Tag: Quebec

  • Warrant issued for suspect wanted in Edmonton robbery

    Warrant issued for suspect wanted in Edmonton robbery

    Canada Global (Web News) Edmonton police are searching for a suspect connected to a robbery at a cannabis store in the city’s south end last year.

    Authorities report that on October 20, around 10:45 a.m., two individuals entered a store near Desrochers Gate and Daniel Way, demanding products. When the store employee refused, the suspects assaulted him before fleeing the scene. The clerk sustained minor injuries and was treated at a hospital before being released.

    Police have identified one suspect as 19-year-old Seth Newman, who has a tattoo on the right side of his neck. He is known to have ties to Edmonton and parts of Saskatchewan. A warrant has been issued for his arrest.

    Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Edmonton police at 780-423-4567 or dial #377 from a mobile phone.

  • IRCC introduces new programs to PGWP-eligible fields of study

    IRCC introduces new programs to PGWP-eligible fields of study

    Canada Global (Web News) Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has recently broadened the range of study programs eligible for Post-Graduation Work Permits (PGWPs).

    Effective December 17, 2024, the updated list of PGWP-eligible fields now includes specific programs in early childhood education and developmental service work. Prior to this update, as of October 4, 2024, IRCC had outlined field requirements across five primary categories, which align with the occupation-based Express Entry categories:

    • Agriculture and agri-food
    • Healthcare
    • Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM)
    • Trade
    • Transport

    The recent revision introduces a new category: Education.

    Programs eligible for PGWPs are organized and categorized according to the Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP), Canada’s system for classifying educational programs.

    The table below lists all the new programs now eligible for a PGWP under the education field of study, along with the corresponding CIP codes:

    CIP 2021 Title CIP 2021 Code
    Developmental services worker 19.0710
    Montessori teacher education 13.1207
    Waldorf/Steiner teacher education 13.1208
    Early childhood education and teaching 13.1210
    Teaching assistants/aide, general 13.1501
    Child development 19.0706
    Child care and support services management 19.0708
    Child care provider/assistant 19.0709
    Early childhood and family studies 19.0711

     

    In September 2024, IRCC announced that international students must graduate from programs linked to occupations experiencing long-term labor shortages in order to qualify for Post-Graduation Work Permits (PGWPs).

    This requirement does not apply to graduates with university bachelor’s, master’s, or doctoral degrees but is relevant to those completing college programs or vocational programs at universities. Students who applied for study permits before November 1, 2024, are not subject to this field of study requirement.

     

  • Quebec Liberal caucus calls for Trudeau’s resignation: sources

    Quebec Liberal caucus calls for Trudeau’s resignation: sources

    Canada Global (Web News) Quebec Liberal MPs are intensifying calls for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to resign.

    According to sources, Stéphane Lauzon, the chair of the Quebec caucus, consulted with MPs individually over the holidays and communicated their stance to national caucus leadership.

    One MP, speaking anonymously due to caucus confidentiality, confirmed that there is a broad consensus among the Quebec MPs that Trudeau should step down.

    MP Alexandra Mendès, who was not consulted by Lauzon, stated that the consensus communicated to the caucus chair was that Trudeau should “step away.” However, she noted that the call for his resignation is not entirely unanimous.

    While several MPs, including Mendès, Sophie Chatel, Anthony Housefather, and Joël Lightbound, have openly called for Trudeau to step down, other members of the caucus have not confirmed the same position. The Quebec Liberal caucus is set to meet virtually on January 9.

  • Quebec Presents An Energy Reform Bill For The Next Three Years

    Quebec Presents An Energy Reform Bill For The Next Three Years

     Canada Global(Web News)Quebec has introduced its much-anticipated energy reform bill and is committing to a maximum rate increase of three per cent for residents over the next three years, followed by A relief program will be launched for those struggling to cope with the financial shock of the increase.

    In the meantime, consumers can get used to cooking their dishes at 2 a.m. instead of dinner.

    Quebec Economy Minister Pierre Fitzgibbon wants Quebec to be carbon-free by 2050, and that means making some changes to the way people use electricity.

    “The energy board and Hydro-Québec can put together programs to encourage people to use at different times or to use less, and they will be optional,” Fitzgibbon said
    . One of several measures proposed in 69.
    To reach its climate goals, the province says it needs to double the energy it currently generates from
    renewable energy projects such as wind and solar It will have to increase many times.

  • A House In Quebec Caught Fire Due To An Explosion, 8 People Including 4 Children Were Injured Due To Burns

    A House In Quebec Caught Fire Due To An Explosion, 8 People Including 4 Children Were Injured Due To Burns

    Canada Global(Web News)An explosion in the city of St. Constant on the south coast of Montreal has sent two families to the hospital with severe burns.

    According to authorities, the two families were inside a home when the garage behind them exploded.

    Around 9:40 p.m., police received several 911 calls from neighbors reporting that the Bratton Street building was on fire.

    Firefighters found the victims on the home’s front lawn and in a home across the street, officials said.
    According to Grands Seigneuries Fire Department Chief of Operations Luc Lapointe, all eight people suffered severe burns to various parts of their bodies.

    Several ambulances were dispatched to the scene to transport the victims to a Montreal hospital. None of the injuries are life-threatening.
    The ages of the victims are between three and 45 years, four of them are children.
    Firefighters are still investigating the cause of the incident. Officials say it is not clear whether the cause of the fire was an explosion or something else.
    A small number of Hydro Quebec customers in the area were without power for more than 17 hours. While the blast destroyed the home’s garage, other buildings were undamaged.

  • Measles May Be Spreading In Some Canadian Communities, Officials Have Warned

    Measles May Be Spreading In Some Canadian Communities, Officials Have Warned

     Canada Global(Web News)Measles, one of the world’s most contagious viruses, is quietly spreading in parts of Canada as health officials brace for more imported infections during the March break travel season.

    By one count, the country now has at least nine confirmed infections for 2024, a two-month tally not far from a dozen cases across Canada in 2023.
    Two recent cases, identified in Quebec and Ontario, were not previously linked to travel and did not come into contact with any known measles cases, suggesting that the individuals may have been infected in their communities.

    Laval Public Health announced Thursday that one infected person has been in home isolation since Feb. 26 and previously visited a school, a corner store, a medical clinic and the CHU Sainte-Justine hospital in the Montreal suburb of Laval. , while highly contagious. Officials said the individual was not vaccinated and had not traveled.
    We believe this is the beginning of community transmission.
    The Quebec case comes after another infection reported this week in York Region, a municipality north of Toronto, that was unrelated to travel. Health officials there say a man in his 30s was infected by an unknown source.

  • Muslim groups promise to monitor Quebec ban on school prayer spaces

    Muslim groups promise to monitor Quebec ban on school prayer spaces

    Canada Global (Web News) Muslim organisations are protesting the Quebec government’s plan to outlaw prayer rooms in public schools and pledging to keep an eye on how the Education Department applies its new regulations.

    Education Minister Bernard Drainville pledged last week to forbid schools from doing so in response to news that at least two schools in the Montreal region had designated areas for Muslim students to pray. But the minister assured reporters that he wouldn’t outright forbid prayer. Instead, he advised pupils to pray “discreetly” and “quietly.”

    The National Council of Canadian Muslims announced on Monday that it would monitor how the government implemented the ban on prayer rooms and that it would “take action” if the rights of students were infringed.

    According to the council’s chief executive officer, Stephen Brown, “we haven’t actually seen how it is going to materially impact individuals.” Hence, “we would do something, we would take action, (if) these guidelines would actually constitute in effect a limitation on people’s fundamental rights.”

    When asked if Drainville’s order had been followed, the Education Department remained silent on Monday.

    Throughout the course of the previous week’s 24 hours, Drainville’s stance hardened. He stated that schools could not favour one religion over another and that they had to make sure the spaces supported gender equality in his first response to news of school prayer areas. But as the Parti Québécois demanded tougher action, he immediately altered his mind, claiming Drainville’s initial accommodative posture would encourage additional schools to open up prayer rooms.

    When the PQ was in power in 2013, Drainville is renowned for introducing a purported values charter. Those who wear religious symbols should not be allowed to work in public institutions, according to the charter. The charter served as a model for Bill 21, a secularism bill introduced by the Coalition Avenir Québec in 2019 that forbids many public employees, including teachers, from donning religious garb at work. Before the elections in 2022, the minister switched to the CAQ.

    According to civil rights attorney Julius Grey, Quebec schools are not required to provide prayer rooms under Bill 21. Yet if the government outright forbids students from praying, it might find itself in legal difficulties.

    “A bar on people praying in schools would be utterly opposed to the Charter — and I think will get struck down,” Grey said in an interview on Monday. They won’t, in my opinion; to do so would be to invite difficulty.

    The minister should have consulted community leaders before banning school prayer areas, according to the Table de concertation des organismes musulmans, a coalition of Muslim groups and mosques that condemned Drainville’s decision last week.

    Hassan Guillet, a Montreal imam, called the issue a “tempest in a teacup,” claiming that politicians and media outlets had implied that Muslim pupils praying in class was somehow sinister. According to him, Ramadan sees an increase in the number of Muslims who pray five times daily.

  • Quebec ice storm left nearly 300,000 customers without power

    Quebec ice storm left nearly 300,000 customers without power

    Canada Global (Web News) After hydro personnel dealt with the largest-scale outages brought on by this week’s deadly ice storm, the rate of power restoration in Quebec was anticipated to slow down on Saturday.

    Over 300,000 Hydro-Québec customers are still without power three days after freezing rain caused ice branches to fall on power lines, roads, and automobiles, according to Maxime Nadeau, director of energy system control.

    “Now that the majority of our distribution system has been repaired, we are working on outages that have fewer customers connected to them. Hence, when we fix an outage, fewer consumers get their electricity back,” Nadeau said during a news conference on Saturday morning. “Thus, the restoration rhythm will be slower.”

    He claimed that some of the about 3,000 unresolved outages are in difficult-to-reach places or are more difficult to fix, which will also hinder the process.

    At its worst, the storm on Wednesday left more than a million people without power and covered significant portions of southern Quebec and eastern Ontario in ice.

    Montreal, Montérégie, Laval, and Outaouais are home to the majority of Quebec’s 290,000 powerless residents.

    Three deaths have been attributed to the storm, the most recent being a 75-year-old man who passed away in Saint-Joseph-du-Lac, Quebec, from carbon monoxide poisoning after using a generator in his garage.

    The health department of Montreal said that scores of people who used outside equipment indoors on Friday while there was a power outage had carbon monoxide poisoning.

    On Thursday in Les Coteaux, Quebec, another man perished while attempting to remove tree limbs from his home.

    According to the provincial police, the man was hit by one of the branches and passed away immediately.

  • 6 Bodies found in marsh area near Akwesasne, Que., police say

    6 Bodies found in marsh area near Akwesasne, Que., police say

    Canada Global (Web News) The deaths of six persons were discovered this afternoon in a marsh area close to Akwesasne, Quebec, and the Akwesasne Mohawk Police claim they are looking into the incident.

    On the border with the United States is Akwesasne.

    With assistance from the Coast Guard and the Hogansburg Akwesasne Volunteer Fire Department, the police claim their marine unit is still searching the area.

    In a press release, the Akwesasne Mohawk Police state that they will request assistance from the air support units of the Ontario Provincial Police and Quebec Provincial Police.

    The cause of death will be determined through toxicological and post-mortem examinations, according to the police.

    According to them, they are also trying to locate the bodies and determine their status in Canada.

  • 9-year girl dies in snow-fort collapse in Quebec

    9-year girl dies in snow-fort collapse in Quebec

    Canada Global (Web News) According to the Quebec Provincial Police, a nine-year-old girl died on Sunday afternoon after colliding with something in the snow behind a house in Saint-Ubalde, Quebec.

    According to the Sûreté du Québec, the victim was building a snow fort with another child when it fell on top of them (SQ).

    In the municipality around 100 kilometres west of Quebec City, police, paramedics, and firefighters were called to the site around 2:40 p.m.

    Nine-year-old child “needed to undergo resuscitation techniques,” according to first responders. According to SQ spokesman Béatrice Dorsainville, she was transferred to the hospital and later declared deceased.

    The second girl, who is seven years old, allegedly sustained non-critical injuries.
    According to Dorsainville, “We have an investigator and the forensic identification service who are on site to evaluate the incident”.

    Authorities were unable to immediately confirm whether an adult was present when the incident occurred with the kids.

  • Canada and U.S. to finish women’s hockey Rivalry Series with two games in Quebec

    Canada and U.S. to finish women’s hockey Rivalry Series with two games in Quebec

    Canada Global (Web News) The Canadian women’s hockey team must defeat the Americans twice to win the Rivalry Series.

    Hockey Canada announced on Thursday that the final two games of the seven-game series will be played on Feb. 20 in Trois-Rivières’ Colisée Vidéotron and Feb. 22 at Laval, Quebec’s Place Bell.

    The United States won the opening three games 4-3 in a shootout in Kelowna, British Columbia, 2-1 in Kamloops, British Columbia, and 4-2 in Seattle.

    The next two games were won by Canada, one in overtime in Los Angeles and the other in Henderson, Nevada, both by scores of 3-2.

    American forward Hilary Knight leads the series after five games with four goals and three assists.

    With three goals and one assist, Beauceville, Quebec native and captain Marie-Philip Poulin leads Canada.

    Hockey Canada is collaborating with the NHL’s Montreal Canadiens and the ECHL’s Trois-Rivières Lions for the two games in Quebec.

    The Montreal Canadiens have long supported women’s hockey, and this is a continuation of their dedication to advancing the sport, according to the team’s president of sport and entertainment France Margaret Bélanger.

    The women’s team and Hockey Canada stipulated in their athletes’ agreement, which was made public last month, that the athletes will be able to profit from the Rivalry Series thanks to a revenue-sharing arrangement.

    Canada will compete for a third women’s world championship title in Brampton, Ontario, from April 5 to 16. Canada has won two straight finals against the United States.

  • Snowfall, freezing rain warnings issued for parts of Quebec

    Snowfall, freezing rain warnings issued for parts of Quebec

    Canada Global (Web News) Environment Canada issued snowfall and freezing rain advisories for numerous areas on Wednesday, signalling the arrival of yet another wave of winter weather in Southern Quebec.

    Starting on Wednesday night, two to five millimetres of freezing rain are predicted to fall in Montreal after the city’s thaw. Streets and walkways will become “icy, slippery, and hazardous,” the public meteorological agency warns.

    “Consider postponing any unnecessary journey until the situation improves. The warning states that rush hour traffic in urban areas could be significantly affected.

    Additionally, freezing rain is anticipated in the Richelieu Valley-Saint-Hyacinthe and Eastern Townships, where accumulations might reach 15 millimetres.

    Environment Canada predicts that beginning Wednesday evening, additional locations will experience a combination of ice pellets and heavy snowfall.

    Up to 15 centimetres of sloppy precipitation might fall in the Laurentians and Lanaudière, making driving in those regions hazardous.

    “Prepare to change your driving style if the road conditions change. In some areas, rapidly falling snow may make travel challenging, according to the warning.

  • Quebec premier more optimistic on health funding deal after meeting with Trudeau

    Quebec premier more optimistic on health funding deal after meeting with Trudeau

    Canada Global (Web News) Following his meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday, Quebec Premier François Legault says he is “more confident” about completing a health-care budget agreement with Ottawa.

    Legault claimed he perceived Trudeau’s “desire to proceed on the file” as paediatric hospitals and emergency rooms across the nation buckled under intense pressure.

    Following the encounter at a coffee shop in Old Montreal, Legault told reporters, “I am more optimistic today than before.” Trudeau declined to answer any questions.

    The main federal funding source for provincial health systems, the Canada Health Transfer, has been increased, but the provinces and territories have demanded it. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has indicated that will only happen if the provinces agree to reform and enhance their systems. The federal government should increase its existing coverage of health care costs to 35% from the current 22%, according to the provinces and territories.

    Legault claimed that Trudeau had been apprehensive about calling a meeting with premiers to discuss health care because he feared the discussions would not be productive.