Energeticcity.ca Weekly Review: We Have Been Blocked
In this edition of the Weekly Review, we have been blocked on Facebook and Instagram. Plus, our top stories of the week.
In this edition of the Weekly Review, we have been blocked on Facebook and Instagram. Plus, our top stories of the week.
Meta has decided to remove all news from Facebook and Instagram in response to Bill C-18 including Energeticcity.ca
Two local artists have been selected for public art residencies through a partnership between the City of Fort St. John and STEPS Public Art.
Lori Archibald has been elected as the new chair of the Northern Lights College Board of Governors.
Mable Elmore, the MLA for Vancouver-Kensington, visited Fort St. John last week to speak with the Filipino community about a Provincial Filipino Cultural Centre.
A Category 1 fire, or campfire, is an open fire that burns piled material no larger than 0.5 metres high by 0.5 metres wide.
The small and medium areas of the Off-Lease Dog Park in Fort St. John will be closed next week for weed spraying.
A local woman is helping to inform residents about International Overdose Awareness Day being held in Fort St. John at the Festival Plaza at the end of the month.
After a few days of rain, the BC Wildfire Service no longer considers the Donnie Creek wildfire a wildfire of note.
A Fort St. John businessman was fined over $40,000 for dumping waste in a lagoon in Charlie Lake, while the judge also noted the shortcomings of two provincial ministries.
Nigel Wray with the Blizzard Bicycle Club bested his clubmates this past Sunday in a 7.16-kilometre race on Bear Flats hill.
The Shadow Minister of Agriculture for BC United visited Fort St. John on Friday and, along with the Peace River North MLA, spoke with local farmers about their experiences during the drought.
A local burn survivor says he had an “amazing time” at the BC Burn Camp in Squamish last month.
Wray came in first with a time of 23:25, followed by Calvin McCracken.
Archival efforts are underway by the Chetwynd Public Library Association to preserve the town’s newspaper, which sadly closed its doors in 2016 - a publication responsible for chronicling 57 years of local history.Â