How a Nunavut welding arts program gives youth (and metal) new life
Since 2018, the Red Fish Art Studio in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, has been a second home for at-risk youth in the community, where they are trained in welding and put to work making signs and artworks out of scrap metal.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/cambridge-bay-red-fish-art-studio-9.7198567?cmp=rss
Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, celebrates more than half a century of its spring festival
It's been more than 50 years since the spring festival began in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, and this year’s event honours that history. Community members, like Elder Pongok Mabel Etegik, look back at what has changed, and what fan favourites have remained.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/cambridge-bay-umingmak-frolics-50-years-9.7196618?cmp=rss
CBC North's Trail's End is coming to Cambridge Bay, Nunavut
The host of CBC's afternoon radio show, Lawrence Nayally, will broadcast from the Arctic hamlet for two days, beginning Monday.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/trails-end-cambridge-bay-9.7191311?cmp=rss
Nunavut leaders push for screening at Yellowknife Airport, amidst rise in organized criminal activity
Justice Minister George Hickes said talks with the N.W.T. and federal governments to introduce security screening for northern flights at Yellowknife Airport are in its preliminary stages – a measure Kitikmeot residents, particularly in Cambridge Bay, have long called for.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/nunavut-organized-crime-drugs-yellowknife-airport-9.7175274?cmp=rss
Family of mother killed in Alberta 'clinging' to hope her missing baby will be found
Ayla Egotik-Learn, a 23-year-old Inuk mother from Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, was discovered dead in January, inside her apartment northwest of Edmonton. Her baby has never been found and is presumed dead by RCMP.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/egotik-learn-homicide-9.7150104?cmp=rss
Family of mother killed in Alberta 'clinging' to hope her missing baby will be found
Ayla Egotik-Learn, a 23-year-old Inuk mother from Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, was discovered dead in January, inside her apartment northwest of Edmonton. Her baby has never been found and is presumed dead by RCMP.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/egotik-learn-homicide-9.7150104?cmp=rss
Family of Inuk woman killed in Alberta 'clinging' to hope her missing baby will be found
Ayla Egotik-Learn, a 23-year-old Inuk mother from Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, was discovered dead in January, inside her apartment northwest of Edmonton. Her baby has never been found and is presumed dead by RCMP.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/egotik-learn-homicide-9.7150104?cmp=rss
Family of mother killed in Alberta 'clinging' to hope her missing baby will be found
Ayla Egotik-Learn, a 23-year-old Inuk mother from Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, was discovered dead in January, inside her apartment northwest of Edmonton. Her baby has never been found and is presumed dead by RCMP.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/egotik-learn-homicide-9.7150104?cmp=rss
Cooking like it’s the ‘last meal’: Inside the Operation Nanook kitchen in Cambridge Bay
In the extreme cold of Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, Canadian Armed Forces personnel have been testing heavy artillery and doing ice water dives and parachute jumps as part of Operation Nanook. But some officers in the hamlet are on a mission in the kitchen: to provide members with a taste of home.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/cambridge-bay-operation-nanook-military-cooking-9.7131291?cmp=rss
‘Are we that close to war?’ In Cambridge Bay, residents say anxiety around security is growing
In the dead of winter, seeing the military in an Arctic hamlet of 1,200 people is provoking anxiety for some residents in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. The Canadian Armed Forces are in Cambridge Bay for the first time in winter for Operation Nanook, an annual Arctic training exercise fi...
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/cambridge-bay-nunavut-operation-nanook-military-arctic-security-9.7120369?cmp=rss