Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Wed. April 29th, 2026 | Page 6 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: April 29, 2026 - 18:02

Stay informed

Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Wed. April 29th, 2026

April 29, 2026

A Canada-wide survey, carried out last month by Angus Reid, found that 75 percent of over 4,000 respondents were in favour of a social media ban, such as the one we have seen in Australia. In that country, youth under the age of 16 are prevented from setting up accounts on TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat. Ontario’s Education Minister was asked if the province would follow Manitoba’s crackdown, and he met the question with an idea of implementing cellphone bans in classrooms. That’s where an advocacy group called Unplugged Canada comes into the picture, as they have been gaining significant momentum on a U-14 smartphone ban. They had 5,000 families on board in 2024, and that number is approaching 10,000 families today. How young is too young to own a smartphone? Guest host Chris Holski sifts through the CFRA textboard and tackles today’s Question of the Day. Meantime, A.I. might be putting your passwords in great danger. We open that can of worms in Hour 3, as Shruti Shekar makes her weekly appearance. She is the editor-in-chief of Android Central. Plus, the CFL Playoffs are going to get a major facelift in 2027, and those seismic shifts have caused a lot of division within the fanbase. Ottawa Redblacks analyst Duke Ellingson offers his two cents.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Police say a male and female teenager were declared dead at hospital, while the other two teenage occupants sustained serious but not-life-threatening injuries.
May 24, 2026 - 09:49 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
Alberta's former deputy premier Thomas Lukaszuk said his Forever Canadian campaign will see him and hundreds of volunteers zigzagging from the province's north to the south.
May 24, 2026 - 09:34 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
The ripple effect of the Iran war has moved beyond oil markets and has now reached everyday consumer goods. The nearly three-month war has triggered shortages affecting smartphones, snack packaging and restaurant kitchens. From monochrome potato chip bags to “Diet Coke parties,” here are five ways the conflict in the Middle East is wreaking havoc on global supply chains. 1. SNACK PACK INK Japanese snack packaging is about to become a lot less vibrant due to a shortage of an ink ingredient. Calbee, Japan’s biggest snack maker with about half of the overall market, said shortages tied to...
May 24, 2026 - 09:30 | Laura Brehaut | National Post