Annex Business Media: Podcasts

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 148:17:03
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Sinopse

Podcast by Annex Business Media

Episódios

  • Blue Line, The Podcast: YRP’s Michelle Vincent, co-founder of The Haven

    03/12/2019 Duração: 33min

    In this episode of Blue Line, The Podcast, we sit down with York Regional Police Officer Michelle Vincent, who has been in the field for 18 years and is also the writer behind Blue Line’s “Holding the Line” column. Furthermore, she is an officer on a serious mission to save lives when it comes to the first responder mental health crisis. As one of the founders of a new non-profit, Vincent is in the process of implementing Ontario’s first treatment centre that will be occupationally-specific for and exclusive to first responders. It’s called The Haven and it is based on Quebec’s model, called La Vigile. She tells us more about the stage this non-profit is at and why it will make a difference in suicide prevention among emergency services and uniform personnel. Tune in now! Thank you to our sponsor, Goodyear.

  • A Security Life: Episode 6 — Patrick Straw, CANASA

    02/12/2019 Duração: 20min

    Patrick Straw has spent more than 30 years building a successful career in security. He started in policing before joining the security industry as a sales and marketing professional. Three years ago, he joined the Canadian Security Association (CANASA) as the organization’s executive director. Straw shares his thoughts on effective customer service, technology milestones throughout the years and the work that CANASA does promoting and representing the security industry across Canada.

  • Fire Fighting in Canada: Mental health moves into the mainstream

    02/12/2019 Duração: 22min

    Many in the fire service will remember a time when it didn’t feel right to openly discuss a call you were struggling with. Today, organic conversations around how firefighters feel are starting to flow. Toronto’s Fire Chief Matthew Pegg discusses the fading stigma of mental illness with host Tom DeSorcy, the fire chief in Hope, B.C. Pegg and DeSorcy discuss the impact of media coverage in the aftermath of tragedy and the growth in open conversation around occupational injury and stress. What’s the next step for the fire service and mental health? Keep the topic top of mind. Listen now to keep the conversation going.

  • Top Crop Podcast: Bonus: Takeaways from the Canola Discovery Forum

    19/11/2019 Duração: 22min

    This bonus episode of Inputs is all about canola – from how harvest was to producer plans for 2020. Associate editor Stephanie Gordon shares highlights from when she travelled to Winnipeg to attend the Canola Discovery Forum from Nov. 13 to 15, 2019. In the episode, Keith Gabert, agronomy specialist with the Canola Council of Canada, shares ways growers can improve their integrated pest management strategies, producers Scott Keller and Troy LaForge share what they do on their operation, and Ashley Robinson, Canadian agriculture reporter with Bloomberg, shares the latest news on the China-Canada canola trade dispute.

  • Fire Fighting in Canada: Green initiatives in the firehall

    17/11/2019 Duração: 23min

    Mitigating one’s environmental footprint isn’t a trend – it’s the now way and it’s here to stay. There are many opportunities, big and small, for the fire service to green up their operations. Gord Schreiner, the fire chief in Comox, B.C., talks with host Tom DeSorcy, the fire chief in Hope, B.C., about a number of environmental initiatives undertaken by his department and training centre. Schreiner, who is also pens the StopBad column for Fire Fighting in Canada, shares cost and benefit details alongside an important message: green technology is good for your firefighters’ health and safety too.

  • Meet Turf & Rec’s Top 10 Under 40 recipients #3

    12/11/2019 Duração: 23min

    In our third podcast, we’ll meet another three of our 2019 class of the Top 10 Under 40 recipients: Amanda Gillies, director of sales and marketing for Maritime Green Products in Moncton, N.B.; Stephen Hicks, superintendent at the Brantford Golf & Country Club in Brantford, Ont.; and Simon Rosas-Leon, owner-operator of Top Notch Yard Care in Winnipeg, Man.

  • Top Crop Podcast: Potassium management in canola and other crops

    11/11/2019 Duração: 23min

    What role does potassium play in crop management, and how do crops respond when there’s a deficiency of it? Robert Mullen, the director of agronomy sales for Nutrien, discusses the ins and outs of potassium fertilizer on this episode of Inputs.

  • Massage Therapy Canada Podcast Episode 7: Responsibilities, Communication Skills + Challenges

    04/11/2019 Duração: 50min

    “We connect with our clients physiologically, yet our touch is interpreted psychologically.” Talking Body, Listening Hands: A Guide to the Massage Therapeutic Relationships prompts a discussion of communication and ethical challenges associated with massage therapy practice. In this podcast we explore professional responsibilities, communication skills, and interpersonal challenges that massage therapists face day to day. How does the Code of Ethics frame Scope of Practice in assisting the practitioner in complicated decision making? How do we build a “working alliance” with clients? What is a “touch-triggered” response? How can we effectively set boundaries? This and more as we consider all that happens in the therapeutic encounter.

  • Blue Line, The Podcast: Maria Iannuzziello, Durham Regional Police Service’s first female cadet

    01/11/2019 Duração: 17min

    As part of our exclusive women in law enforcement podcast series this fall, Blue Line, The Podcast sat down with Durham Regional Police Service’s first female cadet in her Whitby, Ont. kitchen. Maria Iannuzziello, a Durham College professor currently teaching in the Police Foundations program, shared her memories of impactful moments in policing with Blue Line as well as her perspective on the evolution of police training in regards to the academic component. Iannuzziello, who turned in her badge after 18 years to pursue her career in teaching, is also a passionate advocate for mental health and wellness. Tune in now! Thank you to our sponsor, Goodyear. (https://gov.goodyear.com/police)

  • Fire Fighting in Canada: The power of story

    25/10/2019 Duração: 23min

    A great story told well can make the difference between a lesson learnt or a lesson lost. Fire service leaders who share stories effectively can make a big impact with their personnel. Tom DeSorcy, the fire chief in Hope B.C., talks with storytelling expert Paul Smith how to choose the right kind of story to achieve your goals and then tell it best.

  • Top Crop Podcast: Managing risk with crop rotation

    24/10/2019 Duração: 51min

    As producers plan and think ahead, a well-balanced crop rotation is one way to mitigate agronomic and business risk on the operation. Darren Bond, farm management specialist with Manitoba Agriculture, joins us on this episode of Inputs to discuss what’s involved with good crop rotation. Bond touches on weeds, pests and disease management, changing varieties, weather considerations, as well as the economics of it all.

  • Fire Fighting in Canada: What is The Nozzle Forward?

    18/10/2019 Duração: 26min

    The Nozzle Forward is a system of hose line management and fire attack developed by Seattle firefighter Aaron Fields. Tom DeSorcy, the fire chief in Hope B.C., interviews Brian Pods, an Indianapolis firefighter and technical marketing manager for Task Force Tips, on how adapting this system can help fire departments big and small develop their passion and skills for aggressive and efficient fire suppression, in particular for those lower frequency but high-risk events.

  • Top Crop Podcast: Optimizing fall fertilizer application

    16/10/2019 Duração: 25min

    What crops benefit from a fall fertilizer application, and when, where, and how should you approach it? Robert Mullen, director of agronomy sales for Nutrien, joins us on this episode of Inputs, to share some best practices.

  • Massage Therapy Canada Podcast Episode 6: Working with Vulnerable, Stigmatized Patient Populations

    08/10/2019 Duração: 21min

    Casey House opened its doors in 1988 as Canada’s first and only stand-alone hospital for people with HIV/AIDS. It’s a place where clients can receive holistic care in a non-judgmental, stigma-free setting. Situated on Jarvis Street in downtown Toronto, Casey House’s new 58.000 square-foot home ensures those who live with HIV/AIDS are not forgotten or overlooked. Casey House provides innovative, comprehensive health care through 1) Inpatient day health programs; 2) Community care and outreach; 3) Social community programming and; 4) Research and education.

  • Fire Fighting in Canada: Delivering the message

    07/10/2019 Duração: 30min

    Fire chiefs work through various forms of media to convey accurate and timely information to their communities. Unfortunately, misinformation thrives in the blend of traditional and social platforms that dominate today. Tom DeSorcy, the fire chief in Hope B.C., hosts a candid conversation with Steve Darling, a senior broadcast journalist and city councillor in Port Coquitlam, B.C., that will help fire chiefs determine reliable sources, develop quality relationships with journalists, best manage a press conference and ultimately cut through the noise to deliver the needed information to their community.

  • Top Crop Podcast: Pulse check on the pea industry

    01/10/2019 Duração: 25min

    In 2020, Manitoba will see the launch of two pea-protein processing facilities. This episode of Inputs: the podcast by Top Crop Manager, provides context on where the pea-protein industry is and explores some of the opportunities and challenges for growing peas. Cassandra Tkachuk, production specialist with the Manitoba Pulse and Soybean Growers, also joins us to provide an agronomy angle to the topic.

  • Blue Line, The Podcast: Helen Escott, RCMP Newfoundland & Labrador’s first communications strategist

    01/10/2019 Duração: 31min

    In this episode of Blue Line, The Podcast, we catch Helen C. Escott from her home in St. John's, N.L. Helen created the RCMP’s Media Relations/Communications Unit in Newfoundland and Labrador in 1998. She became the first female senior communications strategist and media relations spokesperson for the RCMP in that province. She was the communications lead on high-profile events, including the RCMP’s Newfoundland and Labrador response on 9/11. “It was a very frightening time,” Escott shares. “People didn’t know what it was... Was it the beginning of World War III? She says she’d never seen the subsequent chain of command in motion before. Within seconds her voicemail was full and she had to bring someone in to answer the phones. “When I look back at it, I’ve just never seen anything like it.”

  • Top Crop Podcast: Post-harvest best practices

    18/09/2019 Duração: 29min

    With harvest on the horizon, the performance of this year’s crop will set the stage for what’s required next year. Robert Mullen, director of agronomy sales for Nutrien, joins us on this episode of Inputs – the podcast by Top Crop Manager, to discuss post harvest best practices, from soil sampling to nutrient management.

  • Massage Therapy Canada Podcast Episode 5: Is Regulation Too Burdensome?

    09/09/2019 Duração: 39min

    The act of massage therapy has been regulated for 100 years. In the recent 25 years, regulation has increased in complexity and the level of compliance demanded of its members. Fees to maintain the privilege of self-regulation have risen considerably, and some have become increasingly vocal in their disaffection for the regulatory body’s approach in Ontario. With self-regulation moving at a slow pace across the country, and health insurance companies finding ways to work with practitioners in non-regulated provinces, do the costs of self-regulation outweigh the benefits? Iam Kamm, RMT, speaks to these questions and more.

  • Top Crop Podcast: Growing winter wheat after a tough season

    04/09/2019 Duração: 19min

    Ontario saw poor winter wheat survival in 2019, in part because of wet weather in the fall and spring. To avoid a repeat season, growers are exploring how to ensure their crop gets off to a good start. OMAFRA’s Joanna Follings discusses some of the risks of planting early, ideal seeding rate and depth, along with some input considerations for a good winter wheat crop.

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