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Earth Day Block Party
Sunday, April 26th 11 am to 4 pm
Come on down to the piazza to celebrate Earth Day 2026!
There will be music, booths/tables/tents with non-profits and eco-marketers, workshops, and fun!
We are planning for perfect weather, but we can't count on that. The workshops will be held inside.
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Bluegrass Jam
Sunday, April 26th, 26th 2-4pm as part of the Earth Day event in the Piazza
Come and enjoy some live Appalachian Mountain Old-Time music with the Western Thistles, Hannah-Sara, Elliot Thomas, Bruce Ziff, and Michelle Bohning.
This happens every two weeks.
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Table Top Thursday Games Night
Thursday evenings 5pm to 7 pm
We have a small collection of board games you can choose from or you can bring a game of your own to play.
Bring your friends and tell all the tabletop gamers you know!
See you Thursday! From 5-7PM
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Climate Cafe
Tuesday, May 5th at 6pm
An informal gathering to have conversations about climate, our climate anxiety, and what we can do about the crisis.
The Climate Café is a supportive space where people can share and discuss their worries about the climate and ecological crisis.
Are you feeling alone in the climate crisis, and would enjoy talking to like-
minded people?
Many of us have good ideas and experiences to share.
So let's:
Make new contacts
Have fun
Exchange ideas
Build camaraderie
Share good news stories
Be Curious!
Join us for an in-person 90-MINUTE Community Climate Café.
Tell a friend.
Participation is limited to keep conversation informal. If you would like to join us, please REGISTER.
This is being offered in collaboration with SCAN Edmonton
(Seniors for Climate Action Now)
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Reimagining Bystander Intervention
Description goes hereA community conversation about how we can prevent violence before it happens by shifting norms in our own circles.
Often, we imagine bystander intervention as something we do in the moment to prevent a violent crime in progress. This workshop takes a step back, and explores how we can prevent violence before it happens by shifting norms in our own circles. What if we started to think about bystander intervention earlier and as something we can engage in every day? What if we imagine ourselves as bystanders to a culture that enables sexual violence, and sought to intervene by shifting the norms that perpetuate it, even in small ways?