Rob Drinkwater
Reporter with The Canadian Press
About Rob Drinkwater
Brian Pallister and wife explain how he got lost and broke arm on New Mexico hike
Manitoba's premier is giving some more details about a wilderness hike in New Mexico where he broke his arm and became lost.
Trudeau thanks Edmonton police officer in person who was injured in attack
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau praised an Edmonton police officer for his "exemplary" actions during an attack in which he was run down and then stabbed.
Suspect facing terrorism charges in Edmonton truck attack investigated in 2015
RCMP assistant commissioner Marlin Degrand said the suspect, 30, was checked thoroughly in 2015 and deemed at that time to not pose a threat.
Trudeau calls stabbing and van chase in Edmonton a terrorist attack
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is condemning violent events in Edmonton as a “terrorist attack” following a chaotic night that saw a police officer stabbed and several pedestrians struck with a van.
Fort McMurray helps B.C.: 'Being through it, we know exactly what's needed."
Seeing reports of the wildfire evacuations in British Columbia has brought back stressful memories for residents of Fort McMurray, Alta.
Nunavut's suicide strategy includes Facebook, giving communities more control
Social media plays a central role in a five−year plan aimed at reducing the number of suicides in Nunavut.
Via figuring out how to retrieve train from Churchill cut off by rail closure
There are no roads or other rail lines to Churchill and the two locomotives and five passenger cars are sitting, silent, at the station.
Fundraising site for Nunavut greenhouse draws dollars, encouragement and advice
A teacher in Nunavut who was crowdfunding for a modest greenhouse to grow vegetables with his students is revising his plans after Canadians responded with a bumper crop of donations.
Uranium mine cleanup moves ahead, but Saskatchewan is left with ballooning cost
The total price tag was estimated at under $25 million when the federal government agreed to pay for half the cleanup of a radioactive Cold-War-era uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan.
Hockey Canada to make smaller ice surfaces mandatory for youngest kids' games
Hockey Canada says it will make it mandatory that children getting their first introduction to the game play on reduced-size ice surfaces instead of full-sized rinks.