Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Tues. May 13th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: May 13, 2025 - 18:01

Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Tues. May 13th, 2025

May 13, 2025
Despite the Trump tariffs, some U.S. cities are holding onto hope that their economic ties with Canada won’t be severed. In Hour 2, Kristy Cameron chats with Juliet Abdel, the President of the Greater Topeka Chamber of Commerce in Kansas. She outlines her gameplan to not only preserve trade partnerships with the town’s Canadian allies, but to advance them as well. Turning our attention back to the Great White North, how does today’s Cabinet reshuffling impact the Canadian economy? Joining us to open that can of worms is Gilles Levasseur, a Professor of Law at UOttawa’s Telfer School of Management. And in city news, a rash of break-ins across the Copeland Park neighbourhood has left residents on edge. We get the details from CTV’s Katelyn Wilson. Then, we gather instant reaction from College Ward councillor Laine Johnson.


Unpublished Newswire

 
16 young women and non-binary youth are taking part in the four day program Camp Molly this week at the Regional training Facility outside of Saskatoon.
June 13, 2025 - 18:48 | Nicole Healey | Global News - Canada
A regional chief for Anishinabek Nation says he briefed the Ontario Provincial Police Thursday on what to expect when First Nations take to the streets to protest provincial and federal legislation aimed at fast-tracking major projects.Scott McLeod said he was invited by an Indigenous relations coordinator to brief officers at the OPP’s Orillia headquarters on why First Nations oppose the legislation and why they see the bills as a violation of treaties with the Crown.
June 13, 2025 - 18:16 | Alessia Passafiume | The Globe and Mail
The practice known as “drip pricing” is front and centre again in an action by the federal Competition Bureau against DoorDash and in a proposed class-action lawsuit brought by a Toronto law firm against Uber Eats. Drip pricing generally involves enticing customers by advertising low prices, but charging extra mandatory fees, usually when they are checking out. It continues to come under fire because “disclosure around pricing and fees in various consumer transactions is, at times, less than thorough and transparent,” says Mike Robb, partner with London, Ontario-based law firm,...
June 13, 2025 - 18:09 | Stewart Lewis | National Post