Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Mon. September 15th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: September 15, 2025 - 18:00

Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Mon. September 15th, 2025

September 15, 2025

When it comes to wait times for first assessments, all five of Ottawa’s E.R. departments have exceeded the provincial average. Health Quality Ontario has provided the latest batch of data, which dates back to July of this year. Across our city, the average wait time for a first assessment by an E.R. doctor was 2 hours. The Queensway-Carleton Hospital owns the longest initial wait time locally, slightly decreasing from last year’s 3.9 hours to July’s 3.5 hours. At the Ottawa Hospital General Campus, it’s a wait of 3.3 hours. Now, the wait time for actual treatments and in-depth conversations with a health professional is obviously much longer. But this is a very big issue, and it’s nothing new to Canada’s Capital. Kristy Cameron digs deeper with Dr. Alan Drummond, a former President of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians. Over in Manotick, parents and students are on edge after threats were made at St. Mark’s High School. CTV’s Katelyn Wilson provides the latest developments in Hour 1. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Global News interviewed the top six Edmonton mayoral candidates about what they say they will do if elected.
October 9, 2025 - 18:55 | Karen Bartko | Global News - Canada
The long-awaited trial of a former researcher at Quebec’s electric utility charged with economic espionage for the benefit of China opened Thursday with the Crown beginning to present its case.Yuesheng Wang, 38, is the first person to be charged with economic espionage under Canada’s Security of Information Act.
October 9, 2025 - 18:54 | Sidhartha Banerjee | The Globe and Mail
Ontario has declared its measles outbreak over after a nearly year-long battle, but other parts of the country are still managing new cases of the highly-infectious disease.Public Health Ontario, in its weekly measles update posted on Thursday, announced that the provincial outbreak concluded on Oct. 6. National guidance states an outbreak is over when no new cases have been reported for 46 consecutive days, which is double the incubation period for measles.
October 9, 2025 - 18:31 | Alanna Smith | The Globe and Mail