A New Brunswick Clothing Brand For Beers And Bonfires
Adam Brown celebrates the one-year anniversary of Beers and Bonfires Apparel, a Moncton-based clothing brand dedicated to those passionate about the outdoor way of life.
Adam Brown celebrates the one-year anniversary of Beers and Bonfires Apparel, a Moncton-based clothing brand dedicated to those passionate about the outdoor way of life.
The NDP are pushing for permanent rent control and more cost-friendly homes in Nova Scotia, while the Liberals and Progressive Conservatives oppose a permanent cap on rent increases.
Judith Meinert and Ralph Thomas were born and raised in Saint John’s surrounding areas and spent most of their careers working in Saint John until retirement. They have been together for 18 years and have lived uptown even longer.
If you ask them, they’ll tell you they have no plans of leaving any time soon.
Vaccinated American tourists were allowed to visit Canada again as of August 9. But Halifax tourism operators haven’t seen many customers from south of the border yet.
Port Saint John Cruise Development Manager, Natalie Allaby says they are very excited about the ban being lifted and are working with Transport Canada on the finalization of what Canadian protocols will be for the country’s cruise ports.
This week, both the provincial and federal Liberal parties made announcements about vaccine passports.
Dr. Shawn Harmon, research associate with the IWK Health Centre and part-time faculty at Dalhousie’s School of Law, says it’s tough to assess how effective, legal, or ethical those vaccine passports would be because neither has given much detail about their plan.
Shannon McLaughlin is putting her marketing and PR training to work in promoting the opening of her online baby and toddler clothing boutique, Fox + Cove.
Home sales in Greater Saint John continue to shatter new monthly records, according to the local real estate board.
General Manager for White Point Beach Resort Dylan Meisner says that after seeing staff struggle throughout the pandemic, it was time for a change.
Average assessment rates will drop from 2021’s rate of $2.17 per $100 of assessable payroll to $1.69 in 2022.