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| | By Manuela Vega | | |
| | | Good morning. Here’s the latest on preparations for tonight’s provincial leaders’ debate, why Albertans are struggling to tackle fears of natural disasters and who foots the bill for the health of retired police dogs. | | | |
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| | | | DON’T MISS | | |
| | Steve Russell/The Star | | |
| | | ontario election | | | | Ontario’s party leaders will go head-to-head tonight in what could be a turning point for the provincial election campaign. With Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservatives leading in the polls, the televised 90-minute debate is a chance for the New Democrats, Liberals and Greens to remind Ontarians why they’re worth voting for. From mock debates to studying their opponents’ demeanors, here’s how party leaders are gearing up to take the stage. | | | |
| | Canadian Press/Jonathan Hayward | | |
| | | climate crisis | | | In 2016, the massive fire set Canada’s biggest oil and gas hub ablaze, resulting in the most expensive natural disaster in Canada’s history. Most Fort McMurray residents were evacuated physically unscathed, but many were left with mental and emotional scars. Only four years later, massive floods forced thousands to evacuate yet again. Omar Mosleh digs into how the back-to-back natural disasters continue to affect Albertans today. - More: The emissions changing Alberta’s climate are the result of “The Alberta Advantage.” Oil and gas royalties allow it to be the only province without sales tax, making many reluctant to confront a narrative that threatens its cash cow.
- Who cares? A shocking 27 per cent of Albertans — more than anywhere else in the country — “did not worry about climate change at all” last year, a Leger poll shows.
- Go deeper: The heat dome over parts of Alberta and B.C. last year resulted in 600 deaths, with nearly 250 people dying in a single day.
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| | Richard Lautens/The Star | | |
| | | police | | | Meet Major, a German shepherd-Belgian Malinois mix who can find a missing person or locate decades-old remains. In 2018, he guided police to victims of serial killer Bruce McArthur. Now, at nine years old, he’s retiring — like any other cop in their senior years — but unlike other officers, Major doesn’t have a pension to cover rising health costs associated with his years in a physically-demanding job. As the owners of retired police dogs call for help to cover their bills, pressure remains to decrease police budgets. Here’s how one charity is trying to help. - The aftermath: Many police services stop covering veterinary costs as soon as animals retire. But pre-existing conditions and injuries from the job can be a recipe for soaring insurance prices.
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| | | | | | Get a front-row seat this provincial election. As the Ontario election heats up, you need This Week in Politics, featuring exclusive analysis from Queen's Park bureau chief Robert Benzie and columnist Susan Delacourt. Sign up here, and you'll start receiving their insight on what just happened, what it means — and what's coming next. | | | | | | |
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| | | | WHAT ELSE | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | David Milgaard, who spent decades behind bars for a crime he didn’t commit, died at 69. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | GET THIS | | | | Cameron Tulk/The Star | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | CLOSE-UP | | |
| | Steve Russell/The Star | | |
| | | TORONTO: The super flower blood moon eclipse was visible from Toronto on Saturday night as the Earth moved across the sun’s path. The term “blood moon” comes from the dark red tinge to the Earth’s shadow on the moon. | | | |
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| | | Thanks for reading. You can reach me and the First Up team at firstup@thestar.ca. I’ll see you back here tomorrow. | | | |
| | Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. One Yonge Street, 4th Floor, Toronto, ON M5E 1E6. 416-367-2000 | | PRIVACY POLICY | | | | |
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