By any measure, Vancouver was already lacking outdoor public pools before it was announced the aging and frequently-under-repair Kitsilano Pool would not open at all this year.
Concerns are growing in Alberta about the accessibility and affordability of Paxlovid, after the federal government ended its program supplying the COVID-19 treatment to provinces, which provided the drug for free to specific groups of high-risk patients.
A number of Charlottetown renters are still living in limbo after they were told their units would be switched to condos and sold, but some are hoping a non-profit group will buy the building instead.
The Canadian telecommunications industry wants stiffer penalties for copper wire thieves, who they say are repeatedly causing outages that can leave thousands of customers without service when they cut the wire off telephone poles to sell for scrap metal.
The tiny community of Holmesville, Ont., is reeling after learning a 13-year-old boy is the person charged with first-degree murder after a girl died in hospital earlier this week.
Britain's Labour Party swept to power Friday after more than a decade in opposition, as a jaded electorate handed the party a landslide victory — but also a mammoth task of reinvigorating a stagnant economy and dispirited nation.
A Fredericton police officer will not have a criminal record for offences he committed during a domestic dispute, provided he follows court-ordered conditions.