Another 14 people die from COVID-19 in B.C., hospitalizations fall

VANCOUVER — COVID-19 hospitalizations have dropped again in British Columbia but another 14 people died over a three-day period since Friday.  A Health Ministry statement says the death toll has reached 2,946 people.  There were 359 people in hospital ...

House sends Texas-styled abortion measure to Idaho governor

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Legislation aimed at banning abortions in Idaho after six weeks of pregnancy by allowing potential family members to sue a doctor who performs one headed to the governor Monday.

Sam Massell, Atlanta mayor who drove MARTA creation, dies

ATLANTA (AP) — Sam Massell, who was the first Jewish mayor of Atlanta as well as the driving force behind the creation of the region's transit system, has died. Massell was 94.

Trucker mandate protest hits DC, snarling local traffic

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of truckers and other motorists who have been doing rolling protests on highways encircling Washington made their way into the nation's capital Monday, snarling already-congested traffic in a demonstration against COVID-19 ma...

Inflation pushes B.C.’s minimum wage up by 45 cents to $15.65 per hour

SURREY, B.C. — The British Columbia government is pushing the minimum wage up to $15.65 an hour, which it says is the highest among the provinces.  Labour Minister Harry Bains announced Mondaythat the hourly wage will jump by 45 cents starting

Manitoba bill would allow cosmetic pesticides on lawns, municipal boulevards

WINNIPEG — Manitoba homeowners and municipalities could soon more freely use pesticides on their lawns and public areas. A bill put before the legislature Monday by the Progressive Conservative government proposes an end to a restriction on cosmetic pe...

EU imposes 4th set of sanctions against Russia for war

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union announced late Monday that the 27-nation bloc has approved a new set of sanctions to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.

Lewis calls Bill 21 ‘religious discrimination,’ Poilievre hopes Quebec repeals law

OTTAWA — Conservative leadership contender and rookie MP Leslyn Lewis on Monday called a Quebec law restricting public servants in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols at work "explicit religious discrimination."   Lewis, who is runnin...

‘The whole system falls apart’: Nunavut group concerned about Ottawa care home

IQALUIT, Nunavut — A group representing Nunavut elders says a seniors home in Ottawa is failing Inuit who are sent there. In a March 7 letter to Nunavut Health Minister John Main, the Pairijait Tigumivik Society presents a long list of

Pelosi pushes to show united Democrats ahead of midterms

NEW YORK (AP) — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi teamed up with one of the emerging progressives in Congress on Monday for a town hall in New York, showing a united Democratic front months ahead of the midterm elections.

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