OTTAWA Procurement Minister Anita Anand said this week she is confident Canada's COVID-19 vaccine deliveries will only get better going forward but just hours after she made the remark, Canada's vaccine purchases got slammed again. "The worst week was last week," Anand said in an interview with The Canadian Press Tuesday night. But within hours of the statement, potential deliveries from the global vaccine-sharing initiative known as the COVAX.
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A decades-old debate over development in an important wildlife corridor in an Alberta mountain community is to be back before council next week.
Plans for two projects, which make up about 80 per cent of the remaining developable land in Canmore, show they could almost double the town’s population to nearly 30,000 in the coming decades.
“This is the first plan that was able to be developed with clear guidance from a council in Canmore,” said Chris Ollenberger, managing principal with Quantum Place Developments, which is overseeing the proposed Three Sisters Village and Smith Creek projects.
“These area structure plans are probably the best … in the entire Bow Valley for balanced, responsible development that is sustainably orientated, climate-goal orientated … and respects wildlife.”
Colette Derworiz
A housing development near the Three Sisters mountains on the eastern edge of Canmore, Alta., is shown on July 2, 2017. A decades-old debate over development in an important wildlife corridor through the area is back before the mountain town s council in coming months. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Colette Derworiz February 02, 2021 - 1:00 AM
A decades-old debate over development in an important wildlife corridor in an Alberta mountain community is to be back before council next week.
Plans for two projects, which make up about 80 per cent of the remaining developable land in Canmore, show they could almost double the town s population to nearly 30,000 in the coming decades.
Posted: Feb 02, 2021 9:51 AM MT | Last Updated: February 2
Plans for two projects, which make up about 80 per cent of the remaining developable land in Canmore, show they could almost double the town s population to nearly 30,000 in the coming decades.(Dave Gilson/CBC)