Canadian politician
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She's won more elections than any woman in this province's history - but last week Yvonne Jones announced she won't be running for the provincial Liberal leadership. We find out why... and talk about her next chapter as she releases her tell-all memoir "Just around the Corner." (Krissy Holmes with Yvonne Jones)
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
How did Labrador fare in the Muskrat Falls project? Labrador MP Yvonne Jones shares her thoughts on why Labrador didn't get the benefits it should have. She joined us in our studio to reflect on her 30 year old political career after she announced she won't be running in the next federal election. This is the final part of a two part conversation.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
A couple of weeks ago, Labrador MP Yvonne Jones announced she won't be seeking re-election in the next federal election. She joined us in our Happy Valley-Goose Bay studio to reflect on her political career that has spanned more than 30 years. We bring you the first part of that conversation.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
After more than 30 years of being in office, Yvonne Jones won't be seeking another term.The Labrador MP has announced she's retiring from federal politics. We take you to her public press conference held in Happy Valley-Goose Bay on Friday.
The federal Liberal Party is slimming out. First, Justin Trudeau said he's resigning, and now there's news about MPs from this province, Gudie Hutchings will not run in the next election, citing family as her main reason for leaving her job as MP for the Long Range Mountains. CBC had also learned that Yvonne Jones was expected to announce she's leaving; Newfoundland MPs Churence Rogers, Ken MacDonald and Seamus O'Regan are also out. Former Premier Roger Grimes joins a long list of political watchers shaking their heads for the province and the country.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
We hear from Labrador MP Yvonne Jones on Trudeau's resignation and her hopes for the federal Liberal party, going forward.
Trudeau dissenters got their day as about 20 Liberal MPs stood in a marathon caucus meeting to urge the prime minister to resign before it's too late to stop the Conservatives. But many Liberals emerged from that meeting claiming the party is united. We hear from someone who was in that room - the member of parliament for Labrador. (Krissy Holmes with Yvonne Jones)
Yvonne Jones has spent more than 30 years as an end of life nurse, and has personally witnessed hundreds of people take their final breath as human beings on this earth. What she shares about what she's seen as people are dying might surprise you, and will likely give you a different perspective on something that, unless Jesus returns in your lifetime, you are guaranteed to experience. ----------------------------------------------------------------Subscribe to our YouTube channel hereTo recommend a guest for us click here or visit https://www.astrongerfaith.org/contactTo financially support this ministry visit https://www.astrongerfaith.org/giveWE LOVE MAIL! Send us something to:A Stronger Faith MinistriesP O Box 2594Tuscaloosa, AL 35403
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
The repatriation ceremony for an unknown soldier killed at Beaumont-Hamel was highly emotional for those present—including for Labrador MP Yvonne Jones. We hear some of her thoughts from the Beaumont-Hamel site this past Saturday.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
The federal government is looking into opening up National Defense properties to build more housing for military and civilians, but 5 Wing Goose Bay isn't on that list. MP Yvonne Jones says the base is a critical site, not a surplus site that can be opened up right now, but work is ongoing to create more housing in town.
Jan 20th - Labrador MP Yvonne Jones by VOCM
Rulemaking. The government does lots and lots of it. But because the power to regulate is the power to destroy, rulemaking has rules. And like all agency activities, it requires congressional oversight. The Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress asked the Government Accountability Office for ideas on how to improve rulemaking oversight. To find out what the committee came up with, Federal Drive Host Tom Temin spoke with Yvonne Jones, GAO's director of strategic issues.GAO Report Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Rulemaking. The government does lots and lots of it. But because the power to regulate is the power to destroy, rulemaking has rules. And like all agency activities, it requires congressional oversight. The Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress asked the Government Accountability Office for ideas on how to improve rulemaking oversight. To find out what the committee came up with, Federal Drive Host Tom Temin spoke with Yvonne Jones, GAO's director of strategic issues. GAO Report Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
The federal government wants more people to use electric heat pumps as a way to heat their homes rather than home oil furnaces. Now, it's offering some incentives for rural Canadians. Labrador MP, Yvonne Jones fills us in.
Claimed by Jesus Christ, Yvonne Jones Lembo was born to a family of pioneering Christian leaders in the African-American Pentecostal movement. With strong Christian roots, she has grown up and branched out in fellowship and service across denominations in the Body of Christ. Gifted by the Lord in intercessory prayer and the ministry of the Word through singing, writing, preaching and teaching, she served God's people through music, congregational care, and ministry to women, children and youth. She has witnessed the Gospel of Jesus Christ on college campuses, street corners, prisons, hospitals, and nursing homes; ministered to the homeless, families in need, immigrants and refugees. Yvonne served with worldwide evangelism teams in the Caribbean, Europe and Africa, and has taken the lead in mobilizing African-Americans for missions through ministries such as the African American Missions Summit, the Global Round Table, and Meet Me in Africa. Yvonne has served on the Executive Team of Catalyst for Change Church of Philadelphia since 2011. In 2012, she was consecrated as an Evangelist Missionary with the Church of God in Christ. She received the Master of Divinity with honors from Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia in 2013. Affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America since 2006, she serves as Regional Gift Planner for Eastern Pennsylvania with the ELCA Foundation.
Claimed by Jesus Christ, Yvonne Jones Lembo was born to a family of pioneering Christian leaders in the African-American Pentecostal movement. With strong Christian roots, she has grown up and branched out in fellowship and service across denominations in the Body of Christ. Gifted by the Lord in intercessory prayer and the ministry of the Word through singing, writing, preaching and teaching, she served God's people through music, congregational care, and ministry to women, children and youth. She has witnessed the Gospel of Jesus Christ on college campuses, street corners, prisons, hospitals, and nursing homes; ministered to the homeless, families in need, immigrants and refugees. Yvonne served with worldwide evangelism teams in the Caribbean, Europe and Africa, and has taken the lead in mobilizing African-Americans for missions through ministries such as the African American Missions Summit, the Global Round Table, and Meet Me in Africa. Yvonne has served on the Executive Team of Catalyst for Change Church of Philadelphia since 2011. In 2012, she was consecrated as an Evangelist Missionary with the Church of God in Christ. She received the Master of Divinity with honors from Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia in 2013. Affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America since 2006, she serves as Regional Gift Planner for Eastern Pennsylvania with the ELCA Foundation.
Homer G Phillips Hospital, belongs to the Ville neighborhood and to the African American community, its history and its culture in StLouis mo. It was my privilege and perhaps even my duty ,to have this discussion with the leadership of the Homer G Phillips Nurses Alumni Association, concerning their lawsuit against developer Paul McKee, for copyright infringement. ——— I was joined in studio by Yvonne Jones, President of HGP Nurses Association and Zenobia Thompson, Vice Chairman and a long time healthcare activist l, in the StLouis metro area. ——— Our conversation focused on McKee's misappropriation, of the historic black hospital's name, from the African American community for his, for profit 3 bed healthcare facility located near downtown StLouis. ——— It was hard for me to be the objective host, for this discussion, given my history with Homer G Phillis Hospital. ——— I was born there, my son Christian Thompson ,was born there, my late mother, Mrs Emma Lou Thompson, a LPN worked there for some 40 years and was dedicated to Homer G Phillips and her many healthcare colleagues, while working the 11p to 7am shift for over 4 decades. ——— Homer G Phillips Hospital, was opened in 1937 on Whittier ave. in the Ville neighborhood, around the corner from the Sumner High School, Antioch Baptist Church and the iconic Annie Malone Children's Home. —— The hospital gained national recognition for its excellent training of black physicians, nurses and surgeons, who were denied access to interning at hospitals, throughout the south during that time period. ——— Homer G Phillips Hospital, was ranked in the top ten public hospitals, across the nation, while training medical students, from across the globe. Homer G Phillips was closed in 1979, by former mayor Jim Conway an unforgivable act, that caused him to be a one term mayor, as Congressman Bill Clay Sr., had promised him he would be, if he indeed closed Homer G Phillips Hospital.------ The copyright lawsuit, brought by the Homer G Phillips Nurses Alumni Association, against Paul McKee, was filed in 2022 and is scheduled to be heard, in January 2024. —— Ours is a passionate conversation that you need to hear, it's our black history, our culture and legacy that's once again being threatened. ——— The Homer G Phillips Nurses Association, needs our support. A GoFundMe account has been established, to support this lawsuit. Please visit Fundraiser by the Change The Name Coalition. ———
The Census Bureau is already applying lessons learned from the 2020 decennial count in preparing for 2030 and even 2040. For one thing, it learned how to lower costs through employee productivity, so 2020 came in nearly $2 billion under budget. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that the Census Bureau could tighten up its internal feedback loop even more. For more on that, Federal Drive host Tom Temin spoke with Yvonne Jones, GAO's Director of Strategic Issues. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Census Bureau is already applying lessons learned from the 2020 decennial count in preparing for 2030 and even 2040. For one thing, it learned how to lower costs through employee productivity, so 2020 came in nearly $2 billion under budget. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that the Census Bureau could tighten up its internal feedback loop even more. For more on that, Federal Drive host Tom Temin spoke with Yvonne Jones, GAO's Director of Strategic Issues. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
0:00 It's almost time for the Smokey Mountain Ski club to open for the first time this season in Labrador West. If it snows enough and the weather cooperates, the Ski Resort should hopefully be in operation on December 26th 4:44 There's no sea ice just yet, but Rex Holwell's Smart ICE work is never done. We'll hear about the latest temperatures on the north coast from him and get his sense of the winter to come. 9:45 In The House of Wooden Santas, there is no comfort and joy on the eve of Christmas Eve. 16:38 Two Elizabeths working together to bring an Elder's words to the page. We'll hear about today's book giveaway. 22:29 Search and rescue in Labrador, the road to the north coast, housing... There's been a lot happening this year for Yvonne Jones, Not to mention her having to step aside temporarily for health issues. We'll take a look back and into the future with Labrador's MP 36:15 What are you wishing for this Christmas? Labrador Morning's Jamie Felsberg hit the streets of HVGB to find out 38:58 It's a book Jodie Ashini is super proud of. She helped to co-write a children's book on Innu archaeology in Sheshatshiu. She'll drop by later on in the show to tell about the inspiration behind it. 49:49 It's the week before Christmas, and to mark the arrival of Kris Kringle, our reporters will be reading you some of their favourite children's Christmas books this week. 55:41 Falls, burns, food poisoning. These are just some of the additional risks you could face this holiday season. Dr. Peter Lin will be here with his tips for staying safe.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
Four years ago, the Cannabis Act legalized recreational cannabis in Canada. Now, that legislation is being reviewed. For a closer look at the issues on the table, we speak to former law professor Bill Bogart. (0:00) The search for the two missing fishermen off the coast of Mary's Harbor was blanketed in controversy. It's been one year later, and what's changed? We hear from MP Yvonne Jones for more. (6:31) Jonny Harris and the Still Standing crew truck have stopped in Wabush this week. We catch up with him (24:42) Mike Pye of Labrador City is doing what he can to support those who experienced loss in Port aux Basques from Hurricane Fiona. (33:13) Mask mandates for planes are soon going to be changed, and that's bringing worry to one father in Labrador, we hear from him. (35:27) You'll be seeing more women behind the controls at Air Borealis. There are now eight female officers. We hear from some of them about the group. (42:21)
Social Activist Yvonne Jones returns for the final installation of our mini series #mamaknowscommunity. This time she again welcomes three generations of women from her family to talk community, family, and legacy. Welcome back to the studio Mrs. Emma Steward, Mrs. Shirley Roberson-Presley, and Dr. Penny Logan.Our guests hold no punches in this open and honest conversation about the struggle for liberation for the Black community. There are also surprise connections between Mrs. Jones' family and the legendary Fred Hampton.Community Mother Emma Steward, Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley and Dr. Penny Logan speak with Mrs. Jones about their experiences working to build community, fight oppression, and uphold their ministry as #superaunts. If you don't know Aunts are the backbone of the Black community. In Episode 26, Mrs. Jones gets her sisters and aunt to share their Auntie Legacy.Mrs. Emma Steward is a nonagenarian living in Hot Springs, AR who continues to do her part to infuse care and integrity in her community and especially works at ensuring her church is well taken care of.Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley has been teaching revolutionary math concepts since the 1980's. She makes her home and community in northern Louisiana.Dr. Penny Logan received her Ph.D. from the University of Texas - Austin. She is a fierce advocate for nontraditional students and a proponent of community college as a gateway to personal advancement.To learn more about a few of the topics we covered in this episode, check outFred-HamptonThe Emerging Movement for Police and Prison AbolitionEducational Opportunities in Prison Key in Reducing CrimeCointel-pro
Social Activist Yvonne Jones is back in the studio for Episode 25. This time she welcomes three guests: Mrs. Emma Steward, Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley, and Dr. Penny Logan.Each of these women are not only members of Mrs. Jones' family but as community builders have been working to better neighborhoods and families in the Black Community for generations.In this candid conversation social activist Jones talks with Community Mother Emma Steward, Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley and Dr. Penny Logan to share what community means to them as well as the ways they have been work to preserve the African legacies of community and family inherited from our ancestors.Mrs. Emma Steward is a nonagenarian living in Hot Springs, AR who continues to do her part to infuse care and integrity in her community and especially works at ensuring her church is well taken care of.Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley has been teaching revolutionary math concepts since the 1980's. She makes her home and community in northern Louisiana.Dr. Penny Logan received her Ph.D. from the University of Texas - Austin. She is a fierce advocate for nontraditional students and a proponent of community college as a gateway to personal advancement.
Episode 24, Social Activist Yvonne Jones co-host for continuation of our mini series #mamaknowscommunity.Mrs. Jones is a lifetime Detroit resident. She spent her formatives years during the turmoil of Civil Rights Movement and has first hand experience with the Detroit Rebellion of 1967. She is unashamed of being a direct benefactor of Affirmative Action and the advances made by the Civil Rights Movement. In her second episode as co-host, she continues her conversation with Pan African Activist Nehanda Green. Ms. Green is the mother of one adult daughter and two granddaughters. She has both an undergraduate degree and a Masters in Public Administration. She is a long time Pan African Political Activist and has traveled extensively through North America, Europe and Asia. But Ms. Green's favorite destination is Africa. She is the author of five children's books and a City of Detroit retiree where she worked as an accountant.In this episode Mrs. Jones and Ms. Green share the individuals and movements that inspire their community work. Beginning with an open conversation about Marcus Garvey, we discover that Ms. Green has a direct link to Garveyite movement. Mrs. Jones likewise shares her love of the radical nonviolent philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Together they offer a life curriculum on African activism everyone should become familiar with, here are just a few names they dropped in hopes that you will research and learn more:Marcus GarveyRichard AllenDr. Martin Luther King, Jr.Kwame NkrumahKwame TureW.E.B. DuBoiseBooker T. WashingtonGhanaian IndependenceAfrican UnitedAll African People's Revolutionary Party (post SNCC)el Hajj Malik el Shabazz (Malcolm X)Harriet TubmanSojourner TruthFannie Lou HamerShirley Chisholm
In Episode 23, introduces Yvonne Jones as co-host for That Social Work Lady Podcast's mini series #mamaknowscommunity.Mrs. Jones is a lifetime Detroit resident. She spent her formatives years during the turmoil of Civil Rights Movement and has first hand experience with the Detroit Rebellion of 1967. She is unashamed of being a direct benefactor of Affirmative Action and the advances made by the Civil Rights Movement. In her debut episode as co-host, she invites Pan African Activist Nehanda Green to the studio. Ms. Green is the mother of one adult daughter and two granddaughters. She has both an undergraduate degree and a Masters in Public Administration. She is a long time Pan African Political Activist And has traveled extensively through North America, Europe and Asia. But Ms. Green's favorite destination is Africa. She is the author of five children's books and a City of Detroit retiree where she worked as an accountant.What a treat that Episode 23 allows me to be in conversation with two dynamic women who have spent their lives working to build community and work for the liberation of Black people throughout the diaspora. Ms. Green shares her philosophy of Pan Africanism, while Mrs. Jones focuses her energy on the eradication of the oppression of Black people in America.Together, they helped build a preschool in Freetown, Sierra Leone and have sustained that school for a generation. How? Through small donations from their community members based in Detroit, MI, Ms. Green and Mrs. Jones have held up and help grow the Mawina Kouyate Early Education Center. They liken their dedication to help build the school among their other community building efforts to the #kitchenpolitics of women like Georgia Gilmore.Georgia Gilmore was a Montgomery, GA cook, midwife and activist whose secret kitchen fed the civil rights movement. For more information about her story check out: Meet the Fearless Cook Who Secretly Fed - And Funded - The Civil Rights Movement.What to learn more about Pan Africanism?The Pan African MovementThe History of Pan Africanism
Last week, the Russian government announced it's banning 313 people, in retaliation for Canadian sanctions on Russia. Those on the blacklist can no longer travel to Russia, as it continues its war in Ukraine. Three Canadian Members of Parliament from this province are on the list, including the Liberal MP for Labrador, Yvonne Jones.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
We find out about Five Wing taking part in NORAD's operation, Noble Defender (0:00) Andy Vine, the folk musician who wrote the song 'Woman of Labrador' (15:03) Winter blast activities happening in Churchill Falls this year (28:08) Yvonne Jones on why she's been banned from Russia by the foreign ministry (31:18) The 16th Eric Rumbolt Memorial Sled Dog Race (41:11) COVID update from MHA Lisa Dempster (49:06) Turning your kilometers skied into money for new ski clubs in Labrador (51:17) What advice some listeners would give to their 2020 selves about surviving a pandemic (57:43)
(Starts at 0:55 mark ) Incumbent Liberal MP Yvonne Jones cruises to her fourth federal win in Labrador, (9:51) The International Appalachian Trail, which is developing a popular trail system in Western Newfoundland, is raising concerns about access to Crown Land for recreational use, (18:04) a member of Qalipu First Nation reflects on its achievements as it celebrates its 10-year anniversary, and (25:38) award-winning Corner Brook guitarist Lloyd Bartlett is still writing and performing music during a career that began 50 years ago.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
As major hospitals across the country deal with anti-vaccine protests, the staff inside are coping with the heavy emotional toll of the fourth wave. We speak with Canadian Medical Association President Dr. Katherine Smart about the struggle to maintain morale. How do you know if your dog is choking or having a different issue? A Pet first aid course is hoping to help. We speak with Rebecca Jackson of the Valley Veterinarian Clinic. Voters cast their ballots for the federal election yesterday, and we spoke to some of them to ask what issues influenced their vote. The federal Liberals will be returning to Ottawa with a minority government, and Liberal Yvonne Jones has been re-elected as MP for Labrador. We speak with her about her reelection, what she heard on the campaign trail, and issues affecting Labradorians. We hear the latest on the resumed search for two fisherman who went missing off the coast of Mary's Harbour. We hear from Marc Russell's parents Dwight and Jeanette, the provincial Minister for Public Safety John Hogan, and from a protest that took place outside the Coast Guard Atlantic headquarters in St. John's yesterday. Finally, Heather Scoffield of the Toronto Star is back to give us the rundown on the federal election.
Labrador - In advance of the Mon., Sept. 20 federal election, we feature the candidates from the four ridings in central and western Newfoundland, as well as Labrador. In the riding of Labrador, Amy Norman is running for the New Democratic Party, Shane Dumaresque represents the Conservative Party of Canada, and Yvonne Jones is the candidate for the Liberal Party of Canada. CBC left several messages for Shannon Champion of the Peoples Party of Canada, but he did not reply.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
Artist Johnny Bandura has been painting to honour the children buried in unmarked graves at the site of the former Kamloops Residential School. We hear from him about his connection to the school and why he is doing this. For our new Help Wanted series exploring the difficulties of businesses finding employees, we hear from the owner of the Pizza Delight in Labrador City. Danielle King joins us. CBC Investigates Producer Rob Antle joins us to talk about a judge who faced complaints about a 2014 memorandum about the justice system in Labrador, and the amount of public money spent defending him. Two of Labrador's four federal election candidates join us to answer some of the pressing issues of the campaign. Yvonne Jones of the Liberal Party and Amy Norman of the New Democratic Party are in today's forum. Finally, curling season is almost here! We hear from the Goose Bay Curling Club about the upcoming year.
Are you a Sexy, Sassy, Sanctified Woman? (Featuring Bishop Yvonne Jones)About today's guest (Bishop Yvonne Jones):Bishop Yvonne Jones is happily married to Doug Jones and the proud mother of one son, Kendell. They reside in Montgomery, AL where she is the pastor and founder of Covenant Ministries International. She is paving the way for others to break the boundaries of tradition by her willingness to talk about the tough subjects that are often left unaddressed. Her book Sexy, Sassy, Sanctified Woman addresses some of those issues. This was her first published book. It is available on Amazon.com: https://www.amazon.com/Sassy-Sanctifi...She is also the author of Financial Empowerment (also available on Amazon)About your host (Tasha M. Scott):Tasha M. Scott is an Independent Executive Director with the John Maxwell Team. Her responsibilities include Executive Leadership Training, Coaching, and Keynote Speaking nationally and internationally. She is also a Certified D.I.S.C. "Personality Assessment" Consultant under the Maxwell brand. In addition, Tasha owns Maximized Growth, LLC where she serves nonprofits, state agencies, and for-profit businesses of all sizes through workshop facilitation, leadership training, team development, and executive coaching. Tasha also serves numerous educators, including the Alabama State Department of Education, through customized courses and training programs specific to leadership, communication, and personal growth. She is a graduate of Leadership Montgomery, Class XXXIII, as well as a member of Leadership Alabama, Class XXXI. Tasha is the 2021 Montgomery Area Chamber of Commerce Ambassador Chairman. Tasha thrives on helping individuals and organizations bridge communication gaps that lead to progressive growth.Thank you for joining us on the journey of Connected Women Win ®. We're digging deeper into self-awareness, personal growth, leadership this season, while we're improving our communication skills. It's time to rise to the occasion of who we are and why we're here. This season, I'll be sharing more of my own journey, sharing some valuable nuggets of wisdom as well as introducing you to a brand new lineup of guests.Get ready, Ladies. We can't heal what we don't reveal. We're not here to be accidental successes. We have hope to spread! Purpose to be pursued and differences to make in our world. You ready?Would you do me a favor???Please share this video!Please like this video!Please subscribe to this channelWe'd love for you to join the Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/conne...Follow me:http://www.tashamscott.comhttps://www.youtube.com/user/CoachTas...https://www.facebook.com/coachtashasc...https://twitter.com/coachtashascotthttps://instagram.com/coachtashascotthttps://www.linkedin.com/in/tashascott/#Leadership #Purpose #WomenEmpowerment
Da President's Podcast with the Black Nurses Association of Greater St. Louis
On this session, Dr. Leonora Muhammad and co host Quita Stephens speak to the pioneers of nursing in the St. Louis area, the nurses from the Homer G. Phillips Nurses Alumni Association. We speak to President Yvonne Jones, First Vice President Johnnie Farrell, and Outreach Coordinator Jobyna Foster about the history of the school of nursing at the historic Homer G Phillips Hospital. We learn what services where provided by nursing and provider staff, their viewpoints on the state of nursing in 2021 and how it was an honor to be most often the first nursing graduate in their families. You don't want. to miss this most impactful session yet.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
Feeling jealous of your friend's or neighbour's jabs? You're not the only one. We speak with psychiatry professor Samuel Veissière about why some of us are getting a little touch of vaccine envy. Reaching Home Indigenous NL is asking the federal government to reconsider their funding application in order to better combat homelessness in Happy Valley-Goose Bay. We speak with project co-ordinator Tracey Doherty. We hear comments from Health Minister John Haggie regarding vaccinations in this province and help for Ontario. A new survey has found Newfoundland and Labrador is in the top 10 jurisdictions in the world for mining investment. We speak with Alex Whalen of the Fraser Institute about the results. We hear from Labrador MP Yvonne Jones in response to a recent tweet made by the MP for Nunavut saying she is 'not an Inuk'. Two mining operations just outside Labrador West have recently reported 19 cases of Covid-19. We speak with Labrador City Mayor Fabian Benoit about the issue. NunatuKavut president Todd Russell joins us to talk about actions he wants to see taken to improve air ambulance services, the federal budget, and recent comments about MP Yvonne Jones. We hear Provincial Finance Minister Siobhan Coady's response to the federal budget. Finally, Heather Scoffield of the Toronto Star joins us to talk about the federal budget, the first in two years.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
A new watchdog report has found that the RCMP racially discriminated against a Saskatchewan Indigenous woman after the 2016 shooting death of her son, Colten Boushie. Caitlyn Kasper of Aboriginal Legal Services joins us. March 24th is World Tuberculosis Day. Today, we hear from a woman who was diagnosed with TB in 1950, and another who is working to bring an end to TB now. Laura Biles and Jennifer Bull join us. Could the pandemic's digital switch bring a paperless world closer to reality? Not so fast, says Michele Lajeunesse. We talk digitization and modernization with her today. Anastasia Qupee is a former grand chief of the Innu Nation who is now the social health director in Sheshatshiu. We speak to her about how the Innu are dealing with the loss of another young man this week. Yesterday, we heard from the town of Happy Valley-Goose Bay about being rejected for federal housing funding. Today, we speak with Labrador's MP Yvonne Jones about the program. Living on the Labrador coast, having solid, safe sea ice is critical for basic tasks like feeding your family, and heating your home. But conditions are changing, and this morning we launch a new series called Thin Ice. Labrador Morning's Meg Roberts and the CBC's Lindsay Bird join us. Finally, we meet a Nunatsiavut artist in Rigolet who makes 3-D models using drone photography, work that is part of a new exhibition in Winnipeg. Eldred Allen joins us.
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
On today's show, a conservation officer in Rigolet is scratching his head after a great horned owl injured a woman in the community. Hear more on that story. It's International Women's Day. It goes back to 1910, but it wasn't always celebrated. We'll speak with a woman in Labrador West who will be representing rural and remote Canada at a national event today. We'll check in with two women's shelters in Labrador to find out how they're set up to support women during the pandemic. The killing of caribou in southern Labrador continues to be a hot topic in the region. We'll chat with MP Yvonne Jones to find out how she feels about it. The pandemic has meant huge job losses for women in this country. On this International Women's Day, we'll look at the social impact... and the way forward.
Join me as I invite my mother, Mrs. Yvonne Jones, back to the studio to talk community.In her lifetime Mrs. Jones has made a commitment to support children in the community with the resources she has. In this conversation she provides very specific strategies for building community where you are:1. Set an intention to help2. Take an inventory of what you have to offer3. Seek and opportunity to match what you have to offer with a need4. Fill the need with what you haveThese four steps are how 'ordinary' men and women have worked for and made big change in their communities through out history. You do not have to have a 'big name' or 'big resources' to make a difference. You only really need the will to do the work. As my mother says, "Start where you are."Organizations mentioned during this conversations include Pan African Women's AssociationNorth End Youth Improvement CouncilWilma's Angels of MercyMoratorium Now!Georgia Gilmore: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/31/obituaries/georgia-gilmore-overlooked.htmlAll groups and organizations founded by average people who wanted to make a difference. What can you offer to make a difference in your community.
In this episode, I share the mic with my mother Mrs. Yvonne Jones. A family member reached out to my mother and requested that we share his experience as a person who has been incarcerated and has a diagnosed mental illness. We share our family's experience of navigating the limitations of services and supports when we have had family members in mental health crisis. The letter he wanted us to share with you is below in it's entirety:Hi I'm have a message that needs to get out on Mental Health.I'm suffocating my host, and he can't tell anybody because I'm supposed to be all better now, and if anyone finds out he's not - "It's gonna be Trouble Trouble.” See the Boogeyman is back, and this time, this joker is badder than he ever was. He ain't even got nobody!!!!! He is just a virus now, and every 30 seconds he kills off all my family and friends!On December 15th at 4am in the morning, that sneaky son-of-a-bitch crept up in Momma's window and killed her!Now that wasn't right, she was just learning how to be a good girl, so why did he want to go and do that ? She never did nothing to him.Now the unit managers and counselors in this prison full of boogeyman carriers say I need to call home to get the bad news, but then they say I need to hurry up and get back to my cell, cause we are quarantined and I only got 5 minutes.5 whole minutes to lie to my children and say Papa alright, I'll be home someday soon, now go say goodbye to my Momma for me. But don't get too close or he'll get you too!Every 30 seconds seconds he kills somebody, every 30 seconds he cuts off somebody's lights!I'm not gonna be alright cause President Trump won't test the vaccine, so my people don't trust it and won't take it either so now the boogeyman can't die!!!Because Trump wouldn't wear a mask, people think they didn't need one either, and so we all became super spreaders, and helped the boogeyman kill our families, and friends every 30 seconds.Hello my name is Orell Leroy Logan, I'm a 52 year old African American man, I am one of the millions of young black undiagnosed suffering from mental illness incarcerated in the United States of America. I've been locked up for 30 years, it took 25 years of long term segregation in a super maximum prison before I was told I was bipolar.Before my diagnosis I thought I was just a crackhead. See I'm the other side of the victimless crime from the 80s and 90s war on drugs. I didn't know I was born with a compulsive, addictive personality disorder, and that I just simply wasn't a match against the high potencies of crack's addictive nature.I would serve crack faithfully against my weak will until I was locked up, or killed. Crack's black on black violence, and the booming new money maker at that time (the prison industry) along with being poor and with mental health issues, that no one ever talked to me about was a perfect storm!!I didn't see it coming, the destabilizing of every urban inner city, and otherwise minority populated community in America. This storm touched every African American life one way or another. A movement was even founded behind the results of this tragedy. The Black Lives Matter movement, ask them.I'm here to tell anybody that will listen, all of that put together, on top of every other thing we been through as a people, short of the horrors of slavery itself, will be nothing compared to what this monster will do to us, if we don't wear our mask, wash our hands, and get vaccination shots. And get mental health help because no you are not OK.If you or a family member are suffering because of an undiagnosed mental illness please seek help. Here is one resource: https://www.samhsa.gov/find-help/national-helpline.
Why is it important to understand the 3-D structures of protein, why are they difficult to construct, and what is the nature of AlphaFold’s advance? Why is this so exciting and what further advances in medicine and the other biosciences may result? On the 30th November it was announced that the Artificial Intelligence computer programme AlphaFold had made a decisive breakthrough in the determination of the 3-D structures of proteins. The announcement was immediately hailed as one of the major scientific advances of the decade. To find out why, join a conversation between Yvonne Jones, Director, Cancer Research UK Receptor Structure Research Group, Professor Phil Biggin, Professor of Computational Biochemistry, and Charles Godfray, Director, Oxford Martin School, who will explore these fascinating issues.
G's Power Hour LIVE - Gretchen DS - Faith Friday - Guest: Yvonne Jones
Ominira Adulawo! Abibifahodie!!! On this episode we feature my fellow tribesman and Egbé, Ekundayo Eniolapo. Ekundayo Eniolapo, wasborn Brian Richard Jones. He was raised and reared in Philadelphia and is the youngest living child of Samuel Burton and Yvonne Jones. Baba Ekundayo is a writer, educator, and shrine worker. He is a member of Egbe Ijoba and an aspiring husband and father. Join us for a discussion on Baba Ekundayo's youth and maturation, matriculating to college and his coming into cultural awareness. We also discuss his introduction to Ìsèse (Traditionalism), Ifa and Egbé Ijoba. We discuss identity, brotherhood, the Sankofa Movement and much more. Support for Speak To After https://anchor.fm/speaktoafter/support Follow Speak To After on social media: Facebook: Speak To After Twitter: @SpeakToAfter Instagram: Speak To After YouTube: Speak To After Podcast --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/speaktoafter/support
In this episode YIP Journalist Nathaniel Saad had the chance to interview MP Yvonne Jones from Canada. MP Jones talked about how Indigenous communities are addressing COVID-19. READ OUR NEWS ARTICLES: https://www.youthinpolitics.net/news SUBSCRIBE TO YOUTH IN POLITICS FOR NEW VIDEOS: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrRU... FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/youthinpolitics_/ CREDITS: HOST: Nathaniel Saad PRODUCER: Zubair Hussain --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/this-canadian-life/message
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
On today's show, we'll chat with Yvonne Jones to get more details on mining operations and the fishery, we'll check-in with Labrador MHA's Lisa Dempster, Jordan Brown, Perry Trimper, and Lela Evans to see how their regions are handling the fight against COVID-19, a youth in Makkovik has come up with a clever pastime that we'll tell you all about it, and we'll hear from another future baker who has taken on a baking challenge to past time!
Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
On today's show, we'll have our weekly check-in with Labrador MHA's, we'll speak with Health Minister Dr. John Haggie to get a sense of how Labrador is doing regarding the fight of COVID-19, we'll also get some local reaction on the rampage that occurred in Nova Scotia on Sunday. Plus, Yvonne Jones will comment on what president Todd Russell had to say on Monday's show, and we'll find out how about a women's shelter that supports vulnerable families during the pandemic.
The Office of Congressional Workplace Rights is a little more than a year into reforms and expansion that Congress itself ordered in 2018. It's done a pretty good job at implementing them as it transitioned from its former incarnation as the Office of Compliance. Now the Government Accountability Office has done an assessment of the OCWR's progress. Joining Federal Drive with Tom Temin for the highlights was GAO's Director of Strategic Issues Yvonne Jones.
In today's interview, we talked about:* The Power of Connection* Her new book, "Financial Empowerment"* The YJM Thirsty Conference 2019 (September 27th - 29th)* and moreYou can order her new book on Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Financial-Empowerment-…/…/ref=sr_1_1…{Connected Women Win - hosted by Tasha M. Scott - #MaximizedGrowth)Today's Guest: Bishop Yvonne Jones, Pastor of Covenant Ministries InternationalThank you to Eleven86 Real Artesian Water for always being on the journey with me as I connect with others.Thank you for the connection Casie Scott and NShape Fitness Montgomery!!!Was this helpful to you? Leave a comment below.Follow me:http://www.tashamscott.comhttps://www.youtube.com/user/CoachTashaMScotthttps://www.facebook.com/coachtashascotthttps://twitter.com/coachtashascotthttps://instagram.com/coachtashascott
It's a forever ritual of federal retirement: You retire, you get part of your pension while the Office of Personnel Management takes a few months to figure out what you are really owed. Now the Government Accountability Office has looked at the ongoing backlog and has some recommendations. GAO's managing director for strategic issues, Yvonne Jones, joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin for more.
We are continuing our discussion, Conquering the Fears of Starting a Business, with Yvonne Jones, a personal business coach and relationship marketing strategist. She is also the founder of 50 and Wiser Coaching and the 50 and Wiser Community on Facebook. Yvonne was listed on HuffingtonPost.com as one of the “Top 100 Most Social Customer Service Pros on Twitter” and on GetApp.com: “One of the Top 15 Most Influential Customer Service Experts to Follow on Twitter.” Recipient of Alignable's 2018 Small Business Person of the Year for Stuart, Florida, she is helping us peel back the onions; a process that will allow us to embrace our passions and confidently launch our dreams. Join us, Thursday, May 2nd at 3:30pm, PST/6:30pm, EST for the second of this three-part series. Feel free to call in during the broadcast, at (646) 716.8344, with your questions or comments. If you are interested in connecting with Yvonne, she can be reached at 772.342.1034. Visit her website https://50andwisercoaching.com and download one of her e-books.
Do you see yourself at the helm of a profitable business, but hesitant to take the first steps? Yvonne Jones is a personal business coach and relationship marketing strategist. She is also the founder of 50 and Wiser Coaching and the 50 and Wiser Community on Facebook. Yvonne was listed on HuffingtonPost.com as one of the “Top 100 Most Social Customer Service Pros on Twitter” and on GetApp.com: “One of the Top 15 Most Influential Customer Service Experts to Follow on Twitter.” Recipient of Alignable's 2018 Small BusinessPerson of the Year for Stuart, Florida, she will help us peel back the onion and confidently launch out, towards our dreams and passions. Join us, Thursday April 18th at 3:30pm, PST, for the first of a three-part series. Feel free to call in during the broadcast (646) 716.8344 and visit zenobiabailey.org to request a complimentary copy of Tips to Create an Online Business.
Folge 208 Diese Woche sprechen ich mit meiner Kollegin Eevi Jones über das Selfpublishing von Kinderbüchern. Eevi ist selbst erfolgreiche Kinderbuchautorin und unterstützt andere Selfpublisher und Selfpublisherinnen dabei ihre Kinderbücher zu schreiben, gestalten, im Selfpublishing zu veröffentlichen – und erfolgreich zu vermarkten. In dieser Podcast-Folge gibt Eevi unter anderem Antworten auf folgende Fragen: Wie bist du selbst zum Kinderbuchschreiben gekommen? Was hat dich veranlasst Self-Publishing als Veröffentlichungsweg zu wählen? Oft wird gesagt, dass Self-Publishing mit Kinderbüchern besonders schwer sei. Wie siehst du das? Was sind besondere Herausforderungen für die Autoren und Autorinnen von Kinderbüchern? eBook oder gedrucktes Buch – was geht besser bei Kinderbüchern und woran liegt das? Was gilt es bei der Produktion von Kinderbüchern im Self-Publishing zu beachten? Was gilt es bei der Vermarktung von Kinderbüchern im Self-Publishing zu beachten? Du bietest auch Kurse für das Self-Publishing von Kinderbüchern an. Wie bist du dazu gekommen und welche konkreten Angebote hast du. Was sind deine aktuellen Buchprojekte? Hier die Links, die wir im Podcast ansprechen, und weiterführende Informationen, Tipps und Erfahrungsberichte rund um Bücher, eBooks und deinen Erfolg: Hier geht’s zu Eevi Jones Internetseite: http://eevijones.com Hier bekommst du exklusiv einen gratis Zugang zu Eevis Influencer-Programm: http://www.eevijones.com/freecourse/ Hier holst du dir Yvonne Jones aktuelles Buch „My Robot Bot“ auf Amazon: https://amzn.to/2HAfFmZ Hier bekommst du Yvonne Jones Ratgeber: “How To Self-Publish A Children's Book” auf Amazon: https://amzn.to/2HytYss Und hier geht’s zu Eevis CHILDREN'S BOOK UNIVERSITY: Hier kommst du in den Mission Bestseller Club: https://mission-bestseller.com/mbc Hier kommst du zu Toms eBook: „In sechs Schritten zum Bestseller“ www.mission-bestseller.com/dein-buch Hier findest du die Mission Bestseller auf Amazon: http://amzn.to/2sV2hnL Einige der Links auf dieser Seite sind Affiliate-Links und ich erhalte eine Provision, wenn du über sie kaufst, die sich nicht auf deinen Kaufpreis auswirkt.
Federal agencies often need highly trained or specialized people that are in demand by industry. To compete, the government has an array of incentives to attract such people. But are they used enough? And do agencies document how well they work? The Government Accountability Office found this is one area ripe for improvement. Yvonne Jones, GAO's director of strategic issues, shares the details on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
Claimed by Jesus Christ, Yvonne Jones Lembo was born to a family of pioneering Christian leaders in the African-American Pentecostal movement. With strong Christian roots, she has grown up and branched out in fellowship and service across denominations in the Body of Christ. Gifted by the Lord in intercessory prayer and the ministry of the Word through singing, writing, preaching and teaching, she served God's people through music, congregational care, and ministry to women, children and youth. She has witnessed the Gospel of Jesus Christ on college campuses, street corners, prisons, hospitals, and nursing homes; ministered to the homeless, families in need, immigrants and refugees. Yvonne served with worldwide evangelism teams in the Caribbean, Europe and Africa, and has taken the lead in mobilizing African-Americans for missions through ministries such as the African American Missions Summit, the Global Round Table, and Meet Me in Africa. Yvonne has served on the Executive Team of Catalyst for Change Church of Philadelphia since 2011. In 2012, she was consecrated as an Evangelist Missionary with the Church of God in Christ. She received the Master of Divinity with honors from Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia in 2013. Affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America since 2006, she serves as Regional Gift Planner for Eastern Pennsylvania with the ELCA Foundation. “Enlarge the place of your tent and let them stretch out the curtains of your dwellings.Do not spare. Lengthen your cords and strengthen your stakes For you shall expand to the right and to the left. And your descendants will inherit the nations and make the desolate cities inhabited.” Isaiah 54:2-3
Professor Yvonne Jones tells us how structural biology was brought into the field of immunology in Oxford, at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics. Professor Jones also explains the developments of her current research on cell surface receptors as mediators of nerve cells guidance.
Professor Yvonne Jones talks about cell-cell communication and how this can help us develop new drugs. Prof. Yvonne Jones is director of the Cancer Research UK Receptor Structure Research Group. Her research focuses on the structural biology of cell surface recognition and signalling complexes. Receptors embedded in the surface are potential targets for therapeutic intervention in many diseases including cancer.
Professor Yvonne Jones talks about cell-cell communication and how this can help us develop new drugs. Prof. Yvonne Jones is director of the Cancer Research UK Receptor Structure Research Group. Her research focuses on the structural biology of cell surface recognition and signalling complexes. Receptors embedded in the surface are potential targets for therapeutic intervention in many diseases including cancer.
Talk About It Today! With Mo Stegall is the premier radio talk show brand for individuals and communities globally. Our motivating message, intimate tenor, relevant content, enlightening guests, inform, inspire, and ignite our audience to transform from simply BEING to BECOMING. It covers your Hot Button Topics in the TALK of the TOWN, and getting the latest news with your BUZZ TIP, Plus the hilarious Facebook Front Page/Twitter Tweet. Hosted by media personality Mo Stegall