stores, the two chiefs Pheasant Rump’s Ira McArthur and Zagime’s Lynn Acoose spoke about recent development plans for a safety association, while explaining what the federal government s gap-filled weed law means for First Nations sovereignty.
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Caroline Beckman is the founder and CEO of Nouri, a proactive gut and immune health solutions company. She has founded, advised, and invested in over 10 food, beverage, technology, and sustainable resource companies that have partnered with leading retailers around the world. Recently, she has published work on microbiology illustrating how effective delivery of good bacteria can reduce the incidence of viral infections. Caroline is a Thiel Fellowship recipient and a proud college dropout.
Emile Doak is the executive director of The American Conservative. He is a graduate of Georgetown University, where he studied political philosophy and theology, and previously worked in education before returning to the field of his studies. His writing has appeared in
Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
More than two years after Ottawa legalized weed, Saskatchewan’s green industry has grown into a jurisdictional grey zone.
First Nations in the province’s southeast are growing into the retail end of the market running four pot shops on their reserve lands, but are foregoing the provincially-mandated permitting process.
And the feds keep leaving the ball in the province’s court, saying it’s up to Saskatchewan to regulate, while seemingly not touching the on-reserve pot shop issues.
Yet the issue is black and white for two chiefs who spoke about their communities’ recently opened stores: As signatories to Treaty 4, Pheasant Rump Nakota Nation and Zagime (Sakimay) Anishinabeck have the sovereign right to do as they wish with business on their own lands.
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