Hour 4 of Ottawa Now for Fri. June 20th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: June 20, 2025 - 18:03

Hour 4 of Ottawa Now for Fri. June 20th, 2025

June 20, 2025

It’s been another crazy news week, people! Are you ready to unwind at the nearest movie theatre? If that is your weekend gameplan, Matt Demers has got you covered with his Weekly Movie Picks. Meantime, an Ottawa resident flexed his pop culture knowledge on CTV's ‘Battle of the Generations’, and he’s got the grand prize to prove it. Kristy Cameron goes 1-on-1 with Andrew Franklin in Hour 4. Plus, after local medical specialists detected rabies in a young fox, the Medical Officer of Health for the Eastern Ontario Health Unit is warning the public to keep their distance with today’s wildlife. Dr. Paul Roumeliotis pays us a visit after the 5:30 newscast. And finally, we deliver the latest breaking news as it happens, right here on CFRA’s Ottawa Now.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Pierre Poilievre was greeted with cheers and applause by the hundreds of Albertans who showed up to watch a two-and-a-half-hour political debate on a sunny Tuesday evening in July. The Camrose and District Chamber of Commerce hosted a candidates’ forum featuring 10 of the people who are vying to represent Battle River-Crowfoot in the Aug. 18 by-election.
July 30, 2025 - 00:41 | | The Globe and Mail
Major players in B.C.’s housing industry are calling on federal and provincial governments to loosen restrictions on foreign investment in Canadian homes to avoid a crash they say will deepen the country’s housing crisis. The B.C. industry players have written to Prime Minister Mark Carney and federal Housing Minister Gregor Robertson outlining their concerns. Toronto developers, whose industry is struggling with some of the same challenges, have said they support the measures being urged.
July 30, 2025 - 00:00 | Frances Bula, Rachelle Younglai | The Globe and Mail
The Vancouver Island municipality of Nanaimo wants the local health authority to justify the continued existence of the community’s legal overdose prevention site as opposition mounts to the facility around the corner from its City Hall.Nanaimo City Council deferred voting Monday evening on a motion asking the Vancouver Island Health Authority, or VIHA, to shut down the site in favour of meeting with the agency in coming weeks. The site has been operating since 2022.
July 29, 2025 - 23:18 | Mike Hager | The Globe and Mail