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Offline Chad Hipolito

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July Clip Results 2020
« on: September 25, 2020, 10:42 PM »
Judges

The Des Moines Register


Brian Powers, staff photographer Bryon Houlgrave, staff photographer and Rachel Mummey a Freelance Photographer in Des Moines. 


Photographers-20
Feature-58
News-30
Sports-28
Spot News-9
Portrait-26
Multi-Photo 12 entries/131 photos



FEATURE

Judges comments: Patience looks like it was rewarded in the first place photo making a dull situation funny. Second made great use of light and moment and we appreciated third because shooting concerts during COVID-19 ia a challenge, yet between the dramatic light and the body language of the fan clapping, this shot captured the elements of a bigger story while maintaining a feature photo.

1. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Kaela Dutchak and her six-year-old daughter Ophelia sit in the window sill with their cat Ralph during the COVID-19 pandemic. Being a single mom already has it's challenges, but Dutchak is feeling it even more with the COVID-19 restrictions. Not having access to school or child care, feeling shame when bringing her daughter to the grocery store and trying to write timed-finals online while entertaining Ophelia, her high-energy six year old, has been a struggle. Photo taken in Saskatoon on April 24, 2020.  (published July 14)

2. Cole Burston/Getty Images

MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: A pair of concert-goers embrace atop their vehicle during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.

3. Cole Burston/Bloomberg

Attendees sit in vehicles during a concert at the CityView Drive-In outdoor venue in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on Friday, July 17, 2020. Canada's financial capital will remain under partial lockdown as Ontario moves to reopen more business and public spaces starting on Friday.

H.M. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

One of three orphaned grizzly bear cubs shakes off water after taking a swim in a pond at the Greater Vancouver Zoo, in Aldergrove, B.C., on Wednesday, July 8, 2020. According to the zoo the triplets were orphaned when their mother was shot by hunters in Alberta.

H.M. John Lucas/Freelance

A bolt of lightning illuminates the night above Lake Isle on Thursday July 16, 2020.



NEWS

Judges comments: First was just a great moment at the perfect spot. Second was a great storytelling image and third was a nice capture of a touching moment between a resident and visitor during an era where human contact is avoided.

1. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Judy Utgaard, left, of Port Coquitlam, B.C., reacts as she reaches out to hug her daughter Desiree Osborne, of Bellingham, Wash., for the first time in five months, after stepping across the Canada-United States border into Peace Arch Historical State Park in Blaine, Wash., from Surrey, B.C., on Sunday, July 5, 2020. Although the B.C. government closed the Canadian side of the park in June due to concerns about crowding and COVID-19, people are still able to meet in the U.S. park due to a treaty signed in 1814 that allows citizens of Canada and the U.S. to unite in the park without technically crossing any border. Osborne is originally from Canada but lives in Bellingham with her wife Lisa Garrison.

2. Ben Nelms/CBC News

Patrons watch Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back at the Rio Theatre with physical distancing measures applied in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 10, 2020.

3. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Christine Lorimer, left, and her loved one Ian Lorimer's hands meet at a plexiglass barrier during a visit at Lynn Valley Care Centre, in North Vancouver, on Thursday, July 16, 2020. Two residents per day are now allowed to have pre-scheduled visitors in the designated area with a barrier between them, however they aren't allowed to touch, hug or kiss. Visitors have their temperature checked and are given a screening questionnaire upon arrival. The seniors care home, which is now COVID-19 free, recorded Canada's first death from the virus on March 8.

H.M. Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press

A server delivers food to a vehicle during a Stampede Food Truck Rally as people try to enjoy the Calgary Stampede even though it has been cancelled in Calgary, Saturday, July 4, 2020.

H.M. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Ashley Morin's sister Janine Morin is embraced during a ceremony in front of the SPS Headquarters before an awareness walk led my Ashley Morin's family to North Battleford to raise awareness about her disappearance. Friday marks the second anniversary of the disappearance of Ashley Morin in North Battleford area and the second awareness walk that her family will be leading from Saskatoon to North Battleford. Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Friday, July 10, 2020.



SPORTS

Judges comments: First: Way to use the light, great shot! Second was a great view of the sport and third was a perfect moment.

1. Cole Burston/The Canadian Press

The Toronto Blue Jays participate in a batting practice at Summer Training Camp in Toronto, Sunday, July 19, 2020.

2. Kevin Light/Freelance

A member of the Pinnacle Fitness triathlon training group begins her 4km training session at Thetis Lake in Victoria, British Columbia Canada on July 17th, 2020.

3. Evan Buhler/Freelance

Stephen Denton makes a diving save while playing soccer with his brother Ethan at Millennium Park in Canmore on Friday, July 24, 2020.

H.M. Kevin Light/Freelance

Jakub Buczek, member of the Canadian National Rowing Team trains on a rowing machine in a garage while the teams normal training facility is closed on in Victoria, British Columbia on July 14th, 2020.

H.M.  Kevin Light/Freelance

Paul Regensburg, Head Coach of Pinnacle Fitness paddles his kayak while organizing a group of swimmers prior to a training session at Thetis Lake in Victoria, British Columbia Canada on July 9th, 2020.



SPOT NEWS

Judges comments: First Place was in the right spot at the right time. Second made a nice frame in a tough situation and third just seems like a lesson in futility. We love the body language of the men pulling the car juxtaposed by the owner’s expression.

1. Gavin John/ZUMA Press

A protestor cries out as she is arrested by Seattle Police during the take down of CHAZ on July 1, 2020. Following an executive order from Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, police from every precinct in Seattle and with help from police in outlying cities retook the CHAZ from protestors in an early morning operation.

2. Chelsea Kemp/Cochrane Eagle

A passerby waits for fire services to arrive at a barn blaze in Stoney Nakoda First Nation on Wednesday

3. Cole Burston/Freelance

A man holds his car on a rope in a flooded underpass with the help of bystanders as Matthew Sharon pauses as he wades through the flooded underpass during a flash flood in Toronto on July 8, 2020.

H.M. Crystal Schick/Yukon News

The ears of an injured moose calf stick out of a blanket as Whitehorse RCMP and City of Whitehorse bylaw officers work together to rescue the animal in Whitehorse on July 2, 2020. According to officers at the scene, the mother moose was killed by a vehicle the night before and the calf was injured after being chased by dogs. The rescue was successful and the calf was taken to the Yukon Wildlife Preserve. Conservation officers were unavailable to help with the rescue because they were stationed at the borders to monitor vehicles crossing the territory to Alaska.

H.M. Crystal Schick/Yukon News

Whitehorse firefighters preform a technical rope rescue in pouring rain to help a young individual stuck on the clay cliffs at the end Ray Street in Whitehorse on July 9.



PORTRAIT

Judges comments: First place stopped us all in our tracks. Wonderful image. Second and third both did a great job of capturing a feeling.

1. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Rick Thompson, who had all of his limbs amputated after contracting bacterial meningitis and septic shock in 2015, poses for a photograph in Coquitlam, B.C. Thompson moved to London, Ont., from British Columbia in April to prepare for double-hand transplant surgery, which involves medical and psychological tests, as well as finding a donor. (Held for July publication.)

2. Dave Holland/Freelance

Next Gen team luger Jolie Brodylo trains at the Canadian Sport Institute Calgary high performance training facilities on the first day of reopening following the COVID-19 lockdown in Calgary, Alberta on July 6, 2020.

3. Darryl Dyck/The Globe and Mail

Korean War veteran Don Min, who served with the Korean Marine Corps in the Korean War and moved to Canada in 1967, shows medals and pins on his lapel as he poses for a photograph after a Korean War Veterans Day Ceremony at the Ambassador of Peace War Memorial, in Burnaby, B.C., on Monday, July 27, 2020. The wreath laying ceremony is held to mark the day fighting ended in the Korean War when an armistice was signed on July 27, 1953. Organizers had to limit the size of the ceremony because of a 50-person limit on public gatherings in B.C. due to COVID-19.

H.M. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Junah Sumagio – Saskatoon Police Service
Every time a police car comes back in from a shift, custodial staff are required to give them a thorough cleaning. They wear the protective suits normally reserved for cleaning out detention cells.

“If needed, I’ve been extending hours to clean cars. It’s double the work for us because if we put the suit on our body it’s so hot,” says Junah Sumagio, who has been with the police service since 2014. “I’m very proud of myself because I’m one of the frontline workers to help the police officers. Coworkers celebrate that we clean. My family is very proud of me.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 11, 2020.  (published July 10)

H.M. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Vanessa Hyggen is a Cree artist creating beadwork masks to reflect on Treaty Six history and health in the time of COVID-19. Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 25, 2020.











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Offline Chad Hipolito

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Re: July Clip Results 2020
« Reply #1 on: September 25, 2020, 10:47 PM »
MULTI-PHOTO

Judges comments:Lots of good entries here but 12 really stood out. Great variety of
places and moments. Loved the use of multiple images in second. Tighter edits would have helped the HM’s.



1. Ben Nelms/CBC News

Eid al-Adha at a distance: Muslims in Vancouver find new ways to mark occasion amid COVID-19. A Holiday known for large prayer gatherings, but celebrations are different this year. Muslims give prayer during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year at Al Masjid Al Jamia mosque in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Muslims give prayer during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year at Al Masjid Al Jamia mosque in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Muslims give prayer during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year at Al Masjid Al Jamia mosque in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Muslims pray during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Muslims give prayer during Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year at Place Vanier Student Residence held by the University of British Columbia's Muslim Students' Association at UBC in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


People leave the Al Masjid Al Jamia mosque after prayer during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Muslims give prayer during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year at Al Masjid Al Jamia mosque in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Tarek Tantawy prays outside of the Al Masjid Al Jamia mosque during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020.


Seemi Ghazi, a UBC lecturer on muslim feminist theology, leads prayer during the start of Eid al-Adha, the second of two Islamic holidays celebrated each year in Vancouver, British Columbia on Friday, July 31, 2020. 

2. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix

These are the hands of some of the cleaners that have been on the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis for months. Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 25, 2020.


Junah Sumagio – Saskatoon Police Service
Every time a police car comes back in from a shift, custodial staff are required to give them a thorough cleaning. They wear the protective suits normally reserved for cleaning out detention cells.“If needed, I’ve been extending hours to clean cars. It’s double the work for us because if we put the suit on our body it’s so hot,” says Junah Sumagio, who has been with the police service since 2014. “I’m very proud of myself because I’m one of the frontline workers to help the police officers. Coworkers celebrate that we clean. My family is very proud of me.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 11, 2020.


Ajith Rathnayake – University of Saskatchewan
With classes at the University of Saskatchewan cancelled, Ajith Rathnayake has been focused on cleaning buildings where research is still happening, including the VIDO InterVac lab where scientists are working on a COVID-19 vaccine. “When the researchers see us they know coming to the labs that they are comfortable and they trust it’s a safe place to work,” he said. “Cleaning is the most important thing wherever you go. I’m very happy to be here at this university as a caretaker. They are working on a vaccine right now for COVID-19. We (the caretakers) keep our community safe to keep them do what they’re doing for the world. One of the researchers at the vet college said they were so scared when they came to do work in the lab. She said, ‘When we see you I feel very comfortable and know it’s a safe place I’m working at.’ I was really happy to hear that word from her. They are appreciating what we are doing.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Wednesday, June 10, 2020.


Cindy Smith – Sherbrooke Community Centre
Cindy Smith, who has worked at the Sherbrooke Community Centre for more than 22 years, has been helping keep the centre spotless in the hopes that no residents become infected with COVID-19. She cleans and takes temperatures of staff and visitors at the front desk.“That’s our number one priority: Keeping it out,” she says. “Our job is important: To keep the place clean. We have so many high-touch surfaces. And it’s not just cleaning … It’s cleaning them over and over just to keep the staff safe too. We’re washing our hands often, going home, staying home.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 18, 2020.


Jared Leier – Saskatoon Fire and Rescue
Jared Leier had only started work as a firefighter a few months before the pandemic hit. “It was crazy because when you’re going to school you prepare for all the medical calls and fires you’ll have to go into and then this is something that blindsides you. But our management was great from the get go keeping us well informed.” Leier says these days the job involves constantly cleaning the hall and disinfecting the trucks. Everything is decontaminated after calls. Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 25, 2020.


Megan Kuznitsoff – Downtown YXE
Megan Kuznitsoff spends her shifts disinfecting as much as she can: Wiping door handles, bus stops, benches and hand rails. “We write personal journals of where we’ve been in case an outbreak happens,” she says. “In some respects the workload is less because there are less people, but you have to be more diligent. There was an older man who approached me and thanked me for what I was doing and thanked me for being a front line worker and asked if I was getting paid more because I was putting myself in danger, so that was nice.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Wednesday, June 9, 2020.


Ryan Royal – Waste Management
In his eight years working in waste management picking up people’s garbage, Ryan Royal can’t recall ever receiving as much praise as he has during the pandemic. “The public, when we’re out there doing our job it’s nice to have them come up to us and say, ‘We appreciate what you’re doing and you’re doing a really great job.’ A wave goes a long way — even a smile or a hello. It encourages people during these times. I know people are feeling anxious or depressed. When we see that, it lifts our spirits and encourages us.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 11, 2020.


Stephanie Digness – Co-op
Every half hour Co-op courtesy clerk Stephanie Digness sanitizes bathrooms, railings, door handles and other high-touch surfaces and spends her mornings tracking how many people are in the store to avoid overcrowding. She says she was very overwhelmed in the beginning but that she has gotten used to the routine. “I was pretty proud (to be a frontline worker) but it was scary — the panic on people’s faces. Fear. I’m still frightened, but I’m so used to it now. We just do our social distancing and everything’s fine … The customers will see us sanitizing carts and they’ll say thank you. It feels good.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Tuesday, June 30, 2020.


Afzal Mehmood – Access Transit
When the pandemic struck, Afzal Mehmood’s work as an Access Transit driver dried up because people weren’t booking rides. So he volunteered to clean the interior of Saskatoon Transit buses. He cleans one bus a day, removing gum and mud and sanitizing all touch points.
“We work from our heart. It’s part of our job. Public service — that’s why we try to clean. We see the response from the dispatch. I listen to the radio – some of our customers sit and say to bus driver ‘Oh, this bus is so clean!’ It feels good and that’s why I work hard.” Photo taken in Saskatoon, SK on Thursday, June 11, 2020.

3. Gavin John/Freelance

Black Lives Matter protesters and local residents walk in front of the abandoned Seattle Police Department East Precinct in the Capitol Hill district. The Precinct and a six block area nearby would be called the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) and drew condemnation from US President Donald Trump after its founding in early June 2020.


Black Lives Matter protesters march through the CHAZ  in protest of police violence and call for the de-funding of the Seattle Police Department.


CHAZ community leader Soloman 'Raz' Simone poses for a portrait in downtown Seattle. Simone gained notoriety as the "Warlord of CHAZ" for an incident where he handed out rifles to protestors in anticipation of an attack by white nationalist groups on CHAZ. Simone, a local rap artist, became recognized as a leader early on in the Seattle movement and continued to have considerable sway over the CHAZ until its fall.


Local protester Sakura (right) reads a book on Che Guevara to a child during a daily event she called "Revolutionary Story Time" inside CHAZ. While most of those inside CHAZ protested police brutality, many there also supported socialist revolutionary ideals and saw CHAZ as the beginning of such a revolution in the USA.


Two men sit on a barricade inside the CHAZ sprayed with anti police graffiti. Effectively a police free zone after the East Precinct was abandoned, cases of violence inside and around the CHAZ were difficult to prevent. Several shootings and deaths inside the CHAZ would create a tense situation for protest leaders and city officials.


A sign posted on a business just outside of CHAZ pleads for people not to destroy their business. Cases of vandalism and property destruction around CHAZ was a divisive point of contention for many.


Two local Seattle residents point at the boarded up East Precinct inside the CHAZ. Near the end of June, only a small fraction of protesters remained camped on site, and the area became frequented by onlookers and tourists.


One of the CHAZ leaders, Dustin Adams (left), looks through binoculars after claims that Seattle Police were positioning themselves on rooftops on the night of June 29th. The Seattle Police would retake the East Precinct and clear CHAZ a day later.


Seattle Police form a line at one of the streets leading to what was known as CHAZ the morning of the take down on July 1st, 2020. Police moved in at 5am and arrested over 30 protestors that refused to leave, and had retaken the precinct by 0530.


A protestor cries out as she is arrested by Seattle Police during the take down of CHAZ on July 1, 2020. Following an executive order from Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, police from every precinct in Seattle and with help from police in outlying cities retook the CHAZ from protestors in an early morning operation.


A Seattle city worker moves a pile of trash and debris from the former CHAZ site after the take down on Jul 1, 2020. While garbage and graffiti were removed, Seattle officials announced that all works of art were saved with the intentions of being displayed as a permanent piece in the future.


Seattle Police officers move back into the East Precinct in the area known as CHAZ on July 1, 2020. Following the fall of CHAZ, the city officials committed to looking at the possibility of defunding the Seattle Police in accordance to the demands of the protesters.


A week after the retaking of the East Presinct, the area formerly known as CHAZ was reopened to the public on July 6, 2020. All but one of the protestors arrested on July 1st had their charges dropped and released. With Portland tensions escalating, many protestors left Seattle leaving dwindling numbers to continue sporadic demonstrations.


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Offline Chad Hipolito

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Re: July Clip Results 2020
« Reply #2 on: September 25, 2020, 10:48 PM »
H.M. Cole Burston/Getty Images

NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: People ready their cars ahead of a Canada Day drive-by parade on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: People wave from their front lawns as they watch a passing Canada Day drive-by parade on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: Sam and his sister Grace Redpath wave Canadian flags from their front lawn as they watch a passing Canada Day drive-by parade on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: People wave from their front lawns as they watch a passing Canada Day drive-by parade on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: People watch from street corner as a passing Canada Day drive-by parade makes its way through town on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: People watch from a front yard as a passing Canada Day drive-by parade makes its way through town on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


NEWCASTLE, ON - JULY 01: People watch from a field as a passing Canada Day drive-by parade makes its way through town on July 1, 2020 in Newcastle, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the village of Newcastle encouraged residents to celebrate from their homes as a drive-by parade snaked through the village in order to comply with social distancing measures.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers sit atop their vehicle during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers sit atop their vehicle during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers sit atop their vehicle during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Canadian country music singer Dean Brody performs during a drive-in concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Sisters Madeline, left, and London Honywill play in the car as father Andy Honywill watches the drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: A pair of concert-goers embrace atop their vehicle during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers watch from their vehicles during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Sarah Boye and her son Miles sit atop their vehicle as they watch a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers watch from their vehicles during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers watch from their vehicles during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers watch from their vehicles during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers hold up a Canadian Flag during a singing of the Canadian national anthem during a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.


MARKHAM, ON - JULY 01: Concert-goers watch as fireworks explode behind the stage of a drive-in Dean Brody concert to celebrate Canada Day on July 1, 2020 in Markham, Canada. While most events marking the 153rd anniversary of Confederation across the country have been cancelled or moved online due to the spread of the coronavirus, the drive-in concert skirted social gathering rules by allowing attendees to socially distance in and on their cars.

H.M. Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

Trainee service dogs and their volunteers wait to board and ride transit buses during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Hope, a trainee service dog, sits with her volunteer Shelly Nash while riding a transit bus during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Volunteers Lynn Radbourne, left, and Ann Bonham sit with trainee service dogs Willie and Phoenix while riding a transit bus during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Volunteer Cathy Morgan and trainee service dog CJ disembark a bus during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Trainee service dog Phoenix sits next to volunteer Ann Bonham as they and others wait to board and ride transit buses during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Trainee service dogs and their volunteers wait to board and ride transit buses during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Volunteer Adriana Chiossone walks Millie, a trainee service dog, after riding a bus during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Millie, a trainee service dog, sits for her volunteer Adriana Chiossone during a training exercise on a bus at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Volunteer Cathy Morgan, front right, and trainee service dog CJ sit on a bus during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.


Millie, a trainee service dog, yawns while riding a transit bus with her volunteer Adriana Chiossone during a training exercise at the Vancouver Transit Centre bus depot, in Vancouver, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Approximately two dozen dogs participated in training exercises on different types of buses as part of a one-day training program organized by B.C. & Alberta Guide Dogs and Translink, to accelerate training that has fallen behind due to COVID-19. Volunteers who help raise and train the dogs from seven-weeks-old to 15-months have been limited in the amount of public training they can do due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dogs that go through training later become paired with veterans or first responders dealing with PTSD, children who have autism, guides for the blind or enter the charity's breeding program.




2020 STANDINGS…MONTH…TOTAL

Darryl Dyck/Freelance…170…920
Ben Nelms/CBC News…90…730
3. Cole Burston/Freelance…160…590
4. Kevin Light/Freelance…60…370
5. Christopher Pike/Freelance…0…270
6. Jesse Winter/Freelance…0…230
7. Evan Buhler/Freelance…30…220
8. Chad Hipolito/Freelance…80…190
9. Bernard Brault/La Presse…0…160
9. Chelsea Kemp/Cochrane Eagle…40…160
10. Michelle Berg/Saskatoon StarPhoenix…110…140
10. Blair Gable/Freelance…0…140
10. Dave Holland/Freelance…40…140
11. Liam Richards/Freelance…0…100
12. Jeff McIntosh/Freelance…10…90
13. Daniel Crump/Freelance…0…80
13. Marie-France Coallier/Le Devoir…0…80
13. Gavin John/Freelance…80…80
14. John Lucas/Freelance…10…60
14. Marissa Tiel/Freelance…0…60
14. Crystal Schick/Yukon News…20…60
15. Josie Desmarais/Freelance…0…40
15. Matthew Smith/Saskatoon StarPhoenix…0…40
15. Shannon VanRaes/Winnipeg Free Press…0…40


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