Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: April 29, 2025 - 18:02
Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Tues. April 29th, 2025
April 29, 2025

Dating back to 2004, Pierre Poilievre has served the riding of Carleton with pride. That all changed Monday night, as Liberal candidate Bruce Fanjoy took down the Conservative heavyweight. What election results left your jaw on the floor? What factors, in your mind, fueled Poilievre’s swift downfall? Kristy Cameron sifts through the textboard and tackles today’s Question of the Day. Shifting gears to local news, the Ottawa Senators will have to win another must-win game tonight, as Game 5 of the Battle of Ontario moves to Toronto. We pay a visit to Sens Mile with Duong Hoang, the owner and operator of The Standard on Elgin Street. And if you have any ideas of entering this bar with a Leafs jersey on, prepare for disappointment. Plus, as a troubling weather system moves into Canada’s Capital, flood risks are on the rise in several areas. Kristy chats with West Carleton-March councillor Clarke Kelly in Hour 3.
A driver who has racked up 32 driving prohibitions or suspensions, as well as 16 24-hour driving bans, failed to convince a British Columbia judge he should get a lighter sentence than normal for drunk driving because more than six months in jail could get him deported to India.
Vernon’s Gurinder Pal Singh Bajwa, a permanent resident of Canada who escaped deportation in 2019 on an impaired driving conviction with a sentence of five months and 29 days, got a reduced sentence this time around because Mounties
captured him...
June 7, 2025 - 07:00 | Chris Lambie | National Post
For more than three decades, Barrie Sketchley has led Rosedale Heights, an art-focused high school near Toronto’s tony Rosedale-Moore Park neighbourhood.
Now more than 80 years old, Sketchley’s fate will be decided on Monday when the board of trustees votes to approve — or reject — suggestions on principal assignments made by Toronto District School Board (TDSB) staff. Sketchley is expected to be forced to leave the school he helped build into something students and parents say is pretty special. And they are outraged and upset, racing against the clock to save his job. This is all...
June 7, 2025 - 07:00 | Tyler Dawson | National Post
I deas move in space and time. They swim like fish. They drift like pollen. They migrate like birds. Sometimes their movement carries them right around the world, and they find new niches in which to flourish.
One day in October 1971, a young academic called Christopher Stone was giving a seminar on property law at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. It had been an intense class; the students were tired and distracted. Pens were being twirled, windows stared out of. Stone decided to have a last shot at regaining their interest. What he said then jolted the students...
June 7, 2025 - 06:30 | Robert Macfarlane | Walrus
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