Olivia Chow, Ana Bailão gaining support in Toronto mayoral race: poll

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Olivia Chow, Ana Bailão gaining support in Toronto mayoral race: poll Toronto mayoral hopefuls Olivia Chow and Ana Bailão are slowly separating themselves from the pack with “solidifying support” from voters, a new poll shows.The latest survey from Mainstreet Research was conducted from April 25 to April 26 and polled 794 residents in Toronto. Those results showed that Chow, who previously served as an NDP MP, has the support of 26 per cent of decided voters.Chow announced her bid for the mayor’s chair on April 17, adding a highly recognizable name to the long list of candidates running in the by-election set for June 26.Chow is seeking to reverse her fortunes after coming a distant third in the 2014 mayoral race behind runner-up Doug Ford, now Ontario’s premier, and John Tory, who was elected to three terms. She is one of the most recognizable names in a crowded field that includes Coun. Josh Matlow and Coun. Brad Bradford, ex-police chief Mark Saunders, former deputy mayor Bailão and former provincial education minister Mitzi...

Province says RCMP should leave Surrey, B.C., to local force for safety reasons

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Province says RCMP should leave Surrey, B.C., to local force for safety reasons VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is recommending the City of Surrey continue its transition to the Surrey Police Service, despite the wishes of the new council to revert to the RCMP. The government cites RCMP staff vacancies as one of the key reasons for not wanting the city to keep the Mounties, saying it ensures public safety for the people of Surrey and throughout B.C. The government says the decision is not binding, but it has placed several mandatory conditions on the city should it decide to retain the RCMP.It says it will offer financial assistance for the transition to the municipal police force to protect Surrey taxpayers. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth says in a statement that he agreed with a systematic review by the director of police services that the best way to achieve public safety in B.C. is with the local police force.The Mounties have about 1,500 vacancies in the province and if Surrey goes back to the RCMP, the province says that would worsen the...

Judge rules against Google, allows antitrust case to proceed

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Judge rules against Google, allows antitrust case to proceed ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — A federal judge on Friday rejected a motion from Google to toss out the government’s antirust case against it.U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ruled the lawsuit alleging Google wields monopolistic power in the world of online advertising can proceed in its entirety.Her ruling is the second setback for Google at the federal court in Alexandria. Google had earlier tried to get the case consolidated with a similar lawsuit that’s been ongoing for several years in New York. But Brinkema ruled last month that the case can proceed in the Alexandria courthouse, which is known as the “Rocket Docket” for its reputation of adjudicating disputes swiftly.The lawsuit alleges that Google holds a virtual monopoly in online advertising that works to the detriment of consumers. The complaint alleged that Google “corrupted legitimate competition in the ad tech industry by engaging in a systematic campaign to seize control of the wide swath of high-tech tools used ...

Federal government posts $3.1 surplus for first 11 months of 2022-23 fiscal year

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Federal government posts $3.1 surplus for first 11 months of 2022-23 fiscal year OTTAWA — The federal government posted a budgetary surplus of $3.1 billion between April 2022 and February 2023. In its monthly fiscal monitor, the Finance Department says the result compared to a deficit of $69.8 billion during the same period during the previous fiscal year. Government revenues were up $36 billion, or 10.1 per cent, amid stronger economic growth and the fading effect of the pandemic.Program expenses excluding net actuarial losses decreased $45.6 billion, or 11.5 per cent, as the federal government wound down COVID-19 supports.Higher inflation and interest rates pushed up public debt charges by $9.1 billion, or 40.7 per cent.Meanwhile, net actuarial losses fell by $0.4 billion, or 4.7 per cent.This report by The Canadian Press was first published April, 28, 2023.The Canadian Press

N. Carolina justices sweep away district, voter ID rulings

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

N. Carolina justices sweep away district, voter ID rulings RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — In massive victories for Republicans, North Carolina’s state Supreme Court on Friday threw out previous rulings that had declared illegal both redistricting maps for excessive partisanship and a photo voter identification law for being infected with racial bias.The new edition of the court, which became a Republican majority this year following the election of two GOP justices, ruled after taking the unusual step of revisiting opinions made in December by the court’s previous iteration, when Democrats held a 4-3 seat advantage. The court held rehearings in March. The 5-2 decisions likely to mean that a photo ID mandate approved by the GOP-controlled legislature in late 2018 will be enforced for the 2024 elections. Legislators also should have greater latitude in drawing legislative seat boundaries for the next decade that will reinforce their General Assembly majorities and assist them in winning more seats within the state’s congressional delegation. Prev...

Ontario hospital nurses awarded additional pay after Bill 124 struck down

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Ontario hospital nurses awarded additional pay after Bill 124 struck down Arbitrators have awarded Ontario hospital nurses additional salary increases for the three years that were subject to a wage restraint law, after it was struck down as unconstitutional.The 2019 law, known as Bill 124, capped wage increases for the nurses and other public sector workers at one per cent a year for three years.It was ruled unconstitutional in November and though the government is appealing that, the Ontario Nurses’ Association sought retroactive pay through an arbitrator, since the contracts were subject to be reopened if Bill 124 was repealed or declared invalid.Arbitrators have now awarded the nurses an additional 0.75 per cent wage increase for the year starting April 1, 2020, an additional one per cent for the following year and an additional two per cent for the final year.The nurses’ association says, however, that those amounts still don’t reflect the value of registered nurses, and won’t be enough to address staff shortages in the profes...

US agency raises ‘serious concerns’ about tech visa lottery

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

US agency raises ‘serious concerns’ about tech visa lottery BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — The number of applications for visas used in the technology industry soared for a second straight year, raising “serious concerns” that some are manipulating the system to gain an unfair advantage, authorities said Friday.There were 780,884 applications for H-1B visas in this year’s computer-generated lottery, up 61% from 483,927 last year, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said in a message to “stakeholders.” Last year’s haul was up 57% from 308,613 applications the year before. Each year, up to 85,000 people are selected for H-1B visas, a mainstay for technology giants such as Amazon.com Inc., Google parent Alphabet Inc., Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc. and International Business Machines Corp. Last year, the government began requiring workers who won the lottery to sign affidavits stating they didn’t try to game the system by working with others to file multiple bids under different company names, even if there was no underlyi...

Downtown section of Queen Street to be closed for years starting next week

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Downtown section of Queen Street to be closed for years starting next week Drivers and transit users will be facing a major detour in downtown Toronto starting next week — and it’s going to last for years.Queen Street will be fully closed to traffic between Bay and Victoria streets starting Monday, May 1, to accommodate work on a new station for the Ontario Line subway.The stretch of Queen is scheduled to remain off limits to vehicles for at least four and-a-half years, until sometime in 2027. Pedestrians will still be able to walk along Queen and north/south vehicle traffic on Yonge Street will be unaffected.The city says the extended closure will help “expedite construction” of the Ontario Line by about a year.“If we did it in a partial closure here, partial closure there, it would take us another year to get this station completed,” says Metrolinx spokesperson James Wattie. “The way we’re doing it now provides a bit more predictability.”Source: MetrolinxThe closure will also mean a major change for t...

Azeri protesters say they’ll end blockage of key road

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Azeri protesters say they’ll end blockage of key road Protesters who have blocked the road leading from Armenia to an ethnic Armenian region within Azerbaijan for four months said Friday that they will end their actions because Azerbaijan has established a checkpoint at the start of the road.The blockage of the so-called Lachin Corridor, which leads from the Armenian border to the Nagorno-Karabakh region, impeded food supplies to the region and aggravated tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which fought a six-week war in 2020.Nagorno-Karabakh, which had substantial autonomy under the Soviet Union, came under control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by the Armenian military in 1994 at the end of years of separatist fighting. Armenian forces also took sizable territory surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh itself.Azerbaijan regained most of the surrounding territory and pieces of Nagorno-Karabakh itself in the 2020 war that killed about 6,800 soldiers. Under a Russia-brokered armistice, transit along the Lachin Corridor was to continue under...

Passenger with 'vampire straw' arrested at Boston airport

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:02:24 GMT

Passenger with 'vampire straw' arrested at Boston airport (NewsNation/NEXSTAR) — A passenger was arrested at Logan International Airport in Boston on Monday after attempting to bring a self-defense device known as a "vampire straw" through security, officials with the Transportation Security Administration said.The item, a drinking straw featuring a sharp pointed tip, is described by an online retailer as an "edged instrument" that can double as a dagger or a "very effective tire deflator.""The straw's strength, length and dagger-like point make it a prohibited item," TSA spokesperson Dan Velez confirmed in an emailed statement to Nexstar.The item was confiscated by Massachusetts State Police, the TSA said. (Transportation Security Administration)The passenger, identified as a 26-year-old male, had also concealed the straw "among titanium chopsticks in his carry-on bag," Velez said. ‘Disruptive’ passenger forces Israel-bound United flight back to Newark after 3 hours TSA officers turned the item over to the Massachusetts State Police, w...