The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/10/03 at 06:00 EDT
Episode Date: October 3, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/10/03 at 06:00 EDT...
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from cbc news the world this hour i'm claude fay the yukon is heading into an election with the campaign beginning today
and in one month a yukoners will vote in a new territorial government julian green reports here we go
liberal premier mike pemberton says above all issues the territory is facing housing is the utmost
concerned solving the housing crisis means all hands on deck the
territory's conservative Yukon party also wants to zero in on housing. Leader Curry Dixon says
his party is poised to deliver changes UConners expect after years of a liberal government.
There's been a shortage of housing and challenges with affordability and availability of housing
in the Yukon, so we're going to be focused on that. The Yukon NDP is largely building its campaign around
health care, which leader Kate White says has been plunged into another crisis.
Who can you count on to attract more doctors, nurses and
frontline workers. I want you to know that you can count on me and the Yukon NDP.
During the 31-day election period, the electorate will face new changes, two new
ridings, and others with redrawn boundaries. Julian Green, CBC News, Whitehorse.
To Indonesia, the death toll in this week's school collapse has grown to nine.
This woman says she didn't expect a chat she'd had with her son could be their last.
She's still waiting to hear his fate.
Officials say 55 students are still unaccounted for.
Crews removing concrete slabs from the rubble have found three bodies so far today.
The U.S. Senate is expected to vote today on a bill to fund the government.
It's the fourth attempt to end a shutdown.
And with Republicans and Democrats still at odds, it's forecast to fail.
President Donald Trump's calling the government shutdown an opportunity to clear out what he's calling deadwood,
adding that if any workers get fired, it's the Democrat.
fault. And in an interview with the Trump-friendly network One America News, he suggested more cuts
are coming. We could cut projects that they wanted, favorite projects, and they'd be permanently
cut. So you could say, a lot of people are saying Trump wanted this, that I wanted this closing,
and I didn't want it. But a lot of people are saying it because I'm allowed to cut things that
should have never been approved in the first place. And I will probably do that.
One program is a clean energy initiative.
Seven and a half billion dollars in funding was stopped.
As the Canada Post Strike moves into its second week,
some seniors are considering changing how they receive their bills and make payments.
But making the shift online comes with a cost.
Kimberly Molina has more.
For some people, this might be their only contact with outside world.
Ottawa senior Linda Ward fears what a shift to community mailboxes might mean.
While many seniors have moved online for mail, for those who still rely on postal delivery,
this labor dispute is an inconvenience.
Jane Stalabras runs programs for seniors in Ottawa.
She knows how critical the role between postal workers and the people they serve can be.
I know that seniors chat to the posty when they're dropping stuff off.
We've had phone calls from Canada post folks that are concerned about somebody.
The union representing Canada's postal.
workers called for a nationwide strike last week. It followed the federal government instructing
the Crown Corporation to end home delivery. With no talk scheduled, there's no telling how long
the postal strike will last. Kimberly Molina, CBC News, Ottawa. Taylor Swift's long-anticipated
latest album is out.
That's the title track from The Life of a Showgirl, one of 12 songs.
on the album, the release is part of a multimedia spectacular with a movie playing in theaters
over the weekend. Many expect at the top the box office, just as the album dominates music
streamers. Showgirl arrives less than a year after Swift finished her eras tour that
included concerts in Vancouver and Toronto. And that is your world this hour. For CBC News,
I'm Claude Pag.
Thank you.
