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  • Handling pandemic-related stress

    Like it or not, we’re learning to function in pandemic times.
  • Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation needs better plan for local industry, AG says

    Nova Scotia's Crown liquor corporation does not have an adequate strategic plan for supporting the province's growing alcohol industry, a new report by the province's auditor general finds.
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  • Families of 3 deceased workers sue Tyson over COVID-19 outbreak

    The families of three workers who died after contracting the coronavirus in an Iowa meat plant outbreak sued Tyson Foods and its top executives Thursday, saying the company knowingly put employees at risk and lied to keep them on the job.
  • Ontario brewery employment triples in last decade amid craft beer growth

    The Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing says the number of workers Ontario breweries employ has tripled in the last decade.
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  • Conagra announces Mrs. Butterworth's brand review

    In the wake of increased scrutiny and accountability around the Black Lives Matter movement, Conagra is conducting a review of its famous Mrs.
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  • Health and safety as important as customer service for shoppers

    Health and safety protocols are the new standard for businesses, as provinces and municipalities begin to relax COVID-19 restrictions.
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  • Trans Mountain pipeline restarts after light crude spills in Abbotsford, B.C.

    Trans Mountain says oil is flowing again through its pipeline after as much 190,000 litres of light crude spilled from a pumping facility in Abbotsford, B.C.A statement from the Crown-owned company says the pipeline was restarted Sunday afternoon.The line was shut down early Saturday when an alarm was triggered at the Sumas pump station.An investigation continues but Trans Mountain linked the cause to a fitting on a 2.5-centimetre pipe, and says the oil was contained, recovered and slated for disposal.A statement posted late Sunday by the Environment Ministry says Trans Mountain's is co-ordinating the response at the site, along with environmental and emergency contractors.The ministry says there has been no reported impact to groundwater, but monitoring continues.Sumas First Nation Chief Dalton Silver said Saturday's spill marked the fourth time in 15 years that the pipeline has spilled oil on their land.He said in a statement that it happened just south of a cultural and burial ground of great significance to his people.“Our main concern is for the cleanup of this spill and preventing further impacts to our territory.
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