8:30 – Saskatchewan Teachers Federation president, Samantha Becotte, joins Evan on the show to discuss the ongoing stalled negotiations between the Saskatchewan Teachers Federation and the Government of Saskatchewan now that teachers have instated work-to-rule sanctions.
9:00 – Evan takes your calls on the topics on your mind today. Call 1-877-332-8255.
9:30 – Ralph Nurnberger has been involved in various aspects of Middle East policy, having been the director of Builders for Peace and assisting in that role in economic and social development. He was also a Georgetown University professor for many years, served as Foreign Policy Assistant to former Kansas Senator James B. Pearson (R-KS) and then as a professional staff member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in addition to numerous other accomplishments. He joins Evan to give his perspective on the ongoing Israel-Hamas war just after the six-month mark.
10:00 – Minister of Mental Health and Addictions, Seniors and Rural and Remote Health, Tim McLeod, joins Evan after last week’s announcement alongside Ontario and Alberta’s health ministers to announce a partnership in building a system of care focused on recovery. Minister McLeod gives Evan a better idea of what this means and who this recovery care will help.
10:30 – What do you think of this recovery-oriented system of care? Is this new approach by the provinces going to help? Call Evan with your thoughts — 1-877-332-8255.
11:00 – After Evan’s conversation with author and former Sask. cabinet minister, Eric Cline, last week about Saskatchewan’s potash revenues, Evan sits down with two people on the other side of the issue. Evan is joined by Mosaic’s Marnel Jones and Pam Schwann, president of the Sask. Mining Association, to delve further into the potash industry in the province.
11:30 – Do you think the province is making the appropriate amount of revenue off it’s potash resources? Could more be done? Call Evan with your thoughts at 1-877-332-8255.
12:00 – Insects apparently underwent a pretty sizable change ahead of dinosaurs going extinct. That’s according to new research discovered by the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, featured in the scientific journal, Current Biology. Dr. Ryan McKellar, curator of paleontology for the museum, joins Evan to dig into their findings.