Search This Blog

Sunday, 12 October 2025

Bishop's scold - local police say no big deal

 

Bishop’s scolds students after off-campus homecoming party

feed favicon
Sherbrooke Record · 5 days ago
by Matthew Mccully · Education

Plans full investigation, possible consequences

By Matthew McCully

If the homecoming hangover wasn’t bad enough, the student body at Bishop’s University had another headache to deal with on Sunday Sept. 28, when an email sent out to students from the university’s administration referred to “an illegal gathering on Reed Street”, saying the school is launching a full investigation and that “Students identified as participating in this incident will be subject to sanctions under the Student Code of Conduct, up to and including suspension or expulsion.”

The email, shared with The Record by multiple sources, called the behaviour of attendees at the Reed Street party unacceptable and said, in addition to a full investigation, that the university “will implement both immediate and long-term measures to prevent such incidents in the future.”
The email concludes encouraging students with information relevant to the investigation to reach out, adding all communications will be treated confidentially.

It was signed by Principal and vice-chancellor Sébastien Lebel-Grenier.

 

Fair warning?

There was another email sent out to students the Friday (Sept. 26) before the party, bearing the signature of Danai Bélanger, Vice-principal student affairs and equity, diversity and inclusion, saying BU was aware of the Reed Street gathering being planned and encouraging students to “Stick to events hosted and supported by Bishop’s or events where resources and safety nets are in place.”

“We’ve been made aware of an event on Reed Street being promoted on social media accounts. This is not a Bishop’s-sanctioned event,” the email opens, explaining gatherings of that type don’t have security or harm reduction resources, that things can escalate quickly putting people at risk, and can lead to serious safety issues.

Students are then advised that usual supports found on campus would not be available, and attending is an individual choice, “but please know that unsafe or unlawful behaviour can still result in fines, police action, or Student Code of Conduct consequences.”
The Record reached out to BU for an interview with the administration for details about the investigation and the measures being implemented on campus. The Record was also curious about the qualification of the Reed Street event as illegal, and the jurisdiction the institution was assuming over a party that took place off school grounds.

BU Communications Manager Sonia Patenaude, replying by email, said no interviews were possible at the moment, and provided the following statement, seen here in full:

“Bishop’s University strongly condemns the dangerous and unacceptable behaviour that occurred during the unsanctioned and illegal gathering on Reed Street during Homecoming weekend. This conduct does not reflect the values of our institution or the spirit of our community.
We are taking this matter very seriously. A full investigation is underway, and immediate measures are being implemented to ensure the safety and well-being of our students, staff, and neighbours.

We remain committed to fostering a safe, respectful, and inclusive environment for all members of the Bishop’s and wider community.”

 

Student Code of Conduct

The Bishop’s University Student Code of Conduct is published on the university’s website.
Section 4 of the code refers to the scope. According to the online document, the code applies to students while on university premises, and off campus in the following situations:
– When they are acting as a delegate or designated representative of Bishop’s University or as a member of a Student Organization;
-When they are participating in a University event, program, or activity (including, but not limited to, exchange programs, co-op, career and experiential education activities);
-When the Student’s conduct may adversely affect, disrupt or interfere with another person’s reasonable participation in University programs and activities or the University’s work and learning environment, which may include online conduct; and/or,
-When participating in virtual or online spaces including, but not limited to, online learning environments.
In its two missives and the statement that followed, the university did not explain in what way it perceived students to be in breach of the code.

 

Police call party nothing special

The Record reached out to the Sherbrooke Police Service (SPS) for details about the party in question, which took place on Reed Street Saturday, Sept. 27.

According to SPS media rep, Martin Carrier, compared to previous years, the party was nothing special.
Carrier said things got rolling on Connolly Street and by 10:30 p.m. there were around 200-300 partiers. Carrier said the crowd eventually migrated to Reed Street and carried on until around 2 a.m. when the gathering dwindled to around 100 people, and by 2:30 it was completely over.
At peak party time, Carrier said between 400-500 people were at the gathering, which was monitored for the duration of the event by several officers (plusiers dizaines, he said).

Carrier added that the SPS, local community and the City know a big party is expected every homecoming and plan accordingly.
A single noise complaint was filed Saturday night related to the Connolly Street gathering, and there were no arrests made or fines given.

 

Fire department deals with pyros

The City of Sherbrooke’s communications department confirmed Monday that the fire department was called to Reed Street by the SPS on Saturday before midnight. An intervention was required to extinguish a fire on the street, and while putting it out, a number of revellers tried to start a second one, but it was snuffed out before damage was done.

The City added that no injuries were reported during the incident, and reiterated that the fire department was fully aware the party would be taking place and was on standby.

 

Facebook investigators suggest foul play

The Town of Lennoxville and Area Facebook page had a post asking, “What happened on Reed Street last night?”
A thread of roughly 20 comments followed, ranging from “students misbehaving” to some pretty detailed allegations of breaking and entering, destruction of property and incriminating videos circulating.

The comments piqued the curiosity of Lennoxville Borough President Claude Charron, who said he is planning an investigation of his own.
While he did not attend the party, did not personally hear any complaints from community members, and had not asked for or received a report from the police or BU, Charron said he was determined “to find out how these things happen.”

Charron said the Town and Gown Committee, comprised of Lennoxville community members, police, and BU representatives to ensure harmonious co-habitation between locals and the student population, still exists, but admitted he arrived late to the last meeting and couldn’t confirm whether the party in question was on the agenda.

Councillor Jennifer Garfat, also on the committee, did not reply to a request for comment before press time.

Friday, 10 October 2025

Global Renewables to Double by 2030 as U.S. Slumps, China and India Step Up

Global Renewables to Double by 2030 as U.S. Slumps, China and India Step Up


Global Renewables to Double by 2030 as U.S. Slumps, China and India Step Up
October 7, 2025
Reading time: 3 minutes

Full Story: The Energy Mix
Mitchell Beer









Alexander Mills/Unsplash



While global renewable electricity installations will grow at a slightly slower pace than modellers previously expected between 2025 and 2030, total capacity is still on track to double by decade’s end, with solar leading the way, the International Energy Agency says.

Countries will add 4,600 gigawatts (that’s 4,600 billion watts) of new renewable generation capacity over the next five years, “roughly the equivalent of adding China, the European Union, and Japan’s power generation capacity combined to the global energy mix,” the IEA concludes in its Renewables 2025 forecast released this morning. Solar photovoltaics account for nearly 80% of the increase, and renewable power is expected to grow faster than it did over the last five years in more than 80% of the world’s countries.

Global wind capacity will nearly double to more than 2,000 GW, with China and the European Union leading new deployments, and the IEA expects hydropower to account for 3% of new renewable power through 2030.

All told, renewable energy capacity worldwide will grow 2.6- to 2.8-fold from 2022 levels by 2030, falling short of the tripling that countries promised at the COP28 climate summit in Dubai. “This target can still be brought within reach if countries adopt enhanced policies to bridge gaps in both ambition and implementation,” the report states.

In an analysis published just hours ahead of the IEA release, researchers at the Ember energy think tank said solar and wind outpaced the growth in global electricity demand in the first half of this year, overtaking coal as a source of power supply for the first time.

“We are seeing the first signs of a crucial turning point,” Ember Senior Electricity Analyst Małgorzata Wiatros-Motyka said in a release. “Solar and wind are now growing fast enough to meet the world’s growing appetite for electricity. This marks the beginning of a shift where clean power is keeping pace with demand growth.”

The IEA expects renewables deployment to be 5% slower this year than it projected in October 2024, a shift it attributes to policy changes in the United States and China. “The forecast for the United States is revised down by almost 50%,” the report states, after the Trump administration phased out federal renewable energy tax credits ahead of schedule, imposed severe import restrictions on renewables industries, suspended new offshore wind leasing, and curtailed wind and solar leasing on federal lands.

“China’s shift from fixed tariffs to [renewable energy procurement] auctions is impacting project economics and lowering growth expectations,” the IEA adds. “Nonetheless, China continues to account for nearly 60% of global renewable capacity growth and is on track to reach its recently-announced 2035 wind and solar target five years ahead of schedule, extending its track record of early delivery.”

India, the EU, and most emerging and developing economies have all accelerated their renewable adoption since the IEA’s last data release a year ago. India is in good shape to meet its 2030 target and become the world’s second-biggest renewable energy market, achieving a 2.5-fold increase in capacity in just five years. Deployment is accelerating in Southeast Asia and Europe, while the forecast for the Middle East and North Africa is up 25%, led mainly by solar development Saudi Arabia.

The IEA points to some storm clouds for the renewable energy sector. Growth in wind power development is hampered by supply chain issues, rising costs, and permitting delays, and major solar and wind manufacturers are still losing money despite “surging” installations world-wide. An excess of solar modules has driven prices down by more than 60% in China since 2023, while wind manufacturers outside China reported cumulative losses of US$1.2 billion last year.

But despite those headwinds, the IEA said one-fifth of the large renewable developers it surveyed had increased their deployment targets over the last year, while three-quarters kept to their previously-stated goals. At a time of uncertain government policies, corporate power purchase agreements (PPAs) have been an important point of stability, delivering 30% of the expansion the IEA anticipates through 2030.

Wednesday, 8 October 2025

100 sick cruise passengers

  

Royal Caribbean cruise

Jean-Francois Monier/Getty Images

The poop deck was overflowing on a Royal Caribbean cruise from San Diego to Miami last month, as 94 guests and four crew members (about 5% of the ship’s manifest) came down with norovirus during the two-week voyage.

The flare-up was one of 19 norovirus outbreaks on cruise ships so far this year—already one more than last year and five more than in 2023, per the New York Times.

Norovirus is highly contagious, making cruise ships—where thousands of passengers in tight quarters can get to know their fellow travelers intimately on the conga line—particularly vulnerable to its spread.—AE

Sunday, 5 October 2025

Browse faster and longer

 May 2025: Phishing, battery, and speed improvements | Proton VPN






An even better NetShield plus browse faster and longer

We recently published our roadmap for spring and summer 2025 to showcase the exciting updates to our service that are heading your way. Now, with spring only just underway, we’d like to share with you recent improvements that will make your online life more safe, more private, and more productive.

NetShield Ad-blocker blocks more phishing attempts

NetShield Ad-blocker in action

Are you worried about falling for a phishing attack? We’ve expanded the list used by our NetShield Ad-blocker DNS filtering feature so that it now blocks almost all known phishing(new window) domains. Simply turn NetShield on for peace of mind, knowing that if you accidentally visit a site that contains phishing scripts, it simply won’t load.

RG Richardson City Guides

RG Richardson City Guides
Interactive City and Finance Guides

RG Richardson City Guides

RG Richardson City Guide has over 300 guides let our interactive search city guides do the searching, no more typing and they never go out of date. With over 13,900 preset searches, you only have to click on the preset icon. Search for restaurants, hotels, hostels, Airbnb, pubs, clubs, fast food, coffee shops, real estate, historical sites and facts all just by clicking on the icon. Even how to pack is all there.

Bishop's scold - local police say no big deal

  Bishop’s scolds students after off-campus homecoming party Sherbrooke Record  ·  5 days ago by Matthew Mccully  ·  Education Plans full in...