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Wildfires spread throughout parts of Northern California, the Pacific Northwest and western Canada this week, causing evacuation orders and sending tens of thousands of firefighters to combat the blazes. Buildings burned to the ground, cities were blanketed in smoke, and hundreds of thousands of acres of land were scorched. The Park fire in Northern California has burned more than 71,400 acres and led to the arrest of a man who officials said had caused the fire. Here’s what photographers and video journalist are seeing on the ground as the blazes spread. Western Canada
Locations: Northern California, Pacific Northwest, Canada, Calgary, Alberta’s, New England, Oregon, Washington, Oregon’s, Idaho, Western Canada
The five retired men chatting outside a public library in a suburb of Edmonton, Alberta’s provincial capital, all had roots in South Asia. The group included Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims. But the group, which meets weekly at the library, was united in its late-in-life love of hockey and, in particular, the Edmonton Oilers. Three members of the group said they would be at the library on Thursday night watching the Oilers on TV play their first Stanley Cup final game at home in 18 years. (At the moment the team is down two games to zero in the best-of-seven championship series.)
Organizations: Edmonton Oilers, Oilers, TV, Stanley Locations: Edmonton, Alberta’s, South Asia, India, Pakistan
Such qualms grew more vocal after voter revulsion toward MAGA candidates cost Republicans their prophesied red wave in 2022. He had too much of an edge sometimes.” Perkins was clearly rooting for Ron DeSantis, who represented the shining hope of a post-Trump religious right. But there’s not going to be a post-Trump religious right — at least, not anytime soon. Evangelical leaders who started their alliance with Trump on a transactional basis, then grew giddy with their proximity to power, have now seen MAGA devour their movement whole. But this year, according to FiveThirtyEight’s polling average, Trump leads his nearest Republican rivals by more than 30 points.
Persons: Tim Alberta’s, Donald Trump, Robert Jeffress, First Baptist Dallas —, , Trump boosterism —, , , MAGA, Mike Evans, ” Tony Perkins, Trump, Perkins, ” Perkins, Ron DeSantis, there’s, George W, Bush, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum, Ted Cruz Organizations: Christian, First Baptist, Texas, The Washington Post, Trump, Family Research, Evangelical, Republican Locations: American, The, Alberta, Iowa
LONDON (AP) — A book about a fire that ravaged a Canadian city and has been called a portent of climate chaos won Britain’s leading nonfiction book prize on Thursday. John Vaillant’s “Fire Weather: A True Story from a Hotter World” was awarded the 50,000 pound ($62,000) Baillie Gifford Prize at a ceremony in London. Last year’s prize winner, Katherine Rundell, gave her prize money for “Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne” to a conservation charity. Historian Ruth Scurr, who was on the panel, said she did not feel “compromised” as a judge of the prize. “I have no qualms at all about being an independent judge on a book prize, and I am personally thrilled that the winner is going to draw attention to this subject,” she said.
Persons: Britain’s, John Vaillant’s, Baillie Gifford, Frederick Studemann, Vaillant, , David, , Siddhartha Mukherjee’s “, Katherine Rundell, John Donne ”, Ruth Scurr Organizations: Locations: Canadian, London, British Columbia, Fort McMurray, U.S
CNN —Variety is facing a blistering wave of backlash. “Siegel was informed by The Atlantic that the charges were completely false, but she nevertheless decided to smear Alberta. Jon Kelly, editor in chief of Puck, similarly defended his reporter, who was portrayed in the piece as a Zucker shill. Reached for comment, a Variety spokesperson notably offered a defense of the piece that contained far less fervor. The spokesperson simply said, “Variety stands by our investigative story about CNN written by one of the best journalists in the business.”
Persons: Tatiana Siegel, Jeff Zucker, Zucker, , Risa Heller, Heller, ” Heller, Chris Licht, Tim Alberta, Dylan Byers, Puck, ” Jeffrey Goldberg, “ Siegel, Siegel, ” Goldberg, Licht, , Jon Kelly, “ Dylan Byers, ” Kelly, Organizations: CNN, Variety, Hollywood, Warner Bros, The, The Atlantic, Alberta Locations: Alberta, Alberta’s
CNN staffers don’t want the organization to be known for and consumed by a never-ending soap opera starring the C-suite. With Chris Licht’s dismissal as chairman and chief executive of CNN on Wednesday morning, staffers are aiming to get back to that mission. In recent months, David Zaslav, chief executive of CNN parent Warner Bros. The piece, in which Alberta spoke to more than 100 CNN employees, called into question Licht’s ability to lead the organization moving forward. Will the next network chief be an improvement over Licht?
Persons: don’t, Chris Licht’s, Jeff Zucker, Licht, David Zaslav, Zaslav’s, David Leavy, Tim Alberta, Zaslav, , , , ” Zaslav, “ It’s, Amy Entelis, Virginia Moseley, Eric Sherling, WBD Organizations: CNN, Employees, Warner Bros, Hudson, New Locations: Alberta, New York
Alberta’s New Democratic Party (NDP) leader Rachel Notley did not tweet stating children in Alberta would have access to gender affirming surgeries without parental consent, a spokesperson for Notley said in an email to Reuters. If elected I am committed to ensuring that the kids of alberta have access to gender affirming surgeries without requiring parental consent, and that non-supportive parents who do not affirm their childs chosen gender face criminal charges. In 2015, when her party was in power, it passed a bill in 2015 amending the Alberta Human Rights Act to include protections against gender identity and gender expression discrimination (here), (142.229.235.58/), (here), (here). NDP has promised to promote LGBTQ2S+ rights in the province if elected, according to reports (here). Alberta’s NDP leader Rachel Notley did not tweet about ensuring access to gender affirming surgeries without parental consent for children in Alberta.
Persons: Alberta’s, Rachel Notley, Notley, childs, Rachel Notley’s, Read Organizations: Alberta’s New Democratic Party, NDP, Reuters, Alberta Human Locations: Alberta, alberta
The result, while a win for conservatives, is likely to be seen as a rebuff of the politics of Danielle Smith, the hard-right leader of the United Conservative Party who has been Alberta’s premier for seven months. Ms. Smith came to power after the party effectively rejected a more moderate conservative, Jason Kenney, as premier over his refusal to end pandemic restrictions and vaccine mandates. The views of Ms. Smith, a former radio talk show host and newspaper columnist who previously led another conservative party, are firmly aligned with that faction. She has declared that the unvaccinated were the “most discriminated-against group” she’d seen in her lifetime and suggested that police officers who enforced pandemic measures had committed crimes. In May, a video surfaced of her likening people who chose to be vaccinated to Germans who came to support Hitler.
The damage to oil and gas production was likely to significantly surpass current tallies, Thomas Liles, vice president of Rystad’s upstream research, said in a note. The disruptions from the fires in Canada, a major oil- and gas-producing nation, have helped push oil prices higher. Chevron said it had shut down all production at its Kaybob Duvernay oil and gas fields in central Alberta. Paramount temporarily shuttered a natural gas processing plant along with production in several gas fields, the company said in its latest update on Sunday. It isn’t the first time Canada’s oil and gas fields have been hit by fires, and the shutdowns, for now, affect a small proportion of the country’s total oil and gas output.
FILE PHOTO: Pipelines run at the McKay River Suncor oil sands in-situ operations near Fort McMurray, Alberta, September 17, 2014. REUTERS/Todd KorolPrime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government is expected to table its long-awaited workforce transition bill this spring, ahead of economic changes expected as they pursue ambitious goals to slash climate-warming emissions. The government of Alberta, Canada’s main crude-producing province, says the legislation will dismantle the oil and gas industry that makes up 5% of Canada’s GDP. The oil and gas sector employs around 185,000 workers, making the bill a hot topic in Alberta ahead a provincial election in May. Think tank Clean Energy Canada estimates there could be 200,000 clean energy jobs created by 2030.
Canada’s Global News did not publish a headline speculating potential hate speech charges for Alberta’s new premier, according to a spokesperson for the network who spoke to Reuters. Hundreds of social media users have viewed a screenshot of an Oct. 12 Global News article, written by journalist Rachel Gilmore, which carries the headline: “Danielle Smith could be charged with hate speech after claims about unvaccinated discrimination, experts say” (here and here ). But no such headline was ever written, nor published by the journalist and Global News, a spokesperson for the outlet told Reuters via email. Smith has also not been charged with hate speech. Reuters was unable to find any evidence of the headline being posted by the network.
Canadian hamlet unveils 17-foot Cheeto dust statue
  + stars: | 2022-10-09 | by ( Zoe Sottile | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +1 min
CNN —The bright orange, sticky residue that Cheetos leave on your fingertips has now been immortalized – by a 17-foot statue in Alberta, Canada. The Cheetos brand erected the statue of a hand holding a massive Cheeto, complete with orange fingertips, in Cheadle, Alberta. The community was chosen because of its name’s similarity to “cheetle,” the company’s official name for Cheeto dust, according to a news release from Cheetos. But the unique piece of art won’t stay in Cheadle forever, according to the news release. Its population is tiny: just 83 people lived there in 2021, according to Canada’s census for that year.
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