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If knowledge is power, what is a shuttered database?

Once upon a time, B.C. had a database that tracked the movement of hazardous materials around the province. It was searchable, publicly available and provided a critical tool for enforcement within the government — as well as for journalists who wanted to keep an eye on chemicals moving around the province.

Then in the middle of an environmental controversy, it was mothballed.

Contaminated soils were being transported to the Shawnigan Lake watershed, which sparked protests from residents who depend on the lake for drinking water. The government says it's a coincidence that the database was shut down at that moment.

Regardless of their intention, the loss of the database was a blow to public accountability as well as to the government's own ability to keep track of hazardous materials.

Investigative journalist Ben Parfitt wrote about the consequences of this decision for The Narwhal.

Read on for more of this week's top stories.

Emma Gilchrist
Editor-in-Chief, The Narwhal

Come on a video journey with us ...

Canada is filled with awe-inspiring landscapes — so many that it feels impossible to visit them all. Join The Narwhal on a video journey into Canada's Wood Buffalo National Park, a place named a World Heritage site for its "outstanding universal value."

The seven-minute video, shot by Louis Bockner and edited by our multi-talented managing editor Carol Linnitt, has racked up 20,000 views so far. Watch it now.

Canada, U.S. governments watching, but not intervening in, coal mine pollution controversy

By Judith Lavoie
Governments on both sides of the border are trying to stay out of a dispute within the International Joint Commission, which stems from selenium pollution leaching from Canadian coal mines and across the border into the U.S. Read more. Meet Danielle. She lives in Ladysmith, on Vancouver Island, and works as a flight attendant.

She just became a Narwhal because a) she wanted that sweet T-shirt, b) she likes the "truth and perspective" she finds on The Narwhal compared to traditional media and c) she's stoked to support hiring a reporter in Alberta. Thank you, Danielle! Be Like Danielle

Canada is flying blind into Arctic conservation

By Cody Dey

Canada says it wants science-based decision-making in the Arctic. But does it have the science it needs to make those decisions? Read more.

Roaming in Canada has a history longer than this country. So why not make it official?

By Matthew Robert Anderson

The "right to roam" is enshrined in UK laws, but not in Canada's. Enacting such a right here could help advance reconciliation while better connecting Canadians to the land, argues Matthew Robert Anderson of Concordia University. Read more.

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