Feds to announce payout of $800M to Indigenous victims of '60s Scoop
The Canadian Press has learned that the federal government has agreed to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to Indigenous survivors of the '60s Scoop.
The Canadian Press has learned that the federal government has agreed to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to Indigenous survivors of the '60s Scoop.
A man and a woman are dead and the special investigations unit has been called in after a car collided head-on with a transport truck near Hamilton, Ont., in a situation that involved police.
An 11-year-old boy from B.C. experienced quite a thrill when the picture he was posing for was photobombed by a large, humpback whale on the west coast of Vancouver Island.
The federal government's underestimation of the complexity of overhauling the public servants pay system led to the failure of the Phoenix rollout, according to the findings of an independent auditor's report.
The federal government's underestimation of the complexity of overhauling the public servants pay system led to the failure of the Phoenix rollout, and the government has still not learned its lesson, according to the findings of an independent auditor's report.
The federal government is promising to improve the services and support available to military personnel and veterans in hopes of cutting down the number of suicides among those who have served in uniform.
A U.S. mother’s tweets have gone viral after she shared photos of a seemingly kid-friendly picture book her son received from his grandma, in which she found a variety of colourful illustrations of animal saying a variety of colourful and inappropriate phrases.
For the first time in almost a decade, Canada has a new science adviser. And she’s looking forward to helping Canadians better understand the crucial work of our country’s scientists.
The U.S. Department of Commerce says it is delaying its announcement on preliminary anti-dumping duties against Bombardier Inc. until Friday. The company is expected to face additional export duties on its CSeries commercial jet.
A Conservative MP is looking to get answers after the plaque Prime Minister Justin Trudeau inaugurated at Canada’s new monument to the Holocaust did not mention Jewish people.
Tax experts say Finance Bill Morneau's plan to adjust his controversial tax proposals is easier said than done.
Toronto police are looking for three suspects involved in the brutal beating of a father and son at an illegal gambling house, where the father was struck in the head by a machete in an attack caught on camera.
French investigators say they have located parts from the engine that were lost by an Air France plane during a flight to Los Angeles from Paris last week.
The family of a 38-year-old man who texted his wife to say he’d be home, then never turned up, is begging the public for help to locate him.
A legally blind Winnipeg boy is seeing things in detail for the first time, thanks to high-tech glasses that are bringing the bubbly seven-year-old's world into focus.
A relaxing lakefront cottage has become a powerful source of stress for an Ottawa woman who Hydro-Quebec is charging $5,300 to cover what it says are years of undercharging for electricity usage.
After 24 hours on the run, two women who escaped from an Edmonton prison were caught testing their skills again at an escape room.
Australian and U.S. scientists say they have created a highly-elastic surgical glue that can quickly seal even the toughest wounds, without staples or stitches.
TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) has cancelled its $15.7-billion proposed Energy East pipeline, cutting off a potential conduit to bring more western Canadian oil to eastern refineries and overseas export markets.
TransCanada says it's cancelling plans for the Energy East pipeline and Eastern Mainline projects.
An emotional Amanda Lindhout recounted the horrors of being kidnapped at gunpoint in Somalia as the trial of one of her alleged hostage-takers got underway.
As the aftermath of the Las Vegas shooting sinks in, family and friends of the Canadians who were killed are starting to work through the grief of losing loved ones.
Those seeking to know the motive of Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock have had little more to chase than hints and shadows.
Working with what little they know, investigators have zeroed in on a weapon-buying binge Stephen Paddock went on one year before he gunned down 58 people Sunday at a country music festival from a 32nd-floor room at the Mandalay Bay casino resort before killing himself.
Senior congressional Republicans say they are open to considering legislation banning 'bump stocks' like the shooter in Las Vegas apparently used to make semi-automatic rifles perform more like fully automatic weapons.