Aloha World Toilet Day!
          World Toilet Day is about more than just toilets; it is about
          sanitation as a whole, which includes components such as
          hygiene and the management and treatment of wastewater. The
          day's goal is to inspire action to address the global
          sanitation crisis. Jack Sim founded the World Toilet
          Organization on November 19, 2001, and then declared that day
          to be World Toilet Day. After its founding, various
          organizations around the world marked the day, and it gained a
          new level of legitimacy in 2013 when it was formally
          recognized by the United Nations.
          
  B.C. returns nearly 100 hectares of Crown land near Sechelt to shíshálh Nation 
The 99.6-hectare parcel of land is located on the south shore of Salmon 
Inlet, about 16 kilometres north of Sechelt. 
Making room for salmon 
 Salmon need more estuaries. We look at how 
local tribes are working to restore this critical habitat. 
A Proposed New Marine Sanctuary Would be the First One to be Tribal-Led 
The US government this week began the process to designate the country’s
 first tribal-led marine sanctuary. The proposed Chumash Heritage 
National Marine Sanctuary would protect sacred Chumash sites, feeding 
grounds for numerous species of whales and dolphins, sea otter 
populations, kelp forests, and is home to vital commercial and 
recreational fisheries. 
        
Connecting the dots between B.C.’s floods, landslides and the clearcut logging of old forests 
Deforestation dramatically alters how landscapes are able to cope with 
extreme weather events like the atmospheric river that surged across 
southern British Columbia earlier this week. 
        
Land defenders arrested on Wet’suwet’en territory as RCMP enforces Coastal GasLink injunction 
Elders, legal observers and media have been detained as police advance 
into Gidimt’en territory where land defenders closed road access earlier
 this week in an effort to prevent drilling under a sacred waterway. 
Matt Simmons reports. (The Narwhal) 
Biden officials to propose road ban on much of Alaska’s Tongass National Forest 
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on Friday will propose restoring 
roadless protections on more than 9 million acres of the Tongass 
National Forest in Alaska, a move that would overturn one of Donald 
Trump’s most significant changes to public lands. Juliet Eilperin 
reports. (Washington Post)
First fires, now floods: British Columbia and Washington reeling from atmospheric river 
First they baked, then they burned, and now they’re inundated.
        
        
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected
          in Salish Sea
            News and Weather which is compiled as a community
          service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at no cost to the weekday
          news clips, send your name and email to mikesato772 at
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