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Reçu aujourd’hui — 20 août 2025The Globe and Mail
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  • U.S. places sanctions on four ICC officials, including Canadian
    The United States has issued new sanctions against senior officials with the International Criminal Court, including against a Canadian jurist, threatening to increase friction between Ottawa and Washington as trade talks continue.The U.S. sanctioned two of the court’s deputy prosecutors as well as two judges, a French jurist and Kimberly Prost, a University of Manitoba graduate who spent nearly two decades with Justice Canada before moving overseas.
     

U.S. places sanctions on four ICC officials, including Canadian

20 août 2025 à 21:38
The International Criminal Court building in The Hague, the Netherlands, in 2019. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has called the court a 'national security threat.'

The United States has issued new sanctions against senior officials with the International Criminal Court, including against a Canadian jurist, threatening to increase friction between Ottawa and Washington as trade talks continue.

The U.S. sanctioned two of the court’s deputy prosecutors as well as two judges, a French jurist and Kimberly Prost, a University of Manitoba graduate who spent nearly two decades with Justice Canada before moving overseas.

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  • RCMP charge Montreal minor with terrorism offences involving Islamic State
    The RCMP have arrested a Montreal boy on terrorism-related charges, alleging he had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and was planning at least one attack.The Mounties said Wednesday that they arrested the boy without incident in the city’s Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough, and police were still searching a four-storey apartment there Wednesday afternoon. Authorities did not release the minor’s name or age. Corporal Érique Gasse said the public was never in danger and that polic
     

RCMP charge Montreal minor with terrorism offences involving Islamic State

20 août 2025 à 21:52

The RCMP have arrested a Montreal boy on terrorism-related charges, alleging he had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and was planning at least one attack.

The Mounties said Wednesday that they arrested the boy without incident in the city’s Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough, and police were still searching a four-storey apartment there Wednesday afternoon. Authorities did not release the minor’s name or age.

Corporal Érique Gasse said the public was never in danger and that police began their investigation in April. The RCMP found the boy allegedly intended to acquire weapons, such as AK-47s, for the attack.

© Christopher Katsarov

RCMP personnel enter a building during an active investigation in Montreal, on Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov
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  • Federal probe into deadly listeria outbreak finds major flaws with algorithm guiding inspections
    A federal investigation into a deadly listeria outbreak last year has found significant flaws with an algorithm-based system deployed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency that oversees how often food-production facilities are inspected.A report by CFIA Inspector-General Scott Rattray also found the agency has failed to meet its annual inspection targets – and that a large number of facilities have not been scrutinized because of weaknesses in the system.
     

Federal probe into deadly listeria outbreak finds major flaws with algorithm guiding inspections

20 août 2025 à 21:11
Joriki Inc., the company that owned the Pickering, Ont., facility that was linked to a deadly listeria outbreak last year, filed for protection from creditors in January.

A federal investigation into a deadly listeria outbreak last year has found significant flaws with an algorithm-based system deployed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency that oversees how often food-production facilities are inspected.

A report by CFIA Inspector-General Scott Rattray also found the agency has failed to meet its annual inspection targets – and that a large number of facilities have not been scrutinized because of weaknesses in the system.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Low salaries for federal judges hamper effort to recruit top talent, federal commission says
    Judges for top courts across Canada are underpaid and should receive raises of about 7 per cent to ensure highly qualified candidates continue to apply for jobs behind the bench, according to a commission that reviews judges’ salaries.The proposed raise would increase the salary of most federally appointed judges to $424,700 from $396,700. There are 968 full-time and 230 part-time judges sitting on federally appointed benches, which include provincial superior and appeal courts, the Federal and
     

Low salaries for federal judges hamper effort to recruit top talent, federal commission says

20 août 2025 à 21:04
The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa. A raise proposed by a federal commission would add around $28,000 to most federally appointed judges’ salaries.

Judges for top courts across Canada are underpaid and should receive raises of about 7 per cent to ensure highly qualified candidates continue to apply for jobs behind the bench, according to a commission that reviews judges’ salaries.

The proposed raise would increase the salary of most federally appointed judges to $424,700 from $396,700. There are 968 full-time and 230 part-time judges sitting on federally appointed benches, which include provincial superior and appeal courts, the Federal and Tax courts, and the Supreme Court of Canada.

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  • NBA champion Luguentz Dort honoured at Montreal City Hall
    After reaching the pinnacle of the NBA with the Oklahoma City Thunder, Luguentz Dort was in the heights of Old Montreal to receive an honour at City Hall on Wednesday.Dort signed the city’s registrar, known in French as the “Livre d’Or,” while Mayor Valérie Plante highlighted his community involvement and excellence on the court.
     

NBA champion Luguentz Dort honoured at Montreal City Hall

20 août 2025 à 20:34
Oklahoma City Thunder guard Luguentz Dort signs the Golden Book as Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante speaks with team mascot Rumble the Bison, during a ceremony in his honour at City Hall in Montreal, on Wednesday.

After reaching the pinnacle of the NBA with the Oklahoma City Thunder, Luguentz Dort was in the heights of Old Montreal to receive an honour at City Hall on Wednesday.

Dort signed the city’s registrar, known in French as the “Livre d’Or,” while Mayor Valérie Plante highlighted his community involvement and excellence on the court.

MAGA-affiliated singer Sean Feucht denied permit for concert in West Kelowna, B.C.

20 août 2025 à 19:53
California Christian musician Sean Feucht sings to a crowd during a rally in Washington, in 2020.

The City of West Kelowna, B.C., has cited public safety to deny a permit for a concert by American Christian singer Sean Feucht, who is outspoken in the Make America Great Again movement.

The city said in an emailed statement on Wednesday that the permit for a concert in Memorial Park on Saturday had been sought by the Burn 24/7 Canada Worship Ministries Society.

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  • Nova Scotia battling out-of-control wildfire, with one eye on Hurricane Erin
    Scott Tingley with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources says it’s rare to be simultaneously monitoring a hurricane while fighting wildfires in the province.The Long Lake wildfire in the Annapolis Valley remains out of control, and is composed of a series of fires that cover roughly 32 square kilometres of land. Meanwhile Hurricane Erin, tracking northward between the Carolinas and Bermuda, is expected to bring strong winds to Nova Scotia by Friday into Saturday – but no rainfall.
     

Nova Scotia battling out-of-control wildfire, with one eye on Hurricane Erin

20 août 2025 à 18:48
A water skimmer flies over the evacuation area where firefighters are battling the Long Lake wildfire in Nova Scotia's Annapolis County on Tuesday.

Scott Tingley with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources says it’s rare to be simultaneously monitoring a hurricane while fighting wildfires in the province.

The Long Lake wildfire in the Annapolis Valley remains out of control, and is composed of a series of fires that cover roughly 32 square kilometres of land. Meanwhile Hurricane Erin, tracking northward between the Carolinas and Bermuda, is expected to bring strong winds to Nova Scotia by Friday into Saturday – but no rainfall.

Canada Games affected by Air Canada strike with athletes, families stuck in St. John’s

20 août 2025 à 18:15
An Air Canada plane gets a pushback from its gate at Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport in Dorval, Que., on Tuesday.

For Canada Games Council CEO Kelly-Ann Paul, the timing of Air Canada’s strike was nothing short of “surreal.”

Air Canada grounded thousands of flights last Saturday when its flight attendants went on strike. This disrupted the Canada Games in St. John’s, N.L., which run Aug. 8-25, with teenage athletes from across the country flying in and out throughout.

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  • Furniture maker Klaus Nienkamper was a champion of contemporary Canadian design
    Snagging the commission to furnish the commissioner-general’s suite in Moshe Safdie’s Habitat complex at Montreal’s Expo 67 was quite a coup for 26-year-old furniture jobber Klaus Nienkamper. He had sailed to Canada from his native Germany in 1960 with only $36 in his pocket, and eked out a living soon after as “right rear vacuum man” at Farb’s Car Wash on Toronto’s King Street West. As Mr. Nienkamper recalled in his eponymous furniture company’s Festschrift, Nienkamper: 50 Years of Excellence f
     

Furniture maker Klaus Nienkamper was a champion of contemporary Canadian design

20 août 2025 à 18:00
Klaus Nienkamper, a pivotal figure in the field of design, died last October, in Gaspé, Que., aged 84.

Snagging the commission to furnish the commissioner-general’s suite in Moshe Safdie’s Habitat complex at Montreal’s Expo 67 was quite a coup for 26-year-old furniture jobber Klaus Nienkamper. He had sailed to Canada from his native Germany in 1960 with only $36 in his pocket, and eked out a living soon after as “right rear vacuum man” at Farb’s Car Wash on Toronto’s King Street West.

As Mr. Nienkamper recalled in his eponymous furniture company’s Festschrift, Nienkamper: 50 Years of Excellence from Design to Delivery, published in 2018, “I did not have a factory. My only asset was a station wagon, and I had everything produced in small shops in and around Toronto.”

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ford blasts Stelco owner for tariff support
    Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the head of the company that owns Hamilton-based steelmaker Stelco “doesn’t give two hoots” about the workers, pointing to Lourenco Goncalves’s praise for U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on steel. During a press conference in Hamilton, Ont., Ford said Stelco should find a new owner.
     

Ford blasts Stelco owner for tariff support

20 août 2025 à 17:19
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the head of the company that owns Hamilton-based steelmaker Stelco “doesn’t give two hoots” about the workers, pointing to Lourenco Goncalves’s praise for U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on steel. During a press conference in Hamilton, Ont., Ford said Stelco should find a new owner.

At this summer camp, being different is what helps kids fit in

20 août 2025 à 16:53

Verona Scorsone-Jung and her new best friend are jumping off the dock at their summer camp, swimming to the ladder and doing it all over again in a continuous loop of carefree summer fun.

Then there’s a pause, because 10-year-old Verona wants to explain a few things about having Tourette syndrome.

© Laura Proctor

Left to right, Evelyn Simmons, 14, and Violet Mcallister, 10, swim with fellow campers at Camp Maple Leaf on August 12, 2025. (Laura Proctor/The Globe and Mail)

Canada’s severe drought is a sign of future climate conditions and calls for action, experts say

20 août 2025 à 16:03
A water storage area near farmland at Westcoast Vegetables in Delta, B.C., March, 2024. Canada is home to 20 per cent of the world’s freshwater but less than half of it is naturally renewed through the hydrological cycle.

Canada must prepare for more seasons marked by severe drought, experts say as this summer’s bone-dry conditions tormented farmers, strained municipal water supply and fuelled one of the worst wildfire seasons on record.

Seventy-one per cent of the country was either abnormally dry or under drought conditions as of the end of July, according to the federal government’s drought monitor released last week.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Have cellphone bans been effective in schools? Share your thoughts
    Last fall, governments across Canada enacted policies that restricted phone use in the classroom – with rules varying for elementary schools and high schools. The increased use of cellphones and social media by students has been a source of concern for policy makers, educators and parents. The devices and platforms have been blamed for incidents of cyberbullying, disrupted sleep patterns and the inability of young people to focus.Cellphone bans in schools seem to be working, but some wonder how
     

Have cellphone bans been effective in schools? Share your thoughts

20 août 2025 à 14:10

Last fall, governments across Canada enacted policies that restricted phone use in the classroom – with rules varying for elementary schools and high schools. The increased use of cellphones and social media by students has been a source of concern for policy makers, educators and parents. The devices and platforms have been blamed for incidents of cyberbullying, disrupted sleep patterns and the inability of young people to focus.

Cellphone bans in schools seem to be working, but some wonder how long that will last

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Police investigating after body found on roof of Montreal hospital
    Police in Montreal’s northern suburb are investigating after a man in his 40s was found dead on the roof of a hospital on Tuesday.Sgt. Laurent Arsenault with police in Laval, Que., says officers were called to Cité-de-la-santé hospital at around 9:35 a.m. by employees who found the body.Arsenault says the man was declared dead at the scene.
     

Police investigating after body found on roof of Montreal hospital

20 août 2025 à 13:41

Police in Montreal’s northern suburb are investigating after a man in his 40s was found dead on the roof of a hospital on Tuesday.

Sgt. Laurent Arsenault with police in Laval, Que., says officers were called to Cité-de-la-santé hospital at around 9:35 a.m. by employees who found the body.

Arsenault says the man was declared dead at the scene.

© Christinne Muschi

Signage is seen on a police car in Laval, Que., on Friday, Feb. 7, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

Most evacuation orders, alerts lifted for Vancouver Island wildfire, but First Nations affected by road closures

20 août 2025 à 12:48
The BC Wildfire Service says the Mount Underwood fire, shown on Aug. 16, is not expected to grow beyond its current size.

Most of the evacuation orders and alerts linked to the Mount Underwood wildfire on Vancouver Island have been lifted or downgraded, with firefighters reporting “minimal” behaviour from the blaze.

But local First Nations are still feeling the impact of the blaze and road closures, warning that shortages of propane could in turn cut water supplies unless gas deliveries are restored.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Texas can’t require public schools to display Ten Commandments in every classroom, judge says
    Texas cannot require public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom, a judge said Wednesday in a temporary ruling against the state’s new requirement, making it the third such state law to be blocked by a court.A group of Dallas-area families and faith leaders sought a preliminary injunction against the law, which goes into effect on Sept. 1. They say the requirement violates the First Amendment’s protections for the separation of church and state and the right to free religio
     

Texas can’t require public schools to display Ten Commandments in every classroom, judge says

20 août 2025 à 11:33

Texas cannot require public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom, a judge said Wednesday in a temporary ruling against the state’s new requirement, making it the third such state law to be blocked by a court.

A group of Dallas-area families and faith leaders sought a preliminary injunction against the law, which goes into effect on Sept. 1. They say the requirement violates the First Amendment’s protections for the separation of church and state and the right to free religious exercise.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Canadian Armed Forces investigating Nazi salute video, five soldiers suspended
    The Canadian Armed Forces is investigating an incident of alleged hateful conduct after a video surfaced of people allegedly performing the Nazi salute. Lieutenant-General Michael Wright, commander of the army, said in a statement Tuesday that he became aware of a video on Aug. 6 containing “hateful conduct involving members of the Canadian Army.” Lt.-Gen. Wright said the video was referred to military police within hours of it being shared, and five people were later identified as serving membe
     

Canadian Armed Forces investigating Nazi salute video, five soldiers suspended

19 août 2025 à 20:05

The Canadian Armed Forces is investigating an incident of alleged hateful conduct after a video surfaced of people allegedly performing the Nazi salute.

Lieutenant-General Michael Wright, commander of the army, said in a statement Tuesday that he became aware of a video on Aug. 6 containing “hateful conduct involving members of the Canadian Army.”

Lt.-Gen. Wright said the video was referred to military police within hours of it being shared, and five people were later identified as serving members.

© Sean Kilpatrick

A Canadian soldier takes part in an announcement in Petawawa, Ont., on Thursday, Oct. 19, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
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  • UBC experiment aims to reignite cold fusion nuclear quest
    The Thunderbird reactor sounds like an impressive piece of scientific hardware. Impressive it may be, but not because of size, noise or heat. Rather, it is a tabletop experiment operating at the University of British Columbia. And somehow, it seems to be exhibiting a version of the nuclear reactions that power the sun.Welcome to the quiet renaissance of cold fusion.
     

UBC experiment aims to reignite cold fusion nuclear quest

20 août 2025 à 11:00
Curtis Berlinguette, principal investigator of Berlinguette Research, stands inside one of his program’s labs on the UBC campus in Vancouver on Tuesday. Behind him is a reactor part of Project Thunderbird.

The Thunderbird reactor sounds like an impressive piece of scientific hardware. Impressive it may be, but not because of size, noise or heat. Rather, it is a tabletop experiment operating at the University of British Columbia. And somehow, it seems to be exhibiting a version of the nuclear reactions that power the sun.

Welcome to the quiet renaissance of cold fusion.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Quebec government renews promise to modify forestry bill that sparked blockades
    The Quebec government says it will find solutions and defuse rising tension over a forestry bill that has sparked blockades and confrontations between Indigenous protesters and industry workers. Indigenous Affairs Minister Ian Lafrenière and Natural Resources Minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina have renewed a promise to modify the proposed legislation following meetings this week with Indigenous leaders.
     

Quebec government renews promise to modify forestry bill that sparked blockades

20 août 2025 à 06:37
Indigenous Affairs Minister Ian Lafrenière held a six-hour meeting with First Nations leaders and forest industry representatives.

The Quebec government says it will find solutions and defuse rising tension over a forestry bill that has sparked blockades and confrontations between Indigenous protesters and industry workers.

Indigenous Affairs Minister Ian Lafrenière and Natural Resources Minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina have renewed a promise to modify the proposed legislation following meetings this week with Indigenous leaders.

Canada Post union presents new offers seeking higher wages as they head back into bargaining

20 août 2025 à 06:17
The union resumed bargaining with the employer this morning and says the latest offers met the needs of postal workers.

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers presented new offers to Canada Post on Wednesday seeking higher wages while allowing for the addition of weekend delivery and part-time workers to the postal service.

The latest proposals include annual wage increases of nine per cent in the first year of the agreement, and four per cent in the second year, followed by hikes of three per cent in years three and four.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: The high-stakes negotiations at home and away
    Good morning. Resolution inches forward after days of gridlock in airports and years of stalemate in war zones – more on that below, along with Quebec’s use of AI to get traffic moving and the chances for a Bank of Canada rate cut. But first:Today’s headlinesPoilievre touts his by-election win as a sign of political resilienceCanada’s inflation rate slows more than expected to 1.7 per cent in JulyAn Ontario teen died after waiting in agony for hours at an ER. Now his family wants an inquest
     

Morning Update: The high-stakes negotiations at home and away

20 août 2025 à 06:08

Good morning. Resolution inches forward after days of gridlock in airports and years of stalemate in war zones – more on that below, along with Quebec’s use of AI to get traffic moving and the chances for a Bank of Canada rate cut. But first:

Today’s headlines

© ANDREJ IVANOV

An Air Canada flight attendant Montréal Trudeau International Airport this week.

An Ontario teen died after waiting in agony for hours at an ER. Now, his family wants an inquest

20 août 2025 à 06:00
GJ and Hazel van der Werken hold a picture of their 16-year-old son Finlay in their Burlington home. Finlay died following a visit, in February 2024, to the emergency room at Trafalgar Memorial Hospital in Oakville.

The evening of Feb. 7, 2024, Hazel van der Werken knew something was very wrong with her eldest son.

Finlay, an active 16-year-old who loved playing hockey, was experiencing intense pain on his right side.

© Nick Iwanyshyn

GJ van der Werken (left) and Hazel van der Werken hold a picture of their 16-year-old son Finlay in their Burlington home on August 18, 2025. Finlay died following a visit, in February 2024, to the emergency room at Trafalgar Memorial Hospital in Oakville. (Nick Iwanyshyn/The Globe and Mail)
Reçu hier — 19 août 2025The Globe and Mail
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  • Media argues against publication ban on fitness hearing for suspect in Lapu-Lapu Day vehicle attack
    A media consortium that includes The Globe and Mail argued in court against a publication ban on the details of a hearing into whether the man accused of using his SUV to kill 11 people at Vancouver’s Lapu-Lapu Day festival is mentally fit to stand trial.The defence and the Crown prosecutors asked a British Columbia Provincial Court judge Tuesday to keep the ban in place until the end of a potential criminal trial for Kai-Ji Adam Lo. Mr. Lo watched the proceedings from a video-conferencing room
     

Media argues against publication ban on fitness hearing for suspect in Lapu-Lapu Day vehicle attack

19 août 2025 à 21:41
A woman lays flowers at a memorial during a vigil in Vancouver on May 2, a provincial day of mourning for the victims of the vehicle-ramming attack at the Filipino community's Lapu Lapu Day festival.

A media consortium that includes The Globe and Mail argued in court against a publication ban on the details of a hearing into whether the man accused of using his SUV to kill 11 people at Vancouver’s Lapu-Lapu Day festival is mentally fit to stand trial.

The defence and the Crown prosecutors asked a British Columbia Provincial Court judge Tuesday to keep the ban in place until the end of a potential criminal trial for Kai-Ji Adam Lo. Mr. Lo watched the proceedings from a video-conferencing room at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Alberta revises new COVID-19 vaccine policy to cover shots for health care workers
    Alberta is making changes to its highly scrutinized COVID-19 vaccine program to make shots free of charge for health care workers, but the majority of Albertans will still have to pay out of pocket.Maddison McKee, press secretary to Minister of Primary and Preventative Health Services Adriana LaGrange, confirmed in a statement on Tuesday that vaccine coverage will be extended to all health care workers this fall. Ms. McKee did not say why the government decided to revise its policy.
     

Alberta revises new COVID-19 vaccine policy to cover shots for health care workers

19 août 2025 à 20:06
Alberta will be the only province in Canada to charge the majority of its residents to get a COVID-19 vaccine this fall.

Alberta is making changes to its highly scrutinized COVID-19 vaccine program to make shots free of charge for health care workers, but the majority of Albertans will still have to pay out of pocket.

Maddison McKee, press secretary to Minister of Primary and Preventative Health Services Adriana LaGrange, confirmed in a statement on Tuesday that vaccine coverage will be extended to all health care workers this fall. Ms. McKee did not say why the government decided to revise its policy.

Are you a Canadian student starting school in the U.S. this fall? Share your story with The Globe

19 août 2025 à 18:24
Pedestrians walk past the Widener Library at Harvard University, in Cambridge, Mass., on April 15.

Canadian students from across the country are prepping to go back to school in just a few weeks, and many of them will be starting new chapters in schools outside Canada – especially in the United States.

According to the United States’ Institute of International Education, nearly 29,000 Canadians studied in the U.S. in 2023.

Five Canadian soldiers suspended after video surfaces of people giving Nazi salutes

19 août 2025 à 18:22
The commander of the army, Lieutenant-General Michael Wright, says he is 'deeply disturbed and profoundly disappointed' by the video.

Five members of the Canadian Armed Forces have been suspended and military police are investigating after a video surfaced showing a group of people giving Nazi salutes.

The commander of the army, Lt.-Gen. Michael Wright, called the video’s contents disturbing and said that hate and extremism “have no place in the Canadian Army.”

Elizabeth May to step down as Green Party leader before next federal election

19 août 2025 à 17:02
Green Party Leader Elizabeth May says party members will soon receive details about a leadership review.

The Green Party of Canada will once again be looking for someone to replace Elizabeth May, after the party’s longtime leader said Tuesday she will not lead the Greens into the next election.

In an e-mail to members, May said she intends to stay on as an MP and as party leader until a new leader is elected.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Dulcimer player Rick Scott helped establish B.C.’s folk scene
    As a boy, Rick Scott was taken by his father to the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway in 1954 to see the original production of Peter Pan, with Mary Martin in the lead role. Sitting first row in the balcony, the wide-eyed child witnessed Ms. Martin floating toward him on a harness, staring at him as she sang, “Look at me way up high, suddenly here am I, I’m flying, I’m flying.”
     

Dulcimer player Rick Scott helped establish B.C.’s folk scene

19 août 2025 à 17:00

As a boy, Rick Scott was taken by his father to the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway in 1954 to see the original production of Peter Pan, with Mary Martin in the lead role.

Sitting first row in the balcony, the wide-eyed child witnessed Ms. Martin floating toward him on a harness, staring at him as she sang, “Look at me way up high, suddenly here am I, I’m flying, I’m flying.”

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ontario plans to introduce changes to housing fund for municipalities
    Ontario is planning to make changes to a housing fund for municipalities that many have said unfairly measures their progress on building, the minister signalled in a speech Tuesday.Rob Flack told the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference in Ottawa that he is going to consult with mayors and the association to “extend and improve” the Building Faster Fund.
     

Ontario plans to introduce changes to housing fund for municipalities

19 août 2025 à 16:52
PC MPP Rob Flack told the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference that the province wants to 'extend and improve' the Building Faster Fund.

Ontario is planning to make changes to a housing fund for municipalities that many have said unfairly measures their progress on building, the minister signalled in a speech Tuesday.

Rob Flack told the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference in Ottawa that he is going to consult with mayors and the association to “extend and improve” the Building Faster Fund.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Can renting really be as good as owning? The debate continues as home prices soar
    The rent-versus-buy debate has long divided financial experts and aspiring homeowners, with no clear winner in sight.The traditional argument holds: While buying a home can build long-term equity and stability, renting can provide flexibility and fewer upfront costs. But as home ownership becomes a far-fetched dream for many young Canadians, can renting for life be a viable option?
     

Can renting really be as good as owning? The debate continues as home prices soar

19 août 2025 à 15:56
As home ownership becomes a far-fetched dream for many young Canadians, can renting for life be a viable option?

The rent-versus-buy debate has long divided financial experts and aspiring homeowners, with no clear winner in sight.

The traditional argument holds: While buying a home can build long-term equity and stability, renting can provide flexibility and fewer upfront costs. But as home ownership becomes a far-fetched dream for many young Canadians, can renting for life be a viable option?

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Vancouver Island wildfire evacuees will soon have an update on when they can go home
    The mayor of Port Alberni on Vancouver Island says about 50 residents evacuated from their homes due to a nearby wildfire will soon have an update on when they will be able to return.Sharie Minions told a news conference Tuesday that officials are working with the BC Wildfire Service to update two evacuation orders and three alerts that are in place due to the out-of-control Mount Underwood fire.
     

Vancouver Island wildfire evacuees will soon have an update on when they can go home

19 août 2025 à 14:09
A burned section of forest from the Mount Underwood wildfire near Port Alberni, B.C., on Monday. Officials say the fire is not expected to grow beyond its current 36 square kilometres as the area warms up after several rainy days.

The mayor of Port Alberni on Vancouver Island says about 50 residents evacuated from their homes due to a nearby wildfire will soon have an update on when they will be able to return.

Sharie Minions told a news conference Tuesday that officials are working with the BC Wildfire Service to update two evacuation orders and three alerts that are in place due to the out-of-control Mount Underwood fire.

Quebec City becomes Google’s first Green Light project partner in Canada, using AI to improve traffic, congestion

19 août 2025 à 13:48
Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand says the city's partnership with Google has already yielded positive results.

Quebec City has started synchronizing traffic lights with the use of Google’s artificial intelligence, technology the city says will improve traffic flow, reduce congestion, and lower greenhouse gas emissions.

According to Google Canada GOOGL-Q, Quebec City is the first municipality in the country to partner with the web giant’s Green Light project, which the company offers free of charge to cities.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Loblaw completes four-for-one stock split
    Loblaw Cos. Ltd. L-T says it has completed its plan for a four-for-one stock split of its common shares.The grocery and drugstore retailer says its common shares began trading on a post-split basis as of market open on Tuesday.
     
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Apple launches do-it-yourself repair program in Canada
    Canadians who want to repair their own Apple AAPL-Q devices can now get parts, tools and manuals from the tech giant, which brought its self-service repair program to the country on Tuesday.The program gives customers free access to manuals and diagnostic software that help troubleshoot issues with iPads, iPhones and Macs. Customers are then able to purchase any parts and rent or buy the tools necessary to make repairs.
     

Apple launches do-it-yourself repair program in Canada

19 août 2025 à 08:12

Canadians who want to repair their own Apple AAPL-Q devices can now get parts, tools and manuals from the tech giant, which brought its self-service repair program to the country on Tuesday.

The program gives customers free access to manuals and diagnostic software that help troubleshoot issues with iPads, iPhones and Macs. Customers are then able to purchase any parts and rent or buy the tools necessary to make repairs.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Air Canada resumes flying after flight attendants’ strike ends
    Air Canada AC-T resumed flying Tuesday afternoon after reaching an early morning tentative labour agreement with the union that represents its 10,000 flight attendants, who had been on strike since Aug. 16. The four-year deal, which must be approved by a majority of union members in coming votes, provides hourly raises of about 16 to 20 per cent over the life of the contract, depending on seniority and job type, according to people familiar with the matter.
     

Air Canada resumes flying after flight attendants’ strike ends

19 août 2025 à 07:40
An Air Canada flight attendant walks through the Pierre-Elliott Trudeau International Airport yesterday in Montreal.

Air Canada AC-T resumed flying Tuesday afternoon after reaching an early morning tentative labour agreement with the union that represents its 10,000 flight attendants, who had been on strike since Aug. 16.

The four-year deal, which must be approved by a majority of union members in coming votes, provides hourly raises of about 16 to 20 per cent over the life of the contract, depending on seniority and job type, according to people familiar with the matter.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: The Air Canada strike ends
    Good morning. Air Canada flight attendants have reached a tentative agreement with the airline to end their strike – more on that below, along with the continued risk of wildfires and Cambridge Dictionary’s nod to Gen Z. But first:Today’s headlinesPoilievre wins the Alberta by-election for Battle River-Crowfoot, regaining a seat in ParliamentTrump and Zelensky discuss a meeting with Putin as European leaders gather in WashingtonIsrael is studying Hamas’s response to a 60-day ceasefire proposal i
     

Morning Update: The Air Canada strike ends

19 août 2025 à 07:06

Good morning. Air Canada flight attendants have reached a tentative agreement with the airline to end their strike – more on that below, along with the continued risk of wildfires and Cambridge Dictionary’s nod to Gen Z. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Sammy Kogan

Air Canada flight attendants picket at Pearson International Airport in Toronto yesterday.
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Inflation rate eases to 1.7 per cent in July, core measures stay firm
    Canada’s annual inflation rate eased to 1.7 per cent in July from 1.9 per cent in the prior month as lower year-on-year gasoline prices kept the consumer price index low, but core measures of inflation stayed sticky, data showed on Tuesday.Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast the annual inflation rate at 1.8 per cent and the monthly inflation rate at 0.3 per cent. The CPI increased by 0.3 per cent in July from 0.1 per cent in June on a monthly basis, Statistics Canada said.
     

Inflation rate eases to 1.7 per cent in July, core measures stay firm

19 août 2025 à 06:07
Gasoline prices dropped by 16.1% on a yearly basis in July, following a 13.4% decline in June.

Canada’s annual inflation rate eased to 1.7 per cent in July from 1.9 per cent in the prior month as lower year-on-year gasoline prices kept the consumer price index low, but core measures of inflation stayed sticky, data showed on Tuesday.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast the annual inflation rate at 1.8 per cent and the monthly inflation rate at 0.3 per cent. The CPI increased by 0.3 per cent in July from 0.1 per cent in June on a monthly basis, Statistics Canada said.

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