Hospitalizations, new cases and active cases continue to rise, weekly figures show COVID-19 has killed four more New Brunswickers, the number of sick health-care workers has jumped 44 per cent, and hospitalizations and new cases continue to rise, figures released Tuesday show. A new Omicron subvariant with mutations shown to allow it to better evade immunity from vaccination and prior infection has also been confirmed in the province. A single case of BA.2.75.2 was detected in September, confirmed Department of Health spokesperson Adam Bowie, although it was not listed separately in any of the weekly COVIDWatchRead more
More than 300,000 Canadians have already retired in 2022, Statistics Canada says Lee Valley Tools put up a recruitment sign outside its headquarters in Ottawa a few months ago with a line reflecting a corporate shift: “No Experience Needed.” The company, which has retail stores across Canada, as well as an Ottawa-based manufacturing arm that builds its tools, desperately needed staff. Known for attracting older workers on the retail side, Lee Valley had seen a wave of retirements during COVID-19. But with demand up for its products as people embracedRead more
Russell Tessier guilty of 1st-degree murder in 2007 death of Allan Gerald Berdahl The Supreme Court of Canada has restored a Calgary man’s first-degree murder conviction, ruling his statements to police were admissible as evidence against him at trial. Russell Tessier was originally found guilty by a jury in 2018, 11 years after the body of his friend Allan Gerald Berdahl, 36, was discovered in a ditch north of Calgary, on March 16, 2007. The conviction came after the trial judge allowed the panel to hear evidence of what Tessier disclosed to police before investigators told him of his right toRead more
Methamphetamine back in spotlight after stabbing massacre in James Smith Cree Nation Elaine Fox knows everyone in Onion Lake Cree Nation. That means the elder knows how methamphetamine is altering the fabric of her community like never before. “It’s broken family relationships,” she said. The 66-year-old said meth and gangs control the lives of many young people in Onion Lake, a First Nation that straddles the Alberta-Saskatchewan border. “Most of them come from dysfunctional families — families that have never dealt with residential school traumas,” said Fox. “I know theRead more
Dutch man tormented B.C. teen online for more than two years The 44-year-old Dutch man convicted of sexually extorting a B.C. teenager who died by suicide a decade ago was sentenced to 13 years in prison Friday. B.C. Supreme Court Justice Martha Devlin asked Aydin Coban to stand as she read out her final decision, after detailing the arguments presented by the Crown and the defence and explaining her deliberation process. The sentence is longer than the 12 years suggested by the Crown, but Devlin said Coban’s conduct and the pleasure he took inRead more
Excellence in education is an ‘important part of advancing society,’ prof says When it comes to the coming school board trustee elections, Kate Belair of Wellesley, Ont., hopes people do their homework on the candidates. “We have somebody running for school board trustee who doesn’t seem to be very inclusive,” she said in an interview in the village ahead of Ontario’s Monday, Oct. 24, municipal election. “He’s going to be in a situation where he could impact our children’s education, and that’s scary because we want our community to be inclusiveRead more
The Public Order Emergency Commission is meeting for its second day in Ottawa Two Ottawa city councillors have told the public inquiry probing the federal government’s use of emergency powers to end last winter’s protest convoy occupation of downtown Ottawa that they struggled to convince city police to deploy resources to residential neighbourhoods. “It was a general sense of fear, terror and dismay, that they felt abandoned by their city and by their police,” Catherine McKenney, a councillor for a core downtown ward, told the inquiry on Friday. The Public Order Emergency Commission isRead more
Const. Devon Northrup and Const. Morgan Russell died after an exchange of gunfire Tuesday night Ontario’s police watchdog has revealed new details Thursday about a shooting at a home north of Toronto that left two police officers and a young man dead. The Special Investigations Unit (SIU) says the South Simcoe police officers died in hospital and the 22-year-old man died at the home after an exchange of gunfire Tuesday night in Innisfil, Ont. In an email Thursday, SIU spokesperson Kristy Denette told CBC News that “based on preliminary information” the two officers who were killedRead more
Meadow Lake Tribal Council hopes wellness conference inspires change in communities Chester Herman was gassing up his vehicle when he noticed a poster for a men’s wellness conference hosted by the Meadow Lake Tribal Council (MLTC) outreach team. It’s not something that would typically stop him in his tracks, but the poster listed grief and loss among the topics to be discussed. “It kind of hit the spot for me. I’m going through a lot because of my loss,” he said, describing an immense sorrow he has felt since the deathRead more
Experts say this is a concerning trend driven by misinformation Alberta physicians are raising the alarm about a dangerous trend — fuelled by misinformation — that could cost lives. Dr. Stephanie Cooper, an obstetrician specializing in high-risk births at Foothills Medical Centre, said a patient recently refused to consent to a blood transfusion if it came from a donor who had received the COVID-19 vaccine. “I see people with severe hemorrhage due to childbirth on a regular basis. And for me, the idea that this is out there is somewhat mind-boggling.”Read more