“What do people want now? Do they want job security? Do they want medical benefits? Do they want higher wages, higher tips? The good news is — we’re listening and we’re wide awake,” one restaurant owner said.
“What do people want now? Do they want job security? Do they want medical benefits? Do they want higher wages, higher tips? The good news is — we’re listening and we’re wide awake,” one restaurant owner said.
Just two weeks after the total lunar eclipse, there’s another celestial event on the horizon — but this time involving the sun. A large part of Canada will be able to see it.
Interior Health’s chief medical officer, Dr. Albert de Villiers, has been arrested and charged with sexual assault and sexual interference against a child, according to RCMP.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau today condemned a “brutal, cowardly and brazen” attack on a London, Ont. Muslim family, saying the hit-and-run that left four people dead was a terrorist assault motivated by religious hatred.
The Muslim family identified as the victims of a hit and run Sunday in what police are calling a hate-motivated attack in London, Ont., were deeply involved in the community and committed to their faith, friends and family say.
Legal and economic scholars say there’s virtually no chance Alberta’s planned referendum on equalization will result in changes to Canada’s constitution.
A man convicted of manslaughter after Barbara Kentner, 34, was struck by a trailer hitch thrown from a moving vehicle in 2017 has been sentenced to eight years in prison in Thunder Bay, Ont. “You targeted a vulnerable woman,” the judge tells Brayden Bushby.
Container lashing used to be man’s work. Not anymore. Hanna Graham, Guylaine Cyr and Liz Kramer are the first women in Port Saint John history to pass the test to do it.
A Vancouver woman wants to know why her bank, Tangerine, allowed $1,600 to be transferred out of her account and sent to another financial institution. Tangerine won’t tell her, or Go Public, and the fine print in most banking agreements means it doesn’t have to.
The statue of Egerton Ryerson, considered one of the architects of the residential school system in Canada, that stood outside the university that bears his name was toppled and vandalized Sunday evening following a demonstration in downtown Toronto.