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Mobile Syrup

Canadian government announces funding for Saskatoon electric bus fleet

The City of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, will soon be one step closer to realizing its greenhouse gas reduction targets. The Government of Canada has confirmed an investment of $336,000 into the electrification of Saskatoon Transit vehicles. This funding is in addition to the $84,000 being contributed by the municipality.

According to the news release, Saskatoon Transit will create a five-phase strategy to best transition to a fully electric arsenal. Costs, infrastructure and resource requirements, and risk assessments are all on the table for review.

The initiative “will provide quieter, cleaner transit options to the city’s residents,” according to The Honourable Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Infrastructure and Communities.

The funding results from the Zero Emission Transit Fund launched in 2021. The government’s transit infrastructure investment looks to support city buses’ transition to an all-electric lineup in the coming years.

Header image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Government of Canada

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Mobile Syrup

SaskTel to invest $413 million in 5G, infiNET services, in 2023/24

SaskTel is investing millions in capital to expand its 5G network and broadband reach in 2023 and 2024.

Of the investment totalling $413 million, $160 million is specifically allocated towards 5G. The funds will upgrade 260 cell sites to 5G and construct 10 new sites.

“In 2023/24, we’re planning to invest more in wireless and fibre optic broadband technologies than ever before,”  Doug Burnett, SaskTel’s CEO, said.

“These massive investments will enable us to rapidly expand our blazing fast 5G and infiNET networks across the province, allowing more of our customers to experience the true power of these amazing technologies.”

The company has allocated $106 million to expand its infiNET network, the largest fibre optic network in the province. The funds will go towards fibre-to-the-premises and fibre-to-the-business projects, which will see its infiNET network rolled out to more communities as part of its Rural Fibre Initiative.

SaskTel will also invest $70.5 million in technology and $76.5 million in customer services and operations.

Image credit: SaskTel 

Source: SaskTel

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Mobile Syrup

Federal investment will help bring high-speed internet and mobile connectivity to Saskatchewan

The Government of Canada has committed $37 million to projects improving connectivity in Saskatchewan.

The investment will bring high-speed internet access and mobile connectivity to 5,000 homes. Impacted communities include Northern Saskatchewan, Prince Albert, Saskatoon–Biggar, Regina–Moose Mountain and Yorkton–Melville. Nearly 2,700 of these homes are in Indigenous communities.

“We all know that internet and mobile connectivity are no longer a luxury–they’re a necessity,” Gudie Hutchings, Minister of Rural Economic Development, said.

The funding is part of the federal government’s initiative to connect 98 percent of Canadians with high-speed internet access by 2026 and 100 percent by 2030. The government has made similar announcements in Ontario, Nova Scotia, and British Columbia.

Image credit: Shutterstock 

Source: Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada

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Cottage Life

Cottage real estate region: Last Mountain Lake

Last Mountain Lake is nicknamed locally as Long Lake: stretching a slender 93 km from north to south, it’s the largest natural lake in southern Saskatchewan. The southern tip is only about 40 km northwest of Regina, earning it “beach within reach” status. 

The area features sandy shores, rolling prairie hills, and native vegetation like Saskatoon and chokecherry bushes. Roughly 50 hamlets rim the lake, and a wide variety of road-access cottages are available, from modest lots with small cabins to more expensive four-season getaways. There’s also a decent selection of vacant lots on the lake.

Cottagers love the long prairie summer evenings; the watersports; summer and winter fishing for pike, perch, and walleye; and winter activities such as snowmobiling and cross-country skiing. Regina Beach offers grocery stores and once-weekly medical care (the closest hospitals are in Regina). The Last Mountain Lake Bird Sanctuary, the first federal bird sanctuary in North America and a National Historic Site, at the north end of the lake, is home to more than 280 bird species. There are two small provincial parks on the eastern shore.

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Mobile Syrup

SaskTel expands 5G network to Craven, nearly completes phase one of Rural Fibre Initiative

SaskTel has expanded its 5G network to Village of Craven, providing users with speeds up to 1.2Gbps.

Samsung powers the network, and SaskTel says it will provide increased capacity and ultra-low latency when fully deployed.

The expansion will cover the grounds hosting the Country Thunder music festival, which will take place this week. The company last announced a similar expansion for Saskatoon in March.

“At SaskTel, we recognize the true potential of 5G and are pleased to bring our new network to Craven,” Doug Burnett, SaskTel’s president and CEO, said. “Being the first community outside of Regina and Saskatoon to receive 5G service, we’re extremely excited to test the network and its capabilities in a unique setting which will help us further develop the technology as we work to expand our 5G network to all corners of the province.”

The expansion is part of the company’s commitment to invest $1.5 billion in Saskatchewan over the next five years.

Rural Fibre Initiative

Also part of the $1.5 billion commitment is the company’s Rural Fibre Initiative. The project will bring advanced fibre optics to rural families and businesses in the province through SaskTel infiNet service.

Today the company announced the first phase of the project, valued at $100 million, is 95 percent complete, allowing most of the homes and businesses in Balgonie, Biggar, Langham, and Pilot Butte communities to connect to infiNet service. It delivers speeds “close to” 1Gbps, and SaskTel will complete the project in four phases.

Image credit: SaskTel

Source: SaskTel

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Cottage Life

Wild Profile: Meet the black-footed ferret

What’s the black-footed ferret’s claim to fame? This mammal has the distinction of being the only ferret species native to North America. (Pet ferrets are not native. Experts believe they likely descended from polecats in Europe.) It’s also—unfortunately—famous for its historically non-existent numbers in its prairie home range. Now, thanks to recovery efforts, there’s a Canadian wild ferret population in Saskatchewan’s Grasslands National Park. It’s not big, but it’s something.

Is the black-footed ferret endangered?

Yes. In fact, they’re considered one of the most endangered mammals in North America. In the 1970s, officials listed the species as “Extirpated”, that is, gone from a specific geographical location but not extinct. No one had spotted a ferret in the wild since 1937. Then, in 1981, a Wyoming farmer came across a small population (his dog led him to it—good puppy!). This launched a series of reintroduction programs across the continent.

What’s in the black-footed ferret’s diet? 

They may be small, but this ferret is scrappy enough to take on prairie dogs (not that much smaller). These rodents are the “obligate” carnivore’s main food source—they can make up to 90 per cent of a ferret’s diet—a factor that contributed to the black-footed ferret decline. Since prairie dogs dig burrows in fields where crops grow, there were plenty of reasons for folks to want them gone. And, even though native ferrets also eat mice, squirrels, and ground-nesting birds, losing such a huge part of their diets when many prairie dogs were exterminated had a big impact. (Actions have consequences, people! Happily, we know this now.)

Black-footed facts of life

Female ferrets don’t ovulate until right before breeding season. This starts as early as the end of January, but peaks in March and April. After about 45 days, a mama ferret gives birth to a litter—usually three or four kits. This happens underground, in a repurposed prairie dog burrow (another reason why the species is dependent on prairie dogs). Babies learn to be strong hunters by chasing each other, simulating attacks on pretend prey, and watching adult black-footed ferrets. Each one, teach one! We’re rooting for you, little ferrets.

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Mobile Syrup

FlexNetworks acquires Saskatchewan based Redbird Communications

FlexNetworks has acquired Saskatoon-based Redbird Communications to expand broadband services across Canada.

Redbird was founded in 2008 and has contributed to providing fibre across rural communities in Saskatchewan. FlexNetworks owns, manage and operates fibre-optic infrastructure in Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario.

“At both FlexNetworks and Redbird, our belief or ‘abundance philosophy’ is that everyone should have access to broadband speeds and not be disadvantaged simply by geography,”  John Macdonald, FlexNetworks CEO, said in a statement.

According to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, less than two percent of rural communities, and zero percent of First Nations communities, have access to broadband in Saskatchewan.

“I have been working for almost two decades on getting services equivalent to what is available in Saskatoon to rural areas, and I am excited to have found a partner who shares that vision,” Robin Seaborn, an original co-founder of Redbird’s, said in a statement. 

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: FlexNetworks

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Mobile Syrup

Donations from SaskTel employees leads to support for community non-profits, charitable organizations

In a wave of bad news accounting for uncertainty and an increase in COVID-19 case numbers is a ray of hope courtesy of generous SaskTel employees.

The Saskatchewan-based telecom company has an internal program called TelCare. It allows employees to voluntarily donate funds through their paycheck. The company matches each donation by 50 percent, and the money goes towards a number of different organizations across the province.

A total of $209,000 was raised in 2021. The program had 648 enrolled employees, raising a total of $140,000. With the company’s 50 percent match, a total of $209,000 was raised and went towards 47 organizations.

The funds will support breakfast programs in schools, a program that gives teddy bears to sick children in Saskatchewan hospitals, and a number of other community-based organizations.

“SaskTel employees really are the driving force behind TelCare” Doug Burnett, SaskTel president and CEO, said in a statement. “What makes me proud to work for a company like SaskTel is that the corporation and its employees have always embraced giving back to the communities where we live and work and I’m glad to say the same for 2021.”

Image credit: SaskTel

Source: SaskTel

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Cottage Life

Cottage real estate region: Lac la Ronge

A satellite map of 1,413 sq. km Lac la Ronge reveals an exceptional feature of this north-central Saskatchewan lake, which borders the Canadian Shield. Some 1,300 ice age–carved granite islands fill the lake’s northern half. Sand is rare along the granite islands, but there’s a beach nearly 40 kilometres long on the lake’s sparsely populated south shore. Lac La Ronge Provincial Park encompasses much of the lake, and most people lease land for their water-access cabins from the Saskatchewan government.

Because the area is so remote, cottagers usually visit for at least a week; many stay for the whole summer. Also, it can be difficult to get contractors out to these remote cabins. The government stipulates that cabin lots must be at least 800 metres apart or on separate islands, so quiet and solitude are the main attraction. There are about 20 title properties and 250 lease sites, most on islands. This far north, at 55 degrees latitude, summers are warm, short, and occasionally very windy.

The small town of La Ronge is the nearest centre and has groceries, a hardware store, a medical centre, and most services. Cottagers typically boat into Eagle Point Marina and drive the 5 km into town.

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Mobile Syrup

SaskTel brings 5G to Saskatchewan

SaskTel has begun to deploy its 5G wireless network in Saskatchewan.

The company, a crown corporation of the Saskatchewan government, said the launch is based in parts Regina. The network will be further expanded in the rest of the city and Saskatoon in Spring 2022.

The network will deliver faster internet speeds and have a larger network capacity. Connection will be “instantaneous.”

In order to use this new service, customers have to be within the 5G coverage area, have a device capable of using the service, and sign up for a plan that is compatible with 5G.

“We are thrilled to bring the next generation of wireless technology to our customers. Not only does it further enhance their ability to connect to the world around them, it also sets the stage for technological innovations that will improve the quality of life in our wonderful province,” Doug Burnett, SaskTel’s president and CEO, said in a statement.

The network is powered by Samsung. The company says 5G will help the development of technology use in agriculture, smart cities, healthcare, and many other industries. It likens this expansion to the impact 4G had on the app economy.

Image credit: SaskTel

Source: SaskTel