Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Tues. March 31st, 2026 | Page 11 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: March 31, 2026 - 18:00

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Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Tues. March 31st, 2026

March 31, 2026

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling on the federal and provincial governments to cut taxes, providing relief on the soaring costs of gas. The price-per-litre is set to surpass $1.80, a jump of roughly 5 cents from the current average across Canada’s Capital. While Canada has maintained its current tax structure, other nations are moving to insulate citizens from some of the sticker shock. Those countries include – to name a few – Spain, Portugal, Italy, Ireland, and Australia. We dig deeper with Colin Mang, an economist at McMaster University, in Hour 1. And later in the program, we check in with Franco Terrazzano, the Federal Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. Plus, a pending report to the city’s Finance and Corporate Service Committee paints a tough picture for the local economy in 2026. CFRA’s Andrew Pinsent fills us in.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Saskatchewan is taking aim at reducing the rise in drugs and weapons being dropped by drones into prison yards – sometimes right to an inmate’s cell window.
April 21, 2026 - 06:55 | Jeremy Simes | The Globe and Mail
A man found not criminally responsible on three counts of attempted murder for a March 2016 knife attack at a Canadian Forces Recruiting Centre in Toronto has been granted a three-week travel pass for Saudi Arabia and Somalia, despite the fact that he “continues to pose a significant threat to public safety.” Ayanle Hassan Ali, who is Muslim, plans to go on a pilgrimage to Mecca with his father and meet a potential bride his dad found for him in Somalia. He wants to travel abroad “to facilitate a meeting with a woman as his father has been working on arranging a possible marriage...
April 21, 2026 - 06:30 | Chris Lambie | National Post
This is how the story of a great chess grandmaster usually begins. A parent or teacher discovers an exceptional mind: a memory of shocking precision; a special intuition for geometry; a gift for logic and abstraction. When they are introduced to the game at four or five or six, fluency comes quickly. When that talent is cultivated, others are revealed: monastic discipline, fierce competitiveness, myopic focus. Chess, for the child, becomes everything. They are transfixed by its beauty, lured by its depth, compelled by the contest. Family, friends, hobbies—all life beyond the board begins...
April 21, 2026 - 06:30 | Jordan Himelfarb | Walrus