â–º Listen Live

Canada leader in taking in refugees; No timeline for start of construction for Trans Mountain pipeline expansion

Canada leader in taking in refugees

The United Nations Refugee Agency says Canada took in 28-thousand, 100 refugees last year giving it the largest number of resettled refugees in the world.

The agency says Canada has been a leader on welcoming refugees, but worries that asylum seekers may become a punching bag issue during this fall’s federal election. More than 70-million people fled war, persecution and conflict worldwide last year.

No timeline on start of construction for Trans Mountain pipeline expansion

Finance Minister Bill Morneau didn’t offer any specific dates in Calgary as to when construction will begin on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

Morneau repeated the prime minister’s commitment to begin construction on the $7.4 billion project during this year’s building season.

Prime Minister Trudeau in Washington

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is going to host a reception in Washington Wednesday night and meet with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Republican Senator Mitch McConnell as well as other politicians and business leaders.

Trudeau’s spokesman says it’s an opportunity to strengthen Canada’s relationship with the U.S. and discuss trade and NAFTA.  Thursday, Trudeau will sit down with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office to talk about efforts underway in both countries to ratify the new North American trade deal and issues concerning China.

Panel says it should be easy for Canadian travelers to get ID

A federal advisory panel says if travelers are going to need a federally acceptable piece of ID for domestic flights, it should be easier to get one.

New no-fly list procedures are part of a sweeping national-security bill that received parliamentary approval this week. Members of the Cross-Cultural Roundtable on Security say Ottawa should consider making passports free to everyone for one year to ease the introduction of the changes.

Continue Reading

cjsu Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Cowichan Valley transit strike ending

Unifor and Transdev have agreed to the provincial mediator’s upcoming recommendations, ending the months long Cowichan Valley transit strike - the longest in BC History.

CVRD measures positive impact of culture and arts

The Cowichan Valley Regional District has released a report on the economic contribution of arts and culture to the region.

Early morning quake near Shawnigan Lake

A magnitude 3.0 earthquake near Shawnigan Lake Thursday morning.

B.C. steps up fight against South Asian extortion threats with new RCMP-led task force

The British Columbia RCMP will lead a specialized task force to improve the province’s response to extortion threats targeting the South Asian community. 

B.C. heat waves were made more likely by human-caused climate change, says report

Heat waves that blanketed British Columbia in August and early September were made much more likely by human-caused climate change.
- Advertisement -