Two people stabbed, injured at Dene High School in La Loche, Sask., mayor says
The mayor of a northern Saskatchewan village says her community has been shaken after two people were stabbed at the high school in La Loche.
The Northern Lights School Division confirmed Friday a student and a staff member were attacked Thursday at the Dene High School.
The two victims were being treated in hospital in Saskatoon and the suspect was in RCMP custody, the division said.
Canadians with celiac disease especially hard hit by grocery price pain, group says
When Samantha Mackey was diagnosed with celiac disease a few years ago, she was relieved that there was something she could do to finally stop feeling sick.
But the diagnosis also "turns your life upside down," she said.
"I can remember, you know, once standing in a supermarket and just wanting to cry because being so overwhelmed by the amount of effort that goes into just a basic need of groceries,” said Mackey, who lives in Conception Bay South, N.L.
The federal government promised to plant 2 billion trees by 2030. It's nowhere close.
Two years ago, Canada embarked on an odyssey to plant two billion trees in just 10 years.
An audit of the program so far says that unless things drastically change, it won't even get one-tenth of those trees in the ground in time.
The audit was one of five reports issued Thursday by Environment Commissioner Jerry DeMarco, who said he cannot stress enough how important it is for the government to live up to its commitment on trees.
"There is no solution to climate change and terrestrial biodiversity loss that does not include forests," DeMarco's report said.
Union leaves bargaining table as federal workers hit picket lines Wednesday morning
Canada's largest federal public-service union has left the bargaining table but says it is standing by to resume negotiations when the federal government comes back with a new offer.
Federal workers were hitting the picket lines across the country on Wednesday after Canada's largest federal public-service union and the government failed to reach a deal by a Tuesday evening deadline.
On Wednesday morning, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said negotiations had paused.
Group crossing border called 911 suffering from cold, Minnesota sheriff says
Nine people were detained and one was missing after trying to walk across the Canada-United States border in the early hours of Tuesday morning, a Minnesota sheriff says.
The group made their illicit crossing in woods near Sprague in southeastern Manitoba and called 911 at approximately 4 a.m. as they were suffering from hypothermia, Steve Gust, the sheriff of Roseau County, said Tuesday.
"Some were transferred to hospital but the majority of them were pretty good," Gust said. "They were wet and had frozen clothing."
Thousands of Canadians missed out on federal housing and dental benefits: report
A new report says hundreds of thousands of Canadians may have missed out on government money intended to help with the rising cost of living because the housing and dental benefits rolled out last year have had "atrocious" take-up.
The analysis by David Macdonald, senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, assesses both benefits, as well as how much the federal government has actually spent on the measures.
Federal workers to strike Wednesday if union, government don't reach deal by Tuesday
The country's largest federal public service union says if a deal isn't reached with the federal government by 9 p.m. EDT on Tuesday, it will launch a strike this Wednesday.
The Public Service Alliance of Canada says some 155,000 employees are prepared to walk off the job, including 35,000 workers from the Canada Revenue Agency.
Mediated contract negotiations between the union and the Treasury Board continued over the weekend in what the union described as the government's final chance to reach a deal.
Federal tax workers vote in favour of striking in middle of tax filing season
More than 35,000 federal workers who assess and approve tax returns will be in a legal strike position by April 14, just two weeks before the annual deadline for Canadians to file their taxes.
The strike vote comes after more than a year of haggling between the Canada Revenue Agency and workers represented by the Union of Taxation Employees within the Public Service Alliance of Canada.
A conciliator appointed last fall to help with the talks reported in January that the two sides were at an impasse.
Budget watchdog troubled by spin around latest report on carbon pricing
Canada's Parliamentary budget officer said he is troubled by what he describes as the selective use of facts from his new financial analysis of carbon pricing.
Yves Giroux said the report has to be put into context alongside the costs of all other climate policies, including doing nothing.
"There will be costs no matter what we do," Giroux said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
N.S. mass shooting: how gun smuggling happened, and the inquiry's call for reforms
A decade before a Nova Scotia man used smuggled guns to murder 22 people in the province in 2020, police information systems had labelled him as a firearms risk.
Yet those records never found their way to the Canada Border Services Agency, and they didn't prevent the mass shooter from obtaining a Nexus card — granting him status as a low-risk traveller.