Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: June 10, 2025 - 15:57
Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Tues. June 10th, 2025
June 10, 2025

It’s not just fewer Canadians travelling to the United States, but also fewer Americans travelling to Canada. According to StatsCan, the number of car trips that Americans took to visit Canada declined by 10.7 percent in April and 8.4 percent in May. Those data drops are compared to what we saw in April and May of last year. And when we look at air travel through the same lens, the trend continues. Naturally, as a testy trade war unfolds, Canadian tourism associations are worried that the perception of an anti-American environment is keeping our Southern neighbours away from the Great White North. Today, one tourism association is aiming to change those toxic beliefs with their latest advertising rollout. Kristy Cameron chats with Shanny Halle, a spokesperson for Quebec’s Eastern Townships Tourism. It’s a region in Southeastern Quebec that hovers around the U.S. border. Plus, we are taking applications for Kristy’s Summer Job Centre, starting today and rolling right into Friday! Tuesday’s installment features Angela Grant-Saunders from the one and only Saunders Farm. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and three of her ministers got an earful on Wednesday night from southern Alberta locals at a rowdy, hours-long town hall to discuss the province’s coal policy.About 500 people, dressed in cowboy hats, belt buckles, and jeans, packed a community hall in Fort Macleod, Alta., for an event marked by heckling, competing applause and placards.
June 12, 2025 - 00:13 | Matthew Scace | The Globe and Mail
In an online advisory, BC Parks says all visitors should evacuate the park immediately and stay out of the area until further notice.
June 12, 2025 - 00:05 | Jacob New | Global News - Canada
The massive surgical backlogs left after rolling pandemic lockdowns are clearing but Canadians are still waiting longer than they were pre-COVID for new hips and knees, cancer surgeries and other “priority” procedures, new data show.
Even though 26 per cent more hip and knee replacements were done in 2024 than 2019, it still wasn’t enough to meet the need: just 68 per cent of Canadians received a hip replacement within the 26-week benchmark last year, compared to 75 per cent in 2019.
For those needing a knee replacement, 61 per cent got a slot in the operating room within the 182-day...
June 12, 2025 - 00:01 | Sharon Kirkey | National Post
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