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Yahoo! News Canada - Canada Headlines

Monday, December 30, 2013

Yahoo! News Canada - Canada Headlines


Bitter cold prompts windchill warnings in parts of Canada

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 03:33 PM PST

High winds not only caused windchill warnings but also sent snow blowing over Highway 1 near Winnipeg.A number of provinces are facing some bitter cold temperatures, with Manitoba, parts of Saskatchewan, northern Ontario and Quebec all under extreme windchill warnings.


Two-year-old Canadian girl among 8 dead in St. Vincent storm

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 09:08 PM PST

KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent - Police in the east Caribbean island of St. Vincent say a two-year-old girl from Montreal was among the eight people who died in a Christmas Eve storm that led to widespread flooding and landslides.

Saskatoon condo residents return to suites after gas leak

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 08:32 PM PST

Four-four condominium suites were evacuated after a ruptured gas line in Saskatoon's west end. Line connected to building's backup generator.Saskatoon residents have been allowed to return back to their apartments after a condominium in the city's west end was evacuated due to a ruptured natural gas line.


Plane and cube van collide on tarmac at Calgary International Airport

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 05:42 PM PST

An Air Canada plane lands in front of a United plane at the Calgary International Airport- There's been a bizarre collision between a plane and a cube van at the Calgary International Airport. The incident happened Monday morning on the tarmac near Gate 11 on the Air Canada side of the airport. Jody Mosely of the Calgary Airport Authority says it appears the aircraft was pushed off the gate and bumped the vehicle, knocking it over. Alberta Health Services says one person was assessed on site and didn't require further care.


Year in cartoons: Things we got sick of this year

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 12:00 PM PST

Year in cartoons: Things we got sick of this yearThe year-end gallery cartoon 1

Quebec corruption inquiry set for another busy year in 2014

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 02:29 PM PST

Former FTQ union employee Ken Pereira is seen in a frame grab from the video feed at the Charbonneau inquiry looking into corruption in the Quebec construction industry Wednesday, October 2, 2013 in Montreal.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Charbonneau CommissionMONTREAL - Quebec's fight against corruption snared some high-profile personalities in 2013, including two well-known mayors who were slapped with serious criminal charges. Whether 2014 is just as dramatic is unclear as the Charbonneau Commission resumes its public hearings and the province's anti-corruption unit continues to probe criminal activity at various political levels. Besides then-interim Montreal mayor Michael Applebaum landing in the legal spotlight and gangsterism charges being filed against former Laval mayor Gilles Vaillancourt, 2013 saw: — The province's largest labour federation put under the microscope as its construction wing was shown to essentially be under the control of organized crime.


Replacing spoiled food one small step in Ontario ice storm recovery

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 12:21 PM PST

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne announces compensation plan for Ontarians who lost food to spoilage during last week's ice storm.For residents of Toronto who lost power – some for as long as nine days – during a recent powerful ice storm that wreaked havoc across Central and Eastern Canada, replacing spoiled food may be top of mind. But the … Continue reading →


Rizzuto funeral held in church where his son and father were remembered

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 02:32 PM PST

Pallbearers carry the coffin of reputed mafia boss Vito Rizzuto from a church in Montreal, Monday, Dec. 30, 2013, following his funeral. Rizzuto died last week from natural causes.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham HughesMONTREAL - Police, bystanders and hundreds of mourners were on hand Monday for Mafia boss Vito Rizzuto's funeral in the same church where his son and father were remembered after their violent deaths. Bells pealed as Rizzuto's gold-coloured casket was carried out of the Notre-Dame-de-la-Defense Church in the heart of Montreal's Little Italy. Elaborate flower arrangements, including one in the shape of a golf bag — a nod to one of Rizzuto's favourite pastimes — were tied to the bumpers. Nick Rizzuto was gunned down on the street, while Nicolo Rizzuto was shot by a sniper in his Montreal mansion.


B.C. government ordered to pay logging company $1.75M over aboriginal blockade

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 04:38 PM PST

One lawyer involved in the case says the judgment, which follows several years of legal proceedings that included a trip to the Supreme Court of Canada, should serve as a yet another warning to the provincial government about the need to meaningfully consult with First Nations over resource development. Moulton Contracting Ltd. sued the government, as well as the Fort Nelson First Nation and several band members, over a non-violent blockade that began in October 2006 and stretched on until the new year. George Behn and members of his family launched the blockade after Moulton Contracting obtained timber sales licences from the provincial government. Moulton planned to sell the timber to lumber giant Canfor.

Toronto ice storm: 290 in dark as power slowly returns

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 07:03 PM PST

About 290 customers are still without electricity in Toronto, more than a week after an ice storm hit Eastern Canada and knocked out electricity to about 300,000.

Conservative government lost ground, voter confidence in 2013: polls

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 08:48 AM PST

Canada's PM Harper speaks during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in OttawaIt hasn't been a banner year for the governing Conservative Party of Canada. The reasons are myriad and well-known at this point – starting with a man named Justin Trudeau and a re-awakened Liberal opposition, progressing through a variety of … Continue reading →


Religious freedom chief backs diplomats, aims to make Canada a rights leader

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 02:31 PM PST

Dr. Andrew Bennett is shown at a news conference in Maple, Ont., north of Toronto, Tuesday, Feb.19, 2013. Bennett says his job advancing and promoting religious liberty around the globe has an equally important role: to support Canadian diplomats as they work abroad. Bennett's words of praise for the Canadian foreign service comes despite years of tension between diplomats and the very Conservative government that created his job early last year. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank GunnOTTAWA - Canada's first religious freedom ambassador says his job advancing and promoting religious liberty around the globe has an equally important role: to support Canadian diplomats as they work abroad. Andrew Bennett's vote of confidence in the Canadian foreign service comes despite years of tension between diplomats and the very Conservative government that created his job early last year. Canada's foreign service is "one of the best in the world" and diplomats have been working tirelessly for decades in nations where religion plays a critical role in the lives of their citizens and the politics of their governments, Bennett said in a recent interview. "The Canadian foreign service, and Canadians abroad, have been focusing on religious freedom for a long time before I arrived, so really our office is a way to support them in what they're finding in the countries they're engaged in," said Bennett, himself a longtime public servant.


Christopher Peloso, husband of George Smitherman, found dead

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 11:22 AM PST

Smitherman's husband missingPoliticians from all parties and levels of government are paying tribute to Christopher Peloso. The husband of Ontario's former deputy premier was found dead after a long struggle with depression.


New Brunswick winter storm hits during ice storm recovery

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 02:51 PM PST

Premier David Alward, centre, flanked by NB Power spokesman Brent Staeben, left, and New Brunswick Emergency Measures Organization director Greg MacCallum address a news conference Sunday to gives an update on the storm recover operations.Efforts to restore heat and light to New Brunswick homes and businesses still without power after last week's ice storm were not made any easier by a winter blast that dumped 30 centimetres in some areas of the province overnight.


Toronto ice storm: province, retailers offer gift cards

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 08:31 AM PST

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne announces compensation plan for Ontarians who lost food to spoilage during last week's ice storm.Ontario retailers and the provincial government are offering gift cards to compensate residents who lost food to spoilage during power outages caused by last week's ice storm.


Job vacancies in Alberta outstrip available labour

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 03:50 AM PST

Alberta employers have more job openings than there are job seekers to fill them.Alberta's hot economy is generating so many jobs that many are going unfilled. Businesses in the province reported nearly 53,000 job vacancies in September.


What apps are most used by Canadians? Weather tops the list: poll

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 02:23 PM PST

Crews clear branches snagged on power lines on a closed road in Brampton, Ont., Monday, December 23, 2013. Hydro companies in the Greater Toronto Area — which appeared to be the hardest hit by the weather system — warned some residents to brace for the possibility of being without power until Boxing Day or later.THE CANADIAN PRESS/J.P. MoczulskiTORONTO - Is it any surprise that in a global comparison of what apps mobile users keep going back to again and again Canadians ranked high for checking the weather? In an online survey with more than 19,000 respondents in 27 countries conducted by Ipsos, users were asked what kinds of apps they regularly used. Forty-seven per cent of the Canadians polled said they most often loaded a weather app, which was eight percentage points above the global average. By comparison, only 22 per cent of the users in Saudi Arabia regularly used a weather app and on the high end, 56 per cent of South African users pulled up a weather app often.


Lawsuits in Greyhound bus beheading drop Canadian government, RCMP as defendants

Posted: 30 Dec 2013 02:31 PM PST

RCMP continue to investigate and are asking anyone with information to contact them.WINNIPEG - The Canadian government and the RCMP have been quietly dropped from lawsuits filed after the beheading of a young man aboard a Greyhound bus in Manitoba. Victim Tim McLean's father filed a claim soon after his son was killed in the summer of 2008 against Greyhound, perpetrator Vince Li and Canada. The Canadian Press recently discovered that the file was amended in April 2012 to drop the federal government as a defendant and to add 22-year-old McLean's "infant son" as one of 15 people who have "been deprived of Tim McLean Jr.'s guidance, care and companionship." Lawsuits filed by two separate bus passengers, Debra Tucker and Kayli Shaw, have also been amended to drop the RCMP.


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