Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Wed. June 3rd, 2026 | Page 903 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: June 3, 2026 - 18:02

Stay informed

Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Wed. June 3rd, 2026

June 3, 2026

It’s hard to stay at a park and cheer for your kid’s little-league team when nature calls, especially when there’s no bathroom to relieve yourself. In fact, in any outdoor situation with no restroom, that is not a pleasant thought to think of. The City of Ottawa has tried to answer that call by deploying some porta-potties to city parks. However, critics say more action needs to be taken. Do Ottawa’s public parks need more bathrooms? Kristy Cameron sifts through the CFRA textboard and tackles today’s Question of the Day. Meantime, the review of Canada’s agreement with USA and Mexico is just weeks away. It will be up for review – oddly enough – on Canada Day. And ahead of July 1st, Canada is now under new tariff pressure from its American counterparts, as the White House threatens a 10 percent tariff on Canada and other countries. U.S. President Trump is accusing those countries of not doing enough to halt forced-labour products from entering the North American supply chain. In Hour 3, we bring in David Paterson, who is Ontario's Trade Representative in Washington.



Unpublished Newswire

 
The world first saw Noa Argamani in what looked like a scene from a movie: a beautiful young woman in remarkable anguish on the back of a speeding motorcycle driven by a terrorist. Now-famous Hamas GoPro footage showed Argamani screaming “don’t kill me” as the terrorists took her from the Nova music festival on October 7, while she reached helplessly toward her boyfriend, Avinatan Or, being forced away at gunpoint. Her outstretched arms and tear‑streaked face became one of the most searing visual emblems of the day. She says she was, before that day, a “shy girl that never raised her...
June 20, 2026 - 07:00 | Special to National Post | National Post
He arrived in Canada from Austria over seven decades back at the age of 21 with little money and rudimentary English. Frank Stronach, now 93, went on to become a tycoon in a Hollywood movie mould. He was visually striking, fit and energetic, with piercing blue eyes, his hair turning silver in the 1980s. He kept iron-fist control of his companies, installing directors at a whim, and showed distain for shareholders who questioned his judgment. “I built a company from scratch that is today recognized as the premier automotive supplier in the world … generating close to $30 billion in...
June 20, 2026 - 07:00 | National Post Staff | National Post
June 20, 2026 - 07:00 | Matthew Scace | The Globe and Mail