October 8th, 2024

Invasive species report outlines costs, solutions for world governments

By Rob Drinkwater, The Canadian Press on September 5th, 2023

An international organization has produced a report on alien invasive species which says the global problem costs billions of dollars annually and is, in some cases, being worsened by climate change. The executive summary of the report from the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services was approved over the weekend in Bonn, Germany, ... Read More »

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Quebec Facebook class action can go ahead after Supreme Court declines to hear appeal

By Jacob Serebrin, The Canadian Press on September 5th, 2023

MONTREAL – A class-action lawsuit alleging Facebook illegally allowed advertisers to target users based on their race, age and gender can move forward after the Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal from the social media giant. Facebook had sought to have Canada’s highest court overturn a Quebec Court of Appeal decision authorizing the class ... Read More »

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Trudeau arrives in Jakarta, kicking off Indo-Pacific tour

By The Canadian Press on September 5th, 2023

JAKARTA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau landed in Jakarta today where he is kicking off a six-day tour of the Indo-Pacific region. Trudeau and his son Xavier were greeted with Indonesian dancers, with the prime minister being gifted a traditional scarf. Trudeau is set to spend two days in Jakarta where he will meet with ... Read More »

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Students head back to school with climate change, AI and affordability top of mind

By The Canadian Press on September 5th, 2023

TORONTO – Many students are likely feeling a mixture of nerves and excitement today as they begin another school year. With disruptive pandemic measures seemingly behind them, parents and educators say a new crop of issues may affect classroom learning this year, including AI technology, affordability and climate change. While across much of the country ... Read More »

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Trial of ‘Freedom Convoy’ organizers Tamara Lich and Chris Barber begins today

By Laura Osman and Stephanie Taylor, The Canadian Press on September 5th, 2023

OTTAWA – The criminal trial of “Freedom Convoy” organizers Tamara Lich and Chris Barber begins today, as they answer charges related to their role in the protest that threw Canada’s capital city into chaos last year. Lich and Barber were part of the original group that mobilized a convoy of big rigs and other trucks ... Read More »

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Essential workers head back early to Yellowknife to be ready for everyone else

By The Canadian Press on September 4th, 2023

YELLOWKNIFE – Officials in Yellowknife, as well as staff with the Northwest Territories, are getting ready for the start of a mass migration home of wildfire evacuees that’s still on track for Wednesday. Yellowknife city manager Sheila Bassi-Kellett said workers in grocery stores, pharmacies, home-heating providers, and even some taxi drivers and daycare providers are ... Read More »

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‘Going to take years’: Saskatchewan First Nation marks anniversary of mass stabbing

By Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press on September 4th, 2023

JAMES SMITH CREE NATION – Robert Head says people on his First Nation experienced one their worst mornings on Monday as they marked the anniversary of last year’s mass stabbing. The chief of the Peter Chapman Band, which is part of James Smith Cree Nation in Saskatchewan, said people cried and held each other tightly, ... Read More »

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Day four of boil water advisory in Montreal suburb, lifted in St-Bruno-de-Montarville

By Jacob Serebrin and Marlo Glass, The Canadian Press on September 4th, 2023

MONTREAL – A boil water advisory affecting more than 40,000 residents of a Montreal suburb is now in its fourth day, despite being lifted in two neighbouring communities. The boil water advisory in St-Bruno-de-Montarville, Que. was lifted on Monday afternoon, but residents of the neighbouring community of Boucherville, Que., on Montreal’s south shore, are still ... Read More »

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B.C. Coroner’s inquest jury recommends police body cameras after fatal shooting

By The Canadian Press on September 4th, 2023

NELSON, B.C. – A jury in a coroner’s inquest into the police killing of a British Columbia man eight years ago says the province and the RCMP should speed up the introduction of police body cameras. The inquest was held to find the facts behind the fatal police shooting of 39-year-old Waylon Edey of Yahk, ... Read More »

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Ontario Premier Doug Ford asks Bank of Canada to halt rate hikes

By The Canadian Press on September 4th, 2023

Another provincial premier is making a direct appeal to the Bank of Canada to stop raising interest rates. Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he wrote directly to the central bank’s governor Tiff Macklem on Sunday because of the devastating impact current rates are having on the province’s families and businesses. He becomes the second premier ... Read More »

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Boil water advisory enters fourth day in two Montreal suburbs, lifted in Longueuil

By The Canadian Press on September 4th, 2023

MONTREAL – A boil water advisory affecting more than 60,000 residents of two Montreal suburbs is now in its fourth day, despite being lifted in the neighbouring community that supplies their drinking water. The cities of Boucherville, Que. and St-Bruno-de-Montarville, Que., on Montreal’s south shore, say residents are still being asked to boil water for ... Read More »

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