
Gas prices expected to drop by five cents on Wednesday morning
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The price for a litre of regular gas is expected to drop by five cents on Wednesday, with the cost of diesel to drop by between six and eight cents.
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National Post
27 minutes ago
- National Post
OCEU/CUPE 1750 President Harry Goslin to Join WSIB Strike Picket Line in St. Catharines
Article content ST. CATHARINES, Ontario — Harry Goslin, President of the Ontario Compensation Employees Union (OCEU/CUPE 1750), will join striking Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) workers on the picket line outside the constituency office of NDP MPP Jennie Stevens (209 Carlton St, Unit B) on Wednesday, June 25 at 10:00 a.m. ET. Goslin's appearance comes as the WSIB strike stretches to over two months—the first strike in the Board's 110-year history. More than 3,600 frontline workers remain off the job as backlogs mount and delays impact injured workers across the province. Article content Where: Article content Article content Time: Article content 'This strike has revealed the real cost of inaction: service breakdowns, growing backlogs, and real harm to the people WSIB is supposed to serve,' said Harry Goslin, President of OCEU/CUPE 1750. 'Our members are standing strong for fair wages, safer workplaces, and the protection of public services—and we won't back down until we get a fair deal.' On Tuesday, June 24, striking members delivered a formal letter and petition to the WSIB Board of Directors, calling for urgent action to resolve the dispute. It was also recently confirmed that WSIB's incoming fax system—essential to daily operations such as receiving medical reports and claim updates—is down, underscoring the operational chaos caused by the strike. Article content Article content Article content Article content Article content Contacts Article content For more information, please contact: Article content Article content Bill Chalupiak Article content Article content Article content


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
St. Andrews Soccer Association in search of new field after getting the boot
Youth soccer teams in St. Andrews are getting kicked off their pitches and their association said they have no fields to land on. Since 2009, the St. Andrews Soccer Association has been allowed to host games for kids at a location in the middle of the St. Andrews Airport. But in March, the airport, which is owned by the RM, said it needs the space to expand, and told the association 2026 would be the last season it could use the fields for soccer and their 320 players. Association director Adam Praznik called the decision mind-blowing. 'To receive the boot because of politics between the airport and the RM, just not right,' said Praznik. In a statement, airport Executive Director Zachary Holden said the airport is the ninth busiest in Canada based on movements and it needs the expansion for aviation purposes. He says the area is not zoned for recreation and soccer was always a temporary use. 'The decision was made to delay the development of that area for two years to allow ample time for soccer to find a new home,' said Holden. Praznik is calling on St. Andrew's council to help them because he claims the RM failed to move ahead with plans to build public soccer fields. 'We need a permanent solution or at the bare minimum, an extension of our airport lease so that we have certainty going into next season that we're not going off a cliff and community soccer will be dying,' said Praznik. Mayor Joy Sul said there is a solution. A private business is spending more than $4 million on soccer fields nearby and there is a deal in place for public access once they open. 'Council ensured that there is in the lease agreement with them that 20 per cent of the time be allowed for residents of St. Andrews, and we fully support the kids,' said Sul. Praznik says that's not enough to meet their demands. 'It's also a business, they run programming the same times as us over the same season. You physically can not have two soccer games happening on the same pitches at the same time,' said Praznik.

National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
OCEU Recording Secretary Chantal Reid to Join WSIB Strike Picket Line in Timmins
Article content TIMMINS, Ontario — Chantal Reid, Recording Secretary of the Ontario Compensation Employees Union (OCEU/CUPE 1750), will join striking Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) workers on the picket line outside the constituency office of PC MPP George Pirie (681 Algonquin Blvd. East) on Wednesday, June 25 th at 10:00 a.m. Reid's appearance comes as the WSIB strike extends beyond two months—marking the first strike in the Board's 110-year history. Over 3,600 frontline WSIB workers remain on strike as service disruptions worsen, backlogs grow, and injured workers across Ontario are left waiting. Article content Where: Article content Article content Time: Article content 10:00 a.m. Article content 'This historic strike has made one thing clear: WSIB's refusal to act is hurting the very people they are mandated to help,' said Recording Secretary Chantal Reid of OCEU/CUPE 1750. 'Our members—including those standing strong on the picket lines in Timmins—are holding the line for fair wages, improved workplace safety and quality public service. We won't stop until there's a fair deal on the table.' Article content On Tuesday, June 24, striking members delivered a formal letter and petition to the WSIB Board of Directors, calling for urgent action to resolve the dispute. It was also recently confirmed that WSIB's incoming fax system—essential to daily operations such as receiving medical reports and claim updates—is down, underscoring the operational chaos caused by the strike. Article content Article content Article content Article content Contacts Article content For more information, please contact: Article content Article content Bill Chalupiak Article content Article content Article content