July 1st, 2024

Topless Junos protester splashes pink paint at PM’s office: climate group

By The Canadian Press on April 15th, 2023

OTTAWA – A climate change advocacy group says the woman who walked on the Juno Awards stage while topless has now sprayed pink paint on the entrance to the prime minister’s office in Ottawa. On2Ottawa has posted photos and video to its Twitter account of the woman tossing a bucket of what appears to be ... Read More »

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Alberta premier says she is limiting media questions in order to provide more answers

By The Canadian Press on April 15th, 2023

EDMONTON – Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says there’s no question she welcomes media questions, but says she is imposing limits on those questions in order to provide more answers. Smith made the comments on her Corus radio call-in show a day after she announced the new policy for media as her United Conservative party ramps ... Read More »

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Trudeau’s cross-country town halls are back with a new format — and new skeptics

By Mickey Djuric, The Canadian Press on April 15th, 2023

OTTAWA – Every town hall begins the same way: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives in a blue or white shirt with rolled-up sleeves, takes the microphone, waxes poetic about the state of the world and acknowledges the challenging years Canadians have recently faced. The people in the crowd who will have the chance to ask ... Read More »

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No winning ticket sold for Friday’s $30 million Lotto Max jackpot

By The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

There was no winning ticket sold in Friday’s Lotto Max $30 million draw. The jackpot for the next draw on April 18 will be an estimated $40 million... Read More »

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First Nations health gets $8.2B in funding; may be used on ‘social determinants’

By Chuck Chiang, The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

VANCOUVER – Federal funding of $8.2 billion over 10 years for the First Nations Health Authority in British Columbia will give Indigenous communities unprecedented control over how to use the cash to improve wellness, including the possibility of building housing, said one of the negotiators of the agreement. Wayne Christian, the deputy chair of the ... Read More »

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22 overdoses in one night: Ex-paramedic looks back on 7th anniversary of B.C. crisis

By Ashley Joannou, The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

VANCOUVER – Brian Twaites remembers the first time he realized toxic drugs in British Columbia had hit a crisis level. On one shift as a paramedic, he handled 26 calls and more than 22 of them were drug overdoses. “Twenty-two of them were narcotic overdoses that we actually resuscitated,” he said. “Another couple of those ... Read More »

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Greenhouse gas emissions rose in 2021, but climate experts still see positive signs

By Mia Rabson, The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

OTTAWA – Several climate change experts said Friday they see reason for hope in Canada’s efforts to slow global warming even though the country’s greenhouse gas emissions rose slightly in 2021. The annual inventory of Canada’s emissions for 2021, published Friday, showed emissions from all sources that year added up to 670 million tonnes. That’s ... Read More »

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Alberta Premier Smith, with election looming, announces new limits on media questions

By The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

EDMONTON – Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, four days after announcing she won’t answer questions on her ethics investigation, now says she will limit questions on all other topics. Smith told reporters in Calgary that given an election is looming, she will now only allow reporters to ask a single question at news conferences and not ... Read More »

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Student newspaper drops ‘McGill’ from name over university founder’s slavery ties

By Jacob Serebrin, The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

MONTREAL – A student newspaper at McGill University has dropped “McGill” from its name and is calling on the university to stop using the name because the school’s founder enslaved people. Madison Edward-Wright, a managing editor at The Tribune, said the paper’s editorial board made the decision because it didn’t want to continue honouring someone ... Read More »

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Ottawa mayor declined feds’ offer to take over street in front of Parliament Hill

By Sarah Ritchie, The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

OTTAWA – The federal government wants to keep the street in front of Parliament Hill closed and has offered to take it over from the City of Ottawa, but the city says it is not interested in a temporary handover. In a letter to Mayor Mark Sutcliffe earlier this month, Procurement Minister Helena Jaczek says ... Read More »

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B.C. First Nations health gets $8.2 billion in federal funding to fix ‘disparities’

By The Canadian Press on April 14th, 2023

VANCOUVER – The First Nations Health Authority in British Columbia will receive $8.2 billion over the next decade to help 200 Indigenous communities in a federal government renewal of funding. During an announcement at the Squamish Nation in West Vancouver, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the authority has transformed the way health is delivered to ... Read More »

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