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New surveillance video shows mental state of man killed by transit police

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 30 Desember 2014 | 22.40

New surveillance video is shedding light on a man's mental state before he was shot by police in Surrey, B.C., on Sunday. 

The 20-year-old man can be seen in the convenience store video, pacing inside the store. According to store clerk Connie Yong, he demanded a knife.

"He was looking for a knife and I said I don't have a knife," she said. 

"He was so focused on looking for a knife, something sharp. I thought he was going to get the sharp stuff and then kill someone."

Prior to going into the convenience store, the man was seen screaming and banging his head against a wall at the Surrey Central SkyTrain station. After not finding a knife at the convenience store, the man went to a nearby Safeway.

Surrey police involved shooting

The 20-year-old man was taken away in an ambulance after the incident involving Surrey, B.C., transit police, but he did not survive. (CBC)

Witnesses say the man stole a knife, walked towards the bakery and stabbed himself repeatedly. Police tried to de-escalate the situation, but he was shot and died, the Independent Investigations Office said.

The agency, which provides civilian oversight of serious police incidents, said it will review the convenience store surveillance tape as well as 911 audio and post-mortem exams. 

According to Vancouver police, about eight people are arrested daily under the Mental Health Act, and between 30,000 and 40,000 calls they receive annually involve people who may be mentally ill.

Earlier this month, a man was arrested for threatening to kill police officers under the act. He was later released without charges. 

In November, another mentally ill man was shot and killed by an officer in South Vancouver. At the time, Vancouver police said Phuong Na Du, 51,  was distraught and waving a two-by-four.

He refused to comply with officers' directions and bean-bag rounds were fired in an attempt to disarm him, according to police. 


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Trudeau's Liberals led in 2014, but what does 2015 hold?

As 2014 comes to a close, all eyes turn to the federal election scheduled for 2015.

The climactic year begins with the Liberals leading in the polls, the Conservatives in a close second, and the New Democrats trailing in third. Here's a look at how we got here with a retrospective of 2014 polling.

It was a good year for Justin Trudeau's Liberals, as the party maintained its lead in national voting intentions. But there were moments when it looked like the Conservatives were on track to dislodge the Liberals from top spot.

Monthly polling averages 2014

Liberals (red), Conservatives (dark blue), New Democrats (orange), Bloc Québécois (light blue), Greens (green) (ThreeHundredEight.com)

That was certainly the case when the House of Commons began its summer break. The Liberals had begun the year with a comfortable six- to eight-point lead, but by June the margin between the two parties had decreased to just two points. The Trudeau honeymoon was at risk of coming to an end.

But the Liberals' polling numbers ballooned over the summer, as the party surged to the highest level of support it would enjoy all year, at 38 to 39 per cent. The Conservatives, however, were keeping their heads above water at 30 per cent, and as parliamentarians returned to work in the fall, the margin closed once again.

As it stands at year end, the Liberals still lead in the polls, but their advantage over the Conservatives is modest at about 35 to 32 per cent.

The New Democrats have trended downwards throughout the year, having started 2014 in a strong third position with 24 to 25 per cent support. But as Liberal support jumped in the summer, the NDP dropped to the low-20s and, this past month, has been even flirting with the high-teens. While the party is still polling quite well by historical standards, it is a far cry from the 31 per cent the NDP captured in 2011.

The biggest problem for the NDP has been Ontario, where the party has been averaging 20 per cent or less since July.

That might be good news for Trudeau. The Liberals led in the province throughout the year, experiencing the same uptick during the summer that they experienced nationwide. But the race has been very close for much of 2014, with the gap standing at two to three points for much of the first half of the year. As the fall sitting recommenced, the large margin that the polls recorded over the summer decreased again, and the battleground province looks to be one that will be hotly contested in 2015.

Another important battleground will be Quebec, where the Liberals and New Democrats are vying for the lead. The Liberals captured it for most of 2014, but the New Democrats remain ahead among election-deciding francophones, an edge that could serve them well in the seat count.

The Bloc Québécois began the year with some hope of being able to repeat its 2011 vote share performance and potentially win a few more seats due to vote splitting. But when Mario Beaulieu took over the party in June, the Bloc's support plummeted. Not since before Beaulieu's arrival has the party averaged more than 20 per cent support in any month. And with the Conservatives experiencing a modest uptick as 2014 comes to a close, the Bloc may be dropping into fourth.

The Conservatives also continue to poll well in Alberta, managing between 50 and 60 per cent support for most of 2014. But noteworthy is the performance of the Liberals in the polls, with between 20 and 30 per cent. Recall that the party took just nine per cent of the vote in the province in 2011, so with a three-fold increase the party may be in contention for a handful of seats.

Another region where the Liberals have done unexpectedly well in 2014 has been in the provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. While the Conservatives remain comfortably ahead in the region, with over 40 per cent support for the first half of the year as well as in December, the Liberals have managed between 30 and 35 per cent. The New Democrats, who have hopes for a breakthrough in Saskatchewan, have taken a plunge over the last few months.

Support has proven somewhat more robust for the NDP in British Columbia, the only real three-way race in the country. The lead swapped hands throughout the year, with the parties being within a few points of each other on several occasions. The Liberals have wobbled anywhere between 27 and 37 per cent support, while the New Democrats have put up between 23 and 30 per cent. The Conservatives, meanwhile, have been very steady in the province with about 30 per cent support. Depending on how the vote breaks down regionally, B.C. could have a lot of interesting races in 2015.

One party to keep an eye on in the province is the Green Party, which has polled at roughly 10 per cent for most of 2014. That would mean an improvement over 2011, and bode well for leader Elizabeth May's re-election chances.

Re-election will be more difficult for Conservative and NDP MPs in Atlantic Canada, however, as the Liberals dominated the region in 2014. The party has averaged majority support throughout much of the year. The Conservatives and NDP have vied for the distant second spot, with about 20 per cent apiece.

The 2015 federal election campaign will undoubtedly move the dial again, and none of the parties will start that campaign at zero. The polls in 2014 show where the parties will start off in the new year, but the big question is: where will they finish?


The monthly polling averages are determined by averaging all polls conducted within a given month and weighing them by sample size. The methodologies, survey dates, and sample sizes of the polls included in these averages vary and have not been individually verified by the CBC.


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Animal rescues and close encounters: B.C.'s top wildlife stories of 2014

From curious bears and angry moose to dolphin displays and a jellyfish invasion, here are our top B.C. wildlife video and photo stories of 2014.

Camera-curious grizzly bear caught on video near Revelstoke

The image of a B.C. grizzly bear poised behind a photographer's camera on a tripod went viral in November — and a video uploaded to YouTube shows how the scene unfolded.

The video shows the grizzly, dubbed "Harry the Bear," wandering near photographer Jim Lawrence before moseying up to the camera on a tripod.

After sniffing around, the bear starts to lumber away before turning to check out the equipment more closely. At that moment, Lawrence captured his image of the grizzly, up on its hind legs, peering behind the camera.

Barn owl chicks rescued from Fraser River bridge

In October, three chicks were found by a worker in a nest in one of the dismantled sections of the old Port Mann Bridge, which spanned the Fraser River between Surrey and Coquitlam.

They could not be reunited with their parents and as a result were then cared for by Burnaby's Wildlife Rescue Association, which said after some fluids, warmth, a little rest and hand-feeding, "the siblings soon perked up."

Velella velella turn Tofino shore into sea of blue

Tofino beachgoers were surprised in August by thousands of tiny jellyfish-like creatures that had washed up on local beaches.

Velella velella are small carnivorous animals related to jellyfish and do sting, but not enough to harm people. They can't swim, so their movements are dictated by the wind and the current — far from the coast.

Invasion of the Velella velella1:42

Bald eagle makes a swim for it off Vancouver Island

A Vancouver Island fisherman gave a very tired looking bald eagle a lift to shore in September after finding the exhausted bird floundering in the ocean near Nanoose Bay.

In the video posted on YouTube, the exhausted juvenile eagle appears to swim toward the sport fishing boat before being helped aboard by fisherman Don Dunbar.

The bird was passed on to the Orphaned Wildlife Rehabilitation Society in Delta, which reports the malnourished animal ate a whole quail upon arrival at its facility.

Baby bear's golf pole dancing in the Kootenays caught on video

Golfers playing a round at the Fairmont Hot Springs resort in B.C.'s Kootenays in September were surprised to find a bear cub firmly ensconced on the putting green and having all sorts of fun with the hole pole.

The black bear's pole dancing efforts were caught on a phone camera by one of the players before the pesky bear ran off with the ball.

White-tailed deer has icy escape in Okanagan

Conservation officers rescued a white-tailed deer that had fallen on a frozen lake in the Okanagan in December. 

The young buck had likely ventured out onto the ice on Duck Lake, near Kelowna,, when it was fleeing from predators.

Conservation officer Ed Seitz used a tranquilizer dart to sedate the deer, then took it to shore in a flat-bottomed boat. It has now been returned to the wild.

Frolicking sea otter filmed in rare sighting near Georgia Strait

B.C. resident Cheryl Alexander almost couldn't believe her eyes when she spotted a sea otter frolicking and feeding in a cove off Ten Mile Point in Victoria in August.

Alexander had her camera ready and she took photos and video of the encounter.

"He swam right up to where we were standing on the shore and we have a couple little steps that go into the water, and he put himself on the first step, boost himself up, and then he tried to get on my husband's kayak," she said.

Mother bear rescues cub from Kootenay National Park highway

A video originally posted on the online edition of Britain's Telegraph newspaper showed ​amazing footage of a mother black bear pulling her young cub from a B.C. highway to safety in May.

According to the Telegraph, tornado hunter Ricky Forbes was driving through Kootenay National Park when he spotted a black bear cub sitting dangerously close to the highway.

Suddenly the mother popped up from behind the concrete barrier at the side of the road and hauled the cub to safety. 

"It was a very amazing sight to see," the Telegraph quoted Forbes as saying.

Adams River sockeye salmon run caught on underwater GoPro video 

Millions of sockeye salmon returned to the Adams River near Kamloops in one of the most spectacular displays of natural beauty in the world this year.

In October, the CBC caught underwater GoPro footage of the sockeye salmon spawning — watch it here.

Adams River sockeye run: RAW1:54

Wild horse rescued from raging river in Summerland

The dramatic rescue of a wild horse from Trout Creek in Summerland by local fire crews and volunteers was captured on video and uploaded to YouTube in May.

Rescuers initially managed to put a noose around the horse's head, but it came off after the frightened animal, unused to human handling, struggled free, leaving her farther out in the current.

The shivering horse, later named River by her rescuers, was eventually trapped in a blanket and taken into foster care by O.A.T.S. Horse Rescue where she was nursed back to health.

Grizzly bear chews on GoPro camera in Knight Inlet

A U.K.-based filmmaker collecting footage of grizzlies in Knight Inlet, on B.C.'s west coast, had one of his cameras snatched by a curious bear in October.

John Kitchin posted the video of the encounter to YouTube last week with the simple description: "[A] grizzly bear stole my GoPro and chewed it."

Snowy moose attack caught on camera in Smithers

A cellphone video of a moose attacking a woman in Smithers generated concern on Facebook in February.

The video showed the woman walking past the moose in a snowy yard in the northern B.C. community. The moose followed the woman and then appeared to strike her with its front hoof.

Fortunately, the woman was left with only minor injuries. Conservation officer Flint Knibbs said, "Our take on it is that the moose felt it needed to get out of there. It was being cornered, and the easiest way out happened to be over top of this individual."

Smithers moose attack on video0:27

Dolphins, orcas delight watchers in Vancouver, Squamish

If you kept a close eye on the waters near Vancouver and Squamish in March, you may have seen dolphins and even some orcas.

At least two pods of Pacific white-sided dolphins were spotted by paddlers, boaters and seawall walkers off Vancouver's West End while hundreds more were seen and photographed near Squamish.

In the Howe Sound, the dolphins weren't alone — around 15 orcas were close behind, looking for a meal.

Elk freed from fence with bolt cutters in Kimberley

A YouTube video of a Mountie freeing an elk in the Rocky Mountain Trench east of Kimberley garnered more than 24,000 hits in December.

The female elk was tightly wrapped in a wire fence and was obviously suffering and in distress. Luckily, Sgt. Darrell Robinson was able to approach the elk and free both of its legs with bolt cutters.

Later that day, RCMP put out a news release. "Mountie releases elk," it said, "No charges."

And finally...the mysterious case of the Squamish sasquatch

Sasquatch seekers got an unexpected treat in May when wildlife biologist Myles Lamont posted a video online, showing what he claimed was a possible sasquatch in the Tantalus Range near Squamish.

The video, which garnered more than a million views on YouTube, showed a black dot of a figure apparently moving up the slope of a snow-covered mountain in a remote area of the range near Tricouni Peak.

"If that's human why would you walk up that ridge or that snow line?" Lamont asks. "Why would he not just go straight down?"

The mystery seemed to have been solved two weeks later, when Peter Tennant, a.k.a. Ridgewalker Pete from White Rock, B.C. came forward, after seeing the sasquatch story on the CBC website.

"[Lamont] did this little pan [around in the video] and I started laughing, because I recognized that valley...That's where I was walking all around. And then I realized... I think that was me."

In the end though, there was more to the two men's accounts than met the eye and the mystery of the Squamish sasquatch continues.


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Indian parents pray for 'good sense to prevail' in attempt to bring son to Canada

An Indian woman with permanent resident status in Canada, and who is trying to bring her three-year-old son here, admits she didn't disclose she had a child before her arrival in Ottawa, but disputes the assertion she had agreed to keep him in India.

Citizenship and Immigration Canada said Bhavna Bajaj repeatedly failed to disclose that she had a son, Daksh, before she came to Ottawa. The department said that after she arrived, she signed a document saying her son would continue to live with his grandparents in India.

Bajaj and her husband, Aman Sood, say they're fighting to change Canada's immigration laws after being separated from their son over what they have described as an application error.

The couple applied for permanent residency in 2011 when Bajaj was pregnant, they told CBC News. An immigration consultant had told them to head to Canada and sponsor their son after they arrived, they said.

In an emailed statement sent to CBC News on Monday, Citizenship and Immigration Canada said there was no mention of the son in Bajaj's 2011 application, even though he was born before the department received it in August 2011.

Son's existence not revealed until 2013, CIC says

Bajaj also didn't mention the baby at a medical exam in March 2012, or any time before her application was accepted in April 2012, the department said.

"It was only when she arrived in Canada in January 2013, and was interviewed by an officer, that she revealed that she had a son," reads the statement from spokeswoman Mary Jago. 

Citizenship and Immigration Canada also said Bajaj decided not to add the child to her application in January 2013, and that Bajaj "stated that the child would remain in India with his grandparents and signed a solemn declaration to support this statement."

The couple later applied to sponsor their son on humanitarian and compassionate grounds, and the department said it refused the application because "it appears that the child never resided with his parents and has continuously resided with his grandparents... [and is] living in an environment which was culturally and linguistically familiar to him, among people who had cared for him since birth."

Decision to not declare son based on legal advice

In a statement released Monday night, the couple said the decision not to declare the three-year-old in their application was "an honest mistake."

"We relied on the legal advice of the immigration consultant who told us that we could sponsor him once we settle down in Canada. We had the plan to sponsor him as soon as we get a place to stay and start working. We thought it would take a couple of months before we could sponsor him," they wrote.

The family also disputed the federal department's interpretation of what was in the "solemn declaration" Bajaj signed.

"Ms. Bajaj never signed any declaration which stated that her child would remain in India with his grandparents. There is no word 'grandparents', 'India' in declaration that we signed. We challenge the CIC to prove what it has claimed. If needed we will reveal the declaration the copy of which we have in our possession," they wrote.

The two also disputed the government's claim that they never resided with the child.

"The CIC is actually enhancing our agony by making unsubstantiated allegations against us. It is also trying to justify its action with logic that is not defensible," they wrote.

The two said that, despite the dispute, they still held out hope that the immigration minister could intervene.

"We believe that good sense will prevail and we will receive relief from the immigration minister."


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Falling loonie cited for 'dent' in cross-border holiday shopping

Canadians did less cross-border shopping this holiday season compared to previous years, says the Retail Council of Canada.

The council says Canadians did a lot of shopping overall.

"The exchange rate put a dent in cross-border shopping," said Michael Leblanc, a spokesman for the council.

The loonie was worth less than 90 cents US in the weeks leading into Christmas, and is now hovering around 86 cents.

Mark Satov, president and founder of Satov Consulting in Toronto, also said the falling loonie likely kept people home.

"When you do a price parity comparison, and you go and see what that jacket is selling for in Buffalo, it's getting more and more expensive as the Canadian dollar drops," he said.

So, Canadians spent more at home, for a few reasons, Leblanc said.

"The lower price of gas put more disposable income on the table, so that probably meant a few more presents under the tree," Leblanc said.

Oil prices have fallen well over 40 per cent since the summer. Just a week before Christmas, the average cost of gasoline in Canada dropped below $1 a litre. It had not been that low in 4½ years.

The mild weather across the country also helped sales, Leblanc said.

In Windsor, Ont., with Detroit less than two kilometres away, no snow was recorded leading up to Christmas. During the week before Christmas, temperatures were above average.

Noah Tepperman, who co-owns a local furniture and appliance store in Windsor, says sales are definitely better this year than last year.

"The Boxing Day promotion was one of our all-time best in terms of not only customer traffic, but certainly customer purchases, without question," Tepperman said. "It was the best since the economic downturn of  2007, 2008, so we really are just pleased."

According to Moneris, Canada's largest processor and acquirer of debit and credit card payments, sales were up this year overall.

Comparing this year's last Saturday before Christmas to last year's final Saturday before Christmas:

  • The amount spent per transaction was up by about 10 per cent.
  • Total dollars were also higher, up by about four to five per cent.

Looking at numbers from the start of December, spending was also higher. It was up by about 5.6 per cent in the first two weeks of December, compared to last year.

Spending on clothes and apparel was slightly higher, while electronics purchases were down.

Did you do more or less local holiday shopping this year?


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'Losing my son means losing everything to me,' says dad after Luka Magnotta murder conviction

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 Desember 2014 | 22.40

Diran Lin will return to China empty-handed next month after not getting the answer to the one question he desperately wanted answered: Why did Luka Magnotta kill his son, Jun Lin?

hi-junlin-852-8col

Jun Lin's mother and father arrived in Montreal from China shortly after authorities identified their son's remains. (CBC)

"What he did was very cruel," Lin said on Monday morning in Montreal. 

Lin addressed the media with the help of a translator, nearly one week after Magnotta was handed a guilty verdict for killing the 33-year-old Chinese student in 2012.

"I came here for the trial first, because I miss my son," Diran Lin said. 

"Another reason was to find out why it happened, but there is no result for this."

Even so, Lin said, the result of the trial was fair and just. He thanked the Canadian legal system and Judge Guy Cournoyer for a difficult job that was well done.

He also thanked journalists for caring about his son's death.

"I want to say thank you from my own heart."

The first-degree murder verdict comes with a sentence of life in prison and no chance of parole for at least 25 years. Magnotta was also found guilty of four other charges. 

Diran Lin quit his job to come to Montreal for Magnotta's 10-week murder trial, and during that time, his hair turned white. 

He sat in the courtroom every day, retiring to a room when the court was shown graphic evidence of the murder.

Lin said his wife, who stayed in China, is in poor health and is being looked after by a doctor.

Lin is expected to return to Beijing in January, but he doesn't know quite what he is going back to.

"Losing my son means losing everything to me," he said.

A fund was started by the law firm representing the Lin family members to help them get back on their feet.


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'We should just move to Toronto': Vancouver home prices worry businesses

When Allan Pulga, a communications manager, found out he was going to be a father, he had to make a tough choice — stay in a tiny downtown condo or leave Vancouver.

The 34-year-old, who works for fast-growing private Canadian technology firm iQmetrix, packed his bags and moved to Regina, Sask., where the typical family home costs roughly one third of the price in the Greater Vancouver area.

"When you're a young, single person, you can make Vancouver work financially," said Pulga, who was able to transfer to iQmetrix's Regina office. "But I feel like if it's time to settle down and have kids, maybe you won't stay."

Pulga typifies a worrying trend in Vancouver, where sky-high housing prices are forcing many young professionals out of the city and into long commutes from far-flung suburbs, with some choosing just to leave the region altogether.

That has business groups raising the alarm about Vancouver's ability to attract and retain the talent needed to foster local successes like retailer Lululemon Athletica or tech start-ups like video surveillance maker Avigilon Corp and social media manager Hootsuite.

Lululemon 20140821

Shoppers fill Lululemon Athletica's flagship store on Robson Street in downtown Vancouver. Unlike other expensive global cities, which have well-paid bankers, Vancouver's economy relies more on a cyclical resources industry. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

Vancouver has long boasted Canada's costliest housing. But low interest rates and strong foreign demand, especially from Chinese buyers, have helped drive the cost of a typical detached home up nearly 30 per cent in the last five years.

The average Vancouver-area property — including houses, town homes and condos — sold for $828,937 in November, compared with $580,326 in greater Toronto and $306,541 in Regina, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association. In Seattle, on the West Coast of the U.S., with massive employers such as Boeing, Microsoft and Amazon in the area, the median sale price was $436,250.

On Vancouver's desirable west side, the median selling price for detached homes rose to $2.6 million in November.

Squeezed out

Government data shows the migration of 25 to 44-year-olds out of Vancouver to other provinces has outpaced those migrating in from elsewhere in Canada over the past three years, eroding a key working-age demographic.

"Housing prices are a concern for that exact reason," said Ken Peacock, chief economist at the Business Council of British Columbia. "It makes it more challenging for younger people starting a family."

Vancouver's expensive housing also makes it tough for companies to bring in new talent from other regions, in particular senior executives, he noted.

"There is a sticker shock phenomenon," said Peacock. "A lot of these people are coming from 5,000-square-foot estates and here they get a three bedroom bungalow."

VanElxn Housing 20141109

A man lights a cigarette on a condo balcony in Vancouver in 2010. Small two-bedroom downtown condo rentals are about $2,000 a month. (The Canadian Press)

To be sure, Vancouver is not alone. New York, London and Singapore have long been popular with foreign investors, driving up the cost of living for locals. But while those cities are global financial hubs and have many bankers with big compensation, Vancouver's economy relies more on tourism and a cyclical resources industry.

The median family income in Vancouver in 2012, the last data available, was just $71,140 a year, the lowest of any major city in Canada, putting home ownership far out of reach for most. The median income in Regina, by comparison, was $91,200, while Toronto families make just a bit more than Vancouver families.

Vancouver is working to address the affordability gap, but existing initiatives mainly target lower-income families. Renting is a cheaper option in the city of 1.3 million, with small two-bedroom downtown condos listed for about $2,000 a month and suburban basement units available at $1,200.

'There's just not enough high calibre people here. They all leave when they realize they can make more money in other cities and live there for cheaper.'- Simeon Garratt, Spark CRM

Despite the challenges, numerous companies interviewed by Reuters said most of their staff are willing to make sacrifices — like long commutes or raising kids in shoebox condos — for the benefit of Vancouver's mild climate and outdoor lifestyle.

But those same companies, such as Vancouver-based retailer Mountain Equipment Co-op, also had examples of key hires who ultimately turned down jobs because of the high home prices.

It's an issue Craig Hemer, an executive recruiter with Boyden, has been grappling with for the better part of a decade.

Hemer has learned ways to soften the blow — selling older executives on the idea of downsizing to a luxurious downtown condo and convincing those with families that suburban life offers more amenities for kids.

Love it or leave it

Companies too are shifting their policies, with some offering car allowances and transit subsidies. Others are opening small suburban offices or allow staff to telecommute from home.

But that isn't always enough, especially in Vancouver's start-up scene. Executives say it is easy enough to hire junior staff, but a dearth of experienced engineers and technology workers makes it hard to grow past a certain point.

"There's just not enough high calibre people here. They all leave when they realize they can make more money in other cities and live there for cheaper," said Simeon Garratt, chief executive of Spark CRM, a property-focused tech start-up.

"We debate at least once a month whether we should just move to Toronto."


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University student wants you to know how government spends tax money

Former House of Commons page Olivia Dorey was once one of the people hand-delivering the federal budget to MPs when the finance minister rose to deliver his speech.

That task inspired her to try to read through a budget so she knew better what it contained.

"And I couldn't. I couldn't find the numbers, I couldn't make sense of what they were trying to explain ... I'm used to doing my own personal budgets, and this book, this book was nothing like a budget to me," she said in an interview in Ottawa.

Dorey studies public administration at the University of Ottawa, and is interested in politics. But she still couldn't figure out the budget. That experience jarred her to begin a personal mission to build a website where people could key in some basic demographic information and find out how the federal budget affected them. 

Some of that information is available — specific funding for a hospital or transit, for example, or qualifications for Old Age Security — but much of it is simply not publicly accessible, or hard to follow after an initial announcement.

That's led Dorey to start lobbying MPs to build budgets differently.

"If I can't understand public finance and find the information I need, what hope do other Canadians have understanding it?" Dorey said.

She believes federal, provincial and municipal budgets should be clear enough that people like her grandparents in Bridgewater, N.S., who don't have university educations, can understand them. Her campaign led her to a strong ally: former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page.

'Impossible to track'

Right now, there are several documents you have to read if you want to track a funding promise, including:

  • The budget, the annual planning document for government spending.
  • The estimates, which contain much more detailed information about spending.
  • The supplementary estimates, the update to the estimates.
  • The departmental performance reports, which recap how much was spent out of the amount budgeted, and staffing levels.

Even then, it can be hard to track spending if you want to go back several years. The documents sometimes offer only a few years in the same booklet, so readers have to pull numbers from older versions too.

And there are other problems.

Kevin Page 2012-04-26

Former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page is supporting Olivia Dorey in her quest for more government transparency. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

"These books aren't synced up in any way. They actually switch back and forth between accounting styles," Dorey said.

"It's impossible to track money through the expenditure management system, and the way that it's presented ... you can't actually see or understand how much money is being spent on a specific department or on a specific project," she said.

Page says Dorey took his public finance class a year ago and calls her very bright. Her first step, he says, will be to change the culture of government. Right now, civil servants and governing parties have little incentive for being open with information that can be used to criticize them.

Parliamentarians vote based on departmental operating and capital budgets rather than specific program activities like veteran health care or Arctic oil spill cleanup. Some programs cut across departments, which makes it even more confusing. (Committees vote on specific program lines, but usually devote only one meeting to the estimates of the applicable departments).

Dorey and Page would like to see the votes more specific to program funding instead of operating and capital budgets so the money is easier to track.

There are people in the government who have the kind of information that Dorey wants available to Canadians, said Page, who spent a decade at the department of finance and another decade at the Privy Council Office (PCO), the bureau of civil servants who work directly with the Prime Minister's Office.

"Some bureaucrats deep in the bowels of treasury and finance and PCO, we have that information, but we don't make it available," he said.

'Here's the vision'

But, he says, that insistence on secrecy is bound to change as Dorey's generation advances and becomes the new set of civil servants and politicians.

"Olivia's on a course right now to kind of create a context for change, saying this is what we want. Here's the vision, this is what I'd like my grandparents and me to get, and my generation to have, in terms of access to information. So as citizens we feel like we know how our money's being spent. We can feel more engaged."

It would be unsurprising if Page were cynical about government transparency, given the range and depth of the disputes between him and the Conservative government.

But he sounds optimistic.

"Olivia wants, and it's really her generation ... what we have now is not their future. We live in an information age and I think as Canadians, as citizens, you want to have this information and even as much you want your MPs to have this information."


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Air Canada Calgary-to-Heathrow flight diverted to Toronto over 'electrical smell'

An Air Canada flight from Calgary to London's Heathrow Airport was diverted to Toronto for several hours after "a slight electrical smell" was reported on board.

Flight AC850 left Calgary for England at 7 p.m. MT.

The Boeing 767 with 201 passengers on board changed its flight path on the western edge of Greenland and headed for Toronto.

Air Canada spokeswoman Angela Mah told CBC News that the diversion was done "strictly out of an abundance of caution due to a slight electrical smell detected in the cabin."

Mah said the flight landed without incident at Toronto's Pearson airport early Monday. The flight departed Toronto for Heathrow at 7 a.m. ET with a different aircraft.

The incident comes a day after two Porter Airlines flights were diverted, both because smoke in the passenger cabin was reported:

  • A flight from Toronto to Sudbury, Ont., made an emergency landing at Pearson airport Sunday night. The flight originated at Billy Bishop Toronto City airport, located on Toronto's downtown waterfront. The plane landed without incident.
  • A flight from Toronto to Washington, D.C., made an unscheduled landing in Williamsport, Pa. No one was injured and the plane landed safely. 

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'Free' pot offered by Vancouver medical marijuana dispensary

People are usually bombarded with advertisements at this time of year, but one ad campaign in Metro Vancouver is turning heads.

Some shoppers returning to their cars have been finding business cards on their windshields offering "free premium cannabis."

The so-called free pot is being offered by a medical marijuana dispensary on south Granville Street in Vancouver.

Free premium cannabis

The business cards are offering "free premium cannabis", but there is a catch. (CBC)

Owner Darcy Delainey defends the campaign, noting that to qualify, people have to be 19 or older and have a doctor's note or prescription.

There's also one other catch: "If they spend $30 or more, then they get a free gram of one of the cannabis products we have," said Delainey.

The Richmond RCMP says there have not been any complaints about the cards, which have been distributed at the Landsdowne Centre mall.

"Our position on the business cards is that nothing criminal is being committed simply by handing them out to the public at large," said the statement issued by Acting Cpl. Dennis Hwang.

"We surmise that the business cards are being used to channel new medicinal cannabis clientele towards this dispensary. We hope that the dispensary has been properly licensed by Health Canada and that its clientele are legitimate medical patients with the appropriate paperwork."


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Saskatchewan boy designs Team Canada masks for the World Juniors

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 28 Desember 2014 | 22.41

One Saskatchewan boy's creativity has paid off for Team Canada.

Members of the World Junior hockey team are wearing goalie masks designed by Morgan Bray.

The 14-year-old, who is from Abernethy, Saskatchewan, found out about the contest to design Team Canada's helmets after reading a Boston Pizza menu in White City.

"My sister saw it in her menu and we thought it would be a good idea to enter," Bray explained.

Bray took the entry form home and got to work. He said brainstorming for the idea wasn't too difficult.

"In my free time I just design, like, NHL jerseys and re-design logos from teams and stuff like that," Bray explained. "So I don't know, it came kind of natural."

Morgan Bray

Morgan Bray plays for the Melville Bantam Bucks and lives in Abernethy, Saskatchewan. (Submitted by Kelly Bray)

Bray said it took him a couple rough drafts before he settled on a design he was happy with. He drew inspiration from Team Canada's 100th anniversary.

"I just used a couple logos and banners to celebrate the 100th anniversary," he said.

Originally, Bray thought he hadn't won the contest after the date to submit entries had closed and he still had not heard back.

But those doubts were squashed on one fateful November night when he returned home from a hockey practice with the Melville Bantam Bucks to a message from a woman from Boston Pizza. She told Bray he had won.

"I was shocked, it was crazy," he said, adding that friends at school and on his hockey team didn't believe the news at first either.

Aside from the newly-found notoriety, Bray has also won an trip to Montreal to watch Canada take on the U.S.A. next week.

He and his dad, Tim, will get to sit right behind the players' box.

Bray said he has already seen the hockey helmets he designed being worn in televised matches.

"On the second pre-tournament game Eric Comrie was wearing it," Bray said. "It's kind of crazy to see something I made, that Saskatchewan made, to win that out of 1300 people ... to actually see it live on TV is like an honour to me."

When the trip is over, Bray said he will be heading back home with a Team Canada jersey and goalie mask bearing his own design.


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Teen dies after being hit by car driven by off-duty officer

A teenage boy who was struck and killed by a car driven by an off-duty Abbotsford, B.C., police officer Friday has been identified by family and friends as 14-year-old Marcus Larabie.

A makeshift memorial was growing Saturday, as those who knew Larabie visited the Seven Oaks bus loop near where he was hit and laid flowers against a nearby tree.

Joshua Rawlings, a close friend, said he's going to miss his longboarding partner.

Marcus Larabie friends

Marcus Larabie's friends gathered at a makeshift memorial Saturday to lay flowers, console each other and remember him. (CBC)

"He'd always go longboarding with me," he said. "He could be everyone's best friend. He was like a little angel. I don't know. I'm going to miss him. Everyone's going to miss him."

The incident happened at 6:15 p.m. PT Friday near the intersection of Mill Lake Road and West Bourquin Crescent in Abbotsford.

The province's Independent Investigations Office, which provides civilian oversight of serious police incidents, said Larabie was airlifted to hospital immediately after the accident, but died of his injuries.

"We learned shortly before midnight that the young person had not survived his injuries," IIO spokesperson Kellie Kilpatrick said. "We had an investigator at the hospital providing support to the family, but unfortunately he [the boy] did not survive."

Lewis Tucker, Larabie's uncle, said the family was notified shortly after 7 p.m. and spent the last minutes with him at the hospital.

"Mostly I'm just very upset that something had happened and that nothing could be done for him," he said.

Lewis Tucker, Marcus Larabie's uncle

Lewis Tucker, Marcus Larabie's uncle said Larabie was full of life and it's upsetting that "something happened and nothing could be done." (CBC)

"Full of life, that little boy. He was at our house every weekend with his older uncle Dryden and we had many great moments together, camping trips, PNE, Coliseum. He was like another son. The house is going to be empty for awhile."

Larabie is a student at nearby Abbotsford Middle School.

The driver of the 2009 Mazda 3, who was identified as an off-duty Abbotsford police officer, remained at the scene.  

The IIO was then called in to investigate.

Kilpatrick said the accident site is a very busy area near a mall and a bus loop. She said investigators heard reports the teen may have been on a skateboard, but weren't able to confirm the reports. 

"We certainly have received that information as well, so it's critically important to the young person's family, to the police officers, to the community, that we get accurate, reliable, independent information," she said.

"Whether the young person was, or was not, on a skateboard is certainly something we are going to be pursuing.

Marcus Larabie memorial

Teens offer their condolences near a tree that has turned into a makeshift memorial for Marcus Larabie, 14. (Farah Merali/CBC)

"We understand there may be video surveillance in the area where the buses are. So there will be several investigators, likely our team director and our traffic re-constructionist, out trying to obtain all information that is available to us."

Kilpatrick said investigators believe there were other witnesses to the accident. Anyone with information is asked to contact the IIO infoline at 1-855-446-8477.


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Toronto building gutted by fire to be deconstructed for fire investigation

Parts of the building that was gutted by a Christmas Day fire that destroyed two posh Toronto restaurants are expected to be deconstructed Sunday morning for investigation.

Heavy equipment arrived at the Avenue Road building in the Yorkville neighbourhood on Saturday. Parts of the building, home to Spuntini Ristorante & Bar and Sotto Sotto, are expected to be taken apart to allow the investigators to examine the site.

However, an investigator with the Office of the Ontario Fire Marshal clarified that the building is not in the stage of being demolished. 

"It's a systematic de-layering of the scene to make it safe for us to conduct the investigation," Peter Hamilton, an investigator with the office, told reporters on Saturday. 

Hamilton also said that it's not yet known if the blaze should be considered suspicious, downplaying an earlier remark by Toronto fire officials. 

The owners of both of the restaurants have said they hope to rebuild. 


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RCMP warn of crackdown on execs who bribe to win foreign business

The RCMP says it is more aggressively pursuing Canadian companies that pay bribes to win lucrative contracts overseas and, in future, more cases will lead to real jail time for individuals rather than just fines for companies.

Ottawa businessman Nazir Karigar was sentenced to three years in prison last May for arranging bribes to public officials in India, in a bid to win a $100-million security contract from Air India.

He was the first Canadian to go to prison for bribery overseas but the next one could be going away for a lot longer, says Sgt. Patrick Poitevin of the RCMP's sensitive and international investigations unit.

Karigar was charged under an older version of Canada's Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act, which prescribed a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

'We are investigating not just the companies, but the individuals that paid the bribe.'- Sgt. Patrick Poitevin, RCMP 

"With the amendments that were enacted last year, it's up to 14 years, which is the second-highest level of sentencing in the Criminal Code," said Poitevin.

He adds it's now also possible to charge individuals for merely agreeing to a bribe, even if no actual money changes hands.

The staggering cost of corruption

The United Nations estimates that more than $1 trillion is paid in bribes each year. The cost of that corruption to the world's economy is a massive $2.6 trillion, most of it lost to poor countries that can least afford it.

Corruption allows shoddy and overpriced infrastructure projects to drive out well-built, cost-effective ones. It also undermines the rule of law and people's faith in democratic government. The true cost of corruption in the developing world can be measured in schools and hospitals that are never built, jobs that are never created, and resources that are pilfered and spirited away to foreign bank accounts.

Many experts say the global toll of corruption, in both lives and money, exceeds that of terrorism. Even in countries such as Nigeria, where a brutal jihadist insurgency has killed thousands in the past year, corruption consistently leads security in public surveys as the most serious problem facing the country

Canada lags behind

While the Canadian government has said it is redoubling its efforts to crack down on foreign corruption and bribery, Canada has historically done a poor job of preventing its companies from using bribes as a tool to drum up business around the world — even though Canadian companies are big players in some of the industries where bribery is most common such as mining.

Canada has successfully prosecuted only three major overseas corruption cases.

The U.S., by contrast, has convicted more than 50 individuals since 2009 for paying bribes overseas under its Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. More than 50 U.S. companies have also been punished in the past five years, paying fines and forfeitures of about $3 billion.

The U.S. Justice Department also runs a Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative (KARI), which has returned multi-million dollar sums to the countries where the bribes were paid. In chronically corrupt countries where any money returned might simply be stolen again, the U.S. has co-operated with NGOs. In one case, it returned $115 million of bribery-tainted U.S. corporate profits to Kazakhstan, but not to the Kazakh government. Instead, the money was used by an independent charity to help Kazakh children.

This year, the anti-corruption charity Transparency International upgraded Canada from its lowest rating, "little or no enforcement," to "medium."

"It's a recognition of the prosecutions that have been accomplished," says TI Canada's Peter Dent, a Toronto accountant. "But it doesn't rise yet to the level of active enforcement you see in the U.S."

Making individuals pay

Stung by criticism from organizations such as Transparency International, the RCMP is trying to make up for past inaction. Three years ago, it scored its first major success when Calgary-based Niko Resources pleaded guilty and paid a $9.5-million fine.

Niko Resources had caused an explosion while drilling for gas in a Bangladeshi village. The blast destroyed the local school and caused significant damage to the village, according to an agreed statement of facts.

The company pleaded guilty to presenting a new SUV and other benefits to the Bangladeshi minister in charge of investigating the explosion and determining compensation.

Last year, Griffith Resources paid a $10.35-million dollar fine for bribing the wife of a government official to secure a mining concession in Chad.

But no individual paid for those crimes. In fact Edward Sampson, the CEO of Niko Resources, made $4.8 million in pay and stock options the year his company was convicted.

Sgt. Poitevin at the RCMP's anti-corruption unit said that is now changing and the results can be seen in three pending cases involving bribes paid to win the Air India contract — all charges against individuals.

There are also charges expected from the investigations into SNC-Lavalin.

Transparency International's Peter Dent welcomes the prosecutions, but hopes to see more. "So far there just haven't been enough cases to make an effective deterrent."


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Canada's mining sector braces for another challenging year

Canada's mining sector is bracing for another challenging year in 2015 as slower growth in China is expected to continue to dampen selling prices for many metals.

Iron ore suffered the biggest drop in the past year, losing nearly half its value to reach the lowest price in more than five years. Some expect the price could fall further — perhaps to US$60 per tonne — on increased supply from Australia and Brazil by giants like Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton, outpaces demand.

Coal, silver, potash, copper and lead prices also weakened in the past year.

Not all metals and minerals suffered. Nickel was the big winner, with prices rising 17 per cent following Indonesia's ban on exports. Other gainers were uranium, aluminum, zinc and diamonds.

Although mining is in a multi-year global slump, prices are significantly higher than they were a decade ago, said Pierre Gratton, president of the Mining Association of Canada.

"It's a cyclical industry and we have to weather this," he said in an interview.

Next upswing could be significant

Gratton said mining companies are very focused on reducing costs and will benefit from both the weakened Canadian dollar and dramatically lower energy prices.

Mining sector

Although mining is in a multi-year global slump, prices are significantly higher than they were a decade ago, according to Pierre Gratton, president of the Mining Association of Canada.

"They've seen this a million times. They will weather this and prepare for the next upswing and when (it) comes I think the general view is it is going to be pretty significant."

China consumes almost half of the world's base metals. Even though its pace of growth has slipped, one of the world's largest economy and other emerging countries, such as India, will need more metal to make consumer goods and build housing to accommodate a growing middle class, and the shift in population to urban from rural.

Just increasing the rate of car ownership will propel demand for iron, aluminum and other metals.

In the meantime, industry observers say mining companies are cautious about new investments until they get a better sense of when conditions will improve.

"We are seeing people looking further out and more optimistic in the 2016-2017 time frame," said Jackie Przybylowski of Desjardins Capital Markets. "People are positioning themselves now, to take advantage of those longer term positive markets and just sort of hanging in there until then."

BMO Capital Markets forecasts its commodities price index for metals and minerals will decrease nine per cent this year to its lowest level since 2009, but then increase about four per cent in 2015.

The bank expects precious metal prices will face further downward pressure from the rising U.S. dollar. Copper should decrease further but industrial metals like aluminum and zinc which rallied in 2014 should "consolidate" those gains in 2015.

Gold price expected to remain stable

Gold remains the top metal export in Canada even though its price has slipped from a 2011 peak of $1,921 US to about $1,270 US today, down about 10 per cent in the past year. Analysts expect the price will remain relatively stable over the next two years.

Copper prices have been falling, but global supply will slip after Zambia's tax change to increase royalties prompted Barrick Gold Corp. (TSX:ABX) to halt operations at its Lumwana copper and gold mine. Other global miners have cancelled projects in Africa's second-largest copper producing country.

Meanwhile, the outlook for diamonds sparkles, prompting new investments in the Northwest Territories and Quebec.

Rio Tinto, which holds a 60 per cent stake in Diavik near Yellowknife, says it will spend US$350 million over four years to develop the mine, with production from the expansion expected to start in late 2018.

Quebec's 1st diamond mine

Stornoway Diamond Corp. (TSX:SWY) plans to develop Quebec's first diamond mine, a $1-billion project that will see production begin in 2017.

Royal Nickel (TSX:RNX) is also working on its Dumont nickel project, in northwestern Quebec, that it says will become one of Canada's largest base metal mines.

"When the mining cycle turns — and it will turn — we have one of the few projects that can deliver a substantial amount of value to the market over the next few decades," said CEO Mark Selby.

Not all areas of the country are doing so well. Quebec's iron ore producing Labrador Trough, in the far north, is struggling as low prices have forced Cliffs Natural Resources to close its Bloom Lake mine and several exploration companies to slow their development plans.

ArcelorMittal, which invested $1.6 billion to increase its annual concentrate production capacity to 24 million tonnes, said lower prices is forcing "a structural change" for the iron ore industry to lower costs to offset the possibility of further drops.

Iron ore project struggling with costs

The Labrador Trough also faces higher transportation costs to Asia, along with higher labour and energy costs than Australia's iron region and Brazil.

"This context has forced us to accelerate our strategy and attain our real potential a lot quicker than predicted," said Pierre Lapointe, vice-president at ArcelorMittal Mining Canada.

He said one way to "ease our pain" is to extend liquefied natural gas north, a move that would cut costs by two to five per cent.

Quebec Energy and Natural Resources Minister Pierre Arcand said that's one of the priorities of the government as it relaunches Plan Nord, a multibillion-dollar northern development plan that was initially introduced in 2011.

He said the province is also keen to support the construction of multi-user railway and port infrastructure, and is working with the Ontario government to extend electricity to distant communities.

"(We) cannot wait until there is a mining boom and everything becomes uncontrollable," he said of the need for development.

Copper, nickel mines surviving

Other regions of Canada face differing prospects.

British Columbia's coal regions have suffered from lower prices, but areas of the province with copper are surviving. So too has the copper and nickel producing Ontario cities of Sudbury and Timmins.

Saskatchewan has faced a tougher year because of weaker potash prices, but could do better if Japan's nuclear plants come back on stream to support higher uranium prices.

Ontario's Ring of Fire remains largely just a great mining potential until the required transportation infrastructure for the mineral development in northwestern Ontario is built. Ontario wants the federal government to match its $1-billion commitment to build transportation infrastructure for the mineral-rich region.

The remote region to the west of James Bay holds one of the world's richest chromite deposits, discovered in 2007, along with nickel, copper and platinum — deposits worth an estimated $60 billion.

However the region lacks both an electrical grid and a transportation corridor and faces daunting public infrastructure costs estimated well in excess of $1 billion.

Cliffs Natural Resources Inc. (NYSE:CLF) withdrew last year and just last month the American company's new CEO told the Financial Post he has "zero hope" the deposit will be developed in the next 50 years.


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Wait is over for CBC News app Android users

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 Desember 2014 | 22.41

CBC News Android app

CBC News has launched a new app for Android users which will feature breaking news 'push' alerts, more local news, weather and video.

CBC News has launched a new app for Android users, building on the success of its iOS 8 app launch in the fall.

The CBC News app for Android has been completely rebuilt so users get more local news, video and weather, plus faster access to breaking news. The app features a customizable menu, breaking news 'push' alerts, more photos and video, including The National and local newscasts.

The app is optimized for the Nexus 5, 6 and Nexus 9 tablet and other devices running Android 5.0 Lollipop. Many of the new features are based on feedback and recommendations from the Android community, including a core group of users who got a chance to try new features before they were released to the store.

More than half of CBC News's daily digital audience is on a mobile device. In June, CBC president and CEO Hubert T. Lacroix announced the broadcaster would shift its priorities from television and radio to digital and mobile services as part of its new strategy A space for us all. 

In the fall, as part of that strategy, CBC News launched a redesigned app to coincide with Apple's release of iOS 8 and the new iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.

Jennifer McGuire, general manager and editor in chief of CBC News and centres, said the new Android and iOS apps are designed to give Canadians better access to the CBC journalism happening in their local communities throughout the day.

"At the centre of our strategy is a move from one screen to many screens, increasing the local touchpoints we have with Canadians in each of their communities, and offering a comprehensive local news and information service across the day on all platforms, leading with mobile," she said.  


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Strong winds give 35,000 Quebecers a dark Christmas morning

Weather conditions are making Christmas morning a little more difficult than most Quebecers would like.

High winds knocked out power for nearly 35,000 Hydro-Québec clients Thursday, particularly in the Lanaudière region, the Laurentians, Montreal, Laval, and to a lesser extent in the Montérégie and Outaouais regions.

By 10 a.m. ET, the number of clients without electricity had dropped from 35,000 to just under 20,000. 

Hydro-Québec said it hopes to restore electricity to everyone by late morning.

Many people living in the eastern part of the province and in the Atlantic provinces are having an icy Christmas due to rain, freezing rain and winds gusting up to 90 kilometres an hour in some areas.

Marc-Antoine Pouliot, spokesman for the hydroelectric utility, said the wind in some parts of the province is so violent that it is affecting the pace at which crews can work.

He said he couldn't guarantee a specific time for the power to come back on.

"We are aware it's an important day for Quebecers," Pouliot said.

Motorists should take extra precautions on the road. There is a heightened risk of hydroplaning in some parts of Quebec. In other parts of the province, the roads could be icy.

Up to 60 millimetres of rain could fall on Atlantic Canada, northeast Quebec, Quebec City and the Mauricie region.

Environment Canada is also calling for freezing rain in the Gaspésie, on Quebec's North Shore and in some parts of New Brunswick.

Several rivers in Quebec are also being closely monitored for possible flooding: Yamaska River in Brigham, St-François River in Weedon and Ste-Anne River in St-Raymond de Portneuf.

Check Environment Canada's website for a region-by-region breakdown of current weather warnings.


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Christmas baby delivered by Montreal police officers

A pair of Montreal police officers helped a baby enter the world a little earlier than expected on Christmas morning.

Just before 3 a.m. ET, a man frantically flagged down a patrol car in the city's north end and asked for help as his wife began to give birth in their car. 

The officers helped the woman deliver her baby in the car near the corner of St-Laurent and Gouin boulevards in the Ahuntsic neighbourhood.

The 32-week-old boy was safely delivered and put into an ambulance with the mother.

A police escort brought the family to Sacré-Coeur Hospital.

Their four-year-old son was also in the car during the delivery.

Later in the morning. Const. Jean-Pierre Brabant brought stuffed bears for the boy and his newborn brother.

He said it is not common for police officers to have to deliver babies, but the officers on Christmas morning were more than happy to do so. 

Both mother and baby are reportedly doing well.


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Just how holly jolly is Christmas?

A statistical look at lights! Santas! Eggnog!

CBC News Posted: Dec 12, 2014 10:15 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 12, 2014 1:21 PM ET

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How many Canadian children sent wish lists to Santa? Who holds the record for the biggest Christmas lights show? And how many litres of eggnog will we chug at holiday parties this year? Find out the answers in our by-the-numbers look at the holiday season.

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PM's holiday message asks Canadians to pray for military personnel fighting ISIS

New

Holiday message focuses on Canada's role overseas

The Canadian Press Posted: Dec 25, 2014 8:49 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 25, 2014 10:32 AM ET

Prime Minister Stephen Harper is asking Canadians to pray for the country's military personnel as they battle ISIS extremists in Northern Iraq.

Harper also called Thursday for support of the Canadian Forces as part of his annual holiday address.

Canada has six CF-18 fighter jets in the Middle East as part of an international effort to help Iraq fight an insurgency by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria militants.

Until this week, it also had fighter jets in the Baltics in response to Russia's incursions in Ukraine.

Harper also spoke of the economy, saying more Canadians have more opportunities and better jobs than at any time in the country's history.

But a big focus of his message was on Canada's role overseas.

Harper says Canadians are doing what they are known for — standing up for what is right, defending freedom and protecting the vulnerable.

The prime minister also urged Canadians to give to the less fortunate.
 

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Luka Magnotta found guilty of 1st-degree murder in Concordia student's death

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 24 Desember 2014 | 22.41

Luka Magnotta has received an automatic life sentence for first-degree murder, with no possibility of parole for 25 years. He was sentenced to another 19 years for the four other charges he was convicted on. 

Quebec Superior Court Justice Guy Cournoyer gave Magnotta the maximum sentence on the four lesser charges, to be served concurrently with the first-degree murder sentence. 

Magnotta closed his eyes and showed no emotion after the jury foreman read the highly anticipated verdict in a Montreal courtroom, announcing that the eight women and four men deciding his fate had found him guilty on all charges. 

On their eighth day of deliberations on Tuesday, the 12-person jury returned a verdict in the killing and dismemberment of Chinese engineering student Jun Lin in 2012.

It marked the end of a lengthy and unusual trial that focused primarily on Magnotta's mental state at the time of the crimes.

On mobile? See the live blog here

Magnotta, 32, a former Ontario resident, pleaded not guilty to the five charges, arguing he suffers from a mental illness, but he admitted to the physical acts of killing and dismembering Lin, and sending his body parts with menacing notes to political parties and schools.

The jury sat through 10 weeks of often graphic testimony. Lin, 33, a Chinese national, was studying at Montreal's Concordia University when he met Magnotta. According to what the accused told psychiatrists hired by the defence to assess him, Lin responded to an ad Magnotta posted on Craigslist looking for kinky sex.

'I will never see his smiling face on video chat or hear about his new accomplishments or hear his laugh.'- Diran Lin's victim impact statement about son Jun Lin 

Cournoyer thanked jurors for their patience and hard work. 

"Sir Winston Churchill would be proud," Cournoyer told them before they were dismissed. 

Aside from the possibility of finding Magnotta not criminally responsible, the jury had been given several choices for a verdict:

  • First-degree murder, if they found the act was planned and deliberate.
  • Second-degree murder, if they believed intent was there without planning.
  • Manslaughter.

Lin's father, Diran Lin, was in the courtroom as the verdict was read. The family's lawyer, Daniel Urbas, placed a reassuring hand on his leg as the jury prepared to announce its decision. 

Lin's mother, who came to Montreal for a portion of the preliminary hearing, remained in China during the trial. 

Through a translator, Lin's father delivered a heartbreaking victim impact statement, telling the court that it hurts him still to know that his last words to Jun Lin were "be careful son."

CRIME Magnotta 20141221

Diran Lin, centre, father of Jun Lin, leaves the Montreal courthouse alongside his lawyer Daniel Urbas and a translator on Tuesday. Lin's family presented a heartbreaking victim impact statement at the end of the Luka Magnotta murder trial. (Graham Hughes/CP)

"I feel bad that I was not there to warn him that night," the statement read. 

"I will never see his smiling face on video chat or hear about his new accomplishments or hear his laugh. Lin Jun's birthday is on Dec. 30 and he will never be there for his birthday or ours."

No decision on appeal yet

Luc Leclair, Magnotta's lawyer, said he would take time to reflect before deciding whether to launch an appeal.

"Today is not the time to be discussing that," he told reporters after sentencing.

Leclair said the verdict didn't "change his mind one way or another." 

He said Magnotta suffers, "as the experts have said, from schizophrenia and personality disorder. When you first see him, it's the histrionic personality that comes forward. However, with a bit of time it's the schizophrenia that surfaces."

Leclair said the case should serve as a warning about the importance of well-funded mental health programs.

"Many of us know someone, a family member, a friend, a co-worker, who has struggled with mental illness," he said. 

"Such illness, if untreated, can lead to tragic results as we have seen today. [Prime Minister Stephen] Harper advocates for more and bigger jails, I advocate for more money for mental health. There's a lot of efforts which are being put in that direction, we need more money."

Crown says defence was difficult to mount

Despite waiting more than a week for the decision, Crown prosecutor Louis Bouthillier said he "wasn't nervous" and had expected a lengthy deliberation.

"We had faith that the proof presented during the trial would be successful in convincing the jury," Bouthillier said outside the courtroom.

He said the jurors did an outstanding job.

"Individually, the 12 jurors, they were really magnificent," he said.

Bouthillier said Magnotta's defence was a difficult argument to mount, particularly because the defendant didn't testify and his lawyer bore the burden of proving his client was not criminally responsible through the testimony of experts.

Luka Magnotta Crown prosecutor Louis Bouthillier

Crown prosecutor Louis Bouthillier said it would have been difficult for the jury to return a verdict of not criminally responsible because the accused did not testify in his own defence. (CBC)

Graphic video part of evidence

Lin's body parts were found in a suitcase outside Magnotta's apartment, in packages sent to the headquarters of political parties and two Vancouver schools, and in a Montreal park.

After an international manhunt, Magnotta was arrested in June 2012 at an internet café in Berlin. A German police officer testified Magnotta was looking at an Interpol photo of himself prior to his arrest.

By the time his trial started more than two years later, Magnotta was barely recognizable. The once well-groomed, thin young man who flaunted his looks for modelling photos and a reality show audition had gained a significant amount of weight in custody.

On the day the trial opened, it took an unusual turn. Magnotta admitted to the acts detailed in the five charges, but pleaded not guilty.

During the 10 weeks of testimony, the jury saw a graphic video, which had been posted online, depicting parts of the crime, as well as additional footage found on Magnotta's computer.

The jury also saw surveillance video of Lin walking into Magnotta's apartment building the night he was killed and, in the hours that followed, plenty of images of Magnotta cleaning up and running errands, occasionally while wearing his victim's clothes.

His lawyer spent the duration of the trial trying to convince the jury that his client was in a psychotic state when he killed Lin, unable to tell right from wrong, and therefore not criminally responsible.

Magnotta presented as obsessed

The defence called Magnotta's father, a diagnosed paranoid schizophrenic, as its first witness. It also relied heavily on psychiatric reports and medical records to convince the jury Magnotta has suffered from schizophrenia since his late teens.

The Crown focused its case on surveillance footage and witness testimony that Bouthillier said proved Magnotta had planned the killing, and his well-organized escape from law enforcement, months in advance.

Bouthillier presented the jury with an email Magnotta sent to a British journalist in which he described the pleasures of killing and the need to continue – with a plan to produce a video depicting the death of a person. Six months later, Lin was dead and the graphic video was posted online.

The prosecution also painted Magnotta as an attention obsessed, needy man, who drew on elements from the 1990s erotic thriller Basic Instinct in committing the crime.


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Top 2014 weather story goes to Canada's long, cold winter

Environment Canada has released its list of top weather stories over the past year, and the long winter chill took top spot.

"Stick a thermometer into Canada and it read a measly 0.1 C above normal — the coldest year since 1996 and certainly out of step with the planet, which was on target to being the hottest year since modern records began in 1880," Environment Canada says.

The Great Lakes attained 92 per cent ice coverage for the first time in 35 years, sea ice was back on the East Coast and ice in the Gulf of St. Lawrence was its thickest in 25 years.

But as many Canadians know, the weather had many others ups and downs.

Here is Environment Canada's list ranked from 1 to 10 based on factors that include their impact on Canadians, the extent of the area affected, economic effects and longevity as a top news story.

1. Baby it was cold outside

"Canada's reputation as the second coldest country next to Russia was reaffirmed in winter 2013-14," said the national weather agency on its website.

Snowfall records were set in Windsor, Ont., Kenora, Ont., Calgary, Red Deer and a handful of other cities. It was also the winter of the dreaded "polar vortex," or a circulation of frigid, dense Arctic air that moved much farther south than normal.

hi-ottawa-cold-weather-jan

It was cold, really cold, at the start of 2014. Many areas also broke records for snowfall. (Associated Press)

2. Rain, rain go away: Flooding in eastern Prairies

Flooding has been the big story across the Prairies for the last several years.

"This time, water problems prevailed across the eastern Prairies just a week before summer began," said Environment Canada. "Excessive rains on soggy ground — too much rain too fast over too many days — led to huge flooding and another billion-dollar disaster."

The rain came from prolonged moisture-laden storms that moved up from the northern United States and stalled near the Saskatchewan-Manitoba border. Environment Canada says the relentless rains turned into "biblical-sized deluges" over three days.

Brandon flooded roads

The Manitoba government declared a provincial state of emergency in order to bring in the military to help build sandbags to protect homes from flooding. (John Woods/Canadian Press)

3. All wild-fired up in West, Northwest

While the number of wildfires were down a little from Canada's 20-year average, Environment Canada says it was still a huge year.

"So even with parts of Canada being, at times, soaked by heavy rains or underwater from floods, the Northwest Territories and British Columbia made up for it all with exceptional warmth and dryness that brought sparks to infernos in no time flat."

The national weather agency says an overheated wildfire season scorched the third-biggest loss of timber in British Columbia since authorities began recording wildfire statistics more than 60 years ago. In N.W.T., many of the fires were the result of a stalled ridge of drying air anchored over the Mackenzie River valley for weeks. 

Chelaslie River fire

The largest fire of the year occurred near the Chelaslie River near Burns Lake, B.C., consuming 1,330 square kilometres. (© WMB 2014)

4. The East's nightmare before, during and after Christmas

A winter storm coated parts of Eastern Canada with a thick cocktail of snow, ice pellets, rain and freezing rain the weekend before Christmas in 2013.

"A thick glaze left roads and sidewalks slick and dangerous; it also knocked down hydro lines, leaving over 500,000 people without power. In addition to wreaking havoc in Canada's largest city [Toronto], it crippled North American transportation at one of the busiest travel times of the year."

Restoration of full utilities and property cleanup continued well into 2014. 

WEA Eastern Canada Storm 20131222

Tree branches in Toronto are coated in ice as people make their way through wintry conditions after parts of Central and Eastern Canada was hit by a major ice storm on Sunday, Dec. 22, 2013. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

5. Feeling summer heat on the coasts, cool in the centre

After enduring one of the harshest winters in recent memory, Environment Canada says it was also the sixth warmest summer since nationwide record-keeping began in 1948.

"Much of Canada registered warmer-than-normal temperatures, with five regions (including Atlantic Canada, northern Prairies, B.C. Southern Interior, western N.W.T., and Pacific Coast) experiencing their top 10 warmest on record. The exception was southern portions of Ontario and Quebec where, ironically, a large percentage of Canadians live."

In July, Calgary had the third warmest month in 72 years.

Heat Warning

The world's land and ocean surfaces averaged 16.35 C in August 2014, breaking the previous record set in 1998, reported the U.S. National Climatic Data Center run by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). (iStock)

6. Arthur, Gonzalo pace harried hurricane season

Eight "named" storms forming in the Atlantic basin this year, and out of those, two hurricanes really stood out.

"The season's first hurricane, Arthur, came relatively early for a significant hurricane, while Gonzalo, the last hurricane, marked an early end to the season. Both storms were the most punishing ones of the season in Atlantic Canada."

The season also featured other tropical storms, like Bertha.

power out

Extreme damage like this in Baxters Harbour, N.S., left people without power during Hurricane Arthur. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

7. Airdrie to Calgary hailer

Southern Alberta got pelted with hail during a series of severe thunderstorms that rolled through the province in August.

"The storms also produced strong winds, including a brief but intense low-level rotating outflow [a.k.a gustnado] northeast of Calgary that packed winds of 110 to 140 km/h. The weather was unusual on two fronts — it featured tennis- to baseball-sized hail driven by strong winds and a storm that's swirling path meant some properties were hit three times in the course of an hour."

Airdrie, a community just north of Calgary, was hit hardest with six people injured badly enough by the hail to require hospitalization and almost every household reporting damage. Insurance costs reached up into the millions.

Airdrie hail

Hail in Airdrie, north of Calgary, caused lots of dents in cars and cracks in siding. (Submitted by Patrick Jessup)

8. December storms on West, East Coasts

Millions of Canadians from the West Coast, Central Canada and the Maritimes were bombarded by intense pre-winter storms during the second week of December.

Environment Canada says three storms from tropical origins hammered Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia's central and south coasts. On the East Coast, it was one powerful storm that produced widespread damages for residents in six provinces.

"The Cape Cod storm was so far reaching that its last fling at North America was felt in western Quebec and southern and eastern Ontario."

Courtenay flooding

The Puntledge River overflowed its banks and flooded campsites at the Puntledge RV Campground and Nim Nim Interpretive Centre in Courtenay, B.C., during subtropical storms in December. (Gary Graves, CBC News)

9. Angus tornado anger

Ontario saw 19 confirmed tornadoes in 2014 — one of them hit the community Angus, 18 kilometres southwest of Barrie, on June 17.

"The storm was an offshoot of a potent weather system that had triggered rare double tornadoes and levelled a town in Nebraska the previous day," said Environment Canada.

The fast-moving storm raced across southern Ontario but tore into Angus, causing carnage in some neighbourhoods. The debris field stretched nearly a kilometre, with some houses missing roofs, walls and even top floors.

Angus Tornado 20140618

Investigators assess the damage to homes and property, a day after a tornado touched down in Angus, Ont. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

10. 'Snowtember' in Calgary

Thousands of Calgary homes and businesses were left without power after a freak September snowstorm blanketed the city. Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi even asked Calgarians to help save snow-laden trees, many of which still had leaves, by knocking the snow off the branches.

"The storm's snowfall was the highest September deposit before the autumn equinox in the last 130 years," said Environment Canada.

The heavy snow caused major damage to the city's power lines and trees, and took months to clean up. 

snow on trees

Emergency crews were kept busy dealing with snow-laden tree branches that fell on power lines all around Calgary after snow hit the city in early September. (CBC)


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Goose and plum pudding: How German prisoners of war marked a WW I Christmas in Canada

When Christmas came for the German merchant marine sailors interned at Fort Henry in 1915, the prisoners of war were given a festive meal.

Of course there were those living outside the fort's grey walls in Kingston, Ont., who didn't think such a celebration was right in those tense First World War times.

Internees at Toronto exhibition grounds

Prisoners scheduled to be relocated to longer-term internment facilities wait at a receiving station at Stanley Barrack, on the grounds of the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto. (City of Toronto Archives/Canadian War Museum)

"There were goose, plum pudding and a whole lot of things that citizens generally thought were much too good for German prisoners," the local newspaper, the Daily British Whig, noted, adding, "They pay for it themselves, however, and so have to suffer from the expense and not, as was thought by some, feast at the expense of the Canadian people."

One hundred years later, much attention has focused on the beginnings and lessons of the First World War, with stories of young soldiers leaving Canada and finding heroism and horror on the battlefields of Europe.

At home, however, a lesser-known war story unfolded, a story that is gaining more attention of late and may even have lessons for the unsettled world of today — how do you treat "enemy aliens" captured on the battlefield or simply caught up in the hysteria of the times.

From 1914 until 1920, 8,579 people were arrested and interned in Canada under the auspices of the War Measures Act. They held citizenship from countries legally at war with Canada.

The internees, who were considered a threat to national security, were held in 24 camps across the country. Many of them were Ukrainian, some were German, Bulgarian or Turkish. Eighty-one children were with them. So were some families.

'Overshadowed'

The experiences of those who were interned in WWI have been "overshadowed to some degree by events of the Second World War," says John Maker, a historian at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, which has a special exhibition on enemy aliens on display until March.

"The people who went through the First World War internment experience were not keen to talk about it for very long, and in fact they themselves didn't really bring it up," says Maker.

Vernon internment camp

Prisoners and their families watch a motion picture in the Vernon camp's recreation building. (Library and Archives Canada/Canadian War Museum)

"It was to the following generations, their kids, that really started the process of commemoration and remembrance."

A Parks Canada pavilion focusing on internment camps opened in Banff last year, with Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney saying the camps had been covered up for decades and it was time to put things right.

Earlier this year, 100 plaques were unveiled to mark 100 years since the War Measures Act was enacted. Much of the public commemoration has focused on the experience of some 4,000 Ukrainian-Canadians, a group that felt it shouldn't have been interned in the first place.

Father Taras Makowsky, a Ukrainian Orthodox priest who was part of unveiling ceremonies in Saskatoon, said that current struggles overseas show the importance of remembering the mistakes of the past.

"We can't go back to those hateful times," he said. "We have to learn to respect and love everybody for who they are."

Official PoWs

Of the internees, however, about 2,500 men were members of enemy armed forces — merchant marine or other naval crews, for example — and were considered official prisoners of war.

"A lot of those ended up at Fort Henry," says Maker, noting the greater number of inmates at Fort Henry were German.

Edward William Skinner

Edward William Skinner was a lieutenant in the reserves and was seconded to guard internees held at Fort Henry in Kingston, Ont., during the First World War. (Submitted by Charles Shamess)

Among those keeping watch over those prisoners was Edward William Skinner, grandfather to Charles Shamess, a Toronto man whose interest in the internment experience was triggered by papers handed down in his family.

In those papers was a postcard dated Jan. 2, 1917, and addressed to his grandfather, who was about to go into service with Canadian soldiers overseas. Signed by two German prisoners who had been interned after arriving in Montreal in August 1914, it said: "With best wishes to you and your family, my dear Skinner, for a bright New Year and every luck in its course."

"What struck me most of all was here are these German prisoners in Fort Henry wishing my grandfather, who clearly had befriended them ... all the best of luck in its course as he's getting ready to go over and fight their compatriots," says Shamess, "and I thought, what must that have felt like, for them and for him." 

Intrigued by it all, Shamess explored newspaper accounts of the day.

"I read about the number of escape attempts and several that were successful and again was struck by this urge of these men to escape first of all from imprisonment, which makes sense to me, but then to try to get across the continent, across the ocean to go and fight against the people that have interned [them] …."

Shamess was also struck by evidence of how even in difficult circumstances, people can find bits of happiness.

Athletics and education

"They had regular [theatre] performances. They had athletics. They had tennis matches. They had calisthenics, put on these circuses, had education classes," he says, noting in particular a photo showing two prisoners dressed up as clowns.

"Throughout it all, they found ways to entertain themselves, to keep busy, if you will."

Internee performances

Internees at Fort Henry during the First World War put on plays and performances, often dressing in character. (Submitted by Charles Shamess)

Not every internee had that experience. There were disease and death in the 24 camps — records show tuberculosis and pneumonia accounting for almost half of the 107 deaths occurring in a nearly six-year period. Three suicides were recorded. Six escape attempts ended with death by gunshot.

An internee's experience was determined in large part by the kind of internment camp in which he was held, Maker says.

Some camps, such as Fort Henry, which held primarily German prisoners who were considered a greater threat to national security, were in urban settings: places where they could be more closely guarded. 

Other camps, which held internees of other citizenship who were considered a lesser threat, were in the frontier hinterlands. Several were on the border between British Columbia and Alberta. Internees there typically did manual labour, says Maker, clearing forests, building roads and so on.

But at the camps holding Germans, such as Fort Henry, "they were compelled to do work only for their upkeep and their own health so they were largely left to their own devices," says Maker.

"They would do handicrafts, they would cook food, they would engage in physical exercise, that sort of thing."

Taking notice of holidays

And they marked holidays, too.

"There is evidence that Christmas and the holidays were celebrated in various camps," Maker says, noting a time when three Austrian Jews were furloughed from Fort Henry to take part in religious celebrations around the New Year.

Shamess says he senses his grandfather understood the irony of the best wishes he received from the German prisoners "as he prepared to leave for the horrors of France and Belgium," where he was gassed twice.

"At Christmas, he got to be at home with his wife and two young daughters while the prisoners he befriended, many of whom were husbands and fathers, were locked in a dank old fort simply because they were on a boat that landed at the wrong time in the wrong place," says Shamess.

Shamess also sees the internment experience offering modern-day lessons about how complicated war is and how prisoners held anywhere are treated.

In the end, Shamess says he is "heartbroken and amazed" at what internees and those holding them went through, "and that they, if they survived it … managed to carry on with their lives after some of the most horrible conditions both for the prisoners and for the soldiers imaginable."


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