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First Nation chiefs share safety concerns amid wildfire evacuations in northwestern Ontario

First Nation chiefs share safety concerns amid wildfire evacuations in northwestern Ontario

CBC03-06-2025
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As wildfire evacuees from northwestern Ontario settle in at their accommodations in the southern part of the province, community chiefs are raising concerns about what happens next.
Wabaseemoong Independent Nations was the first community in the region to issue an evacuation notice on May 13 because of the area's largest fire, Kenora 20, which spans more than 35,000 hectares.
About 450 members of the Ojibway First Nation, located north of Kenora, are staying in Niagara Falls.
Next, Deer Lake First Nation called for a community evacuation on Wednesday due to the nearby fire Red Lake 12, which is now more than 17,900 hectares large. Nearly 900 members of the remote Oji-Cree community have been brought to Toronto.
Chief Leonard Mamakeesic said the evacuation has gone smoothly, all things considered. Community members took Dash 8 planes to Thunder Bay before being transported on larger planes to Toronto, he said.
"I try to be more on the positive side," Mamakeesic said in an interview with CBC News Monday afternoon. "To be grateful that we have hotels at the moment; there are reserves in Manitoba that are staying in gymnasiums."
Webequie First Nation declared a state of emergency on Thursday due to a wildfire known as Nipigon 5, which is more than 7,500 hectares large. Evacuees are being sent to Barrie, about a one-hour drive north of Toronto.
However, Chief Cornelius Wabasse said a shortage of aircraft due to high demands in other communities affected by wildfires delayed the remote Ojibway First Nation's evacuation.
"There is a shortage of planes and also other resources," Wabasse told CBC News in an interview Monday morning.
The first planes were expected to arrive in the community Monday and bring about 200 of the First Nation's most vulnerable down south.
CBC News has reached out to the provincial government for comment on Webequie's concerns about a shortage of planes, and is awaiting a response.
Concerns around culture shock, outside influences
While Wabasse's main goal is keeping community members safe while they wait for planes out of Webequie, Mamakeesic says his top priority is maintaining security in Toronto for the members of Deer Lake First Nation.
Fewer than 1,500 people live in Deer Lake. Like Webequie, it's only accessible by plane or winter road.
Transitioning from life in the remote north to Canada's most populous city "is a cultural shock," Mamakeesic said.
He's worried about the high traffic levels near the hotel, as well as pressures on community members to consume alcohol or drugs because they're "easier down here to get," he said.
Two years ago, Deer Lake members were evacuated to Cornwall because of wildfires. A lot of lessons were learned through that experience, Mamakeesic said, including the importance of keeping community members engaged.
"I'm trying to integrate my workers into what's already set up to make it easier. That's a big lesson I'm learning from my past evacuations," he said.
For example, while ISN Maskwa, an Indigenous emergency operations centre, is providing security services for evacuees in Toronto, Mamakeesic is trying to get his own community members to work with them, so evacuees can deal with familiar faces.
Overall, though, he's been encouraging people to make the most out of their time in Toronto while they wait for the all-clear to return home.
"I think it's going well," he said. "I always tell my council, it reflects on us to be calm and if we work collaboratively, then it filters down to our people."
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Genentech and Roche Present New Insights in Alzheimer's Disease Research Across Its Diagnostics and Pharmaceutical Portfolios at AAIC
Genentech and Roche Present New Insights in Alzheimer's Disease Research Across Its Diagnostics and Pharmaceutical Portfolios at AAIC

National Post

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Genentech and Roche Present New Insights in Alzheimer's Disease Research Across Its Diagnostics and Pharmaceutical Portfolios at AAIC

Article content – Trontinemab's Phase Ib/IIa Brainshuttle™ AD study continues to show rapid and robust clearance of amyloid plaques, with 91% becoming amyloid PET negative and ARIA-E remaining <5% – Article content – Design of the Phase III TRONTIER 1 and 2 studies of trontinemab in early symptomatic Alzheimer's disease featured, with initiation planned in 2025 – Article content Article content – Plans for new Phase III trial investigating trontinemab in preclinical Alzheimer's disease, in people at high risk of cognitive decline – Article content – New real-world data support Elecsys pTau217 as a standalone blood test, comparable to a PET scan, for rule-in and rule-out identification of amyloid pathology – Article content SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — Genentech, a member of the Roche Group (SIX: RO, ROG; OTCQX: RHHBY) announced today that new data from its Alzheimer's development portfolio is being presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC) in Toronto, Canada (July 27-30). 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Abrantes, Stella Yilmaz, Denise Sickert, Maddalena Marchesi, Jakub Wojtowicz, Andres Schneider, Ruth Croney, David Agnew, Silke Ahlers, Paul Delmar, Hanno Svoboda, Iris Wiesel Interim biomarker results for trontinemab, a novel Brainshuttle™ antibody in development for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease Featured Research Session (FRS), Talk 3 Room 718 27 July 2025, 2pm – 3:30pm EDT Gregory Klein, Gil Rabinovici, Henrik Zetterberg, Matteo Tonietto, Tobias Bittner, Daria Rukina, Fabien Alcaraz, Carsten Hofmann, Maddalena Marchesi, Jakub Wojtowicz, Ruth Croney, David Agnew, João A. Abrantes, Franziska Schaedeli Stark, Silke Ahlers, Paul Delmar, Hanno Svoboda, Iris Wiesel, Luka Kulic TRONTIER 1 and TRONTIER 2: Pivotal trials of trontinemab in early symptomatic Alzheimer's disease Featured Research Session (FRS), Talk 4 Room 718 27 July 2025, 2pm – 3:30pm EDT Janice Smith, Catherine Mummery, Jeffrey L. Cummings, Gil Rabinovici, Stephen Salloway, Reisa Sperling, Henrik Zetterberg, Angeliki Thanasopolou, Christopher Lane, Paul Delmar, Gregory Klein, Ruth Croney, Jakub Wojtowicz, Carsten Hofmann, Luka Kulic, Hideki Garren Diagnostics Evaluating the Impact on Diagnostic Performance and Healthcare Resource Utilization of Introducing a plasma rule-out test in the Alzheimer's Disease Diagnostic Pathway Poster #102729 27 July 2025, 7:30am – 4:15pm EDT Sophie Roth, Gustaf Ortsäter, Joana Amorim Freire Location tbc Evaluating the Clinical Performance of the Elecsys pTau217 Plasma Immunoassay to Detect Amyloid Pathology in a Routine Clinical Practice Cohort Poster #96679 28 July 2025, 7:30am – 4:15pm EDT Sayuri Hortsch, Niels Borlinghaus, Alexander Jethwa, David Caley, Annunziata Di Domenico, Craig Ritchie Clinical performance and effect of pre-analytical variation of plasma pTau217 alone versus the plasma pTau217/Aβ42 ratio for the identification of amyloid pathology Oral Developing Topics #108585 3-23-DEV Developing Topics on Tau Biomarkers 29 July 2025, 2:00pm – 3:30pm EDT Christopher M. Rank, Joana Amorim Freire, Alexander Jethwa, Annunziata Di Domenico, Christina Rabe, Marc Suárez-Calvet, Colin L. Masters, Tobias Bittner Accuracy of cerebrospinal fluid biomarker ratios to determine amyloid positron-emission tomography status: a diagnostic test accuracy meta-analysis Poster #100941 28 July 2025, 7:30am – 4:15pm EDT Pablo Martinez-Lage, Eino Solje, Julian G. Martins, Sraboni Sarkar Equity in diagnosis through adequate clinical trial design in diagnostic performance studies Poster #102804 30 July 2025, 7:30am – 4:15pm EDT Imke Kirste, David Caley, Clara Quijano Rubio, Margherita Carboni Investigating Differences in Patients Enrolled in a Clinical Study Based on Referral Type Poster #108110 30 July 2025, 7:30am – 4:15pm EDT Sophie Roth, Laura Schlieker, Sayuri Hortsch, Joana Amorim Freire, David Caley Article content About trontinemab Article content Trontinemab is an investigational Brainshuttle bispecific 2+1 amyloid-beta targeting monoclonal antibody specifically engineered for enhanced access to the brain to enable rapid reduction of amyloid in people with Alzheimer's disease. Trontinemab is designed for the efficient transport across the blood-brain barrier to target aggregated forms of amyloid beta and remove amyloid plaques in the brain. 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