The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/05/01 at 21:00 EDT

Episode Date: May 2, 2025

The World This Hour for 2025/05/01 at 21:00 EDT...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 In this acclaimed new production of Anna Karenina, the National Ballet of Canada asks, what is fair in love and society? Renowned choreographer Christian Spook adapts Tolstoy's epic novel to dance in a spectacular work complete with lush costumes, cinematic projections, and a glorious curated score, featuring the music of Rachmaninoff. On stage June 13th to 21st, tickets on sale now at national.ballet.ca sponsored by IG Private Wealth Management. From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Mike Miles. Ontario is seeing a spike of 223 cases
Starting point is 00:00:40 of measles in the past week alone and health officials say the true numbers are likely worse. The case counts we have isn't under reporting. Dr. Ninh Tran is with Southwestern Public Health, which is seeing the bulk of the cases. He says full vaccination is the most effective way to prevent further spread. Since the start of this year, Ontario has reported more than 1,200 cases.
Starting point is 00:01:04 The vast majority of our cases are those who aren't up to date on immunization and the risk of acquiring measles and acquiring any complications is dramatically lower than those who are up to date on and have two doses of measles containing vaccine. Ottawa is now investigating its first confirmed case since 2019 and in Alberta, officials are reporting 193 cases since the outbreak began in March. It appears Canada's auto industry will avoid new American tariffs set to kick in this weekend. U.S. Customs and Border Protection says auto parts that are KUSMA compliant will be exempt from 25% levies that start Saturday.
Starting point is 00:01:43 That includes most of the parts Canada ships to the U.S. U.S. President Donald Trump had said the tariffs would bring more auto jobs in production to the country, but he's recently made concessions after some automaker CEOs warned the measures will hurt the industry. Quebec is expected to impose a full ban on cell phones and other electronic devices on all school property. As Sarah Levitt tells us, the province is going further than in any other jurisdiction in Canada. For us it's a good idea. David Bowles is the head of Quebec's Federation of Private Schools. He's also the director general of a
Starting point is 00:02:17 school on Montreal's South Shore where cell phones have been banned for a few years now. I think it's important that students be able to socialize at school, do social activities, borrow a football, a basketball, go play outside rather than being on social media or scrolling on YouTube. Quebec is set to expand its ban from classrooms to entire schools, including at recess and during lunch, starting in the fall. It's a key recommendation from a special committee looking at the impact of screen time
Starting point is 00:02:45 on young people. Other provinces have banned cell phone use in recent policy changes, but all allow high schoolers to use them on breaks. And Quebec will allow certain exceptions, including for health reasons and teaching needs. Sarah Levitt, CBC News, Montreal. Alberta is taking the federal government to court. Premier Danielle Smith says her province will not allow Ottawa to impose net zero electricity regulations. She says the Constitution gives the province exclusive jurisdiction over power generation. We will not accept the reckless and dangerous policies, policies that will harm our economy, stifle our energy industry, jeopardize the reliability of our electricity grid, and raise electricity prices
Starting point is 00:03:30 for Albertans. Ottawa passed a law requiring electric systems to begin limiting greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels by 2035. The goal is to eliminate them completely by 2050. Alberta is mostly relying on natural gas to generate power. The US National Security Advisor accused of breaching national security is out of his post. Mike Walz had been under fire
Starting point is 00:03:52 since he's shared sensitive military plans over the messaging app Signal. Sasha Petrusic reports. It's the first big shuffle in Donald Trump's second term as president. At the core, Trump is moving Mike Waltz out of his office as national security advisor and nominating him to be UN ambassador, praising Waltz online today as a patriotic ex-soldier and congressman. But actually, Waltz is reportedly being demoted,
Starting point is 00:04:19 blamed for the now infamous leak of military secrets on a signal chat group that included uninvited journalists. They discussed the details of a U.S. attack on Houthi militants in Yemen a month ago. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will be interim national security advisor until a permanent replacement is chosen. Sasha Petrusaak, CBC News, Washington. And that is your World This Hour. Remember, you can listen to us wherever you get your podcasts. We're updated every hour, seven days a week. For CBC News, I'm Mike Miles.

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