Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. September 5th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: September 5, 2025 - 18:01

Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. September 5th, 2025

September 5, 2025

As you heard in Hour 1, Prime Minister Mark Carney has invented a ‘Buy Canadian’ procurement policy, and we should see it in action by 2026. This means that the federal government will be buying from Canadian suppliers, as domestic providers hit the bench. It seems like a good idea on paper and in theory, but what curveballs should the feds be anticipating? Kristy Cameron digs deeper with Pedro Antunes, a Chief Economist with the Conference Board of Canada. Later in Hour 2, we rekindle the stunt driving debate that we originally started with Barrhaven West councillor David Hill. He is among a crowd of city councillors who are growing fed up with stunt driving in Canada’s Capital, claiming that these bad driving habits are getting worse in their specific wards. And while River Ward councillor Riley Brockington believes that the provincial penalties are pretty strict, he is in favour of the province seizing vehicles after a second conviction. He explains why.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Brett Lauther should have been pumped after connecting on five field goals in the Saskatchewan Roughriders' 21-13 Banjo Bowl victory over the Blue Bombers on Saturday, but it was his one mistake he focused on.
September 6, 2025 - 21:57 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
A Canadian Armed Forces member deployed to Latvia, who was missing since earlier this week, was found dead Friday.A news release from the Department of National Defence and Canadian Armed Forces says Warrant Officer George Hohl was deployed on Operation Reassurance as part of the Aviation Battalion under the NATO Multinational Brigade-Latvia.Hohl was a vehicle technician based in Edmonton and had served in the Canadian Armed Forces for almost 20 years.
September 6, 2025 - 21:49 | | The Globe and Mail
A B.C. ostrich farm fighting to stop a cull of its 400-strong flock over an avian flu outbreak has been granted an interim stay by the Federal Court of Appeal in Ottawa, delaying the execution of the birds.Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., has been attempting to stop the Canadian Food Inspection Agency from destroying the birds since the cull was ordered amid an avian flu outbreak in December that would go on to kill 69 ostriches.
September 6, 2025 - 21:25 | | The Globe and Mail