Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. November 20th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: November 20, 2025 - 18:02

Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. November 20th, 2025

November 20, 2025

A wide range of Artificial Intelligence toys will be popping up on this year’s Christmas wish list. However, experts are warning parents that these new toys are not fun and games. In fact, they say it’s not safe for kids. Are you heeding the warnings, or are you giving in and buying them? Kristy Cameron outlines the dangerous cons associated with these purchases, and then turns the floor over to you in Hour 3. Meantime, a national coalition of healthcare organizations, alongside a telecommunications company, are demanding that the feds reintroduce legislation to protect children from online exploitation. Joining us with the details is Sara Austin, the CEO of Children First Canada. Plus, as the Carney Liberals plan to cut another 28,000 jobs, the Department of National Defence is looking to hire public servants from other federal departments.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Brad Treliving met the media earlier this week to talk about his hockey team.
November 20, 2025 - 23:39 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Ottawa
An arbitrator has reinstated an instructor who was fired by a B.C. college after making comments that some interpreted as praising the Hamas-led attacks in Israel two years ago.Natalie Knight, an English instructor at Vancouver’s Langara College, was dismissed in January, 2024, after being placed on paid leave in the wake of comments she made at a rally a few weeks after the attacks.Arbitrator Randy Noonan wrote in a summary award issued Wednesday that Dr. Knight is to be reinstated to her position and should be made whole for the loss of compensation since January, 2024.
November 20, 2025 - 23:05 | Joe Friesen | The Globe and Mail
British Columbia Premier David Eby said Thursday that his counterparts in Alberta and Saskatchewan are jeopardizing major economic development by engaging in what he called “secret” talks with Ottawa on oil pipelines through his province.The pipeline fight escalated earlier in the day after Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe revealed he is involved in Alberta’s negotiations with Ottawa about a potential oil pipeline across northern B.C., which would mean allowing oil tankers to ply the waters off B.C.’s north coast, where they are currently banned.The B.C. government has not been a party to...
November 20, 2025 - 22:21 | Justine Hunter, Emma Graney | The Globe and Mail