Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. March 5th, 2026 | Page 880 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: March 5, 2026 - 18:00

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Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. March 5th, 2026

March 5, 2026

Last week, Ontario’s Minister of Education admitted that too many people don’t know how to download a digital report card. And that might have been the catalyst for an old-school comeback, as paper report cards will soon be brought back from the dead. Kristy Cameron chats with Colin Matthew, the Vice-President of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation. Later in today’s program, we also check in with Stephen Skoutajan, the President of the Ottawa-Carleton Elementary Teachers Federation of Ontario. Meantime, we are on a tireless journey to locate the worst bus route that Canada’s Capital has to offer. Brent Charron, an OC Transpo bus rider who lives in Fallingbrook, thinks he’s got a solid contender for this competition. He drops by for a visit in Hour 1. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines, starting with a positive development in the next stage of Ottawa’s LRT.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Good morning. As war in the Middle East extends into the fourth week, it also spreads across the region. More on that below, along with a new defence bank and a major top court hearing. Let’s get to it.
March 23, 2026 - 06:40 | Sierra Bein | The Globe and Mail
Nearly two decades ago, when a teenager named Jordan Manners was shot and killed at C W Jefferys Collegiate Institute in northwestern Toronto, it sparked broad public condemnation. Something had to be done to address the scourge of youth violence. No one else should die or get hurt going to school. Fast-forward to the present. A fourteen-year-old is charged with murdering two men outside of his school in Etobicoke; a group of teens in Hamilton fatally stab a classmate; in Scarborough, eighteen-year-old Jahiem Robinson is shot by a classmate four years his junior. Key points The number...
March 23, 2026 - 06:30 | Kunal Chaudhary | Walrus
Four-and-a-half years after he was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, a Dutch teen was euthanized at his request. The boy, aged between 16 and 18, had described his life as “joyless.” He’d struggled with anxiety and mood-related problems, and where he fit in, in the world. Oversensitive to stimuli, “every day was an ordeal he had to get through,” according to the latest annual report from the Netherlands’ regional euthanasia death review committees. “In the final weeks before his death, he lay in bed the whole time.” Despite his young age, his doctor had “no doubts whatsoever...
March 23, 2026 - 06:00 | Sharon Kirkey | National Post