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  • Canada’s Competition Bureau is investigating Lululemon
    Canada's Competition Bureau is investigating Lululemon after an environmental group accused the athleisure brand of 'false and misleading' statements in its environmental impact.
    Canada
    May 6
  • A once-in-a-lifetime celestial explosion may be near — and Canadians can see
    Canadians will be able to see a once-in-a-lifetime celestial explosion, likely before September. Astronomers say a star is set to go nova.
    Canada
    May 10
  • A look at the twisted crimes of Peter Demeter, one of Canada’s worst criminals
    The 100th episode of 'Crime Beat' examines the grisly murder of Christine Demeter, and gathers never-before-heard details from journalists, lawyers and former investigators.
    Crime
    May 10
  • What G7 phase-out of ‘unabated’ coal-powered energy means for Canada
    Canada signed a pledge to phase out coal-fired electricity by 2030 with other G7 countries but plans to keep producing coal for steel production.
    Canada
    May 2
  • Canada’s dental plan has officially kicked in. Who is eligible?
    More than 1,200 seniors have already visited a dentist and had their claims processed by the federal government's new dental care plan, the Liberals announced Wednesday.
    Health
    May 2
  • Wildfires are burning across western Canada. What to know
    Wildfires have prompted evacuation orders in western Canada just days after officials warned of 'significant risk' from the natural hazard this summer.
    Canada
    May 11
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  • Canada’s emissions drop to lowest in 25 years, barring pandemic lows
    Canada accounts for nearly 1.5 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, making it the 11th largest emitter in the world, data shows.
    Environment
    May 2
  • Our top 6 Amazon deals of the week
    Looking to shop great deals? Here are our favourite deal items up for grabs this week on Amazon. Save big on L'Oreal, Kindle and more coveted brand items.
    The Curator
    May 7
  • How Veteran Affairs Canada’s holiday tweet became a ‘dumpster fire’
    The post on March 29th wished people a "happy March holiday season,'' prompting hundreds of questions online about what exactly constitutes the March holidays.
    Canada
    May 3
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  • Canadians filed fewer complaints over language rights in last year
    Raymond Théberge says it's too early to say whether Canada witnessing a downward trend in complaints about violations of the Official Languages Act.
    Canada
    May 7
  • How rate cut bets are changing after April jobs ‘shocker’
    Canada's unemployment rate was steady at 6.1 per cent in April as employers collectively added some 90,000 jobs in a surprisingly strong Labour Force Survey.
    Economy
    May 10
  • Renters so far more ‘vulnerable’ than homeowners amid higher interest rates. Why?
    The Bank of Canada says in a new report that renters are feeling more debt stress tied to higher interest rates than Canadians with a mortgage.
    Money
    May 9
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  • Canada repatriates 6 children of woman deemed security risk from ISIS camp
    The children of a woman detained in a camp for captured ISIS members are now in Canada. The family lawyer said a family will house all six of them together.
    Canada
    May 7
  • Delivery issue: Why Canada Post ‘must change’ to avoid collapse
    Canada Post reported a sixth consecutive annual loss in 2023, prompting the Crown corporation to acknowledge its current business model is not working.
    Canada
    May 7
  • Here’s where Canada’s first Shake Shack will open in downtown Toronto
    When Shake Shack crosses the border into Canada later this year, it will make its debut at the northeast corner of Yonge-Dundas Square in Toronto with a 5,500 square-foot space
    Canada
    Apr 30
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  • Thousands of Canada’s rail workers have a strike mandate. What happens now?
    Train conductors, engineers, yard workers and rail traffic controllers under Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC) voted overwhelmingly in favour of a strike mandate Wednesday.
    Canada
    May 3
  • As flu season fades, spring and summer viruses emerge. What are they?
    As Canadians bid farewell to the aches and chills of the respiratory virus season a new question looms: what other microbial menaces will appear as days grow warmer?
    Health
    May 1
  • Bird flu: Experts urge more surveillance in Canada — before it’s too late
    Experts are urging Canada to boost its surveillance of the bird flu after traces of it were found in milk in the U.S. and it has spread among dairy cattle in the U.S.
    Canada
    May 3
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  • Are cancer cases set to rise in Canada this year? What new projections say 
    As the population grows and ages, new cancer cases and deaths from the disease in Canada are increasing, the authors of the CMAJ study say.
    Health
    2 hours
  • Is inside sports betting on the rise? Why the problem may get ‘more common’
    Does Canada have an inside sports betting problem? Two athletes for Canadian teams were recently penalized for betting as legalized gambling has taken off.
    Sports
    May 1
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