Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Fri. June 5th, 2026 | Page 2 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: June 5, 2026 - 18:02

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Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Fri. June 5th, 2026

June 5, 2026

It’s almost officially Summer, and most employees have submitted their vacation requests for July and August. Are you among the crowd taking a well-earned vacation? Are you saving those paid vacation days for the back-half of 2026? Or is your workload way too heavy, and you’re simply afraid to take time off? Kristy Cameron sifts through the CFRA textboard and tackles today’s Question of the Day. Meantime, the Carney Liberals have unveiled their long-awaited, 50-page Artificial Intelligence Strategy. The Prime Minister, along with Canada’s A.I. Minister, says these new rules will ‘strengthen’ privacy laws so that personal information isn’t used ‘inappropriately’ for surveillance pricing. Does it pass the eye test? Are there any holes in this legislation? We dig deeper in Hour 3 with Kim Furlong, the President and CEO for the Retail Council of Canada.



Unpublished Newswire

 
The CBC’s ninety-year run of broadcasting hockey in Canada, first on the radio in 1936 and on television in 1952, is over. Rogers Sportsnet is now the sole rights holder after it and the CBC failed to reach a sublicensing deal that would have kept the national broadcaster in the business of broadcasting the country’s national winter sport. Anger, frustration, disappointment, grief, and shock over the end of CBC hockey broadcasts reflect a sense of loss, that something has been taken away from us, that we’ve sold out a public institution to a for-profit company. For some, the concern...
June 17, 2026 - 11:01 | David Moscrop | Walrus
OceanGate interacted with numerous federal departments and agencies in Canada, yet was not held to any standards by federal regulators. Canada's Transportation Safety Board has made six recommendations aimed at closing those gaps.
June 17, 2026 - 10:19 | | CBC News - Canada
Police allege a firearms and distribution business that submitted nearly 20,000 fraudulent invoices between 2016 and 2020 have racked up an estimated $48 million in losses.
June 17, 2026 - 10:04 | Prisha Dev | Global News - Canada