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I'd woken up to find that my bike had been stolen overnight. I wasn't in the mood to go seeking out photos really. This seemed apt.
From left: Col. Joshua SeGraves, garrison commander; garrison Command Sgt. Maj Gregory Kleinholz; Lt. Col. David Fleming, commander, Headquarters Battalion; and Capt. Tevin Radford, commander, 212th MP Detachment, discuss the force protection exercise at Telegraph Gate, Dec. 8. The scenario involved four agencies responding to an explosive found in an incoming vehicle.
I then explored the theme safety inspired by the functionality of my Grandpa’s dungarees in the context of the modern world, looking into imagery and materials associated with Covid-19. Further safety and protection research taken from Sebastio Salgado’s The Workers photography book.
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This is Ayunda's fingers when she grasped mine. This is the moment when your defense crumbled by the time the innocent and pure creature touches you right in your heart.
Most individuals do not know the concept of popular sovereignty, the definition of being a sovereign, or the power in sovereign meaning.
This morning, on Nov. 5, 2025, Premier David Eby; Chief Marilyn Slett, president, Coastal First Nations; Mayor Garry Reece, Lax Kw’alaams; Jason Alsop, president, Haida Nation; Paula Amos, Indigenous Tourism B.C.; and Clarence Innis, Hereditary Elder, all signed the following declaration:
The North Coast Protection Declaration
“For generations, communities have built and sustained the economy of the North Coast – a legacy that continues today through a multibillion-dollar, sustainable conservation economy that supports thousands of livelihoods in fisheries, tourism, renewable energy and stewardship.
“Protecting our coast is not a barrier to economic prosperity – it is the source of it.
“The Great Bear Rainforest agreements have directly created more than 1,400 permanent jobs and 140 new businesses to date – and counting. In the past 15 years, the conservation economy has generated nearly $2 billion in economic value for British Columbia and for Canada. This is economy that invests back into communities, setting the foundation for ongoing prosperity.
“The oil tanker ban is the result of over 50 years of advocacy from First Nations and coastal communities, and supported by federal and provincial governments of all political stripes. Formalized into law in 2019, the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act did not create this protection – it codified a longstanding commitment that has kept one of the most ecologically and culturally rich marine regions on Earth safe from the threat of crude-oil spills.
“Repealing the tanker ban would risk near-term major projects and cheat B.C.’s economy out of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in investments. Over the long term, the consequence of a crude-oil spill in these waters would be generations of lost livelihoods and irreversible ecological damage.
“We urge the federal government to stand firm in its commitment to uphold the tanker ban. Protecting the North Coast is not an item for negotiation – it is a national responsibility, and it is a quantifiable investment in Canada’s treasured marine environment and the economic prosperity of future generations.
“We choose progress.
“We choose protection.
“We choose: Our Economy. Our Coast.”
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/32994
My uke case has arrived. Now I can travel without fear.
Je peux maintenant voyager sans crainte de casser mon ukulele.
This morning, on Nov. 5, 2025, Premier David Eby; Chief Marilyn Slett, president, Coastal First Nations; Mayor Garry Reece, Lax Kw’alaams; Jason Alsop, president, Haida Nation; Paula Amos, Indigenous Tourism B.C.; and Clarence Innis, Hereditary Elder, all signed the following declaration:
The North Coast Protection Declaration
“For generations, communities have built and sustained the economy of the North Coast – a legacy that continues today through a multibillion-dollar, sustainable conservation economy that supports thousands of livelihoods in fisheries, tourism, renewable energy and stewardship.
“Protecting our coast is not a barrier to economic prosperity – it is the source of it.
“The Great Bear Rainforest agreements have directly created more than 1,400 permanent jobs and 140 new businesses to date – and counting. In the past 15 years, the conservation economy has generated nearly $2 billion in economic value for British Columbia and for Canada. This is economy that invests back into communities, setting the foundation for ongoing prosperity.
“The oil tanker ban is the result of over 50 years of advocacy from First Nations and coastal communities, and supported by federal and provincial governments of all political stripes. Formalized into law in 2019, the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act did not create this protection – it codified a longstanding commitment that has kept one of the most ecologically and culturally rich marine regions on Earth safe from the threat of crude-oil spills.
“Repealing the tanker ban would risk near-term major projects and cheat B.C.’s economy out of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in investments. Over the long term, the consequence of a crude-oil spill in these waters would be generations of lost livelihoods and irreversible ecological damage.
“We urge the federal government to stand firm in its commitment to uphold the tanker ban. Protecting the North Coast is not an item for negotiation – it is a national responsibility, and it is a quantifiable investment in Canada’s treasured marine environment and the economic prosperity of future generations.
“We choose progress.
“We choose protection.
“We choose: Our Economy. Our Coast.”
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/32994
It can be nerve wracking to work in high places for some people. That used to be the case for me before my family replaced our roof a few years ago. In the beginning to was scary, but then I sort of just got used to being up there. Granted I would have liked to have had some safety gear, but since we were doing the project ourselves it was something we did without.
From left: Col. Joshua SeGraves, garrison commander; garrison Command Sgt. Maj Gregory Kleinholz; Lt. Col. David Fleming, commander, Headquarters Battalion; and Capt. Tevin Radford, commander, 212th MP Detachment, discuss the force protection exercise at Telegraph Gate, Dec. 8. The scenario involved four agencies responding to an explosive found in an incoming vehicle.
Hearing Protection Training course includes information on the anatomy of the ear, causes of hearing loss, noise measurement, exposure limits, elements of a hearing conservation program, and methods of controlling noise exposure.
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