The Canadian Press
About The Canadian Press
The Canadian Press has been Canada's trusted national news agency for more than 100 years, a news source and leader in providing real-time, bilingual multimedia stories across print, broadcast and digital platforms. Through words, photos, graphics, audio and video, more than 180 journalists cover news stories that impact Canadians with fairness, compassion, accuracy and taste. CP, a for-profit enterprise owned jointly by three of Canada's largest media companies, gives Canadians an authentic, unbiased source, driven by truth, accuracy and timeliness. More details about CP's news principles are available here. CP is a Trust Project News Partner.
Noxious smell complaints trigger air quality bulletin in Metro Vancouver
An incident at Burnaby's Parkland fuel refinery caused the "strong chemical odour" around the region
New student visa plan expected today from immigration minister
The announcement comes five months after the last cabinet retreat in Charlottetown where Miller and Housing Minister Sean Fraser began floating the idea of capping international student visas.
Natural gas prices dip despite cold snap
North American natural gas prices continued to drop this week, in spite of frigid winter conditions that gripped much of the continent.
Trudeau's trip to Nunavut drew a rare moment of reflection on his dad
Trudeau is in Iqaluit to mark the signing of an agreement to hand over powers to the territorial government when it comes to their management of land, fresh water and the resources each contain.
Freezing rain to hit southern B.C., and another snow dump expected for Vancouver Island
Between 10 and 20 centimetres of snow is forecast on Vancouver Island, with a "prolonged period of freezing rain" inland expected to follow.
CEO pay soars higher with oil and gas profits
CEO pay in the oil and gas sector has soared with the industry's post-pandemic resurgence and will likely increase even more with the completion of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion this year, a new report projects.
Hydrogen project will cut emissions, boost jobs, BC premier says
A planned clean energy hydrogen project in Prince George, B.C., will reduce carbon emissions at a local pulp mill and create jobs, Premier David Eby said on Tuesday.
Ethics committee to decide whether to look into Trudeau's recent vacation
The House of Commons ethics committee is set to meet today to discuss whether a probe should be launched over Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's recent holiday vacation to Jamaica.
Ontario's highest court hears climate challenge from Ontario youth
The appeal is part of a number of recent youth-led cases across Canada and other parts of the world where young people argue government climate inaction in the face of increasingly dire circumstances, from wildfire to floods, is a violation of their rights.
Quebec's striking workers to begin voting on deal with province
About 420,000 unionized public sector workers will begin voting on Monday on an agreement in principle reached with the Quebec government over a new collective deal.