Mia Rabson
Reporter with the Canadian Press
About Mia Rabson
One trillion litres of sewage leaked into lakes and rivers over last five years
Last Wednesday, a team of people from the Lake Ontario Waterkeeper environmental group descended on the Toronto harbourfront looking for any signs the previous night's massive, flash-flood rainfall had caused the city's ancient combined sewer system to overflow into the lake. They didn't need to dip a single test tube into the water to know it had.
'Unflinching' police in Fredericton 'no doubt saved lives,' says PM
Officers who rushed to the scene of a deadly shooting in Fredericton likely saved the lives of others, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday, August 10, 2018, as Canadians reeled from news of early-morning gunfire that claimed the lives of four people, including two members of the local police force.
Canadian government not considering retaliation against Saudis, says Morneau
The federal government has no plans to launch retaliatory economic measures against Saudi Arabia, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said on Thursday, August 9, 2018, in the wake of a series of actions taken by the Middle Eastern kingdom as it seeks to punish Canada in a still-unfolding diplomatic feud.
Trudeau says Canada standing firm on Saudi Arabia's human rights abuses
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says diplomatic talks with Saudi Arabia will continue but he's not backing down on Canada's criticism of the kingdom over the arrest of several social activists last week.
Canada to review auto emissions regulations as U.S. moves to water them down
Canada will review the joint vehicle emissions standards it has with the United States before it decides what to do about the U.S.'s plan to weaken those standards in the coming years.
Citing competitiveness pressures, feds ease carbon tax thresholds
The federal government is scaling back its carbon pricing plan for heavy industrial emitters in a bid to cut greenhouse gas production without creating an incentive for companies to simply up and leave Canada altogether.
As pre-election cabinet shuffle looms, Kirsty Duncan ready for anything
She's gone from a junior minister, to a minister with a $4-billion budget to spend, to a minister holding down two different portfolios.
PM 'confident' he did nothing inappropriate at B.C. music festival in 2000
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insisted on Thursday, July 5, 2018, he "did not act inappropriately" towards a female reporter at a B.C. music festival 18 years ago — but he also acknowledged that the woman he's been accused of groping may have an entirely different perspective.
U.S.-Canada friendship will stand test of time, Trump envoy tells July 4th party
U.S. President Donald Trump's envoy to Canada told guests at her cosier-than-usual Fourth of July party in Ottawa on Wednesday, July 4, 2018, night that the countries' strained relationship will overcome the tough times.
Climate change not one heat wave, but a pattern of extremes: scientist
The scorching heat wave that set records in Ontario and Quebec over the Canada Day long weekend can't be directly attributed to climate change — but neither can the likelihood of a connection be ignored outright, says a University of Waterloo climate scientist.