Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. July 3rd, 2025 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: July 3, 2025 - 18:00

Hour 1 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. July 3rd, 2025

July 3, 2025

Starting this Summer, as part of a new pilot project, certain stores in select Quebec cities will be open late on weekends. Gatineau is among the list of participants, with the province citing its geographical location near the Ontario border as a primary reason. Non-food businesses, ranging from boutique stores to market shops, will be allowed to stay open until 8PM on Saturdays and Sundays. However, this will not apply to grocery stores and pharmacies. And once the 365-day trial run has expired, a report will be published to determine whether the changes should be made permanent throughout Quebec. What stores or services do you find close too early? Which businesses have inconvenient hours that don’t align with your daily schedule? Kristy Cameron opens the debate floor with Michel Rochette, the Quebec President for the Retail Council of Canada. Meantime, regular operations have resumed at the Ottawa International Airport this afternoon following a series of bomb threats. These threats were targeting Ottawa’s NAV Canada facility, leading to several delays that impacted dozens of flights across the country. CTV’s Judy Trinh delivers the details.



Unpublished Newswire

 
A Quebec college facing a $30-million fine for enrolling too many students in English-language programs, contravening the province’s language law, is postponing the first day of classes scheduled for Monday.LaSalle College said the suspension is tied to the fine imposed on the Montreal school it deems “abusive” and Monday classes are cancelled, but the campus will remain open to students.In a statement issued Friday, the college said the first day back-to-class will go ahead on Tuesday. The post-secondary institution assures the measure won’t have an impact on students’ academic careers...
August 23, 2025 - 20:40 | Sidhartha Banerjee | The Globe and Mail
In March of 2024, a middle-aged man was having a cigarette outside his Surrey, B.C., social housing complex when he noticed Jae Won Lee, a 23-year-old Australian-born permanent resident of Canada, lifting the cover off another resident’s motorcycle. The man approached Lee to ask what he was doing, to which Lee replied, “Mind your own business, old man.”Lee then pulled out a knife with a six-inch blade and stabbed the man’s arm before chasing him into the building’s lobby, where he stabbed him in the abdomen. 
August 23, 2025 - 20:30 | Darryl Greer | The Globe and Mail
Ottawa firefighters quickly put out a fire Saturday evening in the basement of a row housing end unit on Borthwick Avenue. Read More
August 23, 2025 - 19:43 | Doug Menary | Ottawa Citizen