logo
In the news today: Air Canada flight attendants picketing at airports

In the news today: Air Canada flight attendants picketing at airports

Yahoo3 days ago
Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed...
Air Canada flight attendants picketing at airports
Air Canada flight attendants are expected to picket at airports in four major Canadian cities in what their union is calling a national day of action.
The Canadian Union of Public Employees says demonstrations are expected to take place at Montreal's Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, Toronto Pearson International Airport, Vancouver International Airport and Calgary International Airport, all at 1 p.m. ET.
CUPE says it is looking to raise awareness about what it calls 'poverty wages' and unpaid labour when working on a plane when it's not in the air.
CUPE says the Air Canada component of the union was set to return to bargaining talks with the airline on Friday after its members voted 99.7 per cent in favour of a strike mandate.
The vote, which wrapped last Tuesday, means flight attendants could possibly walk off the job as soon as Aug. 16 at 12:01 a.m. with at least 72 hours' notice provided.
Here's what else we're watching...
Heat warnings issued throughout Canada
Another day of punishing heat and humidity is expected to hit Ontario, Quebec and the four Atlantic provinces.
A heat warning from Environment Canada remains in effect for all of southern Ontario, stretching north past Lake Huron and Georgian Bay and east through southern Quebec.
Expected daytime highs could reach 35 degrees Celsius in some parts, with the humidex at or near 40 C.
Hot conditions are also washing over Atlantic Canada, with most of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and parts of Newfoundland and Labrador also under a heat warning.
In British Columbia, heat warnings are also in place for most of Vancouver Island, the Sunshine Coast, as well as southern B-C's Fraser Canyon, South Thompson and South Okanagan areas.
Ruling on appeal of Sask. pronoun law challenge
The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal is expected to rule today on the province's appeal of a decision to allow a challenge of its school pronoun law.
A judge ruled last year that the court challenge could continue, despite the government's use of the notwithstanding clause.
The law, which came into force in 2023, requires parental consent if children under 16 want to change their names or pronouns at school.
Lawyers for the LGBTQ+ group UR Pride brought forward the challenge, arguing the law causes irreparable harm to gender diverse youth and its case should move ahead.
The government has argued its use of the notwithstanding clause to bring the law into force should end the court challenge.
Public servant elected as MP for Trois-Rivières
Out of the many federal public servants who ran as candidates in the last federal election, only one was elected: Caroline Desrochers, the Liberal member of Parliament for Trois-Rivières, Que.
Originally from Montreal, Desrochers worked at Global Affairs Canada for almost 25 years; her first posting was in Haiti. She later worked for about a decade on Canada-U.S. relations and was posted to New York during U.S. President Donald Trump's first mandate.
"I always knew one day I would want to do that," Desrochers said of entering politics, adding that she was interested in doing work that felt closer to people.
Desrochers ran for the Liberals in the La Prairie riding in 2021 but was defeated by Bloc Québécois candidate Alain Therrien.
Desrochers said her experience in dealing with the Americans on steel and aluminum tariffs and her outreach with the U.S. Congress will be valuable in this "consequential" moment.
Study maps 'megathrust' quake zone off B.C. coast
Scientists have captured the first detailed images of the meeting of two tectonic plates off the coast of northern British Columbia, an area they say has the potential to generate the largest "megathrust" earthquakes and tsunamis.
The images confirm what appears to be a rare geological occurrence, a subduction zone in its "infancy," the study by U.S. and Canadian researchers shows.
The paper, in the peer-reviewed journal Science Advances, says the Queen Charlotte plate boundary features the beginnings of such a zone, where one plate slides under the other.
The plate boundary that extends from the southern tip of Haida Gwaii to southeast Alaska was the site of Canada's two largest earthquakes in recent history — a magnitude-8.1 quake in 1949 and the magnitude-7.8 quake in 2012.
Co-author Michael Bostock, a professor in the department of earth, ocean and atmospheric sciences at the University of B.C., says it's likely the area will see more "thrust" quakes, and the next one could be larger as the fault grows.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published August 11, 2025.
The Canadian Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

You think it's hot outside? It's even hotter in these P.E.I. kitchens
You think it's hot outside? It's even hotter in these P.E.I. kitchens

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

You think it's hot outside? It's even hotter in these P.E.I. kitchens

With temperatures on Prince Edward Island hovering in the 30s this week, restaurant and food truck kitchens are even hotter, making standing behind the grill excruciating for many in the industry. And it's not just people getting red-hot. The owner of Yogi's Food and Bar in Charlottetown thinks the heat caused a hamper full of used rags to smoulder and nearly catch fire on Monday. Pascal Gyr said it took staff several hours to identify where the smell was coming from. "We really got caught off guard on this one," Gyr said. "I reached into the bag to pull the rags out and they were quite hot, so we took them outside in the parking lot and we emptied the hamper, poured water all over them and separated them. "They were fairly dark. They were black, brown. The bag itself got some stains on the outside." Gyr had never experienced anything like this before, but said people with the fire department had. The restaurant has now stopped using microfibre towels in the kitchen as much as possible, but the heat remains a challenge for kitchen staff. Gyr is trying to do as much as he can to make it comfortable for cooks to work. "You can tell it stresses them. It's more like a physical exhaustion after a long day," he said. "I wish that everything would cool down. We could use some rain — and I will take 5 feet of snow at this point." 'There's no relief' Yogi's Food and Bar is far from the only food establishment in the province struggling to stay cool during this heat wave. Dreadnaught Eatery in Morell reduced its menu on Monday because of the heat, then pulled the plug on Tuesday afternoon, closing for the rest of the day after posting: "It is no longer bearable/safe in the truck and the temp keeps climbing." Go Fish Eatery in the Summerside did the same thing, posting at 11 a.m. Tuesday: "We will be back tomorrow once it cools down a bit. Sorry for any inconvenience!" Chris Gallant is the owner and operator of The Beaten Path food truck, parked on University Avenue in Charlottetown. He said he is used to the hot days because of the nature of the industry, but that doesn't mean it's easy. "It's quite tough. You don't know if it's going to stop. There's no relief, so it's either close down or power through — and I understand a lot of people do close down and I understand why. It's a lot," Gallant said. His kitchen has been registering in the mid to high 30s this week. "In my case, there's no place to sit down... you have to stand. You have to wait for food. A lot of people have air-conditioning in their cars, but I can't imagine a lot of people want to stand outside in this weather," Gallant said. 'This has been pretty brutal' John Pritchard of Saucy Bird on North River Road in Charlottetown echoes the other kitchen owners' sentiments. "This is about the hottest it's been for this part of the business. We also do catering and we've had some pretty hot days outside without any air-conditioning. But for an ongoing period of time, this has been pretty brutal," Pritchard said. His employees have been drinking plenty of water and a lot of Gatorade, and luckily their space had a good air flow. Pritchard said he knows first-hand, having worked in kitchens without good airflow, how challenging that can be. "I've worked in plenty of kitchens where there's no air flow… I mean, I feel terrible for those people. It's brutally hot. And I don't blame people for closing down when it gets that way," he said.

Canada Has Its Second-Worst Wildfire Season on Record
Canada Has Its Second-Worst Wildfire Season on Record

New York Times

time14 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Canada Has Its Second-Worst Wildfire Season on Record

Thousands of people in Eastern Canada are under evacuation orders and thousands more have been warned to be on high alert as quick-moving wildfires burn out of control during what has become Canada's second-worst wildfire season on record. There are over 700 active fires in Canada, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Center, the national firefighting coordinating body, and many large wildfires are occurring in parts of the country where fires typically stay small. A total of 18.5 million acres of forested land have burned since the beginning of the year, making this the second-worst year on record. The worst year was 2023, when 31.3 million acres had burned by this point in the summer, and 42.5 million acres were scorched by the end of the year. Fewer acres may have burned this year compared with 2023, said Awa Cissé, a spokeswoman for the center, but the fire season can continue through September or October, she warned. While parts of Canada experience wildfires each year, this season has been particularly bad because of persistently hot, dry weather. Much of the country is experiencing drought conditions, and the winter snowpack that usually keeps the landscape moist into spring was meager this year in many areas. As a result, the vegetation was parched and ready to burn. The provinces in the western half of the country, especially Saskatchewan and Manitoba, have seen the most intense wildfires in the country this year, Ms. Cissé said. The largest fire is the Shoe fire, in Saskatchewan, which has been burning since May 7. At 1.4 million acres, it's larger than Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Saskatchewan and Manitoba finally received a break thanks to rainy weather over the past four days, and cooler conditions are expected in coming days. The shift in weather has helped prevent new fires from starting and reduced the chance for explosive growth of existing fires, said Brian Proctor, a meteorologist for Environment Canada, the federal weather forecasting department. Now the concern is focused on Newfoundland and Labrador. These eastern provinces, where wildfires are less common, are seeing an active season with multiple fires currently classified as out of control. St. John's, Newfoundland's capital, and the surrounding area, where fires are burning, are experiencing dry conditions similar to what is typically seen in the Canadian Prairies of Western Canada, said Yan Boulanger, a research scientist in forest ecology at Natural Resources Canada. Where wildfires are burning Mr. Boulanger said the fires in Newfoundland were burning in what's known as the 'wildland-urban interface,' areas on the outskirts of cities and towns where houses are built close to flammable wild vegetation. A state of emergency is in place for both Newfoundland and Labrador, and heat warnings are in effect for several regions. Southern British Columbia is also an area of concern. There has been a recent uptick in active forest fires, especially on Vancouver Island, where conditions are extremely dry. The province of Quebec has been an exception this year. It was devastated by wildfires in 2023, but it has largely been spared this year because of wet weather in May, June and July, especially in the southern portion of the province. On Wednesday morning, John Hogan, the premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, said some of the fires there had expanded because of high temperatures and wind. There is already a ban on outdoor burning in the province, and on Wednesday morning, Mr. Hogan said he would add a provincewide restriction on the use of off-road vehicles on forested land. While there is no evidence that the use of the vehicles has contributed to the fires, the ban is out of an 'extreme abundance of caution,' he said. 'If you do violate this,' he said, 'we will find you and we will fine you.'

Halifax wildfire was human caused, N.S. government confirms
Halifax wildfire was human caused, N.S. government confirms

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Halifax wildfire was human caused, N.S. government confirms

Nova Scotia's Department of Natural Resources confirmed on Wednesday that an out-of-control wildfire in Halifax was human caused. During a news conference, manager of forest protection Scott Tingley said crews found an open fire when they arrived on scene on Tuesday afternoon, but whoever started the fire wasn't around. "That makes it impossible to hold the person or people responsible to account. And yeah, that's frustrating to everyone," Tingley told reporters. Tingley said a 911 call was placed at 2:24 p.m. on Tuesday to report the fire in the Susies Lake area near the north entrance to Bayers Lake Business Park, which is located about 10 kilometres west of downtown Halifax. In the last 24 hours, Tingley said crews have responded to 17 wildfires in the province because of the dry weather and "activities that are happening out there that shouldn't be" — including the one in Bayers Lake. He said in the past three weeks, DNR has responded to one or more reports every day. Most fires have been extinguished quickly, he said. A reporter asked Premier Tim Houston at the news conference about speculation the fire was connected to a homeless encampment. "The investigation in time will look at the what, the why, the how — all those types of things, but for right now the focus is just on containing the fire, fighting the fires and just reiterating to Nova Scotians it's a risky situation," Houston said. On Aug. 5, the province banned people from entering the woods under the Forest Act, saying the restriction is required given the high risk for wildfires. A ban on open fires is also in place. Travel and activity in the woods were also banned in May 2023 while the province battled two major wildfires that destroyed hundreds of homes. Bans were also implemented in 2016 and 2001 due to fires and dry conditions. The province is also "strongly recommending" additional precautions for industrial and farm operations on private land which are not currently under the mandatory ban, which only covers commercial activity on Crown land. Those additional precautions include working only between the hours of 8 p.m. and 10 a.m.; fire suppression equipment on hand, and there must be a two-hour fire watch after work is completed. So far, the province has issued 12 fines to people breaking the woods ban and the burn ban. The fine is $25,000. Houston said he'd like to see each of those cases "fully prosecuted and collected." Houston was asked about criticism of the woods ban from federal Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner. On Wednesday, she said inaction from the federal government on wildfires has conditioned Canadians to expect the only response to be to restrict movement. Houston said he's not concerned about what people who don't live in Nova Scotia have to say about the province's measures to keep people safe. "I guess I find it remarkable the interest in travelling in Nova Scotia woods by people who aren't in Nova Scotia and probably haven't been here very much in their life. We're only concerned with keeping people safe. We'll do what's necessary to protect lives and that's what we're doing in this case," Houston said. When pressed further that the woods ban has been a flash point in some Canadian conservative circles with people concerned it is the first step in government climate lockdowns, Houston said he doesn't "have any time for any type of conspiracy theories." "We haven't had any rain in Nova Scotia since June, so the thoughts and opinions of people who haven't been in Nova Scotia, who don't know what it's like in Nova Scotia, who probably have never been in the woods in Nova Scotia in their life — the thoughts and concerns of those people are not a top priority for me right now," he said. "My top priority is keeping Nova Scotians safe." Houston said the next few weeks in Nova Scotia will be difficult because the province is a tinder box and rain is needed. "I know the restrictions that are in place aren't fun, but they're necessary," Houston said. WATCH | Aug 13. N.S. wildfire update: MORE TOP STORIES

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store