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In the news today: Potential strike notice looms for Air Canada

In the news today: Potential strike notice looms for Air Canada

Yahoo4 days ago
Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed...
Potential strike notice looms for Air Canada
The union representing around 10,000 Air Canada flight attendants could signal its intent to strike if a deal isn't reached by the end of today.
The earliest that flight attendants could potentially walk off the job is Saturday at 12:01 a.m. ET.
Since the union must provide 72-hours notice if it plans to strike, that means it could declare its plans for a work stoppage by Wednesday at 12:01 a.m. ET.
Air Canada said yesterday it "remains at the bargaining table and is focused on achieving a negotiated settlement" without any disruption to travel.
Flights are continuing to operate as scheduled, but the airline says if there are disruptions, it will notify customers via email and text message in advance of their travel.
Here's what else we're watching...
Wildfires: More help from Armed Forces in N.L.
More help from the Canadian Armed Forces is expected today in Newfoundland and Labrador to help fight wildfires.
Premier John Hogan says the number of firefighters from the military will double to 80.
As well, two water bombers from Ontario were scheduled to arrive on Monday to help with his province's battle against a string of stubborn wildfires.
As of Monday there were eight active wildfires in the province — six in Newfoundland and two in Labrador.
In New Brunswick, three wildfires were considered out of control on Monday, with residents north of Moncton told to prepare for evacuation.
Vancouver Island camp evacuated over wildfire
An out-of-control wildfire has forced the evacuation of a campground near the Vancouver Island city of Port Alberni, B.C.
The BC Wildfire Service says the Mount Underwood blaze is more than six square kilometres in size.
The wildfire has led to the evacuation of the China Creek Campground and Marina, located about 15 kilometres south of Port Alberni.
The website for the campground and marina says it can accommodate 250 tent and RV campsites.
There are currently 98 wildfires burning throughout British Columbia, nine of which are classified as out-of-control.
Heat wave set to abate in most of Canada
Sweltering heat is expected to continue in British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces today, but relief is on the way for some.
A multi-day heat wave should end today in southern British Columbia, where warnings covered most of Vancouver Island and stretched into the North Thompson and South Okanagan areas.
Hot conditions will continue for a while longer in southern Ontario, stretching north past Lake Huron and Georgian Bay and east through southern Quebec.
The weather agency says cooler temperatures are expected to sweep through the region this evening, providing relief from the 30 C temperatures and near 40 humidex values.
In the Maritimes, similar temperatures are expected to remain through to Wednesday, while parts of Newfoundland will see similar conditions breaking on Thursday or Friday.
Parti Québécois wins Quebec byelection
The Parti Québécois sailed to a third-straight Quebec byelection win on Monday, cementing the sovereigntist party's momentum ahead of the 2026 provincial election and dealing a crushing blow to Premier François Legault's governing party.
Former journalist Alex Boissonneault handily defeated Quebec Conservative Leader Éric Duhaime in the Arthabaska riding, flipping a seat that Legault's Coalition Avenir Quebec has held since 2012.
While polls had suggested Boissonneault and Duhaime were neck-and-neck, the PQ candidate captured over 46 per cent of the vote, compared to just over 35 per cent for Duhaime.
The sovereigntist party also won in Jean-Talon in 2023 and Terrebonne earlier this year. The party sits fourth in seat count in the province's legislature, but has been leading in the polls for the better part of two years.
Boissonneault, who was born and grew up in the riding, campaigned on a promise to restore a "broken social contract" that sees Quebecers pay high taxes without getting enough in return.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 12, 2025.
The Canadian Press
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How Trump's Travel Crackdown Is Hurting Americans at Home and Abroad
How Trump's Travel Crackdown Is Hurting Americans at Home and Abroad

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How Trump's Travel Crackdown Is Hurting Americans at Home and Abroad

This is part of Reason's 2025 summer travel issue. Click here to read the rest of the issue. As the Trump administration began snatching college students, detaining legal European tourists, denying entry to British crust-punks, rejecting transgender passports, deporting tattooed Salvadorans, insulting the sovereignty of Canadians, and floating plans to ban visitors from 43 countries, the domestic travel and tourism industry braced itself for bad news. "Historical data underscores that trade and geopolitical tensions influence travel demand," warned the research firm Tourism Economics in late February. The group had previously estimated that inbound visits to the U.S. in 2025 would rise 8.8 percent over last year; now it was forecasting a 5.1 percent drop. What's more, inbound travel spending this year "could fall by 12.3 [percent], amounting to a $22 billion annual loss." Sure enough, the year-over-year foreign visitor numbers in March were brutal. Down a jaw-dropping 18.4 percent, they were led by a sharp drop-off from America's No. 1 supplier: Canada. Then came President Donald Trump's 11th week in office. On April 2, the populist president capped a lifelong enthusiasm for tariffs ("the most beautiful word in the dictionary," he has said on multiple occasions) by announcing import taxes that averaged 22 percent, the largest ratchet in U.S. history. The move came as a triple whammy to America's globe-leading $200 billion travel and tourism industry. First, as the luxury travel agent Kate Sullivan told TravelPulse, "the cost of hard goods will increase for hotels, airlines, and other industry sectors, who will likely need to increase rates and fares to cover the increases." Second, the disruptions to the global trading system will hit especially hard some of the fastest-growing sources of U.S. visitation—China, India, and Japan. And finally, the concomitant souring of overseas public opinion, particularly in regions (Scandinavia, Southeast Asia, North America) singled out for criticism by the Trump administration, is already depressing numbers. "The U.S. is not perceived as a welcoming destination," travel agency owner Marco Jahn told the Associated Press after the tariffs were announced. Americans whose incomes are not tethered to the enthusiasms of overseas visitors may have the impression that such industry turmoil will leave their own travel plans unscathed. Alas, they are mistaken. For starters, domestic hoteliers are heavily reliant on imports for furniture, especially from high-tariffed China and Vietnam. Trump's own hotels are filled with foreign-made dishware, chandeliers, and even American flags. Making goods more expensive immediately reduces Americans' discretionary spending, which is the bucket from which travel budgets are drawn. 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American bookings to the now-more-expensive overseas were already down 13 percent this year before Trump's tariffs. It's not just cost: A mid-March Travel Weekly survey of 400 agents found that 59 percent had heard customer concern about anti-American sentiment abroad, with 22 percent reporting resultant cancellations. A YouGov poll in early March showed that not a single European country surveyed had a net positive view of the U.S., with favorability plummeting between 6 and 28 percentage points over the previous quarter. "In Great Britain, Denmark, Sweden, Spain and Italy, these are the lowest figures…since we began tracking this question," the pollster wrote. So Americans will be traveling domestically, right? Not so fast. Starting on May 7, a whole 17 years after it was originally supposed to happen, Americans are no longer allowed to board a commercial flight unless using a REAL ID. 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The post How Trump's Travel Crackdown Is Hurting Americans at Home and Abroad appeared first on Solve the daily Crossword

Traveling with kids? You'll want to know about this new TSA perk
Traveling with kids? You'll want to know about this new TSA perk

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Traveling with kids? You'll want to know about this new TSA perk

The TSA is trying something new that could ease one of the biggest headaches in family travel. Here's where it's happening first. Traveling with kids is an Olympic-level challenge—but few moments on the journey test a parent's stamina quite like the airport security line. Between wrestling strollers onto the conveyor belt, corralling wandering toddlers, and fishing crumpled boarding passes from the bottom of a diaper bag, it's a high-stress obstacle course before you've even reached your gate. Does it have to be this bad? Maybe not. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is introducing a new approach aimed at making it easier for families to get through security, and if it catches on, it could be a game-changer for parents. TSA launches family lanes Late last month, the TSA rolled out dedicated family lanes at the security screening checkpoints in select airports. These lanes are designed for parents traveling with young children, giving them extra space, a bit more time, and a less rushed environment to get everyone and everything through safely. The goal: reduce stress for families while keeping the line moving for everyone else. 'Department of Homeland Security and TSA are committed to making the airport security experience as smooth and stress-free as possible for traveling families,' said Adam Stahl, senior official performing the duties of deputy TSA administrator. Who can use family lanes? The new TSA family lanes are open to any adult traveling with kids under 12 years old, according to a BabyCenter report. This includes parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, or any other caregiver or guardian traveling with a young child. And yes, if Fido is coming on the family vacation, he can join you, too—the airport security family lanes are open to pets. The family lane is a convenient, but optional way to go through security. In other words, families traveling with children can still use the regular security lanes or TSA PreCheck lanes if they prefer—so you don't have to feel obligated to join if you roll up and spot a toddler mid-meltdown over putting their iPad on the conveyor belt. More than a separate line The TSA's new family lanes are more than just a separate line. The officers in those dedicated lanes will receive on-the-job hospitality screening to meet the unique challenges families face at security. Per BabyCenter, the officers will be able to help handle baby gear and make screening of breastmilk and pumping equipment smoother. At the very least, you won't get the stink-eye from other hurried travelers when it takes an extra minute to collapse a stroller or fish a pacifier out of a carry-on. In the family lane, everyone's in the same boat—and the agents are ready to help you get through it without feeling like you're holding up the entire terminal. Where are the TSA family lanes? The new family lanes are part of a larger TSA initiative called 'Families on the Fly,' which aims improve hospitality at 435 airports across the country. But you won't find these kid-friendly security checkpoints everywhere. The family lanes are slowly rolling out at select airports. The first dedicated TSA family lanes opened at Orlando International Airport (perfect for families traveling home after a Disney vacation!) and Charlotte Douglas International Airport in late July. Honolulu also recently opened dedicated family lanes at Daniel K. Inouye International Airport. The TSA also plans to open family lanes at the following airports: John Wayne Orange County Airport in Santa Ana, California (SNA) Jacksonville International in Florida (JAX) Rhode Island T. F. Green International Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island (PVD) Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in Puerto Rico (SJU) Tampa International Airport in Florida (TPA) Fingers crossed the next rollout is a 'no shouting about water bottles' lane—where agents don't have to yell, and somehow everyone magically remembers to chug before the checkpoint.

Traveling with kids? You'll want to know about this new TSA perk
Traveling with kids? You'll want to know about this new TSA perk

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Traveling with kids? You'll want to know about this new TSA perk

The TSA is trying something new that could ease one of the biggest headaches in family travel. Here's where it's happening first. Traveling with kids is an Olympic-level challenge—but few moments on the journey test a parent's stamina quite like the airport security line. Between wrestling strollers onto the conveyor belt, corralling wandering toddlers, and fishing crumpled boarding passes from the bottom of a diaper bag, it's a high-stress obstacle course before you've even reached your gate. Does it have to be this bad? Maybe not. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is introducing a new approach aimed at making it easier for families to get through security, and if it catches on, it could be a game-changer for parents. TSA launches family lanes Late last month, the TSA rolled out dedicated family lanes at the security screening checkpoints in select airports. These lanes are designed for parents traveling with young children, giving them extra space, a bit more time, and a less rushed environment to get everyone and everything through safely. The goal: reduce stress for families while keeping the line moving for everyone else. 'Department of Homeland Security and TSA are committed to making the airport security experience as smooth and stress-free as possible for traveling families,' said Adam Stahl, senior official performing the duties of deputy TSA administrator. Who can use family lanes? The new TSA family lanes are open to any adult traveling with kids under 12 years old, according to a BabyCenter report. This includes parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, or any other caregiver or guardian traveling with a young child. And yes, if Fido is coming on the family vacation, he can join you, too—the airport security family lanes are open to pets. The family lane is a convenient, but optional way to go through security. In other words, families traveling with children can still use the regular security lanes or TSA PreCheck lanes if they prefer—so you don't have to feel obligated to join if you roll up and spot a toddler mid-meltdown over putting their iPad on the conveyor belt. More than a separate line The TSA's new family lanes are more than just a separate line. The officers in those dedicated lanes will receive on-the-job hospitality screening to meet the unique challenges families face at security. Per BabyCenter, the officers will be able to help handle baby gear and make screening of breastmilk and pumping equipment smoother. At the very least, you won't get the stink-eye from other hurried travelers when it takes an extra minute to collapse a stroller or fish a pacifier out of a carry-on. In the family lane, everyone's in the same boat—and the agents are ready to help you get through it without feeling like you're holding up the entire terminal. Where are the TSA family lanes? The new family lanes are part of a larger TSA initiative called 'Families on the Fly,' which aims improve hospitality at 435 airports across the country. But you won't find these kid-friendly security checkpoints everywhere. The family lanes are slowly rolling out at select airports. The first dedicated TSA family lanes opened at Orlando International Airport (perfect for families traveling home after a Disney vacation!) and Charlotte Douglas International Airport in late July. Honolulu also recently opened dedicated family lanes at Daniel K. Inouye International Airport. The TSA also plans to open family lanes at the following airports: John Wayne Orange County Airport in Santa Ana, California (SNA) Jacksonville International in Florida (JAX) Rhode Island T. F. Green International Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island (PVD) Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in Puerto Rico (SJU) Tampa International Airport in Florida (TPA) Fingers crossed the next rollout is a 'no shouting about water bottles' lane—where agents don't have to yell, and somehow everyone magically remembers to chug before the checkpoint.

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