Vue normale

Reçu aujourd’hui — 21 septembre 2025The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • U.S. right-wing commentator Chris Sanders offers to house B.C. ostriches facing cull order
    An ostrich farm in the B.C. Interior has got further support from right-wing American influencers when another online commentator added his voice, saying he would like to “help the ostriches out there in Canada” and relocate them to Texas.The Universal Ostrich Farm in Edgewood, B.C., has been calling on supporters to gather at the property to save about 400 ostriches at the farm after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency ordered the cull of the birds following an outbreak of avian flu last Decemb
     

U.S. right-wing commentator Chris Sanders offers to house B.C. ostriches facing cull order

21 septembre 2025 à 16:36
A sign calling for the protection of ostriches at the Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., in May.

An ostrich farm in the B.C. Interior has got further support from right-wing American influencers when another online commentator added his voice, saying he would like to “help the ostriches out there in Canada” and relocate them to Texas.

The Universal Ostrich Farm in Edgewood, B.C., has been calling on supporters to gather at the property to save about 400 ostriches at the farm after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency ordered the cull of the birds following an outbreak of avian flu last December.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Interest from U.S. doctors looking to work in Canada has spiked but few have made the move
    The passing thought of moving to Canada from the United States because of its political climate became an active idea for physician Libby Fleming when, in 2022, the constitutional right to abortion was overturned south of the border.She had a planned trip to Costa Rica later that summer but cancelled it, booking a plane ticket to Nova Scotia instead. The Atlantic province was a bucket-list destination for her. It was also actively recruiting foreign physicians to address a country-wide shortage
     

Interest from U.S. doctors looking to work in Canada has spiked but few have made the move

21 septembre 2025 à 04:00
Phil Martin, CEO of Canadian recruiting firm Physicians For You, has seen a flood of inquiries from U.S doctors about working north of the border. Mr. Martin is pictured at the Silver Star Mountain Resort near Vernon, B.C., on Sept. 15, 2025.

The passing thought of moving to Canada from the United States because of its political climate became an active idea for physician Libby Fleming when, in 2022, the constitutional right to abortion was overturned south of the border.

She had a planned trip to Costa Rica later that summer but cancelled it, booking a plane ticket to Nova Scotia instead. The Atlantic province was a bucket-list destination for her. It was also actively recruiting foreign physicians to address a country-wide shortage of doctors.

Reçu hier — 20 septembre 2025The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Smith defends Alberta’s possible use of notwithstanding clause on transgender issues
    Alberta’s premier says her government might invoke the notwithstanding clause to defend laws affecting transgender people because courts may take “years and years and years” to resolve the issue, and she wants to “protect kids.”Smith, who made the comments Saturday on her provincewide radio call-in program, was responding to news that an internal memo from her government, obtained by The Canadian Press, says it plans to apply the clause this fall to its three laws that police school pronouns, fe
     

Smith defends Alberta’s possible use of notwithstanding clause on transgender issues

20 septembre 2025 à 19:13
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith addresses the chamber of commerce in Calgary, Alta., Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025.Jeff McIntosh for The Globe and Mail

Alberta’s premier says her government might invoke the notwithstanding clause to defend laws affecting transgender people because courts may take “years and years and years” to resolve the issue, and she wants to “protect kids.”

Smith, who made the comments Saturday on her provincewide radio call-in program, was responding to news that an internal memo from her government, obtained by The Canadian Press, says it plans to apply the clause this fall to its three laws that police school pronouns, female sports and gender-affirming health care.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Protests across Canada challenge aspects of Carney’s agenda
    Canadians in several major cities demonstrated Saturday against elements of the Liberal government’s agenda, including Prime Minister Mark Carney’s support for new fossil fuel projects and expected public service cuts. Hundreds who took part in “Draw the Line” protests in Toronto marched from downtown to the provincial legislature building, carrying signs that included messages advocating full immigration status for all, ending trade with Israel, Indigenous rights and a revolution against billio
     

Protests across Canada challenge aspects of Carney’s agenda

20 septembre 2025 à 18:20
Protestors take part in a ‘'Draw the Line' climate change protest in Toronto, on Saturday.

Canadians in several major cities demonstrated Saturday against elements of the Liberal government’s agenda, including Prime Minister Mark Carney’s support for new fossil fuel projects and expected public service cuts.

Hundreds who took part in “Draw the Line” protests in Toronto marched from downtown to the provincial legislature building, carrying signs that included messages advocating full immigration status for all, ending trade with Israel, Indigenous rights and a revolution against billionaires.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Champagne says Canada could be key exporter of critical minerals, energy to Europe
    Canada’s finance minister says the country could be a “supplier of choice” for European markets looking to bolster energy security and defence capabilities. Following a meeting in Denmark with European Union finance ministers, François-Philippe Champagne said Saturday that Canadian critical mineral and energy exports could help European economies become more resilient while diversifying Canada’s trade relationships.
     

Champagne says Canada could be key exporter of critical minerals, energy to Europe

20 septembre 2025 à 15:54
The Finance minister said defence and security were a major theme at this week’s meeting, and pointed to key assets that Canada brings to the table. François-Philippe Champagne on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Sept. 17, 2025.

Canada’s finance minister says the country could be a “supplier of choice” for European markets looking to bolster energy security and defence capabilities.

Following a meeting in Denmark with European Union finance ministers, François-Philippe Champagne said Saturday that Canadian critical mineral and energy exports could help European economies become more resilient while diversifying Canada’s trade relationships.

Legal action urges requirement for lawyer presence in meetings between border officials and migrants

20 septembre 2025 à 09:12
Asylum seekers board a bus after crossing into Canada from the Champlain, New York in 2023. In Canada, asylum seekers do not have the right to counsel during border examinations.

A legal challenge is seeking to expand the right to a lawyer for immigrants and asylum seekers in “high-stakes” proceedings that impact their ability to enter or remain in Canada.

Currently, extensive portions of the immigration and refugee system do not afford people the right to be represented by a lawyer, says the proposed application for judicial review by the Canadian Immigration Lawyers Association, or CILA.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • How the measles made its way back to Canada
    By Nathan VanderKlippe The Globe and Mail Published September 20, 2025 No one saw much cause for alarm when the Pattanasat Witaya School in the deep south of Thailand first noticed last summer that children were getting sick, their chests flushing with bumpy red spots.
     

How the measles made its way back to Canada

20 septembre 2025 à 06:45

By Nathan VanderKlippe The Globe and Mail

No one saw much cause for alarm when the Pattanasat Witaya School in the deep south of Thailand first noticed last summer that children were getting sick, their chests flushing with bumpy red spots.

© Lauren DeCicca

Female students stand in the courtyard of Pattanasat Witaya School for the morning assembly in Narathiwat, Thailand on September 15, 2025. A measles outbreak that began at Pattanasat Witaya School in Narathiwat, in Thailand's deep south, has become one of the largest resurgences of the disease in North America in 25 years. Genetic evidence links cases in Canada, the U.S., and Mexico to the same strain traced back to Narathiwat, where lower vaccination rates left children vulnerable. The outbreak reflects ongoing challenges in the region, where many families in this predominantly Muslim area face poverty, limited access to healthcare, and cautious attitudes toward authorities when it comes to vaccines. Local village health clinics and school directors are responding by bringing vaccines to families by motorbike and organizing vaccination days at schools and clinics.

Lauren DeCicca/The Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Street disorder, homelessness key issues as B.C. civic leaders meet
    Homelessness, street chaos, mental-health problems and drug addiction are the top preoccupations for many municipal politicians set to gather in Victoria next week for their annual convention.Stretched to the limit of their resources, they say that although the provincial government has been stepping up with housing support in the past year, it’s still not enough.
     

Street disorder, homelessness key issues as B.C. civic leaders meet

20 septembre 2025 à 08:30
A person walks through an encampment towards a creek in Penticton, B.C., on Sept. 19.

Homelessness, street chaos, mental-health problems and drug addiction are the top preoccupations for many municipal politicians set to gather in Victoria next week for their annual convention.

Stretched to the limit of their resources, they say that although the provincial government has been stepping up with housing support in the past year, it’s still not enough.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Limberlost Place: Toronto’s timber tower aims high
    Sometimes change is hard to spot. Limberlost Place, a new 10-storey facility for George Brown College, lands quietly on Toronto’s eastern waterfront. Its serrated, copper-hued facades rise up and slim to a peak with just a hint of bravado.There’s no sign this is among the country’s most innovative buildings – not until you cross the threshold. The main lobby rises in a grand staircase framed by ten-tonne columns and nine-metre-long beams of black spruce.
     

Limberlost Place: Toronto’s timber tower aims high

20 septembre 2025 à 07:30
A rendering of Limberlost Place, a new 10-storey facility for George Brown College in Toronto. HO-Doublespace

Sometimes change is hard to spot. Limberlost Place, a new 10-storey facility for George Brown College, lands quietly on Toronto’s eastern waterfront. Its serrated, copper-hued facades rise up and slim to a peak with just a hint of bravado.

There’s no sign this is among the country’s most innovative buildings – not until you cross the threshold. The main lobby rises in a grand staircase framed by ten-tonne columns and nine-metre-long beams of black spruce.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Alberta’s plan to invoke notwithstanding clause on transgender laws draws criticism
    Alberta’s plan to use the notwithstanding clause of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to shield laws affecting transgender young people from court challenges has sparked criticism and intensified a national debate about governments’ wielding of such power.The laws, passed by the United Conservative Party government late last year, generally focus on people younger than 16 and ban transgender girls from female-only sports, prohibit gender-affirming health care and require parental consent at sch
     

Alberta’s plan to invoke notwithstanding clause on transgender laws draws criticism

20 septembre 2025 à 07:00
Alberta's government is preparing to invoke the notwithstanding clause on its three transgender laws, according to a leaked memo.

Alberta’s plan to use the notwithstanding clause of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to shield laws affecting transgender young people from court challenges has sparked criticism and intensified a national debate about governments’ wielding of such power.

The laws, passed by the United Conservative Party government late last year, generally focus on people younger than 16 and ban transgender girls from female-only sports, prohibit gender-affirming health care and require parental consent at school to change a name or pronouns.

Reçu avant avant-hierThe Globe and Mail
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Mountie commander in B.C. charged with multiple counts of assault
    An RCMP commander in B.C. has been charged with multiple counts of assault after an off-duty altercation this summer in a Vancouver suburb.The BC Prosecution Service said in a news release Friday that Assistant Commissioner David Teboul, who is the RCMP’s Pacific Region commander, is accused of assaulting two people and choking one of them.
     

Mountie commander in B.C. charged with multiple counts of assault

19 septembre 2025 à 21:24
Assistant Commissioner David Teboul speaks during an RCMP news conference in Surrey B.C., in April.

An RCMP commander in B.C. has been charged with multiple counts of assault after an off-duty altercation this summer in a Vancouver suburb.

The BC Prosecution Service said in a news release Friday that Assistant Commissioner David Teboul, who is the RCMP’s Pacific Region commander, is accused of assaulting two people and choking one of them.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • RCMP deploys cadaver dogs in search for missing Nova Scotia children
    Nova Scotia RCMP are deploying dogs that are specially trained to detect human remains in “areas of highest probability” in the search for Lilly and Jack Sullivan, children who mysteriously disappeared months ago from their home in the wooded community of Lansdowne, N.S. Staff Sergeant Stephen Pike from the Police Dog Service Training Centre in Innisfail, Alta., told reporters Friday that using cadaver dogs in an investigation means there is reason to believe human remains are present.
     

RCMP deploys cadaver dogs in search for missing Nova Scotia children

19 septembre 2025 à 20:54
Lansdowne Road near the home of missing kids Jack and Lilly Sullivan in Pictou County, N.S., in May. Police say they are now using cadaver dogs in the investigation.

Nova Scotia RCMP are deploying dogs that are specially trained to detect human remains in “areas of highest probability” in the search for Lilly and Jack Sullivan, children who mysteriously disappeared months ago from their home in the wooded community of Lansdowne, N.S.

Staff Sergeant Stephen Pike from the Police Dog Service Training Centre in Innisfail, Alta., told reporters Friday that using cadaver dogs in an investigation means there is reason to believe human remains are present.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Rap group Kneecap banned from Canada for allegedly supporting Hezbollah and Hamas
    The Carney government is barring the Belfast rap group Kneecap from entering Canada, saying the group has endorsed political violence and terrorism.Liberal MP Vince Gasparro, parliamentary secretary for combatting crime, made an announcement in a video posted Friday morning to social media. He said Kneecap has “publicly displayed support for terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah and Hamas” and said that goes beyond artistic expression.
     

Rap group Kneecap banned from Canada for allegedly supporting Hezbollah and Hamas

19 septembre 2025 à 19:41
Liam Og O Hannaidh, second right, a member of Kneecap, speaks to supporters as he departs Westminster Magistrates Court in London on Aug. 20. In May, British police charged Og O Hannaidh with a terrorism offence for allegedly waving a Hezbollah flag at a 2024 concert. The rapper denied the offence.

The Carney government is barring the Belfast rap group Kneecap from entering Canada, saying the group has endorsed political violence and terrorism.

Liberal MP Vince Gasparro, parliamentary secretary for combatting crime, made an announcement in a video posted Friday morning to social media. He said Kneecap has “publicly displayed support for terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah and Hamas” and said that goes beyond artistic expression.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Here’s how much you might get from the Loblaw bread price-fixing settlement
    More than one million people have already submitted claims for compensation under the $500-million settlement that Canada’s largest grocer, Loblaw Cos. Ltd. L-T, and its parent company, George Weston Ltd. WN-T, agreed to pay to settle their part in class-action lawsuits over a scheme to fix bread prices in Canada from 2001 to 2015.So, how much could eligible bread customers be paid? That depends on a few factors.
     

Here’s how much you might get from the Loblaw bread price-fixing settlement

19 septembre 2025 à 19:40
Pedestrians walk past a Loblaws in downtown Toronto in 2024. Loblaw and its parent company agreed to a $500-million settlement over a scheme to fix bread prices in Canada.

More than one million people have already submitted claims for compensation under the $500-million settlement that Canada’s largest grocer, Loblaw Cos. Ltd. L-T, and its parent company, George Weston Ltd. WN-T, agreed to pay to settle their part in class-action lawsuits over a scheme to fix bread prices in Canada from 2001 to 2015.

So, how much could eligible bread customers be paid? That depends on a few factors.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Anti-hate bill could mean 10 years in prison for obstructing access to places of worship
    A new federal anti-hate bill would make it a crime, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, to obstruct someone from accessing a place of worship or other sites where Jews, Muslims and other identifiable groups gather, including by blocking doors, driveways and roads. The Combatting Hate bill would also criminalize the promotion of hatred toward religious and ethnic groups by publicly displaying terror or hate symbols, including the swastika and insignia of the Nazi SS.
     

Anti-hate bill could mean 10 years in prison for obstructing access to places of worship

19 septembre 2025 à 15:55
Minister of Justice Sean Fraser on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Friday. He says a new federal anti-hate bill will not inhibit freedom of speech and has been designed so it does not affect peaceful protests.

A new federal anti-hate bill would make it a crime, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, to obstruct someone from accessing a place of worship or other sites where Jews, Muslims and other identifiable groups gather, including by blocking doors, driveways and roads.

The Combatting Hate bill would also criminalize the promotion of hatred toward religious and ethnic groups by publicly displaying terror or hate symbols, including the swastika and insignia of the Nazi SS.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Canada will withhold normalization of relations with Palestine until conditions met, Anand says
    Canada, which is preparing shortly to recognize Palestine as a sovereign state, will nevertheless withhold full normalization of relations until the territory’s leadership delivers on commitments they made, including releasing Israeli hostages, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said.Speaking to reporters Friday during a visit with Prime Minister Mark Carney to Mexico, Ms. Anand said she intended to speak the same day with Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas to drive home this point.
     

Canada will withhold normalization of relations with Palestine until conditions met, Anand says

19 septembre 2025 à 11:46
A tent camp abandoned by displaced Palestinians who dismantled their tents to flee Gaza City, on Friday.

Canada, which is preparing shortly to recognize Palestine as a sovereign state, will nevertheless withhold full normalization of relations until the territory’s leadership delivers on commitments they made, including releasing Israeli hostages, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said.

Speaking to reporters Friday during a visit with Prime Minister Mark Carney to Mexico, Ms. Anand said she intended to speak the same day with Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas to drive home this point.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Cenovus makes case for MEG Energy bid against rival Strathcona offer
    Cenovus Energy Inc. CVE-T says its cash-and-stock bid for MEG Energy Corp. MEG-T offers a premium valuation and certainty over a rival all-stock offer by Strathcona Resources Ltd. SCR-T“Cenovus brings scale, industry-leading experience, tier-1 assets, near-term growth, diversified revenues, a stronger balance sheet and clearly defined synergies,” Cenovus said in a presentation laying out its arguments for MEG shareholders to accept the friendly deal. Last week, Strathcona revised its hostile off
     

Cenovus makes case for MEG Energy bid against rival Strathcona offer

19 septembre 2025 à 07:59

Cenovus Energy Inc. CVE-T says its cash-and-stock bid for MEG Energy Corp. MEG-T offers a premium valuation and certainty over a rival all-stock offer by Strathcona Resources Ltd. SCR-T

“Cenovus brings scale, industry-leading experience, tier-1 assets, near-term growth, diversified revenues, a stronger balance sheet and clearly defined synergies,” Cenovus said in a presentation laying out its arguments for MEG shareholders to accept the friendly deal.

Last week, Strathcona revised its hostile offer to 0.80 of a share for each MEG share it does not already own. Its initial overture this spring was a combination of cash and stock. When the new bid was announced, it was worth $30.86 per share, up from $28.02.

© Victor R. Caivano

A worker stands on a steam-assisted gravity drainage pad at Cenovus' Sunrise oil facility northeast of Fort McMurray on Thursday, Aug. 31, 2023. Cenovus Energy Inc. reported a fourth-quarter of $743 million, down from $784 million a year earlier, as its revenue also edged lower. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Victor R. Caivano
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Business as usual: Canadian corporate travel to the U.S. stable amid plunge in leisure trips
    Canadians might be shunning leisurely visits to the U.S., but new data show corporate travel appears to be business as usual. Despite political tensions with U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, economic uncertainty stemming from tariffs and fears of treatment at the border, data from SAP Concur suggests Canadian business travel to the U.S. during the first half of the year has remained stable compared with last year’s levels, even if it means some companies are taking more precautions
     

Business as usual: Canadian corporate travel to the U.S. stable amid plunge in leisure trips

19 septembre 2025 à 07:05
In the first half of the year, 79 per cent of corporate travel from Canada was to the U.S.

Canadians might be shunning leisurely visits to the U.S., but new data show corporate travel appears to be business as usual. 

Despite political tensions with U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, economic uncertainty stemming from tariffs and fears of treatment at the border, data from SAP Concur suggests Canadian business travel to the U.S. during the first half of the year has remained stable compared with last year’s levels, even if it means some companies are taking more precautions at the border. 

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: Where the boys aren’t
    Good morning. The gender gap in higher education has persisted for many decades. Do universities need to do more to entice men back? More on that below, plus follows to our reporting on the notwithstanding clause and the BC Ferries deal. But first:Today’s headlinesA real estate executive, lobbyist and banker held an event for cabinet ministers and MPs, raising concerns over federal lobbying rules Prime Minister Mark Carney and Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum vowed closer ties Thursday again
     

Morning Update: Where the boys aren’t

19 septembre 2025 à 06:46

Good morning. The gender gap in higher education has persisted for many decades. Do universities need to do more to entice men back? More on that below, plus follows to our reporting on the notwithstanding clause and the BC Ferries deal. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Fred Lum

Students gather for their convocation ceremony at Toronto Metropolitan Unveristy at the Mattamy Centre on June 19, 2025. (Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail)
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Alberta to use notwithstanding clause on its three transgender laws, leaked memo shows
    Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has directed officials to invoke the Charter’s notwithstanding clause in amending three laws that affect transgender people, says a leaked government memo obtained by The Canadian Press.The internal document sent Sept. 10 by the Justice Department asks other departments to assemble information as per a directive from Ms. Smith’s office to invoke the clause.
     

Alberta to use notwithstanding clause on its three transgender laws, leaked memo shows

18 septembre 2025 à 20:34
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has previously said the notwithstanding clause was on the table as a 'last' resort regarding the government’s transgender health restrictions.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has directed officials to invoke the Charter’s notwithstanding clause in amending three laws that affect transgender people, says a leaked government memo obtained by The Canadian Press.

The internal document sent Sept. 10 by the Justice Department asks other departments to assemble information as per a directive from Ms. Smith’s office to invoke the clause.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ottawa defends Supreme Court submission proposing notwithstanding clause limits
    Ottawa is defending its proposal at the Supreme Court of Canada to put limits on governments’ use of the notwithstanding clause, with the federal Liberals arguing they are standing up for the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.In the House of Commons on Thursday, Minister of Canadian Identity Steven Guilbeault said, “We have the responsibility to defend one of the pillars of our democracy, the Charter.”
     

Ottawa defends Supreme Court submission proposing notwithstanding clause limits

18 septembre 2025 à 18:47
People rally against Quebec’s Bill 21, which prohibits some public sector workers from wearing religious symbols at work in Chelsea, Que., in Decemeber, 2021. Quebec's government has used the notwithstanding clause to shield its legislation from court challenges.

Ottawa is defending its proposal at the Supreme Court of Canada to put limits on governments’ use of the notwithstanding clause, with the federal Liberals arguing they are standing up for the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

In the House of Commons on Thursday, Minister of Canadian Identity Steven Guilbeault said, “We have the responsibility to defend one of the pillars of our democracy, the Charter.”

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • In Dufferin Grove, a big tent of compassion for homeless encampments begins to fray
    When officials took steps to remove an encampment in a Toronto park this week, sympathizers rushed to the park to defend it. One of them wore a sign on the back of his jacket made from strips of adhesive tape: “Love Your Neighbour.”To supporters of those who live in the cluster of tents near the southwest corner of Dufferin Grove Park, it is that simple. If we call ourselves a caring society, we must stick up for its most vulnerable members. Many of those who end up in encampments have mental o
     

In Dufferin Grove, a big tent of compassion for homeless encampments begins to fray

18 septembre 2025 à 18:36

When officials took steps to remove an encampment in a Toronto park this week, sympathizers rushed to the park to defend it. One of them wore a sign on the back of his jacket made from strips of adhesive tape: “Love Your Neighbour.”

To supporters of those who live in the cluster of tents near the southwest corner of Dufferin Grove Park, it is that simple. If we call ourselves a caring society, we must stick up for its most vulnerable members. Many of those who end up in encampments have mental or physical conditions that have landed them where they are. Unless we find a humane way of accommodating them, we should leave them be.

© Duane Cole

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Thousands of public servants seek exemptions to Ontario’s return-to-office mandate
    Thousands of public servants have requested exemptions to the Ontario government’s upcoming order to return to the office full-time, as unions say they are set to meet with the province’s top bureaucrat later this month to plead their case for flexible work arrangements.Dave Bulmer, president of Ontario’s professional employees union AMAPCEO – which has 17,000 members – said there have been about 4,500 requests for remote or hybrid work arrangements in the last three weeks.
     

Thousands of public servants seek exemptions to Ontario’s return-to-office mandate

18 septembre 2025 à 17:55
Protestors at the All Out For Remote Work Rally on Sept. 18, 2025. Several hundred provincial civil servants took part in the rally in front of Whitney Block, the building across from Queen’s Park in Toronto.

Thousands of public servants have requested exemptions to the Ontario government’s upcoming order to return to the office full-time, as unions say they are set to meet with the province’s top bureaucrat later this month to plead their case for flexible work arrangements.

Dave Bulmer, president of Ontario’s professional employees union AMAPCEO – which has 17,000 members – said there have been about 4,500 requests for remote or hybrid work arrangements in the last three weeks.

Canada Post sending new offers to union in bid to move talks forward

18 septembre 2025 à 16:32

Canada Post is sending new offers to the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) in an effort to move negotiations forward, the postal service said Thursday.

The new terms will allow the two sides to return to the bargaining table next week, with work already under way to make that happen, the Crown corporation said.

© Adrian Wyld

A Canada Post vehicle with a frequent stops sticker is seen at a facility in Ottawa, Friday, Sept. 12, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Holocaust survivor Fania Fainer’s memento became a symbol of resilience and friendship
    When Sandy Fainer was growing up in Toronto in the 1950s, she loved reading Nancy Drew mystery books and channelled her admiration for the girl detective by conducting her own investigations in the family’s suburban bungalow. “I was snooping through my mother’s underwear and found it,” she recalled. It was what her mother, Fania Fainer, called in Yiddish “the little book,” a tiny heart-shaped autograph book covered in purple fabric, with a letter F stitched onto the cover.
     

Holocaust survivor Fania Fainer’s memento became a symbol of resilience and friendship

18 septembre 2025 à 16:28
Fania Fainer.

When Sandy Fainer was growing up in Toronto in the 1950s, she loved reading Nancy Drew mystery books and channelled her admiration for the girl detective by conducting her own investigations in the family’s suburban bungalow.

“I was snooping through my mother’s underwear and found it,” she recalled. It was what her mother, Fania Fainer, called in Yiddish “the little book,” a tiny heart-shaped autograph book covered in purple fabric, with a letter F stitched onto the cover.

Former justice minister David Lametti to replace Bob Rae as UN ambassador

18 septembre 2025 à 15:37
Former justice minister David Lametti in Ottawa in 2023. Prime Minister Mark Carney is appointing Lametti as Canada’s next ambassador to the United Nations.

Prime Minister Mark Carney is appointing his principal secretary David Lametti as Canada’s next ambassador to the United Nations.

The Prime Minister’s Office announced Thursday that Lametti, a former federal justice minister, will replace former Liberal leader Bob Rae, 77, who has held the role since 2020.

What survivors learned from Canada’s worst wildfires

18 septembre 2025 à 12:40

When fires burned near towns or villages in the past, they were stamped out, and fast. “Redshirts,” as Canada’s wildland firefighters are still known – although they wear banana yellow now – reliably came to the rescue.

Those days are over.

© DARREN HULL

Residents watch the McDougall Creek wildfire in West Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada, on August 17, 2023, from Kelowna. Evacuation orders were put in place for areas near Kelowna, as the fire threatened the city of around 150,000. Canada is experiencing a record-setting wildfire season, with official estimates of over 13.7 million hectares (33.9 million acres) already scorched. Four people have died so far. (Photo by Darren HULL / AFP) (Photo by DARREN HULL/AFP via Getty Images)
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • RCMP recover $56-million from cryptocurrency platform called TradeOgre
    The RCMP say they have taken down a cryptocurrency platform that was being used mainly for criminal transactions, in what the force claims is the largest crypto bust in Canadian history. In a statement Thursday, the force’s federal policing wing in Quebec said it had recovered $56-million from a platform known as TradeOgre, “the first time that a cryptocurrency exchange platform has been dismantled by Canadian law enforcement.”
     

RCMP recover $56-million from cryptocurrency platform called TradeOgre

18 septembre 2025 à 12:32
The RCMP said their money-laundering team began an investigation last year after a tip from European authorities

The RCMP say they have taken down a cryptocurrency platform that was being used mainly for criminal transactions, in what the force claims is the largest crypto bust in Canadian history.

In a statement Thursday, the force’s federal policing wing in Quebec said it had recovered $56-million from a platform known as TradeOgre, “the first time that a cryptocurrency exchange platform has been dismantled by Canadian law enforcement.”

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Number of asylum seekers turned back by Canada grows despite U.S. deportation threat
    Canada’s government is sending more asylum-seekers hoping to file claims in Canada back to the U.S. under a bilateral pact, even as the U.S. says it may deport them to third countries. Some of the people Canada is turning back should be eligible to file refugee claims in Canada, lawyers say, under exemptions to the Safe Third Country Agreement. The agreement broadly requires asylum-seekers at the Canada-U.S. border to be sent back to the first of the two countries they entered but allows some pe
     

Number of asylum seekers turned back by Canada grows despite U.S. deportation threat

18 septembre 2025 à 12:10
Asylum seekers cross into Canada from the U.S. border near a checkpoint on Roxham Road near Hemmingford, Que., in 2022. Canada turned back 3,282 people under the Safe Third Country Agreement in the first eight months of 2025.

Canada’s government is sending more asylum-seekers hoping to file claims in Canada back to the U.S. under a bilateral pact, even as the U.S. says it may deport them to third countries.

Some of the people Canada is turning back should be eligible to file refugee claims in Canada, lawyers say, under exemptions to the Safe Third Country Agreement. The agreement broadly requires asylum-seekers at the Canada-U.S. border to be sent back to the first of the two countries they entered but allows some people - for example those with close family in Canada or stateless persons - to file claims.

Premier Smith’s Alberta Next panel met with praise, pushed to act in Grande Prairie

18 septembre 2025 à 11:02
The Alberta Next panel will host a final in-person town hall in Calgary at the end of the month.

Premier Danielle Smith’s Alberta Next panel, aimed at wrenching more political control from Ottawa, was spurred to take action in Grande Prairie Wednesday.

The panel is expected to eventually pick six ideas that could become potential referendum questions, and the naysayers were again outnumbered in a packed house of more than 500 attendees.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Progressive groups plan protests to challenge parts of Carney agenda
    Canada-wide protests are planned this weekend, a coalition of progressive civil society groups say, in what organizers call an emerging “common front” to elements of the new Liberal government’s agenda.Prime Minister Mark Carney’s support for new fossil-fuel projects, expected public service cuts, expanded military support and new border measures are some of the concerns motivating Saturday’s co-ordinated day of action, organizers of the Draw The Line protests say.
     

Progressive groups plan protests to challenge parts of Carney agenda

18 septembre 2025 à 10:49
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s support for new fossil fuel projects and expected public service cuts are among some of the concerns motivating Saturday’s protests.

Canada-wide protests are planned this weekend, a coalition of progressive civil society groups say, in what organizers call an emerging “common front” to elements of the new Liberal government’s agenda.

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s support for new fossil-fuel projects, expected public service cuts, expanded military support and new border measures are some of the concerns motivating Saturday’s co-ordinated day of action, organizers of the Draw The Line protests say.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Sarah McLachlan considers if Lilith Fair could ever be revived
    Vancouver-based musician Sarah McLachlan says working on the new documentary Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery kicked up old emotions tied to her memories of the influential all-female tour. But she says if it were ever to be revived for another iteration it would have to be done by a younger artists. The film is streaming on CBC Gem and premieres on Hulu in the United States on Sept. 21.
     

Sarah McLachlan considers if Lilith Fair could ever be revived

18 septembre 2025 à 09:17
Vancouver-based musician Sarah McLachlan says working on the new documentary Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery kicked up old emotions tied to her memories of the influential all-female tour. But she says if it were ever to be revived for another iteration it would have to be done by a younger artists. The film is streaming on CBC Gem and premieres on Hulu in the United States on Sept. 21.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Telus partners with Samsung on software platform to drive AI-powered networks
    Telus Corp. T-T is partnering with Samsung to deploy what it calls Canada’s first commercial radio access network intelligent controller, a software platform that will help eventually deliver networks fully powered by artificial intelligence.Samsung said its technology will enable automation, enhanced energy efficiency and optimized performance across Telus’s wireless network.
     

Telus partners with Samsung on software platform to drive AI-powered networks

18 septembre 2025 à 08:48
Samsung Canada's head of networks says the partnership will allow Telus to run a more robust, high-performing network, reduce energy consumption and automate certain tasks.

Telus Corp. T-T is partnering with Samsung to deploy what it calls Canada’s first commercial radio access network intelligent controller, a software platform that will help eventually deliver networks fully powered by artificial intelligence.

Samsung said its technology will enable automation, enhanced energy efficiency and optimized performance across Telus’s wireless network.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Patron of the arts Dr. Janusz Dukszta was famous for his Toronto soirées
    A psychiatrist, politician and patron of the arts, Janusz Dukszta was a man of many faces – literally. His two-bedroom apartment, on the edge of Toronto’s exclusive Rosedale neighbourhood, was filled with paintings, many of them portraits of himself, sometimes alone, sometimes with friends and family. They were hung everywhere, higgledy-piggledy, on walls, suspended from the ceiling, or mounted three-deep over packed bookshelves.It was not narcissism that prompted Dr. Dukszta to commission such
     

Patron of the arts Dr. Janusz Dukszta was famous for his Toronto soirées

18 septembre 2025 à 08:36

A psychiatrist, politician and patron of the arts, Janusz Dukszta was a man of many faces – literally. His two-bedroom apartment, on the edge of Toronto’s exclusive Rosedale neighbourhood, was filled with paintings, many of them portraits of himself, sometimes alone, sometimes with friends and family. They were hung everywhere, higgledy-piggledy, on walls, suspended from the ceiling, or mounted three-deep over packed bookshelves.

Toronto psychiatrist Janusz Dukszta threw parties at his home where guests who might not otherwise meet would gather.

It was not narcissism that prompted Dr. Dukszta to commission such portraits, but rather a desire to support artists who were starting their careers, and a deep-seated curiosity about the process of transformation and transcendence. How would others see him? Serious and natty in one of his many Savile Row-tailored suits, or posing in the nude, it did not matter. As he told this newspaper in 2010, “I am much more interesting than a vase or a mandolin.”

© Vincenzo Pietropaolo

Toronto psychiatrist Janusz Dukszta
credit: Vincenzo Pietropaolo
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Morning Update: Plant-based meat has lost its sizzle
    Good morning. Meatballs built IKEA’s food empire but its plant balls failed to make a dent in the MAGA era – more on that below, along with Jimmy Kimmel’s indefinite suspension and Donald Trump’s state visit. But first:Today’s headlinesThe Bank of Canada and U.S. Federal Reserve resume rate cuts amid job market slowdownsThe BC Ferries deal was raised with Transport Canada weeks before Freeland’s criticism, e-mails showCanada and Mexico will sign a strategic partnership during Carney’s visitGaza
     

Morning Update: Plant-based meat has lost its sizzle

18 septembre 2025 à 06:59

Good morning. Meatballs built IKEA’s food empire but its plant balls failed to make a dent in the MAGA era – more on that below, along with Jimmy Kimmel’s indefinite suspension and Donald Trump’s state visit. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Kyle Berger

Comedian and actress, Sarah Hillier at the IKEA store in Etobicoke on September 12, 2025.
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • CRTC begins hearing on Cancon requirements for music streamers
    The federal broadcast regulator begins a hearing today to look at which Canadian content obligations should apply to music streamers like Spotify.Streaming services argue their current efforts to promote Canadian culture – and the royalties they pay – are good enough. Radio broadcasters, meanwhile, say their sector is in serious decline and they want the CRTC to take a lighter regulatory touch for traditional players.
     

CRTC begins hearing on Cancon requirements for music streamers

18 septembre 2025 à 06:56
Music streamers Spotify, Apple and Amazon, as well as radio broadcasters Rogers, Bell and Corus, filed submissions ahead of the CRTC hearing.

The federal broadcast regulator begins a hearing today to look at which Canadian content obligations should apply to music streamers like Spotify.

Streaming services argue their current efforts to promote Canadian culture – and the royalties they pay – are good enough. Radio broadcasters, meanwhile, say their sector is in serious decline and they want the CRTC to take a lighter regulatory touch for traditional players.

Alberta schools are overcrowded as province struggles to keep up with population growth

18 septembre 2025 à 04:15
Kira Schulz and her daughter Skyelar Schmidt walk through the grounds of École Edwards Elementary School in Airdrie, Alta., on July 4. Ms. Schulz is concerned about overcrowding in schools after learning that her daughter Skyelar's school will convert its library and music room into classrooms to accommodate rising enrolment.

Kira Schulz is standing in the field behind her daughter’s elementary school in the Alberta city of Airdrie and trying to make sense of space.

If the school adds modular classrooms to accommodate new students – the local school division has asked the government for several – where will the children play, Ms. Schulz wonders.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. creating new police unit to tackle extortion of South Asian businesspeople
    British Columbia is creating a provincial police unit to crack down on the wide-scale extortion of South Asian businesspeople, including a wave of shootings in recent months that echoes similar violence seen across Alberta and Ontario.Assistant Commissioner John Brewer, with the British Columbia RCMP, and provincial Solicitor-General Nina Krieger announced the new 40-member team at a news conference Wednesday flanked by police leaders from around Metro Vancouver. They said this unit will lead ne
     

B.C. creating new police unit to tackle extortion of South Asian businesspeople

17 septembre 2025 à 20:31
The windows of Kap’s Cafe in Surrey, B.C., which is owned by Indian celebrity Kapil Sharma, riddled with bullet holes on Aug. 7. Police are investigating at least 27 such cases of extortion that involve shootings of businesses, homes and vehicles.

British Columbia is creating a provincial police unit to crack down on the wide-scale extortion of South Asian businesspeople, including a wave of shootings in recent months that echoes similar violence seen across Alberta and Ontario.

Assistant Commissioner John Brewer, with the British Columbia RCMP, and provincial Solicitor-General Nina Krieger announced the new 40-member team at a news conference Wednesday flanked by police leaders from around Metro Vancouver. They said this unit will lead new investigations as well as help local RCMP detachments and other municipal forces with their open cases.

Quebec to scale back free COVID-19 shots this fall after Alberta limits eligibility

17 septembre 2025 à 18:24
It will cost between $150 and $180 to receive a shot if an individual is not eligible for free COVID-19 vaccination, according to AQPP.

Quebec has become the second Canadian province after Alberta that will no longer provide free vaccination against COVID-19 for all its population.

Instead, only certain categories of people will still receive the shot at no cost: seniors, health care workers, residents of remote regions and medically vulnerable patients.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Toronto police arrested man accused of smuggling Indian family to U.S. out of fear he would flee Canada
    A Minnesota court requested the arrest of a Canadian resident this month so he can stand trial in the U.S. after he allegedly helped with the 2022 cross-border smuggling of an Indian family of four who froze to death in Manitoba. U.S. authorities were concerned that Fenil Patel, 37, who also goes by the name Fenilkumar Kantilal Patel, would flee Canada – possibly to India – according to new court documents filed in Ontario and Minnesota, verified by The Globe and Mail.
     

Toronto police arrested man accused of smuggling Indian family to U.S. out of fear he would flee Canada

17 septembre 2025 à 17:55
Jagdish Patel, 39; his wife Vaishaliben Patel, 37; their 11-year-old daughter, Vihangi; and their three-year-old son, Dharmik in a handout photo.

A Minnesota court requested the arrest of a Canadian resident this month so he can stand trial in the U.S. after he allegedly helped with the 2022 cross-border smuggling of an Indian family of four who froze to death in Manitoba.

U.S. authorities were concerned that Fenil Patel, 37, who also goes by the name Fenilkumar Kantilal Patel, would flee Canada – possibly to India – according to new court documents filed in Ontario and Minnesota, verified by The Globe and Mail.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Ottawa calls on Supreme Court to clarify the law around use of Charter’s notwithstanding clause
    Ottawa is calling on the Supreme Court of Canada to clarify the law around governments’ use of the Charter’s notwithstanding clause, arguing that courts should have a bigger role in such cases than previously granted by legal precedent.If the Supreme Court accepts Ottawa’s arguments, it will mark the first substantive limits on governments’ use of the notwithstanding clause to override the rights of Canadians since the Charter of Rights and Freedoms was enacted in 1982.
     

Ottawa calls on Supreme Court to clarify the law around use of Charter’s notwithstanding clause

17 septembre 2025 à 16:07
The federal government detailed its arguments in a legal filing at the Supreme Court on Wednesday as part of the landmark case on Quebec’s secularism law.

Ottawa is calling on the Supreme Court of Canada to clarify the law around governments’ use of the Charter’s notwithstanding clause, arguing that courts should have a bigger role in such cases than previously granted by legal precedent.

If the Supreme Court accepts Ottawa’s arguments, it will mark the first substantive limits on governments’ use of the notwithstanding clause to override the rights of Canadians since the Charter of Rights and Freedoms was enacted in 1982.

B.C. Premier David Eby travels to Ottawa to lobby Carney for major projects funding

17 septembre 2025 à 12:51
Prime Minister Mark Carney with British Columbia Premier David Eby, April 7. Eby is leading a mission to Ottawa that will last until Thursday.

British Columbia Premier David Eby is off to Ottawa to lobby the federal government for more investment in major infrastructure projects in the province.

The Premier’s Office says in a statement that Eby is leading a mission to Ottawa that will last until Thursday, and the itinerary includes a meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney on priorities for B.C.’s economic growth.

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