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26
 
 

After 11 days of strikes at the STM, Montreal‘s political class and economic elite are getting restless. Even though bus and metro service continues during rush hour, many are talking…


From The North Star via This RSS Feed.

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Classes were suspended at CEGEP St-Laurent on Friday, November 7 and Monday, November 10 when at least 100 students participated in a picket line called by the college’s student association. …


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Nov 10, 2025 | by Barry Weisleder The federal Liberal minority government tabled its first budget on November 4.  As predicted, it is a war budget, one that steals tens of billions from health, education, public services, and climate action…

Read More Defeat the Liberal War/Austerity Budget!


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Reports of a larger, more aggressive coyote wandering Toronto streets understandably draw attention, but behind the myth of the coywolf is the truth about Ontario’s wolf problem


From The Narwhal via This RSS Feed.

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Socialism 2025 – The Status Quo is Over A Socialist Action Fall Education Conference on Saturday, November 15 both online, and in-person at Trinity-St. Paul’s Church, 427 Bloor Street West, 1 block west of Spadina subway station on line 2…

Read More Socialism 2025 – The Status Quo is Over


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First National Indigenous Fire Gathering in brings First Nations experts from Canada, Australia and the U.S. together on syilx homelands in B.C.


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Martin Lukacs and Desmond Cole discuss the Liberal government’s Harper-esque budget

The post A budget for tanks, banks, and oil barons appeared first on The Breach.


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The Ontario government is repealing its law requiring a provincial climate plan and emissions reduction targets. It’s blaming the feds, but Carney hasn’t cut Canada’s targets


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In an email obtained by The Narwhal, MAGA Energy recommended landowners ask the government for reimbursement of its outstanding lease payments


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The Narwhal's feature documenting a prescribed burn in Gitanyow territory was recognized at an annual awards ceremony honouring the best journalism in B.C.


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The effects of climate change are hitting developing countries hardest. Devastation in Jamaica could increase money transfers from Canada by as much as 10 per cent


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In October 2024, I learned that I would be undergoing open-heart surgery in 2025. It was unfortunate, but I had to go through with it in order to continue living, at least for a little while longer... Wanting to be considerate, and well aware of all the little administrative problems that such a situation can cause, I quickly contacted my employer to let them know. From the outset, I understood that I was dealing with a three-headed machine consisting of my employer, my insurer, and Employment Canada. From the outset, the three of them bombarded me with forms and requirements that would fuel a whole bureaucratic saga of disability. I wrote to one, called the other, and had to wait for certain deadlines. The result? I was admitted to the hospital without the problem being resolved. I called my employer from my hospital bed, then Employment Canada. I spent hours on the phone, having to cut off conversations to make way for doctors and nurses, which meant I had to call back several times and start the process all over again. Yet both form machines have the doctor's note saying that I have to be off work for at least three months and all the forms filled out. I'm going to be cut open, is it possible to have peace of mind? No! Finally, after several attempts, the two opaque entities ended up communicating! It was about time. So now I can rest and focus on the ordeal ahead. Not quite... I have to file reports every two weeks with Employment Canada. Yes, but... I don't know how long I'll be unconscious, what kind of lucidity I'll have after the surgery, I can't guarantee that the first report will be filed on time. Nothing is settled, and the cutting up of my body is coming. On the scheduled date, I lie down on the operating table and fall asleep after a few minutes. I open my eyes after what seems like a moment and see the smiling face of my sweetheart, more loving than ever. I close my eyes, tired, and fall asleep. I am woken up and bombarded with questions: What date is it? Where are you? How many children do you have? The only question I can answer correctly is the one asking me my sweetheart's first name. I am confused, and there are concerns about my cognitive health. If that weren't enough, the medication given during the operation is making me paranoid.  The report I have to file with Employment Canada in all this? I'm in no condition to do it. If only it could have been taken care of before... Of course, we can't get any money until the first report has been filed. It'll have to wait... After a week of remission, I leave intensive care. In my new room, I have a phone and can call Employment Canada to make my first report. I call, press the buttons to answer the questions. After almost an hour of going through the same voicemail and robot responses, I finally speak to an agent who allows me to make the report over the phone with him. I begin to make my mandatory claims. For two months, things go pretty well. Then I have to consider a gradual return to work. My employer asks for another doctor's note, which I provide. However, I receive a very unpleasant phone call from the HR lady. She is being difficult about the dates on the notes. I explain that the two documents should be seen as complementary. She insists that the most recent note cancels out the previous one. Due to a difference in interpretation, our long and unpleasant discussion leads to a fruitless dialogue of the deaf. Fortunately, I haven't heard from her since. For a few weeks, things seem to be going smoothly. I receive a little money from my employer and more money from Employment Canada. Suddenly, I receive a letter from the insurer. They tell me that I must provide documents within 30 days, otherwise my disability claim will be canceled. I don't understand anything, and I panic. So I call the Insurer, afraid that I will lose the money provided by my Employer or Employment Canada. The person on the phone explains that after 15 weeks, the Insurer is supposed to take over. I'm not sure why, it's not explained to me, but I tell them I will do what is necessary. I go to the hospital that same day. The doctor's secretary tells me that it could take up to three months to complete. I have a 30-day deadline to meet, but I can't tell a doctor who spends 12-hour-plus days in operating rooms saving lives that she has to hurry up and fill out the little piece of paper, all to satisfy the whims of the insurer. I come home, call the company again, and tell them there will be a delay. The doctor's secretary takes a few weeks to send me the completed document. Of course, throughout this process, the insurer hasn't paid a penny. On the Employment Canada side, I also have to wait; my new status as a worker returning to work gradually requires new information, so nothing is coming in on that front either. At the end of July, I receive a phone call from the insurer. I have to answer a whole series of questions. Once again, the problem of reading medical bills, created entirely by the employer, resurfaces. I re-explain what I already told the HR lady. Unlike her, the agent understands. The insurer will pay from the beginning of June until mid-August. I tell her that this will interfere with Employment Canada. She replies that it is up to me to call the government agency and see what I owe them. According to her, Employment Canada should have stopped paying at the beginning of June. It's now the end of July. I reply, annoyed, that I'm

L’article My exhausting experience with the bureaucratic hurdles of long-term sick leave est apparu en premier sur The North Star.


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Prime Minister Mark Carney’s budget scales back rules around greenwashing, and hints an oil and gas emissions cap is unlikely. But it introduces a youth climate corps and renews efforts to lift boil-water advisories


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Landowners ring alarm bells about the Alberta government paying them on behalf of delinquent oil and gas companies


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A leaked contract reveals LNG Canada offered to pay at least one Kitimat resident to temporarily “relocate” if they agreed not to raise concerns or to sue if operations damaged their property


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Behind Heron Gate’s destruction lies a broader shift in Canada’s housing system—financial firms, pension funds, and private equity investors have transformed rental housing into a speculative asset class, driving up rents and displacing racialized tenants

The post The corporate blueprint behind the eviction of Ottawa’s most diverse neighbourhood appeared first on The Breach.


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Forced expropriation by the CAQ, hazardous waste imported from the United States, and growing public concern: it didn’t take much more for a movement of citizens, unions, and activists to form earlier this year in Blainville. Their initiatives, research, and a damning public environmental report have now shed light on the serious health risks still posed, forty years later, by the Stablex waste disposal site. What does Stablex do, and why is it in the news now? Since the 1980s, the American hazardous waste landfill company Stablex has been importing substances such as arsenic, lead, cadmium, cyanide, and chromium to treat and bury them near a residential neighborhood in Blainville. Around 70% of this waste comes from south of the border.  Stablex is owned by the largest waste management company in the United States, Republic Services. Republic Services is 35% owned by Bill Gates’ investment firm, Cascade Investments. The remaining shareholders are trillion-dollar investment giants like Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street Corporation (Union Bank). In 1981, the Quebec government authorized Stablex to build a sixth landfill cell, increasing its total capacity to nine million cubic meters by 2040. But forty years ago, Blainville was not yet a city surrounded by residential neighborhoods. That’s why, toward the end of the last decade, the company proposed relocating slightly farther from the residential area, in exchange for an extension of its operations until 2065. A new, more remote plot of land owned by the City of Blainville was sold to Stablex for $14 million, on the condition that the company obtain the required authorizations to begin the project. In 2023, after the Quebec public hearings office on the environment (BAPE) released its public inquiry, Blainville’s city council unanimously voted to cancel the agreement with the American company. Stablex responded that the resolution had no legal value, claiming it did not comply with the terms of the contract. In March 2025, Premier François Legault’s government came to Stablex’s rescue, allowing the company to begin “urgent” construction work to avoid a “service disruption.” The CAQ used an exceptional legislative procedure to bypass normal processes and expropriate the Blainville site without any democratic debate. It’s worth noting that Stablex itself admits that without cell #6, it won’t reach maximum capacity before 2027. According to the BAPE report, the company actually has enough space until 2030. A technology that’s neither effective nor safe Stablex’s waste treatment relies on a British process from 1973 called “Sealosafe,” which mixes toxic waste with concrete before burying it in pits lined with clay that is supposed to prevent leaks. Deemed obsolete for more than 35 years in the UK, this method is even less effective in Quebec’s climate. According to biologist Daniel Green, rain and freezing temperatures prevent the concrete from fully hardening, allowing contaminants to seep into the soil and groundwater. A report from Quebec’s environmental police as early as 1990 confirmed that the process was not “inert.” Stablex claims its waste is not only inert but permanently so. Yet, a statement from Solomax, the company that supplies Stablex’s geomembrane liner, says it is guaranteed for only five years. Moreover, according to the BAPE, Stablex has never tested soil or water quality around its site in over forty years, relying solely on laboratory simulations to assess its process. The report recommends that the Environment Ministry require direct analyses of the landfill cells and concludes that the expansion project should not be approved due to the lack of guarantees about its impact on public health and the environment. And this time, the new cell #6 won’t be buried underground like the others: it will be a mountain of exposed waste. A mountain eight storeys tall, or 22 meters high, made of hazardous materials right next to a mostly residential city of just under 60,000 people. So what is the environmental situation in Blainville? Since neither the company nor the Environment Ministry had ever tested the quality of the soil or water near the Stablex site until very recently, about 30 citizens decided to do it themselves last spring, with the help of biologist Daniel Green to ensure the accuracy of the results. The results only deepened residents’ concern. Now organized as the Blainville Citizens’ Coalition Against Stablex Cell #6, they found alarming concentrations of toxic metals: up to 320 times the safe limit for cadmium in water near the plant, 57 times in nearby soil, and unsafe levels of arsenic, copper, chromium, and nickel—particularly in the Lockhead Creek area, close to residential neighborhoods. The Environment Ministry recently admitted it had already conducted sampling of soil and water near Stablex in 2024, but said results would only be made public “later this fall.” Contradicting the citizens’ findings, the government stated that according to its inspection report, Stablex “complies with current environmental standards.” The ministry also published a report on air quality around the facility, saying: “There are currently no concerns regarding air quality.” Yet no study to date has demonstrated that the company’s new open-air waste storage method will not affect long-term air quality.

L’article In Blainville, Quebec government chooses U.S. toxic waste over public health est apparu en premier sur The North Star.


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On October 21, Filipino activists and diaspora were turned away from the Philippine Consulate in Vancouver as they tried to deliver a letter expressing dissatisfaction with the corruption that has caused widespread devastation after a typhoon hit areas of the country.  The consulate, nestled amidst the luxury hotels and convention centres on the downtown core’s waterfront, barred activists from entering the building and increased security presence at its doors upon seeing people gathering outside in preparation for the letter delivery. The letter is signed by Tama Na BC, a local chapter of a new coalition of concerned Filipinos formed in reaction to the recent corruption scandal.  The North Star spoke with Noa Sison of Bayan BC at the scene. He explained, “We're here because it's been a month since September 21 when hundreds of thousands of Filipinos flooded the streets. And we've only seen the Philippine government double down on their repression of the people's just resistance and double down on their corruption and lack of transparency.” The letter makes specific demands for transparency and accountability from state officials and contractors involved in publicly funded flood control projects.  “It contains eight demands, listing out how we can realize a corruption-free society in the Philippines. For example, making sure that the ICI investigation is transparent and also making sure that there's no more practice of ‘budget insertions’, which basically begets all these bloated pork barrel projects where people are able to pocket the money.” The Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) was established September 15 through an executive order after the public expressed concerns about corruption. The pocketing of public funds designated for flood control infrastructure has caused at least 30 deaths, the destruction of whole communities, and the displacement of thousands in rural communities especially.  Though President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. stated that the commission would operate independently and would not include politicians, critics are concerned about a lack of transparency on the part of the agency. All positions within the commission have been appointed directly by President Marcos Jr. Sison is concerned that the ICI has failed to implicate Marcos Jr. in the chaotic aftermath of the typhoon and is shifting blame to the protesters.  “We know he is actually the one who is responsible, because he is the one who approves and signs off on the national budget, which is full of all these infrastructure projects that are the source of kickbacks or corruption, where all these politicians are basically enriching themselves,” he told The North Star.  Sison says the September 21 protests show that “farmers, workers, professionals, youth, students, all united basically because they all understand that enough is enough.” He says they realized that, “it’s not about who is in [the presidential palace], but actually replacing this rotten system,” that has persistently funnelled public funds into politicians’ pockets, rather than just who occupies the presidential palace as its figurehead. The endemic corruption may be felt most acutely in agricultural communities during extreme weather events and disasters, but the issue is a pervasive year-round reality that keeps people in the countryside from having any kind of stability or security. “Filipino peasants actually live on very thin economic margins already. Some make as little as 350 [Philippine Pesos] a day which amounts to about nine Canadian dollars. When we think of the corruption, we can see what the main issues of the Filipino farmers are. Seven out of 10 Filipino farmers don't own their own land,” and since the floods, “there hasn't been any aid yet provided to them.” Sison explains that funds that could go to supplement the local rice production and subsidize the cost of fertilizer are instead squandered on infrastructure deals that provide kickbacks or foment corruption.  “Marcos Jr. is continuing this legacy of being dependent on imports of rice to basically supplement the local supply.” According to Sison, the corruption “is just a manifestation of deeper, more entrenched problems in the Philippines. We can see that with the landlessness of farmers, the stagnation of the minimum wage in the Philippines, and all these conditions that basically force Filipinos to migrate abroad.” Once immigrants from the Philippines make it to Canada, they’re faced with challenges that sometimes mirror the conditions back home, as well as some new ones.  Take, for instance, federal Bill C-12 which draws on elements of the controversial Bill C-2 to restrict established immigration processes and expand the government’s enforcement powers. The government touts these laws as strengthening border security, but they tend to make conditions for working-class immigrants more uncertain. According to Sison, Bill C-12 will place immigrants into more precarious conditions which will leave them with fewer options for employment and lower wages. He was infuriated by the fact that Filipinos forced away from their home country find themselves heavily exploited yet again “for the benefit of just the ruling elite” once they get to Canada. But Sison says that the shared experiences of overall wage stagnation amidst a rising cost of basic goods could also be a potentially unifying force for the workers of both countries. “Philippines, Canada, we can see basically a shared interest in the working class… and we can see a need for a change in the system that does uplift the working class.”

L’article Protesters barred from delivering letter at Philippine consulate est apparu en premier sur The North Star.


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A once-threatened fish has surged back while another one struggles — leaving fishermen, scientists and regulators divided over how to protect species, habitat and livelihoods


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By Jay Brudny   As the housing crisis continues to intensify, gentrification has become a simple fact of life in Canada, with working-class neighbourhoods being selected one after the other for […]

The post Gentrification: a powerful weapon for corporate profiteering in housing appeared first on People's Voice.


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The Roberts Bank Terminal 2 expansion at Canada’s busiest cargo port could be fast-tracked by the federal government. It’s a major stop for 3.5 million western sandpipers to eat and recharge while travelling the entire Pacific


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Controversial initiatives appear among an internal list compiled by federal officials in March, showing 17 ‘major projects,’ some of which have already been deemed in the ‘national interest’


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Doug Ford’s advertisements might have you think mines are up and running in the remote region, but that’s far from the truth


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Economist Ricardo Tranjan joins Desmond Cole to discuss how Ford and Carney’s housing policies heavily favours corporate landlords

The post Mark Carney and Doug Ford keep serving Big Landlords appeared first on The Breach.


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Katia Lo Innes explains how the right-wing uses attacks on Tim Hortons’ migrant workers to distract us from our real enemy — the corporate elite

The post Why Tim Hortons became ground zero for migrant-bashing appeared first on The Breach.


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