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Maple Chronicles 🇨🇦
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🦝 Raccoon mischief triggers blackout in Toronto, trapping people in elevators

An inquisitive raccoon fiddled with electricity equipment in Toronto and cut power for thousands in the downtown core late on Thursday, knocking out traffic lights in Canada's largest city and trapping some people in elevators.

Crews investigating the outage determined that the nocturnal mammal made contact with equipment at a downtown Toronto station, Utility Hydro One said on social media.

The power outage on Thursday hit areas about 2 km from the CN Tower landmark and left about 7,000 people in the dark for nearly three hours.

#Ontario
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Medically assisted death for mental illness delayed until 2027

The Liberal government is delaying the expansion of medical assistance in dying (MAiD) for people solely suffering from a mental illness until 2027.

Health Minister Mark Holland and Justice Minister Arif Virani made the announcement on Thursday morning, while discussing new legislation to formalize the delay. Holland says all of his provincial and territorial counterparts have told him their health system is not ready for the expansion.

#MAID
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📈 Asylum seekers coming through Montreal airport in record numbers

Roxham Road, a notorious unofficial border crossing, might be closed but as advocates predicted, asylum seekers have found another way to enter Canada in record numbers: Montreal’s Trudeau Airport.

Immigration Canada numbers show that in 2023, Quebec processed a total of 25,755 asylum claims at the airport. That’s more than double the amount of 2022, which was 11,665. In general, asylum requests in Quebec have exploded in the past two years, according to the province’s immigration ministry.

In 2021, Quebec received 10,085 requests, compared to 59,740 in 2023. Most of the requests come from people of Mexican citizenship.

#Quebec #Mexico #immigration
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🏠🚫Ottawa to extend foreign home buyer ban another two years

The federal government is extending its existing ban on foreign ownership of Canadian housing an additional two years, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland announced Sunday.

The ban is currently set to expire on Jan. 1 2025, and will be extended to Jan. 1 2027.

By extending the foreign-buyer ban, we will ensure houses are used as homes for Canadian families to live in and do not become a speculative financial asset class.

Freeland said.

#housing #Freeland
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🇨🇦🇺🇸🇲🇽5 Canadians facing extradition to the U.S., after authorities dismantle drug-smuggling ring

Authorities have dismantled a drug-smuggling operation that they say involved large quantities of narcotics coming into Los Angeles from Mexico before being distributed in the U.S. and Canada by long-haul truckers.

The cross-border operation dubbed "Operation Dead Hand" saw 19 people charged in two U.S. federal indictments for their alleged roles in the organized crime syndicate, including Roberto Scoppa, a Montreal man alleged by authorities to be a large-scale Canadian trafficker and Italian Mafia figure.

A total of 10 people were arrested, including five from Quebec, Ontario and Alberta. Arrest and search warrants were executed in Montreal, Toronto and Calgary as well as in Texas, Florida and California.

The RCMP said in a news release the Canadians arrested will face extradition to the United States to stand trial.

#US #Mexico
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🇨🇦🇺🇸🇾🇪 Canada provides support to U.S. for strikes on Yemen’s Houthis

Canada was among several allies that provided support to the United States and United Kingdom during their second wave of attacks against Houthi targets in Yemen, the Department of National Defence said Saturday.

Canada issued a joint statement with the U.S., U.K., Australia, Bahrain, Denmark, the Netherlands, and New Zealand in response to the Houthis’ continued attacks against international and commercial ships travelling in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.

Three Canadian Armed Forces personnel continue to provide planning support under Operation Prosperity Guardian, a multinational coalition formed in December to counter the Houthis’ attacks. That includes two planners and one intelligence analyst.

No Canadian military weapons were used in the strikes against the Houthi positions, a Department of National Defence spokesperson said on Sunday.

#US #Yemen
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🇬🇧👑 King Charles diagnosed with cancer, to postpone public-facing duties

King Charles III has been diagnosed with "a form of cancer" and will be postponing public-facing duties, Buckingham Palace said Monday.

Doctors made the discovery while the King was undergoing tests for his enlarged prostate. The statement did not specify which form of cancer doctors had found.

His Majesty has today commenced a schedule of regular treatments, during which time he has been advised by doctors to postpone public-facing duties.


#KingCharles
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🩺 Deal to prop up Liberals will be off if Ottawa doesn’t meet pharmacare deadline, Jagmeet Singh says

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Monday his party’s deal to prop up the minority Liberals will be off if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government doesn’t meet the deadline to introduce long-promised pharmacare legislation.

However, the New Democrat wouldn’t rule out still supporting the government on confidence votes, such as the budget, even if the two parties no longer have a formal deal.

Mr. Singh spoke to reporters in the House of Commons before meeting with Mr. Trudeau for the two leaders’ quarterly meetings, scheduled as part of the formal supply-and-confidence deal that has given the Liberals a stable minority government since March, 2022.

As part of the deal, the Liberals agreed to “continuing progress” toward a universal national pharmacare program by passing a Canada Pharmacare Act by the end of 2023. However, the NDP agreed to extend the deadline until March 1 after the fourth-place party rejected an early draft of the bill to give the two sides more time to agree on the contents of the new legislation.

If the Liberals miss the revised deadline for pharmacare legislation, Mr. Singh said it would amount to the government “breaking the deal.”

#healthcare
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🇨🇦🇺🇦 Prime Minister invited Waffen-SS veteran Hunka to his official reception for Zelensky

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invited Yaroslav Hunka, the Ukrainian Waffen-SS veteran who received two ovations in the House of Commons during a visit by Volodymyr Zelensky, to a reception he hosted in the Ukrainian President’s honour the same day.

Mr. Hunka did not attend the Toronto reception, but his invitation by the Prime Minister to the event with the Ukrainian President has raised fresh questions about who approved the Waffen-SS veteran’s attendance, and if his background had been checked.

The invitation from the Prime Minister to “a special event” at Fort York Armoury in Toronto on the evening after Mr. Zelensky’s appearance in Parliament on Sept. 22 was sent to Mr. Hunka on Sept. 19 by the Office of Protocol of Canada.

Dear Yaroslav Hunka, The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, is pleased to invite you to a special event. The event will take place on Friday, September 22, 2023, at 8.30 p.m. in Toronto, Ontario.

the invitation reads.

#Ukraine
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💰🔌Crypto mining company loses bid to force B.C. Hydro to provide power

A cryptocurrency firm has lost a bid to force B.C. Hydro to provide the vast amounts of power needed for its operations, in a court ruling that upholds the provincial government’s right to pause power connections for new crypto miners.

Conifex Timber Inc., a forestry firm that branched out into cryptocurrency “mining,” had gone to the B.C. Supreme Court to have the policy declared invalid.

But Justice Michael Tammen ruled Friday that the government’s move in December 2022 to pause new connections for cryptocurrency mining for 18 months was reasonable and not unduly discriminatory.

Energy Minister Josie Osborne said when the policy was introduced that cryptocurrency mining consumes “massive amounts of electricity” by running banks of high-powered computers around the clock, but adds “very few jobs” to the local economy.

#BritishColumbia
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👶 Child poverty is on the rise in Canada, putting over 1 million kids at risk

Based on current rates of and overall progress in reducing child poverty, the latest UNICEF report card ranks Canada 11th out of 39 of the world’s wealthiest countries. Initially, it seems Canada is doing well; between 2012 and 2021, child poverty fell by 23 per cent.

In reality, since 2021, the number of children living in monetary poverty has sharply risen from 15.2 per cent in 2020 to 17.8 per cent in 2021, and more than one million Canadian children live in poverty today.

This means that one in five children live in persistent fear and stress, face barriers to having their basic needs met, such as stable housing and nutritious food, and experience a lack of opportunity, including access to quality early childhood experiences.

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📉Canadian market experts see interest rates starting to drop in April, BoC survey finds

Canadian market participants expect the Bank of Canada (BoC) to start lowering its key policy rate from a 22-year high of 5 per cent in April, the same as their previous forecast, according to a survey released by the central bank on Monday.

By the end of 2024, the market experts’ median forecast is for the policy rate to come down to 4 per cent, the same as their forecast in the previous survey released in November.

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🌱🔌💰Canada tops China in global rankings for battery supply chains, research firm says

Canada dethroned China last year as the world’s most promising jurisdiction for manufacturing lithium-ion batteries such as those used in electric vehicles, according to a global ranking released Monday.

While Canada produces barely any batteries today, BloombergNEF singled it out as the best placed of the 30 countries it monitors to participate in future global battery supply chains. The strength of its raw materials sector, recently announced large cell manufacturing plants, and rising domestic demand for batteries all helped push Canada ahead.

That doesn’t mean that Canada is better overall than China: What we’re saying is that within the lens of 2023, Canada performed better than China.

said Kwasi Ampofo, BloombergNEF’s head of metals and mining. He added that the ranking reflects the country’s potential in six to 10 years’ time.

Canada’s strong showing reflects the tens of billions of dollars of subsidies announced by the federal government as well as Ontario and Quebec to attract battery manufacturing plants (sometimes referred to as “gigafactories”) and related suppliers.

#energy #China #Ontario #Quebec
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🚫Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says he opposes puberty blockers for minors

Pierre Poilievre offered further support for Alberta’s policy on transgendered youth on Wednesday, endorsing the province’s move to stop treating young people with puberty blockers.

During a news conference on Parliament Hill, the federal Conservative Leader answered “yes” when asked by a journalist to confirm, in the context of Alberta’s proposed policy, that he was against the use of puberty blockers for people under 18.

Mr. Poilievre also said the government should protect the rights of parents to make decisions for their children.

#Poilievre #Alberta
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❗️Justin Trudeau says Pierre Poilievre wants to “Make Canada Great Again” and “that is not what Canadians want.”

#Trudeau #Poilievre
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🇨🇦🇺🇦Conservatives call for Trudeau to resign over invitation to Waffen-SS veteran to Zelensky reception

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced Conservative accusations Tuesday that he misled the House of Commons when he said in September that he had no knowledge of Yaroslav Hunka, a Ukrainian Waffen-SS veteran who was invited to attend a speech in Parliament by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Tuesday that Mr. Trudeau should resign after it emerged Mr. Hunka had received a personal invitation from the Prime Minister to a reception in Toronto for the Ukrainian President later that evening.

Mr. Trudeau “has been claiming for months that he had no involvement in or knowledge of the invitation of a former Nazi soldier to the visit of the Ukrainian President,” Mr. Poilievre said.

He added that since Mr. Trudeau supported the resignation of Mr. Rota, he should hold himself to the same standard and “admit that he is not fit for office.”

Conservative deputy leader Melissa Lantsman said ”the invitation had the Prime Minister’s name on it. It came from him, and for months he said only the Speaker invited him. It turned out not to be true.”

#Trudeau #Poilievre #Ukraine
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Liberal, Bloc, NDP MPs suspend ArriveCan hearings after reading ‘scary’ secret report

Liberal, Bloc Québécois and NDP MPs suddenly suspended parliamentary hearings related to ArriveCan and contracting misconduct allegations Wednesday after reading what one Liberal described as a “scary” secret preliminary report by a federal investigator.

They say any further hearings could put at risk investigations by the Canada Border Services Agency, which produced the report, and the RCMP.

The three parties voted together to end any further questioning of Michel Lafleur, the federal investigator, and made clear that they expect the committee will focus on other topics at future meetings.

Members of the House of Commons committee on government operations have been reviewing how costs for the ArriveCan app for international travellers ballooned to $54-million and related IT procurement issues for months.

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💰Canadians expect they need $1.7M to retire, BMO survey finds

BMO Financial Group's annual retirement survey found that Canadians on average believe they will need $1.7 million, matching the figure in last year's report.

Millennials – those between the ages of 28 and 44 – believe they will need more, expecting to save $2.1 million in order to retire. Gen X (ages 45 to 60) and Boomers (ages 61 to 70) believe they will need $1.3 million to retire, while Gen Z (ages 18 to 27) believes they will need $1.6 million.

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❗️Montreal man charged with uttering death threats against Trudeau

The RCMP have charged a 30-year-old Montreal man after he allegedly threatened to kill Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a social media post.

Paul Clarissou was charged with uttering threats against the prime minister after allegedly making statements on his X account.

The RCMP takes seriously any threats that can affect one's sense of security. Violent statements will not be tolerated. Perpetrators may face criminal charges involving significant sentences.

the RCMP said in a statement.

The force said the charge was laid Jan. 31, after a short investigation by the RCMP's Integrated National Security Enforcement Team.

#Trudeau
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Canada must end reliance on cheap foreign labour, minister says

Canada’s immigration minister is taking steps to curb the country’s dependence on temporary foreign labour and international students, prompting pushback from business groups that say there aren’t enough domestic workers available to sustain parts of the economy.

Marc Miller introduced a limit on foreign student visas last month, cutting them by 35 per cent for this year. He will announce further changes soon to restrict students’ off-campus work hours and he’s also reviewing the country’s temporary foreign worker program.

We have gotten addicted to temporary foreign workers. Any large industry trying to make ends meet will look at the ability to drive down wages. There is an incentive to drive labour costs down. It’s something that’ll require a larger discussion.

Miller said.

Statistics Canada estimates there are more than 2.5 million non-permanent residents, over six per cent of the population, and they play a key role in filling the labour-force gaps left by an aging population.

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🍺Ontario brewery slammed with negative reviews, abusive calls after hosting Trudeau

An Ontario brewery that hosted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says it’s been inundated with hundreds of hateful messages since then.

Trudeau visited the Brewer’s Pantry in Bowmanville, Ont. on Thursday to show support for Robert Rock, the Liberal Party candidate for the Durham federal byelection.

The brewery posted a picture from the event and said it was flooded with dozens of negative Google reviews, offensive emails and phone calls at all hours of the night.

#Ontario #Trudeau
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