Winds Of Change
We can’t avoid the reality that fossil fuels are still very much part of our daily lives. We also can’t escape the consequences.
We can’t avoid the reality that fossil fuels are still very much part of our daily lives. We also can’t escape the consequences.
Atlantic Canadians are rightly worried about not receiving some protection from the effects of the rising costs of living.
As Russia wages war on Ukraine, and people like N.B. entrepreneur Oksana Posatska worry for the safety and security of their family members back home.
We all recognize there is a much more diverse range of food options in our communities. “I always tell people here that we teach culture, I just happen to serve food,” says Naz Ali of Caribbean Flavas in Fredericton.
COVID-19 hasn’t hit Mark Leger very hard yet, but he says that shouldn’t make him less cautious, less concerned about the continued spread of the virus.
If Mark Leger thinks policymakers are lifting restrictions in response to someone answering a pollster’s survey questions, or a protestor holding a sign and screaming on a street corner, he’s not going into grocery stores or restaurants unmasked or comfortably returning to the office.
On the latest episode of the “Home Office” podcast, the serial entrepreneur from Saint John chats with Mark Leger about her career in business and the fintech company that now employs more than 30 people and has more than 3,000 financial advisors using its platform.
A trucker on the road. A journalist covering a rally. Both are frontline workers who deserve our respect and our protection for the essential work they do.
Framing growth as a competition between communities is dispiriting and counterproductive. We need to talk about growth in a way that doesn’t make people feel bad if their city isn’t keeping pace with others.
Huddle editor Mark Leger shares insights from his top “Home Office” podcast interviews with innovators and entrepreneurs over the last year.