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Maritime Noon from CBC Radio (Highlights)
Summary: Maritime Noon is a one-hour program devoted to delivering informative reports and interviews which explore issues that are of interest to Maritimers.
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- Artist: CBC Radio
- Copyright: Copyright © CBC 2018
Podcasts:
A doctor who dumped his patient denies it has anything to do with municipal politics. Gardening expert Marjorie Willison takes your calls. The CBC's Paul Withers on efforts to save the endangered white fish - including stunning the fish's main predator.
Kings County politician says he was dumped by doctor over land use dispute Your feedback about credit card charges Ham radio operators Bryan Allen in Halifax and George Dewar in PEI share their experiences Feedback about whether to pay foster parents
Don Mills, CRA on what people on PEI think of Mike Duffy as their seanator Your views on CPP changes Jim Cormier, Atlantic Director for the Retail Council of Canada, Business professor Ed McHugh and Senator Pierrette Ringuette on credit charges The chi
David MacDonald, senior economist for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, on the impact of changes to the Canada Pension Plan Your views on banning pit bulls Wayne MacFarlane, president of the P.E.I. Federation of Foster Families, on whether fo
Globe and Mail columnist Andre Picard says it's time to ban pit bulls. Wildlife biologist Bob Bancroft takes your questions. Your thoughts on a racist letter left anonymously in a Nova Scotia family's driveway.
Anonymous Racist Letter, Chef Craig Flinn
A clinic set up in Digby, NS to address the doctor shortage closes, due to a lack of doctors. Appliance repairman Aaron Publicover takes your questions. Plus, your thoughts on irradiated beef.
The Green Party of Nova Scotia has run out of steam. Thomas Trappenberg, one of the founders of the Green Party in N.S., tells us why. Irradiation is supposed to make beef safer, but would you want to eat it? Food policy expert Sylvain Charleboi
Halifax is considering banning backyard fires in urban areas. It's a controversial issue across the Maritimes. In Fredericton, Dan Fraser wrote a letter to his local paper on the topic. The federal government may require employers to offer flexible work
Communities across the Maritimes are planning vigils following the deadliest mass shooting in modern American History. Willem Blois, the chair of Halifax Pride, reflects on the tragedy in Orlando. Your stories about turning to emergency rooms to care fo
Mr. Hockey, Gordie Howe, dies at 88. A Nova Scotia ER doctor says elderly, non-emergency patients are increasingly being left for days at the ER instead of being taken hom, causing serious delays for other patients. Gardening expert Marjorie Willison ta
A woman originally from P.E.I. heads back to Fort McMurray, to the good news that her house is standing and she'll be able to sleep in her own bed for the first time in a month. Your thoughts on whether businesses should be able to be kid-free Chef Mich
Two hikers get stranded 250 feet down a treacherous rock cliff. Jeff Skaling, deputy chief of the Canning Volunteer Fire Department, tells us about the rescue at Cape Split. The family cottage can pull you together, or tear you apart. Lawyer Jessica Lyl
A fatal car crash over the weekend has more people calling for a stretch of Highway 104 in Nova Scotia to be twinned. It's the 15th fatality on this area of road since 2009. Your thoughts on tennants who destroyed a Saint John apartment before being evic
A case of Zika virus has been confirmed in Nova Scotia. Dr. Frank Atherton, Nova Scotia's Deputy Chief Medical Officer of Health, tells us more. A new initiative by the Canadian Foundation for Healthcare could change how drugs are prescribed to seniors w