Épisodes

  • The Exchange 2.0 - with John Jeffrey
    Apr 24 2026

    In this episode of The Exchange 2.0, Blake Doyle is joined by John Jeffery for a candid and wide-ranging discussion on Island politics and the future of PEI. Drawing on a career of observation and experience, Jeffery shares perspectives on individual MLAs, political leadership, governance, fiscal management and the major issues shaping public life today.

    From accountability and policy-making to long-term vision and the future direction of the province, this conversation tackles both the immediate challenges and bigger questions facing Prince Edward Island.

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    1 h et 13 min
  • Community Call-in, Apr 23
    Apr 23 2026

    Welcome to The Island Dew Community Call-in — a space where Islanders come together to share their voices, stories, and perspectives.

    In this episode, we'll share some thoughts on what’s been happening around our community, reflecting on local priorities, and responding to what’s on your minds.

    Originally aired live, this episode captures the real spirit of Island conversation — honest, unfiltered, and sometimes a little spontaneous. Whether you were there live or you’re tuning in now, you’re still part of the conversation.

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    31 min
  • Community Call-in with Philip Brown, Apr 20th
    Apr 23 2026

    Welcome to The Island Dew Community Call-in — a space where Islanders come together to share their voices, stories, and perspectives.

    In this episode, we’re joined by special guest Philip Brown, Mayor of Charlottetown, who brings his perspective on city leadership, local priorities, and the issues shaping our community.

    Originally aired live, this episode captures real, unfiltered Island talk — thoughtful discussions, community insights, and a few spontaneous moments along the way. Whether you joined us live or are tuning in now, you’re part of the conversation.

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    1 h et 2 min
  • Community Call-in with Jeff Cooke, Apr 21st
    Apr 22 2026

    Welcome to The Island Dew Community Call-in — a space where Islanders come together to share their voices, stories, and perspectives.

    In this episode, we’re joined by special guest Jeff Cooke from Cooke Insurance Group, bringing his insights and experience into the conversation. Alongside community call-ins, we explore local issues, industry perspectives, and the topics that matter most to Islanders.

    Originally aired live, this session captures real, unfiltered Island talk — from thoughtful discussions to spontaneous moments. Whether you called in or are listening back, you’re part of the conversation.

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    1 h et 5 min
  • The Exchange 2.0 - with Kate McKenna
    Apr 16 2026

    In this episode of The Exchange 2.0, host Blake Doyle and CBC reporter Kate McKenna discuss the shifting landscape of journalism and its impact on Prince Edward Island. McKenna reflects on her transition from the Island to Parliament Hill, noting that the diligence required to report in a small community like PEI provided a unique foundation for her national career. She also highlights the personal significance of her book on the history of abortion access on the Island, which documents decades of local policy struggles.

    The two explore the modern challenges of the industry, specifically the "Meta ban" on news and the rise of online hostility. McKenna observes that while politicians are increasingly using long-form podcasts to show a more human side, the lack of traditional media access during campaigns limits public accountability. They note that as newsrooms face staff compression, maintaining deep, investigative reporting becomes more difficult.

    The conversation concludes with a look at PEI’s rapid growth, where a population surge of 30,000 has brought cultural diversity but also strained infrastructure. Doyle argues that a lack of long-term planning has left schools and hospitals struggling to keep pace with this expansion. Despite these systemic hurdles, McKenna maintains that journalism remains essential for holding power to account and driving policy change.

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    55 min
  • Business Edge 2.0 - PEI & Immigration Policies
    Apr 12 2026

    In this episode of Business Edge 2.0, host Blake Doyle explores the tension between Prince Edward Island’s rapid population growth and its strained infrastructure. He explains that for over a century, the island’s primary struggle was stagnation and people leaving, but the recent growth - reaching over 182,000 residents by 2025 - has shifted the problem to a lack of housing and healthcare capacity. Doyle argues that while the government has narrowed immigration to specific sectors, such as healthcare, to manage these pressures, this "triaged" approach is a shortsighted fix for an unconstrained structural problem.

    Doyle emphasizes that PEI is currently experiencing a "natural decline," where deaths outnumber births, making immigration the only viable engine for a healthy tax base and workforce. He warns that the current policy is too reactive and lacks a long-term retention strategy. To solve this, he proposes an "absorptive capacity framework" that ties immigration targets directly to housing completions, school capacity, and healthcare infrastructure, ensuring the province can actually support the people it recruits.

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    27 min
  • Business Edge 2.0 - Artificial Intelligence
    Apr 12 2026

    In this episode of Business Edge 2.0, Blake Doyle warns that artificial intelligence is hitting Prince Edward Island like a wave, transitioning rapidly from a novelty to a core operating infrastructure for the local economy. He highlights a significant shift toward "agentic AI" - systems capable of independent action and complex task completion - which threatens to displace up to 50% of the province's knowledge-based workforce within the next few years. Doyle notes that even global leaders at companies like Walmart are stepping down because the requirements for leading in this new era are fundamentally different, yet he finds the PEI government and local bureaucracy currently ill-equipped to handle the disruption.

    The economic risk for the island is a massive "leakage" of value, where local businesses become mere consumers of global platforms like Microsoft or Google, sending profits and tax benefits off-island. Beyond job displacement, Doyle is concerned that automating entry-level administrative roles will destroy the "career ladders" needed to train the next generation of local managers and owners. He argues that PEI must move past generic talk about innovation and focus on practical, local implementation in core sectors like tourism and agriculture to ensure the province remains a builder within the AI economy rather than just a victim of it.

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    41 min
  • Business Edge 2.0 - The Cost of Power
    Apr 12 2026

    In this episode of Business Edge 2.0, host Blake Doyle provides a sobering breakdown of the escalating energy costs hitting Prince Edward Island. He explains that local businesses and residents are currently caught between global oil volatility and an increasingly expensive local electrical grid. Doyle notes that while residents pay a base rate of 17.23 cents per kWh, commercial users are charged 21.13 cents, a massive discrepancy compared to provinces like Quebec or Manitoba, which enjoy rates below 10 cents.

    The situation is expected to worsen as PEI faces three major "buckets" of upcoming costs that will be passed on to ratepayers. These include a 7% surcharge to cover refurbishment overruns at the Point Lepreau nuclear plant, roughly $37 million in lingering restoration costs from Hurricane Fiona, and a massive investment of up to $500 million for a new diesel-fired generation plant in Charlottetown. Doyle points out the irony of this "policy paradox," where the government’s push for green electrification through heat pumps and EVs is actually forcing the province to invest in more fossil-fuel infrastructure to keep the grid stable.

    Ultimately, Doyle warns that without more aggressive changes - like updated net metering to flatten peak demand or extending natural gas pipelines to the island - PEI will remain an "energy island" with disproportionately high costs. He suggests that the current 10% government rebate is little more than a "shell game" moving tax dollars around, failing to address the fundamental lack of affordable, locally controlled power.

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    24 min