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Laval Today. Mar. 14, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! Itโ€™s Saturday, and the news keeps coming. The war in Iran is intensifying, the Carney government marks its first year in office, and Just for Laughs has reversed course on Julien Lacroix after a day of backlash.

Meanwhile, Montrรฉal is now home to its first sovereigntistโ€‘themed cafรฉ.

Grab your coffee and letโ€™s dive into the weekendโ€™s stories.

๐ŸŽญ Top Story

Just for Laughs cancels Julien Lacroixโ€™s show

After announcing Thursday that comedian Julien Lacroix would return to the stage, four years after stepping back in 2020 following allegations of sexual misconduct. Just for Laughs reversed its decision on Friday.

The company cancelled the show after widespread criticism of Thursdayโ€™s announcement.

Lacroix had withdrawn from public life in 2020 after the allegations surfaced.

โšก The Essentials

Canada to release 23.6 million barrels of oil

Canada has committed to supplying 23.6 million barrels of oil as part of a broader International Energy Agency plan to stabilize global energy markets amid the ongoing war in the Middle East. The announcement comes two days after Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson said Canada would โ€œdo its partโ€ to help lower global oil prices.

A statement from the ministerโ€™s office says Canadaโ€™s natural gas exports will also increase in the coming months. The 32 IEA member countries, including Canada, agreed to a coordinated release of oil reserves, the largest in the agencyโ€™s history.

Global oil prices have surged as the war disrupts shipments through the critical Strait of Hormuz.

Aviation fuel prices rise, summer flights expected to cost more

Aviation fuel prices are climbing as the war in the Middle East disrupts global oil supplies, putting pressure on airlines heading into the busy summer travel season. Experts say the question isnโ€™t if fares will rise, but when, for how long, and by how much.

The average U.S. price hit $3.99 per gallon on Friday, up from $2.50 the day before the war began two weeks ago. Several nonโ€‘U.S. airlines have already announced fare hikes or fuel surcharges.

Hong Kongโ€™s Cathay Pacific will raise its fuel surcharge starting Wednesday. Air Franceโ€‘KLM says roundโ€‘trip economy fares on longโ€‘haul flights could rise by about โ‚ฌ50 (roughly $57). Air India introduced fuel surcharges on Thursday.

Six dead in U.S. refuelling aircraft crash in Iraq

Six people were killed when a U.S. refuelling aircraft crashed in Iraq as part of the Middle East conflict.

90 strikes on Iranโ€™s Kharg Island

Ninety per cent of Iranโ€™s oil exports pass through Kharg Island, which is now being hit by heavy strikes.

Decapitation of Iranโ€™s leadership seen as intelligence success

Reports say Mossad and the CIA had been working for years on the operation launched on February 28.

Cuba confirms talks with the U.S., releases prisoners

Havana had previously denied that negotiations with the United States were underway.

๐Ÿ™๏ธ Around the Region

Carney: One year in office, a transformed government

One year into his mandate, Mark Carney is leading the federal government very differently from Justin Trudeau. Asked Thursday whether he was satisfied with the pace of his agenda, he replied that things โ€œcould always move faster.โ€

Carney gained momentum during the 2025 election thanks to comedian Mike Myers and his โ€œelbows upโ€ rallying cry against U.S. President Donald Trump. A year later, it appears Canadians werenโ€™t looking for a fight with the Americans. Recent polling shows Carneyโ€™s Liberals in the highโ€‘40s โ€” majority territory.

The party has pivoted sharply from a focus on social equity to prioritizing economic consolidation, major infrastructure projects, and Cold Warโ€‘level military spending. Carney quickly scrapped key Trudeauโ€‘era policies, including the carbon tax and the digital services tax.

He has spent an exceptional amount of time abroad meeting world leaders and CEOs, revitalizing ties with India, warming relations with China, and opening new channels with Japan, Malaysia, and others. He has also reset federalโ€‘provincial relations, extending an olive branch to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and securing a deal to build a pipeline to the B.C. coast.

Carney has also dealt psychological blows to his opponents by recruiting four Conservative and NDP MPs to cross the floor. Three byโ€‘elections are coming in April, two of them in safe Liberal ridings. Winning two would technically give Carney a majority.

Club Pays: Quรฉbecโ€™s first sovereigntist cafรฉ opens in Montrรฉal

Club Pays, Quรฉbecโ€™s first sovereigntistโ€‘themed cafรฉ, opened Friday on Montrรฉalโ€™s Plaza Stโ€‘Hubert. The cafรฉ is run by OUI Quรฉbec, a nonโ€‘partisan citizensโ€™ group advocating for Quรฉbec independence.

From โ€œQuรฉbecanosโ€ to โ€œbiscโ€‘ouiโ€‘ts,โ€ the cafรฉ serves snacks and drinks, including alcohol, and hosts live events showcasing Quรฉbec artists.

Camille Goyetteโ€‘Gingras, president of OUI Quรฉbec, says Club Pays is more than a sovereigntist project… itโ€™s a community. The group says people from all backgrounds are welcome. All proceeds go to OUI Quรฉbec.

Meriem Boundaoui trial: surveillance video shown in court

Closing arguments wrapped up Friday in the case of two men charged with firstโ€‘degree murder in the death of 15โ€‘yearโ€‘old Meriem Boundaoui. In a Montrรฉal courtroom, Crown prosecutor Simon Lapierre presented surveillance footage of the shooting.

Lapierre argued that the two accused, Salim Touaibi and Aymane Bouad, were attempting to resolve a conflict when the shots were fired, killing Boundaoui on February 7, 2021, in Montrรฉalโ€™s Saintโ€‘Lรฉonard borough. The Crown also presented additional evidence, including geolocation data from a Mercedes vehicle and cellphone records.

The judge is expected to give instructions to the jury next week before they are sequestered to deliberate.

Bank of Canada: rate decision coming Wednesday

The Bank of Canada will weigh a lastโ€‘minute influx of economic data against uncertainty surrounding trade and the war in the Middle East as it prepares to deliver its second interestโ€‘rate decision of 2026 this week. Economists say the central bank is navigating turbulent waters as it sets monetary policy this year.

The policy rate remains at 2.25% after being held in January. Fridayโ€™s jobs report showed unemployment rising to 6.7% after the economy shed 84,000 jobs in February. Late last month, Statistics Canada also reported that the economy contracted at an annualized rate of half a percentage point in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Policymakers will also have to factor in fresh inflation data from Statistics Canada on Monday. BMO chief economist Doug Porter said Februaryโ€™s inflation rate could fall as low as 1.8%. Financial markets are pricing in roughly a 92% chance that rates will be held steady on Wednesday. Many economic forecasts had expected the bank to remain on the sidelines for the rest of 2026.

However, the Middle East war, triggered by U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, has pushed global oil prices sharply higher. Porter warns that Aprilโ€™s inflation reading could spike due to comparisons with last year, when the federal Liberals removed the consumer carbon price.

Middle East evacuations: nearly 8,500 Canadians have returned home

Since the United States launched its war against Iran on February 28, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says her top priority has been helping Canadians who want to leave the Middle East. As of Friday, nearly 8,500 Canadians and permanent residents had returned home, while more than a thousand others had been evacuated to safe third countries.

Ottawa notes that it has no legal obligation to extract Canadians from crisis zones, it is a service the government chooses to provide. Global Affairs Canada operates an emergency response center to help citizens with everything from lost passports to imprisonment abroad. The federal government sometimes charters aircraft or calls on the military to assist with evacuations.

According to Sรฉbastien Beaulieu, Global Affairs Canadaโ€™s director of international emergencies, diplomats always look to commercial airlines first before turning to chartered flights. The government often uses โ€œblock booking,โ€ paying to temporarily hold seats. In Cuba, where a U.S. oil blockade has worsened a humanitarian crisis, the embassy in Havana is coping with fuel shortages by using solar panels and reducing service hours.

In the days following the start of the war, Global Affairs staffed โ€œmore than threeโ€‘quarters of 50 people per day,โ€ but that number has since dropped as daily requests fell from 1,400 to 400. Many Canadians live fullโ€‘time in places like Dubai or Beirut due to family ties. On March 7, only 3% of the 24,045 Canadians registered in Lebanon had requested help to leave.

Canada spent $11 million to keep charter aircraft on standby for three months starting in August 2024, and about $4 million to transport 844 people from Lebanon to Istanbul in October 2024.

Four Washingtonโ€‘area airports halt flights due to chemical smell

Four airports serving Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and Richmond, Virginia, suspended all flights for more than an hour Friday evening because of a strong chemical odour affecting airโ€‘traffic controllers. The ground stop impacted Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Washington Dulles International Airport, Baltimoreโ€“Washington International Airport, and Richmond International Airport.

The disruption caused delays of up to two hours at some of the busiest airports in the country. Flights began departing again after 7 p.m. ET Friday.

The odour originated from Potomac TRACON, a terminal radar approach control facility. Between 25% and oneโ€‘third of all departing flights from the four airports were delayed following the ground stop.

Alexandre Texier sits out again at Canadiens practice

Alexandre Texier was once again among the extra forwards at Canadiens practice on Friday. Brendan Gallagherโ€™s mix of merit and survival instinct continues to keep him in the lineup.

Canada eliminated from World Baseball Classic

Team Canada was knocked out by the United States at the World Baseball Classic. It was Canadaโ€™s firstโ€‘ever appearance in the quarterfinals.

11,000 photos of Montrรฉal discovered in painter John Littleโ€™s archives

Roughly 11,000 photographs were found in the studio of Montrรฉal painter John Little.

Santรฉ Quรฉbec concerned about specialistsโ€™ pressure tactics

Quรฉbecโ€™s medical specialists are in negotiations with the province over compensation.

New Oscar for Best Casting delights Quรฉbec

The creation of this new category comes nearly a century after the Oscars were first awarded in 1929.

Simon Plouffe wants to understand everything about pi

Simon Plouffe has devoted much of his life to uncovering the mysteries of the mathematical constant.

Women reclaim control over their finances

โ€œFinance used to look like hieroglyphicsโ€: Toronto women are helping others learn the basics of money management and investing.

Trump administration adds Canada to its trade investigations

The Trump administration is expanding its tariff strategy by opening new trade investigations that now include Canada.

Ottawa extends permits for temporary foreign workers

Ottawa is extending certain temporary foreign worker permits by one year, describing the move as support for Quรฉbecโ€™s new immigration policy.

Four plasma donors have died in Canada over the past 10 years

Health Canada says four people have died in the past decade after donating plasma.

Experts call for safeguards to protect youth from AI

AI and safety experts are calling for stronger โ€œguardrailsโ€ to protect young people, warning that conversational robots are designed to โ€œmaximize engagement,โ€ which they see as problematic.

Setback for Trump: legal action against Fed chair dismissed

In January, Jerome Powell said he was the target of a process that could have led to criminal charges. That action has now been dismissed.

Doug Ford wants Al-Quds Day march banned

Ford has asked the Attorney General to seek an injunction to prohibit the Alโ€‘Quds Day demonstration in Toronto.

โ˜๏ธ Practical Corner

MONTRร‰AL WEATHER โ€“ SATURDAY & SUNDAY

Saturday: Montrรฉalers woke up to a snowy start as a lateโ€‘winter system moved through the region. Environment and Climate Change Canada is calling for about five centimetres of snow throughout the day.

Southwest winds of 20 km/h, gusting to 40, will shift west this afternoon and strengthen to 40 km/h with gusts up to 60. The daytime high will reach +2ยฐC.

Snow is expected to taper off this evening before skies gradually clear. The temperature will drop to โ€“8ยฐC.

Sunday: Cloud cover will increase again Sunday before snow begins in the afternoon. About two centimetres of accumulation is expected.

The daytime high will be โ€“1ยฐC. Periods of snow will continue Sunday night with a low of โ€“1ยฐC.

๐Ÿ‘‹ To wrap up

One year of Carney, a Just for Laughs reversal, and a new sovereigntist cafรฉ in Montrรฉal. The war in Iran continues to shake global markets and our wallets.

Itโ€™s Saturday, thereโ€™s a bit of snow, so enjoy the warmth indoors.

Have a great weekend! โ˜•โ„๏ธ

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Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 13, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! As we wrap up this week of freezing rain, things are slowly getting back to normal. The storm caused less damage than expected, but we still have major economic news today: Canada lost 84,000 jobs in February. Grab your coffee… hereโ€™s what you need to know.

๐Ÿ“‰ Main Story

Canada loses 84,000 jobs in February, unemployment rises to 6.7%

Statistics Canada reports that employment fell well below expectations in February, with a surprise loss of 84,000 jobs pushing the unemployment rate up two points to 6.7%.

The agency says last monthโ€™s job losses were concentrated among youth aged 15 to 24 and men aged 25 to 54, with most of the decline coming from fullโ€‘time work and the private sector.

Quebec accounted for the majority of the drop, losing 57,000 jobs in February, while British Columbia lost 20,000.

This sharp decline follows the loss of 25,000 jobs in January.

A Reuters poll of economists ahead of todayโ€™s release had expected a slight increase in the unemployment rate but also predicted a gain of 10,000 jobs last month.

Wholesale and retail trade led Februaryโ€™s losses on the services side of the economy, while goodsโ€‘producing sectors such as construction and manufacturing also shed jobs.

โšก Key Updates

Ottawa unveils $40โ€‘billion plan for the Far North

โ€œThe country is moving from dependence to resilience,โ€ the Carney government says as it presents its economic and military strategy for the North.

War in Iran could give Canada leverage in CUSMA negotiations

Countries around the world are facing soaring costs for key goods like oil and fertilizer as the war with Iran continues to disrupt global trade. With no end in sight, the conflict is likely to overshadow trade talks ahead of the mandatory review of the Canadaโ€‘U.S.โ€‘Mexico Agreement โ€” and could ultimately give Canada more bargaining power.

Oil and natural gas prices have surged after Iran effectively shut down the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S.โ€“Israeli bombing campaigns. Fertilizer inputs and potash are also being held back, driving up global prices just weeks before planting season. Aluminum prices have jumped as well.

Canada is a key alternative supplier for many of these products. Trump has repeatedly claimed the U.S. โ€œdoesnโ€™t need anything from Canada,โ€ but the Middle East conflict may suggest otherwise.

Massive explosions shake Tehran

Iran marks Qods Day on Friday with demonstrations in solidarity with Palestinians. The Gulf remains a target.

Canadians turn to alternative spring break destinations

Many Canadian travellers are choosing different destinations this year as unrest and violence disrupt tourism in traditionally affordable hotspots.

Travel agents in the Greater Toronto Area say economic and political instability in Cuba, fears of violence in Mexico, and the impact of a devastating hurricane in Jamaica have pushed many people to change their plans.

Cuba is facing a humanitarian crisis triggered by shortages of fuel, food, and medicine caused by a U.S. oil blockade. Last month, cartel violence erupted in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.

John Wood, president of Durham Travel, says bookings to Cuba have dropped 86% this month compared to March 2025. The company also reports a 15% decline in bookings to Mexico. Florida and the Dominican Republic โ€œare absorbing most of the redirected business,โ€ with bookings up 163% and 142%, respectively.

๐Ÿ™๏ธ The Daily Rundown

Alarming report on Montrรฉalโ€™s bedbug problem

A housing advocacy group is sounding the alarm about the impact of bedbug infestations in Montrรฉal with the release of a new report calling for stronger government action. The Comitรฉ logement de La Petiteโ€‘Patrie published the report Friday to coincide with World Sleep Day.

Titled โ€œThe Bedbug Plague in Montrรฉal: A Call to Action,โ€ the study was produced with financial support from Montrรฉalโ€™s regional public health authority.

According to the report, pestโ€‘control companies recorded more than 41,000 bedbug infestations in the city between 2014 and 2024. Researchers say the real number is likely much higher, since many cases are never reported.

The document also highlights the health impacts associated with infestations, including stress, sleep disruption, and anxiety.

Suspicious fires in Montrรฉal and Longueuil

Two vehicles were reduced to charred wrecks early Friday morning after a fire believed to have been intentionally set in Saintโ€‘Lรฉonard. The blaze was reported around 2 a.m. when a 911 caller alerted Montrรฉal police to vehicles on fire on Dโ€™Antibes Street near De Lโ€™Aiglon. Officers found a pickup truck and an SUV already engulfed in flames. Both vehicles were completely destroyed, though nearby buildings were not damaged and no injuries were reported. Early findings suggest an incendiary substance was used to ignite the vehicles.

Meanwhile, Longueuil police are investigating a house fire in Brossard that may have been deliberately set Thursday night around 9 p.m. on Castello Street, as well as a vehicle fire shortly after 8:30 p.m. on Carignan Street. In both cases, preliminary observations suggest the fires may have been intentionally lit.

๐ŸŽธ The secret behind Angine de Poitrineโ€™s guitar

The extravagant instrument was designed by a luthier from Alma, owner of Lutherie Le Breton. Fans have been working hard to figure out who is behind Angine de Poitrine, and some internet sleuths have managed to identify the musicians behind the masks.

โ›ธ๏ธ Kim Boutin reflects ahead of her final championship

The prolific speed skater will end her athletic career this weekend at the world championships in Montrรฉal.

โšก More outages in Centreโ€‘duโ€‘Quรฉbec

The provincial utility is reporting more than 4,000 outages.

๐ŸŒจ๏ธ The orange alert was justified, says Environment Canada

The winter storm caused fewer power outages than expected.

โš–๏ธ Dave Turmel faces nine new charges

The alleged head of the Blood Family Mafia is now facing nine additional charges.

๐Ÿ‘ฎ Ian Lafreniรจre open to publishing BEI reports

Other independent investigative bodies in Canada make their reports public, unlike Quebecโ€™s BEI.

๐ŸŽญ Julien Lacroix returns to the stage with Juste pour rire

The comedian stepped away from performing in 2020 following allegations of sexual misconduct.

๐Ÿ”ฌ Ottawa announces $552M for Canadian research

The federal government was set to unveil today which projects will receive funding through the Canada Foundation for Innovation at an event at Universitรฉ de Sherbrooke. The money, distributed through the Innovation Fund, supports dozens of research projects in life sciences, engineering, and other fields at postโ€‘secondary institutions across the country.

๐Ÿ€ Shai Gilgeousโ€‘Alexander breaks a Wilt Chamberlain record

The Canadian scored 20 points in his 127th straight game, breaking a record held by Wilt Chamberlain since 1963. He surpassed it Thursday night in Oklahoma City.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Conservatives push for a selfโ€‘defence law

They are calling for legislation that would add new protections for people who fight back during a home invasion.

๐Ÿ’ Don Cherryโ€™s Order of Canada nomination sparks controversy

Paulโ€‘Hus says he is looking for โ€œsomething positiveโ€ in his partyโ€™s choice. The hockey figure has been criticized for comments disparaging francophones, Indigenous people, and women.

โš–๏ธ Canadian found dead on boat off Belize

A man found dead on a drifting catamaran was a Canadian originally from Vancouver.

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท Carney government criticized over lack of transparency on Iran

Bloc and Conservative MPs say Ottawa is being too quiet about the conflict in the Middle East.

๐Ÿ’ป Bill aims to expand access to digital data

A new bill would make it easier for law enforcement to access digital information and would also change rules around computer search warrants.

๐Ÿ’ก Petition filed over blinding LED headlights

A Gatineau resident says LED headlights pose a roadโ€‘safety hazard and has submitted a petition to the House of Commons.

๐Ÿ’ผ Returnโ€‘toโ€‘office policy catches departments off guard

Several departments and agencies were unprepared for the threeโ€‘daysโ€‘aโ€‘week returnโ€‘toโ€‘office requirement. The new telework framework is proving challenging for publicโ€‘service managers.

๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ U.S. temporarily authorizes sale of some Russian oil

Washington says the move is intended to โ€œincrease the global reach of existing supply.โ€

๐Ÿ• Shooting at Michigan synagogue

The suspect rammed the buildingโ€™s doors while driving alone. The attacker was killed.

๐Ÿบ Is Canada missing the mark on alcohol awareness?

A new crossโ€‘Canada study finds alcohol is the most harmful substance in the country. While it may not cause the most deaths, the study suggests it causes the most overall harm โ€” made worse by the fact that most Canadians are poorly informed about basic alcoholโ€‘consumption safety.


๐Ÿ’ซ Spotlight

Kudos to the Comitรฉ logement de La Petiteโ€‘Patrie for thoroughly documenting Montrรฉalโ€™s bedbug problem and calling for action instead of letting the issue worsen in the shadows.


๐Ÿ‘‹ To wrap up

A week ending with tough economic news, but at least the freezingโ€‘rain storm caused less damage than expected. The weekend is here โ€” along with the world speedโ€‘skating championships in Montrรฉal, where Kim Boutin will take her final bow.

Have a great Friday and enjoy your weekend! โ˜•


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Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 12, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! Day 2 of the ice storm, and itโ€™s not over yet. More than 175,000 addresses are still without power this morning, schools remain closed, and the REM is slowly coming back online. If you have electricity to read this, consider yourself lucky. Hereโ€™s the latest on the situation and the rest of todayโ€™s news.

โšก Top Story

Ice storm: More than 175,000 addresses without power in Quebec

More than 175,000 addresses were without electricity across Quebec Thursday morning as the ice storm continued to affect several regions.

The largest outages were in Montรฉrรฉgie, where about 80,540 addresses were affected.

Roughly 33,972 customers were without power in Montreal, with additional outages reported in Laval (4,315), the Laurentians (13,743) and Lanaudiรจre, where 24 addresses were without power out of more than 276,000 customers.

The outages come as freezing rain coats power lines and trees across parts of southern Quebec, creating difficult conditions for crews working to restore service.

Authorities warn that outage numbers may fluctuate throughout the day as the storm continues.

Widespread school closures

The ice storm forced school closures across several school service centres Thursday morning.

  • The Centre de services scolaire des Patriotes closed all its schools.
  • The Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board closed Heritage Elementary, Joliette Elementary, Joliette High School and Rawdon Elementary.
  • The Margueriteโ€‘Bourgeoys, Pointeโ€‘deโ€‘lโ€™รŽle and Lester B. Pearson school boards also closed several schools.

REM and airport disruptions

Service on the Rรฉseau express mรฉtropolitain (REM) was interrupted early Thursday due to weather conditions linked to the ice storm.

At 5:10 a.m., the network announced a shutdown between Brossard and Gare Centrale. The REM said the disruption was caused by weather conditions and that there was no estimated time for service to resume.

At 8:55 a.m., REM officials confirmed that service was gradually resuming across the network. The next update is expected at noon.

Montrรฉalโ€“Trudeau International Airport continues to experience major disruptions. More than oneโ€‘third of all scheduled flights (about 184) were cancelled Wednesday. While some operations are resuming today, dozens of flights remain cancelled this morning.

โšก The Essentials

Man in his 80s dies in Longueuil, possibly electrocuted

A man in his 80s died after collapsing in Longueuil on Wednesday. Police say he may have been โ€œelectrocuted.โ€ The incident happened shortly before 7:30 p.m. on Springfield Street in Greenfield Park. He was taken to hospital in critical condition and later died. Investigators are looking into whether freezing rain played a role.

Jacob Fowler recalled from Laval to face the Senators

Laval Rocket goaltender Jacob Fowler has been called up by the Canadiens after Samuel Montembeault allowed nine goals over his last two games.

Demidov scores the winner as Canadiens beat Senators 3โ€“2

Ivan Demidov scored the gameโ€‘winning goal to lift the Montreal Canadiens to a 3โ€“2 victory over the Ottawa Senators on Wednesday. Demidov also picked up an assist in the game.

Juraj Slafkovsky and Alexandre Texier scored the other goals for Montreal, while goaltender Jacob Fowler earned the win with 32 saves.

Demidov netted the winner for Montreal (36โ€‘18โ€‘10) with 7 minutes and 20 seconds remaining, jumping on an Alex Newhook rebound to beat Linus Ullmark, who made 20 saves.

Drake Batherson scored both goals for Ottawa (32โ€‘23โ€‘9). The Canadiens, coming off a 3โ€“1 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Tuesday, tied the game earlier in the night on a sequence that began when Slafkovsky rang a shot off the post.

๐Ÿ™๏ธ The Rundown

New banking rules: NSF fees capped at $10

New rules are now in effect limiting how much banks can charge customers who donโ€™t have enough money in their account to cover a cheque or preโ€‘authorized payment.

The new Canadian cap on nonโ€‘sufficient funds (NSF) fees is set at $10 for personal deposit accounts. Banks are also prohibited from charging more than one NSF fee within two business days for the same account, and from charging any NSF fee when the overdraft is under $10.

The federal government says NSF fees previously reached up to $50. The new cap is expected to save Canadians more than $600 million per year.

Carney heading to Yellowknife, then Norway

Prime Minister Mark Carney is once again travelling abroad, this time to Norway to observe NATOโ€™s Cold Response military exercises as Canada deepens its ties with Nordic countries. His first stop is Yellowknife on Thursday.

Norwayโ€™s ambassador to Canada, Hanne Ulrichsen, said Norway invited Carney and convened the heads of government from Iceland, Denmark, Sweden and Finland in Oslo.

Carney will travel to Bardufoss, Norway, on Friday to watch the exercises alongside Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stรธre and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. The Norwayโ€‘led exercise takes place every two years and involves 25,000 troops from 14 member countries.

Carney is scheduled to hold a bilateral meeting with Stรธre on Saturday, followed by a visit to a crossโ€‘country ski training centre near Oslo. On Sunday, he will meet with leaders from all five Nordic countries.

He will be the first Canadian prime minister to make an official visit to Norway since 1980.

Carney will then leave Norway for London on Sunday, where he is set to meet British Prime Minister Keir Starmer at 10 Downing Street on Monday.

Kim Jong Un and his daughter test new pistols

Kim Jong Un and his teenage daughter tested new pistols during an inspection of a lightโ€‘weapons factory, according to photos released Thursday by North Korean state media.

The official news agency said Kim visited the factory the previous day, where he examined a newly produced pistol model. After testing it on a firing range, he reportedly called the weapon โ€œexcellent.โ€

Since her first public appearance during a longโ€‘range missile test in November 2022, Kimโ€™s daughter, believed to be named Kim Ju Ae and about 13 years old, has accompanied him at an increasing number of official events.

Markets fall as oil jumps another 5%

Wall Street markets slipped Thursday morning while oil prices surged another 5% as the war in Iran entered its second week.

S&P 500 futures fell 0.5%, and Dow Jones Industrial Average futures dropped 0.6%. U.S. crude rose $4.52 to reach $91.77 a barrel. Brent, the international benchmark, climbed $5.34 to $97.32, after briefly surpassing the $100 mark.

Iranโ€™s actions have effectively halted commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for oneโ€‘fifth of the worldโ€™s traded oil. In response, the International Energy Agency agreed Wednesday to release 400 million barrels from emergency reserves. It’s the largest release in its history. The United States plans to release 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve next week.

Oxford Economics warns that oil prices could climb as high as $140 a barrel if the situation worsens.

Blitz to register 180,000 vulnerable patients

The health networks in Montreal and Laval are running a blitz to register 180,000 vulnerable patients into the primaryโ€‘care system. About 58,000 are already registered, but 122,000 still need to be reached by the end of March.

Teams from the CIUSSS, community organizations and pharmacies are actively identifying people without a family doctor and helping them sign up for the Guichet dโ€™accรจs ร  un mรฉdecin de famille (GAMF), a key step to being matched with a Family Medicine Group (GMF) and receiving individual followโ€‘up.

China becomes a cleanโ€‘energy leader despite its reliance on coal

China has emerged as a global powerhouse in renewable energy, dominating the worldโ€™s production of solar panels, wind turbines and batteries. Its new fiveโ€‘year plan confirms massive investments in cleanโ€‘energy technologies.

This shift stems from two decades of strategic investment, driven by domestic pollution problems and the need to reduce energy dependence. Today, renewables account for more than 11% of Chinaโ€™s GDP, and the country is both the worldโ€™s largest market and the largest exporter of green technologies.

But this progress coexists with a major contradiction: China remains heavily dependent on coal, which still provides 60% of its electricity. The new energy plan sets no firm limits on fossilโ€‘fuel use, sending mixed signals about the countryโ€™s climate ambitions.

Muse, Gwen Stefani, Jelly Roll and Kesha at the Festival dโ€™รฉtรฉ de Quรฉbec

Organizers have announced a โ€œjoyful and festiveโ€ 58th edition of the Festival dโ€™รฉtรฉ de Quรฉbec, featuring major artists from the 1990s.

Quebec inmates confined to cells two hours earlier

Quebec is moving to reduce overtime costs for correctional officers by requiring inmates to return to their cells two hours earlier.

Stรฉphanie Meunier eligible to seek release

Stรฉphanie Meunier, convicted of the โ€œheinousโ€ 2008 killing of a fourโ€‘yearโ€‘old child, will be allowed to apply for release.

Pablo Rodriguez leadership race: Elections Quebec confirms investigation

Elections Quebec has confirmed it is investigating the matter but is withholding details for now.

โ€œIโ€™m on agricultural land but canโ€™t farm!โ€

A regulatory grey zone in Sainteโ€‘Pรฉtronille has caused major headaches for resident Nicolas Gagnรฉ.

Inside the 811 health line in Estrie

The Infoโ€‘Santรฉ team fields questions, reassures callers and directs patients through the healthโ€‘care system every day.

Canada reaches quarterfinals at the World Baseball Classic

Canadaโ€™s win over Cuba secured first place in its group and a quarterfinal matchup against the United States… the first time Canada has ever reached this stage of the tournament.

Ottawa tightens controls on fentanylโ€‘related substances

New rules governing the import and distribution of chemicals used to produce fentanyl will take effect on April 12.

Ottawa releases $10 million for Jewish community security

Three synagogues in the Greater Toronto Area were targeted by gunfire in less than a week.

Ottawa considering reopening its embassy in Venezuela

Canada closed its embassy in Caracas in June 2019.

Pierre Poilievre travels to the United States but will bypass Washington

This marks his second international trip as Leader of the Official Opposition.

Fourth opposition MP crosses the floor to join the Liberals

Pragmatism is taking over in Ottawa as a fourth opposition MP defects to the Liberal Party.

AI can encourage violent attacks, study finds

According to the study, 8 out of 10 AI systems tested provided assistance to potential attackers in more than half of their responses.

Vaccine hesitancy: empathy over shame

Dr. Elisabeth Marnik, an immunologist and vaccine advocate, says that in an era of growing health misinformation, empathy will always be more effective than shame.

Toronto expecting over one million visitors for the FIFA World Cup

Residents are torn between excitement and concern as the city prepares for the massive influx.

Global aluminum reserves plunge amid Iran war

Worldwide aluminum reserves have dropped sharply since the start of the conflict.

Mystery surrounds Iranโ€™s next Supreme Leader

Mojtaba Khamenei fears he may be a prime target for the United States and Israel. Observers are asking: โ€œWhere is he?โ€

Donald Trump and the Iranian spiral

Paths out of the Middle East war are proving complicated and risky for the U.S. president.

โš ๏ธ Practical Corner

Ice Storm Thursday Morning Update

Conditions remain difficult this Thursday. Hereโ€™s what you need to know:

Major outages:

  • Montรฉrรฉgie: 80,540 addresses
  • Montreal: 33,972 customers
  • Laval: 4,315 customers
  • Laurentians: 13,743 customers
  • Lanaudiรจre: 24 addresses

Transport:

  • REM: Gradual service resumption underway since 8:55 a.m.
  • Montrรฉalโ€“Trudeau Airport: Dozens of flights still cancelled this morning
  • Roads: Still slippery โ€” avoid nonโ€‘essential travel

School closures (Thursday):

  • Centre de services scolaire des Patriotes (ALL schools)
  • Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board (multiple schools)
  • CSS Margueriteโ€‘Bourgeoys (multiple schools)
  • CSS de la Pointeโ€‘deโ€‘lโ€™รŽle (multiple schools)
  • Lester B. Pearson School Board

If you have electricity, stay home. If you donโ€™t, find a safe, warm place. Conditions should gradually improve throughout the day.

Stay safe!

๐Ÿ‘‹ To wrap up

The storm is winding down, but its impacts are still being felt.

More than 175,000 addresses remain without power, schools are closed, and transportation is disrupted. It is one of those days when being warm and safe at home feels like a luxury. If you have heat, power and a roof over your head this morning, count yourself lucky.

Take care of yourselves and your loved ones, and courage to everyone working to restore services. โ˜•โ„๏ธ

Categories
Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 11, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Well, the ice storm we warned you about yesterday has definitely arrived. If youโ€™re reading this comfortably from home while the kids enjoy a snow day, youโ€™re probably making the right call. Stay warm โ€” hereโ€™s your news roundup while everything freezes outside.

โ„๏ธ Top Story

Ice storm slams Montreal and Laval: widespread closures

The major ice storm forecast for Wednesday has arrived, bringing dangerous conditions, widespread shutdowns, and the potential for significant ice buildup across southern Quebec.

Environment Canada says the system could deliver 20 to 30 millimetres of freezing rain, with the event lasting up to 24 hours from Wednesday into Thursday morning.

The storm is expected to affect Greater Montreal, Montรฉrรฉgie, Outaouais, the Laurentians, Lanaudiรจre, Mauricie, Centreโ€‘duโ€‘Quรฉbec, and the Quebec City region.

Officials warn that heavy ice accumulation could disrupt services, impact transportation, and lead to prolonged power outages as ice builds up on trees and power lines. Roads and sidewalks are expected to become extremely slippery, and residents are urged to avoid nonโ€‘essential travel.

Freezing rain was falling across the Montreal area Wednesday with northeast winds of 30 km/h, gusting to 50, and temperatures hovering near โ€“1ยฐC, with a wind chill of โ€“9ยฐC. The freezing rain is expected to change to rain this evening as winds shift and strengthen overnight. Gusts could reach 80 km/h by Thursday morning as temperatures rise to around 5ยฐC.

Unsettled weather will continue Thursday as the system moves out. Skies will remain cloudy with a 40% chance of morning flurries, while strong westerly winds gradually weaken. Temperatures are expected to fall to โ€“2ยฐC in the afternoon, with a wind chill near โ€“9ยฐC.

Mass Closures

All schools and centres under the Centre de services scolaire de Laval are closed Wednesday, along with the English Montreal, Lester B. Pearson, New Frontiers, Riverside, and Sir Wilfrid Laurier school boards.

The following universities and cรฉgeps have confirmed closures: Concordia University (all inโ€‘person classes cancelled, online classes continue), Dawson College, John Abbott College, McGill University (all classes and exams cancelled at the downtown, Macdonald, and Outaouais campuses; some courses moved online), Marianopolis College, Vanier College, and several others.

Dozens of morning departures and arrivals at Montrรฉalโ€“Trudeau Airport have been cancelled or delayed.

The Sociรฉtรฉ de lโ€™assurance automobile du Quรฉbec (SAAQ) is urging drivers to postpone nonโ€‘essential travel in the coming days. The agency recommends checking Quรฉbec 511 for road conditions, fully clearing ice and snow from vehicles, reducing speed, and keeping a safe distance.

Officials say cold conditions in the days following the storm may slow the return to normal services as ice buildup persists across the region.

โšก What Else You Need to Know

Carney: Canada will โ€œneverโ€ join offensive against Iran

The prime minister adjusted his schedule to attend Question Period on Tuesday and delivered a firm statement.

Canadiens hand Maple Leafs their eighth straight loss

Oliver Kapanen scored his 20th of the season as the Montreal Canadiens held on for a 3โ€“1 win, handing the Toronto Maple Leafs their eighth consecutive defeat Tuesday night.

Phillip Danault also scored, while Jake Evans added an emptyโ€‘netter for Montreal (35โ€‘18โ€‘10). Jakub Dobes made 17 saves.

William Nylander replied for struggling Toronto (27โ€‘27โ€‘11), which is on track to miss the playoffs after nine straight appearances.

The Leafs entered the night 11 points out of a playoff spot and 13 points behind the Canadiens, who held the second wildโ€‘card position in the Eastern Conference.

Cyclist in critical condition after collision in Prรฉvost

A cyclist is in critical condition after being struck by an SUV Tuesday evening in Prรฉvost, in the Laurentians.

According to the Sรปretรฉ du Quรฉbec, the crash happened at the intersection of Route 117 and rue de la Station early in the evening. Police say the cyclist, a man from Saintโ€‘Hippolyte, may have entered the intersection while the SUV had a green light.

He was taken to hospital with serious injuries and remains in critical condition. The SUV driver was not hurt.

Brick wall partially collapses onto car in Westmount

A man suffered minor injuries after part of a brick wall collapsed onto his car Tuesday afternoon in Westmount.

Paramedics were called around 1:40 p.m. to the intersection of Victoria Avenue and Sherbrooke Street West, where a section of a residential buildingโ€™s brick wall had fallen.

The bricks crashed onto the roof of a vehicle, partially crushing it while the driver was still inside. First responders treated the 58โ€‘yearโ€‘old man on scene before transporting him to hospital. His injuries are minor and not lifeโ€‘threatening.

Man found dead in Rosemont apartment

Montreal police are investigating after a man was found dead inside an apartment building Tuesday night in Rosemontโ€“La Petiteโ€‘Patrie.

Officers were called to the building on Masson Street near 4th Avenue around 10 p.m. following a 911 call reporting an incident. Responding officers found an unresponsive man inside an apartment.

He was pronounced dead at the scene. Police say the cause and circumstances of the death remain unknown, and the manโ€™s identity has not been confirmed.

๐Ÿ™๏ธ The Daily Rundown

Town of Mount Royal launches plumbing inspection program

The Town of Mount Royal is launching a homeowner plumbing inspection program that will be fully funded by the municipality at a cost of $1 million.

Starting March 10, 350 eligible homeowners can register to receive a free, professional, full plumbing inspection of their property. The program is open to homeowners who have experienced and reported a waterโ€‘related incident to the Town or to their insurer since June 15, 2022. The incident must have been caused by heavy rainfall, flooding, or sewer backups linked to exceptional weather conditions.

The inspection will include an evaluation of backwater valves, French drains, foundations, gutter systems, window wells, as well as grading and landscaping around the home.

A total of 350 inspections will be offered in 2026. Spots will be assigned on a firstโ€‘come, firstโ€‘served basis. The program will roll out over three years, until 2028, for a maximum of 1,000 inspections.

Ouellet case: โ€œIt canโ€™t be the cardinal,โ€ judge says

Judge Martin Castonguay questioned the testimony of Pamรฉla Groleau and another woman in the Marc Ouellet case.

Father and son could face ban on donating sperm

Donations by Philippe Normand and Dominik Seelos are believed to have resulted in the birth of roughly 600 children.

Marwah Rizqy: โ€œI wish the ending had been differentโ€

Former Liberal MNA Marwah Rizqy testified about the past few months, which she described as โ€œquite difficult.โ€

NDP MP crosses the floor to join the Liberals

Her decision comes after three Conservative MPs defected to the Liberals. Mark Carney edges closer to a majority.

Vote on arms exports to the United States

MPs will vote Wednesday afternoon on whether to advance a bill that would close a loophole in Ottawaโ€™s armsโ€‘export regime allowing Washington to send Canadian weapons to countries that would otherwise be blocked.

NDP MP Jenny Kwan introduced the private memberโ€™s bill last September after Washington attempted to purchase Canadian weapons for Israel, despite Canadaโ€™s ban on exporting several types of arms to that country.

Bill Cโ€‘233 is expected to face a secondโ€‘reading vote after Wednesdayโ€™s Question Period.

Colorectal cancer screening: Canadian Cancer Society calls for lower age

On Wednesday, the Canadian Cancer Society urged provinces and territories to lower the colorectal cancer screening age to 45. The organization says people under 50 are two to 2.5 times more likely to be diagnosed with colorectal cancer than previous generations.

The society highlighted a recent modelling study published March 7 in the Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology, which estimates that starting atโ€‘home fecal immunochemical testing at age 45 could potentially prevent 15,070 colorectal cancer cases and 6,100 deaths over the next 45 years.

The research also estimated $233 million in savings on cancer treatments, even after accounting for the cost of additional tests and colonoscopies.

Gunโ€‘control groups frustrated by lack of information on Tumbler Ridge shooting

Five gunโ€‘control advocacy groups told the RCMP they were โ€œalarmed and disappointedโ€ that the force has yet to release basic information on the firearm models and legal status of the weapons used in the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting in British Columbia.

The RCMP responded that the information is part of an active investigation, meaning it is unclear when details will be available.

Van crashes through barriers near the White House

The driver broke through a security gate near the White House.

Death of Nooran Rezayi: BEI submits report to Crown prosecutors

The Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions will decide whether charges will be laid against the officer who shot the teenager.

First Nations unveil repatriated cultural treasures

First Nations communities unveiled around 50 artefacts during an event titled The Return of the Ancestors, some publicly and most privately.

Station10 hair salon will appeal ruling

Station10 has reversed course and will appeal its $500 fine in a case involving genderโ€‘neutral haircuts.

Sherbrooke opposes dumping treated leachate into Lake Memphrรฉmagog

Sherbrooke says it โ€œformally and permanentlyโ€ opposes the discharge of treated landfill leachateโ€”often called โ€œgarbage juiceโ€โ€”into Lake Memphrรฉmagog.

Franรงois Ruelโ€‘Cรดtรฉ: likely his final play

Franรงois Ruelโ€‘Cรดtรฉ is presenting what will likely be his final play due to lack of funding. Producing theatre at a loss, even with soldโ€‘out shows, is no longer sustainable.

Mobilitรฉ Infra Quรฉbec still not in charge of the PSE

Although Mobilitรฉ Infra Quรฉbec says it is ready to take over the East End transit project, the provincial government has yet to give the green light.

Access to Information Commission under investigation

The president and a viceโ€‘president of the Commission are being scrutinized for their management of staff.

Price accuracy policy still poorly applied in grocery stores

In Quebec, when a scanned price does not match the displayed price, retailers must compensate the customer. The policy is still inconsistently applied.

Brittany Hudak wins bronze in para crossโ€‘country skiing

The paraโ€‘nordic skier took bronze in the 10 km standing event at the Paralympic Games.

Augerโ€‘Aliassime eliminated, Mboko advances to quarterfinals

Fรฉlix Augerโ€‘Aliassime was stopped by Arthur Fils at Indian Wells. Victoria Mboko defeated American Amanda Anisimova in the round of 16 to move on to the quarterfinals.

Bam Adebayo scores 83 points

Bam Adebayo scored 83 points, the secondโ€‘highest total in NBA history behind Kobe Bryant. Wilt Chamberlain still holds the record with 100 points, set in 1962.

Iran escalates tensions in the Strait of Hormuz

Washington says it has sunk mineโ€‘laying vessels near the strait, where attacks on ships have been increasing.

Rising costs for Canadians as Iran conflict intensifies

The conflict in the Middle East is now well into its second week, and like the rest of the world, Canadians are beginning to feel its impact in daily life โ€” especially at the gas pump.

Confusion from the White House has only made things worse, with oil prices swinging wildly after U.S. Energy Secretary Wright made a false claim about the movement of an oil tanker through the Strait of Hormuz.

The critical passage has in fact been closed by the Iranian regime.

Epstein case: investigators search New Mexico ranch

Authorities believe young girls and women may have been victimized there by the convicted sex offender.

London to release documents related to Peter Mandelson

According to Keir Starmer, Peter Mandelson misled Downing Street about the extent of his ties to Epstein.

๐Ÿ’ซ Spotlight

Kudos to the Town of Mount Royal for investing $1 million to help homeowners affected by flooding inspect and protect their plumbing โ€” a proactive initiative that shows prevention can happen before disasters, not just after.

โš ๏ธ Practical Corner

IMPORTANT WARNING: MAJOR ICE STORM UNDERWAY

If you donโ€™t absolutely need to go out today, stay home. The ice storm has arrived… and itโ€™s a serious one.

What to expect:

  • 20 to 30 mm of freezing rain through Thursday morning
  • Extremely slippery roads and sidewalks
  • Risk of prolonged power outages
  • Winds up to 80 km/h overnight

Confirmed closures:

  • All schools under the Centre de services scolaire de Laval
  • All Englishโ€‘language school boards
  • Universities: Concordia, McGill, Universitรฉ de Montrรฉal
  • Cรฉgeps: Dawson, John Abbott, Vanier, and many more
  • Flights cancelled or delayed at Montrรฉalโ€“Trudeau

If you must drive:

  • Check Quรฉbec 511 before leaving
  • Remove ALL ice and snow from your vehicle (including the roof)
  • Reduce your speed
  • Keep a safe following distance
  • Carry a winter emergency kit

Freezing rain is expected to turn to rain this evening, but conditions will remain difficult Thursday as temperatures drop to โ€“2ยฐC.

Stay safe and take care.

๐Ÿ‘‹ Before we go

A perfect day to stay inside, enjoy a good book, or catch up on your favourite shows.

Schools are closed, roads are dangerous, and the safest place to be today is definitely at home.

Stay warm, stay safe, and weโ€™ll see you tomorrow when this has all passed. โ˜•โ„๏ธ

Categories
Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 10, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! Weโ€™re starting the day with some welcome news: Ottawa is finally looking for a solution in the Gilles Vaillancourt tax saga. Meanwhile, Quebec is preparing to allow stores to stay open later on weekends, and the rest of the world keeps turning. Coffee in handโ€”letโ€™s dive in.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Top Story

Gilles Vaillancourt tax bill: Ottawa says itโ€™s looking for โ€œa solutionโ€ for Laval

After weeks of refusing, Ottawa has changed its tone and now says it is looking for โ€œa solutionโ€ to prevent Laval from having to pay $1 million to former mayor Gilles Vaillancourt.

Until now, the federal government had refused to grant the city an exemption that would spare it from paying this massive sum to Vaillancourt to cover federal taxes owed on money recovered from his corruption scheme.

The issue sparked outrage yesterday when Laval mayor Stรฉphane Boyer made a public appeal to Ottawa. โ€œLaval residents have already paid a heavy price for this fraud. It would be unacceptable to ask them to pay taxes on money that was stolen from them,โ€ he said.

Boyer urged Ottawa to use its discretionary powers to exempt the recovered funds from federal tax, noting that Quebec took a similar step in 2016.

Vaillancourt, who served as mayor from 1989 to 2012, was sentenced to six years in prison in December 2016 after pleading guilty to fraud, breach of trust, and conspiracy to commit fraud. Authorities say he ran a largeโ€‘scale corruption system involving kickbacks from construction contractors.

Ottawaโ€™s announcement that it is now seeking a โ€œsolutionโ€ marks a major shift and could finally bring an end to this longโ€‘running controversy.

โšก What You Need to Know

Quebec stores to stay open later starting Wednesday

Beginning Wednesday, a oneโ€‘year pilot project will allow retailers in Quebec to stay open until 9 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays, instead of the current 5 p.m. closing time set by rules introduced in the 1990s.

โ€œWe believe that for small and local businesses, itโ€™s good to stay flexible and be more available to customers and their needs,โ€ said Jane Ding, general manager of Signรฉ Local, a Quebec retailer specializing in locally designed and made products.

Ding said their store at Montrealโ€™s Eaton Centre is eager to take part, adding two hours on Saturdays and one hour on Sundays.

The 1990s rules were designed to protect workersโ€™ workโ€‘life balance and help small businesses compete with large retailers. Some malls, including CF Carrefour Laval, have already tested extended hours.

Business groups say the change could boost local spending and create more weekend job opportunities, especially for students.

Quebec is currently the only province in Canada that regulates retail hours yearโ€‘round. The pilot project will run for one year while the province evaluates whether extended hours should become permanent.

TikTok allowed to continue operating in Canada

TikTok can continue operating in Canada after the federal government completed a national security review.

Industry Minister Mรฉlanie Joly says the decision comes with key conditions, including stronger protections for minors and for Canadiansโ€™ personal information. She also says the move will protect jobs by ensuring TikTok Canada maintains a physical presence in the country.

The decision reverses a 2024 order requiring TikTok to shut down its Canadian offices over national security concerns. Last month, a Federal Court judge overturned an order requiring the company to cease operations in Canada.

Joly says the government will monitor compliance and consider additional measures to make social media safer for young Canadians.

Seniors losing pension payments due to federal software issues

The federal governmentโ€™s new pension management system, CรšRAM, is causing worry and anxiety among seniors across the country.

Carney heading to Norway to observe NATO exercises

Prime Minister Mark Carney plans to travel to Norway on Friday to observe Cold Response, a Norwegianโ€‘led military exercise above the Arctic Circle. The NATO exercise takes place every two years and involves about 25,000 troops from 14 countries training together in Arctic conditions. Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, France, Sweden, and Finland are among the participants.

While in Oslo, Carney is expected to meet Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store to discuss trade, investment, clean energy, critical minerals, and the aerospace sector. He will also attend the Canadaโ€‘Nordic Summit to meet Nordic leaders and discuss ways to strengthen geopolitical cooperation.

Before returning to Canada, Carney plans to stop in London to meet UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to discuss defence and the war in the Middle East.

Former broadcaster Peter Mansbridge voices submarine ad

South Korean firm Hanwha Oceans has enlisted former news anchor Peter Mansbridge to voice an advertisement as it seeks a multibillionโ€‘dollar procurement contract from Ottawa.

Mansbridge, the former voice of CBCโ€™s The National, can be heard in a video posted last week on Hanwhaโ€™s YouTube page promoting the companyโ€™s submarines as proven and reliable.

Hanwha Oceans is competing with German submarine manufacturer TKMS for a contract to supply Canada with up to 12 new submarines.

Mansbridge, who now hosts a podcast called The Bridge, says that since leaving daily news nearly a decade ago, his company has expanded into strategic communications.

In recent months, Hanwha ads promoting its KSSโ€‘III submarine have appeared across Ottawa as the shipbuilder works to raise its profile in the nationโ€™s capital.

Annette Ryan appointed new Parliamentary Budget Officer

Annette Ryan previously served as a senior official at Canadaโ€™s financial intelligence agency.

๐Ÿ™๏ธ The Daily Rundown

6โ€‘yearโ€‘old injured after being struck by a vehicle in Anjou

A child was taken to hospital with serious injuries Monday evening after being struck by a vehicle in Montrealโ€™s Anjou borough.

Montreal police say they received a 911 call around 5:40 p.m. reporting a collision involving a car and a pedestrian near the intersection of Chรขteauneuf Boulevard and Guy Avenue.

Officers found the young victim with a lowerโ€‘body injury. The child was conscious when transported to hospital, and police say their life is not believed to be in danger.

A section of Chรขteauneuf Boulevard was temporarily closed during the police response but has since reopened. The investigation is ongoing.

Woman dies after SUV crashes into STM bus in Montreal North

A 25โ€‘yearโ€‘old woman has died after an SUV rearโ€‘ended a city bus in Montreal North on Saturday evening.

Police say the collision happened just before 5:50 p.m. near Henriโ€‘Bourassa Boulevard and Salk Avenue. The STM bus was stopped at a bus stop when it was struck from behind by the SUV.

The woman, who was a passenger in the vehicle, was taken to hospital in critical condition and later died of her injuries. The 29โ€‘yearโ€‘old driver suffered minor injuries. No bus passengers were hurt.

Investigators say the exact cause of the crash has not yet been determined. Police are reviewing surveillance footage and speaking with witnesses.

Woman found dead in the St. Lawrence River in Lachine

Montreal police have launched an investigation after the body of a woman was pulled from the St. Lawrence River Monday afternoon.

Authorities say they received a 911 call shortly before 2 p.m. reporting a body in the water near 44th Avenue and Saintโ€‘Joseph Boulevard in Lachine.

Firefighters were already on scene when police arrived and were working to recover the woman. She is believed to be about 36 years old and was pronounced dead at the scene.

Police set up a security perimeter so investigators could examine the circumstances surrounding the incident. The cause of death has not yet been determined.

Closing arguments begin in Cardinal Ouellet trial

A woman is accusing the religious leader of sexual misconduct.

Frank Stronach trial: defence calling more witnesses

Defence lawyers are expected to call additional witnesses today in the sexual assault trial of Canadian auto magnate Frank Stronach.

The defence began presenting its case Monday, calling several witnesses, including Stronachโ€™s former driver. Glenn Anderson told the court he spent about a decade in the 1980s driving Stronach to business events, meetings, and other engagements.

He testified that Stronach was not a โ€œcar enthusiastโ€ and owned no European or sports carsโ€”only Cadillacs. The last of the seven complainants testified last week that Stronach had picked her up in a low, twoโ€‘door foreign car she believed was a Porsche.

Since the trial began last month, prosecutors have reduced the number of charges they are pursuing and said Monday they are now seeking convictions on seven counts involving four complainants.

Suspicious death of a woman in Drummondville

An unconscious woman was found Monday morning around 8 a.m. on des Mรฉsanges Street in Drummondville.

Beauce farmers denounce trail blockages

A longโ€‘running dispute continues between agricultural and forestry producers and the Express Beauceโ€‘Mรฉgantic over a snowmobile and ATV trail.

64 Mauricie officials reject TES Canada wind project

โ€œNever has our region seen a citizen mobilization of this scale,โ€ the signatories say.

Quebecโ€™s next generation of researchers โ€œdeserves betterโ€

The Quebec Student Union says itโ€™s time to lift young researchers out of precarity.

900 workers invited to Quebecโ€™s selection program

About 900 workers in health care, education, and early childhood sectors received invitations under the PSTQ for priority fields.

Ontario town on the brink of bankruptcy

The township of Fauquierโ€‘Strickland was facing an accumulated deficit of more than $2.5 million.

Shots fired at U.S. consulate in Toronto

The incident reportedly occurred around 5:30 a.m. on University Avenue downtown.

Allan Legere, the โ€œMonster of the Miramichi,โ€ has died

The serial killer and rapist terrorized New Brunswick in the late 1980s.

Another revival of the Keystone XL pipeline

Despite federal ambitions, a pipeline to the United States still holds economic interest.

Live Nation reaches settlement with U.S. government

If approved, the deal would end the antitrust lawsuit against Live Nation.

Canada and India: trade versus security

Two years ago, Justin Trudeau told Parliament there was credible evidence the Indian government was involved in the killing of a Canadian citizen.

Since becoming prime minister, Mark Carney has worked to rebuild ties, inviting India to the G7 and travelling to the South Asian country on trade missions.

Despite these efforts, the Canadian government still has no clear answer on whether India is considered a security threat.

Opposition parties criticize Carneyโ€™s absence from debate

Opposition parties say the prime ministerโ€™s statements on the Middle East conflict are contradictory.

Donald Trump sends mixed messages on Iran

While announcing Monday that the war would end quickly, Trump also threatened to strike Iran โ€œ20 times harder.โ€

Gulf states face a dilemma over Iran

They had invested significant diplomatic effort to avoid a direct confrontation with their neighbour.

Can you really make money selling your grocery receipts?

Inovo CBโ€™s promise is tempting: get back 20% of what you spend on everyday purchases.

Family of Tumbler Ridge victim sues OpenAI

The family of 12โ€‘yearโ€‘old Maya Gebala, who is fighting for her life at BC Childrenโ€™s Hospital after the Tumbler Ridge shooting, has filed a civil lawsuit against OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT.

OpenAI has faced criticism after it was revealed that the ChatGPT account belonging to the shooting suspect, Jesse Van Rootselaar, had been internally flagged in 2025 for misuse โ€œtoward violent activity,โ€ months before she was accused of killing eight people in February. The account was banned, but OpenAI says she circumvented the ban by creating a second account.

The company said in February it had considered reporting the account to law enforcement but determined the activity did not meet the threshold.

Calling OpenAI โ€œreprehensible and morally repugnant,โ€ the lawsuit accuses the company not only of failing to raise the alarm but also of what it describes as the โ€œnegligent designโ€ of ChatGPT itself.

The family is seeking compensation for losses and punitive damages on behalf of Maya, her sister, and her mother.

Radioโ€‘Canada explains its decision on Prime Video

Several political figures have criticized the arrival of ICI RDI and CBC News Network on Amazonโ€™s platform.

๐Ÿ‘‹ Before we wrap up

Thatโ€™s it for this Tuesday. Some welcome news for Laval as Ottawa finally appears to be moving on the Vaillancourt file, and a few practical changes coming as early as Wednesday for weekend shopping. Enjoy your day and stay warm! โ˜•

Categories
Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 9, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! Weโ€™re starting the week with several important stories that directly affect our region. Between the Laval mayorโ€™s appeal to Ottawa, a major weather warning for Wednesday, and international developments that continue to affect our wallets, thereโ€™s plenty to talk about. Grab your coffeeโ€”letโ€™s dive in.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Main Story

Laval mayor urges Ottawa to exempt recovered corruption funds from taxation

The mayor of Laval is pressing the federal government to ensure residents are not taxed on money recovered from a major municipal corruption scheme linked to former mayor Gilles Vaillancourt.

Vaillancourt, who served as mayor from 1989 to 2012, was sentenced to six years in prison in December 2016 after pleading guilty to fraud, breach of trust, and conspiracy to commit fraud. Authorities say he ran a largeโ€‘scale corruption network involving kickbacks from construction contractors.

Municipal officials say the recovered funds may now be subject to federal taxโ€”something the current mayor considers unfair to residents who were victims of the fraud.

โ€œLaval residents have already paid a heavy price for this fraud. It would be unacceptable to ask them to pay taxes on money that was stolen from them,โ€ said Mayor Stรฉphane Boyer.

He is asking Ottawa to use its discretionary powers to exempt the funds from taxation, noting that the Quebec government took a similar step in 2016.

โ€œThere is discretionary authority to correct exceptional situations like this. We are asking the federal government to exercise that judgment, just as Quebec did in 2016,โ€ Boyer said. โ€œI would find it very difficult to write a cheque to Mr. Vaillancourtโ€”we need to be on the right side of history.โ€

This request comes as Laval is being forced to issue a oneโ€‘millionโ€‘dollar cheque to the former mayor to cover taxes owed to the Canada Revenue Agency. The City is outraged.

โšก Key Updates

IMPORTANT WEATHER ALERT: Major freezing rain expected Wednesday

Environment Canada issued a special weather statement Monday morning: 20 to 30 millimetres of freezing rain could fall between Wednesday and Thursday across several regions.

Affected areas include Greater Montreal, Montรฉrรฉgie, Outaouais, the Laurentians, Lanaudiรจre, Mauricie, Centreโ€‘duโ€‘Quรฉbec, and the Quebec City region.

Freezing rain could last up to 24 hours, creating dangerous travel conditions and potentially disrupting services. Ice accumulation of this magnitude can weigh down tree branches and power lines, causing prolonged outages.

Temperatures are expected to remain cold in the days following the storm.

Monday in the Montreal area will be mostly cloudy before clearing in the afternoon, with southwest winds of 30 km/h gusting to 60 and a high of 14ยฐC.

Tuesday will bring a mix of sun and clouds with a high of 12ยฐC before conditions deteriorate Tuesday evening.

Residents are urged to monitor forecasts and prepare for possible power outages.

Montrรฉal eases rules to speed up housing construction

Montreal Mayor Soraya Martinez Ferrada is fulfilling a campaign promise by easing regulations for developers to help address the housing crisis.

A total of 80 municipal lots have been identified as suitable for residential development. About 40 can be used immediately, including 13 newly added to an interactive map.

Martinez Ferrada is scrapping the policy introduced by former mayor Valรฉrie Plante that required developers to include affordable, social, or family housing in their projectsโ€”or pay a financial penalty. Critics said the policy wasnโ€™t working and often pushed developers to build in the suburbs instead.

To support the rapid development of social and affordable housing projects, the City is making $83 million in financial assistance available.

Montrรฉal man facing terrorism charges appears in court today

A Montreal man previously convicted in the United States for supporting alโ€‘Qaida is set to appear in court today as he faces multiple terrorismโ€‘related charges in Quebec.

Mohammed Abdullah Warsame, 51, faces a terrorism charge after allegedly telling a worker at Montrealโ€™s Old Brewery Mission that he knew how to make explosives and wanted to build bombs to use on public transit to kill a large number of people.

Warsame also faces two additional provincial charges for allegedly threatening to burn or damage Passport Canada offices in Montreal and Quebec City. Prosecutors say the threats were made during four phone calls on November 20 while Warsame was being held at the Riviรจreโ€‘desโ€‘Prairies detention centre.

He previously pleaded guilty in Minnesota in 2009 to providing material support to alโ€‘Qaida after attending conferences led by Osama bin Laden. He served 92 months in a U.S. federal prison before being deported to Canada in 2010.

Pedestrian hospitalized after collision in Longueuil

A pedestrian was hospitalized after being struck by a vehicle early Monday morning in Longueuil.

The incident occurred on Taschereau Boulevard near Curรฉโ€‘Poirier Ouest.

Longueuil police say there is no indication the collision was criminal in nature. Investigators say the driver likely did not see the man as he crossed the busy boulevard.

The pedestrian was taken to hospital with injuries that are not considered lifeโ€‘threatening.

Bedbugs: Westmount Public Library temporarily closed

The Westmount Public Library has been temporarily closed after inspections found evidence of bedbugs in several areas of the building.

Municipal officials say an initial inspection on March 6 detected bedbugs in certain parts of the library.

A followโ€‘up inspection on Monday found additional traces beyond the adult computer section, prompting the decision to close the entire facility for treatment.

The building will remain closed while extermination work is carried out.

Digital library services are not affected by the closure.

๐Ÿ  Tour dโ€™Horizon

Canadaโ€™s first gold medal: Natalie Wilkie

Flagโ€‘bearer at the opening ceremony, Natalie Wilkie has won Canadaโ€™s first gold medal at the Paralympic Games in Italyโ€”her second medal of the competition.

Kalle Eriksson adds a superโ€‘G bronze

The Canadian paraโ€‘skier earned his second medal at the Milanโ€‘Cortina Paralympics with a bronze in the superโ€‘G.

Frank Stronach: Crown drops additional charges

In the ongoing case, the Crown will now seek convictions on only 7 of the original 12 charges.

Life sentence for the murder of an 18โ€‘monthโ€‘old

Former educator Tomy Carranza Ladry has been sentenced to life in prison and will not be eligible for parole for 14 years.

UQAR launches review of its psychosociology program

The Universitรฉ du Quรฉbec ร  Rimouski has initiated an external review following criticism of certain teaching methods.

Mauricie municipality inherits a dam without knowing it

Saintโ€‘Mathieuโ€‘duโ€‘Parc unknowingly took possession of land that included a dam.

Three federal byโ€‘elections set for April 13

Voters in two Ontario ridings and one Quebec riding will head to the polls.

NDP leadership vote underway, results March 29

Party members are voting for one of five candidates: Rob Ashton, Tanille Johnston, Avi Lewis (leading fundraising with $724,000), Heather McPherson ($316,000), and Tony McQuail. The winner will be announced March 29 at the annual convention in Winnipeg. There are 100,000 eligible members.

Ottawa invests $94.5M to improve labourโ€‘market data

The federal government plans to spend up to $94.5 million over five years to better understand the labour market.

Fourteen organizations will receive funding to create forecasts and dashboards tracking indicators such as job vacancies in key sectors.

The investment is expected to support industries directly affected by U.S. tariffs, including manufacturing and forestry, as well as construction, trucking, mining, and aerospace.

Bombardier: new defence contracts expected today

The Mark Carney government was set to announce new investments Monday to strengthen Canadaโ€™s defenceโ€‘industrial capacity, with a particular focus on Quebecโ€‘based Bombardier.

โ€œTodayโ€™s announcement will also include positive news for Bombardier,โ€ the company said.

Swedish manufacturer Saab has submitted a proposal to Canada for a mixed fleet of multirole fighter jets, including 72 Gripen aircraft, along with GlobalEye surveillance planes based on Bombardierโ€™s Global 6500 business jet.

Saab estimates the project would create 12,600 direct and indirect Canadian jobsโ€”about 9,000 tied to the Gripen and another 3,600 linked to GlobalEye assembly at Bombardier.

This potential contract would come in addition to the six multirole surveillance aircraft already announced in December.

Canada sees steepest drop in alcohol sales in 20 years

Nearly 3 million litres of alcohol were sold in Canada in 2024โ€“2025, a yearโ€‘overโ€‘year decline of 3%.

RCMP in recruitment mode

A little over 8% of frontline police positions at the RCMP are currently vacant.

Haddock quotas cut by 57% in the Maritimes

The reduction could be โ€œextremely damagingโ€ for some fishing businesses in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

Arctic Winter Games 2026 kick off in Whitehorse

After months of preparation, athletes marched through the streets to launch the event.

Kyra Wilson: From Long Plain to the Manitoba Chiefs Assembly

A profile of the Grand Chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs.

Augerโ€‘Aliassime defeats Diallo at Indian Wells

Ninth seed Fรฉlix Augerโ€‘Aliassime beat world No. 38 Gabriel Diallo 6โ€‘7 (5), 6โ€‘3, 6โ€‘3. Mboko advances to the fourth round.

Explosion outside a Belgian synagogue

The government condemned the overnight blast in front of a synagogue in Liรจge as an antisemitic act.

Record number of electronic device searches by U.S. customs

Smartwatches, SIM cards, and USB keys are now among the items subject to inspection. Searches reached a record high in 2025.

Immigration tensions and hateful graffiti in rural Alberta

Once a point of pride in Brooks, diversity has become a source of tension within the community.

Doug Ford defends his healthโ€‘care record

Ontarioโ€™s government may table its budget before the end of March as hospitals warn of a looming โ€œcrisis.โ€

International Womenโ€™s Day: progress still needed

The UN says significant gaps remain in achieving legal equality for women. The day was marked on March 8.

Womenโ€™s rights march in Montreal

A demonstration organized by Women of Diverse Origins (WDO) drew a large crowd downtown on Sunday.

The march began at Normanโ€‘Bethune Square near Guyโ€‘Concordia metro and highlighted issues affecting women locally and globally, including immigration, political repression, Indigenous rights, and economic inequality.

Dolores Chew, a founding member of WDO, said that despite some progress, women still face challenges related to pay equity, violence, and reproductive rights.

WDO member Norah Finlay emphasized the importance of intersectionality.

Parliamentary debate proposed on the war in Iran

Some Liberal MPs have expressed discomfort with Carneyโ€™s support for U.S.โ€“Israeli strikes in Iran.

Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon announced that the government has proposed a debate on the hostilities in Iran and their impact on Canadians abroad.

Carney does not plan to participate in the debate this evening.

Mojtaba Khamenei named Iranโ€™s new Supreme Leader

Mojtaba Khamenei, son of the late Supreme Leader, has been appointed his successor.

State television announced the decision early Monday.

At 56, Khamenei now finds himself at the centre of Iranโ€™s theocracy. He is considered close to conservative factions due to his ties with the Revolutionary Guard.

Oil surpasses $100 a barrel

Oil prices have climbed above $100 a barrel for the first time in more than three and a half years as the war in Iran disrupts production and shipping in the Middle East.

Brent crude reached $101.19, up 9.2% from Fridayโ€™s price of $92.69. West Texas Intermediate traded around $107.06, a 16.2% increase from Fridayโ€™s $90.90.

Donald Trump called the historic surge โ€œa very small price to pay.โ€

Traffic in the Strait of Hormuzโ€”through which roughly 20% of global oil supply passesโ€”remains nearly at a standstill.

War toll in Iran

The conflict has killed at least 1,230 people in Iran, 397 in Lebanon, and 11 in Israel.

Lebanon reports that more than half a million people have been displaced. Bahrain has accused Iran of striking a desalination plant critical to its drinkingโ€‘water supply.

Saudi Arabia has reported its first deaths. Israel has reported its first soldier fatalities in southern Lebanon. Seven U.S. soldiers have also been killed.

The U.S. State Department will order nonโ€‘essential staff and families to leave Saudi Arabia.

In Lebanon, hotels hit by the war

The Israeli army has struck two hotels in less than a week, saying it was targeting Iranian personnel.

Russian anthem played at the Paralympics

Paraโ€‘skier Varvara Voronchikhina earned Russiaโ€™s first gold medal, marking the first time the Russian national anthem has been played at the Paralympics since 2014.

โš ๏ธ Practical Corner

Get ready for Wednesday: major freezing rain on the way

Hereโ€™s what you need to know for the next few days:

Monday will be mostly cloudy before clearing in the afternoon, with southwest winds of 30 km/h gusting to 60 and a high of 14ยฐC. Overnight, a few clouds and patches of fog are expected, with a low of 7ยฐC.

Tuesday should bring a mix of sun and clouds with a high of 12ยฐC, before conditions begin to deteriorate in the evening. Precipitation is expected to start as rain or snow as temperatures drop toward 0ยฐC.

Wednesday, temperatures hovering near the freezing point are expected to turn the precipitation into freezing rain, continuing into the evening. The system should shift to periods of snow and windy conditions on Thursday, followed by a sharp drop in temperatures.

Authorities advise monitoring updated forecasts and preparing for possible power outages, dangerous roads, and disruptions to public transit and other services. Consider delaying or cancelling nonโ€‘essential travel on Wednesday and Thursday.

๐Ÿ‘‹ Before we wrap up

Itโ€™s a busy start to the week with major local issues and a significant weather alert to keep an eye on. Between Mayor Boyerโ€™s appeal to Ottawa and the incoming freezingโ€‘rain storm, there are plenty of reasons to stay informed and prepared. Enjoy the mild weather on Monday and Tuesday before Wednesdayโ€™s messy mix arrives. Have a great week! โ˜•

Categories
Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 7, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! Itโ€™s Saturday, and while many are easing into the weekend, a few important stories deserve our attention today. From a tragic crash in Chaudiรจreโ€‘Appalaches to a growing haul of Paralympic medals and a Montreal invention making international waves, thereโ€™s plenty to reflect on. Grab your coffee โ€” letโ€™s dive in.

๐ŸšŒ Top Story

School bus crash in Chaudiรจreโ€‘Appalaches: one dead, about twenty injured

A school bus crash Saturday morning in Sainteโ€‘Roseโ€‘deโ€‘Watford, a small municipality of 737 residents in the Chaudiรจreโ€‘Appalaches region, left one person dead and around twenty injured.

One person is fighting for their life, and about 20 others were injured after the bus, which was carrying local children, veered off the road.

The Sรปretรฉ du Quรฉbec responded to the crash on Grandeโ€‘Ligne Nord Road around 8:30 a.m. Saturday. The children on board were local residents.

Initial reports indicate that four people suffered serious but nonโ€‘lifeโ€‘threatening injuries, while about 15 sustained minor injuries. The person whose life is in danger is not the bus driver.

The bus, which was heading south, reportedly skidded to the left before overturning. The Sรปretรฉ du Quรฉbec says โ€œdifficult road conditionsโ€ may have contributed to the crash.

Police remain on scene, and a reconstruction specialist is working to determine the causes and circumstances of the incident.

Sainteโ€‘Roseโ€‘deโ€‘Watford is located near the Canadaโ€“U.S. border, about 35 kilometres from Saintโ€‘Georges.

โšก The Essentials

๐Ÿฅˆ Three medals for Canada at the Paralympic Games

Kalle Eriksson, a visually impaired alpine paraโ€‘skier from Kimberley, British Columbia, won silver in the downhill event at the Milanโ€‘Cortina Paralympic Games on Saturday… Canadaโ€™s first medal of the Games.

Eriksson, guided by Sierra Smith, finished with a time of 1:18.33.

Kurt Oatway of Calgary then captured bronze in the sitโ€‘ski downhill with a time of 1:19.42. It was a remarkable comeback for Oatway, who missed the 2022 Beijing Games after suffering a broken collarbone, two torn ligaments, three ribs broken in five places, and a punctured lung.

Natalie Wilkie of Salmon Arm, British Columbia, earned her eighth Paralympic medal at her third Games, taking silver in the standing sprint biathlon. She completed the 7.5โ€‘kilometre course in 18:46.4 with no shooting penalties โ€” her first biathlon medal at the Paralympics.

๐ŸŽต A Montrealer invents an instrument made from bicycle parts

Montreal multidisciplinary artist Lateef Martin is turning bicycle parts into music โ€” and attracting international attention. Martin, CEO and creative director of Miscellaneous Studios, invented the Lethelium, a unique instrument built from bike components and other materials.

The idea began in a cooperative bike workshop when a volunteer suggested adding guitar strings to a wheel Martin was repairing. The Lethelium is made from bicycle parts, guitar components, household items, and brass pieces.

It produces a sound Martin describes as โ€œthe love child of a dulcimer and a harp.โ€ The instrument has 24 strings arranged over two octaves.

The creation earned him a finalist spot at the prestigious Guthman Musical Instrument Competition in Atlanta. The Lethelium is also part of a larger creative universe Martin built around Zโ€™Isle, a comicโ€‘book series set years after a zombie apocalypse in Montreal, where bicycles are central to tools and technology.

๐Ÿšจ 27โ€‘yearโ€‘old man found unconscious near Montreal airport

Montreal police say a 27โ€‘yearโ€‘old man was found unconscious near Montrรฉalโ€“Trudeau International Airport in Dorval on Saturday morning. SPVM officers were called by paramedics around 6:50 a.m. about a man with upperโ€‘body injuries on Montrรฉalโ€‘Toronto Boulevard near the Dorval traffic circle.

He was transported to hospital in critical condition. โ€œAccording to initial information, the victim was found on the ground with upperโ€‘body injuries,โ€ said SPVM spokesperson Johany Charland.

Police are seeking witnesses and reviewing securityโ€‘camera footage. The investigation is ongoing.

๐Ÿ’ Canadiens fall 6โ€“5 in shootout to the Ducks

Chris Kreider scored the tying goal with 42 seconds left in regulation, and Alex Killorn scored in the sixth round of the shootout to give the Anaheim Ducks a 6โ€“5 win over the Montreal Canadiens on Friday night.

Kreider matched his career high with a fourโ€‘point night for the Ducks, who earned their seventh win in eight games despite blowing a twoโ€‘goal lead in the third period.

Cole Caufield scored two of Montrealโ€™s three thirdโ€‘period goals, and Lane Hutson added a goal and two assists. Samuel Montembeault made 28 saves for the Habs, who have lost four of their last six games.

Montreal was quiet at the trade deadline. General manager Kent Hughes worked until the final moments to try to add a key player, but no deal was completed.

๐Ÿ The Overview

โš–๏ธ Frank Stronach: Crown cannot prove attempted rape charge

Both the Crown and the defence have asked the judge to issue an early directed verdict of acquittal before the trial concludes.

โš–๏ธ Cardinal Ouellet: โ€œHe rubbed his pelvis against me,โ€ witness says

Two more women have alleged inappropriate behaviour by the cardinal at the defamation trial he initiated.

๐Ÿ—ณ๏ธ CAQ : Christine Frรฉchette concerned about setbacks in gender equality

Coalition Avenir Quรฉbec leadership candidate Christine Frรฉchette says she is troubled by the rise of masculinist rhetoric undermining gender equality. โ€œPeople feel a bit uninhibited. They feel free to openly express opinions hostile to women, and that worries me greatly,โ€ she said.

A recent study found teachers reporting an increase in intolerant comments from students toward several groups, including women. There have been seven femicides in Quebec since the start of the year.

Like her leadership rival Bernard Drainville, Frรฉchette wants to adopt legislation inspired by โ€œClareโ€™s Law,โ€ which would allow women to check a partnerโ€™s history of violence. She also proposes adding 50 new resources to shelters for women fleeing domestic violence, at a cost of nearly $4 million per year.

If elected CAQ leader, she would become Quebecโ€™s second female premier after Pauline Marois of the PQ. The latest Lรฉger poll shows the CAQ receiving only 11% support among women.

๐Ÿ—ณ๏ธ ย CAQ :ย  Bernard Drainville says he supports equality but does not call himself a feminist

CAQ leadership candidate Bernard Drainville insists he is a โ€œstrong supporter of gender equality,โ€ though he does not wish to identify as a โ€œfeminist.โ€ He believes his proposals on home ownership and inโ€‘vitro fertilization will attract women to the party.

Drainville has pledged to achieve gender parity among CAQ candidates for the October 2026 election if he becomes leader. He argues that helping firstโ€‘time homebuyers and funding up to three IVF cycles will appeal to young women. The latest Lรฉger poll shows the party with only 11% support among women.

Like Christine Frรฉchette, Drainville says he supports โ€œClareโ€™s Law,โ€ which would allow women to check a partnerโ€™s history of domestic violence. With Bill 94, he previously added the requirement to โ€œbehave in a manner that respects equality between men and womenโ€ to the student code of conduct.

However, he refuses to label himself a feminist. โ€œI donโ€™t want to be trapped by any definition,โ€ he said.

โœˆ๏ธ More Canadians expected to arrive in Toronto from the Middle East

More Canadians fleeing the Middle East are expected to land at Toronto Pearson Airport this morning as the war in Iran reaches the oneโ€‘week mark. Passengers arriving from Dubai travelled on an Emirates flight on which the federal government reserved 51 seats.

The Emirates flight departed just hours before Dubai Airports announced a temporary suspension of operations at the major Middle Eastern travel hub due to security concerns, with some media reporting an explosion nearby.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said more than 108,000 Canadians in the region have registered with Global Affairs Canada, and about 3,500 have requested assistance to leave.

Canadians who arrived in Toronto yesterday from Dubai described a long and anxious journey home.

๐Ÿ“บ Radioโ€‘Canada in Beirut: โ€œStressed or relieved, they are leaving Lebanon under the bombsโ€

Radioโ€‘Canada visited Beirutโ€™s airport to speak with departing Canadians.

๐Ÿ’ฅ Explosions in Gulf countries despite Iranian presidentโ€™s apology

Iran claims to have โ€œevidenceโ€ that certain Gulf states have โ€œmade themselves available to the enemy.โ€

๐Ÿ• Three synagogues targeted by gunfire in the Greater Toronto Area

No injuries have been reported in the past week, according to Toronto Police and York Regional Police.

๐Ÿค Ottawaโ€“Alberta agreement to speed up major projects

The deal will allow the province to conduct its own impact assessments for major developments.

๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Canadaโ€“U.S. trade negotiations: time is running out

Last October, Donald Trump halted negotiations after a controversial Ontario advertisement.

๐Ÿค– Anthropic to challenge its designation as a โ€œriskโ€ company

The Pentagon added Anthropic to its list of firms posing a โ€œsupplyโ€‘chain risk.โ€

๐ŸŽฌ Ben Stiller: โ€œWar is not a movieโ€

A clip from one of his films appeared in a U.S. government montage about the conflict in Iran.

๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ When young Westerners adopt the Chinese lifestyle

Sherry Zhu, a 23โ€‘yearโ€‘old Chineseโ€‘American influencer, is at the centre of this trend.

๐Ÿ’›Spotlight

๐Ÿ’ซ Hats off to Lateef Martin, who proves that with creativity and perseverance, bicycle parts can become a worldโ€‘recognized musical instrument… and earn a spot in the finals of a prestigious competition in Atlanta.

Closing Note

A Saturday marked by difficult news, but also inspiring achievements. Between tragedies on our roads and the remarkable performances of our Paralympic athletes, life continues with its ups and downs. Enjoy your weekend and donโ€™t forget to set your clocks forward one hour tonight. Until next time. โ˜•

Categories
Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 6, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning!

Weโ€™re ending the week with several important stories that touch our daily lives. Between a major Supreme Court decision, soaring gas prices, and the upcoming provincial budget, thereโ€™s plenty to think about this morning. Grab your coffee โ€” letโ€™s dive into the news.

โš–๏ธ Main Story

Supreme Court orders access to CPEs for asylum seekers

The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that Quebec discriminated against asylumโ€‘seeking women by introducing regulations that denied them access to subsidized daycare spaces. This is the third ruling against the Quebec government on this matter.

In todayโ€™s decision, the Court states that excluding asylum seekers from subsidized daycare risks marginalizing them from society.

The case began with a woman from the Democratic Republic of Congo who sought asylum and obtained a work permit. The province then refused access to Quebecโ€™s heavily subsidized daycare network for her three children.

They were denied because Quebecโ€™s rules only granted access once refugee status had been formally approved by the federal government.

Spaces in the highly soughtโ€‘after network cost about nine dollars per day.

This ruling now forces Quebec to amend its Reduced Contribution Regulation to allow asylum seekers to access CPEs as soon as they obtain a work permit.

โšก The Essentials

Gas prices surge across Quebec

Drivers filling up this morning definitely felt the sting: gas prices jumped by 10 to 20 cents per litre across the province.

In Montreal, some stations were displaying $1.65 per litre for regular gas and $2.13 for diesel on Thursday.

The war in Iran, combined with disruptions in the gasoline supply chain, is pushing fuel prices sharply upward here and around the world. Prices are expected to keep rising as long as the conflict continues.

With diesel surpassing $2.00 in several regions, there are growing concerns about rising transportation costs โ€” and the added pressure this will place on consumers.

Man in his 50s shot in Longueuil

A man in his fifties was shot Thursday afternoon in the Longueuil area of Montรฉrรฉgie. He arrived at Pierreโ€‘Boucher Hospital around 3:15 p.m. with what police described as a gunshot wound.

Officers were later dispatched to an address on boulevard Nobert in connection with the incident. โ€œThe scene has been secured,โ€ the SPAL said.

Authorities say no further information will be released for now to avoid compromising the investigation.

Man in critical condition after crash in Saintโ€‘Louisโ€‘deโ€‘Gonzague

A man in his sixties is in critical condition after a violent crash Thursday evening in Saintโ€‘Louisโ€‘deโ€‘Gonzague. The accident occurred around 7:30 p.m. on Route 236 when the driver veered off the road for reasons that remain unclear.

The vehicle ended up overturned in a ditch. The driver was trapped inside, and firefighters used extraction tools to free him.

He was transported to hospital, where he remains in critical condition.

Edward Gebrael, Saintโ€‘Thรฉrรจse mentalist, captivates Quebec

Mentalist and hypnotist Edward Gebrael, based in Saintโ€‘Thรฉrรจse, has been performing in the Montreal region for more than a decade. Known professionally as Edward โ€œThe Mentalist,โ€ he has built a reputation captivating audiences ranging from corporate clients and schools to television viewers across Quebec.

Gebrael sees mentalism as an art rooted in perception and influence. โ€œMentalism is an art. Itโ€™s the ability to read someoneโ€™s thoughts through techniques like neurolinguistic programming, thought control, and thought influence.โ€ His profile rose significantly after his appearance on Quel talent.

His ambitions now include larger productions and new formats. โ€œMy next step is obviously to produce bigger shows, go on tour, and also create a TV special.โ€

๐Ÿ  Stories Weโ€™re Following

๐Ÿ’ฐ Quebec budget to be tabled on March 18

Finance Minister ร‰ric Girard will table the 2026โ€“2027 Quebec budget on March 18, ahead of the vote to choose Franรงois Legaultโ€™s successor as premier. The next leader of the Coalition Avenir Quรฉbec will be selected on April 12 by party members.

Girard says presenting the budget before March 31 โ€œensures continuity of public services and provides the necessary predictability.โ€ He also says both CAQ leadership candidates, Christine Frรฉchette and Bernard Drainville, were consulted during the process.

For his final budget before the general election scheduled for next October, Girard promises a โ€œsober and targetedโ€ document. It will be the eighth budget he presents.

๐Ÿ‘ถ Deaths now outnumber births in Quebec

New data released Thursday by the Institut de la statistique du Quรฉbec shows that deaths now exceed births in the province. This is the second consecutive year this has happened, and the gap continues to widen.

In 2025, 78,200 babies were born, while 80,450 people died. The year before, Quebec recorded 77,400 births and 78,800 deaths. In 2024, the fertility rate fell to 1.33 children per woman, the lowest level ever recorded.

This trend is partly offset by international immigration, which added 156,700 people in 2024. Without immigration, Quebecโ€™s population would already be shrinking.

Life expectancy now exceeds 82 years, and the share of residents aged 65 and older is expected to rise from 21.7% in 2025 to 27.7% in 2050.

โš–๏ธ Cardinal Ouellet trial: another alleged victim testifies

At the defamation trial launched by Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the defence called another alleged victim to testify. โ€œHe rubbed his pelvis against me,โ€ the woman said.

๐Ÿ‘ถ Lรฉvis couple arrested for mistreating newborn

The alleged events occurred more than a year ago, on January 1, 2025.

๐ŸŽญ Death of Jacques Michel: โ€œa great loss for Quebecโ€

Several public figures, including Nathalie Simard and Sylvain Cossette, expressed their sadness on Thursday.

๐ŸŒฒ Eastern Quebec leads in winter ecoโ€‘routes

In Basโ€‘Saintโ€‘Laurent and Gaspรฉsie, there are 118 km of roads where the MTMD does not use deโ€‘icing salt.

โ›ฐ๏ธ Montโ€‘Orford saga: 20 years of citizen activism

Montโ€‘Orford Park was created in 1938.

๐Ÿฆ Miller Zooโ€™s polar winter

A look inside the Miller Zooโ€™s winter challenges, where lions and hyenas face extreme cold.

๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต Carney signs strategic partnership with Japan

The agreement strengthens bilateral cooperation in defence, energy, trade, and technology.

โœˆ๏ธ Canada charters first flight to repatriate citizens

A Dubaiโ€“Istanbul flight will carry up to 180 Canadians fleeing the Middle East on Saturday. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says a chartered flight is scheduled to leave Dubai for Istanbul, transporting Canadians out of the war zone.

The government has also blockโ€‘booked seats on several Air Arabia flights, securing about 50 seats per flight, and reserved 200 seats on four separate flights from Beirut to Istanbul in the coming days.

Anand confirmed that Canada has four chartered buses with 180 seats leaving Qatar for Saudi Arabia starting Saturday.

More than 108,000 Canadians in the region have registered with Global Affairs Canada, and about 3,500 have requested assistance.

๐Ÿ—ณ๏ธ Conservatives want a vote before any Middle East involvement

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will defend its allies โ€œwhen justified.โ€

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Canada could assist Gulf countries

General Carignan says Ottawa is monitoring the situation and โ€œcould considerโ€ providing military support to its โ€œpartners.โ€

๐Ÿšซ Trump demands Iranโ€™s unconditional surrender

The U.S. president says he is prepared for a prolonged conflict if necessary.

๐Ÿ’ผ EQB approved to buy PC Financial

The Competition Bureau has approved EQB Inc.โ€™s proposed acquisition of PC Financial. The company behind EQ Bank announced the deal to purchase PC Financial from Loblaw for $800 million.

๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ United States: 92,000 jobs lost in February

Unemployment has risen to 4.4%. This unexpected setback is renewing fears of a recession.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ First Nation calls for ministerโ€™s resignation

The Kashechewan First Nation has been under a state of emergency for 60 days due to a drinkingโ€‘water crisis.

๐Ÿ“บ ICI RDI and CBC now on Prime Video

ICI RDI is not yet available on the TOU.TV platform, but that could be considered.

๐Ÿ’ Canadian paraโ€‘hockey team ready for U.S. showdown

The onโ€‘ice rivalry between the two countries will heat up again as the Paralympic tournament begins.

๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Ukrainian parasport as a remedy for war

In Ukraine, parasport serves as rehabilitation for wounded soldiers and as a source of national pride.

๐ŸŽ๏ธ Oscar Piastri dominates Australian Grand Prix

The second free practice session belonged to the Australian driver.

๐ŸŒง๏ธ Practical Corner

Weekend forecast

Residents can expect shifting weather conditions as the final weekend of March Break approaches. A mix of sun and clouds is forecast today, with a high of 4ยฐC and northeast winds around 20 km/h.

Rain will continue Saturday, with 5 to 10 mm expected and a high of 9ยฐC. Winds will shift from southeast to southwest around midday.

Sunday will remain cloudy and windy with a high of 5ยฐC, followed by clearing skies overnight and a low of 2ยฐC.

A mix of sun and clouds is expected Monday and Tuesday, with highs near 13ยฐC, though there is a 60% chance of showers on Tuesday.

Time change this weekend

Clocks spring forward overnight Saturday to Sunday. At 2 a.m., they jump directly to 3 a.m., costing an hour of sleep but adding an hour of evening daylight. Donโ€™t forget to adjust your devices โ€” and maybe plan for an extra coffee Sunday morning.

๐Ÿ‘‹ Before We Go

We wrap up the week with the items that directly affect our wallets and daily lives. Between rising gas prices and major Supreme Court decisions, thereโ€™s a lot to take in. And donโ€™t forget the time change this weekend. Happy Friday, everyone! โ˜•

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Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 5, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning! Itโ€™s Thursday, and while tensions in the Middle East continue to dominate international headlines, a few local and regional stories deserve our attention today. From a major arrest in Montreal to troubling repairs on a local bridge and new political developments, thereโ€™s plenty to talk about. Grab your coffee and letโ€™s dive in.

๐Ÿš” Main Story

Montreal police arrest Canadaโ€™s mostโ€‘wanted fugitive

Montreal police say the mostโ€‘wanted fugitive in Canada, an alleged member of a Montreal street gang, was arrested Thursday morning.

Bryan Fuentes Gramajo was wanted by Toronto police in connection with a July 2025 homicide. Gramajo, an alleged member of Zone 43 โ€” a Montreal street gang with ties in Ontario and British Columbia โ€” was arrested around 2:40 a.m. in Rosemontโ€“La Petiteโ€‘Patrie.

He is expected to appear in court in Montreal Thursday afternoon.

โ€œThe SPVM is pleased to have contributed to the criminal investigation led by our partners at the Toronto Police Service by arresting Bryan Fuentes Gramajo within our jurisdiction,โ€ SPVM Commander Mรฉlanie Dupont said in a statement.

Jamal Bentleyโ€‘Jean was shot and killed in the parking lot of Torontoโ€™s Yorkdale Shopping Centre on July 17, 2025. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Gramajo was one of three Montrealโ€‘area suspects wanted in connection with the killing. Bradley Lucate Nicolas was arrested and charged with firstโ€‘degree murder in August. Jimmy Prudent remains wanted by Toronto police.

Gramajo had been named Canadaโ€™s mostโ€‘wanted criminal in October by the Bolo Program, a national initiative that highlights the countryโ€™s fugitives.

His arrest means the Bolo programโ€™s mostโ€‘wanted suspect is once again Ail Boivin, a Saguenay man wanted in connection with drugโ€‘trafficking cases dating back to 2021 in Saguenay, Brossard, and Abbotsford, British Columbia. Police have been searching for Boivin since February 2023.

โšก Noteworthy

Emergency repairs on Chรขteauguay bridge despite mayorโ€™s concerns

Emergency crews were working Thursday morning to repair a gaping hole in a bridge in Chรขteauguay, south of Montreal. The large hole formed Wednesday in the middle of a traffic lane on the Pont de la Sauvagine, which crosses the Chรขteauguay River, after a small section of the deck collapsed.

The bridge was initially closed completely, but the east side has since reopened to twoโ€‘way traffic after Quebecโ€™s Transport Ministry deemed it safe. โ€œThe ministry is aware that the bridge has structural deficiencies, but it remains safe,โ€ spokesperson Martin Girard said.

The decision to reopen the east side while repairs continue on the west side has been questioned by Chรขteauguay Mayor ร‰ric Allard. โ€œI am speechless and do not understand this decision,โ€ Allard wrote on Facebook. โ€œGiven the level of rust on the metal rods, itโ€™s hard to believe the problem is limited to a single area.โ€

The provincial government had planned to demolish and rebuild the bridge last year, but the project was postponed to 2030.

Bixi bikes coming to Dollardโ€‘desโ€‘Ormeaux this summer

Residents of Dollardโ€‘desโ€‘Ormeaux will soon be able to hop on a BIXI Montrรฉal bike closer to home. The bikeโ€‘sharing program confirmed it will roll out service in the West Island city this summer, making it the first municipality in the region to get Bixi.

About 60 bikes โ€” 30 electric and 30 regular โ€” will be installed across seven stations in the central and eastern parts of the city. The network expansion is expected to be ready for residents by summer 2026.

Although the new stations are partly intended to help residents connect to the Rรฉseau express mรฉtropolitain, cyclists may have to wait until at least 2027 before Bixi docks appear at the REMโ€™s Fairviewโ€“Pointeโ€‘Claire and Des Sources stations on the future Anseโ€‘ร โ€‘lโ€™Orme branch.

๐Ÿ  Chez Nous

Supreme Court to Hear Challenge to Bill 21 on March 23

The Supreme Court of Canada is just weeks away from hearing the challenge to Quebecโ€™s controversial secularism law, known as Billโ€ฏ21. Over five days beginning Marchโ€ฏ23, the countryโ€™s highest court will hear from teachers, civilโ€‘rights groups, and religious organizations contesting the legislation.

The challenge is led by the English Montreal School Board (EMSB), which argues that the law is discriminatory and makes it harder to hire teachers by prohibiting publicโ€‘school employees from wearing religious symbols. Lower courts have largely upheld the law.

At the heart of the case is the use of the notwithstanding clause โ€” Sectionโ€ฏ33 of the Charter โ€” and the question of how far governments can go in overriding certain rights.

Dominic LeBlanc Heads to Washington

Canadaโ€“U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc will travel to Washington for meetings tomorrow. The visit comes as the review of the Canadaโ€“United Statesโ€“Mexico Agreement (CUSMA/USMCA) intensifies.

Prime Minister Mark Carney said during a media availability in Australia yesterday that Canadaโ€™s freeโ€‘trade pact with the United States โ€œhas effectively been broken in the short term by American actions.โ€ He said certain CUSMA protocols were not followed when the U.S. imposed tariffs on Canada.

LeBlancโ€™s trip also follows a ruling by a U.S. Court of International Trade judge on Wednesday, stating that companies are entitled to refunds for tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

Pamรฉla Groleau Testifies Against Cardinal Marc Ouellet

The woman being sued for defamation by Quebec Cardinal Marc Ouellet took the stand at the Montreal courthouse to repeat her allegations of misconduct against him. Pamรฉla Groleau testified in Superior Court that she felt as though she was under a spotlight that drew Ouellet toward her whenever they attended events together.

She accused Ouellet of several incidents of inappropriate touching between 2008 and 2010, including one in which he allegedly slid his hand down her back to the top of her buttocks during an event in Quebec City. The allegations first surfaced in 2022 as part of a broader classโ€‘action lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec.

In response, Ouellet filed a $100,000 defamation suit against Groleau, claiming she damaged his reputation, honour, and dignity. He has denied acting inappropriately toward her or anyone else.

UMQ Calls for Homelessness to Become a National Priority

The Union of Quebec Municipalities is urging the provincial government to make homelessness a national priority, backed by adequate funding. In a statement released Wednesday, the UMQ said the situation of people experiencing homelessness โ€œcontinues to deteriorate across Quebec.โ€

It is calling for homelessness to be treated as a national priority โ€œsupported by predictable and recurring investments that meet needs for the next five years.โ€ The organization stresses the importance of stable funding for both municipalities and community groups working with unhoused people.

โ€œThe next budget will be the last of the Legault government. This is its chance to give itself the means to reverse the trend on homelessness,โ€ said Bruno Marchand, chair of the UMQโ€™s homelessness committee and mayor of Quebec City.

Quรฉbec Solidaire Proposes Frontโ€‘Line Service to Fight Cyberviolence

Quรฉbec solidaire says the province should follow New Zealandโ€™s example and create a frontโ€‘line service to curb cyberviolence and support victims. The service would receive reports from victims and intervene โ€œdirectly with the perpetrators of violent behaviour.โ€

The proposal is inspired by New Zealand, which adopted a law in 2015 aimed at โ€œdeterring, preventing, and mitigating harm caused to individuals by digital communications.โ€ The country now has an agency, NetSafe, which says it resolves more than 97% of cyberbullying cases in under 15 days during its 2024โ€“2025 fiscal year.

Quรฉbec solidaire says its government would also introduce legislation allowing judges to quickly issue orders to stop harmful online behaviour.

Additional Regional and National Developments

Crown drops third charge against Frank Stronach โ€” The defence has completed crossโ€‘examination of the final complainant in the sexualโ€‘assault trial.

Mature trees saved in Estrie โ€” Conservationโ€‘value trees slated for removal in a proposed protected area will be preserved.

La Ronde sold to Village Vacances Valcartierโ€™s parent company โ€” EPR is acquiring seven Six Flags amusement parks, including La Ronde.

McGill aims to attract top international researchers โ€” The university seeks to position itself as U.S. academics consider leaving.

Frรฉchette promises โ€œbudget stabilityโ€ in education โ€” Bernard Drainville pledges cuts to social assistance for asylum seekers.

Terrapure plant continues to expose workers to lead โ€” Lead contamination remains above safety standards.

Shediac jail mishap โ€” Sensitive documents were found in a witnessโ€™s cell, potentially jeopardizing the Janson Baker trial.

OpenAI commits to cooperating with the RCMP โ€” Canadaโ€™s AI Safety Institute will review OpenAIโ€™s protocols.

Carney: โ€œWe will defend our allies when justifiedโ€ โ€” He does not rule out Canadian involvement if the Middle East conflict expands.

Poilievre promotes Canada as a reliable LNG supplier โ€” The Conservative leader continues his European tour.

U.S. reciprocal tariffs rising to 15% this week โ€” Sectorโ€‘specific Trumpโ€‘era tariffs remain unaffected.

Israeli army orders evacuation of South Beirut โ€” Panic grows as displaced residents flee intensified bombardments.

Iran conflict fuels misinformation online โ€” Social media has been chaotic since last weekendโ€™s Israeliโ€‘American strikes.

Trump denies lack of planning in U.S. evacuations โ€” His administration faces criticism over the absence of a preโ€‘offensive evacuation plan.

Union Nationale risks losing its authorization โ€” An investigation found multiple violations of Quebecโ€™s electoral law.

Antiโ€‘spit hoods under scrutiny โ€” Originally designed to protect police, the hoods have been linked to several incidents.

Putin accuses Ukraine of sinking Russian LNG tanker โ€” Moscow claims the attack was launched from Libyaโ€™s coast using naval drones.

British Columbia to keep daylight saving time โ€” Premier David Eby encourages three U.S. states to adopt the same schedule.

Two Russian aircraft detected near North American airspace โ€” NORAD says the activity is routine and not considered a threat.

๐Ÿ‘‹ Before We Go

Itโ€™s been a busy day, with a major arrest and significant developments across the region. Between the troubling repair work on the Chรขteauguay bridge and the arrival of Bixi bikes in Dollardโ€‘desโ€‘Ormeaux, thereโ€™s plenty happening in our local infrastructure. Wishing everyone a great day… see you tomorrow morning for a new edition! โ˜•

Categories
Daily

Laval Today. Mar. 4, 2026

Laval QC โ˜• The morning chat

Good morning!

Itโ€™s Wednesday, and while the conflict in the Middle East continues to dominate international attention, a few local stories deserve a closer look. Between a major drug seizure in Laval, a boilโ€‘water advisory in Montreal, and political developments in Quebec, thereโ€™s plenty to talk about. Grab your coffee โ€” letโ€™s dive in.

๐Ÿš” Main Story

Laval police seize drugs in operation targeting โ€œLes Grecs de Chomedeyโ€

Laval police say they seized large quantities of cannabis and other items as part of an ongoing investigation into an alleged drugโ€‘trafficking network known as Les Grecs de Chomedey.

On February 24, investigators with the Laval police organizedโ€‘crime unit carried out a series of searches at five locations believed to be linked to the group. The operation focused on addresses in both Laval and Montreal.

Two homes were searched in Lavalโ€™s Chomedey neighbourhood, along with two residences in Montrealโ€™s LaSalle borough and a commercial address in Saintโ€‘Laurent. The SPL was assisted by its ร‰quinoxe team, canine handlers, patrol officers, and the SPVM tactical intervention unit.

Police seized 32.5 kilograms of dried cannabis, 4.2 kilograms of cannabis edibles, and 11 bottles of cannabis syrup.

Investigators also confiscated a replica handgun, 10 cellphones, a GPS tracking device, a drone, a computer, more than $5,000 in cash, and fraudulent credit cards.

No arrests were made. Police describe the searches as the first phase of a larger, ongoing investigation, adding that the operation reflects continued efforts to disrupt organizedโ€‘crime activity in the region.

Last December, a Mr. Puffs location in Lavalโ€™s Chomedey neighbourhood โ€” identified by police as the groupโ€™s โ€œheadquartersโ€ โ€” was targeted by gunfire. The leader of Les Grecs de Chomedey, Charalambos Theologou, known as โ€œBobby the Greek,โ€ was shot dead in broad daylight at a Starbucks in Laval last October.

โšก Highlights

๐Ÿ’ง Boilโ€‘water advisory in Plateauโ€‘Montโ€‘Royal

A waterโ€‘main break in Plateauโ€‘Montโ€‘Royal has triggered a boilโ€‘water advisory for residents. City officials issued the precautionary notice after Tuesdayโ€™s break involving a 20โ€‘inch pipe on De Lorimier Avenue.

Authorities have not provided a timeline for lifting the advisory. The break forced the closure of De Lorimier between Masson Street and Saintโ€‘Joseph Boulevard. City crews are carrying out emergency repairs while the SPVM manages traffic.

The cause of the rupture has not been determined. Residents in affected areas are asked to bring tap water to a rolling boil for at least one minute before drinking it or using it for cooking, until further notice.

๐Ÿ“Š Liberals catch up to the PQ in new poll

The Quebec Liberal Party has erased the onceโ€‘significant lead held by the Parti Quรฉbรฉcois and is now virtually tied with its rival. A new Lรฉger poll conducted for Le Journal and TVA shows the PQ at 31% support, just ahead of the Liberals at 30%.

In December, Paul Stโ€‘Pierre Plamondon and his party held an 18โ€‘point lead over the Liberals. The shift comes as Charles Milliard settles into his role as Liberal leader. The Coalition Avenir Quรฉbec has, for the first time, fallen behind the Conservatives.

Support for Quebec sovereignty has dropped to its lowest point since the 1995 referendum. Only 29% of respondents said they would vote for independence if a referendum were held today, while 71% would vote against.

Within the CAQ, Christine Frรฉchette has widened her lead in the partyโ€™s leadership race. Seventy percent of CAQ supporters consider her the best choice to lead, compared with 20% for Bernard Drainville. The online poll was conducted from February 27 to March 2, 2026, among 1,041 respondents aged 18 and older.

๐Ÿ’ Canadiens fall 7โ€“5 to the Sharks

Macklin Celebrini recorded a goal and three assists, Kiefer Sherwood scored the powerโ€‘play winner with 3:26 left, and the San Jose Sharks beat the Montreal Canadiens 7โ€“5 on Tuesday night.

Alex Newhook scored two powerโ€‘play goals for Montreal. Oliver Kapanen, Phillip Danault, and Ivan Demidov also scored, while Mike Matheson added three assists.

The Canadiens lost in regulation for the first time since January 24 in Boston.

๐Ÿ  The Overview

โš–๏ธ Quebec Chief Justice Manon Savard announces her departure

The chief justice, who clashed publicly with Simon Jolinโ€‘Barrette last year, will step down on June 30.

โš–๏ธ Boundaoui trial: Crown says the accused โ€œintended to killโ€

As the trial continues in the killing of 15โ€‘yearโ€‘old Meriem Boundaoui, the Crown sharply challenged on Tuesday the version of events given by the two men accused in the February 7, 2021 shooting in Saintโ€‘Lรฉonard.

Aymane Bouadi, 30, testified that he had no idea his coโ€‘accused, Salim Touaibi, also 30, would pull out a gun and open fire that day. Touaibi admitted pulling the trigger, claiming he believed the vehicle where Boundaoui was sitting was empty.

The prosecution rejected that account. โ€œYou intended to kill the Rekik brothers, but you killed a 15โ€‘yearโ€‘old girl,โ€ prosecutor Simon Lapierre told Bouadi. Lapierre also suggested that Bouadi may have been the actual shooter, contradicting Touaibiโ€™s confession.

โ€œThatโ€™s completely false,โ€ Bouadi reportedly replied. โ€œI know I didnโ€™t do anything.โ€

The court heard that the shooting stemmed from a parking dispute between two neighbouring businesses on Jeanโ€‘Talon Street.

๐Ÿ›‚ New immigration rules threaten Quebecโ€™s circus industry

Tightened rules under the TFWP and the end of the PEQ are making it harder for Quebec circus companies to recruit foreign talent.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Quebec constitution: Liberals want to start from scratch

Charles Milliard believes the debate should be paused and relaunched under the next legislature.

๐Ÿ’ Canadiens approach the trade deadline

The Habs have the assets to make a major move โ€” but is now the right time to use them?

โš–๏ธ Extradition of Dave Turmel to Quebec approved

The former fugitive now has 15 days to appeal the decision.

๐Ÿ‘ถ Childcare: Supreme Court to rule Friday on asylum seekers

Children of asylum seekers were once allowed to attend subsidized daycare (CPE), until the rule changed in 2018.

โฐ Has the time come to abolish the time change?

British Columbia has announced it will keep Pacific Daylight Time yearโ€‘round starting March 8.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Mark Carney speaks candidly about his relationship with Trump

โ€œYou have to be very careful with the language you use with him,โ€ the prime minister said. โ€œItโ€™s not easy.โ€

โ›ฝ Bay du Nord: N.L. and Equinor reach an agreement

The massive offshore oil project appears to be back on track after years of uncertainty, with support from Ottawa.

โœˆ๏ธ Bank of Canada governor issues warning

Tiff Macklem says new players in global debt markets โ€” such as hedge funds and nonโ€‘traditional investors โ€” are not monitored as closely as banks. He warns this could create additional risks in an already unstable economic environment.

He notes that U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran have increased volatility in financial and energy markets, making these risks even more concerning.

Macklem also points out that hedge funds now buy up to half of Government of Canada bonds at auction. This growing presence of lessโ€‘regulated actors in such a central market could make the system more vulnerable during periods of turbulence.

โœˆ๏ธ Canada secures limited seats on flights out of Lebanon

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says the federal government has secured โ€œa limited number of seatsโ€ on commercial flights out of Lebanon for Canadians trying to leave the region.

She says more than 103,000 people have registered with Global Affairs Canada in the Middle East and Gulf region, highlighting the scale of the demand for assistance.

The Canadian government is not offering assisted departures, meaning Canadians must rely on available seats on commercial flights.

โœˆ๏ธ Canadians stranded in the Middle East ask for help

A Canadian visiting Dubai says his family needs more government support to return home, as flight cancellations have multiplied since the U.S.โ€“Iran conflict escalated on Saturday.

Devin Ramoutar, 27, from Toronto, says he arrived in Dubai on Thursday with his parents and sister for a short vacation. They were supposed to return Monday, but their flight has been cancelled six times.

Ramoutar says his family has received no support from the Canadian embassy despite their attempts to get help.

๐ŸŒด Oneโ€‘third of Canadians changing their Mexico travel plans

A new poll shows that 31% of Canadians who had plans or intentions to visit Mexico are now considering choosing another destination. An additional 7% are thinking about cancelling a trip they already booked.

However, 46% of respondents still plan to stick to their Mexico itinerary.

The Lรฉger poll also shows that 55% of Canadians rate their level of concern about travelling to Mexico as โ€œhigh.โ€ The anxiety comes after violence erupted in the country about a week and a half ago, following the Mexican armyโ€™s killing of a cartel leader.

๐ŸšŒ Canadian woman killed in Dominican Republic

The daughter of a Canadian woman killed in a bus crash in the Dominican Republic says her family is still searching for answers three days after the incident, which also left another Canadian dead and 13 people injured.

Amanda Fullerton, from Manitoba, says her mother, Colleen Fullerton, died in the crash Sunday night, while her father, John Fullerton, is hospitalized. She says she has not been able to reach him since the accident.

She is urging Canadian consular officials to send a representative to the hospital where her father is being treated, saying the family feels unsupported. The official confirmation of her motherโ€™s death arrived Monday afternoon from the RCMP.

โš–๏ธ B.C. chief coroner to investigate Tumbler Ridge

The investigation will examine mentalโ€‘health services in rural communities. Many observers also wonder whether it will determine how the killerโ€™s mental state may have contributed to the tragedy, and whether gaps in access to care played a role.

๐Ÿš— Cattle on the loose on Highway 17 in Ontario

A collision on March 1 on Highway 17 near Inglis Lake Road in Kenora caused several cows to escape from a trailer being hauled by a commercial vehicle. The crash, which happened around 10 a.m., led to the animals scattering in the area, prompting authorities to secure the scene.

The Ontario Provincial Police say a plan is in place to safely recover the remaining cattle still at large. Officers are asking the public not to chase or shoot the animals, warning that doing so could lead to charges under the Trespass to Property Act or the Criminal Code, including reckless discharge of a firearm, careless use of a firearm, or theft of livestock.

Drivers in the Inglis Lake Road area are urged to stay alert and report any stray cattle. Police thanked residents for their cooperation and emphasized that community safety โ€” and the safety of the recovery team โ€” remains the priority.

๐ŸŽ“ The red square resurfaces in Ontario

The red square, which symbolized the Quebec student movement in 2012, is now appearing in Ontario amid a major overhaul of student financial aid.

๐ŸŽฟ Ralf Etienne: first Haitian athlete at the Winter Paralympics

The skier becomes Haitiโ€™s firstโ€‘ever representative at the Winter Paralympic Games, going from the 2010 earthquake to the mountains of Cortina in 2026.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Alberta not ready for foreign interference, experts warn

A referendum on Alberta independence could take place this year, but experts say the province is not prepared to deal with foreign interference.

๐Ÿ’ฐ U.S. tariffs rising to 15% this week

U.S. โ€œreciprocalโ€ tariffs are expected to rise to 15% this week. This does not include sectorโ€‘specific tariffs imposed by Trump.

โœˆ๏ธ Saab invites Canada to help develop the fighter jets of the future

Sweden is among several countries working on the next generation of fighter aircraft.

๐Ÿ‘‹ Before we wrap up

A busy day with major developments in Laval and across the region. Between local police operations and provincial political shifts, thereโ€™s a lot to take in this morning. And if youโ€™re in Plateauโ€‘Montโ€‘Royal, donโ€™t forget to boil your water. Have a great day! โ˜•