Eglinton Crosstown LRT hits 98% of in-service target during opening weeks

WATCH: After all the excitement following the long-overdue arrival of the Eglinton Crosstown LRT, Monday brought the first major test to see how it operates for transit users. Matthew Bingley reports. 

Almost three weeks after the launch of the Eglinton Crosstown LRT, initial data suggest the long-awaited line has enjoyed a substantially smoother opening than the Finch West LRT did in December.

Service data maintained by Metrolinx shows that for its first two weeks of service, the Crosstown operated 98 per cent of the time it was scheduled to. That compares to an average of 94 per cent for Finch, which dropped as low as 88 per cent one week.

A spokesperson for the provincial transit agency said the underground portion of Eglinton had been an advantage during its winter launch.

“The majority of Line 5 Eglinton runs underground — similar to a subway in an exclusive alignment, which in the event of delays, has the ability to catch up to the schedule and reduce impact to customers,” they wrote in a statement.

“Line 6 Finch West operates in an exclusive guideway across 10.3 kilometres of Finch Avenue West.”

The Toronto Transit Commission, which operates both routes, said the launch had been successful — and would improve as it learned lessons in real time.

“Line 5 Eglinton has been performing very well during the first three weeks of the phased-opening period,” the agency wrote in its statement.

“Over the coming months, we will learn even more about the line’s operations, vehicle performance, trip times, and ways we can fine-tune the bus network connections that were part of this phase.”

The Eglinton Crosstown LRT finally opened in early February, six years behind schedule.

Finch started carrying passengers in December, but has struggled with snow and freezing temperatures.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Innisfail Mountie in hospital after alleged drunk driver hits cruiser on QEII

A central Alberta RCMP officer is recovering in hospital after their cruiser, which was parked on the side of Alberta’s busiest major highway, was hit by an alleged drunk driver late Thursday night.

The crash on Highway 2 happened around 11:30 near Innisfail, which is between Red Deer and Calgary.

RCMP said a traffic services officer was investigating an unrelated collision on the QEII, just south of Innisfail, and had returned to his police cruiser parked on the side of the road to complete some paperwork.

That’s when a white, Ford Explorer SUV police said was going highway speeds collided with the stationary RCMP vehicle, causing significant damage.

The speed limit on the QEII is 110 km/h.

RCMP arrested the woman driving the Explorer, whom they believed to be drunk. Police said the woman provided breath samples showing she was nearly double the legal limit of alcohol.

The injured RCMP member was taken to hospital by EMS with non-life threatening injuries. On Friday he remained in hospital for testing and treatment.

A 26-year-old woman from Edmonton is facing charges of impaired operation causing bodily harm and dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing bodily harm.

She’s been released from custody and is scheduled to appear at the Red Deer courthouse on March 31.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

QR Calgary 50K Cash Vault Rules and Regs

$50K CASH VAULT CONTEST RULES

 

THE $50K CASH VAULT CONTEST (THE “CONTEST”) WILL BE CONDUCTED THE PROVINCES OF ONTARIO, MANITOBA, ALBERTA, AND BRITISH COLUMBIA  AND SHALL BE CONSTRUED AND EVALUATED ACCORDING TO APPLICABLE CANADIAN LAW. NO PURCHASE IS NECESSARY. ENTRANTS MUST BE OF THE AGE OF MAJORITY IN THEIR PROVINCE OR TERRITORY OF RESIDENCE OR OLDER AT THE TIME OF ENTRY. VOID IN WHOLE OR PART WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. ENTRY IN THIS CONTEST CONSTITUTES ACCEPTANCE OF THESE CONTEST RULES (THE “CONTEST RULES”).

 

 

  • To be eligible for this Contest, an individual must:

 

  • be a legal resident of the province of Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta, or British Columbia; and

 

  • be of the age of majority in their province or territory of residence or older at the time of entry.

 

  • The following people are not eligible to enter the Contest:

 

  • Employees of Corus Radio Inc., operating as CFOX-FM, CKNW-AM, CKRY-FM, CHQR-AM, CHED-AM, CISN-FM, CJOB-AM, CJKR-FM, CFIQ-AM, CILQ-FM, CJXY-FM, CKCB-FM, CIQB-FM, CFPL-FM, CFPL-AM, CJDV-FM, CKWF-FM, CFMK-FM, CJOT-FM, CJSS-FM (each, a “Station”, collectively, the “Stations”) and its parent, affiliates, subsidiaries, related companies, successors and assigns (together with the Station, the “Sponsors”);

 

  • Employees of Kawartha Stereo & TV Centre Limited, its affiliates, subsidiaries, related companies, successors and assigns, advertising and promotional agencies;

 

  • Employees of Canadian Mattress, its affiliates, subsidiaries, related companies, successors and assigns, advertising and promotional agencies;

 

  • Any person who has been confirmed as a winner of any Station administered contest within ninety (90) days preceding the Contest start date indicated below where the prize was valued over One Thousand Canadian dollars (CAD $1,000); or

 

  • The household members of any of the parties listed in Section (a) to (c) above.

 

  • The Sponsors shall have the right at any time to require proof of identity and/or eligibility to participate in the Contest. Failure to provide such proof may result in disqualification. All personal and other information requested by and supplied to the Sponsors for the purpose of the Contest must be truthful, complete, accurate and in no way misleading. The Sponsors reserve the right, in their sole discretion, to disqualify any entrant should such an entrant at any stage supply information that does not meet these requirements.

 

  1. CONTEST PERIOD. The Contest begins at 12:00 a.m. local time on March 9, 2026 and ends at 11:59 p.m. local time on April 10, 2026 (the “Contest Period“) after which time the Contest will be closed and no further entries shall be accepted.
  2. HOW TO ENTER.

 

 

  • Limit of one (1) entry per person, per Code Word. In the case of multiple entries, only the first eligible entry will be considered.

 

  • All entries become the sole property of the Sponsors and will not be returned for any reason. Entries must be received no later than the end of the Contest Period. Entries will be declared invalid if they are late, illegible, incomplete, damaged, irregular, mutilated, forged, garbled or mechanically or electronically reproduced. Unless otherwise set out herein, no communication or correspondence will be exchanged with entrants except with those selected as a potential winner.

 

 

  • There is one (1) prize (the “Prize”) available to be won by the Prize winner (the “Winner”) consisting of Fifty Thousand Canadian dollars (CAD $50,000).

 

  • Winner is not entitled to monetary difference between actual Prize value and stated approximate Prize value, if any.

 

  • Prize will be distributed within sixty (60) days after Winner has been successfully contacted and notified of their Prize and fulfilled the requirements set out herein.

 

  1. PRIZE CONDITIONS.

 

  • Prize must be accepted as awarded and cannot be transferred, assigned, substituted or redeemed for cash, except at the sole discretion of the Sponsors. Any unused, unclaimed or declined portion of the Prize will be forfeited, have no cash value and the Sponsors shall have no obligation to provide either an alternative or value-in-kind. The Sponsors reserve the right, in their sole discretion, to substitute a prize of equal or greater value if a Prize (or any portion thereof) cannot be awarded for any reason.

 

  • Shipped Prizes shall not be insured and the Sponsors shall not assume any liability for lost, damaged or misdirected Prizes.

 

 

  • One (1) Winner shall be selected as follows:

 

  • On or about April 13, 2026, in Toronto, Ontario, one (1) entrant will be selected by a random draw from all eligible entries received during the Contest Period. The odds of being selected as a potential winner are dependent upon the number of eligible entries received by Corus. Before being declared a Winner, the selected entrant shall be required to correctly answer, without assistance of any kind, whether mechanical or otherwise, a time-limited, mathematical skill-testing question to be administered during a pre-arranged telephone call or by e-mail to comply with the Contest Rules and to sign and return the Release (described below).

 

  • THE SELECTED ENTRANT WILL BE NOTIFIED BY TELEPHONE AND/OR E-MAIL NO LATER THAN APRIL 14, 2026 AT 10:00 a.m. LOCAL TIME AND MUST RESPOND WITHIN FIVE (5) BUSINESS DAYS OF NOTIFICATION. Upon notification, the selected entrant must respond by telephone or e-mail (as specified in the notification) to the contact number or e-mail address provided no later than the indicated deadline set out in the Contest Rules and/or the notification. If the selected entrant does not respond accordingly, they will be disqualified and will not receive the Prize and another entrant may be selected in the Sponsors’ sole discretion until such time as an entrant satisfies the terms set out herein. The Sponsors are not responsible for the failure for any reason whatsoever of a selected entrant to receive notification or for the Sponsors to receive a selected entrant’s response.

 

  • If, as a result of an error relating to the entry process, drawing or any other aspect of the Contest, there are more selected entrants than contemplated in these Contest Rules, there will be a random draw amongst all eligible Prize claimants after the Contest’s closing date to award the correct number of Prizes.

 

  1. Potential Winner will be required to execute a legal agreement and release (“Release”) that confirms potential Winner’s: (i) eligibility for the Contest and compliance with these Contest Rules; (ii) acceptance of the Prize as offered; (iii) release of each of the Sponsors and each of their employees, directors, officers, suppliers, agents, sponsors, administrators, licensees, representatives, advertising, media buying and promotional agencies (collectively, the “Releasees”) from any and all liability for any loss, harm, damages, cost or expense arising out of participation in the Contest, participation in any Contest-related activity or the acceptance, use, or misuse of any Prize, including but not limited to costs, injuries, losses related to personal injuries, death, damage to, loss or destruction of property, rights of publicity or privacy, defamation, or portrayal in a false light, or from any and all claims of third parties arising therefrom; and (iv) grant to the Sponsors of the unrestricted right, in the Sponsors’ collective or individual discretion, to produce, reproduce, display, publish, convert, post, serve, broadcast, exhibit, distribute, adapt and otherwise use or re-use the Winner’s name, statements, image, likeness, voice and biography, in any and all media now known or hereafter devised, in connection with the Contest and the promotion and exploitation thereof. The executed Release must be returned within five (5) business days of the date indicated on the accompanying letter of notification or the verification as a Winner or the selected entrant will be disqualified and the Prize forfeited.

 

  1. INDEMNIFICATION BY ENTRANT. By entering the Contest, each entrant releases, indemnifies and holds Releasees harmless from any and all liability for any injuries, loss or damage of any kind to the entrant or any other person, including personal injury, exposure to the COVID-19 virus, death, or property damage, resulting in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, from (a) their participation in the Contest or any Contest-related activity; (b) the acceptance, use, or misuse of any Prize; or (c) any breach of the Contest Rules. Each entrant agrees to fully indemnify the Releasees from any and all claims made by third parties relating to the entrant’s participation in the Contest, without limitation.

 

  1. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. The Sponsors assume no responsibility or liability for lost, late, unintelligible/illegible, falsified, damaged, misdirected or incomplete entries, notifications, responses, replies or any Release, or for any telephone, hardware or technical malfunctions that may occur, including but not limited to malfunctions that may affect the transmission or non-transmission of an entry. The Sponsors are not responsible for any incorrect or inaccurate information, whether caused by any of the equipment or programming associated with or utilized in the Contest or by any technical or human error which may occur in the administration of the Contest. The Sponsors assume no responsibility or liability in the event that the Contest cannot be conducted as planned for any reason, including reasons beyond the control of the Sponsors, such as tampering, unauthorized intervention, fraud, technical failures, or corruption of the administration, security, fairness, integrity or proper conduct of this Contest.

 

  1. By participating in the Contest, each entrant is deemed to have executed and agrees to be bound by the Contest Rules, which will be posted at the contest microsite and made available throughout the Contest Period. Each entrant further agrees to be bound by the decisions of the Sponsors, which shall be final and binding in all respects. The Sponsors reserve the right, in their sole discretion, to disqualify any entrant found to be: (a) violating the Contest Rules; (b) tampering or attempting to tamper with the entry process or the operation of the Contest (c) violating the terms of service, conditions of use and/or general rules or guidelines of any Station property or service; and/or (d) acting in an unsportsmanlike or disruptive manner, or with intent to annoy, abuse, threaten or harass the Sponsors or any other person. CAUTION: ANY ATTEMPT TO DELIBERATELY UNDERMINE THE LEGITIMATE OPERATION OF THE CONTEST MAY BE A VIOLATION OF CRIMINAL AND CIVIL LAWS. SHOULD SUCH AN ATTEMPT BE MADE, THE SPONSORS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO SEEK REMEDIES AND DAMAGES TO THE FULLEST EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO CRIMINAL PROSECUTION.

 

  1. PRIVACY / USE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION.

 

  • By entering the Contest, each entrant expressly consents to Station and its third-party agents and service providers, to collect, use, store, and share any personal information submitted by entrant to enter the Contest, such as name, age of majority confirmation, and contact information, as applicable, only for the purpose of implementing, administering, and fulfilling the Contest as described in these Contest Rules, and in accordance with Station’s Privacy Policy, available at http://www.corusent.com/privacy-policy.

 

  • Each Winner further consents that: (a) any personal information they have provided in connection with this Contest may be shared with prize providers for the purpose of facilitating the delivery or fulfillment of a Prize; and (b) Station may broadcast, publish, disseminate and otherwise use a Winner’s name, city/town/village and province/territory of residence, image and/or voice in connection with any promotion and/or publicity purposes without further compensation to Winner.

 

  • No communication unrelated to the Contest, commercial or otherwise, will be sent to the entrant unless the entrant otherwise expressly agrees to receive further communications from Sponsors.

 

  1. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY. All intellectual property, including but not limited to trade-marks, trade names, logos, designs, promotional materials, web pages, source code, drawings, illustrations, slogans and representations is owned by the Sponsors and/or their affiliates. All rights are reserved. Unauthorized copying or use of any copyrighted material or intellectual property without the express written consent of its owner is strictly prohibited.

 

  1. The Sponsors reserve the right, in their sole discretion, to terminate the Contest, in whole or in part, and/or modify, amend or suspend the Contest, and/or the Contest Rules in any way, at any time, for any reason without prior notice.

 

  1. These are the official Contest Rules. The Contest is subject to applicable federal, provincial and municipal laws and regulations. The Contest Rules are subject to change without notice in order to comply with any applicable federal, provincial and municipal laws or the policy of any other entity having jurisdiction over the Sponsors. All issues and questions concerning the construction, validity, interpretation and enforceability of the Contest Rules or the rights and obligations as between the entrant and the Sponsors in connection with the Contest shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the province of Ontario without giving effect to any choice of law or conflict of law rules or provisions that would cause the application of any other jurisdiction’s laws.

 

  1. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between the terms and conditions of the Contest Rules and disclosures or other statements contained in any Contest-related materials, including but not limited to the Contest entry form, or point of sale, television, print or online advertising, the terms and conditions of the Contest Rules shall prevail, govern and control.

 

  1. SOCIAL MEDIA. This Contest is in no way sponsored, endorsed or administered by any social media platforms on which the Contest may have been promoted and/or publicized. Any questions, comments or complaints regarding the Contest must be directed to Station.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

'Social connection' prescriptions for older adults expand across Manitoba

An expanded well-being program across Manitoba aims to help connect older adults with friendship and activity, without a trip to the pharmacy. Global's Teagan Rasche reports.

Nearly every seat is taken for chair yoga at the St. James Assiniboia 55+ Senior Centre.

“I find it easier to get up and down. I’m not as stiff,” participant Joann Da Silva said.

Chair yoga is just one of many activities that fall under social prescribing, a doctor’s prescription, without medication.

“I love the socialization I see in my class. I love it when people meet and go for coffee after class,” instructor Mary Lou MacGregor said.

If a primary care provider has a senior patient they are concerned is isolated or lonely, they can write a social prescription.

“Most of us are of an age and a lot of us are alone and we are coming to a very welcoming spot,” said Analee Hyslop, who’s part of the Golden Rule Senior Resource Centre.

That doctor’s prescription would connect older adults to community-based supports such as social and exercise programs, peer groups and practical services.

“The senior resource co-ordinator gets a referral from a primary care provider, a nurse practitioner, a family doctor, who then prescribes social connection, the benefits of belonging and connection,” said Joanne van Dyck, who’s a consultant for the Manitoba Association of Senior Communities on the social prescribing project.

While social prescribing has been around for a while, experts say it’s started to become more popular in Canada over the last few years as the benefits become more evident.

“Those who did participate had greater social support, they had higher cognitive abilities, increased satisfaction with life, fewer depressive symptoms, fewer anxious symptoms and fewer self-reported physical health conditions,” clinical psychologist Kristin Reynolds said.

Now, social prescribing is expanding across Manitoba. The province announced this week it will be available in all five regional health authorities.

“It bridges together a gap in care that we are sorely missing,” Reynolds said.

From pickleball and games to a variety of services, this increasingly popular prescription aims to help with overall well-being.

“Have some fun as you grow older because it’s not easy,” said Lynn Greaves, St. James Assiniboia 55+ Centre board of directors president.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Raptors looking for more consistency after losses

TORONTO – The Toronto Raptors are well aware that they need to find a way to play a consistent 48 minutes and hold on to leads against the NBA’s best teams.

The only question is: how?

“I think we have to be better at communicating when we have the momentum to keep the momentum, not getting so caught up into being up 10 by the fourth quarter, actually just pushing even harder when we get those leads like that,” said all-star Brandon Ingram on Friday after stepping off the court at OVO Athletic Centre, the Raptors’ practice facility. “I think it falls on all of us.

“We have to have communication at that time to have a push, another push, until the game is over.”

The Raptors led by as many as 10 points on Tuesday night in a 116-107 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. The next night, Toronto led the San Antonio Spurs by as many as 15 points and had a 12-point advantage heading into the fourth quarter.

Those losses dropped the Raptors to 4-15 against the league’s top 10 teams with three of those wins against the Cleveland Cavaliers before they acquired 11-time all-star James Harden in a trade with the Los Angeles Clippers on Feb. 4.

Ingram said that consistency was the focus of Toronto’s practice on Friday.

“We went over the things that we could do a little bit better, some of the lapses that we had during the games, in both games, on the defensive side of the ball, screen and roll,” said Ingram. “We just had a few miscommunications that could have helped us out, some of our fourth quarter execution, just trying to pick a pace up in the fourth quarter and not slow down as much.”

The loss to San Antonio was the fifth time this season that Toronto had lost after holding a double-digit lead, the most in the NBA. Head coach Darko Rajakovic said that it wasn’t possible to stop blowing leads, that it’s not a switch that can be flipped.

“We also had a bunch of games that we were down 10, 15 and we came back and won the game,” said Rajakovic. “So is the recipe to be 15 points down so we can get back in the game and win? Maybe there’s the solution, right?

“It really comes down to execution of every single play.”

Rajakovic also pointed to two injuries on Wednesday that limited the Raptors’ ability to close out against the Spurs.

Rookie centre Collin Murray-Boyles, who had been tasked with defending San Antonio star Victor Wembanyama, left the game early after he aggravated a sprained left thumb. All-star Scottie Barnes, who suffered a right quad contusion against OKC, was struggling to walk by the fourth quarter against San Antonio.

Murray-Boyles rested on Friday but Barnes went through the whole practice.

Toronto (34-25) is still in a playoff position, sitting in fifth in the Eastern Conference, a game ahead of the Philadelphia 76ers (33-26). Ingram said that although he was disappointed in the back-to-back losses, “it felt good” to test his team’s mettle against the Western Conference’s two best teams.

“The thing that I love about this group is the resiliency,” said Ingram, noting that Toronto was down by 25 to OKC but battled back. “We had a chance to shift the momentum, but we made a couple mistakes that we can learn from.

“I’m just happy to be in those games, being able to go back to the film and learn and see what we can do better for the next game.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 27, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Radiohead tells ICE 'go f**k yourselves' for using song in immigration video

Radiohead has released a joint statement condemning the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for using one of its songs in a promotional video for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations.

A spokesperson for the band told Variety on Friday, “It goes without saying it was without the band’s permission,” and shared a message from the group.

“We demand that the amateurs in control of the ICE social media account take it down. It ain’t funny, this song means a lot to us and other people, and you don’t get to appropriate it without a fight. Also, go f**k yourselves… Radiohead.”

The message came in response to the use of a version of the song Let Down, which was set to a video on ICE’s social media accounts showing footage of people the department claims are “illegal aliens” who are violent towards American citizens.

The caption reads, “Thousands of American families have been torn apart because of criminal, illegal alien violence. American citizens raped and murdered by those who have no right to be in our country. This is who we fight for. This is our why.”

https://x.com/ICEgov/status/2024235605949919438?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2024235605949919438%7Ctwgr%5E92cc9d6f6af8c3e3d61c1ad264e1137c0170a632%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fvariety.com%2F2026%2Fmusic%2Fnews%2Fradiohead-song-ice-video-responds-dhs-1236674808%2F

Radiohead’s condemnation of the Trump administration’s use of its songs to promote its anti-immigration agenda follows a growing list of similar responses from other musicians.

In November 2025, Olivia Rodrigo wrote in a message to DHS after it used her song All American B–ch in a video portraying agents detaining immigrants, “Don’t ever use my songs to promote your racist, hateful propaganda.”

The audio has since been removed.

In December, Sabrina Carpenter called out ICE after it used her song Juno as the backing track to footage of immigrants being thrown to the ground and arrested.

“This video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda,’ she wrote on X.

https://x.com/SabrinaAnnLynn/status/1995876972405420114?lang=en

She was later featured in another ICE video, which cut footage of her Saturday Night Live commercial and added an edited voiceover to make it seem as if she were arresting Marcello Hernández, an SNL cast member, for being “too illegal.”

As of this writing, DHS has not replied to Radiohead’s message.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

China will suspend tariffs on some Canadian agricultural goods

Speaking in Ottawa on Monday, Prime Minister Mark Carney reiterated that Canada is not considering signing a free trade agreement with China. The remark comes after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened 100 per cent tariffs on Canada if there would be a Canada-China trade agreement.

China’s government says it will suspend some tariffs on Canadian agricultural goods following a recent visit by Prime Minister Mark Carney.

The country’s finance ministry says 100 per cent tariffs on canola meal and peas, and a 25 per cent levy on lobsters and crabs, will not be imposed.

A statement says the announcement, which made no mention of canola seed tariffs, will take effect March 1 and continue through to the end of 2026.

The announcement comes after Carney met earlier this year with Chinese President Xi Jinping in a visit that saw the leaders ink a deal on electric vehicles and canola.

The pair agreed Canada would import up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles each year at a tariff rate of 6.1 per cent in exchange for lower duties on canola seed.

Carney’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

David Bowie's daughter says she doesn't 'place blame' on parents for rehab stints

David Bowie’s daughter is clarifying her statements from earlier this month after claiming she was forced to go to a treatment centre when she was younger after her father was diagnosed with liver cancer.

Alexandria “Lexi” Zahra Jones — the daughter of the late singer and supermodel Imanshared a statement on Instagram to explain that her previous post was meant to help other people who have experienced wilderness treatment programs and battled drug addiction and mental health issues.

“I’ve seen a lot of interpretations of what I shared and I want to clarify something important,” Jones, 25, began. “My story was never meant to place blame on my parents. I love my parents deeply and I don’t hold resentment toward them.”

“They were trying to help a child who was struggling in ways none of us fully understood at the time. I never shared this to create a narrative of family conflict,” she wrote.

She said that she was trying to talk about the experience “of being a young person inside the teenage treatment system and how it feels while it is happening.”

“Those feelings can exist at the same time as love for the people who were trying to help you. Both things can be true,” she added. “I shared my experience because many people who have been through similar programs carry confusion and silence around it. Hearing from others who related has already shown me the message reached who it was meant to reach.”

Jones said that she’s not asking anyone to “speculate about my family or assign fault to anyone in my life.”

“My intention is conversation and understanding about a system, not judgment of individuals. I spoke about something that shaped me in hopes someone else might feel less alone in theirs,” her post concluded.

In a video posted to her Instagram on Feb. 18, Jones shared that when she was 14, she struggled with drugs and alcohol during the same time of her late father’s cancer diagnosis.

“When my dad was diagnosed with cancer, that was my breaking point. I was barely 14 and I could already see what the future would look like for my family and for all of us. I felt broken before it even happened,” Jones explained.

“It was my first year of high school and everyone around me was experimenting, but for me, it wasn’t about fun,” she continued. “I wasn’t experimenting. I was escaping — escaping from my complicated mind, my complicated family, my complicated school. When the party ended for everybody else, I kept going and I drank and got high alone.”

She said her mental health began to decline as she continued to increase her use of substances and that she turned into “someone who lashed out.”

Jones alleged she was taken from her family’s home after her father’s cancer diagnosis and sent to a wilderness therapy program, where she lived outdoors.

She said her dad read her a letter that ended with, “I’m sorry that we have to do this.”

When the wilderness therapy program was over, Jones thought she would be returning home. Instead, she was sent to a residential treatment centre in Utah for 13 months.

“A few months into the program, my dad passed away. I was not there. I had the luxury of speaking to him two days before on his birthday. I told him I loved him and he said it back and we both knew,” she said.

Jones was able to leave the treatment centre just before she turned 16 and went home, where she “slipped into old patterns.”

She revealed that it wasn’t long before she got “legally kidnapped again” and sent away.

In January 2016, Bowie, whose hits included Space OddityFameHeroes and Let’s Dancedied of cancer at the age of 69.

Bowie was married twice, first to actor and model Mary Angela “Angie” Barnett, from 1970 to 1980, and then to Iman in 1992. He had two children — Duncan Jones and Alexandria “Lexi” Zahra Jones — one with each wife.

— With files from The Associated Press

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Trump 'not happy' with Iran nuclear talks as fears of Middle East war grow

WATCH: U.S.-Iran nuclear talks end without breakthrough as risk of war looms

U.S. President Donald Trump said Friday he’s “not happy” with the latest talks over Iran’s nuclear program but indicated he would give negotiators more time to reach a deal to avert another war in the Middle East.

He spoke a day after U.S. envoys held another inconclusive round of indirect talks with Iran in Geneva. As American forces gather in the region, Trump has threatened military action if Iran does not agree to a far-reaching deal on its nuclear program, while Iran insists it has the right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes and denies seeking a nuclear weapon.

“I’m not happy with the fact that they’re not willing to give us what we have to have. I’m not thrilled with that. We’ll see what happens. We’re talking later,” Trump told reporters as he left the White House on Friday. “We’re not exactly happy with the way they’re negotiating. They cannot have nuclear weapons.”

Trump was asked about the risks of the U.S. getting involved in a drawn-out conflict if it strikes Iran.

“I guess you could say there’s always a risk,” Trump replied. “You know, when there’s war, there’s a risk of anything, both good and bad.

“I’d love not to use it but sometimes you have to,” he added when asked about the potential use of force.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio plans to make a quick trip to Israel early next week, the State Department said. The U.S. Embassy in Israel had earlier urged staff who want to leave to depart, joining other nations in encouraging people to leave the region and signaling that U.S. military action might be imminent.

Global News has asked the Canadian government if it was also telling embassy staff in Israel to leave, after Global Affairs Canada warned Canadians in Iran to leave “now if you can do safely.”

https://x.com/TravelGoC/status/2027170592995058175

The announcement of Rubio’s visit, and Trump’s latest remarks, could indicate a longer timeline for any potential strike.

The State Department said Rubio would visit Israel on Monday and Tuesday to “discuss a range of regional priorities including Iran, Lebanon, and ongoing efforts to implement President Trump’s 20-Point Peace Plan for Gaza.” It offered no other details.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long urged tougher U.S. action against Iran, and has warned that Israel will respond to any Iranian attack.

A confidential report from the U.N. nuclear watchdog meanwhile confirmed that Iran has not offered inspectors access to sensitive nuclear sites since they were heavily bombed during the 12-day war launched by Israel last June. As a result, it said it could not confirm Iran’s claims that it stopped uranium enrichment after the U.S. and Israeli strikes.

The report was circulated to member countries and seen by The Associated Press.

The announcement of Rubio’s visit came just hours after the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem implemented “authorized departure” status for nonessential personnel and family members, which means that eligible staffers can leave the country voluntarily at government expense.

In an email, U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee urged staff considering departure to do so quickly, advising them to focus on getting any flight out of Israel and to then make their way to Washington.

“Those wishing to take AD should do so TODAY,” Huckabee wrote, using an acronym for “authorized departure.”

“While there may be outbound flights over the coming days, there may not be,” he added. The email was recounted to The Associated Press by someone involved with the U.S. mission who wasn’t authorized to share details.

On a town-hall meeting Friday after the email was sent, Huckabee told staff that he was encouraging airlines to keep flying.

Iran and the United States on Thursday walked away from another round of nuclear negotiations in Geneva without a deal.

Technical discussions are scheduled to take place in Vienna next week.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Thursday said “what needs to happen has been clearly spelled out from our side,” without offering specifics. Iran has long demanded relief from heavy international sanctions in return for taking steps to limit but not end its nuclear program.

Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, who has been mediating the talks, met Friday with U.S. Vice President JD Vance to discuss the negotiations.

“I am grateful for their engagement and look forward to further and decisive progress in the coming days,” al-Busaidi posted on X. “Peace is within our reach.”

Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, meanwhile met with Christopher Yeaw, a U.S. arms control official. Grossi posted on X that the two men had a “timely exchange on current non-proliferation issues, including in Iran and other areas of common interest.”

The U.N. chief urged Iran and the U.S. “to focus on the diplomatic track.”

“We’re seeing both positive messages coming out of the diplomatic tracks, which we’re continuing to encourage,” U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said, according to his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric.

“We’re also seeing very worrying military movements throughout the region, which is extremely concerning as well.”

The U.S. has gathered a massive fleet of aircraft and warships in the Middle East, with one aircraft carrier already in place and another heading to the region. Iran says it will respond to any U.S. attack by targeting American forces in the region, potentially including those stationed in U.S. bases in allied Arab countries.

Airlines such as Netherlands-based KLM have already announced plans to suspend flights out of Tel Aviv’s Ben-Gurion International Airport, and other embassies have also made plans for authorized departures from Israel and neighboring countries.

Britain’s Foreign Office said that “due to the security situation, U.K. staff have been temporarily withdrawn from Iran.” It said the embassy was operating remotely.

In Israel, the U.K. said Friday it moved some diplomatic staff and their families from Tel Aviv to another, unspecified location in Israel “as a precautionary measure.” In an update to its travel advice, the Foreign Office advises against “all but essential travel” to Israel.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Thursday the U.K. was focused on “supporting the political process” between Washington and Tehran.

Germany‘s Foreign Ministry meanwhile advised urgently against travel to Israel.

Australia on Wednesday “directed the departure of all dependents of Australian officials posted to Israel in response to the deteriorating security situation in the Middle East.” China, India and several European countries with missions in Iran have advised citizens to avoid travel to the country.

China’s Foreign Ministry also advised its citizens already in Iran to leave, according to a statement reported by Chinese state media.

Price and Lee reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Sam Metz in Ramallah, West Bank, Seung Min Kim in Washington, Stephanie Liechtenstein in Vienna, Farnoush Amiri at the United Nations, Kareem Chehayeb in Beirut and Pangiotis Pylas in London contributed to this report.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Do 'forever chemicals' age men faster? Experts urge caution on new study

A new study spurring international headlines appears to suggest that pre- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), also known as “forever chemicals,” may be speeding up aging for men in their 50s and early 60s.

However, experts caution that proving cause and effect isn’t that simple.

Karl Jobst, associate professor at Memorial University, also noted that “the authors explicitly acknowledge their study design limits causal inference,” saying “it’s not possible to definitively link cause and effect.”

“Nevertheless, the observation of an association underscore the need to better understand the health effects associated with PFAS exposure,” he said in an emailed statement to Global News.

Published in the journal Frontiers in Aging, authors of the study — which has been widely reported on across international media in recent days — used public data from a randomly chosen group of 326 older women and men enrolled in 1999 and 2000 in the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Each had donated a blood sample, which was used to measure the concentration of 11 PFAS.

“These findings suggest that and may drive epigenetic aging disparities in aging populations, with males and middle-aged individuals at heightened risk,” the study states.

“These findings underscore the need to regulate emerging PFAS and integrate epigenetic biomarkers into environmental health risk assessments.”

Tarek Rouissi, assistant professor at the Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, pointed out that the age ranges the study focused on were “surprising” to him.

“I think it’s confirming what we have observed in the last 10 to 15 years regarding this area of research,” he said.

Marc-André Verner, a full professor at the department of environmental and occupational health at the Université de Montréal, said in anemailed statement to Global News that he has “reasons to question the validity of the study.”

“There is no description of how this sample was selected, and how it compares to the whole population,” he said.

“The discussion talks about results adjusted for false discovery rate (FDR), but the analysis is not described in the methods or results,” he continued. “Even the authors recognize it ‘FDR adjustment attenuated some nominally significant associations, suggesting potential false positives and indicating that our findings should be interpreted as hypothesis- generating.'”

The American Chemistry Council, an industry association for chemical companies, called the study “exploratory research based on a very small sample of older adults using data collected more than twenty years ago.”

“It is not clear why such old samples were used in this work,” Tom Flanagin, senior director of product communications, said in an emailed statement to Global News.

“As the authors acknowledge, the study is cross-sectional, measuring PFAS levels and epigenetic age at the same moment in time, so it cannot establish cause and effect. The authors also note that several findings do not remain statistically robust after correction for multiple comparisons, and that only two of the PFAS examined in the study showed an association with any aging metric.

“This paper does not provide evidence that PFAS exposure causes aging, nor does it change the extensive body of scientific and regulatory work already underway to understand and manage specific PFAS of potential concern.”

Coined “forever chemicals” due to the years it takes for them to break down, PFAS are “a group of thousands of human-made chemicals that are used as surfactants, lubricants and repellents for dirt, water and grease in a wide range of products,” according to Health Canada.

Health Canada also states that PFAS “don’t break down easily and they stay in the environment for long periods of time.”

Some examples of products they are used in are paints, coatings and building materials, cosmetics, pesticides, cleaning products, waxes and polishes.

People can also be exposed to PFAS in drinking water, both indoor and outdoor air, house dust and food.

Health Canada states that exposure to PFAS can affect the liver, kidney, thyroid, bodyweight, metabolism, the immune and nervous systems, development and the reproductive system.

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine have also stated that PFAS are present in the blood of 98 per cent of Americans.

PFAS were also found to be dangerous in the environment, stating that “PFAS are harmful to wildlife and can build up in living organisms. These substances do not break down easily and remain in the environment for long periods of time.”

The Frontiers in Aging findings “suggest midlife (50–64 years) as a critical window for PFNA-driven aging, which aligns with emerging evidence on the significant impact of environmental exposures during this period.”

In addition, the study suggested that PFAS concentrations “did not differ between women and men or across age classes” or that “there was any correlation of other substances tested and biological age.”

Actions have taken place worldwide to reduce the amount of PFAS in products.

France banned the use of all PFAS in clothing and cosmetics on Jan. 1, 2026, with the European Union also considering a similar ban. New Zealand also enacted a ban on PFAS in cosmetic products that will be in effect as of Dec. 31, 2026.

“Anything less is a concession to industry pressure and will leave communities and ecosystems exposed for generations to come,” Anne-Sofie Bäckar, executive director for Swedish organization ChemSec, stated in a July 2025 press release.

Miriam L. Diamond, professor at the University of Toronto in the department of earth sciences, says Canada still has work to do regarding PFAS in comparison to other countries.

“We were early in that the first regulations were proposed in 2006 and came into course in 2008, but since then we’ve been kind of slow,” she said.

Rouissi also said a solution is not simple to create.

“Sometimes it’s difficult to find the alternative to some chemicals. It’s easy to say we would like to remove and to avoid using this,” he said. “But it’s under nature first, it’s not degradable. And sometimes when it’s degraded, it comes to another kind of compound, which is more toxic. It’s a challenge.”

Rouissi says a major aspect of protection from PFAS comes from water sources, and that it is vital “to preserve what we have and to identify the source of contamination.”

“Now or tomorrow, it will come to our body and it will affect the well-being of the population,” he said. “So, we need to think about what we have done, what we can provide, where we can find other alternatives.”

Statistics Canada released the State of Pre- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Report in March 2025, which found that “the class of PFAS, excluding fluoropolymers, is harmful to human health and the environment.”

The report highlights how “exposure to PFAS can adversely affect multiple organs and systems including the liver, kidneys, thyroid, immune system, nervous system, metabolism and body weight, and reproduction and development.”

PFAS were also found to be dangerous in the environment, stating that “PFAS are harmful to wildlife and can build up in living organisms. These substances do not break down easily and remain in the environment for long periods of time.”

The Canadian government has also responded by excluding fluoropolymers to Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA).

“Through a step-by-step approach, the Government will prioritize the protection of health and the environment while considering factors such as the availability of alternatives. Phase 1, starting in 2025, will address PFAS in firefighting foams to better protect firefighters and the environment,” the news release reads.

“Phase 2 will focus on limiting exposure to PFAS in products that are not needed for the protection of human health, safety, or the environment. This will include products like cosmetics, food packaging materials, and textiles.”

In addition, the government of Canada will also be requiring “manufacturing and other facilities to report the use of PFAS to the National Pollutant Release Inventory. This data will improve understanding of how PFAS are used in Canada, help evaluate possible industrial PFAS contamination, and support efforts to reduce environmental and human exposure to harmful substances.”

This began at the start of 2025.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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