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Alberta

Alberta refuses to take part in Canadian government’s gun buyback program

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

Premier Danielle Smith said the Alberta government will use its resources to help local police forces focus on ‘real’ policing such as tackling rising crime.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith doubled down in a fight against Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government, saying her province will refuse to participate in his planned gun buyback program that aims to seize the legally purchased guns of Canadian firearm owners.

“Alberta’s government will not be cooperating with this gun grab against law-abiding firearms owners,” Smith wrote in a X post on September 23.

“We expect law enforcement to focus their time and resources on real provincial policing priorities, like policing violent criminals, not hunters and sport shooters.”

Smith said her government will use its resources to help local police forces focus on “real” policing, such as tackling rising crime.

Alberta Justice Minister Mickey Amery and Public Safety Minister Mike Ellis in a joint statement said the Carney Liberals’ gun buyback program is nothing more than a “confiscation scheme.”

“The Liberal government should end this program, which will waste over $700 million and counting and directly attacks firearms owners, and instead prioritize measures that will actually keep Canadians safe,” reads a portion of the statement.

Smith earlier called out the Liberals’ planned gun buyback, promising to fight its implementation in Alberta.

The Canadian government’s controversial gun grab Bill C-21, which bans many types of guns, including handguns, and mandates a buyback program, became law on December 14, 2023, after senators voted 60- 24 in favor of the bill.

In May 2023, Bill C-21 passed in the House of Commons. After initially denying that the bill would impact hunters, former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau eventually admitted that C-21 would indeed ban certain types of hunting rifles.

Late last year, the Trudeau government extended the amnesty deadline for legal gun owners until October 30, 2025. It should be noted that this is around the same time a federal election will take place.

When it comes to gun-related deaths in Canada, as reported by LifeSiteNews, Statistics Canada data shows that most violent gun crimes in the country last year were not committed at the hands of legal gun owners but by those who obtained the weapons illegally.

Alberta

$150 a week from the Province to help families with students 12 and under if teachers go on strike next week

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Alberta’s government will be providing financial assistance and educational resources to support parents and students in the event of a teacher strike.

Eligible parents or guardians would receive $30 per day, or $150 per week, per student for the duration of the ATA’s labour action. The first payment will be made on Oct. 31.

More information about the application process will be available shortly. To get ready, parents can set up an Alberta.ca verified account at alberta.ca/alberta-ca-account.

Alberta teachers have rejected a four-year deal, putting the ATA in a position to strike by Oct. 6, leaving countless families uncertain about what happens next.

As a teacher strike becomes more likely, Alberta’s government has developed a responsible plan to support kids and keep them learning while paying parents back for unexpected education expenses in the event of a strike.

This plan includes a new payment program to directly support parents experiencing financial strains because of the strike. An online learning toolkit following the grades K-12 curriculum has also been developed to support students with at-home learning.

“I’m disappointed that ATA members have rejected the settlement, choosing instead to go on strike. Students and families need to know we will support them during this time of uncertainty, so we are releasing our plan today to provide payments directly to families and to support at-home student learning.“

Danielle Smith, Premier

“Our goal is to keep our kids in the classroom. Our government is ready, willing and able to head back to the bargaining table at any time.”

Nate Horner, President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance

With 80,000 new students joining our education system in the last two years alone, Alberta needs this investment now, more than ever. That’s why Alberta’s government invested $8.6 billion to build and renovate more than 130 schools. This is more than any provincial government has invested in the history of the province.

The government is aware the ATA may still choose to go forward with their plan to strike. In the event of a strike, Alberta’s government has a balanced plan to support students and parents through this challenging time.

Payment program

To help ease the extra costs families may face while children are away from their desks during labour action, Alberta’s government is introducing a new payment program for parents. This program would be available to parents and guardians of students aged 12 and under who attend a public, separate or francophone school and are affected by teacher strikes.

Eligible parents or guardians would receive $30 per day, or $150 per week, per student for the duration of the ATA’s labour action. The first payment will be made on Oct. 31.

The payments would support families while students are unable to attend school to help offset additional costs like childcare, educational supports such as tutoring, or other activities to keep students engaged.

More information about the application process will be available shortly. To get ready, parents can set up an Alberta.ca verified account at alberta.ca/alberta-ca-account.

Learning supports

To give families flexibility during a potential labour disruption, Alberta Education and Childcare created a free toolkit for parents to support their child’s learning in the event that schools are closed.

The toolkit provides resources that follow the grades K-12 curriculum. The resources are available in English, French and French immersion and focus on the core subjects of language arts, social studies, math and sciences. These resources will be updated weekly.

“We understand that the possibility of a teacher strike brings uncertainty and concerns for families. That’s why Alberta’s government is supporting families with practical tools and resources to help maintain their child’s learning if schools are closed. This parent toolkit offers flexibility, choice, and curriculum-aligned materials to empower families, ease the pressure they’re facing and keep students engaged.”

Demetrios Nicolaides, Minister of Education and Childcare

Classroom complexity funding

Throughout bargaining, teachers have advocated for more support to deal with the issue of increasing classroom complexity. Despite the teachers voting to reject this deal, Alberta’s government remains committed to help address increasing classroom complexity head on and will be allocating $100 million per year over three years. These funds will hire 1,500 net new education assistants. To further address classroom complexity, the remaining funds may be used to hire up to 725 more education assistants, or used to complete autism, mental health, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, or speech-language pathology assessments for students.

Alberta’s government has a strong, responsible plan to keep students learning. No matter what the union decides, government will remain unwavering in our commitment to stand with families.

Key facts:

  • The offer rejected by ATA members would have made Alberta teachers the highest paid in Western Canada after provincial taxes.
    • It would have provided a general wage increase of 12 per cent over the four-year term, as well as a wage grid unification which would have provided more than 95 per cent of teachers even larger wage increases up to 17 per cent.
  • It would have provided tremendous investments in classroom supports to help alleviate population growth and classroom complexity pressures with the hiring of 3,000 new teachers in public, separate and francophone classrooms.

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Alberta

Orthodox church burns to the ground in another suspected arson in Alberta

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

Two suspects are in custody after All Saints Ukrainian Orthodox Church was destroyed last weekend in Bellis, Alberta.

Yet another historic Canadian Christian church has been reduced to ashes after being set ablaze. 

Members of the Smoky Lake Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said two suspects, both indigenous, have been arrested in connection with a fire that destroyed All Saints Ukrainian Orthodox Church last weekend.

According to Sgt. Anita Doktor, detachment commander of the Smoky Lake RCMP, said police and the community are saddened to see a nearly century-old cultural building destroyed in such a manner.”

“We believe in preserving our history, no matter our beliefs, and want to highlight the fact that this is not something that should take place within our communities. We thank the surrounding detachments and specialized RCMP units for assisting in this investigation,” Doktor said. 

Fire investigators believe that an accelerant was used to burn down the church in Bellis, Alberta. An investigation showed that stolen items in the cars linked the suspects to the church arson.

Initially, the RCMP were alerted to reports of both attempted and completed thefts from a vehicle. After some investigation, a police chase ensued, during which the suspects drove erratically to try to evade capture.

A stolen car was involved in the chase, while another suspect in another vehicle tried to flee as well, with some of the suspects fleeing on foot.

Eventually, the RCMP, with the help of dogs and drones, was able to locate and arrest two of the three suspects, one of whom is a youth. One suspect is still at large.

The suspects that were arrested are Sandy Dawn Marie White, 23, and Lazare Favel, 26, who both reside on the Saddle Lake First Nations.

One of the suspects, Favel, is still in jail waiting for a court date, with the other, White, already released on bail.

RCMP have asked anyone with information on the arson to call the Smoky Lake detachment or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477, or online at www.P3Tips.com.

In 2021 and 2022, the mainstream media ran with inflammatory and dubious claims that hundreds of children were buried and disregarded by Catholic priests and nuns who ran some Canadian residential schools. The reality is, after four years, there have been no mass graves discovered at residential schools. 

However, as the claims went unfounded, since the spring of 2021, over 120 churches, most of them Catholic, many of them on indigenous lands that serve the local population, have beenburned to the ground, vandalized, or defiled in Canada.

In October 2024, retired Manitoba judge Brian Giesbrecht said Canadians are being “deliberately deceived by their own government” after blasting the now former federal government of Justin Trudeau for “actively pursuing” a policy that blames the Catholic Church for the unfounded “deaths and secret burials” of Indigenous children.

Residential schools, while run by both the Catholic Church and other Christian churches, were mandated and set up by the federal government. They were in operation from the late 19th century until the last school closed in 1996.

While some children did tragically die at the once-mandatory boarding schools, evidence has revealed that many of the children passed away as a result of unsanitary conditions due to underfunding by the federal government, not the Catholic Church.

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