William McLeod, an inspector at American Iron & Metal in Saint John, doesn't remember hearing any loud or unusual noises the day Darrell Richards was fatally injured cutting into a pressurized calender roll at the scrapyard nearly two years ago.
A former chief of the most populous First Nation in Manitoba has asked the Federal Court of Canada to set aside the results of a 2023 band election over the cancellation of advance polls and alleged issues with mail-in ballots.
Walking across the stage at Saskatoon's Merlis Belsher Place, there were quite a few things twins Caydence and Kennedy Marley had in common: their graduation gowns, their camera-ready smiles — and their academic drive.
This First Person column is written by Dylan Earis, a graduate of the University of Regina's school of journalism. For more information about First Person stories, see the FAQ.
Alberta Occupational Health and Safety has laid charges against three companies after two men died in an explosion at an oil and gas site north of Edmonton.
A B.C. Supreme Court judge will begin hearing arguments Friday in the sentencing of a man who was convicted of first-degree murder in the 2017 death of a 13-year-old Burnaby girl.
A Calgary medical clinic is working to tackle the shortage of family physicians by empowering other health-care providers to play key roles in patient care.
As Canadian urbanites look for more affordable housing, officials in Thunder Bay are pitching the northwestern Ontario community as one of the last cities in Canada with cheap homes for sale.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford swapped his energy and education ministers in a cabinet shuffle Thursday and brought a minister who resigned over the Greenbelt controversy back into the fold.
Pam Atkinson of Charlottetown says she was surprised to receive a mysterious envelope in the mail with big black all-capital letters on the front that read: "ATTENTION PARENTS."