Author: admin
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Cycling Canada is cutting women’s pursuit team. These Canadian riders have launched an appeal
Five Canadian cyclists are prepared to fight back after it was announced Cycling Canada would not be sending a women’s pursuit team to this year’s world championships slated for Oct. 14-18.
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Magna CEO says clarity on auto industry headwinds is key to finding right solutions
The auto industry has been facing uncertainty from trade tensions with the U.S., competition from Chinese automakers and shifting policies on electric vehicles. Swamy Kotagiri says industry can’t make it without clarity on certain issues
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How Mother Nature destroyed a Chatham-Kent tourist spot on Mother’s Day weekend
Hail destroyed 350,000 tulips, according to an owner at a Blenheim, Ont., u-pick flower farm.
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‘We have a lot to lose’: Will Trump’s visit to China threaten Carney’s diversification?
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. President Donald Trump is in Beijing this week for a high-stakes summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping — their first meeting of 2026 after a year of tariff escalation and just months after Prime Minister Mark Carney’s own trip to China. The talks begin on Thursday on issues ranging from Iran…
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The science behind B.C. Ferries weather cancellations
The process behind deciding to cancel a ferry sailing because of weather is a high stakes calculation that involves a high-tech nerve center, a 28-year Navy veteran and a strict mathematical matrix designed to survive the volatile waters of the Salish Sea.
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Feds consider declaring new Alberta oil pipeline to be in ‘national interest’
OTTAWA — Alberta and the federal government are looking at a fall date for when Prime Minister Mark Carney’s cabinet will designate a pipeline to the West Coast as being in the national interest, National Post has learned. Building a new one-million barrel-a-day pipeline from Alberta to British Columbia’s coast is at the heart of…
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A disabled man living in a group home died malnourished in hospital. His family wants answers
A family is calling for an inquest after an intellectually disabled man who was being cared for at a Manitoba group home died in hospital with significant malnutrition.
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Judge expected to deliver verdict at former Mountie’s foreign interference trial
A B.C. Supreme Court judge is expected to deliver her verdict Wednesday on foreign interference allegations against a former Mountie accused of targeting an alleged fraudster at the behest of the Chinese government.
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Posthaste: How remote work, pickleball and AI are changing commercial real estate
Three surprising factors are fuelling Canada’s commercial real estate sector rebound from its pandemic woes: remote work, racquet sports and artificial intelligence. Office space demand has particularly grown for “triple-A, amenity-rich space” in Toronto, Vancouver and Ottawa, while older buildings in Calgary, London, Ont., and Winnipeg are facing pressure to convert, according to a real…
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What we’re tracking on May 13, 2026
Bike interest, shelter services and Chrysler minivans inside popular video games.