Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Wed. March 4th, 2026 | Page 7 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: March 4, 2026 - 18:00

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Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Wed. March 4th, 2026

March 4, 2026

The construction of a historic and ambitious megaproject is just a few years away, and consultations are underway as to where it will run and how it will work. We are, once again, talking about high-speed rail. With shovels supposed to hit the ground in 2029, the service would connect Toronto to Quebec City, and would move through Prescott-Russell between Ottawa and Montreal. Trains are projected to reach speeds of 300 kilometres per hour, cutting travel time between Montreal and Canada’s Capital in half. The cost? Somewhere between $60 billion and $90 billion. But for dozens of farming communities, this idea could be catastrophically bad. Scott Reid, a Conservative MP for Lanark-Frontenac, is in the middle of a riding that could be split by either of the proposed routes. He joins Kristy Cameron from today’s Alto consultations in Perth. Sticking with municipal matters, we could be receiving some positive developments in the coming days about the next stage of LRT. You’ll hear from OC Transpo Interim GM Troy Charter in Hour 1. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Tens of thousands of customers are without power and four parts of Highway 401 are closed Tuesday morning as blasts of blowing snow hit the Ottawa-Gatineau area.
March 17, 2026 - 07:29 | | CBC News - Ottawa
Seven out of 10 Kingston, Ont., residents want their statue of Sir John A. Macdonald back, according to a new poll. Authorities removed the statue of Canada’s first prime minister from a Kingston park in June 2021. That came after city council voted 12-1 to take his effigy down amid controversy over Macdonald’s role in creating the Indian Residential School system. Mark O’Farrell, who chairs Kingston Friends of the Canadian Institute for Historical Education, was “pleasantly” surprised by the poll result. “Kingston City Council, we are hoping, is going to put it to a vote,” O’...
March 17, 2026 - 07:00 | Chris Lambie | National Post
At least two Canadian hospital research labs have imported dogs for scientific research from a U.S. breeder cited for repeated animal care violations, the Investigative Journalism Bureau has found. The University Health Network (UHN) in Toronto, which says it no longer uses dogs for research, and the Lawson Health Research Institute...
March 17, 2026 - 07:00 | Investigative Journalism Bureau and New York City News Service | National Post