Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Fri. August 15th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: August 15, 2025 - 18:02

Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Fri. August 15th, 2025

August 15, 2025

During a press conference on Thursday, Ontario’s Premier suggested that some ‘sneaky companies’ are trying to pass off their products as Canadian-made goods, even though they weren’t manufactured in Canada. Campbell’s Soup, in particular, was one of the companies that rubbed him the wrong way. Should we adopt Doug Ford’s idea, or is it a pointless endeavour? Kristy Cameron sifts through the CFRA textboard and tackles today’s Question of the Day. Sticking with the Ford government, they were making headlines for very different reasons at Queen’s Park today. That’s because, earlier this morning, Ontario’s Premier issued a series of return-to-work orders for provincial civil servants. As of late-October, they will be required to work at their office workstation 4 times per week. Once the new year rolls around, it’s a full-time return to workstation duties. We dig deeper with Jennifer Dimoff, a Professor at UOttawa’s Telfer School of Management and an organizational psychologist. Plus, we check in with CFRA’s Andrew Pinsent, as the potential flight attendant strike at Air Canada approaches a crucial breaking point.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Prolific Canadian actor Graham Greene, who earlier this year received a Governor General’s award for lifetime artistic achievement, has died. Greene’s manager Gerry Jordan said Greene died on Monday in Stratford, Ont., of natural causes. He was 73. 
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When Maurice McGregor graduated from high school, his father sat him down for a pragmatic talk about the future. The fact that young Maurice had not been the smartest of students did not preclude him from pursuing a career in education, law or medicine because if only the smartest were able to take on positions of authority, the world would be in a lot of trouble.The son chose medicine because it was a field that sparked his curiosity. And, coming from a family of fierce pacifists who were all aware that a new world war was on the horizon, he wanted to be able to take part as a healer...
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Many of the more than 35,000 public-service employees from two unions in British Columbia will be heading to the picket lines on Tuesday morning if they are not called back to the bargaining table, the union heads say. “We think our government is out of touch with both our membership and the public‚” said Paul Finch, bargaining chair and president of the British Columbia General Employees’ Union. “We think the government needs to take a knee and revise their position here.”The BCGEU, which represents 34,000 public-sector employees, as well as the Professional Employees Association (PEA...
September 1, 2025 - 19:46 | Aajah Sauter, Claire McFarlane | The Globe and Mail