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BTS Grooving To Dolly Parton At The Grammys Wins For Cutest Moment

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BTS, for the uninitiated, are a global force to be reckoned with. They are to this generation what the Backstreet Boys were to Gen Xers and what the Beatles were to the boomers. BTS's massive fanbase goes wild the minute they walk onto a concert stage or post a photo of their seven-member, multi-coloured-hair band.

They've been number one on iTunes in more than 65 countries, have almost 12 million subscribers on YouTube, and are the first K-pop (Korean pop) band ever to top US album charts.

The only uncharted territory for them was the Grammys. Until last night. And you'd never know they were Grammys newbies.

Take for example, the adorable moment they were caught enthusiastically singing, dancing and clapping along to Dolly Parton and Miley Cyrus' knockout performance of Parton's classic, "Jolene."

Awards-show veterans know that one must always be ready for those spontaneous cut-aways, and BTS nailed it.

Jin, Suga, J-Hope, RM, Jimin, V and Jungkook, who come from all over South Korea, also walked the Grammys red carpet like the pros they were.

Watch: BTS thanks their fans as they walk the Grammys red carpet. Story continues below.

Even Miss Tyra Banks was fan-girling hard for them.

BTS, which is short for the Bangtan Sonyeondan in Korean (or Bulletproof Boy Scouts) also made history as the first K-pop group to present at the Grammys, presenting the best R&B album category to H.E.R. for her self-titled album.

y'all know what pride is? This.

A post shared by JungKook 정국 BTS (@jungkook.affinity) on

"Growing up in South Korea, we always dreamed of being on the Grammys stage," said RM. "Thank you to all our fans for making this dream come true, and we'll be back."

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A Note Of Appreciation For The Spouses At The 2019 Grammys

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Grammys host Alicia Keys and her husband Swizz Beatz arrive at the ceremony on Sunday night.

Whether or not you watched the Grammys, you've probably heard or read the highlights by now. Michelle Obama made a surprise appearance, Cardi B wore the most incredibly bonkers vintage Mugler dress of all time, a rap song (Childish Gambino's "This is America") won Song of the Year for the first time ever.

Among the show's highs — the Dolly Parton tribute and Diana Ross proclaiming "Happy birthday to me" more than a month before her birthday — was the encouragement we saw a lot of the artists get from their partners. We stan a supportive couple!

The show's host, Alicia Keys, was consistently cheered on by her husband, producer Swizz Beatz. The camera panned to him frequently, and it was hard not to notice how hard he clapped for her and how often he cheered. Twitter definitely took notice of his behaviour, both onstage and before and after the ceremony.

Ultimate Instagram boyfriend Alex Rodriguez continued being a superfan of girlfriend Jennifer Lopez. He posted photos of the two of them together on Instagram, both pre- and post-ceremony. He stepped back on the red carpet, letting her take the spotlight. He bopped around appreciatively during her Motown tribute. (It should perhaps be noted that not everyone shared that reaction.) And of course, in the ultimate show of respect, he gave a wide berth to her rather large brimmed and bejewelled hat.

Alex Rodriguez and Jennifer Lopez arrive at the Grammy awards on Sunday night.

Similarly, Offset — despite his shaky track record — was willing to take a step back and let his wife Cardi B take the spotlight. It was clear he knew the night was about her, and her performance, and her historic win for Best Rap Album. (The category has never been won by a solo woman before.) His stance on the red carpet appears to show a willingness to step back in order to let his wife be the centre of attention.

And during Cardi's acceptance speech, she expanded on how the encouraging nature of their relationship. Offset joined her onstage, where he beamed at her and held her hand. Cardi, visibly emotional, talked about how her album wasn't finished when she found out she was pregnant, and how Offset's support was a big part of why she kept at it.

"He was like, 'You're going to do this album, girl. We're gonna have this baby, and we're gonna make this album," she said.

Offset isn't afraid to let his wife, Cardi B, have the spotlight.

In a pre-show interview on E!, country singer Margo Price, who was nominated for Best New Artist, talked about how her husband sold his car to help her raise money to make her first album. In accepting the award for Album of the Year, Kacey Musgraves thanked her husband, adding that the album wouldn't have been created without him. And Brandi Carlile, who swept the Roots category, was frequently cheered on by her wife, who was photographed kissing her on the cheek as Carlile balanced her three awards.

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The Grammys this year made an effort to include more female voices after the backlash to a fairly male-dominated ceremony last year. Four of the five nominees for the most significant prize, Album of the Year, were male, and all of them were asked to perform during the 2018 ceremony. Lorde, the sole female nominee, was the only one who wasn't asked to perform.

Given the circumstances, it's rewarding to see how many people sweetly supported their successful female partners at this year's awards. More of this, please!

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SNC-Lavalin Slashes Profit Outlook Again, As Controversy Swirls In Ottawa

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The head office of SNC Lavalin in Montreal, Thurs. Feb. 19, 2015.

MONTREAL — SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. has cut its guidance again due to problems at an unidentified mining project in Latin America as the beleaguered engineering giant contends with problems at home and abroad.

The Montreal-based company said Monday it has agreed to settle a dispute with its client for the mining project through an accelerated arbitration process.

But the hit to its mining and metallurgy business will be bigger than what it had said on Jan. 28 because arbitration won't be completed in time to recognize the revenue in 2018 results, the company said.

Watch: SNC-Lavalin allegations leave Justin Trudeau facing questions. Story continues below.

SNC said adjusted diluted earnings per share from the division of its engineering and construction business for 2018 will now be in the range of 20 cents to 35 cents, down from an already reduced forecast of between $1.15 and $1.30 in January.

That translates into an expected fourth quarter loss of $350 million before taxes and interest for the mining and metallurgy segment, according to SNC.

The company said it expects "significant recoveries in the future."

Shares dropped four per cent to $35.31 shortly after markets opened Monday, as the company's legal and diplomatic hurdles continue to loom large.

Earlier on HuffPost Canada:


Last week, the Globe and Mail reported that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's office had put pressure on former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to help SNC avoid a criminal prosecution following heavy lobbying from the company.

Trudeau has denied that the minister "was ever directed by me or anyone in my office to take a decision in this matter."

Federal prosecutors announced in October they would not invite SNC to negotiate a remediation agreement over fraud and corruption charges that stemmed from alleged dealings with the Libyan regime under Moammar Gadhafi between 2001 and 2011.

Last month, SNC chief executive Neil Bruce said ongoing diplomatic tensions between Canada and Saudi Arabia was hurting business and forcing the company to consider a possible retreat from the oil-rich state.

The feud, as well problems with the mining project and an arbitration loss in Australia, prompted the company to cut its financial guidance which led to a drop in the company's shares.

'Unexpected conditions'

In its revised forecast Monday, SNC attributed the mining problems to subcontractors and factors out of its control.

"The challenges on this mining project are mainly due to unexpected site conditions, greater than expected environmental and safety measures and under-performance from subcontractors," the company said in a statement.

SNC called the issues an "isolated incident," however it said it has stopped all bidding on future mining projects and reviewed the management structure of its mining and metallurgy business.

Ian Edwards, the company's new chief operating officer, has also been asked to personally work on strengthening the local project team.

Adjusted consolidated diluted earnings per share for the company as a whole are expected to be in a range of $1.20 to $1.35.

In January, the company expected adjusted consolidated diluted earnings per share, overall, to be in the range of $2.15 to $2.30.

In November, the company had forecast adjusted diluted earnings per share from engineering and construction to be in the range of $2.60 to $2.85. Adjusted consolidated diluted earnings per share were expected in the range of $3.60 to $3.85.

Celina Caesar-Chavannes Defends Jody Wilson-Raybould In Light Of SNC-Lavalin Controversy

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Celina Caesar-Chavannes speaks in the House of Commons on May 25, 2018.

A Liberal MP has defended Jody Wilson-Raybould as "fierce, smart, and unapologetic" on the heels of unflattering comments from unnamed party insiders to a national news agency.

"When women speak up and out, they are always going to be labelled. Go ahead. Label away. We are not going anywhere," Whitby MP Celina Caesar-Chavannes wrote on Twitter Sunday.

Caesar-Chavannes' office told HuffPost Canada Monday that the MP is not available for an interview and did not offer any further comment on Wilson-Raybould's situation.

In her tweet, Caesar-Chavannes shared a story from The Canadian Press that covers Wilson-Raybould's ascension as Canada's first Indigenous justice minister and attorney general, and her perceived demotion to veterans affairs last month.

Wilson-Raybould is in the thick of an escalating controversy after The Globe and Mail alleged the Prime Minister's Office pressured her to help major Quebec firm SNC-Lavalin, charged with bribery and corruption, avoid a criminal prosecution.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has denied his office "directed" Wilson-Raybould on the case and has said the allegations in the Globe are false.

Watch: Trudeau says allegations in The Globe and Mail are 'false'

Government officials have said Wilson-Raybould took part in internal discussions on the issue, but wasn't pushed or told to direct Kathleen Roussel, the director of public prosecutions, to strike a remediation agreement that would effectively let SNC-Lavalin duck criminal charges and a possible 10-year ban on government contracts.

While Wilson-Raybould has said she cannot speak about the matter because she is bound by solicitor-client privilege, Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer has asked the prime minister to waive those obligations. The Tories and the NDP are also demanding a committee investigation — something that on Monday got the surprise support of New Brunswick Liberal backbencher Wayne Long.

"I am not making, or rushing to, any judgement when it comes to this matter," Long wrote in a statement on Facebook. "Past experience in various fields as shown me that complete openness and transparency is the only way forward in situations like this."

The CP story used anonymous sources to describe Wilson-Raybould as someone who had "become a thorn in the side of the cabinet" before she was shuffled to her new role last month, and "someone ...[who] was difficult to get along with, known to berate fellow cabinet ministers openly at the table, and who others felt they had trouble trusting."

The story also notes "several Liberals" believe Wilson-Raybould is a source behind the Globe story.

A person described as an "insider who didn't want to be identified" told CP that Wilson-Raybould has "always sort of been in it for herself" and that "everything is very Jody-centric."

Caesar-Chavannes also retweeted a post bemoaning "blatant sexism in the anonymous attacks against this powerful woman."

Caesar-Chavannes quipped about Wilson-Raybould at Robert Burns dinner

Caesar-Chavannes touched on Wilson-Raybould's demotion during a humorous speech weeks ago at a dinner in Ottawa in honour of famed Scottish poet Robert Burns.

According to The National Post, the MP joked that if Burns was a member of the Liberal government, Wilson-Raybould would be called on to remove him from Parliament.

"If she didn't succeed, she would have been fired. If she succeeded in removing Robbie Burns, she would have been fired," Caesar-Chavannes said, according to newspaper.

"You can't have an Indian doing that to the White Man. (David) Lametti can, you can't."

The Toronto Star later reported Wilson-Raybould "laughed and applauded loudly" during the bit.

Lametti replaced Wilson-Raybould as justice minister and attorney general last month.

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Caesar-Chavannes, first elected in 2015, served as parliamentary secretary to the prime minister until 2017, when she was tapped to serve the minister of international development.

After she was shuffled out of that role last August, Caesar-Chavannes released a video to Twitter saying she made the choice to step down.

"Over the last few months it has been very difficult for me and my family with a number of situations that have happened and it was my decision personally to decide not to continue with the parliamentary secretary position," she said at the time.

Earlier On HuffPost:

With files from The Canadian Press

Ethics Watchdog To Probe Claims PMO Pressured Ex-Attorney General On SNC-Lavalin

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Veterans Affairs Minister Jodie Wilson-Raybould attend a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Jan. 14, 2019.

OTTAWA — The New Democrats said Monday that federal ethics commissioner Mario Dion is looking into allegations the Prime Minister's Office improperly tried to help SNC-Lavalin avoid criminal prosecution.

The NDP asked Dion last week to examine whether Justin Trudeau's aides leaned on former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to have the public prosecutor forge a remediation deal with the engineering firm instead of pursuing bribery and fraud charges.

Charlie Angus, the party's ethics critic, said in a statement that Trudeau promised Canadians he would change the way politics worked in Ottawa, but instead his Liberal government "continues to prioritize helping insiders and the rich get ahead. Canadians deserve better."

Word of the probe came shortly after a Liberal MP joined opposition calls for a parliamentary investigation into the matter.

Liberal MP says he's 'extremely troubled' by allegations

New Brunswick MP Wayne Long said in a statement posted to social media that he was "extremely troubled" when the allegation surfaced last week and nothing he has heard since has made him feel less unsettled.

"How the law treats individuals or corporations in our society is not, and should never be, incumbent upon the political pressure they can exert upon politicians," he said.

Long stressed he's not "rushing to any judgment" in the matter, but believes "a full and transparent investigation" by the House of Commons justice committee is necessary to provide answers in the affair. For that reason, he said he supports an opposition motion to launch an inquiry.

Conservatives and New Democrats on the justice committee joined forces to get an emergency meeting on Wednesday to consider a motion calling on nine high-ranking government officials to testify, including Wilson-Raybould herself. The list also includes David Lametti, who replaced Wilson-Raybould as attorney general in a January cabinet shuffle, the prime minister's chief of staff, Katie Telford, and his principal secretary, Gerald Butts.

Lametti, meanwhile, faced a fresh round of questions about the simmering political controversy after speaking to a Canadian Bar Association meeting Monday. However, he emphasized it would be inappropriate to comment on an issue before the courts.

"I'm the attorney general," he said. "So I'm not going to say anything that could be interpreted in any way, shape or form as compromising that position."

The Globe and Mail newspaper reported last week that Trudeau's aides pressed Wilson-Raybould to help avoid a prosecution of SNC-Lavalin on charges stemming from alleged business activities in Libya.

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The newspaper said Wilson-Raybould was shuffled to the veterans-affairs portfolio after she refused to get the public prosecutor to negotiate a remediation deal with the company, a means of acknowledging wrongdoing without a criminal conviction.

The Liberal government maintains that while discussions on the matter took place with Wilson-Raybould, she wasn't pressured or told to issue a directive to the prosecutor.

Trudeau, who is in British Columbia today, is also likely to face questions about the nature of those closed-door discussions.

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'Modern Day Slaves' From Mexico Found Cleaning Ont. Resorts: Police

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BARRIE, Ont. — Dozens of Mexican "modern day slaves" who were allegedly forced to work as cleaners at vacation properties in Ontario for as little as $50 per month have been freed and offered legitimate employment, police announced Monday.

The provincial police and the Barrie, Ont., force said they launched an investigation into the alleged scam last year after receiving multiple tips from the public. They found that the alleged victims were lured to Canada believing they would be offered jobs and educational opportunities.

"Forty-three people were brought into Canada under misleading circumstances, and were promised a safer life and more opportunities," said Barrie police Chief Kimberley Greenwood. "...these individuals are now free from the control of the people who wished to exploit them for their personal gain."

The operation targeting the alleged human trafficking ring took place on Feb. 5 and also involved the Canada Border Services Agency, police said.

The Mexican workers have since been offered accommodations and legitimate employment at a local resort, said Greenwood, adding that those individuals are communicating with Immigration and Refugees Canada about their status in the country.

"We have to acknowledge that this is the first time that we have seen a labour human trafficking operation of this nature and size in our area," she said.

The workers, whose hometowns were not released, arrived in Canada by plane, a police spokesman said.

"The 43 victims were transported to Canada, coached on what to say as they entered the country but then made to live in squalid conditions at locations in Barrie and Wasaga Beach," OPP Deputy Commissioner Rick Barnum said. "From there, their situation only became worse."

Less than $50 a month

Barnum said the workers, who were mostly men, were driven to and from towns in central and eastern Ontario every day and forced to clean vacation properties and a hotel. They were made to pay their alleged traffickers large sums of money for transportation and housing, and were only allowed to keep less than $50 a month in some cases.

As many as 250 officers and support staff searched 12 properties last week and rescued the workers from their situation, Barnum said.

"One of the victims said to our officer, 'Last night, I went to bed a slave. This morning, I woke up a free man," he said.

You can imagine how traumatic this experience has been for the victims, and possibly their loved ones and others who may be ensnared in this very same situation.OPP Deputy Commissioner Rick Barnum

Police are keeping close track of two people who were allegedly running the Barrie-based cleaning company that employed the foreign workers as the investigation continues, Barnum said, adding that criminal charges would be laid later.

"Let me be clear that we're not taking away from the criminal acts that have been committed," he said.

"In fact, we aim to discover every dollar that these individuals profited from holding people as labour slaves. We intend to find a place at the end of this investigation where these people can have a long time to think about how they victimized others."

For now, Barnum said, the workers' needs are being put first.

"You can imagine how traumatic this experience has been for the victims, and possibly their loved ones and others who may be ensnared in this very same situation."

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Woman Caught On Video Throwing Chair From Balcony Wanted By Toronto Police

Doug Ford Boasts About Cutting Funding For Student Unions' ‘Crazy Marxist Nonsense'

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Ontario Premier Doug Ford arrives to speak in Toronto on Dec. 12, 2018.

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford dumped on student unions in a fundraising pitch to supporters of his Progressive Conservative party Monday.

"I think we all know what kind of crazy Marxist nonsense student unions get up to," the email, signed "Doug," said.

His government announced Jan. 17 that it would end mandatory university student fees that fund unions, student newspapers and clubs. The government also lowered tuition by about 10 per cent across the board, while axing grants that let low-income students study for free.

In the email, Ford defended those changes.

"We cut tuition by 10% across the board. What are the Liberals saying about it now? That we're gutting the system. These guys are nuts."

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Under the previous Ontario Student Assistance Plan (OSAP), families earning up to $175,000 could qualify for funding. The PCs lowered that mark to $140,000. Low-income students could qualify for grants large enough to cover the full cost of tuition under the Liberal plan, but now some of the funding they receive will be a loan.

Merrilee Fullerton, the minister for training, colleges and universities, argued that the previous model was unsustainable, and said it makes sense to give most of the government's funding to students whose families earn less than $50,000.

The changes will saddle students with more debt, chairperson of the Canadian Federation of Students Ontario Nour Alideeb told HuffPost Canada.

She didn't take the "crazy Marxist nonsense" email seriously at first.

I think painting students with one brush, that they're all Marxists, is really a stretch.Nour Alideeb

"I thought it was a joke because the email was very poorly written. Then I realized that it wasn't a joke," Alideeb said.

"This isn't a way to save students money," she said, calling the announcement an "attack" on student advocacy organizations."I think painting students with one brush, that they're all Marxists, is really a stretch."

She noted that leaders of student unions are democratically elected and students have the right to join any group or union they please.

Alideeb said the end of mandatory fees will make it difficult for student unions to operate, because they won't know how much funding they have to work with from year to year.

"To me it's really a veiled attack on student unions, who are really the ones who hold their administrations and the government accountable when it comes to student issues," she told HuffPost when it was first announced.

NDP calls changes a 'politically motivated revenge plot'

Ford's email shows the changes to student fees are "a politically motivated revenge plot," the Opposition NDP said.

"Doug Ford is attacking student unions because he doesn't want students to be able to organize to fight against not only this round of cuts, but the next round as well," the party's colleges and universities critic Chris Glover said in a release.

"Student unions provide transit discounts, grad photos, student events, clubs, copy centres, and food banks because so many students can't afford both the tuition fees and food," Glover said. "Who will provide these services?"

The premier's office declined to provide any examples of the "crazy Marxist nonsense" student unions in Ontario get up to. Ford's spokesman asked HuffPost to direct questions to the PC party spokesman, who did not respond.

With files from The Canadian Press

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David Lametti Draws 'Line That Cannot Be Crossed' Amid SNC-Lavalin Scandal

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Justice Minister and Attorney General David Lametti delivers opening remarks at the Canadian Bar Association's annual meeting in Ottawa on Feb. 11, 2019.

OTTAWA — Canada's attorney general told a room full of lawyers Monday that he would not weigh in on the current SNC-Lavalin scandal unfurling before the Liberal government.

But in remarks to the Canadian Bar Associations' annual meeting, David Lametti outlined how his unique job and roles differ from other ministers around the cabinet table.

"There is a line that cannot be crossed: telling the attorney general what a decision ought to be. That would be interference," Lametti explained.

"And at the end of the day, I abide by the longstanding principle that when acting as attorney general I will apply my judicial mind to a decision, and not my political mind."

Watch: Attorney general addresses the 'great deal of commentary' in the news

It's been nearly a month since Lametti was shuffled into the role of justice minister and attorney general. His predecessor, Jody Wilson-Raybould, was moved to veterans affairs. Her apparent demotion spurred questions about what she did to deserve the change in portfolio.

The Globe and Mail reported bombshell allegations last week that the Prime Minister's Office tried to influence Wilson-Raybould to intervene in a case involving SNC-Lavalin to negotiate a remediation agreement. The prime minister has called the allegations "false."

The Montreal-based engineering and construction company is facing criminal charges for allegedly paying millions in bribes to secure government contracts in Libya.

A corruption conviction for the company carries a possible 10-year ban on bidding for lucrative federal contracts in Canada — a scenario that could lead to significant layoffs.

Lametti did not give a clear answer when asked by reporters if he's been in contact with his predecessor since the controversy erupted. He did not give any indication if SNC-Lavalin has come up in talks during the transition of power.

"As attorney general of Canada, I'm not going to comment on that," he said

He also didn't confirm or deny that his office is considering a deferred-prosecution agreement for SNC-Lavalin, which would hold off criminal charges.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Veterans Affairs Minister Jodie Wilson-Raybould attend a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Jan. 14, 2019.

Wilson-Raybould has been keeping a low profile since the allegations broke. On Friday, she issued a statement to explain her silence on the subject.

"As the former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, I am bound by solicitor-client privilege in this matter," she said.

The ethical restriction prompted Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer to write a letter asking the prime minister to release his former attorney general from solicitor-client privilege. He acknowledged that solicitor-client privilege and the duty of confidentiality are "important values" in Canada's legal system.

"But in the present situation, they must be subordinated to a higher value: the confidence of Canadians in the integrity, fairness and impartiality of our criminal justice system," Scheer wrote.

Both the Conservatives and NDP want the matter investigated by the House of Commons justice committee. At an emergency meeting Wednesday, MPs will vote on a motion calling for nine government officials, including Wilson-Raybould and senior PMO staff, to testify about the allegations.

Pardon me if I don't take Justin Trudeau's word.Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer

During an interview on CTV's Question Period that aired Saturday, Lametti dismissed the claims of political interference as "allegations in a newspaper." He said the lack of "corroborating evidence" doesn't merit a committee investigation in his opinion.

Speaking to media in Fredericton, N.B. Monday, Scheer referenced Lametti's CTV comments.

The Tory leader brought up the prime minister's "illegal" vacation at the Aga Khan's residence that violated multiple conflict laws. He also brought up former fisheries minister Dominic LeBlanc, who was found in conflict of interest when his department awarded contracts to members of his wife's family.

"Pardon me if I don't take Justin Trudeau's word," Scheer said of the prime minister's assertions that the allegations of political interference in the SNC-Lavalin case are false.

Wilson-Raybould's presence in cabinet should 'speak for itself': PM

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters in Vancouver that he's asked Lametti to advise him on the "complex matter" of solicitor-client privilege.

Trudeau, who arrived in the Lower Mainland Sunday to campaign with the Liberal candidate in Burnaby South byelection campaign, said he's already met with Wilson-Raybould "a couple of times." Wilson-Raybould represents the British Columbia riding of Vancouver Granville.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tours the Conrad rental housing development in Vancouver on Feb 11, 2019.

The prime minister said Wilson-Raybould reminded him of a conversation they had in the fall where he told her that "any decisions on matters involving the director of public prosecutions were hers alone."

According to The Globe and Mail, the director of public prosecutions refused to negotiate a remediation agreement with SNC-Lavalin related to the corruption charges.

Trudeau also tried to put rumours of bad blood between him and Wilson-Raybould to rest by saying he had full confidence in his minister. "In our system of government, of course, her presence in cabinet should actually speak for itself," he said.

The federal ethics commissioner announced Monday that it will launch an examination of an NDP complaint of alleged political interference between the PMO and former attorney general. When asked about the probe, Trudeau said he welcomed the investigation.

"This is an issue that has been much-talked about in the last few days. And I think it's extremely important that Canadians can continue to have confidence in our system," he said.

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Facebook, Twitter Take Lion's Share Of Canada's Federal Ad Spending

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The Facebook logo appears on screens at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York, N.Y., on Mar. 29, 2018.

OTTAWA — Social media websites like Facebook and Twitter now take in the lion's share of federal advertising dollars, thanks to an ongoing increase in the use of digital advertising by government departments and agencies.

New figures show the federal government spent $39.2 million on advertising last year. Online ads made up two-thirds of this spending, and — for the first time ever — social media was the most-used digital-media platform, representing 43 per cent of digital ad spending.

Last year also marked the lowest amount spent in over a decade on traditional advertising outlets like newspapers and television.

This comes as the result of a policy change in 2016 that saw federal organizations adopt a digital-first approach for communications.

Bob Cox, chair of News Media Canada and publisher of the Winnipeg Free Press, says he is concerned this policy not only hurts traditional media outlets like newspapers, but also means some, mainly older, Canadians are not seeing federal messages.

Concerns have also been raised about the increase in taxpayer dollars going to foreign-owned digital companies like Facebook and Google, while domestic media outlets face revenue losses.

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HuffPost Canada Splash: February 11, 2019

Canadian Doctors' Group Urges Stricter Gun Laws

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Toronto Police investigate the scene of a deadly shooting in Toronto's Danforth neighbourhood on July 23, 2018.

TORONTO — A group of doctors has launched a new organization to fight for stronger gun laws in Canada, arguing that gun violence is devastating their patients and communities.

Canadian Doctors for Protection from Guns says gun violence should be treated as a public health issue in much the same way as road safety and smoking.

The advocacy group is made up of family doctors, emergency room physicians, trauma surgeons and psychiatrists.

They are advocating for a ban on handguns and assault weapons, saying gun violence is a public health crisis that must be addressed.

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The group notes Statistics Canada reports a 42 per cent increase in firearm-related violent crime since 2013.

It says it will work with governments, health and legal stakeholders and other Canadians to address the issue.

"We know the pro-gun lobby is going to try and muddy the issue," CDPG member Dr. Alan Drummond said in a press release. "But our expertise — and our professional responsibility — is in the protection of public health."

The group is set to appear before the Senate's standing committee on National Security and Defence studying Bill C-71, which includes changes to the Firearms Act and the Criminal Code, later this month.

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Ontario's New Autism Policy Will Overwhelm Schools, Advocate Says

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Kindergarten kids are seen playing in a stock photo. Critics are raising concerns about what the Ontario government's changes to its autism program will mean for schools.

TORONTO — Changes to Ontario's autism program are raising concerns that thousands of autistic children who will receive fewer hours of therapy will be pushed into schools unable to properly accommodate them.

The government announced last week that in order to clear a backlog of 23,000 children waiting for publicly funded autism therapy, families will get up to $140,000 to pay for treatment, though funding will be subject to an annual cap of $20,000 for kids five and under, and $5,000 for kids six to 18. But intensive therapy can cost up to $80,000 a year, advocates say.

Parents, advocates and some within the school system say if children with autism who are currently in intensive therapy no longer have those costs fully covered, they will be in classrooms before they've had the chance to develop necessary skills. That also means already-stretched educational assistant resources will be spread even thinner, they say.

"There is a tsunami headed for the school system," said Ontario Autism Coalition president Laura Kirby-McIntosh, who is also a teacher.

"Somewhere out there there's a kid that's going to get off the school property that's going to get seriously hurt or worse. Somewhere there's going to be a kid that's going to be restrained for too long and is going to be seriously hurt. There's an education worker who's going to set off a kid who goes into a massive meltdown and someone's going to get really hurt."

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Educational assistants who work in classrooms with special needs children do their best, parents say, but it's not the same as therapy.

"There is no replacement for one-on-one, consistent, quiet, individualized learning," said Kristen Ellison, whose eight-year-old son is in therapy 25 hours a week and attends school part-time. She worries what it will mean if her son and others need to share existing educational assistant support.

Education Minister Lisa Thompson's office said the ministry will continue to work with school boards to help students transition between community-based Applied Behaviour Analysis therapy and school, "where they will be supported by ABA instructional methods, as appropriate, and enhance the capacity of educators in supporting students with (autism spectrum disorder)."

About $3 billion is going toward special education in 2018-19, and a spokeswoman said they "will have more to say on further supports in the coming months."

Ontario's Education Minister Lisa Thompson attends Question Period at the legislature in Toronto on Aug. 2, 2018.

The president of the Ontario Public School Boards' Association said schools will do their best to serve every child, but there is already a need for more special education funding.

"Year after year boards are saying, 'We need more help with this,'" said Cathy Abraham. "I don't know of a single school board in this province that does not overspend what the ministry gives us for special education."

Jeff Moco's eight-year-old son is in school now, doing some therapy outside of class time, but that's due to three years of intensive therapy to build skills including speech, frustration tolerance and toileting, he said.

I don't know of a single school board in this province that does not overspend what the ministry gives us for special education.Cathy Abraham

"If he didn't do that, the amount of staff that would be required for him to function just in that environment now, it wouldn't be an option," Moco said.

Laura Walton with the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents 55,000 education workers, worries about what will happen when children who have been in intensive therapy start spending more hours in school.

"The numbers that we currently have, we will not be able to service these children in the way that we want to," she said. "I would suggest that it's going to put pressures on an already pressured system, and I'm not seeing anything that makes me think that the government has taken this into consideration."

Educational assistants do not receive funding for professional development, said Walton, and many pay out of pocket for training to help them work with children on the autism spectrum.

A survey of more than 2,300 EAs represented by CUPE last year found that 60 per cent were already working with five or more students. Fewer than eight per cent said they worked with only one student.

The unions representing elementary and high school teachers say the government's new autism program falls short.

"A significant increase in the number of specialized support staff in our schools is essential if we want to provide all the support that students with special needs require and deserve," said Harvey Bischof, president of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation.

PCs say old program was unfair

The government has framed the previous autism program as unfair, as 8,400 children were receiving support while 23,000 waited. But many parents whose children are on the wait list are unhappy with the changes. They say that while the wait was frustrating, at the end their kids would get the therapy they need.

"What they're telling us now is we're going to wait the same amount of time and then you'll get money, but it's a fraction of the money," said Stacy Kennedy, whose son has been on the wait list since July 2017.

"As a taxpayer I want other taxpayers to know that the services that kids aren't getting any longer in their homes or through service providers will then be pushed into schools, and the education system isn't ready for that."

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Vice-Admiral Mark Norman's Lawyers Accuse Government Of Interfering With Trial

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Vice-Admiral Mark Norman arrives at the courthouse in Ottawa on Jan. 30, 2019.

OTTAWA — Vice-Admiral Mark Norman's legal team has raised questions about the independence of federal prosecutors after the Crown and lawyers from the department that supports Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke several times last year about "trial strategy."

Partially censored copies of notes taken by the Crown during those talks with lawyers from the Privy Council Office were submitted in court Monday, as Norman's lawyers resumed their fight for access to thousands of government documents.

In an email also filed in court, lead prosecutor Barbara Mercier explained to Norman's lawyer Christine Mainville that the handwritten notes were redacted because they dealt with "trial strategy."

"As I recall, the portions of the attached documents which have been redacted deal with trial strategy, not witness preparation or discussion about their evidence," Mercier wrote.

So it seems what we are being told is the prosecution service is devising their trial strategy with ... the body that reports to and executes the directions of the Prime Minister's Office.Christine Mainville, lawyer

But Mainville told the court Monday that prosecutors should not talk strategy with the Privy Council Office, which she called the "right arm" to the Prime Minister's Office. The PCO first launched the investigation that ended with Norman being charged.

"The PCO supports the prime minister. They implement what the prime minister's office wants. They execute on behalf of the Prime Minister's Office," Mainville said.

"So it seems what we are being told is the prosecution service is devising their trial strategy with ... the body that reports to and executes the directions of the Prime Minister's Office."

She went on to say the discussions between the Crown and PCO were "more concerning" than allegations the Prime Minister's Office tried to intervene in the criminal case against SNC-Lavalin.

Trudeau's office is accused of trying to pressure former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to direct federal prosecutors to negotiate a "remediation deal" with the Quebec company rather than move ahead with criminal prosecution.

"By all appearances, this is a more direct influencing of the prosecution," Mainville said.

"The attorney general is entirely bypassed. The Prime Minister's Office, via its right arm the PCO, is dealing directly with the (Public Prosecution Service of Canada). And the prosecution service is allowing this to happen."

"So much for the independence of the PPSC," quipped Justice Heather Perkins-McVey, who ordered the Crown to deliver to her an uncensored copy of the notes, to be held under seal, before the case resumes Friday.

Denies wrongdoing

Norman was suspended as the military's second-in-command in January 2017 and charged last March with one count of breach of trust for allegedly leaking government secrets to undermine cabinet's decision-making process on a major shipbuilding deal.

The $700-million contract, in which a Quebec shipyard was asked to convert a civilian container ship into a temporary support vessel for the navy, was negotiated by Stephen Harper's Conservative government and finalized by Trudeau's Liberals in 2015.

Norman has denied any wrongdoing and his politically charged trial is scheduled to start in August. Monday represented the ninth day of a pre-trial hearing that began in December over what government documents Norman's lawyers are allowed to see.

His team wants access to potentially thousands of government documents about the contract, including records held by Trudeau's office, to prove their client was supporting the Tories in obtaining the ship before falling victim to Liberal political games.

However, much of the proceedings have revolved around whether the government has tried to hide key documents, prevent access to witnesses, cherry-picked what information is made public or otherwise interfered in the case.

Among the documents Norman's lawyers want to see are emails and other internal correspondence about their client and the case from officials in Trudeau's office as well as the Privy Council Office.

Norman's lawyers will attempt to get the case thrown out entirely next month during what's called an abuse of process hearing by arguing there is no legitimate reason for the charge against him.

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Parents Of Quebec City Mosque Shooter Alexandre Bissonnette Write Open Letter Calling Sentence Too Harsh

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Alexandre Bissonnette arrives at the courthouse in Quebec City on Feb. 21, 2017.

QUEBEC — The parents of a man behind the deadly Quebec City mosque attack have issued an open letter questioning the severity of the minimum 40-year sentence handed down to their son last week.

Alexandre Bissonnette, 29, received his sentence Friday for killing six men and injuring six others at the Islamic Cultural Centre mosque on Jan. 29, 2017.

His parents, Raymond Bissonnette and Manon Marchand, say in the letter released Monday that the sentence is the harshest imposed in Quebec since the death penalty was abolished in 1976.

They say the Crown's request for six consecutive life sentences, which would have prevented their son from seeking parole for 150 years and guaranteed that he end his life behind bars, amounted to circumventing the abolition of the death penalty and would terminate all hope of rehabilitation.

Watch: Crown prosecutors and members of Quebec City's Muslim community react to Bissonnette's sentence. Story continues below.

Meanwhile, Quebec Superior Court Justice Francois Huot concluded a sentence of 50 years or more would constitute cruel and unusual punishment for the 29-year-old.

Bissonnette's parents say he suffered psychological and physical bullying during his years in school that had "devastating effects" on his personality.

"If we really want to prevent such a tragedy from happening again, it seems to me that the solution is not to lock someone up forever, but rather try to better understand and prevent bullying, which is a serious societal problem that continues to make victims among our young," the letter reads.

Why deny convicts even the faintest hope?

His parents say people who commit serious crimes should still have the possibility to apply for parole after 25 years — a "glimmer of hope" they say would encourage rehabilitation.

"Unlike other countries, Canada has chosen an open-door policy, welcoming people from all over the world and giving them hope for a second chance in life," the letter says. "Why deny convicts even the faintest hope?"

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Sentence denounced by survivors

Legal experts have said Bissonnette's sentence is likely to be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court.

However, it has been denounced by survivors of the attack and other Muslim community members.

Boufeldja Benabdallah, president of the mosque that was attacked, said last week that community members were stunned by the decision and felt the judge was more concerned about the dignity of the killer than that of the victims and their families.

Bissonnette pleaded guilty last March to six counts of first-degree murder and six of attempted murder after he walked into the mosque during evening prayers and opened fire. The murder victims were Mamadou Tanou Barry, 42; Abdelkrim Hassane, 41; Khaled Belkacemi, 60; Aboubaker Thabti, 44; Azzeddine Soufiane, 57; and Ibrahima Barry, 39.


School Bus Cancellations: Should You Bring Your Kids To School?

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In areas where snow is common, school cancellations due to snow are uncommon.

In the aftermath of a massive blizzard, the shovels come out. As does the rock salt. But should the kids?

Sadly, a snowstorm doesn't guarantee the coveted snow day anymore. (Sorry, you can't summon it. Unless you're Bart Simpson, praying won't work either.) Schools are more likely to issue bus cancellations, a practice that has long polarized and confused parents.

Bus cancellations are an indicator of road safety along specific routes. Unless severe weather impacts teaching conditions inside schools, many choose to stay open.

Parents might be tempted to vent at school boards that remain open in spite of extreme weather. But the act is often done to benefit parents who would otherwise be left scrambling for childcare, as the Toronto District School Board's school closure policy states. And for schools where the majority of students walk or are driven there, a lack of buses wouldn't have affected their commute, anyway.

While some parents might be unhappy when school boards decide to keep schools open, the decision accounts for the burden of childcare some might not be able to afford.

On bus cancellation days, the polar vortex issues a polarizing challenge for parents: keep the kids in or take them to class?

If you can handle the drive, why not?

Mother of four and parenting expert Kathy Buckworth has long enforced a fairly unpopular policy among her brood. Where she's from, extreme cold usually wasn't a good enough excuse for being absent.

"I grew up in Winnipeg," she told HuffPost Canada. "So I would drive my kids to school on a bus cancellation day."

For parents like Simone Reali, an office administrator from Markham, Ont., taking the day off comes down to finances.

"I need to ensure that I save up enough vacation days to use if and when they are sick," she said.

However, that decision isn't one all parents can make easily. There are parents who don't have access to transportation other than the bus system.

Buckworth encourages parents with cars to run through an internal checklist before buckling any seat belts: how safe the weather is, what kind of car they drive, how far they need to go, and how comfortable they feel driving are all factors that take precedence over any class time. Not to mention, how long it will take to get the car out of the driveway.

Depending on how much snow your car is under, you might want to re-think the drive to school.

If a parent can't drive or can only arrange pick-up or drop-off, she suggests coordinating with neighbours for carpooling.

Personal reasons to institute an independent snow day are just as valid. If childcare isn't an issue and a parent feels a day off wouldn't hurt, that's up to their discretion.

Donna Green, an actress and mother of three, has a simple philosophy: "If the bus kids don't have to go, you don't have to go," she tells her kids.

For Green, a bus cancellation day is devoted to chilling out. "We don't do much, just stay in. The kids play their games, watch tv or play together," she told HuffPost Canada over Twitter. "I try to clean and feed everyone."

It's not just a day of watching movies

Angie Inglis is an intermediate French teacher in Durham, Ont. When the temperature plummets, so does her class size: just a handful of students show up when the weather is particularly nasty. It's a hiccup in her syllabus, but one that teachers usually plan for, she told HuffPost Canada.

Inglis doesn't hold it against anyone who keep their kids in, noting that educators understand that parents are coming from all kinds of situations. But to those who might feel like they're dropping kids off at a movie theatre on a bus cancellation day, she wants them to know that's a misconception.

Smaller classes can benefit kids who are hoping to catch-up or get more one-on-one time with teachers.

On days when less than half her class shows up, Inglis focuses on helping kids catch up on missed assignments and encourages independent work time for those with extracurricular activities.

As a mom of three married to a fellow teacher, when buses are cancelled are her eldest daughter's favourite days to go to school.

"She gets a quiet place to go, which she doesn't get every day. She gets a lot of one-on-one time with her teacher, so it's kind of a win," Inglis said.

Should the weather permit time outside, the magic of a post-snowstorm recess spent with friends is nothing to scoff at.

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"I remember those days fondly when I think back to my childhood," Reali said. "Kids think it's magical and can't wait to get out into it."

You decided to stay in. Now what?

After weighing their options, staying put is what will end up happening for one's family. But keeping kids occupied on those impromptu snow days can be challenging. Here are a few tips for busting boredom:

  • Ever the teacher, Inglis is always a fan of cozying up with a good book.
  • Buckworth suggests bundling up and playing in the snow: it burns energy and gets kids away from screens.
  • Arts and crafts are always an option.
  • Take a nap! All that mental energy determining what to do deserves some Kindergarten-tier shut-eye.
  • Cooking lunch and dinner are healthy ways to pass a snow day. Baking cookies and stuffing your faces might not be as healthy, but if it sparks joy, why not treat yourselves?
  • There's always cleaning, but bringing this up as a potential passtime might have kids wishing they were in school instead.

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Full-Day Kindergarten Is What Ontario Needs For A Stable Future

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The future of full-day kindergarten in Ontario is far from guaranteed. Educators and parents were stunned after Education Minister Lisa Thompson said on January 29 that full-day kindergarten would run next year, but was under review for the future.

Thompson's ministry later issued a statement saying the government is committed to "full day learning for four- and five-year-olds," but refused to provide assurances that it would continue in its current form — a no-fee, in-school program taught by a teacher and and early childhood educator.

This was after the minister announced the province was consulting about packing more kids into classrooms, and Premier Doug Ford mused about fixing broken areas of education.

Doug Ford is congratulated by Lisa Thompson, then-chair of the PC Ontario caucus, after Ford was named leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservatives in Markham, Ont. on March 10, 2018.

Charges that full-day kindergarten is a surplus frill must originate from those who never went or flunked out. Full-day kindergarten wasn't an impulse move. It was a well-planned, evidence-based strategic investment.

It rolled out in 2010 for solid reasons: Ontario's schools were scarred from a decade plus of bitter disruptions. Test scores were falling along with graduation rates. Boys were floundering in literacy and girls were shirking math and science.

Early childhood research anchored in brain development showed that up to a third of students started Grade One so far behind they never caught up. By the time they entered school it was both very difficult and expensive to make up for the foundational skills they missed during their early years.

As an early childhood researcher, I was part of a team that spent a year travelling the province and beyond when Ontario was developing the program. We gathered the feedback of educators, parents, medical, justice and business leaders.

Nine years in from its start date, full-day kindergarten is doing its job.

During a visit to a northern school, the principal captured why half-day kindergarten just wasn't enough. Producing a box filled with single mittens, she said the "lost mitten" was a symbol for the schedules of small children, rushed from place to place to place, with never enough time to get stuck into a task, to make a friend or to get to know their teacher.

The challenge for small hands to keep track of both mittens caught the mismatch between educational goals and children's lives.

Strategic investment yields results

Nine years in from its start date, full-day kindergarten is doing its job.

Janette Pelletier at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education has tracked successive cohorts of youngsters, including those who did and did not attend the full-day program. Her research shows that children in full-day kindergarten score higher on reading, writing and number knowledge than those who went half day.

They also scored higher on self-regulation, which is the capacity to respond to life's stresses and is a strong predictor of academic achievement. Additionally, full-day kindergarten children were significantly more likely to meet provincial academic expectations in Grade Three.

Sending thousands of early childhood educators into the schools as partners in the full-day kindergarten teaching team contributed to the positive outcomes. Early childhood educators bring a unique knowledge of child development and teaching strategies focused on discovery, an enthusiasm for learning and getting along with others.

Teachers and early childhood educators collaborated on the development of the full day kindergarten curriculum designed for self-motivated, experiential learning.

With two adults in the classroom, they are able to capitalize on children's individual needs and inquiries. They have the time to know their students very well and to identify problems and intervene early before a child becomes too frustrated and discouraged to try. This is yet another advantage of full-day kindergarten.

Full-day kindergarten's rich and secure environments are essential for the deep play where children learn to negotiate, consider the feelings of others and contribute to the group.

Revolutionizing schools

Ahead academically and socially, full-day kindergarten graduates are revolutionizing schools from the bottom up. The Education Ministry is also updating its primary lesson plans in response to children arriving in Grade One ready to direct their own learning.

The learning approaches of kindergarten will serve its graduates well. Preparing for the future requires digital fluency, science, math and a high level of literacy. Also needed are the so-called "soft" skills — adaptability and empathy.

More from HuffPost Canada:

The simple advice Robert Fulghum shared in his bestselling "All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten" — to be kind, play fair and don't take things that don't belong to you — resonate beyond childhood into spheres of politics, commerce and social behaviour.

Ford apparently failed his kindergarten lessons, which is why Ontario needs to teach him the consequences of dismantling one of the most important programs in the lives of its children.

This article, by Kerry McCuaig, Fellow in Early Childhood Policy, Atkinson Centre, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, at the University of Toronto is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Have you been affected personally by this or another issue? Share your story on HuffPost Canada blogs. We feature the best of Canadian opinion and perspectives. Find out how to contribute here.

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Federal Government Spent Record $7.8 Million On Social Media Ads In 2018

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Social media applications are seen in this photo illustration on Sept. 24, 2018.

OTTAWA — Social media websites like Facebook and Twitter now take in the lion's share of federal advertising dollars, thanks to an ongoing increase in the use of digital advertising by government departments and agencies, new figures show.

Of the $39.2 million spent on government advertisements last year, federal departments spent almost $18.2 million on digital ads — roughly 46 per cent of the total budget, which doesn't include production costs.

And, for the first time ever, social media ads made up the biggest slice of digital spending — 43 per cent, or roughly $7.8 million.

Watch: Facebook ex-security chief: How 'hypertargeting' threatens democracy

"Canadians are using more digital platforms and with greater frequency, and therefore expect their government to communicate with them on those channels,'' says the government's newly tabled annual report on advertising activities.

"Departments challenged their creative agencies and the (advertising) agency of record to 'spread their creative wings.'''

Ads on Twitter, LinkedIn and Snapchat featured prominently in the government's digital ad buys for the 2017-18 fiscal year, but the vast majority — 73 per cent — of the government's social media spending went to Facebook.

The report points to statistics showing Facebook had a 75 per cent reach among Canadian internet users, double that of Twitter.

"Further, Facebook allows for niche-targeting and it generally has high engagement rates,'' the report states.

"Twitter, on the other hand, is used more for 'breaking news' and has more limited targeting options.''

File photo of person reading a newspaper.

Meanwhile, last year marked the lowest amount spent in over a decade on traditional advertising outlets like newspapers and television.

Print outlets received about $570,000 while radio received almost $392,000, roughly 1.4 and one per cent, respectively, of the advertising budget.

Television ads, which had long been government's advertising medium of choice, received about 11.5 per cent of the ad spend last year, or $4.5 million.

The shift away from television to online is the result of a policy change in 2016 that saw federal organizations adopt a digital-first approach for communications.

Federal officials have yet to respond to a request for comment about the digital advertising strategy.

Fed's digital ad strategy is 'bad marketing': publisher

Bob Cox, chair of News Media Canada and publisher of the Winnipeg Free Press, says he is concerned this policy not only hurts traditional media outlets like newspapers, but also means some, mainly older, Canadians are not seeing federal messages.

"Every time something new comes along, people rush to the new thing and ignore the old thing,'' he said.

"We've always argued, and we feel justified in making these arguments, that some of the audience is found in social media, some of the audience is found online and some of the audience is found in traditional newspapers. People didn't rush away from newspapers. We still sell a lot of newspapers here in Winnipeg.''

Cox, who is lobbying the government to spend more on advertising in traditional media outlets, argues the digital-first marketing strategy is "off-kilter.''

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"They're forgetting a large swath of the population, pretty much anybody over the age of 55, who focuses on newspapers or who trusts the newspaper, they're not reaching those people. So whereas they may be effectively reaching some people, it's not the only way to reach people and that's what I find so disconcerting about it, it's bad marketing.''

Cox did say he believes government has redirected some spending on newspapers as part of Ottawa's attempt to help the struggling news industry.

The Liberals are also planning to roll out nearly $600 million in new tax credits and incentives for the Canadian news industry over the next five years.

Carbon Tax Worries Small Businesses That Fear They Won't Be Able To Pass On Costs: Poll

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Many of Canada's small and medium-sized businesses fear they will be saddled with the added cost of the carbon tax being introduced in Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario and Saskatchewan.

OTTAWA — A large proportion of small- and medium-sized businesses soon to be subjected to Ottawa's carbon tax worry they'll be unable to pass along the bulk of the extra costs to their customers, suggests a new survey being released Tuesday.

The online survey was completed by 3,527 members of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business in the four provinces — Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick — that will have to follow the Trudeau government's carbon-pricing system as of April 1.

The lobby group has strongly opposed the federal carbon-tax plan out of concern it will pile on too many costs for smaller companies. In fact, more than two-thirds of the business owners that it polled don't support any kind of carbon pricing program at all.

Earlier on HuffPost: Scheer, Trudeau spar over carbon tax and GM plant closure. Story continues below.

Ottawa says 90 per cent of the carbon-tax revenues it collects will be returned via rebates to households in each of the four provinces. Consumers will get by far the largest share because the government expects them to ultimately pay most of the new costs passed down from businesses.

But the findings of CFIB's poll, conducted in November, suggest there's concern most smaller companies will be unable to pass along their new costs — meaning these firms will end up subsidizing the rebate program for households, the report said.

About 80 per cent of the respondents said they didn't think it would be easy for them to forward costs on to their customers. The poll found 55 per cent of those surveyed didn't expect to pass on any of the additional costs, while 25 per cent said they would only be able to pass on less than 25 per cent of the extra costs.

Earlier on HuffPost Canada:


"These findings should be deeply worrisome to public policy makers," said the report, which also repeats CFIB's concerns the carbon tax will arrive the same year that businesses' Canada Pension Plan premiums start to rise.

"It means small firms will be forced to find the resources to pay the tax from the business itself, which means it may come at the expense of wages, jobs or future business growth."

The Liberals' carbon tax has generated intense political debate across the country and it's destined to be a key campaign issue in October's federal election.

Liberals: Pollution expensive already

The Liberal government has argued pollution is already getting expensive for Canadians as costs from climate-change-related weather events have climbed to more than $1 billion a year. The Liberals believe carbon pricing, which has been in place for years in provinces like British Columbia, Quebec and Ontario, is one of the best ways to lower emissions.

The federal climate change action plan also includes efforts to develop clean fuel standards, create new energy-efficiency building codes and phase out electricity generation from coal.

The opposition Conservatives have repeatedly called the Liberal plan a "tax grab" that will hurt the bottom lines of small businesses and families, kill jobs and make the country less competitive. Moving forward, the Tories warn carbon-tax bills will only get bigger.

Several provincial leaders have also become vocal opponents of the federal program.

The regime will be applied to Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick because they don't have their own carbon-pricing system.

"Small firms will be forced to find the resources to pay the tax from the business itself, which means it may come at the expense of wages, jobs or future business growth."

Ottawa has said the remaining 10 per cent revenue share from the carbon tax will be dedicated to a program to help organizations, such as schools, that are unable to pass on the costs via higher prices. Part of this portion — worth about $1.5 billion — will also be used to help small- and medium-sized businesses adapt to carbon pricing over the next five years, the government has said.

Ottawa has yet to lay out the specifics of this element of its plan.

"We are still working with small businesses on how revenue from carbon pollution pricing will be returned to support Canadian businesses to reduce their emissions and their costs, and become more energy efficient and competitive," Sabrina Kim, a spokeswoman for Environment Minister Catherine McKenna, wrote in an email.

The report noted that some big industrial emitters will pay through a separate system that provides some relief to sectors heavily exposed to foreign competition. Smaller businesses, it added, have not been provided the same relief.

CFIB is calling on Ottawa to limit the impact on smaller businesses, including reassurance the same proportion of revenue collected from these firms is returned to them.

This Recipe For Valentine's Day Strawberry Roll-Ups Is A Healthy Treat For Kids

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Valentine's Day is so much fun when you have kids, a.k.a, sweet little valentines to shower with love.

Kids give you the perfect excuse to embrace all the schmaltzy cheesiness of the holiday. Wear an entirely red and pink outfit? Sure. Paper the house with decorations? On it. Make heart-shaped pancakes? How about heart-shaped EVERYTHING.

This adorable strawberry roll-up recipe from Delish will help you get even more use out of those heart-shaped cookie cutters. And bonus: this Valentine's Day recipe is actually (fairly) healthy. It's better for them than heart-shaped cake, cookies and chocolate, anyway.

All you need is strawberries, sugar, lemon juice, vanilla, and those well-worn cookie cutters.

Get the full recipe for heart-shaped strawberry roll-ups here.

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