Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Mon. February 23rd, 2026 | Page 885 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: February 23, 2026 - 18:02

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Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Mon. February 23rd, 2026

February 23, 2026

The city councillor for Barrhaven West is calling on OC Transpo to conduct an audit of LRT Line 1. David Hill wants the transit service to reassure the public that all regulatory, safety, and technical standards are being met. Hill, who also serves on Ottawa’s Transit Committee, believes that an audit is one way to do it. Do you agree with his approach? Kristy Cameron sifts through the CFRA textboard and tackles today’s Question of the Day. Meantime, the U.S. Supreme Court has shut down a series of Trump tariffs, ruling them illegal without Congress approval. Within hours of Friday’s ruling, America’s Big Cheese quickly bit back, issuing new global tariffs that have already been raised to 15 percent. How will these new tariffs impact Canadian businesses, and how should Canadian authorities navigate this delicate situation? We dig deeper in Hour 3 with our Political Heat Panel.



Unpublished Newswire

 
After losing two family members close to her heart, Cambria Harris is finding her path to healing from trauma through art and sewing.
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In December 2025, United States president Donald Trump struck a deal that—uncharacteristically for such a spectacle-driven politician—barely registered among the general public. The agreement committed the Belarusian government to releasing 123 political prisoners, a significant concession from one of Europe’s most entrenched authoritarian regimes. In return, Washington agreed to lift sanctions on Belarus’s potash exports—sanctions it escalated after the country’s rigged 2020 election and later expanded, in 2022, when Belarus allowed Russia to use its territory to invade Ukraine. Why...
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My sister Shauna was listed for a liver transplant, the only potentially curative treatment for her end-stage liver disease, in 2003. All along, I believed that she was going to receive a successful transplant and be able to start a new life. I was attuned to the stories of those fortunate recipients who were able to get one and thrive, and I believed my sister would belong to that cast of heroes and survivors. But during her eighteen-month wait for the “gift of life,” her health precipitously declined, and she died in an intensive care unit. Redemption was out of reach for her. One...
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