Auto tariff delayed, U.S. stops sharing intel with Ukraine, cancer and youth, and more

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Motion sickness in the Canadian economy as the U.S. takes another turn on tariffs. Automakers have a one-month exemption from the 25 per cent tariffs imposed yesterday. Washington says it’s to give them time to move more investment out of Canada and into the U.S. And in U.S. border towns, businesses are facing the possibility of a drop off in revenue – their customers, and many of their supplies, come from Canada. Tariffs could take a bite out of both.


And: US officials have cut off key intelligence Ukraine’s military uses to protect its cities and defend itself from Russia’s invasion. It’s a dramatic example of the brokenness of the relationship between the U.S. and Ukraine after President Volodymyr Zelensky’s combustible encounter with U.S. President Donald Trump in the White House last week.


Also: The incidence of some types of cancer is increasing in young people. That means healthcare needs to adapt to help them cope. Issues including finances, fertility and life planning are all different for those who are younger.


Plus: A home for treating people with mercury poisoning is finally getting built in Grassy Narrows First Nation, searching for climate clues in Antarctic, and more.