Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. March 5th, 2026 | Page 887 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: March 5, 2026 - 18:01

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Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. March 5th, 2026

March 5, 2026

A crowd of groups, organizations, and businesses have sent letters of disappointment and concern to Algonquin College. It follows another series of staggering course cuts from the post-secondary institution, the second significant wave in as many years. They fear that the outright dismissal of these programs will result in a shrinkage of Ottawa’s talent pipeline, and even a drought in local entrepreneurship. We dig deeper with Sarah Chown, a Managing Partner at the Metropolitan Brasserie and a Board Member of Restaurants Canada. Meantime, an Ottawa-based entrepreneur has been forced to change the name of her company. That’s because, if she didn’t, the lawyers of a popular female music group were ready to launch a lawsuit for trademark infringement. Kristy Cameron chats with Lily Bond, the founder of what is currently known as Spyce Girlz Seasonings. And in the world of municipal politics, city councillor Matthew Luloff vows to take responsibility for his actions following today’s drunk driving convictions. He is under a 1-year driving ban and he will have to pay two significant fines. But in order for those promises of change to sink in, should Luloff be stripped of his present-day role at City Hall?



Unpublished Newswire

 
Good morning. The U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran enters its third week. More on that below, along with a cybercrime operation and the Bank of Canada’s coming rate decision. Let’s get to it.
March 16, 2026 - 06:31 | Sierra Bein | The Globe and Mail
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March 16, 2026 - 06:30 | Nora Loreto | Walrus
Weeks after it was delivered, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Davos speech is still generating ripples—quoted in think tanks, parsed in Ottawa, and invoked as shorthand for a world tilting away from frictionless globalization. “We knew,” Carney told that room of elites, high in the Alps in January, “the story of the international rules-based order was partially false.” Just because Canada benefited from it, Carney said, didn’t hide the fact that it was unfair. The rules didn’t apply equally to everyone. “The strongest would exempt themselves when convenient,” he said. Power, not principle...
March 16, 2026 - 06:29 | Colin Horgan | Walrus