Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Tues. May 26th, 2026 | Page 7 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: May 26, 2026 - 18:01

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Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Tues. May 26th, 2026

May 26, 2026

The non-profit behind an Ottawa summer camp for children with autism is worried about staffing, not to mention the camp’s overall future, due to reduced resources from the federal government. Organizers with Camp Kaleidoscope say they've received the approval for 5 positions through the Canada Summer Jobs Program. There’s just one problem: The camp requested 67 positions. And they ran into similar issues last year as well. Back in 2025, only 7 jobs were initially approved through that same program, a number that eventually increased to 14 approvals after lots of lobbying. Kristy Cameron chats with Brenda Reisch, the Executive Director of Ottawa-based Children At Risk. Meantime, it always pays to be polite, but it’s also true that you can’t please everyone all the time. When it comes to the delicate art of ‘people-pleasing’, where should we draw the line? We analyze further with Benslyne Avril, a psychotherapist who currently practices in Westboro. Plus, the legendary Scripps National Spelling Bee begins today! It’s an American classic that’s so big and so popular that it occasionally snags some airtime on ESPN. CFRA’s Chris Holski explains.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Data tracked by the NDP shows the premier skipped roughly one in three sessions of question period during the spring sitting, avoiding a key parliamentary accountability mechanism.
June 3, 2026 - 06:01 | Isaac Callan | Global News - Canada
Data tracked by the NDP shows the premier skipped roughly one in three sessions of question period during the spring sitting, avoiding a key parliamentary accountability mechanism.
June 3, 2026 - 06:01 | Isaac Callan | Global News - Ottawa
An 86-year-old B.C. man who shot and killed his long-time neighbour over a petty noise issue before turning the gun on the man’s wife will likely spend the rest of his days in prison after being sentenced to life in prison last week. In deciding on 86-year-old Robert Amede Freeman’s parole eligibility, the judge considered his “infirm and elderly” state and sided with the defence and set it at the minimum of 10 years. “He is not well now, and he was not well at the time he committed the offences,” B.C. Supreme Court Justice Andrea Ormiston wrote, noting diabetes, heart disease, a...
June 3, 2026 - 06:00 | Kenn Oliver | National Post