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TORONTO — Shoppers Drug Mart has been granted a licence to sell medical marijuana online.

Health Canada’s list of authorized cannabis sellers and producers has been updated to reflect that the pharmacy can sell dried and fresh cannabis, as well as plants, seeds and oil.

A website has been set up by the company, which says that patients “with a valid medical document will soon be able to purchase a wide selection of medical cannabis products” from Shoppers.

A spokeswoman for Shoppers’ parent company Loblaw Companies Ltd. says it’s too soon to say when people will be able to start making orders.

Granted producer license already

She says the company is still working through a “technical issue” with Health Canada.

The company was granted a medical marijuana producer licence in September, after initially applying in October 2016.

Shoppers has said that it has no interest in producing medical cannabis, but the licence is required in order to sell the product to patients.

Under the current Health Canada regulations for medical pot, the only legal distribution method is by mail order from licensed producers direct to patients.

Russian anti-terrorist operations in Syria have provided peace and security for Europe, deputy Duma speaker Irina Yarovaya has said, adding that ending wars in third world countries is the best way to stop the migration crisis.

Today Russia is one of the world nations that is protecting not only its national interests in Syria. Russia provides peace and security for the whole of Europe and, of course, for countries with the Orthodox Faith. The ISIS terrorists that were killed in the course of the successful operation conducted jointly by Russia and Syria would never be able to commit any crimes in Europe,” MP Irina Yarovaya (United Russia) stated in her speech before the general assembly of the Interparliamentary Assembly on Orthodoxy in Athens, Greece.

Over half of Russians say Syrian conflict can develop into new world war

When people ask what is Russia’s input we can say that it is very practical and real. 60 thousand terrorists and their cutthroat warlords had been trained only to kill and once they are eliminated not one of them can commit crimes in Nice, London, Berlin or Athens,” the Russian lawmaker added.

Regarding the influx of migrants from predominantly-Muslim countries which has caused a major crisis in Europe, Yarovaya said that people flee from wars and once the wars end so would the crisis.

Those who are fond of starting wars and conflicts, those who bring revolutionary situations to other countries should bear direct responsibility for the people who are forced to leave their homes and run from wars, aggression, terrorism and misery. It is due to the Russian effort in Syria that one million refugees had already returned to their homes. People want to return home and we must create conditions for this,” she stated.

Despite the completely uncivilized and illegal sanctions, our country continues to deliver a great amount of humanitarian aid [to Syria] which is also saving Europe from the migration crisis. We help people to return to their homes,” Yarovaya said.

The lawmaker also thanked the participants of the assembly for their support of Russian initiatives and positions, adding that political dialogue was very important for building trust and cooperation.

Most Russians support continuing Syria aid after war ends

Russia first deployed an Air Force contingent in Syria in 2015, after receiving a request for military help from the Syrian government, which is currently battling Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) and affiliated groups. Russian war planes began launching air strikes on terrorists in Syria on September 30, 2015. Their work has aided the Syrian military in achieving considerable success in driving jihadist forces out of the country.

On March 14, 2016, President Vladimir Putin ordered a partial withdrawal of Russian forces because they had achieved all of the objectives that had been initially set for them in Syria. However, a smaller Air Force group remains at the Khmeimim Air Base and continues to strike terrorist positions.

Russia has also deployed some special forces and anti-aircraft systems to the area to protect the base from attacks.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Undefeated Colorado Mesa continued as the No. 1 program in the NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll. The Mavericks (22-0) increased their hold on the top spot, gathering 12 first-place votes and 394 points.

CMU hit the road and swept a Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference series from New Mexico Highlands. The Mavericks offense exploded for 56 runs, including 23-0 and 14-0 victories over the Cowgirls.

The next five spots remained the same. North Georgia had a light week, sweeping Lee in a non-conference doubleheader at home, while No. 3 Dixie State was idle as it packed for its PacWest Conference trip to Hawai’i. Both programs received two first-place votes.

No. 4 Angelo State enjoyed a 5-0 week, extending its winning streak to 23 games. The Rambelles (24-1) run-ruled RV Central Oklahoma twice in a home doubleheader and earned a Lone Star Conference sweep of Eastern New Mexico. The fifth-ranked Chico State Wildcats (23-2) went 5-1 in California Collegiate Athletic Association play. They split on the road with Stanislaus State and swept a four-game series from Cal State Monterey Bay.

No. 6 North Alabama continued to roll as it took care of Miles before taking all three Gulf South Conference contests from Shorter. The victories extended their winning streak to 18 games.

Central Region foes Winona State and Southern Arkansas flip-flopped the No. 7 and 8 spots. The Warriors (17-2) capped off their spring break trip in Florida with six wins, including a win over new-No. 23 Grand Valley State, to run their winning streak to 14 games. The Lady Muleriders (19-3) went 3-1 on the road in Great American Conference play, dropping the final game of a four-game set at Southern Nazarene.

Rounding out the top 10 in No. 9 Saint Leo and No. 10 Minnesota State, who also switch positions. The Lions (20-7) finished the week 7-1, while the Mavericks (16-3) went 5-1 at the Spring Games in Clermont, Fla., including a 5-1 triumph over then-No. 13 Southern Indiana.

Making their first appearance in the top-25 are No. 20 Southern New Hampshire (10-0), No. 23 Grand Valley State (13-5) and No. 25 California Baptist (16-3).

The 2018 NFCA Division II Top 25 Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regions. Records reflect games played through March 11, 2018.

  

2018 NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – March 14 (Week 4)

Rank

Team

Points

Record

Previous

1

Colorado Mesa (12)

394

22-0

1

2

North Georgia (2)

385

26-1

2

3

Dixie State (2)

373

18-0

3

4

Angelo State

350

24-1

4

5

Chico State

329

23-2

5

6

North Alabama

325

20-2

6

7

Winona State

303

17-2

8

8

Southern Arkansas

280

19-3

7

9

Saint Leo

235

20-7

10

10

Minnesota State

231

16-3

9

11

Texas A&M Commerce

220

17-3

11

12

Lenoir-Rhyne

214

19-4

12

13

Palm Beach Atlantic

198

16-2

13

14

Sonoma State

178

17-7

15

15

West Texas A&M

173

19-3

15

16

Indianapolis

168

14-4

20

17

Concordia Irvine

131

14-5

19

18

Harding

111

14-4

17

19

Queens

88

23-3

22

20

Southern New Hampshire

87

10-0

 

21

West Florida

80

14-8

24

22

UC San Diego

69

19-4

25

23

Grand Valley State

66

13-5

 

24

Merrimack

53

11-1

22

25

California Baptist

37

16-3

RV

New to Poll: No. 20 Southern New Hampshire, No. 23 Grand Valley State, No. 25 California Baptist

Dropped Out: No. 14 Southern Indiana (12-9), No. 18 Valdosta State (17-7), No. 21 Cameron (16-7)

Receiving Votes: Valdosta State (22), Tarleton State (22), Southern Indiana (19), UVA Wise (17), Coker (17), Central Oklahoma (15), Cameron (3), Shepherd (2), Le Moyne (2), UAH (2), Minnesota Duluth (1)

The 2018 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regionals. Records reflect games played through March 11, 2018.

A deal to change the border between the republics of Ingushetia and Chechnya in Russia was overturned by a court. The proposed border deal sparked thousands-strong protests in a region rife with old rivalries and hot tempers.

On Tuesday, the constitutional court of Ingushetia announced its ruling on an appeal, which was filed by people disagreeing with the decision to change the border with the Chechen republic. The court sided with the plaintiffs, who argued that the Ingush Parliament overstepped its authority in ratifying the border change agreement and that such a profound change should be approved by a republic-wide referendum.

Russian police fire air shots after Ingushetians gather to protest new Chechnya border deal

The proposed land swap, which was finalized in late September by the governments of the two neighbor Russian regions located in North Caucasus, sought to end a dispute over the administrative border. The border did not exist during the Soviet times, when the two regions were a united autonomy within USSR, but in the 1990s it split along ethnic lines. The deal was viewed as unfair by a large number of Ingush people, who started mass protests against it.

Opponents of the border deal celebrated the success of their cause on Wednesday during a rally in Ingush city of Magas. Several thousand people gathered for the event, which was remarkably less tense than some of the previous gatherings in Ingushetia. Organizers of the protest movement earlier announced that their goal was reached and told supporters not to show up to rallies scheduled for early November.

The victory however may not be as final as believed. Ingush leader Yunus-Bek Yevkurov said he may seek a legal opinion from Russia’s Constitutional Court on the decision taken by his region’s judiciary. The deal itself may be challenged in federal courts as well, some experts argue, as administrative borders of regions of Russia are arguably a matter for the entire nation to have a say in.

The Kremlin, however, doesn’t seem eager to get involved. The spokesman for the Russian President, Dmitry Peskov, said the Ingush court’s ruling is “a judicial issue” that should be tackled by legal experts at this point.

Belarusian model Nastya Rybka and sex coach Aleks Leslie, whose theatrical detention in a Moscow airport made headlines earlier, have been set free. Belarusian leader, Aleksandr Lukashenko, reportedly played a part in the release.

A court in the Russian capital has ruled against detaining Rybka and Leslie, who are accused of inducement into prostitution. The scandalous duo was released on own recognizance, meaning they’d have to show up for the hearing when called.

Earlier, the Belarusian president’s press secretary said that Lukashenko “was aware of the situation” with Rybka and that “an order was given to facilitate the release of the Belarusian citizen.” Leslie has a Russian passport.

READ MORE: Belarusian president waltzes with Europe’s first beauty at posh New Year ball (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

When pressed on the model’s liberation, Belarusian Foreign Minister Vladimir Makei replied that “all of the president’s instructions are executed implicitly, efficiently and on time.”

He didn’t confirm that the Foreign Ministry negotiated the model’s release with Russia, only saying that “it was a joint effort.”

The video of the duo’s detention went viral last week as the model resisted the law enforcers at the Sheremetyevo Airport, shouting: “I don’t want to go anywhere” and wriggling like a snake. She was eventually placed in a wheelchair due to refusing to walk on her own.

Rybka and Leslie, whose real names are Anastasia Vashukevich and Aleksandr Kirillov, arrived in Moscow after being deported from Thailand. They spent almost a year behind bars there after being arrested for organizing illegal sex courses for tourists. A Thai court eventually found the pair and six of their associates guilty of labor law violations, sentencing them to time served in pre-trial detention and suspended terms.

While in jail, Rybka and Leslies appealed for political asylum in the US, saying they were willing to share what they knew of the alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

The plea was left unanswered, despite the woman claiming she learned the information while partying on a boat with Russian aluminum and energy tycoon, Oleg Deripaska. This connection was what made the Belarusian model famous in the first place.

Rybka wrote a book about her fun time with the billionaire and his friends as proof that the methods of teaching women to seduce wealthy men professed by Leslie were highly effective.

She didn’t disclose any names, but her writing was used by Russian opposition figure, Aleksey Navalny, to accuse Deripaska of corrupt ties with the Kremlin. 

The billionaire dismissed the claims as “nonsense” and achieved a court order to ban the distribution of Navalny’s investigation in Russia over violation of privacy. He also successfully sued Rybka and Leslie, with the judge ordering them to compensate the tycoon with 500,000 (around $8,000) each for disclosing details about his private life.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The NFCA is pleased to announce Blast Motion as its newest official partner. Blast Motion, the complete hitting solution for players, coaches and teams, has agreed to a two-year contract and will sponsor the NFCA Coaches Clinics’ lanyards.

“The NFCA is excited to welcome Blast Motion as an NFCA Partner,” said NFCA Executive Director Carol Bruggeman. “The use of technology in softball has grown tremendously over the past few years and Blast Motion provides user-friendly information that enhances both the student-athlete and coaching experience.  Blast Motion is a first-class, innovative company and we appreciate their involvement with our Coaches Clinics across the country.”

Blast Motion is a wearable technology and sports analysis app that improves your game with real-time motion analysis, video capture and coaching. Used by several NPF teams, players and coaches, it is the industries’ most accurate motion capture sensor integrated with analysis, coaching, communication and management tools.

“For the past year, we have taken steps to work with some of the biggest names in the industry to develop the best softball product in the market,” said Jeff Fallis, Vice President of Sales at Blast Motion. “The NFCA’s commitment to excellence, innovation and the sharing of information aligns well with that mission. We look forward to being a part of the growth plan by providing coaches, players and teams with advanced tools and insights for improvement within the Blast Motion Solution.”

The NFCA will host seven two-day clinics in January 2018, which were preceded by a clinic on Dec. 2, 2017. Below are the remaining locations and dates:

Louisville (Jan. 5-6, 2018) | Chicago (Jan. 5-6, 2018) | Portland, Ore. (Jan. 12-13, 2018) | Charlotte (Jan. 12-13, 2018) | Minneapolis (Jan. 19-20, 2018) | Nashville (Jan. 19-20, 2018) | Kansas City (Jan. 26-27, 2018)

More than half of Canadians want the right to request search engines remove what they believe to be harmful, personal information from search results, says a new poll.

Coined “the right to be forgotten,” it’s a practice that’s already in place in the European Union, and will be seriously considered by Canadian lawmakers, the Privacy Commissioner of Canada and the federal court this year.

But an expert warns giving companies like Google the power to decide what data should stay in search results and what should be harder to find is a dangerous road to go down, even if people’s reputations are on the line.

“You’re giving a lot of power to a search engine to determine and decide what information is in public interest,” lawyer and privacy expert Eloïse Gratton told HuffPost Canada. “I think people perhaps don’t understand the implications of this right.”

WATCH: Google fights right to be forgotten

The research foundation Angus Reid Institute found 51 per cent of Canadians believe people should have the right to be forgotten, and search engine results changed so that “negative information doesn’t dominate their online record forever,” according to the poll results released earlier this week.

Twenty-six per cent of Canadians believe Internet searches are a form of public record and results shouldn’t be erased, and twenty-three per cent said they weren’t sure or couldn’t say, the poll found.

Right now, Canadians don’t have a way to request search engines like Google de-index specific, potentially harmful search results, making specific web pages and information more difficult to find. Google said it wants to keep it that way.

“Removing lawful information from a search engine limits access to media properties, past decisions by public figures and information about many other topics,” said Peter Fleischer, Google’s Global Privacy Counsel in an email statement. “Freedom of expression is a broadly recognized — and passionately defended — right in Canada and we believe that every Canadian has the right to access lawful information.”

After public consultations, however, Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien determined under Canada’s existing privacy law, Canadians should have the right to be forgotten.

“We approached this work with one key goal in mind: helping to create an environment where individuals may use the Internet to explore their interests and develop as persons without fear that their digital trace will lead to unfair treatment,” Therrien wrote in a report to parliament last September.

Therrien has requested the federal court determine if Canadians have the right to be forgotten, and the case will move ahead in the coming months, said the privacy commissioner’s office.

A complaint Therrien’s office received is included in the court application. An unnamed man alleged Google will not de-index links to online news articles that appear when his name is searched even though the articles are outdated, inaccurate and reveal his sexual orientation and serious medical condition, according to the application.

“The fact that Google prominently links these articles to his name in search results has caused, and continues to cause him, direct harm,” said the application.

Ultimately, parliament will decide if it will clarify or change its privacy law to include the right to be forgotten, and so far it’s supported by MPs from the Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics committee, which made the recommendation in its report from February.

It also recommended Canada consider including in its privacy act the right for Canadians, especially young people, to have personal information posted online erased.

“Our committee expressly focused on minors,” said Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, a vice chair on the committee. “We post online and do stupid things when we’re kids. Intuitively it makes sense the right to be forgotten should exist right away for minors.”

He emphasized the information that qualified to be erased or de-indexed would have to be untrue, or embarrassing and not in the public interest.

Committee chair Bob Zimmer, a Conservative MP, said Canada needs to start thinking of data as “digital DNA” and sacrosanct. That approach encompasses the right to be forgotten — if Canadians want a webpage about them to be more difficult find because it includes false or personal information, for example, they should be allowed to make that request, he said.

“Our data is our soul online, so we should be able to affect it. We should own our information,” Zimmer said. “You don’t let people take your DNA. You shouldn’t let people take your data.”

Following a court ruling in 2014 that found search engines must allow for people to request information be de-indexed if it is inadequate, irrelevant, or excessive, Google set up an online application process.

Since then, Google has received close to three million requests to de-list URLs, and done so 44 per cent of the time, it reported. People have wanted urls to be removed from search results because they contain personal information or insufficient information, are related to a crime, or professional wrongdoing, or the link doesn’t actually contain their name, among other reasons.

If Canada decides it wants to put into place the right to be forgotten, it shouldn’t copy Europe’s approach, Gratton said. Instead of allowing Google to decide what should or shouldn’t be removed, the government needs to set up a separate body with judicial oversight to handle requests, or it could strengthen defamation and privacy laws to discourage harmful information from being published in the first place.

“Is this a public figure? Is this information relevant for researchers? Is it a one-sided request? Should this info de-indexed forever? We need to think about all these issues,” Gratton said.

The poll results come from an online survey of 1,500 Canadian adults conducted last November, and carry a margin of error +/- 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20. The survey was self-commissioned and paid for by the Angus Reid Institute.

More from HuffPost:

The collegiate softball season is already a month old as March has snuck up on us. This weekend, NCAA Division III is highlighted by 27 top-25 matchups, all taking place at the NFCA’s Division III Leadoff Classic, March 2-4 in Tucson, Ariz. The loaded field features 2017 national champion Virginia Wesleyan, national runner-up St. John Fisher, national championship participants Trine, Illinois Wesleyan and St. Catherine, along with 16 more programs who earned berths to the NCAA Tournament

NFCA DIII Leadoff Classic Top-25 matchups

Tournament Central

All games MT

March 2

10 a.m.

20 Wisconsin-Oshkosh v. 22 George Fox (Field 2)

21 Central v. 6 Trine (Field 3)

T24 Babson v. 11 Christopher Newport (Field 4)

12:30 p.m

18 Messiah v. 20 Wisconsin-Oshkosh (Field 2)

11 Christopher Newport v. 21 Central (Field 3)

6 Trine v. T24 Babson (Field 4)

T24 Berry v. RV St. Thomas (Field 5)

3 p.m.

9 Texas Lutheran v. 2 St. John Fisher (Field 6)

5:30 p.m.

2 St. John Fisher v. 5 Illinois Wesleyan (Field 5)

17 Moravian v. 1 Virginia Wesleyan (Field 8)

March 3

10 a.m.

13 East Texas Baptist v. 1 Virginia Wesleyan (Field 8)

3 p.m.

T24 Babson v. 20 Wisconsin-Oshkosh (Field  2)

22 George Fox v. 18 Messiah (Field 4)

T24 Berry v. 5 Illinois Wesleyan (Field 5)

RV St. Thomas v. 9 Texas Lutheran (Field 6)

6 Trine v. 2 St. John Fisher (Field 8)

5:30 p.m.

21 Central v. T24 Babson (Field 1)

18 Messiah v. 6 Trine (Field 3)

11 Christopher Newport v. 22 George Fox (Field 4)

9 Texas Lutheran v. T24 Berry (Field 5)

March 4

9 a.m.

9 Texas Lutheran v. T24 Babson (Field 6)

11:30 a.m.

1 Virginia Wesleyan v. 9 Texas Lutheran (Field 8)

2 p.m.

13 East Texas Baptist v. 6 Trine (Field 1)

22 George Fox v. 5 Illinois Wesleyan (Field 3)

4:30 p.m.

11 Christopher Newport v. 13 East Texas Baptist (Field 2)

2 St. John Fisher v. 22 George Fox (Field 4)

20 Wisconsin-Oshkosh v. RV St. Thomas (Field 7)

 

NCAA DI

March 2

Noon (PT) – 25 Michigan v No. 8 Baylor (Judi Garman) | Watch ($)

3 p.m. (ET) – 6 Oregon at 13 Florida State | Live Stats

3:45 p.m. (PT) – 11 Alabama at 1 Washington | Live Stats

7:35 p.m. (CT) – 23 McNeese State at 10 LSU | Live Stats

March 3

10 a.m. (PT) – 2 Florida v 8 Baylor (Judi Garman) | Watch ($)

2 p.m. (PT) – 3 UCLA v 21 Minnesota (Sand Diego Classic I) | Live Stats

5 p.m. (PT) – 11 Alabama at 1 Washington | Live Stats

March 4

11:30 a.m. (ET) – 6 Oregon at 13 Florida State | Live Stats

2 p.m. (PT) – 8 Baylor v 18 Louisiana (Judi Garman) | Watch ($)

 

NCAA DII

March 2

2 p.m. (CT) – 21 Texas A&M-Commerce at No. 18 Cameron (DH) | Live Stats

March 3

1 p.m. (CT) – 21 Texas A&M-Commerce at No. 18 Cameron | Live Stats

March 4

1 p.m. (ET) – 13 Southern Indiana v. 19 Winona State (Clermont, Fla.) | Watch ($)

 

NAIA

March 2

6:15 p.m. (CT) 8 William Carey v. 14 Reinhardt (Gulf Shores, Ala.) | Live Stats

March 3

1:30 p.m. (CT) – 2 Columbia v. 14 Reinhardt (Gulf Shores, Ala.) | Live Stats

2 p.m. (CT) – 1 Oklahoma City v. 13 Ottawa (Kan.) (Friends Tournament) | Live Stats

LAS VEGAS — Record-breaking attendee numbers and keynote speaker Jessica Mendoza highlighted the opening day of the 2017 NFCA Convention at Bally’s Las Vegas. With 1,685 attendees, it is the second straight year the association’s marquee event set a record, eclipsing last year’s 1,592 attendees.

Wednesday kicked off with three, three-hour pre-convention seminars, one more offering for the membership this year. Arkansas assistant coach Matt Meuchel crunched the numbers in “How Statistics & Metrics Can Help You Win More Games”, five highly successful veteran coaches imparted their wisdom in “Lessons in Leadership” and the third year of the Assistant Coaches University.

Following various committee meetings, the Triple Crown Sports “Rookie” Orientation, designed for first-time attendees and led by Nebraska’s Rhonda Revelle, Georgetown’s Pat Conlan, NFCA executive director Carol Bruggeman and Auburn’s Mickey Dean guided members through their first-ever convention.

Led by NFCA president Karen Weekly and the respective NFCA Board of Director Division reps, the membership groups from High School through NCAA Division I brought forth their issues going into their respective caucuses in the brand new Issues Forum.

After Weekly and Bruggeman greeted the jam-packed room during the “First-Pitch” Opening Welcome, a passionate Mendoza addressed those in attendance and urged them to grow the game for the better. They are the ones who can shape young ladies lives.

The evening concluded off with USSSA’s Leadoff Reception as attendees mingled over food, beverages and music.

Thursday will focus on business, coaching milestones, exhibitors, and the first two speaking sessions. Additionally, the always popular mentoring session and two sponsored social events in the Scrap Yard Sports Happy Hour and the Diamond/PGF Social off site at Margaritaville.

Start your Thursday with a bolt of energy during Jenn Williams’ (MIT) early morning Blackjack Bootcamp and grab some food at the Schutt Sports Continental Breakfast. At 8:30 a.m., the NFCA’s membership groups will discuss important topics and issues at their respective caucuses. Following the caucuses, celebrate coaching milestones, while enjoying a hearty meal at the Victory Club Luncheon.

Be sure to check out the sold out exhibit hall with 135 companies in attendance and then listen the NFCA Hall of Famer Mike Candrea lead off our speaker lineup, followed by our Division I Championship Series pitching coaches Melyssa Lombardi of Oklahoma and Florida’s Jennifer Rocha.

In the evening, the mentoring session is followed by the Fireside Chats, which will break into hitting and pitching conversations, and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes’ “Coaching Today’s Athlete.”

Photo courtesy of Jade Hewett

Click:cultural heritage

The first North Atlantic right whale calf of the winter season has been spotted off the Florida coast heading north with its mother, a known resident of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says on Facebook that the two endangered whales were sighted near the mouth of the state’s St. Johns River.

It says the mother — referred to by her catalogue number, 2791 — was spotted five days earlier off the Georgia coast.

Right whales typically migrate south from the North Atlantic to give birth off the coasts of Georgia and Florida from December through March.

Critically endangered

Melissa Munro, a spokeswoman for the Sierra Club Canada Foundation, says in a statement that no newborns were recorded last year, and the population sits at a critically low number.

She says the population has been downgraded to 411 — only 71 of which are females that could potentially reproduce.

“This one baby represents a whole lot of hope,” Munro said, adding that five females have been identified as possibly expecting calves.

But despite the “joyful” news, she said right whales are “not out of the woods. Not by a long stretch.”

U.S. federal officials said earlier this month that last year was slightly worse than average for the entanglement of large whales, which is a major threat to marine populations.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said entanglement in fishing gear, such as traps, nets and fishing lines, is a major concern for jeopardized species such as the North Atlantic right whale.

The Canadian government put in place measures to protect right whales after 17 of the endangered aquatic mammals died last year — a dozen of them in Canadian waters.

Fishing areas were closed in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, speed limits were reduced for vessels and the Fisheries department increased surveillance of the area to look out for the whales.