By The Canadian Press on January 6th, 2023
In The News is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to kickstart your day. Here is what’s on the radar of our editors for the morning of Friday, Jan. 6, 2023 … What we are watching in Canada … The Alberta government is refusing to release information on toxic contaminants in snowpacks ... Read More »
Be the first to comment!By Hina Alam, The Canadian Press on January 6th, 2023
He won’t be able to soar into the skies or skim the waters with his wings, but a bald eagle treated at a veterinary college at the University of Prince Edward Island after being hit by a car in October 2021 is doing well and settling in a new home. Bald eagle 450 – the ... Read More »
Be the first to comment!By Bob Weber, The Canadian Press on January 6th, 2023
EDMONTON – The Alberta government is refusing to release information on toxic contaminants in snowpacks downwind from mountaintop removal coal mines. The data was collected by two senior provincial government scientists who conducted research into the impact of windblown dust from mines in British Columbia on a pristine Alberta alpine lake. They recently published a ... Read More »
Be the first to comment!By Nono Shen, The Canadian Press on January 6th, 2023
VANCOUVER – At the end of his day, Lucas Philips drives to his home overlooking Spanish Banks Beach in Vancouver, near some of the most expensive real estate in Canada. He climbs out of his black Tesla and soaks up what he calls his “million-dollar view.” But Philips is no wealthy property owner. His home ... Read More »
Be the first to comment!By The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
TORONTO – The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto says most of its priority systems are back after a ransomware attack affected its operations. Dr. Ronald Cohn, president and CEO of SickKids, says in a release Thursday that about 80 per cent of the hospital’s priority systems have been restored. He says the cyberattack that ... Read More »
1 responseBy The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
VANCOUVER – British Columbia has expanded PharmaCare coverage of four drugs used to treat diabetes, heart failure and blood clots, including one medication the health minister says has been promoted as a weight-loss aid, “notably in Hollywood.” Adrian Dix says the drug sold under the brand name Ozempic will become available to more patients in ... Read More »
1 responseBy The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
OTTAWA – The federal government is advising Canadians in Mexico to limit their movements and shelter in place due to violence in the northwestern part of the country. The violence is particularly in Culiacan, Mazatlan, Los Mochis and Guasave. Ottawa says on Twitter that cars have been lit on fire, guns are being fired and ... Read More »
1 responseBy The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
VANCOUVER – Renowned composer Joseph Koo, whose music helped form the soundtrack for what his family called the “Golden Era” of Hong Kong culture in the 1970s and ’80s, has died in Vancouver. Koo’s family says in a statement that he died of natural causes on Tuesday, six days short of his 92nd birthday. The ... Read More »
1 responseBy The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
OTTAWA – Elections Canada suggests that venue names should be listed for fundraising events after a political party asked whether it had to disclose the specific location in light of safety concerns. Elections Canada says parties are obligated under political financing law to publicly list the venue name, but adds the government could change the ... Read More »
1 responseBy Sidhartha Banerjee, The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
MONTREAL – The family of a young man who died after an altercation with Montreal jail guards is demanding an inquiry into systemic racism in the provincial detention system, a civil rights group said Thursday. Nicous D’Andre Spring, 21, was illegally detained at Montreal’s Bordeaux jail on Dec. 24 when guards fitted his head with ... Read More »
1 responseBy The Canadian Press on January 5th, 2023
Environmental groups are welcoming Parks Canada’s buyout of two businesses in Jasper National Park’s Tonquin Valley, a scenic destination also used by vanishing caribou herds. Carolyn Campbell of the Alberta Wilderness Association says buying out the backcountry lodges is unfortunate but needed to protect the herds, which are on the edge of disappearing. She says ... Read More »
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