Kin Canada selects Yorkton woman as national president
Marley Hanishewsky is the youngest woman selected to serve as Kin Canada's national president.
Marley Hanishewsky is the youngest woman selected to serve as Kin Canada's national president.
Yorkton’s Sunflower Art and Craft Market is returning for another year this weekend.
A group of First Nations are taking the initiative to address the drug crisis happening in their communities through community engagement meetings.
The Regina International Airport (YQR), along with over 20 partner organizations, held an emergency training exercise featuring more than 150 people Tuesday.
Day two of the 38th annual Treaty 4 Gathering in the Fort Qu’Appelle Valley focused on youth.
A retirement community in southwest Regina was evacuated after a small fire was reported in the facility's basement.
Another candidate has thrown their hat into the ring for the office of mayor ahead of this fall's municipal election in Regina.
The Saskatchewan NDP is promising help with high rents as it gears up for the October general election.
With the arrival of September and more fall-like weather patterns – the likelihood of Saskatchewan seeing any more tornadoes this year is next to nothing.
Saskatchewan's overdose crisis is tragically on par with last year's record breaking total, with more than 200 people having lost their lives to accidental overdoses in the first seven months of the year.
An evacuation order for the Sandy Bay community has been cancelled due to a decreased wildfire risk, effective immediately.
In 2022, Tanya Frisk-Welburn and her husband bought what they hoped would be a dream home in Mexico.
Democratic U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris put Republican Donald Trump on the defensive at a combative U.S. presidential debate on Tuesday with a stream of attacks on abortion limits, his fitness for office and his myriad legal woes.
U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris and former U.S. president Donald Trump took the stage on Tuesday night for their first and only scheduled presidential debate before the Nov. 5 election.
In their first and perhaps only debate, former U.S. president Donald Trump and U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris described the state of the country in starkly different terms. As the two traded jabs, some old false and misleading claims emerged along with some new ones.
Former U.S. president Donald Trump’s campaign and his allies are amplifying false rumours that Haitian immigrants in Ohio were abducting and eating pets, another instance of the inflammatory and anti-immigrant rhetoric Trump has promoted throughout his campaigns.
An American presidential historian is predicting a Kamala Harris presidency as the outcome of the upcoming U.S. elections in November.