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Tuesday, December 24, 2024
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Megan Leslie

Megan Leslie is president and CEO to the World Wildlife Fund Canada. 

Research and technology won’t feed starving southern resident orcas

Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | April 16, 2018
More funding was announced by Fisheries and Oceans Minister Dominic LeBlanc on March 15 for initiatives to protect southern resident killer whales, the iconic orcas off the southern coast of British Columbia that are slowly starving to death. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | April 16, 2018
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | April 16, 2018
More funding was announced by Fisheries and Oceans Minister Dominic LeBlanc on March 15 for initiatives to protect southern resident killer whales, the iconic orcas off the southern coast of British Columbia that are slowly starving to death. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | March 28, 2018
A cash infusion alone from Ottawa won’t feed the 76 southern resident orcas in B.C. currently facing extinction, writes Megan Leslie. Photograph courtesy of Christopher Michel
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | March 28, 2018
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | March 28, 2018
A cash infusion alone from Ottawa won’t feed the 76 southern resident orcas in B.C. currently facing extinction, writes Megan Leslie. Photograph courtesy of Christopher Michel
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | January 22, 2018
Finance Minister Bill Morneau, pictured last month on the Hill. In response to staggering levels of wildlife loss, conservation organizations and federal parliamentarians of all political stripes have asked the Government of Canada to make nature a priority in the looming federal budget by allocating at least $1.4-billion for habitat protections, writes Megan Leslie. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | January 22, 2018
Opinion | BY MEGAN LESLIE | January 22, 2018
Finance Minister Bill Morneau, pictured last month on the Hill. In response to staggering levels of wildlife loss, conservation organizations and federal parliamentarians of all political stripes have asked the Government of Canada to make nature a priority in the looming federal budget by allocating at least $1.4-billion for habitat protections, writes Megan Leslie. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade