Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. April 30th, 2026 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: April 30, 2026 - 18:00

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Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. April 30th, 2026

April 30, 2026

Kristy Cameron might not be at 100 percent, but she is reporting for duty on this Thursday afternoon. And if you work in a certain section of Downtown Ottawa, you might be getting a wicked headache trying to find a place to park. Should your employer order you back to the office if there’s hardly any parking available? At the moment, federal government employees are reporting to their office workstations 3 days per week. That will change to 4 days per week in July. And employees at the DND offices are already struggling to find a precious lot of parking real estate, largely due to ongoing shortages. Kristy checks in with June Winger, the National President of the Union of National Defense Employees. They represent 20,000 DND employees across Canada and nearly 3,000 of them reside at the Carling Campus. In Hour 2, we circle back and pick the brain of former DND employee Brent Charron, who worked many years at the Carling location before retiring in March. Meantime, the number of families who are experiencing homelessness in our city has surged by 76 percent since 2023. And as we find out from CFRA’s Andrew Pinsent, a pair of City Staff reports paint a stark picture of a system that is running out of racetrack. But first, we bring you up to speed on today’s top headlines.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Gilbert Rozon has agreed to pay $930,000 to nine women who accused him of sexual misconduct and has waived his right to appeal the Quebec court ruling that found he sexually assaulted eight of them.
May 20, 2026 - 19:35 | | CBC News - Canada
The home of the newly-elected president of Cricket Canada in Surrey, B.C., was the target of a shooting early Wednesday morning, the fifth estate has learned.
May 20, 2026 - 19:03 | | CBC News - Canada
The clearing last week of an encampment in an area south of Ottawa's Bayview LRT station is being flagged as a worrying symptom of the city's homelessness crisis. The recovery of a large number of needles at the site also has one advocate pointing to the closing of local safe consumption sites as a failure to provide people the right supports. CBC's Mélina Lévesque has more.
May 20, 2026 - 18:33 | | CBC News - Ottawa