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Tag: Canada

  • Trump to Push Proposal for Elusive Gaza Peace in Netanyahu Talks

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    By Matt Spetalnick and Steve Holland

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Donald Trump will host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday, with the U.S. president pushing a Gaza peace proposal after a slew of Western leaders embraced Palestinian statehood in defiance of American and Israeli opposition.

    In Netanyahu’s fourth visit since Trump returned to office in January, the right-wing Israeli leader will be looking to shore up his country’s most important relationship as it faces growing international isolation nearly two years into its war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    He can expect a warm welcome compared to the chilly reception he received when he spoke on Friday before the U.N. General Assembly where many delegates walked out in protest.

    Netanyahu went on to deliver a blistering attack on what he called a “disgraceful decision” over the past week by Britain, France, Canada, Australia and several other countries to recognize Palestinian statehood, a major diplomatic shift by top U.S. allies.

    They said such action was needed to preserve the prospect for a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict and help bring the war to a close.

    Trump, who had criticized the recognition moves as a prize to Hamas, told Reuters on Sunday he hopes to get Netanyahu’s agreement on a framework to end the war in the Palestinian enclave and free the remaining hostages held by Hamas.

    “We’re getting a very good response because Bibi wants to make the deal too,” Trump said in a telephone interview, using Netanyahu’s nickname. “Everybody wants to make the deal.”

    He credited leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Jordan and Egypt for their assistance and said the deal aims to go beyond Gaza to a broader Middle East peace.

    “It’s called peace in the Middle East, more than Gaza. Gaza is a part of it. But it’s peace in the Middle East,” he said.

    Asked whether there is now an agreed deal for peace in Gaza, a senior Israeli official said “it’s too early to tell.” The official added that Netanyahu would give Israel’s response to the proposal when he meets Trump on Monday.

    Netanyahu is under mounting pressure from the hostages’ families and, according to public opinion polls, a war-weary Israeli public.

    A 21-point peace plan had been circulated to a string of Arab and Muslim countries on the U.N. sidelines last week.

    It calls for the release of all hostages, living and dead, no further Israeli attacks on Qatar and a new dialogue between Israel and Palestinians for “peaceful coexistence,” a White House official said on condition of anonymity. Israel angered the Qataris and drew criticism from Trump for an airstrike against Hamas leaders in Doha on September 9.

    Previous U.S.-backed ceasefire efforts have fallen apart due to a failure to bridge the gap between Israel and Hamas and Netanyahu has vowed to continue fighting until Hamas is completely dismantled.

    GAZA WAR TAKES CENTER-STAGE

    The White House meeting follows an annual gathering of world leaders in New York in which the Gaza war took center-stage and Israel was often the target. Netanyahu responded that the world leaders recognizing Palestinian independence were sending the message that “murdering Jews pays off.”

    The most far-right government in Israeli history has ruled out acceptance of a Palestinian state as it presses on with its fight against Hamas following the militants’ October 7, 2023, rampage in Israel. Hamas-led fighters killed some 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies.

    Israel’s military response has killed more than 65,000 people in Gaza, according to local health officials, leaving much of the territory in ruins, a humanitarian crisis deepening and hunger spreading.

    The International Criminal Court has issued a warrant for Netanyahu for alleged war crimes in the Gaza war. Israel rejects the court’s jurisdiction and denies committing war crimes.

    While Trump and Netanyahu have mostly been in sync and the U.S. continues to be Israel’s main arms supplier, Monday’s discussions have the potential for tensions to surface.

    Some of Netanyahu’s hardline ministers have said the government should respond to growing recognition of Palestinian statehood by formally extending Israeli sovereignty over all or parts of the occupied West Bank to snuff out hopes for Palestinian independence.

    On Thursday, however, Trump said he would not allow Israel to annex the West Bank, which the Palestinians want for their state, along with Gaza and East Jerusalem.

    Analysts say Israeli annexation of the West Bank could unravel the landmark Abraham Accords, a signature foreign policy achievement brokered by Trump’s first administration in which several Arab countries forged diplomatic ties with Israel.

    (Reporting By Matt Spetalnick and Steve Holland, writing by Matt Spetalnick, Editing by Humeyra Pamuk and Diane Craft)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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  • U.S. fighter jets scrambled to intercept Russian warplanes near Alaska

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    U.S. fighter jets were scrambled Wednesday to identify and intercept four Russian warplanes flying near Alaska, the North American Aerospace Defense Command said in a statement

    NORAD said two Russian Tu-95 long-range strategic bombers and two Su-35 fighter jets were flying in the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ), which is international airspace that abuts U.S. and Canadian sovereign airspace.

    NORAD responded Wednesday by sending an E-3 early warning and control aircraft, along with four F-16s and four KC-135 tanker planes, “to positively identify and intercept” the Russian aircraft in the Alaskan ADIZ.

    A Russian Tupolev Tu-95 strategic bomber flies over Moscow, accompanied by fighter jets, during a rehearsal for the Victory Day parade in Russia’s capital, in a May 7, 2022 file photo.

    Sefa Karacan/Anadolu Agency/Getty


    NORAD said Russian military activity in the ADIZ is common and not considered a threat, but it was the latest in a series of flights by Russian aircraft seen by many as testing the preparedness of U.S. and allied NATO nations. It came as officials in Denmark continued investigating still-unattributed, large drones that flew close to Copenhagen Airport on Tuesday and Wednesday, disrupting traffic.

    Danish police have said the drones were operated by a “capable actor.”

    European nations have been on alert amid Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Russian drones were shot down by Polish and allied NATO warplanes after crossing into Polish airspace on Sept. 9. Ten days later, Estonia said several Russian fighter jets entered its airspace.

    The Russian planes entered the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone on Wednesday about one month after a very similar incident, which also saw the U.S. scramble fighter jets for an interception.

    In late August, NORAD said it had detected and surveilled a Russian military reconnaissance aircraft inside the ADIZ after intercepting the same type of spy plane over the region three times in the preceding days.

    In September 2024, NORAD posted dramatic video of a Russian jet flying “within just a few feet” of NORAD aircraft off the coast of Alaska. At the time, a U.S. general said the conduct of the jet’s crew was “unsafe, unprofessional, and endangered all.”

    The ADIZ is “a defined stretch of international airspace that requires the ready identification of all aircraft in the interest of national security,” NORAD said.

    None of the situations thus far has resulted in Russian warplanes entering U.S. or Canadian sovereign airspace.

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  • Saskatoon-based pandemic-fighter lab turns 50 | Globalnews.ca

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    One of Canada’s premier vaccine centres celebrates its 50th birthday this week, but researchers say it comes amid unease over U.S. policy changes and funding cuts that threaten to upend the global fight against disease.

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    Globalnews Digital

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  • $40M Seized, Trust Destroyed? Canada’s Largest Crypto Crackdown Leaves Users Furious

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    The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Federal Policing – Eastern Region has announced the largest cryptocurrency seizure in Canadian history, after seizing more than 56 million Canadian dollars (approximately $40 million) from the platform TradeOgre.

    The operation was carried out by investigators specializing in financial crime, cybercrime, and cryptocurrencies. It is also the first time Canadian law enforcement has dismantled a cryptocurrency exchange.

    Historic Crypto Bust

    In the latest press release, the RCMP said that the case was initiated in June 2024 after a Europol tip led the Money Laundering Investigative Team (MLIT) to probe the platform’s activities.

    Authorities discovered that TradeOgre violated Canadian financial laws, particularly for failing to register with the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) as a money services business and for neglecting to verify its clients’ identities.

    Investigators believe the majority of funds passing through the platform were tied to criminal activity, and noted that privacy-driven exchanges are often used by organized crime groups to launder illicit money. Transaction data collected from the exchange will undergo further analysis, and officials have indicated that charges could follow as the investigation remains ongoing.

    “Straight Up Theft”?

    The seizure sparked heated reactions within the community, as many users expressed anger and concern about the fate of legitimate funds. Reuben Yap, co-founder of Firo (formerly ZCoin), questioned whether Canadian authorities intend to confiscate balances that originated from lawful sources. He argued that penalizing all account holders simply because the exchange did not enforce know-your-customer (KYC) procedures would amount to theft from innocent users.

    Yap further compared the situation to the notorious BTC-e case, where claimants faced a burdensome process requiring extensive evidence to recover funds, and warned that TradeOgre users may fare even worse since reports needed to support claims are no longer accessible.

    Other community voices echoed this outrage. For instance, prominent influencer CaptainCrypto called the move “fucking crazy” and stressed that users who engaged in no wrongdoing are now at risk of losing their assets. He argued that such blanket seizures undermine trust in the financial system and framed it as “straight up theft,” urging the broader crypto community to unite against what he views as an overreach of law enforcement authority.

    Meanwhile, MetaMask security lead Taylor Monahan tweeted,

    “Sorry to contradict your “beliefs” but last time I checked my friends and I are not criminals. Very much looking forward to seeing the evidence, and for you to provide recourse to ALL innocent parties you stole money from without notification and without due process.”

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    Chayanika Deka

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  • Canada to End Foreign Actor Eligibility for 2026 Screen Awards

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    The organizers of the Canadian Screen Awards, the country’s Oscars and Emmys, are to end nomination eligibility for foreign talent, including American actors, starting with the 2026 edition.

    “In order to best celebrate and honor Canadians working on Canadian productions, individuals must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident of Canada to be eligible for a Canadian Screen Award,” the Academy said as tightened eligibility and voting rule changes unveiled Wednesday come amid rising U.S.-Canada diplomatic and trade tensions.

    Making CSAs eligibility exclusively available to homegrown talent or those with residency follows a rise in Canadian nationalism countrywide after U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff and annexation threats. Honoring the best in Canadian film and TV in past years occasionally had CSA trophies going to Americans and other foreign talent as productions with Hollywood actors, or U.S. streamers investing in Canadian projects, aim to drive increased international sales.

    During the 2025 CSAs, Cate Blanchett won for best lead performance in a comedy for her role in Guy Maddin’s Rumours, and The Apprentice, a Canada-Ireland-Denmark co-production and a Donald Trump origin drama, earned the best film prize. Also, the best performance in a lead role trophy went to Sebastian Stan for his portrayal of Trump while the best supporting actor win was awarded to Jeremy Strong for his performance as Roy Cohn. 

    As Canadian talent and content increasingly figures on the world stage, other Canadian Academy rule changes include introducing four new “Spotlight” categories to honor Canadian directors, writers, performers and producers who work on international TV series made and broadcast in Canada. 

    And while Trump’s threat ahead of Cannes to impose a 100 percent tariff on films made outside of the U.S., including Canada, has faded with no concrete policy action, the turbulence of the U.S. president’s global trade war is still felt by a Canadian entertainment industry dependent for jobs and investment on Hollywood production hubs in Toronto and Vancouver.

    The CSAs will also launch a Creator of the Year prize to honor a Canadian digital creator whose original work has found significant online reach on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Twitch and other digital and social media platforms. ACTRA, the country’s actors union, welcomed the rule changes to make eligibility exclusively available to Canadian citizens or permanent residents north of the border.

    “At a time when Canada’s cultural sovereignty is under pressure, the Canadian Screen Awards are uniquely positioned to celebrate Canadian excellence, with Canadian performers rightfully at the center. This decision is a vital investment in Canada’s cultural future,” the actors union said in a statement.

    But Allan Ungar, the Canadian director of London Calling, an action comedy starring Josh Duhamel and Jeremy Ray Taylor and premiering this weekend in theaters, argued the rule changes, while supporting the Academy’s mandate to promote local talent, threatens to limit the sale and promotional reach of homegrown movies in international markets.

    “It’s a little disappointing, especially as we’re making Canadian films by Canadians, and often we have to feature American actors to get them financed and sold worldwide,” Ungar told The Hollywood Reporter.

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    Etan Vlessing

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  • Robert Munsch, Canadian children’s author, says he’s been approved for MAID | Globalnews.ca

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    Robert Munsch, the beloved Canadian children’s author of books like The Paper Bag Princess and Love You Forever, says he has been approved for medical assistance in dying (MAID) after he was diagnosed with dementia and Parkinson’s disease.

    In a New York Times profile of Munsch, the author said that he applied for MAID — a practice that was legalized in 2016 — and his application was approved.

    Munsch, 80, joked to the outlet that his application said, “Hello, Doc — come kill me! How much time do I have? Fifteen seconds!”

    He said he had watched one of his brothers die slowly from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, a nervous system disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord and gets worse over time.

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    “They kept him alive through all these interventions. I thought, ‘Let him die,’” Munsch said.

    The author said he doesn’t want to “linger that way” and added that he thinks he will choose to go “when I start having real trouble talking and communicating. Then I’ll know.”


    Robert Munsch at Dufferin St. Clair library Jan 14, 2010.

    Michael Stuparyk/Toronto Star via Getty Images

    Under MAID laws in Canada, Munsch must be able to actively consent on the day of his death.

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    “I have to pick the moment when I can still ask for it,” Munsch explained to the Times.

    Munsch told his wife, Ann, that if he misses the opportunity, she’s “stuck with me being a lump.”

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    The author, who has published more than 70 books over his career, said he doesn’t want to be here “when I can’t recognize the people I love.”

    For now, he said his old stories have survived his diagnoses and remain with him.

    “I notice that the stories are mostly free from the problems I have with speech,” he said.

    In Canada, a person who wishes to receive MAID must meet eligibility criteria that include being at least 18 years of age, having decision-making capacity, being eligible for publicly funded health-care services and making a voluntary request that is not the result of external pressure.

    The person must also have a serious and incurable illness, disease or disability, be in an advanced state of irreversible decline in capability and enduring and intolerable physical or psychological suffering that cannot be alleviated under conditions the person considers acceptable.

    Munsch was inducted into the Order of Canada in 1999 and received a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame in 2009.


    Robert Munsch attends Canada’s Walk of Fame at the Four Season Centre of the Performing Arts on Sept. 12, 2009 in Toronto.

    George Pimentel/WireImage

    After the New York Times profile was published, Scholastic Canada shared a statement on Instagram, writing, “As proud publishers of Robert Munsch’s beloved books, we are grateful for all the stories he’s shared, including his own. We love you forever.”

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    “This New York Times article by Katie Engelhart offers a powerful glimpse into the man behind the stories, and we join those who have expressed profound gratitude for this chance to understand and connect with Robert Munsch in a new way,” the publishing company wrote.

    “It’s an incredibly generous act to open up like this, and it reminds us, once again, why Robert’s work continues to touch many generations.”


    &copy 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Katie Scott

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  • SIGA Appeals $1.2M FINTRAC Fine

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    The Saskatchewan Indian Gaming Authority (SIGA) has announced its intention to appeal a $1.175 million fine issued by the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC), asserting the issue involves administrative reporting and not financial crime.

    SIGA Denies Reasons for Fine

    FINTRAC is the federal agency responsible for monitoring and investigating financial transactions to help detect and prevent financial crimes such as money laundering and terrorist financing. It is Canada’s financial intelligence unit (FIU) and plays a key role in the country’s efforts to detect, prevent, and deter money laundering, terrorist financing, and other threats to the security of Canada.

    SIGA wrote in an official statement that it is important to note that this penalty relates solely to administrative reporting requirements and does not involve any allegations of money laundering, terrorist financing, or other financial crimes at SIGA’s properties. The Authority also reiterated that it works closely with a number of regulatory bodies in the course of its operations and places a strong emphasis on upholding and complying with regulatory standards.

    SIGA does not agree with the violations cited by FINTRAC, nor with the administrative penalty imposed. As a result, SIGA will be appealing both the findings and the penalty to the Federal Court.

    Why Was SIGA Fined?

    According to FINTRAC, SIGA was found to have committed several administrative violations, including: failing to submit suspicious transaction reports when there were reasonable grounds to suspect the transactions were linked to money laundering or terrorist financing; failing to include the required information in suspicious transaction reports; and failing to establish and maintain up-to-date written compliance policies and procedures, which, in the case of an organization, must also be approved by a senior officer.

    The penalty was issued on August 28 for non-compliance with Part 1 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act and its related regulations. In a statement, Sarah Paquet, Director and CEO of FINTRAC, stated that Canada’s anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing Regime is designed to safeguard the safety of Canadians and the security of the country’s economy. She emphasized that FINTRAC collaborates with businesses to support their understanding and compliance with obligations under the Act, while also maintaining a firm stance on ensuring that businesses fulfill their responsibilities, taking appropriate action when necessary.

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    Stefan Velikov

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  • Wallaroos’ World Cup hopes dashed by dominant Canada

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    The Wallaroos have missed the chance to reach the Rugby World Cup semifinals, losing 46-5 to Canada in Bristol. 

    Australia was a clear underdog for the last-eight clash, with its English coach Jo Yapp admitting before her last match in charge it was going to be a “do or die” moment against such formidable opponents.

    Canada, ranked two in the world, quickly asserted its authority by building a five-try lead by half-time.

    Despite a gutsy second-half response from the Wallaroos, restricting their opponents to just two more scores, it was Canada who deservedly secured a mouth-watering semifinal showdown with world champions New Zealand.

    Canada burst to an early lead with winger Asia Hogan-Rochester running in a well-worked try before the Wallaroos responded when Desiree Miller sprinted down the left touchline to cross for an excellent equalising score.

    Canadian DaLeaka Menin had a try ruled out by the TMO official but teammate Alysha Corrigan crossed for a dazzling five-pointer to put their side back on top.

    Corrigan scored again on 21 minutes.

    And from there it was all Canada, with Sophie de Goede touching down and loosehead prop McKinley Hunt barging over to establish 31-5 advantage at half-time.

    The Wallaroos were punished again after the restart when Canadian number eight Fabiola Forteza stretched to score under the posts just as the predicted rain started pouring down.

    With nothing to lose, it was the Wallaroos’ turn to up the ante as they began taking the game to their opponents, earning plenty of possession as Canada was forced on the defensive.

    But that momentum was swiftly halted when Canada opted to kick a penalty goal before the Maple Leafs reasserted their supremacy as 37-year-old flanker Karen Paquin glided over for a try.

    Wallaroos captain Siokapesi Palu admitted her team needed investment in order to challenge at the next World Cup, which Australia will host in 2029.

    “We’re looking at a group of players who are young mums, who are balancing looking after their kids,” Palu said.

    “People who are working full time, working nine to five and then having to back it up with back-to-back trainings till 9pm and then having to repeat that the next day.

    “We do need to be invested in so that we can produce good rugby.”

    AAP

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  • Wallaroos targeting World Cup quarterfinal boilover

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    The Wallaroos have recalled hooker Katalina Amosa and lock Ashley Fernandez for their Women’s Rugby World Cup quarterfinal against Canada, with their coaching staff still adamant Australia can pull off the upset of the tournament.

    “The quarterfinal is what we wanted, and once you get into the knockout stages, anything can happen. It’s an incredibly exciting opportunity for us,” said assistant coach Gill Bourke after the team announcement on Thursday, local time.

    “We want to go as far as we can in this now, so we’re approaching it like that, and we’re not getting too bogged down on who we’re playing.”

    The Wallaroos are outsiders to earn their first win over a Canada side ranked second in the world, but coach Jo Yapp feels she has a powerful outfit at her disposal capable of pulling off a boilover at Bristol’s Ashton Gate stadium.

    She has made two personnel changes, with Amosa and Fernandez returning to the bench.

    Amosa featured against Samoa and the USA earlier in the tournament, while Fernandez has not played since the Samoa opener.

    Tania Naden and Annabelle Codey have been dropped from the squad, while Yapp has also reshuffled her back row and centre pairing from the side that went down 47-7 to tournament favourites England in the final group match.

    Flanker Emily Chancellor has replaced veteran Ashley Marsters, who reverts to the bench.

    Centre Cecilia Smith has also been promoted to the starting XV, pushing another experienced international, Trilleen Pomare, to the bench.

    There was good news on the injury front, too, with Lydia Kavoa ready to start as prop despite having left the field against England at Brighton in the first half with an ankle injury.

    Yapp said she wanted to see the team deliver the same effort as last weekend when it led the world’s top-ranked side for half an hour, but that it would need to sustain that level for longer against the so far unbeaten Canadians.

    “We started well against England with our game management and need to show that for longer periods of the game this week,” she said.

    “The focus in training is on us. Canada is a physical team and like to move the ball, so we are excited for the challenge.”

    Star winger Desiree Miller echoed that theme, recognising the need for the team to be more consistent.

    Desiree Miller said the Wallaroos must be more consistent. (AP: Dave Shopland)

    “It’s our Achilles heel at the moment, being consistent,” said Miller. “We showed up in the first 20, 30 minutes, and we’re all over England. We had the mentality that we had nothing to lose and they’ve got a 30-game winning streak to lose; we thought we could cause an upset, and we did do that for the first 30 minutes.”

    The Wallaroos have never beaten Canada in seven attempts, and lost their last meeting 45-7 in May.

    WALLAROOS TEAM TO PLAY CANADA

    1 Lydia Kavoa, 2 Adiana Talakai, 3 Asoiva Karpani, 4 Kaitlan Leaney, 5 Michaela Leonard, 6 Piper Duck, 7 Emily Chancellor, 8 Siokapesi Palu (capt), 9 Sam Wood, 10 Faitala Moleka, 11 Desiree Miller, 12 Cecilia Smith, 13 Georgina Friedrichs, 14 Maya Stewart, 15 Caitlyn Halse

    Replacements: 16 Katalina Amosa,17 Faliki Pohiva, 18 Bridie O’Gorman, 19 Ashley Fernandez, 20 Ashley Marsters, 21 Tabua Tuinakauvadra, 22 Tia Hinds, 23 Trilleen Pomare.

    AAP

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  • Vancouver’s Parq Casino Eyes Expansion with 300 New Slot Machines

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    Parq Casino Vancouver is seeking to significantly grow its gambling operations through a new proposal that would increase its number of slot machines by 50 per cent. The downtown casino has submitted an application to add 300 more machines, bringing the total from 600 to 900.

    Parq Casino Vancouver Says Expansion Is Needed to Meet Increased Expectations

    In its application to the City of Vancouver, Parq Casino states that it currently has the lowest slot machine density among casinos in the Lower Mainland, and that its current gaming offerings are insufficient to meet demand. The casino estimates that around two-thirds of gambling revenue from Vancouver residents is spent at casinos outside the city.

    Parq Casino, which replaced the former Edgewater Casino at the Plaza of Nations, retained the same gaming capacity, which was 600 slot machines and 75 table games. Edgewater hadn’t increased its number of slot machines since 2005 or its table games since 2007.

    Meanwhile, demand has grown significantly. Vancouver’s population has increased from approximately 560,000 to 700,000 over the past two decades, with the wider region growing from 2.1 million to more than three million. Rising tourism has further added to the pressure on local gambling facilities.

    No changes to the building’s exterior or structure would be required to accommodate the 300 additional slot machines. If approved by the City, the expansion would be implemented gradually over one to two years. The current casino occupies 72,000 square feet across two floors, with a particularly spacious layout on the second level. The existing floor space designated for gaming is sufficient to support the proposed 50 per cent increase in slot machines.

    The application also notes that, in theory, the space could support up to 1,200 slot machines (double the current number), however, such an expansion is not being considered at this time. Parq’s request for expansion comes just a few months after Vancouver’s council eased casino restrictions, allowing facilities to grow more easily.

    Vancouver Stands to See Increased Tax Revenue from Expansion

    Under provincial policy, municipalities receive 10% of the net gambling revenue generated by casinos within their boundaries each year. In the 2023/2024 fiscal year, the City of Vancouver collected $6 million from Parq Casino’s revenues. With the proposed addition of 300 slot machines, the City is projected to gain an extra $2.7 million to $3.1 million over the first three years.

    Between 1999 and the 2023/2024 fiscal year, Vancouver received a total of $159.1 million in casino revenue. Over the past three fiscal years alone, the city earned $19.3 million in combined gambling revenue from both Parq Casino and Hastings Racecourse and Casino.

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    Fiona Simmons

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  • Canada gives sneak peek of Cirque du Soleil show before its Fairfax Co. debut – WTOP News

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    “Luzia,” Cirque du Soleil’s imaginative journey to Mexico debuts in Fairfax County, Virginia, this weekend. Here’s a sneak peak of the show from its Canada home base.

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    An enchanting sneak peek of Cirque du Soleil’s ‘Luzia’ in Montreal, Canada

    WTOP contributor Briana Thomas, of the “DC Getaway,” series, checked out a performance in Canada. The story below is based on a press trip sponsored by Cirque du Soleil and reflects Briana’s independent editorial research. The sponsor has no editorial involvement.

    Yellow marigolds, massive monarch butterfly wings and a vibrant sunrise mark the beginning of Cirque du Soleil’s imaginative journey to Mexico in the touring show “Luzia,” which debuts in the D.C. area this weekend.

    At the close of each summer, monarch butterflies travel nearly 3,000 miles from southern Canada to the mountain forests of central Mexico. On Saturday, this epic migration comes to life under the “Big Top” at Cirque du Soleil in Fairfax County, Virginia.

    WTOP contributor Briana Thomas got an exclusive, behind-the-scenes look of the production at the circus’ home base in Montréal, Canada, before the show premieres in Tysons.

    Audiences can follow the “Luzia” traveler (a hilarious clown) guided by a larger-than-life monarch butterfly through scenes and sites of Mexico. The family-friendly show — co-written by Daniele Finzi Pasca and Julie Hamelin Finzi with a Latin American score by composer Simon Carpentier — is an ode to Mexico’s culture, traditions and natural beauty.

    Olivia Aepli, who plays the running woman, says the opening butterfly scene where she spreads a set of bright orange wings while gliding along a treadmill is her favorite.

    “ I get to do this big run, and every night it’s really magical,” Aepli said.

    Magical truly describes this lively theater escape to Latin America’s northernmost country. Aepli is one of more than 45 artists who perform live circus acts, such as hoop diving, hurling acrobats, trapeze stunts and more mesmerizing physical feats throughout the two hour production.

    Beyond the major display of talent and athleticism, a signature of Cirque du Soleil showcases, viewers can expect to be transported to a dreamlike depiction of Mexico, illuminating the country’s rich heritages and history.

    The program utilizes engaging storytelling to celebrate Mexico’s contributions to film, dance, music, fashion, wildlife and sports. The visuals are impeccable, and according to Charlie Wagner, senior publicist at Cirque du Soleil, the narrative is moving too.

    Wagner has been on the production team for five years. She said there are moments in the show that make the audience laugh, and that draw emotion from the crowd.

    “It’s such a beautiful love letter from Mexico,” Wagner said.

    Yellow marigolds, massive monarch butterfly wings and a vibrant sunrise mark the beginning of Cirque du Soleil’s imaginative journey to Mexico in the touring show “Luzia.”
    (Courtesy Anne Colliard)

    Courtesy Anne Colliard

    a cirque de soleil performs in water on stage
    The show is running in Tysons, Virginia, from Sept. 6 through Oct. 19.
    (Courtesy Anne Colliard)

    Courtesy Anne Colliard

    performers doing stunts on stage
    Artists will perform live circus acts such as hoop diving, hurling acrobats, trapeze stunts and more mesmerizing physical feats throughout the two hour production.
    (Courtesy Anne Colliard)

    Courtesy Anne Colliard

    The interpretations of the country’s traditions are reenvisioned through live vocals, color-changing costumes, towering agave plants, scenes of lucha libre wrestling, ball-bouncing football choreography, Aztec art, hand-clapping fiestas and more homages.

    But the show’s main attraction is water.

    “Luzia” is the only traveling production that incorporates water into the acrobatic acts. The pool and rain surprises that viewers experience on stage require an intricate recyclable water system that sits outside of the Big Top in a 40-foot container.

    The huge task of transporting, heating and testing the water infrastructure requires an on-site aquatics team.

    Assistant Head of Aquatics Ethan Westland said the contrast of the light and water theatrics — a play on the show’s title which means light and rain — is what’s made the show so successful.

    “ I think we have a unique relationship with water itself, and it’s just such a beautiful piece,” Westland said. “The first time you see the rain curtain or the pool, it’s such a wow moment. You could almost time it to the second in the show when everyone’s going to say, ‘Wow.’”

    The Big Top show, headquartered at Old Port in Montréal, and its cast — including accompanying family members — packs up and travels to five to six cities around the world 12 months out of the year. The next stop is Tysons, Virginia, from Sept. 6 through Oct. 19. Tickets start at $60 per person.

    Briana Thomas is a Washington, D.C.-based journalist and tour guide with a passion for travel. She is the owner of local history and culture tour company Black Broadway Travel, and the Arts and Culture writer for Washingtonian Magazine. To read more of Briana’s cultural explorations sign-up for her Guide Culture newsletter

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Briana Thomas

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  • 8/1: CBS Morning News

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    8/1: CBS Morning News – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    Trump boosts Canada tariff to 35% as U.S. announces new levies across the globe; Family of Virginia Giuffre presses Trump to release Epstein files to the public.

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  • Detroit Lions Brings BetMGM as First Official Sports Betting Partner

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    The Detroit Lions have confirmed BetMGM as the team’s first Official Sports Betting Partner, a collaboration that will encompass different activations, fan promotions, and more. The goal of the tie-up is to drive engagement across all existing channels.

    To help boost betting activity and team following, BetMGM will naturally feature a variety of sports wagers on the team’s games, but also take the collaboration well beyond the realm of sports gambling, plowing into iGaming as well.

    BetMGM is releasing two new casino games – Motor City Slingo and Gridiron Goal, which are inspired by the Lions’ own branding and imagery. Detroit Lions team president Rod Wood:

    The Detroit Lions’ historic relationship with BetMGM has been years in the making and we’re proud to announce details of our official partnership. We’re continuously seeking new ways to entertain and involve our fans, which is especially important during such unusual times; this partnership with BetMGM will provide additional and exciting opportunities to engage our fans.”

    This is coming amid important changes that BetMGM has revamped its platform and mobile app ahead of the new NFL season to provide players with even more worthwhile experiences.

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    Jerome García

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  • 89X returned to Windsor-Detroit airwaves with a nostalgic alt-rock playlist

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    Courtesy photo

    89X announced its return with a cheeky social media ad campaign encouraging listeners to “GET BACK WITH YOUR X.”

    In 2020, “Stop” by Jane’s Addiction closed out what was believed to be the final broadcast of Windsor-based 89X, once one of metro Detroit’s most iconic radio stations. But at 8 a.m. on Thursday morning, 89X returned — once again playing Jane’s Addiction and resurrecting “Windsor-Detroit’s only new rock alternative.” The station announced its return with a cheeky social media ad campaign, encouraging listeners to “GET BACK WITH YOUR X.”

    After five years as a bland pop-country station, 88.7 FM surprised the Detroit area by switching back to its former format, even featuring some of the original station IDs that many listeners will remember and a nostalgic playlist spanning from darker alternative rock of the ’80s and ’90s to the cheery “stomp-clap” millennial hipster sound of the 2010s and beyond.

    89X was officially born in 1991, expanding from an alt-rock segment called “The Cutting Edge” for CIMX. The station soon solidified its place in the local media landscape as a haven for the alternative kids, adapting to its audience and keeping pace with the evolving scene, playing a mix of grunge, punk, goth, and hip-hop (notably Eminem) through the ’90s.

    The author rocking an 89X temporary tattoo circa 2016. - Courtesy photo

    Courtesy photo

    The author rocking an 89X temporary tattoo circa 2016.

    By the mid-2000s, the station began playing emo acts like My Chemical Romance and bringing in a younger crowd. (Around this time I called the station when I was 11 years old and asked them to play “Jesus of Suburbia” by Green Day. They said no, and then told me I was way too young to know that song.)

    While the Canadian-based station infiltrated U.S. radio waves with plenty of legally mandated “CanCon” with foreign (to us) artists like the Tragically Hip and Our Lady Peace, it also prided itself on playing local Detroit acts, such as the White Stripes and We Came as Romans. Its “The Homeboy Show” segment showcased local talent from Detroit and Windsor, giving listeners the chance to vote on their favorite tracks and instilling the importance of underground scenes and a music-based community through the use of street teams, events, and its popular morning show, Dave and Chuck the Freak (who eventually moved to Detroit’s WRIF, which also shifted from a classic rock identity to an alt-rock direction).

    On its first day back as 89X, the station played hits from its late-’90s and early 2000s heyday, with a playlist focused on the alternative rock era with tracks by Beastie Boys, Oasis, Linkin Park, the Strokes, Green Day, No Doubt, and Weezer, as well as older acts like the Cure and Depeche Mode and newer ones like Royal Blood and the Beaches. While the format may have seemed to be going out of style when 89X went away back in 2020, its return seemed to be well-received in 2025 with the nostalgia machine in full force.

    For once, we’re excited to see our “X.”

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    Konstantina Buhalis

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  • Climate-driven wildfires are reversing clean air progress, new report says

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    Canada’s worst wildfire season on record tarnished the country’s air quality and had similar effects on pollution in parts of the United States, according to a new report.

    University of Chicago researchers on Thursday released their annual Air Quality Life Index, a situational update on air pollution and how it impacts life expectancy. The AQLI report said particulate pollution “remained the greatest external threat to human life expectancy,” comparing the impact to smoking.

    Researchers from the university’s Energy Policy Institute analyzed pollution data collected throughout 2023 and compared it with previous years.

    Michael Greenstone, a professor at the University of Chicago who created the AQLI, told CBS News his team focused on airborne particulate matter — small particles that are able to invade and wreak havoc on the body more easily than larger ones. 

    The data is taken from satellite readings that refresh each year and can take time to process, which is why the latest figures date back a couple of years, Greenstone said.

    While global pollution only rose slightly between 2022 and 2023, the report’s authors found that updated levels remained almost five times higher than the limit recommended by the World Health Organization to protect public safety. Local changes in air quality varied from one country to the next. The differences were particularly stark in the U.S. and Canada, where airborne particulate concentrations increased more than anywhere else.

    Property and homes razed by a wildfire in Celista, British Columbia, Canada, on Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023.

    Cole Burston/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    “Evidence of a link between climate change, wildfire smoke, and rising particulate pollution has been increasing over the past two decades,” the authors wrote in their report, citing a recent study that found human-caused climate change “increased the likelihood of autumn wind-driven extreme wildfire events, especially in the Western U.S.” 

    Extreme wildfires, particularly forest fires, have become larger, more common and more intense since the beginning of this century, according to NASA.

    The Canadian wildfires caused particulate concentrations in Canada to soar to levels not seen since 1998, according to the AQLI. In the U.S., the wildfires drove up pollution to levels not seen since 2011 — a 20% uptick from the levels recorded in 2022. Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma and Mississippi were markedly affected, with pockets of those states replacing 20 counties in California as the most polluted nationwide. 

    Out of 3,137 American counties, the number of locations with pollution levels above the national U.S. standard rose to 308 in 2023, up from just 12 in 2022, according to the report. Forty-eight of the counties were in Ohio, 41 were in Wisconsin, 31 were in Pennsylvania, 26 were in Indiana and 19 were in Illinois, with the remaining 143 spread across the rest of the country. 

    In Canada, the researchers said that 50% of residents in 2023 breathed air that contained particulates in amounts exceeding their national air quality standard. That was a sharp turnaround in the country’s progress in pursuit of cleaner air, which had resulted in particulate levels falling below the national standard in previous years, said the report’s authors, noting that particulate levels in Canada’s most polluted regions were roughly equal to those of Bolivia and Honduras, two countries that face are known to face challenges addressing air quality and pollution.

    The Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbia and the Northwest Territories experienced the country’s worst pollution, according to the report. That reflected some of the locations of destructive wildfires that collectively burned more than 71,000 acres of land from the East to West Coasts. Smoke from those blazes permeated the atmosphere over Canada and the U.S., creating hazy, and at times, orange, skies while health posing threats to people with certain conditions. 

    Smoke from the Tantallon wildfire rises over houses in nearby Bedford, Nova Scotia, Canada, May 28, 2023.

    Smoke from the Tantallon wildfire rises over houses in nearby Bedford, Nova Scotia, Canada, May 28, 2023.

    ERIC MARTYN / REUTERS


    Wildfires scorching Canada this summer have again given rise to serious air quality concerns, for Canadians and Americans alike.

    “It’s correct to think of this air pollution from the wildfires as, kind of, the ghost of fossil fuels past,” Greenstone told CBS News. 

    He said that the U.S. has over the last half-century made “enormous progress” toward blocking particulates generated through the burning of fossil fuels, like oil and gas, from entering the air. The AQLI credited the implementation of the Clean Air Act for reducing particulate concentrations by over 60% since 1970, which it says added 1.4 years to the life expectancy of American residents. 

    But the devices used to block particulates do not prevent carbon dioxide from infiltrating the atmosphere, driving up temperatures and increasing both the incidence and the severity of wildfires, Greenstone added. When trees burn in a fire, more particulates are produced and released again.

    “The point we’re trying to make is that CO2 that’s released when we use fossil fuels, both historically and today, it stays up in the atmosphere for centuries, and it raises temperatures, and it will continue to for centuries,” Greenstone said. “What we’re seeing is an important consequence of that, which is, it’s going to increase the incidence of wildfires going forward. And those wildfires are causing us to breathe air that is going to cause us to lead shorter and sicker lives.”

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  • Scientists Have Identified the Origin of an Extraordinarily Powerful Outer Space Radio Wave

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    The Earth is constantly receiving space signals that contain vital information about extremely energetic phenomena. Among the most peculiar are brief pulses of extremely high-energy radio waves, known as fast radio bursts (FRB). Astronomers compare them to a powerful lighthouse that shines for milliseconds in the middle of a rough, distant sea. Detecting one of these signals is an achievement in itself, but identifying its origin and understanding the nature of its source remains one of the great challenges of science.

    That is why recent research led by Northwestern University in the United States has captured the attention of the astronomical community. The team not only detected one of the brightest FRBs ever recorded, but also traced its origin with unprecedented precision.

    The pulse, identified as RBFLOAT, arrived in March 2025, lasted just a few milliseconds, and released as much energy as the sun produces in four days. Thanks to a new method of analysis, the researchers located its origin in an arm of a spiral galaxy located 130 million light-years away, in the direction of the constellation Ursa Major. The research was published in the journal The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

    The CHIME radio telescope in Canada, one of the world’s leading FRB observatories, and a subnetwork of smaller stations called Outriggers detected the anomalous outburst. CHIME characterized the signal, while the Outriggers triangulated it to a narrow region of space. Optical and X-ray telescopes then provided complementary data. The team achieved a precision of 13 parsecs, equivalent to 42 light-years, within the galaxy NGC 4141.

    Astronomers had previously pinpointed other FRBs, but in those cases the signals were repeated, which made the analysis easier. “RBFLOAT was the first non-repeating source localized to such precision,” said Sunil Simha, coauthor of the study, in a university statement. “These are much harder to locate. Thus, even detecting RBFLOAT is proof of concept that CHIME is indeed capable of detecting such events and building a statistically interesting sample of FRBs.”

    What Caused the RBFLOAT?

    Scientists are still not sure what causes RBFs, but they have some ideas. Because of the enormous energy they release and the brevity of the phenomenon, it is likely that they originate from extreme cosmic events, such as neutron star mergers, magnetars, or pulsars.

    In the case of RBFLOAT, the data indicate that it is located in a star-forming region with really massive stars. The triangulation places the signal in a galactic arm where new stars are also being born. This suggests that it could be a magnetar, a subclass of neutron star with a magnetic field billions of times stronger than that of the Earth.

    The experience with RBFLOAT will allow the team to apply the same triangulation technique to future signals. The authors estimate that they could achieve about 200 accurate RBF detections per year with just the signals CHIME captures.

    “For years, we’ve known FRBs occur all over the sky, but pinning them down has been painstakingly slow. Now, we can routinely tie them to specific galaxies, even down to neighborhoods within those galaxies,” said Yuxin Dong, another member of the team.

    This story originally appeared on WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.

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    Jorge Garay

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  • Canada to remove retaliatory tariffs on many U.S. goods

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    Canada’s U.S. trade minister on Trump tariffs



    Canada’s U.S. trade minister says country is “obviously disappointed” by Trump tariffs

    07:34

    Canada will remove retaliatory tariffs on many U.S. products that are covered under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, Prime Minister Mark Carney said at a press conference on Friday.

    The move by the Canadian prime minister is expected to reduce tensions with the U.S., as the two nations work to hash out a trade agreement. 

    Reached for comment before the press conference, the White House said, “We welcome this move by Canada, which is long overdue,” in a statement to CBS News.

    “We look forward to continuing our discussions with Canada on the Administration’s trade and national security concerns,” the White House said. 

    Canada imposed 25% tariffs on an extensive list of American-made goods in March. Without the duties in place, American products including alcohol, clothing, and shoes will not face levies when imported into Canada.

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  • US flight attendants are fed up like their Air Canada peers. Here’s why they are unlikely to strike

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    At the end of work trips, Nathan Miller goes home to a makeshift bedroom in his parents’ house in Virginia. The 29-year-old flight attendant is part of a PSA Airlines crew based in Philadelphia, but he can’t afford to live there.

    Miller says he makes about $24,000 a year staffing multiple flights a day as a full-time attendant for the American Airlines subsidiary. To get to work, he commutes by plane between Virginia Beach and Philadelphia International Airport, a distance of about 215 miles.

    “I’ve considered finding a whole new job. It’s not something that I want to do,” Miller, who joined PSA two years ago, said. “But it’s not sustainable.”

    His situation isn’t unique. Frustrations among flight attendants at both regional and legacy airlines have been building for years over paychecks that many of them say don’t match the weight of what their jobs demand. Compounding the discontent over hourly wages is a long-standing airline practice of not paying attendants for the work they perform on the ground, like getting passengers on and off planes.

    Air Canada’s flight attendants put a public spotlight on these simmering issues when about 10,000 of them walked off the job last weekend, leading the airline to cancel more than 3,100 flights. The strike ended Tuesday with a tentative deal that includes wage increases and, for the first time, pay for boarding passengers.

    In the United States, however, the nearly century-old Railway Labor Act makes it far more difficult for union flight attendants like Miller, a member of the Association of Flight Attendants, to strike than most other American workers. Unlike the Boeing factory workers and Hollywood writers and actors who collectively stopped work in recent years, U.S. airline workers can only strike if federal mediators declare an impasse — and even then, the president or Congress can intervene.

    For that reason, airline strikes are exceedingly rare. The last major one in the U.S. was over a decade ago by Spirit Airlines pilots, and most attempts since then have failed. American Airlines flight attendants tried in 2023 but were blocked by mediators.

    Without the ultimate bargaining chip, airline labor unions have seen their power eroded in contract talks that now stretch far beyond historical norms, according to Sara Nelson, the international president of the AFA. Negotiations that once took between a year and 18 months now drag on for three years, sometimes more.

    “The right to strike is fundamental to collective bargaining, but it has been chipped away,” Nelson said. Her union represents 50,000 attendants, including the ones at United Airlines, Alaska Airlines and PSA Airlines.

    On Monday, she joined PSA flight attendants in protest outside Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, near where an airliner operated by PSA crashed into the Potomac River in January after colliding with an Army helicopter. All 67 people on the two aircraft were killed, including the plane’s pilot, co-pilot and two flight attendants.

    The airline’s flight attendants also demonstrated outside airports in Philadelphia, Dallas, Charlotte and Dayton, Ohio. In a statement, PSA called the demonstrations “one of the important ways flight attendants express their desire to get a deal done — and we share the same goal.”

    Flight attendants say their jobs have become more demanding in recent years. Planes are fuller, and faster turnaround times between flights are expected. Customers may see them mostly as uniforms that serve food and beverages, but the many hats attendants juggle include handling in-flight emergencies, deescalating conflicts and managing unruly passengers.

    “We have to know how to put out a lithium battery fire while at 30,000 feet, or perform CPR on a passenger who’s had a heart attack. We’re trained to evacuate a plane in 90 seconds, and we’re always the last ones off,” said Becky Black, a PSA flight attendant in Dayton, Ohio, who is part of the union’s negotiating team.

    And yet, Black says, their pay hasn’t kept pace.

    PSA flight attendants have been bargaining for over two years for better wages and boarding pay. Alaska flight attendants spent just as long in talks before reaching a deal in February. At American, flight attendants began negotiations on a new contract in 2020 but didn’t get one until 2024.

    Southwest Airlines attendants pushed even longer — over five years — before securing a new deal last year that delivered an immediate 22% wage hike and annual 3% increases through 2027.

    “It was a great relief,” Alison Head, a longtime Southwest flight attendant based in Atlanta, said. “Coming out of COVID, where you saw prices were high and individuals struggling, it really meant something.”

    The contract didn’t include boarding pay but secured the industry’s first paid maternity and parental leave, a historic win for the largely female workforce. A mother of two, Head said she returned to work “fairly quickly” after having her first child because she couldn’t afford to stay home.

    “Now, new parents don’t have to make that same hard decision,” she said.

    Many of her peers at other airlines are still waiting for their new contracts.

    At United, attendants rejected a tentative agreement last month, with 71% voting no. The union is now surveying its members to understand why and plans to return to the bargaining table in December.

    One major sticking point: boarding pay. While Delta became the first U.S. airline to offer it in 2022 — followed by American and Alaska — many flight attendants still aren’t compensated during what they call the busiest part of their shift.

    Back in Virginia Beach, Miller is still trying to make it work. To report for duty at the Philadelphia airport on time, Miller says he wakes up at around 4 a.m. Once his commuter flight lands, it could be hours still before he is officially on the clock and getting paid. His work day sometimes ends at 2 a.m. the next morning.

    Depending what time it is when Miller returns to Philadelphia, he might spend the night at what’s known as a “crash pad,” a shared housing unit for flight crew members who commute to their base. Miller says his crash pad is a two-bedroom apartment with 10 beds in it.

    On family vacations during his childhood, Miller said he was fascinated by flight attendants and their ability to make passengers feel comfortable and safe.

    Now he’s got his dream job, but he isn’t sure he can afford to keep doing it.

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  • Elon Musk Randomly Drops in on Small Town; Reminds Everyone He Is Still Canadian

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    British Columbia and a tiny fishing village is now atwitter after the world’s wealthiest man made an unannounced appearance over the weekend.

    Elon Musk, the controversial and now apparently political CEO of Tesla and X, touched down in Bella Bella—an isolated town nestled in the Great Bear Rainforest—before departing again by helicopter.

    His visit to the town with approximately 1,500 residents was a surprise.

    Local resident Seán Carter told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that the area is no stranger to high-profile visitors.

    He added that Musk was possibly passing through en route to James Murdoch, son of media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who is a board member at Tesla, where Musk serves as CEO, and who owns a property off the coast.

    “It’s not every day the richest man in the world comes through town,” he said. “That’s going to be a tough one to top.”

    CBC News confirmed that Musk’s private jet touched down in Vancouver late Friday night and departed Monday afternoon. Visual evidence viewed by the CBC reportedly aligns with flight data tracked online and show Musk arriving and departing.

    Wait, Elon Musk is Canadian?

    If you follow the lore of Musk, he was born in South Africa and is a Canadian citizen through his mother, Maye Musk, who was born in Regina, according to official biographies. Musk moved to Saskatchewan and then Vancouver as a teen, and attended college in Canada.

    In recent months, Musk’s visits and Canadian ties have fueled debate. Earlier this year, a petition circulated calling for the government to revoke his citizenship over his role in President Trump’s White House, exactly as Musk was getting heavy handed in tariff talks between the two countries.

    In Ontario and Western Canada, Musk’s tempestuous influence has also complicated political relationships.

    Quebec, B.C., and other provinces have debated decisions to exclude Tesla from EV rebate programs in response to U.S. tariffs, with B.C. Premier David Eby citing “retaliation” as the reason. In a move that showed at least one of Musk’s businesses still matters to Canadian communities, more than half of Canadian rural areas are buying services from Musk’s Starlink satellite internet to improve connectivity.

    Musk has gone back and forth on his own complicated feelings about Canada.

    In 2023, he posted a photo wearing a “I Love Canada” T-shirt and declared himself “half-Canadian.” But in February 2025, in response to the citizenship revocation petition, he tweeted, “Canada is not a real country” before deleting the message.

    Carter told the CBC that, politics aside, Musk’s passage through Bella Bella was one for the history books. “No matter what your opinion of him is, it’s something to follow,” he said.

    Locals have mixed feelings about Musk

    The town’s residents clearly had mixed feelings about Musk’s drop-in.

    Emily Lowan, a candidate for the B.C. Green Party leadership, posted images of Musk’s arrival on social media, writing, “yet another reason to tax billionaires out of existence.”

    But in typical Canadian fashion, Carter said that Musk did not get any special treatment at the local airport and then had to walk for a bit.

    “It was quite busy,” Carter said. “The plane landed on one side, the helicopter on the other, and he had to walk a long way. He probably hoped to come in and out quietly, but there are no secrets in this town.”

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    Riley Gutiérrez McDermid

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  • Air Canada flight attendants refuse to back down after strike declared illegal by labor board

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    Air Canada flight attendants are not backing down after the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) declared a strike by 10,000 Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge flight attendants illegal Monday and ordered them back on the job.

    Mark Hancock, president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, said in a news conference in Montreal on Monday that the union will remain on strike.

    “We’re telling our flight attendants we’re going to support them,” Hancock said.

    CIRB declared a strike by 10,000 Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge flight attendants illegal Monday and ordered them back on the job after they ignored an earlier order to return to work and submit to arbitration.

    The strike at Canada’s largest airline entered its third day on Monday and is affecting about 130,000 travelers per day during the peak summer travel season, and the two sides remain far apart on pay and other issues. Air Canada suspended plans to restart operations Sunday after the union defied an earlier return-to-work order.

    “The members of the union’s bargaining unit are directed to resume the performance of their duties immediately and to refrain from engaging in unlawful strike activities,” the Canada Industrial Relations Board board, or CIRB, said in a written decision.

    The board, an independent administrative tribunal that interprets and applies Canada’s labor laws, said the union needs to provide written notice to all of its members by noon Monday that they must resume their duties.

    It was not immediately clear what recourse the board or the Canadian government has in the face of the union’s continued refusal.

    “We are in a situation where literally hundreds of thousands of Canadians and visitors to our country are being disrupted by this action,” Prime Minister Mark Carney said. “I urge both parties to resolve this as quickly as possible.”

    Asked on Monday what kind of repercussions the union was willing to face for its defiance of the labor board’s return to works orders, Hancock said, “There’s no limit. We’re going to stay strong.”

    “If it means folks like me going to jail, then so be it,” he added.

    Despite refusing to comply with the back-to-work order, Hancock also said the union is committed to reaching a deal.

    Air Canada had canceled 600 flights as of 4:03 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, according to FlightAware.com. Air Canada Rouge had 131 flight cancellations, the flight tracking and data provider showed.

    Second return-to-work order 

    Air Canada’s plans to restart operations were first suspended on Sunday after the union said it would defy a return to work order. The strike was already affecting about 130,000 travelers per day during the peak summer travel season.

    CIRB had first ordered airline staff back to work by 2 p.m. Sunday after the government intervened and Air Canada said it planned to resume flights Sunday evening.

    Canada’s largest airline initially said early on Monday that it would resume flights that evening, adding in a statement that the union “illegally directed its flight attendant members to defy a direction from the Canadian Industrial Relations Board.”

    After the Canadian union’s second refusal to end its work stoppage, the airline updated its website Monday afternoon to say that Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge operations remain suspended. 

    “Rolling cancellations now extend until 16:00 EDT of August 19, 2025,” a statement on Air Canada’s site read.

    “Over half a million customers have been impacted by this illegal strike, and we want to see an end to it,” Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau told BNN Bloomberg on Monday.

    The labor board first ordered airline staff back to work by 2 p.m. Sunday and for the union to enter arbitration, after the government intervened. Air Canada then said it planned to resume flights Sunday evening. But when the workers refused, the airline said it would resume flights Monday evening instead. However, there was no sign that the Canadian Union of Public Employees, or CUPE, would relent.

    Air Canada operates around 700 flights per day.

    What Air Canada is offering

    Union leader Hancock on Sunday had ripped up a copy of the initial back-to-work order outside Toronto’s Pearson International Airport, and said members wouldn’t go back to work this week, to the cheers of picketing flight attendants.

    Flight attendants walked off the job around 1 a.m. Eastern Time on Saturday after turning down the airline’s request to enter into government-directed arbitration, which allows a third-party mediator to decide the terms of a new contract.

    Air Canada and CUPE have been in contract talks for about eight months, but remain far apart on the issue of pay and the unpaid work that flight attendants do when planes aren’t in the air.

    The airline’s latest offer included a 38% increase in total compensation, including benefits and pensions, over four years. That deal “would have made our flight attendants the best compensated in Canada,” according to the carrier. 

    But the union pushed back, saying the proposed 8% raise in the first year didn’t go far enough because of inflation.

    “Air Canada’s intended restart of Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge, which have been grounded since Aug. 16 by CUPE’s labour disruption, was prevented on Aug. 17 by the CUPE leadership’s unlawful strike activities,” Air Canada said in a statement on Monday. “Air Canada regrets this impact on its customers and is fully committed to returning to service as soon as possible.”

    The airline now estimates 500,000 customers’ flights have been canceled as a result. Passengers whose flights are impacted will be eligible to request a full refund on the airline’s website or mobile app, according to Air Canada. 

    Last year, the government forced the country’s two major railroads into arbitration with their labor union during a work stoppage. The union for the rail workers is suing, arguing the government is removing a union’s leverage in negotiations.

    Air Canada customers can find more information on the airline’s website: www.aircanada.com 

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