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Halifax Golden Globes The surprise winners, the dresses and what Ricky said metroLIFE Your essential daily news | MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 2016 High 10°C/Low 5°C Wet and windy ‘A debate coming’ MUNICIPALITY City Hall in November. Fire station “We’ve got a real debate com- ing up on Tuesday regarding staffi ng back this,” said Deputy Mayor Matt Whitman on Sunday. before council “I’m not convinced by the chief’s proposal and suggestion Zane that there would not be an im- Woodford pact surrounding the stations.” Metro | Halifax The report includes an option to continue to staff Stations 4 UP IN THE The contentious debate over staff- and 13 with career firefighters, ing at some of the municipal- but to adopt three-person crews, ity’s fire stations will be back rather than the four required to before Halifax regional council respond to a fire alone. AIRWAVES this week. Whitman sees a third option: A report before council ap- Spending the extra money re- proved by Halifax Fire Chief Doug quired to hire enough firefight- Trussler recommends converting ers to fully staff all the stations, Station 4 on Lady Hammond even if that means raising taxes. Road and Station 13 on King Stations 4 and 13 are in Coun. French radio station Street to e-platoon — mean- Jennifer Watts’ and Coun. Gloria ing they’d be staffed by career McCluskey’s districts, respect- facing uncertain future firefighters during the day and ively. Neither could be reached volunteers at night — and con- for comment Sunday afternoon. metroNEWS verting Station 11 on Patton Road to volunteer only. Columnist Stephen Council deferred the mo- Kimber’s take on the David Kantro, president of 98,5 CKRH Radio Metro, is asking for help to save the station. JEFF HARPER/METRO tion after a heated debate at debate metroVIEWS (cid:100)(cid:396)(cid:258)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:381)(cid:3)(cid:282)(cid:286)(cid:367)(cid:349)(cid:448)(cid:286)(cid:396)(cid:3)(cid:400)(cid:346)(cid:381)(cid:396)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:282)(cid:3)(cid:367)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:336)(cid:882)(cid:410)(cid:286)(cid:396)(cid:373)(cid:3)(cid:272)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:381)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:381)(cid:400)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:374)(cid:286)(cid:286)(cid:282)(cid:856) Become a (cid:18)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:415)(cid:374)(cid:437)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:336)(cid:3)(cid:18)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:4)(cid:400)(cid:400)(cid:349)(cid:400)(cid:410)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:410)(cid:3)for Ask home care, long-term care and hospitals. (cid:62)(cid:286)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:271)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:4)(cid:62)(cid:62)(cid:3)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:396)(cid:3)(cid:87)(cid:396)(cid:381)(cid:336)(cid:396)(cid:258)(cid:373)(cid:400)(cid:842) (cid:258)(cid:271)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:396) (cid:100)(cid:346)(cid:349)(cid:400)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:400)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:3)(cid:336)(cid:396)(cid:381)(cid:449)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:336)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:282)(cid:437)(cid:400)(cid:410)(cid:396)(cid:455)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:258)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:381)(cid:299)(cid:286)(cid:396)(cid:400)(cid:3) (cid:4)(cid:425)(cid:286)(cid:374)(cid:282)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:47)(cid:374)(cid:296)(cid:381)(cid:3)(cid:94)(cid:286)(cid:400)(cid:400)(cid:349)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:286) T(cid:104)(cid:47)T(cid:47)ON (cid:327)(cid:286)(cid:454)(cid:349)(cid:271)(cid:367)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:346)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:396)(cid:400)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:282)(cid:3)(cid:272)(cid:381)(cid:373)(cid:393)(cid:286)(cid:415)(cid:415)(cid:448)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:393)(cid:258)(cid:455)(cid:856) (cid:18)(cid:381)(cid:373)(cid:373)(cid:437)(cid:374)(cid:349)(cid:410)(cid:455)(cid:3)(cid:90)(cid:381)(cid:381)(cid:373)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:94)(cid:381)(cid:271)(cid:286)(cid:455)(cid:400)(cid:3)(cid:882)(cid:3) PLEDGE (cid:4)(cid:393)(cid:393)(cid:367)(cid:455)(cid:3)(cid:374)(cid:381)(cid:449)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:381)(cid:3)(cid:400)(cid:410)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:68)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:272)(cid:346)(cid:842) (cid:38)(cid:258)(cid:367)(cid:367)(cid:3)(cid:90)(cid:349)(cid:448)(cid:286)(cid:396)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:58)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:1005)(cid:1007)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:1008)(cid:882)(cid:1010)(cid:393)(cid:373) (cid:40)(cid:74)(cid:91)(cid:86)(cid:89)(cid:3)(cid:87)(cid:86)(cid:89)(cid:91)(cid:89)(cid:72)(cid:96)(cid:72)(cid:83)(cid:90)(cid:21) (cid:18)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:415)(cid:374)(cid:437)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:336)(cid:3)(cid:18)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:4)(cid:400)(cid:400)(cid:349)(cid:400)(cid:410)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:410) (cid:400)(cid:437)(cid:272)(cid:272)(cid:286)(cid:400)(cid:400)(cid:272)(cid:381)(cid:367)(cid:367)(cid:286)(cid:336)(cid:286)(cid:856)(cid:272)(cid:258)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:1013)(cid:1004)(cid:1006)(cid:856)(cid:1012)(cid:1010)(cid:1009)(cid:856)(cid:1012)(cid:1006)(cid:1012)(cid:1007) (cid:87)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:258)(cid:367)(cid:286)(cid:336)(cid:258)(cid:367) GOSSIP 11 Your essential daily news Sean Penn faces criticism over interview with Mexican drug kingpin ‘El Chapo.’ World ROBBERY Used clothing deal takes violent turn Halifax police are looking for She was taken to hospital by a man and a woman after a ambulance with non-life threat- violent robbery Saturday night ening injuries. on Herring Cove Road. Police searched the area with Police say a 41-year-old man a K9 unit, but came up empty- and a 33-year-old woman were handed. meeting another man and Police say they are looking woman in the 300 block of for a man between the ages of Herring Cove Road at about 30 and 40 with dark hair, wear- 10:25 p.m. to sell some clothes. ing a dark hat, a white bandana At some point during the and faded jeans, and a thin sale, the 33-year-old woman woman about five-foot-four was punched and the suspects with dark hair in a ponytail. fled the area with the clothes. METRO BEDFORD Driver hospitalized Authorities continue investigating a wooded area of Dartmouth on Sunday, where a woman’s body was found on Saturday in single-car crash afternoon. JEFF HARPER/METRO Police probing death A crane was called to lift a coming lanes of traffic. It went car out of water following a off the road down over an em- single motor vehicle accident bankment, flipped and lodged in Bedford Saturday afternoon. itself in a brook near 39 Dart- Halifax Regional Police re- mouth Road. in Dartmouth woods sponded to a report about the Police believe the female incident around 1:50 p.m. driver may have had a med- Police say the car was driv- ical issue prior to the collision. ing down Dartmouth road in She was taken to the hospital Bedford and swerved across by ambulance for assessment. the centre line and into on- METRO INVESTIGATION for “quite some time,” police Staff Sgt. Barb Saunders on The deceased said Sunday. Sunday. Saunders said police LAST SNOWFALL A man out for a walk in were awaiting autopsy results CRIME had been there a wooded area near the 200 from the medical examiner’s The region hasn’t seen for ‘quite some block of Pleasant Street stum- office before determining significant snowfall since Raymond Peters murder Street after getting into a bled upon the body at about whether the death was suspi- Dec. 29, according to En- investigation continues fight with several men on time’: Officials 3:30 Saturday afternoon and cious, and before releasing the vironment Canada’s his- Police are continuing to Jan. 7 around 5:20 p.m., ac- called police. age and gender of the deceased. torical weather data. investigate the murder of cording to a Halifax Region- Forensic identification units She said the autopsy would Raymond Peters, three years al Police release. Zane were on the scene Saturday not be conducted on Sunday, after the man was shot in a The suspect, who ran Woodford evening and Sunday collecting but couldn’t say exactly when time or date for that.” Dartmouth backyard. away, was described as a Metro | Halifax evidence. it would be taking place. Saunders said police be- Peters, 24, was shot mul- black man in his twenties, “It got dark quite quickly “That’s in the hands of the lieved the body had been there tiple times in the backyard about 5’8”, with a medium A body found over the week- (Saturday night), and so they medical examiners for their for “quite some time,” based on of a home on Primrose build. METRO end in a wooded area in wanted to go over the scene scheduling,” she said. the fact that it was “partially Dartmouth had been there again during daylight,” said “I really don’t have a specific under the snow.” UPCOMING WORKSHOPS INCLUDE: Women’s Employment Outreach Career Decision Making (5 sessions) February 3, 10, 17, 24, & March 2 Providing Exceptional Service to Women for Over 35 Years Confidence Building (3 sessions) February 9, 16, & 23 Essential Skills for Today’s Workplace (4 sessions) Through individual counselling and employment related March 1, 3, 8, & 10 workshops, we help women in HRM to research & Job Search Working Sessions January 26, 28, February 2, & 4 discover new career paths; prepare for employment; Personality Dimensions and search for jobs. ALL SERVICES ARE FREE! February 26 Portfolio Development January 18, February 1, 8, 22, 29, Funded through the Canada-Nova Scotia Labour Market Development Agreement under the March 7, 21, April 4, 11, & 18 direction of Employment Nova Scotia, and sponsored by Women’s Employment and Advocacy Society We are here to help. Let our staff assist you! | 1888 Brunswick St | Suite 807 | Halifax | 902-422-8023 | Mon-Fri 8:30-4:30 | womensemploymentoutreach.org 4 Monday, January 11, 2016 Halifax Ready, $50,000 set, grow Amount the 2015 Manuary Halifax movement raised for the cause. MANUARY people don’t recognize that Campaign head and neck cancer real- ly exist and what that really puts a face means,” Hart said. “It is a growing cancer which to head and is one of the few that is increas- neck cancer ing in incidents and it is affect- ing younger patients and more women.” Yvette Hart said the main reason d’Entremont head and neck cancers are on Metro | Halifax the rise is an increase in hu- man papilloma virus (HPV) in- Until Friday he had only ever fections. shaved his own face, but Dr. “The incidents of oral pharyn- Robert Hart was happy to go geal cancer in particular (are) under the blade for a cause related to a latent infection in that hit close to home. human papilloma virus and The head and neck oncologist that may affect somebody 10, at the QEII Health Sciences Cen- 20 or 30 years after they’ve been tre submitted to a close shave at infected,” he said. Sailor Bup’s Barbershop to help So what do you need to kick off Manuary, a month-long know? beard-growing awareness and Hart said if you have a sore fundraising campaign for head area in your mouth, tongue, and neck cancer. tonsil area or throat that doesn’t As he watched Bill Bean, get better after three or four president and CEO of the QEII weeks, see your doctor. If you Foundation, getting his face have neck swelling, especially shaved with a straight razor, in the lateral part of your neck, Hart seemed relaxed about his that also warrants a visit. turn in barber Robyn Ingra- Manuary participants get ham’s chair. beard sponsors and let their “They look like they are bet- facial hair grow throughout ter with a knife with me so the month of January. Individ- it should be excellent,” Hart uals and teams can register and joked. donors can give to the cause at The Manuary campaign raises manuary.ca/go/halifax. money to support head and If you can’t grow a beard, par- neck cancer patients under- ticipate virtually by uploading going treatment and also helps your photo to manuary.me. fund head and neck cancer re- Sailor Bup’s is also donating $1 search at the QEII. from every shave this month to Head and neck oncologist Dr. Robert Hart gets a close shave by Sailor Bup’s barber Robyn Ingraham on Friday to kick off “It is a relatively unrecog- head and neck cancer patients Manuary 2016. The annual beard-growing event raises funds for head and neck cancer. YVETTE D’ENTREMONT/METRO nized entity. I think a lot of at the QEII. NOW OPEN! RCMP Pawsitive change for police dog After six years on the force, MENTION THIS AD AND one Mountie is heading off for Get AIR MILES®† a retirement full of relaxing The only thing in Cape Breton — and maybe Reward Miles some games of fetch. Arik really dislikes on your next Arik, a Nova Scotia RCMP is getting out of bed police service dog from the Pennzoil® Bible Hill area, is retiring after in the middle of the hundreds of hours spent track- night, so now he oil change ing, searching and catching will be able to sleep suspects at all hours, accord- (cid:4)(cid:5)(cid:14)(cid:14)(cid:5)(cid:11)(cid:16)(cid:18)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:13)(cid:13)(cid:14)(cid:12)(cid:17)(cid:8)(cid:7)(cid:1)(cid:19)(cid:1)(cid:3)(cid:12)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:13)(cid:13)(cid:12)(cid:9)(cid:11)(cid:16)(cid:10)(cid:8)(cid:11)(cid:16)(cid:1)(cid:3)(cid:8)(cid:6)(cid:8)(cid:15)(cid:15)(cid:5)(cid:14)(cid:18) ing to a police release. all he wants. The seven-year-old German Cpl. Al Hamilton, Halifax Airport | 85 Selfridge Way, Goffs | 902-873-2231 shepherd is heading to Cape Arik’s handler Breton where he will spend Arik the police dog RCMP Dartmouth Crossing | 30 Kiltearn Row | 902-481-7152 lots of time hiking with his new adoptive family, the re- “He never had a bad day. British Columbia to meet his Jiffy Lube and the Jiffy Lube design mark are registered trademarks of Jiffy Lube International, Inc. Used under license. Jiffy lease said. As soon as we arrived to any sixth canine partner and bring lube service centres are independently owned and operated ®Jiffy Lube International, Inc. All rights reserved. ®/™ Trademark of Pennzoil-Quaker State Company. Used under license. ®Shell Canada Products 2015. All rights reserved. For Cpl. Al Hamilton, Arik’s scene, day or night, he was him back to Nova Scotia. ®™ Trademarks of Air Miles® International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and Shell Canada Products. handler, it’s a bittersweet mo- always ready to give 100 per The release said Hamilton ment saying goodbye to a loyal cent,” Hamilton said in the and Arik can keep in touch, partner who helped him re- release. since a member of Arik’s new spond to 176 calls in 2015 As Arik settles into retire- family is also a Mountie. alone. ment, Hamilton is headed to HALEY RYAN/METRO Halifax Monday, January 11, 2016 5 COMMUNITY Ethiopian famine spurs Halifax student’s fundraiser Rebecca Dingwell For Metro | Halifax When Amina Abawajy read about the drought and re- sulting famine in Ethiopia, she wanted to do something about it. “There was no awareness about this issue,” Abawajy said Saturday. According to the United Na- tions, Ethiopia is currently ex- periencing its worst drought Amina Abawajy is raising awareness about the ongoing food in decades. crisis in her parents’ homeland. REBECCA DINGWELL/FOR METRO With the support of her David Kantro, president of 98.5 CKRH Radio Metro, works the station controls Sunday at the family, Abawajy started a Go- the face until you see it first want to bring attention to, studio. CKRH is the only French community radio station in Halifax. JEFF HARPER/METRO FundMe page called Not 15 hand,” said Abawajy. but we want it to be through Million in October. Abawajy has visited Ethiopia displays of culture. Tuning in to “This campaign started with twice, with her most recent “Just the amount of divers- the goal of doing something visit being last February. ity in one country is incred- before the number (of people “Even though it wasn’t a ible and we’re very excited to requiring food aid) reaches 15 famine … there was still so showcase that.” million,” she explained. little,” she said. “To know that The goal of the fundrais- Most recently, it’s been esti- was the norm, and to know er is to raise $15,000, which, a big problem mated 10.2 million people are right now they’re struggling Abawajy explained, will pro- in need of food aid, according even below that level, I guess vide emergency relief to 50 to the Government of Ethiopia. that personal connection is families for a month. Abawajy is a Dalhousie Uni- what really drew me to this.” Tha t money will be split versity student who was born On Saturday, the Not 15 Mil- between the three Ethiopian and raised in Halifax, but both lion campaign is putting on regions most affected by the of her parents are from Ethi- a fundraising dinner at Dal- famine. Abawajy has reached RADIO to survive.” cember to deal with some of opia. Abawajy’s mother, Sueda housie. There will be all-you- out to grassroots organizations Financial woes On air since October 2007, the Revenue Canada debt and Ali, said she is proud of the can-eat Ethiopian food, as well in those areas, and Not 15 Mil- Kantro said the radio station now have a repayment plan in work her daughter is doing. as cultural and traditional per- lion has partnered with them could force was born out of a need for an place. But funds are still needed “(Amina is) doing something formances. to help people get the food independent local voice dedicat- to cover operating costs. for her mother and father’s “We really don’t want the they need. French station ed to sharing news, events and “The business model we had country,” said Ali. “I just feel image of Ethiopia to always be “We feel this is the best off the air information of specific interest before obviously wasn’t work- very happy and I wish every- of famine,” said Abawajy. “This way to move forward in em- to Francophones of varied cul- ing and that’s one of the rea- thing will be successfully ac- is the situation we’re dealing powering local communities tures living in the Halifax area. sons why we got into so much complished.” with right now and what we to take action.” Yvette It also serves as a training debt,” he said. “Now we need The campaign has spread d’Entremont tool for French-speaking univer- to start from scratch and bring the word through social media It really feels incredible … we are Metro | Halifax sity students and those from the new people on board and hire and small fundraisers. They’ve already seeing the results and region’s Francophone schools. people in order to bring in more raised almost $2,000 online Halifax’s only French-language The station currently has no revenue.” from people across Canada. the fruits of our labour. community radio station is executive director but board The station is on air 24/7, but “We’re really privileged here Amina Abawajy struggling to pay its bills and members are working with two Kantro said its current small and it doesn’t really hit you in more community support is established non-profit Franco- stable of volunteers and board needed to keep it on the air. phone organizations to find members alone can’t sustain That’s the message board solutions. Kantro said they re- it without more Francophone “A new career would members are trying to relay ceived a few substantial indi- community involvement. He in light of a financial crisis vidual donations in early De- said many in the broader com- (cid:410)(cid:381)(cid:410)(cid:258)(cid:367)(cid:367)(cid:455)(cid:3)(cid:272)(cid:346)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:336)(cid:286)(cid:3)(cid:373)(cid:455)(cid:3)(cid:367)(cid:349)(cid:296)(cid:286)(cid:856)(cid:863) that has CKRH 98.5 FM owing munity are unaware the prob- $60,000 to Revenue Canada. lem exists. The station has also launched 12,000 “We wanted to let them a GoFundMe campaign to raise know that the radio is at the (cid:100)(cid:396)(cid:258)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:296)(cid:381)(cid:396)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:3)(cid:272)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:286)(cid:286)(cid:396)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:75)(cid:312)(cid:272)(cid:286) $20,000 to help cover operating point now where if they don’t costs for the next year. give or they don’t act or they (cid:4)(cid:282)(cid:373)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:349)(cid:400)(cid:410)(cid:396)(cid:258)(cid:415)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:1005)(cid:1007)(cid:3)(cid:373)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:400)(cid:856) “So far we have had good According to the non-profit, don’t do anything, the radio will success to keep the radio on Dartmouth-based Conseil end up closing,” Kantro said. Communautaire du Grand- APPLY NOW TO the air, but without (more) Havre, 12,000 Halifax-area “That will be really unfortu- volunteers and without dona- residents consider French nate for the French community START IN MARCH! tions this radio (station) won’t their first language and here in Halifax because we may make it,” said CKRH FM’s board about 45,000 speak and not even be able to reopen a president David Kantro. understand it. French community radio again “Long term, we won’t be able if we lose our licence.” (cid:62)(cid:286)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:271)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:4)(cid:62)(cid:62)(cid:3)(cid:381)(cid:437)(cid:396) (cid:87)(cid:396)(cid:381)(cid:336)(cid:396)(cid:258)(cid:373)(cid:400)(cid:842)(cid:3)(cid:4)(cid:425)(cid:286)(cid:374)(cid:282)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:374) (cid:47)(cid:374)(cid:296)(cid:381)(cid:3)(cid:94)(cid:286)(cid:400)(cid:400)(cid:349)(cid:381)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:258)(cid:410)(cid:3)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:286) WEATHER Nasty storms bound for Maritimes (cid:18)(cid:381)(cid:373)(cid:373)(cid:437)(cid:374)(cid:349)(cid:410)(cid:455)(cid:3)(cid:90)(cid:381)(cid:381)(cid:373)(cid:3)(cid:349)(cid:374) (cid:94)(cid:381)(cid:271)(cid:286)(cid:455)(cid:400)(cid:3)(cid:882)(cid:3)(cid:38)(cid:258)(cid:367)(cid:367)(cid:3)(cid:90)(cid:349)(cid:448)(cid:286)(cid:396) (cid:58)(cid:258)(cid:374)(cid:3)(cid:1005)(cid:1007)(cid:410)(cid:346)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:1008)(cid:882)(cid:1010)(cid:393)(cid:373) Environment Canada has warned winds to New Brunswick, Nova areas. Since 1899 of a couple of nasty weather sys- Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Environment Canada says an- tems affecting the Maritimes. It said significant rainfall was other system will likely bring The national weather fore- expected on Sunday evening, heavy rain, snow and strong caster said a mild air mass would with temperatures dropping on winds to Atlantic Canada during (cid:1013)(cid:1004)(cid:1006)(cid:882)(cid:1008)(cid:1010)(cid:1007)(cid:882)(cid:1010)(cid:1011)(cid:1004)(cid:1004)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:3)(cid:373)(cid:258)(cid:396)(cid:349)(cid:415)(cid:373)(cid:286)(cid:271)(cid:437)(cid:400)(cid:349)(cid:374)(cid:286)(cid:400)(cid:400)(cid:272)(cid:381)(cid:367)(cid:367)(cid:286)(cid:336)(cid:286)(cid:856)(cid:272)(cid:381)(cid:373) reach the region on Sunday, Monday, which could make for the middle of the week. bringing heavy rain and strong icy driving conditions in some THE CANADIAN PRESS 6 Monday, January 11, 2016 Halifax Military data uncovered AIR TRAVEL Flight sent back to SECURITY ly unusual.” Protocols imple- Stanfield Sensitive info mented in 2008 require hard drives to be destroyed once discovered on they are no longer operational. An Air Canada plane made an “I’ve not heard of something emergency landing at Stanfield recycled drive like this happening before,” said International Airport on Friday Thompson on Saturday. “The evening. A 30-gigabyte hard drive found Department of National De- Air Canada said the pilot of at a recycling depot that a Hali- fence policy dictates that once Flight 623 reported an “acrid fax man says contains personal hard drives are life-cycled out odour” shortly after takeoff information — including the of operation, they are removed from Halifax and returned as names and numbers of defence from Canadian Armed Forces a pre- personnel — has been taken by networks and sorted prior to caution. 66 the military. destruction.” Initial Pete Stevens, who works in Stevens said the files on the reports the electronics industry, said hard drive appear to be from s u g - he found the hard drive about the years 1999 to 2005. gested Number of a year ago at a recycling depot He said he used basic soft- smoke passengers and, after running recovery ware to recover the files and in the aboard Embraer 190, which had software, suspected it previ- predicts he got about half the cock- been bound for ously belonged to the military. information on the hard drive. pit, but Toronto. He said he recently decided He said recovering personal in- an Air to sift through the hundreds of formation from discarded hard Canada files after hearing about security drives is not uncommon, but he spokesman said that was not breaches at the military’s East was surprised and concerned in the case. Coast intelligence centre and this case because of the nature The Embraer 190 regional jet Canadian Forces Base Halifax. of the information. was bound for Toronto with 66 Stevens said he recovered Vehicles enter Canadian Forces Base Halifax in fall 2014. ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS THE CANADIAN PRESS passengers on board. about 10 gigabytes of data from Air Canada said the plane the 30-gigabyte hard drive, in- “If that was me, I wouldn’t Stevens said military officials landed normally and there cluding 6,000 photos, spread- want somebody like me having retrieved the hard drive Friday. Obviously you don’t normally were no injuries reported. sheets with the names and that information,” Stevens said Military spokesman Maj. Mar- come across things like this. I Passengers were expected to numbers of military person- in a phone interview on Satur- tell Thompson said investiga- be put on a later flight. was definitely surprised to see nel and their families and com- day. “I don’t think we want to tors are assessing the nature The aircraft was to be in- pleted applications for security see any of our people serving of the data on the hard drive. what I saw. Pete Stevens spected to determine the cause clearance. in uniform exposed like that.” He said the incident is “high- of the odour. THE CANADIAN PRESS lnp2ai0ovy1w7e i. .†nSBatot 1oa-k8r a5t 5ifrn-e3eg0 1c -oa2nt0s 2u$0lt 4oart9 i$loa00Dns/i koemwyde.nc*omPa$0yments 0Interest% #lasiklife †Subject to credit approval. Only applicable towards a Custom LASIK/Custom All Laser procedures (including Laser PresbyVision) for both eyes completed by December 31st 2015. Cannot be combined with any other offer or discount. Offer subject to change without prior notice.*Prices are subject to change without prior notice and vary based on prescription strength. Standard LASIK starting at $490 per eye and Custom LASIK at $1,750/eye. Other conditions may apply. Canada Monday, January 11, 2016 7 ‘This isn’t who we are’ VANCOUVER Syrian refugees into our com- PM, McCallum munities,” Palmer said, adding that police were looking for slam pepper- the man. “I condemn the attack on spray attack on Syrian refugees in Vancouver,” Syrian refugees Trudeau wrote on Twitter. A high-profile member of Canada’s Syrian community said Matt the pepper spraying was likely a one-off event and doesn’t re- Kieltyka flect how the majority of Can- Metro | Vancouver adians view the newly arrived migrants. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Tima Kurdi — the aunt of was one of many Canadian pub- three-year-old Alan Kurdi, who lic figures who denounced a drowned while fleeing civil pepper-spray attack on Syrian strife in Syria — says the sup- Flames from a wildfire near Oliver, B.C., A crew battles a blaze in the La Ronge An air tanker drops fire retardant on a refugees in Vancouver at the port Canadians have shown to in August last year. area on northern Saskatchewan in July. hillside in West Kelowna, B.C. in July. weekend. refugees is “unbelievable” and JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS CONTRIBUTED/THE CANADIAN PRESS JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS The police they shouldn’t be called it a “hate- blamed for Friday PARKS motivated crime,” night’s incident. Wildfires drain firefighting reserves and Canadians Canadian people “To be honest, joined in con- Canadian people would not do this, demning the at- would not do tack. It happened the majority this, the majority Wildfires scorched a record into a reserve to be used in longer fire season, which will as about 100 of them. of them,” Kurdi amount of Canada’s national $14 million busy seasons. result in more ignitions and people — includ- said. “They are parks last year — the latest in a Lightning strikes on tinder- larger fires. Climate change is ing several newly Tima Kurdi big supporters number of long, hot summers dry forests made 2015 the third likely to increase our fire load arrived refugees to the refugees.” that have almost entirely de- big fire year in a row. Firefight- across Canada.” — congregated outside Van- Canada’s Immigration Min- pleted Parks Canada’s firefight- The cost of services last ing cost $14 million last sum- Parks Canada also set a re- summer. Parks Canada couver’s Muslim Association of ister John McCallum described ing reserve. mer and the reserve is pretty cord for prescribed burns in reserves about $8 million a Canada Centre after a welcome it as an “isolated incident” that “We had a very busy fire year to fight fires. much depleted, Weir said. 2015 — fires set and controlled ceremony on Friday night. won’t tarnish the country’s mi- year,” said director of fire man- If it becomes necessary, the by staff to duplicate a forest’s Vancouver Police Department grant-friendly reputation. agement Jeff Weir. “We had money would probably come natural cycle of burn and re- Chief Adam Palmer said an un- “This isn’t who we are — and more wildfires than normal scribed fires was 3,000 square from funds earmarked for juvenation. The agency set 28 identified male person riding doesn’t reflect the warm wel- and those fires burned larger kilometres. other ecological restoration such fires in 12 national parks, by on a bicycle approached the come Canadians have offered.” areas than normal.” Most of the damage in 2015 projects, Weir suggested. from Waterton Lakes in south- group and pepper-sprayed them. Vancouver Mayor Gregor Rob- The agency’s annual fire re- occurred in a single park. Fire Climate scientists have pre- western Alberta to Louisbourg Fifteen people were treated for ertson said the incident “was a port recorded 122 wildfires licked through 3,700 square dicted that busier fire seasons in Nova Scotia. exposure to pepper spray. disgusting display of hate — and in 2015 that burned through kilometres of Wood Buffalo on will be one consequence of Prescribed burns help re- “It’s a very troubling situa- Vancouver won’t stand for it.” 4,600 square kilometres — sev- the boundary between Alberta global warming and that will store a forest’s natural mix of tion and the actions of one man Canada has committed to ac- en times the area of the city of and the Northwest Territories. affect the parks, Weir said. plant species and ages, which have shed a negative light on cepting 25,000 refugees from Toronto. The yearly average is Parks Canada reserves about “If climate change is going to also helps keep normal popu- a lot of the positive work that Syria by the end of February. 82, and, in 2014, the amount of $8 million a year to fight fires. result in longer and drier sum- lations of animals in the park. has been done to welcome the WITH FILES FROM THE CANADIAN PRESS park land burned in non-pre- Any money not spent is rolled mers … we’re going to have a THE CANADIAN PRESS IN BRIEF UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Library gets Stalin New anti-nuke effort Canada plans to kick-start daughter’s letters a long-stalled internation- al effort aimed at rid- ding the world of the key Luke was young, members of her ingredients needed for family were disappeared, her nuclear weapons. Can- Simcoe first lover was sent to Siberia, ada’s United Nations am- Metro | Toronto and the list just goes on.” bassador to Geneva will Written towards the end spearhead the creation of A new collection arriving at of Alliluyeva’s life, the letters a Fissile Material Cut-off the University of Toronto li- were sent to British artist Mary Treaty or FMCT. brary reveals what it was like Burkett. The two women in- THE CANADIAN PRESS to grow up — quite literally itially discussed art, but quickly Limited Seating. Call Today to Enroll. — under one of the 20th cen- developed a deeper friendship. Line 9 heads for top court tury’s most famous dictators. “She seemed to feel a bond The Chippewas of the The Thomas Fisher Rare with Mary from the start and Thames First Nation is (cid:18)(cid:23)(cid:33)(cid:31)(cid:28)(cid:23)(cid:41)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:16)(cid:27)(cid:24)(cid:37)(cid:39)(cid:23)(cid:37)(cid:42)(cid:1)(cid:8)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:15)(cid:40)(cid:27)(cid:35)(cid:31)(cid:35)(cid:29) Book Library has just acquired she told her quite a bit about taking its fight against En- (cid:14)(cid:23)(cid:37)(cid:38)(cid:34)(cid:36)(cid:39)(cid:38)(cid:30)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:19)(cid:23)(cid:35)(cid:39)(cid:23)(cid:37)(cid:42)(cid:1)(cid:7)(cid:8)(cid:37)(cid:26)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:22)(cid:27)(cid:27)(cid:32)(cid:27)(cid:35)(cid:26) a collection of letters written her personal life and what it bridge Inc., the National by Svetlana Alliluyeva, the only was like growing up with her Energy Board and the At- (cid:13)(cid:27)(cid:26)(cid:28)(cid:36)(cid:37)(cid:26)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:19)(cid:23)(cid:35)(cid:39)(cid:23)(cid:37)(cid:42)(cid:1)(cid:6)(cid:11)(cid:38)(cid:30)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:22)(cid:27)(cid:27)(cid:32)(cid:27)(cid:35)(cid:26) daughter of former Soviet lead- father,” Dondertman said. torney General of Canada (cid:17)(cid:14)(cid:20)(cid:1)(cid:15)(cid:41)(cid:31)(cid:38)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:19)(cid:23)(cid:35)(cid:39)(cid:23)(cid:37)(cid:42)(cid:1)(cid:7)(cid:8)(cid:37)(cid:26)(cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:1)(cid:21)(cid:23)(cid:38)(cid:39)(cid:37)(cid:26)(cid:23)(cid:42) er Josef Stalin. The correspondence was put over the controversial Line “Can you imagine having up for auction after Burkett’s 9 pipeline — which runs Stalin as your father?” said the death, and secured by author between Sarnia, Ont., and (cid:12)(cid:5)(cid:7)(cid:3)(cid:9)(cid:7)(cid:10)(cid:3)(cid:6)(cid:8)(cid:7)(cid:7)(cid:1)(cid:43)(cid:1)(cid:42)d.com/Halifax library’s director, Anne Don- Rosemary Sullivan, whose re- Montreal — to the Su- dertman. “She had an amazing cent book, Stalin’s Daughter, preme Court of Canada. New Classroom in Bedford Place Mall and difficult life. Her mother is an intensely researched ac- THE CANADIAN PRESS committed suicide when she count of Alliluyeva’s life. 8 Monday, January 11, 2016 World GERMANY Cologne attacks must be investigated: Minister German authorities need to prepared.” quickly determine whether a The attacks are still being string of New Year’s Eve sex- investigated, but police have ual assaults and robberies in said their focus is on suspects of Cologne blamed largely on for- primarily North African origin, eigners may be linked to similar which has put pressure on Chan- offences in other cities, the jus- cellor Angela Merkel’s govern- tice minister said in comments ment and its open-door policy published Sunday. to asylum seekers. Nearly 1.1 Authorities and witnesses say million migrants arrived in Ger- the attackers were among about many in 2015 alone. 1,000 people, mostly men, gath- She announced a proposal ered at Cologne’s central train Saturday that would make it station, some of whom broke off easier to deport migrants who into small groups that groped commit crimes, which still and robbed women. needs parliamentary approval. “If such a horde gathers in Cologne police said Sunday order to commit crimes, that that 516 criminal complaints appears in some form to be had now been filed with them planned,” Justice Minister Heiko in connection to the New Year’s Maas told the newspaper Bild. attacks, about 40 per cent of “Nobody can tell me that which involve allegations of sex- this was not co-ordinated or ual offences. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman reads La Jornada newspaper in Mexico City on Sunday which shows a picture of drug lord Joaquin Guzman, aka “El Chapo,” right, shaking hands with actor Sean Penn. Authorities hope to question Penn about his interview. AFP/GETTY IMAGES Penn interview left trail to drug lord Police use pepper spray to control protesters of the New Year’s Eve sex attacks on Saturday in Cologne, Germany. MEXICO Penn wrote of elaborate secur- Describing the capture, Attor- SASCHA SCHUERMANN/GETTY Authorities ity precautions, but also said that ney General Arely Gomez said CRITICISM as he flew to Mexico on Oct. 2 that investigators had been aided IN BRIEF raided hideout for the meeting: “I see no spy- in locating Guzman by docu- Sean Penn’s days after chat ing eyes, but I assume they are mented contacts between his interview there.” He was apparently right. lawyers and “actors and produ- with Guz- France’s president, U.S. Islam advocacy group A Mexican federal law enforce- cers” interested in making a film man has dignitaries honour victims seeks apology from Trump Mexican officials say Sean Penn’s ment official, speaking on condi- about him. Two months after that prompted of extremist attacks in Paris An advocacy group is seek- contacts with drug lord Joaquin tion of anonymity, said the Penn close call, marines finally caught criticism France’s President Francois ing an apology from Repub- (El Chapo) Guzman helped them interview led authorities to Guz- him in a residential neighbour- through- Hollande and other dignitar- lican presidential candidate track the fugitive down — even man in the area of Tamazula, a hood of Los Mochis, where they’d out the U.S. GETTY IMAGES ies held a special ceremony Donald Trump after a Mus- if he slipped away from an initial rural part of Durango state. been monitoring a suspected and led some Sunday to honour all those lim woman standing in silent raid on the hideout where the They raided Guzman’s remote safe house. social media satirists to killed in Islamic extrem- protest at one of his rallies actor met him. hideout a few days after the inter- Penn wrote that Guzman was wonder whether the actor ist violence around Paris was heckled and escorted Penn’s article on Guzman was view and narrowly missed captur- interested in having a movie will hold other interviews in 2015 — a year when the out. CAIR National Execu- published late Saturday by Roll- ing Guzman, whose July escape filmed on his life and wanted with leaders of terror or- European way of life was tar- tive Director Nihad Awad ing Stone magazine, a day after from Mexico’s top security prison Mexican actress Kate del Cas- ganizations, such as the Is- geted time and again with said Saturday afternoon Mexican marines captured the — through a 1.5-kilometre tun- tillo, who had portrayed a drug lamic State of Iraq and the deadly consequences. she hadn’t received any re- world’s most wanted kingpin in nel — had embarrassed President trafficker in a television series, Levant (ISIL) and al-Qaida. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS sponse. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a raid on the city of Los Mochis Enrique Pena Nieto and made involved in the project. METRO near the Gulf of California. his capture a national priority. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MIDDLE EAST Afghan forces thinned out by ‘ghost’ soldiers Afghan forces are struggling to Atal, head of Helmand’s provin- per cent of registered forces to comment on ghost security man the front lines against a re- cial council. “It’s because some don’t exist, and says the lack forces. Interior Ministry spokes- surgent Taliban, in part because people are getting paid a sal- of manpower has helped the man Sediq Sediqqi acknowledged of untold numbers of “ghost” ary but not doing the Taliban seize 65 per the problem and said an inves- troops who are paid salaries but job because they are cent of the province tigation has been launched, the only exist on paper. related to someone 40% — Afghanistan’s lar- results of which should be made The nationwide problem has important, like a lo- gest — and threaten public in about a month. been particularly severe in the cal warlord.” the provincial capital, “No one knows the exact num- southern Helmand province, In some cases, the Lashkar Gah. Those bers of the Afghan National De- where the Taliban have seized “ghost” designation is It’s estimated men who do serve fence Forces,” an Afghan official that 40 per cent vast tracts of territory in the 12 more literal — dead face even greater said on condition of anonymity of registered months since the U.S. and NATO soldiers and police re- Afghani soldiers danger because of the because he was not authorized to formally ended their combat main on the books, don’t exist. no-shows. In the last brief media on the topic. He said mission and switched to train- with senior police or three months alone, the best internal estimates put ing and support. army officials pock- some 700 police of- the number at around 120,000, “At checkpoints where 20 sol- eting their salaries without re- ficers have been killed and 500 less than a third of what’s needed diers should be present, there placing them, Atal said. wounded, he said. to secure the country. are only eight or 10,” said Karim He estimates that some 40 The Defence Ministry declined THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Your essential daily news Monday, January 11, 2016 R OSEMARY WESTWOOD: ROSIE ON ROSIE It could be our turn The CBC announced Rosemary to rescue firefighters Barton’s appointment as the — from budget cuts official new host of Power & Politics last week, which should HALIFAX MATTERS proposal to staff two of the urban stations with full-tim- Stephen ers during the day and volun- come as no surprise to anyone who Kimber teers nights and weekends, and turn the Sackville station witnessed her famous dressing into an all-volunteer service. On Tuesday, Halifax Regional The trade-off: moving 40 down of former immigration Council will once again pon- firefighters to areas he says der the question: How many need them more, and al- firefighters does it take to lowing aerial trucks in Dart- minister Chris Alexander. make our city safe? mouth and Halifax to each What kind, and in what be fully staffed. combinations? Permanent? The complications: The Forceful, yet affable. Sharp, quick to laugh. On-air, though, training ground as a reporter better, for sure. If it had been Volunteer? fire service hasn’t been able but not cutting. Rosemary she aims to be tough. “There for the CBC at the National a 30-day campaign, I’m not Where should firefighters to recruit enough volunteers Barton holds court nightly is an understanding that we Assembly in Quebec City, at sure I would have been able to and their equipment be lo- to fill the slots now available, with politicians from across all have jobs to do. You can a time of high tension over get where I needed to go.” cated? And — perhaps most and volunteers traditionally the country as the official new be frustrated or angry or mad sovereignty issues. She cites Peter Mansbrige importantly — how much take longer to get to fires. host of Power & Politics. at someone if they’re being “I not only fell in love with among the reporters she ad- are we willing to pay for More generally, but as sig- The CBC announced the ap- too tough on you one day, but politics, but I also felt in love mires. From Don Newman, what we say we need? nificantly, we have developed pointment last week, which that is how democracy works. with that kind of reporting,” former Power & Politics host, The answers matter, pot- understandable distrust of should come as no surprise I’ve had people pout after an she says. “Because I was a she learned the art of being a entially in a life-and-death public officials and corporate to anyone who witnessed her interview, but I’ve never had young woman, working in gentleman “while being dif- way. But there is no simple spokespeople who tell us we famous dressing down of ficult.” From Susan Bonner, yes-or-no answer to any of can do better with less when Chris Alexander over the Syr- a mentor figure who filled in them. the opposite is usually true. ian refugee crisis in Septem- for Newman, she found sup- Is it about what fire Chief Which may explain why ber. Or perhaps to anyone port as a woman in politics. Doug Trussler calls “reallo- more than 175 people who’s watched her captain Amid the extended honey- cating resources to better showed up at a Dartmouth the show since. moon for Trudeau’s Liberals, match our risk,” or is it, as community meeting last Her appointment lends Barton — an admittedly deep Dartmouth Coun. Gloria Mc- week to vent their oppos- stability to a program thrown cynic — now finds herself in Cluskey would have it, about ition to the idea. The chief, into disarray after former the odd position of getting having a fire service that whose plan it was, was not host Evan Solomon’s public flak from the audience for be- makes citizens “feel safe”? invited. Which is too bad. downfall over revelations he ing too hard on the govern- Last spring, council- The issues are multi- took a cut from art deals with ment. lors instinctively said no to dimensional — urbanization, some of the show’s guests. “The amount of ripping I Trussler’s “best professional expanding suburbs, national And it puts her in the position get on Twitter when I say to advice,” and refused to shut- response time standards, of earning the public’s trust John McCallum, ‘Hey, you ter three urban fire stations changing technology, evolv- when many high-profile jour- broke your promise on the — in north-end Halifax, ing data collection, economic nalists are viewed with skepti- refugees, huh?’ (They’re) not downtown Dartmouth and trade-offs — and the dis- cism for cosying up too closely welcome, those questions, Sackville — and four rural cussion needs to be multi- to the powerful people they’re HONEYMOON’S OVER The CBC’s Rosemary Barton told from lot of Canadians who ones he claimed were redun- dimensional too. Are council- meant to scrutinize. Rosemary Westwood that her tough questions are upsetting want to see this government dant and whose residents lors up to that challenge? We “You have some sort of re- people who want to see Trudeau succeed. TORSTAR NEWS SERVICE succeed, and who are all could be better served from shall see Tuesday. lationship with them,” Barton about the sunny ways.” neighbouring stations. tells me over Skype from the anyone say, ‘Well I’m never her second language (French), A pause. At the time, Trussler said Stephen Kimber is a pro- CBC’s Ottawa bureau. “You coming back on the show be- having to try and get English “I don’t really care,” she council’s “No” vote would fessor of journalism at the have to keep that relationship, cause it was too hard.’” clips from people, I had to says with a short laugh. “At force him to hire 59 new fire- University of King’s College it has to be respectful, but at Born in Winnipeg in 1976, be pretty aggressive. People some point over the next four fighters and cost the city an in Halifax and an award- the same time you have to go Barton didn’t grow up with working at the National As- years, a promise will be bent additional $6 million. winning writer, editor and toe-to-toe with them, because dreams of political reporting. sembly are some of the top or broken and the govern- In November, he returned broadcaster. Halifax matters otherwise you’re not going to A professor put her up for a political reporters in the coun- ment will disappoint people, with a new, slightly modified runs every Monday. get the answers you need.” job as a chase producer for a try. You had to be really ballsy, and it’s important people Throughout our conversa- program on ICI RDI, the CBC’s for lack of a better word, and I know that they say one thing PHILOSOPHER CAT tion, Barton is friendly, chatty, French news network, while learned a lot.” and they’re doing something by Jason Logan she was studying French liter- Barton moved to Ottawa, else.” You can be ature at College Universitaire and by the time crisis hit Most especially, she fore- Your essential daily news de Saint-Boniface. That led to Power & Politics, she was the sees trouble with the Liberals’ frustrated or a master’s degree in journal- regular Friday host and fill-in budget promises. STAJRo MhEnD ICA rGuROicUkPs PhRaESnIDkE NT angry or mad at ism from Carleton, by which for Solomon. In June, after he I tell her I want to end on VICE PRESIDE NT & EDITOR someone if they’re point she was hooked on TV was fired, Barton took over a topic close to my heart: Cathrin B radbury reporting. as interim host. In August, whether she goes by Rosie or VICE PRESIDENT & GROUP PUBLISHER being too tough “I like the power of TV, and Stephen Harper called the Rosemary (her Twitter handle METRO EASTERN CANADA Greg Lutes obnu yt othua ot nise h doawy, If okrn aolwl s oitr’tss p ooft erenatsiaolnlys ,w baunt iint’gs fseodmeera flo erl eitcst iroenco. Brde mleonagnthed, t bhye soatyhse ro nane dth oinn-ga,i rh, egru beisots a ann-d MANPAhGiIlNipG CED rIToOuRc HhAeLrIFAX immediate. It’s the, you know, campaign proved crucial for colleagues call her both). As it democracy works. news is breaking, and you run Barton’s chops as host. turns out, either one is fine. ADVERTISER INQUIRIES [email protected] Rosemary Barton in front of a camera and tell “Both the length of the “To my friends I’m Rosie, General phone 902-444-4444 the story.” campaign and the intensity of and I guess I have a lot of She found a pivotal political that campaign helped me get friends now,” she says. FREE TO SHARE Pwhwilwos.mopyhmeert croats tnoorwe. acta Reg and Jean knew how they wanted to retire. Karin knew how to make it happen. Reg and Jean, TD Customers Karin, TD Advisor Our know-how can help you save more. Reg and Jean spoke with Karin, their TD advisor, about their retirement plans. With her help, they were able to save more and achieve their goals. Now it’s your turn. Meet with an advisor today to save more and help reach your goals sooner. See their story at td.com/savemore ® The TD logo and other trade-marks are the property of The Toronto-Dominion Bank.

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