ST. JOHN’S, N.L.—Newfoundland and Labrador legislators approved a number of pandemic-related measures Tuesday, including one to facilitate the removal of non-residents from the province and another to allow authorities to enter premises without a warrant.
There’s an obvious reason why Finance Minister Bill Morneau sidesteps every question about how big the deficit will be and when he will publish a budget on managing it all.
FLINT, MICH.—A Michigan woman was formally charged Tuesday in the fatal shooting of a store security guard who refused to allow her daughter inside because she wasn’t wearing a face mask to protect against transmission of the coronavirus.
If the political conversation around the pandemic seems to have acquired a harder edge these days, science may have an explanation — it’s something called the “third-quarter phenomenon.”
The TTC will formally reduce the frequency of its bus, streetcar, and subway operations next week in a set of sweeping and historic service cuts brought on by the COVID-19 crisis.
The Canadian Academy of Sport and Exercise Medicine (CASEM) pleaded with policy makers late last month to maintain public access to physical exercise as they enforce social distancing.
SEOUL, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF—The new baseball season began in South Korea on Tuesday with the crack of the bat and the sound of the ball smacking into the catcher’s mitt echoing around empty stadiums.
A Canadian software developer says he has resigned his position as a vice president with Amazon over the firing of employees who he says fought for better COVID-19 protection in the company’s warehouses.
OTTAWA—The Trudeau government is expected to announce on Tuesday significant, targeted financial support for farmers hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic.