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Reçu aujourd’hui — 11 septembre 2025The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Judge dismisses media attempt to report details of mental-health history of accused in Lapu-Lapu case
    Media outlets will not be able to report on the mental-health history of the man accused in the Lapu-Lapu Day street festival attack before his eventual trial on 11 counts of second-degree murder and 31 counts of attempted murder, a judge has ruled.On Thursday, B.C. Provincial Court Judge Reginald Harris dismissed an attempt by a media consortium, which includes The Globe and Mail, to lift a publication ban on details of this summer’s hearing into the mental fitness of Kai-Ji Adam Lo.
     

Judge dismisses media attempt to report details of mental-health history of accused in Lapu-Lapu case

11 septembre 2025 à 21:55
Police officers work at the scene after a vehicle drove into a crowd during a Lapu-Lapu Day festival in April.

Media outlets will not be able to report on the mental-health history of the man accused in the Lapu-Lapu Day street festival attack before his eventual trial on 11 counts of second-degree murder and 31 counts of attempted murder, a judge has ruled.

On Thursday, B.C. Provincial Court Judge Reginald Harris dismissed an attempt by a media consortium, which includes The Globe and Mail, to lift a publication ban on details of this summer’s hearing into the mental fitness of Kai-Ji Adam Lo.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Support staff at Ontario’s public colleges go on strike
    Workers at Ontario colleges went on strike Thursday, one of two major labour disputes that have disrupted the first weeks of classes at Canadian postsecondary schools.More than 10,000 support staff in the Ontario college system launched pickets at the province’s 24 institutions after negotiations with the College Employer Council broke down over worker demands related to job security and other issues.
     

Support staff at Ontario’s public colleges go on strike

11 septembre 2025 à 21:08
College support staff picket outside George Brown College's St. James Campus in Toronto on Thursday.

Workers at Ontario colleges went on strike Thursday, one of two major labour disputes that have disrupted the first weeks of classes at Canadian postsecondary schools.

More than 10,000 support staff in the Ontario college system launched pickets at the province’s 24 institutions after negotiations with the College Employer Council broke down over worker demands related to job security and other issues.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Haida Nation’s Aboriginal title secured through court order
    An agreement between the Haida Nation and the federal and provincial governments has been given court approval, cementing the nation’s Aboriginal title to all one million hectares of Haida Gwaii, once known as the Queen Charlotte Islands.Private landowners have been assured that there will be no changes to their ownership status, but the transition of governance over Crown-land tenures and parks on the archipelago off B.C.’s north coast is still being worked out.
     

Haida Nation’s Aboriginal title secured through court order

11 septembre 2025 à 21:04
A Haida elder and members of a youth group paddle a canoe in Gwaii Haanas National Park, in 2012. The Haida, B.C. and Ottawa signed a deal in 2024 formally recognizing Haida Nation’s Aboriginal title to Haida Gwaii.

An agreement between the Haida Nation and the federal and provincial governments has been given court approval, cementing the nation’s Aboriginal title to all one million hectares of Haida Gwaii, once known as the Queen Charlotte Islands.

Private landowners have been assured that there will be no changes to their ownership status, but the transition of governance over Crown-land tenures and parks on the archipelago off B.C.’s north coast is still being worked out.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Clinical trials for childhood cancer closed to new Canadian patients in wake of U.S. funding cuts
    At least five cutting-edge clinical trials for childhood cancer have been closed to new Canadian patients because of the Trump administration’s cuts to scientific funding and its directive that grants no longer be shared with foreign researchers.Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children halted enrolment in three trials for incurable brain cancer last month after the U.S. National Cancer Institute decided not to renew funding for a consortium of pediatric brain-tumour scientists whose only Canadian si
     

Clinical trials for childhood cancer closed to new Canadian patients in wake of U.S. funding cuts

11 septembre 2025 à 20:14
SickKids hospital in Toronto in February, 2023.

At least five cutting-edge clinical trials for childhood cancer have been closed to new Canadian patients because of the Trump administration’s cuts to scientific funding and its directive that grants no longer be shared with foreign researchers.

Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children halted enrolment in three trials for incurable brain cancer last month after the U.S. National Cancer Institute decided not to renew funding for a consortium of pediatric brain-tumour scientists whose only Canadian site was at SickKids.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Carney commits to pharmacare agreements with provinces, territories without deals
    Prime Minister Mark Carney says the government will sign agreements with provinces and territories that have yet to ink deals for public coverage of some diabetes medications and supplies, as well as contraceptives.Mr. Carney’s comments on Thursday in Edmonton, where he has been meeting with his caucus ahead of Parliament’s fall sitting, marked the first time that the Prime Minister has explicitly committed to additional pharmacare agreements.
     

Carney commits to pharmacare agreements with provinces, territories without deals

11 septembre 2025 à 20:07
Prime Minister Mark Carney said Ottawa is determined to reach agreements with outstanding provinces 'as quickly and as equitably as possible.'

Prime Minister Mark Carney says the government will sign agreements with provinces and territories that have yet to ink deals for public coverage of some diabetes medications and supplies, as well as contraceptives.

Mr. Carney’s comments on Thursday in Edmonton, where he has been meeting with his caucus ahead of Parliament’s fall sitting, marked the first time that the Prime Minister has explicitly committed to additional pharmacare agreements.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ottawa ties stalled carbon-capture project to new pipeline
    Reducing emissions from Alberta’s oil sands, including progress on a massive carbon-capture project, will be a “necessary condition” to unlocking new pipelines to Canada’s coasts to access export markets, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday.The Pathways Alliance carbon-capture initiative is a 400-kilometre-long pipeline that would transport carbon trapped at oil-sands facilities to an underground hub near Cold Lake, Alta., with the aim of reducing emissions by 22 megatonnes a year.
     

Ottawa ties stalled carbon-capture project to new pipeline

11 septembre 2025 à 19:50
Suncor's base plant and upgrader in Fort McMurray, Alta., June, 2017. The Pathways project is meant to play a key role in the pledge by the Pathways Alliance to bring emissions to net zero by 2050.

Reducing emissions from Alberta’s oil sands, including progress on a massive carbon-capture project, will be a “necessary condition” to unlocking new pipelines to Canada’s coasts to access export markets, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday.

The Pathways Alliance carbon-capture initiative is a 400-kilometre-long pipeline that would transport carbon trapped at oil-sands facilities to an underground hub near Cold Lake, Alta., with the aim of reducing emissions by 22 megatonnes a year.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Quebec bracing for protests with arrival of Israel-Premier Tech cycling team
    The global controversy over an Israel-affiliated team’s participation in the world cycling tour is coming to Canada this week as race organizers in Quebec City and Montreal grapple with possible disruption by pro-Palestinian activists amidst an outcry over the war in Gaza. The Grand Prix Cycliste events in the two cities are bracing for protests against Israel-Premier Tech, a team with deep ties to both Canada and Israel, which has faced mounting opposition since the beginning of the conflict in
     

Quebec bracing for protests with arrival of Israel-Premier Tech cycling team

11 septembre 2025 à 19:31
The main pack cycles by Place Royale near the Chateau Frontenac at the 2023 Grand Prix Cycliste de Quebec, in Quebec City.

The global controversy over an Israel-affiliated team’s participation in the world cycling tour is coming to Canada this week as race organizers in Quebec City and Montreal grapple with possible disruption by pro-Palestinian activists amidst an outcry over the war in Gaza.

The Grand Prix Cycliste events in the two cities are bracing for protests against Israel-Premier Tech, a team with deep ties to both Canada and Israel, which has faced mounting opposition since the beginning of the conflict in October 2023.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • NHL says players acquitted in Hockey Canada sexual assault trial can return to league
    The National Hockey League has cleared the way for the five members of Canada’s 2018 world junior hockey team who were acquitted of sexual-assault charges to return to the NHL.The league issued a statement Thursday that said Dillon Dubé, Cal Foote, Alex Formenton, Carter Hart and Michael McLeod will be eligible to sign new contracts “no sooner than October 15, 2025, and eligible to play in NHL games no sooner than December 1, 2025.”
     

NHL says players acquitted in Hockey Canada sexual assault trial can return to league

11 septembre 2025 à 17:36
Michael McLeod, left, Cal Foote, Dillon Dubé, Alex Formenton and Carter Hart were found not guilty of sexual assault in July.

The National Hockey League has cleared the way for the five members of Canada’s 2018 world junior hockey team who were acquitted of sexual-assault charges to return to the NHL.

The league issued a statement Thursday that said Dillon Dubé, Cal Foote, Alex Formenton, Carter Hart and Michael McLeod will be eligible to sign new contracts “no sooner than October 15, 2025, and eligible to play in NHL games no sooner than December 1, 2025.”

Oct. 7 doc The Road Between Us to get Canada, U.S. theatrical release next month

11 septembre 2025 à 15:40
Director Barry Avrich and retired Israeli general Noam Tibon arrive on the red carpet for The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue at the Toronto International Film Festival on Wednesday.

A documentary about a retired Israeli general’s Oct. 7 rescue mission will hit theatres mere weeks after its Toronto premiere was met with protesters.

Representatives for the film say The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue is set to open Oct. 3 on 125 screens in Canada and the United States, including in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Legal scholar Beth Bilson was a ‘legend’ to generations of women in law
    Beth Bilson, a leading academic scholar on labour and administrative law, the first woman to be appointed dean at the University of Saskatchewan’s law school and chair of an influential federal task force on pay equity, has died at age 79. “Beth was the epitome of an excellent academic lawyer,” said Thomas Cromwell, a retired Supreme Court of Canada justice who worked closely with Ms. Bilson when she was editor of the Canadian Bar Review and he chaired the publication’s editorial board. The two
     

Legal scholar Beth Bilson was a ‘legend’ to generations of women in law

11 septembre 2025 à 15:23
Beth Bilson, who died on Aug. 13 at 79, chaired a federal task force whose recommendations inspired the Pay Equity Act of 2018.

Beth Bilson, a leading academic scholar on labour and administrative law, the first woman to be appointed dean at the University of Saskatchewan’s law school and chair of an influential federal task force on pay equity, has died at age 79.

“Beth was the epitome of an excellent academic lawyer,” said Thomas Cromwell, a retired Supreme Court of Canada justice who worked closely with Ms. Bilson when she was editor of the Canadian Bar Review and he chaired the publication’s editorial board. The two first got to know each other as legal academics in the 1980s, when Mr. Cromwell taught law at Dalhousie University and Ms. Bilson was at the University of Saskatchewan.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Conservatives will introduce a bail reform bill this fall, Poilievre says
    Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says his party will introduce a bill this fall that would make it harder for people accused of certain crimes to get bail.Poilievre says the proposal would create a new category of major offences that includes things like sexual assault, kidnapping, human trafficking, home invasion and firearms charges.
     

Conservatives will introduce a bail reform bill this fall, Poilievre says

11 septembre 2025 à 12:36
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre in Woodbridge, Ont., on Thursday. He said his party will introduce a bill to make it harder for people accused of certain crimes to get bail.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says his party will introduce a bill this fall that would make it harder for people accused of certain crimes to get bail.

Poilievre says the proposal would create a new category of major offences that includes things like sexual assault, kidnapping, human trafficking, home invasion and firearms charges.

Canadians can now make claims for payouts in Loblaw bread price-fixing settlement

11 septembre 2025 à 12:09
Bread at a Loblaws store in Toronto. Canadian residents can now submit claims for a bread price-fixing settlement involving Loblaw and its parent company.

Canadian shoppers now have a chance to get their share of a $500-million settlement in a class-action lawsuit related to the alleged industry-wide price fixing of bread.

Strosberg Wingfield Sasso LLP and Orr Taylor LLP said Thursday the claims process is now open in the approved settlement involving Loblaw Cos. Ltd. L-T and its parent company George Weston Ltd. WN-T

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Parents visit site of crash at Ontario daycare that killed toddler
    Parents and members of the community left flowers and teddy bears in front of a daycare in Richmond Hill, Ont., the site of a crash that killed a toddler and injured six other kids. York Regional Police said a 70-year-old man was arrested at the scene and faces one count of dangerous driving causing death and one count of dangerous driving causing bodily harm.
     

Parents visit site of crash at Ontario daycare that killed toddler

11 septembre 2025 à 11:42
Parents and members of the community left flowers and teddy bears in front of a daycare in Richmond Hill, Ont., the site of a crash that killed a toddler and injured six other kids. York Regional Police said a 70-year-old man was arrested at the scene and faces one count of dangerous driving causing death and one count of dangerous driving causing bodily harm.

Ontario government proposes new safety measures after daycare crash that left toddler dead

11 septembre 2025 à 08:27
Flowers and toys that people have left sit in front of the Richmond Hill, Ont., daycare on Thursday after an SUV crashed into it.

The Ontario government is proposing measures aimed at boosting safety at child-care facilities, and a man is facing dangerous driving charges after an SUV crashed into a daycare north of Toronto, killing a toddler and injuring six other children.

Three staff members were also hurt in the crash on Wednesday at First Roots Early Education Academy in Richmond Hill, Ont.

© Sammy Kogan

Police and fire crews work to remove a vehicle from First Roots Early Education Academy after it was driven through the daycare's window in Richmond Hill, Ont., on Wednesday.
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • South Korean shipyard sweetens pitch to Canada to build Navy’s next fleet of submarines
    One of two finalists in the competition to build the Royal Canadian Navy’s next fleet of submarines is pitching multiple industrial partnerships and economic benefits in the hopes of sealing the deal.Hanwha Oceans is floating various industrial-technological benefit collaborations that could involve investments in Canadian lithium-ion battery production, liquefied natural gas, aerospace, steel, critical minerals mining and sustainable energy.
     

South Korean shipyard sweetens pitch to Canada to build Navy’s next fleet of submarines

11 septembre 2025 à 07:41
A model of a Hanwha KSS-III submarine at the Canadian Association of Defence and Security Industries annual defence industry trade show, CANSEC, in Ottawa in May.

One of two finalists in the competition to build the Royal Canadian Navy’s next fleet of submarines is pitching multiple industrial partnerships and economic benefits in the hopes of sealing the deal.

Hanwha Oceans is floating various industrial-technological benefit collaborations that could involve investments in Canadian lithium-ion battery production, liquefied natural gas, aerospace, steel, critical minerals mining and sustainable energy.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Extreme weather, U.S. funding cuts put pressure on Canada’s weather service, report says
    Canada has a need for a co-ordinated flash flood warning system and could deepen its European partnerships as the United States cuts climate- and weather-related funding, says a new report digging into the future of Canada’s weather service. The independent assessment prepared for Environment and Climate Change Canada says significant cuts to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration threaten a wide range of weather and water monitoring in Canada, from the Arctic to the Great Lake
     

Extreme weather, U.S. funding cuts put pressure on Canada’s weather service, report says

11 septembre 2025 à 07:23
A truck is abandoned in floodwater after a major rain event in Halifax in 2023.

Canada has a need for a co-ordinated flash flood warning system and could deepen its European partnerships as the United States cuts climate- and weather-related funding, says a new report digging into the future of Canada’s weather service.

The independent assessment prepared for Environment and Climate Change Canada says significant cuts to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration threaten a wide range of weather and water monitoring in Canada, from the Arctic to the Great Lakes.

Air Canada owes passengers more than $66-million in compensation for lost time, inconvenience, tech firm says

11 septembre 2025 à 07:00
According to aviation tech firm airfairness, around 551,697 passengers in total were affected by Air Canada’s labour disruptions.

Air Canada passengers whose travel plans were upended by last month’s labour disruptions are owed more than $66-million in compensation for lost time and inconvenience from the airline, according to estimates from a Toronto-based aviation tech firm.

This figure is above and beyond any refunds or rebookings that may be owed by the airline.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: Speed cameras are under siege – again
    Good morning. As speed-camera vandalism sweeps across Toronto, Doug Ford is calling for an end to photo radar − more on that below, along with a potential teachers strike in Alberta and Canada’s blow to the U.S. travel industry. But first:Today’s headlinesRight-wing commentator Charlie Kirk has died after being shot at a Utah university eventPoland invokes Article 4 of the NATO treaty after drones were shot down during a Russian attack on UkraineEdmonton police want a review of the manslaughter
     

Morning Update: Speed cameras are under siege – again

11 septembre 2025 à 06:24

Good morning. As speed-camera vandalism sweeps across Toronto, Doug Ford is calling for an end to photo radar − more on that below, along with a potential teachers strike in Alberta and Canada’s blow to the U.S. travel industry. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Fred Lum

A sign letting residents and commuters know that a speed camera will be installed on Jameson Ave., is photographed on Feb 3 2020.

Hospital staff provided ‘reasonable’ care to Ontario teen who died after waiting hours in ER, statement of defence claims

11 septembre 2025 à 06:00
GJ van der Werken holds a picture of his 16-year-old son Finlay, who died in February, 2024. Finlay’s family is pushing for legislative changes to emergency-room care.

A statement of defence filed by a health-services corporation and several nurses in Ontario denies allegations of negligence made in a lawsuit filed on behalf of the family of a 16-year-old boy who waited hours to see a doctor, later dying of pneumonia and septic shock.

The lawsuit involves Finlay van der Werken, an active, hockey-playing teen who was rushed to the Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital by his mother on the evening of Feb. 7, 2024. Mr. Van der Werken was experiencing excruciating pain on his right side, she said.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ontario public college support staff hit picket lines after rejecting latest offer
    Support staff at Ontario’s publicly funded colleges walked off the job Thursday, striking over not just better wages and benefits, they said, but for the future of the college system.The 10,000 full-time college support staff, including library technologists, facilities and trades workers, and staff in financial aid and registrar offices, went on strike after failing to reach a new contract deal. Classes are continuing, colleges said.
     

Ontario public college support staff hit picket lines after rejecting latest offer

11 septembre 2025 à 01:49
College support staff picket outside George Brown College's St. James campus in Toronto on Thursday.

Support staff at Ontario’s publicly funded colleges walked off the job Thursday, striking over not just better wages and benefits, they said, but for the future of the college system.

The 10,000 full-time college support staff, including library technologists, facilities and trades workers, and staff in financial aid and registrar offices, went on strike after failing to reach a new contract deal. Classes are continuing, colleges said.

Reçu hier — 10 septembre 2025The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Community reacts after Ontario daycare crash
    A young child was left dead after an SUV crashed into a daycare north of Toronto shortly before pickup time. Police said another five children were injured, with one in critical condition, and three adult staff members were also hurt. The mayor of Richmond Hill, Ont., and onlookers reacted at the scene after police arrested a driver in what they said was not believed to be a deliberate act.
     

Community reacts after Ontario daycare crash

10 septembre 2025 à 20:50
A young child was left dead after an SUV crashed into a daycare north of Toronto shortly before pickup time. Police said another five children were injured, with one in critical condition, and three adult staff members were also hurt. The mayor of Richmond Hill, Ont., and onlookers reacted at the scene after police arrested a driver in what they said was not believed to be a deliberate act.

Edmonton police demand manslaughter plea deal is scrapped in challenge to Crown prosecutors

10 septembre 2025 à 20:33
A woman pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of manslaughter in the killing of an eight-year-old girl in a case that has publicly exposed tensions between Edmonton police and Crown prosecutors. Police say the justice system has failed. And the family of the victim, who can't be identified, say they’re grateful police took the unprecedented step to give voice to their concerns.

Toddler dead, six other children injured after car crashes into Ontario daycare

10 septembre 2025 à 19:32
Police block off First Roots Early Education Academy after a car drove through its window in Richmond Hill, Ont. on Wednesday.

One toddler is dead and six others injured, along with three adults, after an SUV plowed into a daycare north of Toronto on Wednesday afternoon.

York Regional Police say the vehicle went into the building at Yonge Street and Nottingham Drive, in Richmond Hill, at 3 p.m.

© Sammy Kogan

Police block off First Roots Early Education Academy after a car drove through its window in Richmond Hill, Ont., on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sammy Kogan
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Quebec Premier Legault shuffles cabinet, promises ‘shock treatment’ ahead of 2026 election
    Quebec Premier François Legault, one year away from the general election and deeply unpopular with the electorate, announced a major cabinet shuffle on Wednesday and promised to soon present a new vision for the province’s economy.He also pledged to make radical changes to the public service, saying the system needs a “shock treatment” to get out of its lethargy. It’s all part of a plan to revive the fortunes of his party, which according to polls is at risk of disappearing from the electoral ma
     

Quebec Premier Legault shuffles cabinet, promises ‘shock treatment’ ahead of 2026 election

10 septembre 2025 à 19:26
Quebec Premier Francois Legault's reshuffled cabinet is composed of mostly familiar faces in new roles, with five members elevated from the backbench .

Quebec Premier François Legault, one year away from the general election and deeply unpopular with the electorate, announced a major cabinet shuffle on Wednesday and promised to soon present a new vision for the province’s economy.

He also pledged to make radical changes to the public service, saying the system needs a “shock treatment” to get out of its lethargy. It’s all part of a plan to revive the fortunes of his party, which according to polls is at risk of disappearing from the electoral map after it won a second mandate three years ago with a decisive majority.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Toddler dead, six other children injured after car crashes into Richmond Hill daycare
    Police say a one and a half-year-old child is dead after an SUV crashed into a daycare north of Toronto this afternoon.They say six other children ranging in age from one and a half to three years old were injured and brought to hospital, and one of them is in critical condition.York Regional Police say three staff members were also hurt in the crash at the daycare near Yonge Street and Nottingham Drive in Richmond Hill, Ont.
     

Toddler dead, six other children injured after car crashes into Richmond Hill daycare

10 septembre 2025 à 18:43

Police say a one and a half-year-old child is dead after an SUV crashed into a daycare north of Toronto this afternoon.

They say six other children ranging in age from one and a half to three years old were injured and brought to hospital, and one of them is in critical condition.

York Regional Police say three staff members were also hurt in the crash at the daycare near Yonge Street and Nottingham Drive in Richmond Hill, Ont.

© Arlyn McAdorey

Police in a southern Ontario municipality say they have solved the murder of a 16-year-old girl that took place more than 50 years ago. York Regional Police say Yvonne Leroux was last seen walking in a Toronto neighbourhood one night in November 1972 and a passerby discovered her body in the Township of King, about 24 kilometres north of the city, the next morning.A York Regional Police patch is shown Dec, 19, 2022 in Aurora, Ont. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Arlyn McAdorey
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Alberta teachers strike to start on Oct. 6, union says
    The union representing Alberta’s 51,000 teachers says they are planning to walk off the job starting Oct. 6. The head of the Alberta Teachers’ Association says educators are looking for properly funded schools and wages that reflect their value but the government is calling the October deadline disappointing.
     
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Degrassi co-creator settles lawsuit over TV series doc screening at TIFF
    A short-lived legal dispute between Degrassi co-creator Linda Schuyler and makers of the new documentary Degrassi: Whatever It Takes has come to an end, allowing its premiere to move forward at the Toronto International Film Festival.In a joint statement Wednesday, Schuyler and the documentary’s producers said the world premiere will continue as planned this weekend.
     

Degrassi co-creator settles lawsuit over TV series doc screening at TIFF

10 septembre 2025 à 16:43
Degrassi creators Linda Schuyler, left, and Stephen Stohn, right, pose with their star at Canada's Walk of Fame's 25th Anniversary gala in Toronto, December, 2023. In a lawsuit filed on Monday, Schuyler alleged 'defamatory statements and innuendo' in the doc Degrassi: Whatever It Takes would lead viewers to believe she created an 'empire' that profited at the expense of the actors.

A short-lived legal dispute between Degrassi co-creator Linda Schuyler and makers of the new documentary Degrassi: Whatever It Takes has come to an end, allowing its premiere to move forward at the Toronto International Film Festival.

In a joint statement Wednesday, Schuyler and the documentary’s producers said the world premiere will continue as planned this weekend.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Edmonton police want review of stepmother’s sentencing in death of eight-year-old
    A lawyer for Edmonton police says the specific facts of a child’s horrific homicide – coupled with mounting frustration with Alberta’s Crown Prosecution Service – led police to take the exceptional step of asking provincial justice officials to intervene in sentencing for the child’s killer.Edmonton Police Service lawyer Megan Hankewich said officers learned “by happenstance” that there was a plea deal happening in the case Wednesday, in which the child’s stepmother would plead guilty to manslau
     

Edmonton police want review of stepmother’s sentencing in death of eight-year-old

10 septembre 2025 à 16:17

A lawyer for Edmonton police says the specific facts of a child’s horrific homicide – coupled with mounting frustration with Alberta’s Crown Prosecution Service – led police to take the exceptional step of asking provincial justice officials to intervene in sentencing for the child’s killer.

Edmonton Police Service lawyer Megan Hankewich said officers learned “by happenstance” that there was a plea deal happening in the case Wednesday, in which the child’s stepmother would plead guilty to manslaughter and receive an eight-year sentence.

Ms. Hankewich said the eight-year-old’s homicide “remains one of the most horrifying cases of child abuse, and ultimately death from abuse, that our police service has ever seen.”

© JASON FRANSON

In an open letter written by Edmonton Police Service lawyer Megan Hankewich, and sent by Interim Chief Warren Driechel, police say allowing the plea deal to go ahead would be a 'miscarriage of justice.'
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Judge rules man accused in Vancouver festival attack is fit to stand trial
    The man accused of ramming his SUV through a busy Vancouver street festival this spring is mentally fit to stand trial for 11 counts of murder and 31 of attempted murder, a judge ruled Wednesday. B.C. Provincial Court Judge Reginald Harris made the assessment of Kai-Ji Adam Lo’s fitness after weeks of interviews by a psychiatrist in the hospital where he is being held.
     

Judge rules man accused in Vancouver festival attack is fit to stand trial

10 septembre 2025 à 15:55
Debris is seen on East 43rd Avenue in Vancouver, the day after a vehicle drove into a crowd at a Lapu Lapu Day festival. A judge has ruled that the suspect is mentally fit to stand trial.

The man accused of ramming his SUV through a busy Vancouver street festival this spring is mentally fit to stand trial for 11 counts of murder and 31 of attempted murder, a judge ruled Wednesday.

B.C. Provincial Court Judge Reginald Harris made the assessment of Kai-Ji Adam Lo’s fitness after weeks of interviews by a psychiatrist in the hospital where he is being held.

Alberta teachers plan provincewide strike starting Oct. 6, union says

10 septembre 2025 à 14:02
Talks between the union representing Alberta’s 51,000 teachers and the province have been at a stalemate, with the main issues being wages and working conditions.

Alberta teachers have officially started the countdown clock toward an Oct. 6 provincewide strike, with the union’s head and the government accusing the other of failing students.

“Teachers’ patience has run out,” Jason Schilling, president of the Alberta Teachers’ Association, told reporters Wednesday.

Canada ‘evaluating’ ties with Israel after attack on Hamas leaders in Qatar, Anand says

10 septembre 2025 à 13:47
Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand in The Hague, Netherlands, in June. Anand called Israel's attack on Hamas leadership in Qatar unacceptable on Wednesday.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said Canada is “evaluating” its relationship with Israel, calling its attack on Hamas leadership in Qatar unacceptable.

But she stopped short of echoing the call from the EU for a suspension of trade with Israel or sanctions, citing instead Canada’s plan to recognize a Palestinian state at the upcoming United Nations’ General Assembly.

Clearest signal yet rattles gravitational wave detector at risk from Trump budget cut

10 septembre 2025 à 13:21
An artist's conception shows the events immediately preceding a collision between two black holes, observed in gravitational waves by the U.S. National Science Foundation's Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. It depicts the view from one of the black holes as it spirals toward the other.

Jess McIver knows black holes are real. She can hear them dancing in the dark.

An astrophysicist and associate professor at the University of British Columbia, Dr. McIver spends her time reading the subtle vibrations in spacetime that rattle our planet when distant black holes spiral into each other and violently collide.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Is Toronto’s public design in the toilet?
    Toronto’s park department has announced a program to repair and replace more than 125 public bathrooms across the city. Finally, a long-overdue effort to tackle an essential civic problem. Yet the rush to act threatens Toronto’s design culture.The Washroom Enhancement Project is rolling out rapidly. City spokesperson Jas Baweja says Toronto aims to have 35 projects finished by next year, especially in its most popular parks. The timing aligns neatly with the next municipal election.
     

Is Toronto’s public design in the toilet?

10 septembre 2025 à 12:35
A washroom building on Olympic Island in Toronto Island Park designed by the architect Irving Grossman, photographed in 2023. Toronto’s park department is planning to repair and replace more than 125 public bathrooms.

Toronto’s park department has announced a program to repair and replace more than 125 public bathrooms across the city. Finally, a long-overdue effort to tackle an essential civic problem. Yet the rush to act threatens Toronto’s design culture.

The Washroom Enhancement Project is rolling out rapidly. City spokesperson Jas Baweja says Toronto aims to have 35 projects finished by next year, especially in its most popular parks. The timing aligns neatly with the next municipal election.

Toronto police arrest teen for murder in killing of eight-year-old boy, two others wanted

10 septembre 2025 à 12:14
Holly Roy, the mother of Jahvai Roy, speaks at a vigil in Toronto on Aug. 21.

Toronto police say they have charged a teenager with first-degree murder in the death of an eight-year-old boy who was killed by a stray bullet while in bed last month.

Police say the accused boy was 15 at the time of the offence, and they have issued Canada-wide warrants for the arrest of two other suspects who were both 17 at the time of the shooting. 

Mayor of Barrie, Ont., declares state of emergency to address safety at homeless encampments

10 septembre 2025 à 11:00
Barrie Mayor Alex Nuttall at Queen's Park Legislature in Toronto in December, 2024. Nuttall says encampments have resulted in health and safety issues for the community.

The mayor of Barrie, Ont., declared a state of emergency over homeless encampments in the city Tuesday, citing concerns about public safety as a justification for the decision.

Alex Nuttall said in the announcement that the residents of Barrie, a city of nearly 150,000 people north of Toronto, “have had enough” of what he described as “lawlessness.”

© Chris Young

Barrie Mayor Alex Nuttall attends a news conference regarding encampments, at Queen's Park Legislature in Toronto on Thursday December 12, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Canadian wildfires had global impact on premature deaths in 2023, new study says
    Smoke from Canada’s record-breaking 2023 wildfire season may have led to more than an estimated 82,000 premature deaths globally, according to a new study.The study, published in the scientific journal Nature on Wednesday, highlights the far-reaching impact of pollution and associated deaths caused by the Canadian fires, primarily in North America and Europe. Researchers concluded that more than 354 million people worldwide were exposed to Canada’s wildfire toxins.
     

Canadian wildfires had global impact on premature deaths in 2023, new study says

10 septembre 2025 à 11:00
A wildfire burns near Port Alberni on Vancouver Island in August. A new Nature study highlights the far-reaching impact of pollution and associated deaths caused by Canadian fires.

Smoke from Canada’s record-breaking 2023 wildfire season may have led to more than an estimated 82,000 premature deaths globally, according to a new study.

The study, published in the scientific journal Nature on Wednesday, highlights the far-reaching impact of pollution and associated deaths caused by the Canadian fires, primarily in North America and Europe. Researchers concluded that more than 354 million people worldwide were exposed to Canada’s wildfire toxins.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: A Gen Z uprising topples Nepal’s PM
    Good morning. A wave of youth-led protests has rocked Nepal, resulting in the collapse of its government – more on that below, along with Israel’s strike on Hamas leadership in Qatar and the controversial doc premiering at TIFF today. But first:Today’s headlinesPoland shoots down Russian drones in its airspaceTeck agrees to be acquired by Anglo American at a crucial time for Canada’s minerals industryPublic Safety Minister’s link to civil liberties group doesn’t require an ethics screen, watchdo
     

Morning Update: A Gen Z uprising topples Nepal’s PM

10 septembre 2025 à 07:01

Good morning. A wave of youth-led protests has rocked Nepal, resulting in the collapse of its government – more on that below, along with Israel’s strike on Hamas leadership in Qatar and the controversial doc premiering at TIFF today. But first:

Today’s headlines

© ANUP OJHA

Fire rips through Nepal's Parliament yesterday.
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Surgical oncologist Sean Cleary was building a highly advanced robotic surgery program in Toronto
    A few years ago in Cincinnati, two cancer surgeons were watching a video of a minimally invasive liver surgery. The doctor who performed the operation, Adnan Alseidi, always welcomed feedback from his friend and surgical colleague Sean Cleary, a world-renowned expert in their field.Dr. Cleary’s insightful comments left Dr. Alseidi feeling buoyant. It was only later that it dawned on Dr. Alseidi what had actually happened; he had just been schooled.
     

Surgical oncologist Sean Cleary was building a highly advanced robotic surgery program in Toronto

10 septembre 2025 à 07:00
Dr. Sean Cleary was a gifted surgical oncologist and generous educator, but what made him uniquely brilliant was his extraordinary ability to make people feel valued, cared for and inspired.

A few years ago in Cincinnati, two cancer surgeons were watching a video of a minimally invasive liver surgery. The doctor who performed the operation, Adnan Alseidi, always welcomed feedback from his friend and surgical colleague Sean Cleary, a world-renowned expert in their field.

Dr. Cleary’s insightful comments left Dr. Alseidi feeling buoyant. It was only later that it dawned on Dr. Alseidi what had actually happened; he had just been schooled.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • From Sioux Lookout to Seoul: Darts player heads to international competition
    Mastering It is a summer series to introduce you to Canadians who have sought to rise above being simply good at their chosen endeavour – and who, by perfecting their skill, strive to become the best.By the time Shane Sakchekapo steps up to throw a dart in any given match, he’s already calculated in his head the potential targets and scores needed to win.
     

From Sioux Lookout to Seoul: Darts player heads to international competition

10 septembre 2025 à 07:00
Shane Sakchekapo is heading to the World Darts Federation’s World Cup this month in Seoul.

Mastering It is a summer series to introduce you to Canadians who have sought to rise above being simply good at their chosen endeavour – and who, by perfecting their skill, strive to become the best.

By the time Shane Sakchekapo steps up to throw a dart in any given match, he’s already calculated in his head the potential targets and scores needed to win.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Public Safety Minister’s link to civil liberties group doesn’t require ethics screen, watchdog says
    Canada’s ethics watchdog has determined there is no need for a conflict-of-interest “screen” for interactions between the Public Safety Minister, who is responsible for guiding a border bill through Parliament, and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, where his wife is a director.The Ethics Commissioner also concluded that a screen is not required under federal law for the minister, Gary Anandasangaree – who was born in Sri Lanka and has previously advocated for Tamil refugees – on national
     

Public Safety Minister’s link to civil liberties group doesn’t require ethics screen, watchdog says

10 septembre 2025 à 05:00
Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree, left, said he has voluntarily implemented measures aimed at preventing the appearance of a conflict of interest, but they will not impede him from fulfilling his duties.

Canada’s ethics watchdog has determined there is no need for a conflict-of-interest “screen” for interactions between the Public Safety Minister, who is responsible for guiding a border bill through Parliament, and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, where his wife is a director.

The Ethics Commissioner also concluded that a screen is not required under federal law for the minister, Gary Anandasangaree – who was born in Sri Lanka and has previously advocated for Tamil refugees – on national-security issues relating to the Tamil community.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Most Canadians support publicly funded child care, YMCA and YWCA survey says
    A new survey from the YMCA of Canada and YWCA Canada showing a majority of Canadians are in favour of publicly funded child care is intended to shore up support for a federal care program as some provinces’ commitment to the deal appears to be wavering ahead of a critical deadline. In 2021, the federal government pledged $30-billion to create 250,000 new child care spaces and reduce costs to an average of $10 a day over the next five years.
     

Most Canadians support publicly funded child care, YMCA and YWCA survey says

10 septembre 2025 à 00:01
Nearly 70 per cent of Canadians support the federal government's Canada-wide Early Learning and Child Care program, according to a new YMCA and YWCA survey.

A new survey from the YMCA of Canada and YWCA Canada showing a majority of Canadians are in favour of publicly funded child care is intended to shore up support for a federal care program as some provinces’ commitment to the deal appears to be wavering ahead of a critical deadline.

In 2021, the federal government pledged $30-billion to create 250,000 new child care spaces and reduce costs to an average of $10 a day over the next five years.

Reçu avant avant-hierThe Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Scholar-athlete Ken Dryden was a role model far beyond the NHL
    Ken Dryden would plant the toe of his goalie stick in the ice, resting his leather-clad right blocker hand and left catching hand atop the taped knob as a rest for his chin. He was a sentry temporarily at ease, looking no more bothered than a streetsweeper waiting for traffic to pass.For some, the pose evoked Rodin’s The Thinker, as though the goalie needed a respite from the frantic action. In the 1970s, it was not uncommon to see a kids’ road hockey game in which both goalies struck the stance
     

Scholar-athlete Ken Dryden was a role model far beyond the NHL

9 septembre 2025 à 21:22
Ken Dryden is recognized during a pre-game ceremony to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Team Canada's victory in the 1972 Summit Series, in Toronto, in September, 2022.

Ken Dryden would plant the toe of his goalie stick in the ice, resting his leather-clad right blocker hand and left catching hand atop the taped knob as a rest for his chin. He was a sentry temporarily at ease, looking no more bothered than a streetsweeper waiting for traffic to pass.

For some, the pose evoked Rodin’s The Thinker, as though the goalie needed a respite from the frantic action. In the 1970s, it was not uncommon to see a kids’ road hockey game in which both goalies struck the stance.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. Premier David Eby faces internal backlash over immigration comments
    B.C. Premier David Eby is facing pushback after linking Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program to high youth unemployment and strains on social services, with New Democrats calling his remarks out of step with party values.In response to a question about provincial belt-tightening at an unrelated news conference last week, Mr. Eby noted Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s call for Ottawa to axe the program and said it was a timely issue that should be considered.
     

B.C. Premier David Eby faces internal backlash over immigration comments

9 septembre 2025 à 21:04
B.C. Premier David Eby at a news conference in Surrey on Sept. 4.

B.C. Premier David Eby is facing pushback after linking Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program to high youth unemployment and strains on social services, with New Democrats calling his remarks out of step with party values.

In response to a question about provincial belt-tightening at an unrelated news conference last week, Mr. Eby noted Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s call for Ottawa to axe the program and said it was a timely issue that should be considered.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • PHAC to take over running Vaccine Injury Support Program from private company
    The Public Health Agency of Canada is set to take over the country’s compensation program for individuals who have been severely injured by vaccines next year from an outside company that has been subject to criticism over its administration practices.Guillaume Bertrand, director of communications for Health Minister Marjorie Michel, said in a statement to The Globe and Mail that a funding agreement with OXARO Inc., an Ottawa-based company, will conclude at the end of March. He said the federal
     

PHAC to take over running Vaccine Injury Support Program from private company

9 septembre 2025 à 20:44

The Public Health Agency of Canada is set to take over the country’s compensation program for individuals who have been severely injured by vaccines next year from an outside company that has been subject to criticism over its administration practices.

Guillaume Bertrand, director of communications for Health Minister Marjorie Michel, said in a statement to The Globe and Mail that a funding agreement with OXARO Inc., an Ottawa-based company, will conclude at the end of March.

He said the federal government plans to transition the administration of the Vaccine Injury Support Program to PHAC.

© Mary Conlon

<p>The Public Health Agency of Canada says federal funding for COVID-19 vaccines will stop this year and the provinces and territories will be responsible for buying them and determining the timing of the vaccinations. A pharmacist holds a COVID-19 vaccine at a pharmacy in New York, on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Mary Conlon</p>

RCMP officer Catherine Galliford blew the whistle on sexual misconduct in the force

9 septembre 2025 à 20:02
RCMP Cpl. Catherine Galliford (right) during a news conference on the Missing Women Joint Task Force in Vancouver, October, 2004. She died Aug. 15 in Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops, at age 58.

There they are in their red serge, beaming happily in the photo taken by one of their dads on that hot day in late August 1991: Nine female graduates in a class of 32, fresh from the six-month Cadet Training Program in Regina and excited to be stepping into their careers as RCMP officers.

Newly minted constable Catherine Galliford is in the photo, second from the left.

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