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Tobacco and cannabis dispensaries, near Highway 102 at Millbrook, N.S. on Thursday June 13, 2024.

Traces of fentanyl have been found in cannabis purchased in some of Nova Scotia’s many unlicensed marijuana dispensaries, the province’s premier said Thursday.

Under fire from First Nations for his government’s directive last week for police to “intensify enforcement aimed at stopping illegal cannabis operations,” many of which are located on reserves, Premier Tim Houston and two of his ministers were even banned by one, Sipekne’katik First Nation, earlier this week. There are rumblings from some of the province’s dozen other Mi’kmaq First Nations about instituting similar bans.

“I’ve talked to people in law enforcement who have told me that in this province that they’ve taken illegal cannabis from unregulated illegal dispensaries and tested it and found that it was laced with traces of fentanyl,” Houston said.

“Sometimes I hear, ‘I don’t buy from the government supply because I don’t get the same buzz.’ Well, that’s probably why.”

Over the years, fentanyl has become the dominant drug on streets across Canada, taking thousands of lives.

Tests have also found “all kinds of pesticides” in black market cannabis, Houston said.

“So, there’s a real public health issue there, and behind it all, in many cases, not all, but in many cases, is organized crime,” he said.

The premier said he’s been “pretty overwhelmed the last few days, to be honest, from the outpouring of support I’ve heard from people in this province that live in First Nations communities and are thankful that somebody is stepping up, because they don’t want this in their communities,” he said.

Houston said he’s heard from parents, “and mothers in particular,” who told him, “My child says: ‘Can we go in the store with the flashing lights and get some candy?’” Houston said.

“They don’t want that.”

Much of the criticism levelled at the Houston government’s directive to police to ramp up efforts against the unlicensed dispensaries focuses on his lack of consultation with First Nations groups.

“Until the end of time, people will be complaining that the government didn’t consult enough, didn’t consult properly, didn’t consult broadly enough,” Houston said.

“I will assure you 100 per cent that we meet and exceed those obligations every single time.”

The premier said those who operate unlicensed cannabis dispensaries — there are an estimated 118 in Nova Scotia — don’t want to lose the revenue they generate.

“The reality is we have people making millions and millions of dollars selling illegal cannabis, and they’re upset to hear that there might be a crackdown on it,” Houston said.

“We also have people who are customers, and some of them think this is an elaborate scheme by the government to get more money from them. It’s not. We’re concerned about the public safety.”

The government has “massive concerns, as do many, many community members across this province, and many many Nova Scotians, about the organized crime element,” Houston said.

“Where does everybody think the money’s going?”

He linked human trafficking to the illegal cannabis issue, but didn’t elaborate.

“We are the voice for the people who are afraid to stand up,” Houston said.

The province has 51 legal Nova Scotia Liquor Corp. (NSLC) outlets that sell cannabis.

“We’re just saying, hey, let’s treat weed like we treat booze,” Houston said. “So, I don’t want to have any discussion about the number of excuses for why this should be allowed to continue.”

When asked why he wants to crack down on cannabis now, he pointed to “the incredible proliferation of these dispensaries. Take a drive down the highway. You might see what I mean.”

Indeed, the section of Highway 102, where it runs through Millbrook First Nation at the centre of the province, is lined with unlicensed cannabis dispensaries.

“I think somebody has to step up, and it should be the government,” Houston said.

Along with Houston, Sipekne’katik banned the province’s Justice Minister Scott Armstrong, and Minister of L’nu (Indigenous) Affairs Leah Martin, as “undesirables” this week and threatened to hit trespassers with $50,000 fines.

“I think it’s bizarre,” Houston said of the ban.

Armstrong said Thursday that cracking down on unlicensed cannabis dispensaries is a priority for the government.

“This isn’t a First Nations issue, this is a public safety issue,” Armstrong told reporters in downtown Halifax. “We have illegal cannabis shops on reserve and off reserve across the province. There are some a stone’s throw from here actually.”

Cannabis sold by the NSLC is approved by Health Canada, he said. “We know what’s in it, we know the potency of what’s in it, and we know it’s pure. That is not the way it is in unlicensed facilities.”

There’s a process that would allow reserves to get their own NSLC outlet that sells legal cannabis, Armstrong said.

“All the proceeds would stay in those communities, and then they use those for positive social programs,” he said, noting there “has been some interest” from the province’s 13 First Nations, though none have signed on yet.

Martin, who is a member of Millbrook First Nation, fended off questions Thursday about whether she should resign over the province’s directive to crack down on unlicensed cannabis shops.

“For every one negative comment you do hear along the way, there is about ten positive people that have reached out since saying wonderful things and saying, ‘Keep going. I appreciate you standing up. I appreciate you doing hard things,’” Martin said.

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Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau arriving at Westminster Abbey prior to the coronation ceremony for King Charles III in 2023.

Renowned Canadian trauma-care physician and author Dr. Gabor Maté said he never “thought for a second” Sophie Grégoire Trudeau’s relationship to Justin Trudeau was going to last.

The remark came Tuesday during an almost two-hour long online workshop, “Love, Trauma and the Power of Repair,” that was hosted by Grégoire Trudeau, a self-proclaimed

mental health advocate

.

“The first time I met you three years ago now, in Ottawa, I never thought for a second that your relationship would last, because I tell (you), somebody so close to being themselves, and I just didn’t see how (that relationship could last),” Maté said as he talked about Grégoire Trudeau’s personal drive toward authenticity and the breakdown of her marriage.

It was part of a broader discussion about the tension that Maté said can arise in relationships when partners struggle with authenticity versus attachment.

“The question is, which pain are you going to have,” he asked. “The pain of the loss of the attachment, or the pain of losing yourself. Now, as a child, you have no choice, and as an adult, it’s difficult to come to that choice because it reminds you of the set that yourself as a child every time you want to be yourself.”

Maté went on to point to another well-known politician and political wife, Hillary Clinton.

“So, women tend to absorb the stresses of their men … and their children, like Hillary Clinton. Hillary is a fine example. Her husband was a philander … and she said, ‘I didn’t realize how stressed he was,’ like it was her fault. She learned that in her childhood.”

Although Grégoire Trudeau didn’t respond to Maté’s remark about her marriage, the two went on to discuss wide-ranging topics, including how a relationship can come apart or be repaired.

Justin was 33 and Grégoire Trudeau 29 when they were married in May 2005 in Montreal. After 18 years of marriage, the couple announced their separation in 2023 and shared almost identical statements with the public that asked for privacy for their children.

Since the end of their marriage, Justin and Grégoire Trudeau have lived separate lives but have also been committed to co-parenting their children, Xavier, 18, Ella Grace, 16, and 11-year-old Hadrien.

One week after their split, they

vacationed together in Tofino, B.C.,

with their kids. They reunited for

another family vacation to Jamaica at Christmas

, about two months after it was reported Grégoire Trudeau had been

dating Ottawa pediatric surgeon, Dr. Marcos Bettolli

, possibly since before she and Justin announced their separation.

In early 2024, while promoting her new book, Closer Together: Knowing Ourselves, Loving Each Other, Grégoire Trudeau spoke often about her and Justin’s new reality.

“We are still bound by love and respect and smiles and tears, and we’re still trying to figure it out,”

she told Katie Couric in May

. “And it’s not perfect, but when you keep things honest. Michael J. Fox said, ‘We’re only as sick as our secrets.’”

Toward the end of the workshop, Maté praised Grégoire Trudeau for her weekend appearance on the French Canadian TV show Chanteurs Masqués (Masked Singers).

“She was fantastic,” Maté, a lover of classical music, told the session participants.

“Oh, my God, thank you. I love singing, and I just, it was a playful thing to do,” Grégoire Trudeau responded. “I got my pipes going. So it was a good experience.”

“Well, your singing is fantastic,” said Maté. “I mean, there’s another career there.”

Smiling, Grégoire Trudeau said, “Oh, there we go. In the next workshop, I’ll sing for all of you from my heart.”

That’s when a participant burst in and exclaimed, “So, she beats out Katy Perry.”

Keeping her composure, Grégoire Trudeau did not pick up on the praise but said, “I did not say that.” And added: “Thank you for listening.”

The romance between her ex and the American pop star — including a highly publicized July rendezvous in Montreal, and further fuelled by repeated sightings together since — was officially confirmed by Perry last week when she shared photos on Instagram of the two of them in Japan. On the same trip, the pair

dined with former Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida and his wife, Yuko

.

In October, in the wake of published photos of Trudeau and Perry embracing atop a yacht in California, Grégoire Trudeau acknowledged the “triggers” that come with life in the public eye, but said she chooses not to stay triggered.

“How you react to stuff is your decision,” she said on Arlene Dickinson’s

Arlene Is Alone: The Single Life YouTube show.

“The woman I want to become through this is my decision.”

Grégoire Trudeau’s conversation with Maté was the second of two conversations they have had in recent months. The first was in the spring of 2024 at the

Vancouver Writers Festival

.

 

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“Officers recovered approximately 140 stolen toy items, valued at an estimated $7,500. Most of the recovered items were Jellycat toys,” police said.

An Ontario woman is accused of being a serial Jellycat burglar after a police raid uncovered a large collection of the trendy plush collectible toys at her home, worth an estimated $7,500.

Jellycats are soft, stuffed toys that come in a wide range of whimsical designs, including animals and food items, that have become a trendy, hot collectible craze — reminiscent of Beanie Babies in the 1990s.

The dark side of the Jellycat obsession started to unravel on Oct. 25 when an unspecified number of Jellycats were stolen from a store in Kitchener, Ont.

The store was hit again last Saturday, with Jellycats also the target, Waterloo Regional Police said. The value of plushies from the two heists was about $2,000.

The thefts appeared to be linked and a suspect was identified soon after Saturday’s boost.

Investigators received information that items fitting the description of the stolen toys were being sold online through Facebook Marketplace, a police spokesperson told National Post. Investigators believed the toys were being prepared for sale online.

On Tuesday, police moved in on a home in Guelph armed with a search warrant.

“Officers recovered approximately 140 stolen toy items, valued at an estimated $7,500. Most of the recovered items were Jellycat toys,” police said in a written statement. Police said they believe most of the toys were stolen in the Greater Toronto area.

A police photo of the seized goods shows a table covered with colourful, plush toys, some grouped by type and colour, showing several repeated designs.

There is also a Jellycat sign that looks like it could be from a store display.

The alleged culprit is a 52-year-old Guelph woman.

She was arrested and charged with theft over $5,000, possession of stolen property over $5,000, and trafficking in stolen property.

The charge of trafficking suggests she wasn’t just an admirer and collector.

The U.K.-based company that created Jellycat describes them as a “luxury soft toy.” They often sell at retail in Canada from between $125 and $30, depending on size and design. They frequently appear in social media posts and appeal to a wide age range and are popular internationally.

The accused woman has a court appearance in the new year.

Meanwhile, Waterloo police said they are trying to identify other businesses in Southwestern Ontario that may have been victimized to help rehome the toys.

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | X:

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A photo of Breanna Broadfoot at her Grade 8 graduation. Only a few years later, she was killed by her ex-boyfriend.

When police kicked down the front door of a London, Ont. townhouse in July 2024, a trail of blood on the floor and walls led them to an upstairs bedroom, where they found the near-lifeless body of Breanna Broadfoot.

Kneeling beside her, gripping a bloody 20-centimetre kitchen knife, was her boyfriend, Kuhkpaw Moo, according to police.

Breanna, whose screams could be heard in the background of a 911 call earlier that evening, was rushed to hospital with catastrophic stab wounds. She died approximately 37 hours later.

She was 17 years old.

Breanna was one of at least 1,329 women and girls who have died in Canada in criminal or suspicious circumstances over the last seven years, a shocking tally. That’s an average of one female dying under criminal or suspicious circumstances every other day in Canada.

Although 2025 to-date has shown some decrease, the number of such deaths has nonetheless trended steadily upward in recent times. In 2024, the last year for which full data was tracked, there were 221 deaths, an increase of 46 per cent over the 151 deaths in 2019, an

Investigative Journalism Bureau

analysis has found.

Researchers, advocates and some police officials told the IJB the numbers point to a Canadian epidemic of femicide, which the United Nations has defined as the intentional killing of women because of their gender.

On Tuesday, Justice Minister Sean Fraser introduced Bill C-16: the Protecting Victims Act, which proposes, among other things, to define murders of women involving “control, hate, sexual violence or exploitation” as “femicide.” The bill, if passed, would allow such killings to be classified as first-degree murder, even without premeditation, and would add the word femicide to the Criminal Code.

The bill is a “welcome development” for Breanna’s family, who promised after her death to fight for reforms to a justice system they say failed to protect her from Moo, 18, who was shot dead by police after her stabbing.

Breanna’s parents, Jess and Brett Broadfoot, said their ambitious daughter spent her short life looking out for others.

“She would be the first one to speak up for somebody, or make sure somebody had what they needed,” Brett said of Breanna, whose organs now live in five transplant recipients.

“Her heart never stopped beating, and she’s still out there helping people.”

 Brett and Jess Broadfoot have tattoos of their daughter Breanna’s heartbeat on their forearms.

***

It’s difficult to know how many of the 1,329 female deaths tracked by the IJB could be classified as femicides based on the definitions in the proposed bill. While police and court documents sometimes reference how a perpetrator had an explicit intention to target a woman or women, the term “femicide” has been controversial.

There is a patchwork of approaches by police and prosecutors in using the label.

Although police forces in cities including Ottawa, London and Kingston have labelled some killings of girls and women as “femicide,” forces in cities including Vancouver and Calgary have said they would only adopt this term if it were added to the Criminal Code.

The RCMP defines the deaths of women as homicides, but has been “examining” how Ottawa police and international law-enforcement agencies use the word femicide with the goal of potentially establishing its own definition, said RCMP Staff Sgt. Kris Clark.

Regardless of how they are labelled, the killings analyzed by the IJB reveal a growing crisis.

The typical female victim in this country is slain by a man nearly 90 per cent of the time. There’s more than a one-in-three chance the man is a current or former intimate partner, and a one-in-four chance he is a family member.

The odds are high — 83 per cent — that police, child services, judicial or mental health systems were aware of the offender prior to the killing due to a previous interaction.

If convicted in court of the killing, the man’s sentence will be about 10 years, the IJB data shows.

“It’s just too easy to harm women, and there’s no consequence of any meaningful significance,” said Megan Walker, former chair of the Police Services Board in London, Ont.

“The justice system continues to fail women.”

Femicide is already recognized as a specific offence in more than two dozen countries, primarily in Latin America. In Canada, advocates have long fought for legislation that would treat violence against women differently, including naming femicide as a distinct crime or considering it an aggravating factor that would yield a longer sentence.

Bill C-16 is “a step toward” restructuring how violence against women is recognized in law, said Angela Marie MacDougall, executive director of the Vancouver-based Battered Women’s Support Services. But more change is needed to the justice system to truly help victims, she said.

“Ensuring survivors can safely and effectively access justice is another (step).”

Not everyone agrees on the Liberals’ femicide proposals.

Ottawa criminal defence lawyer Michael Spratt fears the legislative proposals that would elevate charges to first-degree murder will prompt more offenders to go to trial rather than plead guilty, further clogging the court system and putting families or witnesses through the trauma of testifying.

“I’m very skeptical whether this bill will help,” said Spratt.

Instead, solutions should include addressing the violence before it leads to murder, through education and counselling, he said.

Lawyer Christine Van Geyn believes the justice system already has sufficient charging and sentencing tools to handle homicides, regardless of the victim’s gender.

“The solutions lie in earlier intervention, improvements in policing and social-services response, and better protection for women at known risk, not in creating new homicide categories that duplicate existing offences,” said Van Geyn, litigation director with the Canadian Constitution Foundation.

 Canadian Constitution Foundation litigation director Christine Van Geyn is unimpressed with a new federal bill that defines ‘femicide.’

But support for recognizing femicide has been slowly growing among police.

Deputy chief Patricia Ferguson of the Ottawa Police Service says the murders of men often have to do with their behaviour, including involvement in the drug trade, robberies or bar fights.

For female victims, it is typically less about behaviour than about their proximity to a violent individual.

Heather Lachine, superintendent of criminal investigations for Ottawa Police, called the data on female killings gathered by the IJB “insane.”

The difference between many killings of men and women, she says, is this: “Women are killed because they are mothers and they are spouses and they are sex trade workers and just for who they are.”

“Women and girls are killed in a different context than men and boys,” agrees Myrna Dawson, director of the Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability at the University of Guelph, which has been gathering its own data on femicides since 2018.

***

The IJB spent more than a year examining the deaths of females across Canada. By searching public records, police reports, court documents and missing person websites, reporters mapped the grim details and outcomes of 1,329 suspicious female deaths since 2019.

The database includes confirmed homicides and deaths that police deem criminally suspicious. Where charges are laid, the majority are murder or manslaughter.

In a handful of cases, court records allege the accused caused a woman’s death through crimes such as arson, failing to provide the necessities of life and aggravated assault.

When it comes to sentencing, penalties have varied widely, based in part on how well the victim knew her killer.

Of the 687 cases reviewed by the IJB in which the accused was close to the victim — either a current or former intimate partner, or a family member — judicial outcomes have been reached in 337 to-date.

Of those 337, more than one-third pleaded to lesser offences, were found guilty of a lesser crime or had their charges stayed or dropped.

Offenders with close ties to their victim are often treated with greater leniency than other violent criminals because of an “intimacy or domestic discount” in sentencing, a

2023 Statistics Canada report

noted.

“Persons accused of a homicide against someone with whom they share a close relationship may be perceived as lacking criminal intent,” the report said, and may be seen by the legal system to have acted on “provocation or strong emotion.”

***

Over the past decade, various Canadian inquiries have examined the targeted deaths of women or mass casualty events that included female victims. Hundreds of recommendations were made to prevent the root causes of gender-based violence.

Few have been enacted.

A 2022 coroner’s inquest into the murder of three women by a man in Renfrew County, Ont., led to 86 recommendations, including asking the federal government to add “femicide” to the Criminal Code — a step the proposed bill aims to achieve.

The Ontario government disappointed survivors’ families by rejecting nine of the 68 recommendations that were made to the province — including the jury’s top request to declare intimate partner violence an epidemic in Ontario.

Other recommendations were accepted wholly or in part; provincial officials did not respond to requests for details on their status.

 Killed by the same man on the same day in Renfrew County, Ont., in 2015 were, left to right, Nathalie Warmerdam, Carol Culleton and Anastasia Kuzyk.

In Nova Scotia, the Mass Casualty Commission examined a man’s two-day killing spree in April 2020, which began with assaulting his girlfriend and ended with 22 people dead, 13 women and nine men.

The commission’s March 2023 report issued 130 recommendations divided into 12 categories. As of June 2025, just two categories related to policing had been completed.

Unheeded red flags

Psychologist Katreena Scott, who sits on the Ontario chief coroner’s committee that reviews domestic violence fatalities, said most of the intimate partner homicide cases reviewed by the committee included red flags that should be spotted in a better-working system.

“Systems often don’t listen very well,” she said. “Systems don’t listen to survivors — to women, who are saying, ‘Listen, this is a dangerous situation’ or are asking for help.”

That appears to have been true in Calgary, where, in two strikingly similar cases, women were allegedly murdered by ex-partners, just 18 months apart.

Both suspected killers had histories of stalking, harassment and flouting no-contact orders.

In January 2024, after six months seeking protection by the courts and police, 40-year-old mother of three Melanie Nicolaides was allegedly killed by her ex-husband, Kerry Girling.

Girling had been on bail since July 2023 after being charged with a violent crime. The court ordered him not to contact his ex-wife, but he was charged with breaching those conditions that September and November.

Nicolaides “fear(ed) for her safety,” according to court documents. On Jan. 16, 2024, a Peace Officer signed a document outlining new charges against Girling for contacting Nicolaides.

 Melanie Nicolaides of Calgary was stabbed to death (Photo courtesy of the family).

What court clerks didn’t know was that an hour-and-a-half before they stamped the paperwork for Girling’s arrest, he had stabbed Nicolaides to death outside an elementary school. He then took his own life.

Calgary Police’s Domestic Violence Review and Assignment Team had done a risk assessment of the case prior to Melanie Nicolaides’s death, according to spokesperson Amy Castonguay. She would not confirm what level of risk Nicolaides was determined to be in.

After the death, Calgary Police conducted an internal review which “resulted in recommendations to strengthen our resourcing, threat assessment and domestic violence policy, which are in the process of being implemented,” Castonguay said.

A remarkably similar case unfolded 18 months later.

In July 2025, Madisson Cobb, 23, woke up in her childhood home in Okotoks, Alta. to get ready for her job as a surgical eye assistant in Calgary.

That afternoon, she was killed in a parkade near her office. Police allege her killer was her ex-boyfriend, Devon Malik, who was subject to multiple restraining orders stemming from allegations of harassment, threats and stalking Cobb.

“Her life was full of potential,” Madisson Cobb’s mother, Jackie Cobb, told the federal Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights during its debate on bail and sentencing reform for repeat offenders on Nov. 18, 2025.

Court documents reveal a chilling account of Madisson Cobb’s fears and her efforts to get the justice system to protect her.

She told police in March that she’d endured months of “non-stop” contact from Malik after she ended their relationship. In an affidavit, she documented receiving multiple calls and texts daily, and finding two tracking devices on her vehicle.

She noted Malik owned a gun.

Cobb obtained a restraining order against Malik on June 10, which he’s alleged to have quickly breached.

Malik was also charged with two counts of harassment of Cobb in May and June. He was released on bail in both instances.

The day after Malik appeared in an Okotoks courtroom for one of the harassment charges, Cobb was shot to death. Malik is now in jail charged with first-degree murder.

Malik’s lawyer, Jim Lutz, declined comment while the case is before the courts. Calgary Police declined to comment for the same reason.

 Madisson Cobb was killed in a parkade near her office (Photo courtesy of the family).

Today, the Cobbs want to honour their daughter’s legacy of helping others by fighting for systemic change.

“I represent her desire to find justice in a system that failed her when she needed it the most … The restraining order did not do its job. It was a piece of paper with meaningless words,” said Madisson Cobb’s mother, who calls it her “mission” to get a law passed in Madisson’s name that makes ankle monitors a mandatory condition of a restraining order.

“How many innocent people need to die, like my young daughter Madisson, for legislation to change?”

***

Toronto lawyer Kathryn Marshall represents 22 plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the federal government filed by advocacy group End Violence Everywhere. It alleges that systemic failures in Canada’s justice system continue to expose plaintiffs to sexual and intimate partner violence, and has caused “severe injustice and left dangerous offenders on the streets.”

“They’re all people who the system has failed,” Marshall said.

The government has not yet provided a statement of defence.

The Broadfoots are among the individuals involved in Marshall’s lawsuit.

In March 2024, four months before her murder, Breanna Broadfoot went out to dinner with her family to celebrate her 17th birthday.

She hid black eyes under her makeup, the result of a brutal domestic violence attack two weeks earlier, which had put her in the hospital and left her with bruises on her neck and broken facial bones, her mother recalled.

“She had been strangled, punched a lot. She was covered in blood,” Jess Broadfoot said of the attack, allegedly by Moo. “He tried to murder my baby girl.”

Charged with assault, including strangulation, Moo was released by police the same day without having to appear before a judge to argue for bail. As part of his release, Moo agreed to not contact or be within 50 metres of Breanna.

But the contact continued, according to Breanna’s parents. Four months later, she was killed.

In response to questions from the IJB, London Police Acting Insp. David Younan, said the force had opened an internal review into the circumstances around Breanna’s murder.

The purpose is “to examine our own role honestly, to identify any gaps in our policies or practices, and to make improvements wherever they are needed.”

Younan said the force intends to publicly release the findings.

 Brett and Jess Broadfoot are among 22 plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the federal government alleging systemic failures in Canada’s justice system.

Since Breanna Broadfoot’s murder, at least another 271 females have been killed in Canada under criminal or suspicious circumstances. Fifteen of the cases involved a victim under 18 years old.

In the past year, Breanna’s father has joined the board of the London Abused Women Centre and provided witness testimony to government committees, and Jess raises donations and funds for local shelters ongoing.

When he struggles to go on, Brett re-reads a Father’s Day card Breanna wrote him.

“‘Dad, you have given me the greatest gift anyone could give another person: love, hope, strength, courage and, best of all, you believe in me. I love you,’” recited Brett in a shaking voice.

“Hear my daughter’s voice … and let’s continue to move forward in stopping this in our communities.”

— With files from Dori Seeman, Lindsay Catre and Myrialine Catule, Investigative Journalism Bureau

The Investigative Journalism Bureau (IJB) at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health is a collaborative investigative newsroom supported by Postmedia that partners with academics, researchers and journalists while training the next generation of investigative reporters. Additional reporting contributed by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project.

The IJB’s investigation by the numbers

Years: 2019-2025

• 1,329:

Number of girls and women killed (to Dec. 10, 2025)

• 151:

Number of victims in 2019

• 221:

Number of victims in 2024 (46% more than in 2019)


87%

of female victims were killed by someone they knew

• 83%

 of offenders had criminal, mental health “red flags” in their histories

• 10 years:

average sentence for killing a woman (more than two years to reach those sentences after charges laid)

• 13%

of cases from 2019 to 2025 remain unsolved

• 26%

 of victims were Indigenous, five times their proportion of the Canadian population

• Ontario and Manitoba

have the largest increases of femicide rates

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ST. CATHARINES-WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 12, 2025—HOMELESS—A homeless person in St. Catharines, Wednesday November 12, 2025.
[Photo By Peter J Thompson/National Post], [For Story by Allen Abel/National Post]

ST. CATHARINES, Ont. — Gigi and Nick are stoking a fire on the right bank of Twelve Mile Creek. It is the sunset hour in St. Catharines, Ont., but the atmosphere is damp and heavy from a November morning rain.

There is not another soul in sight, down here in the riverside parklands below a street called Gale Crescent, a few blocks east of downtown. For kindling, Gigi has scavenged an armful of twigs from the municipal shrubbery. She stacks it inside a makeshift hearth of flagstones and tries to get it to catch, but the twigs are wet and will not accept the flame from Nick’s pocket lighter.

Nick Dunits is 25, hooded, mustached and thinly bearded, soft-spoken, downcast, defeated. His running shoes are brand new. Gigi is mature, self-aware, alert, conversational, with streaky brown-blond hair and bright-red lipstick distracting from a broken smile.

“I am a 33-year-old woman,” she announces. “I would like to sit on a real toilet sometime.” But for privacy, the late Niagara afternoon offers only the sky above, the mud below.

Gigi H. — she doesn’t offer her full surname — says that she ran track and played volleyball and badminton in high school in nearby Thorold, half of her lifespan ago. She says that she studied for a time at Niagara College to become an esthetician.

“You didn’t just learn about the outside of the person,” she relays. “You had to learn about the inside — the whole person — too.”

Nick says that he has a seven-year-old child whom he hasn’t seen in five years. Gigi says that she has given birth to four children by “my two baby daddies” and that the kids live comfortably with their respective fathers.

“I was sure when I was 10 years old that I wanted to run an orphanage,” Gigi says.

Now she lives in one, the biggest in the world, as big as our country, the open-air warehouse of the “unhoused.”

In her faux-leather purse (or maybe it is genuine calfskin) are a makeup palette, some mascaras and a length of plastic tubing connected to what appears to be a pipe for smoking drugs.

Nick says he has a generous sister who sometimes takes him in, and that he got hooked on the painkiller Percocet at the age of 16, back at St. Catharines Collegiate.

“I did it to fit in,” he says with a shrug, barely whispering.

He says that his parents, addicts also, live in a tent by the creek. There used to be a lot of tents on the flats below Gale Crescent before the city swept them away.

Nick says he recently spent a month in jail for stealing a loaf of bread.

It could have been worse. In Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables, Jean Valjean serves 19 years in the galleys of Toulon for the same offence.

“It was just a loaf of bread, but the judge said, ‘Stealing is stealing.’” Nick sighs. When he got out, the street was waiting. It is very patient, the street.

“Homeless people got the biggest hearts,” he says.

An hour earlier, Gigi and Nick had been lounging among the dozens of permanent itinerants in the back lot of the Salvation Army on Calvin Street, a brick dormitory with a cornerstone consecrated, “To the glory of God.” Across the street, outside the doors of a social-service agency called Start Me Up, a woman was writhing and screaming.

Another fellow carefully spelled out his name as “Abdalla Yaya, from Somalia,” as he propped himself unsteadily against the mission wall.

“One lie,” Yaya said. “One lie. One lie when I was young put me here.

“The voice in my head.

“It is confused.”

* * *

At this same hour of every day, in every season, in Canadian cities and towns and villages of all sizes, darkness is gathering and so are the inhalers, the injectors, the vagrants, the victims, the dealers, the ranters, the scroungers, the abused, the disconnected, the bread-stealers, the convicted, the convulsing, and the Yayas of every description.

Homelessness in this country as 2025 concludes is a public catastrophe composed of tens of thousands of private collapses. It is big-city and it is small-town. It is pharmaceutical, and it is macroeconomic. There are no answers, and many answers. There are initiatives, institutions, jurisdictions, community forums, police incursions, devoted volunteers, Christian pieties, tent cities, dung heaps, tiny houses, bulldozers, needles scattered like fescue seeds, and no end of free shoes and soup.

The unhoused of 2025 are not the rail-riding hobos of the Great Depression — W. O. Mitchell’s “strange men (who) swung down from the trains, their blanket rolls slung over one shoulder, bright flannel shirts open at the neck, their lean faces dark with coal dust.”

And they are not the beggared legions with whom George Orwell wandered incognito across Britain in 1933, only to conclude that “a tramp’s sufferings are entirely useless. He lives a fantastically disagreeable life, and lives it to no purpose whatever … the problem is how to turn him from a bored, half-alive vagrant into a self-respecting human being. A mere increase of comfort cannot do this.”

Overwhelmed by the commercial and chemical genius of the Mexican cartels, their Canadian middlemen and the Chinese laboratories that supply them with ever more potent drugs that are

killing an average of 18 people a day

, Canada’s homeless and those who must cross their ragged existence, are caught between charity and condemnation. Some Canadians feed who they can; others are simply fed up.

A recent

Nanos poll

found a majority of Canadians — nearly 60 per cent — say they supported communities declaring states of emergency to clear homeless encampments in parks and public spaces.

A three-day drive around small towns and cities in Southern Ontario brought us face-to-face with Canada’s homeless crisis, but it could have been anywhere.

It could have been in

Medicine Hat, Alta.

, where a 2021 claim that it was the first Canadian city to end homelessness lasted just five months. Community opposition has halted the operation of the only daytime service centre for vulnerable residents and forestalled the centre’s bid to add some overnight beds.

It could have been on

Salt Spring Island, B.C

., until recently the province’s highest per capita capital of homelessness, where, according to the president of the local chamber of commerce, “derelict sailboats and multiple people living on little floating rafts” can be seen in Ganges Harbour.

It could have been in

Shubie Campground

, in Dartmouth, N.S., where the city is helping to cover the costs of people renting RV spots over the winter as a housing option.

In a count taken in the fall of 2024, the federal government

estimated

nearly 60,000 people in 74 communities in nearly every province and territory were experiencing homelessness on a single night. This was part of the “Point in Time” enumeration, which captures a one-night snapshot of homelessness.

Next May, Statistics Canada will add two questions to the

national census

asking respondents if they have experienced sheltered or unsheltered homelessness or if they have been compelled to bunk with friends or family members.

* * *

Back on Twelve Mile Creek in St. Catharines, the fire has gone out, in more ways than one.

“A spirit guide told me that 33 was going to be a bad year for me,” Gigi says. “And now I’m 33.”

As a last resort, she removes her right shoe and peels off her knee-high hose, clicks her lighter and watches the fabric sizzle and flare.

They’re in business.

“We would like to get on with our evening now,” Gigi says, gently urging a visitor back up the hill toward the city and the autumn night.

In 2025, mushrooming tents and middens of trash are as much a part of any Canadian townscape as the library, the arena and the bandshell in Centennial Park.

Thus it happened that, over the past few years, an untended triangle of lumpy lawn at the corner of Niagara and Church streets in St. Catharines, behind the Salvation Army, became strewn with rotting food, jettisoned charity, and enough syringes to deliver poison to kill every citizen of the Garden City two or three times over.

“You drive by there and there’s garbage everywhere. You see crack pipes, you see all the stuff lying all over the place,” a concerned resident of the city is reporting. “You see all of their cotton balls, their alcohol swabs.

“The city of St. Catharines did clean up the encampments that were along Gale Crescent. They cleaned all of that up. Wonderful, fabulous. But we still have the drugstores, and I don’t care if this is government-funded or not, but like, let’s hand out free meth to all these people? Right?

“So, these people line up at the drugstore every day, same time. They sit on the street, they throw their garbage everywhere, and they get their stuff, and then they’re whacked out for however long. And they make a mess. They piss, they sh-t, and there are no consequences. No consequences.”

This is from Tim Toffolo, a tall and garrulous man who dresses for a Niagara winter in sandals and a Hawaiian shirt, and his partner, the more sartorially sensible Silva Leone. They are at a Tim Hortons a few blocks from Calvin Street, and Abdalla Yaya, and Gigi and Nick.

Toffolo is a real estate sales rep who was a pretty good hockey player before he mangled his shoulder beyond repair in junior and later bought the team down in Port Colborne, Ont. Now out of the hockey business, he and Leone recently acquired a property not far from the unkempt corner of Niagara and Church.

“It angered us and it saddened us,” he says of their daily drive-by. “It got to the point after seeing it so long, it just kept on going through my head, OK, there’s no way the mayor hasn’t seen this. There’s no way the councillors haven’t seen this. There’s no way that city workers haven’t seen it. There’s a fire station right across the street!

“We started making phone calls and asking questions, and we started to go around in a circle on the mayoral merry-go-round. No institution and no government entity was doing anything.

“And we just said, OK, enough’s enough. We’re going to go do it ourselves.”

In early November, the couple went to the site — it is registered to a numbered corporation — and stuffed as much crap as they could into black garbage bags, taking care not to impale themselves on the hundreds or even thousands of needles resting in the weeds.

“I couldn’t believe what was being thrown away in that lot,” Leone says. “Running shoes that had never touched the ground. New clothes that still had the tags on them. Those do-gooders who are giving this stuff away — and I am one of them — they need to know that it’s just going to be burned for a fire.

“Some people are probably going to say that we’re cruel to the homeless,” she says with a shrug.

“Enough’s enough,” Toffolo repeats. “If we don’t fix this problem now, 15 years from now it’s going to be worse.

“It’s got to be that, if you’re doing drugs, you’re going in an institution to get cleaned up and you don’t have a choice,” Toffolo says.

“As a country, we need to take care of our own,” he continues. “And that’s not happening. It’s pretty scary that we, the people of Ontario, of Canada, have let our cities get to this point.”

“Is ‘destroyed’ too strong?” the couple is asked.

“I don’t think so,” Toffolo replies. “Our culture, our safety has been destroyed.

“I can walk down the street on any given day at any given time, and I guarantee you I can see somebody on the side of the road smoking crack, injecting themselves. What are we doing about it?

“You can keep talking all you want, but boots on the ground are what makes the changes. Hopefully, we’re going to have people joining us and saying, ‘Hey you know what? We’re not going to accept this.’ But it’s going to take boots on the ground.”

* * *

Three days before Halloween, Chad Nikiforow of Owen Sound, Ont., was awakened at 4 a.m. by a disturbance in the unlocked “mud room” of his home on Third Avenue West. The clothes dryer was running, its door propped open by a ski pole. Chad’s wife Ruth and their two school-age children were slumbering upstairs.

Long known humorously by a fluke of geography as “the elephant’s asshole,” Owen Sound is the seat of Grey County, population about 21,000, and the commercial gateway to the scenic Bruce Peninsula. (Look at the map: the Bruce is the elephant’s tail, Windsor is at the tip of the trunk, Niagara forms the beast’s front legs, and so on.)

Downtown Owen Sound offers a wallet-draining gallery of high-end boutiques, including a certain gourmet cheese shop that, one local resident notes, “is about as frou as you can frou.”

As October ended, the big car ferry that plies up to Manitoulin Island — the 50-year-old MS Chi-Cheemaun — was tying up in dry dock for the winter a few blocks from Chad and Ruth Nikiforow’s address. But so was one of the largest per capita rosters of homeless in the province. For the Nikiforows, the crisis everyone in Owen Sound had been talking about for years had literally hit home.

“At first I didn’t even realize anybody was in there,” Chad reports. “I thought an animal had gotten in because it didn’t dawn on me — why would anybody be on my back porch? And then, OK, it was probably some person, because there’s food here and a big mound of sheets on the floor.

“Then I see somebody’s hiding their face in the sheets, just the head poking out of a hoodie. I stood there for a couple of minutes and then I’m like, OK, well, I don’t necessarily want to have a confrontation here at four in the morning.”

“He didn’t immediately want to talk to them because he didn’t want to be a big, bad bully,” says Ruth. “So, then the police come, and they’re like, ‘Male or female?’ My husband’s like, ‘I don’t know.’

“There was no pee on the sheets. There was no sign that it was drug-related. It was a human being looking for food and shelter.”

Even in little Owen Sound, the hooded woman or man on the back porch was hardly an outlier.

“Every night there’s anywhere between 50 and 100 people in the same situation,” says Chad. “Across the street, they had all their sheds broken into, and they stole all their power tools like chainsaws and weed whackers. If you’re going to be kicking through fences and breaking into sheds trying to steal power tools, you’re probably pretty desperate.

“But that’s no excuse. There’s tons of people, millions of people around the world that have bad lives and traumas and stuff like that. It’s all about the choices you make. You can let that affect you or you can choose to get on with your life and try to make something of it.

“The way I figure it is, I pay enough tax dollars. I pay enough fees and licensing and registrations to the government, which is supposed to deal with things like that. It’s the government that should fix it somehow. Quit wasting money.

“I just don’t think it’s going to be solved in my lifetime. I think things are just going to get worse and worse until everybody wants to leave. In the 50 years that I’ve been alive, I wouldn’t say things have improved at all.

“Two years ago, we did a big trip to Thailand and Vietnam. Those places are listed as Third World countries, but then when you compare the quality of life here to the quality of life there, for the average person I would say Canada is a Third World country. As far as homelessness goes, you don’t see the same kind of homelessness and drug addiction over there.”

“So, are you ready to pack up and move?” Chad Nikiforow is asked.

“Yeah, I would go for sure. Take the kids, put them in an international school. I just got to convince my wife. She still thinks this is as good as it gets.”

* * *

That frou-frou fromagerie in downtown Owen Sound is The Milk Maid, after the painting by Vermeer. It offers a splendid array of domestic wines and pungent cheeses at equally pungent prices, not to mention curated charcuterie boards and crusty sourdough that resemble the loaves depicted by the 17th-century Dutch Master. The Jean Valjeans of the world would be sorely tempted.

“Yeah, we’re the elephant’s asshole, but in this region we’re the main hub, right?” says Robin Miller, the shop’s co-owner. “We’ve got the biggest hospital around here, we’ve got all the recovery-type, the rehab-type facilities, safe needle spots, soup kitchens, that sort of thing, but not a huge amount of industry or tourism as opposed to a lot of the other communities in the area. And so, I think we just kind of get a lot of the problem cases.

“Dregs is not the word, obviously, I wouldn’t want to demean anyone, everyone’s life matters. But yeah, we get a lot of folks who are struggling with different things, lower income stuff. You know, the housing cost is crazy everywhere, but it’s especially so here. There’s not a lot of affordable options.”

The first four people a reporter meets in Owen Sound all warn him not to go downtown, especially after dark. Do your dining and shopping up the hill along the usual strip of Tim Hortons, Harvey’s and Home Hardware, they advise.

“At one time it could have been said that shoppers and visitors just felt uncomfortable downtown, but that feeling has changed. It is now a feeling of being unsafe and this is no longer acceptable,” Owen Sound Police Board chair John Thomson wrote in May.

Even tiny Wiarton, Ont., one-tenth the size of Owen Sound, had a $300,000 drug bust in mid-October. The Ontario Provincial Police called it “a significant disruption to the illegal drug trade in our region.”

“Obviously, there is a drug and a homeless side of it,” Miller says. “But there’s a full demographic of folks, and we like being one of the spots downtown that, when people come in here, it’s like a little safe spot, and they just get this little bubble in here and enjoy themselves.”

Owen Sound has a social agency infrastructure, homeless response teams, shelters, harm-reduction facilities, medical treatment. “So, does this end with this generation of homeless, do you think?” Miller is asked.

“I feel like it’s going to keep getting worse,” he answers. “We are, thankfully, in an era where there is more awareness and acceptance and money going into mental health, which is good. And more people are understanding, that it’s not just, ‘Oh, throw them in jail.’

“Unfortunately, I don’t see it getting any better. They can’t help themselves, especially when it comes to the most scientifically designed drugs that are made to hook them and keep them hooked forever.”

Yet for the desk clerk at a motel up the hill on Sixth Street in Owen Sound, it wasn’t forever.

Jennifer Shute, now 43, once was the vulnerable princess of a family she labels “riddled with addiction.” She says she tried to kill herself when she was 17.

“There was sexual abuse and then I was in physically abusive relationships,” Shute says. What followed was addiction to injectable drugs and winter nights in her car, running the heater until the gas ran dry.

Eleven months in a treatment centre got her clean. “It worked, but you have to want it,” she says. “All you can do is meet them at their level. If you put them on a bus and ship them to Toronto, that’s what Toronto does right back to us, because we have detox, we have treatment centres, we have mental-health facilities.”

“Can you lock them in a cell or a treatment centre so they can’t get the stuff?” she is asked.

“Oh, they can get it in jail. It just costs more money, but they can abuse all kinds of things in jail. I’ve seen them take methadone, drink it down, vomit it back up and share it,” says Shute.

Despite the drugs, the trauma and the homeless, Shute says she’s stayed in Owen Sound because of her family. “If I can’t be clean and sober here, where my kids are, I’m just running from the triggers head-on, I’m just running from the problem.

“I have a car again. I have a life. I have an apartment of my own. My kids are with me.

“I’ll never be sure it’s permanent for me. All I can do is today.”

* * *

Higher than the single-night count by the federal government, the Association of Municipalities of Ontario

estimates

more than 80,000 persons were homeless in the province in 2024.

Of these, the handsome village of Cayuga enumerated exactly one. Or maybe two. But not at the same time.

It’s a sunny November morning along the Grand River and the local folks are trying to help an out-of-towner track down a man who is described as being in his 60s, and who is as elusive — probably on purpose — as Bigfoot.

“He usually sleeps on the cement slab behind the restaurant,” someone offers.

“He hangs out by the abandoned mill on the river.”

“You can find him over by the picnic tables …”

“He’s very to himself,” says Jordan Fowler, who, with his wife Whitney, has operated the lovely Carolinian Café and Eatery in Cayuga for the past seven years. “Like, you’ll ask him a lot of questions, and he’ll just kind of have one-word answers. So, you don’t try to try.

“He has never been a threat. I think that there inevitably is this reaction of, ‘Who is that?’ It’s a stigma that gets perpetuated that homeless people should be feared. And I just think it’s patently untrue.”

Fowler estimates that 75 per cent of Cayugans would try to help the elusive man, “and 25 per cent,” he says, “are like, ‘Get him out of here.’”

“Would you let him live in your backyard?“ Fowler is asked

“I would certainly put him in a position, if he wanted it, to gain traction, if he showed an inkling for wanting change, if he showed to me that he wanted to get a job and do better for himself, I would, yeah. The only way to help is to be compassionate. The homeless already know that they’re making the wrong mistakes.”

“What if there was not one, but 50, and tents and needles and garbage and junk. Would people get fed up then?“ Fowler is pressed.

“I can certainly see how that would get to somebody,” he says.

“Has it reached that point in Cayuga?”

“Oh, God. Not even close.”

“It’s like we put homelessness into one big box,” Whitney Fowler says. “People say, ‘they are drug addicts. They are derelicts.’ But no, they’re all different. They’re human beings just like all of us working-class people.

“We’re putting them all into one box but we’re all so f–king different.”

* * *

The top 10 for per capita homelessness in Ontario starts with Sudbury, North Bay and Thunder Bay. St. Catharines and Owen Sound and little Cayuga don’t even make the top five.

Down at No. 10 is Barrie, once one of those idyllic villages Stephen Leacock described as lying in “a land of hope and sunshine where little towns spread their square streets and their trim maple trees beside placid lakes almost within echo of the primeval forest.”

Barrie isn’t a village anymore, and that forest got pretty darn primeval last January, and again this summer, when one of Ontario’s 80,000 unhoused citizens murdered two of his tent-neighbours and sliced them into pieces.

But progress is being made, depending on how you measure progress. In early November, two months after he

proclaimed a state of emergency

, “strong mayor” Alex Nuttall declared his city had scoured 39 camps, trucked away 400 tonnes of waste, and helped move some 68 people from tents into indoor spaces.

“You want to live in a tent on the side of the road, in a forest, or in an environmental protection area or in a park, Barrie’s not the place for you,” the mayor said.

“Morally cruel,” one advocate spat back.

A reporter rolls into Barrie on an absolutely wretched afternoon, just in time for the Santa Claus parade. Of course, the rain stops the instant the Jolly Old Elf’s float gets rolling up Lakeshore Drive. The sidewalks are packed and, for one night at least, the city is what a city should be at holiday time.

“We shouldn’t have let it get to the point where we had to make a state of emergency, but the mayor had to do something,” one man in Christmasy regalia observes. This is retail butcher Aaron Kell, who retains one outlet in Cookstown after being forced to close his Barrie outlet because of an absolutely wretched economy.

“Why do you think it happened here?” Kell is asked.

“Because this is a great place to be homeless,” he replies. “I think that the Barrie police do what they can. I think the citizens in Barrie are a big-hearted people.

“I feel bad for these businesspeople that have to deal with all of this. I can see why some people would think that Barrie is destroyed. But I also think that there’s certain parts of Toronto that are destroyed, but I don’t live there.

“To be homeless is just one paycheque away for a lot of people. You never know — one bad decision or somebody laying you off, suddenly you can’t pay your rent and you’re homeless.

“It could be you. If it was me, I’d pick Barrie.”

* * *

Back to the Garden City and Twelve Mile Creek and Gigi and Nick.

“It’s all about outlook,” Gigi, the former high school athlete, is saying by her sad circle of stones.

Towering above the creek and the man and the woman and their feeble little fire is a highrise apartment building, bright-lit and inviting, a safe home for many someones.

“Are you jealous of those people?” a well-fed stranger wonders.

“No,” says Gigi H. “I am happy for them. If I would have a million dollars, I would still live in a one-bedroom.

“Nobody owes me anything,” she says. “I owe it to myself.

“I love my country. Canada doesn’t owe me a thing.”


Five Canadian cities are vying to host a  new defence-oriented bank, including Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver, Montreal and Halifax.

At least five Canadian cities are vying to host a new defence-oriented world bank that could create up to 3,500 jobs, the National Post has learned.

Vancouver, Halifax, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal are all in the running to host the headquarters of the Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSRB), according to a well-placed source.

The DSRB, to be established by the end of 2026, will serve 40 member countries, which include NATO members and their Indo-Pacific allies.

“If the vote were today, the headquarters would be here (in Canada),” the source said Wednesday. “The vote won’t be until mid-January or February.”

Months ago, London, England, appeared to be the “natural choice” for the DSRB headquarters, said the source. “But the government in the U.K. has been in such disarray that they can’t even organize a one-car funeral. They were given a gift: do you want this? They never said no. But they couldn’t say yes.”

The city that gets the bank’s headquarters will need to be close to embassies, demonstrate the ability to recruit top talent in financial services, and supply buildings that can house the facility.

“Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa all have those capabilities,” said the source.

“This will become a decision of the prime minister and cabinet.”

Officials behind the DSRB had recent discussions with the business development agency Invest Nova Scotia about headquartering the bank in Halifax, said the source. “They were very supportive, and they were going to work with the premier.”

Vancouver also put their hand up, said the source, as did the City of Montreal.

Toronto is expected to announce next week that it, too, is vying for the DSRB headquarters, said the source.

Toronto City Councillor Brad Bradford wrote a public letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney advocating for Toronto as the ideal location for the headquarters.

“Toronto is the economic engine of Canada’s economy,” Bradford wrote in his letter, dated Dec. 10. “Our city produces roughly one fifth of the national GDP and anchors the country’s financial system. The institutions that finance the energy systems, logistics infrastructure, and digital networks of the DSRB will support (operations) here. Establishing the headquarters in Toronto puts the Bank in the necessary proximity to the vital partners it will need to attract capital and structure complex, multi-year investments.”

Retired general Rick Hillier, a former chief of the Canadian defence staff — who is on the board of the DSRB — was named as honourary chair Wednesday of the National Defence Innovation Hub Task Force for Canada’s Capital Region.

“As part of this work, the Task Force will guide the region’s official bid to host the Global Defence & Security Resilience Bank (DSRB) headquarters, a diplomatic institution that will mobilize critical capital, strengthen sovereign capability, and reinforce the resilience, security, and economic strength of allied nations,” said a press release from Invest Ottawa, which bills itself as the lead economic development agency for knowledge-based industries in Canada’s Capital Region.

Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe and Gatineau Mayor Maude Marquis-Bissonnette issued a joint statement Wednesday on the matter. “We welcome the opportunity to host the DSRB and formally invite anchor nations to convene the bank’s charter negotiations in Ottawa-Gatineau when they commence in 2026,” it said.

“We would be honoured to host this once-in-a-generation gathering and the headquarters of the DSRB. Canada’s National Capital Region is fully committed to supporting the DSRB’s global success.”

Hillier’s “leadership and experience will be invaluable as we accelerate our Defence Innovation Hub Strategy here in the Capital Region, together with our partners from Gatineau, and build on the success of more than 300 companies in the defence sector in our region” Sutcliffe said in a news release. “Hosting the Defence, Security & Resilience Bank would be a game-changer for our city and our country, bringing billions in investment, creating high-quality jobs, and reinforcing Canada’s role on the world stage. Ottawa and Gatineau have the opportunity to lead Canada’s efforts at building a stronger, more sovereign defence sector.”

Announced this past spring, the DSRB could solve financial problems for countries, including Canada, that are under pressure to increase military spending.

The bank will be owned by its member nations, which would capitalize the bank so it would get a triple-A rating it could take to the bond market to raise money.

The theory is the bank would allow Canada and other countries to re-arm in the face of Russian and Chinese aggression.

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.


Pete Hoekstra, U.S. ambassador to Canada, during an interview at the US Embassy in Ottawa on Dec. 8, 2025.

OTTAWA

— While U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra says Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government is free to do as it wants with its review of purchasing the F-35, he says the debate is nevertheless irritating. 

Carney ordered a review of its F-35 purchase back in March, shortly after becoming prime minister, with his then-defence minister saying Carney had done so to ensure it was the best option.

It came as the country was in the early stages of dealing with a trade war with U.S. President Donald Trump, with emotions running high over his repeated comments about wanting Canada to become its “51st state.” Concerns also mounted as to the reliability of the U.S. as a trading partner.

Defence Minister David McGuinty has said that the review remains ongoing. The first 16 of the F-35 jets from major American manufacturer Lockheed Martin are set to be delivered in the years ahead, out of the 88 it needs to replace its aged fleet of CF-18 aircraft.

Sweden, meanwhile, has been courting the Carney government to consider instead purchasing its

Gripen fighter aircraft, made by the Swedish company Gripen.  

Asked whether the U.S. regards Canada’s review of the F-35 purchase as a trade irritant,

Hoekstra answered bluntly. 

“Canada can do what it wants on the F-35, OK?” he told National Post in a recent wide-ranging interview earlier this week.

The ambassador expressed how he welcomes the commitments Canada has made over the past year when it comes to its military, such as the boosting of its timeline to reach its NATO defence spending targets and its recent agreement on Arctic cooperation.

Hoeskrta said they will put forward “a strong case” as to why Canada should move forward with plans to purchase the F-35 and why they believe the American-made fighter jet to be “the best option for Canada.”

He pointed out that Canada stands out among allied countries in not flying the F-35, which he added would change in the months ahead as it receives its first deliveries of the fighter jets.

“Does it irritate me, personally, that we’re revisiting this issue again? Yeah, it’d be nice to put this one to bed and just move forward,”

Hoekstra said. 

Canada and the U.S. have spent years working on the issue, the ambassador added, pointing out that around 30 companies within Canada contribute to the building of the F-35.

“It would be nice if Canada made a commitment,” Hoesktra said. “But if they want to go through another review, they can go through another review.”

Maya

Ouferhat, a spokeswoman for McGuinty, said in a statement that the review of the F-35 remained ongoing, as Canada continues to consider our defence industrial strategy and work to ensure maximum economic benefits for our businesses and workers.”

McGuinty’s office did not directly answer as to why the review remains ongoing when the initial expectation was that it would be finalized by the end of the summer.

Reuters

reported in August

that defence officials had encouraged Canada to stick with the initial plan to purchase the full complement of 88 F-35 jets.

A spokesperson for Lockheed Martin said in a statement that the F-35 was “the

most advanced, survivable and connected fighter aircraft in the world” and that it values its relationship with the Royal Canadian Air Force. 

Chauncey McIntosh, vice-president and general manager of the F-35 program, said in a separate response that Canada stands to reap billions in economic benefit by moving ahead with further purchase of the fighter jet.

“Investing in the full complement of F-35s fosters a robust and innovative aerospace sector in Canada, creating high-quality jobs and boosting the country’s defence and aerospace industries,” McIntosh said in a statement.

Back in 2023, former defence minister Bill Blair, who still serves as a Liberal MP, announced that Canada planned to purchase 88 F-35 jets to the tune of $19 billion, touting the aircraft as the “

most advanced fighter on the market.”

Karen Hogan, Canada’s auditor general, released a report in June that showed the estimated costs had already jumped to nearly $28 billion, adding that another $5.5 billion would be needed to make the jets fully operational.

When he announced the initial purchase plan, Blair said at the time that Canada was scheduled to receive the first four fighter jets by 2026, followed by six in 2027 and six more by 2028.

With a file from David Pugliese, Ottawa Citizen

National Post

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.


Before and after photos of Jolene Van Alstine, who has rare form of parathyroid disease. Saskatchewan
NDP MLA Vicki Mowat posted the images to Facebook in August 2023 and detailed Van Alstine’s struggle to get help.

A Canadian woman who got approved for a medically assisted death because of a years-long wait to receive surgery for her chronically painful condition may finally get treated. American conservative commentator Glenn Beck has offered to pay for her to have surgery in the United States.

“If there is any surgeon in America who can do this, I’ll pay for this patient to come down here for treatment. THIS is the reality of “compassionate” progressive healthcare,”

Beck said in a post on X

after Jolene Van Alstine’s story spread across social media. “Canada must END this insanity and Americans can NEVER let it spread here.”

The Regina woman has endured eight years of abdominal pain, extreme bone pain and fractures caused by normocalcemic primary hyperparathyroidism. The rare form of parathyroid disease also causes daily nausea and vomiting, overheating, and anxiety and depression caused by social isolation.

“Every day I get up, and I’m sick to my stomach and I throw up, and I throw up. It takes me hours to cool off, I overheat, we have to turn the temperature down to 14 degrees when I get up in the morning in the house,” Van Alstine said on Nov. 25, according to a report by 980 CJME, when she and her husband attended question period at the provincial legislature as guests of the NDP, in an effort to make an appeal to the health minister.

“I’m so sick, I don’t leave the house except to go to medical appointments, blood work or go to the hospital.”

The condition is treatable with surgery to remove Van Alstine’s remaining parathyroid gland, but Saskatchewan doesn’t have a surgeon who can complete the complex surgery. In order for Van Alstine to get surgery in another province, she needs to get a referral from an endocrinologist, but none of them are taking new patients.

“I’m urging Health Minister Jeremy Cockrill to meet with Jolene, to hear her story and commit today to get her the surgery she needs. Nobody should be forced to choose between unbearable suffering and death. No family should be put in this position,” said Jared Clarke, the Saskatchewan NDP’s shadow minister for rural and remote health, in a statement after Van Alstine visited the legislature.

“I feel like I’m at the end of the road so I’m hoping Minister Cockrill can help me,” Van Alstine said in a statement released by the NDP.

Her husband said he doesn’t want her to go through with her request for MAID, which has been scheduled for Jan. 7, but he knows how desperate she feels. He told CBC that her case is complex because she has previously had surgeries, “but they haven’t been 100 per cent successful.”

“I understand how long and how much she’s suffered and it’s horrific, the physical suffering, but it’s also the mental anguish,” said her husband, Miles Sundeen, in a statement released by the NDP. “No hope — no hope for the future, no hope for any relief. I don’t want her to do it, but I understand where she’s at.”

Since the couple appeared in the legislature two weeks ago, little seems to have happened to move her case forward. However, her story has spread across social media, with American conservative commentators, in particular, holding it up as an example of what’s wrong with Canada’s health-care system.

On Tuesday, Beck, who is CEO of Blaze Media,

offered to pay

for Van Alstine’s treatment in the United States and said he had spoken to the couple. On Wednesday, Beck said he had discussed the matter with the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump.

“Jolene does not have a passport to gain legal entry into the U.S., but my team has been in touch with President Trump’s State Department,” he posted on X. “All I can say for now is they are aware of the urgent life-saving need and we had a very positive call.”

National Post could not reach Van Alstine by publication deadline.

The health ministry told 980 CJME in a statement that Cockrill met with Van Alstine but wouldn’t say if any progress was made, citing patient confidentiality.

“The Ministry of Health encourages all patients to continue working with their primary care providers to properly assess and determine the best path forward to ensure they receive timely access to high-quality healthcare,” the statement said.

This isn’t the first time Van Alstine has appealed to the government for help. In November 2022 Van Alstine and her husband joined the provincial NDP in asking the government to get wait-times under control for patients to see a specialist or receive surgery.

In August 2023, Vicki Mowat, deputy leader of the Saskachewan NDP,

shared a Facebook post

that showed what Van Alstine looked like before and after her body was ravaged by her disease.

“She and her partner Miles have exhausted all avenues for advocacy,” the post said. “We all know someone who has suffered unnecessarily, and we know that we are stronger when we rise up together. Let’s help build a system where care is available when and where we need it.”

 Jolene Van Alstine and her husband Miles Sundeen at the Saskatchewan Legislative Building on Nov. 30, 2022 in Regina.

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Undated photo of children’s author Robert Munsch.

Bestselling Canadian children’s author Robert Munsch says readers can look forward to more of his stories after his death.

He has a plan for new books to come out, he

told CBC

‘s Adrienne Arsenault in an interview about living with dementia

explaining what it feels like inside his brain.

Munsch, 80, has been diagnosed with dementia as well as Parkinson’s. And he has previously struggled with a stroke, depression, alcoholism and lost two children (who were stillborn). This past fall, he came under scrutiny, including criticism from pro-life groups, for announcing he had applied for MAID (medical assistance in dying) shortly after it was legalized in 2016.

While he hasn’t chosen a date for his death, he’s aware that his health could fail to the point that he wouldn’t be eligible for ask for MAID because of a diminished ability to communicate. Munsch is comfortable with the decision he’s made — retaining control and deciding when he’s ready to go.

His wife of 53 years, Ann,

told CBC

she wasn’t surprised by his choice. “It’s like Bob to face life head-on.”

Munsch has written 85 published books including “Love You Forever,” “The Paper Bag Princess,” and “Mud Puddle.” In the interview with Arsenault, he spoke about the stories that haven’t been published yet.

“In my brain, the stories are all stacked. There… locked. Everything else is up for grabs. Oh, I can’t trust the rest of my thinking,” Munsch said during the interview.

But the stories are your friends?, he was asked.

“The stories are my friends.” He also agreed his wife and children fall are locked in as his friends too.

He was asked if he sometimes dreams about being younger, a version of himself that is running on stage.

“I dream I’m on stage, he responded. “The audience … Well, when things are bad, that’s the place I retreat to.”

Surrounded by kids? “Yeah.”

Arsenault mentioned seeing a photo of a filing cabinet he had that contained stories in various stages.

Munsch confirmed it’s still around.

“It is about… 50 stories in that. Now, not all of them are gonna make it. But… when I’m dead, they’ll still be putting out Robert Munsch books.”

Has he planned for that to happen?, he was asked. “yeah.”

“Well, your stories are gonna live forever, and your voice and telling them is gonna be around for a long, long, long time. Is that a good feeling or a strange feeling?,” asked Arsenault.

“It’s a good feeling,” Munch said. “People always say, you know, they live forever. Well… nobody lives forever, but… I will at least have a couple of… couple…(after his death). As many years as I’ve already had … that’d be nice.”

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Mark Wiseman, the former chairman of Alberta Investment Management Corp.

OTTAWA — Business executive Mark Wiseman has not yet been confirmed as Canada’s ambassador in the U.S. but early signs point to a chilly reception from opposition parties — especially Quebec MPs — because of past comments on immigration and supply management.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has not yet said who will be replacing Kirsten Hillman,

who announced Tuesday she will be leaving her positions as ambassador and Canada’s chief trade negotiator with the U.S. in the new year

. On Wednesday, Carney would not comment on speculation that Wiseman, a close friend of his, would be appointed to the role.

Carney said in French that he would be announcing his pick within the next week.

Wiseman previously served as chair of the board of directors of the Alberta Investment Management Corporation, senior managing director at the U.S. investment firm BlackRock and president and CEO of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. Earlier this year, Carney appointed Wiseman to his advisory council on Canada-U.S. relations.

But Wiseman is also known as the co-founder of the Century Initiative, a controversial lobbying group which advocates for increasing Canada’s population to 100 million by 2100. In 2023, he retweeted

a Globe and Mail column calling for that dramatic increase in immigration levels

to become federal policy “even if it makes Quebec howl.”

During Wednesday’s Question Period, the Conservatives and the Bloc Québécois took issue with the Century Initiative’s proposal and the unfortunate choice of words.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre called Wiseman a “corporate crony” and “longtime Liberal elite” whose goal is to increase Canada’s population in order “to profit multinational corporations by driving wages down and housing costs up.”

“Why is it that, every time somebody comes along with an idea that harms Canadians and drives up their cost of living, the prime minister gives them a promotion?”

But, speaking in French, Poilievre came to the defence of the province.

“This is someone who has shown contempt for Quebec and cannot negotiate for Quebec,” he said. “Why does the prime minister want to name this person as ambassador?”

Bloc Québécois House leader Christine Normandin took issue with the use of the word “howl” which she said equates Quebecers to dogs howling in the night.

“Can the prime minister really think he can represent Quebecers in Washington?”

One after the other, ministers Steven MacKinnon, Dominic LeBlanc and Joël Lightbound said that the objective of increasing Canada’s population to 100 million people by the end of the century has never been, and never will be, the policy of the government of Canada.

But the financier is also on the record being skeptical of the supply management system.

In 2024, Wiseman

penned an opinion piece in the Globe and Mail

calling on the federal government to include in its budget “bold change to fix Canada’s falling productivity,” and pointed fingers at, among other things, the “sacred cow of supply management.”

“Any government that’s financially beholden to the interests of legacy actors will be incapable of embracing the large-scale reform we need to encourage competition and drive meaningful consumer choice and productivity growth,” he wrote.

With the upcoming review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement, Quebecers may be left wondering if Canada’s new ambassador will also be appointed chief negotiator and what could mean for the system regulating the dairy, egg and poultry sectors.

“To have an ambassador… that does not believe in supply management, even before negotiations start, it sends a very, very bad signal to the Trump administration,” said NDP Deputy Leader Alexandre Boulerice.

Quebec Liberal MP Sophie Chatel said the nomination of a new ambassador does not change the government’s view that supply management will not be up for negotiation.

A Bloc bill that protects supply management from future trade deal concessions received royal assent in June, after Carney’s government approved its swift passage in the spring.

“Supply management is a question of economic vitality and prosperity of our regions, of our villages. It’s very important that we keep it,” said Chatel.

Other Liberal MPs, when asked what they make of Wiseman’s possible nomination as Canadian ambassador to Washington, opted to keep their comments to themselves and said they would leave the prime minister announce his choice in time.

One Conservative MP from Quebec encapsulated how opposition parties in Ottawa feel about Wiseman’s name floating around.

“It’s not the idea of the century,” said Luc Berthold.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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