Vue normale

Aujourd’hui — 19 juin 2025The Globe and Mail
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  • Missing Nova Scotia children were assessed by child welfare agency months before disappearance
    Nova Scotia’s child protection agency investigated the living conditions of Jack and Lilly Sullivan months before their mysterious disappearance in early May – a case file that has been reviewed by the minister responsible for child welfare. Scott Armstrong, Nova Scotia’s Minister of Opportunities and Social Development, confirmed in an interview that the agency had a file on the children prior to their disappearance, but said it would be inappropriate for him to discuss the agency’s findings.
     

Missing Nova Scotia children were assessed by child welfare agency months before disappearance

19 juin 2025 à 15:05
Four-year-old Jack Sullivan, left, and six-year-old Lilly Sullivan were reported missing seven weeks ago.

Nova Scotia’s child protection agency investigated the living conditions of Jack and Lilly Sullivan months before their mysterious disappearance in early May – a case file that has been reviewed by the minister responsible for child welfare.

Scott Armstrong, Nova Scotia’s Minister of Opportunities and Social Development, confirmed in an interview that the agency had a file on the children prior to their disappearance, but said it would be inappropriate for him to discuss the agency’s findings.

© Ingrid Bulmer

A growing memorial for missing siblings Lilly Sullivan, 6, and her brother, Jack, 4, outside the RCMP detachment in Stellarton, NS.
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  • Canada to limit foreign steel imports to help producers hit by U.S. tariffs
    Prime Minister Mark Carney is taking action to crack down on the dumping of cheap foreign steel into Canada to help the country’s big three steel producers reeling from U.S. President Donald Trump’s 50-per-cent tariffs.Mr. Carney in a press conference in Ottawa on Thursday said the government will limit steel imports from countries that don’t have a free-trade agreement with Canada to 2024 levels.
     

Canada to limit foreign steel imports to help producers hit by U.S. tariffs

19 juin 2025 à 14:17
The Canadian Steel Producers Association, which represents 17 companies, including Stelco, pictured, has repeatedly advocated for antidumping duties to ease the impact of U.S. tariffs.

Prime Minister Mark Carney is taking action to crack down on the dumping of cheap foreign steel into Canada to help the country’s big three steel producers reeling from U.S. President Donald Trump’s 50-per-cent tariffs.

Mr. Carney in a press conference in Ottawa on Thursday said the government will limit steel imports from countries that don’t have a free-trade agreement with Canada to 2024 levels.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Oil and gas firms spent billions on Indigenous businesses, CAPP survey finds
    A survey commissioned by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers shows oil and gas companies spent more than $14 billion procuring goods and services from Indigenous-affiliated businesses between 2021 and 2023.Data science firm iTOTEM Analytics collected numbers from 12 members of the industry advocacy group that together represent half of Alberta’s oil and natural gas production.
     

Oil and gas firms spent billions on Indigenous businesses, CAPP survey finds

19 juin 2025 à 14:01
Workers stop for lunch at the arena, one of many amenities and infrastructure projects the Indigenous community of 700 in the oilsands region in Fort McKay, Alberta has been able to finance through relationship with industry.

A survey commissioned by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers shows oil and gas companies spent more than $14 billion procuring goods and services from Indigenous-affiliated businesses between 2021 and 2023.

Data science firm iTOTEM Analytics collected numbers from 12 members of the industry advocacy group that together represent half of Alberta’s oil and natural gas production.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Nova Scotia offers $150,000 reward for information on missing children
    The Nova Scotia government is offering a reward of as much as $150,000 for information about the disappearance of siblings Lilly and Jack Sullivan, who have been missing for nearly seven weeks.The children, aged six and four, were reported missing May 2 from their mobile home in Lansdowne Station, in rural Pictou County. The case prompted one of the largest ground searches in Nova Scotia’s history, with hundreds of volunteers, aided by drones, helicopters and rescue dogs, scouring a densely wood
     

Nova Scotia offers $150,000 reward for information on missing children

19 juin 2025 à 13:30
Six-year-old Lilly Sullivan, left, and four-year-old Jack Sullivan went missing on May 2 in the community of Lansdowne Station, N.S.

The Nova Scotia government is offering a reward of as much as $150,000 for information about the disappearance of siblings Lilly and Jack Sullivan, who have been missing for nearly seven weeks.

The children, aged six and four, were reported missing May 2 from their mobile home in Lansdowne Station, in rural Pictou County. The case prompted one of the largest ground searches in Nova Scotia’s history, with hundreds of volunteers, aided by drones, helicopters and rescue dogs, scouring a densely wooded area marked by old mine shafts and lakes.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Doug Ford meets with First Nations chiefs as tensions over Bill 5 continue to escalate
    The Assembly of First Nations has condemned comments made by Ontario’s Premier as appalling and racist and called on Doug Ford to withdraw them, as the Premier meets with First Nation chiefs about his government’s Bill 5 which includes sweeping powers to speed up mines and other development.Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Mr. Ford said First Nations will not be able to “keep coming hat in hand all the time to the government” for more money, while opposing mining or other resource projects.
     

Doug Ford meets with First Nations chiefs as tensions over Bill 5 continue to escalate

19 juin 2025 à 13:00
Ontario’s Bill 5 would allow the province to scrap any provincial law or municipal bylaw in designated “special economic zones.”

The Assembly of First Nations has condemned comments made by Ontario’s Premier as appalling and racist and called on Doug Ford to withdraw them, as the Premier meets with First Nation chiefs about his government’s Bill 5 which includes sweeping powers to speed up mines and other development.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Mr. Ford said First Nations will not be able to “keep coming hat in hand all the time to the government” for more money, while opposing mining or other resource projects.

Federal Court of Appeal overturns decision requiring Ottawa to act on judicial vacancies

19 juin 2025 à 11:04
In a ruling last year, Federal Court Justice Henry Brown said constitutional convention requires Ottawa to appoint a new judge to fill a vacancy within a reasonable time.

A panel of judges has overturned a Federal Court ruling that directed the federal government to step up the pace of judicial appointments to address an “untenable” number of vacancies.

The Federal Court of Appeal allowed the federal appeal of the ruling, saying the lower court lacked jurisdiction to hear the case.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • How are you celebrating Canada Day this year? Share your story with The Globe
    Every year, Canadians across the country celebrate Canada Day in a myriad of ways — some blast The Tragically Hip and snack on s’mores at the cottage, others light fireworks and share popsicles at their local park. But this year, it could look a little different. Angered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to turn Canada into the ‘51st State,’ Canadians are raising the Maple Leaf and getting more patriotic than ever, cancelling American vacations and buying local at the grocery store. Canad
     

How are you celebrating Canada Day this year? Share your story with The Globe

19 juin 2025 à 10:59
Canadians are gearing up to have one of their biggest Canada Day celebrations ever.

Every year, Canadians across the country celebrate Canada Day in a myriad of ways — some blast The Tragically Hip and snack on s’mores at the cottage, others light fireworks and share popsicles at their local park. But this year, it could look a little different.

Angered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to turn Canada into the ‘51st State,’ Canadians are raising the Maple Leaf and getting more patriotic than ever, cancelling American vacations and buying local at the grocery store. Canadians are riding the red-and-white wave, and gearing up to have one of their biggest July 1 celebrations ever.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Nova Scotia offers $150,000 reward for information about missing siblings
    Nova Scotia’s Justice Department is offering a reward of up to $150,000 for information about two young children who were reported missing almost seven weeks ago.Provincial Justice Minister Becky Druhan issued a statement Thursday saying the disappearance on May 2 of six-year-old Lilly Sullivan and her four-year-old brother Jack is being felt across the province and beyond.
     

Nova Scotia offers $150,000 reward for information about missing siblings

19 juin 2025 à 10:30
Six-year-old Lilly Sullivan, left, and four-year-old Jack Sullivan went missing on May 2 in the community of Lansdowne Station, N.S.

Nova Scotia’s Justice Department is offering a reward of up to $150,000 for information about two young children who were reported missing almost seven weeks ago.

Provincial Justice Minister Becky Druhan issued a statement Thursday saying the disappearance on May 2 of six-year-old Lilly Sullivan and her four-year-old brother Jack is being felt across the province and beyond.

Canada will help facilitate flights for citizens leaving Israel and Iran, Anand says

19 juin 2025 à 10:28
Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand says she is concerned about growing volatility in the region.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says Ottawa is helping Canadians leave the Middle East once they reach countries bordering Israel and Iran.

With airports closed across the region, Ottawa has stationed consular officials on the other side of certain crossings on the Israeli and Iranian borders to help those fleeing either country to get home.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Budget watchdog Yves Giroux says he can’t evaluate Liberal government’s fiscal targets
    The Parliamentary Budget Officer said Thursday he can’t properly assess whether the federal government is on track to meet its fiscal targets because the Liberals’ new budget benchmarks haven’t been defined.Without a spring budget, that means Ottawa’s budgetary watchdog is in the dark on how recently announced plans to boost Canada’s defence spending and cut income taxes will affect the government’s fiscal position.
     

Budget watchdog Yves Giroux says he can’t evaluate Liberal government’s fiscal targets

19 juin 2025 à 10:18
Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux Giroux says the federal government’s deficit for the past fiscal year likely came in at $46-billion, about $4.3-billion lower than estimates in March.

The Parliamentary Budget Officer said Thursday he can’t properly assess whether the federal government is on track to meet its fiscal targets because the Liberals’ new budget benchmarks haven’t been defined.

Without a spring budget, that means Ottawa’s budgetary watchdog is in the dark on how recently announced plans to boost Canada’s defence spending and cut income taxes will affect the government’s fiscal position.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: Let’s talk about measles
    Good morning. Our health team has been on the ground as measles cases surge in Ontario and Alberta – more on that below, along with a name change for Hudson’s Bay and the U.S. Supreme Court’s ban on youth gender-affirming care. But first:Today’s headlinesPresident Donald Trump won’t say whether he has decided to order a U.S. strike on IranMark Carney won’t say if he raised India’s role in the murder of a Canadian Sikh separatist leader with PM Narendra ModiCanada’s temporary resident population
     

Morning Update: Let’s talk about measles

19 juin 2025 à 06:33

Good morning. Our health team has been on the ground as measles cases surge in Ontario and Alberta – more on that below, along with a name change for Hudson’s Bay and the U.S. Supreme Court’s ban on youth gender-affirming care. But first:

Today’s headlines

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ottawa’s omnibus major-projects and internal-trade bill clears committee
    The Liberal government’s controversial legislation that would let cabinet quickly grant federal approvals for big industrial projects like mines, ports and pipelines sailed through committee in the early hours of Thursday.A House of Commons panel sat from Wednesday afternoon to after midnight reviewing Bill C-5 in a hurried study, as the Liberal government seeks to pass it through the chamber by week’s end.
     

Ottawa’s omnibus major-projects and internal-trade bill clears committee

Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc defended Bill C-5 at committee Wednesday, rebuffing criticisms that the bill could lead to government corruption.

The Liberal government’s controversial legislation that would let cabinet quickly grant federal approvals for big industrial projects like mines, ports and pipelines sailed through committee in the early hours of Thursday.

A House of Commons panel sat from Wednesday afternoon to after midnight reviewing Bill C-5 in a hurried study, as the Liberal government seeks to pass it through the chamber by week’s end.

Hier — 18 juin 2025The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Canadians fleeing war in Iran face obstacles in absence of diplomatic ties
    Canadian physician Panid Borhanjoo woke up on Friday morning in Iran’s cottage country to an onslaught of messages from family and friends asking if he was safe. He turned on the news in his relatives’ home in Mazandaran, a lush, coastal province on the Caspian Sea. Israeli missiles had destroyed Iranian nuclear facilities and killed high-ranking military personnel in Tehran, about 200 kilometres away. War had erupted.
     

Canadians fleeing war in Iran face obstacles in absence of diplomatic ties

18 juin 2025 à 21:32
After war erupted in Iran, Canadian Dr. Panid Borhanjoo realized he would have to escape the country without support from the federal government.

Canadian physician Panid Borhanjoo woke up on Friday morning in Iran’s cottage country to an onslaught of messages from family and friends asking if he was safe.

He turned on the news in his relatives’ home in Mazandaran, a lush, coastal province on the Caspian Sea. Israeli missiles had destroyed Iranian nuclear facilities and killed high-ranking military personnel in Tehran, about 200 kilometres away. War had erupted.

Remains found in B.C. Interior identified as Nicole Bell, woman missing since 2017

18 juin 2025 à 19:38
Nicole Bell was 31 when she disappeared in September of 2017.

Mounties in British Columbia’s Interior say human remains found last month have been confirmed as being a woman who went missing near Sicamous nearly eight years ago.

They say the remains were discovered on a rural property in Salmon Arm on May 5, and the BC Coroners Service has since linked them to Nicole Bell.

Doug Ford accuses First Nations of ‘coming hat in hand’ for government money, despite treating them ‘like gold’

18 juin 2025 à 18:52
Ford wants to declare the mineral-rich Ring of Fire region in northern Ontario a 'special economic zone' using Bill 5.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he is willing to give First Nations what they want for their support in developing mines, but they cannot “keep coming hat in hand all the time to the government” for more money.

Ford is set to meet Thursday with several dozen chiefs who are part of Anishinabek Nation, which represents 39 First Nations in the province.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • U.S. to screen social media accounts of student visa applicants under new rules
    The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it is restarting the suspended process for foreigners applying for student visas but all applicants will now be required to unlock their social media accounts for government review.The department said consular officers will be on the lookout for posts and messages that could be deemed hostile to the United States, its government, culture, institutions or founding principles.
     

U.S. to screen social media accounts of student visa applicants under new rules

18 juin 2025 à 18:14
The U.S. State Department said new applicants who refuse to set their social media accounts to 'public' and allow them to be reviewed may be rejected.

The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it is restarting the suspended process for foreigners applying for student visas but all applicants will now be required to unlock their social media accounts for government review.

The department said consular officers will be on the lookout for posts and messages that could be deemed hostile to the United States, its government, culture, institutions or founding principles.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Report shows that 60% of Canadians see improved perception of women’s sport
    New data on the explosive growth of women’s sport in Canada underscores its rising popularity, but also reveals that its structural supports still lag behind.Jessica Doherty, vice-president of strategy and growth at Torque Strategies, presented findings from a new national survey on Wednesday morning at the espnW Summit Canada at Toronto’s Evergreen Brick Works. One of the study’s main findings is that 60 per cent of Canadians believe perceptions of women’s sport have improved over the past thre
     

Report shows that 60% of Canadians see improved perception of women’s sport

18 juin 2025 à 17:50
General manager Monica Wright Rogers (left) and Teresa Resch, president of the Toronto Tempo, are working toward the team's inaugural WNBA season in 2026.

New data on the explosive growth of women’s sport in Canada underscores its rising popularity, but also reveals that its structural supports still lag behind.

Jessica Doherty, vice-president of strategy and growth at Torque Strategies, presented findings from a new national survey on Wednesday morning at the espnW Summit Canada at Toronto’s Evergreen Brick Works. One of the study’s main findings is that 60 per cent of Canadians believe perceptions of women’s sport have improved over the past three years.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Missing three-year-old Montreal girl found alive in Ontario, mother remains in custody
    A three-year-old Montreal girl reported missing on Sunday by her mother was found alive in Eastern Ontario on Wednesday afternoon, minutes after her mother appeared in court while facing charges of child abandonment. The Sûreté du Québec and Ontario Provincial Police confirmed in a Wednesday evening press conference that the girl was found around 3 p.m. along Highway 417, near St. Albert, Ont. She was alone but conscious and able to speak with officers, and is now doing “well” after being examin
     

Missing three-year-old Montreal girl found alive in Ontario, mother remains in custody

18 juin 2025 à 17:49
Crown prosecutor Lili Prévost-Gravel speaks to media following a court hearing on Wednesday for Rachel-Ella Todd, the mother of a three-year-old who was found Wednesday.

A three-year-old Montreal girl reported missing on Sunday by her mother was found alive in Eastern Ontario on Wednesday afternoon, minutes after her mother appeared in court while facing charges of child abandonment.

The Sûreté du Québec and Ontario Provincial Police confirmed in a Wednesday evening press conference that the girl was found around 3 p.m. along Highway 417, near St. Albert, Ont. She was alone but conscious and able to speak with officers, and is now doing “well” after being examined by a medical team in hospital, OPP Staff Sergeant Shaun Cameron said.

Toronto police arrest 20 people linked to group involved in tow truck-related violence

18 juin 2025 à 16:37
Police say that 15 per cent of Toronto’s shootings in 2025 so far were related to tow truck disputes. 

An investigation into tow truck industry violence across the Greater Toronto Area has resulted in the arrests of 20 people who are facing more than 100 charges combined, police said Wednesday.

Toronto police said they launched a wiretap investigation dubbed Project Yankee last October to gather evidence of a group committing crimes to control the towing industry.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Measles resurgence exposes fault lines over vaccines and faith in Alberta town
    The quiet streets of Taber, a small town in Southern Alberta, still hold reminders of the COVID-19 pandemic.Taped to the windows of the Taber town office and a local bank are posters that encourage physical distancing. Pinned to the fence of a home near the only major highway that runs through the town is an anti-Trudeau tarp expressing support for protestors who opposed vaccine mandates during the 2022 Coutts border blockade.
     

Measles resurgence exposes fault lines over vaccines and faith in Alberta town

18 juin 2025 à 16:06

The quiet streets of Taber, a small town in Southern Alberta, still hold reminders of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Taped to the windows of the Taber town office and a local bank are posters that encourage physical distancing. Pinned to the fence of a home near the only major highway that runs through the town is an anti-Trudeau tarp expressing support for protestors who opposed vaccine mandates during the 2022 Coutts border blockade.

© Sarah B Groot

Vancouver-based Lululemon cutting 150 corporate jobs after lowering profit expectations

18 juin 2025 à 15:46
Vancouver-based apparel company Lululemon Athletica is cutting about 150 corporate jobs, most of which are part of its store support centres. Earlier this month, the retailer lowered its profit expectations for the full year, estimating a more pronounced impact from expected tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Carney calls meeting with India's Modi a 'necessary' step
    Prime Minister Mark Carney says his meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Alberta was a 'necessary' step toward rebuilding bilateral relations. He refused to say whether he directly raised the accusations that Indian state agents were behind the murder of Canadian citizen Hardeep Singh Nijjar near Vancouver two years ago.
     

Carney calls meeting with India's Modi a 'necessary' step

18 juin 2025 à 09:24
Prime Minister Mark Carney says his meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Alberta was a 'necessary' step toward rebuilding bilateral relations. He refused to say whether he directly raised the accusations that Indian state agents were behind the murder of Canadian citizen Hardeep Singh Nijjar near Vancouver two years ago.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • LGBTQ refugee group says number of requests for help has spiked since 2020
    An organization that helps LGBTQ+ people file refugee claims says it has seen a spike in pleas for assistance from around the world since 2020.Devon Matthews, program head with Rainbow Railroad, said the explosion in the number of requests for help reflects a trend of countries backsliding on LGBTQ rights – or even embracing a policy of persecution.
     

LGBTQ refugee group says number of requests for help has spiked since 2020

18 juin 2025 à 08:29
Rahma Esslouani, a non-binary person from Morocco, came to Canada in July, 2024, with help from the Rainbow Railroad program.

An organization that helps LGBTQ+ people file refugee claims says it has seen a spike in pleas for assistance from around the world since 2020.

Devon Matthews, program head with Rainbow Railroad, said the explosion in the number of requests for help reflects a trend of countries backsliding on LGBTQ rights – or even embracing a policy of persecution.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: AI is killing the career ladder
    Good morning. Companies are rushing to replace entry-level workers with artificial intelligence – more on that below, along with a G7 warning and the latest on the Israel-Iran conflict. But first:Today’s headlinesThe Panthers beat the Oilers 5-1 in Game 6 to win their second straight Stanley CupCanada announces $4.3-billion in new aid for Ukraine and more sanctions on Russia’s “shadow fleet”The short deadline for Canada-U.S. talks helps to ‘concentrate the mind,’ Carney says
     

Morning Update: AI is killing the career ladder

18 juin 2025 à 06:30

Good morning. Companies are rushing to replace entry-level workers with artificial intelligence – more on that below, along with a G7 warning and the latest on the Israel-Iran conflict. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Chris J Ratcliffe

A London underground train passes a billboard for an Artificial Intelligence company advertising AI employees in London, Britain, June 5, 2025. REUTERS/Chris J. Ratcliffe

David Rosenberg says investment scam using his name bilked victims out of hundreds of thousands of dollars

18 juin 2025 à 04:00
David Rosenberg says fraudsters used his name in a scheme that involved luring victims through professional-looking ads on social media.

A Bay Street veteran and financial commentator is speaking out after finding himself at the centre of an alleged online “pump and dump” scam that used his identity to defraud some investors out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

David Rosenberg, an economist and founder of Rosenberg Research, said ads appearing on Facebook and Instagram as early as March have promoted a fake investment program falsely listing him as its administrator.

À partir d’avant-hierThe Globe and Mail
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  • Vancouver city council votes to allow safe inhalation sites
    Vancouver city council voted Tuesday to amend health bylaws to allow for indoor supervised drug inhalation at two sites, expanding access to the harm-reduction measure for people who smoke illicit substances.The decision clears one of the final hurdles for the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS to operate public supervised smoking and inhalation booths at its Hope to Health clinic in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. It also enables Vancouver Coastal Health to pilot an indoor inhalation booth at
     

Vancouver city council votes to allow safe inhalation sites

17 juin 2025 à 21:40
Dr. Julio Montaner, left, executive director of the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, poses with artist Brock Tebbutt in December, 2024. Montaner says a shift in drug-use patterns required a change in harm-reduction response at the Hope to Health clinic.

Vancouver city council voted Tuesday to amend health bylaws to allow for indoor supervised drug inhalation at two sites, expanding access to the harm-reduction measure for people who smoke illicit substances.

The decision clears one of the final hurdles for the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS to operate public supervised smoking and inhalation booths at its Hope to Health clinic in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. It also enables Vancouver Coastal Health to pilot an indoor inhalation booth at a supportive housing building, exclusively for residents.

Isolated location, lack of unifying issue lead to smaller G7 protests

17 juin 2025 à 21:37
Protesters gathered before the start of the G7 summit in Calgary, Alta., June 15.

Calgary’s Enoch Park, just south of the city’s downtown core, was quiet this week, like any other.

But what made its emptiness notable is that this outdoor space, chopped up by concrete seating and sunken walkways, served as a “designated demonstration zone” for people protesting this year’s G7 Leaders’ Summit.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • ‘Spectacular’ Bruce Peninsula site to be protected from development
    One of the last unprotected stretches of wild shoreline along the iconic Bruce Peninsula in Southern Ontario has been saved from development. On Tuesday, the Nature Conservancy of Canada announced the purchase of 29 hectares of land adjacent to China Cove, a small, crescent-shaped bay located west of Tobermory, Ont., near the site of a 19th-century shipwreck.
     

‘Spectacular’ Bruce Peninsula site to be protected from development

17 juin 2025 à 20:47
China Cove is a small, crescent-shaped bay west of Tobermory, Ont. It is home to several rare and threatened species and the site of a 19th-century shipwreck.

One of the last unprotected stretches of wild shoreline along the iconic Bruce Peninsula in Southern Ontario has been saved from development.

On Tuesday, the Nature Conservancy of Canada announced the purchase of 29 hectares of land adjacent to China Cove, a small, crescent-shaped bay located west of Tobermory, Ont., near the site of a 19th-century shipwreck.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Klaatu drummer Terry Draper and his bandmates were mistakenly believed to be the Beatles
    Musician Terry Draper, most remembered as the drummer of the Canadian progressive-pop trio Klaatu, died of leukemia on the sunny afternoon of May 15, at Southlake Health in Newmarket, Ont. He was 73.Like many Canadian kids who came of age in the 1960s, he desired to join a band that just might become the next Beatles. No one came closer to realizing those ambitions than Mr. Draper and his fellow dreamers in Klaatu.
     

Klaatu drummer Terry Draper and his bandmates were mistakenly believed to be the Beatles

17 juin 2025 à 18:00

Musician Terry Draper, most remembered as the drummer of the Canadian progressive-pop trio Klaatu, died of leukemia on the sunny afternoon of May 15, at Southlake Health in Newmarket, Ont. He was 73.

Musician Terry Draper died of leukemia on May 15.

Like many Canadian kids who came of age in the 1960s, he desired to join a band that just might become the next Beatles. No one came closer to realizing those ambitions than Mr. Draper and his fellow dreamers in Klaatu.

23andMe data breach facilitated by lack of appropriate safeguards, joint investigation finds

17 juin 2025 à 17:06
Privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne says inadequate security measures opened the door to a data breach discovered two years ago at genetic testing company 23andMe. Dufresne and U.K. information commissioner John Edwards have released the findings of their joint investigation into the breach, which affected almost seven million people, including nearly 320,000 in Canada.

Military police’s resistance to civilian oversight has ‘worsened,’ watchdog says

17 juin 2025 à 16:08
The problem of refusal of civilian oversight stems from senior leadership, the Military Police Complaints Commission's report says.

The military police watchdog says resistance to civilian oversight in the Canadian Forces Provost Marshal’s office “worsened” last year.

The Military Police Complaints Commission released a report Tuesday accusing the provost’s office – which commands all military police in Canada – of “shutting down” complaints based on a “dubious” interpretation of the National Defence Act.

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