Skip to content

Local News

Province invests thousands in aboriginal education

BY HEIDI ULRICHSEN [email protected] The N'Swakamok Native Friendship Centre is receiving another $62,000 a year from the province to provide a program for pre-teen children called Akwe:go.

College Boreal counsellor receives distinguished award

Louise Gervais-Guy, a counsellor at Collège Boréal, has received the 2005 Distinguished Service Award from the Association of Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology of Ontario (ACAATO).

Good quarter for Hart

Hart Stores Inc, an operator of mid-sized department stores, reported net earnings of $2.1 million for the third quarter ended Oct. 29, compared with $1.4 million for the same period in the previous year, an increase of 44.9 percent.

MNR could sell prime Crown land

BY KEITH LACEY [email protected] The Ministry of Natural Resources is officially reviewing an application by the Whitefish Lake First Nation to expand its reserve by 2,800 hectares (7,000 acres).

Pandemic Planning Overdrive

BY TRACEY DUGUAY [email protected] A medical state of emergency has been declared. The Sudbury Regional Hospital?s emergency room is overflowing. Children with blazing fevers and aching bones are home from school.

Mining company invests thousands into Dynamic Earth

Atlas Copco Construction & Mining Canada announced today a long-term partnership investment in the mining and earth sciences attraction Dynamic Earth.

Community welcomes new doctors to city

BY KEITH LACEY [email protected] Derek MacDonald and his wife Bindu Bittiri are from the Maritimes and admit they felt like a fish out of water in Canada?s biggest city.

Steelworkers support Inco takeover of Falconbridge

BY KEITH LACEY [email protected] Saying there?s power in numbers, the largest union representing miners in Greater Sudbury and across Canada has made a renewed commitment to increase solidarity among Steelworkers around the world.

Water rate increasing by 4.5%

BY TRACEY DUGUAY [email protected] There?s gold in d?em dere pipes. Well, not exactly, but pretty darn close as Sudbury residents brace for another 4.5 percent increase in water and wastewater rates.

And then there?s hydro...

(CNW) Consumers will have to pay almost $3 billion more a year for electricity in Ontario after 2008 if the provincial government does not alter its plans to shut down the coal-fired generating plants, warns an independent study released by the Assoc