- Just in case you needed another reason to think twice about taking an international flight, numerous people have fallen victim to "baggage tag switching", in which airline insiders switch the tags on baggage filled with drugs or other contraband with those of innocent passengers in case they get searched. The airlines are refusing to cover the huge expenses people have incurred in order to be exonerated. Maybe just stay home and read a book or play a video game; it's safer as well as greener.
- A Russian drone involved in the attack on Ukraine strayed across the Romanian border and crashed into an apartment building, injuring two people.
- Manitoba's health minister, Uzoma Asagwara, just returned from the UK where they have been recruiting healthcare workers. Asagwara says that as many as 24 doctors and 29 paramedics may be on their way to the province soon. Reportedly several of them almost didn't show up to the recruitment sessions because they thought it sounded too good to be true.
- The Unifor locals representing about 5,000 employees at TransLink, which provides transit services in Metro Vancouver, have voted 99% in favour of strike action. Affected services include buses as well as the SeaBus ferry service, though not the SkyTrain which is a different bargaining unit.
- Manitoba removed Tesla from the electric vehicle rebate program last year as part of efforts to "Trump-proof" the economy. The company is now threatening legal action in response. An awkward fact is that the province had previously signed IT contracts with SpaceX, and the amount was increased last year, although the province says that this was an emergency procurement related to last year's wildfire season.
- Ferrari has launched its first fully electric vehicle on Tuesday. In response, stock in the company dropped 8.4%. Evidently investors think that the kind of person who would buy a Ferrari won't be satisfied to just go fast, they want everyone around to hear how fast they're going.
- A daycare in southwest Winnipeg had to shut down due to the heat on Wednesday because its air conditioning system had been disabled over the winter by someone stealing copper wire. Some are calling for provincial legislation on scrap dealers to apply the same requirements for accepting wire as for accepting catalytic converters, something that has significantly reduced converter theft.
- The moribund town of Leaf Rapids, Manitoba, whose population has declined from 1,500 in the 1970s to no more than 250 today as a result of a mine closure, is losing its only grocery store. The local co-op is heavily indebted to Federated Co-operatives and seems not to be viable anymore. Employment and Income Assistance is offering to help welfare recipients move out of there, but many don't see that as a satisfactory solution, especially those who have lived there all their lives. I don't know what can realistically be done, though; the town is 1,000 kilometres from Winnipeg and over 200 kilometres from Thompson, and it's hard to salvage such an isolated community that has lost its raison d'ĂȘtre.
- The Transportation Safety Board of Canada has released its report on a 2023 accident in Smithers, BC in 2023 in which a helicopter undergoing ground tests suddenly rotated violently, causing the tail rotor to strike two workers, killing one and severely injuring the other. The TSB has concluded that the pilot skipped parts of a checklist because he was distracted by his cellphone, resulting in the antitorque pedals not being deactivated, and evidently he bumped one of the pedals, causing the rotation. I daresay this was not a good career move on the pilot's part.