Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Mon. February 9th, 2026 | Page 9 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: February 9, 2026 - 18:00

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Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Mon. February 9th, 2026

February 9, 2026

Public service unions are sounding the alarm bell over present-day conditions inside federal office buildings. This follows Friday’s directives from the feds, in which public service employees will be ordered back to their workspaces for 4 days a week later this Summer. The unions argue that workers shouldn’t be ordered back to their workspaces when there isn’t enough workspace available. Health issues, such as pests and bed bugs, are other important concerns they have raised in the past. And now, a local Liberal MP is calling on his party to reconsider the RTO mandate. Kristy Cameron chats with Vivian Funk, a full-time public servant, in Hour 1. She is also the Vice-President of Health and Safety with the Association of Justice Counsel. Later in the show, we tackle the public transportation side of the debate with Tyler Chamberlin. He is an Associate Professor at UOttawa's Telfer School of Management. Meantime, a police watchdog has launched its own probe of policing services across Ontario, assessing their ability to detect corruption within their organizations. This follows a damning week for the Toronto Police Service, as 7 members now face corruption charges. CFRA’s Andrew Pinsent has more on that. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines.



Unpublished Newswire

 
For nearly a year, Canadians have been discussing the danger posed by the United States. The anxiety shows up everywhere—online forums, polling questions, and in the unusually blunt asides from officials. This is good. We need to get in the habit of having hard conversations about who threatens us, the extent of that threat, and what we can and must do if we are to survive as an independent country. To his credit, Prime Minister Mark Carney has talked openly about some aspects of the changing face of global politics. As the world now knows, he articulately described a “rupture” in world...
February 16, 2026 - 06:30 | Stewart Prest | Walrus
OTTAWA — Transportation ministers from across the country will meet quietly this week with an agenda that is expected to include a possible update of the contentious safety rules that govern flights to remote communities. National Post has learned that the unannounced meeting, to be held Feb. 20 in Vancouver, is expected to address a range of transportation issues, including a proposed “regulatory sandbox” that would mark a fresh attempt to balance competing interests over Canada’s air safety rules. Those rules have been a source of friction and a political football that have been...
February 16, 2026 - 06:00 | Simon Tuck | National Post
Rick Westhead nearly missed one of the most important phone calls of his career. The investigative journalist was in Europe shooting a documentary for sports broadcaster TSN. As repeated calls came in from an unknown number, he was too busy to answer. Eventually, he picked up. The voice on the other end told him he needed to pull a court file in London, Ont. It contained allegations from a woman claiming she was sexually abused. “This will change hockey. It may change our country,” said the whistleblower. That call led Westhead to a case that all Canadians would come to know...
February 16, 2026 - 06:00 | Investigative Journalism Bureau | National Post