"Southwestern Ontario Hub journalist Mary Baxter explains how Bill 175: The Connecting People to Home and Community Care Act affects current operations.Suanne Kelman extolls the pleasures of birdwatching.Journalist Laura Trethewey discusses her book, "The Imperiled Ocean: Human Stories from a Changing Sea. John Lappa/Sudbury Star/Postmedia Network John Lappa / John Lappa/Sudbury Star

The final candidate is Ottawa-based lawyer Brenda Hollingsworth.The first issue up for discussion was how each candidate would support northern Ontario's mining and forestry sector.Hunter said there are opportunities to help the resource sector prosper through technology and innovation.While Del Duca says the north has unique challenges, he'd look to those working in the industry for their expertise. Thinking of your experience with tvo.org, how likely are you to recommend tvo.org to a friend or someone like you?Nevertheless, five people to date have put their names forward to be the next leader of the Liberal party. "What are the lessons learned and the remaining issues to be solved 30 years after the Oka standoff outside Montreal.A missing heir, a tragic death, and a haunting on Manitoulin IslandTalking trash in Ontario, the future of French-language education, and the misogyny of climate change deniers.Ontario’s back-to-school plan is straight out of the MLB’s disastrous playbookOPINION: Major League Baseball came up with a plan (of sorts) to play during the pandemic.
Its doors are still open.Neil Oliver visits living Moriori artefacts and Michael Stevens hears about the day the Germans infiltrated the islands' waters during World War 2.When The Bookshelf first opened in 1973, downtown Guelph was vibrant and full of well-established shops. Del Duca embraced the idea that government should “do no harm” when it makes housing policy, and got applause when he suggested that the province shouldn’t let municipalities adopt new land-transfer taxes (only Toronto has a municipal land-transfer tax, and the province levies its own). Tedjo said he wants to create a plan to provide lasting and sustainable resource development. Caring people just like you! From multi-residential and laneway housing to rapid densification, these two politicians hold very different views on how to house the city's exploding population.Housing prices are skyrocketing in cities around the world. John Michael McGrath is a staff writer at TVO.org covering provincial politics and policy.OPINION: The Ontario government took three gambles in July that could make for a painful fall. Pseudonyms will no longer be permitted.By submitting a comment, you accept that CBC has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner CBC chooses. We depend on the generosity of people who believe we all should have access to accurate, fair journalism.

Moderated by TVO’s own Steve Paikin, the event was notable because it allowed the candidates themselves to explain how they think the party ended up where it is and how it should get ready for the next election — and, potentially, the one after that.Del Duca, widely perceived to be the front-runner, agreed with the assessment that the Liberals under Kathleen Wynne went too far to the political left.Get Current Affairs & Documentaries email updates in your inbox every morning.“That’s not because I don’t believe that Liberals can be ambitious in our desire to solve real problems that people face every single day, but I am absolutely of the belief that the overwhelming of majority of people in this province do not expect government to solve every single problem for them,” Del Duca said. In the only televised Liberal leadership debate, candidates Michael Coteau, Steven Del Duca, Kate Graham, Brenda Hollingsworth, Mitzie Hunter, and Alvin Tedjo state their priorities and discuss pressing issues with Steve Paikin, who moderates from TVO's studio.