Media Coverage
Little Harbour Resident Concerned about Community
Information MorningCBC RadioJuly 28, 2021 Little Harbour resident Beverley Isaacs shares her concerns about a developer snapping up properties in the area Listen
Information MorningCBC RadioJuly 28, 2021 Little Harbour resident Beverley Isaacs shares her concerns about a developer snapping up properties in the area Listen
“So many people want to be an active part of this cause. Oftentimes people join a Facebook group, and that’s kind of the end of it. When it comes to Owls Head, joining the Facebook group is just the beginning. We make sure that the information is accessible, but also that there are opportunities for people to volunteer. We make sure that people are able to have a voice. And that’s something that people really crave,” says Lee.
(more…)“My position is that everything pauses until we figure that out. If Rankin has committed the province to something we will need to understand that,” wrote PC Leader Tim Houston.
(more…)The controversial question of what will happen to Owl’s Head remains unanswered, and a drastic shift in the province’s forestry practices remains underway.
(more…)The 38-year old Rankin may be the closest thing to a Green Premier Nova Scotians have seen to date, but he could also be hobbled by his support for the proposed Goldboro natural gas plant (which now seems aborted) and by some past decisions he made during his stint as Environment* minister, when he allowed the Owl’s Head provincial park to be de-listed as a protected place and open for business as a golf course development on the Eastern Shore (Did you know he has a diploma in golf club management?).
(more…)The Chronicle Herald spoke to people out and about in Halifax about the issues that they care about the most. Here’s what they had to say.
… Environment
For Philip Church, who is from Hantsport and currently lives in a van with no fixed address, saving the environment — and Owls Head Provincial Park specifically from being developed into golf courses and residential properties — is most important.“What’s wrong with the status quo? Why do we always have to be taking more land away from animals and wildlife? I think we’re good where we are,” said Church, 42.
(more…)(more…)“This is a species in trouble… There’s been a 70 per cent decline in this population globally, and the population is continuing to head in the wrong direction”
Chris Miller, Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (Nova Scotia Chapter)
Dr. Jeremy Lundholm, Caitlin Porter, and their team have conducted years of research on coastal barrens across the province, including Owls Head Provincial Park.
Nature Nova Scotia
“Nature Talks” Series
Featuring Dr. Jeremy Lundholm
Watch the video at https://youtu.be/MKMOLSkL5S0
(more…)