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CTVN - Monday, May 27, 2024 - 12:00 a.m. (ET) - Segment #17

premiering a selection from section 35. I'm really excited because he did a collaboration with roots this year. You will be seeing -- and their jacket is completely aligned. They are letterman-style. >> Kelsey: I love that. >> The flying moccasin that I love and be on the new collection with roots, he talks about home on native land. A lot of people heard jully black saying. >> Kelsey: that's beautiful. Next you have a designer who uses empowering statements in her designs. Recreation crafts. >> She is the cover girl this year. So you are going to see this look specifically all over advertisements at the eaton centre. You can just see how powerful it throws back to a lot of the traditional elements that we use in north american canadian indigenous culture. The ribbons. Also those really important language around protecting the earth. Really excited to see that in person. >> Kelsey: next up. >> Empowering women. Femininity. The matriarch. This year, she has mommy and me. The matching outfit. You can see how feminine and beautiful the work is. A lot of ribbon work, which is very traditional to many of our cultures across canada. >> Kelsey: that's so beautiful. Lastly, we are going to indigenous with your design you are showcasing. >> I'm so excited. You can see -- this is all hand woven from the material that they call ulos. A lot of design comes from each nation of people from indonesia. He is working with groups of women. You can see how contemporary and how beautiful it is. >> Kelsey: this is beautiful. Thank you so much for being here today. The indigenous fashion arts festival will take place in toronto this weekend may 30th. For more information, head to indigenous fashion arts.com. We will take a short break on the show. Our "good news!" stories are right after the break. Woman: Timmy, I love you! Thank you. This is late show or, like, a late-late show? ( ) (Indistinct shout) (Applause) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) Timothée:Blue de Chanel. Did you know that you get used to odors in your home? Yep.You go noseblind. But others smell This, this, and this. Introducing Febreze Plug-In with fade defy technology. It's the only air freshener that eliminates odors... and automatically alternates between two complimentary scents. It even tells you when to refill. So you don't go noseblind and enjoy freshness for up to 50 days. Try a warmer now for only 99 cents. ( ) This is not just another E-Class. Because it evolves with you. It adapts to you, the generic It is the first E-Class made just for you. For you, for you ( ) This is not just design. Because your E-Class: it adapts to you, recognizes you, understands you, empowers you, energizes you, feels you. It evolves with you. The new E-Class. ( ) It's the betmgm must-see matchup. Toronto takes on Pittsburgh. Leading off this weekend. Have your picks, parlays and popcorn ready. It's time to up the action. Download the BetMGM App. And enjoy the game. From the edge of your seat, it's on.

Male Announcer: Mary's brightening up daytime with good friends and good times. Give me a high five! Do you love it? Oh my gosh, I love this. Announcer: The Good Stuff with Mary Berg, weekdays on ctv. >> Kelsey: if you take a closer look, the clothesline is so much more than it seems. It's actually a work of art by local doctor ask artist. The piece is called "my heart has many colours" during the pandemic, you will remember brian made shutters using toys to bring joy during uncertain times. Those shutters will be heading to a new home at an elementary school in fredericton. >> For people in need of a kidney donation in b.c.'s fraser valley. One of their most valuable resources could be found at a local hot dog stand. >> We have never succeeded. Every person that is on our list, we found a kidney for. >> Kelsey: he is so dedicated to his customers, he once donated a kidney to one of them. Ever since this, he put up posters. The latest posting on the wall is the story of david ask carla. David is in need of a kidney and carla has been doing everything she can to find a donor >> Dwyane wade has launched an on-line community. >> Playing a big part in the community is wade's daughter who came out as transgender. She wanted a place where parents and their children could find support. With all of the information wade needed today start translatable. It's where trans youth and their families can find support, guidance and empowerment >> With "good news!" to good views, here are your viewer photos this morning. Loriann takes us to batterman park in newfoundland and labrador with this beautiful picture. And dan takes us to banff. Coming up in the next half hour here on the show, canada's public washroom problem. How a lack of publicly accessible toilets is holding canadian cities back. That conversation coming up. [Tense Music] One Aleve works through my day... ...so I can keep working my magic. Just one Aleve for up to 12 hours of pain relief. Aleve. Who do you take it for? And for effective topical pain relief for muscles and joints, try AleveX. We were born from a deep desire to create positive change, together. One-hundred-fifteen years later, that impact is felt everywhere. It's where we've made innovations accessible to those who need it most. Where we've championed truth and justice... for all. Where we've mapped out futures... we're already living. From here to here and even here. We're not just transforming lives. We're shaping the world. What keeps baby's skin healthy? A diaper that doesn't leave skin wet. That's why Pampers Swaddlers absorbs wetness better for up to 100%leakproof protection and 0% skin irritation. Pampers. For healthy baby skin. Made for finding a way to do it on your own. ( ) Made for three generations under one roof. ( ) Made for big leaps... and family growth spurts. From your first... to your forever... to your anywhere in between. Homes... made for the real you. Mattamy Homes a world your own. [ ] Pick-up is quick and easy. Like a puzzle piece stops now. Man: Us tribute's don't have a choice.

My name is Alex Hitchons. Call me Hitch. >> Anne-Marie: it's monday, may 27th. Total destruction. This is what's left of a refugee camp in rafah after idf attacks sunday night. At least 45 people have been killed including women and children. >> The students are steadfast in our demands for divestment and disclosure. >> No backing down. Talks have gone nowhere and now we will see how the u of t plans to enforce its deadline for pro-palestinian protesters to clear off campus. >> A saskatchewan man is at the peak of his game and the view from the top is life changing. From the summit of the world's tallest mountain. Stay with us, canada. "your morning" starts right [upbeat theme music] >> Anne-Marie: good morning, canada. Welcome to "your morning." I'm anne-marie mediwake. >> Lindsey: good morning, I'm lindsey deluce. >> Kelsey: I'm kelsey McEWEN. Happy monday. >> Lindsey: it is 8:01 eastern. That means the deadline for pro-palestinian protesters to leave their encampment at the university of toronto is officially here. But there are no signs that the protesters going anywhere. I want to show you the scene this morning. On campus, the tents are there. The signs are still up. Protesters are expected to hold a rally right now. The 8 o'clock deadline to call on the school to meet their demands, negotiations were held over the weekend. The encampment leaders are giving school officials their counter effort. The school says it will seek a court injunction to force them to leave. We are watching that this morning closely. >> Search and rescue efforts are happening right now after an idf attack sunday night. 45 people have been killed and many women and children are among the dead. The idf say they targeted and killed two hamas figures. The strike comes two days after the international court of justice ordered israel to immediately halt its military operation in rafah where hundreds of thousands of people have been sheltering. The first long-range attack since january. Those rocket attacks were intercepted by air defence systems.

>>> People forced out by fire in fort nelson, B.C. are being told to be careful. >> Traffic is going to be heavy. Even if people spread themselves out evenly. Be patient. >> An evacuation order will be lifted at 8 o'clock this morning local time. The local emergency room will be open. Stores will be open. Gas stations will be open as well. The entire community was cleared out may 10th because of the parker lake fire burning nearby. Four homes were destroyed. 6 properties damaged. The fire is still considered out of control. They are telling people in fort nelson, you will still be under an evacuation alert. >> Tomorrow for the first time ever, a question will be asked in an indigenous language inside the ontario legislature. Ndp deputy leader will rise in the chamber to ask a question in og cree. His family, friends and indigenous leaders will be at queen's park to see the historic moment. It will also be a birthday present for his mother who turns 79 years old tomorrow. >> Imagine thinking you scored a champion winning goal only to have it called back. >> Lindsey: they thought that was it because it was the second overtime. They thought they won it all when they scored. The celebration already started. The goal was called back. Goaltender interference. And then this happened a minute later. Boston scoring to a deciding fifth game. Boston will have home ice advantage for wednesday's game. >> One saskatchewan man is proving the journey to the top is not an easy one, but worth it. >> You leave at 8 p.m. It's pitch back for the majority of the time. >> Lindsey: he reached the summit of mount everest early this month. He made it at 5:30 this morning. Proudly waving a saskatchewan flag. He is already eyeing another summit, too. >> Kelsey: we used today go camp every summer. It's stunning. I saw it from very far away as a child. I have such admiration for people who do this. My brother yesterday did a 12-hour run yesterday that involved a lot of walking. He said to his credit, he was just happy he made it through. He sent me a step reader at the end of the day. It was more than 80,000 steps. The next day, because they were in the golden day, he said I just went on a water fall hike. >> Anne-Marie: your brother is so active. >> Kelsey: at one point when he had 50,000 steps, I was like at 3200. >> Anne-Marie: good for him. >> Kelsey: kudos to you if you are doing any kind of training. We are going to collingwood. We are showing this community because later on today, there is a chance of seeing pretty significant rainfall. It has already started to rain there this morning. The plants benefitting from all of this moisture. It's going to come down at such an intensity later on. If you have any new sprout lings and you want to give them cover, it would be advisable to do so. Heavy rain coming in from the southwest of ontario is just picking up in intensity as it moves its way up across lake erie. What our computer models are forecasting is that it continues to intensify. The severity of this could continue to increase into eastern ontario. This morning... We have almost three pockets of rain. Southwest ontario, central communities heading into eastern ontario and southwest québec. And then heading over the great lakes toward sault Ste marie. Those three areas continue as we go into midday today. By lunch-time, it will be a fullout rainfest. All the way toward the prince edward county area. Southwest québec, again, you will see thunderstorms building

into the region. Also tracking through the montréal area toward the eastern townships. As we head into the mid-afternoon, this is particularly concerning. For the likelihood of that severity to jump up. Hail will be a big concern here. 2 to 3 centimetres in diameter, due to the fact that there will be a bit of corkscrewing in that cloud allowing that hail to develop. It's also possible we could see rotation within this as well. The same region that had the rotation and tornado warnings last week through the kawarthas heading eastward toward ottawa region. Keep that in mind. It's a good day -- I said it so many times this spring already. Good day to keep your push notifications on. As we go into the evening, the storms will persist. Ask they linger and they continue in intensity as we head into tomorrow morning. That band, that front sitting over our maritime provinces, stretching up toward labrador and backing into ontario and québec. We will see more showery-type of rainfall tomorrow. If you are in northwest ontario, you will hang on to that cloud. Once this clears, we are set to see a dry end to the week. Wednesday, thursday, friday, looking dryer than initially forecast. Something to look forward to there. For atlantic canada, ahead of the front arriving tomorrow morning, a fairly sunny day ahead. Already, though, environment canada has issued a wreckhouse wind warning for the southwest of newfoundland in advance of that cold front. When it arrives tuesday night in newfoundland, winds will pick up at 100km/h. Knowing that, this is already issued more than 24 hours in advance. For now, here is a look at your local forecast. Channel channel-port aux basques . >> Anne-Marie: canada has a two tier system when it comes to public washrooms. It's not only difficult to find a public bathroom, the problem becomes more desperate when you phase more physical and economical barriers. Joining us this morning from halifax on why public restrooms are so important is lezlie lowe. Journalist and author of "no place to go." >> Good morning. >> Anne-Marie: according to a 2021 public toilet index report, canada has 18 public toilets for 8,000 people. Toronto has 300. How did the pandemic impact how we understand the importance of public restrooms and toilets? >> I felt like the pandemic was a really big opportunity for people to start to understand the really deep need for public bathrooms in our cities because it was a time when everybody was faced with this kind of lack of access. People had pretty good access before who commuted by car, had short commutes and would go into their offices and had their coffee shops. Those changes happened on a broad societal level and people really understood, I felt, what was happening for people who had less access. We saw a lot of cities making changes during covid. Providing temporary options for people. What I hoped would come out of that would be a big change in the way cities approached public bathrooms. We have seen the needle move a tiny bit. >> Anne-Marie: we started out this interview by describing a two tier system for public bathrooms, what does that mean >> We all think of public bathrooms in the way that we use public bathrooms. If you have good access, you think access is great for anybody. If you have poor access, you are not able to live your life the way you might normally live your life. Bathrooms are set up for people who are not caregivers, who are housed. Who are middle class, which sounds ridiculous.

I know so many viewers will say yes, I have gone into starbucks and bought a muffin so I could use the bathroom. If you don't have the ability to do that, you have compromised access. People who have issues with mobility. Who use mobility devices. And definitely women, we have all seen women waiting in public bathroom lines. That's because the design of the bathroom. It's not because of women's bodies or women not doing the right thing in public bathrooms. There's this two tier system where a small percentage of people have great access and the rest of us do not. >> When cities are lacking at setting up for access to public washrooms, there's the wrap around issues around security and cleanliness and safety. Once the city decides to invest in public bathrooms, how do they set up -- >> Public bathrooms are highly complex spaces and they are not always easy to make work well. So they are deeply private spaces, but they are also public spaces and that needs to be managed and they need to meet the needs of a vast array of people who live in our cities. It's really -- it can be really challenging. The way to broadly approach that is to think through all of the different user groups and try the best you can to address the needs of the people who are using the bathroom while at the same time deterring things that go wrong in bathrooms. So bathrooms being vandalized or bathrooms being used for things other than using the toilet or washing your hands. There are a lot of different ways in doing that. There are a lot of creative ways that cities are doing that. It requires a lot of thought. >> Anne-Marie: it's something we don't often think about. You are right. Thank you for highlighting it for us. >> No problem. Thanks so much. >> All right. Here is lindsey now with "in case you missed it." >> Lindsey: here are some stories you may have missed. Donald trump did not find a friendly crowd at the libertarian national convention. Take a look. So trump was booed by the crowd before he could even get a word out. His reaction was -- the convention also heard from robert kennedy junior. They ended up choosing chase oliver. >> Prime minister justin trudeau has confirmed he will travel to france next month for the 80th anniversary of d-day. He will be in france for two days and will be at a canadian ceremony on the morning of june 6th. That will mark 80 years since 14,000 canadians stormed the beach. Trudeau also attended the 75th anniversary of juno beach in 2019. >> A B.C. man has been reunited with his wallet after losing it more than 30 years ago. It is a reunion that has given him a personal time capsule and a few friends. Here is adam sawatsky. >> Nick choudhary will not forget that day at the pier. >> He tried fishing off the rocks. Nick decided to lighten his load. >> I picked what was the perfect spot to put my wallet down and go fishing. >> Reporter: on the way back, not only did he catch no fish. There was no sign of his wallet. >> I had everything in there. >> Seeing that this was back in 1991, he couldn't just go on-line to replace it all. >> He tried not no think about it over the next 33 years until this 14-year-old was fishing off the same break water. A friend asked him to help look for something he dropped in the rocks and jamie lee uncovered an old wallet instead. >> It was crusty and super hard. >> Not only did it contain id, there were old-fashioned video store cards as well. >> Super old. >> Jimmy's dad started searching for the owner on-line. >> I don't know if I want to be touching my phone right now. >> Until he was sent a picture of his younger self smiling back at him. >> I was blown away. >> Bill didn't waste time. >> I thought as a nice gesture what I would do for my fellow neighbour. >> And reunite nick with a time machine of sorts.

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