Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Matthew Scace
Publication Date: February 5, 2025 - 17:47
Demolitions go ahead in Calgary neighbourhood for transit station that may never come
February 5, 2025
Steel snapped and tumbled to the snow-covered concrete on Wednesday as bulldozers ripped away pieces of Calgary’s Eau Claire Market, a plucky mall near the Bow River built in the early 1990s.The demolition is the next step to clear the way for a future train station that may never come, leaving groups in Calgary concerned the downtown neighbourhood will end up a casualty of political battles between city hall and the Alberta government.
The Blood Tribe Department of Health calls the shelter expansion a "lifeline" to the vital work of its frontline workers, who assist the city's vulnerable population every day.
February 5, 2025 - 20:01 | Jordan Prentice | Global News - Canada
If Ottawa is serious about helping its new fentanyl czar defeat a scourge that has killed tens of thousands of Canadians, it will require a lot more than helicopters and extra cameras at the border, former drug investigators and RCMP commanders say.Law enforcement experts told The Globe and Mail they’re hopeful the threat of U.S. tariffs may be the crisis that finally forces Canada to make substantive changes to the way the trafficking of fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid, is investigated and prosecuted.
February 5, 2025 - 19:56 | Greg Mercer | The Globe and Mail
Bill Blair told Global News in Washington, D.C., that military members will not be deployed to the border, which was not requested by the Trump administration during negotiations.
February 5, 2025 - 19:27 | Mackenzie Gray | Global News - Canada
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