Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: January 9, 2025 - 18:00
Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. January 9th, 2025
January 9, 2025

The California wildfires have left five people dead, countless neighbourhoods destroyed, and dozens of residents in need of evacuation. We deliver the latest developments as they become available. Here at home, an unknown amount of data at the Ottawa Catholic School Board might have been compromised due to a cyber incident, with student information deemed to be the primary target. CFRA's Andrew Pinsent tells Kristy Cameron what we know so far. Plus, Canadian officials are reportedly drafting a list of American-made goods to be labeled as ‘retaliatory tariffs’. That grocery list includes steel, orange juice, and toilets. No, we’re actually serious.
British Columbia and Nova Scotia each mapped out a lean fiscal year ahead, with B.C. announcing a spending review and Nova Scotia setting aside a reserve fund, as American trade uncertainty looms over provincial budget season.The two provinces, which spoke to their near-term financial futures in separate official pronouncements on Tuesday, join other governments across the country in manoeuvring to brace themselves for the turmoil that would almost certainly follow if U.S. President Donald Trump makes good on his threat to impose across-the-board 25-per-cent-tariffs on most Canadian...
February 18, 2025 - 21:56 | Justine Hunter | The Globe and Mail
Vancouver’s police chief is retiring from the department he joined as a constable in 1987 and led for the past decade.Chief Constable Adam Palmer announced Tuesday he is leaving the department five months before his current contract expires. He refused to confirm or deny that he plans to run for a seat in the next federal election when asked by reporters but promised to unveil his coming career move in the next week or so.
February 18, 2025 - 21:37 | Mike Hager | The Globe and Mail
The issues arose due to ICBC's Health Care Services Terms, which allow qualifying health care services to bill ICBC directly for services provided to individuals.
February 18, 2025 - 21:26 | Amy Judd | Global News - Canada
Comments
Be the first to comment