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CJCH - Monday, May 27, 2024 - 04:00 p.m. (ET) - Segment #1

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>> Announcer: tonight on "ctv news at 5." >> Valued pieces of art from our hearts, hands and minds. >> Maria: in stitches. This cape breton quilter keeps the tradition alive, creating beautiful works of art. >> It is not rocket science. This is a 2,000-year-old method. >> Maria: good clean work. Meet the couple that sells sea soap by the sea shore. >> A lot of drops in the bucket add up eventually. >> Maria: helping hands for helping hands. Fill your trunk at this community yard sale that aims to feed bellies too. >> Kalin: days of thunder, rain and showers on tuesday. Along with the risk of thunderstorms. >> Announcer: live from the maritimes news centre, this is "ctv news at 5." >> Maria: good evening, and welcome to "ctv news at 5." I am maria panopalis. Thank you for joining us. "first at five" tonight, somber anniversary. Tomorrow marks one year since the start of the devastating wild fires in hammonds plains nova scotia. And residents held a walk to show their resilience and commitment to rebuild their community. Jesse? >> Hi maria, a challenging year for those dealing with the effects of the wild fire. As the anniversary approaches, the aftermath, and the effects still linger but the community is rallying together stronger. The hammonds plains fires are in the past but for many of the residents that lost their homes or were displaced, the incident feels fresh. >> It is very traumatic to have minutes to evacuate our home and see smoke and fire all around you. >> 71 families lost their homes in, and another 38 were damaged. Elsa and jim escaped the flames with their home untouched. >> We have been displaced ever since, but those in the subdivision with major damage, minor damage or no damage feel the impact on a daily basis. >> Reporter: trisha is a resident and a chair of the highland repairs association, she helped organize an ice-cream social and community walk for those from the devastated subdivision. >> To to come together and celebrate a new year, we are hoping that people will continue to rebuild and come back to our community and that we will be whole again. >> Reporter: moving forward, together, is one of the steps in that process. >> Our house was damaged in the fire. We did not lose the home, but it was damaged in the fire. A lot of neighbours have lost their homes, so we have been coming together more as a community since the fire. >> Reporter: that's how the community has come this far and will continue to do, moving forward. Now maria, the rebuilding efforts continue for many that lost their homes or properties in the wild fires and that anxious feeling is still lingering for many. But what is clear is the community is definitely stronger as they rally together in the wake of the aftermath of the wild fires. >> Maria: thank you, jesse. Jesse thomas in the halifax news room this evening. And brings us to the web poll tonight. We are asking, is enough being done to ensure there is not a repeat of last year's wild fires. These are the options, yes, no, and, I don't know. Go to ctvnewsatlantic.ca to weigh in and to see the latest poll results.

>>> Time to check in with todd battis with a look at today's headlines. Hi, there todd. >> >> A group from quebec was banned from new brunswick schools after they shared material from a sex ed presentation. He was beyond furious with the response from the organization. Coming up at 6 o'clock. >>> A new mri suite was unveiled in dartmouth. It is expected that it will significantly reduce wait times in the province. It is that the dartmouth hospital has had an mri machine. And we will hear what that will mean in the newscast. Still with health care now, new brunswick paramedics say offload delays where they have to hand off a patient to a hospital are still serious problems. But they don't know how their impacting response times, because they don't have the data. So laura brown looks into that tonight at 6 o'clock. Let's look into the forecast with kalin mitchell for the first time this week. >> Kalin: seasonal temperatures. Heading into the first part of this evening through the maritimes. So temperatures around the mid to high teens. Cooler around areas of the coast. Some locations are sitting between 9 and 14°. Not an overly high level of mugginess in the air. Looking at due point temperatures, in a lot of cases around the high single digits or low teens. It is pretty dry air for us as we head into the spring and summer months. No periods of muggy weather as we move through this week. Due points come up on tuesday because we have rain moving through, so that's adding moisture into the air but it falls in behind that for fredericton and new brunswick. For halifax, a little bit of moisture on wednesday, but after that, due points falling through thursday, friday and into the weekend. And a similar trend expected for charlottetown and prince edward island. Checking in on the winds, you can see they are out of the south and southeast, they are being sustained in a lot of cases between 10 and 25 kilometres per hour. There is going to be a gusty southerly wind for tomorrow. As that wet weather arrives. Speaking of wet weather, this evening, there is a chance of showers, up to the northwest of new brunswick, but that's running out ahead of the main weather system that is going to bring us rain in the forecast for tomorrow. Some areas with a risk of thunderstorms, I am going to have details of that coming up a little bit later maria. >> Maria: we will see you in a little bit. The yard sale in new brunswick has so many things for sale it extended. It is guilt free spending since your money will go to a great cause. >> It is typically a weekend morning activity, when it comes to yard sales, earl has taken the sale with from one day to three. >> We probably only sold about half. >> Reporter: this is not to yield a bigger profit but a bigger donation to the food bank, and he is not doing it alone. It was sponsored by 5 points baptist church, and saw about 40 to 50 people make donations. >> We want to do our best to help them out in this way. So I know it is only a drop in the bucket but a lot of drops add up eventually. >> Reporter: buyers are invited to make a donation they are comfortable with. Nearly $2,000 was raised on saturday. >> People will just donate cash, if they are not yard sale fans. They want to support the community. >> We are a non-profit, and we -- we depend on donations to run our food bank. >> Reporter: the food bank president, laurie stuart says they have seen an increase in use. >> We are now feeding the working poor. We are feeding more seniors. >> Reporter: plus he says food costs have risen 15% in the last year alone. >> We spend over $2,000 a month, ourselves on groceries besides what comes to us from fda warehouse. >> Reporter: by the time the yard sale wraps up on tuesday evening, they hope to give more than $2,000. But they are optomistic that the impact will be felt long after that. >> Reporter: as people become aware of the food bank or whatever charity we are working with, they end up supporting long term. >> Reporter: ctv news, little riverview new brunswick. >> Maria: thank you, alana. And the yard sale is today and tomorrow. We are going to take a little bit of a break. Find out how to see the bare naked ladies, we have the contest coming up. And we have these stories. >> I am anne, coming up, I would love to show you where my

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