Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. June 26th, 2026 | Page 910 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: June 26, 2026 - 18:01

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Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. June 26th, 2026

June 26, 2026

The federal government is launching a national design-and-build competition to ‘rehabilitate and modernize’ 24 Sussex Drive. The plan is announced nearly 11 years after the last Prime Minister lived at the Official Residence – Stephen Harper in 2015. And during Friday’s news conference in Ottawa, Prime Minister Mark Carney said the Heritage Building is now in a critical state following decades of neglect. Guest host Andrew Pinsent checks in with Marc Denhez, the former President of Historic Ottawa Development Inc. He is also a former member of the NCC’s Official Residences Advisory Committee. Meantime, Apple has raised the prices on its Mac computers and iPads – some by almost 20 percent. The company is blaming this price hike on a global shortage of computer chips, a reality they say is driven by the latest uptick in Artificial Intelligence. Tech analyst Carmi Levy pays us a visit in Hour 2.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Lin and Chen's girlfriend, Hailey Lee, both say in an interview in Mandarin that a side door was broken on the 30-foot boat that went down in deep waters with 10 people aboard.
July 3, 2026 - 18:00 | Amy Judd | Global News - Canada
OTTAWA — Karen Restoule, the director of Indigenous affairs at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, says she was struck by the number of times she heard the word “Indigenous” during Thursday’s federal-Alberta announcement regarding a new West Coast oil pipeline. “(Prime Minister Mark) Carney and (Alberta Premier Danielle) Smith must have both said ‘Indigenous’ or ‘First Nations’ at least a dozen times each,” said Restoule. “I honestly lost track.” Carney and Smith appeared together in Calgary to announce that they’d agreed on a route for a new pipeline, running southwest from Bruderheim,...
July 3, 2026 - 17:50 | Rahim Mohamed | National Post
More than a year after the provincial government took control of the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board over its finances, the board has approved a budget that still projects a $3.5-million deficit. Read More
July 3, 2026 - 17:19 | Michael McBean | Ottawa Citizen