The Last Repair Shop tells the story of the L.A. Unified School District's Musical Instrument Repair Shop, where 11 technicians service about 6,000 instruments each year for more than 1,300 schools across the city.
Premier Wab Kinew stood in the Manitoba Legislative Assembly on Thursday and formally apologized to Edward Ambrose and Richard Beauvais for the mistake that sent them to the wrong homes after their births in 1955.
Four years after remote work became the norm for a huge section of the labour force, it appears some companies are still struggling with the etiquette of letting workers go virtually. And amid a cooling labour market and mass layoffs in several sectors, such as media and the tech industry, it's a common situation.
Chasing world championship figure skating pairs gold, 40-year-old Canadian Deanna Stellato-Dudek talks about her return to figure skating after a 16-year hiatus.
This Ramadan, a new group for people who identify as queer and Muslim is showing their love for the Hamilton community through food. Meanwhile, another group, Mishka Social Services, is raising money to support refugees from Gaza.
Family doctors are gatekeepers for medical care in Canada, but the proportion of adults with access to a primary care provider has declined, a new survey suggests.
British Columbia's emergency management minister has announced $39 million in new funding for more than 50 new projects responding to more frequent climate-related emergencies across the province.
A 62-year-man with end-stage renal disease has become the first human to receive a new kidney from a genetically modified pig, doctors from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston announces.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre urged MPs Thursday to back his motion to topple the government over its planned increase to the carbon tax — a manoeuvre that's unlikely to succeed.
Col. Leif Dahl has pleaded guilty to carelessly storing firearms and public mischief after someone on the boat he was operating last summer fired a gun at either a loon or a cormorant.
In this week's issue of our environment newsletter, we look at what farmers are so angry about in India and when you should plan your cherry blossom picnic.
The U.S. Justice Department has announced a sweeping antitrust lawsuit against Apple, accusing the tech giant of engineering an illegal monopoly in smartphones that boxes out competitors and stifles innovation.
Police in Longueuil, Que., are investigating two deaths for possible links to alleged serial murderer Kenneth Law. The Ontario man is already charged in connection with 14 deaths in Ontario after police say he sold a toxic substance to people at risk of self-harm. Law faces scrutiny in at least five provinces.
Mary Brown says she is one of the oldest competitive swimmers in Saskatchewan and the sport has allowed her to continue moving well into her senior years.
Eurovision bills itself as a non-political event. But controversy around Israel’s song entry and the ongoing war in Gaza has led some critics to call for a complete boycott of the contest in early May.
The Supreme Court has ruled on whether it will hear the appeal of a private Calgary school found to have discriminated against two Muslim students who were not allowed to perform their prayers on campus.
The Bank of Canada's governing council members agree that if the economy and inflation evolve in line with projections, the central bank will be able to begin cutting interest rates sometime this year.
A British Columbia man who put more than $700,000 of his money into what he thought would be a safe investment, only to have it taken by a fraudster, says the discovery of a Winnipeg fraud case is likely to thank for the recovery of his money.
It's deja vu at Confederation Building in St. John's on Thursday morning, as police and protesters have shown up in large numbers ahead of the provincial government's plans to introduce the 2024 budget.
Canada is facing a shortage of measles vaccines amid a rise in cases across the country and around the world, and an increase in demand.
It’s unclear how much methane Canada's landfills are putting into the atmosphere, and that poses a big problem for the country's efforts to mitigate climate change. A team from St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia is hoping their work will help.
Gardiner MacDougall of Bedeque, P.E.I., has a lot to celebrate as the hockey season wraps up. He is now the winningest coach in Canadian university men's hockey history with his UNB Reds repeating as national champions.
Over the past five years, the number of homeless people who die annually in Edmonton has increased dramatically — from 37 in 2019 to 302 in 2023, according to data provided by Alberta Justice. In Calgary, that number has risen from 51 to 294 in the same time period.
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