Could it be that a keystone belief and a bedrock of prosperity in Canada might disappear over the next two decades?
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Could it be that a keystone belief and a bedrock of prosperity in Canada might disappear over the next two decades?
Read more: http://tinyurl.com/neo8623
Alberta’s river forecasters knew two days in advance that heavy rains would likely hit the foothills of the Rockies, but didn’t sound the alarm until after the skies opened up on the eve of the province’s worst flooding.
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Unfortunately, the work of protecting the city against future floods will be very boring, but no less necessary.
It will take place in engineering offices, around conference tables, in inter-governmental negotiations, in budgets and in planning bylaws.
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The city hasn’t finished tallying the damage caused by last week’s flooding, but already officials are saying as many as 10,000 Calgarians won’t be able to live in their homes anytime soon.
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Photographic demand for silver has fallen 70 percent from its peak. What could possibly fill that gap?
Back in the good old days, a physical silver trader’s dream would be to land a photographic company as a customer.
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This Great Graphic comes from The Economist. It depicts world GDP on a year-over year basis for the world, high income countries, the BRICS and other emerging markets.
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Alberta law doesn’t require businesses to continue to pay workers if their premises are closed due to the recent flooding.
But provincial officials are calling on employers and employees to be reasonable given the difficult circumstances.
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CALGARY — The Calgary Real Estate Board is urging people in the midst of residential real estate transactions to consult their lawyers to find out the impact of the devastating floods that hit the city.
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High River residents whose homes are in the northwest part of the flood-ravaged community can go back to their homes as early as tomorrow, the province announced, as plans for a staged re-entry were unveiled this afternoon.
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EDMONTON – Residents at Strathcona County’s Lakeland Village mobile home park — owned by Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel — are frustrated after their neighbourhood flooded three times in as many years.
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