A Coal Policy for all Albertans
Y2Y is among 30 organizations to endorse ‘A Coal Policy for Alberta’ to best protect the Eastern Slopes from coal development in 2022 and beyond.
Y2Y is among 30 organizations to endorse ‘A Coal Policy for Alberta’ to best protect the Eastern Slopes from coal development in 2022 and beyond.
Y2Y is deeply disappointed and concerned over the ruling from the Land and Property Rights Tribunal that the Town of Canmore must adopt the area structure plans for Three Sisters Village and Smith Creek, which were proposed and rejected in 2021.
Learn about Y2Y’s research in Alberta’s Bow Valley to understand the effects of planning decisions and cumulative effects on wildlife.
Many parts of the Yellowstone to Yukon region are getting busier. What does this mean for wildlife and our role in protecting them? See how you are conserving the spaces between parks.
Is the Y2Y vision of connectivity working?
Y2Y partner Alexis Hillyard with Stump Kitchen shares some thoughts on what it means to create safe spaces for all.
West of Yellowstone National Park is Idaho’s Highway US-20. Add your voice to ensure the future of US-20 plans for wildlife connectivity to keep people and wildlife safe.
Y2Y celebrates the start of construction on Alberta’s first wildlife overpass on provincial lands. This crossing structure is at a key point of the Yellowstone to Yukon region, and is one of several wildlife mitigation projects planned for the province.
The efforts and actions of two Indigenous communities in northern British Columbia have resulted in major gains for a particularly vulnerable group of caribou, according to new research released this week.
Mateen Hessami, Y2Y’s 2019 Sarah Baker Memorial Award recipient, seeks to refine moose management in southeastern British Columbia to recover and conserve caribou and Indigenous culture.