Vue lecture

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

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

Today’s headlines

© ANDREJ IVANOV

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

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

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

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

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

© Nick Iwanyshyn

GJ van der Werken (left) and Hazel van der Werken hold a picture of their 16-year-old son Finlay in their Burlington home on August 18, 2025. Finlay died following a visit, in February 2024, to the emergency room at Trafalgar Memorial Hospital in Oakville. (Nick Iwanyshyn/The Globe and Mail)
  •  

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

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

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

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

  •  

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

Alberta will be the only province in Canada to charge the majority of its residents to get a COVID vaccine this fall.

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

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

  •  

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

Pedestrians walk past the Widener Library at Harvard University, in Cambridge, Mass., on April 15.

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

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

  •  

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

The commander of the army, Lieutenant-General Michael Wright, says he is 'deeply disturbed and profoundly disappointed' by the video.

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

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

  •  

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

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

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

  •  

Ontario plans to introduce changes to housing fund for municipalities

PC MPP Rob Flack told the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference that the province wants to 'extend and improve' the Building Faster Fund.

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

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

  •  

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

As home ownership becomes a far-fetched dream for many young Canadians, can renting for life be a viable option?

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

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

  •  

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

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

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

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

  •  

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

Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand says the city's partnership with Google has already yielded positive results.

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

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

  •  

Loblaw completes four-for-one stock split

Loblaw also said it wanted to improve the liquidity of the shares.

Loblaw Cos. Ltd. L-T says it has completed its plan for a four-for-one stock split of its common shares.

The grocery and drugstore retailer says its common shares began trading on a post-split basis as of market open on Tuesday.

  •  

Apple launches do-it-yourself repair program in Canada

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

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

  •  

Air Canada resumes flying after flight attendants’ strike ends

An Air Canada flight attendant walks through the Pierre-Elliott Trudeau International Airport yesterday in Montreal.

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

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

  •  

Morning Update: The Air Canada strike ends

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

Today’s headlines

© Sammy Kogan

Air Canada flight attendants picket at Pearson International Airport in Toronto yesterday.
  •  

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

Gasoline prices dropped by 16.1% on a yearly basis in July, following a 13.4% decline in June.

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

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

  •  

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre wins Alberta by-election

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre secured a seat in the House of Commons late Monday, winning a by-election in Alberta's Battle River-Crowfoot. The riding was left vacant shortly after April federal election, when Conservative Damien Kurek stepped down to allow Mr. Poilievre a chance to seek a seat.

  •  

Air Canada’s flight attendant strike disrupts travel for thousands of people, at home and abroad

A group of attendees from the Plast Canada National Jamboree prepare to board a bus at Easter Seals Camp Squamish in Brackendale, B.C., on Monday.

Near the Easter Seals Camp in Squamish, B.C., dozens of children from as far away as Toronto and Montreal passed the time on Monday kicking a soccer ball around a field and singing Ukrainian songs around a fire. These are some of the summer activities the camp’s staff were using to distract the young campers – a group that includes Ukrainian refugees – from the fact that they couldn’t return home.

About 150 scouts are stuck at the camp owing to the strike by flight attendants at Air Canada, which has grounded the airline’s flights and disrupted travel for an estimated 130,000 passengers a day.

  •  

Eight-year-old victim of stray bullet was a budding anti-violence activist, family spokesperson says

Jahvai Roy, who was killed by a stray bullet on Saturday, was part of a youth council and worked on an anti-bullying campaign.

Jahvai Roy, the eight-year-old boy who was struck and killed by a stray bullet while he was in his bed with his mother early Saturday morning in Toronto, was a budding activist against violence, a family spokesperson said in an interview.

The child, whose death has sparked outrage and calls for action on gun crime, was the youngest member of an organization devoted to stamping out violence in Canada’s largest city, Marcell Wilson said Monday.

  •  

War in Ukraine shaping Canada’s approach to Arctic sovereignty, Anand says

In a Monday call with reporters, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said NATO's gaze has to 'shift westward and north because of the changing geopolitical landscape.'

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said Monday the federal government is leaving “no stone unturned” to defend Canada’s North as changes in the global order in recent years are having direct implications for Canada’s Arctic sovereignty.

But one expert in international relations says Canada is being left out of crucial talks, with Prime Minister Mark Carney not among the leaders who gathered Monday at the White House for talks on the future of Ukraine.

  •  

Weather conditions complicating wildfire efforts in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick

The Kingston wildfire in eastern Newfoundland encompassed about 98 square kilometres on Monday – nearly the size of the city of Paris.

Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston says the weather is not co-operating in his province’s fight against a major wildfire burning out of control in the Annapolis Valley.

“Unfortunately, the weather this weekend was not in our favour. The dry conditions continued. The heat continued. The wind was blowing the wrong way. All terrible news when you’re facing a fire,” Houston told reporters on Monday.

  •  

Air Canada strike focuses on flight attendants’ unpaid work

The union for 10,000 striking Air Canada flight attendants said on Monday they won’t return to work even though the strike, now in its third day, has been declared illegal. The job action at Canada’s largest airline is affecting about 130,000 travelers a day at the peak of the summer travel season.

The battle between Air Canada and its flight attendants – which has boiled over into an illegal strike, stranding travellers and grounding planes – includes a fight over unpaid work that could set a precedent for other major carriers in Canada and around the world, experts say.

A key demand of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), which represents 10,400 flight attendants with Air Canada and its subsidiary Air Canada Rouge, is compensation for what is called “ground time.”

© DARRYL DYCK

Striking Air Canada flight attendants rally at Vancouver International Airport, in Richmond, B.C., on Monday, August 18, 2025. The Canadian Union of Public Employees says a strike by 10,000 flight attendants at Air Canada will continue, defying an order from the Canada Industrial Relations Board that it provide public notice by noon ET Monday that it had ended the strike. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
  •  

Ford focuses on domestic issues amid ‘unpredictable’ Trump

Ontario Premier Doug Ford met with Prime Minister Mark Carney in Ottawa as trade talks with the United States show few signs of progress. Ford said after the meeting that the pair talked about how to make Canada more competitive and said U.S. President Donald Trump’s behaviour is difficult to predict.

  •  

I Remember James Lovell

Capt. James A. Lovell, Jr., in December, 2013. Mr. Lovell was a commander on the Apollo 13 mission.

I once had the pleasure of interviewing Apollo 13 commander James Lovell when I was a reporter at The Globe and Mail.

It was in 2009 and I was writing a story to mark the 40th anniversary of Apollo 11, the first moon landing.

  •  

Anti-land-mine advocates urge European countries to remain in Ottawa Treaty

Shepherd Jalal Ma'rouf, 22, lost a limb to a land mine while herding sheep in farmland recently recaptured from regime forces at his home in Deir Sunbul village, Syria.

An expert who has disposed of bombs in some of the world’s most dangerous places says European governments pinning their security hopes on land mines are turning to an ineffective tool that will only spread misery and hunger.

“It’s an outdated technology that can quite quickly be rendered useless,” said Gary Toombs, a senior explosive disposal technician with the charity Humanity and Inclusion.

  •  

Federal officials expecting higher wildfire risks across Canada until end of September

Smoke from the Kingston, N.L., wildfire is visible along Route 74 on Friday.

Federal officials are warning the public that they expect an elevated risk of wildfires across much of the country from now until the end of September.

For August, increased fire danger is expected over much of Western Canada and the Northwest Territories, according to a technical briefing for media. Southern British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan are expected to have the highest risk given dry conditions and warmer-than-normal temperatures.

  •  

Indigenous leaders on lessons learned from Trans Mountain as Carney aims to fast-track major projects

Following years of delays and legal challenges, the expanded Trans Mountain pipeline, known as TMX, began operating last year.

Two former Indigenous leaders on both sides of the debate over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion say the federal government can’t ignore First Nations on future infrastructure projects it seeks to approve.

Their comments come as Prime Minister Mark Carney aims to fast-track major projects, such as pipelines and mines, through his government’s newly adopted “Building Canada Act.”

  •  

Air Canada flight attendant strike continues as picketers gather outside Toronto's Pearson Airport

Air Canada flight attendants represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees were on the picket lines outside Toronto's Pearson Airport on Monday as a battle against a federal return-to-work order continued. CUPE says it filed a challenge in Federal Court against an order by the Canada Industrial Relations Board that said more than 10,000 flight attendants had to return to work.

  •  

Globe Climate: The rise of weather content on social media

If you’re reading this on the web or someone forwarded this e-mail newsletter to you, you can sign up for Globe Climate and all Globe newsletters here.

Good afternoon, and welcome to Globe Climate, a newsletter about climate change, environment and resources in Canada.

A manatee was recently spotted off the coast of Massachusetts for the first time in almost a decade. The threatened species usually makes its habitat in warmer southern Gulf waters, so scientists want to monitor its condition to see if a rescue is necessary.

© DUANE COLE

Adam Skinner, founder of the Instant Weather app and the Ontario Storm Watch Facebook group (among others) poses for a portrait at Centennial Beach in Barrie, ON on July 29th 2025. Duane Cole/The Globe and Mail
  •  

‘No words’: Newfoundland officials assess fire damage, will notify more residents of lost homes

Kingston resident Eugene Howell films heavy rain  in Burnt Point, Newfoundland on Friday, where he and other residents have been evacuated due to wildfire.

At least 98 structures have been lost to devastating wildfires in Newfoundland, the Premier said Monday, but it will take time before some of the thousands forced to flee their homes have an update on the state of their properties.

Premier John Hogan flew over the Conception Bay area recently to survey the damage from the Kingston wildfire, but he said it’s hard to see what’s happening on the ground from a helicopter. Between the thick smoke and the scale of destruction, he said it’s difficult to pinpoint individual neighbourhoods from the sky

  •  

Morning Update: A new itinerary in the Air Canada strikes

Good morning. Air Canada says it will resume flights later today, despite the union representing flight attendants saying they have no intention of ending the strike. More on that below, plus concepts of a plan to make peace between Russia and Ukraine, and a generational shift in parenting. Let’s get to it.

Demonstrators hold placards and flags at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Ont., Sunday.
TOP STORY
  •  

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly to meet with Saab on visit to Sweden, source says

Mélanie Joly’s sit-down with Saab, the runner-up in Ottawa’s competition for a new plane to replace the aging CF-18 Hornet, follows an announcement from the government earlier this year that it would review the purchase of 88 F-35 Lightning fighter jets.

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly will meet this week in Sweden with the company behind a fighter jet that could replace some of the planes Canada has already committed to purchasing from the United States.

A government source with knowledge of the minister’s plans confirmed that she will meet with Saab along with other businesses in Sweden. The Globe and Mail is not naming the source, who is not authorized to publicly discuss details of the trip.

  •  

Evacuation alerts, state of emergency lifted near St. John’s as crews contain wildfire

A water bomber drops water onto a wildfire burning in the Paddy's Pond area just outside St. John's, N.L., on Aug. 13.

Newfoundland officials lifted evacuation alerts for the communities close to the capital of St. John’s on the weekend as cool weather helped crews contain one of several out-of-control wildfires in the province.

The wildfire at Paddy’s Pond, about 15 kilometres southwest of the city’s downtown core, had about 20,000 people on evacuation alert. The provincial government said in a news release on Sunday that crews were holding the fire “steady” and containing any hotspots.

  •  

Ontario real estate agents report fewer large cash transactions to FinTRAC

Ontario real estate agents reported just eight large cash transactions over the past year to the federal anti-money-laundering watchdog, according to new figures.

The multibillion-dollar real estate market is at high risk for money laundering, experts say.

However, the low number of reports – which is down substantially from previous years – could be due, at least in part, to brokerages implementing no-cash policies.

© JONATHAN HAYWARD

Canada's anti-money laundering agency is highlighting the key areas that lawyers could be aiding in the illicit movement of funds.Money seized by police during a bust is displayed In Surrey, B.C., on Dec. 7, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward
  •