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Edmonton's Belle Canto Choir wins international competition
Edmonton's Belle Canto Choir wins international competition

Global News

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Global News

Edmonton's Belle Canto Choir wins international competition

Edmonton's Belle Canto Choir is back home — fresh off a trip to sing at the 2025 International Choir Competition in France. 'We were very excited to go to Provence and to spend some time on the Mediterranean was a thrill for all of us,' Cantilon Choir Program founding artistic director, Heather Johnson said. Over the span of its 30 year history – the choir has been part of many international competitions and tours, but never in the south of France. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'We were hopeful we could hold our own in the competition — we didn't really know. It's been a long time since we've done an international competition,' Johnson said. Out of 22 choirs, theirs was the only one there from North America. Belle Canto competed in four categories and won them all. Story continues below advertisement 'It was very exciting to hear our name announced as the winners — not only one time, but actually a few times over,' choir member Heather Friedenthal said. Because they came in first place in all of their categories, they were asked to compete in the Grand Prix finale where they came out on top as well. 'It was just so exciting to be rewarded – for some of us especially who have been doing this for a very long time,' Friedenthal said. The community choir is made up of about 30 members, thrilled to finally win together on an international stage. 'It was the tour of a lifetime,' Johnson said.

Tributes pour in for Chatteris hedgehog charity founder
Tributes pour in for Chatteris hedgehog charity founder

BBC News

time22-06-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Tributes pour in for Chatteris hedgehog charity founder

Tributes have been paid to a much-loved Cambridgeshire hedgehog rescue charity founder, who has died aged Johnson opened Heather's Hedgehog Hostel at her home in Chatteris in 2014 and was recognised in her community for her tireless work caring for the Johnson, who had also worked as a teacher, died on 17 June in hospital. Her website posted: "Heather was, and will continue to be, a huge inspiration to us all." Hundreds of tributes were posted on social Gibb de Swarte, from Littleport, said: "Heather's Hedgehog Hostel legacy will live on forever. I for one will dearly miss Heather who truly was and will always be an inspiration to us all."Another user posted: "Such sad news. I only met Heather once last year when I took a poorly hedgehog to her but I was so inspired by her and immediately took to her. She was so lovely and totally dedicated to helping the hedgehogs."A third tribute read: "I was lucky enough to meet Heather last year when she collected a hedgehog I had found. She was a remarkable human being and the world is a sadder place without her."Heathers Hedgehog Hostel said in a statement: "Heather's life was dedicated to her two passions - supporting children and rescuing animals, describing this herself as 'nothing else I'd rather do, and nowhere else I'd rather be'." Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

'Significant milestone': New $28-million indoor soccer dome officially opens
'Significant milestone': New $28-million indoor soccer dome officially opens

Calgary Herald

time30-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Calgary Herald

'Significant milestone': New $28-million indoor soccer dome officially opens

Calgary's soccer community is celebrating the opening of a much-needed indoor facility, which officials hope will alleviate a growing field deficit during the winter months. Article content Article content With both youth and adult teams practicing in the background, officials from the city and local soccer organizations scored their first goals Friday at the Calgary Soccer Centre's new air-supported dome. Rather than cut a ceremonial ribbon, dignitaries kicked soccer balls into an empty net to officially mark the facility's opening. Article content Article content The $28-million dome in Foothills Industrial Park, which includes a full-size artificial turf soccer pitch, will be open for public bookings starting Saturday. Article content Article content The project also included parking lot upgrades in the northwest corner of the property, which the city said will reduce water pooling. Additional parking lot renovations will be completed this summer, adding more than 100 parking spaces. Article content The new soccer 'bubble' is the sixth field house in Calgary, according to Heather Johnson, the city's director of recreation and social programs. She said the venue represents 'much-needed' growth in the city's inventory of indoor sport facilities. Article content Article content 'We know (soccer) is one of the largest sports in the city and is rapidly growing. We also know Calgary is a winter city and we need indoor places to practise and play in the winter season.' Article content Johnson noted the bubble replaces what was previously an underutilized grass pitch, and said the new field is expected to generate three times as many bookable hours. Article content Article content It's the first field house to open since city council's approval in February of GamePLAN, a 25-year, $250-million-a-year strategy to more adequately fund recreational services and sport facilities until 2050. Article content The long-term plan sets a service standard of having 13 indoor field houses by 2050. That would satisfy GamePLAN's target of increasing bookable hours at indoor fields by 2.5 times and meeting a standard of having one indoor field house for every 150,000 residents.

Ingenium and Veolia North America Forge Partnership to Secure Hazardous Waste Treatment Capacity For Industrial Growth
Ingenium and Veolia North America Forge Partnership to Secure Hazardous Waste Treatment Capacity For Industrial Growth

Business Wire

time15-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Wire

Ingenium and Veolia North America Forge Partnership to Secure Hazardous Waste Treatment Capacity For Industrial Growth

BOSTON & ESCONDIDO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Ingenium and Veolia North America announced a strategic partnership providing guaranteed access to Veolia's new high-temperature treatment facility in Gum Springs, Arkansas. Opening in 2025, this state-of-the-art facility will address the growing industry demand for waste treatment capacity. The agreement also ensures Ingenium access to guaranteed capacity at Veolia's existing thermal, landfill and fuel blending facilities in the US. Share The agreement also ensures Ingenium access to guaranteed capacity at Veolia's existing thermal, landfill and fuel blending facilities in the US. Veolia's facility at Gum Springs will set a new industry standard for the safe, efficient and reliable treatment of waste materials, and the agreement with Ingenium – which comes months before the facility opens – will help both companies meet the needs of the market. The agreement takes effect immediately. As part of Veolia's Green Up strategy, and in alignment with both companies' sustainability goals, Veolia's new facility will employ advanced operational and power generation technology, including waste heat recovery and on-site solar power generation to reduce environmental impact. 'This strategic partnership with Veolia North America is a significant step forward for Ingenium and our commitment to providing sustainable waste management solutions. Securing guaranteed access to Veolia's state-of-the-art facilities, particularly the new Gum Springs location, ensures we can meet the demand for hazardous waste treatment while upholding our dedication to innovation and integrity,' said Heather Johnson, Chief Executive Officer, Ingenium. 'This partnership between Veolia North America and Ingenium is yet another example of environmental leaders collaborating to maximize the limited thermal treatment capacity in the US for the benefit of our nation's growing industrial base. Ingenium's strong presence in the western US makes them a key strategic partner and we look forward to working together,' said Bob Cappadona, President and Chief Executive Officer of Veolia North America's Environmental Solutions and Services business. 'This collaboration is also fully aligned with Veolia's GreenUp strategic plan, in which the management of hazardous waste is seen as a critical enabler of U.S. reindustrialization—by providing essential infrastructure to support sustainable industrial growth while advancing environmental stewardship.' ABOUT VEOLIA NORTH AMERICA A subsidiary of Veolia group, Veolia North America (VNA) is the top-ranked environmental company in the United States for three consecutive years, and the country's largest private water operator and technology provider as well as hazardous waste and pollution treatment leader. It offers a full spectrum of water, waste, and energy management services, including water and wastewater treatment, commercial and hazardous waste collection and disposal, energy consulting and resource recovery. VNA helps commercial, industrial, healthcare, higher education, and municipality customers throughout North America. Headquartered in Boston, Mass., Veolia North America has more than 10,000 employees working at more than 350 locations across the continent. ABOUT VEOLIA GROUP Veolia group aims to become the benchmark company for ecological transformation. Present on five continents with 215,000 employees, the Group designs and deploys useful, practical solutions for the management of water, waste and energy that are contributing to a radical turnaround of the current situation. Through its three complementary activities, Veolia helps to develop access to resources, to preserve available resources and to renew them. In 2024, the Veolia group provided 111 million inhabitants with drinking water and 98 million with sanitation, produced 42 million megawatt hours of energy and treated 65 million tonnes of waste. Veolia Environnement (Paris Euronext: VIE) achieved consolidated revenue of 44.7 billion euros in 2024. ABOUT INGENIUM Founded in 2006 and based in Escondido, California, Ingenium is the leading provider of sustainable waste management solutions and is known for its innovation, accountability and uncompromising integrity. We provide a broad range of waste management services specializing in packaging, transportation, recycling and disposal of hazardous, non-hazardous, biological, universal and radioactive waste. Our management established Ingenium with the dual goal of offering sustainable recycling methods to an otherwise traditional hazardous waste environment along with a commitment to be a trusted partner to our clients.

Calgary council approves recreation facility strategy that could cost up to $6B over 25 years
Calgary council approves recreation facility strategy that could cost up to $6B over 25 years

CBC

time26-02-2025

  • Sport
  • CBC

Calgary council approves recreation facility strategy that could cost up to $6B over 25 years

Calgary city council approved a recreation facility strategy on Tuesday that could cost the city between $200 million and $250 million a year — or up to $6 billion over 25 years. City administration will now develop an implementation plan that includes a funding strategy to ensure the cost burden doesn't solely rely on municipal taxes. Recommendations for the city's "Gameplan" were unanimously approved by Calgary's community development committee earlier this month. In a news release Tuesday, the city called the approval a "significant step forward in reimagining Calgary's public recreation system." The city says Gameplan addresses widespread underinvestment in public recreation, Calgary's aging recreation facilities, rising operational costs and the city's growing population. Most of Calgary's public recreation facilities are more than 35 years old. Over the past five years, several city facilities have either closed or operated at or near capacity, the city says. Many were built before the 1990s and are nearing the end of their life cycles. "Today's decision by council is a commitment to improving quality of life for all Calgarians," Ward 3 Coun. Jasmine Mian said in a city news release. "We will not only catch up from years of underinvestment, but we will also ensure our public recreation system remains sustainable, inclusive and effective for the next 25 years and beyond." Heather Johnson, director of recreation and social programs for the City of Calgary, said in a release the approval of Gameplan sets the service level standard for public recreation in the city. "It's a service standard that says, 'We want every child to learn how to swim, we want every kid to play the sport they love, we want newcomers to have spaces to join in community and we want seniors to feel connected,'" she said. Under Gameplan, the city will increase the availability of swimming lessons by 40 per cent (per capita), bookable hours at ice sheets by 25 per cent, more than double bookable hours at indoor fields, and ensure that 86 per cent of Calgarians live within five kilometres of an aquatic facility. The plan includes consistent funding for 67 outdoor and indoor ice rinks, 13 field houses, 89 athletic park fields and 26 aquatic facilities — including 296 swim lanes and 25 leisure pools.

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