Refugee claims followed Montreal AIDS summit marred by visa woes, planning issues

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Refugee claims followed Montreal AIDS summit marred by visa woes, planning issues OTTAWA — Almost one-sixth of guests at a major AIDS conference in Montreal last year who received Canadian visas ended up claiming asylum, according to internal data obtained by The Canadian Press.The documents also show Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada struggled to work with the International AIDS Society as both tried to avoid a mass refusal of visas.When the society’s conference got underway last July in Montreal, dozens of delegates from Africa had been denied visas or never received responses to their applications. Some accused Ottawa of racism on stage, saying international gatherings should not return to Canada.The controversy followed similar incidents at other global summits hosted in Canada in recent years, for which some African delegates could not obtain visas despite receiving invitations on Canadian government letterhead.Documents obtained through access-to-information laws show that 1,020 or 36 per cent of visa applications for last summer’s AI...

CBC head ‘blindsided’ staff with comments on broadcaster’s future, Poilievre: emails

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

CBC head ‘blindsided’ staff with comments on broadcaster’s future, Poilievre: emails OTTAWA — After the head of Canada’s public broadcaster gave a newspaper interview earlier this year that promised CBC would eventually become a digital-only product and that criticized Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, senior managers were quick to refute her comments, internal emails suggest.The Globe and Mail reported in February based on an interview with Catherine Tait that she was preparing to end traditional TV and radio broadcasts and move completely to a digital platform, but that this likely wouldn’t happen in the next decade.Emails that discussed the unease of CBC staff in the wake of that report were disclosed to The Canadian Press under access-to-information law.Months earlier, the BBC had announced a plan to go online-only within the decade.“But this is not the reality for us at CBC,” a senior manager for CBC British Columbia and Alberta said in an email. “Even with a plan to advance and move towards a streaming future, no Canadian will...

Main Street closure means Stillwater can host street dance

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Main Street closure means Stillwater can host street dance As soon as Cory Buettner saw the black-and-white photograph of a street dance on Main Street in downtown Stillwater posted on Facebook, he knew he wanted to recreate the scene this summer.The photo, taken by Stillwater photographer Frederick Holcombe in 1901, shows hundreds of people dancing to a big band in the middle of the street.With Main Street closed from Myrtle Street to Olive Street for the next two months, Buettner, owner of Leo’s Grill & Malt Shop, thought this would be the perfect time for a modern take on the historic event.On Friday, city and Minnesota Department of Transportation officials signed off on his plans for an old-fashioned street dance on Aug. 5 with music from noon to 10 p.m.“When life gives you orange cones and orange detour signs, make orange juice,” Buettner said. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to have a dance like this here on Main Street.”Crews are working on finishing the new $3.6 million Chestnut Street Plaza, and traffic is detoured a...

Literary calendar for week of July 23

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Literary calendar for week of July 23 Bill Fletcher Jr. discusses race, class, and the crime novel, inspired by his new book “The Man Who Changed Colors” on Monday. (Courtesy of the East Side Freedom Library)BILL FLETCHER JR.: Racial justice, labor and international activist, scholar and author discusses race, class and the crime novel, based on his new novel “The Man Who Changed Colors,” about a Cape Cod newspaper reporter who questions a shipyard worker’s death, exploring the complicated relationships between Cape Verdean Americans (from the West Africa country of Cape Verde) and African-Americans, the liberation movement in Cape Verde, and fascists emigrating to the U.S. Fletcher has been involved in the labor movement for decades and is a widely known speaker and writer in print and on radio, television, and the web. He has been in leadership positions with many prominent union and labor organizations, including the AFL-CIO. His previous book is the murder mystery “The Man Who Fel...

Tickets on sale for Opus & Olives fundraiser for St. Paul libraries

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Tickets on sale for Opus & Olives fundraiser for St. Paul libraries Tickets are on sale for Friends of the St. Paul Public Library’s 20th annual Opus & Olives fundraising gala featuring bestselling authors Scott W. Berg, Sadeqa Johnson, Jean Kwok and Don Winslow discussing their new books. The Oct. 8 event at St. Paul RiverCentre includes a cocktail reception, dinner and author presentations.About the authors:Scott W. Berg, born and raised in the Twin Cities, will introduce “The Burning of the World,” about the 1871 fire in Chicago, the biggest and most destructive disaster the U.S. had ever endured, and Kate Leary, the scapegoat whose barn caught fire.Sadeqa Johnson, a former public relations manager, is the bestselling author of five novels and recipient of the National Book Award. Her latest is “The House of Eve,” about a 15-year-old who is on track to becoming the first in her family to attend college when a taboo love affair threatens to pull her back down into the poverty and desperation passed onto her like a...

Ramsey County lowers speed limits on 34 miles with on-street bike lanes

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Ramsey County lowers speed limits on 34 miles with on-street bike lanes Ramsey County is reducing vehicular speed limits on 34 miles of county roads that have on-street bike lanes.The move, approved Tuesday by a unanimous Board of Commissioners, is meant to slow auto speeds on 36 segments, representing 12 percent of all county roads. St. Paul Public Works and county traffic engineers have been studying the issue since at least April 2022.“The goals were to promote more uniformity and consistency of speed limits along corridors and increase the safety and level of comfort of those people walking, rolling or biking,” said Rose Lindsay, a spokeswoman for Ramsey County.Speed limits on most segments will be reduced by 5 mph. Posted speeds on a stretch of Larpenteur Avenue between Dale and Rice streets will be reduced by 10 mph because of frequent crashes in that area.County traffic engineers said they followed a general formula that bases speed limits on the 50th percentile speed for that roadway — the top speed reached by half the drivers ...

Skywatch: Bootes, the happy hunter

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Skywatch: Bootes, the happy hunter It starts happening every mid-summer. Bootes, the hunting farmer, begins his close pursuit of Ursa Major, the Big Bear. These two constellations are right next to each other in the early evening west-northwestern sky and are very easy to see.Ursa Major, Latin for Big Bear, contains the most famous star pattern in the sky — the Big Dipper. The Dipper is the bear’s brightest part, outlining the great beast’s rear end and tail. The rest of the stars in the Big Bear aren’t nearly as bright, but if you have a dark northern sky, you’ll see the skinny triangle that allegedly outlines the bear’s head and the two faint lines of stars that make up the legs.(Mike Lynch)Right on the bear’s tail in the northwestern sky after evening twilight is Bootes, the hunting farmer that looks much more like a kite than a farmer. Arcturus, one of the brightest stars in the sky, is at the kite’s tail. Just follow the arc of the Big Dipper’s handle beyond ...

While calling for new workforce goals, public sector has retrenched from downtown St. Paul

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

While calling for new workforce goals, public sector has retrenched from downtown St. Paul In 2017, three years before the pandemic hit, the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency signed a 10-year lease for a floor of office space within Treasure Island Center in downtown St. Paul, otherwise known as the former Macy’s building. Some 10 or 20 employees still show up regularly to the state agency’s Wabasha Street headquarters, but upwards of 90 percent of the workers no longer work from the office. As “occupied” downtown workspace goes, the floor sits largely vacant.“Thank you for calling Minnesota Housing,” says the recorded greeting on the phone line. “Currently all staff are working remotely and our offices are closed.”A similar scenario is playing out nearby at the Golden Rule building off Seventh Street, where both the Minnesota Department of Health and Minnesota Department of Human Services maintain satellite locations that remain underutilized in the era of remote work.By mid-2024, both field locations will close and workers ...

Literary pick for July 23: Remembering Humphrey’s moment

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Literary pick for July 23: Remembering Humphrey’s moment … Humphrey quailed at bringing the civil rights plank to the fall convention. Biemiller and Rauh would write it, true, but it was Humphrey who would have to stand there at the podium, in isolation, and sell racial equality to delegates who considered it snake oil, just as worthless as the Peruna that H.H. had long ago peddled door to door. And who was Humphrey, after all, to defy a president? He was the ‘”boy mayor,” as the newspapers put it. He was a “pipsqueak,” at least compared with the party elders. How could taking on Harry Truman turn out to be anything but a suicide mission? — from “Into the Bright Sunshine”Seventy-five years ago this month, Minneapolis Mayor Hubert Humphrey gave an impassioned speech to delegates at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. The 37-year-old Humphrey, well known in Minnesota but without a national reputation, galvanized the delegates with his plea for Democrats to embrace civil r...

Ask Amy: Husband’s spiritual quest leads him astray

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 18:04:11 GMT

Ask Amy: Husband’s spiritual quest leads him astray Dear Amy: I have been with my husband for 29 years.For the most part, we are happy and compatible.However, over the last three years he has changed course on me.What I mean is that we were both Christians, until he embraced a New Age philosophy that is in no way compatible with my Christian beliefs.He stopped attending services with me, and has no interest in our church anymore.This hurts me deeply. I feel betrayed.I still love him, but this has put up a barrier between us. It has also caused trust issues on my part, due to some of the comments he has made.For instance, he says that God wants us to be happy, so we can just throw our inhibitions to the wind.Also, he sees no problem with women going out in public half-naked.According to him, God does not want us hiding our bodies.Also, he believes it is OK for a partner to cheat if he or she is unhappy, because God wants us to be happy.Related ArticlesAsk Amy | Ask Amy: Wronged wife chooses to stay — for now Ask Amy | ...