Ontario apartment buildings bring investors double-digit returns. Some tenants say they're paying the price (www.cbc.ca)
U.S. issues detention order for alleged B.C. Ponzi schemer Greg Martel (www.cbc.ca)
Manitoba NDP win majority, CBC News projects (www.cbc.ca)
Woo!...
Trudeau says he's 'not looking to escalate' tensions as India reportedly tells 41 Canadian diplomats to leave (www.cbc.ca)
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government is "not looking to escalate" a diplomatic row with New Delhi, but declined to say whether Canada would match India's decision to ask for the removal 41 Canadian diplomats.
Liberal MP Greg Fergus elected Speaker of the House of Commons (www.cbc.ca)
Three scientists share Nobel Prize in Physics for work in electron dynamics (www.cbc.ca)
Driver with learner's licence caught speeding at 199 km/h on North Vancouver stretch of Hwy 1 (www.cbc.ca)
More adults are taking medication for ADHD. Physicians say trend is a double-edged sword (www.cbc.ca)
Greenbelt 2.0? Why Doug Ford's boundary changes in Ottawa and Hamilton could make developers rich (www.cbc.ca)
On the same Friday afternoon last November that Premier Doug Ford’s government announced its plan to take certain developers’ land out of the Greenbelt, it also made moves that benefited developers who own rural land on the outskirts of Ottawa and Hamilton....
Sask. premier 'jumping the gun' with turn to notwithstanding clause for pronoun policy: expert (www.cbc.ca)
Saskatchewan's premier says he'll use the notwithstanding clause to override a court injunction that has paused the province's new pronoun policy for students. But a professor says the clause is meant to be used as a tool of last resort.
Saskatoon police refuse to release policy on how they use dogs after violent arrest (www.cbc.ca)
Warning: this story contains distressing details and images. Saskatoon police are refusing to release their policy on how police service dogs are used when arresting suspects.
Canada is the only G7 country without a national school food program. Advocates say it's time (www.cbc.ca)
Canada is the only country in the G7 that doesn't have a national school food program. Researchers say that as high inflation affects food prices, more children need access to these programs — but community groups say they need stable funding from the federal government to keep everyone fed.
This B.C. landlord was shocked to find his rental suite listed on Airbnb. Now, he wants stricter regulations (www.cbc.ca)
PC ad encouraging Manitobans to vote like 'no one is watching' pulled within hours (www.cbc.ca)
It’s “basically saying to people, ‘Look, you can do things that other people would say are immoral or unethical in terms of your voting decisions, and you can get away with it because the voting booth is private,’” Saunders said....
Inside the battle to preserve the underwater ghosts of Ontario's Great Lakes (www.cbc.ca)
B.C. Conservative leader under fire for likening teaching of sexuality, gender to residential schools (www.cbc.ca)
At Canada's largest Atlantic puffin colony, chicks are dying of starvation (www.cbc.ca)
'Ghost hotels' need to go, neighbour says after 3 years of complaints about Airbnb next door (www.cbc.ca)
Canada sending men's gymnastics team to Olympics for 1st time since 2008 (www.cbc.ca)
Canada's voluntary AI code of conduct is coming — not everyone is enthused (www.cbc.ca)
A new code of conduct is set to govern how AI is developed in Canada. But it's voluntary, and despite immediate support from big players in the business, there are also concerns it could stifle innovation and the ability to compete with companies based outside of Canada.
Manitoba founded by Métis but oppressive history soon made Indigenous premiership impossible (www.cbc.ca)
Through its 153-year history, Manitoba has had 19 premiers but only one has been Indigenous, and only one other has been a woman.