Premiers Danielle Smith and Doug Ford to sign agreements in Calgary

The premiers of Alberta and Ontario are set to meet in Calgary today to sign two memorandums of understanding.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's office says she and Ontario Premier Doug Ford will sign agreements on energy priorities, trade and interprovincial co-operation.

The pair were together at a roundtable in Calgary on Sunday, with Ford tweeting that they discussed how to build new pipelines, as well as rail lines to export Canadian critical minerals and energy.

Smith also bumped into Prime Minister Mark Carney at the Calgary Stampede on Saturday.

Three individuals pled guilty to fishing related charges along the Highwood River

In early June, Alberta Fish and Wildlife were patrolling a section of the Highwood River near Longview, which led to three people being arrested and charged.

Not only is the Highwood River closed to sportfishing from Nov. 1 to June 15, but there is also a bait ban, which is in place to help protect bull trout and other sensitive species.

While Fish and Wildlife were patrolling the river, three men and one youth were observed fishing in a closed area, who were also using "set" lines, which are usually associated with bait fishing.

Alberta steer wrestler is off to Championship Sunday at the Calgary Stampede

Steer Wrestler Scott Guenthner from Provost, Alberta, is going to the Championship finals this Sunday at the Calgary Stampede.

Guenthner had a time of 4.7 seconds on the final day in Pool A to finish in second place on Sunday, but more importantly, he finished first overall.

That means he's going to the Steer Wrestling finals on Sunday. 

Two other Albertans also qualified for Championship Sunday.

Ladies Breakaway Roping standout Shelby Boisjoli-Meged from Langdon finished in first place yesterday, and overall, so she's moving on to the finals.

Penalty trouble at the Calgary Stampede Chuckwagon races changes up aggregate

The track was wet and a bit slow on the Rangeland Derby on Sunday night, and several penalties slowed down some of the drivers' rankings.

Defending Champion High River's Jason Glass took out a barrel, costing him 5 seconds and pushing him from 3rd down into 13th place in the aggregate.

Glass also suffered a 5-second penalty in last year's Calgary Stampede, but also set a new track record and was able to overcome his penalty and went on to win it all.

Gallery: Shania Twain thrills crowd Saturday night at Saddledome

Canadian Country Music superstar and icon Shania Twain had fans singing along and having a great time Saturday night at the Saddledome.

Twain launched into fan favourites and interacted with the crowd.

"She was pointing people out left, right and centre, and she actually did bring a very beautiful young lady on stage with her and had a wonderful chat."

Long-time fan Clare Nye, seeing her for the second time, had fifth row seats on the floor and says it was an unbelievable night.

'What are you doing here?': Carney makes first Stampede visit as prime minister

Canada's new prime minister, best known as a buttoned-down banker, donned a cowboy hat and toured the stables Friday evening at the Calgary Stampede.

Over an hour-long tour winding through the rodeo grounds, Mark Carney crawled into a tank, snacked at food stations and posed for dozens of selfies, marking his first visit to the Stampede as prime minister.

Politicians overstating benefits of scrapping internal trade barriers: think tank

A new report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is dismissing moves by the federal government and Canada's premiers to break down internal trade barriers as little more than "political theatre."

It lands just ahead of the country’s internal trade ministers meeting in Quebec City this week, where they are expected to talk about their next steps as they rush to remove rules hampering cross-provincial trade.

More soldiers, more money. Canada's top soldier extols benefits of spending boost

Canada’s top soldier is looking forward to a boost in military spending that includes a pay raise for military personnel at a time when uncertainty on the world stage is high.

NATO leaders — including Canada — have approved a plan to dramatically increase defence spending across the Western alliance to five per cent of gross domestic product over the next decade.

Prime Minister Mark Carney said the move to five per cent of GDP — 3.5 per cent for core military spending and 1.5 per cent for defence-related infrastructure — will take place over the next 10 years.