Thursday, August 11, 2022

Polio largely vanished thanks to vaccines. So why is it now back in more countries?

Lauren Pelley - 


Polio, a potentially disabling virus that's long been forgotten in many parts of the world, is now circulating in parts of the U.S. and U.K., on the heels of an outbreak in Israel — prompting health officials to launch vaccination campaigns to ensure the public is protected.



© Ahmad Al-Basha/AFP/Getty Images
A Yemeni child receives an oral polio vaccination during a home visit by health workers as part of an immunization campaign in February 2022.

Even in Canada, a country free of polio for the last two decades, medical experts say it's a wake-up call that the virus still poses a threat to anyone who remains unvaccinated, given polio's ability to spread through global travel networks and wastewater systems.

On Wednesday, British health authorities announced they will offer a polio booster dose to children aged one to nine in London, after finding evidence the virus has been spreading in multiple regions of the capital. Britain's Health Security Agency said polio virus samples were found in sewage water from eight boroughs of London, but there were no confirmed infections.

Still, the agency's analysis showed transmission has likely "gone beyond a close network of a few individuals."

"We know the areas in London where the poliovirus is being transmitted have some of the lowest vaccination rates," said Dr. Vanessa Saliba, a consultant epidemiologist at the U.K. Health Security Agency.

The agency said it was working closely with health authorities in the U.S. and Israel, as well as the World Health Organization, to investigate the links between polio viruses detected in those two countries.

In July, Israel announced a recent outbreak of polio infections appeared to be under control, after multiple people became infected, including a Jerusalem girl who was paralyzed and now requires rehabilitation, according to the Jerusalem Post.

More recently, in the state of New York, one unvaccinated young adult suffered paralysis after a polio infection in Rockland County — an area known for low vaccination rates — which marked the first case reported in the U.S. in nearly a decade.

Vaccination campaigns are now underway as samples of the virus were also detected in the wastewater of both Rockland and another county, just north of New York City. Officials also say hundreds more people may already be infected.

"The scope may be even much larger than we can even fathom or imagine," said New York-based immunologist Dr. Purvi Parikh.

"Because vaccines have become the victim of their own success, we don't see it — so we may not even realize what the spread of polio is, because for the majority of us who are vaccinated, it doesn't really [affect] us."

Outbreaks do still happen in certain countries


Before mass vaccination campaigns largely wiped out polio from circulation in higher-income countries like Canada between the 1950s and early 1990s, the virus was known for sparking outbreaks and striking children, causing paralysis or death in some cases.

Even now, war, poverty, and social unrest make it difficult to achieve eradication in many countries around the world. Outbreaks remain common in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and parts of Africa.

Parikh said polio cases aren't entirely a surprise in any community where vaccination rates are lower, either due to anti-vaccine sentiments or disruptions to routine immunizations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Now the concern is, some of these infectious diseases that we haven't seen in nearly decades may actually come back and pose to be a problem," she said.

Part of the challenge in wiping polio out around the world actually comes from the vaccination approach used in certain regions. While higher-income countries now use an inactivated poliovirus vaccine given as a traditional shot, others rely on a weakened poliovirus that's easy to administer by mouth.

Both types of vaccines helped curb global transmission and, crucially, neither one is capable of giving someone a case of symptomatic polio.

However, since the oral version winds up in the stomach, it's eventually flushed out of the body into wastewater systems — where, over time, the virus can evolve back into a form that's able to cause disease.

"So if you have a shedding of that particular virus and transmission of that in a community, it can cause a polio outbreak," said Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist with the University Health Network in Toronto.

"And in fact, if you look at many parts of the world, there have been small outbreaks of vaccine-derived polio."

'Polio is only a plane trip away'

Lab testing conducted on the case in New York, for instance, linked the virus samples to transmission from someone who'd received the oral vaccine, which hasn't been used in the U.S. since 2000. "This suggests that the virus may have originated in a location outside of the U.S. where [the oral vaccine] is administered," officials said.

In London, out of more than 100 polio samples identified in sewage, most were vaccine-like virus, according to the UK Health Security Agency, while others had enough mutations to be more like "wild" polio that can cause serious health impacts.

Global travel between countries with high rates of polio transmission and regions with lagging vaccination rates could pose a problem going forward, said Wes Hazlitt, a Winnipeg polio survivor, advocate, and president of the Post-Polio Network in Manitoba.

"Polio," he added, "is only a plane trip away."

Another challenge in tackling outbreaks stems from this virus's ability to spread undetected, experts say, with most people unaware they're even infected — leaving countries vulnerable to slow-growing outbreaks before any patients show up with major disease and paralysis.

"Most people will have no symptoms or mild symptoms, but about one in 200 or so will have significant symptoms," Bogoch said.

Under-vaccinated communities remain at risk

So when it comes to experiencing a future polio outbreak, how at risk is Canada? That all depends on vaccination rates both now and in the future, multiple medical experts said.

"If you start not vaccinating the kids from the primary series — like the measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio — then you risk those diseases coming back," warned Dr. Anna Banerji, a pediatrician and infectious disease specialist in Toronto.

A vast majority of the Canadian public has been vaccinated against polio, and while immunization rates among children ebb and flow, the latest available federal data from 2017 shows roughly 90 per cent of toddlers had all three required polio shots.

But that coverage isn't uniform across the country. Polio vaccination rates were below 90 per cent in British Columbia and Manitoba, and close to just 80 per cent in Nunavut, while uptake in specific communities can vary and may have been disrupted by COVID-19 school closures.

"We do have our issues in Canada, with under-vaccinated communities for a variety of reasons, and a lot of this predates COVID-19," said Bogoch, adding many public health teams across the country did offer immunization programs throughout the pandemic to get children caught up.

While pockets of the population could remain vulnerable to polio infection, Fatima Tokhmafshan, a researcher and geneticist at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, said most Canadians shouldn't be overly concerned.

"If you see something circulating, it's good to be on your guard, but not panicking," she said.

"So it's important to keep an eye out. And reach out to your network, to your friends, your family — make sure everybody's vaccinated."
BC
Commercial fishermen’s union ‘deeply troubled’ with DFO’s decision to close Prince Rupert sockeye fishery

Unnecessary and irresponsible is how the United Fishermen and Allied Workers’ Union (UFAWU-Unifor) described Fisheries and Oceans Canada’s (DFO) decision to close some salmon harvesting around Prince Rupert on August 7.

Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) announced their decision to close the commercial marine sockeye fisheries around the Northcoast city, in a media release on Aug. 5,

As of Aug. 1, the Skeena run size was at 4.1 million fish, which UFAWU-Unifor calls one of the largest in decades. Yet economic fisheries will have caught fewer than 900,000 sockeye by the time of the closure, the union stated.

Commercial marine fishermen have a total allowable catch of 40 per cent. To date, they have only caught 20 per cent, Mitch Dudoward, member of UFAWU-Unifor said on Aug. 8.

The decision is not based on science, and it follows a trend of “irresponsible decision-making” by Joyce Murray, the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, which is “deeply troubling”, the release stated.

“It’s not just a closure, they got us started a month late, so now there’s over three million fish going to go to waste in Babine Lake because we don’t have the catching capacity to slow them down,” Calvin Siider, UFAWU-Unifor member said.

Regulations put in place by DFO also restricted commercial fishermen to a half a net and a maximum of 20-minute sets, the latter referring to the amount of time they are allowed to have their nets in the water from the time it is completely set to the time it begins to be retrieved.

“That reduces our efficiency by half,” Siider said.

The numbers of fishing boats dropped by half, with only 150 boats showing up this year when there would usually be closer to 300, he estimated, blaming the low attendance on the Minister’s “wishy-washy” decisions.

“There are concerns for late-run Skeena stocks, which we understand, and we can take a closure for reasons like that,” he said. “But when it doesn’t open because of ministerial interference, I mean, somebody should pay.”

The union stated in its press release the closure is unnecessary and will result in lost economic opportunities for fishers.

A side effect of the stricter regulations and closures is that Prince Rupert no longer has the capacity to process the fish.

“Now that we have a whole bunch of fish, we have no processing capacity. Just about all of the fish that’s been caught and passed through Canadian fishers hands in Prince Rupert here goes to Alaska to be processed,” Siider said.

He added that labour costs have also contributed to the change in the processing location.

“We used to be able to process every fish we caught.”

Kaitlyn Bailey, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Prince Rupert Northern View
Commercial fishers and wild salmon advocates cheer large returns to B.C. waters

Yesterday 

VICTORIA — The summer of 2022 is shaping up to be a bumper season for both pink and sockeye salmon in British Columbia rivers, with one veteran Indigenous fisherman reporting the biggest catches of sockeye in decades.



Mitch Dudoward has worked in the salmon industry for more than 40 years and says fishing on the Skeena River in northwest B.C. has never been better.

"This is the best season I can recall in my lifetime with the numbers we are catching," said Dudoward, who recently completely a big sockeye haul aboard his gillnetter Irenda.

Bob Chamberlin, chairman of the Indigenous-led First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance, meanwhile said that thousands of pink salmon are in Central Coast rivers after years of minimal returns.

The strong run comes two years after the closure of two open-net Atlantic salmon farms in the area.

"We had targeted those farms," said Chamberlin, whose group wants open-net farms removed from B.C.'s waters. "We got them removed and two years later we went from 200 fish in the river to where we have several thousand to date. In our mind and knowledge that is a really clear indicator."

But Bernie Taekema, a salmon expert who consults for several B.C. salmon farming companies, said data for pink salmon returns on the Central Coast and Broughton Archipelago shows numbers in the area were much higher two years ago.

"Mr. Chamberlin is not recognizing that salmon return trends are not based on one year of returns but are based on several years of returns, and the trends are not associated with only one factor when it comes to salmon returns," he said.

Ocean survival, habitat destruction, over-fishing and "potentially, maybe fish farms," could all be factors in low salmon returns, Taekema said.

Fisheries and Oceans Canada spokeswoman Lara Sloan said departmental observations indicated big returns of sockeye to the Skeena River.

"Test fisheries currently indicate that Skeena sockeye returns are tracking at the upper end of the forecast, with an in-season estimate of approximately four million sockeye," said Sloan in a statement. "Sockeye populations returning to a number of areas in British Columbia, Washington and Alaska are returning better than forecast in 2022."

The five-year average return of sockeye to the Skeena is 1.4 million and the 10-year average is 1.7 million, Sloan said.

Dudoward said the Skeena sockeye season ended this week, but it could have gone on longer.


"We should be fishing until the end of August when the sockeye stop running," he said. "There's plenty of them to take."

The union that represents the commercial fishers on the Skeena agrees the season was cut short, resulting in crews losing out on potentially more lucrative financial returns.

"We absolutely could have continued to harvest them and we were just told, 'No,'" said UFAWU-Unifor organizer Dawn Webb in an interview. "One hundred per cent we could still be fishing. There's tons of fish going through there right now."

But Sloan said the Fisheries Department was being careful about salmon stocks.

"For 2022, the department is taking a more precautionary approach toward managing impacts of commercial fisheries on stocks of conservation concern including smaller wild sockeye populations, chum and steelhead returning to the Skeena River," she said.

The Fisheries Department also expects a large sockeye run for the Fraser River and its tributariesthis summer, but returns of chinook, coho and chum to northern and Central Coast rivers and streams are expected to be low.

"The forecast range for Fraser River sockeye in 2022 is 2.3 million to 41.7 million, with a median forecast of 9.7 million," said Sloan. "The median forecast means there is a 50 per cent chance returns will come in below that level."

That is well above the estimated 2.5 million sockeye returns in 2021, according to Fisheries and Oceans Canada data.

Sockeye are the most sought after of the Pacific salmon species for their superior flesh, colour and quality, says the Fisheries Department.

Abundant sockeye returns occur once every four years during a phenomenon called cyclic dominance, the department said.

The strong returns come amid debate over the future of open-net salmon farming in B.C. waters.

In 2018, the B.C. government, First Nations and the salmon farming industry reached an agreement to phase out 17 open-net farms in the Broughton Archipelago between 2019 and 2023.

The agreement was negotiated to establish a farm-free migration corridor to help reduce harm to wild salmon.

In June, federal Fisheries Minister Joyce Murray said the government will consult with First Nations communities and salmon farm operators in the Discovery Islands, near Campbell River on Vancouver Island, about the future of open-net farming in the area.

A final decision on the future of the farms is expected in January 2023, the minister said.

"That is such a key migratory route of all Fraser River salmon, in particular coho and chinook," Chamberlin said. "If we are going to see Fraser runs return, we need to see removal of impediments."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 10, 2022.

Dirk Meissner, The Canadian Press
Planned drag night at Calgary kangaroo petting zoo spurs hateful messages, threats

Michael Rodriguez - Yesterday 

A Calgary petting zoo and theme park has received hateful and threatening messages online after advertising its planned drag night on social media.


Mike Sheppard, owner of Cobb's Adventure Park in Calgary, poses at the attraction on Wednesday, August 10, 2022. The park will be hosting an adults-only drag night and has received threats.

Cobb’s Adventure Park owner and president Mike Sheppard says the adults-only drag event, planned for Saturday evening, has prompted multiple emails and comments from people accusing the business of “sexualizing children” and claiming they will no longer visit the park — some inferring violence in their messages.

One comment on the event on Facebook reads: “Only way anyone should go is if they get to bring guns to the show.” Others called the event “disgusting” and “woke stupidity,” among multiple other negative comments.


© Provided by Calgary HeraldPlanned drag night at Calgary kangaroo petting zoo spurs hateful messages, threats

Sheppard noted his business has long supported the LGBTQ community and this is the third year he’s hosted a drag night, but this is the first time it’s been met with such severe disdain. Typically, he said the annual event would feature other entertainers such as contortionists or hula-hoopers alongside the drag queens, but this year they had to turf some acts to bolster safety. He also filed a police report.

“Those other performers we had to cancel. We had a budget of $1,000 for that, but we’re putting that $1,000 into security guards now because of that message,” he said.

One of the performers, Jesse Postma , who goes by the drag name Angelina Starchild on stage, said the rhetoric is unfortunately nothing out of the ordinary.

“It’s not really anything new. It’s just something that’s always been there and kind of festering,” said Postma, who also hosts a weekly drag brunch at local gay bar Twisted Element every weekend.

“But with the end of the (peak of the) pandemic and kind of the restrictions all loosening up, I feel like everyone just started to feel really brave. So I feel like it’s gotten a lot worse.”

Postma said the messages do make him slightly uncomfortable, but said he thinks the threats are empty and Sheppard’s promise of additional security put him more at ease.

“We shouldn’t have to be going through this; it’s 2022,” he said. “Part of me is a little nervous. But the other part of me is — I just want to go out there and do what I’ve been doing for the past almost decade.”

Both Sheppard and Postma said it seems people have been emboldened to more brazenly showcase their bigotry as of late, especially under the veil of online anonymity.

“Everybody just needs to chill out a bit. The intolerance has gotten to level 11 out of 10,” said Sheppard.

“With everything going on in the world — from inflation to jobs; we just got over two years of COVID — I think people are afraid. I don’t know why that gives them power for hate, but it does.”

Despite the vitriol and threats of lost business, Sheppard said he’s not reconsidering hosting the drag night, saying it’s important for him, his staff and the roughly 300 people that will attend the show that they don’t back down.

“Personally, it’s very important for us,” he said. “I also think publicly, people have to stand up to it.

“If we’re gonna lose a few customers over that, I’m OK with that.”

For more information on Cobbs Adventure Park and the drag night this weekend, visit cobbsadventurepark.com .


UCP ANTI FEMINIST SCREED
Camrose MLA says she was only other member on controversial essay judging panel

Michelle Bellefontaine - 3h ago

Jackie Lovely, the UCP MLA for Camrose, says she was the only other MLA on a panel which awarded a prize to an essay containing racist and sexist statements.

© Adrienne Lamb/CBC
The grounds of the Alberta Legislature. The UCP member for Camrose is apologizing for her role in judging a controversial essay that won third place in a contest.

Jackie Armstrong-Homeniuk, MLA for Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville, started the contest and was on the panel with Lovely.

"I regret that this essay was chosen and I apologize for my role in that," Lovely wrote in an email to CBC News Wednesday night. "As a single mother who has pursued a wide variety of traditionally male-dominated careers, I deeply understand the strength and ability of women."

"Also, as a former ESL teacher who hosted 56 international students, I also value and appreciate the role of newcomers in our province, and will continue working to remove barriers to equity and prosperity for all."

Lovely is the parliamentary secretary for the status of women.

The author of the essay, identified only as S. Silver, won third prize in the "Her Vision Inspires" contest. The piece of writing came to light Monday night after screenshots were tweeted by NDP MLA Janis Irwin.

The contest, which was a partnership between the legislative assembly and the Commonwealth Women Parliamentarians Canadian Region, asked women between the ages of 17 and 25 to describe their "unique vision for Alberta" and what they would do if elected an MLA.

The essay stated that women are not equal to men and that their ability to bear children takes priority over trying to break into male-dominated careers.

The author added that women who have given birth to two children or more should receive medals and financial incentives to prevent the "import" of "foreigners to replace ourselves."

Lise Gotell, professor of women's and gender studies at the University of Alberta, said Tuesday that the views promulgated in the essay about providing medals and money to encourage women to have more children reflect programs in Nazi Germany.

She also said the essay was racist and sexist.

The legislative assembly removed the essay and all mentions of the contest from its website Monday evening after controversy erupted on social media.

Armstrong-Homeniuk, who is the associate minister for the status of women, initially said on Tuesday the essay should have never been chosen. Hours later, she apologized for her role in allowing the "process to fail."

"The selection of this particular essay and awarding it with third prize was a failure on my part as the head of the judging panel," she said in a written statement.

Armstrong-Homeniuk would not make herself available to take questions. Her press secretary and UCP caucus communications would not say who else was on the judging panel.
Exclusive: Freeport LNG retracts force majeure, widening losses for gas buyers - sources

By Julia Payne and Marwa Rashad - Yesterday

 An LNG tanker is tugged towards a thermal power station in Futtsu

LONDON (Reuters) - Top U.S. gas exporter, Freeport LNG, has retracted the force majeure it initially declared after an explosion in June, a development that could cost its buyers billions of dollars in losses, a document showed and three trading sources said.

Force majeure is a notice used to describe events outside a company's control, such as a natural disaster, which usually releases it from contractual obligation without penalty.

The force majeure would also have allowed Freeport’s LNG buyers to exit their own agreements to deliver gas to end users. Instead, they are facing a collective loss of up to $8 billion as they source alternative supplies at elevated spot market prices, according to the trading sources, who have knowledge of the matter, and calculations by a consultancy.

Those buyers include BP, TotalEnergies, Osaka Gas, Japan’s top power generator JERA and South Korea’s SK Gas Trading and trading house Trafigura that holds a small contract.

Freeport and the buyers declined to comment on the force majeure, its retraction and potential losses.

Freeport accounts for 20% of U.S. LNG exports but stopped shipments after the explosion on June 8, causing a spike in global gas prices which had already soared on falling Russian supplies to Europe and other outages.

Freeport declared force majeure on June 9, before retracting the notice around the end of June, two of the three sources with knowledge of the matter said, adding that Freeport blamed human error.

"No facts have been revealed that would indicate that the incident was a result of Force Majeure," Freeport told market participants on Aug. 3 in a notice seen by Reuters.

Neither the retraction nor the notice has been previously reported.

Related video: OPEC and its allies agree to raise output by 100,000 barrels per day from September (CNBC)   View on Watch

Freeport does not expect full operations to resume until the end of the year, although a partial restart is scheduled for October. Without the force majeure, the company needs to pay compensation to its gas buyers and the buyers still need to supply end users.

The outage leaves a hole of about 80 cargoes based on an October restart date, according to Reuters calculations and an LNG consultancy, although Freeport's buyers may not need to replace them all depending on how they negotiate their onward contracts.

The buyers had paid Freeport around $30-$50 million per LNG cargo, according to two of the sources, with the fuel then sold to end users at a premium usually amounting to a few millions of dollars per cargo.

Freeport's buyers would have to pay $100 million per cargo based on Wednesday's spot market prices to replace the lost volumes as LNG prices have doubled since the explosion, which happened when markets were already tight.

However, Freeport is offering buyers compensation of around 10% of the value of the purchased and undelivered cargoes or lump sums of between $3 million-$5 million per cargo, according to the two sources.

"There are ongoing discussions taking place right now with Freeport as the compensation they are offering will not cover taking a spot cargo at today's rates," one of the sources said.

Freeport declined to comment on its compensation policy.

"The potential losses Freeport's offtakers may face... will probably be within the range of about $6-$8 billion, on a collective basis," said Tamir Druz, managing director at Capra Energy, an LNG consultancy.

“While some of these cargoes may not need to be replaced, on a mark-to-market basis, it remains a significant loss.”

Oil major BP has the largest contract at 4.4 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) through 2040. JERA and Osaka Gas have contracts at 2.3 mtpa each through 2039, while SK and TotalEnergies each have 2.2 mtpa contracts running through 2040, according to the International Group of Liquefied Natural Gas Importers.

Based on Freeport paying 10% compensation per lost cargo, losses may amount to about $2.3 billion for BP and $1.1 billion for TotalEnergies on a mark-to-market basis, Capra Energy's Druz said.

BP and TotalEnergies declined to comment on any losses.

Mark-to-market is a way of measuring the fair value of accounts based on current market prices, which is likely different to the price paid to acquire them.

Osaka Gas sharply cut its annual net profit forecast this month citing a nearly 80 billion yen ($611 million) hit from the Freeport outage for the second quarter alone.

(Reporting by Julia Payne and Marwa Rashad; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
Trans Mountain names Dawn Farrell new CEO and president

CALGARY — Trans Mountain Corp. says Dawn Farrell will become its new president and chief executive next week.

© Provided by The Canadian PressTrans Mountain names Dawn Farrell new CEO and president

The pipeline operator says Farrell has more than 35 years of experience in the energy business, where she has held senior level positions.

She was most recently the president and CEO of TransAlta Corp. and helped the company transition away from coal-fired electrical generation.

Farrell's appointment comes after Ian Anderson announced in February that he would retire from the position in April.

Farrell will be tasked with guiding the company as it oversees a pipeline expansion she called "one of Canada’s most important infrastructure projects."

Farrell says the Trans Mountain expansion project is passing the 60 per cent completion mark and she is looking forward to leading the organization to the end of it while steering the next phase of the company’s future.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 10, 2022.

The Canadian Press
Dead salmon found at Trans Mountain construction site spark outcry from environmental group

Yesterday 

Environmentalists are calling on Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) to halt pipeline construction in Hope, B.C., after dead salmon were found at Trans Mountain’s worksite on the Coquihalla River last weekend.

Longtime Hope resident Kate Tairyan and other members of Protect the Planet have been documenting the situation for more than a week. Right now, salmon can’t bypass the construction of the pipeline expansion project and many are dying without laying their eggs, Tairyan told Canada’s National Observer in an interview. Cutting open five dead salmon revealed four were full of eggs, she noted.

“There are hundreds of (salmon) trapped in your construction site,” said Tairyan, who is also a health sciences senior lecturer at SFU. “What are you going to do about them? Are you just going to let them die here or spawn near those excavators? That's not the right thing to do.”

Tairyan said a Trans Mountain biologist told her the dead salmon had already spawned. But she was skeptical: it is so early in the season and the fish seemed energetic and well-muscled — unlike those near the end of their lifecycle.

Trans Mountain has a DFO permit allowing it to divert the river and remove 800 square metres of instream spawning habitat in order to replace part of the existing pipeline and install the new pipeline for the expansion project. The permit is only valid for August 2022.

“Normally, we start seeing the first salmon mid-August and then their quantities increase, and the peak is mid-September,” said Tairyan, who has watched every salmon run in her 15 years of living on the river.

This year, the run — which is set to be larger than average for sockeye salmon — coincides directly with the pipeline replacement and installation.

More than a dozen large pumps and black hoses transport water downstream of the site to lower the water level, enabling heavy equipment to dig in the river. Protect the Planet released drone footage of the worksite showing turbulent and muddied water, which makes it difficult for salmon to navigate upstream.

In an emailed statement to Canada’s National Observer, Trans Mountain said the work complies with Canada Energy Regulator-approved environmental protection plans and permits issued by DFO and the BC Oil and Gas Commission.

“Great care is taken to preserve the environmental features around the river, such as the wildlife and aquatic habitat provided within the riparian zone,” the statement reads, adding that water monitoring takes place throughout the construction process.

“After the pipes are installed, the stream will be returned to the natural flow path and the site will be reclaimed to its original condition with additional bed and bank flood protection.”

The DFO permit requires Trans Mountain to have a qualified environmental professional onsite for all instream work. Tairyan said on Aug. 7, Trans Mountain employees refused to disclose whether the environmental professional was present, which suggests a permit violation.

The company did not directly address Canada’s National Observer’s questions about whether a qualified environmental professional was present onsite that day.

For many days, Protect the Planet and concerned citizens contacted DFO with their concerns.

The DFO told Canada’s National Observer it “is aware of the criticism related to the impact of the TMX construction site at the Coquihalla River,” in an emailed statement yesterday evening.

It said a regulatory inspection team was on-site yesterday to ensure TMX is following the conditions imposed by their Fisheries Act authorization.

“Corrective action will be taken if required,” the statement said.

Last night, B.C. Environment Minister George Heyman tweeted acknowledging concerns about the worksite and urged the federal government to fully investigate the complaints and “take appropriate action to protect wild salmon and BC waterways if any wrongdoing is found.”

“I am not very hopeful,” said Tairyan. “This is like government policing government… like the fox taking care of the hen coop.”

Five species of salmon and steelhead trout migrate through or spawn on the Coquihalla River. Video taken by Tairyan shows two salmon being swept towards heavy machinery at the worksite.

The DFO permit requires fish to be “salvaged,” meaning caught and transported away from the construction site. However, it says salvaged fish must be relocated downstream, so they will still be unable to bypass the construction.

Tairyan and other Protect the Planet members have set up a citizen observation camp near the site to document Trans Mountain’s work and answer questions from locals.

“We don't have any intention to disrupt this work ourselves. It's not safe for us to do that. But we're going to be here watching, documenting,” said Tairyan, who spends hours observing the river every day.

“When I started asking more questions, they started adding more fence and then the next day we see they put black tarp so it's not transparent anymore,” she said. Tairyan also said there has been a recent uptick in security presence, including a worker that “follows me everywhere with his camera,” she said.

“I'm very respectful to everyone, I don't enter their construction site. I don't bother anyone. I just want to see what is happening. Sometimes I feel that I'm the only person witnessing this. And I have a duty to document it.”

Natasha Bulowski, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Canada's National Observer
Omar ekes out win in surprisingly close Minnesota primary

Caroline Vakil - Yesterday 

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) was projected to win her primary in Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District, setting up a likely third term in the House for a progressive member who has proven to be a GOP lightning rod since entering Congress.

© Provided by The HillOmar ekes out win in surprisingly close Minnesota primary

NBC and CNN both called the race shortly before 11:30 p.m. EDT.

The race proved unexpectedly close, however, with her Democratic opponent Don Samuels trailing her by only a few percentage points.

A member of the “Squad,” a progressive group of Democrats in the House, Omar became the first Somali-American to be elected to Congress in 2018, in addition to the one of the first Muslim-American women.

She became a vocal proponent on issues like dismantling the Minneapolis police in the wake of the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died after a white Minnesotan police officer knelt on him for more than nine minutes; student loan forgiveness; and expanding the Supreme Court.

Former Minneapolis City Council member Don Samuels was considered her most competitive challenger, notching endorsements from the Star Tribune’s editorial board, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D) and former Minnesota Secretary of State Joan Growe.

Samuels touted his background as a self-taught musician, his prior toy designing career, city council experience and position as an executive of a nonprofit that offers microgrants to low-income individuals for areas in education, small business and transportation.

Omar is likely to win a third term given the data website FiveThirtyEight notes her seat has a partisan lean of plus 57 points.
37,000-year-old mammoth butchering site may be oldest evidence of humans in North America

Harry Baker - Yesterday 



A 37,000-year-old mammoth butchering site, uncovered in New Mexico, might be the earliest evidence of humans in North America, controversial research finds. Some of the bones at the site show signs of being handled by humans or even being used as tools, which is "some of the most conclusive evidence" yet that humans settled in North America much earlier than experts previously thought, according to the new study.


The excavation site in new Mexico, known as the Hartley mammoth locality, with a partial mammoth's skull lying on top of a pile of bones.

If the team is correct about human activity at the site, it would almost double the amount of time humans have occupied North America. However, determining the exact date that people first appeared in North America has been a controversial subject over the past few decades, and similar studies have been dismissed as inconclusive. Some experts are similarly skeptical of the conclusions the team has drawn from the mammoths' remains.

The new site was discovered on the Colorado Plateau in northern New Mexico, after hiker Gary Hartley spotted a chunk of tusk protruding from the surface. Researchers named the site the "Hartley mammoth locality" in his honor.

An excavation of the Hartley site revealed the incomplete remains of two mammoths, believed to be an adult female and a juvenile. Most of the bones were grouped in a large pile, with the adult female's skull lying on top. By carbon-dating collagen in the bones, researchers estimated the remains could date to between 36,250 and 38,900 years ago.


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Some of the bones appeared to have been crafted into makeshift knives, possibly used to butcher the mammoths, the researchers said. Other bones showed signs of being broken by blunt-force trauma, possibly from using rocks, which were also found in the pile of bones. There were also puncture marks in some of the mammoths' ribs, possibly resulting from humans' attempts to glean at the valuable nutrients inside.

Tiny particles found in the sediment surrounding the bones also included crystallized ash from what researchers suspect was a fire, possibly used to cook the mammoth meat as well as other small animals.

"What we've got is amazing," lead study author Timothy Rowe, a paleontologist at The University of Texas at Austin, said in a statement.
When did the first Americans arrive?

Until the early 2000s, archaeological evidence had suggested that the Clovis people — a group of early humans who can be identified through distinctively shaped weapons — were the first humans in North America, arriving around 13,000 years ago. But more recent finds have revealed that there was likely a genetically separate group of humans, known as pre-Clovis people, living in North America before the Clovis people arrived.

It is now firmly established that the pre-Clovis people were the first humans to live in North America, and they can be reliably traced back to around 16,000 years ago, Justin Tackney, an anthropologist at the University of Kansas who specializes in the human settlement of the Americas and was not involved in the study, told Live Science in an email.

This time frame suggests that the pre-Clovis people arrived in North America after the end of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) — the most recent period when ice sheet coverage across Earth was at its greatest extent, between 26,500 and 20,000 years ago. The melting ice sheets likely provided the pre-Clovis people with an opportunity to cross the Bering Land Bridge, a piece of land that once connected North America and Asia.

However, a number of recent contentious studies have claimed that the pre-Clovis people may have dated even further back, potentially to before the LGM. But this idea has been "a much bigger pill to swallow" for most experts because the evidence from these studies is inconclusive, Tackney said.

A 2017 study investigating a similar pile of mammoth bones at a site near San Diego revealed that the bones may have been handled by humans and could date back to around 130,000 years ago, suggesting humans may have been around more than 10 times longer than previously believed. However, critics argued that the bones' unusual orientation and "wear and tear" could also be explained by natural processes and were not definitively human-caused.


In 2020, another group of researchers claimed to have found unusually shaped rocks in a Mexican cave that may have been used as stone tools and date to around 30,000 years ago. But another study, published in 2021, cast serious doubt over whether the shape of the rocks indicated they were human-made.

These types of studies can be problematic because the evidence does not definitively point to humans. Instead, humans are just one possible explanation. This means researchers are often creating a narrative to fit the evidence, rather than the evidence clearly pointing to what really happened.

"People in our field usually err on the side of caution, and the simplest explanations are preferred," Tackney said. "In that sense, I am always extremely skeptical of reports from sites like these."

Until now, the most conclusive evidence of a pre-LGM settlement for pre-Clovis people comes from a 2021 study, which revealed a set of 60 bare human footprints uncovered at White Sands National Park in New Mexico. The fossilized tracks date to between 21,000 and 23,000 years ago based on organic material trapped inside the footprints, which suggests pre-Clovis people may have moved into North America before or during the LGM. But this discovery has not been enough to settle the debate.
New evidence

In the new study, researchers analyzed the bones found at the Hartley site using a number of techniques, including high-resolution CT scans and scanning electron microscopy.

These analyses revealed that a handful of the bones displayed signs of being fractured by blunt-force trauma, including, most notably, the adult's skull. Most of the ribs showed signs of being snapped off the vertebrae and some had puncture marks that the researchers think could have been made by humans to extract fatty marrow from inside the bone, according to the study. At least one rib bone also shows signs of cut-like marks that could have been left by humans.

"There really are only a couple efficient ways to skin a cat, so to speak," Rowe said. "The butchering patterns are quite characteristic."

The team also identified around a dozen bone flakes, smaller bone fragments with sharp edges, that the researchers think could have been used as knives to cut through the mammoths' meat. There were also many more microflakes, measuring less than 1.2 inches (3 centimeters) long, that could have been created as a byproduct when the bones were turned into makeshift knives. Not all of these flakes and microflakes can be attributed to individual bones, but there is evidence they were carved either perpendicular or parallel to some of the bones, suggesting they were not randomly created by natural processes, according to the study.

A large boulder and several fist-size rocks were also found among the mammoth bones, which the researchers think could have been used to help fracture and break the bones.

The team also found potential evidence of a controlled fire at the site. In the sediment, there were tiny particles of crystallized ash, similar to those found within ancient fireplaces from past studies. Chemical analysis of the particles suggests that they were formed in a controlled fire and not from a much more powerful wildfire or ancient lightning strike. There were also bone fragments from smaller animals and possibly even fish scales, suggesting that humans may have cooked more than just mammoths at the site.

However, some experts remain skeptical.

"The researchers certainly have a solid date for the death of the mammoths, but they lack definitive evidence of human activity," Lauriane Bourgeon, an archaeologist at the University of Kansas who specializes in ancient animal bones, including mammoths, and was not involved in the study, told Live Science in an email. "The role of natural factors also cannot be definitively ruled out."

It can be very hard to attribute human activity to ancient bones because natural processes — like weathering, trampling and sediment layering — can cause similar types of damage to the bones, Bourgeon said.

Without clear and unambiguous tool use or human remains, it is almost impossible to conclusively prove the damage was caused by human activity, Bourgeon said. The stones found inside the mammoth pile and the bone flakes are not sufficient to confirm tool use, she added.

"I think this is going to remain another controversial site," Bourgeon said.

The researchers acknowledged that some experts might be skeptical of their findings, especially when analyzed individually, but they believe that combining all of the evidence found at the Hartley site paints a clear picture of human activity.

"It's not a charismatic site with a beautiful skeleton laid out on its side," Rowe said. "It's all busted up, but that's what the story is."

The study was published online July 7 in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution.

Originally published on Live Science.