The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/19 at 22:00 EST
Episode Date: February 20, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/19 at 22:00 EST...
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It's the epitome of classical ballet, beloved the world over.
The National Ballet of Canada invites you to experience Swan Lake,
revel in Tchaikovsky's glorious score, and an unforgettable production directed and
staged by Karen Kane, whose vision emphasizes the love story at the heart of the ballet.
Presented by Nicola Wealth Management, on stageth to 22nd. Tickets are selling fast.
Secure your seat now at national.ballet.ca.
From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Neil Herland.
British Columbia is making major changes
to its Safer Supply Drug Program.
The province
says it's being done to prevent drugs from being diverted away from the people
they're intended for and sold on the street. Michelle Gossoub reports.
BC is introducing sweeping changes to its controversial safe supply program.
People being prescribed opioids will no longer be able to take them home.
Effective immediately, those drugs will need to be ingested in front of a health care worker. Josie Osborne
is BC's Minister of Health. We've heard concerns about these medications being
diverted and ending up in the wrong hands. The Safe Supply program has been
under attack by the BC Conservatives and the announcement comes about two weeks
after the release of a leaked Ministry of Health briefing that said a
significant portion of opioids prescribed in BC were being diverted.
There is a robust market in very realistic looking but counterfeit
medication that is laced with toxic drugs. The province will also investigate
around 60 pharmacies it alleges are contributing to diversion. Michelle
Gassoub, CBC News, Vancouver. The Mounties say they've arrested a man and a boy in connection with the murder of four
people on a First Nation in southern Saskatchewan. Two men and two women were found dead last
week in a home on the Carry the Kettle Nakoda Nation east of Regina. The Mounties say 18-year-old
Darius Resett faces four counts of first-degree murder, and the boy who cannot
be named also faces charges.
The premier of Alberta is pushing back on corruption claims involving her province's
health care system.
Danielle Smith addressed the issue today.
The former boss of the agency that runs Alberta Hospitals has made allegations about procurement
and contracts signed with private providers.
Terry Reath reports.
The former CEO says she was abruptly fired in January, two days before meeting with the
Auditor General.
Then the entire board of Alberta's health services was let go later that month, just
before an internal investigation was supposed
to be delivered. So on the allegations, Premier Smith again just saying that
they will be investigated. I was not involved in these procurement decisions
I had nothing to do with the process decisions or the implementation. My
actions were straightforward. The government made a policy decision to
expand surgical facilities to tackle the critical issues of wait times.
She is pointing the finger directly at Alberta Health Services.
She says it was dragging its heels in approving contracts for the chartered surgical facilities.
She says AHS wants all surgeries done in hospitals, not private facilities.
Terry Reath, CBC News, Edmonton.
A high-speed train between Toronto and Quebec City is one step closer to reality.
The Prime Minister announced plans for the project in Montreal today.
Justin Trudeau says the rail line would be a game changer for Canadians.
It would whisk passengers from Montreal to Toronto
in three hours. A high-speed rail network between Quebec City and Toronto
with stops in Trois-Rivières, Laval, Montreal, Ottawa and Peterborough.
It'll span a thousand kilometres with a hundred percent electric trains
that will reach speeds of 300 kilometres an hour.
This initial design phase is expected to take four to five years
and it will cost an estimated $3.9 billion.
But there's no guarantee the line will eventually get built.
U.S. President Donald Trump is calling Volodymyr Zelensky a dictator without elections.
Trump's outburst in a social media post comes after the Ukrainian president said Trump was being influenced by Russian disinformation. Here's Zelensky speaking today through an interpreter.
We are seeing a lot of disinformation and it's coming from Russia.
Unfortunately, President Trump, with all due respect, is living in this
disinformation space. Zelensky also said he would like Trump's team to be more truthful after Trump suggested
Ukraine was to blame for the war.
And that is Your World This Hour.
I'm Neal Herland.