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Publication Date: July 8, 2025 - 18:01
Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Tues. July 8th, 2025
July 8, 2025
Another learning season is officially in the books, and today’s educators are already preparing for September’s re-opening. But before any Fall planning could commence, students and teachers needed to find some time to celebrate this year’s accolades, especially for the students who won’t be coming back. During graduation ceremonies, schools across the country are dishing out awards to recognize students who have demonstrated an impeccable standard of intellectual excellence. Critics fear that a lack of focus on overall improvements, as well as leadership excellence, could drain motivation and create anxiety in the post-secondary world. Is it time for today’s schools to re-examine the criteria for graduation awards, or perhaps create new awards that better showcase our students’ creativity? Kristy Cameron digs deeper with Dr. Linda Iwenofu, an Assistant Professor in Applied Psychology and Human Development at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. She is based in Toronto, and she is also a clinical child psychologist. Meantime, the Downtown cores of Canada’s major cities remain at half of the foot traffic before COVID touched down in 2020. That’s despite a growing push from employers to return employees to their workspaces multiple times a week, as a slow uptick had tapered off in 2024 and remains steady in 2025. Here to crunch those numbers in Hour 2 is Mary Rowe, the CEO of the Canadian Urban Institute.
The wildfires that are flaring up across Canada again are one of the reasons public safety should be added to CBC/Radio-Canada’s mandate, a new report from a research centre at McGill University argues. The report says other public media around the world are incorporating national emergency preparedness and crisis response into their role, and recommends that aspect of the CBC’s mandate be formalized and strengthened.
July 16, 2025 - 11:58 | Anja Karadeglija | The Globe and Mail
Ottawa is cracking down further on imports of foreign steel into Canada to help Canadian mills that have effectively been shut out of the U.S. market by President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Less than a month ago, the federal government announced that countries such as China and Turkey that don’t have free trade agreements with Canada will face tariffs of 50 per cent if they ship into Canada volumes above 2024 levels.
July 16, 2025 - 11:52 | Niall McGee | The Globe and Mail
The Planning and Housing Committee today approved development applications that promise new affordable and below-market rental housing in Barrhaven and Overbrook.
In Barrhaven, the Committee approved a zoning amendment that would facilitate development of 117 affordable housing units, southwest of Jockvale Road and Bending Way. Ottawa Community Housing Corporation plans to build a nine-storey, 99-unit apartment building, as well as a three-storey stacked-townhouse building with another 18 units. This would be the second phase of a larger development, and a wide range of unit sizes...
July 16, 2025 - 11:02 | City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias | City of Ottawa News Releases
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