"We'll be open until they drag me out of here," said Adamson Barbecue owner Adam Skelly on Tuesday.
The high end retailer seemingly has one shelf of groceries, making them an essential business.
Police have arrived at the Etobicoke barbecue restaurant which has decided to now close its doors in accordance to the Toronto and Peel region lockdown orders.
The announcement is being touted as a "budget update" and may include other long-term spending promises. The COVID-19 pandemic has left Canada with it's deepest budget deficit since World War II.
A crane on the Eglinton Crosswalk construction site collapsed Monday evening, sending a worker to hospital with minor injuries.
Health Department records also show that the government has secured 1,600 hotel rooms in major cities across the country to provide for incoming visitors.
The Ontario government said the change will be on pause if the bill is passed. Modifications will not be made until Quebec and New York pass similar bills.
Prime Minister Trudeau has been pranked by Russian YouTubers Vladimir Kuznetsov and Alexey Stolyarov, who are also known as Vovan and Lexus.
"You are open by order of the province so residents can buy essentials. You are not open to cash in on Black Friday and in doing so creating crowd scenes."
New Democrat MP Niki Ashton and Green MP Paul Manly will be speaking at the "Zoom to free Meng Wanzhou" event on November 24
Owen Sound Police are looking for information after five places of worship were vandalized on Sunday.
A Georgian Bluffs, Ontario man was arrested after defecating on the floor of a restaurant.
The Special Investigations Unit has launched an investigation after a 23-year-old man was repeatedly shot at by police during a confrontation in Vaughan.
“The prime minister suggested businesses were better off because of lockdown,” Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner stated before the parliamentary health committee.
In 2015, Trudeau came under fire from groups representing small businesses across Canada, after comments saying that rich Canadians were using small businesses as fronts to lower tax rates on their own bills.