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Opinion

Letters: Cat control long overdue

Letters: Cat control long overdue

Editor: As I watch the wonderful array of birds active in our garden and our neighbour’s yard, I feel it is long overdue to start the process of writing a cat bylaw.
Letters: Subsidy is not the word

Letters: Subsidy is not the word

Editor: The Oct. 1 online edition of the Coast Reporter contained an article by Mr. Stefan Labbé entitled, “B.C. subsidizes oil and gas drilling in caribou habitat it’s supposed to protect: study.
Letters: Park values include water

Letters: Park values include water

Editor: I am concerned that misinformation about water supply continues to circulate in our community (“Enough water in Chapman,” by Brian Carson, Letters, Sept. 24).
Letters: INTACT FORESTS

Letters: INTACT FORESTS

Re: “Keep our forests intact,” by Sarah Lowis, Letters, Oct. 1. Standing forest gift to eye, Grey of winter, clear blue sky. Lush and green with diverse wealth, Makes economic, bio health.
Letters: Forest lands protect us

Letters: Forest lands protect us

Editor: Creekers know that we live on a slope that carries water from Mount Elphinstone to the Strait of Georgia.
Letters: Rental priorities welcome

Letters: Rental priorities welcome

Editor: Re: “Council adjusts short-term rental bylaw priorities,” coastreporter.net, Oct. 8.
Most Canadians agree on steps toward Indigenous reconciliation: poll

Most Canadians agree on steps toward Indigenous reconciliation: poll

More than four in five Canadians say it is important to end long-term drinking water advisories in First Nations communities and to end bias against Indigenous Canadians in the justice system
Opinion: 'No shot, no job' — holdouts forced to face new reality

Opinion: 'No shot, no job' — holdouts forced to face new reality

There are eight communities in the Interior where the first dose vaccination rate is in the low 70s.
Canadians’ faith in the country’s health-care system still strong

Canadians’ faith in the country’s health-care system still strong

About 3 in 5 Canadians think there are good things in the system, but many say changes are needed
Editorial: A big boost for Sechelt

Editorial: A big boost for Sechelt

Telus plans to invest up to $40 million on the Cawley Point project, with a goal of educating more than 5,000 youth and students by 2030