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It’s Wednesday, May 27. Here are the top stories we’re following today.
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Tristin Hopper: Kamloops residential school ‘graves’ could have been septic pipes all along
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“The vagaries of the technology are part of why, when the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s final report was published in 2015, it specifically cautioned against jumping to conclusions based on ground-penetrating radar surveys of former Indian Residential Schools,” Hopper writes.
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Steven Guilbeault announces he will resign his seat this summer, remain as Liberal MP until then
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A source confirmed that Guilbeault was resigning because of the deal Prime Minister Mark Carney struck with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith to pave the way for the construction of a new oil pipeline, as well as the government’s general approach to environmental policies.
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The media’s irredeemable failure to challenge ‘graves’ narrative: Terry Glavin
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Sensationalized reporting and political opportunism fuelled false and exaggerated claims of “mass graves” and other horrific crimes, ultimately damaging the credibility of genuine residential school survivors, Glavin argues.
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‘As victims, we don’t have any rights’: Killer released to Toronto neighbourhood often visited by victim’s family
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Zilla Parker fears running into her husband Dominic’s killer, who was recently released to live in a Toronto neighbourhood that she normally frequents. “They don’t seem to have any empathy,” she says of the Ontario Review Board’s decision.
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Canada’s scary debt problem: Federal, provincial debt to exceed $2.4 trillion this year, report finds
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In its latest research bulletin on the growing debt burden for Canadians, the Fraser Institute found that the combined federal and provincial net debt, adjusted for inflation, has nearly doubled from $1.24 trillion in 2007-08.
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