Ditto here on the prairies.Ya, our summer so far has been cooler than usual. We've had a couple of hot days but for the most part, it's been rain & cooler temps.
Ditto here on the prairies.Ya, our summer so far has been cooler than usual. We've had a couple of hot days but for the most part, it's been rain & cooler temps.
Same 100 miles from TO. Must be my age, cus I just can't take the heat anymore. Thank god for AC.Trade you. Hot and Humid here in Toronto.
My son is flying to Ottawa for a week to meet a friend of the family & visit so I guess I should pack lots of shorts. BTW I'm in Alberta so it's much cooler here! Today it's nice but the freakin wind is just non stop!! It's almost like we live in Lethbridge or something LOL!Trade you. Hot and Humid here in Toronto.
perhaps greta will help him.Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Darryl Greer and Chuck Chiang
Published Jul 17, 2025 • Last updated 12 hours ago • 4 minute read
Reports of a plane flying erratically were made on Tuesday afternoon.
VANCOUVER — The day before the suspected hijacking of a light aircraft triggered a security scare at Vancouver’s airport this week, former commercial pilot Shaheer Cassim posted on social media that he was a “messenger of Allah” sent to save humanity from climate change.
A 39-year-old man with the same name has now been charged with hijacking, constituting terrorism, over the incident on Tuesday that saw Norad scramble F-15 fighter jets before the plane safely landed.
RCMP said the suspect seized control of a Cessna at Victoria International Airport by threatening a flight instructor, before flying to Vancouver.
“Investigators have determined the suspect acted with an ideological motive to disrupt airspace,” said Sgt. Tammy Lobb in a statement late Wednesday.
Images posted on social media of the arrest of the Cessna’s pilot on the airport’s north runway show a bearded man who resembles Cassim.
“I am a messenger of Allah. I am the Messiah sent to save humanity from climate change and usher in an era of world peace,” Cassim said on Facebook on Monday.
His profile says Cassim attended high school in Lloydminster, Alta., before studying aviation at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology.
Cassim’s last post warns about “abrupt runaway global warming” that will cause humans to go extinct within a few years.
Cassim also says in the post that he is “Sam Carana,” who runs the “Arctic News” blog that describes itself as a place where contributors “all share a deep concern about the way climate change is unfolding in the Arctic and the threat that this poses for the world at large.”
It includes hundreds of posts since 2011, many of them highly technical, with the latest entry made on Saturday and titled: “Will humans go extinct soon?”
A Facebook account under Carana’s name has more than 4,000 followers.
The Arctic News blog lists more than 30 contributors, including prominent academics from universities in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
Peter D. Carter, who founded the environmental website Climate Emergency Institute in 2009, has interacted with Carana on social media.
“He’s a bit of a mystery,” said Carter, who lives in Victoria, adding that he had never met Carana in person.
Carter is listed as a contributor on Arctic News but he denied contributing.
That someone might hijack a plane in the name of climate change was “absolutely absurd,” Carter said, although he hoped people could see past this for the urgent need to address the issue.
“Our problem is that there’s next to no interest in climate change out there,” Carter said. “Over the years, recent years, the public interest in climate change has been dropping, dropping, and dropping.”
Stanford University Prof. Mark Z. Jacobson, who researches global warming and its solutions, is also listed as an Arctic News contributor. He said in an e-mail that Carana contacted him sporadically between 2013 and 2018 on climate issues, and in 2020 wrote “one four-word comment on a post I posted on Facebook,” Jacobson said.
“Otherwise, I can’t find any other communication with him.”
He also said he had never met Carana.
In 2012, Cassim held a news conference before going on a cross-country bicycle ride to raise awareness for global warming.
His Facebook profile says he was employed from 2008 to 2010 by now-defunct KD Air, a small airline based on Vancouver Island.
The airline’s former owners, Diana and Lars Banke, said in an interview on Wednesday that Cassim was one of the smartest and best pilots they ever worked with, calling him a fast learner who was highly intelligent.
But Lars Banke said Cassim left the airline after getting “bored” and then went to medical school. He also said Cassim believed the world was coming to an end.
Diana Banke said she was “very surprised” to hear of Cassim’s charges, saying he was quite young when he worked for them and was “like a kid.”
“Something would (have to) be going on that’s not normal,” Lars Banke said. “He was, I would say, a caring person.”
Diana Banke said she remembered Cassim “doing a really long bicycle trek,” and that he brought a dog along with him.
Lars Banke said he recalled that Cassim was somewhat interested in environmentalism, but he was unaware of any kind of religious beliefs.
“He never spoke religion with us,” Diana Banke said.
Cassim’s online posts include musings on religion, climate science, and advocacy for tolerance and peace, including a claim “the Angel Gabriel appeared before me and gave me a message from Allah.”
“I’m really surprised that he would’ve done something like this,” Diana Banke said.
B.C. Premier David Eby said when asked about the incident on Thursday that it was a “bizarre moment,” and the fact that it ended without a more significant disruption at the airport is a “testament” to the skill of responders who talked the suspect down.
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Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack
RCMP say the suspect had an "ideological motive" and allegedly seized control of the plane at Victoria International Airport.torontosun.com
I flew with Him a few times. KD Air was our local puddle jumper. Sold to an idiot that promptly went bankrupt as so many of these airlines do.Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Darryl Greer and Chuck Chiang
Published Jul 17, 2025 • Last updated 12 hours ago • 4 minute read
Reports of a plane flying erratically were made on Tuesday afternoon.
VANCOUVER — The day before the suspected hijacking of a light aircraft triggered a security scare at Vancouver’s airport this week, former commercial pilot Shaheer Cassim posted on social media that he was a “messenger of Allah” sent to save humanity from climate change.
A 39-year-old man with the same name has now been charged with hijacking, constituting terrorism, over the incident on Tuesday that saw Norad scramble F-15 fighter jets before the plane safely landed.
RCMP said the suspect seized control of a Cessna at Victoria International Airport by threatening a flight instructor, before flying to Vancouver.
“Investigators have determined the suspect acted with an ideological motive to disrupt airspace,” said Sgt. Tammy Lobb in a statement late Wednesday.
Images posted on social media of the arrest of the Cessna’s pilot on the airport’s north runway show a bearded man who resembles Cassim.
“I am a messenger of Allah. I am the Messiah sent to save humanity from climate change and usher in an era of world peace,” Cassim said on Facebook on Monday.
His profile says Cassim attended high school in Lloydminster, Alta., before studying aviation at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology.
Cassim’s last post warns about “abrupt runaway global warming” that will cause humans to go extinct within a few years.
Cassim also says in the post that he is “Sam Carana,” who runs the “Arctic News” blog that describes itself as a place where contributors “all share a deep concern about the way climate change is unfolding in the Arctic and the threat that this poses for the world at large.”
It includes hundreds of posts since 2011, many of them highly technical, with the latest entry made on Saturday and titled: “Will humans go extinct soon?”
A Facebook account under Carana’s name has more than 4,000 followers.
The Arctic News blog lists more than 30 contributors, including prominent academics from universities in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
Peter D. Carter, who founded the environmental website Climate Emergency Institute in 2009, has interacted with Carana on social media.
“He’s a bit of a mystery,” said Carter, who lives in Victoria, adding that he had never met Carana in person.
Carter is listed as a contributor on Arctic News but he denied contributing.
That someone might hijack a plane in the name of climate change was “absolutely absurd,” Carter said, although he hoped people could see past this for the urgent need to address the issue.
“Our problem is that there’s next to no interest in climate change out there,” Carter said. “Over the years, recent years, the public interest in climate change has been dropping, dropping, and dropping.”
Stanford University Prof. Mark Z. Jacobson, who researches global warming and its solutions, is also listed as an Arctic News contributor. He said in an e-mail that Carana contacted him sporadically between 2013 and 2018 on climate issues, and in 2020 wrote “one four-word comment on a post I posted on Facebook,” Jacobson said.
“Otherwise, I can’t find any other communication with him.”
He also said he had never met Carana.
In 2012, Cassim held a news conference before going on a cross-country bicycle ride to raise awareness for global warming.
His Facebook profile says he was employed from 2008 to 2010 by now-defunct KD Air, a small airline based on Vancouver Island.
The airline’s former owners, Diana and Lars Banke, said in an interview on Wednesday that Cassim was one of the smartest and best pilots they ever worked with, calling him a fast learner who was highly intelligent.
But Lars Banke said Cassim left the airline after getting “bored” and then went to medical school. He also said Cassim believed the world was coming to an end.
Diana Banke said she was “very surprised” to hear of Cassim’s charges, saying he was quite young when he worked for them and was “like a kid.”
“Something would (have to) be going on that’s not normal,” Lars Banke said. “He was, I would say, a caring person.”
Diana Banke said she remembered Cassim “doing a really long bicycle trek,” and that he brought a dog along with him.
Lars Banke said he recalled that Cassim was somewhat interested in environmentalism, but he was unaware of any kind of religious beliefs.
“He never spoke religion with us,” Diana Banke said.
Cassim’s online posts include musings on religion, climate science, and advocacy for tolerance and peace, including a claim “the Angel Gabriel appeared before me and gave me a message from Allah.”
“I’m really surprised that he would’ve done something like this,” Diana Banke said.
B.C. Premier David Eby said when asked about the incident on Thursday that it was a “bizarre moment,” and the fact that it ended without a more significant disruption at the airport is a “testament” to the skill of responders who talked the suspect down.
![]()
Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack
RCMP say the suspect had an "ideological motive" and allegedly seized control of the plane at Victoria International Airport.torontosun.com
How many were caused by arson? Just askin....Federal officials say wildfire forecast shows high risk of more fires in August
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Sarah Ritchie
Published Jul 18, 2025 • Last updated 12 hours ago • 4 minute read
OTTAWA — The 2025 wildfire season is already one of the worst on record for Canada, federal officials said Friday, and there is a high risk that more fires will break out in August.
More than 55,000 square kilometres of land has burned so far this year, an area roughly the size of Nova Scotia. That is more than double the 10-year average of the area burned by mid-July.
There were 561 fires burning as of Friday morning, including 69 that were considered out of control. The Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre says almost 3,300 fires have been recorded this year so far.
The record was set in 2023, when more than 6,000 fires burned more than 150,000 square km of land — an area larger than all three Maritime provinces put together.
That devastating season, where wildfires raged from Newfoundland to B.C. for months on end, sparked significant public pressure for the federal government to create a new kind of disaster response agency.
Former emergency management ministers Bill Blair and Harjit Sajjan both mulled the idea of such an agency during their time in office, with both ministers acknowledging the strain natural disasters have put on the Canadian Armed Forces and the provinces and territories.
The government said it was looking to the United States Federal Emergency Management Agency and Australia’s National Emergency Management Agency as potential examples.
Final decisions on that front still have not been made.
During a Friday afternoon briefing with several of her cabinet colleagues, Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski said her department will be making changes to how it responds to wildfire seasons, which are becoming longer and more severe.
“We think that the formation of such an agency could have a very positive impact on our ability to co-ordinate how we respond to national disasters across the country,” Olszewski said.
That could mean having regional water bombers to respond more quickly to fires in areas that have fewer resources, she said, or leaning on a “humanitarian task force” to ensure people can be deployed where they’re needed.
Matthew Godsoe, a senior director of the government operations centre at Public Safety Canada, said natural disasters are outpacing the capacity of the country’s emergency management system.
“In that current context, maintaining the status quo is equivalent to doing less,” he told reporters at a technical briefing Friday, adding that all levels of government and individual Canadians must work together “to slow or stop this nearly exponential growth in disaster losses that we’re experiencing as a country.”
The federal government has been called in to provide help five times this wildfire season, including last week, when the Armed Forces and the Red Cross helped to evacuate more than 2,800 people from Garden Hill First Nation in Manitoba.
Olszewski said she expects to have an update on a federal emergency agency in the fall.
In the meantime, communities in high-risk areas are bracing for things to get worse in the next two months, which are typically the most active months of the fire season.
Saskatchewan has already seen one of the worst fire seasons ever in terms of the total area burned, and a record number of people have been forced out of their homes in that province.
Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty said 39,000 people have been forced to evacuate from 66 First Nations, mostly on the Prairies, calling the fire season unprecedented.
“It is, I hope, not the new reality that we have to live with, but I’m asking myself what this looks like,” she said.
Gull-Masty said the government’s goal at the end of the wildfire season is to “come together, debrief, reflect, and put tools in place for the next possible time that this occurs.”
Officials said the fire risk typically rises throughout August as temperatures get hotter, and they are predicting higher than normal temperatures for most of the country next month.
“This is consistent with climate change projections, which show that the next five years will be warmer than (we) are used to,” said Sebastien Chouinard, the director of operations at the Canadian Meteorological Centre.
August is also slated to bring below-normal rainfall levels for the Prairies, B.C. and the Maritimes.
More than 530 firefighters from Australia, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Mexico and the U.S. are in Canada to help.
Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson said his department is setting aside $11.7 million over four years to create the Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada, an agency he said will “connect domestic, international governments, the private sector, wildfire scientists and experts and affected communities to share knowledge, science and technology so we can fight fires better.”
The consortium is part of Canada’s commitment to a wildfire co-operation charter that was signed at the G7 leaders’ summit in Kananaskis, Alta., this summer.
![]()
Federal officials say wildfire forecast shows high risk of more fires in August
The 2025 wildfire season is already one of the worst and there is a high risk of more fires in August, federal officials said.torontosun.com
Fires in summer , never heard of such a thing .Federal officials say wildfire forecast shows high risk of more fires in August
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Sarah Ritchie
Published Jul 18, 2025 • Last updated 12 hours ago • 4 minute read
OTTAWA — The 2025 wildfire season is already one of the worst on record for Canada, federal officials said Friday, and there is a high risk that more fires will break out in August.
More than 55,000 square kilometres of land has burned so far this year, an area roughly the size of Nova Scotia. That is more than double the 10-year average of the area burned by mid-July.
There were 561 fires burning as of Friday morning, including 69 that were considered out of control. The Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre says almost 3,300 fires have been recorded this year so far.
The record was set in 2023, when more than 6,000 fires burned more than 150,000 square km of land — an area larger than all three Maritime provinces put together.
That devastating season, where wildfires raged from Newfoundland to B.C. for months on end, sparked significant public pressure for the federal government to create a new kind of disaster response agency.
Former emergency management ministers Bill Blair and Harjit Sajjan both mulled the idea of such an agency during their time in office, with both ministers acknowledging the strain natural disasters have put on the Canadian Armed Forces and the provinces and territories.
The government said it was looking to the United States Federal Emergency Management Agency and Australia’s National Emergency Management Agency as potential examples.
Final decisions on that front still have not been made.
During a Friday afternoon briefing with several of her cabinet colleagues, Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski said her department will be making changes to how it responds to wildfire seasons, which are becoming longer and more severe.
“We think that the formation of such an agency could have a very positive impact on our ability to co-ordinate how we respond to national disasters across the country,” Olszewski said.
That could mean having regional water bombers to respond more quickly to fires in areas that have fewer resources, she said, or leaning on a “humanitarian task force” to ensure people can be deployed where they’re needed.
Matthew Godsoe, a senior director of the government operations centre at Public Safety Canada, said natural disasters are outpacing the capacity of the country’s emergency management system.
“In that current context, maintaining the status quo is equivalent to doing less,” he told reporters at a technical briefing Friday, adding that all levels of government and individual Canadians must work together “to slow or stop this nearly exponential growth in disaster losses that we’re experiencing as a country.”
The federal government has been called in to provide help five times this wildfire season, including last week, when the Armed Forces and the Red Cross helped to evacuate more than 2,800 people from Garden Hill First Nation in Manitoba.
Olszewski said she expects to have an update on a federal emergency agency in the fall.
In the meantime, communities in high-risk areas are bracing for things to get worse in the next two months, which are typically the most active months of the fire season.
Saskatchewan has already seen one of the worst fire seasons ever in terms of the total area burned, and a record number of people have been forced out of their homes in that province.
Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty said 39,000 people have been forced to evacuate from 66 First Nations, mostly on the Prairies, calling the fire season unprecedented.
“It is, I hope, not the new reality that we have to live with, but I’m asking myself what this looks like,” she said.
Gull-Masty said the government’s goal at the end of the wildfire season is to “come together, debrief, reflect, and put tools in place for the next possible time that this occurs.”
Officials said the fire risk typically rises throughout August as temperatures get hotter, and they are predicting higher than normal temperatures for most of the country next month.
“This is consistent with climate change projections, which show that the next five years will be warmer than (we) are used to,” said Sebastien Chouinard, the director of operations at the Canadian Meteorological Centre.
August is also slated to bring below-normal rainfall levels for the Prairies, B.C. and the Maritimes.
More than 530 firefighters from Australia, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Mexico and the U.S. are in Canada to help.
Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson said his department is setting aside $11.7 million over four years to create the Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada, an agency he said will “connect domestic, international governments, the private sector, wildfire scientists and experts and affected communities to share knowledge, science and technology so we can fight fires better.”
The consortium is part of Canada’s commitment to a wildfire co-operation charter that was signed at the G7 leaders’ summit in Kananaskis, Alta., this summer.
![]()
Federal officials say wildfire forecast shows high risk of more fires in August
The 2025 wildfire season is already one of the worst and there is a high risk of more fires in August, federal officials said.torontosun.com
To & from Summer…Climate changes in summer.
Such a nasty word. The good people prefer human caused. That way they get lumped in with the accidental ones.How many were caused by arson? Just askin....
Oops, my bad!Such a nasty word. The good people prefer human caused. That way they get lumped in with the accidental ones.
The ones in August? Fafvateen at least.How many were caused by arson? Just askin....
Heat waves in summer , who would have thunk it ? I believe there is a reason for the siesta .Outdoor work in Southern Europe’s tourist hot spots is becoming hellish
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Joseph Wilson, Derek Gatopoulos And Trisha Thomas
Published Jul 24, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read
Tourists use umbrellas to shelter from the heat as they line up for a tour of the Forum in Rome, on Tuesday, July 22, 2025.
Tourists use umbrellas to shelter from the heat as they line up for a tour of the Forum in Rome, on Tuesday, July 22, 2025.
Cruel heat is baking southern Europe as the continent slips deeper into summer.
In homes and offices, air conditioning is sweet relief. But under the scorching sun, outdoor labour can be grueling, brutal, occasionally even deadly.
A street sweeper died in Barcelona during a heat wave last month and, according to a labour union, 12 other city cleaners have suffered heatstroke since. Some of Europe’s powerful unions are pushing for tougher regulations to protect the aging workforce from climate change on the world’s fastest-warming continent.
Cleaning the hot streets
Hundreds of street cleaners and concerned citizens marched through downtown Barcelona last week to protest the death of Montse Aguilar, a 51-year-old street cleaner who worked even as the city’s temperatures hit a June record.
Fellow street sweeper Antonia Rodriguez said at the protest that blistering summers have made her work “unbearable.”
“I have been doing this job for 23 years and each year the heat is worse,” said Rodriguez, 56. “Something has to be done.”
Extreme heat has fueled more than 1,000 excess deaths in Spain so far in June and July, according to the Carlos III Health Institute.
“Climate change is, above all, playing a role in extreme weather events like the heat waves we are experiencing, and is having a big impact in our country,” said Diana Gomez, who heads the institute’s daily mortality observatory.
Even before the march, Barcelona’s City Hall issued new rules requiring the four companies contracted to clean its streets to give workers uniforms made of breathable material, a hat and sun cream. When temperatures reach 34 C (93 F), street cleaners now must have hourly water breaks and routes that allow time in the shade. Cleaning work will be suspended when temperatures hit 40 C (104 F).
Protesters said none of the clothing changes have been put into effect and workers are punished for allegedly slacking in the heat. They said supervisors would sanction workers when they took breaks or slowed down.
Workers marched behind a banner reading “Extreme Heat Is Also Workplace Violence!” and demanded better summer clothing and more breaks during the sweltering summers. They complained that they have to buy their own water.
FCC Medio Ambiente, the company that employed the deceased worker, declined to comment on the protesters’ complaints. In a previous statement, it offered its condolences to Aguilar’s family and said that it trains its staff to work in hot weather.
Emergency measures and a Greek cook
In Greece, regulations for outdoor labour such as construction work and food delivery includes mandatory breaks. Employers are also advised — but not mandated — to adjust shifts to keep workers out of the midday sun.
Greece requires heat-safety inspections during hotter months but the country’s largest labour union, the GSEE, is calling for year-round monitoring.
European labour unions and the United Nations’ International Labour Organization are also pushing for a more coordinated international approach to handling the impact of rising temperatures on workers.
“Heat stress is an invisible killer,” the ILO said in a report last year on how heat hurts workers.
It called for countries to increase worker heat protections, saying Europe and Central Asia have experienced the largest spike in excessive worker heat exposure this century.
In Athens, grill cook Thomas Siamandas shaves meat from a spit in the threshold of the famed Bairaktaris Restaurant. He is out of the sun, but the 38 C (100.4 F) temperature recorded on July 16 was even tougher to endure while standing in front of souvlaki burners.
Grill cooks step into air-conditioned rooms when possible and always keep water within reach. Working with a fan pointed at his feet, the 32-year-old said staying cool means knowing when to take a break, before the heat overwhelms you.
“It’s tough, but we take precautions: We sit down when we can, take frequent breaks and stay hydrated. We drink plenty of water — really a lot,” said Siamandas, who has worked at the restaurant for eight years. “You have to find a way to adjust to the conditions.”
The blazing sun in Rome
Massimo De Filippis spends hours in the blazing sun each day sharing the history of vestal virgins, dueling gladiators and powerful emperors as tourists shuffle through Rome’s Colosseum and Forum.
“Honestly, it is tough. I am not going to lie,” the 45-year-old De Filippis said as he wiped sweat from his face. “Many times it is actually dangerous to go into the Roman Forum between noon and 3:30 p.m.”
At midday on July 22, he led his group down the Forum’s Via Sacra, the central road in ancient Rome. They paused at a fountain to rinse their faces and fill their bottles.
Dehydrated tourists often pass out here in the summer heat, said Francesca Duimich, who represents 300 Roman tour guides in Italy’s national federation, Federagit.
“The Forum is a pit; There is no shade, there is no wind,” Duimich said. “Being there at 1 p.m. or 2 p.m. in the summer heat means you will feel unwell.”
This year, guides have bombarded her with complaints about the heat. In recent weeks, Federagit requested that the state’s Colosseum Archaeological Park, which oversees the Forum, open an hour earlier so tours can get a jump-start before the heat becomes punishing. The request has been to no avail, so far.
The park’s press office said that administrators are working to move the opening up by 30 minutes and will soon schedule visits after sunset.
— Wilson reported from Barcelona, Spain, Gatopoulos from Athens and Thomas from Rome.
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Outdoor work in Southern Europe’s tourist hot spots is becoming hellish
Cruel heat is baking southern Europe as the continent slips deeper into summer.torontosun.com