Vue lecture

Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal completed without incident despite pro-Palestinian protests

Brandon McNulty crosses the finish line ahead of Tadej Pogacar, both racing for UAE Emirates XRG, during the Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal on Sunday.

The Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal was completed without incident on Sunday despite hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters lining the route amidst a wave of demonstrations against Israeli sports teams worldwide.

The protesters in Montreal were objecting to the Israel-Premier Tech team, an outfit founded by the Israeli-Canadian billionaire Sylvan Adams, participating in the city’s flagship cycling race.

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Four passengers dead, pilot injured in northern Manitoba plane crash, RCMP say

Two men and two women from a remote Manitoba First Nation died Saturday when the bush plane they were in crashed, leaving the pilot and sole survivor with serious injuries.

RCMP say their detachment in Island lake, Man., got a report on Saturday evening that a plane had crashed approximately 40 kilometres south of St. Theresa Point First Nation, near its destination of Makepeace Lake.

Sgt. Paul Manaigre said police were informed of the crash by an iPhone satellite emergency crash notification service, which he said was able to pinpoint the location for police.

© Adrian Wyld

The flag of Manitoba flies on Monday, Nov. 1, 2021 in Ottawa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld<
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Montreal’s Le Miaousée wants to become Canada’s first permanent cat museum

Aqeela Nahani poses for a photograph with signage for the Montreal Cat Museum: Le Miaousee, in Montreal. Nahani recently left a job in the corporate world to focus on launching the cat museum.

For about 100 years, the presbytery on De Castelnau street in Montreal’s Villeray borough was home to Catholics who lived and prayed there. Now, the cats are taking over.

From paintings, historic photographs, book covers and shiny stuffed animal eyes, they stare down at visitors from the walls of Le Miaousée, which bills itself as the first cat museum in both Montreal and Canada.

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Bonnie Crombie to resign after Ontario Liberals narrowly voted against leadership contest

Ontario Liberal Bonnie Crombie waves onstage after winning 57 per cent of the votes in a leadership review vote at the Ontario Liberal Party annual general meeting on Sunday.

Bonnie Crombie has asked the Ontario Liberal Party to launch a leadership vote and says she will resign as leader once her successor is chosen, after a disappointing review of her time at the helm.

Ms. Crombie’s decision to step down came abruptly early Sunday evening, hours after Ontario Liberal members reluctantly agreed to keep her as leader and after she said she intended to stay on. It means the party will hold its third leadership contest since 2018, when the party lost government and was relegated to third place in the legislature.

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Briefing to former Manitoba cabinet on landfill search for murder victims not being released

Manitoba’s former Progressive Conservative government had rejected calls to search the Prairie Green landfill, a private operation north of Winnipeg, for the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran.

A report that could shed more light on why Manitoba’s former Progressive Conservative government rejected calls to search a landfill for the remains of two murder victims is being withheld under the province’s freedom of information law.

Records obtained by The Canadian Press show senior bureaucrats assembled a presentation for cabinet ministers on a potential search in the weeks before the government decided not to proceed with the idea in 2023.

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Multiple people arrested at opposing immigration protests at Christie Pits

Police and Fire officers separate an anti-immigration protest from a counter-protest in Toronto's Christie Pits Park, on Saturday.

Ten people were arrested when a demonstration calling for deportations and an end to mass immigration was met by a counterdemonstration in a Toronto park known as the scene of a historic antisemitic riot.

Hundreds of people supporting immigration gathered at Toronto’s Christie Pits Park on Saturday afternoon in response to a demonstration encouraging mass deportations and nationalism called Canada First.

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Carney allots $13-billion to build affordable housing under Build Canada Homes

Prime Minister Mark Carney has launched a new federal housing agency that he says will partner with the private sector to build non-market homes for Canadians struggling with affordability.

Mr. Carney announced on Sunday that the government is providing Build Canada Homes with $13-billion in initial capital.

© Sean Kilpatrick

A construction worker shingles the roof of a new home in a housing development in Ottawa on Monday, July 6, 2015. Statistics Canada is set to release its August labour force survey this morning. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
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B.C. ostrich farm says it will ask Supreme Court to stop the cull of 400 birds

A spokesperson for Universal Ostrich Farms says the farm will ask the Supreme Court of Canada to stop the culling of 400 ostriches hit by avian flu, but it is not clear yet whether Canada’s highest court will hear the case. 

Katie Pasitney said the farm remains hopeful that it will get another chance to make its case, after Federal Court of Appeal Justice Gerald Heckman ruled Friday the cull of the animals must be allowed to proceed.

“So we would be asking the Supreme Court to hear all of the evidence,” she said. “The health of the animals is imperative to what we’re fighting for.”

© AARON HEMENS

Ostriches eat their feed at the Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., on Saturday, May 17, 2025. Hundreds of supporters flocked to the farm over the Victoria Day long weekend to protest the Canadian Food Inspection Agency’s order to cull 400 ostriches. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Aaron Hemens
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Catherine McKenna details harassment endured as environment minister in new memoir

Catherine McKenna was the environment minister and minister of infrastructure while the Liberal MP for Ottawa Centre from 2015 to 2021.

Former environment minister Catherine McKenna says federal security agencies initially refused to offer her protection – and wouldn’t even show her the risk assessment they’d completed – as she faced a rising tide of threats and harassment online and in person.

McKenna was the Liberal MP for Ottawa Centre from 2015 to 2021 and served in cabinet the entire time, first as environment minister and later as the minister of infrastructure.

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Oscar-nominated actor broke down stereotypes and blazed a trail for Indigenous performers

Graham Greene attends the unveiling of his Canada’s Walk of Fame 2021 commemorative plaque for Arts & Entertainment at Beanfield Centre, Exhibition Place in December, 2022, in Toronto.

Remembered by colleagues and friends as generous, humble, mischievous and a great cook, Graham Greene was, above all, a versatile actor whose career spanned half a century and broke down racial stereotypes of Indigenous people as violent aggressors or victims.

Probably best known for his role as Kicking Bird, a Sioux tribal leader in Kevin Costner’s 1990 epic film Dances with Wolves, Mr. Greene was a trailblazer in presenting Indigenous characters with human complexity and depth.

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A phone line during the pandemic that morphed into a clinic providing culturally safe care in downtown Toronto

Clarissa Larson attends a prenatal visit at Call Auntie with midwife and program lead Cheryllee Bourgeois. The clinic provides a range of services, from getting a lump checked to accessing diabetes medication.

In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, many Canadians were desperate for information about the virus. Fear was running high. Answers were in short supply.

There was also heightened concern, shared by Canada’s then-chief public health officer, that Indigenous people were at greater risk for worse illness, including death, because of factors including health inequities and higher rates of underlying conditions, as well as challenges accessing medical care.

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Why Doug Ford is wrong about speed cameras

Vandals removed a speed camera from a post on Parkside Drive next to High Park in Toronto in May.

Doug Ford is a tough-on-crime guy. He backs our men and women in blue to the hilt. He rants about judges letting crooks off too easily. He believes in enforcing the law.

Except, it seems, the law against destroying public property. When vandals destroyed 16 Toronto speed cameras this week, he didn’t seem especially bothered. While Mayor Olivia Chow denounced the acts of “lawlessness” and police said they were striving to catch the perpetrators, Ontario’s Premier delivered a diatribe against the cameras instead.

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U of T professor placed on leave after online post about Charlie Kirk shooting

The University of Toronto’s media-relations office said the institution acted on its own immediately once it learned of the faculty member’s comments.

A University of Toronto professor whose social-media post after the assassination of American political activist Charlie Kirk was criticized by Ontario’s Minister of Colleges and Universities is now on leave, according to the university.

Ruth Marshall, an associate professor in religious studies and politics, has been placed on administrative leave, the University of Toronto’s faculty association confirmed Friday.

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Northern Manitoba wildfire evacuees’ return delayed because of mould, rotting food in homes

A helicopter crew works on a wildfire as another is shown flying by during a helicopter tour in Northern Manitoba near Flin Flon, on June 12.

More than two months after her entire Northern Manitoba community was forced to flee from a raging wildfire this summer, Beverly Baker has no idea when she will be allowed to go back home.

The flames near Leaf Rapids, a scenic town with a population of 350, have been under control since last month. Evacuees were being prepared to return this week. But on Friday, residents were told they will have to wait even more – at least until October – because their homes are no longer habitable.

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B.C. ostrich farm’s bid for stay of cull order rejected by Federal Court of Appeal

Ostriches eat their feed at the Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., on May 17.

A Federal Court of Appeal judge says the cull of about 400 ostriches at a British Columbia farm hit by avian flu must be allowed to proceed, in a ruling that dismisses the farm’s bid for a stay of execution.

Justice Gerald Heckman says in Friday’s ruling that Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., also failed to establish any “serious or arguable issue” that needs to be addressed by the Supreme Court of Canada.

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Protests outside, silence inside as Canada faces Israel during Davis Cup tennis tie

Demonstrators block a street while protesting Team Israel's participation in the Davis Cup tennis match against Team Canada in Halifax on Friday.

It was a surreal scene in Halifax on Friday as Canada kicked off its Davis Cup tennis tie against Israel behind closed doors at Scotiabank Centre in Halifax.

Save for athletes and staff of the two teams and the necessary officials, who were either on the court or courtside, the venue that normally holds more than 10,500 spectators was completely empty.

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An all-time classic, The Game continues to stand apart, just like its author

Former Montreal Canadien Ken Dryden takes part in the team's centennial celebrations in 2009.

Imagine Neil Armstrong had been a poet, and came back from the Apollo 11 mission with just the right words to capture our place in the cosmos.

That’s what it meant, for Canada, to have Ken Dryden on the 1970s Montreal Canadiens. Under normal circumstances we would never know what it was like to play for the greatest hockey team of all time; that particular experience of touching the heavens would remain locked away in the relatively unpoetic minds of Steve Shutt and Jacques Lemaire.

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G7 seeks ways to boost financial support for Ukraine after Russian drone incursion into Poland

Canada's Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, centre, speaks with colleagues at the G7 Finance Ministers meeting in Banff, Alta.in May, 2025.

Group of Seven finance ministers agreed Friday to look for ways to increase financial support for Ukraine after an incursion into Poland by Russian drones earlier this week.

A virtual meeting chaired by Canadian Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne Friday discussed ways to boost pressure on Moscow to end its war on Ukraine.

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Globe readers remember Ken Dryden, who loved Canada, family and hockey

Ken Dryden holds a special place in the hearts of many Canadians. Revered for his outsized talent on the ice – as well as for his post-NHL accomplishments in politics, law and writing – he inspired countless people along the way.

After his death at the age of 78 following a battle with cancer, many Globe and Mail readers took the time to send in their memories, personal stories that reveal the sense of awe they felt upon meeting him. Here is a selection of what they shared. Submissions have been edited for clarity and length.

© Dave Chan

March 10, 2011: MP and former hockey player Ken Dryden photograph at a local rink in Ottawa. DAVE CHAN for The Globe and Mail
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Canada Post union to stop delivering flyers as labour dispute stretches on

Jan Simpson, the president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, says a ban on overtime work at the postal service will end on Sept. 15. Instead, postal workers will stop delivering commercial flyers as it seeks to keep pressure on the Crown corporation in the long-running contract negotiations. A Canada Post spokeswoman said the postal service was disappointed with the union's decision and that the gap between the two sides remains 'substantial.'

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Ottawa summoned Russian ambassador over drone incursion into Poland, Anand says

Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand and Minister of National Defence David McGuinty in Edmonton on Wednesday.

Global Affairs Canada summoned Russian ambassador Oleg Stepanov over the incursion of Russian drones into Poland this week, as Ottawa looks to help a new effort by the NATO military alliance reinforce its eastern flank.

The summoning occurred hours after Poland reported multiple Russian drones had entered Polish territory between Tuesday and Wednesday. NATO allies shot down some of the devices.

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Police blitz in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside helped curb crime, but lasting change needed, locals say

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim said that the city will use the lessons from Task Force Barrage for a new model of policing in the Downtown Eastside.

Vancouver city officials say a $5-million policing crackdown in the Downtown Eastside has produced a sharp drop in crime and calls for service, a claim met with praise and skepticism from those in the embattled neighbourhood.

Earlier this week, Mayor Ken Sim, Chief Constable Steve Rai and Fire Chief Karen Fry said the six-month enforcement blitz launched in February drove down robberies by 44 per cent, serious assaults by 23 per cent, violent crime by 18 per cent and structure fires by 30 per cent year-over-year during the enforcement period. Firefighter-attended overdose calls fell 36 per cent across the Downtown Eastside, Yaletown and Strathcona.

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G7 finance ministers meet virtually to discuss increasing pressure on Russia

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, centre, speaks with colleagues at the G7 Finance Ministers meeting in Banff, Alta., in May.

Canada hosted a virtual meeting of G7 finance ministers today to discuss further measures to increase the pressure on Russia.

John Fragos, press secretary for the Minister of Finance and National Revenue, says the group also talked about ways to limit Russia’s “war machinery.”

© Jeff McIntosh

Canada's Finance Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne, centre, speaks with colleagues at the G7 Finance Ministers meeting in Banff, Alta., on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
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Restaurateurs nervous as B.C. job action escalates to liquor warehouses

Members of the British Columbia General Employees' Union outside an ICBC driver licensing office in Surrey, B.C., on Monday.

The head of a British Columbia restaurant industry association says businesses are in a state of “nervousness and anxiety” over possible liquor distribution disruptions as public service labour strife expands to several warehouses.

The BC General Employees’ Union announced Friday that it was escalating job action by starting an overtime ban at several Liquor Distribution Branch warehouse locations.

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Pressure builds for in-person intervenors at Supreme Court Quebec secularism law hearing

The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa, August, 2025.

A former federal justice minister has asked the Supreme Court of Canada to allow more lawyers to appear in person for a landmark Charter case involving Quebec’s secularism law.

Allan Rock, who was justice minister from 1993 to 1997, invoked reasons of “public confidence” and the “appearance of democracy” in a letter dated Sept. 10. He is counsel for the Samara Centre for Democracy, a Toronto-based charity that promotes civic engagement. It is one of a record 38 intervenors in the Quebec secularism case.

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Publisher Zdena Salivarova kept Czech and Slovak literature alive through her Canadian publishing house

Zdena Salivarova

Writer and publisher Zdena Salivarova, who died of respiratory complications in Toronto’s Hennick Bridgepoint Hospital on Aug. 25 at the age of 91, became an iconic figure in Czech and Slovak literature and a legend among her countrymen and countrywomen.

At a time when her homeland was under Soviet occupation, she published, from modest offices in her adopted city of Toronto, over 200 original titles by authors who had been banned or driven into exile. The company she founded in 1971 with the support of her husband, novelist Josef Skvorecky, was not only a lifeline to its writers and a beacon of hope to its readers, it was an act of defiance, one of the many that helped, in the end, to undermine the regime.

© Henri Pribik

Zdena Skvorecka, credit: Henri Pribik, courtesy of the family
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Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie confident ahead of leadership review

Bonnie Crombie took the helm of the Ontario Liberals in 2023.

Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie says she is feeling confident as she heads into a leadership review at the party’s annual meeting this weekend. But she doesn’t want to talk about how much of the vote she’ll need to show that she has the broad support of her third-place party.

Ms. Crombie, who took the reins of the party in 2023 but failed to win her own race in this year’s election, will be facing more than 2,000 delegates, who will be asked whether they want to hold a leadership contest within the next year.

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Humpback whale freed from fishing gear after three-day rescue off Vancouver Island

Tutu, a juvenile humpback whale, is freed off Vancouver Island on Friday in a still from a video provided by Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

A juvenile humpback whale nicknamed Tutu is swimming freely again after a multiday mission to disentangle it from more than 150 metres of fishing gear off Vancouver Island.

Paul Cottrell, a marine mammal co-ordinator with the federal Fisheries Department, says the rescue team received several reports from the public about the 4½-year-old whale towing a fishing buoy near Texada Island in the northern Salish Sea on Sept. 4.

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Quebec pulls 1,200 Lion electric school buses off roads after one caught fire

Electric school buses at the Lion Electric assembly plant in Saint-Jerome, Que., in 2023.

Schools across Quebec have been forced to cancel bus service after the government pulled all of the roughly 1,200 Lion LEV-T electric buses in the province off the roads.

The provincial government said it took the precautionary measure after a Lion electric school bus caught fire in Montreal earlier this week. Several children and a driver were inside the bus when it caught fire, but no one was injured.

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What the research says about Tylenol, pregnancy and autism

A major study published last year found no association between acetaminophen, an ingredient in Tylenol, and autism or ADHD when controlling for familial factors.

Tylenol has long been the drug of choice for safely treating pain and fever during pregnancy. But it appears the Make America Healthy Again movement may be about to call this common wisdom into question.

Last week, sources told the Wall Street Journal that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to announce Tylenol use in pregnancy as a potential cause of autism – a disorder that’s long been a fixation for the U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary.

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Some government jobs will be cut as Ottawa adopts AI, chief data officer says

Government office buildings in Gatineau, Que., in 2022. Ottawa’s chief data officer says the introduction of AI to federal government will lead to some job cuts in the public service.

Ottawa’s chief data officer says he thinks the introduction of artificial intelligence to federal government operations will lead to “some” job cuts in the public service.

In a recent interview with The Canadian Press, Stephen Burt said he thinks the impacts are going to vary widely and will be job-specific, with different outcomes in different areas.

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Morning Update: Forever chemicals in the water

Good morning. After learning that their drinking water has been contaminated, residents in communities across Canada are still waiting for answers about how badly their health may have been jeopardized and what the federal government will do to fix it. More on that below, plus leaps in quantum tech and a rise in youth revolt. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Greg Locke

Maureen Marshall at home in Torbay, Newfoundland February 17, 2025. Photo by Greg Locke / Globe and Mail
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Canada Post union says it will lift overtime ban but stop delivering flyers

A Canada Post employee in White Rock, B.C., in July.

The union representing Canadian postal workers is moving to end a ban on overtime work and will instead have members stop delivering commercial flyers.

Canadian Union of Postal Workers president Jan Simpson urged Canada Post on Friday to return to bargaining as she announced the commercial flyer ban would come into effect Monday at 12:01 a.m. local time.

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‘Forever chemicals’ in tap water leave these communities in a toxic limbo

On a drizzly November afternoon last year, Judy Moss burst from her house in Torbay, N.L., sprinted to her red barn and dumped the water she’d drawn for her miniature ponies. Then she hurried up Kelly’s Lane and started knocking on doors.

“Don’t drink the water,” she warned her neighbours.

© Greg Locke

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AIDS Committee of Toronto to close in 2026

An AIDS ribbon hangs from a door in the offices of the AIDS Committee of Toronto.

Canada’s largest and oldest HIV service organization, AIDS Committee of Toronto (ACT), will close in March after 42 years supporting those living with HIV.

Founded in 1983, the groundbreaking organization offered front-line services, peer and mental health support, and helmed advocacy and fundraising efforts to end HIV stigma and advance health care policy in Canada.

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

Police officers work at the scene after a vehicle drove into a crowd during a Lapu-Lapu Day festival in April.

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

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

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Support staff at Ontario’s public colleges go on strike

College support staff picket outside George Brown College's St. James Campus in Toronto on Thursday.

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

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

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Haida Nation’s Aboriginal title secured through court order

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

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

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

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

SickKids hospital in Toronto in February, 2023.

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

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

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Carney commits to pharmacare agreements with provinces, territories without deals

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Ottawa is determined to reach agreements with outstanding provinces 'as quickly and as equitably as possible.'

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

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

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Ottawa ties stalled carbon-capture project to new pipeline

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

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

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

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

The main pack cycles by Place Royale near the Chateau Frontenac at the 2023 Grand Prix Cycliste de Quebec, in Quebec City.

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

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

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

Michael McLeod, left, Cal Foote, Dillon Dubé, Alex Formenton and Carter Hart were found not guilty of sexual assault in July.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Beth Bilson, who died on Aug. 13 at 79, chaired a federal task force whose recommendations inspired the Pay Equity Act of 2018.

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

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

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