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Overtime heartbreak at Scotiabank Arena — Alexander Nikishin scored 41 seconds into OT to lift the Carolina Hurricanes to a 4-3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs on March 20, 2026. Carolina (44-19-6) also got goals from Eric Robinson (penalty shot), K’Andre Miller and Jordan Staal with Brandon Bussi making 23 saves; Toronto (29-28-13) answered through John Tavares, William Nylander and Dakota Joshua with Joseph Woll stopping 32. Sebastian Aho had two assists and hit at least 70 points for the fifth straight season, while Leafs captain Auston Matthews underwent left MCL surgery and faces about a 12-week recovery.
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Doug Ford still leads but more people want change — A new Ipsos poll for Global News finds the Progressive Conservatives at 42% support if an election were held tomorrow, Liberals 35%, NDP 18% and others 7%. The online sample of 801 Ontarians (±4.2%) shows 69% don’t expect Ford to step down, yet 60% say it’s time for a different party and the “time for change” metric is up 7% since last year; approval ratings are Ford 42%, Marit Stiles 32%, John Fraser 24% and Mike Schreiner 27%.
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Ontario won’t meet federal April 1 deadline on nurse practitioner funding — The federal government ordered provinces to publicly fund medically necessary services from nurse practitioners by April 1, but Ontario says it won’t be ready (penalties don’t start until April 2027). Health Minister Sylvia Jones is in talks with Ottawa, while nurse practitioner groups warn delays force clinics to charge patients (one Kingston clinic charges a $1,800 annual membership) and call for flexible funding as the province aims to attach all patients to primary care by 2029.
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Winter refuses to quit — After months of snow and deep freezes, Toronto saw about 80 cm buried over a few days in late January (61 cm fell downtown in a single day; Pearson saw 46 cm) and Lake Erie hit roughly 97% ice coverage. Global chief meteorologist Anthony Farnell warns more Arctic blasts and a Great Lakes storm could drop up to 50 cm in spots, with a true spring warm-up unlikely until May.
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Border officer arrested in major smuggling probe — An Ontario border officer and a truck driver were arrested in January and face charges including drug trafficking and import after allegedly letting a transport truck through at the Queenston–Lewiston crossing. RCMP say the truck held millions of dollars’ worth of opium, cannabis products and tobacco; both accused were scheduled to appear in court this month.
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Province moves to ban ticket resales above face value — Ontario plans legislation, to be introduced when the legislature returns next week, that would make it illegal to resell tickets for more than their original cost for major events like sports and concerts. The government hasn’t decided penalties yet; unlike a past Liberal plan that capped markups at 50%, the new rules would block any above-cost resales for sports tickets and aim to protect families from price gouging.
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CFIA has fined $47,000 over misleading 'Product of Canada' labels — Since April 1, 2025 the Canadian Food Inspection Agency says it has issued $47,000 in fines for misleading origin claims, citing examples like in-store maple-leaf signage placed next to non-Canadian products. The agency says accurate labels are vital for consumers and notes a $10,000 penalty is considered "very serious."
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Islanders plan AHL move to Hamilton's TD Coliseum — The New York Islanders announced plans to relocate their AHL affiliate (the Bridgeport Islanders) to Hamilton, Ontario, for next season, pending AHL Board of Governors approval; the club has played in Bridgeport for 25 years. The team will play in the newly renovated TD Coliseum and will announce a local name and ticketing info later.
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Amherstburg mayor says Crown Royal deal left plant idle — Amherstburg Mayor Michael Prue says Diageo slowed efforts to sell the Crown Royal bottling plant after Premier Doug Ford dropped his threat to ban the whisky in exchange for $23 million in spending commitments (only $500,000 targeted to Amherstburg). The plant closed in February and about 160 jobs were affected; the town says offers have been made but the property remains under Diageo’s control.