
Ontario allows more density, building height near Toronto transit
TORONTO — Ontario’s housing minister says the province has approved a plan for Toronto to allow higher and denser buildings near transit stations. Rob Flack

TORONTO — Ontario’s housing minister says the province has approved a plan for Toronto to allow higher and denser buildings near transit stations. Rob Flack

Jackie Bezos, who gave birth to her son Jeff at 17 and for a time raised him alone as she struggled to build their lives together, has died. She was 78.
TORONTO — The B.C. Lions and Toronto Argonauts will spend the first half of the 2026 CFL season as road warriors. Both the Lions and

Hamilton police say they’ve charged one of their officers with assault and mischief in what they describe as a “historic domestic incident.” Police say the

Richard Guilford lost it in a Ford Edge engine 11 years ago at a Ford Wayne, Mich., plant. The wallet was discovered by a mechanic, sandwiched between the transmission and the air filter box.

Female runners are often told to run in groups, run with a dog, run in a well-lit area, run without earbuds, run with a whistle, run

After more than two decades, a border security headache is finally over for a New Brunswick golf course tucked up against the U.S. border in the rolling hills of Victoria County.

Adam Ben David, a resident of Hampstead, Que., says everybody in town has a right to feel represented. The Israeli flag may leave some feeling left out, he says.

In Highest 2 Lowest, a loose remake of the 1963 crime-thriller High and Low, the director shows off his knack for framing New York City in a lively, exciting way, and touches on similar themes as the original, but doesn’t quite stick the landing.

Vast swathes of Canada’s forests have burned in recent years. Here’s what it takes to replant after a major wildfire.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew is setting his government apart from neighbouring provinces by insisting he doesn’t need Ottawa’s controversial legislation to fast-track major resource projects.

As the U.S. enters its first peak hurricane season after a slew of cuts to the agency that handles most of the countryâs climate and weather research and forecasting, scientists, emergency managers and lawmakers brace for uncertainty in Florida. They are also sounding the alarm about more proposed cuts to climate and storm research that could be implemented in 2026 and which could impact Canada.