Summer dessert recipe: S’more pie, please!

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Summer dessert recipe: S’more pie, please! S’mores have been a much-loved summer treat ever since the official recipe for the sweet but simple combination first appeared in a 1927 Girl Scout guidebook, “Tramping and Trailing with the Girl Scouts.”They’re often a hot, sticky mess, but roasted marshmallows just go so incredibly well with chocolate and graham crackers, right? The fact that you can make them over a campfire only adds to their crowd appeal.But what if you don’t have a fire pit in your backyard, or aren’t keen about letting your kids cook over hot coals with a pointy stick? Or maybe you just want to impress friends and family with a make-ahead, party-worthy dessert.This decadent pie recipe brings together all the familiar and sugary-sweet flavors of a s’more, only with a bit more flair, which makes it the perfect showstopper for a summer barbecue.Built on a sweet and sturdy graham cracker crust, it pairs a thick and gooey brownie layer crafted with two types of chocolate with a creamy milk chocolate ga...

Government developing cybersecurity certification process for defence contractors

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Government developing cybersecurity certification process for defence contractors OTTAWA — The federal government says certain defence contracts will be subject to a mandatory cybersecurity certification process starting in the winter of 2024. Defence Minister Anita Anand made the announcement Wednesday morning at the Canadian Association of Defence and Security Industries annual trade show in Ottawa, which is known as CANSEC.Anand’s speech focused on military modernization, one of her department’s key priorities as it works to finish up the defence policy review that was announced in the 2022 budget. In the day’s second keynote speech, her Ukrainian counterpart revealed that Canada’s updated policy will be released to the public in July. Oleksii Reznikov’s pre-recorded virtual address to the trade show at noon included a call for long-term support from Canada and the Canadian defence industry as his country continues to defend itself against the Russian invasion that began more than 400 days ago.“Ukraine has given a list of th...

Limo company manager sentenced to at least 5 years for New York crash that killed 20

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Limo company manager sentenced to at least 5 years for New York crash that killed 20 SCHOHARIE, N.Y. (AP) — A former limousine company manager was sentenced Wednesday to at least five years in prison for his role in a crash that killed 20 people in rural New York.Nauman Hussain, 33, was convicted of manslaughter earlier this month after prosecutors argued that he intentionally failed to properly maintain an SUV-style stretch limo, which then failed to brake on a downhill stretch of road in Schoharie, a village west of Albany.The 2001 Ford Excursion was packed with friends out for a birthday celebration on Oct. 6, 2018 when it hit a parked car and trees before coming to rest in a streambed.Judge Peter Lynch sentenced Hussain, who was shackled and wearing an orange jail uniform, to an indeterminate term of 5 to 15 years in prison. The state’s parole board will determine when Hussain will be released after he serves the minimum.Some people who lost loved ones in the crash spoke directly to Hussain in court before the judge announced the sentence. “October 6, 2018...

CP NewsAlert: One adult, 16 children injured in school trip fall in Winnipeg

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

CP NewsAlert: One adult, 16 children injured in school trip fall in Winnipeg WINNIPEG — The Winnipeg Fire Paramedics Service says one adult and 16 schoolchildren were taken to hospital after falling four to six metres at the Fort Gibraltar historic site in Winnipeg. Three of the children were listed as unstable. More coming. The Canadian Press

Former Connecticut lawmaker gets 27 months in prison for stealing coronavirus aid

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Former Connecticut lawmaker gets 27 months in prison for stealing coronavirus aid HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A former Connecticut state representative was sentenced to 27 months in prison on Wednesday for stealing more than $1.2 million from the city of West Haven — most of it in federal coronavirus-related aid — and using a good chunk of it to fuel his gambling addiction.“I stole that money. That is on me,” Michael DiMassa said as he apologized during his sentencing before Judge Omar Williams.“It’s hard to find the word to express how I feel. I feel ashamed, embarrassed, mortified,” the West Haven Democrat said.DiMassa, 32, had asked for leniency. He could have gotten more than four years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines. He was ordered to report to prison on July 31 and remains free on bond.“Mr. DiMassa suffered from a debilitating gambling addiction at the time of the offense,” his lawyer, John Gulash, wrote in a court filing, “and his essentially unfettered access to a deep pool of federal funds and total lack of impulse control facilitated his preci...

Trudeau dismisses criticism of David Johnston, as MPs to vote on him to step down

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Trudeau dismisses criticism of David Johnston, as MPs to vote on him to step down OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has confidence in David Johnston, even as the House of Commons is about to vote in favour of a motion to push him out of his job. Trudeau named the former governor general a special rapporteur for foreign interference in March to look into allegations the Chinese government tried to meddle in the last two federal elections.Opposition parties decried the appointment because of Johnston’s family connections to the prime minister’s family and the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation.Trudeau brushed off those concerns, telling reporters that he views the matter as political parties wanting to score “partisan points.” “The fact of the matter is David Johnston has served this country in extraordinary capacities for decades,” Trudeau said Wednesday on his way into a meeting with his Liberal caucus. “He’s taken this incredibly seriously.”The Conservatives and Bloc Québécois is expected to vote ...

Amazon workers stage walkout over company’s climate impact, return-to-office mandate

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Amazon workers stage walkout over company’s climate impact, return-to-office mandate SEATTLE (AP) — A group of corporate Amazon workers upset about the company’s environmental impact, recent layoffs and a return-to-office mandate is planning a walkout at the company’s Seattle headquarters Wednesday.The lunchtime protest comes a week after Amazon’s annual shareholder meeting and a month after a policy took effect requiring workers to return to the office three days per week.“We respect our employees’ rights to express their opinions,” the company said in a statement.As of Wednesday morning, more than 1,900 employees had pledged to walk out around the world, with about 900 in Seattle, according to Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, a climate change advocacy group founded by Amazon workers. While some plan to gather at the Amazon Spheres — a four-story structure in downtown Seattle that from the outside looks like three connected glass orbs — others will participate remotely.Some employees have complained that Amazon has been slow to address its im...

Developer to let Quebec rental board decide on case of holdout tenant

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Developer to let Quebec rental board decide on case of holdout tenant MONTREAL — A major Montreal real estate developer says it will let Quebec’s housing tribunal determine the compensation for a tenant in a $400-a-month apartment whose case risks delaying a major construction project.Mondev senior partners Michael and David Owen say they’ve already made numerous offers to tenant Carla White, who has so far refused to leave her apartment so it can be demolished to make way for a 176-unit mixed-use building.A municipal committee decided earlier this month to approve the demolition of the building, on the condition that the developer demonstrate that the file has been settled with the holdout tenant.White, who was previously homeless, has said she doesn’t want to leave until she’s provided with an acceptable apartment on a long-term affordable lease, or enough compensation to ensure she won’t have to return to the streets.Michael Owen says the developers are sensitive to White’s situation but have already offered her ...

Police bust criminal network operating bawdy houses in Mississauga

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Police bust criminal network operating bawdy houses in Mississauga Peel Regional Police say they’ve arrested four women accused of being part of a criminal network that exploited “victims of Chinese-descent” at bawdy houses in Mississauga.In a release Wednesday, police said Project Pacific was a collaborative investigation that led to the identification of 13 human trafficking survivors and several arrests, along with the seizure of cash, drugs and property.Police allege the network was operating several illegal bawdy houses in Mississauga where victims were taken advantage of due to their precarious financial situations.“These vulnerable individuals were being exploited and victimized as a result of their limited ability to monetarily sustain themselves,” police said in a release.On March 27 and April 5 police executed numerous search warrants resulting in the arrests of four women.Leung Ngai, 59, of Milton, Yuan Yuan Zhang, 39 of Markham, Yu-Hobley Lan, 63, of Mississauga and Kwai Lin Tso, 55, of Mississauga, are fac...

Equinor postponing Bay du Nord oil project off Newfoundland for up to three years

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 01:54:41 GMT

Equinor postponing Bay du Nord oil project off Newfoundland for up to three years ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Equinor is pausing its plans to develop a controversial $16-billion oil project off Newfoundland’s east coast.The Norwegian energy giant announced Wednesday that it was postponing its plans for the Bay du Nord oil project for up to three years. The project has seen significant cost increases in recent months, mostly due to volatile market conditions, the company said in a news release.Trond Bokn, Equinor’s senior vice-president of project development, said the company will reassess the project to see if “further optimizations” can be made.“Bay du Nord is an important project for Equinor,” he said in a news release.The Bay du Nord comprises five different discovery areas that are said to hold a total of 979 million barrels of recoverable oil, according to estimates in February from Newfoundland and Labrador’s offshore oil regulator. The development would open the province’s fifth offshore oilfield and be its first deep-wate...