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A town councillor delivered bad news to residents of fire-ravaged region — and says she knew fires would happen

A town councillor delivered bad news to residents of fire-ravaged region — and says she knew fires would happen

Yahoo3 days ago
Sue Rose tells CBC's Here & Now about the Town of Small Point-Broad Cove-Blackhead-Adam's Cove's most recent assessment, which revealed 33 homes were lost.
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Line 1 LRT loses power, malfunctions in pair of weekend incidents
Line 1 LRT loses power, malfunctions in pair of weekend incidents

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

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Line 1 LRT loses power, malfunctions in pair of weekend incidents

Technical problems caused the O-Train Line 1 to stop operating twice over the past three days, according to the city's acting general manager of transit services. At around 6:30 p.m. Friday, a power outage halted the east-west LRT line between Tunney's Pasture and Rideau stations, according to a memo from Troy Charter to Ottawa city council. Replacement R1 buses ran until the train came back online, Charter said. Then on Sunday morning, Line 1 didn't launch between Tunney's Pasture and Tremblay stations due to a "malfunction with the switch mechanism at the crossover near uOttawa station," Charter wrote in a followup memo. Once again, replacement buses were called into service. The line was running again between Tunney's Pasture and Tremblay by around 12:45 p.m., Charter said. Line 1 service was already being scaled back this weekend as part of scheduled work on the line's eastern extension from Blair to Trim stations, as well as work on the St-Laurent station tunnel. The power disruption and the switch mechanism malfunction were not related, Charter said. Nor were either related to the eastern extension work, he added. Due to the scheduled work, replacement buses continue to run Sunday between Hurdman and Blair stations. Full service is expected to resume across the entirety of Line 1 on Monday morning.

Heron Road Community Centre to reopen after nearly 2 years as emergency shelter
Heron Road Community Centre to reopen after nearly 2 years as emergency shelter

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Heron Road Community Centre to reopen after nearly 2 years as emergency shelter

Community programming will soon resume at the Heron Road Community Centre, nearly two years after the facility began serving as a shelter for the homeless, according to the local councillor. On Friday, the last people staying there were transitioned to other shelters in the city, including the YMCA and the Queen Street transitional facility that opened last month, Alta Vista Coun. Marty Carr said. "There was a place found for every single one of those residents in a more suitable location than a community centre," Carr told CBC on Saturday. "It's fantastic for the community and it's fantastic for unhoused individuals who no longer have to sleep in bunk beds in a gym." Carr said the community centre will reopen "on a staggered basis" as cleanup and renovation work is completed, but they hope to reopen the seniors' centre on the second floor as early as mid-September. 'Long-term plans' being forged Using community centres as emergency shelters was a practice that began during the pandemic, when city facilities were shut down, Carr explained. "There was no plan in place to actually address the emergency that was declared," she said. "And so that practice of using community centres has continued, even when the city was able to resume recreational programming." After COVID-19 lockdowns ended, Carr said she and other councillors tried to end the practice, but a surge in "irregular migration" to the city prolonged their use. "So, hopefully as of Friday, this chapter of using community facilities as shelter has finally come to a close." Carr added that the Bernard Grandmaître Arena on McArthur Road is also no longer operating as a shelter. "And we're making long-term plans so that we can address this housing and homelessness strategy," she said. "We actually have plans in place."

Operation to free ship run aground in St. Lawrence River near Montreal complete
Operation to free ship run aground in St. Lawrence River near Montreal complete

Yahoo

timea day ago

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Operation to free ship run aground in St. Lawrence River near Montreal complete

VERCHÈRES — The Canadian Coast Guard says an operation to free a ship that ran aground in the St. Lawrence River this week has been successful. The agency says the Federal Yamaska was successfully refloated on Saturday morning, one day after 3,200 tonnes of sugar was unloaded from the stuck vessel. The coast guard says the 180-metre-long bulk carrier will be towed to Montreal where it will be unloaded fully and inspected. The ship became stuck near Verchères, Que., at around 5:45 a.m. Tuesday, following a complete loss of engines. No one was injured and no pollution was observed. Transport Canada will take over the case once the ship is docked. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 16, 2025. The Canadian Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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