Beyond — Page 30
'Water Not Coal' petition crosses signature threshold for ballot
Corb Lund's campaign to ban coal mining in the Rockies surpassed 178,000 signatures, moving to Elections Alberta for verification.
Interior Health warns pertussis cases rising ahead of summer
Whooping cough spreading as travel and camps resume; vaccination remains most effective protection.
Canada will host premier oceans conference in Halifax next year
The 12th Our Ocean Conference moves to Canada in 2027, focusing on blue economy, Indigenous leadership, and climate action.
House of Commons criminalizes forced sterilization
Canada's parliament passes long-awaited law making forced or coerced sterilization an aggravated assault carrying up to 14 years.
Ottawa offers airlines up to $150M in fuel-cost loans
Federal government launching relief program as carriers struggle with soaring jet fuel costs driven by Middle East tensions and oil...
Man killed in Nova Scotia crash; Ottawa woman critically injured
A 65-year-old Ottawa resident died Saturday when a pickup truck hit his vehicle near Lunenburg on Highway 103.
Unlicensed airline captain flew hundreds of flights
Peel Regional Police say an airline captain operated flights without proper licensing in an investigation called Project Icarus. Details...
Ottawa proposes social media ban for kids under 16
Federal government will introduce online harms bill Wednesday with new restrictions on youth access. Australia already tried it.
WestJet and Sunwing suspend Cuba operations indefinitely
The airlines are pulling all flights and vacation packages from the Caribbean destination due to an ongoing fuel crisis and U.S. blockade.
Stock markets recover after Friday's tech-driven sell-off
Wall Street and the TSX bounce back as AI stocks steady. Oil gains on Middle East tensions, while Treasury yields ease slightly.
CRA data breach settlement claims open this summer
Up to 47,000 Canadians affected by 2020 cyberattacks can claim up to $5,200. The portal opens soon with a six-month filing window.
CSIS security screening risks stereotyping foreign nationals
Canada's spy agency adds blanket country warnings to clearance assessments—a practice a federal watchdog says may unfairly bias hiring decisions.