Dust season is here

Plus Canfor cuts to result in much fewer job losses than projected and a pro wrestling school for the city. Read to the end for a bird.

Wondering if spring is here? Well, the dust advisories are back, which is as sure a sign as any. So, go ahead, start preparing.

The challenges of accessing addictions treatment in northern B.C.

We’re becoming a hydrogen truck hub

Eight different local companies have entered into agreements with Hydra to retrofit their truck fleets with a hydrogen-diesel engines,” reports the Prince George Post. This is low-key one of the more interesting stories in the city as the company aims to become the largest hydrogen-refuelling station in the world as 2023 shapes up to the be the year of hydrogen nation-wide.

Just thought you should know.

Two events worth checking out tonight

At UNBC (or via Zoom), anthropologist Elliott M. Rechardt is giving a talk titled “The forest will be beautiful again: Experiences of industrialized logging in Northern British Columbia”:

I focus my analysis on participants who have lived and worked for decades in post-industrial forests, either through trapping, ranching, or logging.

My participants encouraged me to imagine and cherish the future forests that would eventually regrow, the wood products from the fallen trees, and the economic benefits to the region.

These narratives valued extraction even as they would express sadness, anger, and grief over lost trees, species, and ways of life in asides.

These stories served to valorize extraction and minimize their own discomfort even as they moved through old clear-cuts. I

conclude my talk with a reflection on “extractive imaginaries” and their relationship to the cultures of extraction that anthropologists have described and observed elsewhere.

It runs from 5 to 7, after which you can head down to the Omineca Arts Centre to catch Naomi Shore of Fort St. John, and one of my personal favs, as she releases a new album.

Quick news:

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