CanadaMar 01, 2024
Ottawa pledges $58.8M to continue local journalism program to 2027
The Liberal government is extending a program that funds 400 local reporting jobs across the country.
Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge says Ottawa will spend another $58.8 million to continue the Local Journalism Initiative until 2027.
The program, which provides funding for news organizations to hire local reporters, was first established in 2019.
The government says its journalists provide news coverage in underserved communities including Indigenous, official language minority and LGBTQ+ communities.
The funding is administered by not-for-profit organizations to protect the independence of
CanadaMar 01, 2024
Child-care legislation clears last obstacle, set to become law
The Government of Canada's National Child Protection Act has passed all stages in Parliament, and is now going to become law soon.
The purpose of this law is to protect the funding of the National Child Care System, which would be difficult for any future government to defund.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government announced the establishment of a National Child Care System in 2021. It aims to bring the cost of day care to $10 per day by 2026. However, experts have raised concerns about a lack of spaces to meet the growing demand for subsidized childcare.
The federal government announce
CanadaMar 01, 2024
Supreme Court of Canada says a computer's IP address deserves privacy protection
The Supreme Court of Canada says police need judicial authorization to obtain a computer's internet protocol address, calling the identification number a crucial link between a person and their online activity.
The top court's ruling came today in a case that began in 2017 when Calgary police investigated fraudulent online transactions from a liquor store.
The store's third-party payment processor voluntarily gave police two IP addresses numerical identifiers assigned by an internet service provider.
Police obtained a production order compelling the service provider to disclose the name and ad
CanadaMar 01, 2024
Brian Mulroney, Former Canadian Prime Minister, Dies At 84
Brian Mulroney, the former Canadian prime minister who struck a free trade deal with the U.S. but whose legacy was marred by revelations of improper business dealings with an arms dealer, has died.
Mulroney died peacefully surrounded by family, his daughter Caroline Mulroney posted on social media platform X on Thursday. He was 84.
Mulroney had a heart procedure in August and was treated for prostate cancer earlier last year, she said in a social media post in late August 2023.
A corporate lawyer turned businessman, Mulroney led the center-right Progressive Conservatives to a historic win in
CanadaFeb 29, 2024
MPs summon CEOs of Rogers, Bell and Telus to appear at committee about phone prices
MPs have voted unanimously to summon the chief executives of Canada's three largest telecommunications companies to testify at a federal committee as it studies the accessibility and affordability of wireless and broadband services.
A motion put forward Wednesday at the House of Commons' industry committee meeting by NDP MP Don Davies calls on Tony Staffieri, Mirko Bibic and Darren Entwistle, the CEOs of Rogers Communications Inc., BCE Inc. and Telus Corp., respectively to appear and answer questions.
The committee had previously invited the trio, along with Quebecor Inc. CEO Pierre Karl Pelad
CanadaFeb 29, 2024
Canada bringing back visa requirements for Mexico to slow asylum claims
Immigration Minister Marc Miller says Canada will bring back visa requirements for people from Mexico because of a spike in asylum claims in recent years.
Miller says Mexicans accounted for 17 per cent of all asylum claimants in 2023, and most of their claims are either rejected or withdrawn by the applicants.
Quebec Premier François Legault has been urging Ottawa to make the change, telling the federal government his province is reaching a breaking point because of the number of claims.
Mexican citizens flying to Canada will be able to apply for an electronic travel authorization if they h
CanadaFeb 28, 2024
Government of Canada will present the pharmacare bill in a day or two
The Canadian government is going to present the pharmacare bill in a day or two. Health Minister Mark Holland has listed it on the notice paper of the House of Commons.
The government's House Leader Steve MacKinnon said on his way to the Liberal meeting this morning that he expects it to be tabled on Thursday because the deadline under the agreement with the NDP is Friday.
Initially, diabetes and birth control drugs are being covered.
In return for supporting the minority government of the Liberals, the NDP had placed several conditions, including the pharmacare condition.
The NDP had previ
CanadaFeb 27, 2024
Woman's death in Quebec City after weekend house fire ruled a homicide: Police
Quebec City police say the death of a woman who was found unresponsive after a house fire over the weekend has been ruled a homicide.
Police say 42-year-old Joëlle Lapointe was killed and the exact cause of death will be determined after investigators receive autopsy results.
Lapointe was found unresponsive in the basement of a semi-detached home in the provincial capital's Loretteville sector around 2:30 a.m. Sunday.
First responders were unable to revive her and she was declared dead on site.
Fire commissioner investigators deemed the blaze suspect and contacted police.
Police say anyone wi
CanadaFeb 27, 2024
If provinces won't, then Ottawa will shut down institutions that misuse International Students Program: Miller
Immigration Minister Marc Miller says Ottawa is ready to step in and shut down shady schools that are abusing the international student program if provinces don't crack down on them.
Miller says there are problems across the college sector, but some of the "really bad" actors are private institutions and those schools need to be shut down.
The minister says provinces are responsible for addressing problems in the post-secondary sector with regards to international students.
But he says if they won't do it, Ottawa will, though there are "jurisdictional questions" around what the federal governm