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Edmonton police’s Project Al Extortion and CBSA work uncovered a network targeting South Asian businesses, prompting arrests, 372 immigration investigations and roughly 70 removal orders — two alleged ringleaders (Arshdeep Singh, Sukhnaaz Singh Sandhu) were deported this winter.
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A St. Albert woman, Ayla Egotik‑Learn, was found dead after being missing for weeks and her nine‑month‑old daughter Braylee remains missing; RCMP have charged Christopher Beasley with second‑degree murder and the family is pleading for help finding the baby.
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The Alberta government will close Calgary’s Sheldon Chumir supervised consumption site and a mobile Lethbridge site at the end of June, shifting funds to recovery services while keeping Edmonton’s two sites open for now.
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Avalanche Canada warned of "extreme" avalanche danger across parts of southwestern Alberta and southeastern B.C., with road closures (including Highway 93) and requests that people avoid backcountry travel during the storm cycle.
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RCMP executed search warrants at MHCare’s Edmonton office as part of an ongoing probe into Alberta Health procurement; the company and owner Sam Mraiche are linked in media reports to several controversial government contracts.
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A Macdonald‑Laurier Institute report warns Canada must act fast on electricity planning as demand grows — driven by data centres and electrification — or risk higher prices and strained grid capacity.
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The Canada Energy Regulator projects big growth in electricity to 2050, with wind supplying much of the new capacity and data centres potentially adding up to 12 GW of demand under a high‑growth scenario.
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An ATB Financial study says boosting pipeline capacity and oil production could add about 1.1% to Canada’s GDP and create roughly 112,000 jobs over a decade, but would require $140+ billion in combined pipeline and upstream investment.
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Gas prices jumped across Alberta (some stations near $1.66/L) after the Middle East conflict pushed global crude prices up, forcing businesses to add fuel surcharges and household budgets to stretch further.
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The Lewis Farms Recreation Centre is 65% built but needs a capital budget increase because inflation and supply issues raised projected costs well above earlier estimates; the city will finalise a new contract and borrowing bylaw soon.
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Alberta’s government introduced a bill to sharply restrict MAID eligibility to people likely to die within a year and to bar referrals outside the province — a move the province says protects vulnerable people and that Ottawa may see as legally challengeable.
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Health workers rallied across Canada against Alberta’s Bill 11, warning the move toward "dual practice" (doctors working in public and private care) risks a two‑tier system and could breach the Canada Health Act.
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The Supreme Court of Canada agreed to hear a legal challenge to Ottawa’s 2020/2023 ban on 1,500+ (now 2,500+) “assault‑style” firearms, a case that could test the federal cabinet’s rule‑making powers.
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Ottawa is pitching a three‑pillar plan to keep AI companies in Canada — access to capital, computing and customers — while promising new privacy and online‑harms rules to protect Canadians.
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Grade 3–4 students in Edmonton submitted bright, kid‑friendly designs and 3D models to the Stollery Children’s Hospital Foundation as the fundraiser’s No Bounds campaign plans the new standalone Stollery in south Edmonton.
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U of A researchers launched a trial recruiting 80 Alberta patients to test “ultra‑early” Gamma Knife treatment for trigeminal neuralgia, aiming to stop chronic facial pain before it becomes permanent.
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Migraine patients in southern Alberta say new injectable treatments can be lifesaving but many can’t afford them — leaving sufferers juggling limited provincial coverage, private plans and big out‑of‑pocket costs.
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Disability advocates and the NDP are pushing a private member’s bill to create province‑wide accessibility standards in Alberta, saying consistent rules are needed for dignity in transit, health care and public buildings.
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Edmonton council voted to ask the province to remove restrictive covenants that block grocery competition, aiming to reduce local "food deserts" and improve neighbourhood access to fresh food.
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A suspicious second‑alarm fire tore through a multi‑unit infill under construction in Garneau on Mar. 19, sending thick black smoke across the city; no injuries were reported and police are involved.
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A girl found a loaded 9mm handgun under a rag near a pond in Secord; police want dash and door‑cam footage from Mar. 8 (5–6 a.m.) after security video showed a person with a white car dropping a blue rag.
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A drive‑by shooting on the QEII near Leduc killed 22‑year‑old Birinder Singh as he and friends drove to Banff; RCMP are investigating but have not yet determined motive or made arrests.
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RCMP in Cochrane seized about 5.1 kg of suspected drugs (cocaine, fentanyl, meth) with a street value near $450,000 and charged a 42‑year‑old Calgary man after a months‑long trafficking probe.
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Taber’s two ice rinks were heavily damaged by a December Zamboni propane explosion; rebuilding will cost millions (estimates roughly $11M to restore what was lost) and the town won a Kraft Hockeyville provincial prize to help.
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The NHL picked Calgary, Edmonton and Prague to host the 2028 World Cup of Hockey in February 2028, with semifinals and the final set for Rogers Place in Edmonton.
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Oilers star Leon Draisaitl is out for the rest of the regular season with a lower‑body injury, missing the final 14 games as Edmonton fights for playoff positioning.
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Rookie Matt Savoie has earned a spot beside Connor McDavid with 11 goals and 28 points in 69 games, bringing energy and a nine‑point surge in his last 11 outings.
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In Rogers Place, Nikita Kucherov had 2 goals and 2 assists as Tampa Bay beat the Oilers 5‑2 on Mar. 21, moving ahead of McDavid in the NHL scoring race and highlighting Edmonton’s mid‑season struggles.
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NHL head of player safety George Parros defended a five‑game suspension for Radko Gudas after a knee‑on‑knee hit that wrecked Auston Matthews’ season and drew wide criticism.
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The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has levied about $47,000 in fines since April 2025 for misleading “Product of Canada” labeling as consumers push to buy domestic goods.