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Telephones at Doug Duffy's telephone museum in Belleville, Ont. who the wide variety of styles once available. [Photo By Peter J. Thompson/National Post]

It’s an ordinary, old black pay phone, its push buttons faded by decades of fingers pressing the numbers.

But I like to call it the world’s most beautiful pay phone, thanks to its front-row view of the majestic, 300-million-year-old Mount Rundle. I first stumbled across this juxtaposition of 20th-century technology and timeless nature a few years ago at a campground just outside of Banff, Alta. Sadly, when you lift the telephone receiver now, there’s no dial tone — just dead air.

Whenever I see an old, decommissioned pay phone or, even more rarely, a rotary dial phone, I’m transported to a time when the landline telephone played a major role in all our lives. I was an early adopter. So enamoured with this marvel of communication was I that for my third birthday, I asked for and received a toy version of our family’s rotary dial phone. Later, I gladly risked a tongue-lashing for the opportunity to listen in on other people’s conversations on my grandparents’ party line, their ancient wooden wall telephone a portal to the daily gossip in their rural Manitoba community.

After my dad had a teen line installed in our basement rec room, I’d jabber endlessly with my best friend, who lived right across the street. During this golden era of telephone anonymity, we also made prank calls across the city, recording our shenanigans on a cassette player, a gift from my eldest brother. We got so good at it, my friend’s parents played those recordings at adult-only house parties. (One of our biggest hits was a series of calls to downtown Winnipeg hotels on the eve of the Shrine Circus, posing as Hungarian lion tamers needing a place to stay with our “pets.”)

After high school, my entanglement with the telephone continued. As an Alberta-wide directory assistance operator, I was on the phone about 30 hours a week, reading out telephone numbers from my cubicle in a windowless downtown office space, a setting straight out of the Apple TV series

Severance

. In its early days, we “telephone girls” (a term coined in the late 19th century for the mostly female profession) would look up the numbers in phone books at our stations, but soon small computer terminals replaced paper. After my shift, which involved talking to several hundred people at about 27 seconds per call (yes, we were timed), I’d sometimes join my friends at Slack Alice, a restaurant a few blocks away. The short-lived Calgary hangout’s calling card was a landline phone at each table where you rang up your fellow diners, a kind of analog version of today’s dating apps.

These were unimaginable dinosaur days, where the telephone was plugged into a wall, the wires inside leading to an outside telephone wire, reaching from the house to telephone poles, which would then connect us with the outside world. Today’s younger digital natives can hardly fathom a phone that is only as mobile as the length of an extension cord. They may have seen a rotary dial phone on the hit TV series

Stranger Things

, but might be stumped by how to operate one. While a smartphone has a voice-to-voice conversation function, like its predecessor the landline, why talk when you can text?

Still, today’s cellular freedom is evolution of the technology their parents and grandparents knew. That wired communication world we experienced for a good century will soon be no more, as more people choose cellular service over landlines, and aging copper phone lines get replaced by VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol). In other words, even if you still covet your landline phone, it won’t be the same, ever again.

This story, then, serves as a tribute to a beloved bygone era as the telephone we once knew heads toward history’s round file.

Bell vs. Meucci

For the technology that dominated much of 20th-century life, we have a Scottish-Canadian-American to thank. After all,

Alexander Graham Bell

was the first to get a U.S. patent approved, on March 7, 1876. He wasn’t the only one, however, experimenting with how to send vocal sounds along a telegraph wave; several wily aspiring inventors hoped to exploit the telegraph cables pumping out Morse code across the United States.

“The telegraph was the first technological miracle,” says Bob Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University in Syracuse, N.Y. “Before that, any message could only go as fast as you could physically carry it. The telephone was the second miracle.”

The controversy over just who was the true inventor of this second 19th-century technological miracle — Bell, Elisha Gray, Antonio Meucci or a number of others — has raged right into the 21st century. In 2002, the U.S. Congress passed a resolution that “the life and achievements of

Antonio Meucci

should be recognized, and his work in the invention of the telephone should be acknowledged.” Ten days later, Canada’s House of Commons passed a motion declaring Bell, a one-time resident of our country, the telephone’s rightful inventor.

Then there’s science journalist Seth Shulman’s The Telephone Gambit, which lays out a convincing case that Bell likely swiped Gray’s idea, in what Shulman calls “one of the most consequential thefts in history.” More recently, Benjamin Brown, professor emeritus of physics at Marquette University, in the 2020 proceedings of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, published a paper entitled, “The Bell Versus Gray Telephone Dispute: Resolving a 144-year-old Controversy.” It made yet another compelling case, this time for Bell.

For now, let’s stick with the then-29-year-old Edinburgh-born Bell, who did manage to get that U.S patent ahead of the pack. Thankfully, Bell’s suggestion to answer a ringing telephone with the nautical “Ahoy-hoy” wasn’t as successful. While that phrase would later live on in the popular animated TV series The Simpsons, it was Bell’s friend and sometimes adversary, Thomas Edison, who insisted on “Hello” as the default greeting. Bell didn’t use either on his first telephone call in Boston on March 10, 1876, when he called his assistant Thomas A. Watson in an adjacent room, simply saying, “Mr. Watson — come here — I want to see you.”

Not everyone was immediately smitten with the brave new world of telephony. U.S. president Rutherford B. Hayes responded to Bell’s demonstration for him by saying, “That’s an amazing invention, but who would ever want to use one of them?” On Oct. 6, 1877, the popular science magazine Scientific American described Bell’s invention as nothing more than a “beautiful scientific toy.” Prime minister Alexander Mackenzie ordered it removed from Rideau Hall not long after its installation in late 1877, a decision overruled by Lady Dufferin, wife of the governor general. The amateur singer, having regaled her friends over the crackling line, was already sold on its entertainment value.

Others had a downright utopian view of the new invention. In his 1910 book The History of the Telephone, Herbert N. Casson said the device not only “marvellously extended the facilities of conversation,” it also altered the urban landscape, making such developments as skyscrapers possible. “It has literally abolished the isolation of separate families and has made us members of one great family,” the Canadian author, a former Methodist minister, stated with evangelical fervour. “It has become truly an organ of the social body.”

Claude Fischer advises anyone reading early writings about the telephone to take such glowing pronouncements with a grain, even a pound, of salt. “It didn’t really change American life, but people adopted and adapted the technology to pursue culture ends that they would have pursued anyway,” says Fischer, a professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley and author of the book America Calling: A Social History of the Telephone to 1940. Everyday activities that were cumbersome before, such as arranging meetups with friends, says Fischer, were made much easier thanks to the telephone. “It became sort of part of the furniture in a home.”

He also doubts the assertion that it radically altered the urban landscape, although the telephone did cut into the roles of messenger and “errand boy,” jobs that would return with a vengeance a century later with the proliferation of online delivery businesses such as Amazon and Skip The Dishes. “They already had pneumatic tubes,” Fischer says, referring to the transport system for documents and other items built into many office structures. Those writing about the telephone were often mere mouthpieces, he says, for the telephone companies. “They weren’t interested in publicizing things that did not make the industry look good.”

Despite the avalanche of early favourable reviews, the telephone elicited deep suspicion in certain quarters. Some feared electric shock by merely touching the new device. Others complained that it would be the death of letter writing, a tool for criminality, and a way to seduce wives and teenage daughters. “There was a concern expressed that when a man went to work and a wife was at home, there was no screening of who might approach her,” says Fischer, who adds that people also worried about the lack of privacy from party lines, those early shared lines (hooked up to the same local network) that could be used by several households. “Some wrote about telephones creating a nervous state of mind from the ringing and constant interruptions.”

Still, the die was cast. In 1877, the first white pages phone directory was published in the United States. A one-pager printed on cardboard with 50 Connecticut names but no phone numbers — the operator would connect you — it would spawn generations of both white- and yellow-page books, providing a historical record of sorts. That same year, the New York Telephone Company published a booklet entitled Winning Friends by Telephone, telling readers that, “The voice with the smile wins.”

Women ‘forbidden to use the phone’

Fast-forward a few decades, and the telephone was now part of the fabric of daily life. By the 1940s, nearly half of Americans had a landline in their household; in Canada, just over 20 per cent. That first one-page phone directory had spread across the continent, and, in bigger markets, the pages numbered in the hundreds, this time with numbers and addresses attached. At the lick of a finger, the Yellow Pages helped you find a butcher, a baker or a candlestick maker.

The technology first touted as a boon for business was an indispensable home item. The early days of needing a switchboard operator to help place every call had been replaced by automatic switchboards (you still needed “0” operators to connect long-distance calls), and many of the fears about the downfall of society hadn’t materialized, even though scammers and pranksters proliferated (“Is your refrigerator running? Then you better go catch it!”). Thanks to the laying of underwater transatlantic cables, you could call Grandma in Liverpool as easily as your next-door neighbour, albeit at astronomical long-distance prices that wouldn’t come down until late in the 20th century.

While the black rotary-dial landline had long since replaced the upright candlestick model and the hand-cranked, wooden wall version, this era was on the cusp of a design explosion. Different colours for phones, a development often marketed to women, were on the horizon. It was a full-circle moment for half the population, who in the telephone’s earliest days were shut out from the action. “At the beginning, women were forbidden to use the phone,” wrote Michele Martin in her book Hello Central? Gender, Culture and Resistance in the Formation of Telephone Systems. “Business was supposed to have the priority.”

By 1959, that attitude was all but a dim memory when the Princess Telephone hit the market. I still remember seething with envy when, visiting my American cousin Sylvia, I spotted a pastel pink Princess Telephone on her nightstand. What girl in the mid-20th century wasn’t lured by its whimsical advertising slogan? “It’s little! … It’s lovely! … It lights!”

The Princess Telephone was the creation of the American design firm of Henry Dreyfuss, one of the first celebrity industrial designers of the 20th century. Dreyfuss also brought the world the Western Electric Model 500 telephone, a sophisticated upgrade to the Western Electric Model 300, the ubiquitous phone of the 1930s and 1940s and one of the first to incorporate the handset, dial and bells into a compact, easy-to-use unit. While the Princess Telephone, whose handset rested firmly on a flat, ovoid base, was an esthetic hit, it wasn’t Dreyfuss’s shining form-meets-function achievement. The base was so light, it moved when the phone was dialed, and it didn’t come with an internal ringer, so you had to mount one on the wall.

Still, a good argument could be made that it helped usher in a bold new era of design for the home telephone, which until the late 1980s had to be rented, rather than outright purchased, from your local phone company. Two superstars of phone design would soon follow: the Trimline (1965), another Dreyfuss design that had the dial on the handset, a kind of a preview to the cellphone; and the Contempra (1968), the first Canadian-designed and manufactured telephone, courtesy of Ottawa industrial designer John Tyson.

Advertised as being “shaped to fit your hand like a glove,” the Contempra’s handset sat between the user’s shoulder and cheek, the coiled cord stretching well across a room. It boasted the new feature of push buttons, rescuing us from the tyranny of the rotary dial. It also came in the popular colours of the day, olive green and burnt orange, harvest hues that matched many refrigerators, stoves and fondue sets.

While the Keebler Elf, Garfield the cat and other novelty phones that flooded the market in the 1970s were popular in some quarters, it was the 

Contempra

 that would eventually make its way into New York’s Museum of Modern Art and The National Gallery of Canada, and be immortalized in a 1974 Canada Post stamp commemorating 100 years of the development of the telephone. “People get excited about the newest iPhone coming out,” says Bob Thompson. “But the range of telephone styles today is considerably less than what we had before.”

Although Doug Duffy views all the beauties in his collection of more than 100 vintage telephones and payphones as “show stoppers,” he knows which ones he’d scoop up from his Belleville, Ont., basement if there were a fire or flood: his three rare Contempra prototype phones, one of which he found a few years ago in a thrift store for $2.50.

Recently, the retiree was contacted by industrial designer Cliff Read, who had worked under Contempra’s creator, John Tyson. Read offered him a treasure trove of phone memorabilia, including a 1996 Nortel Prototype Wallet Phone and a 1977 Northern Telecom prototype Alexander Graham Plane Phone. Duffy is now in the process of uploading the images and drawings to his website (

oldtelephoneroom.ca

) for other vintage phone addicts to admire.

This latest acquisition is a cherished addition to a collection of more than 1,000 documents, manuals and other assorted telephone paraphernalia Duffy squirrels away in his basement, the oldest phone being a 1905 Strowger with an 11-digit dial, which at the time of this writing saw one for sale for more than $11,000 on the vintage phone selling site oldphoneworks.com. His wife, Janice, “tells everyone who comes in the same thing, ‘No phones on the staircase, everything stays in the basement,’” says Duffy, sheepishly admitting that some items have recently spilled over to the garage. “It does have a phone booth in there now, but it’s a beauty, an old 1940s wooden one.”

Telephone as plot device

As the telephone firmly embedded itself in 20th-century domestic life, it also made its way into our hearts and imaginations. On TV and in the movies, the telephone was more than just a prop: it often helped to drive the narrative, whether that was slapstick comedy, dramatic tension or sheer terror. The Three Stooges frequently used them as weapons, tangling one another up in long phone cords (1947’s Brideless Groom); Maxwell Smart’s shoe phone (Get Smart, 1965-1969) and the Jetsons’ video phone (1962-1963) both hinted at the technology’s 21st-century future; Lily Tomlin’s Ernestine and her “one ringy dingy” made her a star (Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In, 1968-1973); and who could forget Carol Burnett’s Mrs. Wiggins (The Carol Burnett Show, 1967-1978), the inept office secretary whose frustrated boss, Mr. Tudball, could never get her to properly use the office desk phone?

The incessantly ringing telephone, the line that didn’t get picked up or a slammed-down receiver became a go-to storytelling device, spicing up many a thriller or horror film. No one capitalized on it more effectively than legendary film director Alfred Hitchcock. While his fellow director Edgar G. Ulmer used a phone cord as an actual murder weapon (Detour, 1945), that was too obvious for the cinematic trailblazer. Hitchcock employed it in more subtle ways, whether that was Grace Kelly’s terrified expression as she listened in on a call from Ray Milland planning out her murder (Dial M for Murder, 1954), Cary Grant’s increasingly panicked calls from payphones (North by Northwest, 1959); or Tippi Hedren fleeing into a phone booth to avoid being pecked to death (The Birds, 1963).

“The telephone was the 20th-century version of the oasis in the desert, the thing you desperately needed to get to,” says Thompson of one of its narrative contributions. “It connected you to the grid, which was the web of telephone wires.” With the advent of mobile phones, he says, “all that drama ended in one fell swoop.” Thompson notes that the infamous line from the 1979 horror flick When a Stranger Calls — “It’s coming from inside the house!” — would “make no sense” to today’s younger generations.

Like the big and small screens, the telephone also made its way into the music of the day, from heartbreakers like George Jones’s Wrong Number (1965) and Jim Croce’s Operator (1972), to more upbeat tracks like Blondie’s Hanging on the Telephone (1978). It was immortalized by the likes of Andy Warhol in art pieces such as “Telephone, 1961” and other pop art works. Warhol was so enamoured of the telephone that, when he died in 1987, he left behind an impressive collection. Warhol’s beloved Telequest Hot Lips phone today sits in the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

The telephone also made its mark during the 1950s-era craze of breaking records. In this case, it was phone-booth stuffing. The popular-but-oh-so-dangerous stunt, immortalized in a 1959 Life Magazine photo showing 22 American college students squished into one, was a re-enactment earlier that same year of a feat in Durban, South Africa, when 25 students reportedly packed into a phone booth. Sadly, in the American attempt, a Plexiglas panel in the booth popped and the students weren’t able to match the South African’s impressive, if highly inadvisable, accomplishment.

In England, the land of the iconic red phone booth (you can buy a full-size replica online for around $2,000), they called the stunt the “Telephone Squash,” and someone had to be able to make a call in order for it to count. Sadly, I could find no photographic evidence of the British version, although the 

Daily Mail

did recently publish a 1980 photo of heartthrob crooner Tom Jones posing in one of those iconic British red phone booths, wearing the kind of white swim bottoms the Brits call a “budgie smuggler,” a term that originated in Australia. I’d call that an impressive stunt.

Caller ID, Call Waiting and *69

While the 1983 unveiling of the Motorola DynaTAC 8000X cellular phone got some attention (it cost more than $15,000 in today’s dollars), the developments that made the biggest splash in the 1980s and 1990s were of the landline variety: the cordless phone, Caller ID, Call Waiting and the answering machine.

The cordless phone finally untethered us from the phone cord, and served as a kind of dress rehearsal for the cellphone that was soon to invade, and transform, daily life. Caller ID, whereby the incoming call number was displayed, brought in a whole new era of phones that, along with a screen to see the incoming call, often included an answering machine that was either part of the phone equipment or attached to it.

Once again, the introduction of this new technology was met with both suspicion and excitement.

“We perceive it as the best technology available for thwarting obscene and threatening and harassing phone calls,” Peter J. Ventimiglia, director of media relations for New Jersey Bell, said of Caller ID in a 1990 New York Times article. While today most of us can’t imagine answering a phone call without knowing who’s on the other end, back then privacy advocates were alarmed by what they perceived as an infringement of the caller’s privacy rights — not to mention a big setback for all us teenaged prank callers.

For a time, there was an easy fix: You could press *69, and your line would dial up the last person who called. You could also prevent numbers from being displayed permanently upon request, or by simply pressing *67 before dialing; which, by the way, has nothing to do with today’s “6, 7” phrase popular with Gen Alpha (those digital natives 15 years and younger) meant to confuse the rest of us, and which Dictionary.com declared 2025’s Word of the Year.

Growing social anxiety

Speaking of Gen Alpha, most wouldn’t know how to operate a rotary dial phone if their lives depended on it. While fewer than half of Canadian households still have a landline, 95 per cent of Canadian households now possess at least one cellphone. According to Tom Keenan, you can no longer even compare a landline to a cellphone. One, says Keenan, a professor in the school of architecture, planning and landscape at the University of Calgary, is something you talk into; the other, in the case of a smartphone, is a completely different animal. “Cellphones are computers and radios, with a telephone function,” says Keenan, the author of Technocreep: the Surrender of Privacy and the Capitalization of Intimacy.

Because of this, most young people have let that last function fall by the wayside. In a recent survey by U.K.-based firm USwitch.com, a full one-quarter of respondents ages 18 to 34 said they would never answer a ringing phone. This has led to a generation of younger adults with such an aversion to speaking on any kind of phone that they don’t even know how to properly converse. To remedy the problem, coaches and courses have popped up across North America and Europe.

Mary Jane Copps, who started her business The Phone Lady (thephonelady.com) 20 years ago, is arguably one of its true pioneers. “Telephobia absolutely exists and it’s getting more common,” says Copps from her Halifax home, about the phobia that isn’t in the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), but is recognized by a growing number of psychologists as falling into the family of anxiety disorders.

“It’s a fear of the unexpected,” says Copps, whose business plan in the early days revolved around etiquette, but who is increasingly focused on helping her clients get over their telephobia. “It’s the improvisational aspect of conversation that many have no experience in.”

Copps is often contacted by managers in the fields of banking, law and hospitality to coach their younger employees, who prefer the control they have while texting, emailing or using social media. While her teachings may sound like plain old common sense to those who grew up chattering away on the phone, Copps insists it’s a vital skill that can be taught. “If you can’t have a conversation in which you can listen to someone else’s point of view, or state your own, that can be very limiting.”

Cellphones ‘made us more reachable’

These days, those old landline telephones are popping up all over. When Mandy Farmer was in the planning stages of launching the Hotel Zed chain in British Columbia a decade ago, she scoured thrift stores for working landline telephones to use in guest rooms. “I wanted our hotels to rebel against the ordinary,” says the CEO of Accent Inns and Hotel Zed, her three Zed hotels in Kelowna, Victoria and Tofino, which are decorated in mid-century modern style. While her older guests enjoy the sentimental walk down memory lane, Farmer says her Millennial and Gen Z customers are “obsessed with vintage, like vinyl, thrifted fashion and quirky, old-school tech and decor.”

Jamie Elder, whose Osoyoos, B.C., store, Unity, caters to a young demographic, loves the conversations that his collection of colourful old phones, boom-boxes and other 20th-century curios inspire.

“People start sharing stories with their kids about growing up with rotary dial phones and pay phone booths,” says Elder, who has been operating his shop catering to skateboarders and beachgoers for three decades. “Living in a retirement community, I’m always finding old phones at garage sales,” he says of his collection of scores of old telephones, which includes a working pay phone he uses as the store’s phone. “They’re some of the best things we ever made in the 20th century.”

While the traditional copper-wire landline telephone may be riding off into the sunset, plugging a phone into a wall is making a comeback in other ways. In a recent issue of The Atlantic magazine entitled, “

The Dumbest Phone is Parenting Genius

,” writer Rheana Murray examined the emergence of landline “pods,” whereby parents are teaming up with other parents to form a community of landline networks for their kids’ friends, a compromise to opening the floodgates of social media to impressionable young minds.

While the evidence of a massive rush back to landlines is still in the anecdotal stage, people such as the University of Calgary’s Tom Keenan think that’s a very wise idea, for many reasons. “I’ll always have a landline, which is somewhat more private,” says Keenan, who adds that the sound quality on even a VoIP landline is superior to a cellphone. While the VoIP system means that if your power goes out, so does your landline, he’ll continue to straddle both worlds.

“The cellphone is superior for urgency, but that’s its fatal flaw,” says Keenan, whose book Technocreep and its detailing of the privacy risks from cellphones would make any reader rush to reconnect their landline. “It’s made us more reachable, which is both good and bad.”

As for this analog native, I confess that, after receiving one too many nuisance calls on my landline, a few years ago I cut the cord and went full cellular. I’ll always cherish, though, those days of the landline telephone in all its copper wire glory, a more innocent time when we weren’t constantly on our phones reading, texting and falling down the social media rabbit hole, and a telephone could only do that one, marvellous thing: bring us together through the age-old art of conversation.


A large grizzly bear on the side of the road in the Rocky Mountains of Alberta.

Bear attacks have loomed frighteningly large in the headlines this year. The most terrifying was a grizzly attack on a group of

B.C. schoolchildren and teachers

out on a hike in late November.

Four people — three children and an adult — from Acwsalcta School near Bella Coola were seriously injured and airlifted to Vancouver for treatment.

In October, a B.C. man was attacked by a grizzly that ripped his scalp, tore off a finger and broke some of his bones. He fought back,

punching, biting and shooting it in the leg

. However, he succumbed to his injuries three weeks later, the Vancouver Sun reported. Also in October, an

Alberta hunter was mauled by a grizzly

and airlifted to hospital. The bear was shot and killed by the man’s hunting partner. The attack came just a few

days after the killing of the first grizzly bear under a provincial program to deal with problem animals, reported the Calgary Herald. Two hikers on a trail near Prince George, B.C. were hospitalized after a grizzly attack in October. Back in July, a married couple were e-biking near Creston, B.C., when a grizzly attacked, putting the husband in hospital.  

In June, Parks Canada reported that a

black bear was euthanized in Alberta’s Waterton Lakes National Park after acting aggressively toward humans. “While this was an isolated incident, we want to remind visitors that wildlife and public safety is a shared responsibility — we all have a role to play,” Parks Canada told the Herald.

According to numbers published in a report by

The Origins Foundation

, an organization dedicated to documenting stories about hunting, wildlife habitats and conservation, grizzly attacks appear to have grown, and fatalities may be increasing: there were six fatalities in Canada in 1990-1999 and five in the five years spanning 2020-2025. For black bears, there were four fatalities in 2020-2025, eight in the 1990s.

In assessing broader attack numbers, the foundation states:

“The number of grizzly bear attacks surged to 11 in the 2020–2025 period — more than double that of any previous full decade. Since this figure covers only half a decade, the annual rate is significantly higher than in earlier periods. If this trend continues, the next decade could see a record number of grizzly fatalities.”

Regarding black bears, the foundation says: “Black bear attacks peaked at nine in the 2000–2009 decade. In the first five years of the 2020s, there have already been eight attacks and four fatalities, suggesting that the total for the decade could surpass past periods if the current pace continues.”

Most fatal grizzly bear attacks in Canada occur in British Columbia and Alberta, while fatal black bear attacks are distributed across multiple provinces, reflective of where these two species of bear live. 

According to estimates by Parks Canada, the grizzly population there is 691 in Alberta and up to 16,000 in British Columbia. The federal service says there are 65 in Banff National Park, 109 in Jasper National Park, 11 to 15 in Yoho National Park and nine to 16 in Kootenay National Park. In it’s latest

report on grizzlies

from September 2025, “up to 20,000 grizzly bears remain in western Alberta, the Yukon and Northwest Territories and British Columbia.”

Dr. Andy Derocher, a biology professor at the University of Alberta who has been studying bears for 40 years, told National Post in an email that grizzlies are suffering habitat loss or habitat degradation.

And with no hunting, he says, we can expect the grizzly bear population to increase to the level sustainable by their environment, then “expect more bears to disperse into areas they don’t currently live — places where we killed them all historically.” Grizzly bear hunting has been closed since 2017 in B.C. and 2006 in Alberta, he notes. Black bear hunts are managed across most of their range in the United States (35 states) and Canada, according to a report he co-wrote,

Bears in North America: Habitats, hunting, and politics

.

“Now add in more people moving further into the wilderness using ATVs, electric bikes, horses or hiking, and there is a greater chance of conflicts. Over time, we have seen more human-bear conflicts in parts of Alberta as grizzlies expand their range. I expect B.C. will have a lot more grizzly bear-human conflicts.”

Grizzlies, he says, have been sighted “in places they’ve not been seen before, such as the high Arctic, Manitoba, possibly in Ontario, Vancouver Island, Texada Island (in B.C.’s Strait of Georgia, where a grizzly was recently shot).

Annie Pumphrey, senior wildlife policy analyst with the BC Fish and Wildlife Branch, echoes this concern: “I would say that humans are crossing into zones (that bears inhabit) more so than bears crossing into human zones. In B.C. alone there are over 600,000 kilometres of resource roads which bring people deep into the backcountry with relative ease … Increased development is blocking (bear) travel corridors, leading them to seek alternative territory. Also, increasing drought is pushing bears into human-use areas in search of poorly secured human attractants (food, garbage and wildlife).”

Nonetheless, Derocher says concern about fatal bear attacks is unfounded. “The chances of being killed by a bear is similar to that of being killed by a bee sting. Bear attacks are extremely rare. I’d be far more worried about driving on the TransCanada Highway in winter than a bear attack.”

Both he and Pumphrey say stats on bear attacks aren’t reliable. How an attack is defined is “fluid and poorly defined,” says Derocher, ranging from one breaking into your cabin to injury and death. Moreover, there is no government database accounting for all bear encounters.

More to the point, Pumphrey contends, is that looking to bear attack statistics “diverts attention from the factors that matter most,”  which is “responsible human behaviour in bear country.” That includes managing items that can attract bears. It also includes knowing when and where to enjoy the outdoors so you will avoid bear encounters, she says.

Pumphrey contends timing may be more important than geography. “There is evidence that there are more bear attacks in fall to early winter.” That could be due to a variety of factors, such as hunting (for other wildlife). And in late fall, she notes, “bears enter a physiological state where they have heightened metabolic demand, which means they are foraging for food at higher rates to build fat reserves for winter.” Bears are more likely to be stressed at that time, she adds.

When attacks do occur, Pumphrey says they are more common with grizzlies than black bears. “There is an evolutionary reason for this. Black bears evolved in more forested areas where they could more easily avoid conflict with other bears by climbing trees or concealing themselves in the forest, which is why they are more likely to flee from perceived threats. Grizzly bears evolved in more open landscapes such as the prairies/tundra, where escape options are limited, and as a result are more likely to display defensive behaviour … to scare away perceived threats without engaging in physical contact.”

And many grizzly and black bears use “trail systems just as humans do.” Moreover, says Pumphrey, the bears will not back off their trails. “There are many reports of bears ‘following’ people, ‘attacking’ or ‘hunting’ them, when in the majority of cases the bear is simply walking down a pathway in the same direction as you are, and if you step off the path they will typically just walk right past you.”

In other words, she warns, stay on human hiking trails. “In popular areas with defined trails, bears will learn where people typically go and where to avoid them. Venturing off-trail into the backcountry increases your risk.”

Canadian and

U.S.

park services offer similar advice about how to stay safe in bear country.

First off is to make noise while hiking, says

Parks Canada

. And while bear spray is advised, don’t rely on it to keep you safe, says Parks Canada, noting its effectiveness will vary with wind conditions and distance from the bear. And note that it is not a repellent, says the

U.S. National Parks Service

, so do not apply to your body or equipment.

Here are some safety tips:

  • If you encounter a bear, the first rule is to stay calm. The bear wants to know you’re not a threat.
  • Pick up small children and stay in a group.
  • Don’t drop your pack. It can provide protection if attacked.
  • Back away slowly, don’t run. Bears can run as fast as a race-horse, both uphill and downhill.
  • Talk calmly and firmly. If a bear rears on its hind legs and waves its nose about, it’s trying to identify you. Remain still and talk calmly so it knows you are a human and not a prey animal. A scream or sudden movement may trigger an attack.
  • Do not run, but if the bear follows, stop and hold your ground.
  • Do not climb a tree. Both grizzlies and black bears can climb trees.
  • Leave the area or take a detour. If this is impossible, wait until the bear moves away. Always leave the bear an escape route.

The advice for how to handle an attack varies depending on what type of bear you have encountered.

If you are attacked by a

grizzly

bear, says the U.S. National Parks Service, leave your pack on and play dead. Lay flat on your stomach with your hands clasped behind your neck. Spread your legs to make it harder for the bear to turn you over. Remain still until the bear leaves the area. Fighting back usually increases the intensity of such attacks. However, if the attack persists, fight back vigorously. Use whatever you have at hand to hit the bear in the face.

The service says you shouldn’t play dead if you’re attacked by a

black

bear. Try to escape to a secure place such as a car or building. If escape is not possible, try to fight back using any object available. Concentrate your kicks and blows on the bear’s face and muzzle.

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    People in Toronto protest the implementation of a QR code COVID-19 vaccine passport by the Ontario government, Sept. 1, 2021.

    They were contentious, unprecedented and among the policies that drove long-haul truckers from across Canada to overtake Ottawa’s downtown core for nearly a month.

    Now a new paper explores under what conditions vaccine certificates should, or shouldn’t ever, be considered again.

    “If you look at some of the language used even during the convoy, it was ethics language. It was informed consent; it was around freedom and liberty and coercion,” said co-author Maxwell Smith, director of Western University’s Centre for Bioethics.

    “These are profoundly ethical ideas. We need to confront that these are the sorts of concerns that people have and motivate things like the convoy. We need to get ahead of them to actually ask: were these measures coercive? Do they infringe on freedom in a way that we think is unethical or unjust?”

    COVID began cutting its swath across the globe six years ago, when, on Dec. 31, 2019, reports of a strange “viral pneumonia” of unknown cause were first reported to the World Health Organization’s China Country Office, marking the beginning of a global pandemic that has contributed to the deaths of seven million people worldwide, according to WHO.

    In Canada, vaccine certificates — individualized QR codes available in paper or digital form granting the fully vaccinated entry to restaurants, bars, theatres and other “high risk” settings — were implemented in 2021 and gradually phased out throughout 2022.

    Future pandemic planning needs to go beyond stockpiling medicines and personal protective gear and building more ICU beds, said Smith. It’s also crucial to grapple with the fraught ethical conflicts COVID raised and ask, “What would we do differently?”

    In their recently published paper, Smith and his colleagues propose that as three factors increase  — pathogenicity, meaning the ability of the virus to harm the person infected, the prevalence of the virus itself and the protective effects of any vaccine — so, too, do the justifications for considering vaccine certificates.

    Lower levels, they said, diminish the justification. In addition, “we then need to determine when we, collectively, think a pathogen is ‘sufficiently’ severe, prevalent, etc to. justify the use of vaccine certificates,” Smith said.

    Higher scores for all three “will provide stronger justification for trade-offs with liberty,”

    Smith and his co-authors, the University of Ottawa’s Cecile Bensimon and Dr. Kumanan Wilson, wrote.

    Their proposed framework could “quickly and clearly” sweep away arguments for using vaccine certificates, they said. “In other cases, it may offer compelling reasons” to seriously consider their use.

    “If we don’t try to answer those questions and maybe try to socialize those answers with the Canadian public, we’ll be facing the exact same protests or confusion or contention with a future threat that we faced during COVID,” Smith said.

    Vaccine certificates were deployed during the early waves to enable partial or full reopenings “whilst protecting the public’s health amidst an ongoing pandemic — two important goals for any pandemic response,” the paper says.

    They were also widely criticized for violating individual liberty and autonomy, creating a “me-them” environment and even splitting families apart. Critics have called them

    “scientifically questionable,”

    polarizing and stigmatizing —  part of far-reaching policies that imposed “the largest infringement on civil rights and liberties

    in living memory.

    They were originally based on several objectives: prevent transmission and make dining indoors and other gatherings safer, and reduce the burden of illness, disease and death. While the shots reduce the risk of severe outcomes, it became clear they weren’t providing “sterilizing” immunity, meaning complete protection. Vaccinated people could still get infected, and infect others. Immunity wanes over months.

    An absence of sterilizing immunity — a vaccine that completely interrupts transmission of the virus — weakens the case for vaccine certificates, the paper says. “But it’s not the case that (COVID shots) did absolutely nothing in terms of the reduction of infection or transmission or severe illness,” Smith said.

    “The all-or-nothing sometimes clouds our judgement.”

     A customer has her COVID-19 QR code scanned by the manager of a fitness club in Montreal as the Quebec government’s COVID-19 vaccine passport comes into effect, Sept. 1, 2021.

    How much impact vaccine certificates had during COVID is hard to disentangle, said University of Toronto medical microbiologist and infectious diseases specialist Dr. Allison McGeer.

    “It is probably impossible to judge, in the setting of a pandemic, because there was so much going on at the same time. Teasing apart what was the effect of travel bans versus vaccine certificate requirements is really hard to do,” McGeer said.

    “There’s a sense in moments of crisis you do what is the right thing now and pick up the pieces later,” she said.

    One study

     estimated that 290,168 additional people in Canada received their first dose in the seven weeks after provinces announced proof-of-vaccination polices, “a 17.5 per cent increase over the number of vaccinations estimated in the absence of these policies.” But it was short lived: Uptake returned to “preannouncement levels,” or lower, within six weeks. The mandates remained in place for at least four months.

    Quebec and Ontario were the first to introduce vaccine passports, in September 2021. By then, 82 per cent of those 12 and older in both provinces had already had one dose of a COVID vaccine. One study found that the number of first doses administered over 11 weeks increased by

    23 per cent in Quebec, and 19 per cent in Ontario.

    Overall, estimated coverage increased by 0.9 percentage points in Quebec, and 0.7 percentage points in Ontario, over the first 11 weeks, the authors wrote.

    “By virtue of saying, ‘Going to restaurants, bars and theatres is conditioned upon you being vaccinated,’ that meant more people got vaccinated,” Smith said.

    Whether that made those settings safer by virtue of everyone there being vaccinated “is a lot harder to measure,” he said. “We sometimes use a proxy: Did they have any broad population effects?”

    At the time, hospitals were overwhelmed by a Delta-driven wave. “We didn’t have enough beds to go around,” Smith said. Doctors were considering rationing critical care. “The more vaccinations we had out there, the lower the risk of people being hospitalized. So, generally, you saw a lower severity of illness occurring,” Smith said.

    Were vaccine certificates coercive? “That’s a tough question,” said Smith. “They did put pressure on people to get vaccinated. We wanted to live our lives. It didn’t force us to do it, but it did put pressure on us to do so.”

     Supporters line a highway in Rigaud, Que., waving flags and signs at Freedom Convoy truckers headed to Ottawa to protest COVID vaccine mandates, Jan. 28, 2022.

    He and his co-authors didn’t apply their framework to COVID. They don’t answer whether the COVID vaccine certificates, and the trade-offs with individual liberty, were justified. But they said it isn’t enough to satisfy the three conditions set out in their paper alone. Other considerations  include whether the use of vaccine certificates “represents a tolerable approach to balancing public health aims with individual liberty and autonomy.”

    “Questions such as this cannot be answered by science alone,” the paper reads. “Determining the point at which benefits are sufficient to justify proof-of-vaccination requirements requires making value judgments about what outcomes matter most (and for whom), what measures are necessary (and for whom) and whether those measures are proportionate or legitimate.”

    “The value judgments of my co-authors and I are less important here than what the Canadian public values, since these are big policy decisions,” Smith said.

    In addition to requiring proof of vaccination for many indoor spaces, vaccines were mandated for hospital staff, 268,000 federal public servants in “core public administration,” including members of the RCMP, college and university students returning to campuses and cross-border truckers.

    Smith thinks the framework could be applied to mandates as well. “But I think there is some nuance that would change the moral calculus in important ways.”

    People working in hospitals and health care have stronger ethical obligations to take steps to protect patients, he said. “Prevalence doesn’t necessarily need to be high to justify requirements in those settings.

    “And because even so-called ‘mild’ diseases can severely harm or kill more vulnerable people, pathogenicity needn’t be high either,” he said.

    Courts in Canada have generally found that governments had the authority to introduce vaccination requirements, he said.

    “I think infringing on liberty is one thing. But I think the more important question is whether it was an unjust infringement on liberty,” Smith said.

    “If we care about the most vulnerable people in society, we need to think about what sort of reductions of my own freedom might be necessary in order to protect other people’s freedom.”

    The country was in a state of lockdown, Smith said. “Everything was closed, and it seemed the safest way forward, given the prevalence of the virus.

    “We were looking for a way out.”

    National Post

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    Tom Christie, a retired RCMP officer, was assaulted by a group of teens in a Calgary Park in July 2004. He's still fighting Veterans Affairs for compensation for his injuries.

    Tom Christie believed he was doing his job when he waded into a crowd of drunken, rowdy teens at a Calgary park.

    Instead, the teens turned on the vacationing Mountie in July 2004, striking his body upwards of 50 times, leaving the front-line RCMP constable with a head injury and setting Christie up for a battle with Veterans Affairs Canada, which handles compensation claims for Mounties, that’s been going on now for two decades.

    Christie was biking with his three sons around 8 p.m. on July 23, 2004. He remembers confronting the group of four or five teens after sending his boys, ages eight, 10 and 13 at the time, home.

    Based on his training, Christie believed he couldn’t ignore potential trouble, even though he was on vacation.

    Recruits “were told we were on duty 24/7; that if you saw a situation, you had to intervene,” he said Tuesday in an interview from Calgary.

    “You just can’t walk away.”

    The teens were throwing their empty cans on the ground, Christie said.

    “There were senior citizens walking. There were moms with their kids in swings,” he said.

    “I went over to talk to the kids to get them to clean up and it didn’t go well. Some of them ended up attacking me and knocking me down.”

    From there, he doesn’t recall much about the beating. “I was told that I had said, ‘I’m going to phone Calgary Police Service.’ And that’s when the violence started.”

    A 17-year-old and a 15-year-old were eventually convicted for beating him up. “They received seven months each for aggravated assault,” Christie said.

    After receiving a decision earlier this year from a Veterans Affairs reconsideration panel indicating he was entitled to full compensation for his closed head injury and left facial nerve palsy, Christie, now 67 and retired, figured the fight was over. But he learned recently that compensation will equate to nothing.

    “I am now appealing again as there are lingering issues. After all, I was booted in the head 30 times,” Christie said. He is seeking compensation to make up for his reduced quality of life and pain and suffering.

    According to Veterans Affairs, it considered neuropsychiatric testing performed on Christie the year after his attack, his annual RCMP medical exam from 2011, and a note from a doctor written a decade later.

    “Based on the information we reviewed, your disability remains assessed at nil at this time,” according to an Oct. 28 letter Christie received from Veterans Affairs.

    It went on to say Christie is “entitled to receive treatment for this condition,” but he does “not qualify for a monetary benefit.”

    When that letter landed, “I thought, ‘Oh my God, here we go again,’” Christie said. “The long battle to get the point established where I was considered to be on duty took a long time and a lot of work. It’s like the left hand’s not talking to the right hand at Veterans Affairs.”

    The decisions from Veterans Affairs come on the heels of an October 2024 Federal Court ruling from Justice Phuong Ngo indicating that it was wrong to deny Christie compensation for the head injury he suffered while he was on vacation because it was not directly connected to his RCMP service, even though a report at the time clearly drew that link.

    Christie, an RCMP officer from April 1982 until November 2013, spent the last two decades trying to convince authorities he was acting as a police officer when he approached the drunken teens causing a disturbance in a green belt near Calgary’s Shawnessy Community Centre.

    “Although (Christie) was not in uniform at the time, he considered it his duty as an off-duty police officer to intervene,” Ngo said last year.

    Christie wound up in a hospital trauma ward for six days with head injuries.

    He “experienced significant and ongoing difficulty” because of his injuries, said the judge.

    Christie “was unable to return to work until late 2004, at which time he was only able to work half days in the office for a maximum of three to four days per week,” according to her ruling.

    He “suffered post-concussion difficulties, amnesia and cognitive and perceived neurological abnormalities,” as a result of the attack, Ngo said. “It is also clear that (Christie’s) memory of the events in question was affected as a result of the injuries he sustained.”

    Veterans Affairs had been denying Christie disability benefits for his head injuries since July 2005, concluding that they weren’t “directly connected” with his RCMP service.

    The judge pointed to a hazardous occurrence investigation report prepared just days after the attack, while Christie was still in hospital. Veterans Affairs had discounted it for decades, believing wrongly that it was made two years after Christie’s assault. The report noted “he was off duty but acting in his capacity as a police officer.”

    Ngo sent Christie’s case back to a different Veterans Affairs reconsideration panel for another look, which resulted in the decision earlier this year granting him full compensation for his injuries.

    Christie said his short-term memory suffered after the attack. “I have check lists all over the place because of that.”

    He also has trouble sleeping and suffers from anxiety and constant fatigue — problems that surfaced after the July 2004 assault “that are still present to this day.”

    The attack had a profound effect on Christie’s family, especially his late wife, who passed away four-and-a-half years ago due to cancer. “After that, if I was ever late for something, she went into a panic.”

    His sons were “frightened to death” after the attack, Christie said. “They thought the kids were going to come up to the house and hunt us down. My poor wife was just stressed beyond belief, which of course added to my anxiety levels.”

    Christie now wishes he’d just phoned police rather than stepping in that day to school the rowdy teens.

    “But that’s water under the bridge. I can’t change the past,” he said. “I can only work on the future.”

    While he doesn’t know if he’ll ever get any compensation for his injuries, Christie isn’t giving up the fight.

    “This is just a matter of principle,” he said.

    If another Mountie is injured while off duty, but acting as police officer, Christie hopes his example will help them get compensation.

    “At least this is a precedent-setting case for them,” he said.

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    Canadians are divided, with 41 per cent saying they trust Prime Minister Mark Carney, left, to manage Canada's relationship with the U.S. under U.S President Donald Trump, and 40 per cent saying they don't trust Carney to defend the country against Trump's political and financial decisions, according a Leger poll.

    Canadians

    are growing impatient with the lack of progress in Canada-U.S. trade relations, a new Leger poll suggests.

    Confidence also appears to be waning over whether Canadians can trust Prime Minister Mark Carney to defend Canada against U.S. President Donald Trump’s political firestorms.

    “I think time has not been kind to Prime Minister Carney, at this point anyway, in terms of not really showing that he is the man for the job,” said Andrew Enns, executive vice-president of Leger’s Central Canada operations.

    The dollar-for-dollar response to Trump’s tariffs against Canadian imports signalled the Liberal government was prepared to hit back at Trump’s protectionist measures, Enns said.

    “I think what’s problematic now, we’re not necessarily seeing action. And I think Canadians are starting to question the effectiveness of the government’s response,” he said.

    “It’s harder to put your finger on, what exactly are we doing? It doesn’t feel like we’re really even responding.”

    The poll exploring how Canadians are feeling about U.S relations and tariffs as the country ends out 2025 also found Canadians are more pessimistic than optimistic about what 2026 holds: 41 per cent expect trade relations to worsen, compared to 20 per cent who expect things will improve. Twenty-eight per cent foresee no change.

    “It’s a very measured Canadian population going into 2026 in terms of expectations,” Enns said.

    Saying it’s no longer time for “elbows up,” Carney announced in August that Canada was removing 25 per cent counter tariffs on $40 billion in goods imported into Canada from the U.S., except for those on steel, aluminum and autos.

    Carney said the move was designed to match the U.S. decision not to levy tariffs on goods compliant with the trilateral Canada-U.S.-Mexico (CUSMA) agreement, saying the countries had restored free trade on a “vast majority of our goods.”

    Canada failed to reach a trade deal before Trump abruptly terminated talks in October over Ontario’s controversial anti-tariff ad featuring clips of former U.S. president Ronald Reagan, a staunch supporter of free trade.

     U.S. President Donald Trump stands beneath a portrait of former President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office of the White House on October 10, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

    According to the new Leger poll, 82 per cent of Canadians believe the U.S. tariffs have had a very (42 per cent) or somewhat (40 per cent) significant impact on the Canadian economy, while just 11 per cent said the impact has been “not very” or not at all significant.

    Liberal voters were more likely (89 per cent) to say the impact was significant, followed by Bloc Québécois and NDP voters, at 88 per cent each, and Conservative supporters (82 per cent).

    When asked how they have personally weathered the Trump tariffs storm, more than half of Canadians (56 per cent) said the tariffs have had a very or somewhat significant impact on their household finances and lifestyle, according to the poll. The proportion was higher still (63 per cent) among Conservative voters.

    However, when polled on the same question in June, more Canadians (66 per cent) felt the tariffs would have a major or moderate impact on their household finances.

    Enns said it’s difficult to separate out what’s creating the hardships meeting household budgets. “Is it the tariffs? Or is it this relentless inflation in the cost of living,” with grocery prices alone increasing

    4.7 per cent year-over-year in November

    , the biggest increase since December 2023.

    He said he was also struck by the level of distrust in Carney. Canadians are divided, with 41 per cent saying they trust Carney to manage Canada’s relationship with the U.S. under Trump, and 40 per cent saying they don’t trust Carney to defend the country against Trump’s political and financial decisions. Nineteen per cent were undecided.

    Support for Carney was higher among Liberal voters (89 per cent), older Canadians aged 55 plus (49 per cent) and those who believe the tariffs are causing a significant blow to the economy (45 per cent).

    “I thought (support for Carney) would be higher,” Enns said.

    When it comes to how satisfied they are with the Liberal government’s response to U.S. tariffs, again Canadians are somewhat split: 44 per cent are “very” or “somewhat” satisfied, and 43 per cent are dissatisfied.

    That compares to a Leger poll in early March, when the Carney Liberals announced its dollar-for-dollar response. Support for that policy tracked at 74 per cent.

    Canadians’ patience is starting to be tested, Enns said, “in terms of, are we seeing results, in terms of the strategy and in terms of, are we making real progress here?”

    “The prime minister has had a good half year in the office, technically a bit more, but certainly since the election, he’s had some time. The results haven’t been really great,” Enns said. “Depending who you talk to, some would say we’ve retreated on a few fronts with respect to how we’re dealing with President Trump and the White House administration.”

    Conservative supporters “were already pretty much convinced, ‘This ain’t our guy,’” Enns said. But Carney had latitude with NDP and Bloc supporters who trusted Carney was the best man for the job. Now, trust in Carney to manage U.S. relations is below 40 per cent among the NDP (38 per cent) and the Bloc (25 per cent).

    Only 11 per cent of Conservative voters said they trust Carney to defend Canada against Trump’s demands, according to the poll.

    “There is a bit of pressure building on the prime minister and his team to start to demonstrate some progress, which is really hard because I don’t think they necessarily are dictating the next steps here fully,” Enns said.

    However, with expectations for a rosier 2026 low, “for the prime minister’s office and the government, there is a potential to sort of exceed expectations if we can suddenly get into what appears to be a fairly productive round of negotiations around the CUSMA agreement, for example.”

    The online survey of 1,519 respondents aged 18 and older was conducted between Dec. 12 and 14. For comparison purposes, a probability sample of this size yields a margin of error no greater than plus or minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

    National Post, with additional reporting from Christopher Nardi

    Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


    Private citizens in Canada do not need to clear meetings with foreign governments with the Canadian government.

    OTTAWA — Federal officials say that Alberta separatists going around Ottawa and repeatedly meeting with U.S. officials to advance their cause is legal for Canadians, within certain limits, even though similar behaviour could be prohibited elsewhere.

    When separatist organizer Jeffrey Rath

    claimed last week he was meeting with officials connected to the White House

    to garner support for Alberta’s independence, Edmonton talk show host Ryan Jespersen responded by saying, “In a lot of countries, this tomfoolery would get you strung up for treason.”

    But unlike the U.S., whose

    little-used Logan Act

    criminalizes

    so-called private diplomacy

    , Canada has no law on the books stopping private citizens from meeting with representatives of foreign governments.

    “The short answer would be ‘no’, we don’t have a Logan law,” said Global Affairs spokesman John Babcock in an email to National Post.

    Nor do private citizens need to clear such foreign talks with the federal government, Babcock added.

    However, a spokesman for the federal Justice Department, Ian McLeod, said that, while private citizens are free to speak with foreign officials, these talks are nonetheless subject to criminal laws prohibiting espionage, sedition and the sharing of state secrets.

    “A determination of whether any activity violates these … offences, or any other criminal offence relating to threats to the security of Canada, is a determination for law enforcement,” wrote McLeod in an email.

    Rath and his fellow organizers with the pro-independence Alberta Prosperity Project (APP) have visited Washington, D.C. three times this year, most recently reporting they

    met with unnamed officials

    inside the U.S. State Department’s headquarters earlier this month.

    The APP says

    the talks have covered

    U.S. recognition of a successful independence referendum in the province, defence and trade co-operation in case of separation, cross-border oil pipeline routes and a possible multibillion-dollar loan to help Alberta transition to an independent jurisdiction.

    Former Alberta premier Jason Kenney earlier this year

    referred to Rath as a “treasonous kook”

    after the separatist appeared on Fox News in the U.S. to promote his cause. (Kenney is a board member of Postmedia Network, which owns National Post, but plays no role in day-to-day editorial processes.)

    The APP is the primary group pushing for an Alberta independence vote in 2026 and is set

    to start collecting signatures

    this week in support of its referendum question. Elections Alberta last week officially approved the group’s Citizen Initiative Petition application that would, if the petition is successful, ask Albertans the question, “Do you agree that the Province of Alberta should cease to be part of Canada to become an independent state?”

    Rath, himself a lawyer, said his group did its homework before booking the flights to Washington, D.C.

    “We researched all of this extensively before meeting with anyone in the U.S. We are not engaged in any activity that is unlawful,” said Rath.

    Cameron Davies, leader of the separatist Republican Party of Alberta, has travelled separately to Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C. and President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida, to court U.S. allies for his cause. He was in Phoenix, Ariz. earlier this month to attend America Fest, the annual conference of Turning Point USA, the Republican-friendly activist group founded by Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated in September.

    Davies said he plans to visit El Salvador and Argentina in the spring for what he calls exploratory talks

    with “freedom-minded governments.”

    He ran unsuccessfully for a seat in Alberta’s legislature this summer, finishing third with 18 per cent of the vote in a rural byelection that was widely

    seen as a bellwether

    for the province’s independence movement.

    Davies said he’s also taken steps to ensure he stays on the right side of relevant Canadian laws.

    “I’ve sought legal counsel (and) we’re staying well within the conversations of a private citizen. Any ideas that are floated are purely speculative,” said Davies.

    Both Rath and Davies said they’ve made it clear to foreign contacts that they don’t have the authority to make agreements on behalf of Alberta or Canada.

    Canada’s existing legal framework of criminal laws prohibiting treason, sedition and espionage set the bar for prosecution so high as to make prosecution almost inconceivable with regard to the Albertans’ meetings, said Yuan Yi Zhu, a Canadian professor of international relations and law at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands.

    “They’d pretty much have to be caught on tape helping Donald Trump plan an invasion of Canada” to be prosecuted, said Zhu.

    Prosecutions of private Canadian citizens for crimes against the state have been virtually unheard of in

    the post-Second World War era.

    Zhu said that the lack of a popular mandate for Alberta separation — with no open separatists currently holding elected office and polls showing

    most Albertans opposed to the idea

     — is legally irrelevant.

    “There’s no law against being a crank,” said Zhu.

    Adrienne Davidson, a political science professor at McMaster University, said the legality of these talks could become a more complicated question once a referendum campaign is officially underway.

    “I think, legally, it could raise some really interesting questions (surrounding) interference into electoral processes or referendums … I think that’s where the real question of foreign interference would come in,” said Davidson.

    The federal government

    passed legislation

    beefing up provisions against foreign interference in June 2024, including the creation of a Foreign Influence Transparency Commissioner to whom groups and individuals working with foreign governments in some contexts would have to report. However, the commissioner has not yet been appointed.

    National Post

    With files from Tracy Moran

    rmohamed@postmedia.com

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    Some federal government benefits and tax credits are set to go up. (POSTMEDIA ARCHIVES)

    As a new year nears, Canadians can look forward to more money from Ottawa. Annual increases in some federal government benefits and credits are coming based on its practice (since 2018) of indexing these amounts to keep up with inflation.

    In 2026, the

    increase will be two per cent

    , based on the

    Consumer Price Index

    .

    Here are some of increasing benefits and credits:

    Ottawa sends out the

    GST/HST credit

    payments in January, April, July and October to help recover some of the sales tax they pay on everyday items. For the 2026-27 benefit year, the

    maximum credit for a single adult

    is increasing to $544. Couples can receive up to $712, plus an additional $187 for each child. This credit follows a July-to-June benefit year, so your increase will come into effect in July, based on this year’s tax return. There are still two more payments left for the current benefit year, in January and April.

    The

    Canada Child Benefit

    is a monthly tax-free payment that helps parents and guardians cover the cost of raising children. It’s based on household income, how many children in a parent’s/guardian’s care and their ages. Starting in July 2026, the

    maximum annual CCB will incre
    ase

    to $8,157 per child under age 6 and $6,883 for kids aged 6 to 17. That’s a yearly boost of $160 and $135, respectively, over this year’s rates. The new amounts work out to a maximum of $679.75 a month for younger kids, and $573.58 monthly at age 6 and above. These new rates take effect in July, with the first monthly payment set to arrive on July 20, 2026.

    The

    Child Disability Benefit

    is a tax-free supplement paid monthly for families raising a child under 18 with a severe, prolonged disability. For the 2026-27 benefit year, the maximum Child Disability Benefit amount is increasing to $3,480 per eligible child — up from $3,411 this year. That works out to a maximum of $290 per eligible child each month. These changes will take effect with the start of the new benefit year in July. The updated amounts will show up in your monthly CCB payment on July 20, 2026, based on your 2025 tax return.

    The

    Canada Workers Benefit

    is a refundable tax credit that supports low-earning Canadians. (Non-refundable credits which can only reduce your tax bill to zero, while refundable credits are paid out in full.) The CWB is tied to the tax year, so the increase in 2026 will actually reflect last year’s inflation-based increase of 2.7 per cent. The

    maximum benefit

    for single individuals with no children will be $1,665 in 2026, up from $1,633 in 2025. The maximum benefit for families will be $2,869 in 2026, up $56 from $2,813 in 2025. The maximum CWB disability supplement (available to Canadians who qualify for the disability tax credit) will increase by $17 from $843 to $860 in 2026.

    The

    Canada Disability Benefit

    is a new monthly payment introduced in July 2025 to support working-age adults with disabilities. It’s available to Canadians aged 18 to 64 who are approved for the Disability Tax Credit, and the amount you receive depends on your income. The maximum annual payment now is $2,400, or $200 per month. Like other benefit increases that follow the benefit year, going forward it will go up each July. Assuming a two per cent increase, the new maximum for 2026-27 would be roughly $2,448 annually — or $204 per month. The first CDB payment at the new rate is set to land on July 20, 2026.

    The

    Canada Pension Plan

    is a monthly taxable benefit. The amount depends on your contributions while working, how long you’ve paid into the system, and when you start collecting. Once you’re eligible, you’ll receive payments for life. CPP benefits are indexed every January to keep up with inflation. For 2026, Service Canada has announced that payments are increasing by two per cent, based on the consumer price index.

    Old Age Security

    is a monthly pension payment from Service Canada for Canadians aged 65 and up. Unlike other pension programs like the Canada Pension Plan, your work history is not a factor in OAS eligibility. OAS is reviewed four times a year — in January, April, July and October — and adjusted as needed to keep up with inflation. The payment amount won’t go down, even if the cost of living does.

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    The Royal Canadian Navy Halifax-class frigate HMCS Vancouver on Sept. 20, 2022.

    More than 18 months after Canada labelled Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) a terrorist organization, the Middle East nation has done the same to the Royal Canadian Navy.

    Iran’s foreign ministry said its decision was made “within the framework of reciprocity” as it relates to

    Ottawa’s 2024 decision

    to classify the IRGC as a terrorist entity, a move it said in

    a statement

    is “contrary to the fundamental principles of international law.”

    It cited a piece of Iranian legislation enacted in 2019 that allows the country to apply the designation to “all countries that in any way comply with or support the decision of the United States of America to declare the (IRGC) as a terrorist organization.”

    Formed after the 1979 Iranian revolution and now considered a “pillar” of the nation’s armed forces, the IRGC is a militia that controls vast business empires and operates armed and intelligence forces with little to no civilian oversight. Its more than 150,000 members oversee Iran’s missile program and nuclear efforts.

    The U.S. first listed the IRGC as a foreign terrorist organization in

    April 2019

    , during President Donald Trump’s first term. Canada, advancing its own efforts to rebuke the Iranian regime’s “unlawful actions and its support of terrorism,” followed suit last June.

    “The Government of Canada has concluded after a deliberative process based on very, very strong and compelling evidence that the cabinet received that now is the time to list the IRGC as a criminal organization,” the Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc told reporters in Ottawa.

    Canada had already designated Quds Force, a branch of the IRGC, as a terrorist entity

    in 2012

    , because it provides weapons, money and training to groups such as Hamas, Hezbollah, the Taliban, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC).

    According to the

    U.S. Counter Terrorism Guide

    , Quds Force “is one of the Iranian regime’s primary organizations responsible for conducting covert lethal activities outside Iran, including asymmetric and terrorist operations.”

    While not specifically stated by Ottawa, one of the key factors in offering the 2024 designation was Iran’s downing of Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752, which led to the deaths of all 176 passengers and crew, 85 Canadian citizens and permanent residents. The Guard admitted it was responsible, but said the aircraft was mistaken for a hostile target.

     Debris from Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752, which was shot down after take-off from Iran’s Imam Khomeini airport, killing 85 Canadian citizens and permanent residents.

    Despite calls from within and outside Canada to apply the terrorist label to the parent IRGC, the Liberals resisted for several years, citing potential unintended consequences on Iranians who were forced into mandatory service or sent money home from Canada.

    Then Justice Minister Arif Virani said an individual’s willingness and intent must be considered under the Criminal Code.

    “If an individual was conscripted at one point in time and no longer serves with the IRGC, that would affect the analysis and inform the analysis,”

    Virani said last year.

    “If the person who is sending the money does not know what it is going to be used for and is, in fact, kept in the dark about that information, that would also affect the analysis.”

    In addition to the U.S. and Canada, Sweden, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia also list IRGC as a terrorist group. Late last month, Australia also listed the Guard as

    “a state sponsor of terrorism

    .”

     

    Iran’s foreign ministry did not detail the practical consequences of the designation on Canada’s Navy.

    National Post has contacted Iran’s ministry and Global Affairs Canada for comment and more information.

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    Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks at an event in Montreal,  Nov. 14, 2025.

    OTTAWA — As Canada prepares to enter 2026 which could see the Parti Québécois (PQ) take power in Quebec and enact its promise of a third referendum, it remains unclear what, if anything, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government intends to do about it.

    The PQ has been riding high in the polls in Quebec for the past two years and could aspire to form a majority government after the October election. Its leader, Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, has vowed to hold a referendum in his first mandate — before 2030.

    Liberal sources told the National Post that former Quebec lieutenant Steven Guilbeault had started to map out a federal strategy to respond to the PQ, but it was very early stages.

    “He was starting to see what their posture should be. Should they have some messages? Should they make some (media) appearances? If so, what kind of appearances? So, he was still at the beginning of the elaboration of a strategy,” said one source.

    But Guilbeault resigned from his cabinet positions in late November, including his role as Quebec lieutenant. A spokesperson for his office said he was unavailable for an interview.

    His successor, Joël Lightbound, is expected to settle into his role in the new year and to take the lead on all things Quebec — including the PQ. A spokesperson for Lightbound also refused an interview, citing a lack of time.

    But sources described Lightbound as having a more “discreet” approach, not one that would be outright confrontational and could direct too much attention toward Ottawa.

    Jonathan Kalles, who served as Quebec adviser to then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and is now a vice president at McMillan Vantage, said Carney’s team will need to figure out who are his main spokespeople in terms of responding to the PQ.

    “Most important, that it be coordinated and not individual ministers or members making comments without being part of a larger plan,” he warned.

    Back in November, Industry Minister Mélanie Joly accused the PQ leader of wanting

    to throw Quebec “into the arms of Donald Trump”

    after he called for a “closer relationship” with the United States if Quebec were to become an independent country.

    Quebec Liberal MP Angelo Iacono went even further a day later, claiming that

    an independent Quebec would be at risk of being invaded

    by the U.S.

    Kalles said there will also be moments when St-Pierre Plamondon might say or do things that could damage his electoral chances, and the federal government “would be wise to pick and choose the moments when to respond and when not to respond.”

    One of those moments was when St-Pierre Plamondon called out

    the cultural sector in the province as being “disloyal” to Quebec

    after some of them congratulated Marc Miller’s appointment as federal culture minister. The PQ leader ultimately apologized for his comments.

    The PQ subsequently dropped four points in a Léger-Québecor poll

    — from 39 per cent of decided voters to 35 — despite the Quebec Liberal Party being embroiled in scandal.

    “That’s clearly a result of people reacting to (St-Pierre Plamondon)’s attacks on the cultural milieu, which were over the top and ridiculous,” said Kalles.

    Michel Breau, associate vice president at the Wellington Dupont Public Affairs, said Carney’s team would be wise to weigh their efforts made to alleviate the threat of Western alienation versus the real threat of Quebec electing a separatist government in 2026.

    “There’s already been stretches of time when the Quebec government felt it was prepared to suddenly run an independent country’s government. That isn’t the case in Alberta,” he said.

    Breau, who worked for Quebec Liberal ministers for a decade, said events such as Guilbeault’s departure from cabinet because of the Alberta MOU and

    naming investment banker Mark Wiseman as ambassador to the U.S. despite Quebec opposition

    could eventually add up.

    “You can start to have a little bit of a drip, drip, drip, in terms of stuff that seeps a little bit, I think, into the woodwork of, does Mark Carney really get Quebec?”

     Joël Lightbound, above, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new Quebec lieutenant, is said to be taking a more “discreet” approach to the job than his predecessor, Steven Guilbeault, did.

    The federal government is not “blind” to the fact that the PQ is leading in the polls in Quebec at the moment, said one source close to Carney’s thinking speaking on a not-for-attribution basis.

    However, they remain convinced that the Quebec election is “anybody’s game” — pointing to the unpredictable turn of events at the federal level in 2025. They also said that the uncertainty around the CUSMA review in 2026 could sway Quebecers to stay within Canada.

    In any case, the federal public service is likely quietly working in the background to prepare for all scenarios — including a majority PQ win.

    In an interview, former clerk of the Privy Council Michael Wernick said he thinks “pretty soon, it would be time to start doing that quiet prep work.”

    “The prime minister’s focus is going to be pulled mostly to Canada-U.S. stuff and trade and security and building those houses and infrastructure projects and all that kind of stuff. So, this could become quite a drain of focus and attention,” he said.

    Wernick, who was assistant deputy minister at the department now known as Intergovernmental Affairs during the 1995 referendum, said the federal government will “always have to find a working relationship with the federalists within Quebec.”

    For now, the whiff of scandal has cast a chill between Liberals in Ottawa and Quebec City.

    Publicly, most federal Liberals are steering clear of provincial politics — seeing that their former colleague, Pablo Rodriguez, recently resigned as leader of the Liberal Party of Quebec after facing a criminal investigation by the province’s anti-corruption police.

    At an unrelated announcement on Dec. 16, Lightbound even contradicted a reporter for suggesting the Liberal parties of Canada and Quebec were somewhat related.

    “It is neither the little brother nor the big brother. There is no connection between both parties, and there hasn’t been a connection for decades,” he said.

    Privately, the federal Liberals are keeping a close eye on the person who could succeed Rodriguez as leader of the provincial party: Charles Milliard, former head of the Quebec Federation of Chambers of Commerce.

    Philippe J. Fournier, founder of

    the polling aggregator website Qc125

    , said that while Milliard has no political experience, it might work in his favour against political opponents who might struggle to find ways to undermine him or uncover “skeletons in the closet.”

    Even though the PQ has been steadily polling in first place, Fournier predicts it is too early to tell what might happen come October given how divided the Quebec electorate is.

    “There is no precedent. … So, I believe it is completely unpredictable, even if the PQ is the favourite,” he said.

    National Post

    calevesque@postmedia.com

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    A man whose teenage daughter was kidnapped on Christmas Day found the girl by using his cellphone’s parental controls to track her location.

    A teenage girl police said was kidnapped on Christmas Day in Texas was located by her father using his phone’s parental controls.

    The 15-year-old girl from Porter, an unincorporated community north of Houston, was reported missing when she didn’t return from walking her dog at the usual time, leading her parents to become concerned, the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office explained in

    a news release

    .

    Her father used parental controls to track the location of his daughter’s phone to a “secluded, partially wooded area” about three kilometres away in adjacent Harris County.

    Police said he found her and the dog “inside a maroon-coloured pickup truck with a partially nude” man. He helped his daughter escape and contacted the police.

    The girl told police the man had threatened her with a knife when he abducted her from the street.

    With the help of witnesses at the scene, police located the truck and identified the driver, a 23-year-old Porter resident. He was located, taken into custody and has been charged with aggravated kidnapping and indecency with a child.

    He’s being held in the county jail without bond while the major crimes unit continues its investigation.

    Under the state’s penal code, a conviction on the kidnapping charge, a first-degree felony, carries a prison term of five to 99 years or life imprisonment and/or a fine up to $10,000, according to

    Dunham Law. 

    Cases involving indecency with a child, meanwhile, are a second-degree felony punishable by between two and a maximum of 20 years in prison and/or a fine up to $10,000 if found guilty, per defence lawyer

    E. Jason Leach

    .

    The family, who have not been publicly identified, told CBS News affiliate

    KHOU

    off-camera that they do not know the suspect.

    “Christmas is a day meant for joy, but this man chose to shatter that joy by targeting a child,” Sheriff Wesley Doolittle stated.

    “I am incredibly proud of our deputies and detectives who worked tirelessly to ensure this dangerous predator was swiftly apprehended and is now off our streets.”

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