Flights at numerous major U.S. airports were delayed Friday due to an “increase in sick leave” among air-traffic controllers, the Federal Aviation Administration said.
Don’t expect a Venezuela regime change to offer an economic miracle cure: Don Pittis
The revolt of two presidents is no quick fix. Repairing Venezuela’s devastated economy will remain a Herculean task — even if Nicolas Maduro agrees to go peacefully.
What we know about Alberta’s plan to buy thousands of oil tank cars
Find out why Alberta will likely have to pay a premium to secure the thousands of tank cars it says it needs.
2 arrested in RCMP raids in Kingston, Ont., related to anti-terrorism probe
The RCMP have arrested two people following raids on two homes in Kingston, Ont., in what officials are calling an anti-terrorism investigation involving multiple police forces.
NYC transit chief slams Bombardier, halts rail car deliveries over problems
The head of the New York City Transit Authority and former chief executive at the Toronto Transit Commission says he is having “deja vu times two” with problems around trains from Bombardier Inc.
Ottawa taps Nokia for 5G research funds as Canadian scrutiny of Huawei continues
Ottawa will announce up to $40 million for Finnish telecom giant Nokia on Thursday to conduct research on 5G wireless technology in Canada.
China envoy McCallum walks back comments on Meng Wanzhou case
Canada’s ambassador to China now says he regrets making comments earlier this week that suggested Meng Wanzhou, the Huawei executive detained in Canada on a U.S. extradition request, has a strong case that her arrest was politically motivated.
Brexit negotiations are a ‘disgrace,’ Airbus CEO says, describing leaving EU without a deal as ‘madness’
The CEO of European aerospace giant Airbus has warned it could move its British operations elsewhere if the United Kingdom leaves the EU without a deal in a hard Brexit.
Venezuela’s crumbling oil output could lead to the U.S. looking for more oil from Canada
More turbulence in Venezuela — including the threat of United States sanctions on its crude oil exports — has Canada’s oilpatch watching carefully for how the impact will ripple across the industry.
Canada’s man in Beijing says Huawei’s Meng has ‘strong case.’ That puts Trudeau in a bind
For weeks now, the Canadian government has argued it is simply following the rule of law in detaining Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou on behalf of the U.S. That position took a serious hit Tuesday, when Canada’s ambassador to China, John McCallum, said that Meng has a strong case.