Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Mon. June 8th, 2026 | Page 6 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: June 8, 2026 - 18:01

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Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Mon. June 8th, 2026

June 8, 2026

Last week, Ottawa Bylaw Services seized over $69,000 worth of contraband vapes, which were snagged away from ‘several’ local businesses. Vapes fall under several laws, such as the federal Tobacco and Vaping Products Act and the provincial Smoke-Free Ontario Act. These retailers are also governed by city bylaws. As this was happening, a private member’s bill aimed at reducing youth vaping has passed First Reading at Queen’s Park, and will return to the Ontario Legislature this Fall. We dig deeper with Queen’s University professor Christian Leuprecht. Meantime, the City of Ottawa is investigating after a teenager was attacked by 3 coyotes in Orleans. The incident happened at Lalande Conservation Park this week, according to the mother of the 14-year-old boy. And now, residents are urging the municipality to take further action. That story is coming up in Hour 2. Plus, it’s been 10 years since a sinkhole opened up the bowels of Rideau Street. CFRA’s Chris Holski checks in with the locksmith that became famous in 2016. He was not able to access the trapped car, though.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Agnes Ryoo had been trying to get her moles checked out for months. The thirty-two-year-old Toronto resident is Korean Canadian, fair-skinned, and has a smattering of moles all over her body and face. “That combination, plus me being anxious, [means] I’m always afraid of what my moles could become,” Ryoo says. When her family doctor referred her to a dermatologist, she spent a lot of time online looking for clinics that would see her quickly. Just four weeks later, in August 2025, Ryoo saw a dermatologist. .entry-content > figure:nth-child(2) { display: block !important; } This...
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As a child, I loved summer rain only as much as its worms on the driveway, on the sidewalk, on the road where cars passed until the next morning, which would be sunny and dry and full of bodies. As if umbilical, two worms could be born— I had learned from classmates—by snipping one in half. So I too conducted no great experiment, only easy cruelty, my heart a knotted spool. Boneless and blind as a needle, needy and pink, worms have five hearts and live best unseen. On days purified by rain, I watch them thread out of black soil, scolding you aren’t meant for this world with the knife of...
June 25, 2026 - 06:29 | Farah Ghafoor | Walrus
Child’s Play In “Leave the Kids Alone” (March/April), Simon Lewsen argues that we are helicopter-parenting children, who are not in as much danger as parents perceive, and that they in fact benefit from being empowered, age appropriately, to navigate life’s challenges. In Winnipeg, from age nine onward, my classmates and I all took city buses to school, and we thought nothing of taking those same buses across town after school. And then home again, after dark, in the winter. By contrast, I now often pull up behind a school bus dropping off a child right in front of their house, and the...
June 25, 2026 - 06:28 | Readers | Walrus