The national public alerting system aims to ensure Canadians know when to take action for safety in case of an emergency, and multiple provinces are testing.
Latest Posts
- Justin Trudeau, Donald Trump meet in Florida amid tariff threats
- WATCH: Global Okanagan News at 5:30 p.m. – Nov. 29, 2024
- Canada Post strike hurting Okanagan charities
- Manitoba Métis Federation to be first Métis group with modern treaty with Canada
- ‘Intense’ snowfall to hamper parts of Ontario as lake effect storm begins
- City council to decide on Glenmore Landing redevelopment next week
- Three major events projected to bring millions to Kelowna by 2026
- Ontario MPP to table bill to make Truth and Reconciliation day a statutory holiday
- Elections Alberta preparing for byelection already affected by postal strike
- ‘It’s a very serious risk’: Safety in the spotlight following amateur fighter’s death
- City of West Kelowna to spend $2.5M on upgrades to Rose Valley Water Treatment Plant
- If Trump imposes tariffs, what could Canada’s provinces stand to lose?
- Bank of Canada official warns it would be ‘painful’ to see big price drops
- Global experts gather in Vancouver for summit on international security
- N.S. election: NDP become Official Opposition as Liberals dealt devastating blow
- OPP on the lookout for repeat offender wanted on Canada-wide warrant
- Food processing company facing 26 charges after worker fatally injured in Alberta smokehouse
- ‘Not a city in chaos’: Calgary’s mayor pushes back on ‘noise’ in post-budget address
- Trump’s tariff threat a ‘wakeup call,’ B.C. business group warns
- ‘They’re my heroes’: Hockey ceremony acknowledges those who saved referee’s life