Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed …
PM Carney to announce federal artificial intelligence strategy in Toronto today
Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to announce the federal government’s strategy on artificial intelligence today in Toronto.
The strategy comes as governments, businesses and civil society navigate the rapid development of machine learning and tools that can process information almost instantly — with varying degrees of accuracy.
Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon said this week the government’s new strategy will look to build trust in AI, empower workers and help build Canada.
The government has said new privacy and online safety laws will be an important element of building that trust.
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How high pandemic-period immigration papered over the cracks in Canada’s economy
Critics say the link between weak economic data and declining immigration rates shows how high immigration masked Canada’s economic challenges over the past few years.
Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday that when immigration and population growth drops, the gross domestic product declines as well.
Nathan Janzen, a Royal Bank of Canada economist, says high immigration rates in 2023 and 2024 “absolutely” helped to prop up Canada’s GDP in the face of other economic headwinds, such as post-pandemic inflation.
He says Canada is in a unique situation because its sharp cut in population growth will make the economy look weaker than it is.
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B.C. Review Board grants conditional discharge for child killer Allan Schoenborn
The British Columbia Review Board has granted a conditional discharge for a man convicted in the brutal slayings of his three children.
Chairperson Geneviève Boudreau says Allan Schoenborn is to attend a psychiatric clinic for treatment and stay at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital in Coquitlam, B.C., if ordered to do so by the board.
Boudreau’s written disposition says Schoenborn must also report any intimate relationships, he must be on good behaviour, and not possess or use any weapons or drugs.
In 2010, Schoenborn was found not criminally responsible for the stabbing and smothering of his three children — aged five, eight and 10 — at their Merritt, B.C., home in 2008.
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New Yorker poetry editor Kevin Young wins Griffin Poetry Prize
Kevin Young, the poetry editor of the New Yorker, has won the $130,000 Griffin Poetry Prize for his collection “Night Watch.”
Young took home the award at a poetry reading at Toronto’s Koerner Hall on Wednesday night.






