Please, public servants, resist the return to the office | Opinion | Page 883 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: Ottawa Citizen
Author: Aaron Hutchins
Publication Date: February 17, 2026 - 13:06

Stay informed

Please, public servants, resist the return to the office | Opinion

February 17, 2026
No responsible journalist should encourage civil disobedience but in the case of this colossally stupid and arbitrarily idiotic return to office mandate for the public service, I am going to make an exception. Don’t RTO, at least not until we have a fully functioning public transit system. Read More


Unpublished Newswire

 
The call to adventure came from a stranger in July 2020. It was a regular day in that plague year. Amid the mix of work emails came one from an address I didn’t know but with a subject line that immediately pulled me in: “Charles Saunders.” Hi Jon, I am hoping you might know or know about the writer, Charles Saunders, who lives in Dartmouth, the message opened. Reading his name conjured up strong images of the towering newspaper editor I’d worked with a decade ago. Built like a heavyweight boxer, but he moved like a cat. A genius with words and a wealth of writing wisdom, Charles was the...
February 21, 2026 - 06:30 | Jon Tattrie | Walrus
1 2 const title = "Weekly Quiz: Online Scapegoating, Elver Economics, and the Old World Order"; const date = "February 21, 2026"; const data = [ { image: "https://walrus-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/img/20260212_16-34-54_MSC2026_lbt-1200x800.jpg", title: "In Munich, Leaders Say Goodbye to the Old World Order", url: "https://thewalrus.ca/in-munich-leaders-say-goodbye-to-the-old-world-order/", question: "In February, leaders from around the world convened at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) to assess the shifting state of geopolitics...
February 21, 2026 - 06:00 | Sophie Siew | Walrus
A few short years ago, before she had proposed a new set of referendum questions on Thursday aimed at curbing rapid population growth, Premier Danielle Smith was actively courting newcomers to the province. Indeed, with the private sector facing a shortage of skilled workers, the premier could hardly bring in enough people to satisfy her appetite. Smith’s latest referendum push, then, seems like a dramatic shift in policy. Instead, the premier told reporters on Friday, her change in tone is the result of a stark mismatch between Alberta’s efforts to recruit skilled workers and changes...
February 21, 2026 - 06:00 | Jesse Snyder | National Post