Vol. 35 No. 10, August - August 2015
Index
- In for the long run: White River Forest Products cashes up to make high-tech improvements.
- Selling Hydro One will help consumers (or not).
- Touring Timmins: kayak festival bolstering city's tourism cachet.
- Gov't funding for Kenora, Dryden mills.
- A Sudbury giant who personified a generation.
- FedNor: who calls the shots matters.
- Northern Credit Union grows its network.
- Protecting your tax-free intercorporate dividends.
- A brew of their own: Manitoulin Brewing Co. introduces first beer.
- Girlz of summer: mentorship program uses fashion to teach business.
- For the love of history: Cobalt train station undergoing intense restoration.
- First Nation partners on wind farm.
- Profitable fiscal year for Kirkland Lake Gold.
- Development dollars welcome: trio of communities awarded improvement funding.
- FedNor supporting francophone tour.
- Community first: WB Melback finds success with local support.
- Running with sports tourism: Kirkland Lake wades into the deep end of event attraction.
- Sudbury's host for almost 70 years.
- From scratch: country bistro caters to the masses.
- Cruising speed ahead: cruise vessel offering North Channel vistas.
- New Clarion property opens in Sudbury.
- Northern luxury: boutique hotel offering alternative accommodation in Timmins.
- Queue up the conferences: aboriginal training institute aims to be meetings host.
- "Rustic, but chic": major facelift for Fort Frances hotel.
- Hampton Inn now open in Timmins.
- Can you feel the synergy? Technology would transform seats, floors and walls to accommodate a wide range of events.
- New direction for museum: meet and greet at Hockey Heritage North.
- Adventure and solitude: Minaki Yurt Adventures provide outside-the-box lodgings.
- Dust clears on Matheson crushing plant: graphite is the "new black gold" of high-tech minerals.
- Layoffs coming at Sudbury mine: low nickel prices, mine deaths plague First Nickel.
- Damage done to the Ring of Fire: NGO: Wildlands League asks for environmental review process for exploration.
- Storytellers and sponsors sought for bush stories website.
- Sudbury mining supply pioneer dies.
- Harte Gold strikes milling agreement.
- Mining group names new chair.
- Palladium miner resumes milling after tailings discharge.
- Data breached at Detour Gold.
- Former Queenston boss joins Wesdome board.
- Marathon to host mine reclamation symposium.
- Richmont Mines achieves record quarter.
- Alamos and AuRico Metals announce completion of merger.
- College-industry collaborate on mine safety devices.
- Glenn Nolan to speak in Sudbury.
- Lake Shore announces new gold discovery.
- Noront finally receives EA approval.
- Searching for new rail operator: CN pulls the plug on Algoma passenger train.
- Pioneer awarded highway contract.
- Thunder Bay port buzzes with activity.
- Wasaya Airways adds to the flock.
- Sealing the cracks: MTO studies why Ontario roads are cracking prematurely.
- Bridging troubled waters: proponents gaining support to save ailing trestle bridge.
- Sault aqueduct project receives funding.
- Fresh food ideas: Thunder Bay implementing local food strategy.
- Alan Auld Canada: world leader in design, construction and repair of underground structures.