NEW: 'Freedom Convoy' organizers testify at public inquiry and time to 'fall back': Five stories to watch this week ottnews
Ottawa's former police chief and organizers of the 'Freedom Convoy' protest are scheduled to testify this week at the public inquiry looking into the federal government's use of the Emergencies Act., Sloly said briefings and reports he received leading up to the arrival of the convoy last January indicated it would be a weekend event, and defended the service's intelligence readings.
The Canadian Union of Public Employees issued a five-day notice to strike on Sunday, saying it will begin a"full withdrawal of service" on Nov. 4 if contract talks this week fail to negotiate a deal. CUPE proposed a wage increase of $3.25 per hour in each year of a three-year agreement. The union says the government offered $0.33 to $0.53 an hour increase.The transition for the new mayor and council will continue this week at Ottawa City Hall.
The Finance and Economic Development Committee will receive the quarterly Stage 2 update on Tuesday morning.
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Watch: Ex-Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly's full testimony at Emergencies Act inquirySloly told the Public Order Emergency Commission that police were overwhelmed as trucks poured into Ottawa. Watch his full testimony
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Advocates urge Ottawa to remove quota on Afghan refugee sponsorship programMany sponsorship applications for Afghan refugees will likely be rejected because the government will process only the first 3,000 applicants, advocates says
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Ex-Ottawa police boss defends intelligence reading of 'Freedom Convoy'It took just several hours on that cold Saturday in January for Peter Sloly to see his previous understanding of “Freedom Convoy” crumble.
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Ottawa raises the bar for foreign entry into Canada's critical minerals industryAny attempt by a state\u002Downed enterprise to purchase assets in the sector can now trigger a review on national security grounds. Read more.
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Ottawa raises the bar for foreign entry into Canada's critical minerals industryAny attempt by a state\u002Downed enterprise to purchase assets in the sector can now trigger a review on national security grounds. Read more.
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