Rachelle Younglai is the real estate reporter for The Globe and Mail.
Paul Attfield is a journalist for The Globe and Mail. Born in England and raised there and in France, Paul now holds Canadian and British citizenship. He has made Toronto his home since leaving London in 2005.
Working in the sports arm of the Globe since 2006, Paul started out covering basically football and rugby. In recent years, he’s more of a mainstream journalist, writing about just about anything related to a bat, a ball, or a puck.
Emma Graney has been covering energy for The Globe and Mail’s Calgary bureau since 2019, adding oil and fuel, select fuels, renewable energy, everyday jobs and green technology. She helps keep an eye on the energy sector across the country, from the oil sands of Alberta (1, 2), the geothermal outlook of Saskatchewan, the explosive hazards of Ontario’s old fuel wells, and the renewable hydrogen of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Emma was part of the Globe’s team of correspondents deployed to Europe in the days following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. In 2023, she was part of the 2023 cohort of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network, and in 2020, she was an Energy Journalism Fellow at Columbia University.
Emma first landed in Alberta in 2016 as a provincial affairs reporter for the Edmonton Journal, where she hosted the Press Gallery’s weekly podcast on Alberta politics and was part of the team that won a National Newspaper Award for its policy on the Fort McMurray bushfires. She worked in Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador, the UK, Indonesia and her home Australia, and has researched synthetic intelligence in China as an Asia Pacific Foundation Media Fellow. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism and a Bachelor of Commerce from the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane.
André Picard is a fitness journalist and columnist for The Globe and Mail, where he has been editor since 1987. He is also the author of six best-selling books.
André is a two-time winner of the Columns Award at the Canadian National Newspaper Awards and has received the prestigious Michener Award for Meritorious Public Service Journalism.
He was named Canada’s first Public Health Hero through the Canadian Public Health Association and a Champion of Mental Health through the Canadian Alliance on Mental Illness and Mental Health. He was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal for his determination to get better physical care.
André is a graduate of the University of Ottawa and Carleton University and earned honorary doctorates from 8 universities, UBC and the University of Toronto.
Bill Curry is the deputy Ottawa bureau leader for The Globe and Mail. He has more than two decades of experience at Parliament Hill and reports on a wide range of topics, with a particular focus on finance and economics. He won the 2020 National Newspaper Award for political journalism as part of a team of journalists covering the Liberal government’s cancelled contract with WE Charity to run a scholarship programme. She was also a finalist in the 2019 ANI in the political category as part of a team that reported on how personal entities exploit election spending laws.
In 2021, he won the Business Journalists Association’s Canada Best in Business award for writing a short film with his Globe colleague, David Milstead. The award is his in-depth investigation into the questionable hydraulic fracturing operations in Colorado, owned by the Canada Pension Plan. Board of Investments.
Before joining the Globe in 2005, he worked in federal politics for the National Post, the Canwest News Service and the Hill Times.
Leslie Beck is a contributing editor at The Globe and Mail. He writes Globe Life’s weekly Food for Thought column. As one of Canada’s leading nutritionists, Leslie is Medcan’s Director of Food and Nutrition and has led a thriving personal practice at the centre. She has been based in downtown Toronto since 1989. She helps thousands of people achieve their nutrition and fitness goals. Her integrative technique provides clients with nutritional counseling, personalized meal plans, and science-based recommendations on the use of nutritional supplements.
Leslie is identified through the media as an authority on nutrition and nutrition and is an experienced broadcaster on television, radio, and print. She is a news contributor for CTV and CBC Radio. Su nutrition recommendation can be heard weekly on Montreal Radio CJAD800’s Andrew Carter show. .
Leslie is the best-selling book of 12 books on nutrition and health: The Plant-Based Power Diet (2013), Leslie Beck’s Healthy Kitchen, Leslie Beck’s Longevity Diet, The Complete A to Z Nutrition Encyclopedia, Heart Healthy Foods for Life, Foods that Fight Disease, Diet Without Failure, Ten Steps to Healthy Eating, Healthy Eating for Tweens and Teens, Leslie Beck’s Nutrition Guide to a Healthy Pregnancy, Menopause Complete Nutrition Guide, and Women’s Complete Nutrition Guide. His books are published through Penguin Group Canada.
With a volunteer interest in sports nutrition, Leslie has served as a nutritionist at the Canadian International Marathon and the NBA’s Toronto Raptors basketball club. Leslie continues to support running, cycling, and weight training.
Born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia, Leslie earned her Bachelor of Science (Dietetics) from the University of British Columbia and then finished the Dietetic Internship Program at St. John’s Hospital. He studied a master’s degree in epidemiology at the University of Toronto. She is a Fellow of the College of Dietitians of Ontario and Dietitians of Canada.
Alanna Smith joined The Globe and Mail’s Calgary bureau in April 2022. She is passionate about social issues and covers topics such as the drug poisoning crisis, homelessness, and intellectual health. Prior to joining the Globe, Alanna worked for The Canadian Press and the Calgary Herald. , where she was nominated for the 2019 National Newspaper Award in the reporting category for a set of articles on domestic violence. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Journalism and Women’s and Gender Studies from Carleton University in Ottawa.
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Welcome to The Globe and Mail’s viewing community. This is an area where subscribers can interact with each other and with Globe staff. Non-subscribers can read and sort comments, but they won’t be able to interact with them in any way. Click here to subscribe.
If you would like to write a letter to the editor, please send it to letter@globeandmail. com. Readers can also do so with The Globe on Facebook and Twitter.
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Welcome to The Globe and Mail’s viewing community. This is an area where subscribers can interact with each other and with Globe staff.
Our purpose is to create a valuable space for discussion and debate. This means:
If you don’t see your comment posted immediately, the moderation team is reviewing it and will probably show up quickly, within an hour.
Subscribers who are logged into their Globe account can comment on a maximum number of articles. However, The Globe limits comments to an 18-hour period. Making closing remarks 18 hours after the initial post helps ensure effective moderation so that conversations remain civil and topic-focused. Comments would also possibly be shut down at any time for legal reasons or abuse.
Our goal is for all feedback to be reviewed in a timely manner.
Comments that violate our Community Standards will be posted.
UPDATE: Read our Community Standards here
Welcome to The Globe and Mail viewing community. This is an area where subscribers can interact with each other and Globe staff.
Our purpose is to create a valuable space for discussion and debate.
If you don’t see your comment posted immediately, the moderation team is reviewing it and will probably show up quickly, within an hour.
Subscribers who are logged into their Globe account can comment on a maximum number of articles. However, The Globe limits comments to an 18-hour period. Making closing remarks 18 hours after the initial post helps ensure effective moderation so that conversations remain civil and topic-focused. Comments would also possibly be shut down at any time for legal reasons or abuse.
Our goal is for all feedback to be reviewed in a timely manner.
Comments that violate our Community Standards will be posted.
UPDATE: Read our Community Standards here