An outbreak of coronavirus that tore through a nursing home in Bobcaygeon, Ontario recently has been declared finished, according to Global News.
China-owned facilities have failed to meet Canadian standards. Cases included residents not being bathed for more than five weeks and left in beds without food or care, as well as understaffed homes.
On May 19, Ontario will enter "Stage One" in the province's reopening, allowing retail stores not located in shopping malls, "with strict social distancing measures in place."
Nine agencies across Canada that provide services for trafficked and exploited women and girls have been told there is no more money to support their programs.
These politicians are either unwilling or unable to provide the public with crucial information.
On Thursday, 258 new cases of the virus were confirmed by health officials, which brings the new total to 21,494.
"The choice we made was to get the money out to people immediately," said Trudeau. The prime minister said that fraudsters would get caught "as we move forward."
Even a leading anti-gun advocacy group is unhappy with Justin Trudeau's gun ban after it was discovered that it has been made easily reversible.
The lawsuit filed by the taxpayer-funded broadcaster used private lawyers after suing the Conservatives for using copyright news footage during last year's election cycle.
Among the products that have dropped in quantity are N95 masks, which Mills says are in "very limited production."
The Norwegian central bank has left out four Canadian oil and gas companies from its $1 trillion wealth fund due to producing too much greenhouse gas emissions, its first use of carbon emissions as a requisite to blacklist firms, according to Global News.
Toronto police are expected to give an update on the investigation into the abduction of Shammah Jolayemi, who was taken on the morning of March 4.
Video has emerged of Minister of Public Safety Bill Blair confusing a grenade launcher and a historic cannon placed in Stanley Park in Vancouver.
A Canadian RN has died from COVID-19 and people are remembering him for his commitment to helping others and his sense of humour.
A family in Ontario has found a way to safely hug their grandma amid the coronavirus pandemic.