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Nova Scotia Liberals release four-year $2.3-billion election platform

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HALIFAX – The Nova Scotia Liberals have presented a four-year $2.3-billion platform for the Nov. 26 provincial election.

The 31-page document released today promises 80,000 new homes by 2032 to help alleviate the province’s housing shortage.

There is also a pledge to replace the federal carbon price with an Atlantic region cap-and-trade model for large industrial greenhouse gas emitters.

The platform contains previously announced big ticket items such as a two percentage point reduction in the harmonized sales tax, free public transit, and a pledge to build 20 new collaborative health care clinics.

Liberal Leader Zach Churchill says to implement the plan, his party would run budget deficits in the first three years if elected, with a surplus planned for the fourth year.

The Liberals are the first of the three main parties to release a full platform.

Meanwhile, housing was the focus today of the Progressive Conservatives and NDP, with both parties making announcements in Halifax.

Tory Leader Tim Houston announced a measure aimed at first-time homebuyers, pledging to reduce the minimum required down payment on a home costing up to $500,000 from five per cent to two per cent under a loan program administered by local credit unions.

Houston says the goal is to enable more young families to buy their first homes.

NDP Leader Claudia Chender announced a new affordable homes rebate that would help households with incomes of less than $70,000 save an average of $900 per year on their rent or mortgage.

Chender said the rebate, along with other promises such as rent control, cutting the provincial rent cap from five per cent to 2.5 per cent, and banning fixed-term leases, will give the average Nova Scotian more “wiggle room” in their budgets.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 4, 2024.

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New Brunswick inmate captured after Saint John jail escape through fence: police

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Police in New Brunswick say an inmate who escaped from a jail in Saint John by squeezing through a fence is back in custody.

The Saint John Police Force issued an update at 8 p.m. saying 44-year-old Darel Dalgleish had been arrested without incident.

Police did not provide further details about when or where Dalgleish was found.

Earlier in the day, police said Dalgleish had escaped through the fence around 9:30 a.m. and evaded correctional officers who pursued him.

He was in custody awaiting trial on charges of assault and violating release orders.

Police say patrol officers searched the area with help from a canine unit and a drone and also used vehicle checkpoints to search for the escaped inmate.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 3, 2024.

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Jacques Villeneuve calls thieves of late father’s bronze monument soulless idiots

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MONTREAL – Jacques Villeneuve, the son of late Canadian Formula One driver Gilles Villeneuve, is lashing out at thieves who stole a bronze statue of his father from outside a Quebec museum in his honour, calling them “idiots.”

The younger Villeneuve, 53, also a celebrated F1 driver, posted a video to social media on the weekend saying he has had trouble sleeping since learning of the theft. In an accompanying message he describes the culprits as “shameless, soulless beings” who “do not deserve to be called humans.”

The five-foot-three-inch bronze statue was stolen sometime between Wednesday night and Thursday morning from a podium in front of the Gilles Villeneuve Museum in Berthierville, Que., about 70 kilometres northeast of Montreal.

A $12,000 reward has been offered for the return of the statue, which can be dropped off at a number of locations in the Berthierville area with no questions asked.

Quebec provincial police said Monday they continue to investigate the theft.

Sgt. Éloïse Cossette said officers verified some tips over the weekend but have not found the missing statue, or made any arrests.

Authorities have been desperately trying to find the bronze statue, created in 1984 as a tribute to Gilles Villeneuve and displayed in front of the museum since 1994 in the town where he grow up. Locals fear it will be melted down and sold for cash.

The museum showcases trophies, racing gear and other items that belonged to Villeneuve, and attracts about 5,000 visitors per year. It’s located on the street also named for the famed driver, but all that’s left of the statue is a pair of bronze boots sawed at the ankles.

Gilles Villeneuve participated in 67 Formula One races from 1977 to 1982, winning six before he died in a crash at the age of 32 during a qualifying session for the Belgian Grand Prix.

“I can’t understand what people can have in their heads or even in their hearts — if they have one,” Jacques Villeneuve said in the post from Saturday. “To go and steal a monument … Gilles represented Canada, Quebec at the international level — there aren’t many.”

“That idiots are capable of such an act, I think they are people who don’t have a heart or a brain, and it is shameful.”

Authorities say that to steal a statue of that size at least two people would be required, with specialized equipment and a truck large enough to haul it off.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 4, 2024.

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Three people charged after violence erupts at Hindu temple in Brampton: Peel police

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BRAMPTON, Ont. – Peel Regional Police say three people have been arrested and charged after violence erupted Sunday as Indian consular officials visited a Hindu temple in Brampton, Ont.

Social-media posts on the weekend appeared to show demonstrators holding banners in support in support of a separate Sikh country called Khalistan clashing with others, including some holding India’s national flag.

The videos seemed to show fist fights and people striking each other with poles in what appeared to be the grounds surrounding the Hindu Sabha Mandir temple.

Police say protesters then relocated to two different places in Mississauga, Ont., and an officer sustained minor injuries during the arrest of a person during the demonstrations.

Police say they’re investigating “several acts of unlawfulness” connected to the protests, and did not immediately provide details about the suspects or charges.

The violence, which came during a tense period in Canada-India relations, drew condemnation from India’s high commission, the prime minister and the leaders of other major federal parties.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 4, 2024.

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