Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. February 27th, 2026 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: February 27, 2026 - 18:01

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Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. February 27th, 2026

February 27, 2026

Funeral directors across Canada are warning grieving families about a series of third-party websites. They are allegedly republishing obituaries for profit, sometimes with fabricated details about the deceased. And while this type of immoral activity has been making headlines over the past 2 years, these sites are becoming more and more prominent in 2026. Kristy Cameron digs deeper with Jeff Hagel, a Western Region Representative for the Funeral Service Association of Canada. He has also worked directly with several families that have been impacted by obituary scraping. Shifting gears to the world of fast food, Burger King is planning to use Artificial Intelligence to monitor its minimum wage employees. And yes, that includes its Canadian chapters. CFRA’s Chris Holski delivers the details in Hour 2.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Officials investigating the collision between an Air Canada plane and a fire truck on a New York airport runway this week revealed on Tuesday what was captured by the cockpit voice recorder in the final three minutes before the crash, shedding more light on the last moments of two deceased pilots. In a National Transportation Safety Board press conference at LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York City, where the fatal collision occurred at 11:30 p.m. Sunday night, investigator in chief Doug Brazy read aloud a summary of the final transmissions between the tower, the aircraft and the...
March 24, 2026 - 15:47 | Kenn Oliver | National Post
OTTAWA — There should be no new limits on the use of the notwithstanding clause even if a “tyrant” could one day take power and use it to run roughshod on fundamental rights, the Quebec government told Canada’s top court amid a challenge to Quebec’s secularism law. “It is not the role of the court to decide a political question that is not justiciable,” lawyer Isabelle Brunet, who represents Quebec’s attorney general, told the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) in French on Tuesday. On the second of four days of hearings, proponents of Quebec’s controversial secularism law — colloquially...
March 24, 2026 - 15:44 | Christopher Nardi | National Post