May 2005 in Canada

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Other May 2005 events
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Australia and New Zealand - Britain and Ireland - Canada - India - Malaysia and Singapore
Monthly events, 2005

[edit] Deaths in May

2Robert Hunter

[edit] Ongoing events

Budget/confidence vote
Men's World Championship in Hockey
2005 Quebec student strike
National Hockey League labour dispute
U.S.-Canada softwood lumber dispute
Same-sex marriage debate
Judy Sgro controversy/"Strippergate"
Sponsorship scandal

[edit] Upcoming events

• TBD: Same-sex marriage vote

[edit] Upcoming holidays

May 23: Victoria Day
• May 23: National Patriotes Day (QC)
June 24: Fête nationale du Québec (QC)
• June 24: Discovery Day (Nfld. & Lab.)
July 1: Canada Day (Memorial Day: NL)
August 1: Civic Holiday1
September 1: Centennial Day2
September 5: Labour Day
October 10: Thanksgiving
November 11: Remembrance Day
December 25: Christmas
December 26: Boxing Day
1 exc. QC, NL & YT
2 Alta. & Sask. held in 2005 only

[edit] Recent elections results

May 17: British Columbia general

[edit] Upcoming elections

May 24: Labrador federal by-election
• ?: 39th general election

[edit] Related pages

About this page

[edit] May 28, 2005

  • The three stranded climbers trapped on Mount Logan were rescued late Friday after the storm keeping them there broke. Two more climbers ascended the mountain and kept them warm before they were airlifted to a hospital in Anchorage, Alaska. (CBC)

[edit] May 26, 2005

[edit] May 25, 2005

[edit] May 24, 2005

[edit] May 23, 2005

[edit] May 21, 2005

[edit] May 19, 2005

  • The House of Commons votes on two crucial budget bills. Bill C-43 carries with a vote of 250 yea, 54 nay. Bill C-48 is tied with a vote of 152 yea, 152 nay, with the Speaker voting in favour, breaking the tie and carrying the bill. The Canadian government survives the vote of confidence. (CBC)
  • The Federal Court of Appeal upholds a lower court ruling that denied CRIA's request of revealing the personal information of users of 29 IP addresses which it believes are heavy downloaders of copy-righted music. The ruling sights the need for increased privacy protection since "the potential for unwarranted intrusion into personal lives is now unparalleled." (P2PNews)
  • After receiving approval of the Canadian Senate on Wednesday, Bill C-15 receives royal assent today to become law. The bill amends the Migratory Birds Act and the Canadian Environmental Protection Act to increase the penalties for ships that pollute Canadian waters and allow charges to be filed against individual ship employees. (CP)

[edit] May 17, 2005

[edit] May 15, 2005

[edit] May 12, 2005

  • StatsCan releases a report that illustrates family incomes across Canada in 2003. Among the highlights:
    • average after-tax income fell from $60,400 in 2002 to $59,900 in 2003
    • Ontario, followed by Alberta, had the highest average after-tax income at $66,500 and $64,900 respectively
    • Newfoundland and Labrador had the lowest average after-tax income at $47,100
    • Prince Edward Island had the lowest rate of low-income families at 3.7%
    • British Columbia had the highest rate of low-income families at 11.6%

(Globe&Mail) (StatsCan-TheDaily)

  • An Ontario man is sentenced to 15 years in prison and a lifetime driving prohibition after killing two people in two separate drunk driving accidents. He becomes the first Canadian to be twice convicted of impaired driving causing death in separate collisions. (CTV)
  • A study published in the Canadian Journal of Public Health finds that the better the access to fast food restaurants in a neighbourhood the higher the levels of hospital admissions and coronary disease in that neighbourhood. (CTV)

[edit] May 11, 2005

  • Prime Minister Paul Martin sets May 19 as the date for a vote on the 2005 budget which he says will be considered a confidence vote in the government.(CP)
  • Montreal mayor Gérald Tremblay startles royal watchers when he greets Princess Margriet of the Netherlands with a signature Montreal two-cheek kiss. The princess is flustered, but quickly recovers, delivers the speech, and returns the kiss. Both the royals and the mayor deny any serious protocol breach. The princess, who was born in Ottawa, is visiting Montreal as part of the commemorations of Canada's help in liberating the Netherlands during World War II. (CBC)

[edit] May 10, 2005

[edit] May 8, 2005

[edit] May 7, 2005

[edit] May 6, 2005

  • The I Am Canadian commercial becomes one of Canada's top ten television advertisements. The list was compiled to celebrate the Institute of Communications and Advertising's 100th anniversary, and also includes an A&W commercial and a Smarties commercial. (Globe and Mail)
  • Crab fishermen protests in Newfoundland have intensified, necessitating a police guard presence for both the premier Danny Williams and the fisheries minister, Trevor Taylor. (CBC)
  • Thousands of Quebec teachers stage a one day strike. The teachers want smaller class sizes and more resources for special education students, as well as a 12 per cent salary increase over three years. (CBC)
  • RCMP investigate the death of Kevin Geldart from a Taser. Moncton police used the taser to immobilize Geldart in a bar after the man escaped from a pyschiatric ward. (CBC) (CP)
  • The federal government and Ontario provincial government agree on a plan to give the province $1.9 billion in childcare funding over the next five years. Paul Martin promised to spend $5 billion in childcare during his election campaign and included it in the federal budget. (CBC) (CTV) (CP)

[edit] May 5, 2005

[edit] May 4, 2005

[edit] May 3, 2005

[edit] May 2, 2005

[edit] May 1, 2005

  • Four new polls suggest that the Liberals are tied or leading over Conservatives for popular support. According to EKOS Research Associates poll of 1,212 voters, the parties had the following percentage of support:
An independent poll of 1,000 voters by Ipsos-Reid had similar results, except that the Conservatives (33%) were ahead of the Liberals (30%), the NDP had 17%, and the Green Party had 5%. (CBC)

[edit] News collections and sources