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Canadian flowers: bleeding not blooming

With the new free trade agreement between Canada and Colombia, the flower markets in Ontario and British Columbia are being threatened by imports of Colombian flowers. Capital News talks to professionals in both countries to find out more about the challenges they are facing with Valentine's Day on the horizon.

Too many addicts, not enough treatment

Opioids like OxyContin, morphine and codeine are reaching staggering levels in Canada and so are addiction rates. But methadone, Health Canada's preferred treatment for opioid addicts, is hard to come by.

Jan
27

Trading copyright

Canada wants to enjoy the trade benefits of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. But becoming part of the deal may mean that we'll have to change our current copyright laws.

Jan
27

Gas Tax Fund to improve water quality in British Columbia

As water quality standards tighten and infrastructure costs continue to burden municipalities, the importance of the Canadian Gas Tax Fund increases. In British Columbia, water quality and treatment is one of the main concerns.

Jan
27

Frontier medicine

Rural and northern communities across the country continue to face doctor shortages. Some experts suggest the fault lies in medical students' education.  Capital News looks into why doctors prefer to practice in cities, and what's being done to lure them into the country.

Dec
2

We no speak bilingual

For almost 30 years, Canadians have had the right to work in their official language of choice.  But even in the supposedly bilingual workplace of the federal government, how free are public servants to speak their mother tongues?

Dec
2

The burden of care

With the baby boom generation now turning 65, the Standing Committee on Health is looking at chronic diseases related to aging. Meanwhile, millions of Canadians are facing the financial and emotional stresses of caring for their aging or disabled loved ones at home.  Capital News Online provides a glimpse into the life of a caregiver.

Dec
2
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Multimedia

Popping the cork on Canadian wine

A vintage law from the prohibition era still affects Canada’s modern wine industry. A Tory MP private member’s bill aims to change the law and make it legal for local wines to cross interprovincial borders.

Video

Watery Winterlude

video | 2:43

For many, Winterlude means three things: snow slides, ice sculptures and skating. But Ottawa's long-term forecasts predict warmer winters might be the new norm. This has some festival enthusiasts worried that future Winterludes will have a lot less 'winter' in them.

Jan
27
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