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Manor Park residents say ‘no' to city's new sidewalk plans

Manor Park residents say ‘no' to city's new sidewalk plans

CBC4 days ago
Some neighbours in Ottawa's Manor Park community are in concrete disagreement with the city's new plan for road upgrades. They've put up signs on their lawns, hoping Ottawa will backtrack on one key aspect of the project: sidewalks.
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Winnipeg students hope to develop Canada-EU AI literacy
Winnipeg students hope to develop Canada-EU AI literacy

Winnipeg Free Press

time6 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Winnipeg students hope to develop Canada-EU AI literacy

A duo of local students has won a trip abroad to pitch diplomats on their made-in-Manitoba plan to bolster artificial intelligence literacy in Canada and the European Union. The University of Manitoba's Divya Sharma and Emily Katsman were named winners of the 2025 Schuman Challenge last week. 'It's a little bit surreal. I'm still taking it in,' said Katsman, noting the 20-somethings are the first Manitobans to enter the foreign policy competition put on by the EU Delegation to Canada. 'We are a province that has a lot of talent, but we sometimes get overlooked — especially when it comes to these high-level government and political competitions and policy settings.' The national contest calls on undergraduate students to brainstorm ways to strengthen the relationship between their home country and the EU. AI was the theme of this year's event, the third of its kind, which drew a total of 19 submissions from across the country. Sharma, 20, and Katsman, 21, were recognized for their proposal to create a Canada-EU roadmap for AI literacy in post-secondary education. 'By working together, Canada and the EU can create the shared infrastructure, standards, and trust needed to shape an AI-literate generation. One that will fuel future breakthroughs in health, climate, defence, and the digital economy,' they argued in a nine-page essay. 'From classrooms to NATO command centres, students in Canada and the EU must speak the same digital language.' Their recommendations to make that happen? Launch a joint AI literacy taskforce, standardized educator certification initiative and a research and student exchange program. 'AI is the future. There's no turning back,' Sharma said. Katsman echoed those comments. However, despite Canada's reputation as a world leader in AI research excellence, local universities have shied away from embracing the technology in classrooms due to plagiarism concerns, she noted. Their essay deemed this situation 'Canada's AI paradox,' and argued the lack of AI integration on post-secondary campuses is a major issue for the workforce and innovation at large. Canadian students are not being prepared to use AI tools effectively or responsibly — a stark contrast to what's happening in Estonia, they argued. Estonia's 'AI Leap' pilot aims to equip 20,000 high school students in northern Europe with lessons on how to use AI tools. A total of 3,000 teachers in that country are receiving training to leverage the technology for educational purposes this fall. Policymakers are working with Anthropic and OpenAI, alongside other partners, to create a related curriculum and workshops. Wednesdays Sent weekly from the heart of Turtle Island, an exploration of Indigenous voices, perspectives and experiences. Sharma and Katsman suggested Canada and the EU learn from Estonia and develop a roadmap accordingly. The U of M students are slated to visit Brussels in the fall to share their ideas with European leaders. Katsman said they are hopeful they will meet Kaja Kallas, who resigned as Estonia's prime minister last year to join the EU government. EU representatives visited Winnipeg in April on a 'Team Europe mission' to the Prairies. Maggie MacintoshEducation reporter Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie. Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative. Every piece of reporting Maggie produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Citizen group begins petition to keep Alberta part of Canada
Citizen group begins petition to keep Alberta part of Canada

CTV News

time7 hours ago

  • CTV News

Citizen group begins petition to keep Alberta part of Canada

A new citizen-led group in Alberta spent the first day of their long weekend asking residents of Old Strathcona, 'Do you agree that Alberta should remain in Canada?' The group known as Forever Canadian gathered on Saturday to begin collecting signatures of legal Alberta voters who are against the separation of the province from Canada. The ultimate goal of the petition is to urge the provincial government to include anti-separatism considerations in policy. 'Albertans are proud Canadians,' said John Lobe, who was out canvassing on Saturday. 'The moment we originated [Forever Canadian], we literally were receiving hundreds of emails per day.' Separatist sentiment emerged largely after the federal election in 2025. The Alberta Prosperity Project applied to put the question of whether or not Alberta should secede from Canada on the ballot. As of Wednesday, chief electoral officer Gordon McClure has referred Alberta Prosperity Project's application to a judge to see if it contravenes the Constitution. Forever Canadian's movement began when former Progressive Conservative Deputy Premier Thomas Lukaszuk applied with Elections Canada to gather signatures across the province for a formal petition in response to the separatist movement. Elections Canada granted Lukaszuk's request on Wednesday. The petition will run until Oct. 28. The group has three months to collect almost 300,000 signatures. At the canvassing event on Saturday, a small group of dissenters with a banner that read, 'Alberta Sovereignty Now!' sat across from people signing Forever Canadian's petition. 'This is 100 per cent a foil to the loud and brash anti-separatist group. They do not speak for most Albertans,' Lukaszuk said in a release. 'This petition is an opportunity to prove that.' Lukaszuk told CTV News Edmonton on Saturday that he was happy to see a turnout from 'all political stripes.' 'This is not about politics. We may differ on policies and we can squabble over things, but when it comes to being proud of being Canadian, we're all on the same team,' he said. The petition requires 10 per cent of the total number of all eligible voters in the post-election day list of electors from the 2023 provincial election. That's 293,967 signatures needed to present the petition to the legislature. Lobe said the first day of canvassing has bolstered his faith in the movement. 'Premier Smith will have a decision to make. She either adopts this as a government overarching policy and does away with any separatist talk and gets rid of legislation like a Sovereignty Act, or she brings it to a referendum,' he said. 'And Albertans will tell her to stop this nonsense about separation.' With files from CTV News Edmonton's Dave Mitchell

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