There's little danger of Winnipeg losing a National Hockey League franchise a second time, experts in the business of professional sports say in the wake of comments about low ticket sales from Jets co-owner Mark Chipman.
Documents obtained by CBC News reveal which colleges and universities account for the greatest share Canada’s steep growth in international students, and which have the most to lose from a new cap on permits to study in this country.
A 74-year-old retired nurse with mental illness who has been jailed and hospitalized dozens of times in the past six years was released from custody on Friday, and her brother — and the assistant Crown — worry it's just a matter of time before she's arrested again.
More than four months after a ransomware attack shut down the Toronto Public Library's computer systems, staff are finally putting a million stranded books back on the shelves.
The cameras on the PWHL broadcasts have lingered on the faces of the young fans in the stands. But the creation of the PWHL has been just as much of a dream come true for 64-year-old Harrison.
As the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered casting studios, the film industry shifted almost entirely from in-person auditions to actors submitting recordings of themselves to casting directors, a process known as self-taping. While it offers a number of benefits, performers say it also introduces a host of challenges.
Emma Tiede didn’t want to join a specialized figure skating club for children with disabilities. But slowly, she began to see the value of it.
A study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal found that Nunavik patients had a shorter survival rate after lung cancer diagnosis compared to Montreal residents.
An Ontario university is pulling dozens of vending machines that were tracking the age and gender of customers in the latest example of pushback against technology that tests the boundaries of privacy rules.
Seventy years after the British Columbia government forcibly removed dozens of children from their families and placed them in a province-run camp, some survivors and their descendants say a $10-million compensation package, aimed at reconciliation, falls short of their expectations.
Quebec consumers will have fewer choices and be paying more for everything from coffee makers to washing machines if the government follows through with its revisions to the province’s French language charter, legal and industry experts say.
Canada's largest pension funds, which hold trillions of dollars in assets combined, are trailing behind many of their international counterparts when it comes to shifting away from investments in fossil fuels, a new report has found.
The cases would have provided compelling precedent for a divorced dad to take his children to China — had they been real.
President Joe Biden said Monday that he hopes a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that would pause hostilities, and allow for the remaining hostages held in Gaza to be released, can take effect by early next week.
B.C.'s appeal court has upheld a decision that saw an accused killer acquitted after the exclusion of key evidence because of the "egregious" way police ignored the laws of search and seizure.
Advocates and police are divided on two things: how to tackle those problems, and whether the current solutions are working.
A U.S. military service member who had set himself on fire outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington over the weekend, in an apparent act of protest against Israeli military action in Gaza, has died, local police said on Monday.
Reflecting upon the end of her curling career, renowned and accomplished curling champion Jennifer Jones talked about the emotions she felt as her final rock slid to a stop, and how she hopes her passion for the sport will inspire others to pursue doing what they love.
The Regina family that discovered unopened 1979 O-Pee-Chee hockey card boxes in an attic has sold them for over $5 million, or $3.72 million US, at auction. The boxes contain an unknown number of Wayne Gretzky rookie cards.
Canada’s military watchdog used what could be one of his last appearances before a House of Commons committee on Monday to renew a push to make his office fully independent from the Department of National Defence (DND).