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Heartbreaking plea: Andrea Egotik, a grandmother from Nunavut, is begging RCMP to find her nine-month-old granddaughter Braylee after her daughter, 23-year-old Ayla Egotik-Learn, was found dead in a St. Albert apartment in late January — RCMP say Ayla had been dead since early December. Christopher Beasley, 33, has been arrested and charged with second-degree murder and indignity to a body; Andrea says someone impersonated Ayla by texting her parents for weeks and a GoFundMe is helping with cremation and travel costs. This is a family still waiting for answers and closure, and Braylee’s disappearance has left loved ones desperate for justice.
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Justice step for South Asian community: Edmonton police identified more than 50 suspects linked to extortion networks that targeted South Asian residents, and two people — Arshdeep Singh and Sukhnaaz Singh Sandhu — have been deported while about 70 removal orders were issued nationwide. The extortions sparked dozens of threats, shootings and fear in Edmonton and Calgary (Calgary saw at least 41 attempts since Jan. 2025, including 17 shootings), and community leaders say deportation is a welcome deterrent even though experts warn the problem may persist. In other words, people feel safer but police and communities say more work is needed to stop these networks.
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Big economic claim: A new ATB Financial study says boosting Canada’s oil pipeline capacity could raise oil output by 1.5 million barrels per day (about one-third more), add an average $31.4 billion a year to GDP (roughly +1.1% annually) and create about 112,000 jobs over the next decade (peaking at 136,100 during construction). The report notes building pipelines would need roughly $41 billion plus $100+ billion in upstream investment, and leaders like Mark Parsons and PM Mark Carney see this as a way to grow exports — but it would take huge funding and political will. For everyday people, the promise is more jobs and growth, but it comes with big costs and environmental debates.
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Province closes sites: Alberta is closing its first supervised drug consumption site at the Sheldon M. Chumir Centre in Calgary and a mobile site in Lethbridge at the end of June, shifting funding to other treatment and recovery services, officials say. Ministers Mike Ellis and Rick Wilson call this a move to a “recovery-oriented” approach; three supervised sites will remain in Alberta (two in Edmonton and a mobile site in Grande Prairie), and closures have sparked legal challenges and questions about whether replacement services are ready. This affects vulnerable people who used those safe spaces, so cities and provinces must work fast to avoid leaving anyone without support.
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Avalanche danger: Avalanche Canada warns of “extreme” avalanche conditions across parts of southwestern Alberta and southeastern B.C., with Parks Canada saying multiple natural avalanches have run to valley bottoms and some mountain roads (like Highway 93 between Lake Louise and Jasper) closed through Saturday. Forecasters cite an atmospheric river bringing up to 70 mm of rain, heavy snow at high elevations and big temperature swings that weaken the snowpack — Tyson Rettie warns even hikers and snowshoers can be at risk. The practical takeaway: avoid the backcountry, check forecasts, and carry proper rescue gear if you must go into the mountains.
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Fines for misleading labels: The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says it has handed out $47,000 in fines since April 1, 2025 for misleading “Product of Canada” labels as shoppers increasingly try to buy Canadian. The list includes high-profile cases such as a Real Canadian Superstore display that wrongly suggested some products were Canadian; the CFIA says accurate origin labelling matters and can carry fines up to $10,000 for very serious violations. For shoppers, this should mean better trust in labels — but retailers also say human error happens and they’re working to improve signage.
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Panthers keep beating Oilers: In Edmonton on March 20, 2026, the Florida Panthers beat the Oilers 4-0 as goalie Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 21 shots for his fourth shutout this season; goals came from Cole Reinhardt, A.J. Greer and Carter Verhaeghe. The loss hurts Edmonton’s playoff push (Oilers now 34-27-9) and came while Leon Draisaitl is out for the season; fans and players feel the sting of another tough night against a recent Stanley Cup rival. In short: a painful result for Oilers supporters at a crucial time in the standings.