In Canada’s North, the affordability crisis hits differently due to climate change. In Norman Wells, N.W.T., the community depends on an ice road and river barges in the summer to bring in food and construction — but a melting road and a low river are impacting shipping and raising prices of goods. The Current’s producer Benjamin Jamieson went to Norman Wells to learn more about how climate change is reshaping life in the North; and host Matt Galloway speaks about managing the effects of climate change with Charlotte Menacho, an elder in Tulita in the North, and N.W.T. Premier R.J. Simpson.
False paternity tests ID wrong dads
A glimmer of hope for the Whitehorse Star
Scanning the skies for the total solar eclipse
Medical concerns about an anti-contraception movement, online and beyond
What dog attacks say about dog ownership culture
Innovating a way out of the housing crisis
How will animals react to the eclipse?
Aid workers fear for safety in Gaza
Inside a Gaza hospital
Single parents say Canada’s policies don’t work for their families
How do you sign atom?
School boards sue social media giants
Have Canadians tuned out Justin Trudeau? We asked him
The gambling problem in sports
Saving a stranded orca calf
How climate change is rewriting the rules of gardening
Making sense of the carbon tax
My Dad Ward: Freeing women from trafficking
Fears of water insecurity and extreme drought
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Front Burner
Vinyl Cafe
Ideas
Someone Knows Something
Under the Influence with Terry O’Reilly