The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/08/30 at 22:00 EDT
Episode Date: August 31, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/08/30 at 22:00 EDT...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We are gathered here today to celebrate life's big milestones.
Do you promise to stand together through home purchases, auto upgrades, and surprise dents and dings?
We do.
To embrace life's big moments for any adorable co-drivers down the road.
We do.
Then with the caring support of Desjardin insurance, I pronounce you covered for home, auto, and flexible life insurance.
For life's big milestones, get insurance that's really big on care at Dejardin.com slash care.
from cbc news the world this hour i'm neil kumar first it was the prairies then was atlantic canada now wildfires are leading to evacuation orders in the north
the small community of wati northwest territories is almost empty as flames threaten the community juanita taylor has the latest
smoky smelly you can breathe josephine bishop describes the conditions in wati before fleeing the community
Big huge fire. It's scary.
Bishop was on one of three busloads of evacuees, driven 163 kilometers to Benchocon,
where a temporary evacuation center was set up with cots, water, towels, and food.
A stopover for those en route to Yellowknife because the city needed time to prepare.
Fire officials say the wildfire is about 8 kilometers from Wattie.
They've been keeping a close watch since it started burning one month ago.
This is the first evacuation.
order in the territory this summer.
Fire officials say it is unusually late in the year,
with the fire season not being over yet.
Juanita Taylor, CBC News, Yellowknife.
Solar power has come to Canada's northernmost communities
thanks to a company base in this country's most southern city.
But as T.J. Deere tells us there are limits as to how much power can be supplied.
Power in Nunavut largely comes from diesel fuel.
Depending on where the community is, sea lift deliveries may only have
happen once a year, but a company from Windsor, Ontario is working to lower the territory's
reliance on diesel. Green Sun Rising has installed solar panels in four communities in Nunavut's
High Arctic. It was made possible through a program run by the Kulik Energy Corporation, known as
QEC, which is the territory's power supplier. One of the four communities in Nunavut
where panels are now installed is the northernmost in the country, Greece Fjord. But the Hamlet
says QEC limits how much power can be used. David General is Greece Fjord's senior administrative
officer. He says it's disappointing that they can't take full advantage of their system.
A lot of money was invested by the feds in the system, but also we invested a lot of time and
every project takes administrative work. T.J. Deere, CBC News, Akhaloui. Many Canadian farmers
have been contending with drought and smoky skies. Now, farmers in central Manitoba are contending
with too much rain. There he saw 100 millimeters of rain overnight on August 20th into the 21st.
Pools of water more than a foot deep are swallowing up rows of crops on Carl Stewart's farm near Poplar Point.
He says he's delayed harvesting by about a week at a time when every second counts.
It's the edge of the field. It's not out in the middle, but just getting equipment in and out,
and then we are going to have to leave some acres behind. And unfortunately, those acres are the
ones that go to the bank, not to our creditors, unfortunately.
Stewart has started combining stretches of his almost 6,000-acre fields of wheat, canola, and
soybeans.
But he says some crops will be left on the field.
The first day of school is just around the corner.
And for dozens of First Nation teenagers in northern Ontario, that means moving to a city
hundreds of kilometers away from home.
Sarah Law reports from Thunder Bay.
Dennis Franklin Cromartie, or DFC, is Thunder Bay's all-indigenous high school.
Many First Nations in Northern Ontario do not have high schools,
leaving students and families to choose between dropping out or going to school hundreds of kilometers away.
It's a particularly vulnerable age.
Volunteer Melissa Blackwell says it's important to consider the mental health toll that comes from leaving home at such a young age.
According to Statistics Canada, just under two-thirds of First Nations youth have high school diplomas.
compared to 91% of their non-Indigenous peers.
As the school's First Nation student success program coordinator,
Sean Spenrath sees the obstacles they face firsthand.
Leaving your family, I couldn't imagine doing that at 13 years old,
and going to a strange place he's kind of never really been.
About 160 students are expected to arrive in the coming days,
many who have never lived in a city.
Sarah Law, CBC News, Thunder Bay, Ontario.
And that is the world this hour for CBZ News.
I'm Neil Kumar.
