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CTV News
24 minutes ago
- CTV News
Lethbridge's food banks need water donations amid city-wide push
Calgary Watch Both the Interfaith and Lethbridge food banks are collecting donations of bottled water and money to supply this year's city-wide water drive.


National Post
24 minutes ago
- National Post
Canada's laws ‘outdated and inadequate' to fight cross-border crime, head of police chiefs group says
VICTORIA — The head of the Canada's police chiefs association says they are guided by 'outdated and inadequate' laws that were never designed to take on the current criminal landscape that no longer respects international borders. Article content Thomas Carrique, president of the Association of Chiefs of Police, said police would have been in a better place to 'disrupt' transnational crime, if the federal government had listened to his group in 2001, when it last proposed legislative changes. Article content 'Across Canada, police are confronting the domestic fallout of international disorder, but we are being asked to do so using tools, and authorities built for a different era, guided by outdated and inadequate legislation that was never designed to address today's criminal landscape,' he said on Tuesday. Article content Article content Carrique said 'geopolitical instability and social unrest' around the world are driving what he called 'a new wave of public safety threats' as Canadian police confront transnational organized crime, extremism, drug trafficking and exploitation through the internet. Article content 'Whether it's human smuggling as well as illicit exportation and importation of drugs, precursors, and firearms, organized crime groups are taking advantage of systematic blind spots, outdated statues, and digital platforms to victimize Canadians,' he said. Article content While geopolitics and social unrest might be beyond the control of Canadians and their government, their level of preparation and response is not, he said. Article content Article content The current Strong Borders Act legislation proposed by the federal governments gives police many — but not all necessary _ tools to confront globalized crime, he said. Article content Article content The government said the bill would help authorities combat transnational organized crime, stop the flow of fentanyl, crack down on money laundering and bolster police response to criminal networks. Article content He said the federal government's legislation aligns closely with several resolutions the group has passed during the conference this week. Article content Carrique said there are a 'number of loopholes' that must be closed to reflect the realities of 21st century crime, such as the inability of police to get a search warrant for any Canada Post package under 500 grams. Article content 'So, a judge cannot even issue a search warrant for a package of that size that may contain enough fentanyl to kill a number of people.'


CTV News
28 minutes ago
- CTV News
‘Devastating blow': Alberta responds to 75.8% Chinese tariffs on Canadian canola
Pumpjacks draw out oil and gas from well heads surrounded by Canola fields near Cremona, Alta., Monday, July 15, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh Alberta is responding to the announcement by the Chinese government that a 75.8 per cent anti-dumping duty will be imposed on Canadian canola starting on Thursday. The province produces about one-third of Canada's canola, about 6.4 million tons a year. 'China's decision to impose a 75.8 per cent tariff on additional Canadian canola products is another devastating blow to Alberta's agriculture industry. 'This comes on top of the existing 100 per cent tariffs on canola oil, canola oil cake and peas and threatens to cut Alberta producers out of one of their most valuable markets almost entirely,' R.J. Sigurdson, minister of agriculture and irrigation, wrote in a statement on Tuesday. 'These tariffs by China are in response to the federal government's decision to impose 100 per cent tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles and 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum, effective October 2024. Alberta's farmers, ranchers and processors did not create this situation, yet they are paying the price. 'Alberta is once again calling on Ottawa to act swiftly, engage in constructive dialogue with China, and restore access to one of our most critical markets before more livelihoods are lost.' The province's calls for federal intervention are echoed by the Alberta Canola Producers Commission. 'We've seen it in softwood lumber, we've seen it in other industries where there's the threat of tariffs,' board chair Andre Harpe told CTV News Edmonton. 'The federal government is doing a lot of work with them. We need them to be as serious with canola as they are with other industries that are under the threat or tariffs are happening.' Harpe, a canola farmer himself, says the tariffs could devastate farmers. 'I woke up this morning, as most canola farmers did, seeing that we had lost about $1 a bushel in the value of our product that we want to sell this year. So quite roughly, that's seven per cent of our income that we potentially could lose just just overnight by just having the Chinese make that announcement,' he said. 'Obviously we're going to be waiting to see what the long lasting effects are, and to see if they actually go through with this tariff.' China is Canada's second-largest canola market. The largest export market for Canadian canola is the United States, where Canadian exports not compliant with the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement are subject to 35 per cent tariffs. With files from CTV News Edmonton's Evan Kenny