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  • NewsThe Canadian Press

    Ottawa to force banks to call carbon rebate a carbon rebate in direct deposits

    OTTAWA — Canadian banks that refuse to identify the carbon rebate by name when doing direct deposits are forcing the government to change the law to make them do it, says Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault. Guilbeault is taking the stand after Tuesday's federal budget promised to amend the Financial Administration Act so government payments accepted for deposit at Canadian banks will carry whatever title the government wants. "The fact that they haven't been doing it now for many years led u

    3 min read
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  • NewsCBC

    Anglers lament lack of parking at boat launches

    Fishing charter captain Jon Bondy says he sometimes has to get up at 3 a.m. to get a good parking spot at the LaSalle Landing park on LaSalle's waterfront if he wants to launch his boat there.He says the municipality does not have enough parking spots to accommodate all the hundreds of walleye anglers who descend on the area this time of year."If you go to Sandusky, Ohio, you go to Michigan and you look at their facilities, they're booming. There's plenty of parking and this county has done an e

    2 min read
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  • NewsCBC

    City of Windsor joins London, Hamilton in "F" grades in fiscal transparency

    If you've felt like municipal finances were a bit hard to follow, it's not just you: According to a new report from an independent think tank, the City of Windsor gets a "F" grade on financial and fiscal transparency.But the City of Windsor's treasurer says she takes issue with the failing score and the way it was determined. The report from the C.D. Howe Institute, released Thursday, looks at the financial transparency of 32 major Canadian municipalities. Windsor, along with Hamilton, Ont. and

    5 min read
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  • NewsThe Canadian Press

    Bigger boats, more nets, people arrive in Zeballos, B.C., for new orca rescue attempt

    ZEBALLOS, B.C. — A large seine fishing vessel capable of casting a net strong enough to hold a nearly 700-kilogram killer whale calf has arrived in Zeballos, B.C., to participate in the latest attempt to rescue the young orca stranded in a remote tidal lagoon. The flat-bottom aluminum vessel has a built-in crane-like device for lifting heavy nets, and it's expected to be deployed as part of a rescue effort that could happen any day now in the lagoon on the northwest coast of Vancouver Island. Th

    1 min read
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  • NewsCBC

    Watson Lake's mayor says anything is welcome when it comes to long-term care options in town

    The mayor of Watson Lake says his town wants any long-term care beds it can get, and he's urging the Yukon's health minister to listen to what she's hearing about long-term care in his community.Earlier this month, CBC News reported that a couple in their 90s, married 75 years, are forced to live apart because there are no long-term care options available in Watson Lake."Ev and Lloyd Kostiuck have been a part of our community for the entirety of their lives," said Mayor Chris Irvin. "Nobody want

    3 min read
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  • NewsCBC

    Toronto looks to expand tree canopy with planting on private land

    As the city of Toronto works to build more housing, it faces another challenge too: less space for trees, which the city is trying to plant in large numbers to improve air quality, reduce storm water runoff and cool city streets as summers heat up. The city says it wants to increase its tree canopy — the amount of city streets shaded by trees — to cover 40 per cent of Toronto by 2050. As of a 2018 city review, the canopy covered about 30 per cent. To do so, it aims to plant about 120,000 trees a

    4 min read
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  • NewsCBC

    Immigration minister responds to critics over plan to detain migrants in penitentiaries

    Immigration Minister Marc Miller confirmed to Radio-Canada that the federal government will be using its penitentiaries to hold some foreign nationals for immigration purposes.He said those detainees will be separated from the prison population, but that both groups could be sharing services."It would be separate housing and it would not be in the general population, because they are not criminals," Miller said, following Radio-Canada's story on the government's proposal buried at the bottom of

    2 min read
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