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Miramichi mayor wants apology for payroll centre comments
The mayor of Miramichi, N.B., is calling for apology after a union representative for workers at the federal pay centre said it was a mistake to move the centre to the small New Brunswick city. More
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Breakfast club: Riverview Boys and Girls Club seeking volunteers
The Boys and Girls Club of Riverview is looking for more volunteers to help serve breakfast at two schools this year.
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Opinion Being cyber safe and smart with our power grid
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Electrical utilities around the world are under increasing attack by nation-states, organized crime, terrorist groups and activists, all seeking the capability to cause widespread disruption and chaos.
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New website may help landlords and tenants keep peace
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A new government website hopes to arm tenants with all the information they need about moving in and out of apartments — while also helping them keep the peace with landlords.
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'Real sense of pride' as artifacts returned to Metepenagiag
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Thousands of artifacts, some of them thought to be as as much as 3,000 years old, are being returned to Metepenagiag First Nation.
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Motorcycle gang members, including Hells Angels, attend biker's memorial
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Hells Angels and other outlaw motorcycle gang members rolled into Fredericton's northside Saturday for a memorial service for Ronald Richard, who was killed in July.
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Seven people rescued after becoming stranded on a shoal
Seven people are safe after being rescued from a shoal off Maces Bay, N.B. Joint Task Force Atlantic says the people became stuck on the shoal as the tide was rising around noon Saturday.
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Like magic: Fredericton college has record number of 1st-year students
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A small art college in downtown Fredericton will welcome a record number of first-year students, going against the trend elsewhere in the city, where universities struggle to attract more students.
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Feature The mall is dead, long live the mall: The rise and fall of Saint John's suburban shopping meccas
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A look at the past and present of three once-flourishing Saint John shopping centres: Prince Edward Square Mall, Parkway Mall and Loch Lomond Place.
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1st New Brunswick soccer player recruited to Montreal Impact Academy
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A 13-year-old Moncton boy has become the first New Brunswick soccer player to be recruited to join the Montreal Impact's elite training centre, where he'll live and breathe the sport far from home all year.
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Saint John parents concerned about school volunteers promoting church membership
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One of the province's newest schools is a little over a week away from opening, and already the school district had to respond to parents' complaints about its affiliation with a church.
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Hells Angel's court case relocated over security concerns
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A judge has relocated the court appearance of a Fredericton man, identified by RCMP as a full-patch member of the Hells Angels, to Saint John because of security concerns.
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Cape Breton thief steals thousands worth of colourful, vintage bills
Police have asked Canadians to be on the lookout for old money, after thousands of dollars in vintage bills dating back to the 1950s were stolen from a Cape Breton home.
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As U.S. and Canada try to solve whale deaths, some ships in gulf break speed limit
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Just two weeks after imposing a mandatory speed limit to protect right whales in parts of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Transport Canada says not all ships are heeding it.
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Sussex civic centre stays open for now, with short-term infusion
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The ailing PotashCorp Civic Centre in Sussex can keep its doors open a little longer, thanks to a cash infusion from its corporate partners.
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Metepenagiag First Nation celebrates return of 60,000 artifacts
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Metepenagiag Heritage Park Inc., in collaboration with Metepenagiag Mi’kmaq Nation, is holding a special repatriation ceremony on Saturday at 11 a.m., as part of its Canada 150 anniversary event.
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Minto man attacked, robbed at gunpoint by 3 men, say RCMP
Two men have been charged in connection with an armed robbery and assault in Minto early Thursday morning.
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Projected deficit drops $35M in latest fiscal update
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The New Brunswick government now projects a deficit of $156 million this fiscal year, down $35 million from the original estimate.
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Premiers, governors to discuss cross-border trade at Charlottetown meeting
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Eastern Canadian premiers are stressing the need to make Canada's case on cross-border trade at every opportunity in the Donald Trump era.
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Marijuana dispensary raids of Tasty Budds lead to 69 charges
RCMP arrested 10 people after searching four homes and five Tasty Budds marijuana dispensaries in Nova Scotia.
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Uptown baby gulls getting creamed by cars, woman says
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A Saint John woman is pleading with drivers not to run over baby seagulls on the city's uptown streets.
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U.S. boys get their stolen guitars back
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Two boys from New York City will be glad their two guitars, stolen this month during a family visit to Saint John, have been recovered and shipped back to them.
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Ottawa won't ask province to pay for army's help after ice storm
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Ottawa says it won't charge New Brunswick for bringing in the military during the ice storm last winter — help that a consultant's report on the disaster described as appreciated but unnecessary.
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Minto fibreglass plant never completely shut down, employees say
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More than five months after Minto’s fibreglass plant was shut down because of a lack of work, about a dozen employees have been called back for several short-term projects.
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Moncton mayor wants glyphosate spraying stopped near Turtle Creek
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Moncton Mayor Dawn Arnold wants the province to stop glyphosate spraying near the Turtle Creek reservoir.
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Ocean temperatures around Nova Scotia hit record highs: DFO report
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Ocean temperatures in the Scotian Shelf and the Gulf of St. Lawrence reached record or near-record highs in 2016, according to a federal report on Atlantic Canada's marine ecosystem.
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U.S. launches investigation into spate of right whale deaths
The U.S. government is launching an investigation into the recent deaths of endangered North Atlantic right whales.
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'Don't cry mother, we are coming back:' Fallen WWI soldier laid to rest
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Sgt. Harold Wilfred Shaughnessy of St. Stephen did not have time for breakfast when he left for the war in Europe on March 29, 1916.
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'Data is the new oil': Your personal information is now the world's most valuable commodity
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Data has surpassed oil as the world's most valuable resource, much of it controlled by just five mega-companies — and jurisdictions are struggling with how to contain, regulate and protect all those ones and zeros.
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RCMP arrest Hells Angels member from Fredericton
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A Fredericton man, identified by RCMP as a full-patch member of the Hells Angels, has been charged with drug and firearm offences in connection with an investigation that resulted in a heavy police presence in the city's downtown this week.
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Expansion to swimming buffer zone proposed for Parlee Beach
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Residents of Pointe-du-Chêne got a first look at a proposed expansion to the swimming buffer zone at Parlee Beach at an open house on Thursday.
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Saint John Riptide score new NBA D-League head coach
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The new head coach of the Saint John Riptide said he wants to build a team worthy of winning the National Basketball League championship this year.
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'New breed of Percocet' causing overdoses, accused drug dealer told police
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A Fredericton man on trial for drug trafficking in connection with a pill containing fentanyl that was found in Esgenoôpetitj First Nation told police a "new breed of Percocet" was causing people to overdose, the court heard.
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Crown appeals Moncton killer Tyler Noel's 'inordinately low' sentence
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The Crown is appealing the sentence of Moncton murderer Tyler Noel, arguing it is "inordinately low, demonstrably unfit and clearly unreasonable."
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- Thousands forced to flee as Harvey floods Houston
- Remains of 10 missing U.S. Navy warship sailors recovered
- Guatemala top court blocks president's move to expel UN anti-corruption chief
- Ceasefire halts Syria-Lebanon border fight against ISIS
- Venezuela responds to Trump's 'belligerent threats' with military exercises
- Murder, arson charges laid after baby dies in Edmonton fire
- 'Vindictive and callous': Ex-Mountie wife killer costs family $45K fighting estate
- NDP candidates face off during French-language debate in Montreal
- 'It's the Canadian dream': Why homeowners will do anything to make their mortgage payments
- The Guess Who founding member suffers 'serious' stroke
- 'Charming' businessman owing nearly $100K in court judgments still advertising online
- Hollywood stars, dancers and Trump — The Leibovitz collection Nova Scotia owns but can't display
- Man who faked physiotherapy licence recently worked at Halifax clinic using alias
- 'A broken system': Why workers are fighting mandatory mail-order drug plans
- Donkin coal mine racks up dozens of safety violations in first few months
Analysis
- Kaepernick-style protests grow but unlikely to affect NFL's bottom line
- Trump risks much more than a government shutdown if he makes good on wall threat
- Trump's Afghanistan war strategy: A 'realistic but undefined' policy U-turn
- Liberal-friendly diplomat's new job pays above scale, but is he worth it?
- Trump makes only move he can on Afghanistan
- NDP candidates face off during French-language debate in Montreal
- Pastor Hyeon Soo Lim believes he wasn't executed or tortured in North Korea because of Canadian citizenship
- Named for our leaders: There's a school for (nearly) every prime minister
- 'Vindictive and callous': Ex-Mountie wife killer costs family $45K fighting estate
- 'Extreme examples' shouldn't be used to justify lack of free speech on campus: Scheer
- 'It's the Canadian dream': Why homeowners will do anything to make their mortgage payments
- Food fight: The argument over protecting kids from junk ads
- Simons CEO feels 'vindicated' as national expansion ushers in new era for retailer
- What you don't know about that restaurant kitchen: CBC's Marketplace consumer cheat sheet
- The NFL's economics vs. Colin Kaepernick's principles
- Groups train workers to help LGBT seniors feel more comfortable in long-term care
- SECOND OPINION | New secrets from tobacco industry documents
- Health Canada warns of suffocation risks of baby nests
- Lyme disease on the rise in Canada, but doctors still confused about diagnosis
- System 'stretched to max capacity' as neonatal ICUs see surge in sick babies, doctors warn
- The Guess Who founding member suffers 'serious' stroke
- Taylor Swift to be in spotlight at VMAs, along with Kendrick Lamar, Katy Perry
- Tobe Hooper, Texas Chain Saw Massacre director, dead at 74
- Madden NFL 18 video game adds narrative of players' dreams of going pro
- Kevin Hart's LOL Network offers Canadian comedians a shot at success
- How hidden code helps cops identify drug dealers and child predators online
- Royal Photographic Society unveils top science photos from around the world
- Shark fins sold for soup include many at-risk species
- Ghostly fish in Mariana Trench in the Pacific is deepest ever recorded
- 'Data is the new oil': Your personal information is now the world's most valuable commodity
Interactives
- 'I just had a weak moment': Disgraced Blue Jays fan Ken Pagan on life after the beer toss
- 'They just simply don't know': The Indigenous innovators challenging Canadians to a difficult conversation
- When darkness descends, Nunavut teens dance it out
- Remix Canada's latest census results to see how you fit in
- How one woman's death illustrates the brutality of Philippines drug war
- 'A period of inaction': Prof., FSIN give Brad Wall gov't low marks on Indigenous issues
- Petition to change B.C. village of Moricetown to traditional name
- Standing Rock music video featuring First Nation hip-hop artist up for MTV award
- Ceremony marks launch of Ottawa's first Indigenous peoples court
- 'It's such a lonely loss': Northern Sask. families affected by suicide call for more open discussion