The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/12/01 at 20:00 EST
Episode Date: December 2, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/12/01 at 20:00 EST...
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This ascent isn't for everyone.
You need grit to climb this high this often.
You've got to be an underdog that always over-delivers.
You've got to be 6,500 hospital staff, 1,000 doctors,
all doing so much with so little.
You've got to be Scarborough.
Defined by our uphill battle and always striving towards new heights.
And you can help us keep climbing.
Donate at lovescarbro.cairbo.
From CBC News, the world this hour, I'm Stephanie Skanderas.
A northern Ontario steel mill is laying off about a thousand workers.
The announcement comes just months after Algoma Steel received half a billion dollars in loans
to avoid exactly this scenario.
Anise Adari reports.
We were brought into a meeting at 7.30 this a.m.
and notified that notice was being served.
Michael DePratt is president of the United Steel Workers' Local 2251 in Sioux-Saint-Marie.
While he knew job cuts were coming because of manufacturing changes, it was a surprise.
What has occurred is that the transfer to the EAF technology happened earlier than expected.
The company has been changing its manufacturing methods to pivot away from tariffed products.
Back in September, it was offered $500 million in government loans.
At the time, a federal release said the money was to help limit disruption to the workforce.
The first thing we need to do is to support workers.
Speaking hours after the layoffs were announced,
Finance Minister Francoel-Philippe-Champeng didn't provide details on how the government might do that.
We've been in touch with the company, certainly, to make sure that we can support them.
Al-Gomis Steele has said the 1,000 layoffs are necessary to protect the company's future against external forces like U.S. tariffs.
Anise Hidari, CBC News, Calgary.
Prime Minister Mark Carney is making changes to his cabinet.
To conclude the ceremony, please join me in congratulating the ministers.
Three ministers were sworn in at Rideau Hall today
following the resignation of Stephen Gilbeau last week.
Mark Miller is back to the cabinet,
now the Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture,
and Minister responsible for official languages.
Two other ministers are taking on additional duties.
Procurement Minister, Joel Lightbound,
will also serve as Quebec Lieutenant,
and Julie de Bruzen,
Minister of Environment and Climate Change,
will be adding Nature to the list of her responsibilities.
A search begins today for the remains of two more murdered indigenous women in a Winnipeg landfill.
One of them is a victim of convicted serial killer Jeremy Skibicki.
The other has been missing for more than a decade.
Cameron Nacintosh has a details.
We want to bring her home.
For Vernon Man, it's been 14 years of waiting.
It's been way too long.
He had two children with Tanya Nipanak, missing since 2011.
It's believed her body and the body of Ashley Shingus murdered in 2022 are in
Winnipeg's Brady Road landfill. At about 8.45 a.m. today, the first truckload of landfill material
drove down the hill at the... Manitoba Premier Wob Canoe confirming this morning a search is beginning.
To recover Shingoose, later, Nipanak.
Somebody who goes missing, we go looking.
Earlier this year, the remains of two other murdered First Nations women were recovered by a
similar search in another Winnipeg area landfill. Man is optimistic it will work again.
Nobody deserves to be there. The searches are expected to go well into next year.
Cameron McIntosh, CBC News, Winnipeg.
Ottawa has finalized an agreement to join the European Union's military procurement program.
Defense Minister David McGinty says the deal will unlock billions of dollars
in potential defense opportunities for Canadian businesses.
This will allow Canada, for example, to participate by supplying capabilities such as ammunition,
missiles, drones, artillery systems, infantry weapons, and beyond.
The so-called safe initiative is meant to be able to.
to boost Europe's defense capabilities in the face of Russian aggression.
Ottawa will create a new defense investment agency to lead Canada's participation in the program.
The deal has yet to be ratified by both Canada and the EU.
Meanwhile, European leaders call it a pivotal week for Ukrainian diplomacy.
It comes as negotiators push ahead to iron out a draft deal to end the fighting.
U.S. Special Envoy Steve Whitkoff is due to meet Vladimir Putin in Moscow tomorrow.
Ukraine's president says the issue of territory remains the most challenging part of negotiations.
Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly rejected Russia's demand that Kyiv surrender the land currently occupied by Russian troops.
Zelensky says strong security guarantees are also crucial.
And that is the world this hour.
For news any time, you can visit our website at cbcnews.ca.
For CBC News, I'm Stephanie Skendaris.
Thank you.
