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CBC Ottawa

Queen's takes on Calgary in national men's b-ball quarterfinal

Watch this U Sports men's basketball quarter-final between the University of Calgary Dinos and the Queen's University Gaels from the University of British Columbia's War Memorial Gym in Vancouver. ...
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Watch this U Sports men's basketball quarter-final between the University of Calgary Dinos and the Queen's University Gaels from the University of British Columbia's War Memorial Gym in Vancouver.

3 hours ago

CBC Ottawa

Top-seeded U of O faces Concordia in Canada's men's basketball quarterfinal

Watch this U Sports men's basketball quarter-final between the University of Ottawa Gee-Gees and the Concordia University Stingers from the University of British Columbia's Doug Mitchell Thunderbird S ...
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Watch this U Sports men's basketball quarter-final between the University of Ottawa Gee-Gees and the Concordia University Stingers from the University of British Columbia's Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre in Vancouver.

40 minutes ago

Protest at local Tesla dealership
Village Report

Protest at local Tesla dealership 'not about the product but the person'

Event organizer Natasha Weese, a Barrie resident, says it's a rally against Elon Musk and his participation in the Trump administration

4 minutes ago

With key permits in hand, Gen Mining ‘closer than ever’ to Marathon construction decision
Superior North Newswatch

With key permits in hand, Gen Mining ‘closer than ever’ to Marathon construction decision

One provincial permit to go before north shore copper-palladium mine developer can move on $1-billion pit project

6 minutes ago

Winnipeg Free Press

Campaign tries to reach exploited workers in Manitoba trucking industry

Labour trafficking in Manitoba’s trucking sector is running rampant and remains mostly unreported, human rights groups and industry leaders said as they launched an effort to combat it. The Joy ...
More ...Labour trafficking in Manitoba’s trucking sector is running rampant and remains mostly unreported, human rights groups and industry leaders said as they launched an effort to combat it. The Joy […]

7 minutes ago

‘The Journey’ Unveiled, To Be Installed at Confederation Building
VOCM

‘The Journey’ Unveiled, To Be Installed at Confederation Building

New, Indigenous artwork was unveiled at Confederation Building this week. Inuit artist Bronson Jacque was commissioned to create a nearly four-foot-long mural depicting Indigenous culture, which was p ...
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New, Indigenous artwork was unveiled at Confederation Building this week.

Inuit artist Bronson Jacque was commissioned to create a nearly four-foot-long mural depicting Indigenous culture, which was presented to the government this week.

Titled “The Journey,” the painting features the colors of the Northern Lights along with representations of Indigenous dancers and native animals.

Jacque says the piece, which was completed over the course of five years, reflects his early memories of Postville, Labrador.

“The way I built it, it was very circular, as if you were being embraced by all of the symbolism and all of the imagery in the painting,” he said. “So there’s a lot of wildlife in a circular formation that’s meant to evoke the feeling of being embraced by nature.”

The artwork will be installed and on display for the public to see in the lobby of the East Block of Confederation Building at a later date.

8 minutes ago

CBC News Brunswick

Atlantic Canada fish farmers group gets $473K for 2-year project

The aquaculture industry in the Atlantic region is getting a financial boost from Ottawa to support a two-year project to "expand markets, strengthen sustainability and improve innovation" within the ...
More ...Man stands at a podium and talks to a room of people

The aquaculture industry in the Atlantic region is getting a financial boost from Ottawa to support a two-year project to "expand markets, strengthen sustainability and improve innovation" within the industry, ACOA announced Thursday in Saint John.

12 minutes ago

Firefighters deal with AIM blaze
Fredericton Independent

Firefighters deal with AIM blaze

Subscribe nowFredericton firefighters remain on the scene of a blaze at an industrial recycling facility on the city’s north side Thursday afternoon.A Fredericton police cruiser was blocking a p ...
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Fredericton firefighters remain on the scene of a blaze at an industrial recycling facility on the city’s north side Thursday afternoon.

A Fredericton police cruiser was blocking a portion of Carman Avenue, just past Barkers Point Elementary School, on Thursday afternoon to keep people away from the site of a fire being tended to by Fredericton Fire Department personnel.

Another Fredericton Fire Department vehicle arrives at the scene of a fire on Carman Ave at the AIM Recycling facility Thursday, passing the police vehicle that was there to keep other traffic and people back from the site. (Photo: Don MacPherson/The Fredericton Independent)

In an email to the Fredericton Independent, assistant deputy fire chief Dave McKinley confirmed the fire was at the AIM Recycling facility located at 400 Carman Ave. He said further details about the situation would be forthcoming in a media release later in the day.

At 3:25 p.m., the fire department warned people of an air-quality problem in the area due to the AIM fire.

“Due to the nature of the materials involved in the fire on Carman Avenue, residents are advised to avoid the smoke issuing from the fire,” it reported on social media.

The department noted that the fire was contained at 4:30 p.m. and that firefighters remained on the scene to deal with hot spots.

The air advisory was lifted at 4:50 p.m.

AIM Recycling, a Quebec-based company that’s a division of American Iron & Metal, has been the source of controversy and catastrophe in New Brunswick in recent years.

There were explosions at its Saint John port facility in recent years and workplace deaths, and a huge fire that burned for two days in September 2023 at the same site gave rise to concerns among nearby residents over safety and pollutants.

The company also operates a scrapyard in Moncton that’s been the focus of noise complaints.

That led the company to erect a wall of shipping containers to block the noise, but residents reported it remains an issue.

The province gave the company more time by way of an operating approval to assess the effectiveness of the measure as a means to reduce the noise.

Don MacPherson can be contacted at [email protected].

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17 minutes ago

Tagish Community Centre fire not suspicious, Yukon authorities say
Yukon News

Tagish Community Centre fire not suspicious, Yukon authorities say

Fire marshal says building will be a “total loss” as investigation continues

17 minutes ago

Winnipeg Free Press

Tenants at troubled apartment block evacuate after fire

A fire at a troubled North End apartment building that came under provincial scrutiny for an illegal mass eviction last summer forced residents out of their suites again Thursday morning. […]

18 minutes ago

CBC Ottawa

Carleton begins women's basketball national title defence vs. Bishop's

Watch this U Sports women's basketball quarter-final between the Carleton University Ravens and the Bishop's University Gaiters from the University of British Columbia's War Memorial Gym in Vancouver. ...
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Watch this U Sports women's basketball quarter-final between the Carleton University Ravens and the Bishop's University Gaiters from the University of British Columbia's War Memorial Gym in Vancouver.

19 minutes ago

The Trump administration demands UN agencies disclose any
Toronto Star

The Trump administration demands UN agencies disclose any 'anti-American' ties

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The Trump administration is demanding U.N. humanitarian agencies that receive or disburse U.S. funding fill out a questionnaire disclosing any ties to communism, socialism or a ...
More ...UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The Trump administration is demanding U.N. humanitarian agencies that receive or disburse U.S. funding fill out a questionnaire disclosing any ties to communism, socialism or anti-American beliefs, according to U.S. and U.N. officials and a copy…

22 minutes ago

Public safety minister dodges NDP MLA
The Orchard

Public safety minister dodges NDP MLA's question about U of C Palestine encampment coverup

Minister of Public Safety Mike Ellis was cagey when asked about The Orchard’s exclusive reporting on his government’s apparent efforts to cover up police violence against pro-Palestine pro ...
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Minister of Public Safety Mike Ellis was cagey when asked about The Orchard’s exclusive reporting on his government’s apparent efforts to cover up police violence against pro-Palestine protestors at the University of Calgary. (Screenshot/Legislative Assembly of Alberta)

Alberta public safety minister Mike Ellis dodged an NDP MLA’s question at a March 13 committee meeting about The Orchard’s exclusive reporting on his government’s apparent cover-up of police violence against the University of Calgary’s short-lived pro-Palestine encampment.

As this outlet reported last week, according to Calgary police chief Mark Neufeld’s hand-written notes, he received a May 13 phone call from Ellis informing him that the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT) was investigating allegations of police misconduct regarding the forced dismantling of the encampment on May 9.

Half an hour later, Neufeld received a phone call from Premier Danielle Smith’s then-chief of staff, Marshall Smith (no relation), informing him that “ASIRT won’t investigate,” but would instead focus narrowly on whether there was “serious injury” resulting from police action.

“I can’t speak to a conversation that I was not a part of, or what may or may not have been said between two individuals,” Minister Ellis, a former Calgary cop, said at Thursday’s Standing Committee on Families and Communities meeting.

This was in response to a question from Edmonton-City Centre MLA David Shepherd, who serves as the NDP’s shadow public safety minister.

Shepherd brought up The Orchard’s reporting, referring to “a journalist” who obtained the chief’s notes of his conversations with members of the government “in response to a student protest at the University of Calgary.”

The Orchard is supported by readers like you. If you appreciate my work, please consider becoming a paid subscriber so I can continue doing it.

He asked Ellis how Marshall Smith’s intervention squares with the minister’s stated commitment to a “broader paradigm shift that reimagines police as an extension of the community rather than as an arm of the state.”

“Having a chief of staff of the premier call to tell the chief whether or not an investigation would take place sure seems like the arm of the state,” said Shepherd.

Ellis, whose office didn’t acknowledge The Orchard’s initial request for comment, was cagey, but added that “this is the exact reason” his government has ordered the establishment of the Police Review Commission to independently address allegations of police misconduct.

The commission isn’t expected to begin operations until December.

“If I were the minister of public safety,” Shepherd replied, “having the premier’s chief of staff interfere to comment on what is going to be the scope of an investigation, that would certainly concern me.”

Before Shepherd could ask his question, Calgary-East UCP MLA Peter Singh tried to shut him down, arguing that Shepherd’s line of questioning was out of order, since the committee meeting was focused on the Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness’s 2025/26 budget.

“We aren’t here to discuss media reporting,” said Singh.

But Shepherd did connect the question to specific budget items before Singh cut him off.

From the budget estimates, he specifically cited line items for funding ASIRT ($5.7 million) and “Contract Policing and Police Oversight” ($397.2 million).

From the ministry’s business plan, Shepherd cited key objective 1.3, which states:

Implement strategies to improve the delivery of policing services in the province to ensure Albertans are safe and police are accountable to the communities they serve, including support for municipalities and Indigenous communities in the development of new models of policing and public safety.

Camrose MLA Jackie Lovely, the committee chair, deferred to Minister Ellis to determine “whether he chooses to answer and how he answers.”

In addition to Minister Ellis and Marshall Smith, Chief Neufeld’s notes include summaries of conversations about the encampment response with Advanced Education Minister Rajan Sawhney and Justice Minister Mickey Amery.

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25 minutes ago

CBC Newfoundland & Labrador

The Folk Arts Society and its festival are in 'severe danger' of shutting down due to shaky finances

A pillar of Newfoundland and Labrador's musical landscape is at risk of collapsing.  The Newfoundland and Labrador Folk Arts Society launched a "Save our Festival" campaign Thursday, appealing to cor ...
More ...A woman in a black sweater. She has short grey hair.

A pillar of Newfoundland and Labrador's musical landscape is at risk of collapsing.  The Newfoundland and Labrador Folk Arts Society launched a "Save our Festival" campaign Thursday, appealing to corporations and the public for donations to help keep it and its annual folk festival running.

29 minutes ago

CBC Calgary

Calgary police make arrest in fatal hit and run from 10 months ago

Calgary police have arrested a 24-year-old man in relation to a fatal hit and run that happened nearly 10 months ago in the city's southeast. ...
More ...A Google Street View image of zebra-stripe crosswalk spanning four lanes of traffic

Calgary police have arrested a 24-year-old man in relation to a fatal hit and run that happened nearly 10 months ago in the city's southeast.

36 minutes ago

CBC British Columbia

B.C. government introduces legislation giving itself sweeping powers to deal with U.S. trade threats

The attorney general says additional powers would expire in mid-2027. ...
More ...Two people at a podium.

The attorney general says additional powers would expire in mid-2027.

37 minutes ago

CBC Nova Scotia

Everwind spending $50M on tugboats to support green energy plans

The company behind a green hydrogen proposal says new tugboats are needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and modernize the fleet that supports shipping in the Strait of Canso. ...
More ...A man with a blue suit jacket, patterned shirt and glasses hanging around his neck points to a photo on an easel showing three boats in water.

The company behind a green hydrogen proposal says new tugboats are needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and modernize the fleet that supports shipping in the Strait of Canso.

38 minutes ago

The Trillium

'I'll never roll over': Ford and Trump both vow strength ahead of trade meeting

The president and his Secretary of Commerce have used increasingly dismissive language about Ford as the meeting nears

38 minutes ago

Bay Observer

Elderly women sucker-punched in broad daylight on Hamilton Mountain

Hamilton Police continue to investigate the circumstances surrounding a vicious, unprovoked assault that took place on Tuesday afternoon and are asking anyone with information to report it to inve ...
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Hamilton Police continue to investigate the circumstances surrounding a vicious, unprovoked assault that took place on Tuesday afternoon and are asking anyone with information to report it to investigators.

On Tuesday, at 1:35 p.m. at the intersection of Upper Gage Avenue and Fennell Avenue East a male suspect punched an elderly woman in the face. The suspect is described as: male, white, approximately 30 years-old, 5’9 to 5″10 in height with a thick build. The assailant was wearing a black hooded sweater with a reflective “X” on the chest and back.

The victim had no interaction with the male and does not know him, this was a totally unprovoked assault. Investigators are asking for the public’s assistance and are asking drivers in the area at the time of the assault to check their dash cameras as well as homeowners to review any camera footage that they may have during that time. Division 30 CID Detectives continue to investigate the assault and anyone with information is asked to contact Detective Sergeant Paul Corrigan at 905-546-3851 or [email protected]

For those who wish to provide information anonymously, they can call  out to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or submit anonymous tips online at Crime Stoppers Hamilton’s Website.

39 minutes ago

CBC Calgary

Alberta brewers concerned about cost of beer cans amid aluminum tariff war

Not even cracking open a cold one is safe from tariffs. As the Canada-U.S. trade war continues to dominate headlines, Alberta's beer industry is paying close attention to how this is impacting the pri ...
More ...beer can lids

Not even cracking open a cold one is safe from tariffs. As the Canada-U.S. trade war continues to dominate headlines, Alberta's beer industry is paying close attention to how this is impacting the price of metal cans.

42 minutes ago

Toronto Star

NATO secretary-general tells Trump he's motivating alliance members to spend more on defense

WASHINGTON (AP) — NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte laid on the praise for President Donald Trump on Thursday as the two met in the Oval Office at a time when the president’s comments have raised ...
More ...WASHINGTON (AP) — NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte laid on the praise for President Donald Trump on Thursday as the two met in the Oval Office at a time when the president’s comments have raised doubts about his commitment to the…

43 minutes ago

APTN News

‘A kid at heart’: Remembering Eskasoni’s Arnold ‘Big Chief’ Sylliboy

An Eskasoni man is being remembered for his unwavering commitment to bringing joy and laughter to all those around him. Arnold Sylliboy Sr., 43, passed away suddenly in his home in Sydney on February ...
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An Eskasoni man is being remembered for his unwavering commitment to bringing joy and laughter to all those around him.

Arnold Sylliboy Sr., 43, passed away suddenly in his home in Sydney on February 22nd. He is survived by his loving fiancée Nina Kent and his children Arnold Jr., Evan, Arlo, and Arley, along with his mother, Vera Sylliboy.

From a young age, Arnold was loyal, protective, and caring, shared sister Mallery Anne Sylliboy, who is among his four siblings, one of which passed away in 2005.

“Arnold’s always been there for me, always by my side and always kept at me, even though it’s a five-year age difference. If I’m looking at pictures, he was always by my side,” she shared.

“I can say he’s a loving person, but it’s so much deeper. He’s very considerate of others. He has so much passion for people and their mental health. After our brother died by suicide, his passion for mental health grew bigger.

“I see people’s Facebook posts and people are telling me that Arnold reached out to them and would show up at their house and wouldn’t leave until they started laughing or smiling again. Arnold was a safe person and a safe place that they might not have had.”

Arnold worked at the local crisis centre for over a decade, providing a safe space for his community members to work through loss and grief.

“I feel like everything he did was great. We had a sweat ceremony last night for my family and I prayed that our grief doesn’t turn into anger,” his sister explained.

“Arnold is someone who would come to people with peace and love and kindness and be there for people, and I thought that that’s how I would like us as a family to move forward.”

Loyal and encouraging

Alongside his siblings, Arnold will also be mourned by several close friends that have known him since adolescence.

“I’ll always remember him for being a great teammate, a great friend and staffer. A more loyal and encouraging person? I don’t think I’ll find one,” shared longtime friend and colleague, Jaime Battiste.

The pair initially became friends while they were attending Cape Breton University and later went on to work together as Culture, Recreation and Youth coordinators in Eskasoni in 1998

“One thing about him, he was a great athlete. He played in the North America Indigenous Games in basketball. He also got a tryout for the Moncton Wildcats, he was a tremendous athlete. He could play every sport; volleyball, hockey, basketball, softball,” said Battiste.

“But he also gave back to his community in terms of he coordinated so many tournaments. I think he coordinated more than a dozen different tournaments over his life, all in different sports.”

Battiste also recalled Arnold’s exemplary leadership as a youth, when he was the first class president at Allison Bernard Memorial High School and the first winner of the Mr. Eskasoni contest, a male version of the local pageant.

“He was always doing things to make other people laugh, no matter how serious things were. He always enjoyed making people laugh and helping people,” said Battiste.

“In 2019, when I started believing that I wanted to be a Member of Parliament, he was there with me from my nomination as my campaign manager and then stuck with me through the actual election. He was my right-hand man through that and did so through the 2021 election.”

Battiste shared that following the election, Arnold decided to pursue a dream of becoming a barber and opening a shop in his home of Eskasoni.

He attended barber college and honed his craft, but returned to work for Battiste in order to save up for his wedding after getting engaged to fiancée Nina Kent.

A doting partner and father

In his untimely passing, Arnold’s fiancee Nina Kent and their two young boys hold his memory close.

Kent first met Arnold at the Eskasoni powwow in 2014, she shared, where she was a dancer and he was a volunteer.

“At first glance, we both had hearts in our eyes for each other when we first met,” said Kent.

The pair went on to date while Kent attended CBU and Arnold worked in mental health in Eskasoni. He introduced her two his two sons, Arnold Jr. And Evan, and as time progressed, they bought their first home in Sydney in 2017 and started their own family.

“Shortly after, we welcomed our first son together, Arlo in 2018, followed by Arley in 2020,” Kent shared.

“We dated for 10 years when Arnold proposed to me amongst family, and we were scheduled to be married August 2025. Sadly, Arnold was called away to the spirit world.”

After 10 years together, Kent had a long list of Arnold’s qualities she admired, from his outgoing and caring nature to his love of community.

“He was a kid at heart, had a playful nature. I want to carry on his love for oldies music, Pepsi, board games and card games, and his elaborate breakfasts and snacks. He had the best style and was never afraid to overdress or be the best dressed in the room,” said Kent.

“Arnold was such a good father to our boys. He would play with them, had the best imagination and would set up little play areas for them where they would play for hours after school.”

Kent also shared that Arnold was always a very present father and would arrange his work life to make his family his top priority.

That included his older sons, Arnold Jr. And Evan Sylliboy. Though Evan didn’t live with his father, he never felt that affected the close bond that they had.

“He’s my favourite person to be around. He was overall a good person to be around, always being funny and energetic around the people he loved,” said Evan.

“My dad was the type of father to support his kids, no matter what the situation was. He was always there, through thick and thin, he loved every one of his kids: me, Arnold, Arlo and Arley. He was the best father I could’ve ever asked for.”

House of Assembly recognition

Arnold’s passing left not only his family and community shaken, but also those who worked alongside him in politics during his time with Jaime Battiste.

On Feb. 24, MHA Derek Mombourquette made a statement in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly to honour Arnold and his work in Nova Scotia politics.

“Our community lost a really great guy on the weekend, Arnold Sylliboy,” said Mombourquette, who represents Sydney-Membertou in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly.

“Arnold was a young man who was a role model to many in the Mi’kmaq community and beyond. Arnold worked for the local MP for years and I saw first-hand the lives that he helped and saved over those years.

“To many people, he was called ‘Big Chief’ because he was such a mentor to so many and he had a heart of gold, he was kind, and the community was a better place because he was around.”

Meghan Dewar is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter for the Cape Breton Post covering Indigenous Affairs. 

The post ‘A kid at heart’: Remembering Eskasoni’s Arnold ‘Big Chief’ Sylliboy appeared first on APTN News.

46 minutes ago

U.S. gender backlash hitting UN agencies, Canadian ambassador Bob Rae says
Village Report

U.S. gender backlash hitting UN agencies, Canadian ambassador Bob Rae says

UNITED NATIONS — Canada is mobilizing to advance gender equity and feminism in global forums as the Trump administration attempts to roll back diversity programming at the United Nations.

48 minutes ago

Village Report

Ottawa offers some 'lost Canadians' citizenship after legislation delayed

OTTAWA — Immigration Minister Marc Miller is giving "lost Canadians" a chance to receive Canadian citizenship as he seeks an extension to a deadline set by the courts for his government to pass new ...
More ...OTTAWA — Immigration Minister Marc Miller is giving "lost Canadians" a chance to receive Canadian citizenship as he seeks an extension to a deadline set by the courts for his government to pass new legislation.

49 minutes ago

B.C. bill targets road tolls, contracts, interprovincial trade in tariff response
Business in Vancouver

B.C. bill targets road tolls, contracts, interprovincial trade in tariff response

New legislation, if passed, could allow the B.C. government to impose a transit tax on Alaska-bound trucks coming from Washington state; but it also gives government sweeping regulatory powers to resp ...
More ...New legislation, if passed, could allow the B.C. government to impose a transit tax on Alaska-bound trucks coming from Washington state; but it also gives government sweeping regulatory powers to respond to perceived tariff threats from the United States

51 minutes ago

The growth of women
Toronto Star

The growth of women's sports is spurring a building boom

While it might not be the flashiest way to chart the rapid growth of women's professional sports, a building boom is showing that investors are paying attention.

51 minutes ago

Prince George Citizen

'Young Guns 3: Dead or Alive' to film in New Mexico

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — It's been almost 40 years since Emilio Estevez first drew his revolver as Billy the Kid in the iconic Western “Young Guns.

54 minutes ago

Prince George man admits assault at Musqueam First Nation
Prince George Citizen

Prince George man admits assault at Musqueam First Nation

He attacked an Elder without provocation, court hears

57 minutes ago

Toronto Star

UN: Sudan war is world's worst humanitarian crisis: 30 million need aid, 16 million of them kids

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The war in Sudan has created the world’s largest and most devastating humanitarian crisis with over 30 million people needing aid this year, 16 million of them children tryin ...
More ...UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The war in Sudan has created the world’s largest and most devastating humanitarian crisis with over 30 million people needing aid this year, 16 million of them children trying to survive in dire conditions, the head…

57 minutes ago

CBC Newfoundland & Labrador

Fuel is about to get more expensive across Labrador, as PUB approves markup hike

The Public Utilities Board is making changes to its pricing model for fuel in Labrador, allowing higher wholesale and retail markups on gas, diesel, stove oil and propane. ...
More ...Close up of a hand holding a gas pump and filling the tank of a car.

The Public Utilities Board is making changes to its pricing model for fuel in Labrador, allowing higher wholesale and retail markups on gas, diesel, stove oil and propane.

59 minutes ago

Video captures Quebec school bus slamming into frozen snowbank, no injuries reported
Global Montréal

Video captures Quebec school bus slamming into frozen snowbank, no injuries reported

The scene of the bus flying through the air and quickly slamming to the ground was captured by a security camera.

1 hour ago

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