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Romana Didulo, self-proclaimed Queen of Canada, arrested by RCMP

Romana Didulo, the self-declared 'Queen of Canada' and a leading Canadian QAnon figure, speaks on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, in February, 2022.

The self-styled Queen of Canada and 15 of her followers were arrested Wednesday after a firearms complaint prompted a predawn raid on their rural Saskatchewan compound.

Dozens of RCMP officers, some wearing SWAT gear, executed a warrant at 4:30 a.m. on a decommissioned schoolhouse in Richmound, a hamlet of just over a hundred people near Alberta, RCMP Inspector Ashley St. Germaine told a press conference later in the day.

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Western Canada shrouded in smoke as hot, dry weather fuels new wildfires

Smoke from wildfires drift over Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday.

Residents across Western Canada were urged to limit outdoor exposure on Wednesday as hot, dry weather stoked new and growing wildfires, blanketing dozens of communities with smoke from the West Coast to Saskatchewan.

About 3.5 million people in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley are advised to seek time in spaces with air filtration or air conditioning to avoid breathing fine particulate matter.

© Jimmy Jeong

Vlad Charvat and spouse Helena Charvat enjoy the last days of summer while smoke from wildfires drift over the city in Vancouver, B.C., on September 03, 2025. Jimmy Jeong/The Globe and Mail.
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RCMP arrest 16 at Saskatchewan conspiracy compound, including Romana Didulo

RCMP say 16 people, including self-proclaimed 'Queen of Canada' Romana Didulo, were arrested Sept. 3 in Richmound, Sask., at a former school occupied by followers of the 'Kingdom of Canada' group. Insp. Ashley St. Germaine says Mounties had learned that a person was in possession of a firearm at the property and an operations team was organized to execute a search warrant.

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Alberta chiefs say AFN has no mandate to decide fate of infrastructure projects

From left, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak, Chief Abram Benedict, and Chief Francis Verreault-Paul listen as delegates speak at the AFN's national assembly in Winnipeg on Wednesday.

Several Indigenous leaders from Alberta are warning the Assembly of First Nations not to step on individual First Nations’ authority, treaty rights and jurisdiction to determine the outcome of national infrastructure projects.

In a letter dated Tuesday and addressed to chiefs attending the AFN’s national assembly, the Alberta chiefs say resolutions proposed by some of their colleagues present “significant risks” to their jurisdiction.

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Alberta law society disbars Calgary lawyers who had Manitoba judge followed

John Carpay, president of the Calgary-based Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, in 2012. Mr. Carpay and another lawyer have been disbarred by the Law Society of Alberta.

The Law Society of Alberta has disbarred lawyer John Carpay, a conservative legal activist and president of the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms who in 2021 helped arrange the undercover surveillance of a top Manitoba judge.

The Calgary-based Justice Centre helps fund an array of legal challenges across Canada, including this year’s Federal Court case against then-prime-minister Justin Trudeau’s prorogation of Parliament. The Justice Centre lost and an appeal is underway at the Federal Court of Appeal.

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Saskatchewan residents who refused to flee wildfire fought flames to save their homes and cabins

Lac La Ronge, Sask., during the Pisew wildfire. Some residents of nearby Wadin Bay, who disobeyed orders to evacuate, fled to the water several times over multiple days as they fought the fire.

Terry Holowach knew the fire was coming when dense smoke eclipsed the sunlight. It was an ominous sign of what was to come: Residents would soon battle the Pisew wildfire to save their homes, defying an order to evacuate.

Earlier that day in June, the regional government agency directed residents of Wadin Bay – a small cottage community on Lac La Ronge, around 400 kilometres north of Saskatoon – to leave the area because of the out-of-control wildfire. It was one among dozens of fires burning in the province, forcing evacuations and prompting officials to declare a state of emergency the week before.

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Ontario tow-truck drivers ousted by province’s rules ask Ford for appeal process

Longtime tow-truck drivers André Thibault, left, and Sean Ramsay both lost their tow-truck certificates under new rules imposed by the Ontario government.

André Thibault thought he had left his past behind him. After he was caught carrying cocaine back in 1999, Mr. Thibault pleaded guilty to drug trafficking and spent 16 months in jail.

After his release, he stayed out of trouble. He drove tow trucks for the next two decades, finding refuge in an industry that gave him a stable life, allowing him to support his son and aging mother, who live with him in his Ottawa home.

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Impresario Harvey Glatt brought fabled musical artists to Ottawa

Ottawa music impresario Harvey Glatt, who died on Aug. 20, at age 91, played an oversized role in turning the country’s sleepy capital city from a cultural desert into a musically vibrant place.

As a retailer, concert promoter, artist manager, label owner, record distributor and patron of the arts, Harvey Glatt enlivened Ottawa's music scene for decades.

The son of scrap metal merchants, he was a music fanatic who began reading music trade journals as a 13-year-old. In 1957, he co-founded the Treble Clef record store, a retail outlet devoted solely to music at a time when vinyl was typically sold in department stores or distributed by mail through record clubs. The initial shop grew to a chain of 15 locations, earning Mr. Glatt the unofficial title of Sam The Record Man of the Ottawa Valley.

Arnold Gosewich (left) and Harvey Glatt. Credit: Bill King Photography
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Homicide investigation launched after house fire in Richmond Hill leaves 11-year-old girl dead

Initial investigation indicates the fire at the house in Richmond Hill was an arson, York Region police say.

A suspected arson at a home in Richmond Hill, Ont., that left an 11-year-old girl dead and four others critically injured is now being investigated as a homicide, York Region police said Wednesday.

Police said they were called to the scene on Skywood Drive just before 3 a.m. on Monday after a report of a house fire. Four unconscious residents were found inside the home while a fifth was found outside, and all of them were taken to hospital in critical condition.

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Metro Vancouver issues air-quality warning as wildfire smoke envelopes large parts of B.C.

The heavy haze hanging over the Vancouver area is expected to last for a few days and people have been advised to avoid or limit outdoor activity.

The Metro Vancouver Regional District has issued an air-quality warning for the Lower Mainland as a dense shroud of wildfire smoke descends over large parts of British Columbia.

Environment Canada has expanded air-quality advisories to more than 30 locations including the Vancouver area and Fraser Valley, as well as most of the B.C. Interior and the northeast.

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Government workers’ strike continues in B.C., hobbling Surrey’s driver licensing services

B.C. public sector workers have been dealing with decades of wage stagnation and a spike in the cost of living.

The range of British Columbia public service staff that could potentially be impacted by job action that began this week is wide, from scientists and social workers to liquor and cannabis distribution and retail staff.

But a labour expert says the BC General Employees’ Union’s actions have so far been limited to allow for an “escalating strategy” to force the government’s hand in negotiations.

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Ontario doctor fined for breaching privacy rules to offer circumcision services

Dr. Omar Afandi used his electronic health record access privileges at Windsor Regional Hospital to look for parents of newborn boys to solicit their business, Ontario’s information and privacy commissioner wrote in a report.

Ontario’s information and privacy commissioner has ordered a Windsor doctor and his private clinic to pay thousands of dollars in fines for privacy breaches in a case she calls a “cautionary tale” for other health startups.

Commissioner Patricia Kosseim wrote in a recent decision that a doctor with privileges at Windsor Regional Hospital used his electronic health record access there to look for parents of newborn boys and contact them to offer circumcisions at a clinic he partly owns.

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Man killed in Vaughan home invasion remembered as a ‘hero’

Vaughan mayor Steven Del Duca, left, speaks during a press conference on Wednesday with Naeem Farooqi, the brother of Abdul Aleem Farooqi, who was killed in a home invasion on Aug. 31.

The brother of a man who was fatally shot in his Vaughan, Ont., home during a home invasion described him as “a hero who died defending his family,” as he and the city’s mayor called for changes to Canada’s criminal justice system.

Police said Wednesday that Abdul Aleem Farooqi, 46, died from gunshot wounds after at least three male suspects broke into his home around 1 a.m. on Aug. 31.

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The U.S. is no longer a safe harbour for domestic violence refugees, but crossing into Canada is often impossible

Claudia Ensuncho Martinez’s right forearm is tattooed with a feather, its spine formed by the white scar stretching from her wrist to elbow.

On a sweltering day last August, Ms. Ensuncho Martinez arrived at the Canadian border, fleeing the man who inflicted that scar. After the journey from Colombia by boat, by foot, by bus and by train, the Rainbow Bridge was a portal to a new life.

© Sara Stathas

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Quebec wants judge to declare Northvolt branch insolvent

The Quebec government says Northvolt owes more than $260-million on a government loan and wants to withdraw nearly $200-million from frozen accounts to pay down the debt.

The Quebec government wants a judge to declare insolvent the North American branch of Swedish battery manufacturer Northvolt, as the province attempts to recoup some of its losses on a failed electric-vehicle battery project.

Documents filed in Quebec Superior Court on Tuesday say that Northvolt Batteries North America owes more than $260 million on a government loan that allowed the company to buy land near Montreal to build a $7-billion battery plant.

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First Nations leaders meet in Winnipeg to discuss major projects legislation

AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak has said the assembly this week would hear diverse opinions on the bill.

The countrywide push for major projects won’t happen without First Nations at the table, the Assembly of First Nations warned government and industry Wednesday, as its annual summer gathering began in Winnipeg.

“We can all agree on this: that progress cannot come at the cost of our rights, our treaties or our responsibilities to the land,” Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand Chief Kyra Wilson told those gathered in Winnipeg.

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Heat warnings persist across B.C. with temperatures reaching 40 degrees

Lytton, B.C., reached temperatures of 40 degrees, breaking its 2022 record.

Heat warnings and air-quality advisories are persisting in parts of British Columbia after daily high temperature records fell in a dozen communities, and the mercury rose to 40 degrees in the Fraser Canyon.

Environment Canada says Lytton, B.C., reached that mark on Tuesday, breaking a record of 39.6 degrees set in 2022.

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IndyCar race moving from Toronto to Markham, Ont., in 2026

The Ontario Honda Dealers Indy race in Toronto in July, 2024. The Grand Prix of Toronto is one of the oldest races on the IndyCar schedule.

IndyCar is coming to Markham, Ont.

The open-wheel auto racing series announced on Wednesday that it’s moving the Grand Prix of Toronto from Exhibition Place in the city’s downtown core to its northeastern suburb and that it will now be held later in the summer. Neil Lumsden, Ontario’s Minister of Sport, said he was happy that the multiyear deal will keep the race – now dubbed the Ontario Honda Dealers Indy at Markham – in the province.

© Arlyn McAdorey

Third place finisher Scott Dixon (9) of New Zealand, left, trails second place finisher Kyle Kirkwood (27) of the United States and winner Colton Herta (26) of the United States during the 2024 Ontario Honda Dealers Indy, in Toronto on Sunday, July 21, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Arlyn McAdorey
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Poilievre calls for Liberals to end temporary foreign worker program

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre at a press conference in Mississauga, Ont., on Wednesday. He argues that a jobs crisis among young people has been caused partly by corporations hiring foreigners instead of Canadian citizens.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on the Liberals to scrap the temporary foreign worker program and stop issuing visas under the program, arguing it has caused an employment crisis among young Canadians.

“The Liberals have to answer why is it that they’re shutting our own youth out of jobs and replacing them with low-wage, temporary foreign workers from poor countries who are ultimately being exploited,” Poilievre told a news conference Wednesday morning in Mississauga, Ont.

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TMU president Mohamed Lachemi on historic milestone of opening a new medical school

TMU president Mohamed Lachemi.

Toronto Metropolitan University’s new medical school officially opens its Brampton campus Wednesday. The school is trumpeting the opening as the first new medical school in the Greater Toronto Area in more than a century. It will be located about an hour’s drive northwest of the downtown Toronto campus in the former Brampton Civic Centre, which has been renovated to include classrooms, labs, offices and student spaces for the incoming class of 94 MD students.

TMU president Mohamed Lachemi spoke to The Globe and Mail about the significance of the school’s opening and other issues affecting the university sector.

© Christopher Katsarov

TMU President Mohamed Lachemi poses for a photograph at the Student Learning Centre in Toronto, Friday April 19, 2024. (Christopher Katsarov/The Globe and Mail)
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Morning Update: The Supreme Court holds out on remote work

Good morning. Companies want employees back at their desks, but one powerful Canadian institution has yet to fully return in-person – more on that below, along with the Taliban’s appeal for international aid and the new editor of American Vogue. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Adrian Wyld

The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa.
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At the Supreme Court of Canada, judges and lawyers disagree over what works better: arguments in person, or on Zoom

Since 2022, the Supreme Court's Ottawa courtroom has been reserved for lawyers representing the primary parties in a case. Intervenors must make their case to the judges via video call.

Lawyers for attorneys-general across the country want to appear in person before the justices of the Supreme Court of Canada when they make their arguments at a coming landmark hearing on Quebec’s secularism law and the Charter’s notwithstanding clause.

One problem, however: That’s not allowed.

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Legault was unaware of cost overruns at Quebec auto insurer until public scandal, he says

Quebec Premier François Legault told a public inquiry on Tuesday that he knew nothing about the $500-million cost overrun tied to digitization efforts at the province’s auto-insurance board until it became public knowledge in February.

Mr. Legault’s appearance before the Gallant commission into mismanagement and alleged cover-ups at the Société de l’assurance automobile du Québec was the culmination of months of speculation about how much the Premier knew, and when, about a scandal that has already claimed one of his cabinet ministers.

The province’s embattled leader, facing plummeting poll numbers as he approaches seven years in office, said that details of mounting problems and ballooning costs within the SAAQclic project should have reached his desk, but didn’t.

© Christopher Katsarov

Quebec Premier François Legault is photographed on a screen while appearing before the Gallant Commission, in Montreal on Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov
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At Yummy House in Toronto’s East End, back to school means back to business

Par :Ann Hui
Susan Duong serves students from Riverdale Collegiate that are grabbing lunch at Yummy House on Tuesday. The small Chinese restaurant across the street from the school is a popular spot for cheap lunch and bubble tea.

Susan Duong was standing behind the counter, stacking containers of chicken fried rice, hot off the wok and ready to eat.

She looked out the window at Riverdale Collegiate – the large high school directly across the street from her little takeout restaurant – and checked her watch. 11:36 a.m. The lunch bell was about to ring. It was time to open the doors. Yummy House was once again open for business.

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B.C.’s civil service union launches strike, with about 2,600 workers joining picket lines

The government of B.C. has established a general bargaining mandate across the public sector that offers wage hikes of 3.5 per cent spread over two years. BCGEU employees are seeking an 8.25 per cent raise over the same time period.

British Columbia’s core public service union has launched strike action, hoping to force a labour-friendly but debt-swamped government to more than double its wage offer in contract talks.

A segment of the B.C. General Employees’ Union’s 34,000 public sector workers walked off the job on Tuesday, and union president Paul Finch promised to escalate job action if the provincial government doesn’t return to the bargaining table with a better offer.

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Anand says she has ‘utmost confidence’ in Canadian ICC judge sanctioned by Trump administration

Canadian judge Kimberly Prost was among several senior ICC officials sanctioned by the Trump administration in August.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says she spoke today with the Canadian judge facing American sanctions for her work at an international tribunal, without condemning Washington’s decision.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio last month announced sanctions on International Criminal Court judges including Kimberly Prost for her work on a case involving American troops in Afghanistan.

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Veteran goalkeeper Erin McLeod calls time on club career in wake of season-ending injury

Erin McLeod, the first-ever signing by Halifax Tides, has endured a string of injuries over her lengthy club and international career, with five knee surgeries and one shoulder operation.

Erin McLeod, the oldest player in the Northern Super League, has announced her retirement in the wake of a season-ending foot injury.

The 42-year-old goalkeeper, the first-ever signing by Halifax Tides FC, has been sidelined since June. She played in six games for Halifax (3-11-3) during the NSL’s inaugural campaign.

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Newfoundland town declares emergency, closes businesses as water runs out

Conception Bay South has already spent much of August under a state of emergency and evacuation alerts because of wildfires.

A mayor near Newfoundland and Labrador’s capital city said his town of about 27,000 people would likely run out of water by Tuesday evening.

Darrin Bent said officials noticed earlier in the day that the water flow was decreasing to Conception Bay South, on the outskirts of St. John’s. They soon found a main pipe was leaking and the town’s water reserves were running out, he said.

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Some evacuation orders lifted in Nova Scotia, three weeks after Long Lake wildfire began

The Long Lake wildfire broke out last month near the sparsely populated rural area which is part of Nova Scotia’s Annapolis County.

Three weeks after the Long Lake wildfire in western Nova Scotia forced evacuations and eventually destroyed 20 homes, fire officials say some evacuation orders will be lifted.

They say that of the almost 500 orders imposed on individual residences since Aug. 13, residents living at 360 civic addresses will be allowed to return home on Wednesday.

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Alberta pauses ban on school library books with sexually explicit content

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has acknowledged the Edmonton school division was too heavy handed in crafting its list of banned books.

The Alberta government is pausing its controversial order for the removal of books deemed sexually explicit from school libraries, a retreat that Premier Danielle Smith vowed would be short-lived as the province continues to push policies around sexuality and gender into the classroom.

As of this month, new amendments to the Education Act dictate that ministerial approval is required before learning resources related to gender identity, sexual orientation or human sexuality are presented in schools.

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How has AI affected students and classrooms? Submit your questions to our experts

How are teachers dealing with AI in their classrooms? Which tools are students using? Is there a place for artificial intelligence in education?

As generative artificial intelligence tools become more readily accessible than ever, parents and educators are struggling to navigate its use in classrooms as the new school year begins.

There’s the worry that secondary and postsecondary students could use AI to cheat on assignments, potentially generating false sources or entirely made-up essays. But others say AI is a helpful tool to enhance learning, if used properly.

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Alberta pauses ban on school library books with explicit content

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has admitted the Edmonton school division was too heavy handed in crafting its list of banned books.

Alberta’s education minister is directing school boards to pause a government order to remove books with explicit sexual content from libraries.

Demetrios Nicolaides, in an e-mail to school divisions and officials Tuesday, said they should pause any development or distribution of lists of books that are to be removed, “including removing materials containing depictions of explicit sexual content.”

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Quebec to end funding for planned Northvolt battery factory

Quebec's Economy Minister Christine Fréchette has insisted the failure of the project does not spell the end for Quebec’s battery industry.

The Quebec government says it is ending funding for Northvolt’s planned battery plant in the province’s Montérégie region.

Economy Minister Christine Fréchette says the government made its decision after the company failed to produce an acceptable plan for Quebeckers.

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Doug Ford pours out bottle of Crown Royal, reacting to closure of Ontario plant

Ontario Premier Doug Ford empties a Crown Royal bottle of whisky at a press conference in Kitchener, Ont., on Tuesday.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is reacting angrily to news of the closure of a plant that bottles Crown Royal, pouring out a bottle at a press conference and encouraging others to dump the whisky as well.

Spirits maker Diageo announced last week that it will cease operations at its bottling facility in Amherstburg, Ont., early next year, as it shifts some bottling volume to the United States.

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B.C. public service staff launch picket lines in three cities after strike deadline expires

The British Columbia General Employees' Union, which represents approximately 33,000 public-service workers across B.C., issued a strike notice last Friday.

Members of the union representing thousands of British Columbia public service workers set up picket lines Tuesday in what the union says is a “last resort” in its labour fight with the province.

Members of the BC General Employees’ Union set up picket lines at provincial government offices in Victoria, Surrey and Prince George as well as in front of the Royal BC Museum.

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Globe Climate: The keepers of the coast

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.

Hope you all had a good long weekend! We are sending this Tuesday edition to take a closer look at Vancouver Island, where First Nations guardians steward a changing landscape under threat.

© James MacDonald

Ryan Teremy, the Ahousaht Guardian Program Director, stands on the top of Lone Cone, on Mears Island, on Tuesday, May 6, 2025. Photographer: James MacDonald
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Enbridge gives go ahead for two natural gas transmission projects

The company says it expects to spend US$300-million on the Algonquin Reliable Affordable Resilient Enhancement project.

Enbridge Inc. ENB-T says it is going ahead with a pair of natural gas transmission projects.

The company says it expects to spend US$300-million on the Algonquin Reliable Affordable Resilient Enhancement project which will increase deliveries from the Algonquin Gas Transmission pipeline to existing local distribution company customers in the U.S. Northeast.

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Majority of Canadian youth experienced bullying in past year, report says

A Raising Canada report says more than 70 per cent of Canadian youth between the ages of 12 and 17 experienced bullying in the last year.

A new report released as students across the country return to school finds bullying, poverty and mental illness are on the rise among Canadian youth and urges action from policy makers to improve the lives of children.

The Raising Canada report says more than 70 per cent of Canadian youth between the ages of 12 and 17 experienced bullying in the last year, and more than 13 per cent of children were living in poverty by the end of 2024.

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Quebec turns down federal funding for addressing systemic racism in justice system

The Court of Appeals in Montreal. The Quebec government say it doesn't agree with the approach of a federal program meant to address systemic racism in the criminal justice system.

The Quebec government has turned down federal funding aimed at combatting systemic racism in the criminal justice system, saying it doesn’t agree with the program’s approach.

The federal government first offered $6.64-million in funding to provinces and territories in 2021 to improve fairness in the courts. Spread out over five years, the money was aimed at addressing the overrepresentation of Black people in the criminal justice system by promoting the use of race and cultural assessments before sentencing.

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