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First-place Blue Jays to welcome Giants

TORONTO – After a strong performance over the first half of the season, the first-place Toronto Blue Jays are hoping to pick up where they left off now that the all-star break is complete.
Chris Bassitt is scheduled to start for the Blue Jays tonight as Toronto welcomes the San Francisco Giants in the opener of a three-game series at Rogers Centre.
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The Giants plan to counter with fellow right-hander Justin Verlander.

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At 55-41, Toronto starts the day with a two-game lead on the New York Yankees in the American League East division standings.
The Blue Jays are set to host the Yankees for a three-game set next week before heading to Detroit for a four-game series against the Central Division-leading Tigers.
Toronto has won 13 of its last 17 games and 29 of its last 42.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 18, 2025.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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71-year-old woman identified as victim of ‘unprovoked’ Toronto stabbing – Toronto

Toronto police have identified a woman who was killed in what seemed to be an unprovoked stabbing as 71-year-old Shahnaz Pestonji.
Police say the victim was loading her groceries in a North York parking lot on Thursday morning when a man attacked her.

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They say officers responded to the stabbing call in the area of Parkway Forest Drive and Sheppard Avenue East around 9:30 a.m.
Police say the woman was taken to hospital where she was pronounced dead.
The male suspect, who investigators said wore a balaclava, fled the area on foot but police said there was no serious threat to public safety.
Police have released surveillance images of the suspect and are asking anyone who sees him to call 911 immediately.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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Ontario construction business, communications tower latest targets of copper theft

The Ontario Provincial Police say a local construction business and a communications tower are the latest sites to be targeted for copper thefts.
Police said there was a “significant theft of copper wire” from a construction yard in Temiskaming Shores, just north of Sudbury.
Officers responded to the yard on July 11 but police said the theft happened sometime between July 6 and 11.
Police found a substantial quantity of copper wire was removed from heavy machinery that was stored at the back of the construction yard, including multiple rock crushers and conveyors.
The value of the stolen materials is estimated to be more than $40,000, police said.
However, police noted the total loss is expected to be higher once repair costs and machinery downtime are factored in.
Meanwhile, police are also looking into two separate incidents of copper theft from a communications tower in Corbeil, just outside of North Bay, early on July 14 and on July 16.
Police said the tower is situated within a fenced compound secured with padlocks and chains.

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“Upon inspection, the enclosure was found unsecured, and the locking mechanisms were missing,” police allege.
Police said the tower stands between two buildings that has cables running up from both structures and that the cables “appear to have been cut using a power tool.”
“It is believed that the tower was then climbed and the opposite ends of the cables were also severed,” police allege.
Anyone with information on either incident, including suspicious sightings or activity, is asked to contact police.
In relation to the communications tower copper theft incident, police said there is a possible cash reward of up to $2,000 for information.

Copper theft on the rise in Canada
Earlier this month, four Ontario men were charged after 33 hydro poles cut down for their copper in a rural area of Ontario.
Police in Durham Region issued a warning in May about copper thefts happening from air conditioners and heat pump units in Oshawa. Police said they had received 22 reported incidents since the beginning of the year.
Telecommunications companies such as Bell Canada and Telus said they have noted an increase in copper thefts.
Bell Canada said copper thefts has grown at an “astronomical rate” over the past few years in Canada and that a large portion of the thefts are happening in east end of the country.
Telus reported a 58 per cent increase in 2024 from 2023 in the amount of copper thefts in Alberta. In Edmonton specifically there was a 238 per cent increase in copper thefts.
Bell Canada says copper theft has grown at an astronomical rate over the past few years in Canada, with a large portion of the thefts occurring in the east end of the country.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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Tory MPs, health group call for investigation and overhaul of vaccine support program

Four Conservative MPs are calling for a Commons committee investigation into the Vaccine Injury Support Program (VISP), and a pivotal non-profit health foundation says the effort needs an urgent overhaul.
Led by Dan Mazier, the Conservative health critic and deputy chairman of the Commons Health Committee, the group requested in a letter that Liberal MP and committee chairperson Hedy Fry convene for an emergency hearing. Fry did not respond to their request.
“This is more than mismanagement,” their letter read. “It appears to be a blatant misuse of tax dollars. The Liberals handed out tens of millions of dollars to high priced consultants while the very Canadians this program was intended to help have been neglected.”
The other Conservatives who signed the letter included Kitchener-area MP Dr. Matt Strauss, South Okanagan MP Helena Konanz, and Red Deer MP Burton Bailey.
A political aide to Hedy Fry said she was unavailable for an interview.
“Dr. Fry is spending time with her family currently where there are connectivity issues and unreliable reception. I’ve been having a hard time reaching her. As such, it seems she is not available to discuss,” Fry’s political staffer replied in an email.
The criticisms emerged this week in the wake of a five-month Global News investigation into the Liberal government’s 2020 announcement it would create VISP and the Public Health Agency of Canada’s decision to outsource its administration to the Ottawa consulting firm, Oxaro Inc., in 2021.
Oxaro did not respond to requests for comment Thursday.
The five-month Global News investigation that prompted the outcry revealed that:
- Oxaro has received $50.6 million in taxpayer money. $33.7 million has been spent on administrative costs, while injured Canadians received $16.9 million. Updated Health Canada figures released Thursday show the company has now received $54.1 million and spent $36.3 million on administration costs, with $18.1 million paid to injured Canadians
- PHAC and Oxaro underestimated the number of injury claims VISP would get, initially predicting 40 per year and then up to 400 valid claims annually. More than 3,317 applications have been filed — of those, more than 1,738 people await decisions on their claims
- Some injured applicants say they face a revolving door of unreachable VISP case managers and require online fundraising campaigns to survive. Others said their applications were unfairly rejected by doctors they’ve never spoken to or met.

In previous emails sent to Global News, Oxaro has said that the program processes, procedures and staffing (of VISP) were adapted to face the challenge of receiving substantially more applications than originally planned.
“Oxaro and PHAC have been collaborating closely to evaluate how the program can remain agile to handle the workload on hand while respecting budget constraints,” it added.

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Oxaro also said that its monthly invoices to the government include documents and details, which in turn PHAC reviews and approves prior to payment.
In response to questions from Global News, Health Canada spokesperson Mark Johnson replied in an email that PHAC, “continuously conducts analyses of the program to identify both shortfalls as well as opportunities to better support people in Canada who have experienced a serious and permanent injury following vaccination.”

The Global News investigation also found that despite decades of calls for a vaccine injury support program, the federal government cobbled it together during the pandemic and underestimated the number of claims it would receive.
Darryl Bedford, president of the GBS-CIDP Foundation of Canada (GBS), is calling for an overhaul of the four-year old program, demanding it improve the speed of decision-making and support for the vaccine injured.
“We’re very concerned. And we think that there really needs to be a close look or overhaul of this,” said Bedford, who runs the national registered charity that supports people with neurological disorders such as GBS.
“It doesn’t feel like it’s working to us.”
Darryl Bedford, the President of the Guillain Barre Syndrome Foundation of Canada, discussed the VISP effort with Global News.
Global News
Bedford said liaison people and volunteers on the ground have told him that they don’t feel VISP is “consistent enough.” Several people who received COVID-19 vaccines developed serious adverse reactions that included GBS, which can cause paralysis, throwing their lives into crisis, according to a Health Canada database that reported adverse reaction events of special interest.
Global News uncovered allegations that Oxaro was unequipped to deliver fully on the program’s mission, questions about why the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) chose this company over others, and internal documents that suggested poor planning from the start.
Former Oxaro workers described a workplace that lacked the gravitas of a program meant to assist the seriously injured and chronically ill: office drinking, ping pong, slushies and Netflix streaming at desks.
The VISP prepared this brochure to explain the process of applying and getting financial support to people injured by COVID-19 vaccines.
Global News
Bedford said those vaccine-injured people need help and rapid support.
“When you experience a sudden tragedy that rips your life apart, you need support within days or weeks. To have to wait months or years for a decision on financial help from the VISP is completely unacceptable,” he said.
“It doesn’t feel like it’s (VISP is) responsive enough,” he added. “It doesn’t feel like the primary goal is support.”
“It feels like the majority of the money is going to the (program) administration, and it doesn’t feel like there’s an organized process for getting the information, making a decision and getting the money out the door,” Bedford added.

Bedford revealed that members of the GBS Foundation were surprised and concerned when the Liberal government decided to outsource the program to Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton Consulting Inc., now named Oxaro Inc.
“We were concerned internally when Oxaro or the subsidiary of Grant Thornton was named because there are public and private entities that have experience processing claims. And these are organizations that Canadians would know and have established processes for managing cases and making decisions on cases,” Bedford added.
“It was a surprise to us because, you know, there are household names that you could think of that process health benefit claims.”
Global News reported that one of the unsuccessful bidders was Green Shield Canada, a national health-claims benefit manager with more than 60 years in the business.
In its proposal to the government, Oxaro (at the time called RCGT Consulting Inc.), noted that its prior claims experience involved processing health insurance claims between 2012 and 2015 for a small regional insurer that became insolvent and entered a liquidation. It also runs a much smaller program for the government that hands out grants to the families of dead first reponders.
PHAC said that a six-person committee that reviewed proposals from four companies “unanimously” picked RCGT Consulting, over Green Shield and three companies.
PHAC says it is reviewing Oxaro’s five-year arrangement to administer VISP, which is up for renewal next year. A compliance audit was also launched last month after Global News started asking questions about Oxaro’s management of claims.
Want to contact us? Email andrew.mcintosh@globalnews.ca or carolyn.jarvis@globalnews.ca
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