Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Fri. September 26th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: September 26, 2025 - 18:02

Hour 3 of Ottawa Now for Fri. September 26th, 2025

September 26, 2025

The Centretown Community Association has written an open letter to Somerset councillor Ariel Troster, echoing her calls for a right-on-red ban. They want to see it across various sections of Ottawa's Downtown Core. Good idea or bad idea? Kristy Cameron sifts through the CFRA textboard and tackles today's Question of the Day. Meantime, Canada's biggest courier has officially hit the picket lines...again. And by again, we mean twice in less than a year. We dig deeper in Hour 3 with labour expert Adam King. Plus, Canada's broadcaster of Toronto Blue Jays games is about to pay the piper after making a last-second deal with Apple TV. With Canada's Team in position to clinch a playoff berth last Friday, Rogers Sportsnet was allowed to carry an exclusive Apple TV broadcast from Kansas City. Sadly, the Jays received little help, got throttled on the field, and failed to clinch. So tonight, if you wanted to catch the Rays-Jays broadcast, it's only appearing on the Apple TV service.



Unpublished Newswire

 
The federal Liberals plan to unfurl measures today to counter fraud and strengthen Canadians’ financial security – the latest in a series of pre-budget announcements.Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne is to be joined at a news conference by Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree and Stephanie McLean, secretary of state for seniors.
October 20, 2025 - 06:56 | | The Globe and Mail
The Ontario Hospital Association has said that hospitals ended last year $360 million in the red and need an additional funding to keep pace with population growth and inflation.
October 20, 2025 - 06:36 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Ottawa
UNDER THE GAZE of a security camera in the northeastern corner of Yorkdale Shopping Centre, a woman and a teenage girl are caught in a confrontation. It is the evening of December 17, 2022, just a week before Christmas—the first holiday season in two years with no pandemic lockdown restrictions—and in the soundless CCTV footage, shoppers at the sprawling mall in a northern Toronto neighbourhood are in constant motion. For a moment, the girl and the woman break the current. They gesticulate, each throwing her hands up at the other, before parting ways. On its own, the brief flash of anger...
October 20, 2025 - 06:30 | Inori Roy | Walrus