News

Glory Michael of Sheffield watched for months as the condition of the city-owned Oakwood Cemetery worsened. Grass along a cemetery wall was knee high. Weeds and ant beds had overtaken ...
Nova Scotia is getting a fleet upgrade and it wants your help. The province is asking for public input on something that played a key role during the 2023 wildfires. Could your idea make the cut?
Nova Scotia’s highest court says it will not weigh in on who has legislative authority over the Chignecto Isthmus, calling the province’s question “too problematic to answer.” ...
Jewish organizations commend a rural Nova Scotia police force for charging a man with alleged antisemitic hate crimes.
The awards were presented at the Nova Scotia Book Awards gala in Dartmouth, N.S., on June 2 as part of the Atlantic Book Festival.
Over the decades, MacKay-Lyons Sweetapple Architects has carved a deep furrow in the architectural culture of Nova Scotia. This modest practice, rooted in teaching and the physical act of construction ...
Police receive more than 180 tips about missing Nova Scotia siblings Lily, 6, and Jack, 4 RCMP 'officers have so far identified 35 people for formal interviews as part of the investigation ...
The mysterious disappearance of two young children from their mobile home in the rural Nova Scotia hamlet of Lansdowne has captured headlines around the world. It’s been more than a week since ...
Nova Scotia to speed up environmental reviews for clean energy projects The changes come after Tim Houston signalled his intent to increase the potential of the province's natural resources ...
The Canadian province has updated its critical minerals list to include uranium and issued a request for proposals for uranium exploration and research in areas with known uranium deposits after ...
The green hydrogen project of EverWind Fuels in Nova Scotia is progressing with the completion of the front-end engineering design (FEED) and front-end loading engineering (FEL-3).
HALIFAX — A secluded and overgrown cemetery in rural Cape Breton, the final resting place for some of Nova Scotia’s earliest settlers, is slowly crumbling into a nearby river.