Hundreds rally in Red Deer to support teenage girl recovering from violent assault

Rylin Brinston, 14, is battered and bruised from an assault earlier this week in Red Deer that left her with a concussion, internal bleeding and possible permanent eye damage.

Rylin was hanging out near her school when it happened.

RCMP responded to the attack around 2:21 p.m. on Monday, in a park in the Lancaster Meadows area along 30th Avenue, near Hunting Hills High School.

Two teens are facing assault charges after an attack on a 14-year-old girl was caught on camera and shared over social media in Red Deer, Alta. on Monday, May 11, 2026.

Two teens are facing assault charges after an attack on a 14-year-old girl was caught on camera and shared over social media in Red Deer, Alta. on Monday, May 11, 2026.

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In the video that was shared on social media, Rylin is seen being attacked for more than two minutes, pinned to the ground, kicked and punched while also having her head slammed down on the grass.

Other teenagers are seen watching the assault but the video doesn’t appear to show anyone stepping in to stop the attack.

“It’s been really stressful and just like, not everything’s right anymore — but we’re managing,” Rylin said on Friday.

After the assault, she was brought into the nearby Collicut Centre rec centre for help. From there, police say the teen was taken to hospital in non-life threatening condition.

The alleged attackers, both also 14, were taken into custody and face charges of assault causing bodily harm. One of the accused has an additional charge of assault by choking.

Once Rylin is ready to resume school, she’ll do so via online classes.

A GoFundMe has been setup to help the family during this difficult time, which will allow Rylin’s mom Stephanie Rempel to stay home with her child.

“I’m trying to stay strong for my daughter, but its mentally exhausting,” the mother said.

As Rylin recovers, she’s doing so surrounded by support. On Friday, hundreds showed up to an anti-bullying rally in support of the central Alberta teen.

Sarah Komadina has her story in the video player above. 

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

Small space gardening: Make the most of every corner

The Curator independently decides what topics and products we feature. When you purchase an item through our links, we may earn a commission. Promotions and products are subject to availability and retailer terms.

Whether you live in a tiny apartment, a condo with a small balcony, or a home with limited outdoor space, small space gardening makes it possible to enjoy fresh greenery almost anywhere. With the right plants, creative containers, and smart layout ideas, you can turn unused corners, windowsills, balconies, and indoor areas into thriving mini gardens. Shop these finds from Simons, Veradek and more to get growing.

Go vertical

With a small space, going vertical just makes sense. Utilize walls, railings, and shelves so plants grow upward instead of taking up valuable floor space, making even small balconies or patios feel lush and functional. This approach lets you layer greenery at different heights with hanging pots, wall systems, and railing planters, improving sunlight exposure and creating a more efficient, visually full garden.

The Cubiko wall planter is a modern, space-saving system that turns any wall into a customizable vertical garden. With a sturdy metal frame and lightweight recycled planters featuring drainage and adjustable layouts, it’s designed for flexible indoor or outdoor styling.[/product_listing]

 

Hanging plants add life and floral decor to any porch or backyard. This two-pack of planters features a self-watering system with a removable tray helps keep plants healthy longer with less maintenance.[/product_listing]

It’s a no-brainer to use height instead of floor space for plants like tomatoes, cucumbers, and beans. Using trellises, hanging pots, or planter boxes can help keep plants organized, improve airflow, and increase your overall harvest in a tight area.[/product_listing]

 

Adorn your windows

Adorn your windows with greenery by placing compact planters or vertical garden setups along the sill, turning unused light-filled space into a productive growing area. This might be the best way to pretty up your balcony while giving your plants maximum sunshine.

Made to withstand harsh Canadian weather, these planters are crafted from durable plastic-stone composite construction that resists cracks, fading, and UV exposure. Plus, its adjustable galvanized steel railing brackets and pre-drilled drainage holes make it a practical home for your plant babies.[/product_listing]

 

Grow in containers

Growing in containers gives your plants flexibility, better root health, and the ability to thrive in almost any small space. They also make it easy to rearrange your garden as the seasons change.

These grow bags make it easier to grow plants with better drainage and healthier roots. They’re light, easy to move with the built-in handles, and work well if you want a simple, reusable option for gardening on a balcony or in a backyard. Since they’re flexible and easy to move around, you can fit them wherever there’s sunlight without needing bulky traditional pots.[/product_listing]

 

Bring it indoors

If you have limited outdoor space, extend your garden by growing indoors – no yard or garden bed required. Compact systems like planters or hydroponic setups help maximize every inch, turning small living spaces into continuous, usable green space year-round.

This indoor gardening system grows up to 6 herbs vertically on a countertop using hydroponics instead of soil. Its compact design and built-in LED grow lights let you produce fresh plants year-round without needing a garden bed or outdoor space.[/product_listing]

 

Start your tiny herb garden with this set that lets you grow in three small metal pots that fit neatly on a windowsill or countertop. Its compact tray design keeps everything organized in one place so you can add greenery to tight indoor spaces without taking up much room.[/product_listing]

 

Tiny but thriving

Starting small allows you to have all the fun of traditional gardening without overwhelming your space. Try smaller pots or mixing pot sizes to get the garden to patio ratio right.

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Self-watering pots allow you to conveniently grow plants of different sizes indoors or outdoors, from small herbs to statement greenery. Grab a few sizes to keep all your plants housed within a unified set. With built-in water reservoirs and level indicators, they reduce daily maintenance while keeping plants hydrated and thriving.[/product_listing]

 

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VIS’V Suction Cup Hooks – $13.99

Outdoor Patio Storage Bags – $50.79

Solar String Lights – $49.99

Patio Novagarden Balcony Railing Table – $111.72

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

Golden Knights docked 2nd-round pick, coach fined $100K for breaking media rules

[sendtonews key="O96JTS5chu-6098807-4366" type="float"] WATCH: Elliotte Friedman joins the FAN Hockey Show to discuss Vegas Golden Knights coach John Tortorella refusing to speak with media after a Game 6 victory, and whether frustration over Brayden McNabb's suspension for interference played a part.

The NHL docked the Vegas Golden Knights a second-round pick in next month’s draft and fined coach John Tortorella $100,000 on Friday for violating media access rules after their series-clinching Game 6 victory at Anaheim on Thursday night.

Tortorella refused to speak to reporters after Vegas routed the Ducks 5-1 to move on to face Colorado in the Western Conference final.

The Golden Knights also did not open their locker room in accordance with league and Players’ Association-negotiated regulations.

The NHL in a statement announcing the punishment said the penalties for these “flagrant violations” come after previous warnings were issued to the Golden Knights.

The team has been offered the opportunity to appeal to Commissioner Gary Bettman’s office in person at the league’s New York headquarters next week.

“The Golden Knights are aware of today’s announcement from the NHL regarding the postgame media availability following Game 6 in Anaheim,” the team said in a statement posted to social media. “The organization will have no further comment.”

https://x.com/GoldenKnights/status/2055389884186345572

Tortorella is new to the team.

The franchise pulled the stunning move in late March of firing Bruce Cassidy, its Stanley Cup-winning coach, and hiring the 67-year-old journeyman coach with just eight games left in the regular season.

Tortorella’s agreement is to see the team through the playoffs, and a decision on a more long-term arrangement would be made afterwards.

He was not in the league this year when Vegas brought him on six weeks ago but has 24 NHL seasons as a head coach under his belt.

Tortorella was an assistant for the U.S. at the Milan Cortina Olympics when it won gold.

A year ago, he was the one run out of an organization when Philadelphia fired Tortorella with nine games to go.

He coached Tampa Bay to the Stanley Cup title in 2004 and is 770-648-37 with five teams overall.

Vegas will now take on the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Final.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Eby says Ottawa is rewarding Alberta's 'bad behaviour' with pipeline agreement

British Columbia Premier David Eby says the federal government is rewarding Alberta for “bad behaviour” by agreeing to push for a new bitumen pipeline to the West Coast.

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed an “implementation agreement” to advance a West Coast pipeline to Ottawa’s major projects office by July 1.

The new agreement commits both the federal government and Alberta to consult B.C. on the proposed pipeline, and it could be declared in the national interested by the federal government by October, which would expedite the project.

However, Eby said in a statement issued Friday that it can’t be the case that projects get prioritized in Canada because a premier threatens to leave the country, referring to the separation movement in Alberta.

The premier said Ottawa must work as closely with B.C. projects as it does with Smith’s pipeline, a proposal that still lacks a proponent or a route.

A statement from the Coastal First Nations advocacy group says its members will never allow a pipeline or oil tankers to the North Coast of B.C., and notes that Friday’s announcement doesn’t increase the chances of that.

“We have heard directly from the prime minister and the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Tim Hodgson that no project, and no route, will proceed without the support of affected First Nations and the province in which it is proposed,” said Chief Marilyn Slett, president of the Coastal First Nations and chief councillor of the Heiltsuk Tribal Council.

Eby’s statement said that “as a country, it’s time to stop rewarding bad behaviour,” and his government’s opposition to any repeal of the North Coast tanker ban has not changed.

B.C. has 35 shovel-ready projects that will create more jobs and prosperity for Canada, but they will need more attention and co-ordination from Ottawa, Eby said.

He said he knows Carney believes he can work with the B.C. in partnership.

“British Columbia is a vital part of Canada. We must work together across federal-provincial lines to build this nation and to strengthen it.”

Eby is due to meet with the prime minister next week and said he will bring a list of projects that can be worked on for the benefit of all Canadians.

“We will find a path forward, together — as Canadians,” his statement said.

B.C.’s Opposition praised the Carney-Smith agreement, while accusing Eby of not working for the nation.

Trevor Halford, interim leader of the Conservative Party of B.C., said in a statement that B.C. has been locked out of a nation-building deal that will produce jobs and help build the province.

“The premier has put himself offside with the national interest, offside with our largest trading partners, and offside with the British Columbians who need these jobs.”

Environmentalists don’t like the agreement.

Ecojustice said in a statement that the pipeline deal threatens to accelerate climate risks and damage coastal ecosystems.

Charlie Hatt, the climate director for Ecojustice, said Friday’s agreement marks another environmental rollback from Carney’s government.

“Let’s be clear, Prime Minister Carney’s latest deal will — by design — unleash more fossil fuels, which means more heat waves, wildfires, and floods that put our lives, health, and the well-being of our communities at risk,” Hatt said.

Criticism also came from the B.C. Greens, whose leader Emily Lowan said the agreement runs counter to the rapid rise of renewables.

“There is no world where a new pipeline proves beneficial for working people, economically or environmentally,” Lowan said. “Danielle Smith’s self-interest will only benefit the fossil fuel billionaires who are stuffing her pockets and funding her desperate last grasp at oil dominance. Letting Smith dictate oil policy is like letting a child dictate bedtime.”

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village reopens after being damaged by fire in 2025

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village is reopening, after a fire in the spring of 2025 that destroyed several buildings and thousands of artifacts forced the open-air museum to stay closed for the rest of the year. As Gates Guarin explains, there's still work to be done but hard work and resilience has helped the centre east of Edmonton welcome back visitors in time for the May long weekend.

An Alberta heritage site razed by a fire last spring is set to reopen its doors this May long weekend.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village, east of Edmonton, will be welcoming students, families, and curious visitors back to the site, starting May 16.

The opening comes 13 months after a grass fire destroyed the visitor’s centre at the heart of the village, along with a few other buildings — forcing the attraction to stay closed for the 2025 season.

The fire broke out on a warm, windy evening back on April 18, 2025.

Gail Fenton, Friends of the Ukrainian Village Society President, rushed over with her son when she heard the grass fire in Lamont County had spread to the village.

“It was horrible to see,” said Fenton. “When we walked through from the back 40 all the way up and when we walked across and saw how close it was to the grain elevator, we thought, ‘Oh my God, thank God it stopped when it did.'”

The open-air UCHV museum in east-central Alberta, complete with costumed interpreters and dozens of buildings, was founded in 1971 and celebrates the province’s rich Ukrainian history.

Settlers from the eastern European country first started coming to Alberta in the 1890s, and the province is home to the greatest number of Ukrainian descendants outside of the nation itself.

A fire burns at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park, Alta. in this Alberta RCMP handout photo posted on their Facebook page on Friday, April 18, 2025.

A fire burns at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park, Alta. in this Alberta RCMP handout photo posted on their Facebook page on Friday, April 18, 2025.

Alberta RCMP
The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

Courtesy: Alberta RCMP
The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

Courtesy: Alberta RCMP
The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

Courtesy: Alberta RCMP
The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

Courtesy: Alberta RCMP
The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village near Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton caught fire on the evening of Friday, April 18, 2025.

Courtesy: Alberta RCMP

While no historical buildings burned, the fire claimed exhibition galleries, collections and curatorial storage.

Five structures and approximately 27,000 pieces of Ukrainian history and culture were lost. Artifacts included original textiles, furniture, jewelry and original research files.

“These were objects that were often donated as part of the buildings that were brought to our Ukrainian village,” said Village Director David Makowsky.

“It was certainly impactful for us in being able to preserve our collection of artifacts here at the museum.”

But through donations and support from the community and the government, the village will be reopen once again.

“We’ve reached a stage now where we can safely reopen our doors and planning is underway to construct a new visitor centre that will help us welcome visitors even better in the future,” Makowsky said.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village east of Edmonton is seen on April 19, 2025, one day after a fire burned through the area.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village east of Edmonton is seen on April 19, 2025, one day after a fire burned through the area.

Jaclyn Kucey/Global News

Minister for Arts, Culture and Status of Women Tanya Fir was in attendance at Friday’s re-opening celebration and applauded the efforts by staff and volunteers so far.

“The village is a powerful symbol of resilience, cultural pride, and the deep connections Ukrainian-Albertans have made to our province and continue to make.” Fir said.

Makowsky said utility work has been completed and significant landscaping has been done to mitigate fire risk.

“It’s just been wonderful,” Fenton said. “We were able to keep going and help the Ukrainian Village keep going and try and get things going back to where it should be.”

The province said it is hopeful to have the visitor’s centre fully restored in 2028.

“Following the devastating fire last year, insurance approved an expense budget of approximately $14 million for Alberta’s government to undertake the necessary repairs and restoration of the site, which they will cover in full,” the province said in a statement.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village east of Edmonton is seen on April 19, 2025, one day after a fire burned through the area.

The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village east of Edmonton is seen on April 19, 2025, one day after a fire burned through the area.

Global News

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

N.S. drivers struggling to keep up with the cost of vehicle ownership, gas prices

Gas prices are continuing to soar in Nova Scotia and the rest of the country. The Canadian Automobile Association says fuel traditionally accounts for one-third of a vehicle's cost, but with gas now occupying more of a driver's budget, experts say that might spell less room elsewhere, including for repairs. Mitchell Bailey reports.

Rich Aucoin says he bought a used vehicle for $800 a decade ago — and has been driving it ever since.

“It’s actually going to get inspected in two weeks. So we’re going to do a major overhaul for the next MVI (motor vehicle inspection). Keep it going for another 10 years,” he said.

The Halifax resident says finding ways to expand the car’s lifespan has helped him save money throughout the years, but it’s not without its challenges.

“Definitely (the) brake pads, I can feel that it’s like kind of easing into the stops,” Aucoin said.

Statistics Canada data findings from April found vehicle maintenance and repairs costs climbed by 4.2 per cent over the past year.

Combined with the minimum self-service price of gasoline reaching $1.96 in Halifax on Friday — an increase of 57 cents per litre since Feb. 27 — some industry experts say drivers might be forced to make some difficult choices regarding vehicle maintenance.

“If you’re seeing an increase in gas prices and you have to pay that because you can’t change your driving habits, then who knows where you’re pulling that money from,” said Kristine D’Arbelles, the managing director of public affairs at the Canadian Automobile Association (CAA).

In an email to Global News, the CAA said a higher percentage of maintenance visits have been for repair issues instead of proactive appointments, like oil and brake checks, in recent years.

The association added that older vehicles combined with lower maintenance diligence can lead to safety concerns.

“The average age of a vehicle on a Canadian road was around 10 years old. Now that number is starting to creep into 11 and 12,” D’Arbelles explained.

Those working in car sales and maintenance across Halifax say not all drivers are pushing their vehicles to the limits, but there are some exceptions.

“There are people who are driving with flat tires, no emergency brakes, stuff like that. They don’t even know. Some people just don’t know, that’s fine, but we have to educate them and steer them in the right direction, whatever that is,” said Jack Clement, a car salesman at a Dodge dealership in Dartmouth.

A service manager at an auto repair shop in Halifax agrees.

“There are some people definitely who are putting it off and putting it off, which can lead to build-up over time and all of a sudden the repair bill is big,” said Ian McDonnell, who works at Tom McDonnell’s Service Centre in Halifax.

D’Arbelles said vehicle ownership is often the second-highest cost for Canadians after housing.

According to Halifax Regional Municipality data from 2024, 65 per cent of residents say they use their personal vehicle as their primary mode of transportation, leaving many searching for ways to mitigate rising costs all around.

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

Lessons from an astronaut: Artemis II crew shares advice on risk, work and friendship

WATCH: It's been exactly five weeks since the splashdown of the Artemis II space mission. The four astronauts on board travelled further from earth than any other human being ever has on a space mission. As Tim Sargeant reports, they landed in Montreal on Friday for a special visit.

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen and his Artemis II crewmates have shared some of the life lessons they learned preparing for and carrying out their record-breaking lunar flyby last month.

Their 10-day mission launched April 1 from Florida, taking Hansen and his three American crewmates — commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover and mission specialist Christina Koch — farther from Earth than any humans before them.

The crew attended an event Friday hosted by the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal, where they were asked to share advice they learned that could help people on Earth. Here’s what they had to say:

On teamwork

Hansen told the crowd that the astronaut team committed to developing a close relationship and worked on it constantly, like building and exercising a new muscle. He said the crew leaned on behavioural health experts to help build their communication skills.

“We asked them to help us have some of the hard conversations,” he said. “It’s just that commitment. And what we learned was, we know (that) no matter what happens, whatever hurdle we run into, we know at the centre of that is the desire to be a strong team and truly, underneath all that, we do love each other.”

Koch said the team “chose each other day after day, even the days that we wanted to maybe be somewhere else.”

“The grind is real. We chose that. We chose the group hug, and put that choice first,” she added, as a picture of the crew embracing flashed on the screen behind her.

On pressure

Koch said the team prepared to handle the pressure of the mission by training for “low-probability, high-stakes situations” that were unlikely to occur. She said this preparation allowed the crew to feel a sense of calm while in space.

“We made a point to make sure that our plans, if we got to space and literally never heard a word from mission control again, we would know how to get ourselves safely back on Earth,” she said. “And that vigilance builds in resilience.”

Glover stressed the importance of repeating the same skills over and over again until basic tasks were automatic, in what he called “practice makes process.”

In space, “we didn’t have to think and actively process the basics so that we could focus our attention on the novel or unique parts, and I can’t overemphasize that,” he said.

On risk

Wiseman said the risk of the mission was a reminder for the team to spend time with loved ones and leave nothing unsaid.

“It was to call your old friends and just have a quick conversation, just to remind people to walk in nature and look at grass and watch a bird fly,” he said. “We all of a sudden had a driving force to just look at our lives and make sure everything was in order.”

Glover said he leaned on prayer as well as trust in the people working to ensure the mission’s success.

“I think that trust that was built on that team and their judgment and that data, combined with faith — we weren’t built to be in fear — gave us the opportunity to be clear-eyed,” he said.

On failure

Hansen says some people mistakenly believe that failure is not an option for astronauts, which is “just not true.”

“But the difference is, in our culture, we will not stop when we meet failure,” he said. “We will just keep creating a solution.” He told the business crowd gathered in Montreal that this attitude will be important in the coming years, as Canada is asked once again to help develop new technologies to guide future space exploration.

“If we want to stay at that leading edge, if we want to continue to be a valued partner on the international world stage with respect to space, we’re going to ask a lot of our industry like we always have, and they’re going meet with failure,” he said. “But the expectation is — and of course, it’s a Canadian core value — we’re not going to quit.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 15, 2026.

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

Montreal sex workers to go on strike during Grand Prix weekend

A group of sex workers in Montreal are calling for a general strike during Grand Prix weekend to demand better working conditions.

The Sex Work Autonomous Committee says its members want an end to the nightly fees that dancers are forced to pay to work in clubs, to obtain labour protections, and for the federal government to fully decriminalize sex work.

During the strike, scheduled for Saturday, May 23, some will refuse to pay the bar fee, while others won’t take clients. It’s unclear how many sex workers will go on strike as participation is voluntary.

A dancer who goes by the name Kit has been working in Montreal’s strip clubs full time for the last three years and says she tries to avoid the “chaos” of the Grand Prix and the influx of tourists it brings. Formula One weekend this year is May 22-24.

She says Grand Prix weekend is a lucrative time for club managers who book more dancers than usual and charge them up to $110 per shift. She adds that at her club, clients are obligated to buy alcohol but not to purchase dances from the girls.

“Sometimes you leave in the negative because you paid more to work than you end up making,” Kit says, adding that some owners increase bar fees during Grand Prix weekend. “Nobody should be paying to work, especially if you’re not receiving a wage.”

Kit says Canada could take inspiration from Washington state, which passed legislation in 2024 known as the strippers’ bill of rights. The measure created safer working conditions for people in the adult entertainment industry and capped bar fees.

The sex work committee says the strike on May 23 is their chance to “threaten that income” from owners of clubs and other adult venues and “affect them when it hurts the most.”

According to Quebec’s workplace safety board, most labour protections apply to employees but not to the self-employed. Many dancers and sex workers who work in massage parlours are not paid a wage and are considered autonomous workers, even if their employers set their schedules.

If sex workers are sick, they dip into their savings to take time off. If dancers trip on uneven floors in their eight-inch heels or fall from a shaky pole, they have no worker protections, Kit said.

Bell GPCanada, promoter of the Canadian Grand Prix, was asked by The Canadian Press to comment on the strike and the allegations that the race weekend brings in many tourists to Montreal seeking sexual services.

“Bell GPCanada strongly objects to any form of sexual exploitation, violence or harassment, and we support the initiatives by local authorities to combat this issue,” spokesperson Jeff Lambert said in an email.

Those going on strike also want to call attention to the fact the federal government hasn’t fully decriminalized sex work. In Canada, it is not illegal to sell sex, but purchasing sexual services and running brothels are criminal offences.

Lena Rozanov offers sexual services in Montreal massage parlours, which operate in a grey zone. Rozanov can legally work, but her clients and the people who run the parlours are criminalized. She says she will be striking during F1 weekend.

Rozanov says decriminalization would help her massage parlour better vet clients. Since they are technically breaking the law, clients aren’t asked to give identification or to register before they purchase her services.

She also wants insurance for workplace incidents — which can include harassment, breaches of consent and assault — and paid time off.

“The main issue is safety,” Rozanov says. “The majority of clients are absolutely decent, but there are some who might behave dangerously, and we have no protection.”

Kit, who escorts on the side, says she would like to see spaces where sex workers can safely work together without fear of prosecution. “We’re not just victims who get pimped out,” she says.

Valerie Scott has fought for the decriminalization of sex work for decades. She says the law criminalizes the income of those who sell sex and pushes them into the shadows.

Scott and two other sex workers challenged Canada’s prostitution laws in 2007. The Supreme Court of Canada in 2013 struck down Criminal Code provisions banning bawdy houses, communicating in public for the purpose of prostitution and living on the avails of prostitution.

The court determined that the country’s laws had caused harm to sex workers by violating their Charter right to security.

Scott, a legal co-ordinator for sex workers, says that in response to the Supreme Court decision, the federal government adopted new laws “that are even worse.” She’s involved in a legal challenge to Canada’s existing sex work laws, and says she wholeheartedly supports the strike in Montreal.

“Why do we as a society insist that people who have sex for money are not … worthy of labour protections, not worthy of physical protection?” Scott said.

However, there are mixed feelings about the strike among sex workers in Montreal. Some may not participate because they don’t want to miss out on the lucrative weekend; others worry about being blacklisted from their only source of income.

For its part, the sex work committee says it will continue to push for labour rights beyond the May 23 strike.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 14, 2026.

— With files from The Associated Press

This is a corrected story. A previous version said that Valerie Scott ran the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform. In fact, Scott is a legal co-ordinator for sex workers in Canada.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Victoria Day deals are here--shop top picks from Article, Bikini Village & more

The Curator independently decides what topics and products we feature. When you purchase an item through our links, we may earn a commission. Promotions and products are subject to availability and retailer terms.

Looking to shop the sales? You’re in the right place. This Victoria Day long weekend is packed with can’t-miss markdowns, and we’ve rounded up the very best of the bunch so you don’t have to scroll for hours. From big-ticket home upgrades to fashion finds and everyday essentials, now’s the time to save on covetable finds from brands like Article, Bikini Village, Dyson and more.

 

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The latest innovation from Dyson takes your blowout routine to the next level. Featuring intelligent scalp-protect technology, attachment learning and automatic pause detection, this special-edition dryer delivers a fast, smooth finish while helping minimize heat damage. Plus, the amber silk colourway is seriously stunning.[/product_listing]

 

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Wake up to softer, more hydrated skin with this overnight mask beloved for its lightweight gel texture and deeply moisturizing finish. Packed with three hyaluronic acids for deep hydration, it works while you sleep to help revive dull, tired-looking skin.[/product_listing]

 

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Bring the med-spa experience home with this smart IPL hair removal device. Designed with cooling technology for a more comfortable treatment, it helps reduce unwanted hair over time for smoother skin without the salon appointments.[/product_listing]

 

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Stay fresh with these volley shorts in a deep green hue. They’re made to follow you through your everyday passions, no matter the activity. The adjustable waistband cord adds both practicality and a unique touch with its two-tone design. And the long inner liner moves with you.[/product_listing]

 

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Easy, breezy and endlessly versatile, this matching two-piece set is the kind of outfit you’ll throw on all summer long. Dress it up with sandals and gold jewellery or keep it casual with sneakers for effortless warm-weather style.[/product_listing]

 

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Whether you’re hiking, golfing or spending long days outdoors, this lightweight sun shirt offers UPF 50+ protection while helping keep you comfortable in the heat.[/product_listing]

 

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44% off: Dr. Reju-All Advanced PDRN Rejuvenating Cream

28% off: Maybelline New York Lash Sensational Sky High Mascara

15% off: Ray-Ban | Meta Wayfarer (Gen 2)

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WATCH: Global News Hour at 6 BC: May 15

Watch the online edition of Global News Hour at 6 BC.

The federal government is entering into an agreement with Alberta and outlining a plan for the proposed pipeline to BC’s coast. A senior citizen and two Vancouver Police officers were taken to hospital after dramatic vehicle ramming. And a ruling by the highest court in the land could forever change the legal landscape of intimate partner violence.

Watch ‘Global News at 6 BC’ for the latest news in British Columbia.

Click here for more Global BC videos

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

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