Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Wed. May 27th, 2026 | Page 901 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: May 27, 2026 - 18:00

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Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Wed. May 27th, 2026

May 27, 2026

We start today’s program by circling back to one of the topics we covered on Tuesday. Does Ottawa need a renoviction bylaw? Somerset councillor Ariel Troster is calling on City Staff to present a draft bylaw to committee in June. However, City Staff say a renoviction bylaw could be expensive to enact, and pre-existing provincial legislation could soon supercede a city bylaw. Kristy Cameron digs deeper with John Dickie, the Chair of the Eastern Ontario Landlord Organization and a lawyer himself. He says that today’s landlords are already covered in tons of red tape, and he says that City Council probably doesn’t want to have this debate. We also check in with Sharon Katz, an ACORN member who is calling for a renoviction bylaw to be installed. Later in Hour 1, we have a difficult conversation about dementia, a complicated condition that can be quite devastating for patients and families alike. And if you know anyone who’s been through it, you also know that treatment options can be just as mentally taxing. Thankfully, the great minds at The Ottawa Hospital are working on potential solutions. Dr. Alykhan Abdulla, a family doctor based in Manotick, pays us a visit. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Recently, the Commonwealth Short Story Prize faced credible allegations that several of its regional winners were AI-generated. Granta, the literary magazine that published the stories, found itself drawn into the controversy. The Commonwealth Short Story Prize matters. It selects five regional winners annually—one each from Africa, Asia, Canada and Europe, the Caribbean, and the Pacific—who then compete for the overall prize. Over the years, it has identified emerging authors whose careers came to justify the prize’s reputation: Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi (overall winner, 2014), for...
June 8, 2026 - 12:37 | D. W. Wilson | Walrus
Tomorrow, June 9, the average Canadian family will have earned enough in 2026 to cover the taxes imposed on it by the three levels of government, according to a new study by the Fraser Institute . The think tank estimates that the average family will earn $166,790 in 2026 and pay an estimated $72,539 in total taxes, representing 43.5 per cent of their annual income. This means that, if Canadian families had to pay their tax bills upfront, they would need to work for more than five months, or 158 days, before they had earned enough to pay off all the taxes imposed by federal,...
June 8, 2026 - 12:29 | Ellie Hutchings | National Post