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- Regina Municipal Election 2020: Sustainable transit –In 2018, Regina city council committed to a 100 per cent renewable city by 2050. Free transit, electric buses, and bike lanes will be a huge component of a renewable city – so why is council so hesitant to implement them?
- Lafontaine, Miriam –Miriam Lafontaine is a freelance journalist based in Montreal, Quebec. She’s also in her fifth year at Concordia University’s journalism program (she hopes to graduate one day).
- Amazon Workers Collective –The Amazon Workers Collective is a group of Canadian Amazon warehouse workers looking to organize their shops.
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- November/December 2020 –COVID-19 has been called the biggest workplace issue of our lifetimes. In our special Labour in the Pandemic issue, we talk to the workers on the frontlines of the pandemic. Inside, you'll find a roundtable with Foodora couriers, a call from Amazon workers asking for salts to help them unionize…
- Regina Municipal Election 2020: Ending homelessness –Without any city, provincial, or federal funding, Fougere’s plan to end homelessness has been an utter failure. What concrete steps can the city take to end homelessness?
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- Regina Municipal Election 2020: Public transit –People who live in Regina know it’s nearly impossible to get around town using only public transit. It’s a huge barrier to access for disabled people, youth, seniors, newcomers, and low-income earners. What should we consider when beefing up public transit?
- Regina Municipal Election 2020: Environment & Sustainability –The city walked back its 2018 motion to use 100 per cent renewable energy by 2050; but environmental sustainability has never been a more pressing local issue. Here’s how local activists are envisioning a truly renewable Regina.
- Reynolds, Joey –Joey. H. Reynolds is a community activist with grassroots groups in Regina, Treaty 4 territory. He was born and raised in Treaty 5 northern Manitoba, as a member of the Swampy Cree Tribal Council. He's lived in Regina since 2001.
- Stratton, Florence –Florence Stratton is a community activist who lives with gratitude to and in solidarity with the Original Peoples of Treaty 4 — Nehiyawak, Anisinapek, Dakota, Lakota, Nakoda — as well as with the Métis Nation whose homeland it is.