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The Backing Bookworm

Beneath a Broken Sky


I have read the previous three books in this small-town police procedural. I have enjoyed the tension and particularly, the main character Ben Packard, whose personal life is woven into the books, including his struggles as a gay police officer in a very small conservative town in Minnesota. The secondary cast is also strong and the banter between him and his police partner Jill Thielen is delightfully snarky (my favourite kind).
Unfortunately, I didn't find this fourth installment as strong as the previous book. There were a lot of subplots without enough focus on any of them. There's murder, some romance, a connection to Ben's past, arborists and roofers, oh my! 
Personally, I thought the story felt convoluted with too much focus on the itinerant storm chasing roofers (and comments about Canadian wildfire smoke - we're sorry, eh!) than the actual murder. The pacing picks up in the last quarter, but readers will have to be patient to see how all of the pieces the story fit together. 
This wasn't my favourite book of the Ben Packard series so far, but I enjoy slipping into Ben's world and seeing how Moehling blends Ben's personal life and emotional elements into his suspense stories and look forward to reading the next book in the series.
Disclaimer: Thanks to the publisher for the complimentary advanced digital copy of this book which was given to me in exchange for my honest review.

My Rating: 3 starsAuthor: Joshua MoehlingGenre: SuspenseSeries: Ben Packard 4Publisher: Poisoned Pen PressFirst Published: May 26, 2026Read: May 23-27, 2026

Book Description from GoodReads: From award-nominated and USA Today bestselling author Joshua Moehling comes a tense, atmospheric thriller about one detective's search for a mysterious killer in the chaos following a deadly storm…
Detective Ben Packard has put down roots in the small town of Sandy Lake. A difficult thing to do; it's a hot, miserable summer, and a tornado has swept through causing irreparable damage. Trees are felled, homes destroyed, and people are desperate. Worse, the storm has also blown in a group of storm chasers with something to hide.

Then a woman is killed in her home. The mother of a gay boy and unpopular among the locals for the hell she recently raised at school when the administration refused to punish a group of students who were bullying her son, there's almost too many suspects to count. 

But to Packard, the case hits close to home. And when someone from his past shows up on his doorstep out of the blue, he realizes he'll have to confront the reality of navigating life as a gay man in a small town bent on tradition, no matter the cost.

The heat suffocates. The violence simmers. Before the summer is out, someone else will die.


Kitchener Panthers

Six-run sixth powers Panthers to win in Guelph

GUELPH - The heart of the Kitchener Panthers order combined for 10 of the team's 16 hits, en route to a 10-8 win over the Guelph Royals Saturday afternoon at Hastings Stadium.

It was a back-and-forth game early, as Guelph climbed out of a 3-0 hole.

Kitchener nabbed six runs in the sixth inning, batting around the order in the process.

But that seven-run lead nearly evaporated, as Guelph clawed back with five runs and even had the tying run at the plate in the ninth.

Yosvani Penalver had four hits, while Petey Kiefer and Malik Williams had three hits.

Yunior Ibarra drove in three runs as part of the win.

Raffi Gross and Charlie Towers both had triples in the large ballpark.

Samuel Quintana pitched four innings in the start, just 36 hours after pitching in a loss against London. He gave up three runs on four hits and struck out three.

Guelph's Alfred Vega gave up four runs on nine hits in 5.1 innings, striking out five and walking five in the start.

Kitchener improves to 5-3 on the season, while Guelph falls to 0-5.

The Panthers are home to Hamilton Sunday afternoon at 2:05 p.m.

GET YOUR TICKETS NOWand #PackTheJack! Wear your Kitchener Rangers jersey to get FREE ADMISSION to the game, and take in some baseball before walking across the parking lot to watch the Rangers in the Memorial Cup final on the big screen at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium! 

BOXSCOREGAME REPLAY PT 1 GAME REPLAY PT 2

Elmira Advocate

ARE REGIONAL COUNCILLORS STUPID, TONE DEAF OR ALL TRYING TO LOSE IN THIS FALLS MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS?

 

You almost have to think that when everybody are unhappy with the Region's water decisions that maybe they really are all trying to get the boot this fall. Don't they know that they can simply say "I've had enough of the good times and am uninterested in the bad times so goodbye. "? 

Firstly they are about to take 15 litres per second more water from Wilmot wells. This item should not even be on the table until AFTER they have committed to drilling old wells deeper or new wells for Wilmot residents whose wells are no longer reliably providing water. This "commitment" does not mean either verbally or in writing because they are proven liars and deceivers.  This "commitment" means the cheque or cash is in the hands of the residents desperately needing them for immediate construction of new or deeper wells.

How clear has it become that the developers and builders are the tail wagging the dog? Man we've recently seen Woolwich Township cut and run from a single wealthy individual whose wants, not needs, for an enclosed, full size, full amenities ice rink on his property buffaloed them. Now over and over again we publicly see developers and builders telling the Region what to do and the difference between us and them is that the Region says O.K. to them. 

Basically the developers and builders have given the Region of Waterloo a deadline and it is June 3/26. That is this coming Wednesday and presumably will occur at the regional council meeting. That is when those in charge will find out if their specific projects have been allocated enough water to go ahead and start building, essentially after the cities give them the building permits and or other required documentation. Make no doubt any failure by the Region to do so this Wednesday will likely result in legal action by those far more entitled than you or I to continue making millions of dollars building homes, apartments, townhouses etc. for the Region's no longer grossly expanding population. Federal government policies finally stopping mass unneeded immigration have been enacted. That said allegedly there were only 90 new residents in Waterloo Region last year which seems unbelievable in the opposite direction of what we've had for the last twenty to fourty years.  

Politicians as well as those in charge may have gone too far this time as many of us have lost all trust in those who run the Region of Waterloo. Today's K-W Record have several water articles keeping us informed as to the latest nonsense going on.


Code Like a Girl

Everyone’s praising Replit and Lovable. I used both and I’m done.

Here’s the honest reason why.♦Source: ChatgptMy Honest Take After Testing All Three

I’ll be straight with you -I’ve spent an embarrassing amount of time inside AI builders this year. Not just clicking around for demos. Actually trying to take things to production. And that’s where every comparison I read online failed me, because they all stopped at the fun part.

Nobody talks about what happens six weeks later.

So I did it myself. I put Replit, Lovable, and 8080.ai through the full arc — from weekend prototype to something that could actually survive real users, real traffic, and real errors. Here’s what I found.

The Test Nobody Runs

Most comparisons show you a landing page built in 30 seconds. That’s easy. What I actually needed to know was:

  • What happens when I need horizontal pod autoscaling?
  • Can I set up a staging environment that doesn’t share credentials with production?
  • Was my database designed before the code, or did the AI just wing it?
  • Can I deploy without leaving the platform and figuring it out on my own?

Those are the real questions. So that’s what I tested.

💜 Lovable — Beautiful. Until It’s Not.

Lovable genuinely impressed me in the first hour. The React code it generates is clean, the TypeScript is well-typed, and the UI looks professional enough to start taking payments. I built a SaaS landing page with pricing tiers, testimonials, and a sign-up flow in under 30 minutes.

Then it asked me to “connect Supabase.”

That’s where things got complicated for me. Lovable’s entire backend model is Supabase-dependent. And when I started thinking about production — real production — I hit a wall. There’s no Kubernetes deployment. No containerized microservices. No multi-environment staging pipeline. The path from Lovable’s hosting model to production-grade infrastructure means you’re building that infrastructure yourself, outside the platform entirely.

To be fair — Lovable was designed for rapid prototyping. It’s excellent at that. My mistake was expecting it to be more. The marketing doesn’t always make that distinction clear, and I learned it the hard way.

My verdict: Use Lovable when you’re validating an idea or need a demo fast. Don’t use it when you’re planning to scale.

🟢Replit — The Developer’s Comfort Zone

Replit felt more like home. Terminal access, direct file editing, 50+ language support, GitHub integration — this is closer to a real IDE. The AI agent can act on your codebase in ways that feel genuinely useful if you already know how to code.

And that’s also the catch.

Replit is fast if you have programming experience. For a less technical builder, the setup time increases quickly as you navigate an IDE environment and external documentation. I also noticed that when I started pushing toward production-grade complexity — multiple microservices, consistent deployment patterns, scaling configurations — I had to set those things up explicitly myself. The AI helped, but it didn’t think ahead about production infrastructure.

It’s a great path to a shareable prototype. It’s not a path to production infrastructure.

My verdict: Solid for developers learning or building side projects. Not the right bet if production readiness is your goal from day one.

🔵 8080.ai — The One Built for What Comes After the Demo

This is where my experience genuinely shifted.

8080.ai doesn’t just generate an app — it designs a multi-tier microservice architecture from your natural language description. It produces database schemas, API contracts, and component diagrams before the code is written. The infrastructure it outputs is Kubernetes-native from the start: stage and production cluster deployments out of the box, Docker containerization, direct Kubernetes dashboard access, and a deployment pipeline you never have to leave the platform to manage.

What hit me most was this: the infrastructure pattern AI applications are moving toward microservices, Kubernetes, horizontal scaling, persistent storage is exactly what 8080.ai produces as its default output.

That’s not a small thing. Every other tool produces something you’ll need to migrate later. 8080.ai produces something that’s already where you’re going.

The built-in task decomposition, sprint tracking, and AI-driven browser testing with visual verification made it feel less like a builder and more like an actual engineering team working alongside me.

My verdict: This is the tool for when you’re serious about production. Not just a demo — a real, scalable product.

🎯 The Framework I Wish I’d Had Earlier

After all this testing, here’s how I’d map it now:

StageTool to UseLearning / ExploringReplit or LovableValidating an idea fastLovableBuilding for production 8080.ai

The tools aren’t competing with each other — they’re serving different moments in the journey. My mistake for too long was using prototype tools at the production stage.

Once I understood what each tool was actually built for, the decision became obvious.

If you’re still choosing, ask yourself one question: Are you building a demo, or are you building a product?

The answer tells you everything.

Everyone’s praising Replit and Lovable. I used both and I’m done. was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

The Art of Networking

CAREER15 Tips to Build Meaningful Relationships.♦How to build strong, meaningful connections. Credit: Elizabeth Lenihan CanvaPro

Are you trying to network on LinkedIn and via email, but finding your response rate disappointingly low? You’re not alone. Effective networking is about building relationships, not just diving in with a request to be considered for a job. It’s about establishing rapport and trust, and this takes time and patience.

I had mixed feelings about networking when I first started attending events. The thought of walking into a room full of strangers, trying to infiltrate various little groups, and instigating a conversation made my stomach turn.

I needed to shift my perspective; otherwise, networking was going to be a source of anxiety and trepidation. I recognised the value, I knew networking was impactful for knowledge sharing, industry expertise, contacts and opportunities, but that initial walking in the door bit was like a roadblock to me. I needed to pivot my mindset away from expecting to walk away with new business and consider how I could offer value to others in a non-reciprocal way. This helped in removing a weighted expectation from my shoulders. By changing my focus, I removed the fear of failure and what felt like a forced transactional encounter. This created a space for more authentic conversations. When new connections walked away feeling informed, supported, or inspired, I became someone they returned to. The key was to give without expecting anything in return.

As well as this mindset change, I also brought a friend or colleague with me to help alleviate the solo nerves, and it also helped to have a few conversation icebreakers in my back pocket. Check these out for some helpful inspiration: 30 Brilliant Networking Conversation Starters and 17 Great Conversation Starters to Help Break the Ice at Networking Events.

Here are some tips to enhance your networking efforts:

  1. Target the Right People: Focus on peers or individuals a level above or below your position, rather than solely on senior titles.
  2. Personalise Connection Requests: Attach a short, thoughtful note with your connection requests to make a positive first impression.
  3. Craft Specific Emails: When emailing someone, be specific about what they do that inspires you. Reference a quote or a specific moment their work impacted you. This type of engagement is more likely to garner a response.
  4. Ask Targeted Questions: Be very specific with any questions-ask something that can’t be easily found through a Google search.
  5. Be Concise and Compelling: Ensure your emails are concise and engaging, with a strong subject line to grab attention.
  6. Be Respectful of Time: Not everyone is open to a virtual or physical call. Be targeted and thoughtful if you request 15 minutes of someone’s time. Many people prefer messaging where they can consider your query and tailor their response.
  7. Follow Up Politely: If you don’t receive a response, follow up a week or two later with a gentle nudge. People get busy, and a polite reminder can bring your email back to their attention.
  8. Leverage Existing Connections: Utilise the connections you already have. Ask if they can introduce you to someone specific, and explain why you want the introduction. This targeted approach helps them craft a supportive connection request.
  9. Seek Professional Guidance: Engage with a career consultant or mentor for added support, advice, and guidance.
  10. Optimise Your LinkedIn Profile: Keep your LinkedIn profile up to date and curated for the opportunities you’re seeking.
  11. Research Job Roles: Leverage the terminology and descriptions used in job specifications, where aligned with your experience, mirror these in your profile and communications. This will help Recruiters align your skills and experience to their needs and increase their likelihood of accepting your connection requests.
  12. Add Value in Engagements: When engaging with someone’s posts, to stand out, ensure you add value-either entertain, inform, or inspire.
  13. Post Informative Content: Share content related to your profession and tag relevant companies and individuals you quote. Establishing yourself as a thought leader builds your credibility.
  14. Join and Engage in Communities: Find a community and genuinely become part of it. Building the best connections and relationships often happens within these groups.
  15. Explore Alternative Networking Platforms: Try platforms like Lunchclub, CoffeeMug, and Meetup. For those in Ireland, consider Network Ireland and Grow Remote.

By implementing these strategies, you’ll build stronger, more meaningful connections and enhance your networking success.

If you have any networking strategies that you feel have been successful for you, please share them in the comments section to help others.

Elizabeth Lenihan is an award-winning Career Strategist and Talent Consultant with over 18 years of experience helping professionals find clarity, build confidence, and move forward with intention. Based in Ireland, she works with clients internationally.

Explore more at elizabethlenihan.com or connect on LinkedIn.

Originally published at www.elizabethlenihan.com on June 13, 2026.

The Art of Networking was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Agilicus

Protecting Local Governments from Evolving Cyber Threats

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KW Granite Club

Early Registration BONUS!

Register by June 15 and receive 3x entries to win a Chilly Moose cooler filled with you favorite summer beverages.

Join us for our inaugural summer bonspiel, KW Icebreaker 2026.

Loads of curling, prizes, food, live entertainment and of course fun!

Sign up now! 

kwgranite.com/index.php/club-events/event-registrations/175-kw-icebreaker-2026/individual-registration


KW Granite Club

KW Icebreaker 2026

Our inaugural summer bonspiel, KW Icebreaker!

Join us for a BEACH PARTY themed event on August 7 - 9, 2026 at KW Granite Club.

Live music Friday and Saturday evenings!

Friday night pizza and late night snacks and Saturday lunch and dinner included.

Three (3) game guarantee. All games will be 6 ends.

Good times on and off the ice to get the new season started right!

Price is $500.00 plus HST per team with up to 6 players allowed per team.

Register here:

kwgranite.com/index.php/club-events/event-registrations/175-kw-icebreaker-2026/individual-registration


Cordial Catholic, K Albert Little

What Catholics Believe About the Eucharist will SHOCK Evangelicals (w/ Father Gregory Pine)

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Brickhouse Guitars

Pellerin Folk C13 #265 Demo by Roger Schmidt

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Kitchener Panthers

Elliott shines in Panthers win

CHATHAM-KENT - Evan Elliott struck out seven in six innings of one-run-baseball as the Kitchener Panthers beat the Chatham-Kent Barnstormers 5-1 Friday night at Fergie Jenkins Field.

He gave up six hits and walked two batters to register the win.

The Panthers used the long ball to do most of the damage.

Mateo Zeppieri opened the scoring with a solo blast in the third, his first of the season.

Raffi Gross then went yard for the second time in two games, a two-run shot in the fourth to extend the lead.

Josh Williams hit his first home run as a Panther, a no doubter to lead off the seventh inning.







View this post on Instagram










A post shared by Kitchener Panthers (@cbl_panthers)


Petey Kiefer went three-for-five and drove in the lone run where the ball stayed in the ballpark, later in the seventh.

Samuele Bruno was two-for-four in his first start of the year as catcher, as Yunior Ibarra got the night off.

Jake Liberta got a scoreless inning of work, while Bawin Colon shut down the Barnstormers in the final two innings.

Kitchener improves to 4-3 on the season, while Chatham-Kent drops to 1-3.

The Panthers continue a busy four-game stretch Saturday in Guelph. First pitch is 2:05 p.m. from Hastings Stadium.

Kitchener returns home Sunday afternoon for a matchup against the Hamilton Cardinals, also at 2:05 p.m.

GET YOUR TICKETS NOW and #PackTheJack! Wear your Kitchener Rangers jersey to get FREE ADMISSION to the game, and take in some baseball before walking across the parking lot to watch the Rangers in the Memorial Cup final on the big screen at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium!

BOXSCOREGAME REPLAY

Code Like a Girl

Introduce More Merit in Hiring

Better allyship starts here. Each week, Karen Catlin shares five simple actions to create a workplace where everyone can thrive.♦

A faculty committee at Yale University recently called for more transparency and clearer standards in admissions, along with fewer advantages for the rich and well-connected, such as the offspring of alumni, varsity athletes, and the children of faculty, staff, and donors.

I appreciate that focus on merit. And it got me thinking: is there room for improvement in our hiring processes?

In today’s newsletter, I cover five ways to introduce more merit into hiring, drawing from my books and past newsletters.

1. Look out for extra scrutiny

Marginalized candidates may be asked for proof or credentials that others were never required to provide.

In 2022, when then-Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was nominated to serve as a U.S. Supreme Court justice, one conservative news host demanded to see her LSAT score. (As you may know, the LSAT is a standardized law school entrance exam.) It shouldn’t have mattered. Jackson received her law degree from Harvard 25 years earlier and went on to have an impressive career, including being a district judge in Washington, DC. By contrast, that same news host didn’t ask to see the LSAT scores of the previously nominated Justice Amy Coney Barrett before announcing, “There’s no question that Barrett is qualified for the job.” (I should note that Jackson is Black and Barrett is white.)

Here’s another story. When I interviewed Dr. Kelly Paradis for my book Belonging in Healthcare, she shared some things she heard about women during interviews, including, “She said, ‘I’ a lot in her presentation. ‘I did this, I did that.’ Did she really do all that stuff by herself?” Yet, as Paradis pointed out, members of the same review committee didn’t question the validity of the men who similarly described their accomplishments.

To help ensure more merit in hiring, we can:

  • Specify all the qualifications needed for an open position before reviewing the first résumé or application.
  • Restate these requirements at the beginning of meetings to discuss candidates.
  • Look out for requests for additional credentials for specific people.

The goal is to not shift the standards during the evaluation and to focus on the merits you need to get the job done.

Share on Instagram, LinkedIn, or YouTube.

2. Say no to the “beer test”

A recent article in Fortune’s The Interview Playbook heralded a best practice Steve Jobs used to evaluate job candidates. He’d ask himself if he’d want to grab a beer with them. If the interview had felt forced, awkward, or draining to him, it was a major red flag.

Honestly? That advice is a red flag for me.

It’s basically a friendship test. Would I enjoy spending time with this person? Do they remind me of my younger self? Would they fit into my social circle?

Those questions can easily steer us away from merit and toward familiarity, comfort, and similarity. And that can disadvantage candidates from underrepresented backgrounds, different communication styles, or nontraditional career paths.

If someone brings up the “beer test” during hiring discussions, push back. Encourage the team to step back and focus on structured, fair evaluation practices, like the ones I shared in my May 15 2026 newsletter.

3. Push back on concerns about “executive presence”

“Lacks executive presence” can sound objective, but it often isn’t.

In Stop Using ‘Executive Presence’ as a Reason to Not Promote Women, Alizah Salario wrote,

“the push to acquire that special ‘je ne sais quoi’ of executive presence is actually a trap…it puts women and people of color in the tricky position of hiding their authentic selves to fit into a leadership box filled with white men in suits.”

It also means that if we use it to evaluate talent, we slip away from measuring merit.

If we hear someone saying “they lack executive presence” during an interview debrief, let’s shift the conversation to focus on the skills and experience they’d bring to our team.

4. Combat the “halo-horns” effect

White men may benefit from a “halo” where one strength is generalized into a high rating, while other groups receive “horns” that unfairly define them.

One strong answer becomes “they’re amazing.” One mistake becomes “they’re not ready.”

To combat this effect, researchers Joan C. Williams et al. recommend at least three pieces of evidence to back ratings.

Consider advocating for an update to your candidate assessment form to request at least three examples of the behavior, rather than generalizing the feedback based on just one.

5. Remind the interview team that bias can creep in

Last but not least, here’s something I share at least once a year in my newsletter.

To help remove bias from the candidate selection process, Google has given the hiring team a simple handout that describes common errors and biases that assessors make and how to fix them.

In his book Work Rules, former Google executive Laszlo Bock explained that simply reminding people of these biases was enough to eliminate many of them.

I love it.

Let’s all be aware that hiring on merit doesn’t happen by default. The more intentional we are about removing bias, the closer we get to building the best teams.

That’s all for this week. I’m glad you’re on this journey with me,

Karen Catlin (she/her), Author of the Better Allies® book series

Copyright © 2026 Karen Catlin. All rights reserved.

Together, we can make a difference with the Better Allies® approach.

  • Say thanks to Karen and buy her a coffee (Need a receipt for educational reimbursement? Reply to this email, and we’ll take care of it.)
  • Sponsor an edition of this newsletter
  • Follow @BetterAllies on Instagram, Medium, or YouTube. Or follow Karen Catlin on LinkedIn
  • Read the Better Allies books
  • Tell someone about these resources
♦♦

Introduce More Merit in Hiring was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Kitchener-Waterloo Real Estate Blog

Waterloo Region Luxury Real Estate Market Update | May 2026

♦ Waterloo Region Luxury Real Estate Market Update: What Sellers Need to Know in Spring 2026

Based on the most recent luxury market data, Waterloo Region continues to show strength as we’re in the spring market, with both single-family and attached luxury homes remaining firmly in seller’s market territory.

The luxury benchmark price in Waterloo Region is currently $1,100,000 for single-family homes and $700,000 for attached homes. While inventory has increased significantly compared to last year, buyer activity remains strong enough to keep the upper-end market moving.

For homeowners thinking about selling a luxury property in Waterloo Region, the current market is not one-size-fits-all. Pricing, presentation, timing, and strategy matter more than ever.

Waterloo Region Single-Family Luxury Homes

The single-family luxury market in Waterloo Region remains a seller’s market, with a 26% sales ratio in April 2026. A sales ratio above 21% is considered a seller’s market, which means demand is still outpacing available supply in key price segments.

In April 2026, there were 199 single-family luxury homes available and 51 sales. This is a notable shift from April 2025, when there were only 96 luxury homes on the market. Inventory has increased by 107% year-over-year, giving buyers more options than they had last spring.

However, more inventory does not mean the market has slowed dramatically. Luxury single-family homes still sold for a median of 98.50% of the list price, showing that well-positioned properties are continuing to achieve strong results.

The median sales price for single-family luxury homes was $1,259,100 in April 2026, remaining relatively stable compared to April 2025. Median days on market also remained unchanged at 17 days.

This tells us something important: buyers may have more choice, but they are still acting quickly when a home is priced properly and presented well.

The Most Active Price Range for Luxury Single-Family Homes

The most active price band for single-family luxury homes in April 2026 was $1,200,000 to $1,249,999, with an 80% sales ratio.

This price range is especially important for Waterloo Region because many move-up buyers, executive buyers, and family-focused luxury buyers are searching in this segment. Homes in this range often appeal to buyers looking for more space, upgraded finishes, larger lots, better school access, or established neighbourhoods.

For sellers, this means the $1.2M range can be highly competitive, but also highly responsive when the home is marketed correctly.

♦ ♦ Waterloo Region Attached Luxury Homes

The attached luxury home market was even stronger in April 2026, with a 49% sales ratio. This also places attached luxury homes firmly in seller’s market territory.

Attached luxury homes include higher-end townhomes, executive townhomes, and upscale condo-style properties priced at or above the $700,000 benchmark.

In April 2026, there were 53 attached luxury homes available and 26 sales. Inventory increased by 66% compared to April 2025, while total sales increased by 4%.

The median sales price for attached luxury homes was $747,500, down slightly from $760,000 in April 2025. However, the sale-to-list price ratio increased to 99.68%, showing that many attached luxury homes are still selling very close to asking price.

Days on market also improved significantly. In April 2026, attached luxury homes spent a median of 17 days on market, down from 34 days in April 2025.

This is a strong indicator that the attached luxury segment remains highly active, especially for properties that offer strong layouts, updated finishes, and desirable locations.

♦ ♦ What This Means for Luxury Sellers in Waterloo Region

For sellers, the current market offers opportunity, but it also requires a more strategic approach.

More inventory means buyers have options. They are still willing to move quickly, but they are also comparing properties more carefully. A luxury listing that feels overpriced, underprepared, or poorly marketed can sit while better-positioned homes attract stronger interest.

In today’s market, luxury buyers are looking closely at:

  • Location and neighbourhood reputation
  • Overall home condition
  • Lot size, privacy, and outdoor living space
  • Interior layout and functionality
  • Quality of finishes and recent updates
  • Professional photography and presentation
  • Accurate pricing based on current market data

Luxury homes are not just competing on square footage or price. They are competing on perceived value.

Why Strategic Pricing Matters

The April 2026 data shows that luxury homes are still selling close to list price, but that does not mean sellers can price aggressively without consequence.

In a market with more inventory, buyers have more leverage to compare. If a home is priced too high from the beginning, it can lose momentum quickly. Once a property sits, buyers may start to question whether something is wrong with it, even if the home itself is beautiful.

Strategic pricing is not about underpricing. It is about positioning the property where it will attract the right buyers, create urgency, and support a stronger negotiation outcome.

This is especially important in Waterloo Region’s luxury market, where neighbourhood, lot size, finishes, school access, and property style can all impact value differently.

Presentation Still Plays a Major Role

Luxury buyers expect more than basic listing photos.

Professional presentation can directly impact how a home is perceived online, especially when buyers are narrowing down options before they ever book a showing. High-quality photography, staging guidance, strong listing copy, and polished marketing materials all help create a stronger first impression.

In Waterloo Region, where luxury homes can vary widely from executive suburban homes to estate-style properties, historic homes, custom builds, and upscale townhomes, marketing needs to clearly communicate what makes the property stand out.

The goal is not just to list the home. The goal is to position it.

Is Now a Good Time to Sell a Luxury Home in Waterloo Region?

For many luxury homeowners, spring 2026 remains a strong time to consider selling.

The market is still favouring sellers in both the single-family and attached luxury segments. Homes are selling close to asking price, days on market remain reasonable, and buyer demand is still active across key price ranges.

That said, success depends heavily on strategy. The homes that perform best are usually the ones that are priced with current data, prepared thoughtfully, and marketed with a clear plan.

For homeowners in Waterloo, Kitchener, and surrounding areas, understanding the current luxury market is the first step in deciding whether now is the right time to sell.

Thinking About Selling a Luxury Home in Waterloo Region?

If you are considering selling your home, it is important to understand where your property fits within today’s market, not just based on general averages, but based on your neighbourhood, home style, lot size, condition, and buyer demand.

The Deutschmann Team provides market-backed custom home selling plans designed to help sellers make confident, informed decisions.

If you are ready to sell soon and want to understand your home’s current value, our team can help you review the data, assess your property’s position, and build a strategy around your goals.

The post Waterloo Region Luxury Real Estate Market Update | May 2026 appeared first on Kitchener Waterloo Real Estate Agent - The Deutschmann Team.


Kitchener-Waterloo Real Estate Blog

What’s Worth Fixing Before You Sell, and What Isn’t


When you’re getting ready to sell your home, it’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking everything needs to be updated, upgraded, or perfect before it hits the market.

It doesn’t.

One of the biggest mistakes sellers make is spending too much money on the wrong improvements. We see it all the time. Homeowners pour time and money into projects they think buyers will care about, only to find out those updates didn’t meaningfully increase the sale price.

As listing agents, our job is to help sellers make smart decisions before listing. That means knowing what is worth fixing, what can be left alone, and where you’re better off saving your money.

If you’re wondering what not to fix before selling your house, here’s what you need to know.

♦ Don’t Fully Renovate the Kitchen Before Selling

This is a big one.

A full kitchen renovation before selling is usually not the best move. Kitchens are expensive to renovate, and sellers rarely get back every dollar they put in. On top of that, your taste may not be the buyer’s taste.

We’ve seen sellers spend tens of thousands of dollars redoing kitchens right before listing, only to find that buyers still view it as a kitchen they may eventually change.

Instead of a full renovation, focus on strategic improvements that help the space show better:

  • fresh paint
  • decluttering countertops
  • updated lighting if the current fixture is especially dated
  • minor hardware updates if needed
  • professional cleaning
  • repairing anything visibly broken

That’s the sweet spot. Clean, fresh, functional. Not overdone.

Don’t Fully Remodel Bathrooms Just Because They Feel Dated

A dated bathroom is not always a dealbreaker. A dirty, damaged, or poorly maintained bathroom is.

There’s a huge difference.

If the bathroom is functional, clean, and in solid condition, you probably don’t need to gut it. Buyers can look past older tile or fixtures much more easily than sellers think, especially if the home is priced properly and presented well.

What matters most is that the bathroom feels:

  • clean
  • bright
  • well-maintained
  • free of mould, leaks, or obvious damage

Before listing, it usually makes more sense to:

  • re-caulk where needed
  • touch up paint
  • replace a broken mirror or light
  • fix dripping faucets
  • ensure grout looks clean

That’s a far better use of money than a full remodel right before putting your home on the market.

Don’t Replace Every Light Fixture, Faucet, or Piece of Hardware

Not every cosmetic detail needs to be updated.

A lot of sellers start looking around the house and suddenly every faucet, light fixture, doorknob, and cabinet pull feels like a problem. Most of the time, it isn’t.

If those finishes are extremely dated or inconsistent, we may recommend a few simple updates in key areas. But replacing every fixture in the house is rarely necessary.

Buyers know cosmetics can be changed. What they care more about is whether the home feels clean, functional, and move-in ready overall.

If you’re going to spend money, spend it where it has the most impact. Chasing every tiny cosmetic imperfection is a fast way to burn through your budget for very little return.

Don’t Redo Flooring Throughout the Entire House Without a Strategy

Flooring is one of the first things sellers panic about, and fair enough, bad flooring can stand out. But that doesn’t automatically mean you need to replace everything.

In many cases, a full flooring overhaul is overkill.

Before replacing floors, ask:

  • Are they actually damaged, or just not your style?
  • Would a deep clean make a big difference?
  • Would one room benefit more than replacing the entire house?
  • Can we work around them through staging and pricing?

Sometimes the answer is replacing a small section. Sometimes it’s refinishing hardwood. Sometimes it’s simply removing worn area rugs, cleaning thoroughly, and letting the rest go.

Blanket replacements are not always the answer.

Don’t Fix Things Buyers May Want to Personalize Anyway

This is where a lot of sellers waste money.

Buyers often want to personalize a home after they move in. So if you spend a lot updating things based purely on taste, there’s a good chance the buyer won’t fully value it.

This can include:

  • trendy backsplashes
  • bold design choices
  • custom built-ins that only suit your lifestyle
  • expensive wallpaper
  • highly specific finishes

The more personal the update, the more likely it is that a buyer sees it as “nice, but not for me.”

When preparing a home for sale, neutral and broadly appealing almost always wins.

What You Should Fix Before Selling

Now for the flip side.

While there are definitely things you do not need to fix before listing, there are also issues you should not ignore. These are the items that can hurt buyer confidence, show up during a home inspection, or make the home feel poorly maintained.

Here’s what we typically recommend addressing before listing:

Anything Broken or Not Functioning Properly

Fix:

  • leaky faucets
  • running toilets
  • loose handles
  • doors that stick or don’t latch
  • damaged locks
  • burnt-out light bulbs
  • broken appliances if they’re included in the sale

These are smaller issues, but buyers notice them fast.

Obvious Damage

Repair or remove:

  • holes in walls
  • cracked tiles
  • torn screens
  • damaged trim
  • stained ceilings
  • chipped paint
  • loose railings

Visible damage can make buyers wonder what else hasn’t been maintained.

Paint Where Needed

Fresh paint is often one of the most worthwhile pre-listing updates.

A clean coat of paint in a light, neutral colour can instantly brighten a home and make it feel fresher, cleaner, and more move-in ready.

Cleanliness and Presentation

This one matters more than almost anything else.

Before listing, focus heavily on:

  • deep cleaning
  • decluttering
  • depersonalizing
  • organizing storage spaces
  • washing windows
  • making the home smell fresh
  • staging key rooms well

A clean, well-presented home almost always outperforms a cluttered one, even if the cluttered one has newer finishes.

The Real Goal: Maximize Return, Not Just Spend More

The smartest sellers don’t prepare their home based on emotion. They prepare it based on strategy.

That’s where working with an experienced listing agent matters. Before spending money, you want clear advice on:

  • what buyers in your market actually care about
  • what improvements are worth the investment
  • what can be left alone
  • how to position your home to sell for the best possible price

Every home is different. Every price point is different. And every market responds differently.

The truth is, selling your home is not about making it perfect. It’s about making it marketable.

Final Thoughts

If you’re getting ready to sell, don’t assume you need to renovate half your house first. In many cases, the best results come from a more strategic approach: fix what’s broken, freshen what’s tired, clean everything thoroughly, and avoid sinking money into updates that won’t meaningfully pay off.

That’s how you protect your bottom line and go to market with confidence.

If you’re wondering what your home needs before listing, we can help you make the right call.

The post What’s Worth Fixing Before You Sell, and What Isn’t appeared first on Kitchener Waterloo Real Estate Agent - The Deutschmann Team.


Centre in the Square

Centre In The Square Unveils 2026/27 Season: Dare to Be There

Broadway Magic, International Spectacle, Canadian Icons and Live Experiences
Take Centre Stage in Downtown Kitchener

Kitchener, ON — Centre In The Square is proud to unveil its 2026/27 Season with a simple challenge to audiences across the region: Dare to Be There. This Season marks a milestone moment for the venue, with the most ambitious Broadway lineup ever presented on the Centre’s stage, alongside world-class international performers, iconic Canadian artists, spectacular family programming, and the continued growth of the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony’s presence at the Raffi Armenian Theatre.

New this Season is the inaugural Studio Theatre Experience, an intimate series showcasing extraordinary artists in a more personal setting, alongside expanded school shows and education programming that continues to make live performance accessible to the next generation of audiences.

“‘Dare to Be There’ is more than a tagline; it’s an invitation,” says Executive Director Eric Larivière. “This season is about shared experiences, powerful moments, and the incredible energy that only live performance can deliver.”

This Season cements Centre In The Square’s position as a leader in live experience and gives audiences across Ontario every reason to make Kitchener worth the drive.

Broadway In Kitchener Series

This season, Broadway takes centre stage in Kitchener with four spectacular productions direct from New York, plus a special encore engagement of one of Broadway’s biggest hits.

Broadway Series productions include:

  • Mrs. Doubtfire • November 3, 2026
  • A Christmas Story – The Musical • November 25, 2026
  • Legally Blonde – The Musical • May 18, 2027
  • Jersey Boys • May 28, 2027

Broadway Encore:

  • The Book of Mormon • March 16–21, 2027

Broadway in Kitchener season tickets offer audiences the best way to experience the magic of Broadway without leaving Kitchener. Subscribers can secure the best seats in the house for all four productions, keep the same seats for every show, save almost 25%, and receive exclusive early access to purchase tickets for The Book of Mormon before the public!

International Series

The International Series brings globally celebrated artists, immersive concert experiences, dance, and cultural performances from around the world to our stage.

International Series performances include:

  • An Evening with Celtic Thunder 2026: Celebrate Your Favourite Songs • September 5, 2026
  • Lorrie Morgan & Pam Tillis: Grits and Glamour Tour • October 9, 2026
  • Pat Metheny – Side-Eye III+ • October 10, 2026
  • The Buena Vista Orchestra • October 18, 2026
  • Mariza • October 28, 2026
  • The Psychology of Cults – A Live Event • October 29, 2026
  • Cinderella presented by Classical Arts Entertainment • November 29, 2026
  • Love Actually In Concert • December 3, 2026
  • Five For Fighting with String Quartet • December 10, 2026
  • YAMATO: The Drummers of Japan – Tamayura: Echoes of the Soul • February 6, 2027
  • Swan Lake by International Ballet Stars • March 24, 2027

Canadians Series

The Canadians Series celebrates beloved homegrown artists and uniquely Canadian live experiences.

Canadians Series performances include:

  • Ballets Jazz Montréal – Dance Me: The Music of Leonard Cohen • November 18, 2026
  • Dwayne Gretzky presented by ENOVA • November 20, 2026
  • Marianas Trench • December 5, 2026
  • Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy: A Celtic Family Christmas • December 15, 2026
  • Blue Rodeo • January 8 & 9, 2027
  • Can You Sing, Kitchener • April 30, 2027

ENOVA Presents: Classic Rock Series

ENOVA returns as the proud Presenting Sponsor of the ever-popular Classic Rock Series, bringing legendary albums and iconic rock tributes back to the Centre’s stage.

ENOVA Presents: Classic Rock Series includes:

  • The Australian Pink Floyd Show – The Happiest Days of Our Lives: Greatest Hits ’26 • September 21, 2026
  • Classic Albums Live: Billy Joel – The Stranger • November 13, 2026
  • Brass Transit: The Musical Legacy of Chicago • November 14, 2026
  • Classic Albums Live: Elton John’s Greatest Hits • January 30, 2027
  • Classic Albums Live: Led Zeppelin II • March 12, 2027
  • Classic Albums Live: Pink Floyd – Dark Side of the Moon • April 9, 2027

Family Series

From magical holiday traditions to acrobatics, wizardry and theatrical adventures, the Family Series offers fantastical experiences for audiences of all ages.

Family Series performances include:

  • Cirque Musica: Holiday Wonderland • November 26, 2026
  • The Nutcracker: A Canadian Tradition • December 28, 2026
  • Cirque Éloize: iD Evolution • February 27, 2027

Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Series

The Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony continues to grow its presence at Centre In The Square, returning with five orchestral performances spanning beloved masterworks and festive favourites. The expanded KWS series reflects the strengthening partnership between the two organizations and their shared commitment to making world-class music a cornerstone of cultural life in Waterloo Region.

Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony performances include:

  • Masterworks 1: Beauty and Power • September 26, 2026
  • Yuletide Pops • December 19, 2026
  • Masterworks 2: Solace • January 23, 2027
  • Masterworks 3: Folk Dances • February 13, 2027
  • Masterworks 4: The Journey Home • May 15, 2027

Grand Philharmonic Choir Series

The Grand Philharmonic Choir returns with a powerful lineup of celebrated choral masterworks performed alongside the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.

Grand Philharmonic Choir performances include:

  • Haydn: The Creation • November 7, 2026
  • Handel’s Messiah • December 12, 2026
  • Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem • March 26, 2027

Studio Theatre Experience Series

The Studio Theatre Series offers intimate, immersive, and innovative performances across music, theatre, and live experiences.

Studio Theatre performances include:

  • Billy Raffoul • October 10, 2026
  • Michael Kaeshammer • November 5, 2026
  • Daniel Vnukowski: Beethoven, and Mixed Programme • March 6, 2027
  • BOOM • April 28–May 1, 2027

Education Programs & Summer Camps

Centre In The Square continues its commitment to inspiring the next generation through an expanding lineup of school shows and summer camps. This season’s School Shows Series features seven curriculum-connected performances for elementary and middle school audiences, with tickets available for as little as $5.

2026/2027 School Shows:

  • Sing Pitch Perfect with Deke Sharon & Splüsh • October 27, 2026
  • Doktor Kaboom: Under Pressure • November 16, 2026
  • ILL-Abilities: No Excuses, No Limits • February 1, 2027
  • Sultans of String: The Refuge Show • March 2, 2027
  • Ocean Blue • March 9, 2027
  • DeeDee Austin • April 13, 2027
  • BOOM • April 27–30, 2027 (Studio Theatre)

In addition to school-year programming, the Centre’s popular Summer Camps return this July and August with a variety of one- and two-week sessions designed for children ages 4 to 14. Led by professional artists and arts educators, these camps offer a welcoming space to build confidence, express creativity and make new friends, culminating in a final showcase performance for family and friends.

The 2026/27 Season is proudly supported by Season Sponsor Heffner Lexus Toyota, Season Media Sponsor CTV, Destination Programming Sponsor Raelipskie Partnership, and ENOVA, sponsor of the Classic Rock Series.

The Centre also acknowledges the continued support of the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Cultural Attractions Fund and the Experience Ontario program, the Government of Canada through the Canada Summer Jobs program, the Lyle S. Hallman Foundation Kids to Camp Fund at the Waterloo Region Community Foundation, The Walper Hotel, Delta Hotels Waterloo, 570 NewsRadio Kitchener, 96.7 CHYM FM, Country 106.7, the Waterloo Region Record, M&T Printing Group, and Borealis Grille & Bar.

Centre In The Square gratefully acknowledges the major funder, the City of Kitchener for its continued support.

Tickets for the 2026/27 Season are available exclusively to CentreStage Members from May 27 through June 7, 2026, with public on-sale dates beginning June 8, 2026.

For full season details, Broadway subscriptions, memberships, and tickets, visit www.centreinthesquare.com.

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Media Contacts

Eric Larivière
Executive Director, Centre In The Square
416-557-8498
ELariviere@centreinthesquare.com

Jonathan Randall
Director, Marketing & Development
519-578-5660
JRandall@centreinthesquare.com

About Centre In The Square:

Centre In The Square is the leading destination for live experiences in the Greater Kitchener-Waterloo Area. With over 180 annual events, Centre In The Square showcases top local, national, and international talent, enriching the cultural landscape with concerts, plays, comedy, lectures, and more. Located in the heart of Downtown Kitchener, Centre In The Square is a meaningful space for live experiences and community gathering, generating creative and economic impact and serving one of Canada’s fastest-growing communities.


Elmira Advocate

THE TALK AND THE ROUND & ROUND IN CIRCLES NEVER ENDS, IT JUST GOES ON FOREVER

 

The Woolwich Observer published a Letter To The Editor from Ms. Bryant that was commenting on an earlier article in the Observer (Oct. 12/23) titled "Lanxess study finds Canagagigue contaminants pose no unacceptable risk". Ms. Bryant's Letter To The Editor one week later is titled "Canagagigue hotspots should be addressed".  Well yes as a matter of fact they should and only a wealthy corporation with more money than ethics could think otherwise. 

There is of course no health study to back up the Risk Assessment claims of no unacceptable risk. There is however reams of paper involved in a number of Draft reports as well as in the possibly final report. As stated lots of contaminants were found some 1,000 times higher than regulated standards. These contaminants are long proven Persistent Organic Pollutants (Pops) including DDT, DDD, DDE, dioxins and furans, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs), PCBs and mercury. They are found in the bottom of the Creek as sediments as well as along the Creek as creekbank soils plus further away from the Creek as Floodplain soils. Finally they are also found in members of the Benthic community that lives within the sediment and finally via bioaccumulation have moved up the food chain into fish tissues. These fish of course are also predated upon by birds of prey, raccoons, foxes, coyotes and more. Yes the fish tissue concentrations also exceed published health criteria  None of this seems to matter to the suits merely doing the job they were paid to do.

This situation is the result of money talking. The successor polluter has more money for legal battles than the Township, the Ministry of Environment (MECP) or anybody else involved. They are not afraid to spend it to save themselves millions in further cleanup costs. In my opinion both human health and environmental health for them are not nearly the priority that shareholders' profits are. Money talks!


KW Peace

Flotilla Fundraiser: Film screening of “All That’s Left of You” & Speaker, 1pm on Sunday 31 May 2026

  • What: Film screening of All That’s Left of You.
  • Hosted by: ♦Neighbours for Palestine: Waterloo Region.
  • When: 1:30pm to 4:30pm on Sunday 31 May 2026.
  • Where: RSVP for location.
  • Location: Near Block Line LRT station, Kitchener, Ontario Map
  • Register: actionnetwork.org/ticketed_events/all-thats-left-of-you-film-screening-flotilla-fundraiser
  • Contact: waterlooforpalestine@gmail.com
Flotilla Fundraiser: Film screening & Speaker

Hear a Flotilla organizer share their experience trying to break the siege on Gaza and bring in humanitarian aid. After the short talk, watch the award-winning film, All That’s Left of You, which traces one Palestinian family’s history from the Nakba to modern day. Sunday, 31 May 2026, doors at 1:00pm Register for Kitchener location. $15.50 – proceeds to Canadian Boat to Gaza. Co-sponsored by N4P & IJV. Let’s show our support for the returning activists. We hope to see you there! Register: actionnetwork.org/ticketed_events/all-thats-left-of-you-film-screening-flotilla-fundraiser

About The Film

All That’s Left of You begins in the Occupied West Bank of the 1980s, when a Palestinian teenager is swept into a protest that changes the course of his family’s life. Reeling from its aftermath, his mother, Hanan, shares the story that led them to that fateful moment. Spanning seven decades, this epic drama traces the hopes and heartaches of one uprooted family, revealing not only the scars of displacement, but the unbreakable spirit of survival. Executive produced by Mark Ruffalo and Javier Bardem, the film is a New York Times Critics’ Pick, Independent Spirit Award Nominee, and was shortlisted for an Oscar.

The film is presented in partnership with Canadian Boat to Gaza and is co-sponsored by Neighbours for Palestine: Waterloo Region (N4P) and Independent Jewish Voices Waterloo Region (IJV).


James Davis Nicoll

Ceremony of Innocence / To Ride a Rising Storm (Nampeshiweisit, volume 2) By Moniquill Blackgoose

Moniquill Blackgoose’s 2026 To Ride a Rising Storm is the the Second Book of Nampeshiweisit. It is a secondary universe fantasy novel.

Protagonist Anequs was wounded saving Jarl of Vaster Hold Joervarsson. Anequs’ dragon Kasaqua incinerated the would-be assassin. Now, all that remains is the matter of the reward… or rather, consequences.


Kitchener Panthers

Panthers drop close one to London

KITCHENER - A valiant bottom of the ninth came up just short for the Kitchener Panthers.

Down 7-2, the Panthers got three runs and had the tying run at the plate, but Skylar Janisse finished it off as the London Majors nabbed a 7-5 decision Thursday night at Jack Couch Park.

Two of the three runs came off a two-run home run for Raffi Gross.

The difference in the game came in the fifth inning, when the Majors scored four runs and sent nine to the plate.

Owen MacNeil took the loss, giving up five runs on four hits in 4.2 innings of work. He struck out four and walked four.

Cesilio Pimentel scattered four hits in six innings for the win in his CBL debut for London. He struck out six and allowed two runs.

Malik Williams was the lone Panther to have a multi-hit effort, he was two-for-three.

Kitchener falls to 3-3, while London moves to 4-1.

The loss begins a busy week for the Panthers. They hit the road to Chatham-Kent and Guelph Friday and Saturday.

The next home game is Sunday at 2:05 p.m. when the Hamilton Cardinals come to town.

GET YOUR TICKETS NOW and #PackTheJack!

BOXSCOREGAME REPLAY

The Backing Bookworm

Find Her Alive


Find Her Alive is the eighth installment of the Detective Josie Quinn series. Part police procedural, part suspense, this is a series you'll want to read from the beginning since Regan weaves Josie's compelling past into her stories. 
The book starts out with Josie and her sister, Trinity, a well-known TV news anchor, having a sudden heated exchange ending with Trinity leaving and going to a remote cabin for some time alone. Josie gives her sister some space, but three weeks later, her family realizes she's disappeared and is shocked when human bones are found nearby. The hunt for Trinity, with her twin sister at the helm, begins.  
Readers learn of Trinity's past but, from what I remember of Trinity, it felt like it came out of left field and didn't fit with the Trinity we've met. There's lots of family drama and a poignant moment or two, but the pacing felt slower and I miss the gritty Josie from previous books and had hoped for the story to grab me more. Readers will also have to suspend disbelief with a few decisions the sisters make and how Josie solves the crime after the FBI already had a go at it. 
Overall, this is a decent addition to the series, and I certainly hope the FBI agent makes another appearance.

My Rating: 3 starsAuthor: Lisa ReganGenre: SuspenseSeries: Det. Josie Quinn 8Type and Source: ebook, personal copyPublisher: BookoutureFirst Published: April 15, 2020Read: May 15-22, 2026

Book Description from GoodReads: Detective Josie Quinn hasn’t heard from her sister since Trinity stormed out of the house in the heat of an argument three weeks ago. So, when human remains are found at the remote hunting cabin where Trinity was last seen, Josie can only assume the worst.
Gathering her team, Josie feels a surge of relief when the dental records match a different body – that of a missing single mother from a neighboring town. But now Josie’s is not the only broken family desperate for answers.

Dusting the crime scene for prints, a name smudged into the side of a nearby car is the first in a trail of clues Trinity left for Josie. In need of a big story to save her journalism career, it seems Josie’s sister was attempting to make contact with a dangerous serial killer known for creating sculptures with his victim’s bones. And Trinity won’t stop until she’s found him, even if it means becoming his next masterpiece…

Josie is certain there’s a critical clue in the ivory hair comb delivered to Trinity just days before she went missing. But as more bones surface, each set more likely to be Trinity’s than the last, time is running out to find her alive. Can Josie’s team trust her instincts in a case that is so deeply personal? Can she find her sister without putting other innocent lives in danger?



Github: Brent Litner

brentlintner starred itbench-hub/ITBench

♦ brentlintner starred itbench-hub/ITBench · May 28, 2026 16:06 itbench-hub/ITBench

An open source benchmarking framework for IT automation

Python 323 4 issues need help Updated May 30


Adam Wathan

Building some empty states for Tailwind UI

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Agilicus

Fine Grained Authorisation

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Agilicus

Why VPNs Are Not a Viable Solution for Multi-Site Manufacturing

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Ball Construction

Homer Watson Business Park in Kitchener Building Three

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Hive WR

Change The Ratio Waterloo Region 2017

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Bardish Chagger

Behind the Curtain - Episode1 (Budget Week)

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Grand River Rocks Climbing Gym

Summer Aerial Silks

The post Summer Aerial Silks appeared first on Grand River Rocks Climbing Gym.


Capacity Canada

Elmira District Community Living (EDCL)

♦ Board Member Recruitment – Elmira District Community Living (EDCL)

Thank you for your interest in joining the Board of Directors of Elmira District Community Living (EDCL).

EDCL is a grassroots, community-based organization dedicated to supporting individuals with developmental disabilities and their families in Elmira and the surrounding area. We are committed to building an inclusive community where everyone belongs and has the opportunity to thrive. Your skills, experience, and perspective can help strengthen and grow this mission.

What We Are Looking For

We are currently seeking two new board members to complement our 12 member Board. We welcome individuals with diverse backgrounds, perspectives, and lived experiences.

In particular, we are seeking individuals with experience in:

  • Finance
  • Construction/property development/planning/architecture

If you are passionate about our mission and interested in giving back to your community, we encourage you to apply.

Time Commitment

Board members contribute approximately 15-20 (board member only) 25-30(if on a committee or committees) per year. This includes:

  • Attending board meetings
  • Participating in committees as needed
  • Supporting occasional events or initiatives

Board meetings are held in the evenings on:

  • The fourth Tuesday in September, November, January, and March
  • The first Tuesday in June

The Annual General Meeting is held on the second Tuesday in June.
Committee meetings occur 2–3 times per year at mutually convenient times.

Requirements
  • Successful completion of a Police Check
Next Steps

Please submit a letter of interest by June 15 via email to: cpeterson@elmiraacl.com

If you have questions or would like to learn more, please contact:

Cheryl Peterson, Executive Director
Phone: 519-669-3205 ext. 226
Email: cpeterson@elmiraacl.com

You can also visit our website: www.elmiradcl.com

The post Elmira District Community Living (EDCL) appeared first on Capacity Canada.


Capacity Canada

AAMAC

Help strengthen care, support and hope for Canadians living with bone marrow failure diseases.

The Aplastic Anemia and Myelodysplasia Association of Canada (AAMAC) is seeking volunteer Board Directors from across Canada who want to help shape the future of patient support, education, advocacy and research for Canadians impacted by aplastic anemia (AA), myelodysplasia and Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

AAMAC is a federally incorporated registered charity dedicated to building a seamless national support network for patients, families, caregivers, friends and healthcare providers affected by bone marrow failure diseases. In addition to patient education and support, AAMAC funds Canadian research focused on improving outcomes for those living with these rare and serious conditions.

This is a meaningful governance opportunity for leaders who want to contribute their experience, judgment and voice to a mission-driven national organization. This role is best suited for individuals who are prepared to contribute over multiple years. Board Directors help guide AAMAC’s strategic direction, strengthen organizational sustainability, support patient-focused programs, expand awareness across Canada and ensure the organization remains responsive to the needs of patients and their support networks.

While beneficial, candidates are not required to have prior board experience, a medical background or direct personal experience with bone marrow failure disease. AAMAC welcomes individuals who are thoughtful, collaborative, committed and prepared to contribute consistently.

The expected time commitment includes:

  • 6–8 virtual board meetings per year
  • 1 annual strategic retreat, held virtually or in person
  • Committee participation, approximately 3–4 hours per month

AAMAC is currently prioritizing candidates from Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia, although applicants from anywhere in Canada are welcome.

Experience in any of the following areas would be considered an asset:

  • Nursing, clinical care or healthcare systems
  • Patient support, advocacy or community outreach
  • Financial management, accounting or audit
  • Nonprofit leadership
  • Fundraising, communications or stakeholder engagement
  • Bilingual proficiency in French and English

AAMAC supports a respectful, collaborative and mission-focused board culture. This is an opportunity to help strengthen a national organization serving patients and families facing rare, complex and life-changing diseases.

For more information or to submit your application, please email cindyanthony@aamac.ca

The post AAMAC appeared first on Capacity Canada.


Capacity Canada

CIRA

♦ Join CIRA’s Board of Directors

Apply to join CIRA’s Board of Directors and help shape the organization’s strategic direction and governance as it fulfils its mandate to manage the CA domain for the benefit of all Canadians.

CIRA’s Board plays an important role in supporting a trusted internet through initiatives such as the Net Good program, cybersecurity products, internet policy development, and other programs that strengthen Canada’s digital future.

Who You Are:

You are a professional with governance experience, interested in joining a high-performing board, who actively:

  • Promotes teamwork and helps build agreement.
  • Asks relevant questions and expresses opinions based on solid reasoning.
  • Recognizes strategic risks and opportunities that could affect CIRA and suggests sustainable solutions.
  • Shows leadership with a creative and innovative approach to solving problems.
  • Values diverse perspectives and experiences, fostering openness and continuous improvement.
What You Bring:
  • Legal Leadership and compliance experience, with subsidiary governance and management expertise and board-level judgement on policy, stakeholder and reputational risks, and/or
  • Executive Leadership experience overseeing business operations with direct accountability for profit and loss, including strategy execution, budgeting, financial performance, and resource allocation, and/or
  • Deep knowledge of DNS Operations, secuirty, and governance, with the ability to translate technical issues into strategic, risk, and policy considerations relevant to Board oversight.
Commitment:

CIRA’s Board meets in person three times a year, typically in November, February, and June.

*Additional Board meetings and meetings of Board Committees are held virtually throughout the year.

Applications must be submitted between 2pm ET on May 28 – 2pm ET on June 11, 2026.

Application Link apply-nominations.smapply.ca/

Learn more about the process and key dates for joining CIRA’s Board at cira.ca/election

CIRA is the national not-for-profit best known for managing the .CA domain on behalf of all Canadians. As a leader in Canada’s internet ecosystem, CIRA offers a wide
range of products, programs and services designed to make the internet a secure and accessible space for all. CIRA represents Canada on both national and international stages to support its goal of building a trusted internet for Canadians by helping shape the future of the internet

 

The post CIRA appeared first on Capacity Canada.


Elmira Advocate

THE BRASS, THE AUDACITY, THE NERVE & SENSE OF ENTITLEMENT IS BOTH SHOCKING AND DISGRACEFUL

 

This is not the first time that hockey of all things has determined the makeup of Woolwich Council. The irony is that Mayor Shantz's initial win (20 years ago?) as a councillor over Pat McLean was not due to any remote superior character, education or experience but due to Sandy Shantz publicly supporting a two ice rink recreation centre whereas Pat wanted but one. Now as Sandy is not running again in this falls municipal election she won't lose her seat over her decision to permit the new, private rink to stay. The same may not be said for other councillors whether in favour or against allowing the new rink near Bloomingdale to stay despite the property owner pretty much literally waving their middle finger at Woolwich Council.

It was a calculated, in your face slap to both councillors and planning staff as the very well to do property owner decided to simply ignore zoning and by-law issues by building his personal, fully enclosed and fully equipped ice rink supposedly for his family and friends only versus for commercial purposes. Time will tell as this person has demonstrated a willingness to publicly flip the middle finger at Woolwich Council.

There are many issues involved in this situation and frankly despite my harsh criticism of Woolwich Council environmentally, I almost feel sorry for them with this no win scenario.  Issues include individual's property rights versus the encroachment and expansion of government influence and authority. Issues also unfortunately include the Rule of Law whereby each and every citizen is to be treated equally before the law.  What we clearly see here is an individual with the money and influence simply confronting a municipal government and effectively telling them to #uck off or else I'll see you in court or at the Ontario Land Tribunal (OLT) or both. No subtlety, no apology, no oops I goofed. Any other average citizen treating Council this way would have the Township's lawyers all over them and a very expensive, possibly bankrupt inducing legal battle before them. 

Part of my sympathy for the individual involved has to do with most municipal council's including Woolwich historically lying, deceiving and bullying citizens whenever it pleases them. Think of the Rattasids among others who for a while owned the former Paleshi garage and auto wrecking yard and how they were treated by staff and council. Clearly this individual in Bloomingdale whether through good luck, good management or whatever has the financial means to push back hard and has chosen to do so. His is a classic case of do what you damn well please on your own (very large) property and then ask for forgiveness afterwards with little to no sincerity and a blatant in your face attitude because clearly his lawyers have told him that an expensive legal battle for the Township during an election year will not be wanted by them. 

Frankly half of this looks good on a municipal Township with a long history of both stupidity and arrogance. It's just unfortunate that it sends the message that yes indeed money does put you above the law. Just ask a couple of guys by the name of Nygard and Stronach about how long money can buy you legal protection in this country.


     

  


Cordial Catholic, K Albert Little

What Evangelicals Get Wrong About the Eucharist #apologetics #Catholic #Christian #Bible

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James Davis Nicoll

Après Moi / The Night Ship By Alex Woodroe

Alex Woodroe’s 2026 The Night Ship is a stand-alone cosmic horror novel.

Romanian Rosi can look forward to a life uncomplicated by personal preferences. The government will select her job, her parents will select her husband, and thanks to Decree 770 (and the unreliable nature of black-market contraceptives), an astonishing number of children will follow. So it has been written. So shall it be.

Thanks to Rosi’s own efforts and a truly visionary effort on the part of the Romanian government, the late 1980s will play out very differently than in our timeline.



Adam Wathan

Live upgrading some projects to the new Tailwind CSS v4 alpha

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Elmira Advocate

LOCAL GOOD NEWS: CANAGAGIGUE CREEK IS AS TOXIC AS IT'S BEEN FOR THE LAST TWENTY YEARS BUT BETTER THAN IT WAS THIRTY TO FOURTY YEARS AGO

 

The headline above demonstrates what passes for environmental cleanup and improvement in Woolwich Township particularly between polluters and politicians.

These results are from the recently released 2025 Biomonitoring Report. DDT and metabolites (mostly DDE) in fish tissues are above the CCME (Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment) Guidelines of 14 ng/g for several reaches in the Creek on the Lanxess (Uniroyal) property.  The guideline is 14 ng/g and the concentrations in Shiners and Bluntnose Minnows averaged between 50 and 70 ng/g, well above guidelines.  

PCB concentrations in fish tissues were all below the CCME Guidelines except for the upstream reach which is interesting. What is just upstream from the former Uniroyal that could have discharged PCBs in the past?

Dioxins and furans concentrations in fish tissues were above the CCME Guidelines of .71 pg/g TEQ (Toxic Equivalency) downstream but below them upstream from Lanxess/Uniroyal.  The downstream composite samples were around 1.6 pg/g which also indicates a decrease from  concentrations that were higher in the early 1990s but have been stable over the last five years. Now this result similar to the others allegedly can not be "...directly or statistically compared with historical MECP tissue data..." due to differences in sampling, fish species assessed and other reasons which I find very convenient and dubious. 

Somewhat strangely the dioxin and furan tissue concentrations in Shiners are higher in 2025 than they were in 2020. One excuse given is that the fish (shiners) averaged a little larger in the 2025 sampling than the earlier one.

All in all this study proves that doing nothing is cheaper than actually cleaning up and that eventually when you stop polluting, concentrations of toxic Persistent Organic Pollutants (Dioxins/DDT/PCBs etc.) tend to decrease over decades.


Code Like a Girl

Underqualified or Underconfident?

CAREERWhat holds most professionals back isn’t their CV; it’s the story they tell themselves about it.♦Hesitation is rarely about capability. Credit: Elizabeth Lenihan CanvaPro

There’s a moment many professionals experience when an opportunity appears. You pause, read the requirements, and your mind goes straight to what might be missing. That hesitation is rarely about capability. It’s about confidence.

Self-doubt has a way of disguising itself as logic. It tells you to wait, to prepare more, to hold back until you feel fully ready. But confidence rarely arrives before action. It’s built through it.

When self-doubt takes the lead, it can subtly shape your career in ways you might not immediately notice. You might avoid applying for roles unless you meet every requirement. You might stay in environments where you feel comfortable but unchallenged. Or you might delay decisions, telling yourself you’ll act when the timing feels right.

A more helpful approach is to shift from assumption to reflection. Instead of asking, “Am I qualified enough?” try asking:

  • What evidence do I have that I can do this, even if I haven’t done it before?
  • Where have I adapted or figured things out successfully in the past?
  • What’s the real risk here, and how would I handle it if it happened?
  • What am I more likely to regret: trying and learning, or staying where I am?
  • If I trusted my capability, what would I do next?

It’s also worth paying attention to how you speak to yourself in these moments. If a friend or a younger version of you came to you with the same doubt, would you tell them to hold back? Or would you remind them of their strengths, encourage them to take the step, and back them fully?

♦The encouragement you offer others is what you need to offer yourself. Credit: Elizabeth Lenihan CanvaPro

The reassurance, belief, and encouragement you offer others is often exactly what you need to offer yourself. Confidence grows when your inner voice becomes one that supports action, not hesitation.

These questions don’t remove doubt, but they put it back in its place. They help you move from avoidance to informed action.

It’s also important to recognise that careers are not built on perfect decisions. They are shaped through small, often uncertain steps. Growth rarely feels comfortable in the moment. It feels like stretching, questioning, and showing up before you feel fully ready.

If confidence feels out of reach, focus on building evidence instead. Take a small step. Start the conversation. Apply for the role. Each action becomes proof that you are more capable than you think.

The goal is not to silence every doubt. It’s to stop letting doubt make your decisions.

You are not waiting to become capable. In most cases, you already are.

Elizabeth Lenihan is an award-winning Career Strategist and Talent Consultant with over 18 years of experience helping professionals find clarity, build confidence, and move forward with intention. Based in Ireland, she works with clients internationally.

Explore more at elizabethlenihan.com or connect on LinkedIn.

Underqualified or Underconfident? was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


Code Like a Girl

Are You Overburdening Your Most Engaged Employees?

Motivated employees may be your first choice when unexpected and unintentional work shows up, but the question you need to ask yourself…

Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »


Brickhouse Guitars

Receiving A Custom Pellerin Folk C

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James Davis Nicoll

Never Rains / My Dress-Up Darling, volume 2 By Shinichi Fukuda

My Dress-Up Darling, Volume Two is the second tankōbon in Shinichi Fukuda’s romantic comedy manga series. This tankōbon is titled Sono Bisuku Dōru in the original Japanese. Dress-Up was serialized in Square Enix’s seinen manga magazine Young Gangan from January 2018 to March 2025.

Having been recruited as her personal tailor by the beautiful, personable Marin Kitagawa, Wakana Gojo is befuddled by Marin’s off-handed revelation that the next cosplay event is in just two weeks.

Meeting that deadline is obviously impossible.



Kitchener Panthers

Baycats best Panthers in extra innings

BARRIE - A throwing error to first after a bunt was Kitchener's undoing up north.

Edgar Figueroa's bunt down the third base line in the bottom of the 10th inning was fielded, but the throw bounced off Malik Williams' glove at first, and Noah Hull trotted home to give the Barrie Baycats a 6-5 win Tuesday night at Athletic Kulture Stadium.

It snaps a three-game winning streak for Kitchener, who fall to 3-2 on the year. Barrie moves to 3-1.

The loss casts a shadow on what was a valiant comeback effort for the Panthers, who were down 5-0 at one point.

Petey Kiefer drove three runs in on a two-for-four night. Raffi Gross had the only other hit for Kitchener on the night, and took advantage of miscues on defence.

Barrie committed three errors, including a throwing error that led to Kitchener's third run, but also gunned down multiple Kitchener runners at the plate.

Elian Serrata struck out eight, but gave up five runs on nine hits in 4.2 innings of work.

Jake Liberta took the loss, while Carlos Sano was credited with the win. The Kitchener pitching staff finished with 13 strikeouts on the night.

Kitchener is back in action Thursday, hosting London at Jack Couch Park. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

BOXSCOREGAME REPLAY

The Backing Bookworm

Shield of Sparrows + Rites of the Starling


Double Review: Sheild of Sparrows and Rites of the Starling
I am not an avid Fantasy reader but like to dip my proverbial toe into this genre now and again. I prefer an easy-to-slip into story with world building that's not overly complicated. Is that too much to ask?
The first two books of the Shield of Sparrows series had the perfect blend of world building, romance, interesting characters and adventure. It also had great banter and a lot of fantastical creatures (which, admittedly, were a bit of a struggle to remember while listening to the audiobook). 

Book 1: Shield of Sparrows
This first book in the series is a quest across dangerous lands with a strong female main character in Odessa. There's some good romance and spice, but honestly it wasn't overly swoony. There are a lot of mythical monsters and adventure, but the main strength of this book is the cliffhanger ending. It's a doozy so you may want to keep Rites of the Starling close by so you can immediately jump into it!
(scroll down for my review of Rites of the Starling)

My Rating: 4 starsAuthor: Devney PerryGenre: Fantasy, RomanceSeries: Shield of Sparrows 1Type and Source: eAudio from public libraryPublisher: Tantor MediaFirst Published: May 6, 2025Narrators: Samantha Brentmoor, Jason ClarkeRun Time: 20 hoursRead: April 20 - May 3, 2026
Book Description from GoodReads: Devney Perry's Shield of Sparrows, a swoon-worthy romantic fantasy filled with legends and monsters, is The Witcher meets Cinderella.
The gods sent monsters to the five kingdoms to remind mortals they must kneel.

I’ve spent my life kneeling—to their will and to my father's. As a princess, my only duty is to wear the crown and obey the king.

I was never meant to rule. Never meant to fight. And I was never supposed to be the daughter who sealed an ancient treaty with her own blood.

But that changed the fateful day I stepped into my father’s throne room. The day a legendary monster hunter sailed to our shores. The day a prince ruined my life.

Now I’m crossing treacherous lands beside a warrior who despises me as much as I despise him—bound to a future I didn’t choose and a husband I barely know.

Everyone wants me to be something I’m not—a queen, a spy, a sacrifice.

But what if I refused the role chosen for me? What if I made my own rules? What if there’s power in being underestimated?

And what if—for the first time—I reached for it?


Book 2: Rites of the StarlingSometimes the second book of a series hits stronger and that's what we have here. A big part of that may be the amazing cliffhanger at the end of Rites and how this book hit the ground running! I felt the story and characters in Rites felt more well-rounded than Shield and getting the POVs of two pairs of characters on their own journeys (with Caspia's outshining Odessa's just a smidge) added a lot more depth to the story. 
There is a big reveal later in the story which I loved, and I just generally felt like I stayed in the moment as I listened to this audiobook instead of trying to figure out the twists. 
Beasties, action, prophecies and secrets abound and will keep listeners glued to their headphones.

The narration: The two books were decently narrated. I liked Samantha Brentmoor's narration, but I found Jason Clarke's voice to be MUCH too deep and so low that I had a very hard time hearing what he was saying. One does not need a bass voice to be manly. 
My Rating: 4.5 starsAuthor: Devney PerryGenre: Fantasy, RomanceSeries: Shield of Sparrows 1Type and Source: eAudio from public libraryPublisher: Recorded BooksFirst Published: April 7, 2026Narrators: Samantha Brentmoor, Jason ClarkeRun Time: 18 hoursRead: May 9-20, 2026

Book Description from GoodReads: A princess journeys across a cursed realm to find the truth about her family, only to discover her quest intertwines with the fate of a lost warrior. Love, danger, and magic collide in a captivating romantasy perfect for fans of Sarah J. Maas and Rebecca Yarros.
​Calandra's five kingdoms are on the verge of destruction. The crux migration is coming. And in the wake of a devastating attack, I've been separated from the man who owns my heart.

​I'm lost. Terrified. Homesick. Hunted by monsters, driven to exhaustion, and kidnapped by a powerful priest, the only thing keeping me going is the little girl counting on me to keep her safe. ​It's my turn to become the Guardian.

​Our lives change one fateful night. A night of death. A night of monsters. A night of truths. That night, when I learn the real meaning of fear—and the depth of my own strength.

​Everyone wants me to be something I'm not—a queen, a spy, a sacrifice. But what if I embrace my crown? What if the secrets I uncover save our realm? ​What if my sacrifice means salvation for the man I love?

For too long, I've feared the monsters we make. ​It's time to discover the monster within.​


Github: Brent Litner

brentlintner starred dnsimple/cli

♦ brentlintner starred dnsimple/cli · May 26, 2026 12:23 dnsimple/cli

CLI to access DNSimple programmatically.

Go 2 Updated May 26


Elmira Advocate

HOW WILL WOOLWICH TOWNSHIP RECONCILE DOWNSTREAM TOXIC HEALTH EFFECTS WITH THEIR ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLACENCY ?

 

By environmental complacency I mean Woolwich Councils' arms length, treat the polluter with kid gloves behaviour and attitudes.  I mean appointing various "citizens" committees whose primary characteristics are deference and submission to credentialed suits. Even that twit Todd Cowan after appointing a more vigorous and aggressive group of knowledgeable citizens to CPAC in early 2011 bent over backwards to Uniroyal/Chemtura pressure to have me removed. That wasn't enough for the Chemtura scum who couldn't stand to have me present as a sub-committee (SWAT)  assisting CPAC along with Dr. Henry Regier and Rich Clausi. They yelled and screamed in late 2014 and the incoming queen (mayor) got rid of in later 2015 the entire CPAC of highly experienced, knowledgeable and even professionals in the field such as Henry, Ron and Graham. All this was to appease Chemtura who didn't like to have to justify or do more than simply pronounce from on high their inadequate cleanup plans.

The various polluters inadequate cleanup of the Elmira Aquifers is now on record. They have utterly failed after twenty-five years of loud and vigorous claims that all was well and they had the cleanup under control. They lied and they were supported all the way by the Ministry of Environment and by Woolwich Township. I and other citizens have talked to each and every  council since then and despite apparently listening they have done little or nothing. They continue to take all words from the MECP and now Lanxess Canada as gospel from proven deceivers. The only way Woolwich Township survive the last thirty-six years of selling out to a world class polluter is with the eyes closed, ears covered behaviour of local citizens. That is also truly disgraceful.


Aquanty

HGS RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT – Three‐Dimensional Geostatistical Inverse Analyses of Transient Head and Temperature Data From a Long‐Term Heat Tracer Test

Ning, Z., Nakashima, T., Inaba, K., Shimizu, T., Hwang, H., & Illman, W. A. (2026). Three‐Dimensional Geostatistical Inverse Analyses of Transient Head and Temperature Data From a Long‐Term Heat Tracer Test. Water Resources Research, 62(2). doi.org/10.1029/2025wr041599

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE.

“To analyze the 2015 HTT, we utilized a 3D geostatistical inverse modeling approach based on the pilot point method (de Marsily, 1984). The inversion is achieved by coupling a series of programs: (a) HGS, the forward simulator (Aquanty Inc, 2023); (b) PEST, the model-independent parameter estimation package (Doherty, 2005); (c) Parameter List Processor (PLPROC) implemented in the Groundwater Data Utilities (Doherty, 2008); and (d) R Statistical Software (R Core Team, 2023).”
— Ning, Z. et al., 2026 ♦

Fig. 3. The general framework of geostatistical inverse modeling using the pilot point method in this study.

We’re pleased to highlight this staff research highlighted which investigates how three-dimensional geostatistical inverse modelling can improve characterization of subsurface heterogeneity in groundwater systems. This study leverages HydroGeoSphere (HGS) to simulate fully coupled groundwater flow and transport processes within a stochastic inversion framework, addressing long-standing challenges in estimating spatially distributed hydraulic conductivity fields from limited observational data.

Traditional inverse modelling approaches often rely on simplified parameterizations or two-dimensional representations that cannot fully capture the spatial variability of subsurface properties. While these methods can reproduce observed hydraulic heads, they frequently underestimate uncertainty and fail to resolve complex flow structures. By integrating HGS within a three-dimensional geostatistical inversion workflow, this research enables physically consistent simulation of groundwater flow responses to heterogeneous conductivity distributions, improving the reliability of parameter estimation.

The study applied this approach to synthetic aquifer systems with complex hydraulic conductivity variability, using hydraulic head observations to constrain inverse solutions. Results demonstrated that the three-dimensional inversion framework successfully reconstructed spatial patterns of subsurface heterogeneity while preserving realistic flow dynamics. Compared with traditional inversion strategies, the coupled modelling approach produced improved estimates of hydraulic conductivity fields and reduced uncertainty in predicted groundwater flow behavior.

Key findings showed that incorporating fully distributed flow simulations within the inversion process significantly enhanced the identification of subsurface structure and reduced ambiguity in parameter estimation. The results also highlighted how uncertainty in conductivity fields propagates through groundwater flow predictions, emphasizing the importance of physically based modelling when interpreting inverse solutions in heterogeneous environments.

HydroGeoSphere proved essential in enabling this work due to its ability to simulate three-dimensional groundwater flow across heterogeneous domains within a flexible finite-element framework. By coupling geostatistical inversion with physically based flow simulation, HGS allowed the researchers to evaluate how spatial variability influences hydraulic responses and parameter uncertainty throughout the aquifer system.

Fig. 5. Estimated K fields from inverse modeling of 2015 HTT for Cases: (a) 1; (b) 2a; (c) 2b; (d) 3a; (e) 3b. The cross section along Y = 16.5 m is included as well.

This research provides critical insights for groundwater characterization and uncertainty quantification, demonstrating that advanced modelling approaches like HydroGeoSphere are essential for improving subsurface parameter estimation in complex geological settings. By integrating geostatistical inversion with fully distributed flow simulation, the study paves the way for more reliable predictions of groundwater movement and resource availability.

Abstract:

Improving the accuracy of subsurface heterogeneity characterization remains a key component in better understanding groundwater flow and contaminant transport. Heat tracer tests can provide temperature measurements, in addition to head data, that can be used for mapping heterogeneity. Here, the performance of head and temperature data in characterizing the hydraulic conductivity (K) distribution is investigated with a three-dimensional highly parameterized model using the pilot point method. The performance results are evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively in various aspects, including K fields comparison, head and temperature matches for both model calibration and validation, as well as through identifiability and sensitivity analyses. Results of this study reveal that: (a) K fields obtained by inverting head data show finer details of heterogeneity, while small scale heterogeneity is smoothed when inverting temperature data; (b) combination of heat and temperature data improves the prediction of heat tracer tests; (c) increasing data density yields more heterogeneity information and further improves prediction performance; and (d) identifiability and sensitivity analyses suggest that head and temperature data contain nonredundant information of K heterogeneity. These results jointly suggest that the integration of transient head and temperature data shows promising potential in improving the delineation of subsurface K distribution and obtaining reliable predictions of head responses and heat plume migration.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE.


James Davis Nicoll

Assorted Flavours / Frankensteins and Foreign Devils By Walter Jon Williams Edited by Timothy P. Szczesuil

Walter Jon Williams’ 1998 Frankensteins and Foreign Devils (edited by Timothy P. Szczesuil) is both a collection and evidence of a flaw in my approach to this project.

KW Predatory Volley Ball

Congratulations 18U Engage. Calgary Nationals T13 Silver

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Code Like a Girl

What Is Intuitive in UX Design? It Depends on Your Generation…

I’m an oldie and I have Dutch-Greek insights every day

Continue reading on Code Like A Girl »


Code Like a Girl

Why Networks Matter for Women in Tech in 2026

Women-in-tech events are booming. The reason isn’t empowerment. It’s the aspiration ceiling effect, and here’s how to find a room that raises you.♦The Gateway Network

The boom in women-in-tech events and female-founder networks is not a passing DEI trend. It is the ecosystem’s response to the strongest causal evidence in entrepreneurship research that structured peer networks measurably raise innovation and profit. But the mechanism is not the “female” label. It is the aspiration ceiling set by the highest-bar peers in the room. The “female founder” framing is the gateway. The peer band is the work. Choose your rooms by who is in them, not by what they are called.

You signed up for the women-in-tech event. You showed up. A month later, nothing in your business has changed.

Were the rooms wrong, or were you?

Neither. The mechanism the events keep gesturing toward is real. It just is not the one the marketing language points at. Once you see the actual mechanism, you choose your rooms differently. You stop choosing them by the wording on the invite. You start choosing them by who is in the room.

Call the pattern the Gateway Network.

What the pattern is

The Gateway Network is the room you enter through the “female founder” or “women in tech” label, and stay in for the high-bar peer band that compounds inside. The label is the door. The peer band is the work.

The pattern matters because it explains a contradiction. Women-in-tech networks are growing at rates that suggest something powerful is happening. But many of the events themselves feel oddly hollow. Inspiring speeches, warm cocktails, no compounding outcomes. Both observations are true. They live in different layers of the same phenomenon.

The door is the gender framing. It is what gets you into rooms you would not otherwise enter, at scale you would not otherwise reach, with the psychological safety you would not otherwise have. The room is the operator-to-operator depth, the curated peer band, the multi-year compounding access to capital, talent, and information that closes structural gaps faster than any other intervention in entrepreneurship research.

Most events stop at the door. The networks that change outcomes invest in the room.

Why this works now

Four reasons, compressed.

1. Structural gaps make rooms more leveraged for women

Women hold roughly 26 to 28 percent of global tech roles, against 42 percent of the overall labor force¹. All-female founding teams receive 1 to 3 percent of venture capital in a given year². Women receive 31 percent less sponsorship than comparable men inside large companies, according to McKinsey’s 2025 Women in the Workplace research³.

Every one of those gaps is a place where the right network compensates for what the formal system under provides. For men, networks are an accelerator on top of an already-distributed resource base. For us, networks are often the substitute distribution channel for capital, sponsorship, and information that would otherwise not reach us. The leverage of a good room is mathematically larger.

2. The mechanism is the room, not the label

In 2023, a team affiliated with the World Bank ran a randomized controlled trial with 1,771 growth-oriented women entrepreneurs in Ghana⁴. Some were assigned to structured WhatsApp networking groups with scheduled interactions. Others were not. One year later, the women in the networking groups had increased business innovation by 25 to 36 percent and raised profits by 21 to 26 percent. The cost-benefit ratio was 14 to 28 dollars of profit per networking dollar spent.

The mechanism was not “feeling empowered.” Participants shifted their primary business contacts from friends and family to peer entrepreneurs in the network, particularly more educated and higher-performing ones. The room rewired the learning loop. The “women” framing made the room possible. The peer band did the work.

3. The aspiration ceiling effect

Your sense of what is possible is set by the highest-bar peer in your room.

Spend a year in a peer band where two members are at Series A, one just exited, and three are scaling past one million ARR. Something shifts. Your sense of what is feasible for your own company recalibrates upward. The shift is not motivational. It is informational. You now have reference points for what the path actually looks like. The risks you avoided yesterday because they felt impossible become routine moves you watch peers make this week.

The reverse is also true. Sit in a peer band where everyone is at the same stage of struggle, and proximity does not pull you upward. You get stuck in the average. This is why same-stage homophily produces warmth without growth.

4. Identity is the gateway. Depth is the work.

Women-only spaces are repeatedly described in the research as places where you can discuss bias, self-doubt, and non-dominant leadership styles without being penalized. That matters. Psychological safety is a real condition for risk-taking, and risk-taking is a real input to growth.

But the effective programs do not stop at safety. They move quickly into fundraising, go-to-market, hiring, pricing, org design. The identity framing creates trust on day one. The operator-to-operator depth creates the gains over years. Programs that stay at the identity layer feel good and produce little. Programs that use identity as the gateway, then operate as serious business peers from there, produce the kind of compounding outcomes the Ghana RCT measured.

The shift: choose the room by who is in it, not what it is called

This is the reframe that changes the outcome. Four moves follow.

1. Audit the current members before you commit

Look at who is actually in the network. Not who spoke at the launch event. Not who the marketing page features. The current active members. Their stages. Their ambition signals. Their willingness to share. If the highest-bar peer in the room is below where you want to be in two years, the room will not raise you.

2. Optimize for structured recurrence

The Ghana RCT used scheduled interactions, not one-off events. The India SEWA experiment used training in pairs, not solo learning. Both relied on disciplined recurrence as the mechanism. Networks that meet on a cadence, with defined cohorts and clear expectations, compound. Networks that publish a calendar of inspirational events do not.

3. Curate for diverse-but-aligned

The strongest gains in the research came from peer groups with mixed backgrounds and similar growth orientation. Different industries, different geographies, different paths into tech. Same level of ambition. Same willingness to operate as serious peers. This is the diversity that produces learning, not the diversity that produces panels.

4. Plan for multi-year engagement

Three-year follow-up data from the Ghana RCT shows that the gains from light-touch networking interventions fade if engagement is not sustained⁵. The room only keeps raising you as long as you keep showing up. Choose networks with alumni structures, multi-year cohorts, or compounding access to opportunity, not networks that expire after a single program.

♦The right room changes what you think is possible.What most of us try instead (and why it does not work)

The instinct, when you first hear “networks matter,” is one of three moves. None produces the outcome the research describes.

You collect events. Sign up for every women-in-tech conference, panel, and Slack community within reach. The schedule fills up. The compounding does not begin.

You stay in same-stage rooms. Find peers at your level so the conversations feel comfortable. The comfort is real. The aspiration ceiling stays where it is.

You wait for the network to find you. Assume good rooms surface organically once the work is good enough. Sometimes they do. More often, they do not, because the rooms that compound the most are deliberately curated, and the curators are looking for specific signals you have to send.

The cycle continues

Every generation rediscovers the same lesson about networks. The 1980s women’s business associations made the case for capital access. The 2000s women’s leadership programs made the case for sponsorship. The 2010s women-in-tech meetups made the case for representation. The 2020s female-founder communities are making the case for performance infrastructure, backed by causal evidence the earlier waves did not have.

The cycle continues. The next disruptor will rediscover that the room raises you, and will give it another name.

If you take one thing from this: the next women-in-tech event you attend, judge it by the height of the peers in the room, not by the wording on the invite.

The pattern underneath: the label is the gateway. The peer band is the work.

FAQ

1. Why are women-in-tech networks growing so fast in 2026?

Two reasons converging. Women’s share of tech and entrepreneurship has reached a critical mass that sustains vertical-specific networks. And the causal evidence on what closes opportunity gaps is now strong enough that ecosystems, corporates, and donors are funding networks as performance infrastructure, not inclusion theater.

2. Do female-founder networks actually improve business outcomes?

Yes, with the strongest causal evidence in entrepreneurship research. A randomized trial with 1,771 women entrepreneurs in Ghana found that structured WhatsApp networking groups raised business innovation by 25 to 36 percent and profits by 21 to 26 percent in one year, at a cost-benefit ratio of 14 to 28 dollars in additional profits per dollar spent.

3. Should female founders only join women-only networks?

No. The mechanism is the quality of the peer band, not the exclusivity. Women-only spaces work because they create psychological safety and rapid trust. The compounding gains come from depth between operators at similar growth stages with different backgrounds. Identity is the gateway. The room is the work.

4. What makes a women-in-tech network effective?

Five things. Structured recurring interaction over one-off events. A diverse-but-aligned peer set with similar growth ambition. Integration with practical resources like capital and talent. Multi-year engagement, since light-touch networks fade by year three. Embedded role models inside the network, not just on the keynote stage.

5. How do female founders find high-bar peer networks?

Judge the room by who is in it, not by what it is called. Look at the current members, their stages, and their ambition signals. Ask whether the network has structured recurring interaction or only sporadic events. Look for integration with capital, talent, or expert access. Treat the first few months as evaluation, not commitment.

¹ Spacelift 2026 women in tech statistics, cross-referenced with World Bank Gender Data Portal labor-force participation data.

² Crunchbase and FF.co 2025 venture funding data on female-only founding teams.

³ McKinsey Women in the Workplace 2025 research on sponsorship gap.

⁴ J-PAL, World Bank, and IGC policy brief on the Ghana WhatsApp networking RCT with 1,771 women entrepreneurs, one-year results.

⁵ GLMLIC and IGC three-year follow-up brief showing performance gains fade without sustained engagement.

Why Networks Matter for Women in Tech in 2026 was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


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