As Toronto Police prepare to begin training on using lapel cameras, the federal and provincial privacy commissioners have warned the technology poses significant privacy risks. Among concerns raised about the cameras, due to begin operations in a pilot project in May, are whether citizens will be told when they are being recorded and where information […]
By Jasminee Sahoye As Black History month wraps up, efforts are being made to gather insights from some 2,000 members of the Black community through exploring the lived experiences and views that speak to individual and collective strengths, contributions, challenges, opportunities, capacity and resiliency. The Black Experience Project (BEP) is hoping to create the first-ever […]
Microeconomics looks at the communication between the two individuals in addition to options they make in his or her commercialized enterprise projects. It encompasses study regarding detailed sells, and global financial segmentation. It therefore relates to conditions like user habits, personal work promotes, therefore the idea of companies, the allocation of strategies and expenses of […]
By Gerald V. Paul In an exclusive interview with The Camera yesterday, Louis Saldenah of Saldenah Mas Camp revealed that his 4,400-plus players will pay tribute to the new Trinidad and Tobago Power Soca Monarch and winner of the Road March, Machel Montano. Saldenah’s son Ronnie, the third generation involved in Mas, had the idea […]
A pastor at a Scarborough church has been charged with two counts of sexual assault and three counts of fraud over $5,000 in an ongoing investigation after a second woman came forward, police said. Wayne Marlon Jones of Ajax is a bishop at United Spiritual Baptist Church. Jones was born in Trinidad and Tobago. According […]
By Gerald V. Paul Children’s Minister Tracy MacCharles “needs to move faster” as she considers ways to fix systemic issues affecting Black families, including a separate CAS for the Black community, the executive director of the African Canadian Legal Clinic (ACLC) charges. “It is no secret that youth in care do not fare well when […]
By Claudette de la Haye KINGSTON, Jamaica – Rev. Glen Archer of Scripps Spelling Bee fame died of kidney failure from the complications of chikungunya last Sunday in UHWI. Archer had been hospitalized since Dec. 9 after problems brought on by a mosquito bite. His passing comes on the tail end of producing his 26th […]
By Claudette de la Haye KINGSTON, Jamaica – Gleaner’s Children’s Own Spelling Bee has produced yet another stellar Jamaican national spelling bee winner who is now slated for Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. in May. For over an hour, a calm and collected Sara-Beth McPherson of Holy Childhood, St. Andrews, had a knock- […]
By Gerald V. Paul The consul general of St. Vincent and the Grenadines says there have been overwhelming prayers and support from across the Caribbean and here in Toronto on the recent mini bus accident in North Winward constituency which left five students dead, two missing and put 14 in hospital. Fitzgerald Huggins told The […]
Ninety- eight adopted schools in Jamaica are the recipients of $40,000 (J$4 million) thanks to a Canadian charity, Project for the Advancement of Childhood Education (PACE) Canada. President Sandra Whiting said the organization has helped thousands of children in Jamaica. “PACE Canada is committed to assisting basic school children in Jamaica and Canada and has […]