Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says the province will begin loosening up its health measures on Feb. 8 as part of a new “path forward for easing COVID-19 health restrictions, with clear benchmarks for hospitalizations.”
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says the province will begin loosening up its health measures on Feb. 8 as part of a new “path forward for easing COVID-19 health restrictions, with clear benchmarks for hospitalizations.”
The Lunar New Year is a time for food and family, but like most celebrations during the pandemic, the holiday looks different this year. Despite that, a New Westminster, B.C., mother is hoping to keep the magic alive for her two-year-old son.
A B.C. judge has rejected a bid by Meng Wanzhou to loosen the terms of her bail while she awaits a ruling on extradition to the United States.
A post-mortem report into the death of 26-year-old Jordan Sheard last June reveals that before he entered Ontario’s Lindsay jail, Sheard was twice checked for drugs — and both times cleared by correctional officers, before he died with fentanyl hidden inside his body.
As dining rooms open across the province, patrons, including some politicians, have been flouting the rules, risking steep fines in an attempt to lobby against the current guidelines.
Two engineering students have plotted out hundreds of locations where people have cried on University of Waterloo’s campus.
Hours of behind-the-scenes video shot by a whistleblower show former Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard, who is alleged to have abused women and girls for decades, screaming at his employees and approaching a 16-year-old girl at the London Olympics.
The federal government will cap two days of meetings this week meetings into eliminating anti-Indigenous racism in the health-care system by announcing plans to begin co-developing new legislation to overhaul Indigenous health, according to sources who spoke to CBC News.
People in Fort Nelson, B.C., previously needed to call 10-digit phone numbers for emergencies.
Reconciliation will take generations, but Canada must reckon with systemic racism, says Sen. Murray Sinclair, who retires from the Senate this week.