In this week’s Tokyo Olympics update: With mom waiting outside in the parking lot, ninth grader Summer McIntosh did something very few 14-year-olds have ever done. She qualified for the Olympics.
McIntosh will be Canada’s new kid on the block in Tokyo, a similar role then-16-year-old Penny Oleksiak played five years ago in Rio. In one of her races at last week's Canadian Olympic swim trials, she beat Oleksiak.
“When you speak to her, there’s a steeliness to her face … She reminds me of a great white shark. That’s how I describe her – just so focused on what she wants to do,” her coach Ben Titley said.
Meanwhile, boxer Mandy Bujold is one of the 337 Canadians who have qualified for Tokyo. This week, the IOC overturned a rule that eliminated opportunities for her to qualify after taking a year to have a child
In Tokyo, #COVID19 is back on the rise. The city’s infections rose to its highest rates in a month on Wednesday, prompting discussions of halving previous limits of 10,000 spectators and banning them from night events.
It has been nothing short of horrific. This demon virus chokes me in my sleep and there are days I can’t get out of bed. It has taken more from me than one virus should be able to. My life will never be the same.
- Natalie, 41, Fort Nelson, B.C.
I am a mother of a 20-month-old girl and I have issues holding her in my arms while standing. I don’t always have the energy to play with her.
- Sandy Choiniere, 34, Blainville, Que.
🏆 Every acceptance speech for Everything Everywhere All at Once. The biggest emotional moment of the evening arrived early, when Ke Huy Quan won Best Supporting Actor for his role in the multiverse comedy.
A former senior executive at St. Michael’s Hospital and the former president of an Ontario construction company have been charged as part of a long-standing criminal probe into corruption at one Canada’s premier healthcare facilities: theglobeandmail.com/canada/article…
Vas Georgiou, the former chief administrative officer at St. Michael’s, and John Aquino, the former president of Bondfield Construction Co. Ltd., voluntarily surrendered to police on Tuesday. theglobeandmail.com/canada/article…
The cases against both men, which involve allegations of collusion and kickbacks, date back to 2015, when Bondfield was selected as the winning bidder to redevelop the aging hospital. theglobeandmail.com/canada/article…
The rate of sexual-assault complaints that police reject as “unfounded” has dropped by more than half since a Globe and Mail investigation put a spotlight on the issue five years ago.
Today, 8 per cent of sexual assaults reported to police are being closed as unfounded, a law-enforcement term that means the allegation is false or baseless.
This is down from the 19-per-cent rate that The Globe reported in its 2017 Unfounded series.
Back in 2017, the Halton Regional Police Service had one of the worst unfounded rates in Canada. Now, the Halton police have among the lowest in Canada.