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SOCIATY
- Peguis First Nation launches $1B flood damages lawsuit against feds, Manitoba and 2 municipalities
- Former SNC-Lavalin executive sentenced to prison term in Montreal bridge bribery case
- Cuba apologizes to Canada for delivering wrong body to grieving Montreal family
- Poilievre visits convoy camp, claims Trudeau is lying about 'everything'
- Montreal's 'Big Owe' stadium costs keep piling up as Quebec OK's $40M budget for fire repairs
Ryan Connon, a hydrologist with the Environment and Climate Change, said that also means an elevated risk of high water at breakup this year for the Peel River.
Palestinian Canadians say their families are dying in Gaza before they’re able to escape to Canada. In January, the federal government announced a temporary resident visa program for Palestinians with extended family in Canada. But three months later, it has failed to bring even one relative to Canada.
The trial of a Carievale, Sask., man charged with abducting his daughter has ended with a jury finding him guilty.
Canada’s failure to provide First Nations with clean drinking water constitutes a flagrant human rights violation, according to the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to drinking water and sanitation.
Saskatoon police say they will search a specific part of the Saskatoon landfill as part of the investigation into the 2020 disappearance of Mackenzie Lee Trottier.
Canada’s premiers are criticizing the federal government over “limited and inconsistent outreach” with provinces ahead of tabling the 2024 budget.
A man set himself on fire on Friday outside the New York courthouse where Donald Trump's historic hush-money trial was taking place, witnesses said.
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault's department has been battling with banks for almost two years over how carbon rebates are labelled when they are deposited directly into bank accounts.
19.04.2024 Text message fraud cases are rising. Police chiefs say many people still aren't reporting them
The province's association of police chiefs says the number of cases of fraud reported doesn't show the whole picture and that scams are becoming more sophisticated.
Alberta has concluded its negotiations with major water licence holders and is now outlining what it calls the largest water-sharing agreements in Alberta’s 118-year history.
Health Canada says it will end a long-standing policy that blocked all men who have sex with men from donating to sperm banks.
Tesla is recalling 3,878 Cybertrucks to fix an accelerator pedal pad that could come loose and get lodged in the interior trim, the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said.
A golden retriever named Stella is now part of legal history in B.C. after an upper court decision based on new laws recognizing pets as family members, not just property.
A teenager who pleaded guilty to misleading police after 17-year-old Tyson MacDonald disappeared in eastern P.E.I. in mid-December, sparking a huge search before his body was found, has been sentenced to two more months in custody plus 30 days of community supervision.
19.04.2024 Has hockey hazing changed in 40 years? At least people now 'being held accountable,' says former pla
Todd Tisdale says he suffered abuse at the hands of his older hockey teammates when he was the same age as some of the boys in southwestern Manitoba who now allege they were sexually assaulted during trips to Winnipeg for hockey tournaments.
19.04.2024 Federal government withdraws offer of 17 Alberta family court judges when province won't meet terms
The Alberta government says it won’t revamp its court system to get federal funding for 17 judges dedicated to hearing family court cases.
19.04.2024 NATO members to meet as Ukraine calls for 25 Patriot systems to defend against Russian attacks
As NATO members meet with Ukraine amid an appeal from the embattled country for more air-defence systems, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has called on alliance members to send an additional six U.S.-made Patriot systems to Ukraine as it faces an increasing barrage of Russian aerial attacks.
19.04.2024 'We've been where they've been': People with lived addiction experience key in aiding Thunder Bay's
Thunder Bay remains among the Ontario communities hit hardest by the opioid crisis, with a toxicity mortality rate more than triple that of the provincial rate. As advocates push for more resources, front-line workers say having lived experience goes a long way in connecting with vulnerable people.
When Canadian middle-distance runner Marco Arop met his hero David Rudisha, it was everything he could have imagined. Now, hopes to follow in Rudisha's footsteps with an Olympic gold medal and world record this summer, beginning at Saturday's Diamond League.
19.04.2024 What's the big hairy deal about Sasquatch Sunset? The Bigfoot movie is dumb, gross and satisfying
Though it can be confusing and sometimes repulsive, this story about a family of sasquatch is actually a mostly competent, heartfelt and touching story about simple humanity. Mostly.
ENTERTAINMENT
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