Halifax, Nova Scotia- Province House Hyperlapse
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Province House in Halifax, the oldest and smallest provincial legislature in Canada.
Province House: Halifax Oodle Adventures Tour
Province House (Nova Scotia)
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Province House (Nova Scotia)
Province House is where the Nova Scotia Legislature, known officially as the Nova Scotia House of Assembly, has met every year since 1819, making it the longest serving legislative building in Canada.
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A Tour of Province House
Guidelines for Use
The Speaker of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly grants permission to record the televised proceedings of the Legislature for use in schools and for other purposes such as private study, research, review or newspaper summary.
Television and radio broadcasters may make use of recorded excerpts of the televised proceedings in their news or public affairs programs for the purpose of fair and accurate reports of proceedings.
Program material may not be used for political party advertising, election campaigns or any other politically partisan activity.
Program material may not be edited for use in promotional material by any political party or other organization and may not be used in any edited form that could mislead or misinform an audience or viewer, or which does not present a balanced portrayal of the proceedings in the House.
Program material may not be used in court, or before a tribunal or other body, for the purpose of questioning, commenting upon or making judgment upon the proceedings in the House.
Video program material may only be used with its original audio component and no other audio material may be added to video material used.
Video and audio material must not be used in any edited form, which has the tendency to mislead or misinform an audience or viewer; for greater certainty, in any manner that separates the video and audio elements, unless audio alone is requested, or which adds music or other sounds; or in election campaigns, promotional videos or any other politically partisan activity.
Any other commercial use or rebroadcast of these proceedings requires the express written approval of the Speaker.
Katie + Zach : Engagement Slideshow | Province House / Halifax, Nova Scotia
Katie + Zach Churchill
Engagement Photos
Province House | Halifax, Nova Scotia
The 10 Best Places To Live In Canada - Affordable, Job, Retire, Family
Canada is the best country to live in the world, according to the United Nations. It's also one of the happiest and safest countries in the world.
Do you know that more than 300,000 people made a move to Canada in 2018?
Canada is one of the few countries that doesn't just want temporary workers, it wants citizens from around the world.
This means that it has loosened the requirements needed to apply to become a citizen of the country.
Applicants only have to live in the country for three years in a five year period instead of four years now to qualify.
No matter where you live in Canada, your children have access to free public education from the time they are five to around the age of 19 depending on the province or territory.
Are you planning to move to Canada?
Here are the 10 best places to live in Canada for new immigrants:
10. Montreal, Quebec. (affordable place, raise a family)
9. Vancouver, British Columbia. (most active city, job, best to raise kids)
8. Toronto, Ontario. (retire, job)
7. Kingston, Ontario. (best place to retire)
6. Halifax, Nova Scotia. (place to find a job)
5. Calgary, Alberta. (best to raise a family, find a job, high income)
4. Burlington, Ontario. (most affordable housing, best to raise kids)
3. Quebec City, Quebec. (family-friendly city, cheap place, best to retire, job)
2. Oakville, Ontario. (Overall)
1. Ottawa, Ontario. (best education, study, raise a family, retire)
Please remember, there is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to these rankings. It all depends on your individual needs and skills.
We hope you will find the right place for you and your family.
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Thanks for watching this video. I hope it's useful for you.
(This article is an opinion based on facts and is meant as infotainment).
►Business email: truthseekerdailys@gmail.com
NSGEU downtown Halifax at Province House
NSGEU downtown Halifax at Province House. Nurses in the Capital Health District took to picket lines this morning, on Day 1 of their legal walkout. The 2300 members of Nova Scotia Government and General Employees Union walked out at 7am.
Province House Restorations for 2014
In anticipation of PEI 2014 celebrations, Parks Canada renovated the historic Province House in Charlottetown. The restoration was conducted by Clifford Restoration from Ontario. Learn more about PEI 2014 at
TOP 8 WORST PLACES TO MOVE IN CANADA (2013)
immigroup.com
416-962-2623 / 1-866-760-2623
We’ve told you about some of the underrated immigration destinations in Canada, now check out our list of places prospective Canadians should avoid: the poor places, the racist places, the isolated places, the depressing places, the worst of the worst! Naturally, the tiny towns in the woods of Northern Ontario or the southern shore of Newfoundland would be the worst of the worst, but let’s be reasonable. Here are list of towns and cities with a substantial population (at least 5000 residents) that might seem like a decent idea to a prospective immigrant interested in a slower pace of living.
Photos Credit to:
1. New Glasgow, Nova Scotia
Photo by Verne Equinox, via Wikimedia Commons
Photo by JBarta via Wikimedia Commons
High crime rate? Check.
High unemployment? Check.
High cost of living? Check.
Limited access to services? Check.
High property taxes? Check.
Bad weather? Check.
Despite being a small, quaint city just a few hours from Halifax, New Glasgow tops polls of the worst places to live in Canada. How could those 10,000 people stand it? They must have all been born there.
In 2009 New Glasgow ranked 36th out of 208 in StatsCan's crime severity index. The crime rate increased from 2011 to 2012, and was significantly higher than the provincial average.
In 2006, New Glasgow had an unemployment rate of 7.7%. It has decreased since then and, as of the 2011 census, it was 5.7%, or slightly lower than the provincial average.
The cost of living in New Glasgow was estimated by one website to be 4% higher than the cost of living in New York City, but only 30.3% of those reporting say their households earn more than $60,000 Canadian per year (after taxes).
Property tax in New Glasgow was higher than the average in Nova Scotia and significantly higher than Halifax up to and including 2013.
Climate
New Glasgow receives 1212 cm of precipitation per year (that's more than Vancouver).
2. Kitchener - Waterloo, Ontario
Photo by Tina, via Wikimedia Commons
Photo by Tyx via Wikimedia
Photo by JustSomePics, via Wikimedia
Congratulations, Kitchener / Waterloo, you are the hate crime capital of Canada! Despite hosting two universities and a massive tech company campus, the Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge tri-city area experiences a high per capita rate of verbal and physical assaults on ethnic, religious and gay minorities. Despite its location in the highly diverse Southern Ontario region, Kitchener has inherited the mantle from the previous main offender, Calgary.
In 2011 Kitchener-Waterloo was surpassed by Peterborough, Hamilton and Ottawa in police-reported hate crimes, however the rate remained at nearly double the national average.
3. Thetford Mines, Quebec
The third of the three rogues’ gallery dwellers is poor Thetford Mines, the heart of Quebec’s asbestos mining region and the winner of the title Most Polluted City in Canada. Despite the overwhelming evidence of the dangerous health effects of asbestos, Canada still mines the dangerous mineral, and the biggest mine in a populated area is in Thetford Mines.
4. Bay Roberts, Newfoundland
Photos by Werner Koehler, via Wikimedia Commons
Many, many other rural communities on the east coast could make this list, but Bay Roberts appears because it has the highest unemployment rate in Canada, at 17%. Despite the oil, gas, mining and hydro-power booms in Newfoundland, Bay Roberts has somehow managed to avoid the job benefits. This wouldn’t seem so peculiar if Bay Roberts wasn’t just an hour’s drive from money-drunk St. John’s and other rapidly expanding bedroom communities like Conception Bay South.
The unemployment rate has improved as it was 20.7% in 2006
5. Sarnia, Ontario
Photo by P199, via Wikimedia
Sarnia itself may not be so bad, but its view of and proximity to American heavy industry helps to reinforce the fact that this border town is polluted. It also has an empty downtown and a shrinking population.
6. Saint John, New Brunswick
Photo by DDD DDD, via Wikimedia
Photo by Shipley07, via Wikimedia
Photo by Michael d40, via Wikimedia
Long known as the unglamourous milltown cousin to its apostrophic neighbour to the east, St. John’s, Saint John is a dirty, stinky pulp and paper port on the Bay of Fundy. Despite the natural beauty nearby, the city has a declining population and few economic opportunities outside of the paper mills, nuclear power plant, and small university satellite campus. Don’t end up in Saint John when you want to live in St. John’s!
7. Nanaimo, BC
Photo by Masterhatch, via Wikimedia
Photo by galina75, via Wikimedia
8. Thunder Bay, Ontario
Photo by Derek Hatfield, via Wikimedia
Photo by P199, via Wikimedia
For video production please contact George Laczko at gl@immigroup.com
Port of Halifax - Past and Present
For over 250 years the Port of Halifax has been a cornerstone of economic activity for the city, the region and the province as a whole. The Port’s strategic location made Halifax an ideal Gateway into North America for settlers and shippers and a perfect vantage point for military operations.
Today, the world’s largest shipping lines call on the Port of Halifax, connecting the port to more than 150 countries. The beautiful Halifax Seaport is a premier destination, attracting more than 1.3 million visitors each year. Collaborating and working with strong partners and stakeholders, the Port of Halifax is a significant economic enabler in Nova Scotia, generating $2 billion in economic output each year.
Prince Edward at Government House, Halifax, NS
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Halifax, province Nova Scotia, Canada
2019
Music:
Halifax-area students sing a Gaelic milling song at Province House, Halifax, Nova Scotia
Halifax-area elementary school students sing a Gaelic milling song at Province House, seat of the Nova Scotia legislature, to mark the start of Mìos na Gàidhlig 2016 - Gaelic Awareness Month in the province of Nova Scotia.
The song is Seinn O Ho Ro Seinn (Words:
Apartment in Halifax/ Canada (Nova Scotia)
This apartment is situated in the most distinguished residential area of Halifax and is an ideal base for exploring the charming province of Nova Scotia. Enjoy the breathtaking views over the North West Arm – the most popular estuary of the city, where the stately houses and villas of long-established Halifax families and prominent business people are located. You will immediately sense the calm atmosphere in the building, as well as in this residential neighbourhood.
Mit der luxuriösen Ausstattung und dem traumhaften Blick auf die Bucht, ist dieses Apartment zweifellos ein idealer Ausgangspunkt für Ihre Erkundung der zauberhaften Provinz Nova Scotia. Viel Wert wurde auf die edle Inneneinrichtung und auf den atemberaubenden Ausblick gelegt.
FunDuctRaiser: Quacky with Hon. Lena Metlege Diab at Province House, Halifax
Honourable Lena Metlege Diab, MLA Halifax Armdale spends some time with #Quacky at Government House (Nova Scotia), Canada's oldest house of government. ???? ????
See more: FunDuctRaiser.org
Airbnb in Nova Scotia: Why the province isn't cracking down
Airbnb is being regulated in many provinces, but Nova Scotia is taking a more tenuous approach. The National looks at why tourism and a lack of rental units is keeping the province from cracking down on Airbnb listings.
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11 Cheapest Places in Canada to Buy a Home
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11 Cheapest Places in Canada to Buy a Home.
British Columbia is known for its beauty, but not cheap home prices. Vancouver and the surrounding area has some of the most expensive real estate in the country with prices near, and often over, the $1 million mark. Toronto and Montreal, although in different parts of Canada, are pricey as well, with averages of $630,858 and $328,862 respectively. Fortunately, there are places where the price of a home is much more affordable. There are so many beautiful places in Canada, and there are more reasonable options to the pricier areas. Here are the 11 cheapest places to buy a home in Canada, listed in no particular order.
1. Thunder Bay
2. Moncton
3. Windsor
4. Charlottetown
5. Fredericton
6. London
7. Trois-Rivieres
8. Halifax
9. Sudbury
10. Saguenay
11. Saint John
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Nova Scotia Golden Jubilee Celebration Part 2
16 May 2002. Ceremony at Province House in Halifax
11 Top Tourist Attractions in Halifax (Canada) - Travel Guide
HOTELS -
Travel Guide: 11 Top Tourist Attractions in Halifax (Canada).
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Downtown Halifax, Halifax Citadel National Historic Site, Halifax Harborfront, Halifax Public Gardens, Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, McNabs and Lawlor Island Provincial Park, Peggy's Cove, Pier 21 National Historic Site, Point Pleasant Park, Province House
Driving in a Halifax Blizzard, February 13, 2017
Driving around the Halifax peninsula during a blizzard on February 13, 2017.
0:00 Queen and Spring Garden; former site of the Bank of Montreal, Rogue's Roost bar, and the original Tom's Little Havana.
0:27 Spring Garden Place (left),
0:30 Park Lane (right)
0:36 Lord Nelson Hotel (right)
0:42 Victoria Park (left), Public Gardens (right)
3:46 Dalhousie University (left)
4:23 University of King's College (left)
4:53 Oxford Street
5:23 Saint Thomas Aquinas Church (right)
5:59 Shaar Shalom Synagogue (right)
6:01 Oxford Theatre
6:29 Quinpool Road
6:45 West End United Baptist Church (right)
8:21 Atlantica Hotel (right)
8:24 The Willowtree (nickname for the intersection Robie Street, Quinpool Road, Bell Road, and Cogswell Street)
9:30 Bell Road
9:41 QEII Health Sciences Centre (right)
9:47 CBC Television Halifax (right)
9:58 Citadel High School (ahead and left)
10:06 Museum of Natural History (right)
10:19 Halifax Junior Bengal Lancers (right)
10:32 Citadel High School (left), Citadel Hill (right)
12:36 Halifax Common (left)
12:56 Halifax Armoury (right)
13:10 Agricola Street
16:16 Oland Brewery (right)
17:22 Young Street
19:02 Windsor Street
19:13 Halifax Forum (left)
20:03 Faith Tabernacle Church (right)
21:44 St. Antonio's Church (right)
22:26 St. Vincent's Nursing Home (right)
22:47 Atlantica Hotel (ahead)
22:57 Quinpool Road
23:52 Vernon Street
26:16 Coburg Road
26:41 Lemarchant Street
26:41-29:00 Dalhousie University
26:56 Killam Memorial Library (right)
26:56 Marion McCain Arts and Social Sciences Building (left)
27:39 Dalhousie Student Union Building (right)
27:51 Kenneth C. Rowe Management Building (right)
27:58 Dalhousie Arts Centre Rebecca Cohn Auditorium (left)
28:11 Goldberg Computer Science Building (right)
28:11 Schulich School of Law (left)
28:22 Nova Scotia Public Archives (right)
28:35 Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Station 2 (right)
28:46 Dalhousie Faculty of Dentistry (left)
28:53 IWK Health Centre
28:58 Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation (left)
29:17 IWK Children's Hospital (right)
29:26 Nova Scotia Rehabilitation and Arthritis Centre (left)
29:45 Victoria General Hospital (right)
30:03 Victoria Park (left)
30:18 South Park Street
30:25 Holy Cross Cemetery (left)
31:43 Young Avenue
33:13 Driver stuck in the snow
33:40 Point Pleasant Park (ahead and left)
34:19 Tower Road
35:41-37:49 St. Mary's University(left)
36:20 Halifax Grammar School (right)
37:06 Inglis Street
37:37 Inglis Street Elementary (right)
37:56 Robie Street
38:27 Gorsebrook Junior High School (right)
38:59 Dalhousie Faculty of Dentristy (right)
40:27 Camp Hill Cemetery (right)
41:06 Camp Hill Veterans Memorial Hospital (left)
42:10 Wanderer Grounds (ahead)
42:38 Public Gardens (left)
43:35 Sacred Heart School (right), Spring Garden Road
44:56 Lord Nelson Hotel (left)
46:22 Halifax Public Library (right)
46:41 Dalhousie Sexton Campus (right)
46:39 Nova Scotia Provincial Court (right)
46:45 St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica (left)
46:52 The Old Burying Ground (right)
47:10 Barrington Street
48:16 St. Paul's Anglican Church (left)
48:26 Grand Parade (left)
48:36 City Hall (left)
49:05 Duke Street
49:07 Granville Square (left)
49:09 Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University (left)
49:16 Nova Scotia Court of Appeal (ahead)
49:24 Hollis Street
49:36 Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (left)
49:37 Province House, Nova Scotia Legislative Assembly (right)
51:09 Four Points Sheraton Hotel (right), Courtyard by Mariott Hotel (left)
52:33 The Westin Nova Scotian Hotel, VIA Rail station (left then on right)
52:09 Lower Water Street, Discovery Centre (right)
54:03 Alexander Keith's (left)
54:36 Maritime Museum of the Atlantic (right)
55:00 Halifax Transit Ferry Terminal (right)
55:14 Historic Properties (right)
55:22 Halifax Mariott Harbourfront Hotel (right)
55:24 Cogswell Interchange
56:07 Homewood Suites Hilton Hotel (left)
56:17 Halifax Regional Police Headquarters (left)
56:21 Centennial Pool (ahead, left)
56:30 Gottingen Street
56:50 Global Television Halifax (left)
56:56 Metropolitan Regional Housing Authority (right)
57:01 Mi'kmaw Native Friendship Centre (left)
57:13 Dalhousie Legal Aid (right)
58:23 North Memorial Public Library (right)
59:07 Canadian Forces Base Stadacona (right)
1:00:07 St. Mark's Anglican Church (left)
1:00:08 Shambhala School (right)
1:01:13 Hydrostone Market (right)
1:03:15 Getting stuck in the snow
1:06:32 Canadian Forces Base Windsor Park (right)
1:06:42 Royal Canadian Mounted Police (right)
1:07:47 Oxford Street
1:09:57 North Street Gospel Hall (right)
1:10:03 Oxford School (left)
1:11:33 Oxford Theatre (right)
1:14:58 Dalhousie University (left), University of King's College (left)
1:15:20 Beth Israel Synagogue (right)
1:15:30 Ambrae Academy (right)
1:15:41 First Baptist Church (right)
1:16:24 Wickwire Field
1:16:27 Dalplex
1:17:38 IWK Health Centre (left), Gorsebrook Junior High School (right)
1:17:56 IWK Children's Hospital (left)
1:18:43 Victoria General Hospital (left)