Federal Government responds to blockades with historic Emergencies Act
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday invoked the national Emergencies Act to bring to an end the antigovernment blockades he describes as illegal and not about peaceful protest.
The government will use the act to force towing companies to remove big rigs and other vehicles that are blocking highways and other critical infrastructure, establish zones where public assembly is not allowed, and require banks to suspend or freeze accounts suspected of supporting the blockades, including those belonging to companies whose trucks are part of the convoy.
Windsor, Ont. mayor says protest over at Canada-U.S. border crossing
Police are working to reopen traffic across a key border crossing with the United States after officers ended what the local mayor described as a "national economic crisis."
Mayor Drew Dilkens of Windsor, Ont. said police will decide when cross-border traffic can resume. He also said that illegal acts, blockades and hate speech must not be tolerated and should be denounced.
Canada is a country that believes in freedom of speech and expression, Dilkens said in a statement, adding "we are also bound by the rule of law."
Draft standards for LTC building design, infection prevention publicly released
Experts have released a new set of draft standards for long-term care, this time focused on building design, materials and infection prevention and control.
CSA Group, formerly the Canadian Standards Association, developed the draft in parallel with care-giving standards from the Health Standards Organization, released two weeks ago.
Ottawa police say more trucks out of city as convoy protests at capital's airport
Ottawa police say almost two dozen vehicles tied to an ongoing protest have left the city, just as a convoy disrupts traffic at the capital's airport.
In a release this morning, police said a dozen trucks left an area outside the downtown core after negotiations with protesters who have used the parking lot as a staging and logistics ground.
Police say 10 more trucks left streets near Parliament Hill, and another vehicle was towed for obstructing traffic.
Despite COVID-19, census shows population grew at fastest rate in G7, topping 36.9M
Statistics Canada says the national population almost hit 37 million last year as it grew at the fastest rate among G7 nations.
The agency says Canada's population was just over 36.9 million on census day last year, growing by 5.2 per cent between 2016 and 2021.
The five-year growth rate was double that of any peer country in the G7, and Statistics Canada says most of the growth happened prior to the onset of the pandemic in 2020.
Police concerned for safety of kids living in trucks involved in Ottawa protest
Ottawa police say 23 people have been arrested in the ongoing anti-vaccine mandate protest in the city's downtown, and there are 85 ongoing criminal investigations related to the nearly two-week-long demonstration.
More than 1,300 tickets have been issued to protesters.
Deputy Chief Steve Bell says officers are focused on hardening the perimeter around downtown and preventing fuel from getting to the trucks parked there, saying the 1,800 additional officers Ottawa has requested would help that effort.
Ottawa increases warnings about Ukraine, urges Canadians to leave over Russia threat
The federal government is now warning against any travel to Ukraine and urged all Canadians currently in the country to leave Monday as concerns about war with Russia escalate.
Last month Global Affairs Canada warned only against non-essential travel to Ukraine, but stepped up its warning late Monday, suggesting growing concerns that a conflict is imminent.
“Avoid all travel to Ukraine due to ongoing Russian threats and the risk of armed conflict,” the advisory said. “If you are in Ukraine, you should leave while commercial means are available.”
Two-thirds oppose Ottawa protest, but many sympathize with frustration: survey
Almost two-thirds of Canadians oppose the Ottawa protest against COVID-19 measures, with more than four in 10 saying they strongly consider the demonstration a selfish display, a new poll suggests.
But almost 30 per cent of Canadians surveyed by Leger disagreed with that characterization of the demonstration against COVID-19 measures that has seen hundreds of large trucks create gridlock and incessant noise in the national capital.
In addition, 44 per cent of those polled said they sympathized with the frustrations being voiced by the protesters.
Ottawa mayor declares state of emergency as police crackdown on convoy supplies
The mayor of Canada's national capital declared a state of emergency in his city on Sunday in the face of ongoing protests that have overwhelmed local resources shortly before police moved to choke the convoy's supply chain.
In a late-afternoon release, the City of Ottawa said Mayor Jim Watson's declaration reflected the "serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents" from protesters encamped through much of the downtown core.
Statistics Canada says 200,000 jobs lost in January
The Canadian economy lost 200,000 jobs in January amid stricter public health rules put in place to slow the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19.
The decrease marked the largest drop since January 2021, when the economy shed 207,800 jobs, Statistics Canada said Friday.
The job losses also pushed the unemployment rate to 6.5 per cent in January compared with 6.0 per cent in December
As Omicron spread across the country, governments reintroduced capacity limits and closures for workplaces such as restaurants and gyms.